
31 Hilarious Internet Fails From Last Week
Well, it's happened again — Monday has arrived. Now, I've got some good news, and I've got some bad news. I'll give you the bad news first: The new pope is not taking my calls about removing Monday from the Gregorian calendar. But the good news? We've got 31 hilarious fails from last week to get us through:
How do spiders know when we're at our most vulnerable?
I'm guessing your foot is a big draw for tourists.
Time to fold up the entire coffee shop and pack it in a suitcase like Bugs Bunny.
Well, if there's no pipe, I guess no plumbers are needed, so it's free!
You know what, I'll just get water in my ears.
Perhaps the kitchen?
This is a podcast origin story.
"I always feel like somebody's watchin' me..."
This was so helpful, bud.
Honestly, a pretty logical reaction.
I think you're about to give your tiny goalie a complex.
At least you'll forget you've said this.
Please check yourself for stray pieces before heading to the litter box, thanks.
Maybe she's dehydrated?
Maybe a little too far from milkshakes for my taste.
A helpful analysis to determine what's truly important to you.
Should we be addressing the AI as Bolinda?
This is the only kind of review you can truly trust.
You just drank the what?
And I brush for the full two minutes, if you're wondering.
My ChapStick needs an AirTag.
Actually, now I need to be paid for my time.
If I've ever spoken to you, I apologize.
Carmine Berzatto origin story.
Never ask and find out when you ask them to order the wedding invitations.
Every person in town will need to try on this Invisalign.
This is like saying "too soon" to a joke about The Crusades.
There's nothing sexy about trench warfare.
Should we be worried?
Appreciate the support, I guess.
And finally, what a beautiful view!
If you enjoyed these laughs, go follow the creators! And for more fails, check out our most recent posts:

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Trump-backed bill could block Tennessee's AI laws, threaten deepfake protections
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) — President Donald Trump's 'big, beautiful bill' could change the way Tennessee regulates artificial intelligence. New language added to the legislation would block states from regulating AI or risk losing federal broadband funding. That means state laws like the Elvis Act, which protects artists from having their voices or images stolen by AI, would be put on pause. 'We are just hoping that we're not taking a couple steps backward since there's no federal regulation currently in place,' Kaley Bonett, a Nashville entertainment lawyer at Hall Booth Smith, said. MAY: House Republicans include a 10-year ban on US states regulating AI in 'big, beautiful' bill 'The songwriters — all — are entitled to revenue generated from the performances and distribution of that particular sound recording of their song, so if there's a deepfake imposing and competing with the authentic, then it's going to affect where the revenue share goes,' a Nashville managing partner and shareholder for Hall Booth Smith, Karl Braun, explained. 'It's going to be very difficult for, let's say, a songwriter to protect themselves legally from this evolving kind of internet Wild, wild west.' 'The big beautiful bill that the president is advancing does not replace those regulations with anything, which is almost unprecedented,' Plaintiffs Attorney at Spragens Law, David Kieley, said. Also at risk is the 'Preventing Deep Fakes Images Act,' which makes it a felony to post fake AI images designed to harm someone's reputation. Nashville-based meteorologist Bree Smith was targeted by AI imagery herself, explaining that someone used AI to take her face and put it on someone else's semi-naked body. '[This bill] just means that we are saying for 10 years we are going to let people potentially be victimized in this way, and that can't happen,' Smith said. 'It's not going to be any more okay for something like that to happen 10 years from now than it is for it to happen today.' 'Even looking prospectively at things we haven't really encountered yet, but this would stop the state from being able to regulate things like driverless cars in your town, driverless 18-wheelers on Tennessee highways,' Kieley added. 'We don't know really how this technology could affect public safety things like 9-1-1, dispatch.' A law signed just last week by Governor Lee banning AI-generated child sexual abuse material could also be blocked. ⏩ 'It would put child sex predators and big tech over the safety of our families,' Sen. Heidi Campbell (D-Nashville) said. 'This is really antithetical to the values that people across the aisle in Tennessee have been communicating with our legislation.' The president's bill passed in the House of Representatives. It's now in the Senate, where supporters hope to finalize it by July. Senator Marsha Blackburn has previously stated that Tennessee needs AI safeguards, saying, 'Until we pass something that is federally preemptive, we can't call for a moratorium on those things.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Axios
6 hours ago
- Axios
Explore how AI works at the Exploratorium this summer
This summer, the Exploratorium is bringing AI to life with hands-on science. Why it matters: Artificial intelligence is transforming every aspect of modern life from the workplace and education to the media and beyond with the potential to reshape how we live, think and work. Driving the news: "Adventures in AI" — the Exploratorium's new exhibit — takes a deep dive into the science, logic and ethics of the burgeoning technology to make it accessible for kids and adults alike. Inside the room: The exhibit features 20 interactive displays that explain how artificial intelligence works. Think robots that test your trust in machines, AI tools to experiment with making music, and games that ask you to think like a computer. One of the most spectacular ones includes "Manifold" — a nine-foot-tall robotic hand covered in soft pink fabric designed to roam the museum, created by Dr. Catie Cuan, the museum's artist-in-residence. What they're saying:"It will have microphones that are picking up language and doing sentiment analysis," said Ann Meisinger, project director of the artist-in-residence program. "This robot is going to attempt to learn how to endear itself to our visitors." Between the lines: The exhibition is backed by Anthropic, a Bay Area company behind the "Claude" AI language model. "We definitely tried to focus on concepts in AI and machine learning that are going to be timeless," said Doug Thistlewolf, the museum's manager of exhibit development. "We have exhibits on the floor that have been here for 50 years, and the science is still accurate… so with this burgeoning new world, how are we holding that same standard?," he added.

Wall Street Journal
6 hours ago
- Wall Street Journal
Alexa! Can This Amazon Executive Make You Cool Again?
Panos Panay remembers the first time he walked into a room and asked Alexa to play a song. 'And it actually played,' he says, hands on his knees, leaning into the audience of reporters and analysts at February demonstration of Alexa+, a rebooted, AI-infused version of the virtual assistant. 'Sounds kind of funny right now, but 10 years ago, it was mind-blowing.'