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  <title><![CDATA[The Big Bing: Black Holes of Time Management, Gaseous Executive Bodies, Exploding Careers, and Other Theories on the Origins of the Business Universe]]></title>
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  <description><![CDATA[With twenty years of experience as a self-described &quot;mole in the heart of corporate capitalism,&quot; CBS executive Gil Schwartz a.k.a. columnist Stanley Bing, is a man of many words. <em>The Big Bing</em>, recycles two decades of artful and acid <em>Fortune</em> and <em>Esquire</em> columns into a coherent view of business as usual. <p>  The pieces are sectioned into themes readers will recognize--office politics, technology, life on the road, men being men, job angst. A number of columns snap and sting. For example, in &quot;You Da Man,&quot; Bing details six species of bad bosses including &quot;Don King without the Hair&quot; and &quot;the last days of Dick Nixon.&quot; He spins tales from the political crypt, asking readers to join his amusement at &quot;the range of goofy people who are thrown together in the pursuit of political advantage.&quot; <p>  Bing is at his best in giving amusing advice (how to give good phone, win turf wars and get a room with a view) and in business travelogues about places like Las Vegas where he sees &quot;several apparently dead people playing slots.&quot; The writing bristles with attitude. Only a moving essay on &quot;the mourning after&quot; September 11 interrupts the relentless cynicism of Bing's observations. Some readers will be able stay in on the jokes. Others may find his voice tiring or unkind and may note the difference between insight and wisdom. <em>--Barbara Mackoff</em></p></p>]]></description>
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        <name><![CDATA[Stanley Bing]]></name>
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    <![CDATA[The Big Bing: Black Holes of Time Management, Gaseous Executive Bodies, Exploding Careers, and Other Theories on the Origins of the Business Universe]]>
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    <![CDATA[With twenty years of experience as a self-described &quot;mole in the heart of corporate capitalism,&quot; CBS executive Gil Schwartz a.k.a. columnist Stanley Bing, is a man of many words. <em>The Big Bing</em>, recycles two decades of artful and acid <em>Fortune</em> and <em>Esquire</em> columns into a coherent view of business as usual. <p>  The pieces are sectioned into themes readers will recognize--office politics, technology, life on the road, men being men, job angst. A number of columns snap and sting. For example, in &quot;You Da Man,&quot; Bing details six species of bad bosses including &quot;Don King without the Hair&quot; and &quot;the last days of Dick Nixon.&quot; He spins tales from the political crypt, asking readers to join his amusement at &quot;the range of goofy people who are thrown together in the pursuit of political advantage.&quot; <p>  Bing is at his best in giving amusing advice (how to give good phone, win turf wars and get a room with a view) and in business travelogues about places like Las Vegas where he sees &quot;several apparently dead people playing slots.&quot; The writing bristles with attitude. Only a moving essay on &quot;the mourning after&quot; September 11 interrupts the relentless cynicism of Bing's observations. Some readers will be able stay in on the jokes. Others may find his voice tiring or unkind and may note the difference between insight and wisdom. <em>--Barbara Mackoff</em></p></p>]]>
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    <body><![CDATA[I must not get this book.  The copyright is 2003, but he writes about 'squawk boxes,''rolodexes,' and paper memos as if we're in the 80's.  You have to get more than half way through the book to hear about a PDA...and Squawk Box now makes me think of the Financial News show, not a phone.<br/><br/>...<a href="http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/46182472">more...</a>]]></body>
    
