The process is entirely manual.
A moderator has to take the time to look at the eligible burninate requests (or handle a flag*), pick one of the eligible ones to action, and then kick it off by following the steps described in the standard process, including making it featured for a while.
Bhargav was handling a lot of these, but he's been away from the keyboard a lot over the last couple of weeks for reasons. Since I was elected, I've actioned a couple of these as well, and have every intention of continuing to do so.
But even if we handle one per week, it'll still take a while to get through them all, considering how fast they roll in and how large the backlog is. That's why I try to pick the most highly upvoted ones, which are the least controversial, the easiest, and the ones where the tag is probably causing the most harm and thus doing it will have the biggest positive impact.
And handling one per week is pretty much the fastest possible rate. You need to leave it featured for at least a couple of days to give everyone a reasonable chance to see it and sleep, and then it takes the community a while to actually do the burnination (exactly how long depends on the number of questions with the affected tag, of course).
Finally, there's been an uncharacteristically high level of "meta" activity lately, it seems, so it's hard to find a good time to edge in a featured burnination for the community to consider. Several weeks ago, we were featuring and focusing on the sunsetting of Documentation, and none of the moderators really thought it made sense for burnination to compete with that. Right now, although we just finished up burninating the [research] tag, I've been reluctant to kick off another one, given the large amount of meta activity stemming from the roll-out of the new topbar to the other SE sites and our amazing new ability to compare our salaries. Also, the community-led process of removing links to Documentation is still on-going. If you want to participate in improving the site, this would be a good way to do it.
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* Yes, users can flag burnination requests that have met the official criteria and that they really want to see get actioned. But...you really don't need to, and the flag may well be declined. It just creates a backlog of Meta flags that nobody can effectively handle and mess up our stats. ;-) It's just as easy, if not easier, for one of us to look through all of the pending burnination requests, sorting by vote, and excluding the ones that have already been assigned a status (completed, declined, whatever). The backlog of requests is already maintained by Meta's tag system; we don't really need to duplicate it in the flag queue.