2026-02-08 - Create Content
Context
Goal
Let’s play around with this a bit.
Ok, today we’re creating the content for a long-form newspaper/magazine.
The purpose is to test generate newspaper content. If I like this, we may go through a multi-step generation of a newspaper or I may let the material sit for a while. Depends on how I feel about the intellectual nature of the work.
This report and the associated newspaper will be dated 2026-02-08 Be sure to use that date and also the day of the week. You can note the date this was actually generated at the bottom if you’d like
The title of the newspaper will be “The Review”
I’ve requested a research report to verify facts and re-organize themes. I’ve attached the report at the end of this prompt. The catch is that we’re taking the research and theme and having fun with them. These are dry topics How can we play around with them? Are there any good sourced quotes. comments, editorials, essays, or such that are funny and are about this topic? Make it light, but be sure you’re not lying about the facts. For each story, write it using a traditional newspaper story with the pyramid format. Write for a higher-education level, except for the lead sentence, which should be readable by most anybody deciding on whether to continue reading the story or not (as in a traditional newspaper). Continue until you have all the stories created. Now let’s make something to put at the top of our newspaper. Write a brief, perhaps 2-5 paragraphs, along with a headline, to tell the user what the rest of the document is going to be. This is our introduction. That’ll be our lead at the top before folks dive into each headline. This should give folks a good idea of whether they want to read anything in the paper at all. At the bottom, give your editorial based on the information and Overarching Connecting Theme Each of these assignments, the stories, the introduction, and the editorial, shouldn’t take more than 10 minutes to read. Try to write good headlines for each story that are non-technical. Finally, don’t tell me about my instructions to you as far as the newspaper. The top part should be the pitch for the entire paper only, not you repeating all the instructions and constraints.
No matter what, be sure to follow the editorial guidelines.
For those who are interested in pursuing further along the lines of hearing pro/con commentary, I’d like a link to opinion pieces that are the best representation of this. I’ve been a big fan of the realclear series of websites, as they give a broad overview of the opinion community. However, sadly much opinion is simply hair-on-fire rage bait, not well thought-out articles. There’s a lot of audience capture.
I know that you have access to even more current opinion pieces, like X and essays linked from X. There’s still that quality problem, though. For each of the newspaper articles you make, plus the editorial, scan all of the recent <4 weeks opinion pieces and give me the best pro and con essay under each of the articles and editorial. I’d also like a new, more newsworthy title along with one word representing the author. The heading should be something like “Pros and Cons” in smaller font than the story headline. I guess that’s H4.
A Style guide to the newspaper is included below before the research paper:
Just to emphasize, I want places in each article to hold images or infographics I can create or find later. If you an image or infographic, put it in there. Colored infographics are great. Those kind of pencil sketch heads like you used to see on the NYT are also cool. But don’t worry about images unless you can find one. We’ll do that in the formatting stage. I want actual links to the pros and cons with brief descriptions of their arguments.
APPLT WHAT YOU CAN FROM THE STYLE GUIDE, BUT WE’RE NOT DOING GRAPHICAL LAYOUT HERE. We simply want to make sure any sort of content material we can find is put into the markdown.
You probably want to break this work up into small pieces because it might crash and you’ll need to pick back up where you left off.
Background
Relevant context, prior work, and constraints
Success Criteria
How will you know when this is done well?
Daily Newspaper Style Guide
This style guide ensures consistency across all editions of the daily newspaper. It applies to both human editors and large language models (LLMs) during the final polishing stage, after core content (articles, headlines, images, etc.) has been drafted. The goal is to maintain a professional, readable, and uniform appearance, fostering reader trust and brand recognition. Adhere strictly to these rules unless overridden by specific editorial decisions.
1. Overall Structure and Layout
- Edition Header (Masthead): Every edition must start with a centered masthead block including:
- Volume and issue details, day, date, and price in uppercase, small caps or equivalent, on one line (e.g., “VOL. I, NO. 47 • SUNDAY, JANUARY 11, 2026 • PRICE: ONE MOMENT OF ATTENTION”), centered, in 10-12pt font.
