THE POST-PROJECT WORLD PODCAST SERIES
What if you didn't just show the world's gaze on a region, but actively interpreted what that gaze means? El Mirador [elmirador.news] covers 23 countries and territories across Latin America using only international press. But every day, per country, it publishes an editorial grounded in that day's most significant article. The editorial reads the framing. It says: here is what the foreign press emphasizes, here is what it obscures, here is what selective coverage tells you about how the world sees this place. In this episode, Luigi Pascal Rondanini explains how El Mirador's editorial system actually works: it's purely qualitative, not quantitative. It doesn't count articles or track 30-day patterns. It interprets one day's framing. It passes through two gates—a language check and a fact-gate—before publication. News purges after 24 hours, but editorials stay forever. And there's no correction mechanism, which means the editorial can misread and will stand as written. El Mirador shows what happens when you add active interpretation to constraint. The editorial turns "here's what the world sees" into "here's what the world sees, explained back to you in your own language." It doesn't fix bias. It makes bias discussable. Keywords:El Mirador, Latin America, international press, framing bias, media interpretation, news bias, AI editorial, editorial analysis, journalism AI, autonomous journalism, press bias, Latin American news, media bias analysis, framing analysis, AI news commentary, news literacy Topics/Categories:Technology, News & Politics, Business, International
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