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Paperback Latitudes & Attitudes: An Atlas of American Tastes, Trends, Politics, and Passions: From Abilene, Texas to Zanesville, Ohio Book

ISBN: 0316929085

ISBN13: 9780316929080

Latitudes & Attitudes: An Atlas of American Tastes, Trends, Politics, and Passions: From Abilene, Texas to Zanesville, Ohio

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Book Overview

Where bagels are king, Twinkies don't flourish. And Alaskans buy fewer home pregnancy tests, but they're better-than-average book purchasers. What's it mean? With this remarkable atlas of marketing... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Time and Place for Everything - How about a Sequel?

I've had this book for over ten years and still flip through it. When I recently moved, it now sits on the coffee table for anyone of interest. Especially after living in different parts of the country it makes it even more interesting. Are you curious if that new city you're considering has many people your age? Or maybe you want to know if it's too liberal or there's no demand for coffee or pizza by the locals. It's in there. Where do they eat donuts and enjoy woodcrafting? Is the town 100 miles away from there the opposite - with expensive wine and international travel the popular hobbies? My only suggestions are as follows: 1. How about a latest edition (of course, some of the subjects can change too if need be)? 2. See above.

Eye-Opening

This book is a survey of American marketing surveys. Through its detailed maps, we can see associations between products and behaviors, attitudes, and income. The book has two major sections. The first half is comprised of maps showing us such information as the regions in which baking from scratch is popular and the regions where it is not, or juxtapositions of the regions where heavy metal music is preferred as opposed to where gospel music rules. The maps are drawn not on a state-wide scale, but rather using the more detailed ADIs (Arbitron's Areas of Dominant Influence), which divide up the US into some 211 markets. Underneath each map is a short article describing the topic in more detail, and mentioning other related correlations. The maps are organized by topic, including chapters on food, drink, leisure activities, home, health, sports, cars, television, music, periodicals, and politics. The second half of the book takes up each ADI in turn from Abilene-Sweetwater, Texas to Zanesville, Ohio, providing a short description of the market including total population, median income, median house price, median education level, primary age groups, major employment options, a list of hot and not-hot topics (such as car brands, TV shows, magazines, foods, and political views) as well as a one-paragraph overview of the community. At the very end of the book are charts reviewing the information from the maps in graphical form. There is no index. The book is filled with amazing bits of information, some predictable, and others quite surprising. For example, we learn that pro-lifers also tend to be staunch supports of the death penalty. Filmgoers tend to be more highbrow than video renters, since filmgoers also attend plays, concerts, and art openings at above average rates, while video renters have less money, more kids, and typically watch more than seven hours of TV every weekday. We can see a huge cluster of National Enquirer readers in the Southeast, while the Simpsons are popular on the West Coast. Weiss doesn't provide us with maps of educational attainment or income levels. But in the text, he manages to slip in some eyebrow-raising details, such as "Southerners...have low rates of mobility and college attendance," the appeal of both Donahue and Oprah in the South is "understandable, given the region's dubious distinction as having the lowest high school completion rate in the nation." We can see how the relative burden of housing costs varies across the nation, with houses in Davenport, Iowa going for only 1.6 times local salaries, while houses in Santa Barbara cost 6.4 times local salaries. Presenting this information in book form brings with it certain technical limitations. In the interests of clarity, Weiss never juxtaposes more than 2 sets of survey results at once. However, in flipping from page to page, repeated patterns begin to emerge, and the reader will probably wish the book could have been printed with loose tra

Amusing AND Useful!

This is a fun book, great entertainment (I was laughing like crazy when I was looking through it at the bookstore). The main reason I bought it was because my husband and I plan to move within the year, and I thought the book would be a good resource for helping us choose where to live--it is!The book uses the 213 American consumer markets--the way the market research folks have sectioned off the country by consumer trends. For example, there's Northern Maine, Central Maine, Southern Maine/Vermont, about 12 sections in Calfornia, New Mexico is all one, and about 10 in Florida.The first half of the book is maps with the sections color coded as to inhabitants' preferences for things like: fresh croissants vs. white bread, bagels, twinkies, books vs. tv, owners of power tools, owners of personal computers, cats, dogs, different kinds of cars, political leanings, what they watch on tv, what kind of car they drive, et cetera. There are 87 maps and 11 categories (eg Food, Sports, Cars, Television). Each map includes a commentary so we can learn why exactly snack nuts are much more popular north of the Mason-Dixon line and The Simpsons are more popular in the West.The second half of the book highlights each of the 213 sections (half a page for each), telling what's hot and what's not, along with commentary on the general mood of the place,and statistics about socioeconomic makeup, median income and house price.The consumer market designated as Seattle-Tacoma, Washington (actually most of the Western half of the state), is described (in part) thusly: "Locals have the money to enjoy the 'good life': traveling abroad, enjoying gourmet cuisine--especially espresso from numerous coffee bars--and investing in stock, bonds, and real estate at some of the highest rates in the nation."For Bangor, Maine (which includes the central portion of the state), the author says, "The sterotypical New Englander--aloof, curt, idiosyncratic--is what you'll find in Bangor. Many are independent-minded professionals, retirees, and assorted blue-collar workers who keep to themselves."The book also serves as a kind of armchair traveler--or a guidebook in knowing what to expect of the natives when traveling through the U.S. All in all, LATITUDES AND ATTITUDES is an entertaining way to learn more about the people of America--or to help choose a new place to live!(and yes, we are now very happy in our new home state of Oregon :)Kimberly Borrowdale - Under the Covers Book Reviews

Loved it!

Great info. A fun and creative way to look at market profiles. Only problem is that an update is needed as my copy was published in 1994, pre-Internet, etc.

Why a book so good can be out of print so soon?

Michael Weiss's earlier book, The Clustering of America, was a very enlighting look on the social settings of America. It was tops, but he even did one better with LATITUDES & ATTITUDES. I have walls covered with books but this is one of the most coveted books of my guests once they open it. It is a reference book that you return to over and over. Bless Michael and all his loved ones!
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