SAG-AFTRA Sues Popular Video Game Over James Earl Jones A.I. PerformanceNew Foto - SAG-AFTRA Sues Popular Video Game Over James Earl Jones A.I. Performance

The Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists has officially launched a lawsuit alleging unfair labor charges towards popular video game developers, Llama Productions. Llama, who are perhaps best known for their work on the hit gaming franchiseFortnite, has recently featured an A.I. recreation of James Earl Jones' immortalStar Warsvillain, Darth Vader, in their latest expansion. The A.I.-generated recreation of Jones' voice was added toFortnitewith the express permission of the actor's estate. According to SAG-AFTRA's charges, however, Llama Productions had failed to notify the actors' union of the A.I.-powered performance without proper notice, as reported byAP News. In awritten statementfrom the organization, SAG-AFRTA cited their particular issues with Llama's recreation of Jones' iconic villain, including the fact that the A.I.-generated performance takes potential work away from a willing voice actor. "We celebrate the right of our members and their estates to control the use of their digital replicas and welcome the use of new technologies to allow new generations to share in the enjoyment of those legacies and renowned roles," the statement reads. "However, we must protect our right to bargain terms and conditions around uses of voice that replace the work of our members, including those who previously did the work of matching Darth Vader's iconic rhythm and tone in video games." Jones -- who passed away last September at the age of 93 -- remains one of the key prominent actors who gave formal permission to prospective studios (such as Disney) to use A.I.-backed recreations of his voice in any future media. In SAG-AFTRA's eyes, however, this decision could hamper the potential for working actors hoping to play the role of Jones' most notable characters, potentially upending the larger entertainment industry as a result. "Fortnite's signatory company, Llama Productions, chose to replace the work of human performers with A.I. technology," the organization wrote. "Unfortunately, they did so without providing any notice of their intent to do this and without bargaining with us over appropriate terms. As such, we have filed an unfair labor practice charge with the NLRB against Llama Production."

SAG-AFTRA Sues Popular Video Game Over James Earl Jones A.I. Performance

SAG-AFTRA Sues Popular Video Game Over James Earl Jones A.I. Performance The Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio...
'The Whole World Is Crumbling': Paul Telfer Opens Up About Xander and Sarah's Breaking Point on 'Days of Our Lives'New Foto - 'The Whole World Is Crumbling': Paul Telfer Opens Up About Xander and Sarah's Breaking Point on 'Days of Our Lives'

