Some Basics in Using Principles of Conversational Hypnosis to Get More Fans


Fan, aficionado, supporter, they all mean one thing: an intense person who occasionally has an overwhelming liking or enthusiasm for someone or something. Despite all of these, fans are peculiar as they constitute a star’s fanbase. They can show their enthusiasm by starting a fan club, holding fan conventions, creating fan sites on the web, fan mail, or they simply promote the object of their interest and attention.


When a star develops followers, the free image campaign that they eventually get can make or break a performer. Take for example the then young starlet, Marilyn Monroe. She was first seen in Scudda Hoo! Scudda Hay! where she merely walked in. Fans saw and were astounded. Here was one worthy of their adulation.


Was she using principles of conversational hypnosis to get more fans? No idea. I don’t think she even knew what those principles were. She was simply one who had something in her that made such a big fuss. Till the day she died, up till now, her fan sites are still garnering support from countless fans. Now don’t tell me that this long dead woman is still using principles of conversational hypnosis to get more fans?

Current performers who are using principles of conversational hypnosis to get more fans maybe do so at the insistence of their press secretaries who make sure that they get enough press coverage for them to be memorable. Others simply get to the point where they get totally sick of the whole thing, wanting their privacies back. It worsens with the paparazzi that don’t use any of those techniques, only the camera. Whatever it is that works, it works, to the maximum. The end results are incidents like that young actor who got hit by a taxi trying to run from the mad fan crowd.

 

 

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