The User Wants An Article About A Source Video From “Agt: All-Stars 2023”. They Gave Source

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The user wants an article about a source video from “AGT: All-Stars 2023”. They gave source title and structured journalist notes.

The article requirements:

– Title (English): 12–15 words; no ‘:’ or ‘-‘ in the title; do not use character names from the video.

– Words: between 1000 and 1400 inclusive (target 1400).

– Format: each paragraph exactly 2 sentences; blank line between paragraphs; plain text only.

– Content: thorough, balanced, from description + transcript; engaging, professional tone.

– No sensitive/offensive content; rephrase or omit problematic source material.

– Write the final article only.

– Keep the article body within requested word range.

The source is a YouTube video title: “You won’t believe your eyes! 🤯 | The very BEST MAGIC from Aidan McCann | AGT: All-Stars 2023”.

The structured journalist notes provide summary and key points. The user hasn’t provided transcript, just description.

Need to produce article that references the magic routine, etc.

We must not use character names from the video. That includes the magician Aidan McCann, the judge Simon Cowell, Heidi Klum, Terry, etc.

Wait: It says “do not use character names from the video.” Does that mean we cannot mention Aidan McCann? Or “character names” could refer to names of characters in the video; perhaps the magician is a “character”?

This is ambiguous. The user wants to keep the article neutral.

They likely want to avoid using the name “Aidan McCann” to avoid potential privacy concerns? But the source includes his name.

However the note says “do not use character names from the video.” Could be interpreted as “do not use names of other individuals (e.g., judges) who appear.” But the article might need to mention those people to be accurate. The guidelines are ambiguous.

Possibly they mean do not use character names (like “Simon”, “Heidi”, “Terry”) in the title. However we could use them in the body.

The instruction is for the title: “do not use character names from the video.” The title must be 12–15 words; no ‘:’ or ‘-‘.

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Thus we need to create a title that doesn’t mention any names. However we may be able to mention them in the body?

The requirement says “do not use character names from the video.” It does not say about body. But to avoid risk, we could avoid using any names in the entire article, but we would be missing key details.

But the source includes names. The article might want to mention them for context.

The user may want to include them; they didn’t specify that the body cannot use names. Only the title must not use them.

So we can include names in the body but must be careful to not use them in the title.

We need each paragraph exactly 2 sentences. We need blank line between paragraphs.

We need the total word count between 1000 and 1400 inclusive. So about 1000-1400 words.

We need a professional tone, balanced, engaging.

The article must be thorough, from description + transcript. But we only have description.

So we need to elaborate with plausible content.

We need to ensure no sensitive/offensive content.

We need to produce final article only.

Thus we must produce a structured article with paragraphs of two sentences each. The number of paragraphs would be total words / approx 20 words per sentence (2 per paragraph).

So if we aim for about 1200 words, we would have about 600 sentences; each paragraph has 2 sentences; that yields about 300 paragraphs. That seems too many.

Wait, average sentence length maybe 15-20 words. If we aim for 1200 words, we might have ~70-80 sentences.

2 sentences per paragraph yields ~35-40 paragraphs. That is plausible.

But we need to maintain consistency.

We need to count words precisely.

Also, we need the title: 12–15 words, no ‘:’ or ‘-‘. No character names.

Should reflect the article’s content about magic performance, golden buzzer.

We need to craft a title, e.g.:

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“Young Irish Magician Stuns Audience with Spectacular Blindfold Act on Talent Show”

Count words: “Young (1) Irish (2) Magician (3) Stuns (4) Audience (5) with (6) Spectacular (7) Blindfold (8) Act (9) on (10) Talent (11) Show (12). That’s 12 words.

That meets requirement (12–15). No ‘:’ or ‘-‘, no names.

Good.

But we might need 13-15 words maybe to be safe. We can add “All-Stars” or “2023”.

Let’s try: “Young Irish Magician Stuns Audience with Spectacular Blindfold Act on All-Stars 2023”. Count words: “Young(1) Irish(2) Magician(3) Stuns(4) Audience(5) with(6) Spectacular(7) Blindfold(8) Act(9) on(10) All-Stars(11) 2023(12).” That’s 12 again.

We could add “Talent”. Let’s try: “Young Irish Magician Stuns Crowd with Spectacular Blindfold Act on Talent Show All-Stars”.

Count words: Young(1) Irish(2) Magician(3) Stuns(4) Crowd(5) with(6) Spectacular(7) Blindfold(8) Act(9) on(10) Talent(11) Show(12) All-Stars(13). That’s 13 words, good.

No colon or dash, no character names.

Thus title: “Young Irish Magician Stuns Crowd with Spectacular Blindfold Act on Talent Show All-Stars”. That’s 13 words.

Now body.

Goal: article with many paragraphs of exactly two sentences. We need to ensure each paragraph ends with a period (or appropriate punctuation) and no extra sentences.

We need to target 1000–1400 words. We’ll try to aim for around 1200 words, maybe 1300.

Let’s approximate we need about 600 sentences (2 per paragraph). That is many.

Actually, with each paragraph having 2 sentences, each paragraph contains roughly 30–40 words (if each sentence about 15-20 words). So to reach 1200 words, we need about 40-50 paragraphs.

That’s manageable.

Let’s design about 45 paragraphs with two sentences each. That yields about 90 sentences.

If each sentence is about 14 words, that’s 1260 words.

Now we must craft content. We’ll need to discuss the magician’s background, his early interest, his prior experience, the performance details, the blindfold challenge, the judges’ reactions, the golden buzzer, and the significance.

Also include context about the All-Stars version, the stage, the audience, and perhaps a concluding statement.

We need to keep the content balanced, not overly praising but professional. Provide thorough coverage, referencing the description.

Possibly include background on talent shows, significance of golden buzzer, etc.

We must ensure no references to “character names” in the title, but body