THE BIG STORY Donald Trump and two Jan. 6 rioters have been sued in the death of a US Capitol police officer |
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US Capitol Police Sgt. Harry Dunn, right, consoles Sicknick's partner Sandra Garza as a video of the Jan. 6 attack is played during a congressional hearing on June 9, 2022. Andrew Harnik / AP |
The estate of Brian Sicknick, the US Capitol Police officer who died after the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection, is suing Donald Trump and two of the men who were charged with assaulting him as the former president's supporters attacked the Capitol. The lawsuit argued that Trump, Julian Khater, and George Tanios all "played a significant role in the medical condition that led" to Sicknick's death. Khater was captured on video spraying Sicknick and other officers with a chemical irritant that Tanios supplied to him. After collapsing at the Capitol on Jan. 6, Sicknick died the next day of natural causes, though the medical examiner also told the Washington Post that "all that transpired played a role in his condition." Capitol Police have deemed it a line of duty death. Additionally, the complaint accused Trump of "intentionally" riling up the crowd with lies about the 2020 election before encouraging them to attack the Capitol and those who stood in their way. "Defendant Trump put out a clear call to action," attorneys for Sicknick's estate wrote, "and the crowd—including Defendants Khater and Tanios—responded."
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STAYING ON TOP OF THIS What in tarnation is happening with the Speaker of the House? |
- Throughout this week, Rep Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) has failed 11 separate times to get the 218 votes needed to be elected Speaker of the House of Representatives. This is the most prolonged Speaker vote that Congress has seen in the last 164 years, according to CNN.
- How much longer can this go on? To get at least 16 of the 20 ultraconservative Republican votes he needs to reach 218, McCarthy has shown an increasing willingness to compromise with the remaining GOP holdouts. (Vox's Andrew Prokop explains McCarthy's new concessions wonderfully, I highly recommend checking out his rundown.) For now, this impasse in the House has no end in sight.
- "If this takes a little longer, that's okay," McCarthy said on Thursday.
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Buffalo Bills player Damar Hamlin is showing "remarkable improvement" in his recovery after a cardiac arrest during a game. "It appears that his neurological condition and function is intact," one of his physicians said Thursday. "He still has significant progress that he needs to make but this marks a really good turning point in his ongoing care." A surviving roommate of the Idaho murders said she came face-to-face with the suspect the night of the killings. On Dec. 30, a suspect was arrested in northeast Pennsylvania and charged with four counts of murder as well as felony burglary for the killings. A man fatally shot his five kids, mother-in-law, and wife weeks after she filed for divorce. The apparent murder-suicide has shaken the small Utah town, where the Haight family was very well-known. An indie author has mysteriously reappeared more than two years after news of her death. Meachen wrote online that her family "did what they thought was best" by telling her followers that she was dead. She concluded the post with a declaration: "Let the fun begin." |
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ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE A tool that can judge whether an AI wrote your essay is beloved by educators and loathed by students |
Baona / Getty Images / iStockphoto |
GPT3, the latest version of the AI tool Chat GPT, has ushered in a new wave of plagiarism concerns. Released to the public in late November, the tool can produce lengthy, coherent prose based on fairly elementary writing prompts. But educators fear that high school or college students might use this technology to dodge writing their own essays. According to Chalkbeat, New York City public schools blocked access to ChatGPT on school devices and internet networks. The anxiety is even coming from inside the house: A top AI conference has banned the submission of academic papers written entirely by AI (although it will allow some tools to "polish" writers' work). However, students hoping to use artificial intelligence to write their homework have a new enemy: Edward Tian, a 22-year-old Princeton University student who created a website that can detect if a piece of writing has been created with ChatGPT. His tool, GPTZero, determines if there is a high or low indication that a bot wrote a given text based on its "perplexity" and "burstiness." Educators are praising the effort, and others, mostly teens, are calling Tian a "narc." "AI is here to stay," Tian said. "AI-generated writing is going to just get better and better. I'm excited about this future, but we have to do it responsibly." |
