Writes podcast episode summaries in three lengths (100, 150, 250 words) for directories, emails, and social bios. Requires episode title and description or key points.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/autopunk-media-skills:episode-summary-writerThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Writes concise episode summaries in three lengths — platform short (100 words), directory standard (150 words), and promotional long (250 words) — for podcast directories, promotional emails, and social bios.
Writes concise episode summaries in three lengths — platform short (100 words), directory standard (150 words), and promotional long (250 words) — for podcast directories, promotional emails, and social bios.
Required: Episode title; a 4–8 sentence description of what the episode covers (or key points from the transcript) Optional: Guest name and one-sentence bio; the single most memorable moment, quote, or insight from the episode; target new audience versus regular listener framing; show name for attribution; primary keyword
Three clearly labeled summary blocks: PLATFORM SHORT (100 words), DIRECTORY STANDARD (150 words), PROMOTIONAL (250 words). Each block preceded by usage context. Written in third person for platform directories or first person for show-voice contexts — specify preference. Plain text, no headers within the summaries. Output ends with a "Next Step" note mapping each summary to its immediate destination and identifying any remaining distribution asset to create (show notes, newsletter feature, social thread).
Episode title: What Your Doctor Isn't Telling You About Burnout Episode content: Conversation with a psychiatrist who argues that burnout is being systematically misdiagnosed as depression in clinical settings, leading to incorrect treatment. She explains the clinical differences, the specific workplace structures that cause burnout versus other mood disorders, and why she thinks the DSM's lack of a burnout diagnosis is a political problem as much as a medical one. The most memorable moment: she says "We're giving people antidepressants for what is essentially a structural workplace problem — and then wondering why they don't feel better." Guest: Dr. Amara Osei (fictional), psychiatrist Show: Mental health and work podcast Keyword: burnout misdiagnosis
PLATFORM SHORT (Use for: Spotify episode description, Apple Podcasts short description, social post caption. Under 110 words.)
Is your burnout being treated as depression? Psychiatrist Dr. Amara Osei argues that the two conditions are being routinely conflated in clinical settings — with real consequences for treatment. In this episode, she breaks down the clinical differences between burnout and depression, the workplace structures that drive each, and why the absence of a formal burnout diagnosis in clinical frameworks is, in her view, a political choice rather than a medical one. One of the most clarifying conversations we've had on what it means to be mentally unwell at work.
(89 words)
DIRECTORY STANDARD (Use for: Apple Podcasts main description, podcast hosting platform episode page. 140–160 words.)
Burnout is being systematically misdiagnosed as depression in clinical practice — and the treatment that follows is often the wrong one. That's the argument psychiatrist Dr. Amara Osei makes in this episode, drawing on her clinical experience and her frustration with the frameworks her profession uses to categorize workplace-driven mental health conditions.
She explains the specific clinical and behavioral differences between burnout and clinical depression, the organizational factors that drive each, and why she thinks the DSM's current approach to burnout reflects institutional inertia more than science. She also takes apart the "antidepressants for structural problems" pattern she sees in her practice.
If you have ever been told you are depressed and wondered whether that was quite right, this conversation offers language and a frame that may be useful.
(140 words)
PROMOTIONAL (Use for: newsletter feature, social media thread, press release episode highlight. 240–260 words.)
"We're giving people antidepressants for what is essentially a structural workplace problem — and then wondering why they don't feel better."
That's psychiatrist Dr. Amara Osei, speaking in this week's episode, and it's the sentence that stopped us in the edit.
Dr. Osei argues that burnout — the specific exhaustion that comes from prolonged, unresolvable workplace stress — is being consistently misdiagnosed as depression in clinical settings. The difference matters not because one is more serious than the other, but because the treatments are different. Antidepressants and therapy approaches designed for clinical depression do not address the conditions that cause burnout. And when the treatment doesn't work, the patient is often blamed.
In this conversation, Dr. Osei explains the clinical markers that distinguish burnout from depression, the workplace structures that generate each, and why the clinical frameworks used by most practitioners haven't caught up with what researchers have known for years. She's also direct about the political dimension: burnout is absent from the DSM not because there isn't enough evidence for it, but because formalizing it would create liability for employers.
This is one of the most practically useful episodes we've published. If you work in a professional environment that asks more than it gives back, this conversation will give you language, context, and a better map for what you are experiencing.
New episode, available now.
(251 words)
npx claudepluginhub ur-grue/autopunk-media-skills --plugin autopunk-media-skillsGenerates publication-ready podcast show notes including episode summary, timestamped chapter markers, key takeaways, guest bio, and links, formatted for hosting platforms and listener discovery.
Generates YouTube and podcast SEO packages (titles, descriptions, tags, chapters) with live-researched keywords. Audits underperforming content.
Converts any input (topic, article, URL, notes) into a ready-to-record 30-second YouTube Shorts script with hook, core content, and CTA. Includes tone selection and hook variant generation.