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Don't Tell Larry Was 2025's Most Perfect Comedy, And Everyone Missed It

By Robert Scucci
| Published

White lies are a necessary evil when you have kids. Sometimes you have to lie about how delicious carrots are so they get enough vitamin A, or tell them the doctor isn’t about to give them a booster shot even though they’re hiding the needle behind their back, waiting for the right moment to jab. 2025’s Don’t Tell Larry, though, shows just how quickly a white lie can spiral out of control in the adult world, when the person you’re trying to deceive is a situationally aware but seemingly aloof coworker who’s about to steal your promotion out from under you.

What starts as a small fib snowballs when an ever-increasing body count latches onto a minor misunderstanding made in the name of professional self-preservation. Saving face at work is fine in theory, and something we’ve all done at some point in our careers. Don’t Tell Larry has an incredible amount of fun showing how catastrophically wrong things can go in a dog-eat-dog corporate setting, escalating to absurd levels once the authorities get involved.

Susan Just Wanted Her Promotion

Don't Tell Larry 2025

Don’t Tell Larry wastes no time showing you exactly who Susan (Patty Guggenheim) is, and how her personality quickly backfires at the office. She’s earned Employee of the Year eight consecutive times, which makes her the obvious frontrunner for the soon-to-be vacated CEO role when her boss, Bruce Waters (Ed Begley Jr.), announces his retirement. Susan and Bruce have a solid professional relationship, and she’s patiently waiting for the corporate torch to be passed so she can finally take over.

Her life takes a sharp turn when Larry (Kiel Kennedy) is hired, changing her trajectory overnight. Larry is the quintessential weird office guy you feign friendliness with in the hope that if he ever snaps and goes on a rampage, he’ll spare you. When a surprise retirement party is thrown for Bruce, Susan makes the executive decision not to invite Larry. What she doesn’t realize is that Larry is actually Bruce’s son, and Bruce already plans to hand the company over to him as a way of making peace for abandoning him years ago.

Larry’s Ever-Present Menace 

Rightfully peeved about being passed over, Susan throws a rock through Bruce’s office window, weakening the glass. Later, when Larry shoves Bruce during a confrontation, the already compromised window gives way, sending him to a fatal plunge. After Bruce falls to his death, Susan enlists her friend and coworker Patrick (Kenneth Mosley) to help cover up her involvement, but Larry is onto them.

To make matters worse, Detective Kim Hammer (Dot-Marie Jones) suspects foul play, though she can’t quite piece together what happened until she reviews the security footage, which has conveniently gone missing. 

Don't Tell Larry 2025

Meanwhile, more violent workplace incidents pile up, leading to additional deaths that Susan is convinced Larry is responsible for. Larry, never losing his odd charm, plays suspiciously unaware of the carnage that follows him, even as it becomes obvious to Susan and Patrick that he’s eliminating coworkers in increasingly gruesome fashion. Detective Kim, however, has every reason to believe Susan had something to do with the inciting incident that started this entire mess.

A Perfect Comedy Of Errors

The lesson in Don’t Tell Larry is simple: sometimes it’s better to tell the truth, even if the short-term consequences feel life-altering. Had Susan not lied about the party, Larry might not have seen her as an adversary and might not have retaliated after discovering the deception. Or maybe everything would have unfolded the same way. Bruce had already chosen Larry as his successor, and Susan’s jealousy was bound to surface eventually, likely leading to a similar disaster.

Don't Tell Larry 2025

Half the fun in Don’t Tell Larry comes from watching forced pleasantries in a corporate white-collar setting peel back to reveal just how cynical everyone really is. Between the backstabbing, both literal and figurative, you discover who your true friends are. Watching Susan and Patrick scramble to talk their way out of being implicated in a string of murders is a twisted version of friendship, even if their loyalty only makes things worse.

As of this writing, you can stream Don’t Tell Larry for free on Tubi.


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Every Major Change One Piece Season 2 Made To The Source Material

By Jonathan Klotz
| Published

Now that Netflix’s live-action One Piece Season 2 has been out for awhile, you’ve probably become curious about how it matches up to the original One Piece anime. As with the first season, manga creator Eiichrio Oda was actively involved in all stages of production, even helping with adjustments from the source material and giving them his blessing. His level of involvement is why the series is the new gold standard for live-action adaptations. 

The Garp And Gol D. Roger Flashback

Ripped from the Marineford arc and dropped at the start of Season 2’s Loguetown episode, Garp and Gol D. Roger’s conversation is a bit of misdirection. Fans watching only the live-action series would think that Roger is asking Garp, who we know is Luffy’s grandfather, to take care of his son. That would mean Luffy is the son of the greatest Pirate in history. 

