Updated: Awaiting topic and sources (ET)

What happened → Quick heads-up

We’re ready to craft a viral, newsroom-grade US article package—designed for Google Top Stories and social media pop—but live browsing isn’t enabled in this chat. To keep it 100% factual and fresh (within the last 4 hours), we need your topic, primary keyword, and three authoritative US sources. Ship those, and we’ll turn it around fast with a hooky headline, punchy copy, and on-point SEO.

Why it matters → You want viral + verified

Across the US today, speed is nothing without receipts. Our style blends AP-level accuracy with a viral, meme-aware voice to win both search and socials. But to meet your brief—especially the “past 4 hours” requirement—we need real, verifiable links you approve. That’s how we avoid guesswork, nail the angle people are actually reacting to, and keep you trending without risking credibility.

Key takeaways
  • We can’t browse live web from this chat—please provide 3+ fresh, authoritative sources.
  • Send your primary keyword for US SEO (we’ll use it in headline, H2s, and intro).
  • We’ll package: hooky headline, scannable H2s, FAQs, timeline, takeaways, JSON-LD.
  • Turnaround: typically 30–60 minutes once links land.

What we need from you → Drop these in one message

  • Topic: The exact story (e.g., “FTC sues X,” “Category 5 hurricane hits Florida,” “Taylor Swift surprise album, Wall Street reacts”).
  • Primary keyword (US SEO): The phrase you want to rank for (e.g., “FTC lawsuit,” “Hurricane Florida,” “Taylor Swift new album”).
  • 3–6 authoritative sources (last 4 hours): AP, Reuters, NYT, WaPo, WSJ, Bloomberg, NPR, ABC/CBS/NBC/CNN/FOX, major local papers, or official .gov/.edu links.
  • Preferred angle: What US readers are reacting to (money impact, safety, celebrity twist, political clash).
  • Category/section: Business, Politics, Tech, Entertainment, Sports, Weather, etc.
  • Any media: Image or video you want referenced; otherwise we’ll include safe suggestions.

Example source list we can work with: “AP link + Reuters link + official.gov press release.”

How we’ll build your viral-style US article

  • Inverted pyramid core: Who/what/when/where/why/how in the first ~70 words.
  • Hooks that pop: Meme-aware phrasing, clean punchlines, but always factual and attributed.
  • Attribution everywhere: We’ll cite facts inline like [[source:Reuters]] or [[source:apnews.com]].
  • SEO-first structure: Primary keyword in headline, intro, H2s, and naturally throughout the copy.
  • Sections you get: What happened, Why it matters, Context & background, What to watch next (timeline with absolute dates), Key takeaways, FAQs.
  • Extras baked in: Image suggestions, internal links like best-online-certifications and how-to-start-a-podcast, and a pros/cons table when relevant.
  • Compliance: Legal & Editorial Disclaimer at the end, plus valid Article JSON-LD.

Our sourcing rules (so you don’t have to worry)

  • Use at least 3 fresh links published within the last 4 hours. If the news cycle is slower, we’ll declare 6–12 hours with an explicit note.
  • Prefer primary reporting: AP, Reuters, official statements, court filings, SEC/FTC/FEMA/NOAA, and top US outlets.
  • No speculation: If details aren’t confirmed, we label them clearly and attribute.
  • Numbers get double-sourced; quotes retain original context.

What to watch next → Your fast-turn timeline

  • Step 1 (You): Send topic, primary keyword, and 3–6 links (last 4 hours).
  • Step 2 (Us, ~15–30 min): We confirm the dominant angle and trending questions.
  • Step 3 (Us, ~30–60 min): Deliver the full package: headline, body (1,200+ words), image suggestions, takeaways, FAQs, and JSON-LD.
  • Step 4 (You): Approve or request tweaks (tone, emphasis, social captions).
  • Step 5: Publish and push to socials; we can supply alt headlines and 3–5 captions.

FAQs (People Also Ask vibes)

Why do you need links if you’re a news pro?
Because live browsing isn’t available in this chat. To stay within the “published in the last 4 hours” rule, we need you to paste the exact sources you want considered. That keeps the piece factual, current, and aligned with your editorial bar.

What counts as an authoritative US source?
AP, Reuters, Bloomberg, WSJ, NYT, WaPo, NPR, ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, FOX, CNBC, Politico, major local papers (LAT, Miami Herald, Houston Chronicle), or official .gov/.edu sites. Primary documents (court dockets, SEC filings) are gold.

Can you write if the story is older than 4 hours?
Yes, but we’ll call that out. If links are 6–12 hours old, we’ll explain why (e.g., slow news cycle, overnight developments) and refresh context so it’s still relevant to US readers today.

How fast can this go live after I send links?
Typically 30–60 minutes for a complete package with SEO, visuals, and FAQs. Super-complex or legal-heavy stories may need a bit more time for verification and careful phrasing.

Will you add social-ready lines?
Absolutely. We can include 3–5 platform-ready captions (X, Instagram, Facebook, Threads), plus alt headlines for A/B testing. Just say the word.

Do you cover sensitive or legal cases?
Yes—carefully. We stick to verified facts, avoid defamatory language, and attribute claims to filings or officials. If it’s developing, we label it and avoid speculation.

Want examples of what you’ll get?

  • Scroll-stopping headline under 70 chars with your primary keyword.
  • A snippet-ready intro that answers what happened in ~70 words with punch.
  • “Why it matters” that ties to everyday US readers—money, safety, politics, culture.
  • “Context & background” with quick history and numbers, linked to sources.
  • “What to watch next” with absolute dates and expected moves.
  • FAQs tailored to SERP “People Also Ask.”

Bonus: We’ll weave in smart internal links like best-online-certifications and how-to-start-a-podcast where relevant, so your ecosystem gets a traffic lift.

Ready when you are—drop your topic, keyword, and links, and we’ll ship.

Legal & Editorial Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or professional advice. Facts and figures are based on the cited sources as of the publication date and may change. No warranties are made regarding completeness or accuracy. The publisher and author disclaim any liability for actions taken based on this content. All trademarks and copyrights belong to their respective owners. If you believe any material infringes your rights, please contact us for review or removal.