• Amanda Seyfried nearly played Gamora in Guardians of the Galaxy
    www.digitaltrends.com
    Amanda Seyfried nearly joined the MCU to play Gamora in Guardians of the Galaxy.While speaking with Josh Horowitz for theHappy Sad Confusedpodcast, Seyfried admitted that she received an offer to play the adopted daughter of Thanos. Despite a wonderful meeting with James Gunn, Seyfried did not want to play the character for practical reasons.I was really scared of the idea of being stuck and painted a different color because of the amount of time [it takes], Seyfried said. I definitely got the offer for it and I mulled over it for a couple days. I didnt want to live in London for six months out of the year.Please enable Javascript to view this contentInstead of joining the Guardians, Seyfried opted to work with Seth MacFarlane on A Million Ways to Die in the West.Marvel is a behemoth in the movie industry. In the early 2010s, the MCU was still in its early stages. Guardians of the Galaxy does not feature recognizable characters like Spider-Man or Captain America. Joining a little-known franchise was a risk Seyfried did not want to take.Marvel StudiosLets also remember that being a part of the first Marvel movie that bombs aint good for your career, Seyfried said. I thought that because this was about a talking tree and a talking raccoon, that it would be Marvels first bomb and me and Chris Pratt would never work again. I was wrong! But I was just being smart. Its not brave.Zoe Saldaa signed on for Gamora, and the rest is history. Still, Seyfried does not regret her decision.Sitting there for four-and-a-half hours every morning seemed like it wasnt going to be fun. I had done some green screen stuff, and it wasnt my best or my cup of tea then, Seyfried added. I dont regret anything. I made that decision for myself. It was good for me then, and it was good for me now.Editors Recommendations
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  • The Lion Capital of Ashoka: A Statues Roaring Symbolism
    www.wsj.com
    The elegantly carved feline figures from the third century B.C., unearthed by the British in northern India, embody both tenets of Buddhism and the power of the emperor.
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  • Breaking the Mold: Brooklyn Museum at 200 Review: Telling Its Own Story
    www.wsj.com
    A captivating show celebrating the institutions bicentennial highlights the creativity of the borough, outlines the history of the museum and its collection, and showcases recent artistic gifts.
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  • Measles arrives in Kansas, spreads quickly in undervaccinated counties
    arstechnica.com
    "Fluid situation" Measles arrives in Kansas, spreads quickly in undervaccinated counties Since a single case last week, at least 9 more have been reported with more pending. Beth Mole Mar 21, 2025 5:53 pm | 24 Boxes and vials of the Measles, Mumps, Rubella Virus Vaccine at a vaccine clinic put on by Lubbock Public Health Department on March 1, 2025 in Lubbock, Texas. Credit: Getty | Jan Sonnenmair Boxes and vials of the Measles, Mumps, Rubella Virus Vaccine at a vaccine clinic put on by Lubbock Public Health Department on March 1, 2025 in Lubbock, Texas. Credit: Getty | Jan Sonnenmair Story textSizeSmallStandardLargeWidth *StandardWideLinksStandardOrange* Subscribers only Learn moreMeasles has arrived in Kansas and is spreading swiftly in communities with very low vaccination rates. Since last week, the state has tallied 10 cases across three counties with more pending.On March 13, health officials announced the state's first measles case since 2018. The case was reported in Stevens County, which sits in the southwest corner of the state. As of now, it's unclear if the case is connected to the mushrooming outbreak that began in West Texas.That initial case in Kansas already shows potential to mushroom on its own. Stevens County contains two school districts, both of which have extremely low vaccination rates among kindergartners. By the time children enter kindergarten, they should have their two doses of Measles, Mumps, and Rubella (MMR) vaccine, which together are 97 percent effective against measles. In the 20232024 school year, rates of kindergartners with their two shots stood at 83 percent in the Hugoton school district and 80 percent in the Moscow school district, according to state data. Those rates are significantly below the 95 percent threshold needed to block the onward community spread of measlesone of the most infectious viruses known to humankind.As of today, March 21, Stevens County has reported three more casestwo confirmed and one epidemiologically linked probable casebringing the total