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Howard Lutnick

4 appearances · 1 as guest · 10 topics

Influence Direction (across 4 analyzed appearances)

Avg Intensity

Moderate 54%

Avg Transparency

Transparent 85%

Top Technique

Appeal to authority

Technique Profile

Direct Appeal 4x Single-cause Framing 4x Curiosity Gap 3x In-group/out-group Framing 3x Moral Outrage 3x Association 2x Character Flattening 2x Generalization 2x Pathos 2x Us Vs. Them 2x Appeal To Authority 1x Confirmation Appeal 1x Intensity Amplification 1x Loaded Language 1x Strategic Ambiguity 1x

Persuasion Dimensions

Story Shaping
55%
Implicit Claims
48%
Group Characterization
48%
Emotional Appeal
45%
Engagement Mechanics
23%
Call to Action
15%

Topics

jeffrey epstein artificial intelligence blockchain chips act davos davos wef de dollarization department of commerce department of justice designated survivor

Narrative Themes

The content aims to provide a platform for a survivor's testimony while reinforcing a specific 'deep state' or systemic cover-up narrative regarding the Epstein case.

"Satanic!" - Epstein Survivor TELLS ALL on Epstein Island & Disturbing Links | Lisa Phillips • 394

To portray Trump's cabinet as scandal-ridden and incompetent, reinforcing viewer opposition to his administration—stated purpose aligns with the show's known partisan commentary identity.

Maddow: Trump Cabinet too rife with scandal to designate a 'survivor'

This content wants you to align with the hosts' pro-Trump, pro-business worldview by framing global events as validations of US dominance and criticisms of European policies, aligning stated current events discussion with their overt ideological advocacy.

ICE Chaos in Minneapolis, Clawdbot Takeover, Why the Dollar is Dropping

To promote the Trump administration's economic policies and Commerce Department achievements as unqualified successes, aligning the audience's view with the guest's perspective.

Howard Lutnick: How America Can Hit 6% GDP Growth in 2026
Viewer Guidance (3 tips)

Consider alternative frames

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

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 group characterization

People or groups are reduced to types. Consider whether the characterization serves the argument more than the truth.

Questions to Ask Yourself (1)

Whose perspective is missing here, and would the story change if they were included?

Story Shaping — 55%

Appearances

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