Category Archives: general

Tracking the Early Vote in New York, New Jersey and Virginia

Here is the age breakdown of voters in New York City, along with the partisanship of voters in New Jersey and Virginia who have cast ballots so far.

**New York City: Voter Age Breakdown**

[Insert detailed age breakdown data here—charts, percentages, or descriptive statistics]

**New Jersey and Virginia: Voter Partisanship**

[Insert data on the partisanship of voters—such as percentages of Democratic, Republican, and Independent voters—in both New Jersey and Virginia]

This information provides valuable insights into the demographics and political affiliations of early voters in these key states. Stay tuned for more updates as additional data becomes available.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/31/upshot/early-voters-2025-election.html

Nick Aldis to make a shocking announcement that might affect Drew McIntyre? Exploring SmackDown possibility

Drew McIntyre is set to face Cody Rhodes tomorrow at Saturday Night’s Main Event XLI.

The two will compete for the Undisputed WWE Championship in what promises to be an exciting matchup.

Fans can look forward to an intense battle as both superstars vie for the prestigious title.
https://www.sportskeeda.com/wwe/nick-aldis-make-shocking-announcement-might-affect-drew-mcintyre-exploring-smackdown-possibility

Karrion Kross reacts to WWE seemingly stealing his gimmick

Former WWE Superstar Karrion Kross recently opened up about his experience with the company, specifically addressing concerns over the potential appropriation of his gimmick.

In a candid discussion, Kross shared his thoughts on WWE seemingly adopting elements of his character without proper acknowledgment. This revelation has sparked conversations among fans and industry insiders alike, highlighting the complexities of creative ownership in professional wrestling.

Karrion Kross’s perspective sheds light on the challenges wrestlers face when their unique personas become entangled with corporate interests. As the dialogue continues, many are eager to see how WWE and its talent navigate these creative boundaries moving forward.
https://www.sportskeeda.com/wwe/news-karrion-kross-reacts-wwe-seemingly-stealing-gimmick

‘Meth Busters’: CBP officers in Eagle Pass halt massive drug shipment bound for United States

U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers in Eagle Pass, Texas, intercepted nearly 90 pounds of liquid methamphetamine this week, uncovering the narcotics hidden inside plastic bottles during a vehicle inspection, officials said.

The discovery was made on October 29 at the Camino Real International Bridge when officers referred a 2008 Chevrolet Suburban for secondary inspection. A closer search revealed five plastic bottles containing 88.8 pounds of methamphetamine with an estimated street value of $816,556, CBP said in a statement.

“This significant seizure was possible because of the continued vigilance and alertness our CBP officers put forth on a daily basis,” said Port Director Pete Beattie of the Eagle Pass Port of Entry.

CBP officers seized the narcotics, and Homeland Security Investigations special agents have opened a federal inquiry.

On social media, the agency struck a lighter note by posting photos of the evidence with the caption:
“When there’s something strange, in a vehicle, who you gonna call? Meth Busters!”

The pun-filled post quickly drew attention online, but officials emphasized the serious stakes behind the operation. They called the seizure part of an intensified effort to block synthetic drugs at South Texas ports of entry.

Liquid-form meth shipments have become increasingly common along the border, according to CBP data. The agency has reported several similar interdictions in recent months, including seizures at Laredo, Brownsville, and Pharr, involving narcotics concealed in vehicle compartments and household containers.

CBP said it will continue heightened inspections along the Eagle Pass corridor, where officers process thousands of commercial and passenger vehicles daily.

Stay tuned for more updates on CBP’s ongoing efforts to secure the border and prevent drug trafficking.
https://www.foxnews.com/us/meth-busters-cbp-officers-eagle-pass-halt-massive-drug-shipment-bound-united-states

Rubio dismisses report that US is poised to strike Venezuela as ‘fake story’

Secretary of State Marco Rubio pushed back on a report Friday that the Trump administration had decided to strike military installations in Venezuela.

“Your ‘sources’ claiming to have ‘knowledge of the situation’ tricked you into writing a fake story,” Rubio posted on social platform X.

