News

Donald Trump’s social media posts calling for the Washington Commanders and Cleveland Guardians to revert to their old names ...
It started with a fourth-grade assignment and became a mission to make sure a piece of Indiana history wasn’t lost forever.
The Eagles get their Super Bowl rings today. Here's how fans would design it. The Eagles will finally get their Super Bowl LIX rings on Friday. The specifics of the ring itself have not yet been ...
As the Kanwar Yatra approaches, a fierce political and legal storm brews over the enforcement of nameplate rules on food shops along the yatra route. The debate intensified during a recent ...
The Philadelphia Inquirer called on Sen. John Fetterman to step up or step aside on Sunday amid reports of mental health concerns, which the Democratic lawmaker called a smear campaign.
Syndicated content in Sun-Times special section included AI-generated misinformation A Chicago freelance journalist said he did not fact-check information he compiled using AI before including it ...
The list appeared in “Heat Index: Your Guide to the Best of Summer,” a special section distributed in Sunday’s Chicago Sun-Times and the Philadelphia Inquirer last week.
There's another artificial intelligence blunder impacting news organizations. The content distributor King Features said it was firing a writer who produced a recommended summer reading list that ...
Those books that the Chicago Sun-Times recommended reading this summer? You can stop looking for them. The newspaper said Tuesday that several of the titles had been generated by AI and don’t ...
Major newspapers ran a summer reading list. AI made up book titles. The Chicago Sun-Times and the Philadelphia Inquirer printed a special section that included articles written using generative AI.
A “summer guide” sprawling across more than 50 pages, the feature, which was syndicated over the past week in both the Chicago Sun-Times and The Philadelphia Inquirer, contains “303 Must-Dos ...
“Parks and Rec” alumni tease a show called “Philly Justice,” while the Inquirer features a 2025 summer reading list. Unfortunately, both are a bunch of baloney.