Audience participation program (particularly as a term of art applied to radio programs spanning game shows and proto-reality shows, as well as early television adaptations of the genre)
Western (genre) is an example where we're already doing this
Pulp fiction novel. Pretty remarkable we don't seem to have much dedicated coverage of mass market pulp paperback fiction, except as an afterthought in Pulp magazine. Though we do have quite extensive coverage of the subtopics Lesbian pulp fiction and Gay pulp fiction.
Partly covered at Compulsory sterilization § India, but this was also prefigured by a program of voluntary sterilization in the 60s and early 70s, partly driven and funded by USAID and American NGOs associated with the population movement.
See Sterilized by the State (Hansen and King, 2013) pp. 202-205 for a start
Would be really useful to have this as a parent article to subtopics like text-to-image model, as well as particular architectures (generative adversarial network). It would also be a good place to cover other conditional generation tasks beyond text-to-image (inpainting, outpainting, img2img, style transfer, super-resolution, etc.), some of which don't really have a home right now (beyond coverage of, say, inpainting as done by a particular model like DALL-E).
Six pack (muscles) redirects to the highly technical anatomical article Rectus abdominis muscle. There's probably room for a separate article about six packs / visible abdominals as a cultural topic, and its relation to beauty standards etc.
Photographic filter is a quite technical article about "low level" photographic filters. It gets a lot of incoming links from contexts that are referring to filters as a social media phenomenon, which are quite a different beast, and should perhaps have a separate article. (We have beauty filter, but that's only a subtopic.)
Some coverage in pop history books, e.g. "The World's Greatest Hoaxes", "Impostors: Six Kinds of Liar", though none easy to access
Lots of news coverage, contemporary and recent, though have to be careful to avoid the surfeit of tabloid coverage. Look for stories about the story, e.g. [18], [19], [20]
Split LGBT people in prison into separate articles for gay and trans prisoners? Sources tend to talk about one or the other, and the considerations for each are pretty different. Also, I spent a fair while searching for sources about trans men in prison, and could find nothing more than a a master's thesis, so scope might have to be limited to trans women prisoners.
Music leak § List of leaked albums This should be a table with a column for prose describing the major details of each individual leak. A basic list of album names and years is not very informative. (Also, should probably establish some list criteria that the leak itself must have been the subject of non-trivial coverage. Per Music leak#Prevalence, most albums nowadays leak - so we should probably only list examples about which we can say something more substantial than "It leaked".)
Duncan Hines attracts a lot of bad(ish) incoming links intended to refer to the brand. Should probably split off a separate article for that.
Similar situation with Elizabeth Arden. In that case we do have a separate Elizabeth Arden, Inc. article, but a lot of the incoming links targeting the base name are referring to the brand, which strongly suggests that the current ptopic arrangement isn't working.
It seems very plausible that a reader on English Wikipedia might search for "preposition" looking specifically for information about prepositions in English (though it is implausible a user might use such a search term expecting to find information about, say, Spanish prepositions). The same goes for any other grammatical class or phenomenon you can name. But generally these base names go to articles that try to explain the concept cross-linguistically. And from those articles it's often not easy for readers to navigate to the en-specific article (e.g. a reader of Compound (linguistics) needs to do a lot of scrolling to find a link to English compound). Should these be considered full (rather than WP:PARTIAL) title matches, and therefore get a disambiguating hatnote link (or even be considered as competitors for primary topic status?).
Rename Thanksgiving (Canada) -> Canadian Thanksgiving? Article intro sort of frames "Canadian Thanksgiving" as an exonym. As a Canadian, I don't think that's quite true. (See, for example, the title of the Macleans cite)
Revisit clickstream data once it's available in a month or two re Talk:Keith Richard
Autotune vs. Pitch correction. Because the former term is so commonly used as a genericized trademark to refer to the broader concept of pitch correction, there are lots of wikilinks targeting this page which are just referring to pitch correction, not the specific software created by Antares. Same goes for much of the article's content.
Also possibly worth having a separate article on "extreme autotune", i.e. "autotune as stylistic effect" (as opposed to the more conventional use to hide minor imperfections)
Bridewell as a primary redirect to Bridewell Palace is probably a poor choice. Significant proportion of incoming wikilinks are mistargeted.
Old discussions that petered out but should maybe be revisited someday
Sentence function seems like a kind of flakey, unreferenced redundant fork of Illocutionary force (which probably should be split into a standlone article)
Add section to Computer memory about memory as an abstract computational resource in theoretical computer science, with link to Space complexity.
More detail on activities of survivors on return to Spain, particularly trial of San Antonio deserters, and oral testimony of Elcano et al at Valladolid
Currently at ~46kb of readable prose, which is starting to approach WP:SIZESPLIT territory. Perhaps the "Survivors" section could be split off into a standalone list article? Could also be interesting to split off a bibliography article, though the content currently in the article is not that long.
Replace problematic cites. Cameron 1974 is sort of an un-serious popular account which embellishes and distorts the facts, and should be avoided. Castro is non-ideal per WP:RSUE (also may have some factual issues, just based on seeing it used to cite some erroneous claims)
Prison should have a section on terminology. The intro currently dwells a lot on this topic, but it's not actually discussed in the body. Definitely an issue of due weight / WP:LEADFOLLOWSBODY.
Expand and reorganize ... Not!. Some ELs would be useful as references. CGEL also briefly discusses this (calling it "unintegrated final not"), pg. 812.
Seems like there's a good argument for doing away with most navboxes which link to all recipients of a particular award, for the same reasons as given for WP:PERFNAV/WP:FILMNAV. Do some searching to see if this has been discussed before. I remember a discussion about navbox overuse more broadly that invoked the example of Meryl Streep (which is pretty heinous). See Category:Awards navigational boxes for many examples of such navboxes.
This line from WP:DABCOMBINE would probably benefit from a few accompanying examples (the way the bullets in the list above have examples): Editorial judgement should be used in deciding whether to combine terms in the ways described above. If a combined disambiguation page would be inconveniently long, it may be better to split the disambiguation page into separate pages.
Also, what about hidden categories for dab pages which are split by case/punctuation/diacritic variants?
WP:RMT should have (or link to) some kind of closing instructions. In particular, it seems unclear whether someone performing a listed technical request is also expected to do the sort of post-move cleanup steps described at WP:RMCI#Cleaning up after the move.
More detail on legislation in countries other than US
Criticisms (esp. from physicians who criticized the accuracy of the Wassermann test)
More details on tests for diseases other than Syphilis. Esp. add a subsection on HIV testing, which was very briefly legislated in some jurisdictions in the 80s.
Add more details on pre-penicillin treatment regimens (with arsenic and bismuth). How were they administered, and over what schedules (seems like they were long!). Info about this could be added to Syphilis, History of syphilis, Arsphenamine, etc.
Make an infobox template for neural network models. Some fields that would be useful to have which are not present in software infobox:
License of code vs. license/availability of model weights