to four cases. And there's more to come."We do have pending cases at this time," the county's health department wrote in a Facebook update this afternoon. "We want to keep our community informedthis is a fluid situation and we are focused on working closely with the identified positives and their contacts."On the west border of Stevens sits Morton County, which on Wednesday reported three confirmed cases linked to the first case reported last week in Stevens. Morton County has two school districts, Elkhart and Rolla. The vaccination coverage for kindergartners in Elkhart in 20232024 was also a low 83 percent, while the coverage in Rolla was not reported.On Thursday, the county on the northern border of Stevens, Grant County, also reported three confirmed cases, which were also linked to the first case in Stevens. Grant County is in a much better position to handle the outbreak than its neighbors; its one school district, Ulysses, reported 100 percent vaccination coverage for kindergartners in the 20232024 school year.Outbreak riskSo far, details about the fast-rising cases are scant. The Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) has not published another press release about the cases since March 13. Ars Technica reached out to KDHE for more information but did not hear back before this story's publication.The outlet KWCH 12 News out of Wichita published a story Thursday, when there were just six cases reported in just Grant and Stevens Counties, saying that all six were in unvaccinated people and that no one had been hospitalized. On Friday, KWCH updated the story to note that the case count had increased to 10 and that the health department now considers the situation an outbreak.Measles is an extremely infectious virus that can linger in airspace and on surfaces for up to two hours after an infected person has been in an area. Among unvaccinated people exposed to the virus, 90 percent will become infected.Vaccination rates have slipped nationwide, creating pockets that have lost herd immunity and are vulnerable to fast-spreading, difficult-to-stop outbreaks. In the past, strong vaccination rates prevented such spread, and in 2000, the virus was declared eliminated, meaning there was no continuous spread of the virus over a 12-month period. Experts now fear that the US will lose its elimination status, meaning measles will once again be considered endemic to the country.So far this year, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has documented 378 measles cases as of Thursday, March 20. That figure is already out of date.On Friday, the Texas health department reported 309 cases in its ongoing outbreak. Forty people have been hospitalized, and one unvaccinated child with no underlying medical conditions has died. The outbreak has spilled over to New Mexico and Oklahoma. In New Mexico, officials reported Friday that the case count has risen to 42 cases, with two hospitalizations and one death in an unvaccinated adult. In Oklahoma, the case count stands at four.Beth MoleSenior Health ReporterBeth MoleSenior Health Reporter Beth is Ars Technicas Senior Health Reporter. Beth has a Ph.D. in microbiology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and attended the Science Communication program at the University of California, Santa Cruz. She specializes in covering infectious diseases, public health, and microbes. 24 Comments
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  • Cloudflare turns AI against itself with endless maze of irrelevant facts
    arstechnica.com
    Follow the left wall Cloudflare turns AI against itself with endless maze of irrelevant facts New approach punishes AI companies that ignore "no crawl" directives. Benj Edwards Mar 21, 2025 5:14 pm | 17 Credit: iambuff via Getty Images Credit: iambuff via Getty Images Story textSizeSmallStandardLargeWidth *StandardWideLinksStandardOrange* Subscribers only Learn moreOn Wednesday, web infrastructure provider Cloudflare announced a new feature called "AI Labyrinth" that aims to combat unauthorized AI data scraping by serving fake AI-generated content to bots. The tool will attempt to thwart AI companies that crawl websites without permission to collect training data for large language models that power AI assistants like ChatGPT.Cloudflare, founded in 2009, is probably best known as a company that provides infrastructure and security services for websites, particularly protection against distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks and other malicious traffic.Instead of simply blocking bots, Cloudflare's new system lures them into a "maze" of realistic-looking but irrelevant pages, wasting the crawler's computing resources. The approach is a notable shift