Going where the spirit leads: Fort McMurray artists paint Northern Alberta’s pride at Stampede
Original article ↗ 🔒 Paywalled source — limited preview availableB.I.A.S. ANALYSIS
CENTER
LEFTCENTERRIGHT
Signal breakdown
Heuristic (v1/v3)
0.00 · CENTER
ML v2 (DistilBERT)
-0.269 · LEFT
Ensemble
-0.135 · CENTER
🏦 Source Intelligence
Rolling outlet bias
CENTER
avg -0.011
601 articles tracked
7-day bias trend
LcenterR
V.E.R.I.F.Y. has fact-checked this article.
Subscribe to see claim-by-claim verdicts and reasoning.
Subscribe to see claim-by-claim verdicts and reasoning.
Article Excerpt
Advertisement 1
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Breadcrumb Trail Links
HomeLocal ArtsNewsLocal News
Going where the spirit leads: Fort McMurray artists paint Northern Alberta’s pride at Stampede
"It was never the plan" said Kavanagh, but this is what happens when two Northern Albertan women let their brushes lead
Author of the article:
By Itoro Umanah
Published Jul 08, 2026
4 minute read
Join the conversation
An original metal art piece by Amy Keller-Rempp depicts a tiger looking fiercely into the distance. The piece is on display at the Calgary Stamp…
Read full article at Edmonton Journal ↗
How we scored this article
WTF uses a two-tier system: every article gets a heuristic bias score from keyword analysis, and priority articles (high overlap across 3+ outlets or strong heuristic signal) get full LLM analysis from B.I.A.S. and V.E.R.I.F.Y.
Analyzed by
B.I.A.S.
V.E.R.I.F.Y.
L.O.C.A.L.
quick v1
Jul 8, 2026