Updated: Oct 8, 2025, 4:00 PM ET
What happened
We’re ready to produce a full, viral-style US news package that can trend in Google Top Stories — but we need your specific topic or live browsing access to verify facts in real time. Our process requires checking at least three authoritative sources (think AP, Reuters, NYT, WaPo, major networks) and citing them clearly like this: [[source:Associated Press, 3:12 PM ET, URL]]. The second you share the topic, we’ll turn this into a 1,200+ word, punchy, hook-driven story in minutes — fully sourced and optimized.
Why fans are losing it (and why it matters to you)
In the US today, trending stories blow up fast — from courtroom twists to market shocks to celebrity meltdowns. Translation: attention spans are short, stakes are high. A strong package needs to be fact-checked, snackable, and share-ready. We’ll build exactly that: a scroll-stopping headline, a tight 70-word intro that answers who/what/when/where/why/how, embedded context, and a clear next-steps timeline. You get accuracy plus sauce — the kind people can’t stop sharing.
The bigger picture: How we’ll nail this (with your topic)
Here’s how your story gets from trending to top-of-feed:
- Lock the primary keyword (e.g., “Federal Reserve rate decision,” “Powerball winner,” “Hollywood strike deal,” “Hurricane [Name]”).
- Verify facts across 3–5 major US outlets: AP, Reuters, NYT, WaPo, ABC, CBS, NBC, NPR, Bloomberg, CNBC, or official .gov/.edu pages.
- Write an inverted-pyramid lead with punchy lines and a viral hook (pop-culture nods, meme-adjacent phrasing — but never compromising facts).
- Add context: history, numbers, players, and quotes attributed precisely with timestamps and links.
- Lay out what to watch next with hard dates, filings, court timings, advisories, or pressers.
- Optimize for SEO and social: keyword in H1, slug, intro, and at least one H2; US-centric language; snackable takeaways.
How we’ll cite (and keep it clean)
Every factual claim will be attributed inline using bracket citations like these examples:
- “The judge set a new hearing for Oct. 15 at 10 a.m. ET.” [[source:Reuters, 2:47 PM ET, https://www.reuters.com/...]]
- “The National Hurricane Center issued a hurricane warning for parts of Florida.” [[source:NOAA/NHC, 1:10 PM ET, https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/...]]
- “Shares of [Company] fell 7% in midday trading.” [[source:Bloomberg, 12:33 PM ET, https://www.bloomberg.com/...]]
No paywalled quotes without fair use; no speculation packaged as fact. If only 6–12 hour-old sources exist, we’ll label that clearly and update the second fresher reporting lands.
Context & background
Once you share the exact topic (e.g., “Supreme Court emergency order,” “massive outage across US airlines,” “blockbuster trade in the NFL”), we’ll add:
- A quick history: when this last happened, who the main players are, and what the numbers looked like then vs. now.
- Money angle: how it hits your wallet (gas prices, mortgage rates, student loans, ticket prices, insurance deductibles).
- US-local impact: which states or cities are most affected, plus any local advisories.
- Receipts: crisp quotes from officials and stakeholders with links and timestamps.
What to watch next
- Today (Oct 8): We verify across 3–5 sources and publish v1 within minutes of receiving the topic.
- Within 1–2 hours: Add updates from press briefings, filings, or live streams; embed new quotes with timestamps.
- Next 24 hours: Track official statements, court calendars, economic releases, or NWS/NHC bulletins.
- Next 48–72 hours: Follow fallout: policy moves, market reactions, fan/consumer responses, impact by state.
Key takeaways
- We’re standing by to build a fully verified, viral US news package the moment you share the topic.
- We will cite at least 3 authoritative US sources and time-stamp every update.
- Expect a hooky headline, scannable sections, and a clear “what’s next” timeline.
- We’ll update fast for fresh angles, quotes, and official guidance.
How you can speed this up
- Reply with the exact topic or headline you want (e.g., “CDC issues alert on [X],” “FTC sues [Company],” “NBA megatrade: [Player] to [Team]”).
- Optional: share any must-include links or angles (money impact, maps, quotes).
- We’ll handle the rest: verification, writing, SEO, and updates.
Sample structure we’ll deliver (instantly after topic arrives)
H1: [Primary keyword + vivid hook, ≤70 chars]
Updated: [Absolute ET timestamp]
What happened
[70-word inverted pyramid lead with a viral twist. Include primary keyword.] [[source:AP, time, URL]] [[source:Reuters, time, URL]] [[source:NYT/WaPo/ABC, time, URL]]
Why fans are losing it
[Personal impact, community chatter, US-centric framing — taxes, prices, safety, jobs, tickets, travel.]
Context & background
[Short history, key players, numbers, previous milestones, quotes with timestamps.]
What to watch next
- [Hard date/time events: hearings, advisories, pressers, key games, data drops.]
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