from the standard block-and-defend strategy used by most website protection services. Cloudflare says blocking bots sometimes backfires because it alerts the crawler's operators that they've been detected."When we detect unauthorized crawling, rather than blocking the request, we will link to a series of AI-generated pages that are convincing enough to entice a crawler to traverse them," writes Cloudflare. "But while real looking, this content is not actually the content of the site we are protecting, so the crawler wastes time and resources."The company says the content served to bots is deliberately irrelevant to the website being crawled, but it is carefully sourced or generated using real scientific factssuch as neutral information about biology, physics, or mathematicsto avoid spreading misinformation (whether this approach effectively prevents misinformation, however, remains unproven). Cloudflare creates this content using its Workers AI service, a commercial platform that runs AI tasks.Cloudflare designed the trap pages and links to remain invisible and inaccessible to regular visitors, so people browsing the web don't run into them by accident.A smarter honeypotAI Labyrinth functions as what Cloudflare calls a "next-generation honeypot." Traditional honeypots are invisible links that human visitors can't see but bots parsing HTML code might follow. But Cloudflare says modern bots have become adept at spotting these simple traps, necessitating more sophisticated deception. The false links contain appropriate meta directives to prevent search engine indexing while remaining attractive to data-scraping bots."No real human would go four links deep into a maze of AI-generated nonsense," Cloudflare explains. "Any visitor that does is very likely to be a bot, so this gives us a brand-new tool to identify and fingerprint bad bots."This identification feeds into a machine learning feedback loopdata gathered from AI Labyrinth is used to continuously enhance bot detection across Cloudflare's network, improving customer protection over time. Customers on any Cloudflare planeven the free tiercan enable the feature with a single toggle in their dashboard settings.A growing problemCloudflare's AI Labyrinth joins a growing field of tools designed to counter aggressive AI web crawling. In January, we reported on "Nepenthes," software that similarly lures AI crawlers into mazes of fake content. Both approaches share the core concept of wasting crawler resources rather than simply blocking them. However, while Nepenthes' anonymous creator described it as "aggressive malware" meant to trap bots for months, Cloudflare positions its tool as a legitimate security feature that can be enabled easily on its commercial service.The scale of AI crawling on the web appears substantial, according to Cloudflare's data that lines up with anecdotal reports we've heard from sources. The company says that AI crawlers generate more than 50 billion requests to their network daily, amounting to nearly 1 percent of all web traffic they process. Many of these crawlers collect website data to train large language models without permission from site owners, a practice that has sparked numerous lawsuits from content creators and publishers.The technique represents an interesting defensive application of AI, protecting website owners and creators rather than threatening their intellectual property. However, it's unclear how quickly AI crawlers might adapt to detect and avoid such traps, potentially forcing Cloudflare to increase the complexity of its deception tactics. Also, wasting AI company resources might not please people who are critical of the perceived energy and environmental costs of running AI models.Cloudflare describes this as just "the first iteration" of using AI defensively against bots. Future plans include making the fake content harder to detect and integrating the fake pages more seamlessly into website structures. The cat-and-mouse game between websites and data scrapers continues, with AI now being used on both sides of the battle.Benj EdwardsSenior AI ReporterBenj EdwardsSenior AI Reporter Benj Edwards is Ars Technica's Senior AI Reporter and founder of the site's dedicated AI beat in 2022. He's also a tech historian with almost two decades of experience. In his free time, he writes and records music, collects vintage computers, and enjoys nature. He lives in Raleigh, NC. 17 Comments
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  • Classrooms decorated like woodlands seem to slow myopia progression
    www.newscientist.com
