{
  "source": "yt1",
  "clips": {
    "linkedin_a": {
      "duration": "60s",
      "screen_headline": "2,000mg: What That Number Means Clinically",
      "screen_body": "The recommended therapeutic dose for an adult is 5-10mg.\nA gas-station gummy can be 400x that in one package.",
      "hook": "I pulled a 14-year-old off a 2,000mg gas-station gummy at Emory last spring. His mother asked me if that was a lot.",
      "deliver_hook": "Steady, clinical. Let the number do the work.",
      "core_message": "The standard medical starting dose for THC is 5 to 10 milligrams. A 2,000mg gas-station gummy is 200 to 400 times that dose. Parents are not failing to protect their kids because they do not care. They are failing because no one has ever given them the clinical math. That is the gap. Gas-station products are unregulated, untested, and frequently mislabeled. A dispensary product is third-party tested. Those are not equivalent risks. Parents need that distinction before the ER visit, not during it.",
      "deliver_core": "Analytical authority. No hyperbole. The numbers carry the weight.",
      "cta": "Follow Charles for clinical ER education that closes the parent knowledge gap.",
      "deliver_cta": "Direct, unhurried.",
      "caption": "A 14-year-old arrived at Emory after a 2,000mg gas-station gummy. His mother had no idea what that number meant. Here is the clinical math every parent needs. #ERnurse #parentingtips #THCeducation #gasstation #clinicaleducation",
      "hook_variant_a": "Four hundred times the medical starting dose. That is what a gas-station gummy contains. And most parents have never heard that number.",
      "hook_variant_b": "An ER nurse's math: 5mg is a medical starting dose. 2,000mg is what the gas station sells next to the Gatorade."
    },
    "linkedin_b": {
      "duration": "45s",
      "screen_headline": "Gas Station vs. Dispensary: The Actual Clinical Difference",
      "screen_body": "Dispensary: third-party tested, regulated, traceable.\nGas station: unregulated, untested, frequently mislabeled.",
      "hook": "There is a clinical difference between a dispensary product and a gas-station Delta-8 product. One is a medical product. The other is a liability.",
      "deliver_hook": "Clear, factual contrast. Not preachy.",
      "core_message": "A licensed dispensary is required to third-party test every product. Label accuracy is regulated. A gas-station Delta-8 product has no mandatory testing and no oversight body verifying the milligram count. The 1995 D.A.R.E. curriculum never made this distinction because these products did not exist. In 2026 they are on shelves two miles from your kid's school. The conversation parents need to have includes this clinical distinction. Without it, the risk is invisible.",
      "deliver_core": "Informational, not alarming. The distinction is the message.",
      "cta": "Follow Charles for more on clinical substance education for parents.",
      "deliver_cta": "Brief and direct.",
      "caption": "Gas station vs. dispensary. These are not equivalent products. Here is the clinical distinction parents need to know. #ERnurse #Delta8 #substanceeducation #parenteducation #nursecharlesmedia",
      "hook_variant_a": "The most important thing parents do not know about Delta-8: it is sold legally at gas stations with no testing requirement. That is not the same as a dispensary product.",
      "hook_variant_b": "Dispensary product: tested, labeled, regulated. Gas-station product: none of the above. One clinical distinction that changes the risk conversation."
    },
    "reels": {
      "duration": "60s",
      "screen_headline": "What 2,000mg Does to a Teenager",
      "screen_body": "Medical starting dose: 5-10mg\nGas-station gummy: up to 2,000mg\nThat's a 400x gap parents don't know exists.",
      "hook": "A gas-station gummy brought a 14-year-old into my ER at Emory. Two thousand milligrams. His mother had never heard that number before.",
      "deliver_hook": "Warm but urgent. Pull them in with specificity.",
      "core_message": "For 30 years I have treated substance emergencies at Emory Healthcare. The cases that hit different are not the ones where parents knew and did not act. They are the ones where parents had no clinical frame at all. 2,000mg on a label means nothing without context. The context is: medical starting dose is 5 to 10mg. This is a 400x gap. Gas-station products are unregulated. Delta-8 is legal in most states and sold openly. A parent who knows these three things walks into the conversation with their teenager with clinical vocabulary. That changes everything.",
      "deliver_core": "Conversational authority. This should feel like Charles is talking to a friend, not lecturing.",
      "cta": "Save this. The full clinical breakdown is on this channel.",
      "deliver_cta": "Natural, not salesy.",
      "caption": "What does 2,000mg actually do to a teenager? I am breaking it down from 30 years of ER cases at Emory. Save this if you are a parent. #nursecharlesmedia #ERnurse #2000mg #THC #parenteducation",
      "hook_variant_a": "I have pulled teenagers off gas-station gummies with 2,000mg of THC. Here is what that dose does clinically and why most parents have no framework for it.",
      "hook_variant_b": "The number on the gas-station gummy package: 2,000mg. The number most parents know: zero. Here is the clinical bridge."