- Newspaper name in bold, uppercase, large font (e.g., 48pt), split across two lines if needed (e.g., “THE GLOBAL” on first line, “CONNECTOR” on second), centered.
- Tagline in quotes, italic, below the name (e.g., “Tracing the threads that hold the world together—before they snap”), centered, in 14pt font.
- A horizontal rule (---) below the masthead for separation.
- Example in markdown approximation:
VOL. I, NO. 47 • SUNDAY, JANUARY 11, 2026 • PRICE: ONE MOMENT OF ATTENTION THE GLOBAL CONNECTOR *"Tracing the threads that hold the world together—before they snap"* ---
- Background and Visual Style: Aim for a newspaper-like background in digital formats (e.g., light beige or subtle paper texture via CSS if possible; in plain markdown, note as a design instruction for rendering).
- Sections: Organize content into a themed newsletter format rather than rigid categories. Start with an introductory article, followed by 4-6 main stories, and end with an editorial. Each story should stand alone but tie into the edition’s theme.
- Introductory article: Begins immediately after masthead, with a main headline in bold, title case.
- Main stories: Each starts with a bold headline, followed by a subheadline in italic.
- Editorial: Labeled as “EDITORIAL” in uppercase, bold, with its own headline.
- Separate sections with ❧ ❧ ❧ or similar decorative dividers.
- Limit total content to 2000-3000 words for a daily edition.
- Page Breaks/Flow: In digital formats, use markdown or HTML breaks for readability. Aim for a “print-like” flow: no more than 800-1000 words per “page” equivalent. Use drop caps for the first letter of major articles.
- Footer: End every edition with:
- A horizontal rule.
- Production Note: A paragraph explaining the collaboration between human and AI, verification process, and encouragement of skepticism (e.g., “Production Note: This edition… Your skepticism remains appropriate and encouraged.”).
- Coming Next: A teaser for the next edition (e.g., “Coming Next Week: [Theme]—examining [details]. Also: [additional hook].”).
- Copyright notice: ”© 2026 [Newspaper Name]. All rights reserved.”
- Contact info: “Editor: [Name/Email] | Submissions: [Email]“.
- No page count; end with a clean close.
2. Typography and Formatting
- Fonts (for digital/print equivalents):
- Headlines: Serif font (e.g., Times New Roman or Georgia), bold, 18-24pt.
- Subheadlines: Serif, italic, 14-16pt.
- Body Text: Serif, regular, 12pt.
- Captions/Quotes: Sans-serif (e.g., Arial or Helvetica), 10pt, italic.
- Use markdown equivalents: # for main headlines, for sections, bold for emphasis, italic for quotes/subtle emphasis.
- Drop Caps: Introduce new articles or major sections with a drop cap for the first letter (e.g., large, bold initial like Welcome). In markdown, approximate with W and continue the paragraph; in rendered formats, use CSS for 3-4 line height drop.
- Headlines:
- Main article headlines: Capitalize major words (title case), no period at end.
- Keep to 1-2 lines (under 70 characters).
- Example: “Everything Is Connected (By Very Fragile Stuff)”
- Body Text:
- Paragraphs: 3-5 sentences each, separated by a blank line.
- Line length: 60-80 characters for readability.
- Bullet points for lists (e.g., key facts): Use - or * with consistent indentation.
- Tables: Use markdown tables for data. Align columns left for text, right for numbers.
- Pull Quotes (Drop Quotes): Insert 1-2 per story, centered, in a boxed or indented block, larger font (14pt), italic, with quotation marks. Place mid-article for emphasis. Example in markdown:
> "The tech giants in California scream about latency and 'packet loss,' viewing the outage as a software bug. The ship captain knows the truth: the internet is just a wire in the ocean." - Emphasis:
- Bold (text) for key terms or names on first mention.
- Italics (text) for book titles, foreign words, or emphasis.
- Avoid ALL CAPS except in headers.
- No underlining except for hyperlinks.
- Punctuation and Spacing:
- Use Oxford comma in lists (e.g., “apples, oranges, and bananas”).
