Editor
Namrata
Editor of every MonkeyEatingMango country guide. AI does the drafting; she reviews every fact, photo, and recommendation before it ships.
How the guides actually get made
Every country guide on MonkeyEatingMango is produced through a two-step process:
- AI inference drafts the structure — costs, cities, festivals, food, shopping, FAQs, mistakes. This pulls from real venue data, Wikipedia Commons, and Wikivoyage rather than freeform invention, so the output is grounded in verifiable sources.
- Namrata reviews every card and photo before publish. Wrong subjects in photos (a satellite map labelled "Lake Lugano", a 19th-century painting labelled "Pompeii") get caught and replaced. Generic claims get tightened or dropped. Duplicate recommendations get deduped. Anything that wouldn't survive a real traveler's glance gets fixed.
The result aims to be more accurate than what raw AI produces and faster to publish than a fully hand-written guide. We're explicit about the AI step because we think transparency is the right answer — and because most AI-content detection tools will identify it anyway.
Travel background
Bio coming soon.
Why this matters for the guides you read
When you read a MonkeyEatingMango guide, every photo has been checked to make sure the image actually shows what the caption says. Every restaurant or activity has either been visited, verified against multiple sources, or removed. The Bali-belly tips on the Bali guide aren't generic — they reflect what actually works in practice. The August-closure warning on the Italy guide isn't generic — it reflects what actually closes.
If you find a mistake, please email hello@monkeyeatingmango.com — corrections ship same-day.
Find Namrata elsewhere
Social profiles coming soon.