AI Script Generator

Cooking TikTok Script Generator

A creator we analyzed recently faced a common friction point: a brand brief for heavy carbon steel pans that clashed with their usual '15-minute weeknight' aesthetic. The brand wanted a deep dive into seasoning and heat retention, but the creator’s audience drops off if a knife doesn't hit a cutting board within the first three seconds. This tension is where most kitchen scripts fail; you either alienate your core viewers with a clinical product demo or you bury the brand's USP so deep the client asks for a reshoot. WeKlapp functions as an executive producer by reconciling these two worlds. It doesn't just spit out generic recipes. It parses your specific pacing—whether you prefer ASMR-heavy chopping sequences or rapid-fire voiceovers—and weaves the technical specs of a brand like Made In into the natural rhythm of a recipe. The goal is a script that fulfills the contract without killing the retention graph.

Scene 1 free, no card required
AI judge panel scoring

Trained on what works in the cooking corner of TikTok

Hook variations tuned to the first 2 seconds of attention

Brand-fit angles vetted by an AI judge panel

Scene-by-scene storyboards you can revise in one click

Sample script
TikTok
Meal-kit subscription
Sample output — illustrative

25-Minute Dinner That My Kids Actually Finished

Hook:This one pan saved my Tuesday.

Angle: A busy mom gives an unfiltered, real-time verdict on a Pantry Box weeknight kit — from box to plate in under 25 minutes, with kids as the ultimate judges.

Storyboard sketch for scene 1: Hook
1

Hook

0:00 - 0:03 · 3s

Visual: Tight over-the-shoulder shot of a cluttered kitchen counter. Creator slaps a Pantry Box kit down next to a pile of unopened mail and a kid's backpack. Text overlay center screen: 'THIS ONE PAN SAVED MY TUESDAY'

Audio: This one pan saved my Tuesday.

Note: Hook line doubles as thumbnail headline. Keep it fast — no music intro, just ambient kitchen noise then voice.

Storyboard sketch for scene 2: Unbox + Honest Setup
2

Unbox + Honest Setup

0:03 - 0:15 · 12s

Visual: Medium shot, creator facing camera at counter, pulling ingredients out of the Pantry Box kit one by one — pre-portioned garlic, a sauce packet, chicken thighs, green beans. Quick cut to close-up of the instruction card. Text overlay bottom of screen: 'Pantry Box honey garlic chicken kit'

Audio: Okay so I've tried maybe six of these kits now and honestly? Some of them are a lot of chopping dressed up as convenience. This one though — garlic's already minced, sauce is pre-made, and everything fits in one pan. I'm a little suspicious it's going to be good.

Note: Keep the skeptical tone genuine. Do not oversell. The 'suspicious it's going to be good' line builds authentic tension.

Storyboard sketch for scene 3: The Cook
3

The Cook

0:15 - 0:30 · 15s

Visual: Sped-up wide shot of creator cooking — chicken going into the pan, sauce being poured, green beans added to the same pan. Clock graphic in corner ticking up to 22 minutes. Cut to creator lifting the lid and leaning in to smell it. Text overlay: '22 minutes. One pan. No disasters.'

Audio: I started this at 6:08. It's 6:30 and my kitchen smells like a restaurant, which — for a Tuesday — I'll take. One pan, one wipe-down, done.

Note: Use real timestamps if possible for authenticity. The sped-up cook with a real clock builds credibility without fabricating a claim.

Storyboard sketch for scene 4: Kid Verdict + CTA
4

Kid Verdict + CTA

0:30 - 0:42 · 12s

Visual: Handheld close-up of two kids' plates — both mostly empty. Pan to creator holding up the empty pan toward camera with a shrug and a grin. Text overlay: 'Empty plates = mom win' then fade to: 'Link in bio — first box discount'

Audio: Both kids ate it. My seven-year-old asked if we could have it again, which is the only review that actually matters in this house. Not every kit lands like this one did — but for me, this is the one I'd reorder. Link in bio if you want to try it.

Note: CTA is soft and personal. Avoid superlatives. The 'not every kit lands' callback to scene 2 keeps the honest framing intact through the end.

Generate yours to see all 4 scenes unlocked

Includes hook variations, AI judge scores, and storyboard sketches per scene.

