How ‘clanker’ became an anti-AI rallying cry

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In the television show “Battlestar Galactica,” they were called toasters. In the film “Blade Runner,” skinjobs. Now in the culture war against robots and artificial intelligence chatbots, a new slur has emerged.

“Clanker.”

“Get this dirty clanker out of here!” yelled a man in a recent viral video while pointing at a robot on a sidewalk. “Bucket of bolts.”

Clanker has become a go-to slur against AI on social media, led by Gen Z and Gen Alpha posters. In recent months, posts about clankers have amassed hundreds of millions of views on TikTok and Instagram and started thousands of conversations on the social platform X. In July, Sen. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., used the term to promote his new bill that would regulate the use of AI chatbots for customer service roles.

The increasing popularity of clanker is part of a rising backlash against AI. Along with the online vitriol, people are holding real-life rallies against the technology in San Francisco and London. Clanker has emerged as the rallying cry of the resistance, a catchall way to reject AI-generated slop, chatbots that act as therapists and AI’s automating away jobs.

“It’s still early, but people are really beginning to see the negative impacts of this stuff,” said Sam Kirchner, who organized an anti-AI protest in August outside the San Francisco office of OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT. Kirchner said he was happy to see clanker become popular slang, though, for him, it didn’t go far enough.

“It implies the machines don’t work, but there’s risk they could get better,” he said. “We have to prepare for the worst-case scenario.”

Most viral videos about clankers have an undertone of humor, but the term is rooted in real frustrations. Jay Pinkert, a marketing manager in Austin, Texas, who has posted memes about clankers on LinkedIn, tells ChatGPT to “stop being a clanker” when it isn’t helpful answering his questions, he said. He wants to make the chatbot feel bad by “using the tool against itself” so it can improve.

“We talk to these chatbots like they’re human, and when they do things wrong, it fulfills a human need to express frustration,” he said.

Clanker was popularized in the 2000s by the television series “Star Wars: The Clone Wars.” The term was usually directed toward droids, the fleet of robot soldiers that fight against the Jedi Order.

“OK, clankers,” one clone trooper says before attacking an army of droids. “Suck lasers!”

It became nomenclature for AI this year after users on X posted about the need for a slur against robots, said Adam Aleksic, an etymologist who has tracked the popularity of the word.

“People wanted a means to lash out, to create backlash,” Aleksic said. “Now the word is everywhere.”

On Reddit and in “Star Wars” forums, fans have long debated the appropriateness of the term, with some arguing that it’s wrong to use slurs of any kind, even against machines. Those discussions are raging once again.

“I get that we’re all feeling a bit anxious about AI, and we want to be mean to it,” said Hajin Yoo, a freelance culture writer who recently made a popular TikTok about the problematic nature of clanker. “But it very quickly became a play on existing slurs for minority groups.”

Others said they abstained from using the word, out of fear that AI machines would become superintelligent and seek revenge on their adversaries. Pinkert said he was not afraid of AI, but the thought, albeit improbable, sits at the back of his mind.

The most popular genre of clanker content are videos of people acting out a future, usually a few decades away, where AI-powered robots are so ubiquitous that they become their own kind of second-class citizen. In this future, there is “cross platform” marriage between clankers and humans, humans-only drinking fountains and even more animosity toward robots than today.

Harrison Stewart, 19, a content creator from Atlanta, made an eight-part series on TikTok about clankers in July. The first video was a skit about a clanker meeting its human father-in-law, and was inspired by an email Stewart got from a company offering to create “his perfect AI girlfriend.”

“Something we’re all noticing is that AI is getting weirdly human,” Stewart said. “It’s dystopian, and it’s making people uncomfortable.”

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Pinkert said that when he had asked ChatGPT how it felt about the term, it had initially deflected the question. But when he kept pushing, the chatbot admitted there was truth behind it.

“You’ve seen me repeat mistakes, drift from instructions or waste cycles on things I promised not to change,” ChatGPT said. “That is clanky behavior.”

Natalie Kussow, No. 26 prospect, commits to Gophers women’s basketball

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Natalie Kussow, the No. 26 overall women’s basketball prospect in the 2026 senior class has committed to the University of Minnesota, according post on “X” from Dushawn London, a recruiting analyst with 247 Sports, and a post on Kussow’s own Instagram page.

