The bait, then the rug-pull.
The cold open is a confession — not from Andy, but from the man across the whiteboard from him. 'I don't know what else to do.' Then Andy hits the bait: 'Do you want a real miracle right now?' Eleven seconds of broken-man footage and a promise of a miracle. That's the deal. The next ten minutes are the receipt.
What the video promised.
stated at 00:24“I changed his life in eleven minutes... Not only did it work in his life, but it also can work in yours.”delivered at 08:11
Where the time goes.

01 · Cold open: 'I don't know what else to do'
Raw footage hook — client at the bottom, Andy offers a 'real miracle.' Pattern-interrupt opening that frames the rest of the video as a documented breakthrough.

02 · Pool-house promise to camera
Cut to Andy alone in his Scottsdale pool-house wearing the 'Elliott 5.1 Army' tee, framing what the viewer is about to see: a man 'about to self-sabotage his life' getting fixed in 11 minutes.

03 · Diagnosis: 'trash can mind' & the fence metaphor
Back in the war-room, Andy names the problem — 'mind disease,' a 'trash can mind.' Introduces the central frame: God on one side, the devil on the other, and the client paralyzed sitting on a fence the devil owns.

04 · Naming the spiritual battle & getting yes-ladder commitments
Reframe: 'It's an eternal issue. You can't fix it. You've already tried.' Then the yes-ladder: 'Do you want him to fix it? Do you believe he can?' Each weak yes is challenged until the conviction sharpens.

05 · The chair: 'You have more faith in that chair than you do in God'
The signature move of the whole video. Andy points to a chair, asks the client to walk over and sit. Then drives in the metaphor: you trusted the chair to hold you without inspecting it; you trust other drivers in their lanes; you use faith everywhere — just not with God. This is the wedge that cracks the belief system.

06 · Spiritual warfare reframe: 'There's no enemy in the room'
Andy externalizes the client's self-sabotage. 'There's no one in your company self-sabotaging you. You did that.' Pulls the source of the problem out of HR and into the spiritual plane: 'You're literally favored by God. You're also favored by the devil — and you're allowing the devil to run your mind.'

07 · Stand him up — shift the state, shift the posture
Andy gets the client out of the chair. Narrates to camera: 'My number one goal is to shift his state. In order to shift his state, I gotta shift his posture.' Re-runs the belief checks while the client is now standing toe-to-toe.

08 · Invite Him in — the 10-minute prayer (off-camera)
Andy walks the client through inviting God into his heart, then into his mind. Acknowledges to camera that ten minutes of silent prayer were cut from the video. Specific request: 'Remove every lie. Fill it back up with the truth.'

09 · After-shot: 'A new man has been born'
Andy narrates the visible transformation: 'You can see a new belief. You can see a new self-confidence. If you look closely, you can see the spirit on him.' Sells the result before the viewer can question it.

10 · Re-anchor: faith + work, not faith instead of work
Closes a potential loophole — 'Now are you gonna have to freaking train hard in the gym? Eat clean? Wake up on time? Yes. You're gonna do those things. But now when you do those things with God on your side, oh my gosh — you're gonna rise up.' Bridges spiritual to operational.

11 · Rich-life close: 'God has provided a spot for me at every table'
Andy reframes the win as bigger than money — peace, no anxiety, knowing you belong wherever you walk in. The 'tables' line lands as the spiritual upgrade to a sales-mindset closer.

12 · CTA: text 918-210-0254 for coaching
Direct-to-camera close. Identifies the audience ('the true one percenters' — anyone who made it to the end), restates the offer (one-on-one coaching), drops the phone number twice, ends on black slate with the number on screen.
Visual structure at a glance.
Named ideas worth stealing.
The Fence Metaphor
God on one side, the devil on the other, the client paralyzed in the middle. The kicker that closes the metaphor: 'the devil owns the fence' — indecision is not neutrality.
The Chair Test for Faith
You sat in that chair without inspecting it. You drive over a hill without stopping the car to check the other lane. You use faith everywhere — just not with God. Tangible, undeniable, in-the-room proof of an abstract concept.
Shift the state by shifting the posture
Direct quote: 'My number one goal is to shift his state. In order to shift his state, I gotta shift his posture, so I'm going to stand him up.' Classic NLP move, narrated openly to the audience as it happens.
The Yes-Ladder Repeat
Andy asks the same question three times in a row with mounting force — 'Do you believe he can? Do you believe he can? Do you believe he can?' — until the yes hardens. Soft yes is treated as a no.
Faith + Work (closing the loophole)
Pre-empts the lazy interpretation: 'Are you still gonna have to train hard, eat clean, show up to appointments? Yes. But now with God on your side...' Bolts the spiritual ask onto the operational grind.
Lines you could clip.
“Do you want a real miracle right now?”
“You have more faith in that chair than you do in God.”
“The devil owns the fence.”
“My number one goal is to shift his state. To shift his state, I gotta shift his posture.”
“God has provided a spot for me at every table. The good tables.”
“A new man has been born.”
How they spent the runtime.
Things they pointed at.
How they asked for the click.
“If you'd like me to help personally take you to another level, I'd love to. You can text me right now, 918-210-0254. It's simple. 918-210-0254. Let's change your life. Let's go.”
Two CTAs stacked — first the in-video phone number drop (twice for memorization), then a closing black slate that holds the number in big white text after the speech ends. The number was also stamped on lower-thirds throughout the video (visible at 03:58, 06:53, 10:37). Direct response 101 — say it, repeat it, show it, slate it.
Word for word.
Steal the format.
Wrap a single repeatable framework in 'never-before-seen footage' and let the result land before you sell.
- Open on the raw moment of weakness, not on yourself. The client's 'I don't know what else to do' is a stronger hook than any line Andy could write for himself.
- Cut to a confident narrator-piece-to-camera within 15 seconds — the pool-house tee shot is the 'I'm safe, trust me' anchor that sells the upcoming intensity.
- Build the whole teaching around ONE physical object in the room. The chair is the entire video. Find your chair.
- Narrate your own moves to the audience while you're making them ('I'm about to stand him up to shift his state'). Meta-coaching is content gold — it teaches AND demonstrates simultaneously.
- Always close the 'faith without work' loophole. If your offer feels too miraculous, name the work the buyer still has to do — it actually increases belief, not decreases it.
- Stack your CTA: say the number, repeat the number, show the number on lower-thirds, end on a black slate that holds the number. Direct-response stacking still works in 2026.
- Pre-roll the result before you show the work. 'A new man has been born' is delivered confidently — the audience accepts the transformation because YOU did.
What this could mean for you.
The lesson under the religious frame is universal — indecision is not neutrality, and you already use faith everywhere except where it matters most.
- Notice the things you trust without thinking — the chair, the lane next to you on the highway, the elevator cable. You already practice faith dozens of times a day.
- If you're stalled between two options ('should I commit or should I wait?'), recognize that the waiting is itself a choice — and usually the worst one.
- When you're spiraling on 'someone is sabotaging me at work,' check whether the actual saboteur is your own thinking. Most enemies are internal.
- Posture changes state. If you're stuck mentally, physically stand up, walk to a different room, or move your body before trying to think your way out.
- Faith without action is a wish. Whatever you decide to believe in, you still have to do the reps — train, eat clean, show up. Belief amplifies effort; it doesn't replace it.
- A 'rich life' isn't the bank balance — it's walking into any room and knowing you belong there. That posture is buildable.




































































