A timer-driven, screen-shared work session where a creator scripts, batch-films, and edits short-form videos in real time — and lets you do it alongside him.
Posted
5 days ago
Duration
Format
Tutorial
educational
Views
3.6K
238 likes
Big Idea
The argument in one line.
Short-form output is a flow-state and constraint problem, not a quality problem: forced timers, single-take filming, and deliberately minimal editing remove the overthinking that stops most people from posting consistently.
Who This Is For
Read if. Skip if.
READ IF YOU ARE…
A creator who can come up with ideas but freezes when it is time to actually film, and posts inconsistently because each video feels too precious.
A solo founder or operator trying to produce a high volume of short-form content without it eating a full workday.
A beginner who over-edits, chases perfection, and wants a concrete minimum-viable process to copy instead of an abstract mindset talk.
Anyone who wants to see, screen by screen, how viral-style talking-head reels are scripted, batch-shot, and cut in a native phone editor.
SKIP IF…
You want polished motion-graphics editing, color grading, or anything beyond fast cuts and auto-captions — this is deliberately minimal.
You are looking for a guaranteed-virality formula; the whole premise is volume and consistency over per-video perfection.
You produce long-form or cinematic video where single-take, no-retake filming would not meet your quality bar.
TL;DR
The full version, fast.
The video argues that the bottleneck in short-form content is not talent but overthinking, and that hard time constraints fix it. The creator runs three timed blocks live: a brainstorm where he forces out ten hook ideas in minutes and uses Claude to rank them so he does not have to decide what to film, a batch-filming block where he allows himself only one take per video to brute-force authenticity, and a minimum-viable editing block where he rough-cuts dead space, adds auto-captions, drops in a text hook and a mid-video CTA, then cross-posts to TikTok and Instagram. The practical conclusion: lower the stakes of any single post, batch the work into focused sprints, and ship before you have time to second-guess, because consistency beats polish.
Free for members
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Credential drop (four accounts past 100k), a sales-results flex, and the promise: make five-plus viral videos in two hours by working alongside him.
01:35 – 04:00
02 · Brainstorm 10 ideas on a timer
Opens a Google Doc, forces out ten hook ideas under a short timer, leaning on saved inspo videos and real data rather than starting from scratch.
04:00 – 10:20
03 · Revise and rank hooks with Claude
Sets a second timer to revise the rough ideas, then pastes them into Claude to rank from most to least viral so the tool decides filming order.
10:20 – 13:10
04 · Mindset: your best videos come unexpectedly
Reframes virality — his best performer was a 1AM throwaway shot for habit's sake; lowers the stakes before filming begins.
13:10 – 14:40
05 · Sponsor: Mino AI hook tool
Mid-roll demo of his own AI tool that ingests an inspo video URL and outputs a reusable hook template; free-trial link in the description.
14:40 – 20:40
06 · Filming setup and warm-up
Walks through lighting, gear (iPhone, unused earbuds as a prop, a journal for the 'planning' look), then does jumping jacks and forced laughter to spike endorphins.
20:40 – 27:00
07 · Batch-film, one take only
Films videos back-to-back with a strict no-retake rule to brute-force authenticity; chugs caffeine to kill overthinking and drafts each immediately.
27:00 – 33:10
08 · Ten-minute break and roommate
Crosses off filmed ideas, takes a screen-free active break; friend Charles enters and he demonstrates filming with someone else in the room.
33:10 – 52:20
09 · Second filming sprint to ten videos
Focus music on, hypes back into flow, and finishes a personal record of ten videos filmed in roughly an hour.
52:20 – 58:40
10 · Minimum viable editing — the rough cut
Opens the native TikTok editor and rough-cuts the seven-limiting-beliefs video, removing redundant lines and trimming fractions of a second of dead space.
58:40 – 1:30:00
11 · Captions, text hooks, and overlays
Adds auto-captions in a custom style split one line at a time, bumps volume to 200%, layers a text hook plus mid-video subtext and a CTA overlay.
1:30:00 – 1:38:50
12 · Cross-post to TikTok and Instagram
Saves to camera roll in clean full HD, posts to TikTok and as an Instagram trial reel, then refreshes to confirm the first view landed.
