scriptwriting
npx skills add https://github.com/bmcgauley/skills --skill scriptwriting
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Skill 文档
Scriptwriting
Overview
This skill provides frameworks and methodologies for crafting compelling scripts that sound natural when spoken, engage audiences emotionally, and effectively convey information across various mediums from educational videos to narrative films.
Script Type Decision Tree
To determine the appropriate scriptwriting approach:
What type of script are you creating?
âââ EDUCATIONAL/INSTRUCTIONAL
â âââ Video Tutorial â Use "Educational Video Script"
â âââ Course Lecture â Use "Lecture Script Format"
â âââ Training Module â Use "Instructional Design Script"
âââ PRESENTATION/BUSINESS
â âââ Keynote/TEDx â Use "Presentation Script"
â âââ Pitch Deck â Use "Pitch Script Format"
â âââ Webinar â Use "Webinar Script Structure"
âââ NARRATIVE/CREATIVE
â âââ Documentary â Use "Documentary Script"
â âââ Short Film â Use "Narrative Script Format"
â âââ Commercial â Use "Commercial Script"
âââ AUDIO/PODCAST
âââ Interview â Use "Interview Script Framework"
âââ Solo Episode â Use "Podcast Monologue"
âââ Narrative Audio â Use "Audio Drama Format"
Core Scriptwriting Principles
The Spoken Word Difference
Scripts differ fundamentally from written prose because they’re meant to be heard, not read. Apply these principles:
-
Write for the Ear
- Short sentences (10-15 words ideal, 20 max)
- Simple vocabulary unless technical terms necessary
- Active voice exclusively (passive only for specific effect)
- Contractions everywhere they’d naturally occur
-
Natural Speech Patterns
- Incomplete sentences where natural
- Restarts and self-corrections (sparingly)
- Conversational asides and direct address
- Rhythm variation to prevent monotony
-
Clarity Over Cleverness
- One idea per sentence
- Signpost transitions clearly
- Repeat key points naturally
- Avoid ambiguous pronouns
Avoiding AI Script Patterns
Never use these in scripts:
- “Let’s delve into…” â “Let’s look at…” or just start
- “In today’s video…” â Jump straight to content
- “Without further ado…” â Delete entirely
- “Comprehensive guide…” â “Complete guide…” or specify
- Triple patterns â Vary list lengths
- Em dashes â Use pauses or new sentences
Educational Video Scripts
Structure Framework
Hook (0:00-0:10)
Start with one of these patterns:
- Question Hook: Pose the exact question viewers have
- Problem Hook: Show the frustration they’re experiencing
- Result Hook: Show the end state they’ll achieve
- Story Hook: Brief anecdote that sets up the lesson
Example:
[WRONG - AI Pattern]
"Welcome to today's comprehensive tutorial where we'll delve into
the fascinating world of Python programming."
[RIGHT - Natural]
"Your Python code keeps crashing with mysterious errors?
In the next five minutes, you'll know exactly how to debug them."
Promise (0:10-0:20)
State exactly what viewers will learn/achieve:
"By the end of this video, you'll be able to:
- Read Python error messages like a pro
- Use three debugging tools that save hours
- Prevent these errors from happening again"
Content Delivery (Main Body)
Progressive Disclosure Pattern:
1. Context Setting (Why This Matters)
"Here's why this breaks most people's code..."
2. Core Concept Introduction
"The key insight is actually simple..."
3. Concrete Example
"Let me show you exactly what I mean..."
4. Guided Practice
"Now you try. Pause here and..."
5. Common Pitfalls
"Watch out for this mistake..."
6. Advanced Application
"Once you master the basics..."
Transitions That Work
Instead of formulaic transitions, use:
[SCENE CHANGE]
"Now here's where it gets interesting..."
"But wait - there's a problem..."
"OK so that handles X. What about Y?"
"You might be thinking... [address objection]"
Educational Script Templates
Tutorial Script (5-10 minutes)
[HOOK - 10 seconds]
"[Problem statement or intriguing question]"
[PROMISE - 10 seconds]
"I'll show you [specific outcome] in [timeframe]"
[PROOF - 15 seconds]
"[Credibility statement or quick demo of result]"
[PART 1: FOUNDATION - 2 minutes]
- What is [concept]?
- Why does it matter?
- When do you use it?
