GEORGE STEVENSS 1956 film Giant begins with a stereophonic blast of The Eyes of Texas Are Upon You, the recurring theme of Dimitri Tiomkins score. In the 1952 best seller that is the movies inspiration, its the eyes of author Edna Ferber that are upon Texas. And Ferber was not enchanted with what she saw. Read now (HarperCollins reissued it in 2019 as a Modern Classics paperback), Ferbers novel plays like an early sketch of the ignorance and arrogance that have made Texas a cultural millstone at the bottom of the US, determined to drag all the other states down with it.
If we think about Edna Ferber at all today, and we should, its likely as a writer whose novels were the fodder for works that have become better known than the books they came from, not only Giant, but also Show Boat (1926) and So Big (1924) and Cimarron (1929) and Saratoga Trunk (1941). Ferber belongs squarely to the tradition of the popular writer of big-scale narratives that sprawl over years, an honorable job occupied today at its best by the likes of Amor Towles and Donna Tartt, and for which there is always some critic around to tell us that this is not literature. The question of whether literature can ever be what gets people reading in the first place and, more crucially, keeps them reading, is not one that tends to arise in what Terry Southern once called the Quality Lit Biz.
And yet, in its withering critique of its subject, and in Ferbers sly subversion of genre conventions while still delivering a thoroughly entertaining read, Giant is a fascinating novel, a wasp disguised as a possum. Ferber lures the reader in with a love story, provides the conflicts and bust-ups and reconciliations that mark it as such, all the while refusing almost all the satisfactions one associates with love stories.
On the surface, Giant fits squarely within the romantic tradition of a headstrong man taming a rebellious woman, who ends up all the happier for it. Only, by the time Giant was published, there had already been a couple of decades of pushback undermining that model. Two decades before, screwball comedies like My Man Godfrey (1936) and Bringing Up Baby (1938) and The Lady Eve (1941) had featured romances wherein the male characters are so befuddled that theyre almost relieved to let the heroines run the show.
The biggest blow to the model of dominating man and subservient, adoring woman came in 1936 when Margaret Mitchell published Gone with the Wind. Audiences loved Scarlett OHara, in both the book and movie versions, precisely because she was such a schemer and thus, as much as the conventions of her time would allow, the equal of Rhett Butler. Theirs was less a love story than a partnership of piratical egos, both out for themselves, amused and excited to find their opposite-sex incarnation. For all the outrage about the movie as a piece of Lost Cause propagandizing, film historian James Harvey came closer than anyone to grasping its appeal when he characterized it as a tough comedy. Gone with the Wind is the only Hollywood epic with something of the cheerful cynicism and snappish sarcasm that had characterized the best movies of its decade. Do you know anyone who enjoyed it for Ashley and Melanie?
The relationship in Giant between Virginia-by-way-of-Ohio socialite Leslie Lynnton and Texas cattleman Jordan Bick Benedict isnt the avaricious union of Rhett and Scarlett. It hews more closely to a sweep-her-off-her-feet story. Leslie meets Bick when hes a guest in her family home and, in short order, marries him and relocates to Reata, his enormous Texas ranch. There she raises a family and spends her married years trying and failing to change her husband. She loves him nonetheless for his headstrong, shallow self.
Provincialism in some people is quaint, but Bicks limited worldview has all the charm of a Cadillac outfitted with steer horns on the grille, blasting down a two-lane blacktop at 90 miles per hour. Hes not a bully and only occasionally a boor. But nothing gets in his way and anything that tries to is in danger of getting run over.
Bick doesnt change, but neither does Leslie. She never gives in to Bick. She never blunts her criticism of the awful conditions in which his Mexican workers live, the starvation wages he pays them. Eventually, both improve (under Leslies influence, its implied), but for every appeal Leslie makes to Bicks (extremely limited) sense of decency and fairness, he responds with some variation of those people have their own way of doing things. Leslie doesnt fall for that. She knows poverty and sickness arent folkways. But shes also a bit of a sucker.
The first thing Leslie does when she meets Bick, as her fathers guest in the family home, is to stay up all night reading about Texas, soaking up its history. And she doesnt sugarcoat it when, the next morning at breakfast, she greets Bick with, We really stole Texas, didnt we? I mean. Away from Mexico. Shes not trying to provoke an argument. Shes just stating the facts, and who, she wonders, can dispute facts? But a short while later, shes gushing, Its so fascinating. Its another world, it sounds so big and new and different. I love it. The cactus and the cowboys and the Alamo and the sky and the horses and the Mexicans and the freedom. Its really American, isnt it. Im Im in love with it.
