After a successful debut on Netflix, the streaming service has renewed Free Bert for a second season. Filming will continue in Atlanta, Georgia, which we expect to get underway sometime this year.
This feels like a good occasion for Bert Kreischer to rip his shirt off and celebrate: Netflix has given the stand-up comedian’s scripted sitcom “Free Bert” a Season 2 renewal. The renewal comes in ...
NLP researchers from HuggingFace made a PyTorch version of BERT available which is compatible with our pre-trained checkpoints and is able to reproduce our results. Sosuke Kobayashi also made a ...
The U.S. startup has introduced a screen-printable copper paste for backside solar cell metallization that can be fired in air and co-fired with standard silver frontside pastes using conventional ...
NASCAR driver Natalie Decker met comedian Bert Kreischer at Daytona International Speedway. Decker is in Daytona to compete in the O’Reilly Series season opener. What happens when a comedian famous ...
Dennis has written for publications like USA Today, Prediction News, and Psychology Today before bringing his thoughts to Collider. Despite consuming an arguably concerning amount of Netflix content, ...
BUFFALO, N.Y. — First came the snow crossing Buffalo and Western New York. Now, we're enduring a near-record run of bitter cold. With that in mind, Buffalo Bert was the center of attention on Saturday ...
(FOX40.COM) — Comedian and actor Bert Kreischer’s new television series, “Free Bert,” is officially out Thursday — and the star, famous for his oft-shirtless presence, spoke with FOX40’s Melanie ...
INDIANAPOLIS — Those who know comedian Bert Kreischer know that he likes to be shirtless. Kreischer is now starring in a Netflix TV show called "Free Bert," a fictionalized version of real events in ...
An NLP-powered recruitment automation system that utilizes Transformer-based models (BERT/S-BERT) for semantic resume screening, skill extraction, and automated skill gap analysis. The recruitment ...
Bert Kreischer plays Bert Kreischer in the six-part series about a stand-up comic who tries to change his ways to help his family. By Daniel Fienberg Chief Television Critic Or perhaps what Kreischer ...