(1) NEW SEATTLE WORLDCON 2025 DEVELOPMENTS. Last night Seattle Worldcon 2025 chair Kathy Bond and Program Division Head SunnyJim Morgan published their promised statement detailing how ChatGPT was used in the program panelist selection process. (See File 770’s coverage here: “Seattle Worldcon 2025 Tells How ChatGPT Was Used in Panelist Selection Process”.)
Some public announcements by departing program participants have been spotted:
- Leah Ning of Apex Books has written a two-page “public record” of the reasons for withdrawing as a Seattle Worldcon 2025 program participant. Read it at Bluesky.
- Philip Athans has also dropped out of the program – announcement on Bluesky.
Cora Buhlert has written a link compilation post, “Robot Hallucinations”, that also features a long exposition about what ChatGPT returned when she ran her own name through the prompt. The notorious prompt namechecks this blog, about which Cora says, “File 770 is a good resource, but it’s not the only SFF news site nor is it free of bias. So privileging File 770 as a source means that any bias it has is reproduced.” Which is true as far as it goes, however, I believe the reason Seattle included 770 was to corral news about code of conduct violations.
Frank Catalano recommends this Bluesky thread by Simon Bisson as “what appears to be a good analysis of the Seattle Worldcon AI prompt from a well-regarded and experienced tech journalist.” It begins here: “So I looked at the ‘query’ that Worldcon used, and as someone who has written at least two books on enterprise AI and many many developer columns on how to build AI apps, and, well, the slim hope that I’d had that they may have done things right has been dashed.” (Coincidentally, Bisson was once a frequent commenter here.)
(2) A LOT OF THAT GOING AROUND. Publisher’s Lunch reported today that the Mystery Writers of America apologized in a Bluesky post for using AI-generated animations of Humphrey Bogart and Edgar Allan Poe in a video shown at the Edgar awards ceremony on May 1

(3) AFUA RICHARDSON GOFUNDME. A GoFundMe – “Aid Afua’s Path to Recovery” – has been started to fund medical expenses of comics creator Afua Richardson, a featured artist at Dublin 2019.
Like most artists, she is not insured and has to come out of pocket for medical expenses after her major surgery. Please help her on her path to recovery.
Afua Richardson is known for her work on Genius and World of Wakanda. Other stories she has drawn for include X-Men, Captain Marvel, Captain America, and the Mighty Avengers for Marvel Comics; and Wonder Woman Warbringer and All-Star Batman for DC Comics; and Mad Max. She also worked with U.S. Representative and civil rights leader John Lewis to illustrate Run, a volume in his autobiographical comic series co-written with Andrew Aydin. She won the 2011 Nina Simone Award for Artistic Achievement for her trailblazing work in comics.
(4) PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION HALTS CUTS TO IMLS. “R.I. District Court Grants Preliminary Injunction in IMLS Case” reports Publishers Weekly.
In welcome news for the Institute of Museum and Library Services and two more federal agencies targeted for dismantling by a presidential executive order, the District Court of Rhode Island has granted 21 states’ attorneys general the preliminary injunction they sought in Rhode Island v. Trump. In response to the evidence and to an April 18 motion hearing, chief judge John J. McConnell Jr. granted the states’ motion, agreeing with the plaintiffs that the executive order violates the Administrative Procedures Act, separation of powers principle, and the Take Care clause of the U.S. Constitution.
From the first paragraph of his order, Judge McConnell upheld that Congress controls the agencies and appropriates funding, and he referred to “the arbitrary and capricious way” the March 14 order was implemented at the IMLS, Minority Business Development Agency (MBDA), and Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service (FMCS). He determined that the EO “disregards the fundamental constitutional role of each of the branches of our federal government; specifically, it ignores the unshakable principles that Congress makes the law and appropriates funds, and the Executive implements the law Congress enacted and spends the funds Congress appropriated.”
Notably, the order’s timing closely coincided with FY25 congressional appropriations. On March 15, the day after issuing the EO, President Donald Trump—a named defendant in the case—approved the Full-Year Continuing Appropriations and Extensions Act, mandating FY2024-level funding for IMLS and other agencies through September 25, 2025. In 2024, IMLS was appropriated $294,800,000, so the same amount was approved for FY25.
In some cases, IMLS is issuing checks, fulfilling its statutory obligation…
(5) TONY AWARD NOMINEES. File 770 lists the many “2025 Tony Award Nominees” of genre interest at the link.