    A classroom decorated as part of a myopia trial in Lijiang in Yunnan province, ChinaWeizhong Lan/ AIER Academy of Opthalmology, Central South UniversityMyopia has long been linked to spending too much time inside, but new research suggests that just simulating the outdoors in classrooms could help ward off the condition in children.Short-sightedness, or myopia, generally emerges as the eye changes shape during normal development in early life, and the distance between the cornea at the front of the eye and the retina at the back becomes too long. This results in blurry vision of distant objects
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  • The 10 best new movies and shows to stream this weekend, from the 'Severance' season finale to a new Natalia Grace drama
    www.businessinsider.com
    For a fictionalized true-crime drama, check out "Good American Family."Imogen Faith Reid, Ellen Pompeo, and Mark Duplass star in Hulu's "Good American Family." Disney/Ser Baffo The story of Natalia Grace fascinated audiences when it was teased out in an ID docuseries that unfolded over the course of multiple years (with a few unexpected twists and turns during filming). The Ukrainian orphan was famously accused of being an adult posing as a child by her American adoptive parents."Good American Family," starring Ellen Pompeo as Natalia's adoptive mom Kristine Barnett, is the first scripted take on the story and uses multiple perspectives to get viewers to question the nature of truth.Streaming on: HuluOr "Happy Face."Dennis Quaid in "Happy Face." Paramount+ For a true crime drama of the decidedly more lethal variety, check out "Happy Face," which premiered its first two episodes this week.The series focuses on Melissa, a real woman who learned as a teenager that she was the daughter of an infamous murderer after her dad, Keith Jesperson (aka the Happy Face Killer), was arrested. The real Melissa Moore serves as an executive producer on the show, which stars Annaleigh Ashford as a version of Melissa.Streaming on: Paramount+If you like movies like "Knives Out," try "The Residence."Uzo Aduba and Randall Park in "The Residence." Erin Simkin/Netflix As with the Rian Johnson films which are also on Netflix "The Residence" is a whodunit that leans into comedy, focusing on a fictional murder mystery in the White House. Uzo Aduba's police consultant character even has a similarly alliterative (and somewhat silly-sounding) name to rival Daniel Craig's Benoit Blanc.Streaming on: NetflixIf you're a fan of musicals, watch "Wicked.""Wicked" stars Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo Giles Keyte / Universal Pictures The popular Broadway musical got the film adaptation treatment last year and was a hit at the box office. Now, "Wicked" is available to stream at home, so you can experience Ariana Grande's Glinda and Cynthia Erivo's Elphaba in all their Oscar-nominated glory from the comfort of your couch.Streaming on: Peacock"Anora" is also finally streaming.Mark Eydelshteyn and Mikey Madison in "Anora." Neon Sean Baker's "Anora" swept the Oscars, but the indie film was probably one of the lesser-seen nominees. It's finally available to watch at home, so you can see the performance that led Mikey Madison to triumph over best actress frontrunner Demi Moore.Streaming on: HuluSo is "Sing Sing."Colman Domingo and Clarence Maclin in "Sing Sing." A24 Another underappreciated 2024 critical darling, "Sing Sing" stars Colman Domingo as an incarcerated man who finds purpose after joining a theater group in prison. Domingo was nominated for an Oscar for his performance and acted alongside real former inmates.Streaming on: MaxIf you like rock operas, "O'Dessa" is delightful.Sadie Sink returns to her Broadway roots in "O'Dessa." Searchlight The plot isn't exactly airtight, but if you take it for what it is, "O'Dessa" is a fun ride with impressive performances. Sadie Sink shines as the title character, a young orphaned musician in a postapocalyptic future. Imbued with the power of music to change the world, she embarks on a quest to save her family heirloom guitar and save her true love.Streaming on: Hulu"Severance" season two ended this week.Adam Scott in season two of "Severance." Apple TV+ The megahit workplace thriller/mystery box series completed its second season this week. The ending of "Severance" season two left off on a major cliffhanger, so hopefully fans won't have to wait another three years for "Severance" season three.Streaming on: Apple TV+True crime fans should watch "A Body in the Snow: The Trial of Karen Read."Karen Read with John O'Keefe. Courtesy Karen Read One of the most baffling true crime cases in recent memory, this new ID docuseries looks into the death of John O'Keefe, who was found dead in the front yard of his friend's home. His girlfriend, Karen Read, was subsequently arrested and charged with his murder, but has maintained her innocence. Read participates in the doc.Streaming on: MaxFor a twisty thriller, watch "Tyler Perry's Duplicity."Kat Graham in "Tyler Perry's Duplicity." Quantrell Colbert/Prime Kat Graham stars as a lawyer trying to figure out who shot her best friend's husband. The synopsis promises "a treacherous maze of deception and betrayal," so this is probably a good one for the Harlan Coben fans out there.Streaming on: Prime Video
