Will Laws

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Will Laws

Will Laws

@WillLaws

@SInow MLB editor/writer. ex: @yahoo @aol @mlbam. Fluent in coachspeak. @survivorCBS addict. Email: [email protected]

Los Angeles, CA Katılım Eylül 2010
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Will Laws
Will Laws@WillLaws·
Happy to announce I’m now officially Sports Illustrated’s MLB editor. Feel blessed to accomplish a goal I’ve had for as long as I can remember. On a related note, I’m now accepting freelance pitches for our MLB preview issue. Feel free to reach out at will.laws@si.com.
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Gage
Gage@GageEHC·
thanks to a post I saw earlier I’m down a Carl Crawford rabbit hole. This dude was such a freak athlete that his options coming out of HS in 1999 were: - 52nd pick in MLB draft by Devil Rays - QB at Nebraska/Oklahoma/Florida/USC - PG at UCLA what. the. hell. 😂
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Variety
Variety@Variety·
EXCLUSIVE: Tom Hanks is set to star in the baseball movie "The Comebacker" from his "A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood" director Marielle Heller. Bad Bunny and Colman Domingo are eyeing roles in the movie, which "follows a fading sports journalist named Lionel whose passion for his craft and his life is awakened by a pitcher called up from the minor leagues." Sony Pictures is currently leading the bidding war. variety.com/2026/film/news…
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Will Laws
Will Laws@WillLaws·
In the four years since the Braves let Freddie Freeman walk and traded for Matt Olson: Freeman: 21 bWAR, 96 HR, 381 RBI, .310/.391/.516 in 614 games. Four All-Star games. Olson: 20.7 bWAR, 146 HR, 435 RBI, .261/.354/.505 in 648 games. Two ASGs + 1 Gold Glove, Silver Slugger.
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Ryan M. Spaeder
Ryan M. Spaeder@theaceofspaeder·
I’m watching the show “Paradise” with my wife, and after a Mets and a Cardinals reference, I told her that one of these writers is definitely a baseball fan. Absolutely confirmed now with a Castellanos doomsday walk-off home run. Brilliantly done. Outstanding show, by the way.
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Sports Illustrated
Sports Illustrated@SInow·
Shohei Ohtani and Aaron Judge are powering baseball's popularity surge 💥 Tom Verducci on their part in baseball’s new golden era: si.com/mlb/shohei-oht…
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Will Laws
Will Laws@WillLaws·
Our April cover story is out! Shohei Ohtani and Aaron Judge cleaned up nicely for us. We’ll be having plenty of more MLB preview stories coming out over the next week-plus. si.com/mlb/shohei-oht…
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Charlotte Alter
Charlotte Alter@CharlotteAlter·
Say it again louder for the folks in the back: AI makes you stupid
Nav Toor@heynavtoor

🚨BREAKING: MIT hooked people up to brain scanners while they used ChatGPT. What they found should concern every single person reading this. ChatGPT users showed 55% weaker brain connectivity than people who didn't use it. Not after years. After just four months. Here's how they tested it. 54 people were split into three groups: one used ChatGPT to write essays, one used Google, and one used nothing but their own brain. They wore EEG monitors that tracked their brain activity in real time across four sessions over four months. The brain-only group built the strongest, most widespread neural networks. Google users were in the middle. ChatGPT users had the weakest brains in the room. Every time. Then the memory test hit. Participants were asked to recall what they'd just written minutes earlier. 83% of ChatGPT users couldn't quote a single line from their own essay. They wrote it. They couldn't remember it. The words passed through them like they were never there. It gets worse. In the final session, ChatGPT users were told to write without AI. Their brains were measurably weaker than people who never used AI at all. 78% still couldn't recall their own writing. The damage didn't go away when the tool was removed. Meanwhile, brain-only users who tried ChatGPT for the first time? Their brains lit up. They wrote better prompts. They retained more. Their brains were already strong enough to use AI as a tool instead of a crutch. The researchers also found that every ChatGPT essay on the same topic looked almost identical. More facts, more dates, more names. But less original thinking. Everyone using ChatGPT produced the same generic output while believing it was their own. MIT gave this a name: cognitive debt. Like financial debt, you borrow convenience now and pay with your thinking ability later. Except there's no way to pay it back. The question isn't whether ChatGPT is useful. It's whether the price is your ability to think without it.

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Nate Tice
Nate Tice@Nate_Tice·
THIS IS MARCH
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Deadline
Deadline@DEADLINE·
Google has apologized after an AI-generated news alert about the BAFTA Film Awards racial slur incident included the N-word deadline.com/2026/02/google…
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Will Laws
Will Laws@WillLaws·
How is this Alysa Liu sequence more satisfying to watch than a quad axel?
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