The Tipping Point

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    to protect him or herself due to a change in the immediate environment. Gladwell claims that this phenomenon of a particular tipping point “isn’t [from] a particular type of person…It’s something physical…The impetus to engage in a certain kind of behavior is not coming from a certain kind of person but from a feature of the environment” (152). In this situation the tipping is something physical, like the environment, that can influence an individual over the edge of sanity because it has an…

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    or even the suicides of Micronesia, regardless of the topic these all caused major shifts in society and the world we know and live in. Wonder where exactly am I getting this information from? It’s from the very well-written book titled “The Tipping Point” by Gladwell Malcolm. In this book, it explores the theme of how quickly things change and “tip”. It also gives historical and factual evidence to back it up. The book is very effective with its message and the…

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    Of course, no amount of self-deprecation can mask Gladwell’s phenomenal success. Since the 2000 publication of The Tipping Point, he has been less a journalist than, as Fast Company once deemed him, “a rock star, a spiritual leader, a stud.” Business executives seek him out for his insights, adoring fans stop him on the street to shake his hand, and other writers strive to emulate the genre he essentially pioneered—the idea-driven narrative that upends the way we think about everything from…

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    The Tipping Point Analysis

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    Malcolm Gladwell’s The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference was my book of choice to discuss in small literature circles. The Tipping Point was my first choice because I have read other pieces of Gladwell’s work and enjoyed his writing style. I found The Tipping Point riveting because Gladwell discusses the algorithm of how epidemics become triggered and take off. I took pleasure in reading the first few chapters, but Gladwell’s writing became repetitive and I became…

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    social issues. Specifically, their respective views on preventing criminal activity and disproving the growing concerns in regards to society’s reliance on mass media. In an excerpt from Malcom Gladwell’s The Tipping Point, the author analyzes the application of a theory known as “the tipping point”. Likewise, Steven Pinker’s essay “Mind over Mass Media” examines whether there is a connection between mass media and lower intelligence by analyzing recent data and statistics. Despite both author’s…

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    Malcolm Gladwell Trend

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    Gladwell’s, The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference, the author explains that a trend is spread by essentially word-of-mouth until it reaches the pinnacle of its popularity, then eventually fading in prevalence. Not only this, but Gladwell likens trends to that of disease epidemics, claiming that they spread in the same fashion. Gladwell defines the tipping point as, “the moment of critical mass, the threshold, the boiling point” (Gladwell), to demonstrate the tipping…

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    Why is crime such a large part of our everyday society? Since the beginning of time, crime has been a large part of history, which gradually increased throughout the years, and continues today in everyday life. Crime is something that is caused by either force, impulse, fun, accident, or environmental factors. Some people have been raised since childhood in areas where crime rates were at a high and this may have compelled them to follow a negative figure, thus resulting in that person…

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    Malcolm Gladwell

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    (“The hardcover of Blink sold three times what the hardcover of Tipping Point did,” says Geoff Shandler, Little, Brown’s editor-in-chief, “so his audience has grown and grown.”) Across the river in New Jersey is the Leigh Bureau, which fields Gladwell’s speaking requests and negotiates his stratospheric fees. (“He was by…

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    When I first read The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference by Malcolm Gladwell, I was incredibly intrigued by the notions presented throughout the book. It intuitively makes sense that changes will add up over time to a significant change; after all, “Rome was not built in a day.” However, throughout this book Gladwell explores the counterintuitive concept about the foundation of epidemics. He realizes that epidemics are not caused by long term change, but rather by the…

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    particular century because something is happening all around the world as the masses are rising up. The following quote from that speech kind of reached out to me. And another reason that I’m happy to live in this period is that we have been forced to a point where we are going to have to grapple with the problems that men have been trying to grapple with through history, but the demands didn’t force them to do it. Survival demands that we grapple with them.…

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