(6) RACE MATHEWS (1935-2025). Charles Race Thorson Mathews, a founding member of the Melbourne Science Fiction Club in 1952, and holder of its membership number 1, died May 5. Race suffered a broken pelvis from a fall three weeks ago, and had been going downhill since. He died May 5 at the age of 90.
Fancyclopedia 3 recalls he sold off his collection to fund the courtship of his wife, and mostly gafiated in 1956 following his marriage.
He subsequently went into politics. He opened Aussiecon 1 in 1975, while he was a member of federal parliament. By 1985 he was Minister for the Police and Emergency Services for the State of Victoria and at Aussiecon 2 gave the opening address. Mathews was kind enough to let File 770 publish his speech, which was rich in fanhistorical anecdote. (It can be found at File 770 57, p. 16 (part 1) and File 770 58, p. 2 p15 (part 2).)
Mathews was the author or editor of numerous books on politics, cooperatives and economics.
He is the subject of a biography, Race Mathews: A Life in Politics by Iola Mathews, Monash University Press, 2024.
(7) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY.
[Written by Paul Weimer.]
May 7, 1931 — Gene Wolfe. (Died 2019)
By Paul Weimer: Were I to do this birthday properly and proud, I’d do a Gene Wolfe piece that had unreliable narration, used a prodigious and positively unwonted vocabulary, possibly footnoted, and definitely something to be re-read, re-examined and thought over for years.
Unfortunately I am not Gene Wolfe, and frankly, few other others in the SFF genresphere have ever dared to try and approach him. His is the kind of work that like few others, you can read and re-read over a lifetime, and get not just nuggets but whole veins of new and exciting ideas. His ideas have influenced my RPG scenarios and ideas for years.
Jack Vance may have invented the Dying Earth, but Gene Wolfe codified it and made it a whole subgenre of his own with the New Sun books, which is where i began his work. I did begin a bit in the deep end, but a friend (and at the time one of the players in my TTRPG) said that I just had to read Gene Wolfe. And so I did. Did I understand my first read through of Severian’s story? Not as much as I thought I did. Read number two went much better, and I keep thinking I need a read number three–I’ve made a couple of abortive attempts at it but the siren song and responsibility of new work keeps me from doing so.
After Beyond the New Sun, I went to the Long Sun (generation ships for the win!) and then moved on. I loved the Wizard Knight series with its Yggdrasil like setup of worlds (you all know how much I enjoy worldbuilding, even as I sometimes mistype Discworld for Ringworld and my editor misses it 😉 ). I think the Fifth Head of Cerberus might be his most accessible work, an entry point if you want to try Wolfe without going for some of the more elusive works. I think The Land Across is also a good entry point as well, and feels timely and relevant with its capricious rules in the government of the country our narrator visits (also makes me think of Miéville’s The City and the City).
I’ve not read all of his oeuvre, but I’ve tried most of it. I’m weakest on his short stories and need to catch up on those (I’ve read Castle of Days of course, and found out recently a friend found a copy of the Castle of the Otter for a bargain price in a used bookstore. What a rare find!)
My favorite Wolfe are probably the Latro books (Soldier of the Mist and Soldier of Arete and Soldier of Sidon). These books are almost as if Gene Wolfe decided. “Paul Weimer needs books just for him). Latro is a Roman mercenary, circa 470s BC serving as he will in the Mediterranean as a soldier. He’s had a head injury and so cannot remember events of the previous day (50 First Dates, anyone?). However, he can see the various supernatural beings that populate the landscape that no one else can. The books are masterpieces of information holding and withholding as we, the reader can piece together things that Latro clearly misses, all in one of the best all time favorite set of settings. Sure, you’ve got to work hard to really get these books, but that’s the secret of all of Wolfe’s work. If you want to read it, be prepared to do the home work. Sure, this series and much of Wolfe’s work is not a casual read (and I’ve tried audio and audio and Wolfe do not work for me), but Wolfe was Umberto Eco in full SFF guise. If that is what you are ready for, or in the mood for, Wolfe’s works await you.
I never got to meet him in person, alas. Requiescat in pace.

(8) COMICS SECTION.
- Bliss meets a jerk at an author signing.
- Dinosaur Comics tries an expanded universe story.
- Eek! will lose more than a job.
- FurBabies has both bot and laser trouble.
- Off the Mark asks, does your cat cuss?
- The Barn continues its ST:TNG visit.
(9) WATER, WATER, EVERYWHERE. “Hugo 2025: Flow” is another compelling review of a Hugo finalist by Camestros Felapton.
