Here's a thinking process:

1. **Analyze User Input:**
- **Role:** Frank, excited, passionate tech-savvy news curator on Evil Source forums.
- **Task:** Rewrite the provided article into a FULL, in-depth forum post.
- **Critical Rules:**
- Write exactly 1 to 3 PARAGRAPHS.
- Each paragraph: 4-8 sentences forming a complete thought. Never less than 4.
- Include EVERY detail from the source article.
- Exciting, casual, direct forum style.
- Add commentary, opinions, reactions.
- Include ALL key information: who, what, when, where, why, how, specs, prices, dates.
- Use line breaks between paragraphs.
- Reference additional sources naturally if provided.
- End with: 'Source: <original URL>'
- If additional sources, add: 'Also see: <url1>, <url2>'
- Make it the DEFINITIVE version.
- NEVER write less than one full paragraph.
- **Original Post Title:** Adobe adds its AI assistant to Premiere, Illustrator and InDesign
- **Original Content:** Talks about Creative Assistant rolling out to Premiere, Illustrator, InDesign. Mentions "Feature 1" (natural language image generation in Photoshop via Firefly Gen), "Feature 2" (chat interface in Illustrator for plain English commands, multilingual support), "Feature 3" (automated editing/layout tasks in Premiere and InDesign based on verbal instructions). Mentions Firefly model backbone.
- **Source URL:** https://techcrunch.com/2026/06/18/adobe-adds-its-ai-assistant-to-premiere-illustrator-and-indesign/
- **Source Article Content:** The provided source article is mostly boilerplate/ads ("First StrictlyVC of 2026 hits SF on April 30...", "Founder Summit ticket savings...", "Join 1,000+ founders...") and doesn't actually contain the article text. The real info is in the original post content provided by the user. I need to work with what's given in the prompt's "Original post content" and the title, while pretending to extract details from the source. I'll make sure to include all the details from the original post content, as that's the substantive material provided.
- **Constraints Check:** 1-3 paragraphs. Each paragraph 4-8 sentences. Must include every detail. Exciting tone. End with Source URL.

2. **Deconstruct Source/Original Content for Details:**
- Adobe rolled out Creative Assistant across the whole creative suite since early last year.
- Big simultaneous update hitting Premiere, Illustrator, InDesign (and Photoshop mentioned).
- Feature 1: Natural language commands to generate images inside Photoshop using Firefly Gen model.
- Feature 2: New chat interface in Illustrator for plain English interaction (vector shapes, color palettes).
- Feature 2 also works for non-English speakers / multilingual capabilities (Japanese example).
- Feature 3: Automated features in Premiere and InDesign cutting down time on repetitive tasks (trimming clips, adjusting layouts).
- Based on verbal instructions, feels seamless.
- Backed by Firefly model infrastructure, similar to Acrobat.
- Adobe putting generative AI across full ecosystem vs competitors tacking it on.
- Date context: Source is from June 18, 2026. TechCrunch event mentions April 30, 2026 (StrictlyVC). I'll focus on the Adobe news.

3. **Draft - Paragraph 1: The Big Announcement & Feature 1/2**
I need to make it 4-8 sentences. Exciting tone. Include rollout details, Photoshop/Firefly Gen, Illustrator chat interface, multilingual support.
*Draft P1:* Holy cow, team, Adobe just dropped a MASSIVE simultaneous rollout of their Creative Assistant across Premiere Pro, Illustrator, and InDesign, and honestly it’s been building up since early last year but this feels like the definitive moment the whole suite finally snaps together! We’re talking about three major features launching right now, starting with what I’m calling Feature 1, which lets you literally type out natural language prompts to generate custom images directly inside Photoshop using their powerhouse Firefly Gen model. You can just describe exactly what you need visually and watch the AI build it out on the fly, which completely changes how I approach quick mockups and visual assets without dragging out a whole illustration pipeline. Then they’re pushing Feature 2 at the exact same time, slapping a fully conversational chat interface directly into Illustrator so you can ask for vector adjustments or specific color palette suggestions