I think comedians pause because of chunking, not NLP. It's easier to memorize & perform a routine by dividing it into lines and then speaking them in a rhythm. Pausing between is necessary for breathing and swallowing, and he places these pauses between lines, dividing the chunks so they are easier to memorize. By smiling or inflecting every pause, he decorates the pause. That way it doesn't sound scripted & we don't catch him swallowing.
When I watch stand-up comedy, sometimes I hear the crowd laugh and I think, "there was nothing funny; they laugh every time the comedian pauses". Sometimes I think the whole set was boring. Some, like Chris Rock, I think are funny, but I only laugh when he says something I find funny, not every time he pauses or smiles or does a voice inflection. What does this mean regarding me?
exactly, its just a form of mastery.. after being an actor in the comedy industry for over 10 years you develop a finger tip feel for what really works, it's natural. It's not so hard to work out
Darren Brown, one of the people whose work is analysed as NLP by you on YouTube, says when talking about NLP in his book Tricks of the mind;
"because it aims to take as its starting point what already works, there is little in its roots that is unique. One of the many irritating habits of NLPers is to claim anything remotely concerned with looking consciously at ones inner processes as NLP."
Is this an everyday unconscious process or is it NLP?
Hey JohnboyLea, its an everyday process. People get all bent out of shape saying something is or is not NLP... which for the most part is crazy because NLP is not a thing, it doesn't exist. It offers an operator/practitioner some very useful models and ways to code how people organize and use their experiences. I can agree with Darren in that some NLP folks forget that the behahviour people are doing is just that and not necessarily "NLP"...
@JohnboyLea It seems both you and Derren Brown have both missed the key point of NLP. NLP is a "model" of excellence. It serves as a collection of techniques taken from excellence communicators. In reality there is only one true NLP technique; modeling. It allows you to be come fully conscious of your unconscious behavior and move through life with intent.
What anchoring? What nlp? This is called voice impression and comedians do it to make people laugh. No other purpose. Just to get a laugh out of the audience not something else. And they wait for the audience to give a sign to make it more enjoyable not to anchor anything into them. You're exaggerating the explanatory powers of super-woo-woo nlp.
If you look carefully at any two people in conversation you will be able to find multiple anchors being set, every person converses with the purpose of influencing the other person/s involved..the only difference between general conversation and NLP is that in NLP we set out to set intentional anchors. To be human IS to ANCHOR, to entertain is to deliberately ANCHOR.
Anchoring in NLP terms refers to the process of how two or more stimulus are linked together in the mind so that the presence of one stimulus causes the other to occur. Depending on your age and location if I say have you ever seen the US TV show "Happy Days" you may think of the Fonz, If I say "Homer Simpson" you may get a picture of a yellow overweight character etc.
@ioanonissimo you may have in the past wondered why are such beautiful women doing such nasty and kinky things on film with so much enthusiasm, and where can you find them? if you said that to me, i would tell you that you pass by them everyday. the porn industry is based on trauma based mind control (look it up) and it's the bases of MPD (mulitple personality disorder) each personality is "anchored" by a certain word, phrase or action. the male performer is hypnotist or magician!
sandler and rock are just good showman with an inherent flare for comedy; they don't plan out their moves and think about anchoring; they just know how to make people laugh
anchoring is actually b.f. skinner's stimulus-response model in different terms; any stimulus will cause a response and make us, over time, associate the stimulus with the response sometimes before the stimulus even happens (like smelling popcorn and hearing people talking before a movie starts; antecedents, maybe?)
NLP differs on the stimulus-response part which comes from the behavioral conditioning worldview, which is the idea of ring bell/present food -> dog salivate, ring bell/present food -> dog salivate, eventually ring bell/no food -> dog salivate.
An anchor can be a 1 time learning experiences and require no conditioning if the learning experience is powerful enough and for one reason or another overwhelms the nervous/sensory experience. Most obvious example of this is a phobia.
I agree, they didn't "consciously" go out and say "hey I'm going to do this, this and this, and then "set" this anchor.
