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Daily Caller Feed
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1 y

Fish Fossils Predating Dinosaurs Found In Pavement: REPORT
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Fish Fossils Predating Dinosaurs Found In Pavement: REPORT

'To my knowledge these fossils seem to have gone amiss'
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1 y

Homeless Man Allegedly Attacks California Mayor In Broad Daylight
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Homeless Man Allegedly Attacks California Mayor In Broad Daylight

'It speaks to a much bigger issue'
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1 y

‘He’s Where He’s Always Been’: Harris Faulkner Clashes With Dem Who Says Trump Flip-Flopped On Abortion Stance
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‘He’s Where He’s Always Been’: Harris Faulkner Clashes With Dem Who Says Trump Flip-Flopped On Abortion Stance

'Trying to have his cake and eat it too'
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1 y

Of Course Gov. Kathy Hochul Had Alleged Chinese Spy In Her Office. She’s Not Alone
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Of Course Gov. Kathy Hochul Had Alleged Chinese Spy In Her Office. She’s Not Alone

this is all just the tip of the iceberg
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
1 y

A Twilight Animated TV Series Will Be Sparkling Its Way Onto Netflix
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A Twilight Animated TV Series Will Be Sparkling Its Way Onto Netflix

News Twilight A Twilight Animated TV Series Will Be Sparkling Its Way Onto Netflix By Vanessa Armstrong | Published on September 4, 2024 Screenshot: Summit Entertainment Comment 0 Share New Share Screenshot: Summit Entertainment Attention Twilight fans: the sexy vampiric world created by author Stephenie Meyer will once again grace the screen in a new adaption. According to The Hollywood Reporter, Netflix has greenlit a straight-to-series animated adaptation of Meyer’s novel, Midnight Sun. The story covers the same events found in the Twilight Saga, but is told from the point of view of Edward Cullen, aka the vampire played by Robert Pattinson in the five films that were released from 2008 to 2012. (In the original books, the point of view was from Bella, played in the films by Kristen Stewart.) The production comes from Lionsgate Television; Lionsgate’s film branch also produced four of the Twilight films. Sinead Daly (Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency, Raised By Wolves, Tell Me Lies) will pen the adaptation and executive produce. The project is still in its early days, though the fact it got a straight-to-series order ups the odds that we’ll eventually see it on Netflix. It’s not clear yet if Pattinson, Stewart, or the rest of the live-action cast—including Taylor Lautner, Ashley Greene, Kellan Lutz, Nikki Reed, and Jackson Rathbone—will reprise their roles. My guess is that’s unlikely for at least the two leads, but I’d be happy to be proven wrong. While we wait for the animated series, we can experience the drama unfold by (re)watching the five films, four of which are currently streaming on Netflix, and all of which are available on Starz. [end-mark] The post A <i>Twilight</i> Animated TV Series Will Be Sparkling Its Way Onto Netflix appeared first on Reactor.
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
1 y

Amy Adams Is a Woman, a Mom, and a Literal Dog in Nightbitch Trailer
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Amy Adams Is a Woman, a Mom, and a Literal Dog in Nightbitch Trailer

News Nightbitch Amy Adams Is a Woman, a Mom, and a Literal Dog in Nightbitch Trailer By Vanessa Armstrong | Published on September 4, 2024 Credit: Anne Marie Fox/ Searchlight Pictures Comment 0 Share New Share Credit: Anne Marie Fox/ Searchlight Pictures Searchlight Pictures has made a film adaptation of Rachel Yoder’s novel, Nightbitch. It stars Amy Adams as a woman who, as the newly released trailer makes clear, has lost herself after becoming a stay-at-home mom to a toddler and ultimately ends up turning into a dog at night.   Is it weird to say that, as a mom to a four-year-old, this premise is extremely relatable? Here’s the blurb from the book, which the trailer appears to hue closely to: At home full-time with her two-year-old son, an artist finds she is struggling. She is lonely and exhausted. She had imagined—what was it she had imagined? Her husband, always travelling for his work, calls her from faraway hotel rooms. One more toddler bedtime, and she fears she might lose her mind.Instead, quite suddenly, she starts gaining things, surprising things that happen one night when her child will not sleep. Sharper canines. Strange new patches of hair. New appetites, new instincts. And from deep within herself, a new voice… The adaptation comes from writer-director Marielle Heller, whose previous credits include directing 2015’s The Diary of a Teenage Girl and an episode of Transparent. She’s also an actor who had roles in The Queen’s Gambit and MacGruber. In addition to Adams, the film stars Scoot McNairy, Arleigh Patrick Snowden, Emmett James Snowden, Zoë Chao, Mary Holland, Archana Rajan, and Jessica Harper. Nightbitch is set to premiere in select theaters sometime in December 2024. Check out the trailer below. [end-mark] The post Amy Adams Is a Woman, a Mom, and a Literal Dog in <i>Nightbitch</i> Trailer appeared first on Reactor.
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
1 y

