P.T. Barnum — "I always leave 'em wanting more."
I always leave 'em wanting more.
I always leave 'em wanting more.
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"Without publicity a terrible thing happens: nothing."
"The great art of money making consists in putting money at the service of the public."
"The public is always willing to be amused."
"Money is in some respects like fire; it is a very excellent servant but a terrible master."
"Well, doctor, and do I now act like a 'pink powder puff'?"
American showman and Barnum & Bailey Circus co-founder, whose autobiography popularized Gilded Age commercial spectacle. Closely associated with James Anthony Bailey (his circus business partner). For an intellectual contrast, see Mark Twain, American author and Gilded Age satirist — Twain's The Gilded Age (1873, with Charles Dudley Warner) named the entire era of corrupt commercial spectacle Barnum embodied — Twain's later writing repeatedly attacked Barnum-style hucksterism as the era's moral disease.
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