@AndreasmovedtoCodidact From my understanding, the broad events are fairly historically accurate, but it takes large liberties for the sake of drama. The biggest is the focus on two main characters who, in the film, have a much bigger role than they did historically. Additionally, the court scene at the end was highly dramatized.
There are a bunch of other things sprinkled in that are also tuned up or excluded for dramatic purposes, but I expect this from any "Based on true events" story.
To answer my own question: yes. Apparently McDonald's and other fast food chains have been trying to use generative AI to take orders. It worked about as well as you might expect: misunderstanding orders, some times adding more items, something adding random items (packets of butter), or just mishmash of stuff (ice cream with bacon). McDonald's is dropping the order chatbot for now.
@Spevacus Based on what I’ve read about it, it does indeed take a lot of freedoms, and I’ve seen many claim that it doesn’t even represent the society at the time correctly. I haven’t watched it, though. Probably due to those reviews, and also the fact that it’s in English. It’s too close in time that it doesn’t kill the immersion for me. :P
Wait, it’s HBO, isn’t it? Yeah, I don’t have a subscription there.
@VLAZ I saw that before but I think people also did those kind of orders on purpose (someone once did a burger with only meat, but multiple stack of meat, etc)
@Spevacus For the main characters having a larger role than reality, it's pretty common in movies (even fiction) to combine characters - I think they want to simplify the story to fit into the format. For TV...I suppose it's less essential, but I expect it applies to a lesser degree (and you probably don't want to have to remember a complicated slate of characters between episodes). And for something like the Chernobyl disaster that involved literal thousands of people, it's probably almost a must for anything that's not a documentary.