Former Nunavut TV star on what National Indigenous History Month means to her
Original article ↗B.I.A.S. ANALYSIS
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Signal breakdown
Heuristic (v1/v3)
0.00 · CENTER
ML v2 (DistilBERT)
0.000 · CENTER
Ensemble
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🏦 Source Intelligence
Rolling outlet bias
CENTER LEFT
avg -0.343
317 articles tracked
7-day bias trend
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Article Excerpt
By William Koblensky Varela, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Nunavut News Ooleepeeka (Rebecca) Veevee was born in a camp outside Pangnirtung in 1950, but considers Iqaluit her home community. Living in a traditional sod house made of whale bones and animal skins called a qammaq, she didn’t have access to technology growing up. “My grandma, she played music and danced a lot. Then people starting laughing. I want the people to be happy and laughing. That’s why I wanted to be a comedian,” Veevee said in a modern community centre called the Iqaluit Elders Qammaq on June 10. She is well known…
Read full article at Turtle Island News ↗
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Jun 19, 2026
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