Writes a self-contained sidebar or infobox (fact-box, timeline, glossary, Q&A) for articles without duplicating the main narrative. Provide topic, angle, and notes.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/autopunk-media-skills:sidebar-writerThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Writes a focused sidebar or infobox that packages key facts, context, or supporting detail alongside a main article, without repeating the article's primary narrative.
Writes a focused sidebar or infobox that packages key facts, context, or supporting detail alongside a main article, without repeating the article's primary narrative.
Required: The topic of the sidebar (what it should cover), the angle or purpose (fact-box, timeline, key figures, how-it-works, glossary, Q&A, checklist), and a brief summary or raw notes of the content you want included.
Optional: A word-count target, the publication's style register (formal broadsheet, general interest, consumer magazine), whether it will appear in print or digital, and a sample sentence from the main article to help calibrate tone.
150–300 words unless a target is specified. Structured for scannability: bold labels, short data points, or numbered items depending on sidebar type. Tone matches the main article's register. No footnotes. No calls to action. A clear, short header at the top.
Topic: Sidebar for a feature on urban heat islands in mid-sized European cities. Type: Key figures fact-box. Purpose: Give readers the hard numbers on how much hotter city centres run compared to surrounding areas, and the health toll, without cluttering the main narrative. Notes: City centres in Europe average 3–5°C hotter than rural fringes on summer nights. In extreme heat events the gap widens to 8–10°C. Heat-related deaths in European cities rose by an estimated 30% during the summers of 2022–2023 compared to the 2000s baseline. Green cover reduces local surface temperatures by up to 7°C. Dark paving and dense building stock are primary drivers. Population at elevated risk in EU cities: approximately 60 million people over 65. Style: General-interest news magazine, accessible but not dumbed down. Word count: Around 150 words.
Urban Heat by the Numbers
European city centres run 3–5°C hotter than the surrounding countryside on summer nights — a gap that stretches to 8–10°C during extreme heat events.
Why it happens Dark paving, dense building stock, and reduced green cover trap and re-radiate heat long after sunset, turning city streets into overnight ovens.
The health cost Heat-related deaths across European cities rose by an estimated 30% in the summers of 2022–2023 compared to the 2000s baseline. Roughly 60 million people aged over 65 across EU cities face elevated health risk during prolonged heat events.
What helps Expanding green cover — parks, street trees, green roofs — can reduce local surface temperatures by up to 7°C. It is currently the most effective intervention available to city planners without major infrastructure changes.
Sources: European Environment Agency; peer-reviewed urban climatology literature, 2022–2024.
npx claudepluginhub ur-grue/autopunk-media-skills --plugin autopunk-media-skillsWrites a structured, print-ready fact box or sidebar for feature articles—supports statistical overviews, glossaries, timelines, by-the-numbers panels, and key quotes boxes.
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