1:38:50 – 2:16:40
13 · Edit remaining videos and outro
Continues editing the batch silently, notes the rest will be finished the next day, and pitches his Content Academy coaching community.
Atomic Insights
Lines worth screenshotting.
Give yourself permission to write bad ideas and the good ones start flowing — the first two or three garbage hooks unlock the flow state for the rest.
Use AI to rank your hook ideas from most to least viral so the tool tells you what to film next, removing the decision that causes procrastination.
Allow only one take per video while batch-filming; the no-retake rule brute-forces authenticity and kills the urge to overthink delivery.
Chug caffeine and physically warm up — jumping jacks and forced laughter — before filming to spike endorphins and silence the overthinking voice.
Best-performing videos often come when you least expect it; one of his top performers was filmed at 1AM after work just to keep the posting habit alive.
Minimum viable editing means cutting redundant sentences and 0.2-0.3 second dead space, adding auto-captions, one text hook, and a CTA — nothing more.
A single talking-head reel can be rough-cut, captioned, and cross-posted in about 15-18 minutes once you stop over-editing.
Do not scroll during breaks — consuming other content mid-session wrecks your dopamine and pulls you out of creative flow.
Set a text hook on screen plus a mid-video text CTA around the 10-second mark to keep viewers engaged and route them to your offer.
Cross-post by saving the finished video to your camera roll in full HD without a watermark, then uploading the clean file to the other platform.
You do not need a hotel, expensive lights, or fancy gear — many of his most viral videos were shot in his bedroom on an iPhone.
Batch the work into timed Pomodoro-style sprints with real breaks; the timer is the forcing function that converts procrastination into output.
Takeaway
How constraints, not talent, unlock consistent output.
WHAT TO LEARN
The reason most people post inconsistently is overthinking, and hard time limits plus a no-retake rule remove the deliberation that stops you from shipping.
Force out a batch of rough ideas under a short timer; the first few bad ones give you permission to flow, and you sift the garbage to find the gold.
Let an AI rank your hooks from most to least viral so the tool decides what you film next, removing the choice that triggers procrastination.
Allow yourself exactly one take per video; the no-retake rule brute-forces authenticity and stops you re-recording to chase a perfect delivery.
Warm up physically before filming — caffeine, jumping jacks, forced laughter — to spike endorphins and quiet the part of your brain that overthinks.
Edit to a minimum-viable checklist: cut dead space, add auto-captions, one text hook, one mid-video CTA, then stop — over-editing hurts performance.
Treat each post as low-stakes rather than precious; your best video might be a 1AM throwaway, so consistency and volume beat polishing any single one.
Protect your flow on breaks by not scrolling, and cross-post by saving a clean full-HD file to your camera roll before uploading to the second platform.
Glossary
Terms worth knowing.
Minimum viable editing
Editing a video only as much as needed to make it watchable — rough-cutting dead space, adding auto-captions, a text hook, and a CTA — and deliberately stopping there to avoid over-polishing that slows output.
Rough cut
The first editing pass where you remove redundant sentences and trim silent dead space between words, before any captions or graphics are added.
Batch filming
Recording several videos back-to-back in one focused session rather than one at a time, to maintain momentum and reduce setup overhead.
Trial reels / trial posting
A TikTok and Instagram feature that releases a video to a test audience first so a creator can gauge performance before it is shown widely.
Pattern interrupt
A hook technique that surprises or disrupts the viewer's expectation in the first seconds so they stop scrolling and keep watching.
“You need to stop thinking about every single content piece as this magical form of art — you are a production company.”
reframes the creator-as-artist identity→ IG reel cold open↗ Tweet quote
The Script
Word for word.
Read-along
Don't just watch it. Burn it in.
See every word as it's spoken — crank it to 2× and still catch all of it. The same dual-channel trick behind Amazon's Kindle + Audible.
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metaphoranalogystory
00:00My name is Mito Lee, and I've grown four accounts to over a 100,000 followers across TikTok and Instagram. So in the next two hours, this is quite possibly going to be the most valuable video on personal branding you have ever seen because it is not just tactical advice. This is going to be a create content with me where I'm gonna be walking through my exact scripting, filming, and editing process, screen sharing everything while you do it along with me.
