Épisodes

  • Are People Still Hungry After Talking To You?
    May 17 2026

    You know the feeling. Someone answers your question and technically everything is fine. Words were said. The conversation moved on. But something in you didn't move on with it. You're still there. Still waiting. Like you've eaten a full meal but somehow you're still hungry.


    That feeling is not paranoia. That feeling is information. Your brain picked up something your conscious mind hadn't caught yet. And in this episode of How Words Work with Jack Fox, Jack is going to show you exactly what it found.


    From Blake Lively's powerful statement about digital violence that somehow leaves you knowing nothing about her personal experience of it, to the friend who answers every question with "just hung out, nothing much really." Jack breaks down the specific signals that tell you whether someone is genuinely meeting you in a conversation or just making sounds in your direction.


    And just as importantly he shows you what a genuinely nourishing answer looks and sounds like. Because learning who to trust is as important as learning who not to.


    🎙️ How Words Work with Jack Fox. 📩 Jack's weekly newsletter Credible lands every week with one idea you can use straight away. Sign up here: https://jack-fox.kit.com/dfc55f19a6

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    15 min
  • Why Controlling People Are So Hard To Argue With
    May 10 2026

    Most people think coercive control is about behaviour. What they don't realise is that it starts with language. Specific words and phrases designed to make you doubt yourself, feel abnormal, and believe that the problem is you rather than them.


    In this episode of How Words Work I get personal. I share my own experience of being made to feel small by people who used words as weapons, and explain the mechanism behind why it works even on people who know better.


    I break down the specific phrases that controlling people use, why they're so effective, and why hearing them from a new person years later can trigger a reaction that feels completely out of proportion to the situation. And most importantly, he shows you how these same patterns show up in everyday speech when we're stressed or insecure, and how to clean them out of your own words so you never accidentally make someone feel the way you once felt.


    This is the most personal episode of How Words Work. And probably the most important.


    🎙️ How Words Work is a weekly podcast with Jack Fox. 📩 Jack's weekly newsletter Credible lands every week with one idea you can use straight away. Sign up here: https://jack-fox.kit.com/dfc55f19a6

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    10 min
  • The Words That Give You Away Every Single Time
    May 3 2026

    There are certain words and phrases that act like flares. The moment someone uses them, something underneath the surface is exposed. They don't know they've done it. But you'll know.


    In this episode of How Words Work, I break down the specific language tells that reveal deception, evasion and hidden truth. From the word "just" and what it's almost always hiding, to the reason "never" is almost never as absolute as it sounds. From Maxine Carr speaking about two missing girls in the past tense during a live TV interview, to the email that says "just checking you got my message" when what it really means is something else entirely.


    This is the most practical episode yet. By the end of it you'll have a handful of specific things to listen for in every conversation you have, and you'll never use them the same way yourself again.


    🎙️ How Words Work is a weekly podcast with Jack Fox. 📩 Jack's weekly newsletter Credible gives you one idea you can use straight away every week. Sign up here: https://jack-fox.kit.com/dfc55f19a6

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    9 min
  • Why Innocent People Sound Guilty When They Talk
    Apr 26 2026

    You don't have to be a criminal to sound like one. Every day, in offices, relationships, dating profiles and press statements, people use four specific strategies to mislead you without technically lying. And the uncomfortable truth is that you use all four of them too.


    In this episode of How Words Work I break down the four strategies of Truthful Deception. Convincing, Avoidance, persuasion and Selection. I show you exactly how they sound in the wild, from Taylor Frankie Paul's police statement to Bill Clinton describing one of the most scrutinised relationships in modern political history as an “acquaintance." And from a dating profile that tries so hard to sound relaxed it becomes exhausting, to a simple question about a report that somehow turns into a conversation about Jane's personal life.


    By the end of this episode you'll never hear a conversation the same way again.


    How Words Work is a weekly podcast with Jack Fox. 📩 Want to go deeper? Jack's newsletter Credible lands in your inbox every week with one idea you can use straight away. Sign up here: https://jack-fox.kit.com/dfc55f19a6

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    12 min
  • Why You Talk Like Someone on Death Row
    Apr 19 2026

    You've never killed anyone. You've never stood in front of a jury. But the way you speak when you're nervous, defensive, or trying too hard? It follows the exact same patterns as some of the most notorious criminals ever put on trial.


    In this first episode of How Words Work with Jack Fox, Jack reveals why lying is far rarer than you think and why that's actually more alarming, not less. The real threat isn't the outright lie. It's Truthful Deception, the art of misleading someone while never technically saying anything false.


    Using the case of Scott Peterson, a cookie-stealing kid, and a workplace alibi that unravels in four words, Jack shows you how the truth leaks out whether we want it to or not. And more importantly, how to make sure your own words never work against you.


    If you want to speak with more authority, spot when you're being misled, and understand why the truth is always in the words, this is where it starts.


    Want to go deeper? Jack's newsletter Credible lands in your inbox every week with one idea you can use immediately. Sign up here: https://jack-fox.kit.com/dfc55f19a6

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    9 min
  • Why Explaining Early Kills Credibility
    Apr 11 2026
    Explaining feels helpful, but under pressure it sounds like protection. This episode looks at why people explain before committing, how this shows up in deceptive and manipulative language, and why listeners hear defence before they hear information. You’ll learn why answering first and stopping early makes you sound composed, credible, and in control without trying harder.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    5 min
  • Why Your Answers Sound Evasive Even When You’re Telling the Truth
    Apr 5 2026
    When a question feels uncomfortable, people often answer at a higher, safer level than they were asked. This episode breaks down how criminals and manipulators use general language to reduce exposure, how honest people do the same thing under everyday pressure, and why listeners immediately sense that something is missing. You’ll learn how matching the ground of the question restores credibility and reduces follow-up instantly.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    5 min
  • Why Saying “Honestly” Makes People Doubt You
    Mar 29 2026
    People use words like “honestly” when they feel pressure to be believed. This episode explains why credibility markers appear in deceptive and manipulative language, how honest people use them without realising, and why listeners hear uncertainty the moment they show up. You’ll learn why removing these words makes your statements sound calmer, firmer, and more believable without adding anything at all.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    4 min