And for all the ways she will challenge Bick to treat his workers as people, to be less dogmatic about the futures he envisions for their children (Bick sees their son, Jordy, who wants to be a doctor, taking over the family cattle business and their daughter, Luz, the one really suited to business, as a Texas wife) Leslie succumbs to the colorful romance of Texas life, both the history and storybook versions, and never wakes up from it. Oh, shell have her moments of revulsion: passing out at a barbecue in her honor when she sees the guests reaching into a mesquite-grilled calves head to scoop out the solid gelid brains and placing them on fresh pieces of bread with a bit of salt sprinkled on top. And she never accepts that a woman shouldnt have a say in the mens business of politics. But the romantic hold that her husband and, through him, Texas itself has on her finally overwhelms the common sense of the life she left behind. She does get Bick to agree to build a human-scaled house for the two of them, something airier and more pleasant than the dark manse filled with hunting trophies and paintings of Herefords and chairs the size of couches and furniture adorned with horns.
But if you read carefully, you realize that, other than the new house, Leslie never gets one thing she wants, not even the books she wants to order from Brentanos to supplement Reatas library, which consists of issues of The Cattlemans Gazette, a Websters Dictionary, copies of A Girl of the Limberlost and The Sheik. (The particularized poverty of those selections a trade journal, an unconsulted reference book, a childrens classic, and a racy best seller conveys the withering wit Ferber cushions in what appear to be plain descriptions.) Oh, you wont do much reading out here, Bick says when Leslie asks for some new volumes. Here in Texas theres so much more to do. You wont have time to read.
But she does have time to become something like the author of her own romance. She translates what shes read and the sheer size of what she sees everything, from the land itself to the platters of food borne out for every meal, exists on a mammoth scale into a kind of romance in which Bick is a hero big enough to belong in such vastness. She doesnt abandon her principles, but her stubbornness never turns into rebellion. Eventually, having won the man who fires her imagination and desire, she settles into domestic comfort, known for being outspoken but no real threat to the order of things.
In her 1978 biography of her Great Aunt Edna, Ferbers niece Julie Goldsmith Gilbert quoted the author talking about her initial visit to Texas:
The whole region was as virile and fascinating as it was vast. It was all drawn on a scale larger than life. There was about it a tremendous vitality. It was incredible that a whole people could possess such energy, such self-complacency, such enthusiasm for living in the midst of this hurly-burly of heat, dust, glare, great distance and much discomfort.
I mean no disrespect to Ferber when I say that that has to be one of the greatest pieces of public relations any writer has ever come up with, even though she does manage to slide self-complacency in among the other adjectives. In any event, Texas didnt buy it. Texas reviewers hated the book, seeing it, quite correctly, as a slam on their home state. And theres no doubt that the book does have more than a touch of the condescension so often shown by the literary establishment to Texans (and Southerners in general).
Ferber was a member of the Algonquin Round Table, but she was not a woman born to privilege. Her father was a poor Hungarian Jewish storekeeper in Michigan, where she was born, and she grew up in Chicago; Ottumwa, Iowa; and Appleton, Wisconsin, where she graduated from high school, briefly attended college, and began her writing career as a reporter. Still, she was a true sophisticate (you didnt get to co-author plays with George S. Kaufman if you werent), and it is a sophisticates cold eye that informs Giant.
Almost 70 years have made it easy to see whats missing from Giant specifically, any sense that the state could produce anything beyond the self-satisfied and largely ignorant characters who strut through it as exemplars of outsized vitality. If, when Giant was published, the book was all you knew of Texas culture, youd have no idea that, in the years to come, the state would produce musicians like Buddy Holly and Ornette Coleman, Freddy Fender and Willie Nelson; scholars like Annette Gordon-Reed; politicians like Barbara Jordan and, above all, Lyndon Baines Johnson, the only tragic modern president, praised by Ralph Ellison in 1965 as the greatest American President for the poor and for Negroes.