He was responding to a Miami Herald report that said…
https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/5584001-rubio-trump-deny-impending-venezuela-strikes/

A Great Story, ‘Auction’ Is Weakened by the Director’s Dithering

Pascal Bonitzer’s “Auction” boasts a compelling story, but the movie itself feels inconsistent and often arbitrary. Based on a script inspired by true events, Mr. Bonitzer dutifully outlines a basic trajectory, yet he adds narrative detours that feel unnecessary or, worse, clichéd.

Granted, a “feel good” movie often leans on predictability—it’s no spoiler to say that a happy ending is de rigueur for the genre. However, why the director chose to linger on these elements to such an extent remains puzzling. This is especially surprising considering Mr. Bonitzer’s extensive experience. “Auction” marks his 12th film, and prior to this, he contributed to over 48 screenplays for renowned directors such as Jacques Rivette, André Téchiné, and Anne Fontaine. He began his career as a critic at the famed French film journal, *Cahiers du Cinéma*, where his writing was notably erudite.

If you appreciate serious, intense commentary about “the atony of commentary,” Mr. Bonitzer might be the perfect cinematic guide. But “Auction” is not that dense or obscure. Despite some well-deserved jabs at the art market and its beneficiaries, the film remains light on its feet.

The opening scene is nearly brilliant: a rapacious connoisseur working for a major auction house, André Masson (Alex Lutz), accompanied by his new intern, Aurore (a stern and steely Louise Chevillotte), visits the home of a wealthy dowager (Marisa Borini). The elderly woman is eager to sell a significant work of art, but when she begins to pontificate about family, money, and minorities, what starts as a business transaction over tea morphs into a high farce. The result is discomfiting comedy of a high order.

Mr. Bonitzer’s script, co-written with Ilana Lolic, retains some of its wit, but “Auction” loses momentum as it slides into soap opera territory—or rather, a patchwork of soap operas. The push and pull between human desires is an evergreen topic, but the narrative Mr. Bonitzer and Ms. Lolic have crafted succumbs to overly cutesy tactics that feel less soft-hearted and more soft-headed.

For all its Frenchness, “Auction” unfolds with the dramatic subtlety of a by-the-numbers American romcom. Still, the story is worth recounting.

Through a friendly lawyer, Suzanne Egerman (Nora Hamzawi), and his ex-wife, Bertina (an always welcome Léa Drucker), Masson learns about a potentially valuable painting hidden in faraway Mulhouse, an industrial town out in the sticks. The canvas is found in the home of a single mother (Laurence Côte) and her 30-something son, Martin (Arcadi Radeff). When not working at the local chemical factory, Martin hangs out with his two ne’er-do-well friends, Paco (Matthieu Lucci) and Kamel (Ilies Kadri). They are rough but amicable, if a bit awkward around women.

The painting Martin has haphazardly hung in his bedroom is believed by Suzanne to be *Wilted Sunflowers (Autumn Sun II)* (1914), a work by Austrian expressionist Egon Schiele. The piece was stolen by the Nazis and presumed lost. When Masson and his team confirm its authenticity, they contact the descendants of the family from whom it was stolen.

Bob Wahlberg (Doug Rand) is astonished and grateful for the discovery. So much so, he proposes that Martin receive a 10 percent cut of the proceeds once the artwork goes up for auction.

Given the historical, artistic, and cultural significance fueling this tale of redemption, one might expect the film to possess more depth or flair. However, Mr. Bonitzer and Ms. Lolic often spend their time either connecting narrative dots to blandly reassuring effect or sprinkling factoids about the characters that feel neither as revealing nor as shocking as intended.

“Auction” attempts high drama, a touch of class analysis, and a dash of gender politics, but ultimately boils down to a likable, easily digestible entertainment. It’s better suited as inflight viewing than a night out on the town.
https://www.nysun.com/article/a-great-story-auction-is-weakened-by-the-directors-dithering

Afternoon Briefing: Homewood ‘cemetery’ evokes ghosts of businesses past

Good afternoon, Chicago.

A 56-year-old widower, single parent, and sole caretaker for four U.S. citizen children had secured an immigration court date with a strong case for being granted bail, according to his attorney. Despite entering the U.S. legally and obtaining a work permit, a lawsuit alleges that immigration agents forced the man to sign a voluntary departure waiver while he was held in allegedly inhumane conditions at the west suburban Broadview holding facility. Later that same day, he was reportedly “on the other side of the border.”

