Serving size: 42 min | 6,258 words
Makes flawed arguments feel convincing — you accept conclusions without noticing the gaps.
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
You just heard a podcast episode that packed a lot of news into a short span — from the Epstein case to a cancer diagnosis to a shipping tool endorsement. The hosts used emotionally charged language like "horrendous details" and "horrendous place" to describe a prison, amplifying the emotional weight of the story beyond what a neutral description would convey. You also heard a direct appeal to trust with the line, "This is the place where we bring you just the facts," framing the show as uniquely factual while surrounding it with editorial choices and a commercial break. The faulty reasoning stood out too. A claim that a prison official was placed there by David Ellison because of his Trump ties was presented as established fact without supporting evidence. Meanwhile, a shipping tool ad used the claim of "1 billion businesses" trusting it — a huge, unverifiable figure — to leverage crowd mentality. And a teaser like "we'll have more on that in a bit" keeps you listening through ads to get the promised details. Here’s what to watch for next time: when emotional language does the describing, when a sweeping claim substitutes for evidence, and when deferred reveals function as a retention hook. The goal isn't to stop trusting your favorite hosts, but to build a clear sense of what editorial choices are being made and where your attention is being directed.
“that is why more than 1 billion businesses out there trust ShipStation to handle their fulfillment”
Invokes a massive claimed number of businesses ('1 billion') as social proof to pressure trust in the product.
“she was put there by David Ellison, who's close to the President Trump and his dad and close to President Trump”
Introduces Ellison's political connections as the framing lens for Weiss's appointment, materially biasing interpretation toward a political appointment rather than editorial merit, without evidence of the claim's evidentiary support.
“This is the place where we bring you just the facts.”
Presents the show's identity as delivering 'just the facts,' a trust-signaling posture that frames all subsequent content as objective when the claim cannot be verified from the transcript alone.
XrÆ detected 13 additional additives in this episode.
If you got value from this, please return value to OrgnIQ.
OrgnIQ is free for everyone. Contributions of any amount keep it that way.
Return ValueThis tool detects influence techniques in presentation, not errors in content. Awareness is the goal.
Powered by XrÆ 6.14
Purpose-built AI for influence technique detection