McLaughlin's method is so much cruder than the 5-cut method that it's just comical to watch him claim that it's so great. Pathetic, actually.
Firstly, his method is similar in concept to checking a square for accuracy by drawing a line, flipping the square and drawing another line. This doubles the error and makes the discrepancy more visible. That's basically what Tom is doing when he flips the board between cuts 2 and 3.
Then, he places his "measuring stick with a stop block" to figure out which end is wider, adds a second stop block, and uses a feeler gauge to figure out by how much. That's OK, but just not necessary with the 5-cut method. And various colors of masking tape instead of a feeler gauge? Yikes. And in the end. all that is being measured is twice the error.
The five-cut method doesn't need the "measuring stick and stop blocks". Make a few extra cuts which is no problem since you're already set up. Then on the last cut just cut a smaller slice. Using a dial caliper (who doesn't have one these days?) you can easily see what 4 times the error is.
I admit that his method of using the test piece to determine where to offset the fence to correct the error is clever. That eliminates to the need to adjust the offset amount by the ratio of the fence length to test piece size. but otherwise, the 5-cut method is really no harder that his 3-cut method and more accurate.
Whether you need the higher accuracy of the 5-cut method over Tom's 3-cut method is a whole different issue.