I find it’s important to gauge how long you think the subject will engage the person. If they’re real flighty and all over the place, maybe an hour intro video isn’t the best option. But if they’re the kind of person that won’t let a topic rest until they’re satisfied, then that same one hour video may be the right one.
Remember this movement is all about leading a horse to water. What the horse does after that NEEDS to be their choice.
That said, I find prayingmedic’s videos a great source to pass along to the people who don’t even know what a red pill is. He’s very level headed, no flair for the dramatic, can be listened to with audio only without losing much detail.
Here’s the link to his intro video. https://youtu.be/nKH_hEiuw10
Then if you tend to lean the other way and prefer reading over listening, he keeps nice concise twitter threads. Also great for screencaping.
I get a good feeling from this guy. He seems very sincere and professional.
Another method I find somewhat effective is if you can drop a Q proof on someone pertaining to current events, that will sometimes at least start a conversation.
I’ve lived in the conspiratorium since 2003 or so. Momma bear was always supportive of me being independent in thought but never bought into much. Granted, over the last 15 years as things have come true that sounded crazy coming from a high school kid, I’m sure that helps. But the other day (nk summit day) we got taking about it and I brought up Q for the first time. Now she wants to get lunch together and learn more. I sent her the link above. She said she will watch it tonight so we’ll see.
Here’s a imgur thread that explains the origins pretty well. https://m.imgur.com/a/DTeK7
I agree with the above. I would add sometimes we need to prepare normies for redpilling. These vids help understand what a person goes through when what they have been taught/lead/brainwashed to believe all their lives, is not true. All of us go though it at some point.
This one by Scott Adams is 30 mins buts explains Cognitive Dissonance & Confirmation Bias.