00:25And the process that I'm showing you actually created all of these viral videos, which generated this much in sales for me in the past week. So this video will be the most interactive guide you've ever seen to get you into the maximum creative flow state to create not just one, not two, not three, but five viral videos in just two hours.
00:44So without further ado, let's start with scripting and ideating viral video ideas on a Google Doc. Let's get to it. And timer starts now, and what I'm gonna do is I'm just going to literally whip out a Google Doc and start fucking cooking.
01:01I've done this practice many times before, which is why you can see all of this stuff written down. Right? And I'm probably gonna be actually, like, hella mute during this.
01:17Alright. I've already lost, like, ten seconds or thirty seconds.
02:31Like, I don't know about these three lessons, but what I'm gonna do is I'm just gonna skip that and just go on to the next idea because ideally, wanna whip out, like, five shit ideas in the next, like, three minutes. I'm just gonna call it like brand.
03:26I'm hitting close here right now. Here we go. Usually, that's in, like, two or three ideas in.
03:31You just start hitting this fucking flow where you're like, oh, I have permission to make random bullshit ideas. Let me whip out a bunch more. And I think that permission helps me get into a good flow of ideas where they just start flowing eventually.
05:40Also, have a couple videos saved that I wanted to use as inspo. Notice how I'm doing most of my creative process not from scratch, but by using real data, right, on what works.
05:51So right here, I see these three videos saved from this creator has been popping off recently. Right? A couple other videos.
10:54We have our 10 ideas. Now here's what we're gonna do. I really like the idea of this, like, forced timer because for me, I love procrastinating.
11:01And whenever there's, like, more work to be done, I always just like, yeah. I'm yeah. I'll just wait.
11:07So we're not gonna do that. We're gonna set another three three to five. You know?
11:11Don't give yourself too much time for this part. But, basically, now force yourself to revise some of these ideas because a lot of these are just not hashed out, which is fine.
11:19You know? You need to sift through the garbage to get through the gold. So something I also like to do, which I'll actually just do right now, is just go to Claude and rank these content hooks slash ideas from lowest to least viral.
11:33Okay? And while it does that because that's how I'm gonna prioritize what to film first. Pro freaking hack.
11:39Right? While that cooks for me, profitable personal brand, what I learned from Hamzah. That's not a hook, though.
11:47Profitable difference between a personal brand and a mediocre person.
13:47I don't even remember what three tips were. That'll be for this one. I'll probably, like, relegate this one to the bottom because I don't really like it, or I have no clarity on what how I would actually execute this.
13:56How do full guide to start in. First thirty days, first sixty days, first ninety days, first seven days, first thirty days, first ninety days.
14:51Why not? We're just gonna let Claude literally reorder here because sometimes we need to be told what to film because sometimes that gives me permission to film, I guess, honestly. How I never run out of ideas?
15:05Honestly, I, like, wholeheartedly agree with this, which is the crazy part. I don't disagree with any of these points. Hooks masterclass.
15:12This is cool, honestly. I'm I'm actually pretty surprised. You can also use Mino AI for this as well.
15:17Probably would be slightly better. Lazy method.
15:21Perhaps being ambitious but lazy. Yeah. The only issue here is that I don't have an idea for this, but we could probably I'm gonna actually move this to the bottom just because I don't remember if I actually had an idea for this.
15:32I don't think I did. Profitable personal brand. Yep.
15:37That's pretty much everything that we need from here. Now what we're gonna do is obviously film these videos. Oh, man.
15:45This batch filming is gonna be a freaking bitch, but but we're gonna figure this out.
15:51You know, we're gonna grind this out because, you know, it's 6PM on a Sunday. I just wanna chill. I just wanna play video games, but we're not gonna do that because we have a fucking personal brand to build.
16:01We have viral videos to make. And I wanna make one thing clear before I start this filming. Right?
16:06Look at these videos. Yeah. You might think, damn.
16:09Like, he gets, like you know, he got 300 k views on this video. This video was filmed at 9PM. No.
16:30March? In the last sixty days. My best performer.
16:33Meet at night at 1AM just because I wanted to get into the habit of it. So, guys, some of your best videos will come when you least expect it. Alright?