But if what Ferber shows us in Giant isnt all of Texas, its certainly not too little to draw the portrait she does, and the strength of the book is that she doesnt suspend her sophisticated worldview by treating the characters as common folk somehow exempt from criticism. It doesnt take long to realize that the title of the book is intended to be ironic. Size seems to be all that anyone talks of, and the main thing used to glorify the state: the acreage of ranches, the number of cattle, the mockery of distances that elsewhere would seem considerable (Far! Bick says of Reatas distance from the train station. Its only ninety miles.) In Ferbers treatment, the bigness seems finally to denote emptiness more than anything else. The characters seem not so much equal to the landscape as puffed up by it, braggarts at home in a place that suits them. There is nothing here but size. The only time anyone is conscious of competing with a city like New York is when Bick mentions to Leslie that he hears that Neiman Marcus makes Saks and Bergdorf look like a trading post.
Just as Bick cant envision a desire for books, so no one can seem to see the need for any kind of culture. To complain that the Texas of Giant offers no symphony, no museums, no theater would be playing right into the hands of those who were ready to call it a snobbish book. But its cities dont offer the chance to see a touring musical or even go to the movies. Texans in Giant are entertained by and interested in only Texas. Nothing else seems necessary.
It might be too easy, too convenient, to see, in the prejudices and ignorance of Ferbers characters, their not giving a damn for the way things are done anywhere else, the very things that have allowed present-day Texas to be so arrogant as to pass an anti-abortion law that attempts to circumvent judicial review or one of the most restrictive voter-suppression laws in the country. But the parallels are too strong to ignore just because they are easy to see. Ferber ends the novel with Bick and his cohorts scheming to suppress the votes of the largely Mexican field hands who have come to the region to work the jobs offered by the oil boom.
Stevens ended his film (a wonderful film, maybe the most intelligent and purely enjoyable of all 50s epics) quite differently than Ferber did her novel. In the movie, Bick loses a fight to a short-order cook who will not serve Bicks Mexican daughter-in-law and his Mexican American granddaughter. A white man becoming indignant about racism only when he is suddenly exposed to its reality is exactly the kind of scene progressive thought today would claim as itself an example of racism. But Stevens, a classic Hollywood liberal, knew that change is a political process that only comes when people who are not directly affected by oppression or prejudice see the moral necessity of joining with those who are demanding redress. Lyndon Baines Johnson knew that as well, saying in his great 1965 speech in support of the Voting Rights Act:
There is no Negro problem. There is no Southern problem. There is no Northern problem. There is only an American problem. And we are met here tonight as Americans not as Democrats or Republicans we are met here as Americans to solve that problem. [] Their cause must be our cause too. Because it is not just Negroes, but really it is all of us, who must overcome the crippling legacy of bigotry and injustice. And we shall overcome.
The key to Giant comes early on, when Bick and Leslie return to the ranch after their honeymoon. Leslie has been kind to the Mexican boy sent to meet them, and Bick tells her, Making a fuss over that Mexican boy. We dont do that here in Texas. When she says, this still is the United States, Bick answers, Youre a Texan now. Please remember that. A little later, theres talk of Texas law containing a provision allowing the state to secede from the union if it ever wants to. The thing is, the Texas depicted in Giant never really belonged to the United States in the first place.
What Ferber saw in Texas was not just a state eager to keep women and racial minorities in their place but one that proudly considered itself separate from better than America. And thus, she unknowingly grasped one of the key truths at the heart of Trumpism the other great pandemic of our present moment. For the truth is that Trumpers hate America: they hate its precepts, its principles, the way it has worked steadily and bravely (albeit imperfectly and with frustrating slowness) to include in its promised freedoms the people not considered by those who wrote its founding documents.
Its a clich to say that the America Trumpism pines after, the nation for whose restored greatness it is willing to countenance any brutality, is a place where to be anything other than white, heterosexual, Christian, and preferably male is to be considered a threat, unworthy of legal protection, and ripe for persecution if you make true Americans feel uneasy. But partly because so many people assume that snobbish condescension is the same thing as deserved contempt for willful ignorance, there has been a reluctance to acknowledge that Trumpism, by working to make the law an extension of its various bigotries, is empowering contempt for the basic virtues of the American project. Its well past time to acknowledge that there are some things worth being snobbish about. We cant pretend that the sympathy we show for people never given the chance to learn, held back by socioeconomic conditions or systemic racism, is somehow violated when we show contempt for those Hillary Clinton aptly and correctly dubbed deplorables.