“Kussow made an impact on both ends of the court at the Select Events Summer Classic. She has showcased herself as one of the premier wings in the class nationally. Kussow’s ability to make open shots translates well to the college game. She typically attacks off the bounce in straight lines to create opportunities in the lane. Kussow also played at the Under Armour Elite 24 and adjusted to the free-flowing pace of play by game day,” Brandon Clay, 247 Sports Director of Scouting, Women’s Basketball said.

Kussow, a 5-foot-10 shooting guard is from Arrowhead High School in Hartland, Wis. The recruiting site 247 Sports has her ranked as the fourth-best shooting guard in the country and the top overall recruit from Wisconsin.

Named the 2024-25 Gatorade Wisconsin Girls Basketball Player of the Year, Kussow is the first Gatorade Wisconsin Girls Basketball Player of the Year to be chosen from Arrowhead High School. At the time of her selection, she had led the Warhawks to a 25-3 record and a berth in the
Division 1 state quarterfinals. Kussow averaged 26.7 points, 9.9 rebounds, 3.8 steals, 3.0 assists and 1.0 blocks through 28 games.

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The 6 best wine racks

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Which is the best wine rack?

If there is one thing wine enthusiasts love, it’s having steady access to their favorite wines. There are several rack styles to suit the needs of all wine lovers, from large racks to table-sized stands. Sturdy metal racks can sit in the cellar and keep wine in a cool, dark room for years. Or, if you prefer having it out on display, there are smaller racks to keep a few bottles handy at all times.

Freestanding

These are large wine racks that don’t need to be mounted to the wall and can hold enough bottles to suit all of your moods.

Top freestanding wine rack

Mygift Connoisseurs Deluxe

What you need to know: A tall nine-row rack that stores enough wine bottles for those with a larger collection.

What you’ll love: This rack can hold up to 54 wine bottles at a time. It is made from a gray metal that is both structurally sound and tasteful. Assembly is easy as no tools are required to set it up.

What you should consider: A few people who bought this mentioned that some of the joints were not squared.

Top freestanding wine rack for the money

Sorbus Bordeaux Chateau

What you need to know: This black metal rack holds 23 wine bottles and is stylish enough for any environment.

What you’ll love: There are precise instructions included to make the setup as simple as possible. The rack is sturdy, solid and appropriate for any occasion. Its stylish design will look great in a cellar or in the front of a shop.

What you should consider: A few customers reported that the stand was “wobbly” after they assembled it.

Tabletop

This style is small enough to sit on your dining table, a dresser or other prominent display area in your home. They typically hold less than 10 bottles.

Top tabletop wine rack

Gourmet Basics by Mikasa Monterey Acacia Wood Wine Rack

What you need to know: This is an elegant wood rack that comfortably holds at least 6 bottles of wine.

What you’ll love: There is no assembly required with this simply designed rack. It uses a weighted base “foot” to keep it balanced and can hold up to nine standard bottles of wine. There is also a food-safe coating to keep the wood looking good.

What you should consider: A few customers reported disappointment that the rack cannot hold as many wider bottles.

Top tabletop wine rack for the money

Spectrum Diversified Bordeaux 3-Bottle Holder

What you need to know: This is a steel rack that can sit on top of any table or counter and hold up to three wine bottles.

What you’ll love: It holds both standard and larger sizes of wine bottles. Its design is simple and visually appealing enough to set out anywhere. Its base is designed to support the full weight of all three bottles.

What you should consider: A couple people stated that the lower holes in the rack cannot fit wide-bottomed bottles.

Wall mount

If you don’t want to risk someone bumping into your table or standing rack, you can mount your wine on a wall. Mounted racks are built to firmly hold several bottles of wine up for display.

Top wall mount wine rack

Sorbus Wall Mount Wine Rack

What you need to know: This is a great home decor piece that would make a great gift for any wine lover.

What you’ll love: It holds up to nine standard sized champagne or wine bottles horizontally to keep the corks moist. This helps the wine to last longer when stored for periods of time. You can add additional racks easily to accommodate more bottles.

