Episode Transcript
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0:05
I mean, yeah, Claire, you're definitely our people with your
0:07
your shortening of words. I've noticed in your
0:11
your rhetorical stylings procedures like
0:14
that. I mean, I think we all called
0:17
a bobo. I mean, I feel like that became these
0:20
days.
0:20
Yeah, yeah, we call yeah, and we are
0:22
all saying that, but just did you call it a bobo?
0:25
Clarification, we would just say bobos.
0:27
They're like, oh yeah, okay, that's interesting,
0:30
rather than an a bobo and
0:33
original, Yeah, it must be regional.
0:35
Yeah, what dialect? What dialect do you speak?
0:39
Bitch?
0:40
Oh? Okay,
0:51
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season
0:53
three, forty two, Episode four of Daily's
0:56
I Got a production of iHeart
0:58
Radio. This is a podcast where
1:00
we take a deep dive into america
1:03
shared consciousness. And it is Thursday,
1:06
June thirteenth, twenty twenty four.
1:09
A near miss for those of us
1:12
we're definitely afraid of Friday
1:14
thirteenth.
1:15
Dude, I just I just realized
1:17
we missed six ' nine, our
1:19
greatest we did. Yeah, yeah,
1:22
because that doesn't seem like that was that was a
1:24
Sunday.
1:25
It was a Sunday. That's why that was
1:27
it. Just remember we still do.
1:28
Recognize six ' nine in this house. It's
1:30
the new fourth over four twenty, yeah.
1:32
Over four twenty. It's always a sixty nine all day.
1:34
But June thirteenth is National
1:36
Golf Cart Day, National Random
1:39
Acts of Lights Day.
1:40
Okay, I miss me with that one.
1:41
National Kitchen Clutches of America
1:44
Day, National Weave Your Garden Day, National
1:46
Sewing Machine Day, National Career
1:49
Nurses Assistance Day, Nurse
1:51
Assistance Day.
1:52
Yes, I was just too
1:54
distracted on June ninth to you
1:57
know what I mean, too busy, celebraty,
1:59
celebrate, Yeah, exactly.
2:00
Man, just watching
2:02
Marilyn Manson interviews, trying
2:05
to figure out how I do I need to.
2:07
Remove a rip to achieve this. I don't
2:09
quite know. Is that a sixth? Does
2:12
that count? I don't know. I mean self sixty
2:14
nine? Yeah, a self Yeah,
2:16
I don't know. I don't know. We'll have to blasco listeners.
2:19
That's what SSN stands for for me.
2:21
People ask me what's my SSN, I said,
2:23
I wish
2:25
no.
2:26
So your social security. We're trying to make sure you have
2:28
my bad insurance.
2:29
For My name is Jack O'Brien
2:31
aka learn your Hues. My
2:34
preschool son teach
2:37
me green when you are dumb.
2:40
Roy g bib when I get
2:43
dressed? What's magenta
2:46
foror that
2:49
is courtesy of southa door jolly on the discord.
2:53
In reference to Miles not knowing
2:55
what the primary colors are, what the secondary
2:58
colors are, I.
2:58
Don't see color man, Yeah,
3:01
just at all. I'm kind of also
3:04
extensive that I'm ignorant about anything to
3:06
do with actual colors as well.
3:07
Yeah that's right. Yeah, it
3:10
kind of translates to people who say
3:12
that about race. But yeah, and also
3:14
reference to magenta, the new
3:17
primary color that I
3:20
have petitioned my kids school board
3:22
about this. Fucking they're
3:24
going to change the primary colors.
3:26
Not my America. I'll tell you that.
3:28
Wait, the magenta is a primary color.
3:30
Now, Yeah, that's what they're saying. They're saying magenta
3:33
instead of red for some whatever.
3:35
Look see that thing.
3:36
That's why I have peace, because I'm not Everything's
3:39
gotta.
3:39
Be different, you
3:41
know what I mean. Anyways, I'm thrilled
3:43
to be joined as always by my co host, mister Miles
3:46
Grass.
3:47
This Miles Gray a ka Miles
3:49
nominative foot of best role else
3:51
it's how we handle six point eight stress.
3:53
So well, okay, shout out.
3:55
Obviously, that's I'm f to him. That's from Mad Villain,
3:57
America's most one to shot out Lacaroni for that
3:59
one. Yes, I have been nominated for the Best
4:01
rold Els and it is how truly
4:04
that's how I handled this six point eight week's
4:06
debacle stress so well.