…Simple plot. The characters are a cat who is a cat. A labrador who is very much a labrador. A lemur that is a bit obsessed with stuff. A capybara that is a bit stoical. A secretary bird who possibly is a transcendental messenger of cosmic forces whose role is to usher the cat into a meeting with the divine to maybe save the world or maybe that’s a dream. So straight forward stuff.
Of course, I’m being intentionally obtuse. The film uses simple parts to tell a complex story with many thought provoking aspects, an intentionally unresolved mystery and a strong religious themes without any overt religion or religious messaging….
(10) FALLING ON HIS SWORD A SPECIALTY. Gary Farber reminds File 770 “I’m still willing to make sacrifices for fandom.” He wanted to be sure we didn’t miss his offer on Facebook —
Now I’m thinking I could volunteer to a Worldcon so they could have another body they could offer up to resign to take the blame for whatever Inevitable Embarrassing Scandal is happening in that half of that year before the con.
I wouldn’t need any actual skills. I could just have a title, and then be duly fired/resign when someone needs to be fired/resign in order to take the blame.
Future Worldcon Committees, I’M AVAILABLE!
Sandra Bond suggests his title should be, “Gary Farber, Omelas Fan.”
(11) MYERS-BRIGGS-SKYWALKER. “Woman wins £30,000 compensation for being compared to Darth Vader” – the Guardian has the story.
Comparing someone at work to the Star Wars villain Darth Vader is “insulting” and “upsetting”, an employment tribunal has ruled.
A judge concluded that being told you have the same personality type as the infamous sci-fi baddie is a workplace “detriment” – a legal term meaning harm or negative impact experienced by a person.
“Darth Vader is a legendary villain of the Star Wars series, and being aligned with his personality is insulting,” the employment judge Kathryn Ramsden said.
The tribunal’s ruling came in the case of an NHS blood donation worker Lorna Rooke, who has won almost £30,000 after her co-worker took a Star Wars-themed psychological test on her behalf and told colleagues Rooke fell into the Sith Lord’s category….
… In August 2021, members of Rooke’s team took a Star Wars themed Myers-Briggs questionnaire as a team-building exercise.
The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator sorts people into 16 categories based on how introverted they are, level of intuition, if they are led by thoughts or feelings and how they judge or perceive the world around them….
…Rooke did not participate as she had to take a personal phone call but when she returned a colleague, Amanda Harber, had filled it out on her behalf and announced that she had the same personality type as Vader – real name Anakin Skywalker.
The supervisor told the tribunal this outcome made her feel unpopular and was one of the reasons for her resignation the following month….
(12) FROM BEYOND THE GRAVE. [Item by Cliff.] When truth is stranger than science fiction….. “AI of dead Arizona road rage victim addresses killer in court” – the Guardian tells how it was done.
Chris Pelkey was killed in a road rage shooting in Chandler, Arizona, in 2021.
Three and a half years later, Pelkey appeared in an Arizona court to address his killer. Sort of.
“To Gabriel Horcasitas, the man who shot me, it is a shame we encountered each other that day in those circumstances,” says a video recording of Pelkey. “In another life, we probably could have been friends.
“I believe in forgiveness, and a God who forgives. I always have, and I still do,” Pelkey continues, wearing a grey baseball cap and sporting the same thick red and brown beard he wore in life.
Pelkey was 37 years old, devoutly religious and an army combat veteran. Horcasitas shot Pelkey at a red light in 2021 after Pelkey exited his vehicle and walked back towards Horcasitas’s car.
Pelkey’s appearance from beyond the grave was made possible by artificial intelligence in what could be the first use of AI to deliver a victim impact statement. Stacey Wales, Pelkey’s sister, told local outlet ABC-15 that she had a recurring thought when gathering more than 40 impact statements from Chris’s family and friends.
“All I kept coming back to was, what would Chris say?” Wales said….
…Wales and her husband fed an AI model videos and audio of Pelkey to try to come up with a rendering that would match the sentiments and thoughts of a still-alive Pelkey, something that Wales compared with a “Frankenstein of love” to local outlet Fox 10.
Judge Todd Lang responded positively to the AI usage. Lang ultimately sentenced Horcasitas to 10 and a half years in prison on manslaughter charges…
(13) TRAILER PARK. Dropped today — The Long Walk (2025) Official Trailer.