There is now a populist political movement, and not just in America, that tells anyone who ever feels resentful toward the educated, anyone who distrusts any new idea, that they have been right all along. Thats the movement that Giant, in its depiction of a self-satisfied (white) empire with no interest in anything outside itself (and for only some of the people inside), seems to catch in its nascent form. The lines that best serve to describe this novels afterlife, the way the cultural mindset it depicts is lived now, were written by Ferber herself in her 1938 autobiography, A Peculiar Treasure, when she describes what she saw in 1930s Europe: It was a fearful thing to see a continent a civilization crumbling before ones eyes. It was a rapid and seemingly inevitable process to which no one paid any particular attention. As well as anything Ive read, those lines sum up what it feels like to live in America today, the almost complete lack of urgency about the ongoing attempts on the right to make it into a fascist state.
Writing after World War II, Cyril Connolly said of the war not merely the regimes that had been defeated but the war itself, the undeniable and degrading necessity of having to engage in it and to experience its brutal inhumanity that it was opposed to every reasonable conception of what life is for, every ambition of the mind or delight of the senses. The anti-achievement of the spiritual descendants of those who inhabit the Texas of Giant is to have made this opposition obscenely alive in peacetime.
Charles Taylor is the author ofOpening Wednesday at a Theater or Drive-In Near You. He lives and writes in New York.
Continue reading here:
Deep in the Jaundiced Heart of Texas - lareviewofbooks
- Working at DeepMind | Glassdoor [Last Updated On: September 8th, 2019] [Originally Added On: September 8th, 2019]
- DeepMind Q&A Dataset - New York University [Last Updated On: October 6th, 2019] [Originally Added On: October 6th, 2019]
- Google absorbs DeepMind healthcare unit 10 months after ... [Last Updated On: October 7th, 2019] [Originally Added On: October 7th, 2019]
- deep mind Mathematics, Machine Learning & Computer Science [Last Updated On: November 1st, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 1st, 2019]
- Health strategies of Google, Amazon, Apple, and Microsoft - Business Insider [Last Updated On: November 21st, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 21st, 2019]
- To Understand The Future of AI, Study Its Past - Forbes [Last Updated On: November 21st, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 21st, 2019]
- Tremor patients can be relieved of the shakes for THREE YEARS after having ultrasound waves - Herald Publicist [Last Updated On: November 21st, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 21st, 2019]
- The San Francisco Gay Mens Chorus Toured the Deep South - SF Weekly [Last Updated On: November 21st, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 21st, 2019]
- The Universe Speaks in Numbers: The deep relationship between math and physics - The Huntington News [Last Updated On: November 21st, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 21st, 2019]
- MINI John Cooper Works GP is a two-seater hot hatch that shouts its 306 HP - SlashGear [Last Updated On: November 21st, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 21st, 2019]
- How To Face An Anxiety Provoking Situation Like A Champion - Forbes [Last Updated On: November 21st, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 21st, 2019]
- The Most Iconic Tech Innovations of the 2010s - PCMag [Last Updated On: November 24th, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 24th, 2019]
- Why tech companies need to hire philosophers - Quartz [Last Updated On: November 24th, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 24th, 2019]
- Living on Purpose: Being thankful is a state of mind - Chattanooga Times Free Press [Last Updated On: November 24th, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 24th, 2019]
- EDITORIAL: West explosion victims out of sight and clearly out of mind - Waco Tribune-Herald [Last Updated On: November 24th, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 24th, 2019]
- Do you need to sit still to be mindful? - The Sydney Morning Herald [Last Updated On: November 26th, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 26th, 2019]
- Listen To Two Neck Deep B-Sides, Beautiful Madness And Worth It - Kerrang! [Last Updated On: November 26th, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 26th, 2019]
- Worlds Last Male Northern White Rhino Brought Back To Life Using AI - International Business Times [Last Updated On: November 26th, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 26th, 2019]
- Eat, drink, and be merryonly if you keep in mind these food safety tips - Williamsburg Yorktown Daily [Last Updated On: November 26th, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 26th, 2019]
- The alarming trip that changed Jeremy Clarksons mind on climate change - The Week UK [Last Updated On: November 26th, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 26th, 2019]
- Actionable Insights on Artificial Intelligence in Law Market with Future Growth Prospects by 2026 | AIBrain, Amazon, Anki, CloudMinds, Deepmind,... [Last Updated On: November 26th, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 26th, 2019]
