Could you reference any youtube videos, blog posts, etc of people you would personally consider to be _really good_ at prompting? Curious what this looks like.
While I can compare good journalists to extremely great and intuitive journalists, I don't have really any references for this in the prompting realm (except for when the Dall-e Cookbook was circulating around).
Sorry for the late response - but I can't. I don't really follow content creators at a level where I can recall names or even what they are working on. If you browse AI-dominated spaces you'll eventually find people who include AI as part of their workflows and have gotten quite proficient at prompting them to get the results they desire very consistently. Most AI stuff enters into my realm of knowledge via AI Twitter, /r/singularity, /r/stablediffusion, and Github's trending tab. I don't go particularly out of my way to find it otherwise.
/r/stablediffusion used to (less so now) have a lot of workflow posts where people would share how they prompt and adjust the knobs/dials of certain settings and models to make what they make. It's not so different from knowing which knobs/dials to adjust in Apophysis to create interesting fractals and renders. They know what the knobs/dials adjust for their AI tools and so are quite proficient at creating amazing things using them.
People who write "jailbreak" prompts are a kind of example. There is some effort put into preventing people from prompting the models and removing the safeguards - and yet there are always people capable of prompting the model into removing its safeguards. It can be surprisingly difficult to do yourself for recent models and the jailbreak prompts themselves are becoming more complex each time.
For art in particular - knowing a wide range of artist names, names of various styles, how certain mediums will look, as well as mix & matching with various weights for the tokens can get you very interesting results. A site like https://generrated.com/ can be good for that as it gives you a quick baseline of how including certain names will change the style of what you generate. If you're trying to hit a certain aesthetic style it can really help. But even that is a tiny drop in a tiny bucket of what is possible. Sometimes it is less about writing an overly detailed prompt but rather knowing the exact keywords to get the style you're aiming for. Being knowledgeable about art history and famous artists throughout the years will help tremendously over someone with little knowledge. If you can't tell a Picasso from a Monet painting you're going to find generating paintings in a specific style much harder than an art buff.
While I can compare good journalists to extremely great and intuitive journalists, I don't have really any references for this in the prompting realm (except for when the Dall-e Cookbook was circulating around).