Given how powerful infographics can be for distilling and communicating complex topics, I thought our experiments over the past week coupling Gemini 3 and Nano Banana Pro to visualize a wide range of things from CSPAN hearings to government legislation and reports (including the 3,100-page NDAA), Wikipedia pages and global television news broadcasts in a wide range of languages might be of great interest. You can pretty much visualize anything now by just handing it a PDF and asking for an infographic! While these examples demonstrate using it as-is, you can also interactively edit the infographics to correct errors, etc: https://blog.gdeltproject.org/?s=banana+infographic Turning conference talks into instant infographics (tremendous potential for conferences to do this for each talk): https://blog.gdeltproject.org/turning-kalevs-web-summit-2025-stage-talk-into... This one is especially powerful, coupling Chirp, Gemini and Nano Banana to analyze an entire day of six Russian television news channels, perform a comparative analysis and visualize as an infographic: https://blog.gdeltproject.org/visualizing-an-entire-day-of-russian-televisio... Also, for researchers interested in integrating television news coverage into their analyses, the Internet Archive's TV News Archive has considerably expanded to a growing range of channels, with machine ASR, OCR and translation: https://api.gdeltproject.org/api/v2/tvv/tvv Thought these experiments would be of interest to a lot of folks re what's possible now! Kalev