- Searching for the Ghost Orchids of the Everglades - Discover Magazine [Last Updated On: November 26th, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 26th, 2019]
- Parkinsons tremors could be treated with SOUNDWAVES, claim scientists - Herald Publicist [Last Updated On: November 26th, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 26th, 2019]
- Golden State Warriors still have prolonged success in mind - Blue Man Hoop [Last Updated On: November 26th, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 26th, 2019]
- 3 Gratitude Habits You Can Adopt Over The Thanksgiving Holiday For Deeper Connection And Joy - Forbes [Last Updated On: November 26th, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 26th, 2019]
- The minds that built AI and the writer who adored them. - Mash Viral [Last Updated On: November 28th, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 28th, 2019]
- Parkinson's Patients are Mysteriously Losing the Ability to Swim After Treatment - Discover Magazine [Last Updated On: November 28th, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 28th, 2019]
- Hannah Fry, the woman making maths cool | Times2 - The Times [Last Updated On: November 28th, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 28th, 2019]
- Meditate with Urmila: Find balance of body, mind and breath - Gulf News [Last Updated On: November 28th, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 28th, 2019]
- We have some important food safety tips to keep in mind while cooking this Thanksgiving - WQOW TV News 18 [Last Updated On: November 28th, 2019] [Originally Added On: November 28th, 2019]
- Being thankful is a state of mind | Opinion - Athens Daily Review [Last Updated On: December 2nd, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 2nd, 2019]
- Can Synthetic Biology Inspire The Next Wave of AI? - SynBioBeta [Last Updated On: December 2nd, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 2nd, 2019]
- LIVING ON PURPOSE: Being thankful is a state of mind - Times Tribune of Corbin [Last Updated On: December 2nd, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 2nd, 2019]
- AI Hardware Summit Europe launches in Munich, Germany on 10-11 March 2020, the ecosystem event for AI hardware acceleration in Europe - Yahoo Finance [Last Updated On: December 5th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 5th, 2019]
- Of course Facebook and Google want to solve social problems. Theyre hungry for our data - The Guardian [Last Updated On: December 5th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 5th, 2019]
- Larry, Sergey, and the Mixed Legacy of Google-Turned-Alphabet - WIRED [Last Updated On: December 6th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 6th, 2019]
- AI Index 2019 assesses global AI research, investment, and impact - VentureBeat [Last Updated On: December 11th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 11th, 2019]
- For the Holidays, the Gift of Self-Care - The New York Times [Last Updated On: December 11th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 11th, 2019]
- Stopping a Mars mission from messing with the mind - Axios [Last Updated On: December 11th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 11th, 2019]
- Feldman: Impeachment articles are 'high crimes' Founders had in mind | TheHill - The Hill [Last Updated On: December 11th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 11th, 2019]
- Opinion | Frankenstein monsters will not be taking our jobs anytime soon - Livemint [Last Updated On: December 11th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 11th, 2019]
- DeepMind co-founder moves to Google as the AI lab positions itself for the future - The Verge [Last Updated On: December 11th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 11th, 2019]
- Google Isn't Looking To Revolutionize Health Care, It Just Wants To Improve On The Status Quo - Newsweek [Last Updated On: December 12th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 12th, 2019]
- Artificial Intelligence Job Demand Could Live Up to Hype - Dice Insights [Last Updated On: December 12th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 12th, 2019]
- What Are Normalising Flows And Why Should We Care - Analytics India Magazine [Last Updated On: December 15th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 15th, 2019]
- Terence Crawford has next foe in mind after impressive knockout win - New York Post [Last Updated On: December 15th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 15th, 2019]
- DeepMind proposes novel way to train safe reinforcement learning AI - VentureBeat [Last Updated On: December 15th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 15th, 2019]
- Winning the War Against Thinking - So you've emptied your brain. Now what? - Chabad.org [Last Updated On: December 16th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 16th, 2019]
- 'Echo Chamber' as Author of the 'Hive Mind' - Ricochet.com [Last Updated On: December 16th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 16th, 2019]
- Lindsey Graham: 'I Have Made Up My Mind' to Exonerate Trump and 'Don't Need Any Witnesses' WATCH - Towleroad [Last Updated On: December 16th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 16th, 2019]
- Blockchain in Healthcare Market to 2027 By Top Leading Players: iSolve LLC, Healthcoin, Deepmind Health, IBM Corporation, Microsoft Corporation,... [Last Updated On: December 16th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 16th, 2019]