[PART 2: DEMONSTRATION - 3 minutes]
- Step-by-step walkthrough
- Visual callouts
- Pause points for practice
[PART 3: PRACTICE - 2 minutes]
- Exercise for viewer
- Common mistakes to avoid
- Verification of success
[WRAP-UP - 30 seconds]
- Recap key points (not three!)
- Next steps
- Call to action
Lecture Script (20-45 minutes)
[OPENING CONTEXT - 2 minutes]
- Connect to previous knowledge
- State learning objectives
- Preview structure (not agenda)
[CONCEPT BLOCKS - 5-7 minutes each]
Block Structure:
1. Introduce concept
2. Explain with analogy
3. Show concrete example
4. Check understanding
5. Bridge to next concept
[SYNTHESIS - 3 minutes]
- Connect all concepts
- Show complete picture
- Real-world application
[CLOSING - 2 minutes]
- Key takeaways
- Assignment/practice
- Preview next session
Presentation Scripts
Keynote/TEDx Structure
Opening (First 30 seconds)
Never start with:
- “Thank you for having me”
- “I’m honored to be here”
- “Today I want to talk about”
Instead start with:
- Provocative statement
- Surprising statistic
- Personal story moment
- Counter-intuitive claim
The Through-Line
Every presentation needs one core message. Everything supports this.
Structure:
1. SETUP (20% of time)
- Establish the problem/opportunity
- Make it personal to audience
- Plant the seed of your idea
2. CONFRONTATION (60% of time)
- Challenge conventional thinking
- Present your core insight
- Support with evidence/stories
- Address objections
3. RESOLUTION (20% of time)
- Show the new possibility
- Give concrete next steps
- End with memorable callback
Pitch Script Format
The One-Minute Pitch
[PROBLEM - 15 seconds]
"You know how [target audience] struggles with [specific problem]?"
[SOLUTION - 15 seconds]
"We've built [solution] that [key benefit]."
[PROOF - 15 seconds]
"We've already [evidence of traction/validation]."
[ASK - 15 seconds]
"We're looking for [specific request] to [specific outcome]."
Narrative Scripts
Three-Act Structure for Short Content
Act 1: Setup (25%)
- Establish normal
- Introduce character/situation
- Inciting incident
- Stakes established
Act 2: Confrontation (50%)
- Rising action
- Obstacles and attempts
- Midpoint reversal
- Darkest moment
Act 3: Resolution (25%)
- Climax
- Falling action
- New normal
- Thematic resolution
Documentary Script Format
[SCENE HEADING]
Location - Time
[NARRATION]
Write narration in normal paragraph form.
Keep sentences short. Make points clear.
[INTERVIEW SEGMENT]
SUBJECT NAME:
"Direct quote from interview transcript."
[B-ROLL NOTES]
Describe supporting visuals needed.
[LOWER THIRD]
Name, Title/Context
[TRANSITION]
Description of how to move to next segment.
Podcast/Audio Scripts
Solo Episode Structure
[COLD OPEN - 30 seconds]
Hook with best moment/insight from episode
[INTRO - 30 seconds]
"Welcome back to [show]. I'm [host].
Today: [one sentence description]."
[SETUP - 2 minutes]
- Context for topic
- Why it matters now
- What you'll learn
[MAIN CONTENT - Varied]
Segment 1: [7-10 minutes]
- Main point
- Supporting stories
- Examples
[BREAK/TRANSITION]
"Quick note about [sponsor/announcement]"
Segment 2: [7-10 minutes]
- Second point
- Deeper dive
- Practical application
[CONCLUSION - 2 minutes]
- Synthesis
- Key takeaway
- Call to action
[OUTRO - 30 seconds]
"Thanks for listening. See you next [frequency]."
Interview Script Framework
[PREP NOTES]
Guest: [Name]
Topic: [Specific focus]
Goal: [What listeners should learn]
[INTRODUCTION OF GUEST]
Don't read bio. Instead:
"Today I'm talking with [name] who [relevant credibility].
[Name], [engaging first question]?"
[QUESTION FLOW]
Opening: Permission to be personal
"Before we dive into [expertise], can you tell us..."
Expertise: Get specific
"Walk me through exactly how you..."
Challenge: Create tension
"What's the biggest misconception about..."
Story: Make it real
"Can you share a time when..."
