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Entertainment Jun 06, 2026

AI-Generated Film 'Dreams of Violets' Pioneers New Era of Filmmaking at Tribeca Festival

Iranian-British director Ash Koosha has created 'Dreams of Violets,' the first fully AI-generated l…
The Lead: AI Film Breakthrough at TribecaNext week, a groundbreaking 75-minute drama about the brutal crackdown in Iran on anti-government protesters will premiere at the Tribeca film festival in New York. Titled Dreams of Violets, this film represents a historic milestone as the first fully AI-generated live action feature accepted at a major film festival. Directed by Iranian-British filmmaker Ash Koosha, the project was completed in less than six months at a cost of under $2,000—dramatically less than traditional production methods would require.The Technical Breakthrough: AI as a Creative ToolEvery image and character in Dreams of Violets is AI-generated, with Koosha creating characters by describing their physical appearances using people he has known as references. The director explains that using AI was necessary for security reasons: "Because of the security issue, it would not be safe for the characters to even remotely resemble someone" in Iran. While the script wasn't AI-generated, Koosha used the chatbot Claude to improve language and structure his thoughts. The director emphasizes that AI allows filmmakers to "multiply your imagination until something hits the right spot," as they can change direction at any point without costly reshoots.The Financial Impact: Democratizing Film ProductionThe economic implications of AI filmmaking are profound. Koosha states that Dreams of Violets would be "100% impossible" to bring to screen traditionally, noting that "If you wanted to do it in CGI, it would cost millions." This dramatic cost reduction—under $2,000 versus potentially millions—removes significant barriers for independent filmmakers. The director also highlights how AI enables rapid production, allowing films to be made "at the speed of news itself," which would be impossible with traditional methods requiring years of development and financing.The Industry Transformation: Shifting Power in FilmmakingKoosha sees AI as a democratizing force in the film industry, potentially leveling the playing field between independent and studio filmmakers. "An indie film-maker mind is often a lot more fresh and creative than an industrial film-maker mind," he argues. "In my view most stories that are told with $100m should be told through the lens of an indie film-maker." This technological shift could create a "new space" separate from traditional filmmaking, allowing emerging talents to create compelling content without needing to prove themselves to established gatekeepers.The Future Outlook: AI's Expanding Role in CinemaThe film industry is beginning to grapple with AI's potential. While some directors like Steven Soderbergh and Gareth Edwards embrace AI as a "genius" tool, others like Guillermo del Toro reject it outright. Koosha himself takes a measured approach: "I'm not selling AI. I'm just trying to use a tool to tell a story." Looking ahead, he plans to create characters using actual people's faces, with actors potentially taking a share in the financial gain through licensing. As AI technology continues to evolve, we may see more filmmakers using it to create "impossible movies"—ambitious projects that would require budgets of "$300m" and "doesn't happen on this planet" through traditional means.
#Dreams of Violets #Ash Koosha #AI filmmaking
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Tech Jun 04, 2026

Seattle Poised to Implement Year-Long Datacenter Moratorium Amid Rising Tech Backlash