Except he’s not. Long-time fans know that Roger’s son is Ace, part of Whitebeard’s pirate crew, and user of the Flame Flame Devil Fruit. DC’s Blue Beetle, Xolo Marideuna will play Ace when he makes his first appearance in Season 3. 

For now, the flashback to Roger’s execution hints at the existence of his son, misdirects the audience, and lays the stage for something Oda did a lot during One Piece Season 2: placing events from future arcs much, much earlier than before, but where they make perfect sense. 

Bartolomeo Appears Much Much Earlier

An example of an early appearance comes right in Episode 1, when the memorable green hair and canines of Bartolomeo appears as a very confused bystander in Loguetown. He doesn’t appear in the anime until episode 633, over 500 episodes from the events of the first episode. But what he does do in the anime, is mention that he saw Luffy during the events in Loguetown. That makes this one of the best changes any live-action adaptation has ever made. 

Bartolomeo may not be an East Blue mob boss, but his inclusion in Roger’s execution is technically, not a change from the anime. It’s a bit of a tease for fans as we may not see him again during the Netflix show’s run, unless they start compressing even more arcs each season, and they did a great job bringing the character’s strange appearance to life. He’d eventually become Luffy’s biggest fan, and his ship, the Going Luffy-senpai, is as ridiculous as his fashion sense. 

Brook’s Human Form

Yet another pull from the future came in Episode 2, “Good Whale Hunting.” Anime viewers didn’t get to see Brook as a human until long after they got used to his undead skeleton form. His backstory isn’t shown until episode 379, over 40 episodes after his first appearance, and by then, it’s been hundreds of episodes since Reverse Mountain. Including the flashback right away, to explain Laboon’s obsession with ramming the mountain, teases fans with what’s to come, and gives the heartbreaking story maximum emotional impact. 

If Brook ever does return to the live-action One Piece, at least Martial T. Bachamen has nailed the look for one of the most unique Straw Hat Pirates. Fans will have to keep waiting to see how they’ll get across his skeletal appearance and wild fighting style in live-action.

Luffy Befriending Laboon 

The live-action series changed a lot about the Reverse Mountain arc, from Crocus living inside Laboon, to the weird sky painted on the inside of the whale’s stomach. Among all the changes, Luffy’s plea for friendship is one of the best. It’s perfectly fitting that Luffy, the most joyous, upbeat, enthusiastic character in One Piece, would use the power of friendship to win over the massive whale. 

In the anime and manga, Luffy stabs Laboon with the mast of the Going Merry. Instead of declaring their friendship, he announces that he and Laboon are now rivals. On the one hand, that’s how boys make friends, on the other, the live-action did it so well while being true to Luffy’s nature, that both versions work. 

Luffy And Zoro Don’t Fight

Zoro gets his shining moment in Whiskey Peak by taking on 100 members of Baroque Works, in what’s not only the highpoint of Season 2, but in the running for Netflix’s best action scene ever. What’s left out, is what comes next in the other adaptations: Luffy attacks Zoro for killing a lot of people he has no idea are Baroque agents. It’s the first real showdown between the two friends and it only comes to an end when Nami acts as the voice of reason. Sort of.

It was a stand out moment in the anime as anime fans love nothing more than debating who can beat who (saying Saitama form One-Punch Man would win is always an immediate flag on the play). Zoro, the greatest swordsman, against Luffy, the indestructible rubber man? It’s a great match up, which Luffy would win 10 out of 10 times, but it’s also easy to see why the live-action series cut it out. 

Zoro And Sanji’s Dino Hunt

Little Garden is an interesting early island. Giants weren’t enough, it had to include actual dinosaurs. In the Netflix series, Zoro and Sanji argue over who can take down the biggest beast, and they end up arguing over who landed the killing blow on a massive T-Rex. In the source material, they each take down one of their own. They still argue, but it’s more evidence that Sanji isn’t the joke his only-kicks fighting style can make him look like. 

Another small change that ties into the fauna of Little Garden is the missing shot of the insect that bites Nami and gets her sick. Removing any foreshadowing of the illness worked, and Nami going down during the party is an effective teaser for the next part of the journey. 

The Marines vs. Baroque Works

Season 1 add a whole new subplot with Kolby and Helmpopo, so it makes sense that Season 2 keeps the Marines involved by including a sequence with Smoker and Tashigi investigating a Marine listening post under a Baroque Works assault. This is the type of addition that helps expand the world of One Piece. Even when the focus is on the Straw Hat Pirates, other characters are going on adventures in the background. 

