A couple of thoughts.
Wow, 15 minutes of a self-absorbed idiot inartfully justifying exposing magic using explicatives as well as faulty logic. I'm still trying to figure out how repeatedly using explicatives makes you sound more intelligent. What a tool. What a waste of my time listening to his idiotic ramblings.
However, exposure it isn't that big of a deal.
I remember watching the Masked Magician on television revealing how he changed the color of a silk. My wife, who also was watching, asked me, "is that how you do it?" I lied and told her, "No, of course not." I then went into my magic closet, pulled out a silk and changed the color of the silk. My wife commented that my way of doing it was so much better because I didn't have to use a gimmick. I smiled and agreed, because my wife is always right.
I once had a spectator come up to me who had a magic set as a kid and comment about how the linking rings in their set had a cut out section of the ring and how they knew that magicians really didn't do it that way. I smiled and agreed because spectators are always right.
On OOTW - Roberto Giobbi has a great effect in Card College Light called T.N.T. that shows a shuffled deck and has the spectator mix it up even more before going into an Out of this World type routine. Pefroming it that way disproves the method that is revealed on the internet. Also John Armstrong's Out of this Blah Blah Blah, Giobbi's Intuition and Euguene Burger's version are good presentations.
Ultimately, my advice will echo what
@ChristopherT and
@William Draven said. When you take a trick and perform it, make it your own. Study different methods of accomplishing the same thing. Add convincers and other elements that disprove certain methods (even if those are the methods you are using). Most importantly, dress it up. Do OOTW using post cards or ESP cards or Star Wars Cards ("use the force"). Use quality props (see above comment on linking rings). Give the impression that your performance is something different based on how you present yourself. By taking tricks and making them performance pieces, your audience won't want to know how you did it.
Finally, get a book. I just found a great routine in Scarne on Card Tricks that does a great poker deal from a brand new unopened (really unopened) deck - no sleight of hand involved. Just looking at my shelf -- Lavand, Hilliard, Gardner, Bossi, Carpenter, Regal, Bloomberg, Blum, Bannon (John, not Steven), Jennings, Harris, Giobbi, Tamariz, Steinmeyer. How about magazines - Apocalypse, Hirophant, Almanac, Jinx, Tailsman and Genii. Most YouTube noobs will never crack open a book so you are really safe.