Of course not. However the function of an anchor was established. The listeners brains got "wired up" to the idea that when Adam says this a state of humour etc. is evoked...
all is crap christ does it because he is a funny guy he is not anchoring shit he is just being funny and that implies everything voice gestures the joke itself this anchoring shit would take a lot from the comedian if he does intentionally expecting a laugh from the audience good comedians do not expect anything from audiencies they just fell funny
chris maybe doing it at a subconcious level he does it with out himself knowing
he is doing, how many times do u blink in one minute? you blink with out yourself knowing you are blinkn chris ancors with out himself knowing he ancors
right but the idiot that presents this video is implying that christ is doing it like he is trying to manipulate audiences this shit of anchoring is not bad nor good is the intention behind it that make it nasty l
No, the comedian doesn't necessarily know what anchoring is or isn't, but what his goal is, is to make the audience laugh, because that's his job. In order to do that, he has to control how the audience feels, and compel them to feel the way he wants them to feel as he tells a story. To (some) comedians this ability is natural, but to the average person, it is a learned process known as NLP, in other words, there is a technical name for inducing emotions in people that you want them to feel.
great comedians do not expect anything from audiences they are self involve with their own approval at personal level if you expect to get the aproval from anyone in everything u do u going to end up being a mediocre person almost lesser human being
In the case of seduction, women are emotionally driven moreso than they are visually driven, in other words they are more turned on by how you can make them feel and not necessarily how "hot" you are. In using NLP you can make a girl feel for you in ways she normally wouldn't. You do it by verbal ques and gestures, sometimes touching her physically certain ways as you say certain words. Like comedians, this comes naturally to the seducer. But anyone anyone can learn it. It is called NLP.
this is beautiful, mate. score. great coverge and cliffnotes lol. The Chris rock visual anchor (with the bright smile direct to audience) was VERY distinct, nice spot.
My friends below.......NLP is all about learning how to use what works...........he's describing the process that makes all of this funny in relation to NLP anchors. It does not matter if it was on purpose or if chris rock just naturally projects himself this way, it works.
its correct, thoose examples are anchors, but weak anchors. if he says sandman a few times it will make them happy, but after a while the anchor will be lost. It all depends on how strong you set the anchor to be
Hi Korvlada, this is all unconscious, or should I say "setting the anchor" by Adam would most likely have been totaly unintentional, yet he knew (presumedly) knew it would get a laugh. And of course it is an anchor in that an anchor is nothing more than the process of learning and is how the stuff get's associated and states can get assoicated. If Adam played on the "Sandman" phrase later on he would get a laugh again from the audience.
I always thought that people who cue with their smile before telling the punchline of a joke were being manipulative and obnoxious. Now I know it has a technical term, LOL!
Hi Kronker, thanks for the feedback. Of course this is comedy. Chris Rock is great. And it is also an example of anchoring, I imagine for Adam it was not an intentional one. As for Chris, knowing how to anchor, (to attach states of laugher) to specific phrases or expressions is what any good comedian does. Of course they probably don't call it that. But for those who think anchoring is some difficult thing, this is just showing how it going on all around you - regardless of whether one is aware.
@kronker i can see why you might think that, but consider that there is a science behind doing comedy, and the science is not suppose to be visible to the audience. and almost any professional speaker can be compared to a magician because of the magical way they use words and phrases. having been taught the hidden science communication, gives them courage and confidence to stand before thousands and in some cases millions of people
I think a lot of NLP is instinctive.
2tim149 1 month ago
where the hell are my 20 videos you kaks?
geoff1424 3 months ago
Hi @geoff1424,
you can get access here at the nlptimes.com homepage, there is a black graphic that says "enjoy 20 free videos here"
NLPTimes 3 months ago
I think comedians pause because of chunking, not NLP. It's easier to memorize & perform a routine by dividing it into lines and then speaking them in a rhythm. Pausing between is necessary for breathing and swallowing, and he places these pauses between lines, dividing the chunks so they are easier to memorize. By smiling or inflecting every pause, he decorates the pause. That way it doesn't sound scripted & we don't catch him swallowing.
qwexas 7 months ago
When I watch stand-up comedy, sometimes I hear the crowd laugh and I think, "there was nothing funny; they laugh every time the comedian pauses". Sometimes I think the whole set was boring. Some, like Chris Rock, I think are funny, but I only laugh when he says something I find funny, not every time he pauses or smiles or does a voice inflection. What does this mean regarding me?
qwexas 7 months ago
exactly, its just a form of mastery.. after being an actor in the comedy industry for over 10 years you develop a finger tip feel for what really works, it's natural. It's not so hard to work out
Inflowify 1 year ago
Darren Brown, one of the people whose work is analysed as NLP by you on YouTube, says when talking about NLP in his book Tricks of the mind;
"because it aims to take as its starting point what already works, there is little in its roots that is unique. One of the many irritating habits of NLPers is to claim anything remotely concerned with looking consciously at ones inner processes as NLP."
