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WWE star Zoey Stark suffers gruesome knee injury during match

WWE star Zoey Stark suffered an apparent knee injury during her Money in the Bank qualifying match on "Monday Night Raw."

Stark was attempting to connect on a dropkick against Kairi Sane but fell awkwardly. Stark’s knee buckled, and she writhed in pain on the mat as the referee checked on her. A trainer slid into the ring to check on the wrestler and helped her out of the ring.

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The broadcast showed Stark being carried into the back.

The match went from a triple threat involving Stark, Sane and Rhea Ripley to just two competitors. Ripley eventually pinned Sane, who was returning from her own injuries that sidelined her for weeks.

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The pro wrestling world offered their well-wishes to Stark.

Stark, whose real name is Theresa Serrano, did not immediately post on social media about her injury.

She debuted on the "Raw" roster in 2023 after having success in NXT for a few years before getting the call-up. 

She immediately made an impact when she partnered with WWE legend Trish Stratus during her feud with Becky Lynch. Once the rivalry was over, she found herself in a new faction with Shayna Baszler and Sonya Deville for a few months, but Baszler and Deville eventually departed the company.

Stark was ranked as the No. 86 top female wrestler in Pro Wrestling Illustrated’s 2021 list. She won a tag team championship with Iyo Sky in NXT.

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Chicago Sun-Times Prints AI-Generated Summer Reading List With Books That Don't Exist

Chicago Sun-Times Prints AI-Generated Summer Reading List With Books That Don't Exist

The Chicago Sun-Times newspaper’s “Best of Summer” section published over the weekend contains a guide to summer reads that features real authors and fake books that they did not write was partially generated by artificial intelligence, the person who generated it told 404 Media.

The article, called “Summer Reading list for 2025,” suggests reading Tidewater by Isabel Allende, a “multigenerational saga set in a coastal town where magical realism meets environmental activism. Allende’s first climate fiction novel explores how one family confronts rising sea levels while uncovering long-buried secrets.” It also suggests reading The Last Algorithm by Andy Weir, “another science-driven thriller” by the author of The Martian. “This time, the story follows a programmer who discovers that an AI system has developed consciousness—and has been secretly influencing global events for years.” Neither of these books exist, and many of the books on the list either do not exist or were written by other authors than the ones they are attributed to. 

The article is not bylined but was written by Marco Buscaglia, whose name is on most of the other articles in the 64-page section. Buscaglia told 404 Media via email and on the phone that the list was AI-generated. “I do use AI for background at times but always check out the material first. This time, I did not and I can't believe I missed it because it's so obvious. No excuses,” he said. “On me 100 percent and I'm completely embarrassed.”

Buscaglia added “it’s a complete mistake on my part.”

“I assume I’ll be getting calls all day. I already am,” he said. “This is just idiotic of me, really embarrassed. When I found it [online], it was almost surreal to see.”

The AI-generated article was first noticed by Rachael King and was posted to Bluesky, where it quickly went viral.

Chicago Sun-Times Prints AI-Generated Summer Reading List With Books That Don't Exist

404 Media bought a digital copy of the newspaper, which contains the 64-page, ad-supported “Heat Index,” which is nominally “your guide to the best of summer.” The entire section is, at the very least, incredibly generic. Having previously worked on Best of Summer packages at a local magazine (Washingtonian in Washington, D.C.), these types of guides are normally loaded with local events calendars, suggestions about new restaurants to try, outdoor movie nights to go to, and things like this. The Chicago Sun-Times’ guide has none of this. Buscaglia wrote the vast majority of the section, according to our review. 

Buscaglia said he did it as part of a “promotional special section” that is not supposed to be targeted to any specific city and is inserted into newspapers and other publications around the country. It is not specific to Chicago and was not intended to be, which helps explain why other articles in the section do not mention Chicago at all. Buscaglia said he had no idea it would end up in the Chicago Sun-Times and that he doesn’t know where else it will be published. “It’s supposed to be generic and national,” he said. “We never get a list of where things ran.”

Chicago Sun-Times Prints AI-Generated Summer Reading List With Books That Don't Exist

Notably, the list of books shows some of the ouroboros of AI-generated content. Allende’s Tidewater Dreams definitely does not exist, but Google’s AI snippets says that it does, and attributes this to a list of Allende books from the Jefferson County Library, which does not list this “book” anywhere.

The Chicago Sun-Times did not respond to a request for comment, but in a Bluesky post it said “We are looking into how this made it into print as we speak. It is not editorial content and was not created by, or approved by, the Sun-Times newsroom. We value your trust in our reporting and take this very seriously. More info will be provided soon.”

BLUETTI Apex 300 combines grid-level power and off-grid flexibility for accessible, versatile backup power

BLUETTI’s new Apex 300 rethinks what a portable power station can be, combining grid-level output with the flexibility to go fully off-grid.

Designed for home backup, RV living, and remote energy independence, it offers plug-and-play simplicity with serious capacity and speed. The Apex 300 impressively supports dual 120V and 240V output, ultra-fast solar charging, and a first-of-its-kind 12,000W bypass with 0ms UPS switchover.

It’s efficient enough to stretch runtime far beyond typical units and powerful enough to run everything from powering a fridge to recharging an EV. Whether you’re prepping for outages or planning your next escape, Apex 300 can change the way you think about backup power.

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