Modern Creator
Kallaway · YouTube

I Studied 100 Viral Hooks, These 6 Will Make You Go Viral

A 22-minute breakdown of the six hook archetypes behind virtually every viral video — plus the five-step framework for writing them and two live teardowns showing exactly where comprehension wins or loses.

Posted
1 years ago
Duration
Format
Tutorial
educational
Views
298.5K
15.2K likes
Big Idea

The argument in one line.

Every viral hook works by creating contrast between what the viewer currently believes and what you're about to show them — and maximizing that contrast, while maintaining full visual-audio-visual alignment, is the only variable that separates 500 views from 500,000.

Who This Is For

Read if. Skip if.

READ IF YOU ARE…
  • A short-form creator or business owner who has been making videos for at least a few months and wonders why some get traction and others don't.
  • Someone who has tried writing hooks before but finds it feels random — sometimes they work, often they don't.
  • A marketer or founder posting on LinkedIn, Instagram, or TikTok who wants a repeatable framework, not just tips.
  • Anyone studying viral content who wants to understand the psychology behind attention, not just copy surface-level tactics.
SKIP IF…
  • You're brand new to video — you'll get more from studying examples before learning the naming conventions.
  • You already have a deep hook practice and are looking for platform-specific advice rather than psychological frameworks.
  • You make long-form YouTube content exclusively and hooks under five seconds aren't part of your format.
TL;DR

The full version, fast.

All viral hooks do one thing: create contrast between what the viewer believes and what you're about to show them. The six archetypes — Fortune Teller, Experimenter, Teacher, Magician, Investigator, Contrarian — are six different ways to build that contrast. The real unlock is that the visual hook comes first, not the words: find your strongest key visual, then pick whichever archetype creates the most contrast against it, and write the spoken hook to match. Hook performance is determined by comprehension — whether the viewer's visual-then-audio-then-visual scan of the first five seconds adds up to a clear, curiosity-triggering signal — not by which archetype you chose.

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Chapters

Where the time goes.

00:0000:39

01 · Cold open + promise

States the thesis — hooks are the 80/20 — and promises a breakdown of the six formats that power all top performers.

00:3901:26

02 · Psychology of hooks: contrast and curiosity loops

Establishes the underlying mechanic: a hook creates a curiosity loop by introducing contrast (viewer believes A, creator shows B). The bigger the distance between A and B, the deeper the hook.

01:2611:33

03 · The 6 hook archetypes

Fortune Teller, Experimenter, Teacher, Magician (with visual pacifier sub-type), Investigator, Contrarian. Each explained with real examples and tactical A-B-C steps. Demonstrates that any topic can be hooked with any archetype — the choice is driven by the key visual available.

11:3316:00

04 · The 4 hook components and the comprehension model

Introduces spoken, visual, text, and audio as the four components that must align. Explains the visual-audio-visual perception sandwich and why eyes dominate. The key visual should be chosen before writing a single word.

16:0018:36

05 · The 5-step Golden Approach to writing hooks

Step-by-step: (1) identify key visual, (2) find highest-contrast angle, (3) write spoken hook, (4) add on-screen text, (5) gut-check comprehension. Start visual, not verbal.

18:3621:56

06 · Two live hook teardowns

Case 1 (15M views, life-sized floor plans): strong key visual, Fortune Teller archetype, full alignment. Case 2 (under 100K, generative world models): abstract text hook, jargon without matching visuals, comprehension loss at every level.

Atomic Insights

Lines worth screenshotting.

