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Sleeve No Card Behind

@sleevenocardbehind · 75.5K subscribers · 148 videos · 3 analyzed

My mission is to create a video encyclopedia for Pokémon cards.

Share Influence Report

Communication Profile (across 3 videos)

Stated Purpose

My mission is to create a video encyclopedia for Pokémon cards.

Operative Pattern

Across 3 videos, this channel demonstrates low persuasion intensity, primarily through Performed Authenticity. Recurring themes suggest consistent operative goals beyond stated content.

Avg Intensity

Low 30%

Avg Transparency

Transparent 80%

Top Technique

Performed authenticity

The deliberate construction of "realness" — confessional tone, casual filming, strategic vulnerability — designed to lower your guard. When someone appears unpolished and honest, you evaluate their claims less critically. The spontaneity is rehearsed.

Goffman's dramaturgy (1959); Audrezet et al. (2020) on performed authenticity

Persuasion Dimensions

Implicit Claims
43%
Emotional Appeal
33%
Story Shaping
33%
Call to Action
27%
Engagement Mechanics
20%
Group Characterization
3%
Uses AI to group individual video agendas into recurring patterns
Viewer Guidance (3 tips)

Question unstated assumptions

Arguments rely on assumptions treated as obvious. Ask what you'd need to already believe for the claims to land.

Watch for emotional framing

This content frequently uses emotional appeal. Notice when feelings are being prioritized over evidence.

Consider alternative frames

Information is consistently shaped from one angle. Seek out how other sources present the same facts.

Technique Fingerprint (from knowledge graph)

Performed authenticity

AI detected as: Manufactured Authenticity

The deliberate construction of "realness" — confessional tone, casual filming, strategic vulnerability — designed to lower your guard. When someone appears unpolished and honest, you evaluate their claims less critically. The spontaneity is rehearsed.

Goffman's dramaturgy (1959); Audrezet et al. (2020) on performed authenticity

Social proof

Presenting the popularity or consensus of an opinion as evidence that it's correct. When you see many others have endorsed something, it feels safer to follow. This shortcut can be manufactured — fake reviews, inflated counts, and cherry-picked polls all simulate consensus.

Cialdini's Social Proof principle (1984); Asch conformity experiments (1951)

Performed authenticity

The deliberate construction of "realness" — confessional tone, casual filming, strategic vulnerability — designed to lower your guard. When someone appears unpolished and honest, you evaluate their claims less critically. The spontaneity is rehearsed.

Goffman's dramaturgy (1959); Audrezet et al. (2020) on performed authenticity

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© 2026 GrayBeam Technology Privacy v0.1.0 · ac93850 · 2026-04-03 22:43 UTC