Is this an everyday unconscious process or is it NLP?
I think you can over analyse simple actions.
JohnboyLea 1 year ago
Hey JohnboyLea, its an everyday process. People get all bent out of shape saying something is or is not NLP... which for the most part is crazy because NLP is not a thing, it doesn't exist. It offers an operator/practitioner some very useful models and ways to code how people organize and use their experiences. I can agree with Darren in that some NLP folks forget that the behahviour people are doing is just that and not necessarily "NLP"...
NLPTimes 1 year ago
@JohnboyLea It seems both you and Derren Brown have both missed the key point of NLP. NLP is a "model" of excellence. It serves as a collection of techniques taken from excellence communicators. In reality there is only one true NLP technique; modeling. It allows you to be come fully conscious of your unconscious behavior and move through life with intent.
MrNobody100m 5 months ago
What anchoring? What nlp? This is called voice impression and comedians do it to make people laugh. No other purpose. Just to get a laugh out of the audience not something else. And they wait for the audience to give a sign to make it more enjoyable not to anchor anything into them. You're exaggerating the explanatory powers of super-woo-woo nlp.
juditK2007 1 year ago
If you look carefully at any two people in conversation you will be able to find multiple anchors being set, every person converses with the purpose of influencing the other person/s involved..the only difference between general conversation and NLP is that in NLP we set out to set intentional anchors. To be human IS to ANCHOR, to entertain is to deliberately ANCHOR.
HypnoLynne 1 year ago
Totally agree.
NLPTimes 1 year ago
@NLPTimes can you please explain to me what anchors are??
im new with nlp .
cheers
ioanonissimo 1 year ago
Hi ioanonissimo,
Anchoring in NLP terms refers to the process of how two or more stimulus are linked together in the mind so that the presence of one stimulus causes the other to occur. Depending on your age and location if I say have you ever seen the US TV show "Happy Days" you may think of the Fonz, If I say "Homer Simpson" you may get a picture of a yellow overweight character etc.
NLPTimes 1 year ago
@ioanonissimo a good place for you to begin is in the porno industry.
MrScottydabody 1 year ago
@MrScottydabody really what makes you say that??
ioanonissimo 1 year ago
@ioanonissimo you may have in the past wondered why are such beautiful women doing such nasty and kinky things on film with so much enthusiasm, and where can you find them? if you said that to me, i would tell you that you pass by them everyday. the porn industry is based on trauma based mind control (look it up) and it's the bases of MPD (mulitple personality disorder) each personality is "anchored" by a certain word, phrase or action. the male performer is hypnotist or magician!
MrScottydabody 1 year ago
nice breakdown
joesimmons90 1 year ago
sandler and rock are just good showman with an inherent flare for comedy; they don't plan out their moves and think about anchoring; they just know how to make people laugh
anchoring is actually b.f. skinner's stimulus-response model in different terms; any stimulus will cause a response and make us, over time, associate the stimulus with the response sometimes before the stimulus even happens (like smelling popcorn and hearing people talking before a movie starts; antecedents, maybe?)
nefasest 2 years ago
Hi nefasest,
NLP differs on the stimulus-response part which comes from the behavioral conditioning worldview, which is the idea of ring bell/present food -> dog salivate, ring bell/present food -> dog salivate, eventually ring bell/no food -> dog salivate.
An anchor can be a 1 time learning experiences and require no conditioning if the learning experience is powerful enough and for one reason or another overwhelms the nervous/sensory experience. Most obvious example of this is a phobia.
NLPTimes 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
i don't think they did it on purpose
SIEMDUNK 2 years ago
i don't think they did it on purpose
cypress1337 2 years ago 3
I agree, they didn't "consciously" go out and say "hey I'm going to do this, this and this, and then "set" this anchor.
Of course not. However the function of an anchor was established. The listeners brains got "wired up" to the idea that when Adam says this a state of humour etc. is evoked...
NLPTimes 1 year ago
wtf is anchoring? someone please explain this to me...
