Blog New Events Settings is located under My Calendar > My Calendar Pro > Blog New Events.

Click the checkbox for “Copy new events as posts” when you want to cross post the event to your blog as a post.

My Calendar Pro Settings Blog New Events disabled
My Calendar Pro Settings Blog New Events – disabled

Post New Events as Post settings

My Calendar Pro Settings Blog New Events - enabled
My Calendar Pro Settings Blog New Events – enabled

The settings for blogging new events are all about mapping your event data to become a post.

Blog Post Content
What content from your event should get submitted as the post content?
Options include the “Event Description” alone, the entire event content – “Full Event Template”, or “Custom Content Added at event creation”.

Blog Post Excerpt
What to create as the post excerpt.
“Event Excerpt”, “Auto-excerpt Event Description”, “Custom Content added at event creation.”

Blog Post Title
Use the “Event Title”, or pass a “Custom Format” (that can include a template tag for the event title.)

Custom Title Format
A custom format to post to your blog, e.g. “Event Scheduled: {title}”

Custom Post Excerpt or Content Template
A custom format to post to your blog including template tags from the event, but with original formatting or copy included.

Blog Post Author
Customize the author used for the post. “Event Author” or “Event Host”.

Blog Post Status
Publish immediately – “Published” , or post as in an unpublished format for further editing. Such as “Pending”, “Draft”, “Private” or “Future”.

Use post permalink for Event URL
Set the link in the Event settings to this blog post.

Post Type
Publish as a post type other than a blog post.
Such as “Posts” or “Pages”.

Add Post Term
A term inside a taxonomy.

Term Taxonomy
Such as “category”, “Tags” or “Formats”.

Post Publish Date
Manipulate the date of the post in relation to the event.
Such as “Publication Date”, “Event Date” or “Custom Date”.

Custom Post Time (in seconds before event date)
Sets a specific time for the post that’s different from the event’s published date. (E.g., if you want an event on your calendar immediately, but want the post published at a scheduled time the next day.)