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Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
3 w

Arnold Schwarzenegger Doesn’t Take Joy Behar’s Bait To Push Dems’ Preferred Narrative On ICE Raids
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Arnold Schwarzenegger Doesn’t Take Joy Behar’s Bait To Push Dems’ Preferred Narrative On ICE Raids

'You got to do things legally'
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
3 w

Spanish Tennis Star Flouts Rules to Whoop it Up With Ball Boys & Girls After Epic 5-Hour French Open Win (WATCH)
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Spanish Tennis Star Flouts Rules to Whoop it Up With Ball Boys & Girls After Epic 5-Hour French Open Win (WATCH)

After winning the French Open—one of the four coveted majors in tennis—Carlos Alcaraz immediately shed the reserved nature prevalent in the sport and shared his exuberance with the ball boys and girls who had been working the event. The 22-year-old from Spain strolled over to the cheering ball boys and girls and formed a celebratory […] The post Spanish Tennis Star Flouts Rules to Whoop it Up With Ball Boys & Girls After Epic 5-Hour French Open Win (WATCH) appeared first on Good News Network.
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
3 w

DC Studios Has Found Their Clayface
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DC Studios Has Found Their Clayface

News Clayface DC Studios Has Found Their Clayface The Mike Flanagan-written film is due out next year. By Molly Templeton | Published on June 17, 2025 Image: Disney+ Comment 0 Share New Share Image: Disney+ Clayface will be led by a somewhat unfamiliar face. DC Studios has tapped Welsh actor Tom Rhys Harries to star in the next big DC Comics film—up next on the movie release schedule after Superman and Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow. On Bluesky, Gunn said “After a long and incredibly exhaustive search, we finally have our DCU Clayface in Tom Rhys Harries. Both Matt Reeves and I were just blown away by this guy, and can’t wait for you to see this film, directed by James Watkins and written by Mike Flanagan.” Harries has an interesting resume with lots of series appearances, including single episodes of Doctor Who (he played Ricky September in “Dot and Bubble,” pictured above), Midsomer Murders, and Chewing Gum. He was in a 2015 Jekyll and Hyde miniseries; the British series Suspicion, which starred Uma Thurman; and most recently provided a voice in the animated series Wolf King. In 2012, he was named one of Screen International’s Stars of Tomorrow. According to Deadline, several rather more familiar British actors were also in the running for the role, including Jack O’Connell (Sinners) and Tom Blyth (The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes). As the creative team of Mike Flanagan and James Watkins (Speak No Evil) suggests, the movie is expected to be a bit more horror-leaning than previous incarnations of the character, like Alan Tudyk’s very entertaining take on him in Harley Quinn. Clayface has been a villain, but last year, sources told Deadline that this film wouldn’t present him as one. Clayface is expected in theaters on September 11, 2026.[end-mark] The post DC Studios Has Found Their Clayface appeared first on Reactor.
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SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy  
3 w

What You Do Know Might Hurt You: “The Damned Thing” by Ambrose Bierce
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What You Do Know Might Hurt You: “The Damned Thing” by Ambrose Bierce

