Formalizes a story idea into an editor-ready one-page pitch with news hook, angle, sources, and format. Useful for journalists preparing for editorial meetings or pitching to new outlets.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/autopunk-media-skills:story-pitch-writerThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Drafts a concise, editor-ready story pitch that captures the angle, news hook, key sources, and proposed format so you can walk into an editorial meeting with a compelling one-page proposal.
Drafts a concise, editor-ready story pitch that captures the angle, news hook, key sources, and proposed format so you can walk into an editorial meeting with a compelling one-page proposal.
Required: The story idea in plain language — what happened, who is involved, and why it matters now. Optional: Target outlet or programme, proposed format (print feature, news report, documentary, podcast episode), any sources already identified, word count or runtime target, publication date or broadcast window.
One page (300–450 words). Plain prose — no bullet-pointed laundry lists. Paragraphs are short. Language is direct and confident, matching the register of the target outlet if specified. Ends with a suggested working headline and a one-line note on proposed format and length.
Story idea: A city council has quietly changed the zoning rules around a large urban park, allowing a private developer to build a hotel on land that was previously protected green space. Local residents only found out when planning notices went up last week. I've identified three residents who are organising opposition, a planning lawyer who says the process was irregular, and I have the council meeting minutes where the decision was made. Target: regional newspaper, longform news feature, around 1,500 words.
Pitch: The Park That Disappeared From the Map
Last month, Riverside City Council altered the zoning classification of a 1.4-hectare section of Elmwood Park — a change that went unannounced to residents and that, according to planning lawyer Deborah Fenn, bypassed the public consultation period required by the Municipal Land Use Act. The amendment clears the way for a hotel development on land that has been designated protected green space since 1989.
Residents found out when planning notices appeared on fences bordering the park last Tuesday. Within 48 hours, a local opposition group had formed with more than 200 members. Three of its organisers — a retired schoolteacher, a father of two who coaches youth football on the site, and a local business owner — have agreed to speak on the record.
The story has two distinct threads. The first is the planning irregularity: council meeting minutes from 8 February show the vote was conducted under an agenda item listed as "routine administrative amendments," with no public notice and no recorded debate. The second is the human impact: Elmwood Park is the only publicly accessible green space within walking distance for residents of the Fairfield housing estate, one of the most densely populated areas of the city.
This is not a story about NIMBYism. It is a story about a process that appears to have been designed to avoid scrutiny, and about what happens to ordinary residents when the paperwork moves faster than public accountability.
Access: I have the February meeting minutes under open records. The planning lawyer is on the record. The three resident organisers are confirmed. A request for comment has been sent to the council and the developer; I expect responses within 48 hours.
Working headline: "How the Council Rezoned a Park Without Telling Anyone" Format: Longform news feature, approximately 1,500 words, with a sidebar on the planning regulations that were allegedly bypassed.
npx claudepluginhub ur-grue/autopunk-media-skills --plugin autopunk-media-skillsBuilds a complete narrative structure for a long-form reported piece — opening scene, sourcing map, section-by-section arc, and closing — given the story's central argument, key findings, and available sources.
Drafts a factually accurate news article using inverted pyramid structure and AP style. Includes lede writing, source attribution, quote handling, and self-editing steps.
Generates 3-7 journalist-quality story angles from a single company update using newsroom lenses (perspective shift, data, contrarian, news peg). Refuses rephrasings, invented facts, and generic angles.