P.T. Barnum — "Nothing draws a crowd quite like a crowd."
Nothing draws a crowd quite like a crowd.
Nothing draws a crowd quite like a crowd.
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"The common man, no matter how sharp and tough, actually enjoys having the wool pulled over his eyes, and makes it easier for the puller."
"There is no such thing in the world as luck. There never was a man who could go out in the morning and find a purse full of gold in the street to-day, and another to-morrow, and so on, day after day: …"
"Comfort is the enemy of progress."
"The public is always ready to pay for a good show."
"The best way to get rich is to give people what they want, and then charge them for it."
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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