The man’s case is detailed in a sweeping class-action lawsuit filed today against immigration officials. The lawsuit accuses the federal holding facility in Broadview of dirty and unsafe conditions, where arrestees are being warehoused for days on end.

Here’s what else is happening today in Chicago:

### Immigration and Legal News
– Immigration agents at the Broadview facility face allegations over the treatment of detainees, including unsafe and unsanitary conditions.

### Local Highlights
– The deceased? Iconic local businesses such as Mitchell’s Ice Cream, Al’s Deli, and many others—from years past—are remembered in a reflective story. [Read more here.]

### Top News Stories
– Border Patrol agents used a taser and arrested a man following a crash in the O’Hare parking lot.
– Today in Chicago history: 68 people were killed when an American Eagle plane bound for O’Hare crashed in an Indiana field.
– Hospitals have been pulling back on gender-affirming care for minors under the Trump administration, leaving transgender youth and their families with shrinking options.

Since President Donald Trump took office earlier this year, hospital systems across the Chicago area have been reducing gender-affirming healthcare services for children. This has left many transgender youth searching for care throughout the state and their parents facing uncertainty and fear. [Read more here.]

### Top Business Stories
– Instacart, DoorDash, and other companies are now offering discounts to SNAP recipients.
– The FDA has announced a recall of a blood pressure medicine found to be contaminated with a cancer-causing chemical.
– 5 things to watch in the Chicago Bears-Cincinnati Bengals game along with our Week 9 predictions.

The Chicago Bears (4-3) will face Ja’Marr Chase just two days after Halloween. Despite the timing, the Bears will maintain a healthy respect for the star wideout as they take on the Cincinnati Bengals (3-5) this Sunday. [Read more here.]

### Top Sports Stories
– Column: Billy Donovan’s “gut” rotation decisions are working for a deep and selfless Chicago Bulls team.
– Hugo Cuypers and the Chicago Fire prepare for another win-or-go-home playoff game this Saturday, saying, “We’ve done this before.”
– Theater Review: In *Little Bear Ridge Road* on Broadway, Laurie Metcalf delivers a powerful portrayal of a woman alone on her couch.

In Samuel D. Hunter’s poignant play *Little Bear Ridge Road*, the remarkable Laurie Metcalf plays Sarah, a gruff, determined woman from red-state America, reflecting the playwright’s native Idaho. Sarah despises dependency with every fiber of her being. [Read more here.]

### More Eat. Watch. Do. Stories
– Playboi Carti’s “Antagonist 2.0” concert in Chicago was a nonstop night of music.
– Gayle King may be stepping down as host of *CBS Mornings* next year.

### National and World News
– Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has ordered the military to detail dozens of attorneys to the Justice Department for temporary assignments in Memphis and near the U.S.-Mexico border. These assignments could run through next fall, according to a memo reviewed by The Associated Press. [Read more here.]

For the latest breaking news in Chicago, visit [chicagotribune.com/latest-headlines](https://www.chicagotribune.com/latest-headlines) and sign up to get alerts on all your devices.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/10/31/afternoon-briefing-homewood-cemetery-evokes-ghosts-of-businesses-past/

New to HBO Max in November 2025

By October 31, 2025, at 3:17 PM ET, HBO Max is set to kick off November 2025 with one of its most diverse monthly lineups to date. The streaming platform offers a dynamic mix of high-profile films, original series, and returning favorites spanning eerie thrillers to lighthearted family features.

Leading the way is Ari Aster’s “Eddington,” debuting on November 14, according to Newsweek. The A24 film stars Joaquin Phoenix as a small-town sheriff caught in a bitter feud with the mayor, played by Pedro Pascal. Set during the COVID era, the story blends slow-burning tension with sharp humor and the distinct discomfort Aster is known for.

A24 continues its momentum with “Materialists,” a sleek romantic comedy premiering November 7. Dakota Johnson stars as a New York City matchmaker torn between her ideal client, portrayed by Chris Evans, and her unpredictable ex, played by Pedro Pascal. With stylish cinematography and sharp dialogue, the film captures the chaos of love and ambition in modern Manhattan.

