| name | reframe-idea |
| description | Transform a dead-end idea into a viable memetic form. Converts clichés into fresh angles, supermemes into tractable sub-problems, and NO-GO ideas into spreadable versions. Use when classify-idea returns cliché, assess-fitness returns NO-GO, or detect-supermeme confirms parasitic properties. Trigger on: "How do I make this spreadable?", "This idea isn't working", "Reframe this", "Make this less apocalyptic", "Find a fresh angle".
|
Reframe Memetic Idea
Core concept: Ideas that fail memetic assessment can often be salvaged by changing their packaging, scope, or framing — without losing the core insight.
What This Skill Does
Takes a failed/stuck idea and applies one of three transformation paths:
- Cliché → Fresh Angle: Recover novelty from a worn-out idea by finding the unsaid or contrarian take
- Supermeme → Tractable Sub-Problem: Narrow apocalyptic, vague ideas into measurable, actionable scope
- NO-GO → Viable: Address the specific failure criterion (low impact, no champion, high immunity) by restructuring
Input/Output Contract
Accepts:
- The idea in its current form
- Classification output (from classify-idea) or assessment output (from assess-fitness/detect-supermeme)
- The specific failure reason (cliché, supermeme, NO-GO flag)
- Optional: target network context
Produces:
- 2-3 reframed versions of the idea
- For each: which transformation path was used, why it works, and predicted classification of the reframed version
- Recommendation on which reframe to pursue
- Recommended next skill(s) for the chosen reframe
Passes to:
- classify-idea (re-classify the reframed version)
- assess-fitness (re-assess with the new framing)
- craft-content (if reframe produces something ready to spread)
- design-strategy (if reframe produces viable antimeme)
Process
Step 1: Diagnose the Failure Mode
Identify exactly WHY the idea failed:
If CLICHÉ:
- What made it novel originally? When did novelty wear out?
- Is the CORE INSIGHT still valid, just overexposed?
- What has the audience NOT heard about this topic?
- Source: "A cliché occurs when a meme 'wears out'. When an audience is tired of a joke or an idea, it starts to receive negative feedback, which kills the meme's ability to propagate further."
If SUPERMEME:
- Which red flags triggered? (apocalyptic, vague goals, no metrics, total prioritization, no success criteria)
- Is there a legitimate concern buried under the parasitic framing?
- Can the scope be narrowed to something measurable?
- Source: Nadia writes that supermemes "suck up everyone's attention and time and result in very little constructive action; they are parasites."
- Example from source: "We must prepare for existential AI risk" (supermeme) → "Invest X% in AI safety research with clear measurable outcomes" (antimeme/meme — tractable, measurable)
If NO-GO (from assess-fitness):
- Which specific criterion failed?
- Low impact → needs scope change or different network
- No champion → needs different messenger or coalition
- High immunity → needs different network or slower inoculation
- Ego-driven → needs reorientation toward network benefit
- Supermeme properties → apply supermeme reframe path
Step 2: Apply Transformation
PATH A: Cliché Recovery
Techniques:
- Contrarian Inversion: Take the opposite position. "Follow your passion" (cliché) → "Ignore your passion, follow your curiosity" (fresh)
- Specificity Injection: Replace vague with concrete. "Be authentic" (cliché) → "Post one thing this week that would embarrass your professional self" (specific, actionable)
- New Evidence Attachment: Tie the worn-out idea to recent data, events, or examples that make it feel timely again
- Audience Shift: Same core insight, different network where it hasn't been heard yet
- Format Shift: Same idea, radically different packaging. Essay → data visualization. Tweet → long-form case study. Advice → story.
Source support: The examples file notes that a cliché "retains form but lost meaning" — so the goal is to restore meaning through one of these transformations.
PATH B: Supermeme Narrowing
Techniques:
- Scope Reduction: "Save the planet" → "Reduce plastic waste in your city by 30% this year"
- Metric Attachment: Force measurable success criteria onto the vague threat
- Timeboxing: "Existential forever-crisis" → "What can we accomplish in 12 months?"
- Sub-problem Extraction: Identify one tractable piece of the supermeme and champion THAT
- Villain Specificity: Replace vague existential threat with a specific, attackable target (source: Jason Levin — "pick a villain to fight against. It doesn't have to be a person. It can be a big faceless company.")
