Serving size: 39 min | 5,858 words
Shapes your opinion before you notice — charged words bypass critical thinking.
Makes you lower your guard — false authority and manufactured kinship bypass skepticism.
Controls what conclusions feel obvious — you only see the story they want you to see.
Hijacks your habits — open loops, rage bait, and identity binding make stopping feel impossible.
32 influence techniques analyzed by XrÆ
This episode of The Andrew Klavan Show uses 34 influence techniques across approximately 39 minutes. The most prominent patterns are Loaded Language and Framing. None of this means the content is wrong — but knowing these patterns helps you listen more critically.
“Candy asses like Quentin Tarantino from getting killed in neighborhoods he wouldn't even dare to go into, right?”
Links Tarantino's identity as a privileged, out-of-touch person to the claim that he benefits from police protection without deserving it, using social-mobility shame to dismiss him.
“Candy asses like Quentin Tarantino”
Emotionally charged, derisive descriptor where a neutral alternative (e.g., 'people like Quentin Tarantino') exists.
“It just seems strange to me, and I really think that the importance that the media has managed to give this and the left have managed to give it is part of this war on reality.”
Establishes a suppression/war-on-reality narrative template that predetermines how transgender bathroom debates should be interpreted — as manufactured distractions rather than genuine policy issues.
XrÆ detected 31 additional additives in this episode.
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Return ValueThis tool detects influence techniques in presentation, not errors in content. Awareness is the goal.
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