  • The human brain processes visual information 10 to 100 times faster than audio, so the visual hook — not the spoken line — is the actual anchor of every hook.
  • Viewers process hooks in a sandwich: visual first, then audio, then back to the visual for confirmation — and your hook must survive all three passes.
  • Comprehension loss, not lack of creativity, is the real reason most hooks fail.
  • Any video topic can be hooked with any of the six archetypes — the archetype is a writing constraint, not a genre assignment.
  • The Magician can stack on top of any other archetype; it's a scroll-stop mechanism, not a standalone hook format.
  • If you don't have a strong key visual, the right answer is often not to make the video at all.
  • The gap between 500 views and 500,000 views is alignment between spoken, visual, text, and audio hook components — not the script itself.
  • The Contrarian hook is the most direct: it states the contrast explicitly rather than hiding it inside a framing device.
  • A visual pacifier — something the subject does passively like stacking cups or applying makeup — holds subconscious attention so the viewer can focus on the main content.
  • The Investigator hook requires no cheeky framing; even a straightforward 'here's a thing nobody knows' creates inherent curiosity because the base case is always ignorance.
  • You can write all six hook versions for a single video idea before choosing the best one — the constraint is the key visual you have, not the topic.
  • A hook that is visually stunning but verbally abstract will still fail because the audio confirmation pass produces comprehension loss.
  • The Fortune Teller works because the human brain is designed to constantly model the future — tapping that instinct requires almost no setup.
  • The difference between the Experimenter and the Teacher is the delivery mode, not the content: peer-to-peer live demo vs. teacher-to-student extracted lesson.
Takeaway

The visual decides the hook, not the other way around.

WHAT TO LEARN

Most creators write the spoken hook first — that's the mistake, because the visual is what viewers process first, fastest, and with the most retention.

  • Hooks work by creating contrast between what the viewer currently believes and what the video will show — the wider the gap, the more attention you capture before a word is spoken.
  • Viewers process video in a visual-then-audio-then-visual sequence, because eyes take in information 10 to 100 times faster than ears; everything in the hook has to survive that three-pass scan.
  • The key visual should be chosen before a single word of the spoken hook is written — your archetype choice and scripting should flow from the strongest visual available, not from the idea alone.
  • If your spoken hook uses abstract language or jargon that has no direct visual confirmation on screen, comprehension breaks at the second visual pass and viewers churn — this is the root cause of most hook failures.
  • Any video topic can be framed through any of the six archetypes; the constraint is which key visual you actually have access to, not which archetype feels right for the subject matter.
  • The Magician archetype functions as a modifier, not a standalone format — it creates an initial scroll-stop moment that can precede any of the other five.
  • If you watch your own hook on mute and the visual alone does not clearly signal what the video is about, the hook will underperform regardless of how well-written the spoken lines are.
  • The right response to a weak key visual is often to not make the video — there are always more ideas, and a video with no strong visual anchor rarely recovers in the hook.
Glossary

Terms worth knowing.

Curiosity loop
The psychological state a hook is designed to create — the viewer becomes curious enough about the topic that they feel compelled to keep watching. Built by introducing contrast between what they currently believe and what the video will show.
Key visual
The single most compelling visual moment available in the first three to five seconds of a video. Choosing the right key visual before writing the spoken hook is the central step in the Golden Approach framework.
Comprehension
The degree to which a viewer actually understands what they're seeing and hearing during the hook. Comprehension loss — when visual and audio signals conflict or abstract terms lack visual confirmation — is the primary cause of hook failure.
Visual pacifier
A passive, rhythmic activity visible in the frame — cup stacking, applying makeup, driving footage — that occupies just enough subconscious attention to prevent viewer churn, freeing cognitive bandwidth for the main spoken content.
Context lean
The first move in a spoken hook: describing exactly what the viewer is looking at in the visual, creating perfect alignment between what is seen and what is said before introducing contrast.
Contrarian snapback
The closing beat of a spoken hook where the creator states their unexpected or forward-looking take — the contrarian element that creates the final contrast jolt and locks the curiosity loop.
Resources Mentioned

Things they pointed at.

Quotables

Lines you could clip.

