coolness-desire-envy

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As consumer confidence plunges, cracks are showing: TikTok and Instagram users are pushing back against influencers in the comments.

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Being cool is hard. Staying cool is harder. It’s an elusive quality, in part because it’s an elusive word with layers of nuanced meaning that peel off...

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On a flight from Paris to London in 1983 Jane Birkin, an Anglo-French chanteuse and actress, spilled the contents of her overstuffed straw...

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Last year, a handful of specific watches – you know the ones – went from "rather expensive, even for a luxury item" to "these prices simply cannot be real." This year, the bubble popped. Here's what happened, and what it means for 2023.

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One of the many unintended consequences of social media is what is popularly referred to as FOMO - fear of missing out. People see all the wonderful things people are doing and buying in their social media profiles, and fear that they are missing out on the good life, or the latest trend, or perhaps

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He is a music sensation, but Girl Talk neither sings nor plays an instrument. He plays music off reinforced Toughbook laptops protected from his sweat by layers of plastic wrap.

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How do you sell a six-figure painting? Branding and a heavily "curated" marketplace.

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Research shows that the brain finds pleasure in the pursuit of inexpensive things, and high-street chains and online retailers sites alike are cashing in.

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None of us want to admit it, but chances are we're all fanboys of something. Whether it's a particular brand of software, gadget, or anything else, we

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Instead, befriend people who inspire awe in you.

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The LinkedIn Learning Blog is written for professionals by professionals. Discover courses, tips and information that can take your career to new heights.

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A dialogue of books: James Clear's "Atomic Habits" and "Wanting"

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A sociologist on why people buy too many things.

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The ability to let go of control when one wants it most is one of the most important skills anyone can develop.

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A Veblen good is a type of luxury good, named after American economist Thorstein Veblen, for which the demand increases as the price increases, in apparent contradiction of the law of demand, resulting in an upward-sloping demand curve. The higher prices of Veblen goods may make them desirable as a status symbol in the practices of conspicuous consumption and conspicuous leisure. A product may be a Veblen good because it is a positional good, something few others can own.

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Namibian hunter-gatherers deride those who stand out. What does this tell us about why, and how, we care about fairness?

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Namibian hunter-gatherers deride those who stand out. What does this tell us about why, and how, we care about fairness?

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I think it’s probably no secret by now that I hate minimalism. I hate it as the incredibly-tedious piece of […]