logo
Fox News Entertainment Newsletter: Trump urged by Hollywood to protect AI rules, 'Jeopardy!' fans outraged

Fox News Entertainment Newsletter: Trump urged by Hollywood to protect AI rules, 'Jeopardy!' fans outraged

Fox News22-03-2025

Welcome to the Fox News Entertainment Newsletter.
TOP 3:
-Trump urged by Ben Stiller, Paul McCartney and hundreds of stars to protect AI copyright rules
-'Jeopardy!' fans slam contestants for missing 'obvious' triple stumper clue about 'Cheers'
-'Pawn Stars' boss Rick Harrison questions if he could have saved son from fentanyl overdose: 'Nothing worse'
'COWARDLY MEASURES' - Blake Lively's attempt to remove herself from 'self-concocted disaster' is abuse of legal system: lawyer.
'ONE OF A KIND' - 'Little House on the Prairie' actor Jack Lilley dead at 91.
ROYAL TANTRUMS - Kate Middleton treats Prince William like a 'fourth child,' royal insider claims.
'SINCE U BEEN GONE' - Kelly Clarkson shared a cryptic message after an unexplained absence from her talk show.
'CREATIVE MIND' - HGTV star admits she gets jealous of 'supermodel' looking women messaging husband.
HEALTH IS WEALTH - Gwyneth Paltrow is fascinated by MAHA movement, says many institutions are 'really failing us'.
'WHY SHOULD I?' - 'Wheel of Fortune' host Vanna White doesn't cook for her family.
LIKE WHAT YOU'RE READING? CLICK HERE FOR MORE ENTERTAINMENT NEWS
FOLLOW FOX NEWS ON SOCIAL MEDIA

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

He Got Us Talking to Alexa. Now He Wants to Kill Off AI Hallucinations
He Got Us Talking to Alexa. Now He Wants to Kill Off AI Hallucinations

CNET

time15 minutes ago

  • CNET

He Got Us Talking to Alexa. Now He Wants to Kill Off AI Hallucinations

If it weren't for Amazon, it's entirely possible that instead of calling out to Alexa to change the music on our speakers, we might have been calling out to Evi instead. That's because the tech we know today as Amazon's smart assistant started out life with the name of Evi (pronounced ee-vee), as named by its original developer, William Tunstall-Pedoe. The British entrepreneur and computer scientist was experimenting with artificial intelligence before most of us had even heard of it. Inspired by sci-fi, he "arrogantly" set out to create a way for humans to talk to computers way back in 2008, he said at SXSW London this week. Arrogant or not, Tunstall-Pedoe's efforts were so successful that Evi, which launched in 2012 around the same time as Apple's Siri, was acquired by Amazon and he joined a team working on a top-secret voice assistant project. What resulted from that project was the tech we all know today as Alexa. That original mission accomplished, Tunstall-Pedoe now has a new challenge in his sights: to kill off AI hallucinations, which he says makes the technology highly risky for all of us to use. Hallucinations are the inaccurate pieces of information and content that AI generates out of thin air. They are, said Tunstall-Pedoe, "an intrinsic problem" of the technology. Through the experience he had with Alexa, he learned that people personify the technology and assume that when it's speaking back to them it's thinking the way we think. "What it's doing is truly remarkable, but it's doing something different from thinking," said Tunstall-Pedoe. "That sets expectations… that what it's telling you is true." Innumerable examples of AI generating nonsense show us that truth and accuracy are never guaranteed. Tunstall-Pedoe was concerned that the industry isn't doing enough to tackle hallucinations, so formed his own company, Unlikely AI, to tackle what he views as a high-stakes problem. Anytime we speak to an AI, there's a chance that what it's telling us is false, he said. "You can take that away into your life, take decisions on it, or you put it on the internet and it gets spread by others, [or] used to train future AIs to make the world a worse place." Some AI hallucinations have little impact, but in industries where the cost of getting things wrong – in medicine, law, finance and insurance, for example – inaccurately generated content can have severe consequences. These are the industries that Unlikely AI is targeting for now, said Tunstall-Pedoe Unlikely AI uses a mix of deep tech and proprietary tech to ground outputs in logic, minimizing the risk of hallucinations, as well as to log the decision-making process of algorithms. This makes it possible for companies to understand where things have gone wrong, when they inevitably do. Right now, AI can never be 100% accurate due to the underlying tech, said Tunstall-Pedoe. But advances currently happening in his own company and others like it mean that we're moving towards a point where accuracy can be achieved. For now, Unlikely AI is mainly being used by business customers, but eventually Tunstall-Pedoe believes it will be built into services and software all of us use. The change being brought about by AI, like any change, presents us with risks, he said. But overall he remains "biased towards optimism" that AI will be a net positive for society.

