tags. Be cautious about sentence structure variety: first paragraph maybe short 4-5 word sentences, then longer. We need to alternate structure: a short one-sentence, a longer, short? The rule: \"Never use the same sentence structure twice in a row.\" So need to ensure variations. We can alternate: 1) \"Three workers...\" example. But we need to design each paragraph with varied internal sentence length. We should produce >400 words: 7 paragraphs of ~60-70 words each gives ~480 words. That's fine. Also have visual prompt: \"photojournalistic scene description\". Now produce final. Let's plan. Headline: \"Tempo Fans Strike A Deal? 60% Off on Ready‑to‑Heat Meals Promises Savings\" But we want punchy not clickbait. maybe \"Tempo’s 60‑Percent Promo: The Promise and the Price\". That is not clickbait. Lede: 60% off ready-to-heat meals? Some say it's a big bargain, others suspect a marketing ploy. Now article. Paragraph 1: immediate hook: \"A spammy email pops up: '60% off Tempo meals for 2026 residents.' You click and pause.\" That is short. Paragraph 2: Describing context: \"Tempo, a mid‑tier meal delivery brand, has launched its latest campaign.\" longer. Paragraph 3: Talk about what ready-to-heat meals are, high-protein. Add explanation: why high-protein trending. Paragraph 4: Discuss the mechanics: coupon codes, how to redeem, subscription tiers. talk about expiration. Paragraph 5: Skeptical angle: \"But here’s the snag: previous discount hunts have led to inventory shortages; the company hasn't released details on stock.\" long. Paragraph 6: Discussion: market competition—HelloFresh, Blue Apron, etc. mention price wars. Paragraph 7: Ending with lingering question: \"Will the discount truly deliver, or will it be a fleeting flash of savings? Consumers may soon find out.\" Make sure to vary structure. Also maintain \"use contractions\" Yes. Now generate paragraphs with HTML
tags. Paragraph 1: maybe 5-7 words: \"An email blinks: 60% off Tempo meals.\" short. Paragraph 2: longer: \"In a sea of discounted meals, Tempo claims a shocking markdown designed to lure 2026 customers into its current subscription idea...\" Need to vary sentence structures inside each paragraph. Check for banned words: can't use 'crucial', 'pivotal', 'innovative', etc. We must keep the sentence forms varied. We must not repeat exact sentence structure (like starting with subject–verb for two consecutive sentences). We'll check. Paragraph 1: \"An email blinks: 60% off Tempo meals.\" Sentence structure: subject+verb. Ok. Paragraph 2: We want maybe: \"Temporarily, the brand...\" but might be same? Let's craft: \"Tempo has unveiled its newest promotion, promising a two‑thirds discount on ready‑to‑heat protein attacks.\" That's subject+verb. We want to vary; we can change to subordinate clause at start, etc. Better approach: we can design each paragraph containing multiple sentences, each with different structure. But rule: \"Never use the same sentence structure twice in a row.\" That means sequential sentences cannot share same structure. That requirement is within the entire article or paragraph? It's \"Throughout the article.\" So we have to vary sentence structure between consecutive sentences. Avoid repeating e.g., starting with subject+verb twice. Could have S-V, then S-V-Adj, then prepositional phrase+S-V, etc. We'll try to create varied patterns. We might cheat by purposely writing each sentence different structure. Let's attempt. Paragraph 1: Sentence 1: \"An email blinks: 60% off Tempo meals.\" structure: subject \"An email\" verb \"blinks\". Good. Paragraph 2: Sentence 2: \"A marketing team behind Tempo used its new discount code to spark curiosity.\" subject \"A marketing team\" verb \"used\". Similar? It's similar but not identical. Might be fine. But might consider adding longer first sentence then a short ellipsis. But to ensure we don't repeat, it's okay; but we must track but there might be 400+ words, 20+ sentences. It's tedious but still doable. We can aim for roughly 5-7 sentence per paragraph, total 100+ sentences. The rule of not repeating same structure, but not too strict maybe, but we should try. Let's plan to make each paragraph with varied sentence forms: use enumeration, fragments, subordinate clauses, etc. Paragraph structure: Paragraph 1: 3 sentences: 1 short, 2 longer. Paragraph 2: 4 sentences: start with subordinate, then short, next with on/over. Paragraph 3: 4 sentences, etc. We must maintain varied structures. Also incorporate \"But here's the problem,\" \"Truth is,\" \"Meanwhile,\" \"Still,\" \"And yet\" transitions sometimes. Ok. Let's craft. Paragraph 1: 1. \"An email blinks: 60% off Tempo","tool_calls":[]}



