Monitors 春風亭一之輔's official site for new Tokyo performance tickets and sends notifications to a specified Discord webhook.
Data sourced from ClawHub. View on ClawSkills
Select your agent
Option 1: Install via CLI (recommended)
Recommended (no pre-install needed)
npx clawhub@latest --dir ~/.claude/skills install ticket-monitor-ichinosukeOr via clawhub CLI (if already installed)
clawhub --dir ~/.claude/skills install ticket-monitor-ichinosuke⚠️ Requires Node.js 18+. No Node? Use Option 2 below to download the ZIP instead. Install Node.js →
Option 2: Manual install (no Node required)
Download the ZIP, extract it, and place the folder at the path below. Restart your agent to activate.
Install path
~/.claude/skills/ticket-monitor-ichinosuke/💡Extract and place the folder at the path above, then restart your agent.
Category
💬CommunicationPlatforms
What Ticket Monitor Ichinosuke can do for your AI workflow
Monitors 春風亭一之輔's official directly from your Claude conversation
Works across Claude, Cursor, OpenClaw — install once, use everywhere
One-command installation — no complex setup required
Combine with other skills to build powerful multi-step AI workflows
Try these prompts with your AI agent after installing Ticket Monitor Ichinosuke
Send a Slack message to the #engineering channel about the deployment
Formats and sends the message with relevant context, tagging the right people
Summarize all unread messages in my inbox from today
Reads messages across connected channels and returns a prioritized summary
Draft a reply to this customer complaint and send it for review
Writes an empathetic, professional response and routes it to the approval queue
Guides & tutorials for AI skills
The 7 AI Skills Every Software Developer Should Have Installed in 2026
After testing dozens of developer-focused AI skills, these are the seven that have proven genuinely useful across different tech stacks and workflows — not just impressive demos, but tools that hold up under daily use.
MCP Skills vs Native Claude Tools: What's the Difference and When to Use Each
Claude comes with built-in capabilities, but MCP skills extend it in ways the base model can't. Here's a clear breakdown of what each type of tool is good for, with real examples of when to reach for a skill versus relying on Claude's native abilities.
Staying on top of communications across multiple channels is a real challenge for modern teams. Ticket Monitor Ichinosuke helps by enabling monitors 春風亭一之輔's official site for new tokyo performance tickets and sends notifications to a specified discord webhook directly from your AI assistant, without switching apps or logging into separate platforms.
Ticket Monitor Ichinosuke works across Claude, Cursor, OpenClaw through the Model Context Protocol (MCP) — an open standard that lets AI clients share tools and skills without lock-in. Because MCP is platform-agnostic by design, you install Ticket Monitor Ichinosuke once and it becomes available across all your AI clients. Whether you're working in Claude for focused sessions or Cursor for integrated workflows, the skill behaves consistently.
Getting started with Ticket Monitor Ichinosuke takes about two minutes. Place the skill at `~/.claude/skills/ticket-monitor-ichinosuke/` (personal, all projects) or `.claude/skills/ticket-monitor-ichinosuke/` (project-specific), then restart your AI client. From that point, typing `/ticket-monitor-ichinosuke` in any conversation activates it, or the AI will use it on its own when it detects a relevant request.
Ticket Monitor Ichinosuke has 524 installs and is part of the growing Communication skill ecosystem on DiscoverAISkills. Like all skills on DiscoverAISkills, it is free to install and use. The broader AI skills ecosystem continues to expand as developers contribute new capabilities across categories like developer tools, data analysis, writing, automation, and more.
Place the skill folder at ~/.claude/skills/ticket-monitor-ichinosuke/ for personal use (all projects), or .claude/skills/ticket-monitor-ichinosuke/ for project-specific use. Restart your AI client, then invoke with /ticket-monitor-ichinosuke or let the AI discover it automatically.
Ticket Monitor Ichinosuke supports Claude, Cursor, OpenClaw. It integrates seamlessly with these AI platforms to extend their capabilities.
Ticket Monitor Ichinosuke is free to install. Check the repository for licensing information.
Monitors 春風亭一之輔's official site for new Tokyo performance tickets and sends notifications to a specified Discord webhook.
Monitoring
Set up observability for applications and infrastructure with metrics, logs, traces, and alerts.
Monitor
Create monitors for anything. User defines what to check, skill handles scheduling and alerts.
Monitor X posts
Monitor specific X/Twitter accounts and surface noteworthy tweets on a configurable schedule. Filters for high-value content about technology and trends, excluding political rage bait. Use when user wants to manage their X account list, run a manual check, or update filtering criteria.
Ticket Monitor Ichinosuke is categorized under Communication. These skills help AI agents perform specialized tasks in this domain.
Monitored Ralph Loop
Generate copy-paste bash scripts for Ralph Wiggum/AI agent loops (Codex, Claude Code, OpenCode, Goose). Use when asked for a "Ralph loop", "Ralph Wiggum loop", or an AI loop to plan/build code via PROMPT.md + AGENTS.md, SPECS, and IMPLEMENTATION_PLAN.md, including PLANNING vs BUILDING modes, backpressure, sandboxing, and completion conditions.