Trump Vs Musk Gets BBC ‘Have I Got News For You' Treatment After Meltdown Occurs During Recording
Trump Vs Musk Gets BBC ‘Have I Got News For You' Treatment After Meltdown Occurs During Recording

Yahoo

time40 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump Vs Musk Gets BBC ‘Have I Got News For You' Treatment After Meltdown Occurs During Recording

EXCLUSIVE: It was the bust-up that was long predicted, but spectacular nonetheless. Donald Trump and Elon Musk's steady separation suddenly went thermonuclear on Thursday, with the former MAGA mates exchanging Molotovs across two social media platforms. Deadline hears that the fireworks broke out as Hat Trick Productions was recording the final episode in the current season of BBC comedy series Have I Got News For You. Cameras were about to be shut down for the night when producers decided to throw the Trump-Musk meltdown at presenter Richard Ayoade and teams led by Ian Hislop and Paul Merton. More from Deadline Kim Kardashian Robbery Spotlighted In BBC Three Doc; Canal+ & Netflix Partner In Sub-Saharan Africa; 'Jaws' Documentary - Global Briefs BBC Content Chief Latest: Race To Replace Charlotte Moore Nears Final Two, As Zai Bennett Drops Out & New Candidates Emerge Late Night Hosts Take On Trump-Musk Feud: "Vader Turns On The Emperor Again" Have I Got News For You is always filmed up to the wire to maintain its topicality, but it's rare that producers toss a breaking news story into the mix. We hear that Trump vs Musk will feature towards the end of the show, with Merton and Hislop offering their typically withering commentary on events in the U.S. Their teammates on the night were comedian Jack Dee and Kelly Cates, one of the new presenters of Premier League highlights show Match of the Day. Have I Got News For You will air at 9PM on BBC1 on Friday. The timing was somewhat auspicious given that the show is about to bow out for its 69th season. HIGNFY first launched in the UK in 1990 and continues to attract around 3M viewers, often making it BBC1's most-watched show of the day. Hat Trick Productions, run by Jimmy Mulville, has recently established Have I Got News for You on CNN in America. Filming has concluded on Season 2, and CNN has renewed the comedy show for a third run, which will begin screening in September. Hosted by Roy Wood Jr., along with team captains Amber Ruffin and Michael Ian Black, the show was ultimately greenlit by Mark Thompson, who is entwined in the history of Have I Got News for You, having served as the BBC's director general. Mulville would have loved for the Musk-Trump imbroglio to play out while the CNN series was in production, but for now, he will have to make do with the story gatecrashing the UK show. Best of Deadline 2025 TV Series Renewals: Photo Gallery 'Stick' Soundtrack: All The Songs You'll Hear In The Apple TV+ Golf Series 'Nine Perfect Strangers' Season 2 Release Schedule: When Do New Episodes Come Out?

As WorldPride comes to DC, queer community vows to be 'louder than ever'
As WorldPride comes to DC, queer community vows to be 'louder than ever'

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

As WorldPride comes to DC, queer community vows to be 'louder than ever'