Seattle is set to become the largest US city to implement a one-year moratorium on new datacenter c…
The Lead: Tech Hub's Resistance to Data Expansion Seattle's city government is on the verge of passing a year-long ban on the construction of new datacenters, making it the largest city yet in the US to consider such a moratorium as nationwide backlash grows. Four companies sought to build five large datacenters in areas serviced by Seattle's public utility; if approved, they would have consumed approximately a third of the city's current daily demand for electricity. The Technical Breakthrough: Seattle's Regulatory Response On Wednesday, city council committees unanimously passed the moratorium and an accompanying resolution. A full council vote on both measures is expected on Tuesday, which activists see as a formality after weeks of engagement with city officials on the topic. Lawmakers cited the two measures as an effort to protect residents from rising utility costs and environmental hazards. They said they plan to spend the duration of the moratorium drafting regulations tailored to the AI industry's massive facilities. The Financial Impact: Energy Consumption and Economic Concerns The proposed datacenters would have consumed approximately a third of Seattle's current daily demand for electricity, raising significant concerns about utility costs and resource allocation. During a moratorium, officials may establish pollution standards, energy connection requirements and contract terms, labor standards, and other rules specific to datacenters. The moratorium and accompanying resolution enable Seattle's public utility to establish separate rates for new "large load" customers, a category that includes large datacenters. The Industry Impact: Tech's Own Backlash The swift response to the proposed datacenters represents a major rebuke in tech's own backyard. A hub for the technology sector, Seattle's metro area serves as the headquarters for Microsoft and Amazon, which have laid off thousands of local workers over the past year as they spend a projected $390bn on AI investments in 2026. Seattle's tech workers have shown up in large numbers to organize against the proposed datacenters, with many viewing AI as synonymous with job losses despite increased productivity. The Regional Implications: Washington State's Precedent Lawmakers and advocates hope Seattle's status as a tech city can encourage more jurisdictions to join the dozens of other local governments moving to regulate datacenters, which are bipartisanly unpopular. Debora Juarez, who chairs the committee overseeing Seattle's public utility, noted that the datacenters' water use could threaten local Indigenous groups' treaty and water rights, which spurred tribes to be among the first to organize against new datacenters. Seattle's tech and climate activists are also working with groups in other parts of Washington state, seeing a Seattle win against datacenters as a replicable regional roadmap. The Future Outlook: Regulatory Uncertainty for AI Infrastructure Seattle mayor Katie Wilson indicated that the pause would allow the city to determine whether datacenters are a "good use of urban land" and potentially draft public benefit requirements, such as requisite investments in affordable housing and transit projects, in exchange for approval. Activists intentionally favored a year-long moratorium over a full-out ban because the former strategy could assemble a larger coalition in its favor, while potentially delivering the same end result. If an AI market bubble bursts in the coming year, the facilities are unlikely to be built, regardless of the moratorium's outcome.
#Seattle #Datacenters #Amazon
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Entertainment Jun 03, 2026

Martin Scorsese's AI Investment Sparks Industry Backlash

Legendary director Martin Scorsese's investment in AI company Black Forest Labs and his use of AI f…
The Director's Digital PivotMartin Scorsese's announcement that he has invested in an AI company and uses the technology to create storyboards has triggered a backlash from fellow members of the film industry.The New York Times reported that Scorsese had been appointed in 2025 as a partner and adviser to Black Forest Labs, a German-based venture that specialises in text-to-image generative AI.Scorsese said in a statement to the New York Times: "I'm interested in the intersection of technology and storytelling, and seeing how that can push the bounds of creativity to create deeper and richer experiences for audiences. Remember, cinema is a young medium, only around 125 years old, so we have to be open to how it can evolve."He added: "For 70 years, I've been creating my own storyboards. There's always been this problem of how do you communicate what you see in your head to your cast and crew. There are some things you have to see and feel. Now with this tool, I can share what I'm visualising more clearly and efficiently to my creative team."The Artist's RebellionStoryboard and concept artists responded angrily, with Karla Ortiz, a concept artist on a string of Marvel films including Black Panther, Avengers: Endgame and Avengers: Infinity War saying on social media: "He throws every single storyboard artist he's ever worked with under the bus ... To use his legacy and power for this is just so disgusting."Samuel Deats, director of animated TV series Castlevania, added on social media: "There is absolutely no reason to need AI built on the stolen work of millions of artists to storyboard your vision, have some damn pride and respect your peers."The AI Wave in HollywoodWith this move, Scorsese has joined the swelling ranks of significant film industry figures who are endorsing and utilising AI. Steven Soderbergh used AI generated sequences in his recent documentary John Lennon: The Last Interview while Jurassic World Rebirth director Gareth Edwards described AI as "a fucking genius at helping you". Tribeca film festival co-founder Jane Rosenthal defended plans to screen Dreams of Violets, a fully AI-generated film about protesters in Iran, saying that "it's something that should be seen right now at this time".The Production RevolutionThere is no suggestion, however, that Scorsese is planning to use gen-AI images in a film, but rather as part of the preparatory process. In his statement he said: "I recently tested this out on a scene, and the ability to visualise and immediately share the storyboard was creatively freeing. During the preproduction process, time costs money, and this allowed us to move faster without sacrificing quality or craft."
#Martin Scorsese #Black Forest Labs #AI
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World Wide May 24, 2026

