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Promotional Narrative for Self‑Help Book with No Substantive Leads
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kaggle-ho-013801House Oversight

Promotional Narrative for Self‑Help Book with No Substantive Leads

Promotional Narrative for Self‑Help Book with No Substantive Leads The passage consists of marketing copy, personal anecdotes, and generic advice without any concrete names, transactions, dates, or allegations linking powerful actors to misconduct. It offers no actionable investigative leads. Key insights: Contains only personal story about a book launch in 2007.; Mentions a vague “president of a large bookseller” but no name or actionable detail.; No financial flows, legal exposure, or foreign influence disclosed.

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House Oversight
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kaggle-ho-013801
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Summary

Promotional Narrative for Self‑Help Book with No Substantive Leads The passage consists of marketing copy, personal anecdotes, and generic advice without any concrete names, transactions, dates, or allegations linking powerful actors to misconduct. It offers no actionable investigative leads. Key insights: Contains only personal story about a book launch in 2007.; Mentions a vague “president of a large bookseller” but no name or actionable detail.; No financial flows, legal exposure, or foreign influence disclosed.

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kagglehouse-oversightmediapublishingself‑helpmarketing

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Working Remotely Killing Your BlackBerry Star Wars, Anyone? RESTRICTED READING: THE FEW THAT MATTER BONUS MATERIAL How to Get $250,000 of Advertising for $10,000 How to Learn Any Language in 3 Months Muse Math: Predicting the Revenue of Any Product Licensing: From Tae Bo to Teddy Ruxpin Real Licensing Agreement with Real Dollars Online Round-the-World (RTW) Trip Planner ACKNOWLEDGMENTS »> PREFACE TO THE EXPANDED AND UPDATED EDITION Tie 4-Hour Workweek was turned down by 26 out of 27 publishers. After it was sold, the president of one potential marketing partner, a large bookseller, e-mailed me historical bestseller statistics to make it clear—this wouldn’t be a mainstream success. So I did all I knew how to do. I wrote it with two of my closest friends in mind, speaking directly to them and their problems—problems I long had—and I focused on the unusual options that had worked for me around the world. I certainly tried to set conditions for making a sleeper hit possible, but I knew it wasn’t likely. I hoped for the best and planned for the worst. May 2, 2007, I receive a call on my cell phone from my editor. “Tim, you hit the list.” It was just past 5 P.M. in New York City, and I was exhausted. The book had launched five days before, and I had just finished a series of more than twenty radio interviews in succession, beginning at 6 A.M. that morning. I never planned a book tour, preferring instead to “batch” radio satellite tours into 48 hours. “Heather, I love you, but please don’t $4%* with me.” “No, you really hit the list. Congratulations, Mr. New York Times bestselling author!”

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