00:00
The biggest difference between winning and losing on social media is the hook.
Clean thesis statement, zero setup neededTikTok hook↗ Tweet quote
12:36
The difference between five hundred and five hundred thousand views is unlocking max alignment between those four things.
Specific contrast with a memorable number pairIG reel cold open↗ Tweet quote
13:58
It's not what you say, it's the visual. I call this the key visual.
Counterintuitive reversal of common advicenewsletter pull-quote↗ Tweet quote
20:55
If there isn't clarity and alignment, you probably should throw out the video because there's always more ideas that you could make.
Actionable, slightly provocative advice that reframes 'wasted work'IG reel cold open↗ Tweet quote
The Script

Word for word.

metaphoranalogy
00:00The biggest difference between winning and losing on social media is the hook. This is the eighty twenty of video. If you want your videos to perform better, you need to focus on leveling up your hooks.
00:10Now I've studied thousands of videos and it turns out all of the best performers only use six different hook formats. If you know these six, you're set. So in this video, I'm gonna break all that down.
00:20First, we're gonna walk through all six hook formats with examples and then I'm gonna give you a full playbook for how to actually write winning hooks on your own. I guarantee this will be the best video on hooks you ever watch.
00:32And I know this works because I've done billions of views myself using these exact same methods. Alright. Now first, before anything else, we need to understand the psychology behind how hooks work.
00:43This is super important. Hooks are designed for one reason, to create a curiosity loop. Think of it like a rabbit hole in the viewer's brain.
00:51We need to get them curious about the topic that they couldn't dream of doing anything else other than watching our video. Now the best way to create that curiosity loop is with contrast. The viewer starts the video believing one thing and then we introduce an alternative in the hook.
01:05They believe a, we show them b and the distance between a and b is contrast. The bigger the contrast, the more the curiosity and the deeper the hook. It really is as simple as that.
01:15But the hard part is you only have five seconds to make it stick. So each of these six hook formats are specifically designed to create that contrast and build the curiosity loop.
01:26Alright. Now the first hook format is called the fortune teller, and it's all about positioning the present against the future. The creator is using some scenario or question to build curiosity about how the future might change.
01:37So this could mean saying something like, that new microwave is gonna change cooking forever or that little blue light is gonna impact traffic moving forward. Here are a couple other examples of the fortune teller hook in action. We're witnessing one of the largest breakthroughs in marketing.
01:50This is the future of animation. And this fortune teller hook format works super well because the human brain is designed to constantly think about the future. So it's playing into that.
02:00So the tactical steps for using this hook format would be a, establish what the current reality is. B, figure out how the future might change based on the video subject. And c, frame a question or statement teasing that new future as a possibility.
02:14And this format is great for breaking news, product innovations, really anybody that's trying to build authority or interest around knowing the future of some topic. And again, I'm going through all six of these base formats first so we can build that baseline before going deeper tactically into how to actually write the hooks, and I'll go through that in a minute.
02:31Okay. Now the second hook format is called the experimenter, and this one is all about the creator showcasing how something works using a demo or experiment.
02:39And specifically, this is angled as peer to peer. It's one friend showing another what they learned or came across. So the contrast that's being built is coming from, I used to do something this way.
02:49I figured out some method or format. Let me show you how now I'm doing this thing this way. And here are couple examples of the experimenter format in action.
02:57Does anything look weird about this shot to you? I actually don't have a camera in my hands. I'm recording with these glasses on my face.
03:03These are the Ray Ban Meta smart glasses, and they're about to change the way that we create. This right here is the brand new ChatGPT
03:11agent that literally controls your browser
03:15and does tasks for you. And this is an 11 step process, and we're gonna see if it does it. Now I especially love the Colin and Samir one because Samir is actually showing how the glasses work in the hook as well.
03:26He doesn't have to use the hook to tee it up in the future because the glass glasses camera is the subject itself, and that video did 50,000,000 views for a reason. And a lot of mister beast videos fall into this hook category as well. He doesn't always explicitly explain them as experiments, but he's basically doing human experiments and then letting you watch in real time to see what happens.
03:46So the tactical steps for using the experimenter hook framework are to a, establish the base pain point that needs solving, b, show that you solved the pain point or tried some new method or tool with an experiment, and then c, walk through why that new experiment or solve is different and help solve the pain point better.