Brendon Thorne / Getty Images | An Elvis impersonator poses prior to boarding the Elvis Express in Sydney, Australia on January 5, 2023. The Parkes Elvis Festival is held annually over five days, timed to coincide with Elvis Presley's birth date in January. This year marks the 30th anniversary of the festival. |
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A ROBOT DOLL? GOES ROGUE? GROUNDBREAKING. M3GAN is a campy delight |
M3GAN (Amie Donald, voiced by Jenna Davis) Geoffrey Short / Universal Pictures / Courtesy Everett Collection |
M3GAN, which stands for "Model 3 Generative Android," is the secret side project of roboticist Gemma (Allison Williams). When Gemma adopts her newly orphaned niece, Cady (Violet McGraw), she quickly realizes that she's not cut out for parenting, and fast-tracks the M3GAN model in the hopes that the doll can be Cady's friend and de facto mom. What could go wrong? The film is a crisscrossed web of pop culture references designed to cement M3GAN's cultural relevance amid a specific niche of highly online, campy young people, Izzy Ampil writes. Stripped of this context, the movie is not bad, but not exceptional. Its plot points are skimpily justified: Cady's parents die convenient horror-movie deaths; Gemma finalizes M3GAN within a week, despite having spent $100,000 and untold years tinkering on it unsuccessfully; various characters make pointed allusions to how the rushed timeline of M3GAN's release means she can't be properly safety-tested. But M3GAN is not a movie you watch for the airtight quality of its storytelling or the subtlety of its technological cautionary tale. It's a movie you watch because its titular character is "archly iconique," unnecessarily couture in a satin pussy bow and matching double-breasted jacket. Because it is at once breezily familiar and very, very weird. Because it has a highly specific, out-of-pocket sense of humor, which is campy and offbeat and so clued into the pop cultural appetite for irony that it's sometimes difficult to tell what's supposed to be a joke. |
If you have a favorite corner of the internet that you'd like to share, send it my way at hellomobile@buzzfeed.com with the subject line "reSEARCH." We may feature it in a future newsletter. —Alexa |
Marlon James, author of Black Leopard, Red Wolf, on Late Night with Seth Meyers in 2015. Seth did you read the book? Please let me know. Lloyd Bishop / NBCUniversal via Getty Images |
Revisiting "How to Hire Fake Friends and Family" by Roc Morin. An interview with the CEO of Family Romance, a Japanese company that lets you hire actors to play various roles in your life: "I played a father for a 12-year-old with a single mother. The girl was bullied because she didn't have a dad, so the mother rented me. I've acted as the girl's father ever since. I am the only real father that she knows. ... I've been seeing her for eight years. She just graduated high school." Obsessing Black Leopard, Red Wolf by Marlon James. Neil Gaiman described this fantasy book as "the kind of novel I never realized I was missing until I read it. … It's something new that feels old, in the best way." I can't sum up my thoughts on Black Leopard, Red Wolf much better than that. The novel follows Tracker, a superbly talented and isolated hunter, as he's pulled into a web of political warfare, ancient magic, and a mystery that threatens to upend the world as he knows it. As a narrator, Tracker is loquacious and blasé, but the true poignancy of his story lies in what he leaves unsaid: his grief over a friendship gone cold, the toll of a life hardened by survival, his willingness to be loyal even at great personal cost. Please read this book so I have someone to talk about it with. (I'm not joking, if you read this book email hellomobile@buzzfeed.com, I really want to talk about the ending with someone.) Streaming "Blue Bayou" by Linda Ronstadt. Not everyone can cover a Roy Orbison song and outdo him, but Ronstadt's version is a hands-down, no contest smash. When Ronstadt's voice shifts from subdued calm to unmitigated despair in the chorus, she brings the bayou to life in all its rose-colored, nostalgic glory. "I'm going back someday / Come what may," she promises. I can almost feel the humid summer night on my skin. |
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Meaningful change takes time. Be patient with yourself, Alexa |
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