We Need To Write An Article Based On The Source Content. Requirements

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We need to write an article based on the source content. Requirements:

– Title: English, 12-15 words, no ‘:’ or ‘-‘ in the title, no character names from the video (so no “Ellen”, “Chris Pratt”? The source title uses “Chris Pratt Plays ‘Speak Out'”.

But they say “do not use character names from the video.” That is ambiguous: character names from the video? Probably they mean names of people in the video, like “Chris Pratt” or “Ellen”.

But maybe they mean the “character” from the video (i.e., the game “Speak Out” is a party game, not a character). But they might be referring to names of people in the video.

The safe path: do not include Ellen or Chris Pratt in the title. Use “Star Plays Party Game on Talk Show”.

Something like that. Title must be 12-15 words inclusive.

Let’s propose: “Hollywood Star Turns Party Game into Hilarious Physical Comedy on Talk Show”. Count words: “Hollywood” (1) “Star” (2) “Turns” (3) “Party” (4) “Game” (5) “into” (6) “Hilarious” (7) “Physical” (8) “Comedy” (9) “on” (10) “Talk” (11) “Show” (12).

That’s 12 words, ok. No ‘:’ or ‘-‘.

Word count: article body must be between 1000 and 1400 inclusive. Should aim for target 1400.

Paragraphs each exactly 2 sentences, blank line between paragraphs. Plain text only.

Must be thorough, balanced, from description + transcript, engaging professional tone. No sensitive/offensive content.

Must not exceed the word range. Use concise sentences to avoid gateway timeouts.

We need to produce article content with multiple paragraphs, each exactly 2 sentences, and blank line between paragraphs. Each paragraph must be 2 sentences.

The total number of sentences will be the number of paragraphs * 2. The article length is measured in words, not sentences.

The article must be within 1000-1400 words inclusive. So we need to compute approximate number of words per paragraph.

Let’s aim for 1400 words, with about maybe 20-30 paragraphs (since each paragraph is 2 sentences). 20 paragraphs * 2 sentences = 40 sentences.

If average sentence length maybe 15-20 words, then 40 sentences * ~17 words = 680 words. That’s not enough.

We need more words. If we have 30 paragraphs (60 sentences) with average 20 words per sentence = 1200 words.

That would be within 1000-1400. So maybe 30 paragraphs.

Or 28 paragraphs, each 2 sentences, average 20 words per sentence = 56 sentences * 20 = 1120 words. That’s okay.

However, we need to ensure the content is thorough and balanced. Could be 30 paragraphs.

But we must not exceed 1400 words. Let’s aim for around 1250 words.

We’ll count later.

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We need to incorporate description and transcript elements: Ellen introduces segment, mother’s day theme, “Speak Out”, game with mouthpiece, garbled speech, physical comedy, guesses, humor, audience reactions, mention of Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2.

We need to write the article in a professional tone, engaging.

We need to avoid “character names from the video”. So we cannot mention “Ellen” or “Chris Pratt”.

How to refer to them? We can use “the host” and “the guest” perhaps.

The video description said “Ellen DeGeneres” but we could use “the host” and “the guest” to avoid character names. That may satisfy requirement.

The requirement: “do not use character names from the video.” Probably they mean don’t use “Ellen” and “Chris Pratt”. We can refer to them generically.

But they said “character names” which is ambiguous: maybe they refer to names of characters in a video, not necessarily actors. But here we have a talk show where the names are real.

The safe approach: avoid using “Ellen” and “Chris Pratt”. Use “the host” and “the celebrity guest”.

But the title uses “Hollywood star”. Good.

We need to produce article body with paragraphs of exactly 2 sentences each, blank line between. Use plain text only.

We must check the content for any sensitive or offensive content. This is a talk show segment, mother’s day, no issues.

We must ensure each paragraph is exactly 2 sentences. No stray punctuation that splits into more sentences inadvertently.

Must watch for abbreviations like “e.g.” which may be considered separate sentences? Usually they are part of a sentence.

But to be safe, we can avoid abbreviation that could be misparsed as separate sentences. But we need exactly 2 sentences per paragraph.

That means each paragraph must contain exactly two sentences, separated by a period and a space. Not any extra period inside (like “Mr.” counts?

Might be considered a period). Safer to avoid periods inside abbreviations.

So we can write sentences like “The host introduced a popular party game, framing it around a Mother’s Day celebration, and the guest eagerly agreed to participate.” That’s fine. Avoid “e.g.”.

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We need to make sure each paragraph has exactly two sentences, not three. Also need to ensure each paragraph ends with a period at the end of the second sentence.

The final paragraph also ends with a period.

We must ensure the article is within 1000-1400 words. Let’s try to compute.

We’ll aim for maybe 35 paragraphs, each 2 sentences. If each sentence is about 18-20 words, that yields 35*2*19 = 1330 words.

That’s within range.

We need to produce about 35 paragraphs. That is a lot.

But we can structure the article with multiple paragraphs covering description, analysis, context, reception, etc. Could produce around 30 paragraphs.

We must be careful to have exactly two sentences per paragraph. Let’s design a structure:

1. Opening: introduction of the segment.

2. Description of the game.

3. The mouthpiece’s effect.

4. Guest’s physical comedy.

5. Host guesses.

6. Audience reactions.

7. Some specific lines guessed.

8. Game difficulty.

9. Guest’s gestures.

10. Host’s comedic timing.

11. Mother’s Day theme.

12. Guest’s personal anecdote.

13. The role of the game in talk show.

14. Physical comedy in talk shows.

15. Audience laughter.

16. Cultural relevance of “Speak Out”.

17. Visual gags in the segment.

18. Guest’s willingness to embarrass himself.

19. Host’s encouragement.

20. Guest’s facial expressions.

21. The segment’s pacing.

22. Use of sound effects.

23. Editing choices.

24. The promotional mention of upcoming film.

25. Audience response to promotion.

26. Comparative analysis with other talk show games.

27. The synergy between humor and promotion.

28. The impact on guest’s public persona.

29. Viewer engagement on social media.

30. Concluding remarks.

That’s 30 paragraphs, each two sentences.

Now we must write each paragraph with two sentences, with roughly