16:42Before we get into the filming section, you might have struggled a little bit with the brainstorming, and I know it can be very daunting at first to take these viral video concepts that you see on the for you page and actually translate them into your own voice, into the most viral possible hooks and scripts. So I actually created an AI tool that you can try out in the first link in the description for completely free that'll do the entire thought process for you that's trained off of thousands of viral hooks that have already been scraped off of TikTok Instagram and three hundred plus hours of me coaching directly and all of my content guides.
17:15So just give me thirty seconds. I'm gonna show you guys exactly how this tool works so you can try it out, you'll get an exclusive three day free trial if you use that first link into the description. So, basically, let's say I found this inspo video saved.
17:26All I'm gonna do is copy the link to it, go to mino.ai, and ask it to simply recreate the viral video. I'm gonna paste the inspo video URL right there, and it's going to find the video, extract it, and watch it, and transcribe the entire thing frame by frame. And what it's going to be able to do is break down the entire video.
17:44So first, it's gonna tell me what made the video go viral, and this is also based on all of the training that I have ever said in all of my coaching calls, all of my YouTube videos, talking about what actually makes videos go viral. So in this case, if we're being completely honest, that's a subtle way in the hook to create intimacy.
18:02Nobody is obsessed with your brand. That's a direct attack on the viewer's ego. Right?
18:06And then it gives me a reusable template. So this is how I'm able to save time as a busy 22 year old business owner to be able to essentially make all the videos that I post and still be able to run my business, manage my team, and take all the viral inspiration inspiration that I see online and be able to recreate it in a tenth of the time using Mino dot ai.
18:25So if you wanna try a free trial of Mino dot ai, I'm gonna give an exclusive link in the first link in the description. So if you wanna go back and retry the brainstorming even, if you feel like you've struggled, go ahead try Amino AI and go back and restart the brainstorming. If you're already done and you feel confident with the ideas that you have right now, let's go into the filming.
18:44Alright. Welcome to the twenty five minute filming with me portion.
18:50Uh, right now, I'm gonna set a twenty five minute timer, which starts now. And what I'm gonna do is try I'm trying to try to batch film somehow four or three to five videos in the next in the next, you know, twenty five minute session.
19:05So that means I literally cannot allow myself to do more than one take, which is a beautiful part of this because now I kinda have to just yap whatever's on my mind, which kind of it's this way of, like, brute forcing authenticity. So what I'm gonna do is I'm gonna start screen recording on my phone as well.
19:21So you can see here, got my phone, and I wanna walk you guys through a couple of things from this, uh, from this session. So the first one, I'm gonna move this a little bit here, is that notice my setup. You guys might think, okay, it's a just normal setup.
19:34What's the difference if I don't have this light on? Look at the difference in lighting. It feels kind of amateur.
19:39Now, look at that. It's clean. And I also bought these, like, $50 LED lights that can color change, but made them blue to add a little bit of ambiance.
19:49And yes, I am staying at a hotel just so I can film these videos. Yes, I paid an egregious amount of money. No, you don't need to do that.
19:54Oftentimes, actually, just filming your bedroom is how I made some of my most viral videos. I just happen to be staying at a hotel right now. Okay?
20:01And I also got these performative wired earbuds. Guess what, guys? I don't even use these aren't even connected to my freaking phone.
20:07Now you can use them to connect to your phone. Like, the mic is good on these Apple ear pod headphones. We don't need them.
20:13I used my iPhone when I film. Uh-huh. Billions of And I'm gonna put this informative white monster and make myself look like you know, to match the vibe of the creator, you know, because people love content creators and, sophisticated, performative shit.
20:27Right? I might split test hoodie on and hoodie off. Not that it really matters.
20:31I also notice I have a pimple on my cheek, which is kind of giving me friction to film, but I don't really give a fuck. So right now, what we're gonna do before I even start filming, and I know I'm wasting a bit of time here, is just do some stretches because getting my endorphins up is a pretty huge thing.
20:47So what I'm gonna do is I'm just gonna jump up and down. One, two, three, four, five.
20:52Okay. Next, what I'm gonna do is I'm gonna set a timer for myself for about ten, fifteen seconds and just force myself to laugh. Ready?
