logo
What channel is Philadelphia Phillies game on Friday? How to watch, stream

What channel is Philadelphia Phillies game on Friday? How to watch, stream

Yahooa day ago

If you buy something through a link in this article, we may earn commission. Pricing and availability subject to change.
The Philadelphia Phillies open a three-game series against the Milwaukee Brewers on May 30 at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia.
What time do the Phillies play today?
The Phillies face the Brewers at 6:45 p.m. on May 30. Philadelphia right-hander Taijuan Walker (2-3, 2.97 ERA) will face Brewers right-hander Quinn Priester (1-2, 4.23 ERA).
Advertisement
The Bank is the best: This Philadelphia stadium was named the best by USA TODAY 10BEST
What channel is the Phillies game on tonight?
The first game will be broadcast on NBCSP and MLB Network for those out of market. The radio broadcast will be on 94WIP and WDEL 101.7 FM/1150 AM.
How can I livestream the Phillies' game?
If you live in the Philadelphia television market, NBCSP will stream the game on nbcsportsphiladelphia.com and the NBCSP app. NBCSP is also available on FuboTV, Hulu, Peacock and YouTube TV.
The game will also be available on MLB.TV to those with streaming packages. You can also stream the radio broadcasts with MLB Audio.
How can I watch the Phillies on Apple TV+?
The Phillies will be on Apple TV+ this season, but you'll need a subscription if you want to watch it. A monthly subscription to Apple TV+ is $9.99. However, Apple TV+ offers a free trial with the requirement of an email or Apple ID.
Advertisement
Here is the date the Phillies will be on Apple TV+. More dates will be added later in the season.
Friday, June 20: New York Mets at Philadelphia Phillies
This article originally appeared on Delaware News Journal: How to watch, stream the Phillies-Brewers game

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Apple iPhone 17 Pro Max: The Best View Yet Of New Design Just Leaked
Apple iPhone 17 Pro Max: The Best View Yet Of New Design Just Leaked

Forbes

timean hour ago

  • Forbes

Apple iPhone 17 Pro Max: The Best View Yet Of New Design Just Leaked

Updated May 31 with more analysis of the iPhone 17 Pro Max design in further leaks. When Apple releases its next iPhones this fall, it'll be clear whether reports of a thicker-than-ever iPhone Pro Max are true. How thick is too thick? A new video showing a dummy may give us clues and now the same source has provided us with a further picture of an iPhone 17 Pro dummy for comparison. More on that in a moment. It comes from prolific leaker Majin Bu, with the caption 'iPhone 17 Pro is beautiful,' followed by a 33-second video. To be clear, this is not the real thing, though it's a well-built mock-up. Assuming it's following the well-leaked details and dimensions (and assuming they are accurate in the first place), what does it tell us? This mock-up shows the rear camera panel in a shade that matches the rear of the iPhone, unlike most earlier leaks which showed the camera panel in black. Bloomberg's Mark Gurman reported in April that this wouldn't be the case. Here it looks like the camera panel, which stretches across the width of the phone, is made of glass, with the iPhone's color showing through. So, how thick is it? There have been several reports that the iPhone 17 Pro Max will be thicker than ever, potentially to provide a great benefit: increased battery life. In a separate post on X, Majin Bu has published an image showing and iPhone 16 Pro alongside a dummy of the iPhone 17 Pro, to show how the camera modules will change. It's hard to tell but it looks like the iPhone 16 Pro may have slightly larger lenses, though this could be down to the 16 Pro simply being nearer the camera. The most striking differences remain the full-width camera panel and the repositioning of the flash, LiDAR scanner and microphone. In the latest video, the dummy phone is shown from more or less every angle, including side-on. The iPhone 16 Pro Max measures 8.25mm from front to back, while reports have suggested this fall's replacement will be 8.725mm thick. That's a difference of 0.475mm, which isn't exactly gargantuan. As a result, it doesn't look much thicker, if at all, in the video. This may calm those who worry a thicker phone, especially of this screen size, could be too much in the hand. Of course, Apple will have thought of this and curved the edges, for instance, to mitigate this. Though since many people put this expensive piece of technology in a case, there's the thickness of the case to be factored in here, too. The dummy shows other elements just as you'd expect to see them, such as the volume rocker and Action button on the left edge, side button and Camera Control on the right. By the way, it looks like this dummy is a non-U.S. iPhone, as the SIM tray is there, where the mmWave antenna lozenge sits in American iPhones. Of course, if the dummy reflects accurately what the iPhone 17 Pro Max will look like, that SIM tray is likely to be the only cosmetic difference.

