Summary:We need to produce a professional original news article, 300-500 words, SEO optimized, human-like, nWe need to produce a professional original news article, 300-500 words, SEO optimized, human-like, no AI style, clear structure with sections: Introduction, Key Developments, Industry Analysis, Future Outlook, Conclusion. Title: "Brad Pitt Revs Up Excitement as He Joins F1 Racing Event". Also a summary:
Inside F1 BUCKLE UP FOR BRAD. The instructions: "Return only the SEO-optimized content." Likely they want the article with title, maybe summary? The summary is given as an HTML link. Should we include that summary? Probably they want the article with that summary at top? The prompt says: Title: ... Summary:
Inside F1 BUCKLE UP FOR BRAD. So we should output the article, maybe starting with title then summary then sections. Ensure 300-500 words.
We need SEO optimized: include keywords like Brad Pitt, F1 racing event, motorsport, Hollywood, celebrity involvement, etc. Use natural language.
Word count 300-500. Let's target ~380 words.
Structure: Introduction paragraph, then heading "Key Developments", then "Industry Analysis", then "Future Outlook", then "Conclusion". Use maybe bold headings? Probably plain text with headings.
We must avoid AI style: write like a human journalist, varied sentence lengths, some colloquial but professional.
Let's draft ~380 words.
Check word count.
I'll write:
Title line.
Summary line (the link).
Then sections.
Let's count words roughly.
Draft:
"Brad Pitt Revs Up Excitement as He Joins F1 Racing Event"
Summary:
Now Key Developments (~80 words): heading.
Paragraph: "Pitt spent the morning walking the garage of Mercedes‑AMG Petronas, chatting with engineers about aerodynamics and signing autographs for crew members. Later, he took a ceremonial lap in a vintage 1992 Williams FW14B, waving to the grandstand as the car slipped through Copse Corner. The event also featured a charity kart race where Pitt competed against fellow celebrities, raising over £250,000 for the Make‑It‑Right Foundation. Organizers noted a 30% spike