…
etc. We can also use headings like…
. We must include at the end a paragraph promoting the e-book with given link. We must not use placeholders. Must be actionable content. We must count words. We need to write about “Character Mapping: Using AI to Track Subject Development”. Use facts from e-book: list of dimensions etc. Provide steps. We need to ensure word count between 450-500. Let’s aim around 470 words. We need to write in HTML with paragraphs. Let’s draft. We’ll start with Title line: Title: Character Mapping: Using AI to Track Subject Development for Documentary Filmmakers Make sure includes “AI” and “ai”. Title includes both uppercase AI and lowercase ai? It says include “AI” and “ai”. We can have both somewhere. Title: “Character Mapping: Using AI and ai to Track Subject Development”. That includes both. Now content. We’ll produce paragraphs. Let’s draft about 470 words. We need to count words manually. I’ll write content then count. Draft:Why Character Mapping Matters
For small‑scale documentary filmmakers, understanding how a subject evolves across interviews is the backbone of a compelling narrative. AI can automate the extraction of key traits, turning hours of transcript into a clear character map that guides editing decisions.
Define Your Core Dimensions
Before running any analysis, pick 5‑7 dimensions that reflect your film’s themes. Use the e‑book checklist: Central Goal/Motivation, Core Beliefs & Values, Emotional Arc, Emotional Keywords, External Conflict, Internal Conflict, Metaphors & Analogies, Relationship to Key Themes. Write these as column headers in a spreadsheet or visual board.
Segment the Transcript
Chronologically split the cleaned interview into 3‑5 major segments that roughly follow the story’s beginning, middle, and end. Consistency in segment length helps the AI compare changes over time.
Run Segmented AI Analysis
For each segment, feed the text to your preferred AI model with a prompt that asks for the chosen dimensions. Example prompt:
“Analyze the following transcript excerpt for: 1) Central Goal/Motivation, 2) Core Beliefs & Values, 3) Emotional Arc (joy, anger, regret, hope, fear), 4) Emotional Keywords, 5) External Conflict, 6) Internal Conflict, 7) Metaphors & Analogies, 8) Relationship to the film’s theme of ___. Return concise bullet points for each dimension.”
Record the results in a Character Map table, placing each segment’s answers under the appropriate column.
Identify Pivot Points
Scan the completed map for sudden shifts—where a goal changes, an emotion flips, or a metaphor appears/disappears. Note the timestamp or segment number; these are your character’s pivot points.
Integrate with Story Arc
Align the identified pivots with your documentary’s structural beats (setup, confrontation, resolution). Use the map to decide where to place revealing B‑roll, voice‑over, or music cues that reinforce the subject’s transformation.
Action Step
Copy the full, cleaned interview transcript into an AI tool. Run the segmented analysis using the prompt above, fill in the Character Map table, highlight pivot points, and then match those moments to your edit timeline. This workflow cuts manual coding from hours to minutes while preserving analytical rigor.
Now the e-book promotion paragraph. We must include exactly the given 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 we need to count words. Let’s count words in the entire content (excluding the Title line? The title line likely counts as words? Usually word count includes everything. Safer to include title line words as well. We’ll count everything after “Title:” line. We’ll produce final output: Then a blank line then HTML. Now count words. I’ll copy the content into a counting mental. I’ll write the full HTML then count. Content:Why Character Mapping Matters
For small‑scale documentary filmmakers, understanding how a subject evolves across interviews is the backbone of a compelling narrative. AI can automate the extraction of key traits, turning hours of transcript into a clear character map that guides editing decisions.
Define Your Core Dimensions
Before running any analysis, pick 5‑7 dimensions that reflect your film’s themes. Use the e‑book checklist: Central Goal/Motivation, Core Beliefs & Values, Emotional Arc, Emotional Keywords, External Conflict, Internal Conflict, Metaphors & Analogies, Relationship to Key Themes. Write these as column headers in a spreadsheet or visual board.
Segment the Transcript
Chronologically split the cleaned interview into 3‑5 major segments that roughly follow the story’s beginning, middle, and end. Consistency in segment length helps the AI compare changes over time.
Run Segmented AI Analysis
For each segment, feed the text to your preferred AI model with a prompt that asks for the chosen dimensions. Example prompt:
“Analyze the following transcript excerpt for: 1) Central Goal/Motivation, 2) Core Beliefs & Values, 3) Emotional Arc (joy, anger, regret, hope, fear), 4) Emotional Keywords, 5) External Conflict, 6) Internal Conflict, 7) Metaphors & Analogies, 8) Relationship to the film’s theme of ___. Return concise bullet points for each dimension.”
Record the results in a Character Map table, placing each segment’s answers under the appropriate column.
Identify Pivot Points
Scan the completed map for sudden shifts—where a goal changes, an emotion flips, or a metaphor appears/disappears. Note the timestamp or segment number; these are your character’s pivot points.
Integrate with Story Arc
Align the identified pivots with your documentary’s structural beats (setup, confrontation, resolution). Use the map to decide where to place revealing B‑roll, voice‑over, or music cues that reinforce the subject’s transformation.
Action Step
Copy the full, cleaned interview transcript into an AI tool. Run the segmented analysis using the prompt above, fill in the Character Map table, highlight pivot points, and then match those moments to your edit timeline. This workflow cuts manual coding from hours to minutes while preserving analytical rigor.
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 in the visible text (excluding HTML tags and maybe the comment markers). Word count typically counts the content visible to readers. We’ll count the words insideand