The other reason for the addition is to remind viewers that Smoker is an absolute unit. Without breaking a sweat, he goes through a unit of Agents and Miss Thursday. There’s nothing wrong with letting cool characters show why they’re cool. It’s the basis of Shonen anime. 

The Flag 

It’s one of the moments in the anime that establishes Luffy as a badass. When he dives and saves Chopper’s flag from destruction at the hands of King Wapol, he’s covered in smoke. Then it clears, and there’s Luffy, holding onto the tattered flag, standing on top of the castle. The kids call this aura farming. 

During the Season 2 live action climax, Luffy still saves the flag and gives his speech about what the flag represents to an astonished King Wapol. The scene is still there, but the scale is smaller, the only ones present are Wapol and the crew of the Going Merry. It’s a great moment, and Luffy shows a small fraction of his potential power in absorbing the direct hit, but as with most of the changes from the anime to the live-action, it cuts everything down. Which is understandable, but if more adaptations did it like this, the track record would be a lot better.

One Piece is a Netflix Original, and can be streamed with an active subscription.


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An OpenAI-linked news outlet appears to be entirely AI-generated

A new report from The Midas Project’s Model Republic publication has found that news site, The Wire by Acutus, relies almost entirely on AI-generated content. The publication has been operational since the end of 2025 with nearly 100 published articles across tech, energy, media, science, business, and healthcare. Stranger still, their About page describes their work as “collaborative journalism” led by an “editorial team,” but the site has no masthead and credits no editors or journalists in its publications.

The official explanation for this anonymity is buried in their How It Works subhead:

Our editorial team identifies timely topics and invites contributors with relevant, firsthand experience to share their perspective through structured conversations. Those perspectives are synthesized and edited into stories that reflect where contributors align, where they diverge, and what it all means — offering depth, balance, and clarity beyond the headline.

But when journalist Tyler Johnston ran the site’s content through Pangram, an AI detection tool that boasts a 99.98% accuracy rating, he discovered just how widely AI was relied upon: “Of the 94 articles, 69% came back flagged as fully AI-generated, with another 28% flagged as partially AI-generated. Only three articles were classified as human-authored.”

Johnston’s suspicions grew when he looked at the content itself, which was both overwhelmingly in favor of the development of artificial intelligence and dismissive of AI’s critics. One piece, for example, warns of “Escalating Anti-AI Radicalism,” while another chides the reader: “Will Republicans Let Blue States Set America’s AI Rules?” 

The deeper Johnston dug, the clearer the picture got. As a new site with very little social media presence, articles by The Wire are seldom retweeted, but Johnston discovered that half of its engagement on X came from Patrick Hynes, the president of the PR firm Novus Public Affairs. A quick glance at their client list reveals they work on behalf of Targeted Victory, the consulting firm at the very heart of OpenAI’s lobbying efforts in Washington on behalf of its regulatory interests. 

Generative artificial intelligence has already created rifts in our collective perception of reality. With enough computing power, you can create fake trailers for films that were never made and never will be, or steal a politician’s voice for a deep fake, or even invent an absurd, implausible scenario, like a shark attacking a plane, and fool at least a few credulous internet rookies.

If Johnston’s reporting is correct and his inferences are accurate, we may have an instance of an AI firm deliberately mischaracterizing its work as “independent journalism” to lobby on its behalf (something Johnston points out contravenes its own usage policies).


Disclosure: Ziff Davis, Mashable’s parent company, in April filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.

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Creative Assembly drops first look at the Alien: Isolation sequel

Twelve years after the original Alien: Isolation game was released across platforms, on the official “Alien Day” meant to celebrate the beloved franchise, game developers Creative Assembly are returning to the world of xenomorphs and unreliable robots to once again terrify the living daylights out of us.

The teaser trailer, aptly titled “False Sense of Security,” does a lot with very little, from the flashing red light in a poorly lit room to the ominous background music and eventual close-up of what looks to be a payphone, with the word “Emergency” appropriately backlit.

As you might expect from the makers of the original game, Creative Assembly is clearly reluctant to over-share, relying on atmosphere and sound to do the heavy lifting, but the brief glimpse we get of the background when the door opens suggests the possibility that, unlike the first game, the sequel might also take place on a planet’s surface, perhaps hinting at a much larger game world.

Needless to say, we’ll be covering more details about the game’s development and progress as they emerge.

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