Big Cats in the UK: The Black Beast of Exmoor and Its Many Relatives
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Big Cats in the UK: The Black Beast of Exmoor and Its Many Relatives

Column SFF Bestiary Big Cats in the UK: The Black Beast of Exmoor and Its Many Relatives By Judith Tarr | Published on September 4, 2024 “The black leopard, in the gardens of the Zoological Society” (From History of the Earth and Animated Nature, 1829) Comment 0 Share New Share “The black leopard, in the gardens of the Zoological Society” (From History of the Earth and Animated Nature, 1829) One of the supposed antecedents of the Ozark Howler is a legend or legends passed down from colonizers’ ancestors in the UK: a great black beast, possibly demonic, who has haunted various parts of the island for time out of mind. Originally it was described as a gigantic black dog, but in the twentieth century, the story shifted. From the 1970s onward, eyewitness after eyewitness has reported seeing a huge black cat—far too big to be a domestic cat. The animal they describe is the size and shape of a leopard. Thousands of years ago, the UK was home to lions, leopards, and other large predators, but all of those have long since gone extinct. The only native wild cat left is the Scottish wild cat, which is about the size of a large Maine Coon. It’s found only in Scotland, and it’s very rare. And yet the proliferation of sightings in England and Wales as well as Scotland indicates that something is out there. There’s video, there’s evidence: livestock maulings and mutilations, even a boy who claims to have been swiped in the face by a big cat (though a big-cat expert has debunked that one). Some of the evidence is pretty striking. In 2008, MonsterQuest summed up the story so far. The episode leads with an account of the history of exotic pets in the UK. There was no regulation of these until 1976, and in 1981 it became illegal to keep a big cat in the country. The timing is pretty interesting. In 1983, the Black Beast of Exmoor slaughtered over a hundred sheep. Royal Marines were called out to hunt the animal down. They didn’t succeed, but at least one Marine claims to have seen something large and dark that fled before he could get a good look at it. There are a Lot of photos of big, black, catlike creatures all over the island, from Devon all the way up into Scotland. There’s also a swath of deceased animals, from sheep to deer, that may have been brought down by dogs, but in multiple cases, experts have determined that the method of the kill is more characteristic of a big cat than a canine. And then there are the eyewitnesses. Hundreds of them over the years. Big cat, they say. Big, black, long tail. And tracks—many tracks. There’s a Big Cat Society that keeps records of sightings and investigates the most plausible. The experts consulted in the episode maintain that leopards and other big cats are highly adaptable and can handle cold and wet, which contradicts what the show had to say about big cats in the Ozarks. Winters in the UK, it’s true, are not quite as harsh as winters in Missouri and Arkansas in the US. With plenty of game and livestock to feed on, and remote country to lair in, a leopard could do well enough even in the dead of winter. MonsterQuest gets hold of DNA samples from a longtime investigator and sends them to a lab in Edinburgh. In the meantime a crew of trackers and wildlife experts forays into the Beast of Exmoor’s hunting grounds with camera traps and cat lures (bobcat gland extract, to be specific). Other investigators test eyewitnesses with silhouettes of cats and discover that the witnesses are actually accurate as to the size of what they say—and they’re consistent about seeing leopard-sized cats. The physical evidence the show is able to find doesn’t check out. Video of a black cat is probably not a big cat, but a very thin, long-tailed feral domestic cat. A cast of a pawprint turns out to be made by a large dog. And the DNA tests as various species of deer, and domestic dog. Fifteen years later, in 2023, Expedition X took aim at the story. Sightings have continued, and they’ve shown up all over the UK. While MonsterQuest focused on the area around Exmoor in the southeast, Jess and Phil head to Wales and the Peak District, where in January of 2023, a farmer and his sons encountered a large black cat and photographed its tracks in the snow. They were hunting a predator that was killing a neighbor’s lambs. Not only did they see the animal, they heard its cry, “a strange, very deep howl.” (Shades of the Ozark Howler.) Jess and Phil duplicate part of the MonsterQuest experiment with camera traps and scent lures (civet perfume, to be precise). To those they add more of their cool tools: tree and ground hunting blinds, Velcro fur traps, night-vision goggles, game-calling equipment, and the trusty FLIR infrared camera. They find a lot more evidence than the previous investigators. As soon as they arrive in the area where the farmer saw the cat, they come across prints of a large animal, scratches on a log, the fresh kill of a bird, and a sheep’s skull with the marks of a predator’s teeth. And they see something large, dark, and able to climb trees—and find some hair in the fur trap. They also capture video. One of the more interesting experts they talk to does something called toothpick analysis: the study of bite marks on bones. He can analyze a bone of any age and identify the animal that chewed on it. Predators have distinct patterns of tooth cusps that allow him to determine whether it’s a feline or a canine, and even to identify the species. DNA in this case is inconclusive, but it does appear to be feline. But what’s more convincing is a combination of eyewitness report from a railway inspector who came face to eyeshine with a big black panther one night, and video from the camera trap. Jess sees a pair of glowing eyes staring at her, and records them on camera; she also claims to have seen a second pair that turned away and seemed to head up a tree. The camera trap catches something long, dark, with a long tail and a distinctly feline silhouette. This is interesting enough, and it’s great to see the camera capture. But there’s a coda to this combination of stories. A report showed up in the international news this past May. In October 2023, the news story relates, a woman in the Lake District, which is north of the Peak District and is equally remote and thinly populated, startled a predator which was feeding on the carcass of sheep. It was a large black cat, she said, “the size of a German Shepherd dog.” She swabbed the carcass and sent the sample to a podcast titled “Big Cat Conversations,” which in turn sent it to a lab at the University of Warwick. Professor Robin Allaby, who analyzed it, claims to have found “Panthera DNA,” and believes that the sample is authentic. The material is minimal but, he says, definitive. He can’t identify the specific variety of cat from what little material there is (interesting how similar this is the findings of Expedition X from earlier in 2023), but he is certain that there is a big cat on the loose in Cumbria. I’m sure there’s blowback from other experts because of how tiny the sample is. And yet, add it to all the eyewitness accounts, the videos that haven’t been debunked, and the fact that there is a known point at which the stories began—which coincides with the crackdown on exotic pets—and I think it’s hard to dispute that there just may be a breeding population of black leopards in the UK. Cryptids they are not; they’re a known species, and they’re not extinct in the wild. But they are surviving and apparently thriving well outside of their native range. It just happens that they’ve fit into a very old niche: a black beast that hunts the night and preys on domestic livestock. So far they haven’t seriously harmed a human, though eyewitness after eyewitness, including Jess of Expedition X, tells of being watched and stalked but eventually left alone. That’s legend fodder right there.[end-mark] The post Big Cats in the UK: The Black Beast of Exmoor and Its Many Relatives appeared first on Reactor.
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Reclaim The Net Feed
Reclaim The Net Feed
1 y

