@recklesskelly When did I claim to be to a marketer or businessman? My role in audio is as a consumer. But I agree with your depiction of Mark as a marketer. Being successful in this industry takes great marketing. Engineers can design a circuit that will deliver 500 watts with less then .5% distortion but its marketing that makes it "warm" or "bloom" or have "air". Well marketers, critics, and a whole lot of golden eared internet fanboys.
The fact remains none of these guys blind test. I have alot more respect for the wine industry. To be a master of wine you have to correctly identify regions, varietals and vintages purely on taste. Fewer then 500 have passed the exam since its inception in 1953. Thats less then the number of people that summit Everest every year. The truth is we have a natural tendency to overstate our own skills, and don't like to admit how much psychology and social cues play into our opinion. It would be cool if they had audio testing standards based on listening skills, but then we'd probably end up concluding that most of this stuff sounds the same no matter how much we'd like to justify price with performance.
Mark's observations are his own subjective opinions. His previous experience founding an audio company and now running a division at Harmon havent given him some ungodly perceptive skills. If anything those skills are worse now then when he was younger. The guy put a big amp in a pretty box. His most impressive accomplishment imo was keeping Kim Kottrall happy for a few years.