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  • Will Moiraine die in 'The Wheel Of Time' season 3? The books give some clues
    www.businessinsider.com
    2025-03-21T22:10:03Z Read in app Rosamund Pike as Moiraine Damodred in season three of "The Wheel of Time." Prime Video This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now.Have an account? "The Wheel of Time" season three trailer teased that Moiraine might die in the coming episodes.Moiraine is a fan-favorite character played by Rosamund Pike.The TV series may be adapting a storyline from one of the later source material books.Warning: spoilers ahead for the first four episodes of "The Wheel of Time."Prime Video's "The Wheel of Time" may take a big swing in season three by killing off Moiraine Damodred, who is played by the show's most famous actor."The Wheel of Time" has been an ensemble series since its first season, but Rosamund Pike, who plays Moiraine, has always been the face of the show.When the first trailer for season three debuted last month, the video seemed to tease that Moiraine would sacrifice herself for the series' hero, Rand al'Thor (Josha Stradowski)."In every future where I lived, Rand dies. And the only way he lives is if I don't," Moiraine says over clips of Rand and Moiraine in different settings.Moiraine is an Aes Sedai (sorcerer) on a mission to defeat the Dark One, and she needs Rand alive because he's the Dragon Reborn, a reincarnated hero who is prophesied to save the world.Killing off a fan-favorite character like Moiraine can be risky for a TV series, as it could lead to a backlash.Moiraine has visions of Lanfear killing her in the future One of the visions of Lanfear (Natasha O'Keeffe) strangling Moiraine (Rosamund Pike). Prime Video In season three, Moiraine, Rand, and their allies travel to the Aiel Waste to raise an army and run away from the Forsaken, a group of sorcerers working for the Dark One.Rand hopes to prove that he is the Car'a'carn, the leader they have been waiting for, but he must complete their prophecy. He must go through Rhuidean, a mysterious city in the Aiel Waste, where men are tested before becoming chiefs of the Aiel clans, and women are tested to become sorcerers.In episode four, Moiraine follows Rand to Rhuidean after one of the Wise Ones, the Aiel's sorcerers, accidentally reveals that she has seen a future where Moiraine goes through the test.When they enter the city, Rand experiences visions of his ancestors, while Moiraine enters a ring-like structure that reveals visions of her potential future. Moiraine's visions initially show a variety of possible futures, from Moiraine becoming the leader of the Aes Sedai to Moiraine killing Rand.At the end of the episode, we see another series of Moiraine's visions, where she sees herself being killed over and over again by Lanfear, a Forsaken with whom Moiraine currently has a tense alliance.The message seems pretty clear. Moiraine will die, and Lanfear will be the person to do it.Fans will have to wait for future episodes to see if we get further insight into these visions.In the book series, Moiraine dies temporarily Lanfear (Natasha O'Keefe) is stuck between working for the Dark One and wanting to be with the Dragon Reborn. Courtesy of Prime Lanfear is also a major rival for Moiraine in Robert Jordan's "Wheel of Time" novels, which the show is based on.In the fifth book, "Fires of Heaven," Lanfear, who is in love with the Dragon Reborn, becomes jealous when she finds out he has slept with someone else. Rand and Lanfear fight, but he refuses to kill her, so Moiraine intervenes, pushing Lanfear through a red door portal to another world. Moiraine falls through the portal, too, and the door melts, making the heroes believe that Moiraine and Lanfear died.However, in book 11, "Knife of Dreams," the heroes discover that Moiraine is alive in another world. In book 13, "Towers of Midnight, " she is rescued from the other world.Though season three is mainly focused on book four, "The Shadow's Rising," the series often feeds in storylines from the later books earlier in the story. This could mean that the show is adapting Moiraine's sacrifice early, making Moiraine's death in the show temporary."The Wheel Of Time" airs new episodes weekly on Prime Video.