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Balancing Technical Specs with Kitchen Reality

The initial brief required highlighting the durability and heat distribution of a specific skillet. Usually, AI generators trip here, producing clunky dialogue like 'This pan has superior heat retention for my steak.' No home cook talks that way. WeKlapp took the brand’s PDF and the creator’s last five transcripts to find a middle ground. Instead of a scripted line about metallurgy, it suggested a visual beat: a tight shot of a protein hitting the pan with a distinct, aggressive sizzle, followed by a text overlay about 'no hot spots.' We kept the creator's signature dry humor but integrated the brand's requirement for a close-up on the riveted handle. By treating the pan as a tool for a specific problem—like getting a crust on salmon without sticking—the script felt like a recommendation from a peer rather than a read-from-the-teleprompter ad. The system recognized that for this creator, the hook had to be the visual of the finished meal first, pushing the brand integration to the 12-second mark where the actual cooking begins.

Evaluating the Variations and Finding the Flow

We formulated three distinct variations based on the same 45-second target. The first was a 'mistake-led' script, the second a pure 'process' video, and the third a 'secret ingredient' narrative. The AI judge panel flagged the third option as a brand safety risk because it obscured the product for too long, potentially leading to lower attribution. We landed on the 'mistake-led' approach because it allowed for a natural setup of the cookware. The generator produced notes for specific on-screen actions that creators often overlook in the scripting phase:
  • The 'Dry Wipe' shot: Showing how easily the pan cleans up after the sear to address the common objection that carbon steel is high-maintenance.
  • The 'Handle Grip' transition: Using the pan handle as a whip-pan transition point between the prep station and the stove.
  • The 'Bottom-of-the-Pan' reveal: A quick high-angle shot to show the brand logo without interrupting the recipe flow.
  • The 'Sound On' beat: A 1.5-second sequence of pure audio—the scrape of a metal spatula—to satisfy the kitchen-tinkerer audience.

From Timecodes to Visual Storyboarding

Once the script was locked, the generator produced storyboard sketches that prioritized the 'messy' reality of cooking over sanitized studio shots. For a brand like Misen, the sketches suggested low-angle shots of the knife edge against a garlic clove, emphasizing sharpness through action rather than words. This phase is where the production effort score becomes vital. The system calculated that a multi-angle setup for a 30-second clip would take two hours of shooting, prompting us to consolidate the prep shots to a single overhead angle to save time. We decided to keep the hand-held camera movement for the final tasting shot to maintain the creator's authentic, slightly chaotic energy. The storyboard acted as a checklist, ensuring we didn't miss the mandatory 'pour shot' requested by the brand while keeping the creator's preferred fast-paced editing style front and center.
A script is only as good as the creator's ability to execute it without losing their signature kitchen 'vibe'.

The Human Element in the Edit

While the generator handled the structural heavy lifting, certain nuances required a human touch. The AI suggested a specific spice measurement, but we knew the creator’s audience loves the 'measure with your heart' trope. We swapped the precise 'one teaspoon' line for a visual toss of spices, maintaining the relatability that built the account in the first place. The generator also couldn't predict the specific lighting flicker of the creator's stove-top hood, so we adjusted the 'action notes' to move the final plating to a window-lit counter. This collaboration between AI-driven structure and human intuition ensures the final export to Word isn't just a document, but a functional blueprint for a day in the kitchen. It removes the 'blank page' anxiety of a new brand brief while leaving enough room for the spontaneous moments—like a dog waiting for a dropped piece of carrot—that actually drive engagement in the comments section.

Example hooks WeKlapp will generate

Your stainless steel isn't sticking, you're just impatient.
The only way I make eggs when I have five minutes.
Stop throwing away your parmesan rinds.
This is why your chicken breast always tastes like cardboard.
The $10 tool that made me a better cook than any knife.
I've made this pasta every week for three years.
Don't buy pre-made pesto until you see this.
The secret to restaurant-style crust isn't the heat.
Stop washing your cast iron with soap? Let's talk.
This one swap makes frozen veg taste actually fresh.

Common mistakes (and what to do instead)

Opening with a long intro about who you are or what the brand is.

Start mid-action—chopping, searing, or pouring—and let the text overlay do the heavy lifting for the first three seconds.

Reading the brand's talking points verbatim from the PDF.