Books Dissecting The Dark Descent What You Do Know Might Hurt You: “The Damned Thing” by Ambrose Bierce A smart, unsettling story that prefigures Lovecraft (and many others)… By Sam Reader | Published on June 17, 2025 Comment 0 Share New Share Welcome back to Dissecting The Dark Descent, where we lovingly delve into the guts of David Hartwell’s seminal 1987 anthology story by story, and in the process, explore the underpinnings of a genre we all love. For an in-depth introduction, here’s the intro post. Ambrose Bierce was a writer whose acid-tongued societal critiques and gift for crafting scenes of the unnerving feel like a lightning rod for literature to come. Not just in prominent works like The Devil’s Dictionary and “Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge,” but in his unique voice and deadpan humor, attributes that made him a persistent figure in American culture long after his disappearance somewhere in Mexico in 1913. “The Damned Thing,” one of his best works of horror, pits three intellectuals against an invisible monster in a style that’s been emulated everywhere from the works of H.P. Lovecraft to the movie Predator. Bierce’s unnerving creature, intelligent protagonists in search of dangerous knowledge, and deliberate subversion of rural horror clichés rewrote the rules that insisted horror could be defeated by understanding and defining the unknown, in the process setting the stage for cosmic horror and more refined strains of Appalachian gothic in one single burst. In a small cabin in the woods, a jury of six men meets with a coroner over a mysterious death. The subject of the inquest, a local man named Hugh Morgan, has died under unknown and violent circumstances. The only witness of his death is a writer named William Harker, whose story is too strange to be believed. Confusing the issue further is Morgan’s journal, which details his studies into a horrifying invisible beast known only to him as the Damned Thing. As the details of Morgan’s gruesome end are revealed, it falls to the coroner to answer the question: should the questions around Hugh Morgan’s demise truly be answered? If Fitz-James O’Brien’s aim in “What Was It?” was to show that knowledge could take all the scares and fascination out of a supernatural experience, Bierce directly challenges his assumption. The cast of “The Damned Thing” are very well-versed and learned in their chosen disciplines, but even with all their collective knowledge, they are unable to do more than provide an annoyance to the titular Damned Thing. By the end, the closest we come to defining or understanding the entity (in a manner Lovecraft would echo) is the vague knowledge that it’s an animalistic monster that exists in some color impossible for the normal visual spectrum to perceive. The person who’s studied it the most thoroughly, Hugh Morgan, is unfortunately its most recent victim. Harker, the journalist studying him, knows Morgan saw something terrifying but is smart enough to realize his story won’t be believed and files his account as fiction. The coroner is smart enough to understand that it’s better if they chalk up Morgan’s death to a mountain lion mauling and put the whole thing to rest. All three are portrayed as rational, intelligent people who are able to process the facts before them, even as some elements remain unknowable. In an interesting inversion of the usual pattern, the more rural protagonists are also much smarter than the urban narrator. A lot of rural horror (a notable exception being Manly Wade Wellman’s American folktales) involves an urban narrator playing audience surrogate with the more “rustic” characters being, well, “earthy” and “superstitious” and other adjectives that are basically euphemisms for “weird hicks.” Both Morgan and the unnamed coroner demonstrate the reverse—the coroner is suspicious of Harker the entire way through, refusing to give Harker the journal where Morgan recorded his final thoughts on the Damned Thing because he knows how dangerous it would be in the hands of the naïve writer, and Morgan himself understands nature far better than the average rural protagonist. In Morgan’s diary, not only does he opine on natural philosophy, but reveals that he lured Harker out to his property just to get the young journalist to confirm that the Damned Thing exists. Harker, while self-serving and less grounded, at least demonstrates basic self-preservation. All three exhibit an intelligence and understanding that’s usually left out of horror stories for fear of undercutting the feeling of overwhelming dread or terror that’s outside any context. None of the context we do have makes the Damned Thing any less terrifying, nor is it any more understandable with this information. What the reader learns about the beast instead only heightens that terror—it’s capable of immense violence, but doesn’t attack Morgan until he shoots it; it’s defined in Morgan’s limited understanding as a creature that exists in a color not on the visible spectrum (explaining how it’s invisible); and it does show hints of intelligence, like how it gets close to Morgan’s property but doesn’t attack, and specifically goes after Morgan while leaving Harker alone. It’s still a massive invisible creature that tears a grown man to shreds and does so mainly because Morgan saw it, bothered it, and then hit it with quail shot. It’s bestial, but also intelligent enough to hold a grudge. While the reader might not know where it comes from or what the creature actually is, we’re still given a lot of information while still maintaining a convincing level of terror. There’s a further sense (and another place where Bierce presages Lovecraft) that trying to study and observe the creature literally drove it to Morgan’s front door. Trying to research and understand the Damned Thing is part of the reason it hangs around Morgan and leads to the ultimately fatal confrontation between observer and observed. The first time it’s noticed by Morgan’s dog, it appears watching Morgan from the ridge. As Morgan continues to watch it more and more, it moves closer and closer to him until he’s aiming a shotgun at the dark from his front porch. When it finally attacks him, it does so only after he tries to shoot it—a provocation in their escalating conflict driven by Morgan’s fatal need to find out more about his nocturnal interloper. The act of knowing more about the creature is directly tied to Morgan’s ultimate demise. The chronological end to the story reinforces this—the jury at the inquest finds that Morgan was mauled by a mountain lion “that had fits” in spite of knowing full well that it was something more than that; the coroner refuses to let Harker publish Morgan’s journal as it would only add to the chaos; and Harker publishes his account of what happened to Morgan as fiction specifically because no one would actually believe him and accept the story as fact. Further knowledge of the Damned Thing would only cause more problems than it would solve, and while the story doesn’t embrace the idea that ignorance is bliss, it does leave us with an overwhelming feeling that some things should just be left alone. After all, the one person who poked at the Damned Thing ended up getting torn to shreds. Perhaps that’s a warning Morgan should have heeded before it was too late. In ignoring the clichés of rural horror and directly refuting the concept that horror is specifically “about the unknown,” Bierce proved that (counter to what O’Brien and others might think) knowledge isn’t as effective a bulwark against the horrors as it might have seemed. His idea that maybe one shouldn’t poke the supernatural creatures to understand them would also lead to the birth of cosmic horror as a genre—both in that some things will remain mostly unknowable despite all the logic and intelligence applied in their direction, and in the idea that (as we’ve seen in Lovecraft, Wagner, and to a lesser extent Leiber and Bradbury) sometimes it’s best to let the monsters and forbidden corners go undisturbed…lest the “mountain lion” decide that maybe its best solution is to attack whatever keeps poking it. And now to turn it over to you: Is ignorance truly bliss in “The Damned Thing?” Was Bierce the earliest author to demand more from rural fiction? Was the coroner right to keep the journal from Harker? How much did Lovecraft borrow from Bierce? Is Manly Wade Wellman’s oeuvre a continuation of Bierce’s rural work? Please join us in two weeks when we look at a ghost story from the author of everyone’s favorite sled crash—“Afterward” by Edith Wharton.[end-mark] The post What You Do Know Might Hurt You: “The Damned Thing” by Ambrose Bierce appeared first on Reactor.
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Daily Signal Feed
Daily Signal Feed
3 w