A Physical Archive of Infamy: The 3.5 Million Page Epstein Files Exhibition in Tribeca

A Tribeca gallery has transformed into a physical archive of 3.5 million pages of Epstein files, se…
The Physical Archive of a Financial EmpireA mile from the Manhattan jail where convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein was found dead in 2019, an unassuming Tribeca gallery at 101 Reade Street has been transformed into a physical testament to his crimes. The exhibition, titled "The Donald J Trump and Jeffrey Epstein Memorial Reading Room", was organized by the Institute for Primary Facts, a nonprofit focused on transparency and anti-corruption.The Scale of the DocumentationThe archive contains a staggering amount of evidence, with more than 3.5 million pages of law enforcement documents printed, bound, and stacked across 3,437 volumes. These documents line the walls from floor to ceiling, creating a "paper city" that forces visitors to confront the sheer volume of the cases connected to Epstein that never went to trial.3.5 million pages of released documents3,437 bound volumes displayed in the gallery24-hour livestream reading of the files by survivors and advocatesVisibility as a Tool for AccountabilityThe exhibition serves as a deliberate attempt to shed light on systemic failures. Organizers discovered that the Department of Justice had failed to properly redact survivor names, leaving them visible while hiding witness names. This error has turned the archive into a site of protest, aiming to drive public outrage to pressure Congress and the DOJ into action.Survivors like Lara Blume McGee describe the experience as emotionally overwhelming. "The silence was thick with memory," she said, noting that the physical presence of the documents validates the lives affected by the abuse. The gallery has become a place for survivors to feel seen, with visitors leaving flowers and handwritten notes of grief and anger.From Visibility to ConsequenceWhile the exhibition provides undeniable proof of the crimes and the victims' suffering, it also highlights the gap between documentation and justice. Organizers emphasize that visibility without consequence prolongs the wound. The goal is to ensure that the files are not quietly buried and to demand that the government finally investigates, prosecutes, and reforms the systems that allowed Epstein to operate with impunity.
#Jeffrey Epstein #New York #Sexual Trafficking
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Politics May 21, 2026

Streeting Proposes Equal Tax on Income and Capital Gains in Labour Leadership Bid

