We Need To Write A Final Article Based On The Source Title “Omg! 5 Acts That

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We need to write a final article based on the source title “OMG! 5 Acts That FREAKED OUT Sofia Vergara | AGT 2021”.

Structured journalist notes: angle: Sofia Vergara’s debut season as an America’s (presumably “America’s Got Talent” AGT) – so we are focusing on her debut as a judge on America’s Got Talent 2021. The requirements:

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1) Title (English): 12–15 words; no ‘:’ or ‘-‘ in the title; do not use character names from the video. So we need an English title, 12-15 words, no colons or hyphens, and we cannot use character names from the video (like Sofia Vergara or other performers).

The source title includes “Sofia Vergara” but we cannot use that? It says “do not use character names from the video”.

Probably “Sofia Vergara” is a character? The source title mentions “Sofia Vergara” but we need to avoid using character names from the video, which likely includes Sofia Vergara, maybe other participants?

They say “character names”. Could be the names of the acts?

The article likely refers to “Sofia Vergara” as a judge. It’s ambiguous.

It says “do not use character names from the video”. This likely means the article shouldn’t name specific contestants (or maybe specific acts).

But they might also consider “Sofia Vergara” a “character name” as it’s a person’s name. However, the article can mention “Sofia Vergara” because that’s the subject of the piece.

However, they might treat “Sofia Vergara” as a name, but the rule says “do not use character names from the video”. So the title cannot include “Sofia Vergara”?

Let’s parse.

The source title is “OMG! 5 Acts That FREAKED OUT Sofia Vergara | AGT 2021”.

The article is presumably about the debut season as a judge, and focusing on five acts that shocked or surprised Sofia Vergara. The article requirements: we must produce a title with 12-15 words, no colon or dash, and not use character names from the video.

“Character names” presumably refer to “Sofia Vergara” because that’s a person in the video, maybe also the contestants. But the article is about Sofia Vergara, so it’s tricky.

Usually, the instruction “do not use character names from the video” means you shouldn’t reference specific performers or contestants in the title, to avoid naming them. However, you can refer to “the judge” or “the actress”.

The article can still mention Sofia Vergara in the body. So we need a title that does not include any name, i.e., not “Sofia Vergara”.

But that may be too restrictive. Let’s see: Title (English): 12–15 words; no ‘:’ or ‘-‘ in the title; do not use character names from the video.

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Thus we need a title describing the topic: Sofia Vergara’s debut season as an America’s (maybe “America’s Got Talent”) judge and five acts that shocked her. Something like “Sofia Vergara’s Debut as AGT Judge: Five Jaw-Dropping Performances That Stunned Her”.

Count words: “Sofia Vergara’s” (2) “Debut” (1) “as” (1) “AGT” (1) “Judge:” (but colon not allowed) we can’t use colon. “Five” (1) “Jaw-Dropping” (1) “Performances” (1) “That” (1) “Stunned” (1) “Her” (1).

Let’s count: “Sofia Vergara’s” = maybe considered one token? Actually “Sofia” and “Vergara’s” are two words?

The phrase “Sofia Vergara’s” is 2 words: “Sofia” and “Vergara’s”. “Debut” 1, “as” 1, “AGT” 1, “Judge” 1, “Five” 1, “Jaw-Dropping” 1, “Performances” 1, “That” 1, “Stunned” 1, “Her” 1.

That’s 12? Let’s count: 2 (Sofia, Vergara’s) + 1 (Debut) + 1 (as) + 1 (AGT) + 1 (Judge) + 1 (Five) + 1 (Jaw-Dropping) + 1 (Performances) + 1 (That) + 1 (Stunned) + 1 (Her) = 12 words.

That meets 12-15. No colon.

But includes “Sofia Vergara’s” which is a character name. The rule says “do not use character names from the video”.

So we cannot include “Sofia Vergara” in the title. So we need to avoid that.

We can use “the actress” or “the new judge”. Could do: “New Judge’s Debut on America’s Got Talent: Five Acts That Left Her Speechless”.

Count words: “New” (1) “Judge’s” (2? Actually “Judge’s” is one word) “Debut” (1) “on” (1) “America’s” (1) “Got” (1) “Talent:” (colon not allowed).

Actually “America’s Got Talent” is 3 words: “America’s”, “Got”, “Talent”. “New” 1, “Judge’s” 1, “Debut” 1, “on” 1, “America’s” 1, “Got” 1, “Talent:” 1 but colon not allowed.

So we must avoid colon. “New Judge’s Debut on America’s Got Talent Features Five Acts That Left Her Speechless”.

Count words: New(1) Judge’s(2) Debut(3) on(4) America’s(5) Got(6) Talent(7) Features(8) Five(9) Acts(10) That(11) Left(12) Her(13) Speechless(14). That’s 14 words.

No colon, no hyphen. Does it include any character name?

No. So it’s okay.

Or “New Judge’s Debut on America’s Got Talent Showcases Five Acts That Stunned Her”. Count: New(1) Judge’s(2) Debut(3) on(4) America’s(5) Got(6) Talent(7) Showcases(8) Five(9) Acts(10) That(11) Stunned(12) Her(13).

That’s 13 words. Good.

However, note the rule: “do not use character names from the video”. The title does not mention any names, so okay.

Now content: we need 1000-1400 words inclusive, target 1400. Each paragraph exactly 2 sentences.

Blank line between paragraphs. Plain text only.

So we must produce multiple paragraphs, each exactly two sentences. Each paragraph must be separated by a blank line.

The article must be thorough, balanced, from description + transcript (but we don’t have transcript). We need to incorporate details about Sofia Vergara’s debut,