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Generates three opening hooks (provocative question, surprising fact, bold claim) for YouTube videos, podcasts, or documentaries based on topic, format, and tone.
npx claudepluginhub ur-grue/autopunk-media-skills --plugin autopunk-media-skillsHow this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
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/autopunk-media-skills:hook-generatorThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Write three opening hook options — one per style — for a YouTube video, podcast intro, or documentary opening. Each hook is 1–3 sentences and ready to use as-is.
Creates retention-optimized opening hooks for video intros, newsletters, social posts. Activates for content planning, retention issues, or mentions of 'hook', 'opening', 'intro'.
Writes a short, high-impact cold open or teaser script for broadcast television that hooks the audience before the title sequence. Useful for documentary, news magazine, or factual series producers.
Writes retention-optimized YouTube scripts with hooks, chapters, CTAs, visual directions, and SEO metadata.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
Write three opening hook options — one per style — for a YouTube video, podcast intro, or documentary opening. Each hook is 1–3 sentences and ready to use as-is.
Required:
Optional:
Identifies the core tension. Before writing, finds the single most compelling thing about the topic — the counterintuitive fact, the unexpected outcome, the stakes that make this worth watching. This becomes the raw material all three hooks draw from.
Writes one hook per style, each attacking the tension from a different angle:
Adapts register to tone. Serious journalism hooks are measured and authoritative — they earn credibility without sensationalism. Popular science hooks trade in wonder and accessibility. Entertainment hooks lead with personality, energy, or a visual provocation. If the input tone is ambiguous, the assistant matches the most common register for the format.
Respects the format. YouTube hooks prioritize visual provocation and pattern interrupts. Podcast hooks rely entirely on language and often work best when they are conversational and surprising. Documentary openings can sustain a slower build — a declarative statement of place or time followed by a pivot.
Recommends the immediate next step. After delivering the hooks, specifies which to film or record first, and which related skill to use next (seo-title-optimizer to align the title, thumbnail-concept-brief to translate the hook's visual energy, or full-script-writer to expand).
Three labeled hook options. Each hook: 1–3 sentences, no more. No preamble, no rating, no explanation — just the hooks. After the three options, one line of practical guidance on which style tends to work best for the given format and tone. Output ends with a one-line "Next Step" specifying the immediate action: which hook to lead with and which skill to run next.
**Option 1 — Provocative Question**
[Hook text]
**Option 2 — Surprising Statistic**
[Hook text]
**Option 3 – Bold Claim**
[Hook text]
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*Guidance: [One sentence on which option best fits this format/tone and why.]*
Topic: A deep-dive YouTube video about why most personal finance advice is designed for a demographic that no longer exists — the single-income household with a stable job and a pension.
Format: YouTube long-form (20–25 minutes)
Tone: Serious journalism
Audience: People in their 30s and 40s who feel financially behind despite doing everything they were told to do
Option 1 — Provocative Question What if the reason you feel financially behind isn't that you're doing something wrong — but that you're following advice written for a version of the economy that ended in 1989?
Option 2 — Surprising Statistic The most-cited personal finance framework in the English-speaking world was designed in an era when 62% of households had a single income, a defined-benefit pension, and a job they expected to keep for 30 years. That era ended before most of you started working.
Option 3 — Bold Claim Most personal finance advice isn't broken. It's just optimized for someone who doesn't exist anymore — and using it without understanding that assumption will cost you.
Guidance: For serious journalism aimed at this audience, Option 2 works hardest: the specific statistic signals research and authority, which earns trust before making the larger argument. Option 1 is strongest if the tone edges toward editorial or opinion.