Modern Creator Network
Mike and Matty · YouTube · 03:17

If you think you're too busy, watch this

A 3-minute YouTube essay where a med-school dropout dismantles the busy excuse using social reinforcement and an iPhone-battery metaphor.

Posted
1 weeks ago
Duration
Format
Essay
sincere
Channel
MAM
Mike and Matty
§ 01 · The Hook

The bait, then the rug-pull.

The title is the bait and the bait is the bug. "I'm too busy" — Matty opens by saying the line his audience uses to excuse themselves, then carves out the people who genuinely are (60-hour weeks, kids, no margin) so he can spend the next three minutes hard on the rest of us. What follows is a compact belief-update essay: med-school collapse, two living counter-examples, the psychology label that names the trap, and the iPhone metaphor that makes it stick.

§ · Stated Promise

What the video promised.

stated at 00:17If you truly are busy ... that is a different problem. [Otherwise] I investigated my beliefs about time, and it changed everything.delivered at 02:36
§ · Chapters

Where the time goes.

00:0000:17

01 · Cold open

Names the excuse, then carves out the genuinely-busy so the rest of the video can be a confrontation.

00:1701:04

02 · Med-school collapse

Day-one orientation, 'drinking from a fire hose,' drops side quests, locks in, two-year slow burnout.

01:0401:36

03 · Why am I doing this?

Burnt out, asking the question. Visuals of head-in-hands, hunched against a wall, late-night iPad.

01:3601:57

04 · Pattern interrupt — Ali Abdaal

Discovers 'this friendly guy' (Ali Abdaal, shown via 'My Favourite iPad Productivity Apps' subscribe card). Top of class at Cambridge, ran a business, full-time medical student.

01:5702:16

05 · Pattern interrupt — the surgeon-founder

Plastic-surgery resident, 80hr weeks, built and scaled a company while top of his class. Two proof points stacked.

02:1602:36

06 · Investigate the belief

Names the move: 'I did what I wish I'd done years ago. No, it wasn't quit medicine. That came a little bit later. I investigated my beliefs about time.'

02:3603:03

07 · Social reinforcement

Title card + animated conformity-circle CG. Names the psychological mechanism: when everyone around you believes something, you adopt it. Becomes a suffocating echo chamber for the ambitious.

03:0303:33

08 · Stress test the script

Who decided 12 hours of studying? Who decided 3am nights out? Better study strategies exist. Real friends survive dipping out early.

03:3303:33

09 · Too busy being busy

Word-pop overlay: 'you're too busy being busy.' The thesis line, captioned for the clip.

03:3304:46

10 · iPhone metaphor + payoff

iPhone with hundreds of apps quietly draining the battery. Closes the apps → launches YouTube channel with brother, builds a tech startup, runs a business — while still a full-time medical student.

04:4603:17

11 · CTA

'Stop accepting busy and start creating.' Direct, single-line, no link mention on-screen (link is in description).

§ · Storyboard

Visual structure at a glance.

open
hookopen00:00
scope ident
promisescope ident00:17
med school
storymed school00:22
burnout
storyburnout01:04
Ali Abdaal
proofAli Abdaal01:36
surgeon-founder
proofsurgeon-founder01:57
framework card
valueframework card02:36
conformity CG
valueconformity CG02:45
thesis caption
valuethesis caption03:33
iPhone metaphor
valueiPhone metaphor03:38
CTA
ctaCTA04:46
§ · Frameworks

Named ideas worth stealing.

01:50concept

Social Reinforcement

When everyone around you believes something to be true, you adopt the same belief. Normally harmless — but for ambitious people in low-ambition environments it becomes an echo chamber that suffocates outlier behavior.

Steal forAny belief-update essay. Name the psychological mechanism AFTER you've shown the receipts — viewer is already nodding before you label it.
02:30concept

Investigate your beliefs about time

Don't try to add more hours — interrogate the assumptions about how the hours need to be spent. 12-hour study days, 3am nights out, full calendars are scripts you absorbed, not laws.

Steal forSelf-coaching prompt. 'When's the last time you questioned X' is the structure he closes with.
03:35concept

Closed-apps iPhone metaphor

Your busy life is an iPhone with hundreds of apps open. Each one invisible but draining your battery and slowing every decision. Close them and you free the resource you needed.

Steal forPick the metaphor your audience ALREADY uses about themselves and weaponize it. Everyone has felt their phone slow down.
§ · Quotables

Lines you could clip.

00:00
I'm too busy. It's the most common answer or, let's be honest, excuse that stops you from creating.
Self-incriminating opener — viewer cannot disagree without admitting itTikTok / Reels cold open
03:33
The problem is you're too busy being busy.
Already captioned on screen, 5 words, repeatablePull-quote graphic, newsletter subject line
03:35
It's like your iPhone that's got hundreds of apps that are open ... quietly draining your battery.
Visual metaphor with universal recognitionStandalone 20s short, no setup needed
03:16
The fastest way to beat being busy is to remove it.
Punchy, koan-shaped, fits a cardX post, IG quote card
05:12
Stop accepting busy and start creating.
Hard CTA — viewable as a manifesto line independent of the videoChannel tagline, end-screen text
§ · Pacing

How they spent the runtime.

Hook length17s
Info densityhigh
Filler5%
§ · Resources Mentioned

Things they pointed at.