04:03And this format is great for product demos, new frameworks. It's also great for b to b trying to showcase how your tool or product works.
04:10This is also the same hook framework where those people that make the elaborate outdoor structures, camping or building a log cabin by hand, this is the same format they're using as well. And before we keep going, if you like the way I break this content stuff down using the metaphors and the names to make it a little bit easier, I actually did the exact same thing around virality.
04:27How does virality work? Break it into a formula. You can actually grab that.
04:31It's a free five day email course called the virality blueprint. Explains concepts like this, but in way more depth. You can grab that.
04:38There's a link below or go to viralityblueprint.com and you can sign up. Alright.
04:41Let's keep going. Now the third hook format is called the teacher, and this one is similar to the experimenter except that instead of going peer to peer, it's going more teacher to student. And instead of showing things with a live experiment, it's more showing them by framing a lesson.
04:55So it's kinda like, I'm the teacher of this topic. I just saw somebody who solved x with y method. Let me break that down and explain to you how they did it.
05:03Again, the contrast is coming from you're failing at this thing. I found a new way to do it. Let me explain how to do it so that you can start winning.
05:10And here's a few examples of the teacher format in action. Three things you can learn from Aritzia. Here's how I got this shot.
05:17I made this ecom brand a million dollars in twelve hours using something called the product drop method. And again, these are all teaching setups. So it's either the creator tried something and extracted the lessons and is now teaching it, not live experiment, but teaching the methods, or they studied someone else who solved that thing and then is now teaching those lessons back.
05:36Either way, it's show by teaching. And so the tactical steps for using this one would be a, establish the base pain point, b, show that you have a solve through some set of learnings or method, and then c, walk them through why the process or steps worked because of your solve. And this format is super good for anybody who's trying to build authority in the category or become an expert to then sell that expertise.
05:56Okay. Now the fourth hook framework is a little bit different than the other five. It's called the magician, and it can be used as a precursor or in combination with the rest of them.
06:04Now the magician is basically a stun gun. It's strategically using visuals and or language like, hey, look at that, to visually force the viewer's attention to a specific thing in the visual. And it's usually something outlandish or just rhythmic and visually pops to stop the scroll.
06:19Now there are a ton of amazing examples of people who do this. China. What's up, MTTB crew?
06:27Yo. Check this out. So president Trump just ordered the resurgence of a 19 plan for nuclear war in space.
06:33Let me explain. So this can either be executed with some visual stun tactic like what Karl Shakur uses, the kind of snap click, or it could be the spoken words themselves, like, look at that crazy thing and really forcing the attention. My favorite example of this is the neon sign guy who starts out as Trump with the wig, makes a joke in the voice, and then throws the wig off and immediately starts talking about the neon signs.
06:52I've been using this on my own videos for the last thirty or so where I start all the videos saying check this out really quick, and I roll into the first line with it. Check this out this. Check this out this.
07:02Check this out this. It just gives that kind of unique signature pattern that people recognize audibly when they hear it. Another great way to achieve the magician is with something called a visual pacifier.
07:13Now this is an activity that the subject is doing passively, which holds just enough of your subconscious attention to let you focus on the thing. This could either be like Alex Earl doing her makeup or this guy in this example stacking the cups.
07:26It's the same psychological reason why people make those GTA gameplay videos, the split screen, and you see the car driving through the course on one end and then the clip on the other. It holds just enough subconscious attention to get you to focus and not churn on the main thing. And I say this format is different because you can combine the magician with any of the other five.
07:44A lot of people stack them, so they use the magician immediately as a visual stun gun, and then layer on one of the other five below. So tactically to do this, you either wanna find some visual, some sound, or some signature thing that you can tie to your videos to kind of stun that's atypical and stops that scroll. Alright.
07:59Now the fifth hook format is called the investigator, and this one is super common. With this format, you're basically trying to create contrast against some unknown secret or some finding that you found in your research that nobody knows about.
08:11So the contrast is today, don't know the thing. I show you the thing. Now you know the thing.
08:16Very simple. Almost all of my personal short form videos fall into this category. It's kind of unearthing some tech or AI thing about the future potentially that people don't know about.
08:25And there's a ton of amazing examples showcasing this format as well. So this is one of the sneakier marketing campaigns I've seen. Central sees brand sales out in seconds, and and what's crazy is that it's not just because he's a rapper.
