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You can’t believe your eyes

caption: After Facebook declined to remove a doctored video that portrayed Nancy Pelosi as drunk, a deepfake of Zuckerberg himself was shared to Facebook.
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After Facebook declined to remove a doctored video that portrayed Nancy Pelosi as drunk, a deepfake of Zuckerberg himself was shared to Facebook.

Beware the Photoshop of videos. The Oregon Republican Senate delegation has R-U-N-N-O-F-T. The impact of war, and failure, on many men. And Mike O’Brien wants to bring sunshine to the soda tax.

Listen to the full show by clicking the play button above, or check out one of the show’s segments below. You can also subscribe to The Record on your favorite podcast app.

Deepfakes

A few years ago, actor and director Jordan Peele made a video impersonation of President Obama that became known as a deepfake. You may have seen more recent, and more sophisticated, versions that target Nancy Pelosi or Mark Zuckerberg. As this technology spreads, how will we know what’s real? Ryan Georgi is a doctor of Computational Linguistics at the University of Washington; Jevin West is at the UW Information school and co-created a class titled “Calling BS.”

Oregon GOP skips town

What do you do when something you don’t like happens at work? Maybe you call HR, or talk to your boss. Some Republican Oregon lawmakers, on the other hand, just left. KLCC’s Chris Lehman has been reporting on their dramatic flight to Idaho so they couldn’t be forced to vote in the Senate.

Ocean Vuong, On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous

Refugees. Asylum seekers. They’re from war-torn countries, right? So are you, says poet Ocean Vuong. His debut novel, On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous, swells with themes of longing and loss, masculinity and failure. He spoke about the prison and the opportunity offered by each of those things, and how the failure of America is that it has been shaped by war.

Mike O'Brien on soda tax

Last week we spoke about how the city has taken in much more money than expected from its sweetened beverage tax – and how the ins and outs of how that surplus is spent aren’t as transparent as government watchdogs might hope. Seattle City Councilor Mike O’Brien is working to tighten the rules around how these funds can be spent.

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