Produces a structured research brief for podcast hosts preparing guest interviews, covering background, key work, positions, prior appearances, and suggested questions.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/autopunk-media-skills:guest-research-briefThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Produces a structured, host-ready research brief on an upcoming podcast guest — covering their background, key work, public positions, conversation history, and suggested angles — so the host can prepare a focused interview.
Produces a structured, host-ready research brief on an upcoming podcast guest — covering their background, key work, public positions, conversation history, and suggested angles — so the host can prepare a focused interview.
Required: Guest's name; their professional role or area of expertise; the show's topic focus and what prompted the booking Optional: Links or descriptions of their recent work (books, articles, talks, other podcast appearances); what the audience already knows about them; specific angles or topics you want to cover; topics to avoid (at the guest's request or editorial choice); episode format and approximate length
Structured brief with five sections: Guest Overview (3–5 sentences), Key Work Summary (100–150 words), Most Interesting Angle (1 paragraph), Ground Already Covered (list of 3–5 points from other appearances), and Suggested Questions (5–7 specific questions). Total length: 400–600 words. Factual, neutral register — written for a host, not an audience. Output ends with a "Next Step" note: which opening question to lead with, whether to run interview-question-builder to build out the full question set, and what to confirm with the guest before recording (topics to avoid, technical requirements, preferred intro).
Guest: Dr. Renata Solís, behavioral economist, author of a recent book on how poverty changes decision-making at a neurological level Show: Interview podcast on economics and social policy, 50 minutes Booking reason: Her new book has been getting attention; one of the show's core themes is how policy often misunderstands human behavior No previous appearances noted by the booking team Topic to avoid: personal backstory (guest has requested this)
Guest Overview
Dr. Renata Solís is a behavioral economist whose research focuses on the cognitive and neurological effects of financial scarcity. Her recent book argues that poverty does not simply limit options — it degrades the cognitive bandwidth available for decision-making in ways that standard economic models do not account for. Her work has been cited in policy debates about means-tested benefit programs and the design of financial assistance systems.
Key Work Summary
Her book's central argument: when people are managing scarcity — not just poverty in the abstract, but the active experience of not having enough money to cover immediate needs — the cognitive load of that management occupies mental resources that would otherwise be available for longer-term planning and judgment. This is not a character flaw or a cultural failing; it is a measurable cognitive effect that reverses when scarcity is removed. The policy implication she draws is that programs designed to add conditions, monitoring, or complexity to financial assistance may be compounding the very cognitive impairment they are nominally trying to address.
Most Interesting Angle
The most productive tension in her work is between her research findings and the political framing of "deserving" versus "undeserving" recipients of public assistance. Her data suggests that means-tested programs — which are politically designed to ensure only the "right" people receive help — may be structurally counterproductive even by their own criteria. This is a finding with significant political implications that she navigates carefully in public discussion. Pressing here, specifically asking how she thinks about the gap between what her research implies and what is politically viable, is likely to produce the most substantive conversation.
Ground Already Covered
Based on available written interviews and reviews of the book:
Suggested Questions
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Generates a professional event plan from guest bio/CV. Runs multi-turn clarification dialog for activity type, audience, duration, tone, then outputs title, promo copy, minute-level rundown, host questions, and gift suggestions.