All posts tagged: Cares

‘Who cares!’ Anna Nicole Smith’s daughter Dannielynn Birkhead’s defiant response to remarks on hair transformation

‘Who cares!’ Anna Nicole Smith’s daughter Dannielynn Birkhead’s defiant response to remarks on hair transformation

Dannielynn Birkhead has inherited not only her late mother Anna Nicole Smith’s looks but also her confidence.  The 19-year-old stepped with a bold new look on Friday May 1 to the Barnstable Brown Gala in Louisville, Kentucky on the eve of the 2026 Kentucky Derby. Dannielynn joined her dad, Larry Birkhead, at the annual event. She rocked an edgy platinum wolf haircut with black tips and wore a floor-length black dress. The teenager spoke to press at the event, and responded to comments she had received about her hairstyle.  © Getty ImagesAnna Nicole Smith’s daughter Dannielynn responded to remarks about her hair Now at college, she is learning more and more about herself and her style, telling Access Hollywood: “I learned to just be myself and not let anything stop me.”  She added: “Someone’s like, ‘Hey, you actually can’t do your hair like that.’ Who cares! I’m doing it. I’m not gonna let someone dictate what I wanna do or who I wanna be, because life is short, and I think you should be who you …

Review: Who cares if Max & Helen’s is really a classic diner when the waffle’s this good

Review: Who cares if Max & Helen’s is really a classic diner when the waffle’s this good

You have probably heard of Max & Helen’s, the homage to classic diners opened in Larchmont six months ago by Phil Rosenthal, creator of “Everybody Loves Raymond” and host of “Somebody Feed Phil,” and culinary juggernaut Nancy Silverton. If the algorithms pick up even your slightest interest in L.A. restaurants, you know the early waits for tables reached an absurdist eight hours, and probably that Silverton resequenced the DNA of the breakfast waffle into something more closely resembling yeasted pastry. An immutable law of L.A. dining: Crowds subside, at least during less popular time slots. Weekday lunch waits these days seem to average about 45 minutes. Double or occasionally triple that on weekends. I’ve also been twice recently when the only lag between me and a seat was the beat a server needed to grab menus and say, “Right this way.” Long waits (up to eight hours) for tables in the Max & Helen’s dining room have become more manageable since the restaurant first opened six months ago. (Ron De Angelis/For The Times) On a …

“Rooster” and the wake-up call that nobody cares

“Rooster” and the wake-up call that nobody cares

Whenever I’ve needed a dopamine boost lately, two sources haven’t let me down. The first is author Tetyana Denford’s “Nobody Cares” videos on Instagram. The second is “Rooster,” Bill Lawrence’s latest HBO comedy. They’re entirely unrelated entities: Denford’s stitch reels fire up a second or two of some influencer’s sexist or body-shaming rhetoric before she cuts in with a brisk, “Nobody cares.” Then she shares a delightful, fact-based piece of trivia like, “Hey, did you know that rats giggle when you tickle them?” “I really like writing about non-toxic male friendships and relationships,” Lawrence said. “Maybe it’s a fantasy, and maybe it’s wish fulfillment.” Denford films these tidbits from her car or while taking a walk in nature. Sometimes she’s in bed. Denford’s mission is to interrupt the spinning vortex of negativity in which the world is caught by redirecting our energy instead of contributing one more fiery rebuttal to sexist idiocy. “Rooster,” on the other hand, is the story of an analog middle-aged man, Steve Carell’s Greg Russo, who has much in common with …

Anthropic Suddenly Cares Intensely About Intellectual Property After Realizing With Horror That It Accidentally Leaked Claude’s Source Code

Anthropic Suddenly Cares Intensely About Intellectual Property After Realizing With Horror That It Accidentally Leaked Claude’s Source Code

Sign up to see the future, today Can’t-miss innovations from the bleeding edge of science and tech The AI industry largely acts as if it’s above lowly copyright laws — unless, of course, those laws happen to be protecting its own interests. As the Wall Street Journal reports, Anthropic is scrambling to contain a leak of its Claude Code AI model’s source code by issuing a copyright takedown request for more than 8,000 copies of it — a gallingly ironic stance for the company to be taking, considering how it trained its models in the first place. The leak isn’t considered to be an outright disaster; no customer data was exposed, Anthropic says, nor were the internal mathematical “weights” that determine how the AI “learns” and which distinguish it from other models. But it did expose the techniques its engineers used to get its AI model to act as an autonomous agent, a form of digital infrastructure coders call a harness, and other tricks for making the AI operate as seamlessly as it does. Hence …

