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THE GREATEST SHOW IN NETWORK MARKETING: PART 12

Why Spectators Are the Point (And Why the Industry Misses It) The MLM industry treats spectators like a problem. They aren’t. They are the majority — and they always will be. The mistake wasn’t building a model that allows leverage.The mistake was pretending everyone should play the same role inside it. Professional sports don’t collapse …

THE GREATEST SHOW IN NETWORK MARKETING: PART 10

Walking Away from the Circus, Not the Model Walking away from the circus is not the same thing as rejecting the model. That distinction matters — because the grifters rely on people confusing the two. The underlying model of tiered, leveraged compensation is not foolish. It is not inherently immoral. In fact, stripped of theatrics, …

THE GREATEST SHOW IN NETWORK MARKETING: PART 9

The Endless Parade of Clowns (Why MLM Trainers Never Run Out) Context: The Clown Car Gag In mid‑20th‑century circuses and early children’s television, there was a recurring gag audiences immediately understood. A tiny car would drive into the ring. One clown would step out. Then another. Then another. Then another. The joke wasn’t that clowns …

THE GREATEST SHOW IN NETWORK MARKETING: PART 8

Why I Ran Off and Joined the MLM Circus Context: What “Running Off to Join the Circus” Meant Before the internet, before corporate career paths, the circus held a unique place in American culture. From the late 1800s through the mid‑20th century, the circus was a traveling world unto itself. It moved town to town …

THE GREATEST SHOW IN NETWORK MARKETING: PART 7

THE ONLY WAY OUT OF THE CIRCUS  Why Principles Always Outlast Personality Barnum didn’t build an empire by creating value. He built it by mastering distraction, emotion, spectacle, and false certainty. MLM inherited that same machinery — then wondered why it keeps producing churn instead of craftsmen, noise instead of operators, and hype instead of …