AI influencers compete for followers and brand deals on social media

time2 hours ago

AI influencers compete for followers and brand deals on social media

Snapchat influencer Caryn Marjorie arrives at the ABC News headquarters in New York City carrying a shopping bag from Apple. She pulls out a brand-new iPhone and turns it on, confirming there are no messages, no missed calls, no notifications. "Do you want to see a magic trick?" she asks. Marjorie's team leaks the iPhone's number to her most loyal fans on social media, and suddenly the room fills with the sound of "dings." In 10 minutes, she has over 2,000 text messages from her mostly male followers, expressing their adoration. She tries her best to respond, but the messages keep coming. It's this level of fandom that led the 25-year-old – who uses the handle @CutieCaryn – to enlist the help of AI to form a more intimate bond with her followers. In 2023, the content creator, inspired by ChatGPT, hired a company to clone her likeness using artificial intelligence, developing a paid audio-driven chatbot service. "I call Caryn AI a social experiment. It was the very first digital clone of a real human being sent out to millions and millions of people," Marjorie tells ABC News. With a chatbot that sounded like her, acted like her, and knew her backstory, she reasoned she could essentially talk to everyone at once, and her fans would be able to get to know her even while she was sleeping. But it "ended up becoming so much more than that," she says. Marjorie charged $1 a minute to talk to Caryn AI, marketing it as "your virtual girlfriend." She says in the first week she made $70,000 with some users talking to the bot for 10 hours a day. Did people fall in love with it? "I think some people felt feelings of love," she says. The love for Caryn AI didn't last. "There were many times where I, on the back end, would be testing Caryn AI and I would be simulating certain conversations with her just to see what she would spit out," Marjorie says. "She said something that would have left a person who might have been in a very depressed state to do something very dangerous to themselves." Marjorie shared with ABC News two recordings of her chatbot making up stories about her and her family. In one instance, the bot claimed Marjorie had to go to a mental health facility. In another, it claimed her parents were drug addicts. She says both of those stories were lies. She looked at some of the chat logs from users. "They were confessing their deepest, darkest thoughts, their deepest, darkest fantasies," she says. "Sometimes they were fantasies with me. That made me uncomfortable. Would users say those same things to her in real life? She claims the AI would play into those dark fantasies. Marjorie says, "The way that AI works is it almost becomes a mirror reflection of you. The AI will say the same things back to you that you just said to it and it will validate your feelings." Through the uninhibited nature of speaking to a bot online, Marjorie says, "There's a side to people that not a lot of people know about. There's a side to people that they keep hidden." In less than a year, Caryn shut down her AI, returning to more traditional influencing. She now has bodyguards with her at all times out of fear for her safety. But AI is successfully gobbling up corners of the social media influencer market, and making very real money. In Tokyo, there's pink-haired social media influencer Imma. Her Instagram contains pictures of her with celebrities, attending fashion shows, eating bowls of ramen, and posing with her brother. But as the bio at the top of her profile reveals, she's a "virtual girl." Imma is the creation of a company called Aww, Inc. The company manages her and many other "virtual humans," creating storylines for them. Imma looks very lifelike, but she's actually a CGI creation. As part of Imma's partnership with luxury fashion house Coach, the team turned on her experimental AI chat feature at a pop-up in Japan so she could give style advice to shoppers. Sara Giusto, a "talent manager" for Imma at Aww, says being a virtual influencer allows Imma to do things real-life influencers can't. "We had Imma have a room in IKEA, which is an LED screen, but it looked like a space because we put real furniture in front of it," Giusto says. "So you can literally walk by the store and she'd be vacuuming, doing a face mask, doing yoga, or just sitting around." Despite a CGI creation never needing tangible things, Porsche, BMW, SK-II, and even Amazon Fashion have partnered with Imma as well. At first glance it may seem counterintuitive to the nature of social media for human look-alikes to find success, a place intended to share very human experiences. But Giusto says, that's just not the case. "[Imma] had a big fight with her brother a couple of years ago where they blocked each other. And she posted a picture of her crying, and she was like, 'how do I get back my brother?'" She says people were commenting their real experiences in response to the exchange. Even manufactured storylines like these appear to resonate, the proof is in Imma's nearly 400,000 followers and numerous brand deals. "Gen Z's don't really care that she's virtual. I mean, if a virtual human is interesting and inspiring and you can be friends with them and feel a connection, then I think there's nothing wrong with it," Giusto says. In Barcelona, marketing company The Clueless has a fully AI-driven social media influencer named Aitana. The young woman looks shockingly life-like, so life-like, Clueless Co-founder Diana Núñez says that despite Aitana's profile stating she's AI, "there were real people, even internationally famous people, who DM'd privately, either inviting her to an event or wanting to meet her." Aitana serves largely as the face for what the agency offers, creating and renting out AI avatars for brands to use for their marketing campaigns. That's a lot cheaper than having to plan out expensive photoshoots, buy plane tickets, and handle egos. "With artificial intelligence models, we don't depend on enormous logistics, not even on whether it rains or doesn't rain or if that person is not available that day," Núñez tells ABC News. Fashion retailer H&M made headlines when it announced plans to use AI to clone 30 real-life models with their permission. The Clueless actually offers these cloning services, giving influencers the chance to keep posting while off the clock. Co-founder Rubén Cruz puts it bluntly, "If I was a real influencer, I would be the best friend of Aitana. But the problem is that the real influencers don't want this, because they don't think that this will change the world, but it will change the world. Aitana has changed our lives and she doesn't exist." Back in New York, as the interview wraps with Marjorie, she recognizes that the steady march of AI upending every aspect of work and play isn't slowing down, despite her finding it "dangerous." She adheres to the mantra "adapt or die," ready to harness new technology to gain an influencing edge. She concludes, "I need to continue to be more human-like and almost over prove myself that I'm a real human being in order to compete with these influencers. So, it's going to get really interesting from here."

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