Tom H:
Great sample size. I don't doubt that the masses know very little. Like I said before there were tons of people who went to see "Jackass -- the Movie." Does that make them out to be film officianados? If the masses signify success then McDonald's is no doubt high quality cuisine.
My only issue is the nature of what is provided under the pretense of so-called "information." An extremely generalized listing is really nothing more than a cash cow for the people putting out such rubbish.
Clearly, the average "Joe" places some sort of value because of the branding names involved -- i.e. GD, Zagats, etc, etc. The average "Joe" just makes the erroneous assumption that these so-called sources really do know what type of golf is indeed available. Of course, these sources don't do any homework -- they simply gather input fromt he masses, tally it up and then "waaaalaaaa" -- you have some sort of "quality" listing. How conveniently easy and cost efficient!
I know years ago I used to place stock in the same sort of things from advertorial type "reviews." Mike Cirba highlighted the issue quite clearly -- there's a desire to use these information source books as a general revenue machine for the parent companies.
It's gotten to the point that the awarding of stars is simply laughable -- you hardly ever see any real critical analysis. Minus the very top courses which most agree with (i.e. Pebble Beach, Pinehurst #2, Pacific Dunes, Bethpage / Black, etc, etc.) the bulk of the rest of the reviews is quotes from people concentrating on the esoteric and bizarre. I never knew how important it was for people when playing to have a frozen Snickers bar or how the range balls are stacked on the practice tee!
In today's information age I am quite sure many people who are truly interested can get independent information, but it seems more and more difficult given the desire to do the "lite" approach in course reviews.