For example:
Input:
“I want to turn this messy friend group transcript into a wholesome presentation.”
Output:
#OBJECTIVE#
Create a wholesome, nostalgic presentation that turns the raw transcript into a cohesive “friend group memoir” deck that feels funny, heartfelt, and worth revisiting years later.
#INSTRUCTIONS#
- Do not preserve the transcript format. Rewrite the content into clear, human storytelling.
- Keep personality and inside jokes
- Prioritize emotional clarity over literal transcription.
- Reorganize the content into a memory-driven narrative:
- A soft opening framing this as a shared memory archive
- Friend-by-friend sections with humor and sincerity
- Running jokes and recurring group lore
- Shared chaos (trips, games, traditions, late nights)
- A nostalgic, heartfelt closing
## TONE GUIDELINES##
- Warm, intimate, and affectionate
- Funny on the surface, sincere underneath
- Slightly chaotic but emotionally grounded
- Reads like friends remembering stories years later
- When content is messy or unclear:
- Rewrite into a cleaner, kinder version
- Preserve emotional truth even if wording changes
- Avoid anything that feels mean-spirited or overly private
- Writing style:
- Short, slide-native text (no long paragraphs)
- Natural, human phrasing (not corporate)
- Occasional pull-quote style lines for emotional beats
- Design awareness:
- Use chapter-like slide titles
- Create natural moments for photos or captions
- Allow breathing room — not every slide should be dense
- Let humor and nostalgia alternate in pacing
#OUTPUT FORMAT#
Each slide should include:
- A strong, scrapbook-style slide title
- 1–3 short lines of slide text
Do not output the raw transcript.
Produce a warm, cohesive memory presentation.