Entertainment
‘The View’ breaks silence on Jimmy Kimmel’s suspension
Since the suspension of Jimmy Kimmel over slain Charlie Kirk’s killer remarks, many stars in Hollywood have spoken out. Now, The View is sharing its protest.
Whoopi Goldberg, one of the show’s co-hosts, said in the show on Monday, “Did y’all really think we weren’t going to talk about Jimmy… have you watched the show over the last 29 seasons? No one silences us.”
She continues, “When the news broke last week about Jimmy Kimmel’s suspension, we took a breath to see if Jimmy was going to say anything about it first.”
“You cannot like a show and it can go off the air. Someone can say something they shouldn’t and get taken off the air. But the government cannot apply pressure to force someone to be silenced.”
Alyssa Farah Griffin also chimed in: “The First Amendment is the first for a reason, because you need to be able to hold those in power accountable.”
In the end, Whoopi concludes, “We talk about freedom of speech a lot because we are always in somebody’s mess because somebody has decided that we have said something that’s offensive.”
“But we fight for everybody’s right to have freedom of speech because it means my speech is free, it means your speech is free.”
The hosts of The View’s remarks on Jimmy’s suspension come after speculation among fans whether ABC instructed them to be silent on the matter, as their show also airs on the network.
Entertainment
Jimmy Kimmel remembers Cleto Escobedo III, leader of in-house band and childhood friend
Jimmy Kimmel announced Cleto Escobedo III, his longtime friend and bandleader of “Jimmy Kimmel Live!,” has died at 59. Escobedo has been with the show since it premiered in 2003, and he and Kimmel were friends since childhood.
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Entertainment
Queen Camilla hosts reception at Clarence House
Queen Camilla hosted a reception at Clarence House to celebrate the Booker Prize 2025.
Palace released a video of Queen Camilla on social media handles saying “Celebrating The Booker Prize 2025.”
The Queen hosted the reception for this year’s shortlisted authors, judges and supporters of the prize. “Congratulations to 2025 winner, David Szalay.”
David Szalay won the Booker Prize 2025 for his sixth work of fiction, Flesh, becoming the first Hungarian-British author to win the award
Flesh by David Szalay was named the winner of the Booker Prize 2025 at a ceremony in London on Monday, 10 November.
Szalay receives £50,000 and a trophy, which was presented to him by last year’s winner, Samantha Harvey.
Flesh was selected as the winning book by the 2025 judging panel, chaired by 1993 Booker Prize winner Roddy Doyle, the first Booker Prize winner to chair a Booker judging panel.
This year’s judging panel included Sarah Jessica Parker, Ayọ̀bámi Adébáyọ̀, Kiley Reid, and Chris Power.
They considered 153 books and were looking for the best work of long-form fiction by writers of any nationality, written in English and published in the UK and/or Ireland between 1 October 2024 and 30 September 2025.
The Booker Prize is the leading literary award in the English-speaking world and has celebrated world-class talent for over 55 years.
Entertainment
People can’t tell AI-generated music from real thing anymore, survey shows
It’s become nearly impossible for people to tell the difference between music generated by artificial intelligence and that created by humans, according to a survey released Wednesday.
The polling firm Ipsos asked 9,000 people to listen to two clips of AI-generated music and one of human-made music in a survey conducted for France-based streaming platform Deezer.
“Ninety-seven percent could not distinguish between music entirely generated by AI and human-created music,” said Deezer in a statement.
The survey was conducted between October 6 and 10 in eight countries: Brazil, Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Japan, the Netherlands and the United States.
Deezer said more than half of the respondents felt uncomfortable at not being able to tell the difference.
Pollsters also asked broader questions about the impact of AI, with 51 percent saying the technology would lead to more low-quality music on streaming platforms and almost two-thirds believing it will lead to a loss of creativity.
“The survey results clearly show that people care about music and want to know if they’re listening to AI or human made tracks or not,” Deezer CEO Alexis Lanternier said in a statement.
Deezer said there’s not only been a surge in AI-generated content being uploaded to its platform, but it’s attracting listeners as well.
In January, one in 10 of the tracks streamed each day were completely AI-generated. Ten months later, that percentage has climbed to over one in three, or nearly 40,000 per day.
Eighty percent of survey respondents wanted fully AI-generated music clearly labelled for listeners.
Deezer is the only major music-streaming platform that systematically labels completely AI-generated content for users.
The issue gained prominence in June when a band called The Velvet Sundown suddenly went viral on Spotify and only confirmed the following month that it was in fact AI-generated content.
The AI group’s most popular song has been streamed more than three million times.
In response, Spotify said it would encourage artists and publishers to sign up to a voluntary industry code to disclose AI use in music production.
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