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Writes complete Instagram captions (hook, body, CTA, hashtags) for news stories, documentaries, videos, or editorial projects, optimized for reach and engagement.
npx claudepluginhub ur-grue/autopunk-media-skills --plugin autopunk-media-skillsHow this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/autopunk-media-skills:instagram-post-writerThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Writes a complete Instagram caption — including hook, body, call to action, and hashtag set — for a news story, documentary, video, or editorial project, formatted for how Instagram audiences read and discover content.
Writes platform-optimized social captions from a brief or article excerpt, adapting tone and structure for Instagram, LinkedIn, TikTok, or Twitter/X.
Generates clear, engaging, platform-optimized social media posts for Instagram, LinkedIn, and Facebook from topics, keywords, audience, and tone inputs. Includes hooks, CTAs, and SEO hashtags.
Generates platform-specific social media posts for LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, Reddit from topics, content, or campaigns, respecting limits, hashtags, and best practices.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
Writes a complete Instagram caption — including hook, body, call to action, and hashtag set — for a news story, documentary, video, or editorial project, formatted for how Instagram audiences read and discover content.
Required: A one-paragraph summary of the story or content, a description of the image or video being posted (so the caption relates to the visual), and the platform account's primary tone (e.g. authoritative and factual, conversational, activist, documentary-style).
Optional: A specific hook fact or striking statistic from the piece, the target audience, a call to action beyond a link in bio (e.g. "save this for later," "tag someone who needs to see this"), and whether the account uses emoji in captions.
Caption body: 100–250 words in plain prose paragraphs. First line: under 125 characters, punchy and standalone. Hashtags: 15–20 tags, presented as a separate block below the caption. One emoji per paragraph maximum if the account uses emoji; none if not specified. Total output includes the caption and the hashtag block as two distinct deliverables.
Story summary: An investigation into how fast-fashion brands are using chemical dyes that are banned in Europe but legal in their manufacturing countries. The piece reveals that garments sold in high-street stores contain residues that dermatologists link to skin reactions in sensitive individuals. Image description: A close-up photograph of brightly coloured fabric samples with labels showing country of origin. Account tone: Investigative journalism, serious but accessible. No emoji. Hook fact: Seven of the twelve brands tested failed independent laboratory standards for dye residue. Call to action: Drive readers to the full investigation via link in bio.
Caption:
Seven out of twelve high-street brands failed independent lab tests for chemical dye residue in their fabrics.
These are dyes that are banned for use in finished garments sold within Europe — but legal in the countries where most fast fashion is manufactured. The result is that clothes on the rack in ordinary shops can carry chemical residues at levels dermatologists say are linked to skin reactions, particularly in children and people with sensitive skin.
The brands know their supply chains. The regulations exist. The gap between the two is not an accident.
We tested twelve of the most widely purchased fast-fashion labels. The full investigation, including the laboratory data and the brands' responses, is in the link in bio.
Hashtags:
#fastfashiontoxics #fabricdyeresearch #chemicalsinfashion #investigativejournalism #fashioninvestigation #fastfashiontruth #sustainablefashion #fashionpollution #textilewaste #consumerrights #fashionindustry #knowyourclothes #environmentalhealth #fashionethics #investigativereporting #fashionnews #clothingchemicals #skinsafety #fashionaccountability #supplychain