WASHINGTON − In 1975, Deacon Maccubbin was chatting with buddies at a party in the nation's capital about attending New York City's Pride Day when a friend tossed out a novel idea: 'Why don't we just do one here?' Maccubbin had taken a 'gamble' a year earlier, founding the LGBTQ+ bookstore Lambda Rising in the city's Dupont Circle neighborhood, determined to find a home for 'stories that needed to be told.' Business roared, and the bookstore soon become a haven for the city's gay community. So with similar gusto − and a little trepidation − Maccubbin took another revolutionary step: launching the District of Columbia's first Pride celebration. 'We didn't know whether anyone would show up or not. It was something that had never been done before,' he told USA TODAY. When start time ticked closer that inaugural Pride Day, only a handful of people milled around the bookstore. Maccubbin fretted. 'One of the organizers I had hired said: 'Don't worry. They are just on gay time,'' he recalled. 'And about 15 minutes later there were 2,000 people on the street.' Now 50 years later, DC's Capital Pride Alliance is hosting WorldPride − a global festival that promotes LGBTQ+ visibility and awareness − at another historic juncture: when the queer community's rights are increasingly in hostile crosshairs. With more than five decades of activism under his belt, Maccubbin remains undaunted. 'The fight goes on. There will always be people who try to push you back. But you stand up and keep going forward all the time.' Trump's 'bullying' during Pride: Trump's actions on LGBTQ+ issues in Pride Month criticized by advocates WorldPride, which began May 17, is brimming with events and celebrations – musical performances, fashion shows, discussion groups and subcommunity gatherings such as Trans Pride, Latinx Pride, Youth Pride and beyond. The festival culminates with the city's Pride Parade on June 7 and a massive rally and march from the Lincoln Memorial to the U.S. Capitol on June 8. Ryan Bos, who has been executive director of DC's Capital Pride Alliance since 2011, was thrilled when the group's bid to host WorldPride was accepted in 2022. Bos couldn't wait to showcase the city's rich culture on the world stage. But as threats to LGBTQ+ freedoms began to spiral in recent months, the festival took on a new sense of urgency, he said. 'People have begun to see this as much more of a historic moment – one that is necessary to galvanize our community.' President Donald Trump signed an executive order on his first day in office to dimantle diversity, equity and inclusion practices − which can offer protections for LGBTQ+ people − in the federal government. As more directives rolled out, the transgender community has been particularly targeted: The administration moved to halt gender-affirming care for minors, revived a ban on transgender people in the military, removed references to the community from the Stonewall National Monument website, and directed that federal agencies recognize only two sexes, male and female − affecting the ability of transgender people to identify on items such as passports and sowing fear and anxiety among travelers. The actions have fueled a backlash, leading some corporate sponsors to yank support of Pride parades and even prompting safety concerns for LGBTQ+ people traveling internationally to the WorldPride festival. But the climate has also cemented a gritty resolve around WorldPride that the queer community is not going anywhere, Bos said. 'People see … the world closing in and feel: Who has our back? Who truly believes in human dignity and decency these days? We don't want to be steered back into the closet. And we won't,' he said. 'We will remain visible. We are a resilient community. We've been through challenges like this before.' Katherine Fisher is the founder and lead guide for DC PrideWalks, the city's first tourism company dedicated to highlighting the queer history of the nation's capital from its monuments to its neighborhoods. Fisher, a historian, started PrideWalks in 2021 after a former LGBTQ+ student who had dealt with addiction and other struggles 'lost his community' during COVID-19 − and died of an overdose. Fisher, who had studied queer history in grad school, said the tragedy 'lit a fire in me.' She has been intent on bringing Washington's LGBTQ+ history out of scholarly books into the public discourse, and through the walks she hopes to encourage engagement and activism, even among allies. As WorldPride takes the stage in DC in a challenging time, Fisher says friends in the LGBTQ+ community have decided to 'fight back with joy and celebration.' Fear often drives erroneous assumptions about LGBTQ+ people, she said. Fisher hopes her tours help educate people − and thwart those misconceptions. 'When I take people out on the street and I tell them about someone called Evelyn Hooker, no one has ever heard of her,' she said. 'But she is as important to the queer rights movement as Rosa Parks to civil rights or Eleanor Roosevelt to women's rights.' Brooke Eden, a country singer/songwriter who will be performing at WorldPride, recalls being warned to 'stay in the closet; otherwise I'd lose my career' when she met her soulmate. She found solace and therapy in songwriting, and after five years she was able to come out. Eden married wife Hilary in 2022 in Nashville, and the couple welcomed their first child in November. Her music has helped share her journey, and she hopes her words touch and uplift others who might be struggling with acceptance. Eden has been flooded with messages from people 'who never saw their story in country music. And then one of my videos was playing on CMT or YouTube or TikTok, and now people are saying, 'Oh my gosh, I'm not alone; I'm not the only Southern person who has also found queer joy and queer love.' One of Eden's hit songs is 'Outlaw Love,' which she thinks resonates perfectly with WorldPride as an 'outlaw movement, a kind of rebellion,' she said. 'The WorldPride stage is in front of the Capitol building at a time when they are trying to silence us, put us back in the closet, make us feel ashamed, take away so many of our freedoms, pull back DEI,' she said. 'And we are like: 'Oh no no no! We are going to the nation's capital; we are going to be louder than ever. You can't take this away from us. We are going to be ourselves.'' This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: WorldPride in DC: Queer community vows to be 'louder than ever'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store