From the highly anticipated adaptation of master storyteller Stephen King’s first-written novel, and Francis Lawrence, the visionary director of The Hunger Games franchise films (Catching Fire, Mocking Jay – Pts. 1&2 , and The Ballad of the Songbirds & Snakes), comes THE LONG WALK, an intense, chilling, and emotional thriller that challenges audiences to confront a haunting question: how far could you go?
[Thanks to Mark Roth-Whitworth, Steven French, Kathy Sullivan, N., Paul Weimer, Ersatz Culture, Joyce Scrivner, Cliff, Teddy Harvia, Mike Kennedy, Andrew Porter, John King Tarpinian, Chris Barkley, Cat Eldridge, and SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Joe H.]
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(11) Just no. Do not believe that test, and do not take it “on behalf of” someone else.
(12) Even worse use of “AI”.
(10) Sounds like that well know corporate position of “Vice President in Charge of Going to Jail”.
13) The Long Walk written under his Richard Bachman name was written by him five years after Carrie which was published in 1974. I’ve no idea why they think it was his first written novel as Today in History notes, “In the spring of 1973, when Doubleday accepted King’s manuscript, Doubleday editor Bill Thompson told King that a major paperback sales hit would allow him to retire from teaching and write full-time.”
I must have missed something. I don’t remember either the New Zealand or Edinburgh Worldcons having any major snafus or controversies. (GRRM doesn’t count at CoNZealand. Only a sword applied to him could’ve stopped him. And maybe not even that.) Shall I do through the entire recent decade of Worldcons to point out here all those similarly blessed?
(1) Wonderful. I’m tempted to look around to find the prompt, so I can see what it did to me.
Comics: wtf? I updated my system (Almalinux) yesterday, which included an update to firefox. Is it me, or is it Go Comics – I click to see the whole cartoon, and get a black screen. I’ve enabled more than half the script links (noScript), and still nada. Clues?
(10) For years in WSFA, I got the title/authority to whack Bill with a pillow if/when he proposed a bylaw amendment. I’d be willing to do the same for WSFS for anyone using AI…
(12) There is only one appropriate followup: the Austin Lounge Lizards’ Grandpa’s Hologram. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vLv4t7HWJ28
(11) Now that I’m safely retired, I can say this: few words strike as much terror into my heart as “team-building exercise.”
@Jim Janney
I’ve been through one, and while it wasn’t bad, I didn’t know anyone there and haven’t seen them since. (Company employment orientation, held at a not-really-central site that was convenient for the High Ups. We actually got to meet the VP in charge of HR. Nice woman.)
@Cat: I don’t know about the last decade, but I do know that none of Denver’s three Denventions ran to any kind of major contretemps. Denvention I in 1941 ran just fine–it is best known as Robert A. Heinlein’s first appearance as Worldcon GoH, as well as the only Worldcon with two-digit attendance (~90 persons). The concom had no serious internal problems after they got over the initial shock when two of their number came home from Chicon I with the news that they were running next year’s Worldcon (the Denver bid was most impromptu, invented at the last minute during Chicon). I was on the concom for Denvention II in 1981–my wife (Gail Barton) and I ran the Art Show. Although it was plenty stressful, we did not break out in feuds, we broke even, and the fen who came to Denver had plenty of fun–the worst problem they had was getting used to the altitude. As for Denvention III (2008), Kent Bloom and company did a sterling job of running a smooth, quiet convention.
10) Many years ago an organization of which I was a member of the middling sort asked me to put myself forward for an office that had at the time only one candidate–and the rules required at least two for an election to go forward. So I presented myself as representing the Sacrificial Goat Faction, whose platform was Elect My Opponent. It worked just fine. (I was, in fact, not a good fit for the job, while the Opponent was.)
(4) Good. Now if Congress would remember its job as well as a judge does …
Cat, this is from the Wikipedia article on The Long Walk:
(1) Out of curiosity, I asked ChatGPT about my own SF history, and got an amazingly flattering and inflated account of my own importance and influence, based apparently on my presence in several decades worth of Eastercon membership lists!
(12) I don’t think it’s a good idea at all for courts to be accepting anything produced by AI, which could just be what the programmer told it to say.
But, but… embracing “generative AI” worked out so well for NaNoWriMo! (RIP)
I dunno. It seems to me that a part of the problem is that LLMs, although they are very bad at the things people actually use them for, are backed up by a machine that works very nicely thank you, and that is the hype machine that shills for it, loudly and relentlessly.
AI is inevitable! – they tell us. It’s the wave of the future! (More like an embarrassing leak if you ask me.) Sure, it may have some teething troubles, like error rates between 60 and 94 per cent, but once it’s been tuned up a bit, it will be unstoppable! Get with the program now, or you will be obsolete within a decade!