Wes Streeting, former health secretary and Labour leadership contender, has proposed equalizing tax…
The Lead: Streeting's Tax Equality ProposalFormer health secretary Wes Streeting has set out plans for a "wealth tax that works" by equalizing tax rates on income and capital gains in his pitch for the Labour leadership. Streeting argues the current system unfairly penalizes work while rewarding asset ownership, contributing to widening wealth and opportunity gaps in the UK.The Policy Details: Equalizing Tax RatesStreeting's proposal would mean capital gains tax rates mirror the three bands of income tax: 20%, 40%, and 45%. A person's capital gains tax band would be calculated by combining their income and profits from assets. He used the example of a woman in Lancashire who paid a higher rate of tax on her salary than her landlord paid for the growing value of her rented house."The system is penalising work. It's not fair and it's bad for our economy. We need a wealth tax that works. A pound made from simply owning assets should not be taxed less than a pound made from a hard day's work," Streeting told the BBC's Political Thinking podcast.The Financial Impact: Potential Revenue and Economic EffectsStreeting estimates his plan could raise up to £12bn a year. A 2024 report by the Centre for the Analysis of Taxation estimated that changing capital gains tax could raise £14bn. The proposal includes measures to protect genuine entrepreneurs with lower capital gains tax rates for those taking risks building companies.Streeting argues there is "a good pro-business, pro-growth, pro-productivity argument" in his proposals because the current system encourages investment in less productive businesses. He also called for closing loopholes that allow people to disguise income from work as capital gains, such as setting up personal service companies or taking pay in shares.The Political Context: Labour Leadership and Party UnityStreeting, who quit the Cabinet last week and called on Keir Starmer to stand down, warned in his resignation speech that Labour must change course or risk handing Reform UK power. He has the support of 81 MPs needed to launch a leadership challenge but decided not to proceed after learning that Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham had found a seat to stand in."It was clear that if we had been plunged straight into a leadership contest by me or for that matter, anyone else, I think it would have been seen as a deliberate attempt to get ahead of Andy Burnham's potential return," Streeting explained. "And if there's one thing that we need to do coming out of a change in leadership, it is to bring the tribes of the Labour party together."The Future Outlook: Potential Policy Shift and Party DirectionStreeting's tax proposal represents a significant potential shift in Labour's economic policy direction if he becomes party leader. By positioning himself as both "pro-worker" and "pro-entrepreneurialism," he attempts to bridge traditional divides within the party. His emphasis on fairness in taxation comes amid growing public concern about wealth inequality and the perceived advantages of capital over labor in the current tax system.The proposal will likely face scrutiny from both economic conservatives who may argue it could discourage investment and progressive elements who may push for more aggressive wealth taxation. Streeting's ability to unite different factions of the Labour party around his economic vision will be crucial in determining the party's direction and electoral prospects.
#Wes Streeting #Labour Party #Capital Gains Tax
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Business May 20, 2026

James Murdoch to Acquire Half of Vox Media in $300m Deal

James Murdoch, son of Rupert Murdoch, is set to acquire half of Vox Media, including New York magaz…
The Acquisition Deal James Murdoch, second son of publishing giant Rupert Murdoch, has agreed to acquire some of Vox Media’s assets, including New York magazine, in a deal believed to be worth around $300m. The 53-year-old publishing scion is acquiring the assets through his company, Lupa Systems, which has built up holdings in Art Basel, the traveling art fair business, and Tribeca Enterprises, the media and entertainment company co-founded by Robert De Niro, and the Indian streaming service Bodhi Tree Systems. Murdoch's Vision for Vox Media In the deal announced Wednesday, Murdoch will acquire half of Vox Media. In a twist of fate that will not be lost on media observers, the title was once owned by the elder Murdoch. The younger Murdoch told the New York Times that he was not looking to acquire a “daily news business” but wanted “longer-form, thoughtful journalism that can really speak to the culture”. “We want to create platforms where really amazing, talented people can come and do the best work of their lives,” he added. New York magazine and its online spin-offs The Cut, Vulture, Intelligencer, The Strategist, Curbed, and Grub Street, are well known for producing stories then optioned by Hollywood. The Financial Context The deal is the biggest acquisition for Murdoch since he and his family resolved a protracted dispute over future control of the family’s media holdings. As part of a settlement, James Murdoch and his siblings received about $1bn and control was handed over to the elder Lachlan Murdoch. The Future Outlook Certain Vox media properties, including Eater, Popsugar, SB Nation, The Dodo, and The Verge are not included in the transaction. In an official comment, Murdoch said the acquisition “aligns well with our existing holdings and investments and reflects both our interest in the forward edge of culture and our deep commitment to ambitious journalism and agenda-setting conversations”. The deal notably includes Vox’s podcast series, which reaches 58% of Americans monthly, according to Edison Research, including two out of three people between the ages of 18 and 54.
#James Murdoch #Vox Media #New York Magazine
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Entertainment May 18, 2026