21:11Jesus. Freaking the fuck out. And I literally am getting I'm feeling literally sweaty from doing that.
21:16I just watched Obsession last night, which is a brilliant movie. But the whole goal with that is to spark some endorphins. So hopefully, your body literally felt a little bit uncomfortable.
21:24That's the feeling of you getting your nerves out. That's good. Okay?
21:28Now let's actually start filming. Okay. And what I'm gonna do is I also put this little notepad in front of me, this journal, not because any of these notes are actually relevant to what I'm filming, but just because it literally helps make it a little bit more performative and signals planning.
21:42You know what I'm saying? Okay. I'm gonna ignore this camera now and just go actually get locked into filming.
25:43Okay. I'm gonna hit next, and I'm just gonna draft this shit because I genuinely do not have time to even overthink the execution of that. Did I film it well?
25:50Did I not film it well? Did I sound like a fucking bitch? Did I sound really cringe?
25:57These efficient filmers don't even they film, all their emotions tied up, and then boom, they're done. And then we'll on to the next one.
26:04Mind that's the mindset of a 100 k a month creator. Speaking of which, I need to actually plan out this video. Let's let's think through the script here.
42:39Oh, wait. We just finished our third video, and now we have one minute to spare.
42:52So we're gonna get up and stretch for a little bit. I know I probably wasted, like, two minutes of that time or time trying to, you know, come up with the come up with the right hooks.
43:03The the art explained what I was thinking through, but my friend's also gonna be here in, like, a minute or so. So I'm literally just going to pick him up while we do our ten minute break.
43:16And, yeah, I'm just gonna cross off on my on my dock as well the three ideas that I already executed on so I don't repeat them again. Okay. I'm just gonna do this.
43:28Alright. And now we have seven ideas remaining.
43:32Okay? And we're gonna do that in our next filming session as the timer literally is about to run down to zero. We're gonna take a little ten minute break.
43:41You know, do not scroll because that's going to once again ruin your focus. Fuck up your dopamine receptors. Do not scroll.
43:48If anything, we can do some breathing exercises together. We'll just get up, take a walk, stay active, keep your body active because if you wanna stay in a flow state while filming, you don't want your body to literally shut down and go into a comatose state.
44:01Another thing too is I don't like to eat during my filming and deep work blocks because once my body is starting to digest food, my blood sugar might rise and crash, which is gonna cause me to become eepy and sleepy, which is not what you want when you wanna stay locked in, energetic, excited to fill. Okay? Let's take a ten minute break.
44:19Stay off the screens and just try to stretch, move around, and we'll set that timer now. Alright. So our our homie Charles just entered.
44:27Right? We're in the midst of our our ten minute break session right now.
44:33But our homie Charles just entered. What's up? I'm gonna be closing my back while I'm filming to make this on extra hard.
44:41Let's go. Because it's because I know you guys are probably thinking, alright.
44:45I have a roommate, so I can't film. Mhmm. Well, I'm gonna practice with the roommate here now.
44:50I'm here. And he's he's got a super big cock, so I'm super intimidated by his BDE too. What?
51:56You thought this was gonna be some calm calm up corridor. No.
52:00We're getting hype. Let's get hype. Let's get ready.
52:03Let's settle back into flow state. We got twenty five minutes left to film four videos. Let's do it.
52:10Alright. Let's get hype. Let's start our filming session.
52:13Let's get hype. Okay. I turned on some focus music this time on Brain FM.
52:18I'm not sponsored, but this helps me block out any overthinking from my brain so I can just purely focus. I play that on my computer. Let's go.
1:16:57Alongside, obviously, the common good of being part of the community.
1:17:12That's actually a new record for me too. That's actually a new record for me to to film 10 videos in the span of just an hour, but we did it.
1:17:21We did it, guys. And now, we're gonna move on to the editing portion, which, you know, we're just gonna have as a minimum viable editing.
1:17:29I'm gonna walk through exactly how I'm going to edit these batch filmed videos and how you can do the same to maximize the viral potential of your content. But let's take another five minute break before we jump into that.
1:17:41Alright. Let's finish up with our one hour minimum viable editing session. Now the reason why I call it minimum viable editing is because with editing, it's very easy, especially as a beginner to content, but also when you're just trying to build up momentum and your consistency to overthink the editing and almost overdo it to the point where it actually hurts your video's performance.
