…
). So we need to output each paragraph wrapped in those comments. Also headings similarly:…
. Title: start with the title as a plain heading (e.g., “Title: …\n\n”), then HTML content. So first line: Title: AI-Powered ai for Small-Scale Documentary Filmmakers: Mining for Emotion in Interviews Then blank line then HTML content. We must ensure total words 450-500 inclusive. Need to count words. We need to include actionable content: discuss methods, checklist, etc. We need to use facts from e-book (list of cues). Provide actionable checklist. We need to end with paragraph promoting e-book with link. We must not use placeholders. We must not include any thinking process. We need to count words precisely. Let’s draft about 470 words. We’ll write sections: Introduction, Method 1, Method 2, Method 3, Actionable Checklist, Conclusion/E-book promo. Each paragraph wrapped in…
. Headings: maybe h2 for each method. We need to ensure we count words inside the visible text only (not HTML tags or comments). Usually word count counts the visible text. We’ll need to count words in the paragraphs and headings (excluding HTML markup and comments). We’ll need to be careful. Simplify: We’ll output plain HTML without the wp comments? The requirement says write as plain HTML paragraphs and headings (e.g.,…
). So we need to include those comments exactly. Word count likely counts only the text insidetags, not the comments. We’ll assume that. Thus we need to count words inside
and
etc.
Let’s draft content.
Title line: Title: AI-Powered ai for Small-Scale Documentary Filmmakers: Mining for Emotion in Interviews
Then blank line.
Now content:
Introduction
Small‑scale documentary filmmakers often drown in hours of interview footage, struggling to spot the emotional beats that drive a compelling story. AI can surface those moments fast, letting you focus on craft rather than transcription grunt work.
Method 1: Direct Transcript Interrogation
Upload a cleaned transcript to a large language model (ChatGPT, Claude, etc.) and ask targeted prompts. Example: “Identify sentences where the speaker uses conviction cues like ‘I will always believe…’ or ‘The truth is…’.” The model returns highlighted excerpts, giving you a quick map of where the subject’s stance solidifies.
You can also ask for vulnerability cues (“I never told anyone this…”) or shift cues (“I realized…”). The LLM’s pattern‑matching catches subtle phrasing that a manual skim might miss.
Method 2: Sentiment & Emotion Analysis APIs
Services such as IBM Watson Tone Analyzer, Google Cloud Natural Language, or open‑source Hugging Face models return sentiment scores and emotion labels (joy, sadness, fear, anger) per sentence or segment. Feed the transcript line‑by‑line and look for spikes in sadness or fear that often coincide with vulnerability cues.
Combine the API output with a simple script: tag any segment where sentiment score < -0.5 (negative) and emotion = fear/sadness, then cross‑reference with the cue list from the e‑book. This yields a prioritized shortlist of emotionally rich passages.
Method 3: Audio Analysis for Paralinguistic Cues
Tools like Amazon Transcribe with enabled speaker‑sentiment, or open‑source libraries (LibROSA, PyAnnote) can extract pitch, speaking rate, pause length, and filler‑word density. Export these metrics alongside the transcript.
Look for: a sudden rise in “ums” and “uhs” (filler spike), a pitch increase >10 Hz, or a pause >1.2 seconds. Those acoustic markers often precede or follow the conviction, transformation, or stakes cues highlighted in your transcript analysis.
Actionable Checklist: Emotional Keywords & Phrases
When reviewing AI‑generated highlights, verify the presence of at least one of these cues:
- Conflict: explicit internal or external struggle.
- Conviction Cues: “What people don’t understand is…”, “I will always believe…”, “The truth is…”, “Absolutely not.”
- Filler Word Density: noticeable increase in “ums”/“uhs”.
- Human Connection: statements where viewers see themselves.
- Pauses: long silences before/after a statement.
- Pitch & Speed Changes: rising pitch (anxiety/excitement) or slowed speech (gravity).
- Relational Cues: references to family, mentors, blame, gratitude.
- Shift Cues: “I realized…”, “It dawned on me…”, “Looking back…”, “That was the turning point.”
- Stakes: where it truly matters to the subject.
- Transformation: realization or perspective change.
- Vulnerability Cues: “I never told anyone this…”, “It was the hardest…”, “I felt so…”, “I was ashamed/afraid/hopeless…”.
Putting It Together
Run Method 1 to get a rough emotional map, refine with Method 2’s sentiment scores, and validate with Method 3’s audio flags. Export the timestamps that satisfy three or more checklist items; those become your narrative anchors for drafting act breaks, character arcs, and thematic beats.
Now e-book promo paragraph:For a comprehensive guide with detailed workflows, templates, and additional strategies, see my e-book: AI for Small-Scale Documentary Filmmakers: How to Automate Interview Transcript Analysis and Narrative Structure Drafting.
Now count words. We need to count words inside all,
,
When reviewing AI‑generated highlights, verify the presence of at least one of these cues:
” Yes. Then list items: – Conflict: explicit internal or external struggle. – Conviction Cues: “What people don’t understand is…”, “I will always believe…”, “The truth is…”, “Absolutely not.” – Filler Word Density: noticeable increase in “ums”/“uhs”. – Human Connection: statements where viewers see themselves. – Pauses: long silences before/after a statement. – Pitch & Speed Changes: rising pitch (anxiety/excitement) or slowed speech (gravity). – Relational Cues: references to family, mentors, blame, gratitude. – Shift Cues: “I realized…”, “It dawned on me…”, “Looking back…”, “That was the turning point.”