| name | wedding-speech |
| description | A best-man/maid-of-honour/parent wedding toast that actually lands — funny without roasting, moving without syrup, short enough that nobody checks their phone. Use when someone has to give a wedding speech and has either nothing or a dangerous first draft. Produces a 2-4 minute toast built on one good story, plus delivery notes and the three jokes to cut. |
Wedding Speech
Every bad wedding speech fails the same three ways: too long, too inside, or secretly about the speaker. The fix is structural — one story, one arc from laughter to warmth, one glass raised under four minutes.
Required Inputs
- The role (best man, maid of honour, parent, friend) and the speaker's real relationship to the couple.
- One to three stories about the person they know best — including the unusable ones (exes, arrests, hazings: they won't be used, but they often contain a usable kernel).
- What they honestly think of the partner — the pivot of the whole speech lives here.
- Audience shape: grandparents present? Two families with different humour thresholds? Cultural or religious considerations?
The Arc That Works
- Open with a laugh that costs nothing — self-deprecating or situational, never at the couple's expense yet ("For those who don't know me — which after this speech may be a choice…").
- The story — ONE, well told, about the person you know: specific, visual, ending somewhere character-revealing.
- The pivot — "and then they met ___" — the story's trait meets the partner; this is where the room goes quiet in the good way. What changed in your person, said plainly.
- The direct address — two sentences TO the couple, not about them.
- The toast — stand, raise, one line, their names last.
Output Format
- The speech — 300-500 words (2-4 minutes), speaker's register, laugh lines and the quiet moment clearly built.
- Delivery notes — where to pause for laughter (and what to do if it doesn't come: keep going, never explain), pace guidance, the reminder to hold the glass DOWN until the toast.
- The cut list — the jokes/stories from the input that must not survive, each with the one-line reason (wrong audience, punches down, secretly about you, ex-adjacent). Naming the cuts prevents relapse at the open bar.
Quality Checks
Anti-Patterns