42 Years Later The Terminator's AI Warning Hits Different
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-PztN-sTikk
#AI #scifi #artificialintelligence #dystopia #sciencefiction #TheTerminator #darksideofsynth

42 Years Later The Terminator's AI Warning Hits Different
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-PztN-sTikk
#AI #scifi #artificialintelligence #dystopia #sciencefiction #TheTerminator #darksideofsynth

Michael Biehn’s Iconic Role as Kyle Reese in The Terminator
📰 Original title: Studio Portraits of Michael Biehn as Sgt. Kyle Reese in “The Terminator” (1984)
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Michael Biehn's portrayal of Sgt. Kyle Reese in the 1984 film 'The Terminator' is widely recognized as one of the most emotionally compelling performances in science fiction cinema. While Arnold Schwarzenegger’s character represented the unstoppable mechanical force, Biehn brought a human, desperate intensity to the screen. His performance emphasized Reese's background as a survivor of a post-apocalyptic world, constantly alert to danger, which made the film's suspense and stakes feel grounded and real. Biehn’s lean and wiry build reinforced this authenticity, showing a character shaped by famine and guerrilla warfare rather than typical 1980s action hero bulk. The improvised civilian outfit he wore, including a stolen gray trench coat and Nike Vandals, became an iconic look of the era. Interestingly, Biehn nearly lost the role after his initial audition, where a Southern accent he used didn’t fit the character’s persona, but a second audition without the accent secured him the part. Despite other actors taking on the role in later installments, including Anton Yelchin and Jai Courtney, Biehn's interpretation remains the definitive portrayal for fans, combining intensity with a humanizing tenderness that brings depth to a character from a cold, dystopian future.
Michael Biehn’s Iconic Role as Kyle Reese in The Terminator
📰 Original title: Studio Portraits of Michael Biehn as Sgt. Kyle Reese in “The Terminator” (1984)
🤖 IA: It's not clickbait ✅
👥 Users: It's not clickbait ✅
View full AI summary: https://en.killbait.com/michael-biehn-s-iconic-role-as-kyle-reese-in-the-terminator.html?utm_source=mastodon_social&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=killbait.mastodon_social

Michael Biehn's portrayal of Sgt. Kyle Reese in the 1984 film 'The Terminator' is widely recognized as one of the most emotionally compelling performances in science fiction cinema. While Arnold Schwarzenegger’s character represented the unstoppable mechanical force, Biehn brought a human, desperate intensity to the screen. His performance emphasized Reese's background as a survivor of a post-apocalyptic world, constantly alert to danger, which made the film's suspense and stakes feel grounded and real. Biehn’s lean and wiry build reinforced this authenticity, showing a character shaped by famine and guerrilla warfare rather than typical 1980s action hero bulk. The improvised civilian outfit he wore, including a stolen gray trench coat and Nike Vandals, became an iconic look of the era. Interestingly, Biehn nearly lost the role after his initial audition, where a Southern accent he used didn’t fit the character’s persona, but a second audition without the accent secured him the part. Despite other actors taking on the role in later installments, including Anton Yelchin and Jai Courtney, Biehn's interpretation remains the definitive portrayal for fans, combining intensity with a humanizing tenderness that brings depth to a character from a cold, dystopian future.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Shares Photo With New Gym Buddy & It’s Terminator Himself
NBC News Top Stories | In Musk v. Altman case, judge warns lawyers that AI itself is not on trial by Shanshan Dong, Angela Yang
AI generated summary, Read the full article for complete information.
On the third day of Elon Musk’s lawsuit against OpenAI and its CEO Sam Altman, Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers intervened to keep the focus on Musk’s claim that Altman betrayed the nonprofit origins of the company for personal profit, while rejecting Musk’s broader warnings that AI could cause humanity’s extinction. Musk, testifying that he contributed only $38 million of his pledged $1 billion and that he gave Tesla cars to OpenAI staff, demanded $134 billion in damages from OpenAI and Microsoft, arguing that the firm violated its founding charter by turning a charity into a for‑profit enterprise. Altman’s team countered that Musk never fulfilled his financial commitment and left after being denied control, and Musk affirmed he uses other AIs to validate his own but does not develop weaponized AI. The four‑week trial could shape the future of OpenAI’s flagship model, ChatGPT, and the broader AI industry.
#ElonMusk #OpenAI #SamAltman #YvonneRogers #Microsoft #GregBrockman #IlyaSutskever #Tesla #xAI #TheTerminator # #YvonneGonzalezRogers
@randahl WASH DAY TOMORROW NUSSINK CLEAN YOUR MEDAL GIVE IT TO ME NOW
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Kyle Reese is interesting to me.
The opening scenes of The Terminator introduce a few very important themes. One: The future is a dreadful place full of death and destruction, and where humanity's sole goal of survival has a common opposition in the form of murderous machines. Two: Kyle Reese and The Terminator are both out of their element in the world of 1980s Los Angeles, both reasonably desperate, and both dangerous. Three: The Terminator looks a lot less uncomfortable than Reese. Reese is suffering physically and mentally; The Terminator is not. Reese is merely human.
There's a lot to be said for Linda Hamilton's Sarah Connor, and a lot that should be said for and about her. Her acting is excellent, her character arc interesting, and I like how she portrays a figured who rises to meet a challenge. Sometimes the most unexpected people will prove worthy of a position of importance. The story ultimately is about her, and I love that. She broke so many eggs just by being amazing.
But this is about Kyle Reese.
I showed my support worker this film, with very little prior context, continuing an informal project to fill out their missing cultural knowledge from a somewhat abusive and paradoxically sheltered childhood. (They really liked Casablanca and Network.) One thing that was interesting was their initial certainty that Kyle Reese was a villain, just like the Terminator was. Different, obviously, but similar in methods, and surely similar in intentions.
Kyle Reese is like a traumatized, cornered rat throughout the movie. Resourceful, tenacious, never cruel but always in fight or flight. He is plagued by flashbacks and nightmares very frequently.
Never cruel. Never vindictive. Sometimes even almost gentle, especially with dogs.
Always desperate, often a danger to others both out of a need to defend himself and a need to complete a mission of far more importance than any life except one.
He doesn't know nobody will listen to him. He does know he is not safe; he doesn't know how to become safe except by hiding, fighting and stealing for the few scraps of clothing, information and equipment he can get.
He doesn't know how to talk to a normal human being. He does know how to make a pipebomb.
He reminds me of myself.
Which is why I'm slowly lowering him into a boiling vat of estrogen to see what happens.