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Creator of AI actor Tilly Norwood says she received death threats over project

about 11 hours ago
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The creator of the AI actor Tilly Norwood has said she received death threats after a global backlash against the project, and said she developed it to “provoke thoughts and discussion” about the impact of AI in the entertainment world.Eline van der Velden caused anger and panic in Hollywood and beyond last year after she said talent agents had been interested in signing her creation.Prominent actors and acting unions immediately condemned the idea.In an interview with the Guardian, Van der Velden said she had been prepared for a backlash against the provocative idea of AI performers.However, she said she was “quite shocked by the vitriol” that followed.

“The death threats and the hate … my goodness, loads,” she said.“That’s still going, but much less now.I totally understand the reaction.I made her to represent the fear – and to represent this change in AI as an art piece, in a way.I was just like, this is the zeitgeist.

”Van der Velden, who founded the production company Particle6 and its AI arm, Xicoia, debuted Norwood in a short comedy sketch called AI Commissioner last autumn.Norwood has her own social media accounts, with 141,000 followers on Instagram.An immediate backlash came from actors including Melissa Barrera, Mara Wilson and Ralph Ineson.The actors’ unions Sag-Aftra and Equity also raised concerns.When asked about Norwood on a podcast, the actor Emily Blunt said: “Good lord, we’re screwed.

”Van der Velden said it had been a deliberately provocative exercise to shock the industry into understanding how far the technology had come.“You’re trying to provoke thoughts and discussion,” she said.“So yes, I wanted to make people sit up and go ‘holy moly’.So in a way I achieved my goal.”Van der Velden continues to be an advocate for the use of AI.

She said the technology “might actually be a blessing” for some actors who wish to avoid fame.She said avatars like Norwood could be controlled by real performers using motion capture technology.“I think it’s great for some actors, it might actually be a blessing that they can have a digital twin,” she said.“They don’t have to be a known name.For example, Tilly is famous.

I’m not.That’s wonderful.Fame is a horrible thing.”She has now featured Norwood in a new music video, with the lyrics written by an AI chatbot.Van der Velden controls Norwood’s avatar using motion capture techniques.

“I’m the actor behind Tilly and she could play multiple different characters,” she said.“It’s great.I don’t have to get plastic surgery.I don’t have to get Botox.I don’t even have to put makeup on.

And yet I can play all these different roles.“It’s very freeing as an actor.When I play Tilly, it’s all down to the craft.It’s like doing theatre, right? It’s all about the emotion that you convey … I think a lot of actors will enjoy it.”She said she had turned down offers for her creation to feature in real productions.

“A lot of people came to us with films,” she said,“We said no to all of them, because that was not the purpose for her to replace a real actor,However, we are creating a micro drama with her, writing a full series with her,”Van der Velden said Norwood had been created using publicly available tools, which meant it was impossible to say what or whose data had contributed to it,“Tilly’s not trained on anything specific,” she said.

“We just use general models.We just use the same publicly available models as everybody else has access to.“Any of these black boxes are trained on lots and lots of data.The reason I make peace with it is because I just think: OK, fine, it’s trained on all of our data, but I am allowed to use these tools to make art, creative stuff going forward.So I’m building on the whole of humanity that came before me.

“Hopefully [this is] opening the creative door for people to use these tools in a positive way.”
cultureSee all
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Jon Stewart on Donald Trump’s Iran lies: ‘Our Supreme Misleader’

Late-night hosts reacted to Donald Trump’s tweet celebrating Robert Mueller’s death, his ICE intervention at chaotic airports and his bluffing on “talks” with Iran.Jon Stewart hoped you had a happy Monday, because “the dizzying, chaotic carnival ride that is Donald Trump’s America continues to careen down Shitshow Hill”, he said on The Daily Show. “It’s fucking madness out there: TSA lines longer than your actual trip, escalating threats in the Middle East, planes driving into trucks.”In fact, “the only thing giving me joy is looking forward to this season of The Bachelorette”, he joked, referring to the doomed season with The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives star Taylor Frankie Paul, pulled three days before its premiere after video surfaced of a previously reported domestic violence incident from 2023. “I mean, they’ve got a strong Mormon woman