It's been a horrible week forDays of Our Livescharacter Xander Kirakis (Paul Telfer). The business mogul started off the week confronting his half-brother over the life-changing secret he was keeping, only for things to go from bad to worse when he realized his wife knew the truth and kept quiet. Now Telfer, Xander's portrayer, reflects on the latest story developments and questions whether Xander can move forward with Sarah. On screen Xander's half-brother Philip (John-Paul Lavoisier) returned to town and with the help of his pseudo-mother Vivian (Louise Sorel), the two falsified a letter from their late father Victor (John Aniston) claiming that he wanted Philip to run Titan alongside Xander. Philip manipulated his way back into the company, but after months of secrecy the secret was finally exposed. Xander initially tried to handle matters quietly, but after being told that due to on-going business deals, it would be a bad look for the company to remove Philip at this point in time. Xander tries to work along side his scheming half-brother, but is unable to do so for long, and eventually takes matters into his own hands and in Philips hotel room beats his brother up. Philip battered and bruised loses consciousness and needs medical attention, but not before uttering that Xander's wife Sarah (Linsey Godfrey) knew Philip's scheme and instead of telling Xander, decided to keep Philips secret. Now Xander has confronted Sarah over this secret, but is it too little too late? Telfer spoke withSoap Opera Digestabout the current storyline. Discussing the confrontation scenes between Xander and Sarah, Telfer said, "The scenes allowed Sarah to have more strength and more weaponry, I guess, in the argument. She's not wrong. She did a bad thing and she was wrong to do it, but her motivations made total sense if you look at it on paper and look at Xander's behavior over the years. But it becomes this thing of, "Is this entire love story untenable? Can it actually continue?" It's super heart-wrenching, the way it plays out. The fact that it happens at the same time as all this other high-stress stuff is going on in Xander and Sarah's life just heightens it even more. It's like the whole world is crumbling around them. The ground is literally disintegrating beneath their feet, and it's just awful." Telfer explained how Xander feels now stating, "Now there's not just the rage and the anger at the betrayal, but there's also this terror of loss. It's like, "Wait a minute. Nothing's changed. You still don't trust me. You still don't believe that I won't fly off the handle and try and kill everybody. You still think I'm a danger to our daughter." Sarah and Xander have been together for all this time, and it's been, from his perspective, wonderful. So it's not just the anger, but it's the awfulness of potentially losing all of that." Examining his frame of mind, Telfer shared, Xander "is like, "How can I be with this woman? What's the point anymore, if I do everything aboveboard and I'm honest and good, but then she's dishonest in order to, what, force me to continue to be the way I've become?" It's so sad. Xander's feeling this mixture of sadness and rage and deep tragic loss." Telfer previously went to social media to address fans concerns about the recent story developments. Telfer said, ""Totally understand that - esp for fans that enjoy Xander/#Xarahas one of their main reasons for watching Obviously I won't go into spoilers, but i will say that this "destruction" is quite different from prior ones - and I feel that there are unaddressed issues. Relating to Xander's character and past behavior that need to be properly explored and dramatized before he can achieve the kind of stability and happiness he keeps saying he wants. So I remain hopeful he'll get there one day…" Days of Our Lives streams weekdays on Peacock.

‘The Whole World Is Crumbling’: Paul Telfer Opens Up About Xander and Sarah’s Breaking Point on 'Days of Our Lives'

'The Whole World Is Crumbling': Paul Telfer Opens Up About Xander and Sarah's Breaking Point on 'Days of Our Lives' It...
Today's Wordle Hint, Answer for #1433 on Thursday, May 22, 2025New Foto - Today's Wordle Hint, Answer for #1433 on Thursday, May 22, 2025

If you're stuck on today's Wordle answer, we're here to help—but beware of spoilers for Wordle 1433 ahead.Let's start with a few hints. There are three vowels out of the five letters in the word today. Today's Wordle begins with a consonant. Yes, there are double letters in today's Wordle. Marching band members know these music sheet holders well. They're great for holding any kind of paper, though. OK, that's it for hints—I don't want to totally give it away before revealing the answer!Related:16 Games Like Wordle To Give You Your Word Game Fix More Than Once Every 24 HoursWe'll have the answer below this friendly reminder ofhow to play the game.SPOILERS BELOW—do not scroll any further if you don't want the answer revealed. Today's Wordle answer on Thursday, May 22, 2025, is FOLIO.How'd you do?Up Next:-Catch Up on Other Wordle Answers From This Week-Hints, Clues and Answers to the NYT's 'Mini Crossword' Puzzle

Today's Wordle Hint, Answer for #1433 on Thursday, May 22, 2025

Today's Wordle Hint, Answer for #1433 on Thursday, May 22, 2025 If you're stuck on today's Wordle answer, we're here to help...
Before the word 'transgender' existed, there was Bambi, the dazzling Parisian iconNew Foto - Before the word 'transgender' existed, there was Bambi, the dazzling Parisian icon

