Viral video breakdown

Using ChatGPT to write content is bad.

Summary

The creator rapidly contrasts 'bad, good, excellent' content habits across tools, scripting, posting frequency, niching, filming style, and hooks, ending with a CTA to follow him for social growth tips.

At a glance

Who it’s for

short-form content creators and online coaches wanting to grow faster on social media

Best fit: Startups

Where it fits

Top of funnel

Awareness. Reaches viewers who don’t know you yet.

How it’s built

listicle

A numbered or rapid-fire run through distinct points or tips.

myth-bustingtalking headcontroversial

The hook

Using ChatGPT to write content is bad.

Make it yours: the reusable formula

Using [common, popular tool/approach] to [achieve outcome] is bad.

Swap the highlighted parts for your own niche.

The re-hook

Using Claude is good, but using Manus AI is excellent.

Escalates the initial controversy into a bad–good–excellent ladder that sets up the repeating structure for the rest of the video.

Hot take

Using ChatGPT to write content is bad.

Why it works

The video works because it weaponizes a simple, rhythmic 'bad, good, excellent' framework that makes each point feel punchy and easy to remember. Opening by attacking a beloved tool (ChatGPT) triggers curiosity and defensiveness, pulling creators in to hear the rest of the hierarchy. Each line speaks directly to common creator behaviors (posting cadence, niching, scripting, hooks), so viewers constantly self-assess where they fall on the ladder. The final beat ties the pattern to a clear CTA, positioning the creator as the guide to reach 'excellent' in all these areas.

Swipe-file takeaways

  • Use a repeating comparison structure (e.g. bad vs good vs excellent) so viewers can instantly track progress and stay hooked.
  • Lead with a spicy verdict on a popular tool or behavior to create immediate tension and curiosity.
  • Touch multiple pain points within one niche (tools, scripting, posting, niching, production, hooks) to maximize relatability in under a minute.
  • Escalate from basic to advanced behaviors so viewers feel both called out and aspirational, then bridge that to a follow CTA.
  • Name specific tools or formats (e.g. Manus AI, training format, 3–6 posts/day) to make the advice feel concrete rather than generic.

Full script

Using ChatGPT to write content is bad. Using Claude is good, but using Manus AI is excellent. Scripting your own videos from scratch is bad. Scripting your videos with AI prompts is good, but using hooks and templates from already viral videos is excellent. Posting once a week is bad. Posting once a day is good. Posting three to six times a day is excellent. Creating content for everyone is bad. Creating content for a specific group is good. Creating content from one ideal avatar is excellent. Filming selfie videos is bad. Filming with cuts on screen and graphics every three seconds is good. Filming in a training format is excellent. Using verbal hooks is bad. Using verbal and written hooks is good, but using verbal, written, and visual is excellent. Plagiarizing other people is bad. You know who you are. Following top accounts and recreating viral ideas in your own spin is good. Following at TheRealBrianMarx so you can learn how to grow on social media is excellent.

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