4:08
So thank you for that, Locaroni. Yeah,
4:10
very true, very true, very true. That Academy
4:13
Award category goes way back, but a
4:15
lot of people like they moved it. Yeah,
4:17
Best Role Elves they moved it out of
4:19
the main telecast, so yeah, yeah, it's
4:21
with the Arts and Sciences.
4:23
They give it out in the parking lot, but behind Hollywood
4:25
and Highland.
4:26
That's right. Yeah, well, Miles, we
4:28
are thrilled to be joined in our
4:30
third seat by an actor, comedian
4:33
and writer who's written for SpongeBob
4:36
square Pants. Never heard of it,
4:38
shrill snl ever
4:40
heard Yeah, was the pseudo host
4:43
of Viceland's Flophouse, which I
4:45
will always bring up because that's where
4:47
I first saw her. She's performed Edinburgh,
4:50
Edinburgh, Fringe Fest, Bridge down,
4:52
all the festivals. Her new special Everything
4:54
I Know How to Do is out now and
4:57
it is hilarious. Please welcome
4:59
Clara,
5:05
Claire, thanks so much for you.
5:07
Know.
5:07
I was reading your bio and I too have been
5:09
described as quote sarcastic and quote
5:11
half Asian, so.
5:13
I believe that. Yeah, yeah, yeah, what
5:15
kind of sarcastic are you?
5:18
Japanese? Awesome? Yeah,
5:20
Japanese sarcasm.
5:21
Yeah yeah yeah in Filipino.
5:23
Yeah, okay, Well, thanks
5:25
for coming on.
5:28
I was gonna say a word that
5:31
I was I was gonna say and
5:34
yeah, but that feels somehow
5:37
racist, even though that is Jane cool.
5:40
I can actually speak for Miles on this one.
5:42
It's fine. I said to him all the time.
5:45
He loves it.
5:47
That's awesome.
5:48
Let me just cut in here. He
5:52
loves when I started singing turning Japanese.
5:54
He loved that. Yeah, I love that.
5:56
I love well. Happy to be a part of the clan here.
5:59
Yeah, yeah, welcome. It's
6:01
strange where you come in too. It's from
6:03
Claire.
6:04
I'm here in Brooklyn, New York.
6:06
Brooklyn, New York. Lovely Brooklyn, New York.
6:10
How is it?
6:11
It's summertime here? Summertime is popping
6:14
off in a pretty heavy way.
6:16
Is that New York stension? The air?
6:18
The summer stench in the area quite yet.
6:20
The piss has not made it to the area,
6:22
but the garbage has.
6:25
Yeah, yeah, it's.
6:26
Not hot enough for the piss to kind of sizzle
6:28
up.
6:29
Yeah, it's still early in the season for that.
6:31
There's a long read
6:33
on like the how they're like trying to fix
6:36
the New York garbage collection system
6:39
and uh yeah, just all
6:41
sorts of interesting information. I don't
6:43
like their chances. But one of the
6:45
facts they had in there is that if you ever throw something
6:48
away, you can like
6:50
call three one one and they will hold the
6:52
garbage before it goes on the barge
6:55
and you have they'll dump
6:57
the entire garbage truck and you have an hour
6:59
to find the thing
7:01
that you threw accidentally threw away,
7:04
Like they created a game show.
7:06
That's so cool.
7:08
Isn't that cool? And they were like yeah,
7:11
they were like people usually find
7:13
it like people, but it's that organized.
7:15
You can be like bleaker ship
7:19
was picked up and they're like, all right, okay, we.
7:21
Find we know which trash truck
7:23
that is. Yeah, you got an hour
7:25
to get to the docs and then you're going
7:27
to have an hour to look through to
7:30
comb through us your
7:32
blocks garbage, what is the
7:34
system.
7:35
I thought it was just just pilot up on the sidewalk.
7:37
Right, it's pilot up on the sidewalk.
7:40
But they're changing that because of rats
7:42
and because the mayor doesn't
7:45
want to solve other more important
7:47
problems.
7:47
Yeah. Yeah, he wants to party.
7:49
He kind of just wants to party and be vegan,
7:52
which is like awesome for him, and
7:54
we love that.
7:55
He's so cool.
