M: How did your interview go
W: I couldn’t feel better about it.
M: You weren’t nervous, were you
W: Not at all. The interviewer was very friendly.
W: How did your interview go
M: I couldn’t feel better about it. The questions were fair, and I seemed to find an answer to all of them.
W: How did your interview go
M: I couldn’t feel worse about it. The questions were very fair but I seemed to find no answers for all of them.
Q: How does the man feel about the interview ()
W: How did your first exam go
M: I thought I did poorly, but I ended up with eighty percent, the highest grade in the class.
W: How did your test go
M: I couldn’t feel better about it. The questions were fairly simple and I seemed to have found answers for all of them.
Interview with PAUL RAY:
AD: How did you discover the Cultural Creatives
PR: When in 1986 I co-founded American LIVES, I was less interested in traditional market research and more in how America was changing. One of the first things we discovered in our research was that a clear cultural change was happening: not just change in one area of people’s lives, but in many areas. Prom environmental issues to consumption patterns, from media preferences to the purchase of food products. We also discovered that the people who were changing were a definite subculture and part of a longer-term pattern. Although most Cultural Creatives in our surveys thought they were alone or part of a very small group, it turned out that they represented a sizable and fast-growing portion of the American population, now reaching over 50 million.
AD: How do you explain this impression of Cultural Creatives that they are not part of a larger group
PR: Cultures are gene
A. people’s lives
B. environmental issues
C. consumption patterns
D. media advertisements
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