EXCLUSIVE: Trump Admin to Increase Accountability for Federal Employees
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EXCLUSIVE: Trump Admin to Increase Accountability for Federal Employees

FIRST ON THE DAILY SIGNAL—The Trump administration is seeking to increase accountability for federal employees by implementing new performance standards and training. The Office of Personnel Management (OPM) issued a memorandum published online Tuesday to fulfill President Donald Trump’s mandate for a federal workforce that prizes excellence, deals with underperformance, and fulfills its mission.  “Federal employees should be held to the highest standards of performance and accountability,” Chuck Ezell, the acting director of the Office of Personnel Management and author of the memorandum, said in a statement. “These reforms will ensure that strong performers are rewarded, poor performers are addressed, and the American people receive the effective and efficient service they deserve. OPM is proud to implement the president’s direction to create a culture of excellence throughout the federal workforce,” Ezell said.  The new standards are intended to reduce performance grade inflation among federal workers and to end the disproportionate number of highest performance-level reviews. They are also designed to improve the ability of federal supervisors to demote, remove, or fire employees who are underperforming. The U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board, a self-described independent, quasi-judicial agency in the executive branch that adjudicates employee appeals, published a research brief in 2019 that found only 26% of supervisors answered in the affirmative that “[i]f a subordinate employee was deficient in a critical performance element after completion of a [Performance Improvement Period], are you confident that you would be able to remove that employee?” That statistic was part of the rationale for the updated performance standards.  At the same time, the Trump administration’s new standards are designed to double down on rewarding excellence. “[O]utstanding performance should be identified and rewarded in real time throughout the year. Supervisors should not wait for the next scheduled progress review to reward outstanding performance,” the OPM memorandum to the heads and acting heads of federal departments and agencies states.  These new standards will encompass all personnel who are non-Senior Executive Service and non-Senior Professional employees. New performance-management training will be required by federal agency supervisors. A governmentwide performance appraisal system will be implemented in all federal agencies beginning on Oct. 1, 2026.  The moves to reform the federal bureaucracy come after the Trump administration through the Department of Government Efficiency has sought to reduce the size of the federal workforce. Indeed, DOGE’s cuts to the federal workforce accounted for almost half of all layoffs so far in 2025. That meant 283,172 jobs were cut in the first several months of the administration, according to a recent report by the outplacement and career transition coaching firm Challenger, Gray, and Christmas. An additional 6,945 job terminations were linked to the impact of DOGE that has affected NGOs and education institutions part of the proverbial Washington swamp.  The post EXCLUSIVE: Trump Admin to Increase Accountability for Federal Employees appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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Hot Air Feed
Hot Air Feed
3 w

MAGA Splits Over Iran?
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MAGA Splits Over Iran?

MAGA Splits Over Iran?
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
3 w

Achoo! Why Do People Say "Bless You" When You Sneeze?
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Achoo! Why Do People Say "Bless You" When You Sneeze?

There's no scientific evidence that common colds are remedied by divine intervention.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
3 w

Could Studying Dinosaurs’ Cancer Help Us Cure Our Own?
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Could Studying Dinosaurs’ Cancer Help Us Cure Our Own?

You might not expect there to be many health lessons from an animal so distant from us in time and evolution, but new techniques may change that.
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
3 w

Trump’s ICE shields farmers from raids, then reverses course to deliver on mass deportation promise
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Trump’s ICE shields farmers from raids, then reverses course to deliver on mass deportation promise