PARIS (AP) — The moment that changed queer history occurred on a sweltering summer day in early 1950s Algeria. An effeminate teenage boy named Jean-Pierre Pruvot stood mesmerized as traffic halted and crowds swarmed around a scandalous spectacle unfolding in the conservative Algiers streets. All had stopped to look at Coccinelle, the flamboyant "transvestite" star of Paris' legendary cabaret, the Carrousel de Paris, who strutted defiantly down the boulevard, impeccably dressed as a woman, sparking awe and outrage and literally stopping traffic. What Pruvot — who would become famous under the female stage name "Bambi" — witnessed was more than mere performance. It was an act of resistance from the ashes of the Nazipersecution of the LGBTQ+ communityin World War II. "I didn't even know that (identity) existed," Bambi told The Associated Press in a rare interview. "I said to myself, 'I'm going to do the same.'" Decades before transgender became a household word and "RuPaul's Drag Race" became aworldwide hit— before visibility brought rights and recognition — the Carrousel troupe in the late 1940s emerged as a glamorous, audacious resistance. Bambi soon joined Coccinelle, April Ashley, and Capucine to revive queer visibility in Europe for the first time since the Nazis had violently destroyed Berlin's thriving queer scene of the 1930s. The Nazis branded gay men with pink triangles, deported and murdered thousands, erasing queer culture overnight. Just a few years after the war, Carrousel performers strode onto the global stage, a glittering frontline against lingering prejudice. Remarkably, audiences at the Carrousel knew exactly who these performers were — women who, as Bambi puts it, "would bare all." Elvis Presley, Ava Gardner, Édith Piaf, Maria Callas and Marlene Dietrich all flocked to the cabaret, drawn to the allure of performers labeled "travestis." The stars sought out the Carrousel to flirt with postwar Paris's wild side. It was an intoxicating contradiction: cross-dressing was criminalized, yet the venue was packed with celebrities. The history of queer liberation shifted in this cabaret, one sequin at a time. The contrast was chilling: as Bambi arrived in Paris and found fame dancing naked for film stars, across the English Channel in early 1950s Britain the code-breaking geniusAlan Turingwas chemically castrated for being gay, leading to his suicide. Evenings spent with legends Today, nearing 90, Marie-Pierre Pruvot — as she has been known for decades by some — lives alone in an unassuming apartment in northeastern Paris. Her bookshelves spill over with volumes of literature and philosophy. A black feather boa, a lone whisper from her glamorous past, hangs loosely over a chair. Yet Bambi wasn't just part of the show; she was the show — with expressive almond-shaped eyes, pear-shaped face, and beauty indistinguishable from any desired Parisienne. Yet one key difference set her apart — a difference criminalized by French law. The depth of her history only becomes apparent as she points to striking and glamorous photographs and recounts evenings spent with legends. Such was their then-fame that the name of Bambi's housemate, Coccinelle, became slang for "trans" in Israel — often cruelly. Once Dietrich, the starry queer icon, arrived at the tiny Madame Arthur cabaret alongside Jean Marais, the actor and Jean Cocteau's gay lover. "It was packed," Bambi recalled. "Jean Marais instantly said, 'Sit (me and Marlene) on stage' And so they were seated onstage, legs crossed, champagne by their side, watching us perform." Another day, Dietrich swept in to a hair salon. "Marlene always had this distant, untouchable air — except when late for the hairdresser," Bambi says, smiling. "She rushed in, kissed the hairdresser, settled beneath the dryer, stretched her long legs imperiously onto a stool, and lit a cigarette. Her gaunt pout as she smoked — I'll never forget it," she says, her impression exaggerated as she sucked in her cheeks. Perhaps Dietrich wasn't her favorite star. Then there was Piaf, who, one evening, teasingly joked about her protégé, the French singing legendCharles Aznavour, performing nearby. "She asked, 'What time does Aznavour start?'" Bambi recalled. "Someone said, 'Midnight.' So she joked, 'Then it'll be finished by five past midnight.'" Reassignment surgery Behind the glamour lay constant danger. Living openly as a woman was illegal. "There was a police decree," Bambi recalls. "It was a criminal offense for a man to dress as a woman. But if you wore pants and flat shoes, you weren't considered dressed as a woman." The injustice was global. Homosexuality remained criminalized for decades: in Britain until 1967, in parts of the U.S. until 2003. Progress came slowly. In 1950s Paris, though, Bambi bought hormones casually over-the-counter, "like salt and pepper at the grocery." "It was much freer then," but stakes were high, she said. Sisters were jailed, raped, driven into sex work. One comrade died after botched gender reassignment surgery in Casablanca. "There was only Casablanca," she emphasized, with one doctor performing the high-risk surgeries. Bambi waited cautiously until her best friends, Coccinelle and April Ashley, had safely undergone procedures from the late 50s before doing the same herself. Each night required extraordinary courage. Post-war Paris was scarred, haunted. The Carrousel wasn't mere entertainment — but a fingers' up to the past in heels and eyeliner. "There was this after-the-war feeling — people wanted to have fun," Bambi recalled. With no television, the cabarets were packed every night. "You could feel it — people demanded to laugh, to enjoy themselves, to be happy. They wanted to live again … to forget the miseries of the war." In 1974, sensing a shift, Bambi quietly stepped away from celebrity, unwilling to become "an aging showgirl." Swiftly obtaining legal female identity in Algeria, she became a respected teacher and Sorbonne scholar, hiding her dazzling past beneath Marcel Proust and careful anonymity for decades. 'I never wore a mask' Given what she's witnessed, or because of it, she's remarkably serene about recent controversies around gender. This transgender pioneer feels wokeism has moved too quickly, fueling a backlash. She sees U.S. PresidentDonald Trumpas part of "aglobal reactionagainst wokeism… families aren't ready… we need to pause and breathe a little before moving forward again." Inclusive pronouns and language "complicate the language," she insists. Asked about Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling's anti-transstance, her response is calmly dismissive: "Her opinion counts no more than a baker's or a cleaning lady's." Bambi has outlived her Carrousel sisters — April Ashley, Capucine, and Coccinelle. Still elegant, she stands quietly proud. When she first stepped onstage, the world lacked the language to describe her. She danced anyway. Now, words exist. Rights exist. Movements exist. And Bambi, still standing serenely, quietly reaffirms her truth: "I never wore a mask," she says softly, but firmly. "Except when I was a boy."