Future: Look ahead
"Where do you see this going..."
Closing: Give value
"If people remember one thing..."
Voice and Tone Guidelines
Matching Tone to Purpose
Educational Tone
- Encouraging but not condescending
- Clear but not simplistic
- Authoritative but not arrogant
Example Progression:
"This might seem complicated at first." (Acknowledge difficulty)
"Here's the simple version." (Provide access)
"Now let's add one more layer." (Build complexity)
"See? You've got it." (Affirm success)
Motivational Tone
- Direct but not aggressive
- Inspiring but not unrealistic
- Personal but not oversharing
Professional Tone
- Confident but not cocky
- Detailed but not boring
- Results-focused but not salesy
Natural Dialogue Principles
Realistic Speech Patterns
Include (sparingly):
- “Um” and “uh” for authenticity (max 1-2 per minute)
- Self-corrections: “The data shows… actually, let me rephrase that”
- Thinking pauses: “…” or “[pause]”
- Natural emphases: “This is THE key insight”
Conversational Connectors
Replace formal transitions with:
- “So here’s the thing…”
- “But actually…”
- “OK, now…”
- “And get this…”
- “The weird part is…”
Script Formatting Standards
Video Script Format
VIDEO | AUDIO
-------------------------------|----------------------------------
[Wide shot of speaker] | SPEAKER: Welcome. Today we're
| solving a problem that affects
| 90% of developers.
|
[Cut to screen recording] | See this error message? You've
| probably seen it dozens of times.
|
[Zoom on error] | But here's what it actually means...
Two-Column Format (AV Scripts)
VISUAL | AUDIO/NARRATION
------------------------------|----------------------------------
FADE IN: | [MUSIC: Upbeat, fades under]
|
Title: "Python Debugging" | NARRATOR: Your code is broken.
|
CUT TO: Screen recording | But in the next five minutes,
showing error message | you'll know exactly why.
Notation Standards
For emphasis:
- CAPS for shouted words
- Italics for emphasized words
- … for pauses
- â for interrupted speech
- [brackets] for actions/directions
For timing:
- (2 beat) for specific pauses
- [PAUSE] for natural break
- // for overlapping dialogue
Revision and Polish
Read-Aloud Test
Every script must pass the read-aloud test:
- Read at performance speed
- Mark tongue-twisters
- Note breathing points
- Identify unnatural phrases
- Time each section
Clarity Checklist
- Can each sentence be understood on first hearing?
- Are technical terms defined before use?
- Do pronouns have clear antecedents?
- Are lists varied in length (not always three)?
- Have you eliminated jargon and buzzwords?
Engagement Checklist
- Hook within first 10 seconds?
- Promise clear value?
- Stories and examples throughout?
- Variation in pace and energy?
- Clear call-to-action?
Natural Language Checklist
- Contractions used naturally?
- Sentences under 20 words?
- Active voice throughout?
- No AI clichés (see references)?
- Conversational transitions?
Common Pitfalls to Avoid
Opening Pitfalls
â “In this comprehensive guide…” â “Here’s exactly how to…”
â “Let’s delve into the fascinating world of…” â “Let’s break down…” or just start
â “Welcome to another episode where we’ll explore…” â “Today: [specific topic/question]”
Transition Pitfalls
â “Now, let’s move on to our next point…” â “But here’s where it gets interesting…”
â “It’s important to note that…” â Just state the important thing
â “With that being said…” â “So…” or start new thought
Closing Pitfalls
â “In conclusion, we’ve covered X, Y, and Z…” â “The key thing to remember…”
â “I hope you found this helpful…” â “Now you can…” [specific capability]
â “Thank you for watching/listening…” â End with value, not gratitude
Resources
Scripts
scripts/script_timer.py– Calculates reading time and pacescripts/dialogue_formatter.py– Formats scripts for productionscripts/readability_scorer.py– Analyzes script complexity
References
references/hooks_database.md– 100+ proven opening hooksreferences/transition_library.md– Natural transition phrasesreferences/ai_cliches_to_avoid.md– Comprehensive list of AI patternsreferences/story_structures.md– Advanced narrative frameworks
Assets
assets/templates/video_script_template.docx– Two-column AV formatassets/templates/podcast_script_template.md– Markdown formatassets/templates/presentation_slides.pptx– Speaker notes template