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    <![CDATA[With twenty years of experience as a self-described &quot;mole in the heart of corporate capitalism,&quot; CBS executive Gil Schwartz a.k.a. columnist Stanley Bing, is a man of many words. <em>The Big Bing</em>, recycles two decades of artful and acid <em>Fortune</em> and <em>Esquire</em> columns into a coherent view of business as usual. <p>  The pieces are sectioned into themes readers will recognize--office politics, technology, life on the road, men being men, job angst. A number of columns snap and sting. For example, in &quot;You Da Man,&quot; Bing details six species of bad bosses including &quot;Don King without the Hair&quot; and &quot;the last days of Dick Nixon.&quot; He spins tales from the political crypt, asking readers to join his amusement at &quot;the range of goofy people who are thrown together in the pursuit of political advantage.&quot; <p>  Bing is at his best in giving amusing advice (how to give good phone, win turf wars and get a room with a view) and in business travelogues about places like Las Vegas where he sees &quot;several apparently dead people playing slots.&quot; The writing bristles with attitude. Only a moving essay on &quot;the mourning after&quot; September 11 interrupts the relentless cynicism of Bing's observations. Some readers will be able stay in on the jokes. Others may find his voice tiring or unkind and may note the difference between insight and wisdom. <em>--Barbara Mackoff</em></p></p>]]>
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    <![CDATA[With twenty years of experience as a self-described &quot;mole in the heart of corporate capitalism,&quot; CBS executive Gil Schwartz a.k.a. columnist Stanley Bing, is a man of many words. <em>The Big Bing</em>, recycles two decades of artful and acid <em>Fortune</em> and <em>Esquire</em> columns into a coherent view of business as usual. <p>  The pieces are sectioned into themes readers will recognize--office politics, technology, life on the road, men being men, job angst. A number of columns snap and sting. For example, in &quot;You Da Man,&quot; Bing details six species of bad bosses including &quot;Don King without the Hair&quot; and &quot;the last days of Dick Nixon.&quot; He spins tales from the political crypt, asking readers to join his amusement at &quot;the range of goofy people who are thrown together in the pursuit of political advantage.&quot; <p>  Bing is at his best in giving amusing advice (how to give good phone, win turf wars and get a room with a view) and in business travelogues about places like Las Vegas where he sees &quot;several apparently dead people playing slots.&quot; The writing bristles with attitude. Only a moving essay on &quot;the mourning after&quot; September 11 interrupts the relentless cynicism of Bing's observations. Some readers will be able stay in on the jokes. Others may find his voice tiring or unkind and may note the difference between insight and wisdom. <em>--Barbara Mackoff</em></p></p>]]>
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    <![CDATA[The Big Bing: Black Holes of Time Management, Gaseous Executive Bodies, Exploding Careers, and Other Theories on the Origins of the Business Universe]]>
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    <![CDATA[With twenty years of experience as a self-described &quot;mole in the heart of corporate capitalism,&quot; CBS executive Gil Schwartz a.k.a. columnist Stanley Bing, is a man of many words. <em>The Big Bing</em>, recycles two decades of artful and acid <em>Fortune</em> and <em>Esquire</em> columns into a coherent view of business as usual. <p>  The pieces are sectioned into themes readers will recognize--office politics, technology, life on the road, men being men, job angst. A number of columns snap and sting. For example, in &quot;You Da Man,&quot; Bing details six species of bad bosses including &quot;Don King without the Hair&quot; and &quot;the last days of Dick Nixon.&quot; He spins tales from the political crypt, asking readers to join his amusement at &quot;the range of goofy people who are thrown together in the pursuit of political advantage.&quot; <p>  Bing is at his best in giving amusing advice (how to give good phone, win turf wars and get a room with a view) and in business travelogues about places like Las Vegas where he sees &quot;several apparently dead people playing slots.&quot; The writing bristles with attitude. Only a moving essay on &quot;the mourning after&quot; September 11 interrupts the relentless cynicism of Bing's observations. Some readers will be able stay in on the jokes. Others may find his voice tiring or unkind and may note the difference between insight and wisdom. <em>--Barbara Mackoff</em></p></p>]]>