08:36Out. This is a secret Japanese city built at the base of Mount Fuji, but it's not just any city. So the tactical steps, if you wanna use the investigator, would be to tee up the fact that there is some secret that they don't know and then frame it against their current reality, which is not knowing.
08:50The And communicated contrast in this one is pretty straightforward because the base case is they don't know, and then you tell them something they know. Some of these don't have to be super cheeky. They could be pretty straightforward, but inherently, they'll still grab and create that interest.
09:02This format is great for people to use who are trying to be at the leading edge of their field or showcase that in a research capacity they're finding the deep insights that most people don't know. Okay. And the sixth and final hook format is called the contrarian.
09:15And this one is actually the easiest to understand where exactly sits. The contrarian hook literally has the creator come out specifically and say what they believe about the topic that is different than the conventional wisdom.
09:26And the difference between this one and some of the others is that a few of the others kind of slyly try to hide that contrast in the framing. Whereas this one, immediately, you come straight out and just say, you're doing your branding wrong. You should be doing it this way.
09:38It's very direct. Here are a few examples of the contrarian
09:41in practice. So I think this is probably the most important thing that you need to be doing if you run a brand that you are probably not doing, and this is having one on one conversations with your customers. You have no creative ideas because your space sucks to live in.
09:54This guy is a multimillionaire
09:56from his clothing brand, and the weird thing is their best sellers are almost never in stock. Now of the six hook formats, this one is the most direct at creating that contrast, and it's really easy. The tactical steps would be figure out what you believe that most people don't believe and then say it explicitly.
10:11This is great for the smarty pants expert use case or somebody who's trying to frame themselves as a contrarian in a crowded space. Okay. So there we have it.
10:18Those are the six hook archetypes. The fortune teller, the experimenter, the teacher, the magician, the investigator, and the contrarian.
10:27Now I'm gonna tell you a secret. You don't actually have to figure out which one of the six works for your video. Because the truth is every single video idea could be manipulated to use any of the six hook formats.
10:39For example, let's say I made videos reviewing backpacks, and this new interesting backpack just came out that I wanted to make a video about. How would I go about using all six of these in different ways? So for the fortune teller, I may say something like, this backpack is gonna completely change the way millennials travel.
10:54For the experimenter, I might say, I just took this backpack 7,000 miles across the world, but it has three major design flaws. For the teacher, I may say something like, if you're traveling internationally this summer, this is the best way to pack your backpack. For the magician, I may do a rapid match cut with a bunch of different backpacks to visually stun them, and then with the voice over saying, which of these backpacks is the best for a guy in their twenties?
11:16For the investigator, I may say something like, I can't believe this company isn't marketing this one flaw in their bag. And then for the contrarian, I may say something like, everybody loves this bag, but if you use it every day, it is so overhyped. And see, you can pick any of those hook directions with every single video topic.
11:31And so the real question is, how do you decide? If you're staring at the blank page and you're trying to write a hook, which of these is the best one for you in any given scenario? And this really gets into second part of the video, which is tactically, how do you actually write a banger hook that crushes every single time?
11:46Because that's where the sauce really lies. So let's walk through that. I'm gonna break the whole thing down right now.
11:51All hooks are made up of four components. The spoken hook, which is what you say, the visual hook, which is what you show on the screen, the text hook, which is what you write in text on the screen, and then the audio hook, which is the sound and sound effects that you play in the background. And this is the big secret right here.
12:08The difference between five hundred and five hundred thousand views is unlocking max alignment between those four things.
12:16So if you say one thing verbally, but then the visual even slightly different, that creates misalignment and then the hook is not as effective. To nail the hook, you need all four of these things to line up perfectly.
12:27And the reason this matters is because of comprehension. Comprehension is the degree to which the viewer actually understands what they're seeing and hearing. You can't hook them unless they fully understand and are interested in what they're watching.
12:40If your verbal spoken hook is different from your visual hook, which is different from the music in your audio hook, well that leads to confusion. And confusion leads to comprehension loss, which just makes it harder for the viewer to stick with the hook.
12:53The way to drive max comprehension is to make sure the visual and audio hooks are aligned. And so how do you do this? The way you do this is to understand exactly how the viewer takes in the video when they're watching.