HBO Max’s original programming also steps into the spotlight this November. “The Seduction,” premiering November 14, delivers a tense psychological drama, while “I Love LA,” launching November 2, offers a witty look at life and relationships in the City of Angels.

For families and Harry Potter enthusiasts, “Harry Potter: Wizards of Baking, Season Two” returns on November 3, hosted once again by the Weasley twins. Contestants will cast spells in the kitchen to create magical desserts inspired by the Wizarding World.

Rounding out the month, “Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes” arrives November 13, giving viewers the chance to complete the modern Apes trilogy already available on HBO Max. The platform’s November lineup also includes several Food Network staples, seasonal movies, and holiday specials to carry viewers straight into December.

### What’s New on HBO Max in November 2025

#### November 1
– Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter
– A Christmas Carol (1938)
– A Christmas Story
– A United Kingdom
– A Woman’s Face
– Alex Cross (2012)
– Backfire
– Beasts of the Southern Wild
– Betrayed (1954)
– Brick Mansions
– Crime Wave
– Dangerous Liaisons
– Deception (1946)
– Desperate Destination Tokyo
– Dillinger
– Each Dawn I Die
– Elf
– Four Christmases
– Happy Feet
– Hellboy (2004)
– House of 1000 Corpses
– I Was a Communist for the F. B. I.
– Ice Age: Continental Drift
– Invisible Stripes
– Johnny Angel
– Kingsman: The Golden Circle
– Marine Raiders
– Marked Woman
– Monster-In-Law
– Murder, My Sweet
– National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation
– Nocturne
– Norm of the North
– Objective, Burma!
– Out of the Fog
– Out of the Past
– Red Light
– Red Riding Hood
– Roadbloack Screaming Eagles
– Sucker Punch
– The Bride of Frankenstein
– The Devil’s Rejects
– The Devil’s Rejects: Director’s Cut
– The Kitchen, Season Thirty-Nine (Food Network)
– The Locket
– The Man I Love
– The Mask of Dimitrios
– The Polar Express
– The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946)
– The Public Enemy
– The Roaring Twenties
– The Set-Up
– The Town
– The Unsuspected
– The Wolfman
– The Women (1939)
– They Live by Night
– They Were Expendable
– Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo
– This Woman Is Dangerous
– Where Danger Lives
– Dawn of the Planet of the Apes
– I Love LA, Season One (HBO Original)
– Paranormal Caught on Camera, Season Nine (Travel)
– Past Lives (A24)
– Unlocked: Family Secrets, Season One (OWN)

#### November 3
– Barney’s World, Season One E (Cartoon Network)
– Harry Potter: Wizards of Baking, Season Two (Food Network)
– I Am Curious Johnny
– In the Eye of the Storm, Season Three (Discovery)
– Wardens of the North, Season Five (Animal Planet)

#### November 4
– Holiday Baking Championship, Season Twelve (Food Network)
– Supermarket Stakeout, Season Seven (Food Network)
– Tom and Jerry Gokko Shorts, Season One A

#### November 5
– The LEGO Ninjago Movie
– The Plot Thickens, Season Six (TCM)
– Who Hired the Hitman?, Season One (ID)

#### November 6
– A Man Called Otto
– Alex vs ARod (HBO Original)
– Beat Bobby Flay, Season Thirty-Nine (Food Network)
– Expedition Files, Season Three (Discovery)
– Expedition Unknown, Season Sixteen (Discovery)
– Tournament of Champions: All-Star Christmas, Season One (Food Network)

#### November 7
– Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives, Season Fifty-Two (Food Network)
– Let’s Go Bananas, Season One B (Cartoon Network)
– Maine Cabin Masters, Season Eleven (Magnolia Network)
– Materialists (A24)
– The Vallecas Files (HBO Original)

#### November 8
– Gold Rush, Season Sixteen (Discovery)

#### November 9
– Build for Off-Road, Season Two (Motortrend)

#### November 10
– Bad Sports: When Fans Turn Violent for The Whole Story with Anderson Cooper (CNN Original)
– Sweet Empire: Winter Wars, Season One (Food Network)

