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The Story Of The A-Bomb Kid

 

            John Aristotle Phillips is an Obscure Individual. He graduated from Princeton in 78', repeating his senior year. He transferred to Princeton for his sophomore year, and landed an exclusive spot on the academic probation. He got average grades, and was on the path to flunking out. Then he did something that anything less of a genus couldn't accomplish. John Phillips is not a genius. John Phillips is an Obscure Individual who was Whoopeed.
             "Whoopee is a mass media action word. It describes the process which starts when an Obscure Individual does something Creative, Courageous, Frivolous, or Frightening (C2F2). The media decide that he will make a Good Copy (GC). Using millions of newspapers, magazines, radios, and television sets, the media form a peephole through which the public can scrutinize him. The Public's Impression through the Media Peephole (PIMP) suddenly makes him more important than what he has done. The Obscure Individual is now a Personality:-.
             OBSCURE INDIVIDUAL ®C2F2 + GC + PIMP ® PERSONALITY = WHOOPEE.
             John Phillips wasn't always such a personality. In fifth grade, his teachers believed he would never be able to handle abstract math. Although he wasn't allowed to see, he tested below average on his IQ analysis. He grew up always encouraged by his parents that he could accomplish whatever he wanted to, no matter who told him he couldn't or what stood in his way as means of an obstacle. .
             In 1973, John goes to Berkeley in search of not only his college career, but as he named it "the movement- which always seemed to leave just as he got there. No exception here. Life turned into an endless party for young John. He joined a fraternity, and grew into a slum of drinking and dating sorority girls. He felt his brain was turning to mush. Being inspired by a Professor of Political Science he discovered his love of physics. During September of 1975, he transferred to Princeton, which wasn't too far west and wasn't too close to home.


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