An obese comedian’s persuasion secret for picking up chicks & changing closed minds

Published: Mon, 07/27/20

One of my top marketing influences, even though he was not a marketer or even a businessman… was the late comedian Patrice O’Neal.

One of his abilities:

He could persuasively change even some of the most set-in-stone minds about certain topics. It didn’t mean everyone always agreed with him. But, they’d have to at least think about what he was saying, and have to respond with something more than a shallow Twitter hashtag-level brain fart. And whatever he said would significantly “up” the chances of getting what he wanted, and was guaranteed to get attention, discussion, and thinking about the subject either way.

His favorite topic to do this was dating & relationships.

For example:

On a show he used to host he told a story about a woman he was talking to and, before they even made plans to go out, much less went on the first date, she said:

“Just so you know right now, I don’t give casual sex.”

To which Patrice’s reply was:

“I don’t give casual conversation.”

The result:

With one sentence he demonstrated his value, stood out from the needy & thirsty mush cookie guys begging for her attention, and you can fill in the blanks from there.

The point of all this?

The psychology behind how he would persuade - whether it was in business, life, dating, or whatever it was - is one of the parts of what makes up the secret way of writing emails I teach in the August “Email Players” issue — that I’ve been using for years to get people who otherwise would ignore, roll their eyes at, and even outright hate me... to become eager-to-buy fans, customers, and even JV partners.

There’s powerful information in this issue.

And only subscribers will possess it, as I don’t know anyone else teaching it.

To learn this secret, with examples spanning multiple niches, I don't recommend procrastinating.

As soon as the deadline hits, it gets turned off in the cart for a while.

To subscribe, read the letter carefully here:

https://www.EmailPlayers.com

Ben Settle