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  • The elite institutions caving to Donald Trump, briefly explained
    www.vox.com
    This story appeared in The Logoff, a daily newsletter that helps you stay informed about the Trump administration without letting political news take over your life. Subscribe here.Welcome to The Logoff: Today Im focusing on powerful private institutions caving to Donald Trumps demands and a law firm demonstrating another way forward. Whats the latest? Donald Trump took back an executive order attacking Paul, Weiss one of the countrys largest law firms after it agreed to do $40 million worth of free legal work on causes favored by the Trump administration. Trumps order had pulled the firms security clearances and tried to terminate its federal contracts because it had sued January 6 rioters and because a former partner had worked on a Trump prosecution case. Is this normal? No but it is part of a trend of powerful private sector institutions bowing to Trumps threats to their business. Columbia University just gave in to Trumps demands after he threatened $400 million in federal funding. And colleges across the country are taking similar steps to protect their own funding. What other choice do they have? To fight. Perkins Coie, another firm whose security clearances Trump targeted, sued. And, last week, a federal judge temporarily blocked the administration from enforcing Trumps order, finding it likely violates the firms First, Fifth, and Sixth Amendment rights. (In response, the Trump administration today tried to get the judge kicked off the case.) Whats the big picture? These are powerful institutions with vast resources. Yes, theyre still less powerful than the federal government, and yes, they have plenty to lose. (The Times reports that Paul, Weiss considered its own legal challenge but deemed the financial risk too high.) But we all have even more to lose if the rule of law is replaced by a system in which the president can use the federal government to pursue personal vendettas and enforce compliance with his agenda.And with that, its time to log off... I really enjoyed this (very short) piece about a Dutch initiative that helps people enjoy something soothing online in this case, watching fish swim and also engage in a small act of environmentalism. You can read about the fish doorbell here. Thanks for all the book recommendations, and Ill see you back here on Monday. Have a good weekend!See More:
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  • Natalia Grace, the orphan whose bizarre abandonment made her a reality star, explained
    www.vox.com
    Late in Hulus new series Good American Family comes a moment of irony thats become all too familiar in true crime docudramas. The fictionalized Natalia Grace Barnett at this point in the story a teen, being played by the 27-year-old Imogen Faith Reid glowingly reads supportive comments from random internet strangers. I feel so bad I doubted you, Natalia, one comment reads, But I guess thats what the media wanted. Ah, yes: the ancient narrative that the media made a complicated situation worse, being proffered by a piece of media thats currently making it worse.Good American Family dramatizes the twisted saga of Natalia Grace, a Ukraine-born adoptee who was born in 2003, 1989, or somewhere in between, according to a litany of contradicting stories and court records. The new series interminable eight episodes rehash the saga many Americans first learned about in 2019, when her second set of adoptive parents, Michael and Kristine Barnett, gained media attention for adopting and then abandoning her in the US when they moved to Canada without her. The Barnetts publicly claimed that their daughter was an evil, murderous 20-something con artist pretending to be a little girl. Yes, its the plot of the movie Orphan, but in real life. (To be clear, Natalia Graces tale did not inspire the 2009 movie, as she was adopted in 2010, but may well have been inspired by it.) The Barnetts behavior resulted in ultimately unsuccessful criminal charges of neglect. Though the messy details of this back and forth are recounted for viewers, including the accompanying media spectacle, the Hulu series ultimately does little to justify itself, either as entertainment or as a further examination of an abuse victim whose entire life has been lived under a magnifying glass as a result of her abuse.Heres what to know about the saga of Natalia and why the Hulu docuseries probably isnt the last time youll be hearing her name, even though it probably should be.Natalia was 6 or 7 or maybe 8 or 9 when she was adopted in 2010By their own telling, Indiana residents Kristine and Michael Barnett and their three sons were an all-American family: Kristine would go on to author a much-lauded book about raising her son Jacob, who is a high-functioning child prodigy. The memoir, The Spark, was so popular it was nominated for a Goodreads Choice Award in 2013 but while it details Kristine Barnetts miraculous job parenting her sons, it reportedly contains no mention whatsoever of the little girl she adopted alongside them.The Barnetts adopted Natalia in 2010. According to Michael Barnett, they were only given 24 hours by a shady adoption agency to make a decision about adopting her, and were provided very little information