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This looks like a huge fuckup on a database back end.
For those that don't know, Telemundo is owned by Comcast through NBCUniversal, NBC basically owns Telemundo, that's why Telemundo keeps coming up.
Telemundo and the NBC websites mirror certain pages.
See the following:
https://www.telemundo47.com/fotosyvideos/lista-de-ninos-desaparecidos-en-todo-el-estado-de-nueva-york/44000/
^^^
This is basically the same list of New York children as the NBCNewYork site.
https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/missing-children-ny-complete-list/442173/
^^^
This is the site everyone's up in a tizzy about.
These sites are basically mirrors of one another. No one is sitting down coding these sites, they're aggregated automatically via software.
So what's different between the two?
One major difference is the number of images listed in each of them. The Telemundo version has far fewer, but why?
Remember that these sites aren't manually entered in - at least not when they're converted for other regions/languages. So they're effectively generated.
I believe what we're looking at is a fuckup in the pools of sourced images being pointed to in LISTS on the sites.
The numbers of images on each site do no match, neither do the images for that matter. But the images being posted, while largely random, have a common threads between various groups of them - like the Princess Diane images.
Whatever the glitch is on their site, it has to do with LISTS of images for articles.
Here's another example:
https://www.telemundohouston.com/noticias/local/fotos-de-la-cantante-pop-venezolana-dayan/1956563/
This is another Telemundo site, which is exhibiting the same behavior on a LIST based site. The lists in this case aren't images for missing children, they're images of a some bullshit popsinger doing something.
But all the images are being pulled from, what looks like, a random cache of images - again from the Telemundo's own database of images they use for their articles.
Neither of the pages had been archived to the internet wayback machine, unfortunately, so we can't pinpoint when the bug became apparent.
If you look at this from the aspect that Anons found this on the Missing Children NY page, it looks spoopy. But when you take a step back and look at the fact that Telemundo and NBC are one in the same (at least from their website platform), and that other image lists are fucked up on both sites, it doesn't seem so spoopy.