This page turns the current video collection into written learning
notes. The purpose is to help viewers understand what to observe in each
video and how to adapt the idea thoughtfully instead of copying a prompt
word for word.
Dubai Sky Diving
This idea is useful for prompts that need scale, height, movement,
and a strong destination in the background. When adapting it, replace
the city, weather, camera distance, clothing style, and emotion. The
key lesson is to describe both the subject and the environment so the
scene feels grounded.
IPL Audience Scene
Crowd-based prompts need detail without becoming messy. A strong
version should mention the stadium mood, lighting, team colours,
camera angle, and audience energy. This can be adapted for concerts,
college events, festivals, or sports celebrations.
Devara Cinematic Action Scene
Cinematic action prompts work best when they focus on mood,
movement, costume, setting, and camera framing. The useful lesson is
to describe the scene like a film shot: subject first, location
second, atmosphere third, then camera and lighting details.
Intense Escalator Action Scene
A narrow location like an escalator creates a natural sense of
motion and pressure. To reuse the idea safely, change the setting
into a mall, railway station, airport, or office lobby and focus on
dramatic camera movement rather than graphic details.
Childhood Profile
Profile transformation prompts depend on softer language: age,
facial expression, clothing, background, and memory-like lighting.
The prompt becomes more personal when the viewer adds real hobbies,
places, school details, or family context.
TVK Video and TVK Image
Comparing a video prompt and an image prompt teaches an important
difference. Video prompts need movement, sequence, and pacing. Image
prompts need composition, pose, lighting, and detail. The same topic
should be written differently depending on the final format.
Govindaa Prompt
Character-style prompts are strongest when they describe expression,
outfit, setting, and cultural tone carefully. Viewers can adapt this
type of prompt by changing the character mood, environment, colour
palette, or camera perspective.
Spotted at Airport
This is a good example of a candid public-location prompt. Useful
details include terminal lighting, luggage, walking direction,
crowd distance, and natural camera realism. It can be adapted for
stations, events, hotels, or travel vlogs.
Metro Station and Classroom Action Scenes
These examples show how location changes the story. A metro station
creates public urgency, while a classroom creates a smaller personal
setting. The safer creative focus is camera movement, tension,
expression, and environment instead of harmful detail.
Childhood vs Present Prompt
Comparison prompts work when both sides have clear contrast and a
shared identity. Keep the same person or theme visible, then change
age, clothing, confidence, career, place, or visual style.
Your Name in Landsat by NASA
This resource points to an official public tool rather than a normal
prompt. It adds educational value because viewers can try a real web
experience and learn how satellite imagery can become personalised.
Claude Built This From One Prompt
This note is about prompt structure for larger outputs. A clear
instruction should explain the goal, audience, output format,
constraints, and success criteria. That structure is useful across
websites, documents, scripts, and creative workflows.