1:18:02So I wanna show you guys the exact, very simple process that I do with my videos to minimum viably edit them.
1:18:10I'm just gonna set our sixty minute timer here and get started with the editing. I'm also gonna screen record this. So like so, and we will get started.
1:18:23So we're gonna open back the TikTok app and just go back to the first couple of drafts, and we're just gonna get started here. So I'm gonna go to this one right here.
1:18:32Here's the seven limiting beliefs I do. And what we're gonna do first off is what I call a rough cut. And what I'm also gonna do is I'm gonna walk you guys through my editing thought process for the first video, and the rest of them, I'm just gonna stay silent so that you guys can also edit in peace.
1:18:49Right? But let's start off with the minimum viable editing process starting with step one, which is the rough cut. And what I'm gonna do is basically cut out either sentences that I think are either redundant or unnecessary to the video, as well as do the fine cutting of dead space, whether it's like zero point two, zero point three seconds of dead space.
1:19:09it's the seven limiting beliefs I had to grow out of in order to reach a 100 k a month as a content creator. Belief number one, the idea that quality beats creator.
1:19:18Belief number one. I'm gonna remove the the idea of that because I think that just slows the video, especially in the first ten seconds. The idea for one.
1:19:28The idea that number one. Quality beats quantity.
1:19:34Quality beats quantity. There's a dead space there, so I'm gonna press it and delete. Quantity.
1:19:43Okay. It looks like this clip just got repeated twice. Quantity.
1:19:46When you're pumping out the scale of actually running a business through your social media, you need to stop thinking about every single content peep social media. You need to stop thinking about social media. Okay.
1:19:55I'm gonna cut out the business part. Quantity, you need to stop thinking about every single content piece as this magical form of art. You have to understand that you are a production piece as this form of art.
1:20:10Yeah. I'm gonna cut that part out too. It's quantity.
1:20:12You have to understand that you are a production company at the end of the day, which means you need to just pump out a video and then immediately at the end of the day would means I'll just gonna cut that part out too and just do this.
1:20:26You need to just pump out a video and then immediately onto the next without dwelling on how well that without dwelling on I'm gonna cut out this little breath here.
1:20:37On how well this video is going to do because that's gonna take you out of the flow state necessary to be consistently producing. Number number two Number two.
1:20:49Number two, the obsession over being original. I used to genuinely take pride in my over being original.
1:20:57I used going to be consistently out content enough to the point where you can actually I'm gonna cut that part out.
1:21:12I got that dead space. Original. Number three, have to come way more introspective.
1:21:16So journaling and meditation, these were necessary for me to actually develop these These were necessary for me to actually some journaling and meditation.
1:21:27I'm gonna cut this rest of this clip here too. A lot of times, I just kinda, like, say
1:21:32an explanatory portion, but from my experience making and editing these videos, I've realized that just a lot of times, I overspeak.
1:21:40Even now, too honestly, like, you might be getting bored of me talking right now. And it's very normal to overspeak in our videos, and that's the goal of the editing process. Meditation four.
1:21:56This one's an obvious one, but stop scrolling as much. Because if you're scrolling and you're over consuming, you're gonna lack the clear mindedness necessary to also be articulate on camera.
1:22:06Number five number five, I on camera. Number five, I had to give up this clinging to this concept of safety.
1:22:13If you stop post if you stop you stop post safety.
1:22:19If you stop posting for two weeks when you have a 100,000 followers, guess what? Followers fucking mean nothing. You're gonna lose all the traction that you on social media.
1:22:28Is On social media. Now you can social media. Now you can treat social media.
1:22:35Now you can social media. Now you can treat this as a media.
1:22:39Now you can treat this as a bad traction that you have on social media. Now you can treat this as a bad thing or you can treat this as a way to constantly self develop, to be more comfortable with risk and boldness. Comfortable with risk.
1:22:58Had to develop a ruthless level of optimism. People have told me for the past three years, yo. Are you sure social media is going to be a long term career?
1:23:05Yet my business has continuously can't be a long term career. Yet my business has My cock continuously.
