I have a vague recollection of a Phil Donahue show with Wayne Dyer and other pop psychologists discussing listening as the key to success in life.
Eberhard and Phyllis Kronhausen, whom Mr. Kendrick puts down as pop psychologists, at least point in the right direction.
As for the title - The Journey - it's a phrase more commonly used by pop psychologists or reality TV contestants than by historically significant leaders of men.
I'd hate to think you were someone with a bit of that Messiah complex the pop psychologists are always on about.
In Jane's Addiction, the fury is connected to primal traumas; Mr. Farrell has (as a pop psychologist might put it) held on to his inner child.
"Be Sweet" is a kind of memoir tracing Mr. Blount's humoristic origins in what the pop psychologists call a dysfunctional family.
I have heard pop psychologists inveigh against them for years.
Also listed among the dead is noted pop psychologist and lecturer Dr. Adam Wexler, author of the bestselling Sharing, Caring, and Swearing.
The lawyer, mistaking him for a pop psychologist, tries to edge him out the door.
A pop psychologist might translate the story into a fable called "Women Who Rob Banks and the Society That Hates Them."