13:05And this gets to the deep psychology which is my favorite thing to do. Imagine a subconscious heat map when somebody's watching the video. Where are they actually focusing their attention?
13:14I'm gonna tell you. This is what all viewers do. The first thing they do is they take in the visual and text hook.
13:20They see the visual, they may read the text hook if it's obvious enough in the right place, and then their ears catch up and they hear the spoken hook after. And after they hear what you're saying, they look back at the visual and they're seeking visual confirmation with what they heard. So it's visual, audio, visual.
13:36That sandwich is how people actually take in videos at the subconscious level. Now why is this the case? Well, reason is our eyes process 10 to a 100 times more information per second than our ears.
13:47And this is essentially the speed of light verse speed of sound phenomenon. So the viewer is seeing first, then hearing, and then looking back at the visual to match what they heard. Okay.
13:56So tactically tying all this together, what does this actually mean, and why did I spend so much time going through those six hook archetypes? What this means is that the most important part of getting the hook to actually perform well is the visual. It's not what you say, it's the visual.
14:10I call this the key visual. So when you first have your video idea, the very first thing you should do is figure out what visual or visuals you have at your disposal that you could actually slot into the first three to five seconds. And based on that key visual, you then need to decide which of the six hook archetypes will create the most contrast and perfectly align with what that visual shows.
14:30Knowing the visual lets you set up the speech to then set back up to the visual. This is the golden approach to hooks that nobody talks about at this level. Alright.
14:39So now I'm gonna say it again one more time but more organized. So the very first step is you need to look at what visuals do you have. The better the visual, the more you can lean on the visual and the easier it will be to set up the contrast back to the visual.
14:50If you don't have a good visual, you need to really think, should I make this video? And if you do wanna make it, how are you gonna manufacture the key visual with motion graphics or some stock footage to create this interesting thing to look at. Step two is that once you have the visual, you need to think about what are the most interesting fact sets or angles, things about the story that you have to work with.
15:11And based on those, what has the biggest contrast? Whichever one has the biggest contrast will inform which of the six hook archetypes that you actually use. Step three is that I would then write the spoken hook.
15:21This is gonna be two to four lines and it's gonna follow the context lean, contrast, and contrarian snapback approach that I detailed in my other hook video. I'll link that here. Step four is then what text can I put on screen overlaying the video to support that initial visual and the reconfirmation of the visual after someone hears the speech?
15:39And then step five, I'm going to watch it back and gut check with myself. Does this achieve max comprehension? If the viewer goes visual, speech, visual, are they very clear on what I'm talking about in this video, and does that align with where I think the rest of video will go?
15:54If not, I will stop, not move forward, and rework the hook. That is how important it is. Alright.
16:00Now really quick, I just wanna walk through a couple examples of my own content to illustrate what I mean by good and bad hooks. We're gonna show one of each. The first one is an example of a perfect hook.
16:10This video is about life-sized floor plans, which is this really cool projected home floor plans in a warehouse. This video did 15,000,000 views. So the first thing I want you do is watch this video with no sound.
16:21We're gonna turn the sound off. Just watch the hook visually, and I want you to think, where do your eyes go? What do you notice, and what do you see?
16:28So we're gonna play that right now.
16:31Alright. Now the first place your eyes probably go is that sliding text that comes across that says the future of home design. This first clip with a split screen, you don't actually see that well.
16:40The girl with the arms going up, that was more just a visual stun gun. The actual hero visual, the key visual that I saw in the idea that I knew I was gonna build the whole video around was the next visual in the full screen with the people walking on top of the floor plans. What I did is I put text that said life-sized floor plans with an arrow enhancing the fact that your visual eyeline went directly to that thing.
17:03I wanted to make sure you saw that. And so this was the visual shocker. Right?
17:06There's embedded contrast here. Most people have never seen this before. So the fact that it existed on its own created a large contrast.
17:13I knew that visual was a great key visual to build off of. Okay. So the next thing is I'd actually pick which of the hook formats that I wanna go with, and then how would I actually write the hook itself.
17:23So when I looked at the formats, there were two that made sense. One was the fortune teller. This is the future of home design, and the second one was the secret keeper.
17:30I found this secret about how people are designing homes that nobody knew. They're close to the same, but slightly different. I went with the fortune teller one because it was just easier to explain and creates more of a shock.
