visualextreme close-up of an iphone back. flashlight on. you can see two distinct led dots glowing.
dialogueyour iphone flashlight has two leds. they do different jobs and almost no one knows.
educational short-form fails when it explains too much, too slowly. this generator writes educational scripts that assume the viewer is smart and busy: one concrete fact per shot, examples instead of definitions, and a takeaway at the end that isn't a recap. works for tech, finance, cooking, science, language learning, and any niche that earns trust by teaching.
tiktok rewards low production and high specificity. lean into voice — the words the speaker says matter more than the camera moves. on-screen text is the second voice; treat it like a character, not a caption. native audio over original is fine, but don't lead with a generic 'follow for more' close.
a 30s tiktok showing how the iphone flashlight has two physical leds and how to make your phone better in one specific situation.
a 30s tiktok showing how the iphone flashlight has two physical leds and how to make your phone better in one specific situation.
visualextreme close-up of an iphone back. flashlight on. you can see two distinct led dots glowing.
dialogueyour iphone flashlight has two leds. they do different jobs and almost no one knows.
visualopen control center, long-press the flashlight icon. slider appears with five power levels. demonstrates each.
dialoguelong-press the flashlight in control center. you get five power levels. level one and two use one led. levels three through five fire both.
on-screenlong-press → 5 power levels
visualcompares level one (soft, warm) to level five (harsh, bright) on the same wall.
dialogueif you're trying to read a menu in a dim restaurant, level one is enough and won't blind your table. level five is for finding a contact lens on a hotel carpet at 2am.
visualcreator turns flashlight off. holds phone up.
dialoguefollow for one of these every wednesday. boring tech, made useful.
absolutely — and the hook should pre-load the value, not promise it. 'i thought i was paying $40 a month for spotify family. i was paying $86.' is stronger than 'today i'll show you how to save money on subscriptions.'
swap general claims for specific examples. swap 'always' and 'never' for 'usually' and 'in my case.' the generator leans into first-person teaching, which lands much better than third-person authority.
15s to 60s. the platform leans into 30s clips for high-watch-through content. for storytelling — the kind that gets pinned — you can stretch to 60s if every beat earns its place. the generator scales the shot count to the duration.
implicit beats explicit. a 'pov: you' frame works when it's specific. asking the viewer 'wait until the end' works less than it used to. the strongest hooks here are confessional or contrarian, never declarative.
yes — sign in with google, walk through a 90-second onboarding, and start generating scripts. there's no paywall on the core generator right now. paid features may come later, but the v1 is free.
drop a one-line idea. the generator handles the structure, the pacing, and the voice.