conclusion: you could use gpt3 for this, but only if you want all your tags to be kind of meaningless. couple tests under the break.
Prompt: Write a series of organization and discovery tags for a given social media post. Tags can contain multiple words separated by spaces. All tags should begin with a # symbol.
sample post:
tags: #JurassicWorld #MovieAnalysis #Touchscreens #HollywoodFX #ScriptWriting #MovieMaking #ComputerTerminal #MaterialDesign #ImmersionBreaking #RealWorldExperience #SuspensionOfDisbelief
some of these are vaguely plausible but it's the sort of overly large hashtag usage you'd find on an aspiring instagram influencer's posts. also the first of many examples of gpt3 having no fucking clue what "tags can contain spaces" means apparently.
sample post:
tags: #bocchitherock #anime #hyperfixation #EverVigilant #LearningGuitar #StartingToPlayGuitarAgain #selfpreservation #DadRock #vaguelyexperimental #experimentaldadrock
maybe like three of these make sense. bad job. also nice internal inconsistency on multi-word tags.
sample post:
tags: #DungeonSynth #MisterAnderson #TheMatrix #Reloaded #2003
ok credit where it's due this is probably the best one yet. these tags suck but they fit in well with the bit that the post is doing. big fan of "The Matrix" and "Reloaded" being their own tags. #2003
sample post:
tags: #LA #MovinToLA #WaitingTables #Ghostbusters #Slimer #NametagReading #SpecialEffects #DecentTip #Espresso #Ciao #FunnyStory #WorldsWeirdPlace
fuckin love that since i didn't put a cap on number of tags it's just putting EVERYTHING in there.
i tried limiting the tag count to 6 and got this: #LA #Ghostbusters #Slimer #WaitingTables #Espresso #Ciao. better? yeah. good? no. gpt3 is a land of contrasts.
anyway tags for this post were generated by gpt3 as well. sorry in advance.
