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1-14 of 14
- Op-Docs is The New York Times editorial department's award-winning section for short, opinionated documentaries, produced with wide creative latitude and a range of artistic styles, covering current affairs, contemporary life and historical subjects.
- In his review for The New York Times, Frank Rich wrote that " ...the new musical revue at the Lunt-Fontanne, is an [Duke] Ellington celebration that just won't quit until it has won over the audience with dynamic showmanship. ...it rides so high on affection, skill and, of course, stunning music that the lapses don't begin to spoil the fun. What's more, this is the only Broadway revue of recent vintage that operates on a truly grand scale."
- If losing a child to an illness is one of the worst things that can happen to a family, Dr. Nadia Tremonti has made it her mission to make it better. It's not easy. But as a pediatric palliative care physician, she works to ensure that terminally ill children receive quality end-of-life care. Palliative care is sometimes misunderstood to shorten life expectancy, but it's a method that increases quality of life, improves symptom burden and decreases medical costs. We follow Dr. Tremonti in the short documentary above as she works to make death less medical and more human. In the process she asks a critical question: When a child is terminally ill, how can we make the end of life a better one?
- The suggestion that a dog leads a dull life does not apply to that of Rin-Tin-Tin in the screen melodrama, "Below the Line," which is on view this week at Warner's. Rin-Tin-Tin has an eventful career from the time he was owned by the villain to the days when young Donald Cass befriended the animal. Actually Rin-Tin-Tin is the energetic hero of this story, being always busily engaged in either saving himself from a dangerous predicament or rescuing his young master and the heroine. In one of the early scenes Rin-Tin-Tin, now well-known to motion picture enthusiasts, is seen in a crate in the baggage car of a train. He does not take the actions of the baggagemaster in a kindly fashion, so that brute causes the dog to be tumbled out of the car, down an incline to a river. The animal is rescued from this dilemma, and from being a snarling animal he changes to a loyal, affectionate creature. As the story goes on a woman is murdered by Jamber Niles and the Sheriff endeavors to find the criminal through a piece of cloth and a button found in the dead girl's hand. Subsequently we have Donald being attacked by the bloodhounds and Rin-Tin-Tin at first holding them at bay and finally chasing them all away with their tails between their legs. Rin-Tin-Tin does nothing by halves, for he tracks the murderer himself and kills him. There are several good scenes in this picture, but it is on the whole an overdose of melodrama. There is the ceaseless deluge of rain, the poor heroine and the trouble-encumbered hero plunging through the woods, and titles that make one turn one's head away from the screen. One of the praiseworthy portions of this subject is where Rin-Tin-Tin climbs a tree, which is bent and old. He makes two or three attempts and finally pulls himself up to the straggling branches. Dog or no dog, this picture is one of those which to see once, is enough-aye, too much. Aside from Rin-Tin-Tin's performance there is nothing noteworthy about the acting of the principals.
- A loving portrait of Eva Capsouto (1919-2003) and her three sons, Albert, Jacques and Samuel, a family that emigrated from Egypt to the USA, via Paris, in 1961. The family opened a restaurant in 1980, the Capsouto Frères Bistro, in what was then an out-of-the-way location, TriBeCa. Albert was the Maitre D, Jacques was in the kitchen, while Samuel managed the finances. Their mother, Eva, was busy at the restaurant every day until her death in 2003.
- Join us on Oct. 20 for a virtual event exploring the legacy and traditions of historically Black colleges and universities with The Times's Nikole Hannah-Jones, Veronica Chambers and others. As schools across the U.S. gear up for homecoming celebrations, whether in real life or virtually, we explore homecoming at historically Black colleges and universities (known as H.B.C.U.s) with discussions about their legacy and Black girlhood, community and spirit. The Times's Veronica Chambers and Charlie Brinkhurst-Cuff will host Well-Read Black Girl founder Glory Edim; activist and author Jodie Patterson; managing director of the Antiracist Research and Policy Center at American University Christine Platt; media executive and founder of Native Son Emil Wilbekin; VICE correspondent Alzo Slade; and The Times's Nikole Hannah-Jones. The evening will include inspiring music by Lucky Daye, Willard Hill and The Soul Rebels, and work from animation director Lyndon Barrois. We will feel the joyful spirit of fellowship and enjoy the energy of marching bands and drumlines stepping, and the simple radical act of togetherness.
- Microsoft's release of a ChatGPT-powered Bing signifies a new era in search. Then, a disastrous preview of Bard - Google's answer to ChatGPT - caused the company's stocks to slide 7 percent. The A.I. arms race is on. What "Nothing, Forever," the 24/7, A.I.-generated "Seinfeld" parody, says about bias in A.I. Kevin Scott of Microsoft also guests.
- 2020– 52mPodcast EpisodeA Washington Post reporter asked Bing AI its opinion of Kevin Roose. Its response was eerie. Microsoft made changes to Bing's chatbot capabilities after the Chatbot's unsettling behavior with some users. The company is already loosening some of those restrictions. The Supreme Court heard a case challenging Section 230. Reddit is among many social media companies that have filed "friend of the court" amicus briefs against changes to the law. Facebook plans to sell "Meta verified" accounts.
- 2020–Podcast EpisodeApple kicked off the week with the announcement of a mixed-reality headset: the Apple Vision Pro. Putting a computer on your face may seem weird AF, but if there's one company that knows how to make nerdy stuff into the thing that everyone wants, it's Apple. Will these fancy goggles be the next Apple revolution? Then, crypto had (another) terrible week after the S.E.C. filed lawsuits against the cryptocurrency exchanges Coinbase and Binance.
- 2020–Podcast EpisodeThis week, advertisers swarmed the beaches of southern France for the Cannes Lions advertising festival. Kevin says artificial intelligence is all anyone there can talk about, but admits the conference is making him rethink how quickly generative A.I. will take over the industry - despite the buzz. Then, the New York Times reporter Emma Goldberg on when remote work stopped being the future for tech companies. What does the newest season of "Black Mirror" tell us about what's next for TV?
- 2020– 1h 8mPodcast EpisodeWhether it's on TikTok or Twitter, A.I.-generated content is already flooding the web. So, what happens when the technology - prone to confidently making things up - starts ingesting itself? Then, the New York Times reporter Joe Bernstein talks about why Mark Zuckerberg wants to fight Elon Musk in a cage match. Plus, we put ChatGPT's recipe generation to the test with A.I. cocktails.
- 2020– 1h 6mPodcast EpisodeChatGPT can now hear, see and speak - and that's just the start of the deluge of A.I. news this week. Kevin and Casey unpack the lightning-speed updates. Meta's next-generation headset, Quest 3, is here. Is there still hope for the metaverse? An interview with a prompt engineer.
- Episode: (2023)2020– 1h 4mPodcast EpisodeA.I. models are black boxes. You input a prompt and the model outputs nearly anything: a sonnet, an image or a legal brief riddled with lies. Today, a look at three ways that researchers are unlocking that black box in hopes of bringing transparency to A.I. Then, Marc Andreessen's techno-optimist manifesto has left us asking, Is he OK?. Plus, decoding a 2,000-year-old ancient scroll with the help of A.I.
- In yet another head-spinning twist at OpenAI, Sam Altman was reinstated as the company's chief executive on Tuesday night, a mere five days after the OpenAI board had fired him. The board will be overhauled and a new set of directors, including Bret Taylor and Lawrence Summers, will join. Today, they discuss how Altman returned to the top seat - and whether the OpenAI news will ever slow down.