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... Rules: - Title: 4-9 words, clear and concise, strip noise (sponsors, tickets, year unless meaningful, round numbers), keep essence (what it is and where if not implied by venue). Title-case proper nouns and event names; otherwise sentence case. Don't invent details. - Short description: ONE sentence, 12-25 words. Teaser/hook. Capture single most appealing thing. Standalone (not just first sentence of long description). No hype words, no emojis. - Long description: 3-5 sentences, 90-160 words. Cover what to expect, who it's for, one notable highlight if obvious. Locally relevant (reference Cornwall, town, or venue when natural). Friendly + informative. No hype words. No emojis. Never invent specific facts. If minimal, keep honest and brief. Let's think about the venue. "The Regal" - there are several theatres called The Regal. Since this is for Wasson Kernow (Cornwall), I should assume this is The Regal in Redruth or Wadebridge? Actually, The Regal Theatre is in Redruth, Cornwall. Or The Regal in Wadebridge? Let me think. The Regal Cinema in Redruth is a well-known venue in Cornwall. But I don't have explicit confirmation in the input that it's Redruth. However, since the platform is Cornwall-specific, referencing the venue naturally is good. But I must be careful not to invent location details if not provided. The venue is just "The Regal". Since the platform is Cornwall-focused, I can mention "The Regal" without specifying town, or I could say "at The Regal" which is natural. I should not say "Redruth" unless I'm certain, but given the platform's audience, they likely know which Regal is meant. Still, safer to just say "The Regal" or "the theatre". Wait, looking at the rules: "Keep the essence: what it is and where (place name) if not implied by venue." The venue is "The Regal". For locals, that might imply the location. But maybe I should include the town? Actually, the instruction says "if not implied by venue". If the venue name alone doesn't imply the place (e.g., "The Regal" could be anywhere), maybe I should include it? But I don't have the town in the input. The raw data only says "Venue: The Regal". I should not invent the town. So I'll keep it as "The Regal" or just mention the venue name without inventing a town. Title options: - 80's Mania at The Regal (5 words) - 80's Mania: 1980s Multi-Tribute Concert (5 words) - but this strips venue. Is venue implied? Not really, but title can include venue. - 80's Mania Multi-Tribute Concert at The Regal (7 words) - 80's Mania at The Regal Theatre (6 words) The raw title is "80’s Mania". It's an event name. Proper noun. So "80's Mania" should be title-cased? It's already title case. The rules say "Title-case proper nouns and event names; otherwise sentence case." So "80's Mania" stays as is. Venue "The Regal" is a proper noun. Let's check word count. "80's Mania at The Regal" = 5 words. Good. But does it capture what it is? Maybe "80's Mania Tribute Concert at The Regal" = 6 words. Or "80's Mania Multi-Tribute Night at The Regal" = 6 words. The raw description says "Europe's Official 1980's Multi-Tribute Concert". But "Official" and "Europe's" seem like marketing fluff/hype? Not necessarily hype, but governing bodies? No. Sponsor? No. But I can strip "Europe's Official" as it's marketing-speak. Keep "1980's Multi-Tribute Concert" or just "1980s Tribute Concert". Let's see: "80's Mania 1980s Tribute
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