17:40This is what the future of home design will look like. Right? So that's what I picked.
17:43And then step three was I had to actually write the hook. So context lean, contrast, contrarian take. So I literally said, check this out.
17:50That was my magician scroll stop thing, and then I said, these are life-sized floor plans. You can literally walk through your exact home design before you build it. Right?
17:59So that's context lean. That is me literally describing exactly what you're seeing. That is perfect alignment with showing the visual and saying the thing.
18:06Then for this one, I didn't actually need a contrasting word. I didn't need to say, but here's what's crazy because the fact that it existed on its own was already contrast enough. So my contrarian take, which maps to the future hook fortune teller was, I think this is the future of how people are gonna design their homes.
18:21Right? So it's exactly what I'm saying. I picked the fortune teller.
18:24I talked about the future. I set up the context lean, what you're seeing with pure alignment, and then I framed, this is the future of how people are gonna design their homes.
18:32That is tailor made how you build the hook with pure alignment, and this one worked. 15,000,000 views.
18:38Now before we end the video, let's quickly go through one bad example where I made a video, but it didn't work out that well. It got maybe a 100,000 views or less, and the hook was just executed super poorly.
18:47So I wanna explain what went wrong and what I should have done looking back. Okay. So the same thing here.
18:52I want you to watch this video without sound. Just watch the first fifteen seconds and tell me where you focus your attention.
19:06So right away, you see the text sliding across again, future of storytelling, and then you see a bunch of these rooms kind of like magically appearing out of nowhere. Just that alone is kind of misaligned. Future of storytelling is a bit of an abstract concept, and so visualizing that with those rooms, does that really mean future of storytelling?
19:24Not really. So already just in the visual and with the text, there is comprehension loss. Then when you turn the sound on, it gets even more confusing.
19:31So I say, this is the future of storytelling. It's called a generative world model. It lets you turn a single image into a photorealistic cinematic world.
19:40Okay. So if you really take that down, future of storytelling, it's so abstract. It's like, do you even show for that?
19:45Maybe it's a book with a video or a robot coming out of it. Maybe I could have used that. The problem is nobody knows what generative world model is.
19:52Nobody knows what photorealistic world. So I use these crazy terms that I didn't have good visuals to show, and you can tell immediately it's just a little confusing. It's not as straightforward as the life size floor plans one.
20:02And so when you watch this, yeah, maybe you're like, oh, those are cool visuals, but you're not actually hearing what I'm saying. When you don't hear what I'm saying, you have comprehension loss. When you have comprehension loss, you're not purely tied and aligned with the video.
20:13And so looking back, maybe what I should have done is gone more explicit. So these rooms are the future of commercials, and if I had visuals of guys actually using those rooms to film commercials and I could show that perspective, maybe that would have worked. The truth is this video didn't have great b roll that was easy to explain.
20:28So what I should have done is probably canned the idea, not made it in general. And that's really what you need to decide when you're going through this process. What is the visual?
20:36What is the hook format? Riding the hook? Is there clarity and alignment?
20:40If there isn't, you probably should throw out the video because there's always more ideas that you could make. So that's really the process in a nutshell. You have to have that clarity, and if you don't, that's the difference between 10,000 views and 10,000,000 views.
20:51And look, the reason that I can go so deep and I'm so nerdy on this stuff is because I live and breathe this content stuff all day long. And I'm making this channel because I'm trying to show my experiments and show my work to help other people grow with content. But look, if you don't want to have to worry about which hook format to use and how to exactly write it, you don't wanna take sixty minutes a day making videos, that's completely fine.
21:11I built Sandcastles, which is a software to infuse all of these learnings and formulas and formats into it. So all you have do is put your video in and we'll do it for you.
21:20We go through the full diagnostic to figure out what is the right hook formula, how should we frame it, where is the best contrast. It's all automatic. So if you wanna try that out, sandcastles.a I have a free trial for you below.
21:32That's the easiest way that you can close the gap on this without having to do all the work. And And guys, if you like how I think about this stuff, there is a ton more for free in the description. I have a free content community called wavy world with over 13,000 people that are learning the advanced psychology behind this stuff.
21:47There's a free invite for you below. Make sure to grab that. And keep me posted on what you guys want next.
21:51Keep the shares coming. Keep the comments coming. Until then, we'll see you guys on the next one.
21:55Peace.
The Hook