about Natalias background and medical history. What we know is that Natalias birth mother had been born in Latvia and was living in Ukraine at the time of Natalias birth, which was listed on Natalias birth certificate as September 4, 2003. She placed Natalia in an orphanage. In 2008, at the age of 5, she was brought to the US by Dyan and Gary Ciccone, a New Hampshire couple with ties to an area adoption agency focused on Russian adoptees. What happened is unclear, but Natalias unsuccessful placement underscores the often murky and dysfunctional process of adoption, especially international adoptions, which can exploit children. Imogen Faith Reid, Ellen Pompeo, and Mark Duplass in Good American Family. Disney/Ser BaffoThe Barnetts immediately ran into problems with the adoption. They claimed that Natalia, who was born with dwarfism, was showing signs of puberty, including menstruation and pubic hair, despite being only 6 or 7 according to her official birth certificate. They also claimed that Natalia had tried repeatedly to kill them, including by placing thumbtacks on the stairs, pouring Pine Sol into coffee, wielding knives, and allegedly pulling Kristine Barnett into an electric fence. According to Michael Barnett, their response to these incidents included begging the police to arrest their 7-year-old; police declined. Child services were alerted to the situation, however, and began investigating the couples treatment of their daughter. During the same period, the Barnetts had Natalia seen by various medical experts, apparently in attempts to determine her real age. Medical providers in the Barnetts lives have since come forward to allege that they told the Barnetts Natalia was a child.To this day, its not fully clear whether the Barnetts actually believed their own lie about Natalia being an adult, or whether they just made it up as an excuse to be rid of her. Kristine Barnett has fallen back on the medical advice she claims she was given by experts, while Michael Barnett has emphasized the court rulings concerning her age; the new Hulu docuseries depicts him as being manipulated by Kristines own narcissism, though not without culpability. In 2012, the Barnetts successfully petitioned a probate court to change Natalias official birth year from 2003 to 1989, which made her legally 22 years old instead of 8. According to court documents, the change was made based on age estimates provided by a primary care physician and a social worker, without holding an evidentiary hearing or providing Natalia with her own legal representative in the matter. This also meant that the child services case was closed, since Natalia was now legally an adult. Around the time of this ruling, Natalia spent nine weeks in a mental hospital. She also spent time at a halfway house. The Barnetts rented two subsequent apartments for her, including one in Lafayette, Indiana a decision made, according to court testimony from a state police detective, Because Kristine said Lafayette is a white-trash town and nobody is going to care or worry about [Natalia]. The Barnetts also appeared to disbelieve that the physical disabilities associated with Natalias medical condition were real; though she had used a walker since she was a child, the apartment they rented for her was on the second floor of a house with no easy street access. After relocating Natalia to this isolated, inaccessible house in Lafayette, the Barnetts moved to Canada with their sons in 2013, leaving her behind. Natalia never saw Kristine Barnett again. The couple divorced in 2014 but their entanglement with Natalia was only just beginning. The courts perpetuate a wrong and then fail to redress itFollowing her abandonment by the Barnetts in 2013, Natalia was taken in by Cynthia and Antwon Mans and their children. (Some reports say the Mans have 10 children, others say five.) Over the next decade, Natalia and others tried repeatedly to have her age change reversed in the courts, only for the courts to reaffirm that she was an adult. Natalia was legally considered an adult for most of her childhood. At one point, per court records, the Mans attempted to gain legal guardianship over Natalia, only for Michael Barnett to block their efforts because, he claimed, Natalia was an adult. All I was told was, Youre 22 now, Natalia later told IDs multi-season docuseries about the saga, The Curious Case of Natalia Grace. Whenever somebody asks you what your age is, you say youre 22 and you tried to murder your family. I was taught to lie.Prosecutors soon became interested in Natalias case. Confusion over Natalias actual age began to dominate the investigation into the Barnetts behavior, which was serious enough that they were each charged separately in 2019 with criminal counts related to both child neglect and neglect of a dependent [adult]. The child neglect charges were ultimately dismissed due to the outstanding quandary of her age. In 2023, a DNA lab conducted testing that seemed to conclusively put the matter of Natalias age to rest: she was likely around two years older than the age indicated by her birth certificate at the time of her adoption, born around 2001. At the time of her adoption, she would have been 8 or 9, and at the time of her abandonment in Lafayette, she would have been 11 or 12 not 23, as the court system legally claimed.But