Zelenskyy asked if Trump cares about the future of Ukraine

Zelenskyy asked if Trump cares about the future of Ukraine

IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser. NASA Artemis II crew speaks on upcoming lunar launch 01:22 Officer hangs off truck before fatally shooting driver 00:41 Now Playing Zelenskyy asked if Trump cares about the future of Ukraine 01:25 UP NEXT DHS funding lapse becomes longest government shutdown 00:18 Zelenskyy describes Russian intelligence sharing with Iran 01:19 Sky turns bright red in Western Australia ahead of Tropical Cyclone Narelle 00:11 Search on for missing diaper-clad kangaroo in Wisconsin 01:09 Florida representative found guilty on ethics charges 00:21 Peter Alexander announces departure from NBC News 00:44 Tiger Woods seen walking out from Florida jail 00:52 Multiple votes not enough to pass DHS funding 00:37 House passes bill to fully fund DHS 00:39 Body of missing flight attendant believed to be found 00:20 Two students killed in Tennessee school bus crash 00:22 What’s next in the DHS funding fight? 01:42 Jane Fonda speaks at protest in D.C. 00:56 GOP Rep. McClain: ‘We will not accept’ Senate bill on DHS …

Who Cares If AI Brings Down the Economy?

Who Cares If AI Brings Down the Economy?

The tech billionaire Hemant Taneja admits that AI is a bubble. In fact, he welcomes it: “Bubbles are good,” Taneja, the CEO of General Catalyst, a venture-capital firm, told me in an email. If AI comes crashing down, it will lead to “some spectacular failures,” he said—companies will go under and people will lose their jobs—but that’s a price worth paying for “enduring companies that change the world forever.” His view is widespread in Silicon Valley. Some, such as Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, reject the notion that their companies are overvalued. But many of the wealthiest and most powerful people in tech are embracing the idea of an AI bubble. Jeff Bezos has argued that AI might be a “good” kind of bubble. Sam Altman has made similar comments, predicting that AI will be a “huge net win for the economy” even if “a phenomenal amount of money” is lost along the way. Indeed, a phenomenal amount of money is at stake: OpenAI, which is still far from profitable, is currently worth more than Toyota, …

At day cares in Minnesota, strangers are showing up at the door

At day cares in Minnesota, strangers are showing up at the door

This story was originally reported by Chabeli Carrazana of The 19th. Meet Chabeli and read more of their reporting on gender, politics and policy. They started showing up shortly after the now viral video was posted to YouTube, claiming Minnesota day cares run by Somali Americans were rife with fraud. The video showed no real proof of that claim and has since been widely debunked. They came anyway. The first time it happened, the day care received an anonymous call from a woman brusquely asking them to open the door. When Fay, the owner, went outside, a man was already there recording. “There’s nobody here,” he was saying into the camera on his phone. “Can I help you?” she asked him. The man said he was there because of Nick Shirley’s video. He wanted to see the children. “I’m not going to let you in,” she replied. “There are kids here.” “If you’re not lying,” he told her, “let me in.” Fay, whose name The 19th has changed to protect her identity over fears for …

11 Signs Someone Cares Less Than They Used To (But Hopes You Won’t Notice)

11 Signs Someone Cares Less Than They Used To (But Hopes You Won’t Notice)

Relationships are complicated. Whether it’s romantic or platonic, there may be times when someone will start to pull back. Usually, when someone starts to care less than they used to, they hope you won’t notice. This may be because they derive some benefit from maintaining the relationship. They may want to keep you around, but at arm’s length. In doing so, they will start to pull back. This person may stop texting back, or suddenly appear too busy to spend time with you. These will likely be small changes, since they do not want you to notice the change in their behavior. No matter how close you once were, when they pull back, you may not be able to tell. These are 11 signs someone cares less than they used to (but hopes you won’t notice) 1. They’re always busy Ivan S from Pexels via Canva Have you noticed someone in your life is suddenly busier than they once were? They used to have time to hang out, but now, they have something going on …