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You can find variations of that kind of speak, what Mr. T would call âjibber-jabberâ in the military and politics too. It is a means of keeping nosy Nellies from understanding your precise meaning. It isnât used to elucidate it is for confusion and opacity of meaning.
His whole word salad was about finding and motivating the best ones in your group. But when you are also among experts talking shop it can sound similar if you donât understand what they are talking about. Whether it is physics or biology or anything you can imagine for the Ph D crowd.
A pretty thorough parody of âBusinessspeakâ. Lynnâs own comments:
âI had a friend who added âologyâ and âalityâ to a number of words. Once the first âologyâ came out, I couldnât listen to what he was saying. It was all âBS-ologyâ after that."
Scott Adams was of course more of a pro at parodying this kind of talk, having lived it for so long. But this was MUCH earlier, and still a very good example of âusing 60 words when one will doâ and âSaying high-priced nothingâ.
I thought that I was the only one who had a hard time hearing the word âbasicallyâ⊠I thought that it was a new term but I guess this comic was ahead of itâs time. basically.
Iâm convinced that âC-levelâ management and their VPs donât have the faintest idea what theyâre talking about. Like so many other self-absorbed groups, they thrive off of their own buzzwords.
Abraham Lincoln was once at a debate. After his opponent gave a heavy intellectual speech full of puffery, Lincoln simply brought it back to simplicity. He asked âHow many legs would a horse have if we called its tail a leg?â
An audience member responded âFive?â
âThe answer is four.â said Lincoln âCalling a tail a leg does not make it so.â
It appears to be two Consultant/Salesmen conversing in their native jargon/speak. It looks like they are consulting on/selling to the corporate Human Resources demographic.
I once took a college level Engineering Economics course. The book would have only been about 50 pages if it had been printed in plain English. Colleges for some reason measure a bookâs worth by its weight and number of pages (the book didnât mention this). So, they just fluffed the book up with hot air until it was about 700 pages. I memorized one of the medium-length sentences of the last page I read, just for future reference. And from then on I just took notes on what the professor said, and left the book/paperweight alone. The sentence was, more or less, âThus, the ultimate success of any engineering project, depends on the engineerâs ability, both individually and collectively, to maximize their employment of the methodologies and techniques that facilitate task accomplishment.â And there was 700 pages of this baloney! It would make my mind go numb for an hour after reading just a page or two. This is where the type of computer that was mentioned in Asimovâs Foundation science fiction series would come in handy: You could put in a formal treaty, or a 700 page economics book written by a gas-bag, and it would translate it to standard English. In the science fiction book, it translated a 3-page treaty into a blank page. One of the humans had to expand that summary to: âWe owe you nothing, and you owe us nothing!â So, this computer could have reduced that unreadable book to about 50 pages of readable English. In this case, it is a gas-bagging contest to try and impress John, who was indeed impressed, but not in the way they wanted.
John, people like that talk like that when everyone else has left the room from no longer wanting to hear their crap, liking to hear their own voice telling themselves how smart they think they are in which every story they think they are the hero.
The ability to know the difference between junk speak and highly technical jargon is good to have. And to increase your vocabulary is like learning to paint with not only more colors but also the shades and tints of them too.
Plus â the elevator music had too much linear distortion in the downward modulation peaks! (If you canât dazzle âem with your brilliance, baffle âem with BS!!)
Templo S.U.D. almost 7 years ago
one would wonder, John
wiatr almost 7 years ago
I hope those two know what they said because I have very little idea of what they refer to. Apparently I have no reference to their database.
howtheduck almost 7 years ago
This is one of those comic strips that makes me really appreciate how well Scott Adams does this kind of corporate dialogue in Dilbert.
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] almost 7 years ago
You can find variations of that kind of speak, what Mr. T would call âjibber-jabberâ in the military and politics too. It is a means of keeping nosy Nellies from understanding your precise meaning. It isnât used to elucidate it is for confusion and opacity of meaning.
His whole word salad was about finding and motivating the best ones in your group. But when you are also among experts talking shop it can sound similar if you donât understand what they are talking about. Whether it is physics or biology or anything you can imagine for the Ph D crowd.
Jabroniville Premium Member almost 7 years ago
A pretty thorough parody of âBusinessspeakâ. Lynnâs own comments:
âI had a friend who added âologyâ and âalityâ to a number of words. Once the first âologyâ came out, I couldnât listen to what he was saying. It was all âBS-ologyâ after that."
Scott Adams was of course more of a pro at parodying this kind of talk, having lived it for so long. But this was MUCH earlier, and still a very good example of âusing 60 words when one will doâ and âSaying high-priced nothingâ.
dukedoug almost 7 years ago
What happened to running it up the flagpole to see who salutes ?
jaxxxon58 almost 7 years ago
I thought that I was the only one who had a hard time hearing the word âbasicallyâ⊠I thought that it was a new term but I guess this comic was ahead of itâs time. basically.
Rosette almost 7 years ago
Long words are so superfluous and photosynthesis!
dwane.scoty1 almost 7 years ago
John should consider a home Dentist office: lose the Hi-rise rent & the elevator nonsense!