California’s New AI Law Proposals Could Impact Memes
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California’s New AI Law Proposals Could Impact Memes

If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. California’s state legislature has passed several bills related to “AI,” including a ban on deepfakes “around elections.” The lawmakers squeezed these bills in during the last week of the current sessions of the state Senate and House, and it is now up to Governor Gavin Newsom (who has called for such laws) to sign or veto them by the end of this month. One of the likely future laws is Defending Democracy from Deepfake Deception Act of 2024, which aims to regulate how sites, apps, and social media (defined for the purposes of the legislation as large online platforms) should deal with content that the bill considers to be “materially deceptive related to elections in California.” Namely, the bill wants such content blocked, specifying that this refers to “specified” periods – 120 days before and 60 days after an election. And campaigns will have to disclose if their ads contain AI-altered content. Now comes the hard part – what qualifies for blocking as deceptive, in order to “defend democracy from deepfakes”? It’s a very broad “definition” that can be interpreted all the way to banning memes. For example, who’s to say if – satirical – content that shows a candidate “saying something (they) did not do or say” can end up “reasonably likely” harming the reputation or prospects of a candidate? And who’s to judge what “reasonably likely” is? But the bill uses these terms, and there’s more. Also outlawed would be content showing an election official “doing or saying something in connection with the performance of their elections-related duties that the elections official did not do or say and that is reasonably likely to falsely undermine confidence in the outcome of one or more election contests.” If the bill gets signed into law on September 30, given the time-frame, it would comprehensively cover not only the current campaign, but the period after it. And “translated” into plain language, the provisions are designed to “protect” candidates from AI-generated content in any scenario (when such measures are actually justified, or merely, for example, as part of the “war on memes”). Another category to protect are election officials, that is, “election integrity” (one can make an educated guess, in case an election is contested – again, even if the content is protected lawful speech such as satire). It’s the “reasonably likely” phrase that leaves space for such broad interpretations. If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. The post California’s New AI Law Proposals Could Impact Memes appeared first on Reclaim The Net.
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NY Times: There Is a Recent Surge in Left-Wing Misinformation
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NY Times: There Is a Recent Surge in Left-Wing Misinformation

NY Times: There Is a Recent Surge in Left-Wing Misinformation
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In the Forever War Against CA's Gas and Oil Industry, Greasy Gavin Is a No-Quitter
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In the Forever War Against CA's Gas and Oil Industry, Greasy Gavin Is a No-Quitter

In the Forever War Against CA's Gas and Oil Industry, Greasy Gavin Is a No-Quitter
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