#### November 12
– Beat Bobby Flay, Season Forty-One (Food Network)
– Hoarding for the Holidays, Season One (HGTV)
– Homestead Rescue, Season Thirteen (Discovery)

#### November 13
– Ângela Diniz: Murdered and Convicted, Season One (HBO Original)
– Body Cam, Season Ten (ID)
– Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes (20th Century Studios)

#### November 14
– Eddington (A24)
– One to One: John & Yoko (HBO Original)
– Silly Sundays, Season One D (Cartoon Network)
– The Seduction (HBO Original)

#### November 15
– The Last Woodsmen, Season Two (Discovery)

#### November 18
– Gingerbread Land: The Biggest Little Holiday Competition, Season One (Magnolia Network)
– Thoughts & Prayers (HBO Original)

#### November 20
– Missing (2023)
– Work on the Wild Side, Season One (Animal Planet)

#### November 21
– Teen Titans Go!, Season Nine E (Cartoon Network)

#### November 22
– Belle Collective, Season Six (OWN)
– Bugs Bunny Builders, Season Two H (Cartoon Network)

#### November 26
– Flight Risk (Lionsgate)

#### November 28
– Krypto Saves the Day: Package Pandemonium (DCU)
– Obsession: The Murder of a Beauty Queen (HBO Original)

#### November 30
– Fake Yourself a Merry Little Christmas (OWN)

From family-friendly fare and nostalgic favorites to fresh originals and award-winning films, HBO Max’s November 2025 lineup promises something for every viewer. Don’t miss out on these exciting premieres and returning series throughout the month!
https://clutchpoints.com/entertainment/new-to-hbo-max-in-november-2025

The Man Who Invented AGI

In the summer of 1956, a group of academics—now we’d call them computer scientists, but there was no such thing then—met on the Dartmouth College campus in New Hampshire to discuss how to make machines think like humans. One of them, John McCarthy, coined the term “artificial intelligence.” This legendary meeting and the naming of a new field is well known.

In this century, a variation of the term has stepped to the forefront: artificial general intelligence, or AGI—the stage at which computers can match or surpass human intelligence. AGI was the driver of this week’s headlines: a deal between OpenAI and Microsoft that hinged on what happens if OpenAI achieves it; massive capital expenditures from Meta, Google, and Microsoft to pursue it; and the thirst to achieve it helping Nvidia become a $5 trillion company.

US politicians have said if we don’t get it before China does, we’re cooked. Prognosticators say we might get it before the decade is out, and it will change everything.

The origin of that term, however, and how it was originally defined, is not so well-known. But there is a clear answer to that question. The person who first came up with the most important acronym of the 21st century so far—as well as a definition that is still pretty much the way we think of it today—is unfamiliar to just about everybody.

This is his story.

### Nano Nerd

In 1997, Mark Gubrud was obsessed with nanotechnology and its perils. He was a fanboy of Eric Drexler, who popularized the science of the very, very small. Gubrud began attending nanotech conferences. His particular concern was how that technology, and other cutting-edge science, could be developed as dangerous weapons of war.

“I was a grad student sitting in the sub-sub basement at the University of Maryland, listening to a huge sump pump come on and off very loudly, right behind my desk, and reading everything that I could,” he tells me on a Zoom call from the porch of a cabin in Colorado.

That same year, Gubrud submitted and presented a paper at the Fifth Foresight Conference on Molecular Nanotechnology, called **“Nanotechnology and International Security.”** He argued that breakthrough technologies will redefine international conflicts, making them potentially more catastrophic than nuclear war. He urged nations to “give up the warrior tradition.”

The new sciences he discussed included nanotechnology, of course, but also advanced AI—which he referred to as, yep, “artificial general intelligence.” It seems that no one had previously employed that phrase.

Later in the paper he defined it:
“By advanced artificial general intelligence, I mean AI systems that rival or surpass the human brain in complexity and speed, that can acquire, manipulate and reason with general knowledge, and that are usable in essentially any phase of industrial or military operations where a human intelligence would otherwise be needed.”

Drop the last clause and you have the definition of AGI that most people use today.

