"Forget it, Louis, no Civil War picture ever made a nickel." -- Irving Thalberg's warning to Louis B. Mayer regarding "Gone With the Wind"
"We don't like their sound. Groups of guitars are on the way out." -- Decca Recording Company executive, turning down the Beatles, 1962
"With over 50 foreign cars already on sale here, the Japanese auto industry isn't likely to carve out a big share of the market for itself." -- "Business Week," 1968
"There is no reason for any individual to have a computer in their home." -- President of Digital Equipment Corporation, 1977
"Bill Clinton will lose to any Republican who doesn't drool on stage." -- "The Wall Street Journal," in a 1995 editorial
"The Experts Speak" systematically catalogues, footnotes, and sets straight these and a couple of thousand other examples of expert misunderstanding, miscalculation, egregious prognostication, boo-boos, and just plain lies. The experts have been wrong about everything under, including, and beyond the sun: time, space, the sexes, the races, the environment, economics, politics, crime, education, the media, history, and science. In this expanded and updated edition (now more error-filled than ever), we see just how much the experts don't know. But the book also goes deeper, presenting a through-the-looking-glass chronicle of human knowledge: the story of what was and is so, as seen through the story of what we wanted to and did believe.