Arthur Murray’s Popularity Book


Book Description

FIRST PUBLISHED IN 1944, the Popularity Book is a vintage guidebook full of wise and wonderful advice on living well, building poise and maintaining good relationships. Drawing on books, testimonials and magazines from the World War II era, it shows the forthright common sense and charming romanticism of the “Greatest Generation”, a generation inspired by debonair role models such as Clark Gable, Cary Grant and Katharine Hepburn. As relevant today as it was in the 1940s, the Popularity Book offers counsel on being an unforgettably great date, eliciting a marriage proposal, and how to be generally charming. Compiled and originally published by Arthur Murray, it also features his iconic step-by-step footprint instructions on how to Samba, Fox Trot and Rumba divinely!




Miss Popularity


Book Description

Cassie Knight is bubbly, stylish, and super-friendly, the fashion queen at her Texas school. When her father moves the family to Maine, Cassie's in for a huge culture shock.




Popularity in the Peer System


Book Description

Bringing together leading researchers, this is the first volume to comprehensively examine popularity among children and adolescents: what it is, how it is attained, and its impact on peer interaction and individual development. The book clarifies how popularity is distinct from being socially accepted or well liked and how it is different for girls and boys. Behaviors that characterize popular peers are explored, as are the developmental benefits and risks of popularity and its connections to peer influence processes. Innovative measurement approaches and research designs are clearly described.




Popularity: A Bridge between Classical and Behavioral Finance


Book Description

Classical and behavioral finance are often seen as being at odds, but the idea of “popularity” has been introduced as a way of reconciling the two approaches. Investors like or dislike various characteristics of securities for rational reasons (as in classical finance) or irrational reasons (as in behavioral finance), which makes the assets popular or unpopular. In the capital markets, popular (unpopular) securities trade at prices that are higher (lower) than they would be otherwise; hence, the shares may provide lower (higher) expected returns.This book builds on this idea and expands it in two major ways. First, it introduces a rigorous asset pricing model, the popularity asset pricing model (PAPM), which adds investor preferences for security characteristics other than the risk and expected return that are part of the capital asset pricing model. A major conclusion of the PAPM is that the expected return of any security is a linear function of not only its systematic risk (beta) but also of all security characteristics that investors care about. The other major contribution of the book is new empirical work that, while confirming the well-known premiums (such as size, value, and liquidity) in a popularity context, supports the popularity hypothesis on the basis of portfolios of stocks based on such characteristics as brand value, sustainable competitive advantage, and reputation. Popularity unifies the factors that affect price in classical finance with those that drive price in behavioral finance, thus creating a unifying theory or bridge between classical and behavioral finance.




Shakespeare, Popularity and the Public Sphere


Book Description

In late Elizabethan England, political appeals to the people were considered dangerously democratic, even seditious: the commons were supposed to have neither political voice nor will. Yet such appeals happened so often that the regime coined the word 'popularity' to condemn the pursuit of popular favor. Jeffrey S. Doty argues that in plays from Richard II to Coriolanus, Shakespeare made the tactics of popularity - and the wider public they addressed - vital aspects of politics. Shakespeare figured the public not as an extension of the royal court, but rather as a separate entity that, like the Globe's spectators who surrounded the fictional princes on its thrust stage, subjected their rulers to relentless scrutiny. For ordinary playgoers, Shakespeare's plays offered good practice for understanding the means and ends of popularity - and they continue to provide insight to the public relations strategies that have come to define modern political culture.




Persecution or Popularity as an Individual


Book Description

Which One Are You? Corporate individual will select popularity or persecution to be their true identity, true image, and true testimony as a human being in today's society. Congressional individual will select popularity or persecution to be their true identity, true image, and true testimony as a human being in today's society. Clergy individual will select popularity or persecution to be their true identity, true image, and true testimony as a human being in today's society. Christian individual will select popularity or persecution to be their true identity, true image, and true testimony as a human being in today's society. Church individual will select popularity or persecution to be their true identity, true image, and true testimony as a human being in today's society. Community individual will select popularity or persecution to be their true identity, true image, and true testimony as a human being in today's society. Career individual will select popularity or persecution to be their true identity, true image, and true testimony as a human being in today's society. Citizen individual will select popularity or persecution to be their true identity, true image, and true testimony as a human being in today's society. The storms of life, struggles of life, and stresses of life are causing individuals to select either popularity or persecution to be their true identity, true image, and true testimony as a human being in today's society. Which one are you?




The Barrows Popularity Factor


Book Description

The Barrows Popularity Factor explains how businesses of all kinds can now measure the effectiveness of their advertising with an easy-to-use mathematical formula called The Barrows Popularity Factor. The formula actually lets you quantify the relationship between your advertising and sales. Advertisers can use it to test and compare advertising copy and media, better, faster and less expensively than any other method. It can give you more of the information you need to help you fine-tune your marketing to help you increase your sales, increase your profits and decrease your risk! You can read the whole booklet in about an hour, and all the math can be done in moments, by one person with just a simple calculator. Anyone who spends any money on any advertising anywhere should read this booklet immediately.







The Popularity of Basic Income


Book Description

This book provides a state-of-the-art overview of the popularity of basic income among the general public. Using data from a wide array of public opinion polls conducted in different countries and years, the book first charts popular support for the ideal-typical version of basic income, broadly defined as a "periodic cash payment unconditionally delivered to all on an individual basis, without means-test or work requirement”. On top of that, the book maps popular support for the many other, differently designed varieties of basic income that are part of real-world proposals, pilots, and experiments – including, for example, a participation income, a negative income tax, and a stakeholder grant. By investigating how and why support for different types of basic income varies across countries, evolves over time, and differs between individuals with different characteristics, this book offers crucial information about the political constituencies that can be mobilized in favor of (or against) the introduction of basic income, thereby contributing to our knowledge on the political feasibility of basic income.




The Secret of Popularity


Book Description