Serving size: 34 min | 5,155 words
Shapes your opinion before you notice — charged words bypass critical thinking.
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
If you listened to the BBC's Global News Podcast episode on Iran and the Benin Bronzes, you might have noticed how the framing and word choices shape what feels important. The episode opens with a dramatic claim about being "on the ground in Tehran for the first time since the regime's brutal crackdown," which sets an emotional tone before any analysis begins. The word "brutal" is a strong editorial choice that primes the audience to interpret the situation through a specific lens. Later, when describing an app as "a surveillance tool," this loaded language frames the product in maximally negative terms, nudging the listener toward a particular conclusion before they hear more details. The juxtaposition of topics — from Iran's political tensions to Nigeria's cultural repatriation — creates a curated narrative arc that guides interpretation. A casual listener might not notice that the show's framing and word choices do persuasive work, shaping what feels urgent or alarming. Regular listeners should watch for how emotionally charged language and topic pairing can direct interpretation beyond what the facts alone convey. The practical takeaway? Pay attention to the framing words ("brutal," "surveillance tool") and how stories are sequenced — these are the cues that help you read between the lines of what the hosts are choosing to emphasize.
“As Iran marks the anniversary of its Islamic revolution, we're on the ground in Tehran for the first time since the regime's brutal crackdown on anti-government protesters.”
Teases a rare-access story with emotionally charged framing ('first time', 'brutal crackdown') then defers the substantive report to later in the episode, creating an open loop that retains the listener.
“a very small community. It's about 1,000 kilometres north of Vancouver, near the border with Alberta.”
In a report about a mass shooting, the casual geographic detail minimizes the scale and severity of the event by shifting focus to the community's size and remoteness, obscuring the gravity of the incident.
“And it's not a messenger. It's a surveillance tool. And they recommended to transfer, for example, domestic chats or school chats into Max.”
Frames the government app exclusively through its surveillance dimension, presenting the characterization as a factual assertion rather than a perspective, while omitting any functional or legitimate aspects.
XrÆ detected 4 additional additives in this episode.
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