Before the word ‘transgender’ existed, there was Bambi, the dazzling Parisian icon

Before the word 'transgender' existed, there was Bambi, the dazzling Parisian icon PARIS (AP) — The moment that changed queer histor...
'Scrubs' Reboot Gets Exciting Casting Update With Original ActorNew Foto - 'Scrubs' Reboot Gets Exciting Casting Update With Original Actor

An originalScrubsactor is scrubbing in for the reboot currently in development at ABC from 20th Television. Zach Braff, who starred as John "J.D." in the original series, is reportedly going to reprise the role, sources toldVarietyandDeadline. Sources noted that there were apparently some hurdles in the negotiation process as Braff requested to film in Los Angeles instead of Vancouver. When the reboot was first announced to be in early development back in December, it was revealed that original series creatorBill Lawrencewould serve as executive producer (not showrunner). This is the first original cast member to be attached to the reboot of the medical sitcom that premiered in 2001 on NBC and ran for seven seasons, before getting cancelled and renewed for a final eighth season by ABC. It then scored a ninth season calledScrubs: Med School, with onlyJohn C. McGinleyandDonald Faisonreturning as series regulars for the final season, as Braff appeared as a guest star. It's unclear if any other Sacred Heart Hospital employees will sign on, as the cast also includedSarah Chalke,Judy Reyes,Ken JenkinsandNeil Flynn. While aScrubsreboot was in discussion for years, it was only recently that Lawrence's deal with Warner Bros. Television allowed him to work with his former studio partners on the sitcom. No timeline has been announced as his hands are quite full producing Apple TV hit comedies likeShrinking,Ted LassoandBad Monkey. He previously toldDeadlinethat his vision would be a "hybrid between a revival, revisiting original characters a decade and a half after the original series ended its run, and a reboot, revamping the original concept with new characters as the series is set to introduce new surgical interns." A filming location has also yet to be announced. Related: 'Scrubs' Star is 'Unrecognizable' in New 'Deeply Concerning' Red Carpet Photos

'Scrubs' Reboot Gets Exciting Casting Update With Original Actor

'Scrubs' Reboot Gets Exciting Casting Update With Original Actor An originalScrubsactor is scrubbing in for the reboot currently in ...

 

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