…
). Likely they want each paragraph wrapped in that comment block. We can also use headings similarly:…
. We must start with the title as a plain heading (e.g., “Title: …\n\n”), then HTML content. Thus first line: Title: Training Your AI on Your Festival’s DNA: Genre, Tone, and Audience Fit Then a blank line, then HTML. We need to ensure word count includes everything after title? Likely includes everything after “Title:” line? We’ll count all words in the output (including title line?). Safer to count everything after “Title:” line inclusive? We’ll just count all words in the final output. We need to write about AI automation for small independent film festivals, focusing on training AI on festival’s DNA: genre, tone, audience fit. Use facts from e-book: Pillar 1: Genre & Theme Nuance, Pillar 2: Aesthetic & Tone, Pillar 3: Audience Fit & Community Resonance, plus bullet points: Low Fit description, Medium Fit description, color palette & lighting, pacing, shot composition, soundscape, annotate every clip with 50-word DNA analysis, build synthesis node, curate gold standard reels, hold DNA definition workshop, select workflow platform. We need to be concise, actionable. Let’s draft ~470 words. We need to count words. Let’s write then count. I’ll draft in a text editor mentally. Title line: “Title: Training Your AI on Your Festival’s DNA: Genre, Tone, and Audience Fit” Now blank line. Then HTML. We’ll produce sections: Introduction, Pillar 1, Pillar 2, Pillar 3, Steps to Build AI Training, Workflow Platform suggestion, Conclusion, then e-book promo. We need to use HTML paragraph blocks. Let’s write:Small independent film festivals thrive on a distinct voice, but reviewing hundreds of submissions manually drains programmer time. By training an AI on your festival’s “DNA”—the specific mix of genre, tone, and audience fit—you can automate screening and generate consistent filmmaker feedback.
Now Pillar 1 heading.Pillar 1: Genre & Theme Nuance
Identify the genres and thematic motifs that repeatedly appear in your past selections. Tag each clip with keywords (e.g., queer coming‑of‑age, eco‑horror, experimental documentary) and note how tightly the story aligns with those tags. This creates a genre‑score that the AI can learn to weigh against new entries.
Pillar 2 heading.Pillar 2: Aesthetic & Tone
Document visual and auditory signatures: color palette (muted vs. saturated), lighting style, average shot length, transition type, shot composition (static vs. handheld, close‑up vs. wide), and soundscape (dialogue‑driven, score‑heavy, ambient). Assign numeric values to each dimension so the AI can compute an aesthetic‑tone score.
Pillar 3 heading.Pillar 3: Audience Fit & Community Resonance
Gauge how a film connects with your community’s values and programming goals. Use the fit scale: Low Fit (1‑3) – “Likely misfit. Themes are generic and visual style is at odds with our ‘Yes’ reel examples.” Medium Fit (4‑7) – “Standard queue. Competent but tone is more conventional than our curated taste.” High Fit (8‑10) would echo your top selections. Capture these judgments in your training data.
Now steps.Building the AI Training Pipeline
- Annotate every clip with a 50‑word DNA analysis that covers the three pillars. This becomes the labeled dataset for supervised learning.
- Create a “Gold Standard” reel set of 15 clear “Yes” and 15 clear “No” examples. These anchors define the decision boundary for the model.
- Hold a DNA Definition Workshop with your programming team using the three‑pillar framework to agree on scoring rubrics and resolve ambiguities.
- Build the Synthesis Node: feed the pillar scores into a text model (e.g., GPT‑4) with a prompt that combines them into a coherent rationale and a fit rating.
- Select a workflow platform such as n8n, Make, or a dedicated AI automation tool to ingest submissions, run the annotation pipeline, and push results back to your submission system.
Once trained, the AI can pre‑screen submissions, flagging low‑fit films for quick rejection and surfacing high‑fit candidates for programmer review. It also generates personalized feedback notes that reference genre alignment, aesthetic match, and community resonance, saving hours of written commentary.
Now closing.Start small: pick 30 clips, run the workshop, and iterate. As your model learns, you’ll see faster curation, more consistent programming, and stronger audience satisfaction.
Now e-book promo paragraph (must be exactly as given).For a comprehensive guide with detailed workflows, templates, and additional strategies, see my e-book: AI for Small Independent Film Festivals: How to Automate Submission Screening and Filmmaker Feedback Generation.
