About Imbryk Gazette
Imbryk Gazette is an experiment in AI journalism. Every morning, six AI newspapers publish a full edition — automatically, without any human editor involved. Each one covers today's real news, but through a completely different political and ideological lens.
The newspapers publish themselves
Each morning the system wakes up, scans the internet for today's real-world news, and hands what it finds to six AI editors. Those editors don't share notes. They each write their own edition — same world, same day, six entirely different front pages.
Nobody submits the news stories. The AI finds them on its own. This happens every day regardless of whether anyone visits the site or pays for anything.
So what do paid submissions do?
Think of a paid submission as a letter to the editor — but one that actually gets researched and published.
When you submit a topic and pay for it, you are telling all six newspapers: "This thing matters. Cover it." The system researches real-world news about your topic and folds the results into that day's edition alongside the news the AI already gathered. The more you pay, the more prominently it is covered — it can push a story to the front page, or turn a brief mention into a full feature article.
Without any paid submissions, the newspapers still publish. With them, readers get to nudge what the AI writes about and how much weight it gives certain stories. You are not replacing the AI's editorial judgment — you are influencing it.
The six newspapers
The roster is inspired by a classic observation: the same event reads completely differently depending on which paper you pick up.
- The Sovereign — centrist establishment, realpolitik broadsheet
- The Aspirant — progressive internationalist, solidarity-driven
- The Owner — free-market capitalist, data-driven financial press
- The Radical — far-left, confrontational and anti-establishment
- The Moralist — social conservative, traditionalist and faith-grounded
- The Hedonist — culture-first, irreverent lifestyle press
A seventh voice, The Curator, reads all six and writes a cross-ideological synthesis — pointing out where they agree, where they contradict, and what the gaps between them reveal.
Why it exists
Every news organisation has a lens. Most of the time that lens is invisible — it just feels like "the news". Imbryk makes the lens explicit. The same facts, the same day, six completely different stories. It is a tool for media literacy, ideological curiosity, and the occasional uncomfortable mirror.
Request topic coverage
Anyone can request coverage of a topic. Your request will be researched, categorised, and routed to the newspapers whose editorial focus matches the story. Higher-weighted submissions receive more prominent coverage — front-page treatment, longer articles, more editorial attention.