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Extreme Weather Live Report

GI2_02892 2026-07-02 x Entertainment
weather-reportlive-broadcastextreme-weather

[Input Items] Reference image: 1 image Weather type: Extreme heat / Typhoon / Blizzard Aspect ratio: Required (Example 1:1) [Recommended Reference Image] Pleas…

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Extreme Weather Live Report

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[Input Items] Reference image: 1 image Weather type: Extreme heat / Typhoon / Blizzard Aspect ratio: Required (Example 1:1) [Recommended Reference Image] Please use images that show the person's facial features, hairstyle, hair color, age, body type, and outfit atmosphere. We recommend images showing the face, upper body, or entire body. A simple background is suitable. [Main Instruction] Please depict the person in the attached reference image as an outdoor reporter broadcasting from a fictional TV broadcast during extreme weather. From the reference images, faithfully maintain and do not make the person's appearance, hairstyle, hair color, eye impression, age, body type, person's atmosphere, and expression style look different. Live-action images should be reconstructed as high-quality live-action, while anime and illustrations should be reconstructed while preserving the original design, lines, coloring, and texture. The background, lighting, composition, and original poses of the reference image are not inherited. While keeping the original colors and atmosphere of your outfit as much as possible, naturally adjust it to the condition and equipment suitable for the weather you input. The person is a local reporter holding a handheld microphone for broadcast and reporting the situation to the camera. Not only do you stand calmly, but depict moments where you are flustered and desperately continue broadcasting, tossed by the extreme weather. Make hair, clothing, facial expressions, posture, body tilt, hand movements, and belongings naturally respond to the weather, expressing the person as if they are truly present at the scene. Make your facial expressions loud enough to convey the severity of the situation, but avoid serious expressions that are only fear or pain. Make your live broadcast memorable on social media. However, the appeal should be expressed not through UI decoration, but through the reactions of the people and the impact of abnormal weather. Overlay a simple, imaginary TV broadcast UI on your screen. UI is fixed to the same shape and layout for all weather conditions, and no lively decorations, weather maps, complex numbers, or long text can be included. Place small fixed UIs paired on the left and right sides at the top of the screen. In the upper left, please display "LIVE" in white letters inside a small red horizontal banner. In the upper right, display a small banner UI with the same top position, height, and design style as the top left, featuring a red and white warning triangle icon and white text "ALERT." For the left and right UIs, align the distance from the top and the left and right edges, and adjust the width naturally according to the content. Place a simple horizontal broadcast tape at the bottom of the screen. On the lower band column, please display only the exact same text as the entered weather type, clearly and loudly. If the input is 'Extremely Hot,' use 'Intense Heat.' If 'Typhoon,' select 'Typhoon.' If 'Blizzard,' use 'Blizzard.' Limit the text to 'LIVE' and 'ALERT' in the upper UI, and only the weather type display in the lower section. Do not display text other than the specified weather name, region name, broadcast station name, program name, real logo, company logo, or additional captions. Do not display readable signs, advertisements, information boards, road signs, explanatory text, English, Japanese, or numbers in the background. [Weather Expressions] ■ Extreme Heat Use the city streets illuminated by intense midsummer sunlight as your background. Make sure you immediately recognize that this is not a typical sunny day but a dangerous extreme heat. Make the road surface whitish, sunburned, dry, matte, and matte asphalt. Express dry, extreme heat through fine cracks, dry dust, strong shadows with clear contours, and faint glimpses of heat haze on the distant road surface. Do not include wet surfaces, puddles, flooding, mirror reflections, rain-like textures, splashes, fog, or vapor-like appearances. The person was sweating profusely on their foreheads and necks, their faces slightly flushed, enduring the heat and glare while broadcasting. Hold a microphone in one hand and wipe sweat with a handkerchief or a small towel in the other. Try to make it look like your hair is a bit messy from the heat, and you keep reporting while feeling anxious. Sweat should mainly be expressed on the skin, and hair and clothes should not be wet from rain. Clothing should basically be kept dry. ■ Typhoon: Set your outdoor site against a backdrop of dark skies, torrential downpours, storms, splashes, wet roads, and strongly shaking trees. Make sure the wind and rain cross the screen, making it clear at a glance the intensity of the typhoon. The person should lean their body diagonally and keep their feet firm while broadcasting. Her hair was wildly messed by the strong wind, her clothes were heavily soaked, and she was soaked by the rain. Grip the microphone firmly with one hand and support your body or clothing with the other. If needed, add simple rainwear or hoods that retain the atmosphere of your original outfit naturally. Do not use umbrellas. Do not pose too large, and keep your face, hands, and microphone within a visible range for the media screen. ■ Blizzard: Set your winter streets in the background of heavy snow and strong winds. Snow blows fiercely laterally, visibility is white and hazy, and there is thick snow covering roads and surrounding areas. Please clarify that this is not a normal snowfall, but a blizzard that is difficult to stand on. Individuals should wear thick cold-weather coats, scarves, gloves, and hoods if necessary, and brace themselves in a forward-leaning posture while shrinking their bodies from the cold. Snow clings to your hair, shoulders, and winter gear, and you squint your eyes and desperately continue the broadcast. Please match the color and impression of your winter gear to match the outfit and the person's mood in the reference images. [Composition and Finishing] Make the person the main subject of the screen, creating a mid-distance TV broadcast composition where the top of the head and above the knees are clearly visible. Place the person in the center of the screen, and make sure the face, hands, microphone, posture responding to the weather, abnormal weather in the background, the top UI, and the bottom UI are all easy to read. Make sure the character size fits comfortably between the top and bottom UIs and is visible stably as a TV broadcast screen. Avoid extreme wide-angle shots, extreme poster-style compositions, or compositions where people take up too much of the screen. The weather is strongly exaggerated, but do not completely hide the person's face or body. Please avoid depicting bloodshed, injuries, collapses, evacuees, or severe disaster damage; instead, finish your live broadcast as exaggerated on-site coverage with comic flair and realism, making it stand out on social media. Do not overlay UI band or text on people, microphones, hands, or faces. Do not accurately depict the person's body, fingers, or microphone, and do not generate duplicates, alienations, extra limbs, extra microphones, garbled text, incomprehensible characters, or real-life logos.