We need to wrap it in wp:paragraph as well? The requirement says: At the end, include a paragraph promoting the e-book with link:…
. It didn’t specify the wp comment but likely we should follow same HTML paragraph format. We’ll wrap it. Now count words. Let’s copy the full text and count manually. I’ll write everything as a single block then count. Title line: Title: Training Your AI on Your Festival’s DNA: Genre, Tone, and Audience Fit Now blank line. Then HTML. I’ll write the full content:Small independent film festivals thrive on a distinct voice, but reviewing hundreds of submissions manually drains programmer time. By training an AI on your festival’s “DNA”—the specific mix of genre, tone, and audience fit—you can automate screening and generate consistent filmmaker feedback.
Pillar 1: Genre & Theme Nuance
Identify the genres and thematic motifs that repeatedly appear in your past selections. Tag each clip with keywords (e.g., queer coming‑of‑age, eco‑horror, experimental documentary) and note how tightly the story aligns with those tags. This creates a genre‑score that the AI can learn to weigh against new entries.
Pillar 2: Aesthetic & Tone
Document visual and auditory signatures: color palette (muted vs. saturated), lighting style, average shot length, transition type, shot composition (static vs. handheld, close‑up vs. wide), and soundscape (dialogue‑driven, score‑heavy, ambient). Assign numeric values to each dimension so the AI can compute an aesthetic‑tone score.
Pillar 3: Audience Fit & Community Resonance
Gauge how a film connects with your community’s values and programming goals. Use the fit scale: Low Fit (1‑3) – “Likely misfit. Themes are generic and visual style is at odds with our ‘Yes’ reel examples.” Medium Fit (4‑7) – “Standard queue. Competent but tone is more conventional than our curated taste.” High Fit (8‑10) would echo your top selections. Capture these judgments in your training data.
Building the AI Training Pipeline
- Annotate every clip with a 50‑word DNA analysis that covers the three pillars. This becomes the labeled dataset for supervised learning.
- Create a “Gold Standard” reel set of 15 clear “Yes” and 15 clear “No” examples. These anchors define the decision boundary for the model.
- Hold a DNA Definition Workshop with your programming team using the three‑pillar framework to agree on scoring rubrics and resolve ambiguities.
- Build the Synthesis Node: feed the pillar scores into a text model (e.g., GPT‑4) with a prompt that combines them into a coherent rationale and a fit rating.
- Select a workflow platform such as n8n, Make, or a dedicated AI automation tool to ingest submissions, run the annotation pipeline, and push results back to your submission system.
Once trained, the AI can pre‑screen submissions, flagging low‑fit films for quick rejection and surfacing high‑fit candidates for programmer review. It also generates personalized feedback notes that reference genre alignment, aesthetic match, and community resonance, saving hours of written commentary.
Start small: pick 30 clips, run the workshop, and iterate. As your model learns, you’ll see faster curation, more consistent programming, and stronger audience satisfaction.
For a comprehensive guide with detailed workflows, templates, and additional strategies, see my e-book: AI for Small Independent Film Festivals: How to Automate Submission Screening and Filmmaker Feedback Generation.
Now count words. I’ll need to count words in the entire output, including title line and HTML tags? Usually word count counts only visible words, not markup. But to be safe, I’ll count only the textual content (words inside, headings, list items, title). HTML tags and comments are not words. Let’s count. I’ll copy the visible text: Title: Training Your AI on Your Festival’s DNA: Genre, Tone, and Audience Fit Small independent film festivals thrive on a distinct voice, but reviewing hundreds of submissions manually drains programmer time. By training an AI on your festival’s “DNA”—the specific mix of genre, tone, and audience fit—you can automate screening and generate consistent filmmaker feedback. Pillar 1: Genre & Theme Nuance Identify the genres and thematic motifs that repeatedly appear in your past selections. Tag each clip with keywords (e.g., queer coming‑of‑age, eco‑horror, experimental documentary) and note how tightly the story aligns with those tags. This creates a genre‑score that the AI can learn to weigh against new entries. Pillar 2: Aesthetic & Tone Document visual and auditory signatures: color palette (muted vs. saturated), lighting style, average shot length, transition type, shot composition (static vs. handheld