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Death of a Salesman: “well-liked” — 6 Comments

  1. Likeability is a meaningless plus factor that the media can control so it’s given undue weight in the balance for that obvious reason. The media has convinced a lot of people that it’s a meaningful criteria because they talk about it all the time ostensibly because the “most likeable” candidate is the one who almost always wins. That’s not at all absurdly arbitrary and suspicious reasoning. Of course people are going to say that they “like” their candidate best. And then once the candidate wins, the herd will want to like the winner and winners are generally happier (more likeable) than losers.

    “Likeability” as a factor leads to people thinking that they need to feel an imaginary personal relationship with the candidate or the candidate is lacking something. It’s an offshoot of the lefty “personal is political” meme. It’s BS and has led to the Obama/Trump phenomena. It needs to stop.

  2. Likeability as projected to a mass audience may be quite different from likeability one-on-one. Is Obama liked by people he has actually worked with?…apparently he was not too popular when he was an adjunct professor, and I doubt that he was all that popular in legislature or Congress. Yet the majority of people in the electorate perceived him as “caring.”

  3. First Frederic March, a very fine actor indeed, who made the portrayal of his character look effortless.

    Where the comparison between Loman and Trump falls apart is that Trump could care less about likability. Trump wants to be feared by his enemies and wants his supporters to worship him from afar.

    That few in our corrupt Congress like Cruz speaks well of him. Cruz refuses to play along to get along. Lots of people personalize disagreement, in today’s world, a man who puts principle first is going to be disliked by a lot of people, perhaps even most people. None of us want our ox to be gored.

    Trump of course says whatever he thinks will lead to advantage and could care less as to the truth of an accusation. I think his real problem with Ted Cruz is revealed by his last sentence; “You can’t make deals with people like that.”

    Making ‘the deal’… with Trump, it’s all about making the deal… which is my greatest fear regarding Trump. He’d make a deal with the devil, if it got him what he wants and, I suspect he’d cavalierly give up what cannot be surrendered, just to gain an ephemeral victory.

  4. Geoffrey Britain:

    I disagree. Trump is almost as obsessed by likability as he is by financial success and fame. Almost, although not quite.

    Pay attention to what he says about himself. One of his bragging claims is how many people like him, how likable he is compared to other candidates, and this emphasis on likability is not new. Don’t misunderstand me; I’m not saying Trump cares about likability because he cares about what other people actually think and feel. It’s not about empathy for him. It’s about likability (affability, in his case) as a tool to get what he wants from people. Trump is likable for the same reason con men are likable, and he is interested in it for the same reason. For Trump, his “likability” is also a measure of success. As with Willy Loman.

  5. My father was a sales rep, and he found Death of a Salesman to be incredibly depressing.

  6. My father worked in sales as well, on the business to business level, and the one time he and my mother saw Death of a Salesman, he walked out at the intermission (the only time he ever walked out on a play). He was … hurt by the portrayal, saw it as cruel and unfeeling, with no respect for a man’s role in providing for his family. And yes, as incredibly depressing.

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