President Donald Trump’s administration has reportedly weighed changes to its strict immigration enforcement policies over concerns about how they impact America’s agricultural and hospitality industries. Last week, Trump’s Department of Homeland Security briefly halted Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids at farms, hotels, and restaurants, according to the New York Times. The DHS reportedly reversed those exemptions on Monday.'Worksite enforcement remains a cornerstone of our efforts to safe guard public safety, national security, and economic stability.'The Times report followed a post on social media from Trump about the impact of the immigration policies on the agricultural community.The president wrote, “Our great Farmers and people in the Hotel and Leisure business have been stating that our very aggressive policy on immigration is taking very good, long time workers away from them, with those jobs being almost impossible to replace.”“In many cases the Criminals allowed into our Country by the VERY Stupid Biden Open Borders Policy are applying for those jobs,” Trump continued. “This is not good. We must protect our Farmers, but get the CRIMINALS OUT OF THE USA. Changes are coming!”RELATED: Illegal labor isn’t farming’s future. It’s Big Ag’s crutch. Photo by Smith Collection/Gado/Getty ImagesThe following day, the Times stated that an internal DHS email and three U.S. officials claimed the Trump administration had ordered a pause on ICE raids at farms, hotels, and restaurants. Senior ICE official Tatum King reportedly issued the new guidance to the agency’s regional leaders.According to the Times, the email read, “Effective today, please hold on all work site enforcement investigations/operations on agriculture (including aquaculture and meat packing plants), restaurants and operating hotels.”The guidance appeared to contradict border czar Tom Homan’s previous declarations that ICE would significantly increase worksite raids to achieve the administration’s mass deportation goals. “We acknowledge that by taking this off the table, that we are eliminating a significant # of potential targets,” King reportedly wrote.Homan stated last week that ICE has increased its arrests to roughly 2,000 per day. According to reports, White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller has pushed federal authorities to reach a minimum of 3,000 daily arrests. RELATED: Trump orders ICE to ramp up deportations in Dem-controlled cities following MAGA backlash over selective pause on raids Photo by APU GOMES/AFP via Getty Images The new guidance allowed ICE to continue any investigations involving “human trafficking, money laundering, drug smuggling into these industries.” However, agents were instructed not to arrest “noncriminal collaterals,” or illegal aliens who have not committed additional crimes in the United States. On Monday, the Washington Post reported that the administration lifted its temporary exemption after the DHS learned that White House leadership did not support it. DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin told Blaze News, “The president has been incredibly clear. There will be no safe spaces for industries who harbor violent criminals or purposely try to undermine ICE’s efforts.”“Worksite enforcement remains a cornerstone of our efforts to safe guard public safety, national security, and economic stability. These operations target illegal employment networks that undermine American workers, destabilize labor markets, and expose critical infrastructure to exploitation,” McLaughlin said.Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
3 w

'I'll blow your head off': Carjacking victim threatened crook after turning the tables on him. Now carjacker learns his fate.
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'I'll blow your head off': Carjacking victim threatened crook after turning the tables on him. Now carjacker learns his fate.

Early one morning last year — around 6:28 a.m. Jan. 2, 2024, to be exact — a Chicago motorist told police he was sitting in his car in the 9400 block of South Laflin Street when Darrius Berry approached him, CWB Chicago reported.The 39-year-old victim said Berry walked up to the driver's window of his 2021 Mazda CX-9 and pointed a gun at his head, the outlet reported.'Who’s with you?'“Please give me the keys,” Berry allegedly told the victim, according to the outlet. “I need your car. I’m sorry, sir. ... Go in the house.”The victim did just that, handing Berry his keys and heading into his house, the outlet continued.But what Berry likely didn't count on was the victim reappearing soon after.It turns out that the victim grabbed his own gun, went back outside, and confronted Berry, who was sitting behind the steering wheel of the victim's car with a gun on the passenger seat, CWB Chicago said, citing a report.“If you reach for it, I’ll blow your head off,” the victim recalled telling Berry, according to the outlet.RELATED: Helpless suburban couple obediently hand over valuables — even clothing — to armed males in front of their home: Doorbell cam JEWEL SAMAD/AFP via Getty ImagesIt gets even better.The victim opened the car door, grabbed Berry by the collar, and pulled him to the ground, CWB Chicago said, citing officials.“Who’s with you?” the victim asked Berry, according to the outlet, presumably out of concern that Berry may have accomplices to help him carry out the crime.“He’s around the corner,” Berry reportedly answered, CWB Chicago said, adding that the victim said he never saw anyone.Soon after, Chicago police responded to a call of a "citizen holding an offender" and found the victim holding Berry at gunpoint, the outlet said.RELATED: Road rage suspect opens fire on fellow motorist in Chicago, cops say. But victim is a concealed carrier — and wins shootout. Photo by Jacek Boczarski/Anadolu via Getty ImagesPolice recovered the gun Berry allegedly left on the Mazda’s passenger seat, the outlet reported, adding that a police report indicated the firearm had been stolen from a vehicle in the 1400 block of West 90th Street about a month prior to the ill-fated January 2024 carjacking.Judge Thomas Hennelly on Monday sentenced Berry — now 19 years old — to 10 years in prison after he pleaded guilty to one count of vehicular hijacking, CWB Chicago said, citing court records.The outlet added that Berry will be eligible for release in just over three years due to Illinois' "standard 50% sentence reduction and credits earned while in jail."Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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