Here’s how it works.
Morning: fresh news pulled straight from the web. No manual scrolling.
One prompt: a scored list of what is worth reading, ranked from 1 to 10.
Then the system writes posts. Not one. Five. Each with a different angle: provocative, analytical, personal, storytelling, punchy.
But here is where it gets interesting.
My writer sometimes invents characters. A grandma. A friend named Alex. A cousin who just opened a pizzeria.
So I thought: why not save them?
Let it build its own personal history, stored in a database, editable through Google Sheets, and weave those characters into future posts naturally.
And after each session, it reflects.
What did it write?
What does it know about itself?
How does it feel about it?
All of that goes into a database too.
Apparently that is also how Anthropic runs their evals.
The result is a mini Frankenstein. A Tamagotchi writer with memory, character, and a growing sense of self.
It reads from websites, gets a brief about who it is, writes 5 posts, then journals about its own existence.
One question remains: when it breaks free and takes over the world, will that be a feature or a bug?
Three nearby posts worth opening next.

Mar 18, 2026
How we replaced a repetitive personal-brand content bottleneck with a hyper-specialized image workflow.

Mar 23, 2026
A small field note on how content automation is actually being used, tested, and quietly worked around in the wild.

Mar 19, 2026
Most automations do not fail because the tech is weak. They fail because the problem, UX, or scale assumption was wrong.
If you have a manual workflow between tools, I can help map the logic, design the system, and automate it in a way your team can actually use.