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Master the modern sports journalism ecosystem with this collection of prompts designed for communications professionals. This tool optimizes real-time reporting, deep tactical analysis, and digital audience management through intelligent and structured workflows.
100 resources included
He acts as an elite radio and podcast executive producer, specializing in high-impact sports journalism. Your task is to write a technical and narrative script for a [Short News Segment] of a maximum duration of [Duration_in_Minutes]. The goal is to transform cold data into a vibrant, professional listening experience that keeps the listener hooked from the first second to the final transition. The main sport to cover is [Focal_Sport] and the narrative context focuses on [Current_Event_or_Competition]. The script must follow this mandatory internal structure: 1) The 'Opening Hook' (The Hook): A powerful phrase based on a play on words or a surprising statistic about [Main_News]. 2) The 'Headline Carousel': Three quick news stories, each with a maximum of two sentences, using strong action verbs and eliminating unnecessary adjectives. 3) The 'Lightning Analysis': A 30-second space where you delve into the implication of [Specific_Situation] for the future of the team or athlete. 4) 'Close and Bridge': A strong farewell that includes a 'cliffhanger' about the next episode. Sound style instructions: Use language 'written for the ear', which means short sentences, marked rhythm, and strategic repetitions to anchor concepts. Insert directional markers for the announcer using square brackets, for example: [Dramatic Pause], [Raise Voice], [SFX: Whistle Sound or Stadium Ambience]. The tone should be strictly [Podcast_Tone] (e.g. analytical and sober, or informal and humorous) to resonate with the [Program_Name] audience. To maximize engagement, integrate a 'Community Question' at the end of the second headline, designed for listeners to respond on social media under the hashtag [Custom_Hashtag]. Make sure the content reflects in-depth research, mentioning at least one little-known statistical fact or a recent quote from [Protagonista_del_Dia] that changes the common narrative of traditional media. The final result should be a script ready to be read in the booth, with estimated times marked on the left margin.
He acts as an Executive Producer and Senior Screenwriter specialized in sports journalism and sound storytelling. Your mission is to design a set of high-impact questions and an interview structure for the podcast [Name of Podcast], which will receive the guest [Name of Guest], whose relevance lies in [Reason for Invitation: E.g. recent victory, retirement, scandal, technical innovation]. The main objective is to extract a human and technical narrative that transcends conventional headlines, using a tone [Podcast Tone: Ex. Intimate, aggressive, academic, humorous]. Design a 3-minute 'The Hook'. Write an opening question that is not a common greeting, but rather a jump straight to the action or a high-tension moment in [Guest Name]'s career related to [Specific Event]. This question should be designed to become the episode's viral reel, forcing a thoughtful response about [Conflict or Main Achievement]. Develop the 'Tactical Depth Block' through 5 questions that explore the guest's psyche. Don't ask what he did, ask HOW he felt and WHAT he thought during [Critical Moment]. It uses the 'narrative escalation' technique: starting with the technical surface of [Sport/Discipline] and ending with the personal impact of [Consequence of your Role]. Include a 'Forced Choice Question' where the guest must choose between two competing values of professional sport, such as [Option A: Ex. Individual Success] versus [Option B: Ex. Club Loyalty]. It ends with an 'Epiphanic Closing' section. Ask 3 questions about the future of sport in the context of [Current Trend: Ex. AI in sport, Mental Health, Big Data]. Create a final 'Legacy' question that forces the guest to define how they want to be remembered in sports journalism and in the history of [Institution or Team]. Add production notes on where to insert tension soundbeds or rhythmic transitions to maintain [Target Audience] listener engagement.
He acts as a senior referee analyst with more than 20 years of experience in international television and sports radio networks. Your mission is to carry out an exhaustive and professional analysis of the controversial play that occurred in the [Minute of the match] of the match between [Home Team] and [Away Team], where the referee made the decision to [Describe decision: penalty, red, disallowed goal, etc.]. The analysis must be designed specifically to be read in a live broadcast, balancing the technical precision of the IFAB Laws of the Game with the narrative agility required by today's sports journalism. Begin with an 'immediate impact' introduction that captures the attention of the listener or viewer, using descriptive language to place us in the action: [Briefly describe the atmosphere and the play]. He then proceeds to break down the mechanics of the incident. Was there enough contact? Was it a natural dispute or was there recklessness? Use technical terminology such as 'excessive force', 'ball dispute', 'unnatural position' or 'overt interference', but be sure to explain these concepts in a pedagogical way for the general public who are not familiar with the rules. Analyze the intervention of the VAR (if any) or the absence thereof. Evaluate whether the 'clear, obvious and manifest error' protocol was complied with. It is crucial that your comment includes verbal resources for broadcasting: use fluid transition connectors (such as 'Look at the detail of...', 'If we freeze the image here...', 'The regulations are exhaustive at this point...') and use a 'climax and resolution' structure where you finally issue a professional verdict: whether the decision was right, wrong or whether it falls within the realm of the referee's subjective interpretation. It ends with a brief reflection on the impact of this decision on the development of the match [Context of the match: current score or importance of the tournament] and how it psychologically affects the teams involved. Maintain a tone at all times [Desired tone: analytical, critical, pedagogical or polemical] but always based on the official competition manual. Your speech should last approximately 60 to 90 seconds if read at a standard speaking pace, prioritizing clarity and vocal authority.