Tribe Film Review: A Chilling Search for a Lost Sect

Dan Asma's debut feature film 'Tribe' is a compelling and unsettling search for a lost sect in the …
The Lead Dan Asma's superbly unsettling debut feature could well be California’s answer to The Blair Witch Project, as it follows a retired professor protagonist heading out into the Cuyamaca mountains and into the bowels of Mount Shasta on the trail of a lost sect. The Event Details Our intrepid academic Devin (Asma) has bitten off more than he can chew, judging by the riverbed of bloodshot veins disfiguring his face and failing mental faculties that have left him unable to drive his car out of the wilderness. Still able to access his past recordings, he jogs his own memories about what led him out there in the first place: ex-wife Kate (Nicole Jones) dropping off old camcorder excerpts of college hangouts with pal Charlie (Keaton Asma), who recently killed himself. The Data Analysis The film features a mix of found-footage, vlogs, Zoom calls, and Facetime, creating a sharp narrative line and nagging suspense. The movie's use of archival multimedia creates a sense of disintegration and malignancy. The Impact Analysis Asma bakes in a palpable sense of disintegration and malignancy into the very fabric of the film; our technological compulsion to constantly record, seek meaning and rewind back towards our origins feels like the real corrupting force here. The Prediction The film 'Tribe' is available on digital platforms from 25 May, and is expected to resonate with fans of unsettling and thought-provoking cinema.
#Tribe #Dan Asma #The Guardian
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Entertainment May 15, 2026

Photoville Festival Showcases Diverse Photography Amid Social Challenges

The 15th annual Photoville festival features over 90 photographic exhibits from around the world, b…
A Global Celebration of Visual Storytelling For the 15th installment of the annual Photoville festival, which sees more than 90 exhibits of photographic portfolios from all around the world, festival co-founder Sam Barzilay is thinking about apples – specifically the bizarre and at times cosmic-looking ones in the exhibit Old Apples. "I was so delighted it got selected," he enthusiastically shared. "It's the most whimsical thing we have, it's about apples and how there are no two apples in nature that are the same." Diverse Exhibitions Reflect Contemporary Society With exhibitions celebrating everything from cumbia music to the many ways people play soccer globally and even a fox sanctuary, Photoville may be more whimsical than ever, but the show also delivers a satisfying range of the hard-hitting reportage and documentation that have made prior years so vital. Collections this year run the gamut from turbocharged wildfires in the western US to how racial inequalities affect water access to the ways in which ICE has brought chaos to many American communities. Amplifying Marginalized Voices Through Photography In light of efforts by the Trump administration to erase the reality of trans people, Photoville offers two exhibits that attest to the enduring nature of trans lives. Special Girls, which draws from the mammoth archive of photographer Remsen Wolff, shows off 1990s-era photos of trans women, as well as gender nonconforming individuals such as crossdressers and drag queens. "The world has changed dramatically from then to today," said Barzilay, "this is a celebration of the fact that this is not a new idea." Documenting Human Resilience in Challenging Circumstances Lexi Parra's portfolio of work The Avillas documents what happens after the titular family's matriarch self-deports amid terrifying threats directed toward immigrants in the United States by the Trump administration. The photos make for an extremely difficult reminder of what happens when a beloved member of a family is torn away from it. "It's looking at their lives today as they try to figure out what to do next," said Barzilay. The extremely moving collection Puppies Behind Bars is the fruit of the nearly two years that photographers Ashley Gilbertson and Ava Pellor spent in the men's maximum security Green Haven, documenting the titular program wherein those incarcerated raise puppies to become service dogs. "The dogs humanize an environment that's devoid of all humanity," said Gilbertson. "It gives men who have committed grave crimes against society a chance to do something, it gives men a chance to show weakness and vulnerability to be emotionally open and playful, it gives them a sense of responsibility." Cultural Preservation Through Visual Documentation The Women's Grass by Blackfeet Nation photographer Whitney Snow documents that intricate web of cultural knowledge and practice that has grown around sweetgrass. Long used by the Blackfeet in both religious ceremonies and as medicine, the plant is the province of the tribe's women, who have passed down knowledge of sweetgrass from generation to generation. "Women are held to a very high regard in our society," Snow said. "To have plant knowledge like that is considered very prestigious." The Future of Documentary Photography Festivals As Photoville continues to grow in its 15th year, it represents a vital platform for photographers addressing pressing social issues while also celebrating the beauty and diversity of human experience. The festival's ability to balance whimsical, light-hearted exhibitions with profound social commentary demonstrates the power of photography to both comfort and challenge viewers. In an increasingly polarized world, events like Photoville provide spaces where diverse perspectives can be shared and understood, suggesting that documentary photography festivals will continue to play an essential role in fostering empathy and understanding in the years to come.
#Photoville #Photography Festival #Remsen Wolff
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Sports May 10, 2026