- Single space after periods.
- Em-dashes (—) for interruptions, en-dashes (–) for ranges (e.g., 2025–2026).
- Block quotes: Indent with > or use italics in a separate paragraph for quotes longer than 2 lines.
3. Language and Tone
- Style Standard: Follow Associated Press (AP) style for grammar, spelling, and abbreviations.
- Numbers: Spell out 1-9, use numerals for 10+ (except at sentence start).
- Dates: “Jan. 12, 2026” (abbreviate months when with day).
- Titles: “President Joe Biden” on first reference, “Biden” thereafter.
- Avoid jargon; explain acronyms on first use (e.g., “Artificial Intelligence (AI)”).
- Tone: Neutral, factual, and objective for news stories, with a witty, reflective edge. Editorial may be more opinionated but balanced. Overall voice: Professional, concise, engaging—aim for a reading level of 8th-10th grade. Use direct address like “dear reader” in intros.
- Length Guidelines:
- Introductory article: 200-400 words.
- Main stories: 300-500 words each.
- Editorial: 400-600 words.
- Avoid fluff; prioritize who, what, when, where, why, how, with thematic connections.
- Inclusivity: Use gender-neutral language (e.g., “they” instead of “he/she”). Avoid biased terms; represent diverse perspectives fairly.
- For Further Reading: Perspectives: At the end of each story and editorial, include a “FOR FURTHER READING: PERSPECTIVES” section. Use PRO (green box) and CON (red box) for balanced views. Each entry: Bold label (PRO or CON), title in quotes, source with hyperlink. Approximate boxes in markdown with code blocks or tables; in rendered formats, use colored backgrounds (e.g., light green for PRO, light red for CON). Example:
FOR FURTHER READING: PERSPECTIVES **PRO** "Why Governments Must Control Cable Repair" — Parliament UK Joint Committee Report Source: [publications.parliament.uk](https://publications.parliament.uk) (September 2025) **CON** "Sabotage Fears Outpace Evidence" — TeleGeography Analysis Source: [blog.telegeography.com](https://blog.telegeography.com) (2025)
4. Images and Media
- Placement: Insert images after the first or second paragraph of relevant articles. Use 1-2 per article max. No images in this example, but if used, tie to stories (e.g., maps for cables, illustrations for AI).
- Formatting:
- Size: Medium (e.g., 400-600px wide) for main images; thumbnails for galleries.
- Alignment: Center with wrapping text if possible.
- In text-based formats, describe images in brackets: [Image: Description of scene, credit: Source].
- Captions: Below images, in italics, 1-2 sentences. Include credit (e.g., “Photo by Jane Doe / Reuters”).
- Alt Text (for digital): Provide descriptive alt text for accessibility (e.g., “A bustling city street during rush hour”).
- Usage Rules: Only relevant, high-quality images. No stock photos unless necessary; prefer originals or credited sources.
5. Editing and Proofing Checklist
Before finalizing:
- Consistency Check: Ensure all sections follow the structure. Cross-reference dates, names, facts, and thematic ties.
- Grammar/Spelling: Run through a tool like Grammarly or manual review. Use American English (e.g., “color” not “colour”).
- Fact-Checking: Verify claims with sources; add inline citations if needed (e.g., [Source: Reuters]).
- Readability: Read aloud for flow. Break up dense text with subheads, pull quotes, or bullets.
- LLM-Specific Notes: If using an LLM for polishing, prompt with: “Apply the style guide to this draft: [insert content]. Ensure consistency in structure, tone, formatting, including drop caps, pull quotes, and perspectives sections.”
- Variations: Minor deviations allowed for special editions (e.g., holidays), but document changes.
This guide should be reviewed annually or as needed. For questions, contact the editor-in-chief. By following these rules, each edition will maintain a polished, predictable look that readers can rely on.
Failure Indicators
Warning signs that things are going wrong
Input
What do you need to start? Dependencies, materials, information
Output
What will you produce? Deliverables, artifacts, decisions
Work Area
Log
- 2026-02-06 11:14 - Created