The Wire: Berkeley Rep used AI art to market play; Berkeley High custodian writes kids books in his free time
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The Wire: Berkeley Rep used AI art to market play; Berkeley High custodian writes kids books in his free time
"Berkeley Rep used AI art to market its its January production of The Thing About Jellyfish, part of what the theater describes as an experiment to complement not replace the work of our internal creative design team. Its part of a trend of performing arts spaces turning to to AI to save money that is dividing the Bay Area theater community. (SF Chronicle)"
"Berkeley High custodian Kris Tan has written two kids books and has a third book coming out soon. (Berkeley High Jacket) Berkeley Lab has received $125 million for quantum research. (Daily Cal) A UC Berkeley college access program serving 1,500 students is in jeopardy after an $836,000 annual federal grant was canceled over a reference to equity and inclusion in a grant application. (Berkeley News)"
"A man suspected of spending hours inside a UC Berkeley sorority watching women sleep and possibly stealing their underwear has been arrested. (Berkeley Scanner) Police arrested a 14-year-old boy from Pinole who spent several days Berkeley stealing cars in Berkeley. (Berkeley Scanner) A pedestrian in her 60s was struck by a driver Tuesday morning at University and Curtis Street and taken to the hospital. (Berkeley Scanner)"
Berkeley Rep used AI art to market its January production of The Thing About Jellyfish to complement internal design work, part of a regional theater trend. Berkeley High custodian Kris Tan has written two kids books and a third book is coming out soon. Berkeley Lab received $125 million for quantum research. A college access program serving 1,500 students faces jeopardy after an $836,000 federal grant was canceled over a reference to equity and inclusion. Reports also cover an alleged sorority intruder, a teen accused of multiple car thefts, and a pedestrian struck and hospitalized, along with campus cultural activities such as gravel biking, indigenous language work, anime subcultures, and Dia de los Muertos observances.
Read at www.berkeleyside.org
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