Mike Rowe reveals which American jobs will remain untouched by the coming AI revolution
MikeroweWORKS Foundation founder Mike Rowe joins'The Brian Kilmeade Show' to discuss how AI and robots threaten white-collar jobs, as the nation faces a need for blue-collar workers. Mike Rowe is sounding the alarm about the future of white and blue-collar jobs, and is urging young Americans to rethink their career choices due to threats from artificial intelligence. The former star of the shows "How America Works" and "Dirty Jobs" sat down with Fox News Radio host Brian Kilmeade to discuss the outlook for the U.S. job market amid recent developments from President Donald Trump's administration to invest in domestic energy and artificial intelligence. Trump visited Pittsburgh on July 15 to announce a 90 billion investment in data centers and other energy projects in Pennsylvania. Rowe was also present at the event, dubbed the Energy and Investment Summit, at Carnegie Mellon University.
The Hunt for a Fundamental Theory of Quantum Gravity
The original version of this story appeared in Quanta Magazine. Two blind spots torture physicists: the birth of the universe and the center of a black hole. The former may feel like a moment in time and the latter a point in space, but in both cases the normally interwoven threads of space and time seem to stop short. These mysterious points are known as singularities. Singularities are predictions of Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity.
When Bots Go Nazi
It's kind of strange that Grok, Elon Musk's chatbot, went full Nazi a few weeks ago, and is justโฆstill out there. But, then again, how are you supposed to hold an LLM accountable? Subscribe to Slate Plus to access ad-free listening to the whole What Next family and all your favorite Slate podcasts. Subscribe today on Apple Podcasts by clicking "Try Free" at the top of our show page. Sign up now at slate.com/whatnextplus to get access wherever you listen.
'You can make really good stuff โ fast': new AI tools a gamechanger for film-makers
Mallal says he wants to see a "broadly accessible and easy-to-use programme where artists are compensated for their work". Beeban Kidron, a cross-bench peer and leading campaigner against the government proposals, says AI film-making tools are "fantastic" but "at what point are they going to realise that these tools are literally built on the work of creators?" She adds: "Creators need equity in the new system or we lose something precious." YouTube says its terms and conditions allow Google to use creators' work for making AI models โ and denies that all of YouTube's inventory has been used to train its models. Mallal calls his use of AI to make films "prompt craft", a phrase that uses the term for giving instructions to AI systems. When making the Ukraine film, he says he was amazed at how quickly a camera angle or lighting tone could be adjusted with a few taps on a keyboard.
Ring to let police request user videos again
Ring, the Amazon-owned home surveillance company, is partnering with taser-maker Axon to once again help law enforcement request footage from users' doorbell cameras. The move reverses Ring's 2024 decision to kill its "Request for Assistance" feature, which let police ask users for video via the Neighbors app. At the time, Ring framed the change as a shift toward becoming a more community-focused brand, one less reliant on law enforcement integrations. That ethos now appears to be on pause. The about-face coincides with the return of Ring founder Jamie Siminoff, who rejoined Amazon in April.
Can your Apple Watch detect pregnancy?
An Apple Watch saved his life after it used SOS to call for help when he had a stroke in his driveway. What if your Apple Watch or iPhone could alert you to a pregnancy before a test does? A new Apple-funded study suggests that this is now within reach. Researchers used a mix of behavioral and biometric data to train an artificial intelligence model. The system correctly predicted pregnancy in 92% of cases.
Netflix admits to using AI in one of its shows
Netflix isn't pretending to play coy about AI anymore. The streaming giant confirmed during its latest earnings call that it leaned on generative AI to create visual effects for The Eternaut, an Argentine post-apocalyptic drama. According to reporting from Engadget, co-CEO Ted Sarandos revealed that the creators of The Eternaut wanted a collapsing building sequence to anchor a key moment in the story. Instead of outsourcing the shot to a traditional VFX house, they turned to generative AI tools. "Using AI-powered tools, they were able to achieve an amazing result with remarkable speed," Sarandos said.
McDonald's AI hiring chatbot exposed data of job candidates
Fox News chief political anchor Bret Baier investigates concerns that artificial intelligence is becoming too advanced on'Special Report.' Many companies now rely on AI to handle parts of the hiring process. Bots screen resumes, filter candidates, and manage preliminary communication before a human steps in. McDonald's utilizes an AI-powered hiring platform called McHire, which is powered by Paradox.ai's While AI brings convenience, it also comes with data privacy risks.
Man dies after being pulled into MRI machine by metal necklace he was wearing
Ezra founder and CEO Emi Gal explains on'Fox & Friends Weekend' how artificial intelligence can'enhance' MRI scans, image quality, analysis, and comprehension. A man has died after getting sucked into an MRI machine. The accident occurred on July 16 at the Nassau Open MRI in Westbury, New York, according to a press release from the Nassau County Police Department in Long Island. Officers responded to a 911 call at around 4:30 p.m. at the MRI center, which provides diagnostic radiology services. ARE FULL-BODY SCANS WORTH THE MONEY? "Upon arrival, officers were informed that a male, 61, entered an unauthorized Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) room while the scan was in progress," the release stated.
Fox News AI Newsletter: Warning on electricity prices
Fox News anchor Bret Baier examines the U.S. power supply on'Special Report.' POWER UP: A new White House study warns that electricity prices may spike due to artificial intelligence demand if the United States does not boost energy output. TURNED OFF: Google is making a push to ensure its AI, Gemini, is tightly integrated with Android systems by granting it access to core apps like WhatsApp, Messages, and Phone. The rollout of this change started on July 7, 2025, and it may override older privacy configurations unless you know how to disable Gemini on Android. Here's what you need to know. OPINION: DIGITAL DOMINANCE: The global race to harness the power of artificial intelligence (AI) has begun.