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    <![CDATA[With twenty years of experience as a self-described &quot;mole in the heart of corporate capitalism,&quot; CBS executive Gil Schwartz a.k.a. columnist Stanley Bing, is a man of many words. <em>The Big Bing</em>, recycles two decades of artful and acid <em>Fortune</em> and <em>Esquire</em> columns into a coherent view of business as usual. <p>  The pieces are sectioned into themes readers will recognize--office politics, technology, life on the road, men being men, job angst. A number of columns snap and sting. For example, in &quot;You Da Man,&quot; Bing details six species of bad bosses including &quot;Don King without the Hair&quot; and &quot;the last days of Dick Nixon.&quot; He spins tales from the political crypt, asking readers to join his amusement at &quot;the range of goofy people who are thrown together in the pursuit of political advantage.&quot; <p>  Bing is at his best in giving amusing advice (how to give good phone, win turf wars and get a room with a view) and in business travelogues about places like Las Vegas where he sees &quot;several apparently dead people playing slots.&quot; The writing bristles with attitude. Only a moving essay on &quot;the mourning after&quot; September 11 interrupts the relentless cynicism of Bing's observations. Some readers will be able stay in on the jokes. Others may find his voice tiring or unkind and may note the difference between insight and wisdom. <em>--Barbara Mackoff</em></p></p>]]>
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    <![CDATA[With twenty years of experience as a self-described &quot;mole in the heart of corporate capitalism,&quot; CBS executive Gil Schwartz a.k.a. columnist Stanley Bing, is a man of many words. <em>The Big Bing</em>, recycles two decades of artful and acid <em>Fortune</em> and <em>Esquire</em> columns into a coherent view of business as usual. <p>  The pieces are sectioned into themes readers will recognize--office politics, technology, life on the road, men being men, job angst. A number of columns snap and sting. For example, in &quot;You Da Man,&quot; Bing details six species of bad bosses including &quot;Don King without the Hair&quot; and &quot;the last days of Dick Nixon.&quot; He spins tales from the political crypt, asking readers to join his amusement at &quot;the range of goofy people who are thrown together in the pursuit of political advantage.&quot; <p>  Bing is at his best in giving amusing advice (how to give good phone, win turf wars and get a room with a view) and in business travelogues about places like Las Vegas where he sees &quot;several apparently dead people playing slots.&quot; The writing bristles with attitude. Only a moving essay on &quot;the mourning after&quot; September 11 interrupts the relentless cynicism of Bing's observations. Some readers will be able stay in on the jokes. Others may find his voice tiring or unkind and may note the difference between insight and wisdom. <em>--Barbara Mackoff</em></p></p>]]>
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    <![CDATA[The Big Bing: Black Holes of Time Management, Gaseous Executive Bodies, Exploding Careers, and Other Theories on the Origins of the Business Universe]]>
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    <![CDATA[With twenty years of experience as a self-described &quot;mole in the heart of corporate capitalism,&quot; CBS executive Gil Schwartz a.k.a. columnist Stanley Bing, is a man of many words. <em>The Big Bing</em>, recycles two decades of artful and acid <em>Fortune</em> and <em>Esquire</em> columns into a coherent view of business as usual. <p>  The pieces are sectioned into themes readers will recognize--office politics, technology, life on the road, men being men, job angst. A number of columns snap and sting. For example, in &quot;You Da Man,&quot; Bing details six species of bad bosses including &quot;Don King without the Hair&quot; and &quot;the last days of Dick Nixon.&quot; He spins tales from the political crypt, asking readers to join his amusement at &quot;the range of goofy people who are thrown together in the pursuit of political advantage.&quot; <p>  Bing is at his best in giving amusing advice (how to give good phone, win turf wars and get a room with a view) and in business travelogues about places like Las Vegas where he sees &quot;several apparently dead people playing slots.&quot; The writing bristles with attitude. Only a moving essay on &quot;the mourning after&quot; September 11 interrupts the relentless cynicism of Bing's observations. Some readers will be able stay in on the jokes. Others may find his voice tiring or unkind and may note the difference between insight and wisdom. <em>--Barbara Mackoff</em></p></p>]]>
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