Translate 'superior ergonomics' into 'this actually feels good in my hand' or show it through a comfortable grip shot.

Ignoring the 'Objection' phase of a recipe.

Address why a viewer might fail (e.g., 'don't flip it yet') to build trust before you introduce the sponsored tool.

Bonus sample
TikTok
Insulated water bottle
Sample output — illustrative

Ice Still Rattling After 8 Hours in a Hot Car

Hook:I left this in my car all day — it was 94 degrees outside.

Angle: Real-world heat stress test proves insulation claim through three sequential proof shots with no staging.

Storyboard sketch for scene 1: Hook — Hot Car Reveal
1

Hook — Hot Car Reveal

0:00 - 0:08 · 8s

Visual: POV handheld shot opening a sun-baked car door, heat shimmer visible. Creator reaches in and grabs the Loom Bottle off the passenger seat. Text overlay in bold white: 'LEFT IN A 94° CAR ALL DAY'

Audio: I left this in my car all day — it was 94 degrees outside. Dashboard was hot to the touch. Let's see what's inside.

Note: Shoot mid-afternoon for real heat shimmer. Keep the grab motion quick and confident — no hesitation.

Storyboard sketch for scene 2: Proof Shot 1 — The Open
2

Proof Shot 1 — The Open

0:08 - 0:20 · 12s

Visual: Close-up shot of creator unscrewing the lid over a white countertop. Steam condensation visible on the outside of the bottle. Ice cubes audibly rattle as the lid comes off. Creator tilts bottle so ice is visible on camera. Text overlay: 'STILL ICE. 8 HOURS LATER.'

Audio: Eight hours later — listen to that. Full ice. In my testing I've never had it melt down this fast, but today was a real push and it held. You can see the condensation on the outside — that's how cold it still is in there.

Note: Capture the rattle sound clearly — this is the money audio moment. Use a lavalier mic or get the phone close to the bottle mouth.

Storyboard sketch for scene 3: Proof Shot 2 and 3 — Pour and Taste
3

Proof Shot 2 and 3 — Pour and Taste

0:20 - 0:35 · 15s

Visual: Shot 1: Creator pours water over a clear glass — ice tumbles out, water is visibly cold with condensation forming on the glass instantly. Text overlay: 'COLD WATER. NOT LUKEWARM.' Shot 2: Creator takes a sip straight from the bottle, genuine reaction, slight exhale of relief. Text overlay: 'ACTUALLY COLD.'

Audio: That pour is cold — not just cool, actually cold. And drinking straight from it after sitting in a hot car? That's the whole point of the Loom Bottle for me. Link in bio if you want one — they go fast.

Note: The sip reaction needs to feel real. Do a genuine take, not performed surprise. The glass pour shot gives visual proof the ice survived — don't skip it.

Generate yours to see all 3 scenes unlocked

Includes hook variations, AI judge scores, and storyboard sketches per scene.

Generate your script free

Frequently asked questions

How does the AI know my specific cooking style?

The system ingests your past TikTok transcripts and descriptions to map your vocabulary, pacing, and frequent 'beats.' If you use 'chef-y' terms, it stays technical; if you’re a 'dump-and-go' creator, it keeps the language accessible and fast.

Can I upload a brand brief that is just a messy email?

Yes. You can paste raw text from an email or upload a formal PDF. The generator extracts the 'must-haves' like hashtags, mandatory phrases, and product shots, then cross-references them against your style to ensure they fit naturally.

Does it provide specific camera angles for cooking?

The scripts include 'Action Notes' that suggest angles common in the niche, such as 45-degree prep shots, overhead 'tasty-style' views, or the 'POV' stove shot. These are optimized based on what typically performs well for your specific format.

What if the brand brief requires a specific 5-second disclaimer?

The AI judge panel will flag if a mandatory disclosure or brand requirement is missing. You can prompt it to move the disclosure to the end or integrate it as a text overlay to protect your hook's retention.

Is the storyboard detailed enough to show to a brand?

The sketches are meant as a production guide for the creator, but the export to Word includes the script, timecodes, and action notes in a professional format that is often sufficient for brand pre-approval workflows.

Generate your first script in under a minute

Paste a channel link and a brand brief. WeKlapp handles the analysis, scriptwriting, judging, and storyboarding.

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