0:00 / 0:00

TikTok and YouTube Automation make long video with grok ai for totally free.. #automation #tiktokearning #worksmart #ismailafridi077 #foryoupage❤️❤️

@ismailafridi077
4.0K views158 likes2:40ENMar 21, 2026
505 words2880 characters36 sentencesReadability: Middle School

Transcript

Step 2, generating the visuals. For all image and video generation, I use GROC AI completely free, no credit card needed. Just sign up with a Google account, go to the main dashboard, and click on "Imagine". Before you do anything else, go into settings, then behavior, and turn off automatic video generation. This is critical, especially for a long animation where you're managing dozens of clips. You want full control over when images turn into video, not have it happen automatically. Now, I take the image prompt that ChatGPT generated, the one that establishes Leo and Biscuit together at home, and paste it into the prompt box. I make sure I'm in image mode, choose my aspect ratio, and hit generate. GROC gives you several options. I spend a lot of time on this first image because it is doing a very important job. It locks in Leo's design, Biscuit's design, the color palette, and the cartoon style for the entire animation. Everything that follows needs to match this image, so I don't rush it. Once I have an image that feels right, I save it. This saved image now becomes the starting frame for the first video. I paste it into the prompt box, switch to video mode, add the first scene video prompt from ChatGPT, and generate. Sometimes the first result is perfect. Sometimes I regenerate two or three times. When I'm happy with it, I download the clip, and move on. Step three, chaining the scenes. Instead of generating every scene from zero, I drag the playhead on the previous video to the very last frame, copy video frame, and paste it as the starting image for the next scene. Then I copy the video prompt from ChatGPT, paste it into GROC, and generate. That's it. Because each scene starts from where the last one ended, everything stays consistent. Same character design, same environment, smooth natural transition, no jarring cuts, no style changes. For the second scene, I copy the last frame of the video, paste it as the starting image. Then I copy the video prompt from ChatGPT, paste it into GROC, and generate. The weather shift looks completely natural, because it starts exactly where the previous clip ended. For the third scene, I copy the last frame of the video, paste it in, copy the video prompt from ChatGPT, paste it into GROC, and generate. Because the character design carries over from the previous frame, Leo looks identical, same jacket, same expression style, no inconsistency. For the fourth scene, I copy the last frame of the video, paste it in, and drop in the prompt and generate. And the first drops of rain begin to fall. The storm is building, and because every scene connects to the last, the progression from calm to chaos feels earned and gradual, rather than sudden. I repeat this for every single scene. If GROC struggles with a prompt, I don't rewrite the whole thing. Just tweak a small detail and regenerate. Step 4.