The bait, then the rug-pull.

The hook — not the edit, not the platform, not the algorithm — is the eighty-twenty of short-form video. Kallaway studied thousands of videos and found that virtually every high-performer traces back to one of six archetypes, all of which do the same thing: manufacture contrast between what the viewer currently believes and what they're about to see.

Frameworks

Named ideas worth stealing.

01:26list

The 6 Hook Archetypes

  1. Fortune Teller
  2. Experimenter
  3. Teacher
  4. Magician
  5. Investigator
  6. Contrarian

Six categories that cover the contrast-building strategy of virtually every viral hook. Each can be applied to any topic.

Steal forany content planning session — run your video idea through all six and pick the one with the best available key visual
11:33list

The 4 Hook Components

  1. Spoken hook
  2. Visual hook
  3. Text hook
  4. Audio hook

The four layers that must align for a hook to achieve max comprehension. Misalignment between any two causes viewer churn.

Steal forhook review checklist — watch your hook on mute first, then with sound, then check the text overlay
16:00list

The Golden Approach to Hooks

  1. Look at what visuals you have
  2. Find highest-contrast angle among your facts
  3. Write the spoken hook (context lean, contrast, contrarian snapback)
  4. Decide what on-screen text supports the visual
  5. Gut-check: does the viewer have full comprehension visual → audio → visual?

A five-step writing sequence that starts from the key visual rather than the script.

Steal forpre-production hook writing — do this before scripting the rest of the video
17:40model

Context Lean → Contrast → Contrarian Snapback

The three-beat internal structure of a spoken hook. First describe exactly what the viewer sees (context lean), then introduce the tension (contrast), then land your take or future claim (contrarian snapback).

Steal forwriting the spoken hook line itself
CTA Breakdown

How they asked for the click.

21:33product
I built Sandcastles, which is a software to infuse all of these learnings and formulas and formats into it. All you have to do is put your video in and we'll do it for you.

Soft — mentioned naturally as the solution to 'not wanting to do all the work yourself', with a free trial link. Secondary CTA to the Wavy World free community.

Storyboard

Visual structure at a glance.

open
hookopen00:00
psychology
promisepsychology00:39
archetypes
valuearchetypes01:26
components
valuecomponents11:33
framework
valueframework16:00
teardowns
valueteardowns18:36
CTA
ctaCTA21:30
Frame Gallery

Visual moments.