1:23:27And number seven, detaching from worldly outcomes. Worldly outcome.
1:23:35I used to be so obsessed with views and make I used to be outcomes.
1:23:46I used to be so outcomes. I used to be I used to be so obsessed with views and making sure people would see my page and see all these viral creator.
1:23:57Oh, he's got motion. And once finally learned to let go of that slowly Mhmm.
1:24:04Cut this part. Slowly that we're I remind I slowly.
1:24:12I remind myself every morning that, dude, we're gonna fucking die. None of this shit matters. All of these videos are going to be burned to the ground in a none of this shit matter burn anyway.
1:25:56Order to reach out. Now we're just gonna hit the captions, auto captions here, and let TikTok load that for a second.
1:26:09It's also really late right now. It's 11:40 it's 11:50 right now.
1:26:15But we're grinding this out, and that's oftentimes how content is. It's late at night, but you're getting the content done. That's the most important thing.
1:26:25K. Now we're gonna hit style and do custom, and this is my preferred auto caption style.
1:26:30But if you're new, you haven't gone consistently viral and found that, like, winning editing style, just copy mine honestly. What we're gonna do is hit this, and now you have these clean small auto captions. Like, what I'd like to usually do as well is split it into one line at a time.
1:26:47I had to grow out of in order to reach a 100 a month as a content creator.
1:26:57I'm also just gonna do hashtag. You need to
1:27:01just we're gonna do a couple spelling checks here just to make sure that, you know, all the captions are actually spelled properly.
1:27:14That's gonna take you out of the flow state necessary to be consistently
1:27:19producing. Number two, the obsession over being original.
1:27:28Number three, yeah, we're just gonna continue this process. I had to become way more introspective, so journaling and meditation. Number four, stop scrolling.
1:27:40If you're scrolling here, the clear mind is necessary to also be articulate on camera.
1:27:52Number five, You have this clean to this concept of safety if you stop posting for two weeks.
1:28:03You have a 100,000 vol for two weeks? When you have
1:28:14You're gonna lose all the traction that you have on social media. And you can treat this as or you can treat this as a way to constantly self develop to be more comfortable with risk.
1:28:33I had to develop a ruthless level of optimism. People have told me for the past thirty years, yo, are you sure social media is going to be has continued to grow?
1:29:33Now we have these and also remove the here are the just seven limiting beliefs, honestly. It keeps to one line, but keeps it also clear.
1:29:41Okay. And now I'm just gonna make it a little bit larger and make it a little bit more centered. And then lastly, now what I'm gonna do is I'm gonna add a text hook.
1:31:23How well that video is going to do because that's gonna take you out of the flow state necessary to Number two, the Okay. Number two, the obsession over being original. Originality is a myth.
1:35:03Give me seven limiting Alright. So now we have that.
1:35:06And in more options, this is key actually because you wanna be able to cross post this onto Instagram. What we're gonna do is just make sure that there's a save to device, right, which is gonna auto save basically this video in full HD quality without a watermark to our camera roll.
1:35:23So we're just gonna post video and let that cook. Now Today's day six.
1:35:27It officially just took eighteen minutes, seventeen minutes, and we just edited our first video. So that's how you can edit in just the span of fifteen minutes and still get a super clean edit that is also, you know, super uniform and clean for both TikTok and Instagram.
1:35:44Right? That is awesome. Now, we're just gonna immediately go on to Instagram, and I'm gonna post this initially as a trial.
1:35:57Here's the seven limiting beliefs. I'm simply this. Comment, dream to tune into my free on
1:36:11speedrunning followers, teach how you can speed run.
1:36:28Okay. And now I'm just going to trial it and send it up.
1:36:36The harder you train, the strong There we go. We did it.
1:36:41So now I'm just gonna let this actually post.
1:36:53Gonna make sure I'm just gonna refresh it on TikTok as well to see if it actually got posted. Here's the seven limiting beliefs I had to grow out of in order to re And sometimes, we just need to see just to make sure it gets its literal first view to see if it actually gets posted. Because sometimes, content just randomly gets taken down on TikTok.
1:37:10Genuinely, TikTok's algorithm can be really freaking annoying, but we're also gonna let this post two trial reels. Okay?
