The User Wants An Article. They Gave Us Detailed Instructions. Let’S Break Down

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The user wants an article. They gave us detailed instructions.

Let’s break down:

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

The source title is “Messoudi Brothers | Golden Buzzer Recap | AGT 2025”. But we cannot use character names from the video.

That implies we should not use the judges’ names (Mel B) or other names like maybe the brothers themselves? The instruction “do not use character names from the video” might refer to not using any names that appear in the video (like the judges names).

However “Messoudi Brothers” is the group name and is likely the performers. It’s not a “character” from the video; it’s the name of the acts.

The source title includes “Messoudi Brothers”. The article should probably not mention “Mel B” as a character name.

So we must avoid that name. However we could refer to “the judge” or “the panelist” etc.

But we must not use the actual judge name.

Also “Mel B” is a name of a judge (Mel B). So we must not include that name.

Also any other names that appear in video? There’s only “Mel B”.

So we should avoid that.

– Title: 12-15 words. Not use ‘:’ or ‘-‘.

Let’s make a title: “Knife Act Earns Golden Buzzer On America’s Got Talent 2025”. That’s 9 words?

Let’s count: Knife (1) Act (2) Earns (3) Golden (4) Buzzer (5) On (6) America’s (7) Got (8) Talent (9) 2025 (10). That’s 10 words.

Need 12-15 words. Add “Unforgettable” and “Daring”.

Let’s see: “Knife Act Earns Golden Buzzer On America’s Got Talent 2025”. That’s 10.

Let’s add “For” maybe. “Knife Act Earns Golden Buzzer On America’s Got Talent 2025 Stage”.

Count words: Knife(1) Act(2) Earns(3) Golden(4) Buzzer(5) On(6) America’s(7) Got(8) Talent(9) 2025(10) Stage(11). That’s 11.

Need at least 12. Add “Daring”.

“Knife Act Earns Golden Buzzer On America’s Got Talent 2025 Daring Stage”. Count: Knife(1) Act(2) Earns(3) Golden(4) Buzzer(5) On(6) America’s(7) Got(8) Talent(9) 2025(10) Daring(11) Stage(12).

That’s 12 words. Good.

Title length 12 words.

But no colon or dash. It’s fine.

Also we shouldn’t use character names; our title doesn’t include any names.

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Now article body: 1000-1400 words inclusive. Must be 2 sentences per paragraph.

Paragraph separated by blank line. No other formatting.

Must be plain text only. Must be thorough, balanced, from description+transcript.

Engaging, professional tone.

We must not mention “Mel B”. Use “the judge” or “the panelist”.

Also not mention “Messoudi Brothers”? Actually we can use the group name; it’s not a character from the video?

It is a performer, so it’s a name. The instruction “do not use character names from the video” might refer to “character names”, like if there are characters (like maybe from a story) but I think they refer to people like judges.

However it’s ambiguous. To be safe, we could avoid using the performers’ name.

But they are the main subject. We may refer to “the brothers” as “the act”.

Let’s use “the brothers”. That is a descriptive reference, not a specific name.

But the title includes “Messoudi Brothers” maybe it’s okay because they are the subject and not a “character”. However to be safe, maybe we can avoid “Messoudi”.

But we need to identify them. The title is “Messoudi Brothers | Golden Buzzer Recap | AGT 2025”.

The article likely must talk about them. So we can refer to them as “the brothers” or “the act”.

The instruction “do not use character names from the video” could refer to not using “Mel B”. The “Messoudi Brothers” is the performer name.

Might be allowed. Let’s use “Messoudi Brothers” once in article but only if needed.

But I’ll be safe: we can say “the brothers” throughout. Maybe not mention their name.

Now count words: target 1400. That’s a lot.

Must write many paragraphs, each with exactly 2 sentences.

We must write about: knife act, dangerous, clothing removal/replacement while handling sharp objects. Judges reaction: initially frightened, then gave Golden Buzzer calling them “perfect”.

They blacked out for 10 seconds after buzzer, saw judges and audience standing. They credited studio audience energy.

Thanked judge for unexpected honor, noting they were initially scared of her critical reputation. Haven’t had time to plan live shows, promised something “incredible” for America.

Thus we need to incorporate these details.

Word count: target 1400. Let’s aim for ~1250 words.

Paragraph length: 2 sentences each. So we need number of paragraphs: about 1250/2 sentences => roughly 625 sentences.

But we must have 2 sentences per paragraph. That’s too many paragraphs; we need to think: typical word count per sentence maybe 15-20 words.

2 sentences per paragraph => ~30-40 words per paragraph. So 1250 words / ~35 = ~36 paragraphs.

That’s doable.

Thus we need about 36 paragraphs. Each with exactly 2 sentences.

That is a lot. Let’s plan around 30-40 paragraphs.

Provide thorough coverage. Must be balanced, professional, engaging.

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We must ensure not to exceed 1400 words. So we need to count words carefully.

Better approach: we can write around 1300 words. Let’s do 36 paragraphs with ~36 words each (2 sentences of ~18 words each).

36 paragraphs * 36 words = 1296 words. Good.

Now we must ensure each paragraph has exactly 2 sentences. We’ll need to carefully craft sentences.

We need to write about the act, the judge’s reaction, the brother’s reaction, the aftermath.

We also need to include the context: America’s Got Talent’s landmark 20th season, Golden Buzzer awarded. The act involves knives, daring routine with clothing removal and replacement while handling sharp objects.

The judge was frightened but ultimately gave Golden Buzzer, calling them “perfect”. The brothers blacked out for the first 10 seconds after buzzer, saw judges and audience standing.

They credited studio audience energy. They thanked judge for unexpected honor, said they were initially scared of her critical reputation.

They haven’t had time to plan live shows but promised something “incredible” for America.

We also should perhaps mention the panel, the 20th season, the significance, the buzz.

No colon or dash in title. The title we have includes no