7:56
He reversed his own diabetes and
7:59
that's kind of his whole thing is
8:02
veganism.
8:03
He cured his own diabetes.
8:05
And like hanging out with hot women.
8:08
Yeah, right right, he'll do it every time.
8:10
I'll do it. But they're
8:12
trying to they're trying to implement, you know,
8:14
like a dumpster system where everybody
8:17
has like every building
8:19
has their own sort of dumpster thing right
8:22
then, But I don't
8:24
know.
8:25
That the rats will be respectful of and
8:27
not enter it.
8:29
Yeah, they look up a respect
8:32
I see what's going on.
8:35
I feel like Mayor Adams doesn't want to sit here, man.
8:37
Yeah, you know what, Just pack it up,
8:39
y'all, pack it up, take it back underground.
8:42
Yeah, let's go to Boston.
8:44
Were you were you in Jack when you're talking about
8:46
how the rats Are was failing at
8:48
their job in New York appointed rats Are
8:50
Yeah, yeah, yeah. So it's a lot of a lot
8:53
of stuff in flux right there.
8:54
Didn't his didn't the mayor's
8:56
own like Brownstone get
8:59
like condemned for being a
9:02
rat hot spot at one point.
9:03
Probably it's the rat hot
9:06
spot.
9:06
Okay, he has like a line and ship,
9:09
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
9:14
Music was both really sexy
9:16
little rats.
9:18
Yeah you see them?
9:19
Yeah, well
9:22
for rats, low cut jeans.
9:28
Rats kind of have like big, big old asses.
9:32
I can respect.
9:36
I'm just thinking, I was thinking about rats wearing
9:38
the low cut jeans, and I was like, they
9:40
do kind of have you know, they.
9:42
Got the apple bottom jeans, the
9:44
bodies.
9:45
With the fur. All
9:49
Right, Claire, we're going to get to know you a little bit better in a
9:51
moment. First, we're going to tell our listeners
9:53
a couple of things we're talking about from
9:56
the news. You've seen this, you heard
9:58
about this news Hunter
10:00
Biden guilty. Mega
10:02
World doesn't really know what to make of
10:05
that fact, because they had lots
10:07
of conspiracy theories like that he was gonna
10:09
get off and that this is just
10:12
the tip of the iceberg of the Joe Biden
10:14
Crime Family. So we're gonna talk
10:16
about that. There's just been a
10:18
bunch of wild shit about AI art
10:21
that I wanted to talk about. There there's
10:24
this article that published
10:26
a couple of weeks ago, Hollywood Nightmare,
10:28
new streaming service lets viewers
10:31
create their own shows using
10:33
AI. And there's this like studio
10:36
called Fable where you, I
10:38
guess, just like put a prompt in and
10:40
it generates a show
10:43
that sucks like
10:46
this, and this is going to replace
10:49
entertainment that doesn't suck. And the
10:51
thing that they point to the description
10:55
is this, did you guys see the AI generated
10:57
South Park? Yeah, it's
11:01
it's a fucking it's so bad,
11:03
like it fucking bums me out, like
11:05
it too, like it. I think it gave
11:07
me depression, just like watching it like
11:10
clinic, like a depression that I can't cure.
11:12
Like is so bad. It's so strange,
11:15
like it makes you feel crazy and
11:17
sleepy at the same time. It's
11:19
very strange. So I want to talk about that. I want
11:21
to talk about the Ashton Kutcher and the Tribeca
11:24
Film Festival, trying to make AI
11:26
movies happen, all of that plenty
11:28
more. But first, Claire, we
11:30
do like to ask our guest, what is
11:32
something from your search history
11:35
that is revealing about who you are? Or you
11:37
could tell us the most recent thing that you screencappt.
11:40
I googled Tim Meadows.
11:45
He's doing good. He's I wanted to see
11:47
how old he was, and he's sixty three.
11:49
It really looks good every time I see
11:52
it.
11:52
Looks really good. Because I was on
11:54
Instagram he popped up and I go, what's up
11:56
with him these days? He's one of my favorites.
11:59
Yeah, and one of my favorite SNL
12:01
sketches where he plays a guy named doctor Poop.
12:05
You guys ever see this.
12:06
I don't think I've seen doctor Poop.
12:08
You're gonna want to look that up and post that. It's
12:11
pretty crazy.
