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The Bombast Transcripts: Rants and Screeds of Rageboy
 
 
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The Bombast Transcripts: Rants and Screeds of Rageboy (Hardcover)

~ (Author) "Though I had passed the same buildings nearly every day, walked and driven the same streets, they now appeared alien, even threatening, as if some..." (more)
Key Phrases: entropy gradient reversals, teenage brain surgeon, cluetrain manifesto, World Wide Web, Weather Channel, Tells All (more...)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

With The Bombast Transcripts, Christopher Locke (a.k.a. RageBoy, that iconoclastic cybervoice of dissonance, disdain, and all things provocative) is leaping from your screen to your bookshelf. Look out. The scathing rants from the creator of Entropy Gradient Reversals--probably the most wittily outrageous, cryptically observant, and eagerly puzzled-over Web zine ever to pollute the airwaves--are explosive.

As a tag, screed is only partly accurate for the contents of this volatile collection; they're long harangues, all right, but by no means monotonous. Listen in as Locke lets his alter ego loose in friendly chat with IBM's Lou Gerstner (well, actually an exit interview with Lew Firstner, pompous and clueless chairman of the 666 Corporation). As he not-so-clearly illustrates what "getting it" means (by pondering T.S. Kuhn, voodoo ceremonies, and a sacred space you can't enter with your mind on, let alone your shoes). And as he gleefully admits that most of his readers "seem to enjoy abstruse and obfuscatory exegeses on themes that utterly elude them" but apparently "alleviates their anxiety about not knowing anything that wasn't covered by Geraldo." Don't be insulted; be alleviated. Locke may indeed be the Web's most acerbic gonzo journalist and techno-semiotic social critic, but he's also written for Forbes; worked for MCI, Ricoh, and the Japanese government's AI project; and been named one of the top 50 business thinkers in the world. If you missed out on this cyberpundit's irreverent rants the first time around, catch him now (if you can). As Locke himself reminds us, "Being totally insane is hard work. People don't realize that." They should now. --S. Ketchum



From Publishers Weekly

RageBoy, the cyber-handle of gonzo-journalist Locke, has collected here his online columns, mostly from his Web zine, Entropy Gradient Reversals. Entries range from the autobiographical (his LSD and drinking years, followed by his own weird version of sobriety) to mock-interview (his chats with TV horse Mr. Ed or "Moe Ron Hubbard, father of Diuretics and Sayonaralogy"). Favorite targets include corporate culture (which he'd consider an oxymoron) and academic posturing (his "Snack with Andr‚" imagines situationist philosopher Guy Debord as Port Authority panhandler DeMerde; his piece "deriding Derrida" exposes French postmodernists as so many "petty control freaks"). While his rants take potshots at a variety of cultural sacred cows (including a wicked analysis of America's fondness for the Weather Channel), it's Locke's own history as an early artificial intelligence/cyberspace pioneer that informs his most damning critique the co-optation of the Internet. In the early days, people who knew how the Internet worked "were mainly using it to fuck off We thought it was important to fuck off." They wanted the Internet to be different from all the other media, a place to "tell stories" about things that mattered, like "heaven, earth, man, woman." But it wasn't long before the "marketing boys" took over, reducing the Net to just another way to sell product. Resurrect William Burroughs, Charles Bukowski and Ken Kesey, add a dash of Dilbert and that's RageBoy. Though it's not for everyone, this "browser-free format" may bring in new audiences. (Feb.)Forecast: This work will be popular with college kids at places like Berkeley readers of Locke's earlier Gonzo Marketing may not get these rants.

Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Basic Books; 1st edition (January 8, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0738206334
  • ISBN-13: 978-0738206332
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.8 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.7 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #2,493,238 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

More About the Author

Christopher Locke
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Though I had passed the same buildings nearly every day, walked and driven the same streets, they now appeared alien, even threatening, as if some inimical wind had swept away whatever significance I had once attached to shops and intersections, old meeting places, the houses of friends long gone, or worse, unable to be reached. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
entropy gradient reversals, teenage brain surgeon, cluetrain manifesto, valued readers, faster horses
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
World Wide Web, Weather Channel, Tells All, Business Week, Carnegie Group, Clues You Can Lose, Moe Ron Hubbard, The New York Times, Valued Readers, Bad Science, Corporate Legal, Gonzo Marketing, Omar Reads the Net, Pattern Recognition, Valued Subscribers, Bloatus Moats, Brain Research Center, Cary Ling Jive, China Rising, Christopher Locke, Columbia House, Lotus Domino, Mad Dog, Modern Man, Our Snack
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beyond description, September 22, 2003
This is the crash course in understanding the fundamentals of the necessity of change as seen through the eyes of the author, Christopher Locke. Everything you previously thought was lore is turned on its head in riotous fashion in The Bombast Transcripts. Each chapter takes apart some standard you thought was a given, an immutable and constant attribute of practically every aspect of life in the western world.

The best part is that Chris does it in so many different ways in one book. There's flat out ranting and there's cutting ridicule including interviews with himself, Rupert Murdoch and the famous one with Mr Ed. (Yes, the horse.)

Using those cliched critic's terms of rollercoaster ride or rollicking good yarn don't do this volume any justice whatsoever. In fact, this book defies any label you might care to ascribe.

In fact, I defy anyone to come up with a label for this book.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "You have GOT to READ this guy!!", January 27, 2002
By S. Oneill (Greenville, NC USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
That was my introduction just over a year ago to Entropy Gradient Reversals and the evil genius mind(s) behind it, Christopher Locke/RageBoy. From that first mind-blowing, breathless reading of his newsletter, I was alternately charmed, alarmed and disarmed by the decidedly unpretentious Chris Locke. His new book, the Bombast Transcripts, a collection of essays previously published to the Entropy Gradient Reversals mailing list, contains that first newsletter that caught my imagination, and so many more.

As I've read through this book, I have found myself again reacting to it in the visceral way that I had to become accustomed to as one of his faithful Valued Readers at EGR. While some may call him pompous and crass, I find him to be merely open and honest. Then again, I've always had a soft spot for intelligent, over-indulgent, semi-vulgar Don Quixotes. His chosen windmills are big business that don't have a clue (IBM et all, no small potatoes here) and, while a book about business practices would normally make my eyes glaze over while putting me in a semi-catatonic state, I find this book to be human and engaging at every turn. Each essay stands on it's own as either a rant or a screed, yet each could also be expanded into its own little book. Irreverent, engaging, transforming, contemplative, hilarious....and each page is more of the same.

While I read Locke's words, I get the feeling that I am a part of something much bigger and more important than anyone can guess, especially those that think the internet is nothing more than a collection of chatrooms and porn sites. No, I get the feeling I'm getting a glimpse of a creation, a rapturous inferno of truth and emotion, two key elements that, when exposed to each other under the heat of RageBoy's passion, cause a brilliant flash of evolution that could change the world as we know it. What a wonderful world that would be.

Idealistic? Maybe. Bombastic? Hardly. Evil Genius?? Indeed.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Rant on, RageBoy (aka Chief Blogging Officer)... and do it again!, July 24, 2009
By J. Williamson "JargonTalk" (Bucks County, PA USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
I've liked reading Chris Locke (aka Rageboy, aka Chief Blogging Officer) since he and fellow authors Rick Levine, Doc Searls, and David Weinberger showed how the Internet was turning business upside down with their original publication of The Cluetrain Manifesto about a decade ago. They had argued that commerce should be about conversations, no matter what the medium, and should not be about transactions. This was pretty heady stuff a decade ago, and this book did cause a number of CEOs to examine their own businesses... but maybe not enough of them.

I was working for a now-defunct "Internet Super Carrier" (google that one) located in Northern Virginia about the time of the paperback release of that title in 2001. My associates and I quoted regularly from our copies as we watched our 'Net worlds sinking around us in that strange financial collapse of so many of the telecoms and ISPs during that year.