1:37:17So we're just gonna let this cook and see. You know, we're just gonna let this give it a second. Sometimes Instagram literally takes ten years, and that's fine.
1:37:26Yes. Sometimes Instagram literally takes so long to post. Oh, let me get some water.
1:38:02Okay. I think it should be finished posting. I'm just gonna check our trial rules here.
1:38:12K. It seems like it's up. Now I'm just gonna make sure it's posted onto TikTok.
1:38:18There we go. We got a first view, which means it is fully posted.
1:38:27Let's go to posting our next video. Or let's go to editing our next video. We got another thirty nine minutes here.
1:38:33Let's move on. But, yeah, that's the general gist of editing. So now I'm just gonna let this overlay play as I get into a deep editing flow state, and let's continue to edit your videos as well.
2:18:16Alright. So the one hour timer has finished. I'm just gonna finish up this one video real quick.
2:18:22It should probably take another five minutes. And there we go. We're just finishing up posting this final video, and you can see here now we have four videos.
2:18:36One, two, three, and then the last one, four up now on TikTok.
2:18:43And there we go. Now I will go ahead and edit the next three videos probably tomorrow, but it's probably gonna take me another forty five to an hour.
2:18:53Right? So feel free to do that on your own time as well. But hopefully, this tutorial was helpful.
2:18:58If you found this video helpful and you want more direct help from me, I have a private community where I coach creators. Right? And we've already helped 60 creators grow to their first 10,000 followers across TikTok and Instagram on their personal brand.
2:19:13So if you wanna build a personal brand that can actually help you monetize and make a full time living as a creator, go to that second link in the description to apply to join Content Academy. Other than that, thank you guys so much for freaking watching.
2:19:26If you found this helpful, yo, let me know in the comments which part you found the most helpful. If you want more videos like this, please let me know. I thought this would be a really fun spin on the study with me concept.
2:19:37I always find myself watching this kinda like Pomodoro style video from this guy Justin Sung on the Internet. So it's a little bit of an interesting video style, but if you found this helpful, let me know.
2:19:47I'd love to do them in the future too, where I'm just kind of going about my actual video process. If you wanna see more videos like this, I guess, you can hit that subscribe button. If you want to, you know, if you want to.
2:19:58Okay. I'll catch you guys the next one. Peace.
The Hook
The bait, then the rug-pull.
The title makes a volume promise — seven reels, two hours — and the cold open backs it with a credential and a sales screenshot. But the real bait is the format: this is not advice about making videos, it is a live, screen-shared work session where the creator scripts, films, and edits in front of you on a running clock, daring you to keep pace.
Frameworks
Named ideas worth stealing.
01:00model
The three-block batch session
Brainstorm and rank (timer)
Batch-film one take each (timer)
Minimum viable edit and post (timer)
The entire workflow is three timed Pomodoro-style blocks with breaks between, each a forcing function against procrastination.
Steal forany content batching or deep-work session
52:20list
Minimum viable editing steps
Rough cut redundant lines and dead space
Auto-captions in a custom style, one line at a time
Volume to 200%
Text hook on screen
Mid-video subtext and CTA overlay
Save clean HD and cross-post
A fixed, repeatable checklist that gets a talking-head reel posted in roughly 15-18 minutes without over-editing.
Steal forany short-form talking-head edit
18:20list
Pre-film endorphin warm-up
Jumping jacks
Forced laughter for 10-15 seconds
Chug caffeine
A physical ritual to spike endorphins and kill the overthinking that ruins on-camera delivery.
Steal forany on-camera filming session
CTA Breakdown
How they asked for the click.
VERBAL ASK
2:17:10product
“Go to that second link in the description to apply to join Content Academy.”
Earned-then-asked: he delivers the full process for two hours before pitching, and stacks social proof (60 creators grown to 10k followers). The Mino AI sponsor mid-roll at 13:00 is the harder sell; the community pitch at the end is softer and credibility-backed.
A 69-minute, eight-part course on turning a hobby into a £1,500–£4,000-a-month personal brand, taught by a UK creator who funds three businesses off his own audience.
Six pre-built Claude skills — motion graphics, viral trend research, carousels, AI images, silence removal, and static visuals — that turn a solo creator into a one-person production team.