12:12
Oh, I was, and look at this one a
12:14
very specific age when the Ladies Man
12:16
came out where me and all
12:19
my friends were like, this is an
12:21
underrated masterpiece and
12:25
he's so good. Yeah, he's so
12:28
good.
12:29
And you were saying Cravasier with a lisp.
12:31
Yes, yeah, yeah, absolutely, that
12:34
was absolutely had to if you're
12:36
a ladies.
12:36
Man, Yeah, I'm real wow,
12:39
sixty three, he may keep
12:41
it.
12:41
I'm glad he's not like embroidered so many times
12:43
when you look up past SNL cast members,
12:46
like if you really start.
12:46
Digging it, like, oh they're why aren't
12:49
they canceled? No
12:51
one's talking about this. This is weird.
12:53
I don't like this section of what I'm reading.
12:55
But Tim Meadows, glad to know you're
12:58
out there doing the good time to know I
13:00
ship.
13:01
I hope he. I think there's a girls
13:03
five I have a plot maybe where like
13:05
one of them is trying to date Tim Meadows
13:08
and it goes like
13:11
he's recently divorced and it's
13:13
fun. Oh, and they got their eye on him. They
13:15
got their eye on him. They like see
13:17
him on the dating apps or something like that
13:20
as himself as Medows
13:23
Meadows as Tim Meadows.
13:25
Yeah, display
13:27
name the first. Yeah,
13:30
so I think there's I think there might be a few people checking
13:33
for Tim Meadows.
13:34
Yeah.
13:35
What is something, Claire that you
13:37
think is overrated?
13:40
Texting? Mmmmm, what
13:43
do you mean texting as the primary
13:46
form of communication? I
13:48
think it's overrated. I think often
13:50
things get lost in translation with
13:53
punctuation and
13:55
capitalization. I
13:57
think people need to stop expecting
14:00
me personally to text them back right away.
14:03
Yeah, I find texting
14:05
you gotta let it marinate. You gotta let it marinate.
14:08
You gotta let it marinate. It's not natural to
14:10
communicate with each other this quickly
14:14
in this fashion. It's not natural.
14:17
I feel like I wish they took like you
14:19
like switched I message like AOL
14:21
instant messenger, where you're here, like like
14:24
a door open, you're like, oh, who signed on?
14:26
Yeah?
14:27
What what's that? What's up?
14:29
Hey?
14:29
You're on here? Up the door close?
14:31
Well later, just later.
14:33
I feel like that was because that was the beginning
14:35
of sort of like, hey, why aren't you talking to
14:38
me? Because back then it's like, yeah, because my ass is sat
14:40
right in front of this fucking computer talking to you.
14:42
Yeah.
14:43
Yeah, now with it in the hand. I like, we can't
14:45
have that expert. I'm even terrible responding right
14:47
away most of the time, me too.
14:48
An away message even just
14:50
say I'll get back one of these
14:53
Hey, I'm sorry, but I'll get
14:55
back to shortly. When what is
14:57
that four hours or four days?
14:59
Yeah?
15:01
People, do you have people coming at you for not responding
15:03
quickly? I'm guessing for what,
15:05
like real stuff.
15:06
Like please help me, I need it, I need a right now
15:08
to the doctor. I'm in big trouble.
15:13
I'm gonna actually turn my phone off.
15:17
Now.
15:17
I'm well, I'm just generally a
15:19
bad text texterbacker
15:22
unless it is important. But if it's not important,
15:24
and it's just like, hey, what.
15:27
Are you doing next? Sunday? Next?
15:29
Yeah?
15:31
And you know, I understand like the feelings
15:33
of you know, that sort of everyday
15:35
rejection we go through when somebody doesn't
15:38
answer right away and you're asking them
15:40
out or asking them to do something.
15:42
But I'm just like, wait,
15:44
are.
15:44
You saying if we call you on the phone,
15:47
then I'm going to respond?
15:50
Really Okay, both
15:52
of those things stress me out, but yeah,
15:54
phone calls I feel like much
15:57
less stressful than having a text that's
16:00
sitting there, you know, unresponded
16:03
to.
16:04
Well, then there's also like that stress like that you
16:07
have, Like when you see someone calling that you haven't talked
16:09
to on the phone a long time, You're like, oh, what the fuck is
16:11
going on? I'm like, we're normally texting?
16:13
Are you?
16:15
That means death?