- In sight but out of mind - The Hindu [Last Updated On: December 16th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 16th, 2019]
- The Case for Limitlessness Has Its Limits: Review of Limitless Mind by Joe Boaler - Education Next - EducationNext [Last Updated On: December 16th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 16th, 2019]
- The Top 10 Diners In Deep East Texas, According To Yelp - ksfa860.com [Last Updated On: December 16th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 16th, 2019]
- 3 breathing exercises to reduce stress, anxiety and a racing mind - Irish Examiner [Last Updated On: December 16th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 16th, 2019]
- DeepMind exec Andrew Eland leaves to launch startup - Sifted [Last Updated On: December 16th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 16th, 2019]
- The Top 10 Diners In Deep East Texas, According To Yelp - kicks105.com [Last Updated On: December 17th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 17th, 2019]
- Mind the Performance Gap New Future Purchasing Category Management Report Out Now - Spend Matters [Last Updated On: December 17th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 17th, 2019]
- Madison singles and deep cuts that stood out in 2019 - tonemadison.com [Last Updated On: December 19th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 19th, 2019]
- Hilde Lee: Latkes bring an ancient miracle to mind on first night of Hanukkah - The Daily Progress [Last Updated On: December 19th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 19th, 2019]
- Political Cornflakes: Trump responds to impeachment with complaints about the 'deep state' and toilet flushing - Salt Lake Tribune [Last Updated On: December 19th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 19th, 2019]
- Google CEO Sundar Pichai Is the Most Expensive Tech CEO to Keep Around - Observer [Last Updated On: December 24th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 24th, 2019]
- Christmas Lectures presenter Dr Hannah Fry on pigeons, AI and the awesome power of maths - inews [Last Updated On: December 24th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 24th, 2019]
- The ultimate guitar tuning guide: expand your mind with these advanced tuning techniques - Guitar World [Last Updated On: December 24th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 24th, 2019]
- Inside The Political Mind Of Jerry Brown - Radio Ink [Last Updated On: December 24th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 24th, 2019]
- Elon Musk Fact-Checked His Own Wikipedia Page and Requested Edits Including the Fact He Does 'Zero Investing' - Entrepreneur [Last Updated On: December 24th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 24th, 2019]
- The 9 Best Blobs of 2019 - Livescience.com [Last Updated On: December 24th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 24th, 2019]
- AI from Google is helping identify animals deep in the rainforest - Euronews [Last Updated On: December 24th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 24th, 2019]
- Want to dive into the lucrative world of deep learning? Take this $29 class. - Mashable [Last Updated On: December 24th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 24th, 2019]
- Re: Your Account Is Overdrawn - Thrive Global [Last Updated On: December 27th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 27th, 2019]
- Review: In the Vale is full of characters who linger long in the mind - Nation.Cymru [Last Updated On: December 27th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 27th, 2019]
- 10 Gifts That Cater to Your Loved One's Basic Senses - Wide Open Country [Last Updated On: December 27th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 27th, 2019]
- The Most Mind-Boggling Scientific Discoveries Of 2019 Include The First Image Of A Black Hole, A Giant Squid Sighting, And An Exoplanet With Water... [Last Updated On: December 27th, 2019] [Originally Added On: December 27th, 2019]
- DeepMind's new AI can spot breast cancer just as well as your doctor - Wired.co.uk [Last Updated On: January 1st, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 1st, 2020]
- Why the algorithms assisting medics is good for health services (Includes interview) - Digital Journal [Last Updated On: January 4th, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 4th, 2020]
- 2020: The Rise of AI in the Enterprise - IT World Canada [Last Updated On: January 4th, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 4th, 2020]
- An instant 2nd opinion: Google's DeepMind AI bests doctors at breast cancer screening - FierceBiotech [Last Updated On: January 4th, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 4th, 2020]
- Google's DeepMind AI outperforms doctors in identifying breast cancer from X-ray images - Business Insider UK [Last Updated On: January 4th, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 4th, 2020]
- New AI toolkit from the World Economic Forum is promising because it's free - The National [Last Updated On: January 20th, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 20th, 2020]
- AKA Wants to Help People Break Bad Habits and Create New Positive Ones - Hospitality Net [Last Updated On: January 20th, 2020] [Originally Added On: January 20th, 2020]