01:40channelAli Abdaal
01:57channelPlastic surgery resident creator (unnamed on-screen)
§ · CTA Breakdown

How they asked for the click.

04:46next-video
It's time to update your beliefs. When's the last time you questioned your habits or checked your screen time? ... Stop accepting busy and start creating.

Soft CTA — no on-screen subscribe button or product mention. Real CTA is in the description (Work With Us / Find your Profitable Niche / 0-to-$1M Creator Playbook links). Implicit ask is behavior change, not click.

§ · The Script

Word for word.

HOOKopening / re-engagementCTAthe pitchmetaphoranalogystory
00:00HOOKI'm too busy. It's the most common answer or, let's be honest, excuse that stops you from creating. And look, if you truly are busy, you work fifty, sixty hours a week, you have family, kids, you spend every waking moment productive and you still don't have time, that is a different problem. When I started medical school, there was this mandatory seminar on day one. Our assistant dean, doctor Gigi Giovanni, she stood at the front of this classroom
00:26and she made one thing really clear. These next four years are gonna be brutal, like drinking from a fire hose. I believed her. So I let go of everything else, my side quests, my creative goals, my dreams of being a Coachella DJ. And for the next two years, I locked in. I studied until my brain was numb, my eyes were heavy, and then after exams, I go out with friends and let loose until my brain was numb and my eyes were heavy. And then we'd do it all over again. I was super busy, but at the same time, I was slowly breaking down. The days got longer, exams got tougher, my grades started slipping, even the nights out started to kinda feel old.
01:05I was burnt out. And every night, I remember thinking, why am I doing this? And is this how it's gonna be? But then I discovered this friendly guy. Hey, friends. Welcome back to the channel. Today, we're talking He was top of his class at Cambridge. He ran a business, and he was a full time medical student just like me. And then I also found this guy. He was a plastic surgery resident working eighty hours a week who also built and scaled a freaking company
01:31while scoring top of his class. And I remember sitting with that and thinking, how is this even possible? Right? These guys were definitely busier than me, but they were doing way more. And so I did what I wish I'd done years ago. And no, it wasn't quit medicine. That came a little bit later. I investigated my beliefs about time, and it changed everything. There's this principle in psychology known as social reinforcement. When everyone around you believes something to be true, we adopt the same belief. Normally, it's harmless, but for people who don't feel like they belong, more ambitious,
02:03maybe they want more, it creates this echo chamber, and that echo chamber suffocates you. Who decided that twelve hours of studying a day was what was needed? Or when has ever being out at three in the morning helped me with anything? So I stress tested these ideas, and it broke my brain. Who knew you could learn way more efficiently with better strategies? Or you could dip out early on a night out and your real friends would still like you. The problem is you're too busy being busy, and you never question if busy is the best solution, and it slowly
02:33wears you down. It's like your iPhone that's got hundreds of apps that are open. You can't see it, but it's quietly draining your battery and slowing down every decision. But when I closed out of them, it gave me the space to launch YouTube channel with my brother, and build a tech startup, and launch a business while I was a full time medical student. That stuff changed my life. It's time to update your beliefs. When's the last time you questioned your habits or checked your screen time? Investigated if the shit on your calendar actually helps you achieve your goals? Because the fastest way to beat being busy is to remove it. If you really wanna build a meaningful life, to create things that people love and become recognized for your ideas,
03:13HOOKCTAstop accepting busy and start creating.
§ · For Joe

Steal the belief-update essay.

Mike and Matty playbook

Bait the excuse, carve out the exceptions, collapse personally, stack two living counter-examples, name the psychology, stress-test the script, close on a metaphor the audience already uses about themselves.

  • Make the title the bait line and have your first spoken sentence repeat it back. The viewer self-selects in.
  • Carve out the audience you DON'T want to confront in the first 15 seconds. It buys you permission to be hard on everyone else.
  • Tell your personal collapse before you teach the lesson — receipts before frameworks.
  • Stack two living counter-examples by name (or visible logo) so 'is this even possible' becomes 'these specific people did it.'
  • Don't introduce the psychology label until the viewer is already nodding. Social reinforcement at 1:43, not 0:30.
  • Close on a metaphor the viewer already uses about themselves (their phone, their inbox, their car) — they'll repeat it in their head later.
  • Soft on-screen CTA, hard CTA in the description. The video sells the belief, the description sells the product.
§ · For You

What this could mean for you.

If 'I'm too busy' is your default answer

The fastest way to beat being busy is to interrogate the script you're running — not to add more hours, but to question why those hours are spent the way they are.

  • Make a list of the things on your calendar that you've never actually questioned. Twelve-hour days, late nights, recurring obligations. Ask each one: who decided this was needed?
  • Look for two people who are clearly busier than you and producing more than you. Don't admire them — investigate them. They've solved something you haven't.
  • Notice when you say 'I'm too busy' to yourself. The phrase is a closed door; treat it as a question instead: too busy for what, and at what cost?
  • Run the iPhone test: list the open apps in your life right now (commitments, subscriptions, group chats, mental loops). Close three you don't actively need. See what the freed-up bandwidth does.
  • Check your screen time once a week. The number doesn't lie about what you actually have time for.
  • If you keep telling yourself you'll 'get to the thing' once you're less busy, you won't. Less-busy is something you build by removing, not by waiting.
§ · Frame Gallery

Visual moments.