because the original court ruling still stood, in 2020, prosecutors had to drop all charges related to child neglect. At Michael Barnetts 2022 trial for neglect of a dependent adult, Natalia testified against her adopted father. She alleged that she had fallen repeatedly while attempting to navigate her inaccessible apartment, and that the Barnetts had left her to fend for herself without teaching her how to access her disability payments or perform basic tasks like laundry or food preparation. Michael Barnetts lawyer, however, was able to successfully allege that at 23 the only age Natalia was legally permitted to acknowledge under the court ruling she should have been able to do all of those tasks as a functioning adult. Defense attorneys also implied that the Mans family were manipulating and exploiting Natalia allegations of stealing benefits that would linger after the trial. Jurors ultimately found Michael Barnett not guilty on the neglect charge, and the pending charges against Kristine Barnett were subsequently dropped. From there, despite the mudslinging, it seemed as though things were finally resolved between Natalia and the Barnetts. By that point, however, the Barnetts, Natalia, and the Mans were something more than a set of dysfunctional squabbling families they were all reality stars. From one messy situation to anotherIn late 2019, the news of criminal charges laid against the Barnetts began to make headlines, and the lives of all involved irrevocably changed. Tabloid media quickly labeled Natalia a Psycho dwarf, and Natalia and the Mans family went on Dr. Phil and all of this was within weeks of the story coming to light. Then came IDs multi-season docuseries, The Curious Case of Natalia Grace, which began airing in 2023 shortly after the court proceedings. By that point, Natalia was living with the Mans family, who the docuseries framed as her saviors. The Mans, who claimed Natalia had never been dangerous at all, formally adopted her in 2023 when she was around 21 in a splashy event that made up part of the shows second season.The pressure to provide TV drama may have been too much for the Mans family, however. Despite caring for Natalia for nearly a decade without issues, they abruptly dramatically leaned into the Natalia is evil theme, with Antwon Mans calling the shows producers to allege that her behavior had been disturbing and selfish. The ID producers, naturally, revealed this development as a shocking twist and a season-ending cliffhanger. In the documentarys third season, Natalia accused the Mans family of physical and emotional abuse. To the Hollywood Reporter, ID president Jason Sarlanis described the docuseries decision to delve into Natalias time with the Mans as do[ing] right by our audience whether anyone considered doing right by Natalia and her new family dynamic was less clear. In 2023, Natalia left the Mans familys Nashville residence and moved in with yet another family: The DePauls, a family of little people who reportedly wanted to adopt Natalia all the way back in 2009, prior to her adoption by the Barnetts. The ID series filmed them helping Natalia dramatically escape from the Mans in the middle of the night, into a new wholesome life with a family who hopefully could finally understand her. A happy ending? Yes and no. While theres little left to say about Natalias story at this point, its clearly going to keep going in the public eye. In January 2025, People placed now 23-year-old Natalia on the cover, with the lurid headline Victim or Villain? even though years of reporting within its own pages make the answer abundantly clear. Hulus Good American Family similarly plays with blaming a disabled child for her own abuse. On top of that, the show drags out over eight episodes and features a parade of flat, dull characters. Ellen Pompeo as Kristine is especially one-note, narcissistic and brittle with little nuance, while Mark Duplass as Michael goes through a histrionic and unbelievable series of emotional swings as he wrestles with who to believe. The Mans are depicted as well-meaning grifters who rescue Natalia but arent without their own issues.Though it ultimately fully accepts the framing that the Barnetts emotionally and physically abused and gaslit Natalia to a heartbreaking degree, it also initially perpetuates the idea that Natalias behavior is alarming and disturbing. Above all, casting 27-year-old Reid to play a child 20 years younger at the time the series starts does more to confuse the narrative than clarify it. While the narrative depicts Natalia as finding closure, its hard not to see the show leaving the door open for another season, just as ID has done again and again. Whats more, Nicole DePaul recently alleged on Facebook that the docudrama had not compensated Natalia in any way for the use of her story though they were, she claimed, compensating Kristine Barnett, perhaps in the hopes of staving off a lawsuit. (Hulu did not respond for comment.) This wouldnt be the first time that a high-profile true crime docudrama has been castigated for exploiting victims. But instead of learning any lessons from those other cases, or even from Natalias own story, it seems were destined to repeat these same mistakes in the quest for drama with diminishing returns.See More:
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