2 days ago
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Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? at 60: Elizabeth Taylor still crackles with feral energy

After a long day at work, we may not instinctively leap to films about toxic marriages and relationship breakdowns – but by God they can make good drama. Blue Valentine, The Squid and the Whale and A Separation are some of the great portraits of love turned septic. But perhaps greatest of all is Mike Nichols’ directorial debut – a sizzling adaptation of Edward Albee’s legendary Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, which arrived in 1966, four years after the play, and helped cement it in the zeitgeist.The film was nominated for every eligible Academy award and won five, including best actress for Elizabeth Taylor, who delivers a searing performance as the ferocious yet vulnerable Martha. It’s lost none of its gut-busting charge today and her brilliantly performed experience still crackles with emotional electricity

2 days ago
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Punk masks, Walkmans and Choppers: Museum of Youth Culture to open in London

In the basement of a new-build housing block in Camden, the ventilation system is working flat out. The fans whir like a chainsaw orchestra bouncing around the concrete room as they attempt to deal with a slight damp problem. “This is what it’d sound like if there was a fire!” shouts Jon Swinstead, the driving force behind the Museum of Youth Culture, as he tries to make himself heard above the din.It’s hard to imagine but in a few weeks this empty, slightly soggy space will be transformed into an institution dedicated to all things teenage – a project Swinstead has been working on in one way or another for almost 30 years.Opening on 15 May, the museum has amassed a 100,000-item archive that tells the story of British youth subcultures from mods and rockers, to ravers and emo

3 days ago
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‘Audiences told us we didn’t show enough teacher sex’: how we made Waterloo Road

‘In series one, it was bullying, drugs and alcohol. Twenty years on, it’s vapes, cyber-bullying and bloody energy drinks’I was working on women’s prison drama Bad Girls when the idea for Waterloo Road came up. Bad Girls creators Maureen Chadwick and Ann McManus had a fiery belief in social justice and did rigorous research. Those are often the foundations of successful serial drama. Ann had once taught in a Glasgow comprehensive and was passionate about education: she believed we write off young people too readily

3 days ago
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What does loneliness smell like? Inside the strangely soothing world of fragrance TikTok

I was bestowed with a nickname throughout my younger years: Smellanor. When I decided to go by Elle, the nickname evolved with it: Smell. I’m always a sucker for a fun rhyme. But it did make me hypervigilant about maintaining what I actually smelled like, vowing that this moniker would never manifest itself into reality. Thus began my ongoing journey into the wild world of fragrances

4 days ago
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‘On the threshold of a new age’: inside the New Museum’s $82m expansion and landmark new exhibition in New York

Right now on the Bowery, a busy Manhattan thoroughfare, two supersized lovers embrace several stories up into the blue spring sky. Strapped against the New Museum’s industrial mesh exterior, the pair are frozen in a state of plasticized affection. Their grinning, almost smooching heads are pressed close and glossy torsos entwined. A massive hand, safe as a catcher’s mitt, encases them both, splaying wide across their waists as though to stop them crashing to the sidewalk.The site-specific sculpture is titled Art Lovers, a work by Harlem-born artist Tschabalala Self, and marks the architectural “kiss point” between the New Museum’s original building and a new expansion

5 days ago
politicsSee all
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UK politics: Trump says UK’s aircraft carriers are just ‘toys’ – as it happened

about 5 hours ago
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Tories are convinced McSweeney’s phone is the only one in London not to have been stolen | John Crace

about 6 hours ago
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Orgreave inquiry formally under way into policing during miners’ strike

about 8 hours ago
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Starmer tells Travelodge boss to engage with MPs over sexual assault case

about 9 hours ago
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‘Give the guy a chance’: Wes Streeting says he does not want Starmer ousted

about 17 hours ago
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Overseas political funding capped and crypto donations blocked in blow to Reform UK

1 day ago