Shortly after getting and reading my original hardbound copy of Cluetrain, I found that Chris Locke had a number of regular online journals to be found, especially his "Entropy Gradient Reversals" and his "Mystic Bourgeoisie." Google them and you'll see that they are still running to this day. (The author of these is also the Chairman Emeritus of "The Titanic Deck Chair Rearrangement Corporation" NASDAQ:TDCRC, but that's another story in itself.) Chris was already quite experienced at publishing on the Web when some were asking "What's a blog?"

He provided diversionary enlightenment to a number of us as we watched the collapse our so-called 'Net empires that year. Many of the thoughts that the author was noting on his various Web pages and blogs proved to be prophetic.

When The Bombast Transcripts: Rants and Screeds of Rageboy came out in early 2002, I bought my first hardbound copy, one that became the merciless victim of a yellow highlighter and numerous Post-It tabs as I furiously noted sections that I felt were worth referencing for future use. All of this was taking place during a frantic search for a new IT project management leadership position and a personal domestic relations meltdown.

That book was "borrowed" by a colleague last year and never returned. As it's a critical one on my IT reference shelf, was pleased to find it still listed here in the Bargain Book section. I grabbed it, and reading it again has proven to be a pleasure as I've become quite accustomed over the years to RageBoy's gonzo-journalist style. As Publishers Weekly once put it, "Resurrect William Burroughs, Charles Bukowski and Ken Kesey, add a dash of Dilbert and that's RageBoy." I'll add a dash of Hunter S. Thompson to that.

But now authors Chris Locke, Rick Levine, Doc Searls, and David Weinberger have released The Cluetrain Manifesto: 10th Anniversary Edition, with a new introduction and chapters by the original authors, and commentary by Jake McKee, JP Rangaswami, and Dan Gillmor. A decade after its original publication, their message remains more relevant than ever. Am personally finding this new book to be truly essential reading for anybody interested in the 'Net and e-commerce, and it's especially vital for businesses navigating the topography of the wired marketplace.

But if you want an even broader understanding of Cluetrain, try The Bombast Transcripts: Rants and Screeds of Rageboy as a companion volume of sorts. It's not for everyone, and some may even find him irreverent and slightly offensive (I did not). He'll either charm or alarm you, but Chris has a way with words that is unforgettable.

Calling this one a 5-star read. And apologies to the author for again bringing up the TDCRC.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Genius at work. Chew on carpet while you wait.
I only have one thing to say about this: "The Solution is Poetry". Excellent reading. Warning, you may not get it if you consider yourself too smart and significant.
Published on July 15, 2002 by Marek J

5.0 out of 5 stars Delicious Poetic Nonsense
There are people who will swear by this book, there are people who will hate the book. There is no middle ground, i have checked and tried it out. Read more
Published on April 22, 2002 by T SANTOSO

5.0 out of 5 stars Not what you think....nor expect...
I just finished Bombastic Transcripts, so if you have bothered to read this at all you're probably wondering so what did this monkeyboy think? Read more
Published on by J. Thomas Vincent

5.0 out of 5 stars repurposing free emails and selling it back to me
Wow. Wow. Rageboy's ways are faster than America realizes. Blessed by more than a wit of words, Rageboy (AKA Chris Locke) steps three ahead in the market place. Read more
Published on January 27, 2002 by billy pooper

5.0 out of 5 stars Billy likes this book
I like how the words seathe with celebration. Rageboy's words leap to the eyes, swirl in the brain...and confuse, but amuse and seduce. Read more
Published on January 27, 2002 by billy pooper

5.0 out of 5 stars A symphony of words
Chris has an incredible way with words, weaving them into material that alternately sooths and savages. You read a passage that you find just doesn't leave you. Read more
Published on January 23, 2002 by Shelley R Powers

5.0 out of 5 stars Your duty as citizens...
Chris Locke gets me moist.

Something about this man's extraordinarily vivid prose, salty vernacular and plangent intelligence just does it for me. Read more

Published on January 22, 2002 by Stephen Daedalus

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