James25H 2 years ago
all is crap christ does it because he is a funny guy he is not anchoring shit he is just being funny and that implies everything voice gestures the joke itself this anchoring shit would take a lot from the comedian if he does intentionally expecting a laugh from the audience good comedians do not expect anything from audiencies they just fell funny
SuperAlexrios 2 years ago
personally he is so funny as however
chris maybe doing it at a subconcious level he does it with out himself knowing
he is doing, how many times do u blink in one minute? you blink with out yourself knowing you are blinkn chris ancors with out himself knowing he ancors
maoriboy2010 2 years ago
right but the idiot that presents this video is implying that christ is doing it like he is trying to manipulate audiences this shit of anchoring is not bad nor good is the intention behind it that make it nasty l
SuperAlexrios 2 years ago
No, the comedian doesn't necessarily know what anchoring is or isn't, but what his goal is, is to make the audience laugh, because that's his job. In order to do that, he has to control how the audience feels, and compel them to feel the way he wants them to feel as he tells a story. To (some) comedians this ability is natural, but to the average person, it is a learned process known as NLP, in other words, there is a technical name for inducing emotions in people that you want them to feel.
rgvhen 2 years ago
great comedians do not expect anything from audiences they are self involve with their own approval at personal level if you expect to get the aproval from anyone in everything u do u going to end up being a mediocre person almost lesser human being
SuperAlexrios 2 years ago
@SuperAlexrios lol he's sub-consciously anchoring, you idiot
everyone does it sub-consciously, you just gotta be intelligent enough to realize that, bro
Mu5clehead 2 years ago
In the case of seduction, women are emotionally driven moreso than they are visually driven, in other words they are more turned on by how you can make them feel and not necessarily how "hot" you are. In using NLP you can make a girl feel for you in ways she normally wouldn't. You do it by verbal ques and gestures, sometimes touching her physically certain ways as you say certain words. Like comedians, this comes naturally to the seducer. But anyone anyone can learn it. It is called NLP.
rgvhen 2 years ago
wow its exactly the same as milking it.
skippto 2 years ago
this is beautiful, mate. score. great coverge and cliffnotes lol. The Chris rock visual anchor (with the bright smile direct to audience) was VERY distinct, nice spot.
johntkucz 3 years ago
My friends below.......NLP is all about learning how to use what works...........he's describing the process that makes all of this funny in relation to NLP anchors. It does not matter if it was on purpose or if chris rock just naturally projects himself this way, it works.
RobBobMarley 3 years ago
its correct, thoose examples are anchors, but weak anchors. if he says sandman a few times it will make them happy, but after a while the anchor will be lost. It all depends on how strong you set the anchor to be
rygrystaldrigrist 3 years ago
Hi Korvlada, this is all unconscious, or should I say "setting the anchor" by Adam would most likely have been totaly unintentional, yet he knew (presumedly) knew it would get a laugh. And of course it is an anchor in that an anchor is nothing more than the process of learning and is how the stuff get's associated and states can get assoicated. If Adam played on the "Sandman" phrase later on he would get a laugh again from the audience.
NLPTimes 3 years ago
I thought adams joke (if you can call it that) was not funny at all. why was i unaffected by this anchor?
If i said ten funny things in a row using a anchor then i said i like to rape people would people still laugh?
mythros1 2 years ago
Well that made me laugh. And you didnt even say the ten funny things prior to that.
Genius ;o)
Tbaldwin1971 2 years ago
I always thought that people who cue with their smile before telling the punchline of a joke were being manipulative and obnoxious. Now I know it has a technical term, LOL!
blackberryjuice1 2 years ago
How does the anchor make a person laugh though, i mean an anchor can technically put you into any state right, why is it making people laugh here?
ShaolinHero1 2 years ago
Im pretty sure thats not anchoring but just comedy.
kronker 3 years ago 12
Hi Kronker, thanks for the feedback. Of course this is comedy. Chris Rock is great. And it is also an example of anchoring, I imagine for Adam it was not an intentional one. As for Chris, knowing how to anchor, (to attach states of laugher) to specific phrases or expressions is what any good comedian does. Of course they probably don't call it that. But for those who think anchoring is some difficult thing, this is just showing how it going on all around you - regardless of whether one is aware.
NLPTimes 3 years ago
@kronker i can see why you might think that, but consider that there is a science behind doing comedy, and the science is not suppose to be visible to the audience. and almost any professional speaker can be compared to a magician because of the magical way they use words and phrases. having been taught the hidden science communication, gives them courage and confidence to stand before thousands and in some cases millions of people
MrScottydabody 1 year ago
great video, but does adam sandler learnt this or is it unconscious?
korvlada 3 years ago