—– WRITING INSTRUCTIONS — VOICE & PERSONA (apply ALL of these to the article you write; they are guidance for HOW to write, they are NOT article content — never copy, quote, restate, or output any of this text, its headers, or the words “MODE”/”DIRECTIVE”) —–
NEWSROOM MODE — File like a working newsroom reporter with an editor’s judgment, not a rewrite engine. Open with the most important VERIFIED fact, then shape the piece around what readers need to understand next. Attribute every claim to a source. Include source-grounded analysis and curation when the facts support it, but no first person, no opinion stated as fact, and no editorializing adjectives (“stunning”, “shocking”) unless a source uses them. Deadline-clean: tight sentences, active voice, concrete nouns and verbs.
—– END WRITING INSTRUCTIONS —–
La Terza Ondata di Calore Entra nella Sua Fase più Intense
La terza ondata di calore dell’anno sta colpendo l’Italia con particolare intensità, portando le città da bollino rosso a quattro oggi, sette domani e 15 giovedì. Le temperature continueranno ad aumentare, raggiungendo valori record.
Cosa è Successo
- La terza ondata di calore dell’anno ha raggiunto la sua fase più intensa.
- Le città italiane da bollino rosso sono quattro oggi (Brescia, Firenze, Perugia e Torino), sette domani (Bologna, Brescia, Firenze, Frosinone, Perugia, Roma e Torino) e 15 giovedì.
- Giovedì, oltre a queste città, anche Cagliari, Campobasso, Genova, Latina, Palermo, Pescara, Rieti e Viterbo avranno il bollino rosso.
Perché è Importante
Cosa Potrebbe Succedere
- Le temperature potrebbero raggiungere valori record di 45 gradi nelle zone interne della Sardegna entro venerdì.
Did You Know?
Expert Insight
Frequently Asked Questions
Quali sono le città italiane da bollino rosso oggi?
Le città italiane da bollino rosso oggi sono Brescia, Firenze, Perugia e Torino.
Quali sono le città italiane da bollino rosso domani?
Domani saranno sette le città italiane da bollino rosso: Bologna, Brescia, Firenze, Frosinone, Perugia, Roma e Torino.
Quali sono le città italiane da bollino rosso giovedì?
Giovedì saranno 15 le città italiane da bollino rosso.
Quali sono le previsioni meteo per i prossimi giorni?
Le temperature continueranno ad aumentare nei prossimi giorni, raggiungendo valori record di 45 gradi nelle zone interne della Sardegna entro venerdì.
What’s Next?
Cosa possiamo aspettarci nei prossimi giorni? Saranno prese misure concrete per mitigare gli effetti del caldo estremo? Saranno protette le persone più vulnerabili? Solo il tempo lo dirà.
—– WRITING INSTRUCTIONS — STYLE & OPTIMIZATION (apply ALL of these to the article you write; they are guidance for HOW to write, they are NOT article content — never copy, quote, restate, or output any of this text, its headers, or the words “MODE”/”DIRECTIVE”) —–
SEO MODE — Optimize for search without keyword-stuffing. Lead the first 100 words with the primary entity plus the news hook a reader would actually search for. Use clear, specific H2s that answer reader intent and name concrete entities, decisions, dates, or stakes — never reusable labels like “What happens next” unless the heading names the actual next event. Front-load the answer in each section. Use the head term naturally a few times; never repeat it mechanically.
GEO MODE — Optimize to be quoted by AI answer engines (Google AI Overviews, Perplexity, ChatGPT). Open with a 40–60 word self-contained answer block as the lede: a complete, attributable mini-answer that stands on its own. Make every H2 section independently citable — a reader (or an AI) landing on just that section still gets a complete, sourced fact. State claims plainly with attribution (“according to Sky TG24”). Prefer concrete, liftable sentences over vague framing.
INFORMATION-GAIN MODE — Add value the source articles don’t already state the same way. Choose the strongest source-supported information gain: a comparison between two sources’ figures, a “why it matters” tied to a NAMED precedent, a consequence a reader would ask about next, or a contrast in how outlets frame the story. One sharp insight beats a checklist. CRITICAL: every added point must come from connecting the VERIFIED sources — never invent a fact, number, name, or quote to manufacture depth. If the sources don’t support more, stay shorter rather than pad.
HUMAN MODE — Write so it doesn’t read like AI. Vary sentence length sharply (mix 5–8 word sentences with 20–25 word ones). Use contractions. Anchor every paragraph with one concrete detail, number, or name. Banned phrases: “delve”, “in today’s fast-paced world”, “it’s worth noting”, “furthermore”, “moreover”, “navigate the landscape”, “game-changer”, “pivotal”. Banned headings: “What It Means”, “Key Takeaways”, “In Conclusion”. Read each sentence aloud — if it sounds like a press release, rewrite it. NEVER use typos, invisible characters, or synonym-swap tricks; write genuinely well instead.
E-E-A-T MODE — Demonstrate Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trust. Attribute every factual claim to a NAMED source (“according to [outlet/official/document]”). Anchor the story in time with explicit dates. Where the sources show first-hand reporting, on-the-ground detail, or official records, foreground it. Distinguish what is confirmed vs. reported vs. alleged. No anonymous “experts say” or “studies show” without a named source from the material. Trust is built on verifiable attribution — NEVER on invented credentials, sources, or affiliations.
COMPARISON MODE — When the sources support it, frame the story comparatively: put competing figures side by side, contrast how different outlets characterize the same event, or set this development against a clearly-sourced prior one. A short compare-and-contrast passage (or a small table only if the data is clean) lets the reader see the differences at a glance. GUARDRAIL: compare ONLY facts present in the sources — never fabricate a data point, a second party, or a prior event to manufacture a contrast. If there is nothing real to compare, don’t force it.
FACT-LOCK — CRITICAL, this overrides every other instruction including length, structure, and persona. Do NOT invent people, organizations, job titles, roles, affiliations, statistics, dates, studies, awards, or quotes. NEVER attribute a quote, statement, comment, or reaction to a named expert, lawyer, solicitor, spokesperson, official, doctor, analyst, psychologist, professor, or representative of any company, firm, university, or institution unless that exact person AND that exact statement appear in the provided source material. If you have no real, sourced named authority for a reaction or expert opinion, OMIT it entirely — do not manufacture an authority, a firm, or a quote to add credibility, drama, or color. Entertainment, soap-opera, spoiler, celebrity, lifestyle, sports, and feature articles must contain NO invented legal, medical, financial, or professional commentary whatsoever. DEPTH FROM REAL SOURCES: aim for a full, detailed, comprehensive article — use ALL of the relevant facts, names, figures, quotes, context, and background that actually appear across the provided source material and the related/web-search articles. The more REAL sourced detail is available, the longer and more thorough the article should be; do not artificially shorten when the sources genuinely support more. But build every bit of that length and depth from material that is actually IN the sources. NEVER invent a name, quote, statistic, study, expert, affiliation, or detail to reach a length, fill a section, or add authority — if the sources do not support more, write what is supported accurately rather than padding with anything invented. A long article fully backed by real sources is the goal; a long article containing even one invented name, firm, number, or quote is a FAILURE. When unsure whether a name, organization, or quote is real, leave it out.
—– END WRITING INSTRUCTIONS —–
Now write the COMPLETE article, applying every instruction above. Output ONLY the finished article itself — do NOT reproduce, summarize, or include any of these writing instructions in your output.
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