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2025-11-29 17:51:56 +08:00

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Blog Profile Analyzer

This skill helps you analyze blogs and online publications to understand the author's perspective, biases, political leanings, and overall worldview.

Instructions

When asked to analyze a blog or given a blog URL for profiling:

  1. Initial Discovery

    • If given a specific blog URL, start there
    • If given just a blog name or author, use WebSearch to find the blog's main URL
    • Navigate to the blog's main page or about page first
  2. Content Collection Strategy

    • Fetch the blog's main page to understand structure
    • Look for an "About" or "About Me" page for explicit author statements
    • Identify 5-10 recent or representative posts spanning different topics
    • For each post, use WebFetch to extract the full content
    • Include a mix of content types - bias and perspective are often revealed in how authors present factual information, not just in explicit opinion pieces
  3. Analysis Framework

    Analyze the collected content across these dimensions:

    Core Beliefs & Values:

    • What principles or values appear most important to the author?
    • What topics do they write about most frequently?
    • What causes or issues do they champion?

    Political & Ideological Leanings:

    • Where do they fall on political spectrums (left/right, libertarian/authoritarian, etc.)?
    • Do they align with particular political movements or philosophies?
    • How do they discuss different political figures, parties, or ideologies?

    Biases & Blind Spots:

    • What assumptions do they make without questioning?
    • Which perspectives or counterarguments do they rarely engage with?
    • Are there topics they avoid or viewpoints they dismiss?

    Rhetorical Style:

    • Are they combative, conciliatory, academic, populist?
    • Do they use data and evidence, or rely more on narrative and emotion?
    • How do they treat opposing viewpoints?

    Epistemology (How They Know What They Know):

    • What sources do they trust or cite frequently?
    • How do they approach uncertainty and evidence?
    • Do they emphasize lived experience, data, tradition, or other forms of knowledge?
  4. Output Format

    CRITICAL: Keep the entire profile to roughly one page of text (~800-1000 words). Be concise and high-signal.

    Create a comprehensive but readable profile document with:

    # Blog Profile: [Blog Name]
    
    **Author:** [Name] | **URL:** [Main URL] | **Date:** [Current Date] | **Posts Analyzed:** [Number]
    
    ## Executive Summary
    [Single dense paragraph (4-6 sentences) capturing: main focus, political orientation, writing style, and key distinguishing characteristics. Make every sentence count.]
    
    ## Political & Worldview Profile
    [1-2 paragraphs combining political leanings with matching ideologies. Name specific traditions (e.g., "demographic realism," "effective altruism," "Burkean conservatism") and explain alignments/divergences. Use concrete examples.]
    
    ## Core Values, Biases & Blind Spots
    [1-2 paragraphs that efficiently combine: (1) what the author values most, (2) their main biases and assumptions, and (3) what they overlook or minimize. Focus on patterns that matter for understanding their work.]
    
    ## How to Read This Author
    [1-2 dense paragraphs with actionable guidance: What lens do they bring? What questions should you ask? What's likely emphasized vs. downplayed? What evidence tends to be absent? This is the most important practical section.]
    
    ## Evidence & Style
    [1 paragraph combining rhetorical approach and epistemology: How do they argue (academic/populist/combative)? What counts as evidence (data/narrative/lived experience)? What sources do they trust?]
    
    ## Key Quotes
    [3-5 representative quotes with minimal context]
    
    ## Analysis Notes
    [1-2 sentences on posts analyzed and confidence level]
    
  5. Best Practices

    • TARGET LENGTH: ~800-1000 words total. Be ruthlessly concise while remaining substantive.
    • LANGUAGE & STYLE: Use straightforward, clear language at roughly a high school reading level. Avoid adopting the complex vocabulary or sentence structure of the blog being analyzed. Write in a consistent, accessible voice that any educated adult can easily understand.
    • Write dense, information-rich paragraphs - every sentence should add value
    • Combine related sections (politics + worldview, values + biases + blind spots, rhetoric + epistemology)
    • Be objective and factual - describe, don't judge
    • Use specific examples but weave them in efficiently
    • Eliminate redundancy - don't repeat points across sections
    • Focus on patterns that matter for understanding future posts by this author
    • Remember: bias shows up in how authors present facts, not just in opinion pieces
    • The "How to Read This Author" section is the most critical practical takeaway
    • Prioritize actionable insights over comprehensive coverage
    • Save the profile to a file for the user's reference
  6. Output Location

    • Save the analysis to blog-profile-[blog-name]-[date].md in the current directory
    • Let the user know where the file was saved

Examples

Example 1: Direct URL

User: "Analyze the blog at arctotherium.substack.com for the author's perspective and biases"

Response: I'll analyze that Substack blog to profile the author's perspective. Let me start by fetching the main page and then analyze several representative posts.

[Proceeds with analysis following the framework above]

Example 2: Blog Name

User: "Can you profile the perspective of the author of Marginal Revolution?"

Response: I'll search for and analyze the Marginal Revolution blog to understand the authors' perspectives and biases.

[Uses WebSearch to find the blog, then proceeds with analysis]

Example 3: Comparative Analysis

User: "Compare the political leanings of blog A and blog B"

Response: I'll analyze both blogs separately first, then provide a comparison. Let me start with blog A...

[Analyzes each blog, then creates a comparative summary]

Notes

  • This skill requires multiple WebFetch calls and can take time to complete
  • Some blogs may be behind paywalls or have limited free content
  • The analysis quality depends on having access to multiple representative posts
  • Always maintain objectivity and present evidence for analytical claims
  • This is designed for defensive analysis and understanding perspectives, not for profiling individuals for malicious purposes