Source support: The book notes supermemes have "a surprising lack of consensus as to what the 'climate crisis' actually means, nor how to measure its progress." The reframe forces that missing specificity.
PATH C: NO-GO Restructuring
For each failure mode:
- Low impact: Change the SCOPE or the NETWORK. Same idea in a network where it's more consequential. Or expand the idea's implications.
- No champion: Reduce the idea to a form that doesn't NEED a 3-5 year champion. Can it be a meme (short burst) instead of an antimeme (long advocacy)?
- High immunity: Use the sediment filter approach — introduce through a proxy idea that lowers resistance first. Inoculate gradually rather than attempting direct transmission. Source: "Networks need to be inoculated to avoid triggering an immune response."
- Ego-driven: Strip the idea of personal branding. Reframe as network benefit. Remove yourself as the visible champion and empower others.
Step 3: Generate 2-3 Reframed Versions
For each reframe, provide:
- The reframed idea (concrete, not abstract)
- Which technique was used
- Predicted classification of the reframed version (meme/antimeme/supermeme/cliché)
- Why this version avoids the original failure mode
- Strength: what's better about this version
- Risk: what could still fail
Step 4: Recommend Best Reframe
Choose the strongest reframe based on:
- Highest predicted impact
- Lowest predicted immunity in target network
- Most sustainable (can you champion this version for 3-5 years?)
- Best fit with user's actual capabilities and network
Output Template
## Reframe Analysis
**Original Idea:** [the idea as submitted]
**Failure Mode:** [CLICHÉ | SUPERMEME | NO-GO: specific flag]
**Diagnosis:** [why exactly it failed]
---
### Reframe 1: [Name]
**Technique:** [which transformation technique]
**Reframed Idea:** [the new version]
**Predicted Classification:** [meme | antimeme]
**Why This Works:** [how it avoids the original failure]
**Strength:** [best property]
**Risk:** [remaining vulnerability]
### Reframe 2: [Name]
[same structure]
### Reframe 3: [Name] (optional)
[same structure]
---
## Recommendation
**Best Reframe:** [which one and why]
**Next Steps:** Run [classify-idea | assess-fitness | craft-content | design-strategy] on the reframed version
**Timeline Impact:** [how this reframe affects the spread timeline]
Examples from Source Material
Example 1: Supermeme → Tractable
- Original: "AI will make humanity extinct" (supermeme — apocalyptic, no metrics, total prioritization demanded)
- Reframe: "Federal AI safety labs should publish quarterly risk assessments with specific capability thresholds" (antimeme — specific, measurable, championed by policy experts)
Example 2: Cliché → Fresh
- Original: "Follow your passion" (cliché — everyone's heard it, triggers boredom)
- Reframe: "Your passion is probably wrong — track what makes you lose time instead" (contrarian inversion — challenges the premise, creates novelty)
Example 3: NO-GO (high immunity) → Viable
- Original: Trying to spread Yarvin's political theory in progressive academic network (NO-GO: immunity too high)
- Reframe: Abstract the non-political structural insights and present them through a different lens to a different network — tech/startup communities where structural analysis resonates (audience shift + specificity injection)
- Source: The book documents exactly this pattern — Yarvin's ideas spread through tech networks first, where immunity was lower, before eventually reaching broader discourse.
Common Reframing Mistakes
Mistake 1: Cosmetic reframe — Changing the words but not the structure. "Save the world" → "Change the world" is not a reframe. The scope, metrics, and framing must actually change.
Mistake 2: Losing the core insight — Reframing so aggressively that the original truth disappears. The goal is to preserve what's valuable while changing what blocks transmission.
Mistake 3: Reframing into another supermeme — Narrowing one apocalyptic framing into another. Test the reframed version against supermeme red flags.
Mistake 4: Assuming one reframe is enough — Sometimes you need multiple rounds of reframing. Run the reframed version through classify-idea again to verify it actually escaped the failure mode.
When to Use Other Skills
- After reframe-idea → classify-idea: Verify the reframed version's classification
- After reframe-idea → assess-fitness: Check if the reframe makes it GO
- After reframe-idea → craft-content: If the reframe is ready for content creation
- After reframe-idea → design-strategy: If the reframe produces a viable antimeme strategy
References
See /references/source-summary.md:
- Supermeme characteristics and reframing examples
- Cliché definition and novelty recovery
- Network immunity and inoculation strategy
- Villain narrative strategy from Jason Levin