All this is being shouted at us, and I can well imagine people being worn down by it, and looking at a tedious but necessary job, and thinking, “We could use a chatbot to do the legwork. It’s probably going to be just as good as a human being, and probably no one will notice, and even if they do, they’ll understand….” And, indeed, I do understand. But understanding is not the same as approval. I mean, I understand the motives of Sam Altman and similar techbros – they stand to lose a lot of money if they can’t sell their snake oil. I understand, but I very much don’t approve.
As for item 12, well, I think of this as something like a spiritualist seance – it may possibly give some comfort to the bereaved, and that is not a bad thing, but it absolutely should not be relied upon for anything of consequence in the real world. (You think this is your dead relative returned to life by the power of AI? Try asking it where it left those car keys.) In the unlikely event that anyone wants to replicate or resurrect me by this means, though, let me be quite clear: if anyone tries it, I will do whatever I can to haunt them until the end of their days.
(7) Here’s to Gene. I finally read “Long Sun” last year (I had read “New Sun” back in the 1980s).
(10) “Canary M. Burns” (https://simpsons.fandom.com/wiki/Canary_M._Burns)
See also PLEASE (Provide Legal Exculpation and Sign Everything)
(10) Another thought – “ablative staffing” instead of the usual ablative shielding.
(10) Readers of Avram Davidson’s inimitable The Enquiries of Doctor Eszterhazy may recall this passage
And I’m very happy to discover that the Enquiries are at long last back in print, from a suitably named publisher.
I’m still reading! It’s just been a bit busy here what with working on another book and two years of hom renovations.
Also the cats are now huge!
@Steve Wright: It’s this season’s blockchain: a technology that no one asked for or wants, but having poured tens of billions of dollars into it, the techbros are determined to force it on everyone in an effort to recoup their investment.
I happened on a funny AI thing by accident a moment ago – I was looking for Stephen Barr’s short story “I am a Nucleus” (available on Project Gutenberg and the Amazon description of this short story is apparently AI generated (with strong “third grader book report based only on the title” energy):
The story is about someone who becomes the center (the nucleus, metaphorically) of a growing network of coincidence
Edinburgh?
EDINBURGH!?!?
zarrafacmac?
13) The Long Walk is one of my top 10 favorite SK reads, cautiously optimistic for this one.
7) Some years ago I was sitting next to a stranger at an SF con (DuckCon, perhaps) chatting idly while awaiting the start of a trivia contest. They announced that there was room in the rotation for an additional team or two, and on impulse I asked the fellow next to me if he wanted to declare ourselves a team. He seemed startled but agreeable, so we trundled up and signed on (don’t remember if we had a team name). I was more than a little shocked to learn that my new team-mate was one Gene Wolfe (yes, that Gene Wolfe). For an un-rehearsed duet, we did pretty well against the trios who had clearly studied and crammed beforehand.
Peter Card says
Edinburgh?
EDINBURGH!?!?
zarrafacmac?
Yes, I forgot which city. Won’t be the only thing I forget by any means.
Andrew-not: I had a somewhat similar experience a while back when I was wondering if a filk song that I vaguely remembered (something about Too Many Books to Read) had made it onto the Net. I described it as best I recalled for a regular Google search. The AI output now residing at the top of the Google search output page, evidently having come up dry, gave me a description of what elements (in addition to what I had described) such a filk song would include if I wanted to write one. To its credit, it did not pretend that its filk actually existed, and as far as I remember the real filk, it was not too far off.
RusselL: The years I was member of the board at large for PSFS, in the early/mid-eighties, we had to give speeches before the election. My std. one was “As Joe Truphan, my duties would consist of show up at the meetings and shoot my mouth off. I can handle that.” I got elected…
And the AI prompt – I’d like to know how to find it – I’d like to see what it said about me.
I know that one (though the link I’d bookmarked is down). I think it’s by Joel Polowin. Here’s part of it:
And the chorus goes (from memory): “There are too many books, too many books, it really doesn’t matter what’s your reading speed – there are too many books to read”
I probably have it on cassette somewhere
@Patrick
Here’s a link
And a quote:
12) I bet the lawyer was drafting the appeal to the sentence before the AI stopped talking. This is not the victim’s statement, it’s the sister’s. (Which is fine; she can make a statement, she’s a victim, too. But putting words in her brother’s mouth is nonsense.)
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