Egrayjames almost 7 years ago
I always used the expression âYou canât BS a BSâr!â Those two are BS.
Tyge almost 7 years ago
Of course they do!
rshive almost 7 years ago
Jargon lives forever.
Auntie Socialist almost 7 years ago
Thereâs a website that will automatically generate whole random paragraphs of that kind of talk, free of charge.
chuck_sa almost 7 years ago
Otherwise, known as baffling them with BS.
Jan C almost 7 years ago
Iâve wondered that myself.
MitmanArt almost 7 years ago
As soon as anyone uses any form of âutilize,â I stop listening.
tripwire45 almost 7 years ago
Iâm convinced that âC-levelâ management and their VPs donât have the faintest idea what theyâre talking about. Like so many other self-absorbed groups, they thrive off of their own buzzwords.
Diat60 almost 7 years ago
I know itâs petty, but my pet hate is âutilizeâ. What on earth is wrong with âuseâ?
BlitzMcD almost 7 years ago
The aesthetic impetus pursuant to the aforementioned inadvertently subjugates a subjective assessment.
USN1977 almost 7 years ago
Abraham Lincoln was once at a debate. After his opponent gave a heavy intellectual speech full of puffery, Lincoln simply brought it back to simplicity. He asked âHow many legs would a horse have if we called its tail a leg?â
An audience member responded âFive?â
âThe answer is four.â said Lincoln âCalling a tail a leg does not make it so.â
Alphaomega almost 7 years ago
9 out of 10 hockey interviews start off with the player saying âobviouslyâ Obviously,my favourite!
TerBer almost 7 years ago
paid to talk not do.
summerdog86 almost 7 years ago
Boring! I never bothered to even read it.
Brian Premium Member almost 7 years ago
If you pare away the baffle-gab, there are actually a few decent ideas in there. Which is often the case.
Linguist almost 7 years ago
My idea of hell is to be stuck in an elevator with a couple of Marketing Strategists !
gigagrouch almost 7 years ago
BS bingo, anyone?
Teto85 Premium Member almost 7 years ago
My English teacher grandmother always said that we should eschew meretricious sesquipedalianisms.
Sakamichi almost 7 years ago
My granny would label that as gobbledygook.
ktrabbit almost 7 years ago
Sounds like Charlie Brownâs teacher to me; âWah-wah-wah, wawahwawah, wah, wah, wah.â
Seed_drill almost 7 years ago
You can tell itâs an older strip because they didât say âproactiveâ.
David_J Premium Member almost 7 years ago
From personal experience Iâve found that people who talk like that donât know sh!t from Shinola and lack even basic common sense.
1JennyJenkins almost 7 years ago
Basically, access to accessibility has to be utilized proactivelyâŠ
; â /
sperry532 almost 7 years ago
It appears to be two Consultant/Salesmen conversing in their native jargon/speak. It looks like they are consulting on/selling to the corporate Human Resources demographic.
Sorry. It kinda rubs off. eeeewww
Sue G almost 7 years ago
On his way off the elevator, John should have said, âexcept on Tuesday, when 2 Jacks equal half a Fizbinâ.
Partyalldatyme almost 7 years ago
Google âMission Statement â by Weird Al Yankovic.
cosman almost 7 years ago
When i hear âat the end of the day..â my mind wander away.
TerBer almost 7 years ago
It occured to me as a DR. Jon is probably smarter than those two yahoos combined.
STACEY MARSHALL Premium Member almost 7 years ago
I once took a college level Engineering Economics course. The book would have only been about 50 pages if it had been printed in plain English. Colleges for some reason measure a bookâs worth by its weight and number of pages (the book didnât mention this). So, they just fluffed the book up with hot air until it was about 700 pages. I memorized one of the medium-length sentences of the last page I read, just for future reference. And from then on I just took notes on what the professor said, and left the book/paperweight alone. The sentence was, more or less, âThus, the ultimate success of any engineering project, depends on the engineerâs ability, both individually and collectively, to maximize their employment of the methodologies and techniques that facilitate task accomplishment.â And there was 700 pages of this baloney! It would make my mind go numb for an hour after reading just a page or two. This is where the type of computer that was mentioned in Asimovâs Foundation science fiction series would come in handy: You could put in a formal treaty, or a 700 page economics book written by a gas-bag, and it would translate it to standard English. In the science fiction book, it translated a 3-page treaty into a blank page. One of the humans had to expand that summary to: âWe owe you nothing, and you owe us nothing!â So, this computer could have reduced that unreadable book to about 50 pages of readable English. In this case, it is a gas-bagging contest to try and impress John, who was indeed impressed, but not in the way they wanted.
davetb1956 almost 7 years ago
John, people like that talk like that when everyone else has left the room from no longer wanting to hear their crap, liking to hear their own voice telling themselves how smart they think they are in which every story they think they are the hero.
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] almost 7 years ago
The ability to know the difference between junk speak and highly technical jargon is good to have. And to increase your vocabulary is like learning to paint with not only more colors but also the shades and tints of them too.
tuslog1964 almost 7 years ago
Plus â the elevator music had too much linear distortion in the downward modulation peaks! (If you canât dazzle âem with your brilliance, baffle âem with BS!!)