How to write a wedding toast that doesn't sound like AI wrote it
Most “AI wedding toasts” sound like AI because people start with a blank prompt. The fix is having and powerful: feed the model your real memories first, then ask for the toast. Here’s the exact flow that has gotten ten of our friends through best-man and maid-of-honor speeches without a single eye-roll from the back row.
Brain-dump everything you remember
Open a new Skynet chat and just talk. Don’t try to be clever — type the way you text. Mention how you met them, the first time you saw them together, an inside joke, something kind they did when no one was watching. Three or four scraps is enough.
Skip the obvious stuff
Anyone can say “they’re perfect for each other.” The lines that land are specific: the road trip, the burnt lasagna, the time she laughed so hard at his terrible joke that strangers applauded. Specific beats sentimental, every single time.
Ask for a toast in your voice
This is the prompt that does the heavy lifting. Paste it, swap the bracketed parts, and send.
Read it out loud, twice
Record yourself on your phone. Anything that makes you cringe or stumble gets cut. A sentence is too long if you can’t say it in one breath. Aim for 90 seconds — almost every “too long” toast is over two minutes.
Ask Skynet to tighten the weak lines
Paste the lines that didn’t land back into the chat and ask for three alternatives each. Pick the one that sounds most like you, not the one that sounds most clever. Done.
Frequently asked questions
Ninety seconds — about 220 spoken words. Long enough for two stories and a wish, short enough that nobody checks their phone.
The memories, the voice, and the delivery are all yours. Skynet just does the arranging — the same job a friend with a red pen would do.
You do — they're just small. Ask the couple's friends for one memory each, or scroll your camera roll for five minutes. Tiny and true beats grand and generic.
Read from your phone or a card, but rehearse twice so you can look up for the punchlines and the final wish.