    },
    "tiktok": {
      "duration": "60s",
      "screen_headline": "400x the Medical Dose. At a Gas Station.",
      "screen_body": "5-10mg = medical starting dose\n2,000mg = gas station shelf\nParents need this number.",
      "hook": "Two thousand milligrams of THC in a single gas-station package. The medical starting dose is 5mg. That gap is why I made this video.",
      "deliver_hook": "Fast, specific, direct. TikTok front-load.",
      "core_message": "The 1995 D.A.R.E. education most parents received talked about marijuana. It did not prepare them for 2,000mg unregulated Delta-8 gummies at a gas station two miles from a high school. In an ER, we treat the outcome. What I am building here is the clinical education that should happen before that outcome. The dose-to-outcome equation is not linear at these concentrations. A 14-year-old with zero tolerance hitting 2,000mg is not just 'really high.' It is a clinical presentation, tachycardia, confusion, vomiting, that most parents have never been prepared to recognize. That changes now.",
      "deliver_core": "Confident, rapid-fire clinical facts. TikTok pace.",
      "cta": "More on this: search 'gas station gummies' on TikTok for more clinical context from this channel.",
      "deliver_cta": "Casual, keyword-drive.",
      "caption": "The clinical math most parents have never seen: 5mg is a medical dose. 2,000mg is a gas-station gummy. This is what happens in the ER. #ERnurse #gasstation #2000mg #Delta8 #parenteducation #nursecharlesmedia #clinicaleducation",
      "hook_variant_a": "400 times the medical dose. Sold legally. At a gas station. Here is the clinical breakdown.",
      "hook_variant_b": "If your teenager bought a gummy at a gas station, here is what 2,000mg means in clinical terms from an ER nurse."
    },
    "youtube_shorts": {
      "duration": "60s",
      "screen_headline": "2,000mg Gas-Station Gummies: The ER View",
      "screen_body": "What the clinical progression actually looks like.\nAnd what parents need to know BEFORE it happens.",
      "hook": "I treated a 14-year-old at Emory who had ingested a 2,000mg gas-station gummy. I want to show you exactly what that looks like from the ER side.",
      "deliver_hook": "Authoritative and grounded. YouTube audience expects clinical depth.",
      "core_message": "Acute THC toxicity at high doses produces tachycardia, confusion, agitation, and in worst-case scenarios, respiratory effects that require clinical intervention. The clinical threshold is not a warning on a gas-station label. The 1995 D.A.R.E. education framework most parents carry does not include a milligram-to-outcome reference. I am giving that to you now: 5 to 10mg is the clinical starting dose for an experienced adult. Two thousand milligrams in a teenager with zero tolerance is a substance emergency. Narcan is not the treatment. Supportive care and time are. But the family sitting in the waiting room needs to know what to tell the team. That knowledge starts here.",
      "deliver_core": "Full clinical register. YouTube audience will stay for depth.",
      "cta": "Subscribe to this channel for more clinical ER education for parents. New videos every week.",
      "deliver_cta": "Clear and specific.",
      "caption": "The ER reality of 2,000mg gas-station gummies. A clinical breakdown from 30 years at Emory Healthcare. Subscribe for more. #ERnurse #THCoverdose #gasstation #parenteducation #NurseCharles",
      "hook_variant_a": "From the ER side: what a 2,000mg gas-station gummy does to a 14-year-old and why most parents have no clinical frame for it.",
      "hook_variant_b": "Thirty years at Emory Healthcare and the clinical case I see parents least prepared for is this one."
    }
  }
}