WNBA's 30th Season Marks Historic Growth as Team Valuations Soar to $850m

The WNBA celebrates its 30th season with unprecedented growth, as team valuations soar to $850m and…
The Transformational 30th SeasonThe WNBA's 30th season has opened with a blend of nostalgia and optimism as the New York Liberty wore special 'court origins' uniforms honoring their history as one of the league's eight founding members. Despite protracted negotiations between the players' union and the league that threatened to delay the season, a new collective bargaining agreement has been reached, providing players with significant pay rises. Commissioner Cathy Engelbert has described this season as a 'transformational moment' and the 'beginning of a new era' for the league.The Economic Boom in Women's BasketballThe WNBA is experiencing an economic boom that validates Engelbert's optimistic outlook. A $300m agreement was reached in March to sell the Connecticut Sun to Tilman Fertitta, owner of the NBA's Houston Rockets. The Sun, based in Connecticut since 2003 and owned by the Mohegan Tribe, will likely be renamed the Houston Comets, reclaiming the brand identity of an original franchise that dominated the early WNBA. This transaction symbolizes the WNBA's evolving fortunes and its leading position in the growing interest in North American women's professional sports.Franchise Valuations Soaring to Record HeightsThe numbers behind the WNBA's growth are staggering. The Houston Comets franchise, valued at $10m when it disbanded in 2008 (about $15m in 2026 money), is now reportedly being sold for a league-record fee, representing a 1,900% increase in value in under 20 years. In 2024, new expansion teams paid substantial fees: the Portland Fire reportedly paid $75m, while the Toronto Tempo, the first WNBA team in Canada, was charged $50m. Most remarkably, the expansion fee for the newest teams in Cleveland, Detroit, and Philadelphia is said to be $250m each, exceeding the NWSL-record $205m paid by Columbus for their 2028 entry.The Billion-Dollar Valkyries and Changing PerceptionsThe Golden State Valkyries, who share a principal owner and arena with the NBA's Golden State Warriors, have set attendance records and transformed the financial landscape of women's sports. After paying $50m to start in 2025, they promptly set the WNBA record for average attendance with 18,064 fans per game. The Valkyries have sold over 12,000 season tickets for the new campaign, leading to valuations that have made them the first billion-dollar franchise in women's sports. CNBC estimates their value at $1bn, while Sportico places them at $850m, with the New York Liberty valued at $600m as the second-most valuable team.Player Salaries and the New Economic RealityThe WNBA's hotly contested seven-year collective bargaining agreement, ratified in March, has dramatically increased player compensation. The minimum salary has risen from $66,079 in 2025 to $270,000, while the maximum salary has increased from about $250,000 to $1.4m. The salary cap per team has grown from $1.5m to $7m. These substantial increases reflect the league's growing revenue streams and the increased value placed on elite women's basketball talent.The Future Trajectory of Women's SportsSports business experts note that the WNBA's growth is changing the baseline perception of women's sport, signaling to investors, sponsors, and media partners that women's sports are credible, scalable and commercially viable. Katie Lebel, a sports business professor at the University of Guelph, explains that this represents a market correction, with investors finally pricing the future value of women's sport rather than judging it based on limited past revenues. While she doesn't foresee a WNBA team surpassing the value of top men's teams like the Dallas Cowboys in the near future, she acknowledges that in the right market with the right ownership, it's entirely possible given women's sports' high-growth phase and strong cultural tailwind.
#WNBA #Cathy Engelbert #Houston Comets
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