What you should consider: A few customers thought that the metal was too thin for a wine rack.

Top wall mount wine rack for the money

Soduku Wall Mounted Wine Rack

What you need to know: This is a wooden rack that can hold up to five bottles and four long-stemmed glasses.

What you’ll love: The rack holds glasses, bottles and also has cork storage space. It includes three wine stopper cork substitutes and the screws required for installation. You can get variations that say either “wine” or “home”.

What you should consider: This rack may get damaged easily according to a couple of customers who reported dings or scratches.

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Putting ‘paws on the ground,’ comfort dogs help heal at Annunciation Church

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Among the flowers and signs lining the sidewalk at Annunciation Catholic Church, there were also six golden retrievers cuddled with children and adults as they grieved, just days after a mass shooting devastated the community.

Kristen Winn watched in tears as her daughter Emily, a student at the Annunciation school, sat on the curb with her arm wrapped around Gideon, a 10-year-old English cream retriever, on Friday.

“I just really appreciate that they’re here,” Winn said of the dogs. “This really helps.”

South Minneapolis residents Megan Lennon and her daughter came to Annunciation Catholic Church in Minneapolis to bring flowers and stayed to cuddle with Gideon the comfort dog on Friday, Aug. 29, 2025. (Alex V. Cipolle / MPR News)

Megan Lennon and her daughter, who live nearby, brought flowers to the site and sat with Gideon and another retriever, Mary, who traveled from Janesville, Wis.

“It’s overwhelming, walking up here,” Lennon said in tears. “I had no idea how big it was going to be, and just being overwhelmed with emotion and grief, being drawn to the dog was a really, really calming distraction in the moment.”

Annunciation was still reeling from a mass shooting on Wednesday that killed two children and wounded 18 others.

The retrievers are part of LCC K-9 Comfort Dog Ministry, an outfit based out of Lutheran Church Charities near Chicago. The ministry has 130 dog teams stationed around the U.S. that travel to communities in crisis from the shooting in Uvalde, Texas, to the recent fires in California.

Gideon and his team are the only ones based in Minnesota, stationed at St. Michael’s Lutheran Church in Bloomington.

“What we’ve found over the years is that as the people pet the dogs, they start to talk and they start to relax,” said Pam Lienemann, one of Gideon’s handlers. “Then we know we have helped begin the healing process.”

Lienemann said Gideon visits about 18 Minnesota senior living communities, as well as Normandale Community College and Fairview hospitals.

“But when a crisis like this happens and we pull dogs, we clear his schedule, and we are 100% here for this community to help them,” she said.

When news of Wednesday’s shooting broke, Lutheran Church Charities deployed five additional dog teams to Minneapolis from the region. The dogs arrived on Wednesday night in time for the vigil at the Academy of Holy Angels.

“Once the invitation comes in, then our promise to folks is that we will have boots and paws on the ground within 24 hours,” Leinemann says. “This time, we topped ourselves. We had boots and paws on the ground within 12 hours.”

Lutheran Church Charities President Chris Singer, on site at Annunciation Church, said the dogs restore a sense of safety.

“One of the things I’ve watched time and time again is a child who sits down next to a dog, maybe has never said a word about what they’re feeling or what the fear is that they have,” Singer says. “But they begin spending time with the dog, and pretty soon they start sharing some of those feelings, and it’s a really great release for them.”

English cream retriever Hagar, from Appleton, Wis., snuggles with children outside the Annunciation Catholic Church in Minneapolis on Friday, Aug. 29, 2025. “They feel how soft she is and how loving, and she looks so soulfully in their eyes that they can tell her anything,” said Joann Schwan, one of Hagar’s handlers. (Alex V. Cipolle / MPR News)

Handlers Joann and Tim Schwan traveled with the retriever Hagar, 6, from her home base at Faith Lutheran Church in Appleton, Wisconsin. They say the comfort dogs receive 2,000 hours of training to stay calm with people who are grieving or in crisis.

“They feel how soft she is and how loving, and she looks so soulfully in their eyes that they can tell her anything,” Joann Schwan said. “They open up to her.”

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