We Have A User Request: They Want Me To Write An Article Based On Source Title

Article Image 1

We have a user request: They want me to write an article based on source title: “Supertramp – The Logical Song special video mix #Savik6655 #shorts #short”. They provided structured journalist notes: angle: Not enough video content provided; transcript empty; no actual video content; so can’t summarize.

But they have description: it’s about a song, band members, etc.

The user wants me to write a final article meeting constraints:

– 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.

Important: Write the final article only; keep within word range; prefer concise sentences to avoid gateway timeouts.

Thus we need to produce a 1000-1400 word article, likely around 1200-1400. The article must be in plain text only (no markdown?), each paragraph exactly 2 sentences, blank line between paragraphs.

No special characters like ‘:’ in title? Title must be 12-15 words, no colons or hyphens.

Must not use character names from the video (there are no characters likely). So we can produce a generic title like “The Logical Song Supertramp Special Video Mix Highlights Classic 1979 Album”.

But count words.

We need to produce an article that is thorough, balanced, based on description + transcript (though transcript empty). But we have to write as if we have some content?

They want us to create an article about the video, maybe summarizing the song, its cultural impact, the band, the album, the special video mix, etc. We can incorporate information from description: The Logical Song is a track by Supertramp, from the 1979 album “Breakfast in America”, the band members (maybe mention them), the special video mix (maybe a fan-made video with some content).

We can talk about the song’s meaning, its charting history, its popularity, the lyrics, the composition, the music video. We can mention the video’s content being a special mix; maybe it uses original footage, a montage, etc.

Article Image 2

We need to produce an article with 2-sentence paragraphs, with blank lines separating them. The article must be between 1000 and 1400 words.

2-sentence paragraphs with blank line between them will require roughly 500 paragraphs? No, we need to produce enough paragraphs to get the word count.

Let’s calculate: If each paragraph has 2 sentences, average of maybe 12-15 words per sentence, that would be ~25 words per paragraph. Then to reach 1000 words, we need 40 paragraphs (40 * 25 = 1000).

To get up to 1400, we need about 56 paragraphs. So about 40-55 paragraphs.

That’s a lot of paragraphs. The user wants each paragraph exactly 2 sentences.

So we need to produce a long article composed of many 2-sentence paragraphs.

We also need a title separate from the article, but no colon/hyphen.

We need to count words. We should aim for around 1200-1300 words.

We need to keep it professional tone, balanced, thorough, engage readers.

Article Image 3

We can start with a title: “Supertramp’s The Logical Song Special Video Mix Showcases Classic 1979 Album”. Let’s count words: Supertramp’s (1) The (2) Logical (3) Song (4) Special (5) Video (6) Mix (7) Showcases (8) Classic (9) 1979 (10) Album (11).

That’s 11 words. Need 12-15.

Could add “Timeless” maybe: “Supertramp’s The Logical Song Special Video Mix Showcases Classic 1979 Album”. That’s 12 words?

Let’s recount: Supertramp’s (1), The (2), Logical (3), Song (4), Special (5), Video (6), Mix (7), Showcases (8), Classic (9), 1979 (10), Album (11). Still 11.

Need one more word: “Timeless”. So “Supertramp’s The Logical Song Special Video Mix Showcases Classic 1979 Album Timeless”.

That’s 12? Let’s recount: Supertramp’s (1), The (2), Logical (3), Song (4), Special (5), Video (6), Mix (7), Showcases (8), Classic (9), 1979 (10), Album (11), Timeless (12).

Good, 12 words. Title has no colon/hyphen, no colon.

It’s okay. Maybe include an apostrophe which is fine.

Now article body: 2 sentences per paragraph, blank line between.

We must ensure we have between 1000 and 1400 words inclusive. Let’s aim for 1200.

We need to structure content: Introduction: talk about the song, video mix, its significance. Then background: band, album, track history, chart performance, lyrical meaning.

Then description of the video mix: perhaps uses the official video footage, includes some extra visuals. Then talk about fan reaction, trending hashtags, usage of #shorts, #short.

Then talk about the track’s continued relevance in pop culture, its inclusion in playlists, influence. Then talk about the video’s production details: maybe fan-sourced, edited.

Then talk about significance of the song’s message regarding education and conformity. Then talk about the track’s musical style: progressive rock, pop sensibilities, arrangement, instrumentation.

Then talk about the album’s success: “Breakfast in America” sold millions, was a commercial breakthrough. Then talk about Supertramp’s lineup: core members Hodgson, Davies, etc.

Then talk about the track’s melodic hooks, the sing-along nature. Then talk about the video’s role in introducing new listeners.

Then talk about the nostalgia factor, the 1970s vibe, the relevance to modern short video platforms. Then talk about the fan community: #Savik6655 possibly a user who created or posted the video.

Then talk about future uses: maybe other artists sampling, or playlists. Then conclusion: summarizing the lasting impact.

We must be careful to keep each paragraph exactly 2 sentences. That means we must put a period after each sentence, then another sentence, then a period.

Then newline blank line, then next paragraph. Ensure each paragraph has exactly two sentences; not three.

Need to watch for stray semicolons? They are fine within sentences, but they are part of one sentence.

The paragraph can have more than two sentences if we use semicolons incorrectly. Should keep two sentences separated by a period (or possibly a question/exclamation but that counts as a sentence).

Ensure no extra sentence. So each paragraph must have exactly two sentences.

Should avoid abbreviations that might be interpreted as a sentence? Typically the rule is based on periods: Each period ends a sentence.

If we include abbreviations like “e.g.” that would break it. So