HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013829.jpg

2.15 MB

Extraction Summary

6
People
2
Organizations
1
Locations
1
Events
1
Relationships
3
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Book excerpt / narrative account (evidence production)
File Size: 2.15 MB
Summary

This document appears to be a page from a book or manuscript (likely 'The 4-Hour Workweek' by Tim Ferriss, based on the content) included in a House Oversight evidence production. It recounts a lecture given at Princeton University in Spring 2005 where the narrator challenged students to contact 'impossible-to-reach' celebrities like Bill Clinton or J.Lo to win a round-trip plane ticket. The text focuses on the psychology of the students, noting that the first group failed due to intimidation, while a subsequent group succeeded after hearing the story of the first group's failure.

People (6)

Name Role Context
Narrator (I) Lecturer/Author
Gave a lecture at Princeton University and issued a challenge to students.
Bill Clinton Subject of Challenge
Mentioned as an example of a 'seemingly impossible-to-reach' person for the student assignment.
J.Lo Subject of Challenge
Mentioned as an example of a 'seemingly impossible-to-reach' person for the student assignment.
J. D. Salinger Subject of Challenge
Mentioned as an example of a 'seemingly impossible-to-reach' person for the student assignment.
Lewis Carroll Author
Quoted at the top of the page.
George Bernard Shaw Playwright
Quoted at the top of the page.

Organizations (2)

Name Type Context
Princeton University
Location of the lecture and the challenge.
House Oversight Committee
Implied by the footer stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013829'.

Timeline (1 events)

Spring 2005
Lecture and subsequent challenge issued to students at Princeton University.
Princeton, New Jersey
Narrator Princeton Students

Locations (1)

Location Context
Setting of the narrative in Spring 2005.

Relationships (1)

Narrator Teacher/Student Princeton Students
My lecture at Princeton University had just ended... I told them to meet me after class

Key Quotes (3)

"Doing the Unrealistic Is Easier Than Doing the Realistic"
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013829.jpg
Quote #1
"Contact three seemingly impossible-to-reach people—J.Lo, Bill Clinton, J. D. Salinger, I don’t care—and get at least one to reply to three questions."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013829.jpg
Quote #2
"Of 20 students, all frothing at the mouth to win a free spin across the globe, how many completed the challenge? Exactly … none."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013829.jpg
Quote #3

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (2,688 characters)

“Then it doesn’t matter which way you go,” said the Cat.
—LEWIS CARROLL, Alice in Wonderland
The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man.
—GEORGE BERNARD SHAW, Maxims for Revolutionists
SPRING 2005 / PRINCETON , NEW JERSEY
I had to bribe them. What other choice did I have?
They formed a circle around me, and, while the names differed, the question was one and the same: “What’s the challenge?” All eyes were on me.
My lecture at Princeton University had just ended with excitement and enthusiasm. At the same time, I knew that most students would go out and promptly do the opposite of what I preached. Most of them would be putting in 80-hour weeks as high-paid coffee fetchers unless I showed that the principles from class could actually be applied.
Hence the challenge.
I was offering a round-trip ticket anywhere in the world to anyone who could complete an undefined “challenge” in the most impressive fashion possible. Results plus style. I told them to meet me after class if interested, and here they were, nearly 20 out of 60 students.
The task was designed to test their comfort zones while forcing them to use some of the tactics I teach. It was simplicity itself: Contact three seemingly impossible-to-reach people—J.Lo, Bill Clinton, J. D. Salinger, I don’t care—and get at least one to reply to three questions.
Of 20 students, all frothing at the mouth to win a free spin across the globe, how many completed the challenge?
Exactly … none. Not a one.
There were many excuses: “It’s not that easy to get someone to …” “I have a big paper due, and …” “I would love to, but there’s no way I can….” There was but one real reason, however, repeated over and over again in different words: It was a difficult challenge, perhaps impossible, and the other students would outdo them. Since all of them overestimated the competition, no one even showed up.
According to the rules I had set, if someone had sent me no more than an illegible one-paragraph response, I would have been obligated to give them the prize. This result both fascinated and depressed me.
The following year, the outcome was quite different.
I told the above cautionary tale and 6 out of 17 finished the challenge in less than 48 hours. Was the second class better? No. In fact, there were more capable students in the first class, but they did nothing. Firepower up the wazoo and no trigger finger.
The second group just embraced what I told them before they started, which was …
Doing the Unrealistic Is Easier Than Doing the Realistic
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013829

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