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Nobody became a developer to write documentation. But the docs still need to get written — PRDs, README updates, architecture decisions, onboarding guides.
Wispr Flow lets you talk through it instead. Speak naturally about what the code does, how it works, and why you built it that way. Flow formats everything into clean, professional text you can paste into Notion, Confluence, or GitHub.
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In previous editions we said that distribution now is the challenge, not creating the app itself.
Now, you think distribution means going viral.
You think it means getting on camera. Becoming an influencer. Showing up every day and posting your face to people who didn’t ask.
That’s why you’re not building.
Two founders just hit 100,000 YouTube subscribers without uploading a single video themselves.
Their channel is called Prayer Lock. It’s the marketing arm of a Christian prayer app.
Mau Baron and Ernesto Lopez built it eight months ago. They’ve spent 30 minutes on it, total. This week they crossed the line for the YouTube Silver Play Button.
They’re about to be the first founders to win one with 100% automated content.
Here’s exactly what they did, step by step. Mau wrote up the full method on X. I’m going to walk you through it so you can copy it this weekend.
Mau and Ernesto picked ZackD Films. Brainrot-style 60-second videos that pull millions of views per post.
The point isn’t ZackD. The point is finding any creator whose viewers are also your customers. If your app is for accountants, find an accountant TikTokker. If your app is for parents, find a parenting creator. The “brainrot” feel is part of why this works. The shock pulls attention.
2. Make ONE CTA clip in CapCut. That’s the only content you make.
They grabbed images from Pinterest.
Added a recognizable viral song.
Stitched a 7-second pitch for the Prayer Lock app.
Saved it as CTAvideo.mp4.
That’s it. After this, you don’t make any more video. The system makes the rest.
As you can see by the video below, the CTA part does not need to be very beatiful to work.
3. Open Claude Code and write the scraper. Use a caveman prompt.
Mau pasted this almost verbatim:
“Hey Claude, I need you to create for me a scraper that uses a headless browser to download the YouTube Shorts videos from a given creator… I just want to scrape each video one by one for ten different times, okay.”Notice the tone. There’s no “please carefully construct a robust solution.” There’s “okay.” Conversational. Specific. Done in two minutes.
This is happening because people are using tools like Wispr Flow to literally talk to their AIs, instead of writing prompts that are too formal and short.
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Claude Code writes the Python script. You run it pointed at the creator’s Shorts page. It dumps videos into a folder on your machine.
4. Tell Claude Code to stitch the hooks to your CTA.
Same chat, next prompt:
“Hey Claude! Now I need you to create a script and to run it that grabs the first three seconds of the YouTube videos that you just downloaded… and then immediately after you want to stitch the video titled CTAvideo.mp4 found in the same folder… Go!”That’s it. The script takes the first 3 seconds of each scraped video, appends your CTA clip, and outputs a folder full of finished posts.
5. Schedule the uploads.
They use post bridge by @jackfriks. Any scheduler works. One important warning from Mau: YouTube shadow-bans aggressive automated uploads in the first week. They got hit multiple times. His advice is to post manually for the first 7 days, then flip the switch.
That’s the whole system.
869 videos live.
2,000+ scheduled.
Most videos pull under 5,000 views each.
The math: small numbers times a lot of videos equals seven million views.

As you can see, some videos just dont add up, but others just distribute like butter.
Every video has the same title: “join 100k+ Christians on the prayer lock app.” Same wording on the 902-view video and the 4,000-view video. They didn’t iterate. They didn’t optimize. They kept the loop running.
Algorithms don’t reward your strategy. They reward consistence.
You don’t need a face. You don’t need a viral hit. You don’t need to overcomplicate.
You need one boring action you can run on autopilot.
Pick the channel you’ve been avoiding because you didn’t want to be on camera. YouTube. TikTok. LinkedIn. Whatever you’ve been scared of.
What’s the boring loop you could build with Claude Code in 30 minutes this weekend?
Pick one. See you next week. Go ship.
— Bissuh

There’s two kinds of operators in this game.
System-sellers and ritual-shippers.
System-sellers write the polished case study. They sell the framework. They make threads about “the 7 things that built my $10K MRR.” They almost never run the loop themselves.
Ritual-shippers ship the same boring action, on the same schedule, for months. They don’t post their strategy. They post their work.
Mau and Ernesto are the second kind. Their CTA didn’t change between video #1 and video #4,000. They didn’t pivot. They didn’t optimize. They just kept the loop going.
The trap of system-selling is it pretends to be a shortcut. It isn’t. The actual shortcut is doing the same boring thing on schedule until the algorithm notices.
So here’s my question.
Don’t tell me your strategy. Tell me what you ship every day.
— Chico