“I needed a word to distinguish the AI that I was talking about from the AI that people knew at the time, which was expert systems, and it was pretty clear that was not going to be the kind of general intelligence they were,” he explains.

The paper wasn’t circulated widely, and its impact was minimal.

### Real AI

Fast forward to the early 2000s, a time when AI Winter still chilled the field. Some perceptive researchers sensed a thaw.

In 1999, Ray Kurzweil predicted in his book *The Age of Spiritual Machines* that AI would be able to match human cognition by around 2030. This struck a chord with computer scientist Ben Goertzel, who began working with like-minded collaborator Cassio Pennachin to edit a book on approaches to AI that could be deployed for wide use—as opposed to using machine learning to address specific and bounded domains, like playing chess or coming up with medical diagnoses.

Kurzweil had referred to this more sweeping technology as “strong AI,” but that seemed fuzzy.

Goertzel toyed with calling it “real AI,” or maybe “synthetic intelligence.” Neither alternative enchanted the book’s contributors, so he invited them to bat around other ideas. The thread included future AI influencers like Shane Legg, Pei Wang, and Eliezer Yudkowsky (yep, the guy who would become the doomer-in-chief).

Legg, who then had a master’s degree and had worked with Goertzel, came up with the idea to add the word “general” to AI. As he puts it now:

“I said in an email, ‘Ben, don’t call it real AI—that’s a big screw you to the whole field. If you want to write about machines that have general intelligence, rather than specific things, maybe we should call it artificial general intelligence or AGI. It kind of rolls off the tongue.’”

Goertzel recalls that Wang suggested a different word order, proposing the pursuit should be called general artificial intelligence.

Goertzel noted that when pronounced out loud the acronym GAI might introduce an unintended connotation. “Not that there’s anything wrong with that,” he quickly adds.

They stuck with Legg’s AGI.

Wang, who now teaches at Temple University, says he only vaguely remembers the discussion but notes he might have suggested some alternatives. More importantly, he tells me that what those contributors dubbed AGI circa 2002 is “basically the original AI.”

The Dartmouth founders envisioned machines that would express intelligence with the same breadth as humans did. “We needed a new label because the only one had changed its common usage,” he says.

The die was cast.

“We all started using it in some online forums, this phrase AGI,” says Legg. (He didn’t always use it: “I never actually mentioned AGI in my PhD thesis, because I thought it would be too controversial,” he says.)

Goertzel’s book, *Artificial General Intelligence*, didn’t come out until mid-decade, but by then the term was taking off, with a journal and conference by that name.

### Reinventing the Term

Gubrud did manage to claim credit in naming AGI. In the mid-2000s, he called it to the attention of those popularizing the term.

As Legg puts it, “Somebody pops up out of the woodwork and says, ‘Oh, I came up with the term in ‘97,’ and we’re like, ‘Who the hell are you?’ And then sure enough, we looked it up, and he had a paper that had it. So [instead of inventing it] I kind of reinvented the term.”

(Legg, of course, is the cofounder and chief AGI scientist at Google’s DeepMind.)

Gubrud attended the second AGI conference in 2006 and met Goertzel briefly. He never met Legg, though over the years he occasionally interacted with him online, always in a friendly manner.

Gubrud understands that his own lack of follow-up edged him out of the picture.

“I will accept the credit for the first citation and give them credit for a lot of other work that I didn’t do, and maybe should have—but that wasn’t my focus,” he says. “My concern was the arms race. The whole point of writing that paper was to warn about that.”

Gubrud hasn’t been prolific in producing work after that—his career has been peripatetic, and he now spends a lot of time caring for his mother—but he has authored a number of papers arguing for a ban on autonomous killer robots and the like.

Gubrud can’t ignore the dissonance between his status and that of the lords of AGI.

“It’s taking over the world, worth literally trillions of dollars,” he says. “And I am a 66-year-old with a worthless PhD and no name and no money and no job.”

But Gubrud does have a legacy.

He gave a name to AGI. His definition still stands. And his warnings about its dangers are still worth listening to.

*This is an edition of Steven Levy’s Backchannel newsletter.*
Read previous newsletters [here](https://backchannel.com/).
https://www.wired.com/story/the-man-who-invented-agi/