Produces a structured pre-interview research brief on a source, covering background, biases, conflicts of interest, and suggested interview questions.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/autopunk-media-skills:source-research-briefThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Produces a structured pre-interview research brief on a potential source, covering their professional background, public positions, known biases, potential conflicts of interest, and suggested lines of questioning.
Produces a structured pre-interview research brief on a potential source, covering their professional background, public positions, known biases, potential conflicts of interest, and suggested lines of questioning.
Required: The source's name, professional title or role, and the topic of your investigation Optional: Links or summaries of previous public statements, publications, or interviews; the source's employer or institutional affiliation; any known relationship between the source and the subject of your investigation; how you plan to use their testimony (on-record, background, expert commentary)
Structured brief, 400–600 words. Sections: Background Summary, Relevant Expertise, Known Public Positions, Potential Biases and Conflicts, Suggested Interview Questions (6–10 questions). Factual, neutral tone. No editorial conclusions about the source's truthfulness — only documented facts and flagged unknowns. Output ends with a "Next Step" note: whether a conflict of interest needs editorial sign-off before the interview, which question to lead with, and whether to run foia-request-writer to independently corroborate what the source may reveal.
Source: Dr. Marcus Osei, Chief Medical Officer at Vantage Genomics, a mid-size biotech company Topic: Investigating whether a widely prescribed blood pressure drug causes elevated cancer risk in patients over 65 Intended use: Expert commentary and potential whistleblower source — Osei was previously at the FDA's drug evaluation division
Source Research Brief — Dr. Marcus Osei, Chief Medical Officer, Vantage Genomics Prepared for: Investigative piece on blood pressure drug and cancer risk
Background Summary
Dr. Marcus Osei holds an MD and an MPH and spent eight years as a medical officer at the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) before joining Vantage Genomics in 2019. At the FDA, he was involved in post-market drug surveillance and adverse event reporting. His transition to industry is relevant context: he moved from a regulatory oversight role to a commercial biotech environment, a common career path that warrants disclosure.
Relevant Expertise
Osei's FDA background gives him direct, credible knowledge of how adverse event data is collected, analyzed, and acted upon — or not. He is a legitimate expert on the regulatory machinery of post-market drug safety. His current role as CMO at Vantage Genomics involves cardiovascular therapeutics, which overlaps directly with the story's subject matter. However, confirm whether Vantage Genomics has any commercial relationship with the drug manufacturer or its competitors before treating him as a neutral expert.
Known Public Positions
In a 2022 conference presentation (American Pharmacovigilance Society, Boston), Osei argued publicly that the FDA's post-market surveillance system is "structurally under-resourced" and that adverse event signals are frequently deprioritized. This position aligns with what he might say on the record. In a 2021 trade press interview (PharmaTech Review), he was notably more cautious, describing the drug evaluation process as "rigorous by international standards." The shift in tone is worth exploring.
Potential Biases and Conflicts
Suggested Interview Questions
npx claudepluginhub ur-grue/autopunk-media-skills --plugin autopunk-media-skillsGenerates a structured biographical research plan for a specific person, listing public-record sources, key questions, and verification steps for interview prep or profile writing.
Plans and conducts journalistic interviews to maximize source cooperation and information yield. Useful for reporters and investigators preparing structured interviews.
Triage inbound journalist source requests against user expertise profile. Kills weak fits, drafts BLUF-style responses for real matches, never auto-sends.