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" ... As for Scorsese superfan and his belly laughs, a long time member of the Actor’s Studio floated the theory to me that Scorsese’s enthusiasm is a technique meant to put Liebowitz at ease and have her open up. If true it certainly is an improvement on his interview technique from The Last Waltz (I have never recovered from Scorsese saying “!6 years?” over and over again to Robbie Robertson). In the case of Leibowitz, it’s hard to say whether this technique worked, as Leibowitz is a pro at dispensing her well-crafted opining. ... "
" ... First, some background. Sheeran is a longtime superfan of Heinz Ketchup—so much of a superfan that he tattooed the brand's label on his bicep. ... "
" ... Full disclosure here: I've never read a Preacher comic in full. I know I should, but during its height of popularity, I associated it with someone who was a superfan of it and had broken my heart. The only thing stopping me now is that I don't necessarily want to spoil the show for myself, but I watched it with some skeptical fans of the books, and they were applauding throughout. By the time it was done, one of them told me that Cassidy is the best adaptation of a comic character ever, tied with Matt Ryan's John Constantine. Unlike the book, the TV show does not appear to be a road-trip setup, at least so far, but rather keeping most of the key events in Annville, presumably to keep location costs down. Obviously it's early days yet and we don't know this for sure, but events thus far imply it. ... "
" ... Spreading joy does better business: We call every company superfan to check up on them — asking whether they like the product, how it's working for them and if there’s anything we can do. These interactions are incredibly positive for the customers, team members and the business. ... "
" ... The issue is: they are selling something – a $9-million-dollar something that needs to gross over $500,000 a week to stay afloat (which it has been doing so far, handily). To keep it going for years, however, they need to convince the folks who read The New York Times that it is worth seeing, or tap a wholly different market, one that is neither superfan nor fluent in Theater. ... "