16:17
Yeah, it's like did
16:19
you die? Are
16:22
you right now? Yeah? Oh
16:24
you have my Deadwood DVD? Still? Ok?
16:27
Yeah? Yeah?
16:28
Yeah, yeah yeah yeah, just bring them over. You
16:30
can leave by the door. I'll be all right, thanks, oh, thanks
16:32
fucking god. Yeah,
16:34
and you were saying thanks God because you really
16:37
wanted to. Yeah, don't
16:39
know how to watch it on streaming. I still don't
16:41
care about their health. You're just no,
16:43
no, no, no.
16:44
No, it's all about the wood.
16:46
Yeah.
16:46
When there's like a group chat and
16:48
like everybody's just like
16:51
like there's just like text flying back and forth,
16:53
I will frequently get too stressed out
16:55
to respond.
16:56
Oh, I've seen that happen where I
16:58
feel like we'll text about it game with Jabari
17:01
and like Jabari and I start
17:03
going off on something and slowly
17:06
I'm.
17:06
Like Jack, her respond this is fun.
17:07
These are firefucking texts right now, not
17:09
even a cat back on anything. And
17:12
then it gets like seventy message if you're like, sorry, that
17:14
was a lot to catch up on, a lot
17:16
to catch up right there.
17:18
I get it phone
17:21
on me, you know, comes life
17:23
does. Yeah,
17:25
And it's not true that I don't keep my phone on me. I'm
17:27
just sitting there trying to come up with
17:30
something to text, and just sweat pouring
17:32
down, just being like, oh, it's too late.
17:35
There are already four more.
17:36
That's where AI would really help you, Jack, Yeah,
17:39
Jack, you find something witty to.
17:41
Reply about this conversation
17:44
about Kendrick Lamar. Please, everyone's
17:46
just AI boughts texting with other
17:49
AI bots. That's
17:51
the dream, according to the founder of
17:53
Bumble. Oh yeah right, I bought dates
17:55
another AI bought and for
17:58
you, and that you get to know each other. WHOA,
18:00
Yeah, that's the That's
18:02
what they they're promising with this
18:05
AI stuff. It sounds too good
18:07
to be true. Claire, What is
18:09
something you think is underrated?
18:11
Documentaries?
18:13
Okay, okay, what you're watching as.
18:14
A as an art form? Just just I
18:18
just saw this one called sperm World. Have you seen
18:20
this?
18:20
No, but I'm intrigued.
18:22
It's a documentary my favorite theme
18:25
park, my
18:31
dream life. It's
18:33
about these guys who
18:36
do these sort of unsanctioned sperm
18:40
giving to women who
18:42
want to have kids. It's it's like not.
18:44
They're describing like masturbating on the subway.
18:47
Well, I mean.
18:53
Not to a clinic, but people who
18:56
like offer their services like personally,
18:58
like on like.
18:59
On craigs List, guys are like, I can
19:01
I have sperm, I have a
19:03
twenty confirmed children out
19:06
there, Like I have strong sperm.
19:09
I can sell it to you for however much
19:11
and you know, it's always sort of a desperate
19:14
there's desperation on both sides. They're
19:17
not charging that much. There
19:20
are scenes. There's this one guy who always kind
19:22
of has a big gulp and a cup of his own
19:24
ches and he's like in
19:27
a parking in a parking lot, like
19:29
leaning into a minivan being
19:31
like here it is here, this is for you.
19:34
You don't want to get and that's delivered.
19:36
It's often hand delivered or sometimes
19:39
traditional do it traditional
19:41
yeah, intercourse, yeah,
19:44
like a very like well let's this
19:46
is like the right time to do it. Let's do it
19:48
now.
19:49
Wow.
19:50
And it's but it's really gross.
19:52
It really sucks.
19:56
They're not like trying to be like can we kiss
19:59
or like they're like, yo, I just just make
20:01
the deposit and leave.
20:02
Yeah.
20:02
Well the guys are like, okay, so
20:05
this is what we're gonna do. This is how we'll do it. Let
20:07
me know if you put your uncomfortable
20:09
and I recommend right when you know
20:12
the seed is planted, you're gonna want
20:14
to like sit up and raise your like they're
20:16
like, what's the whole system they've got down?
20:19
This is so I.
20:20
Watched ninety de Fiance a lot and there's
20:22
a guy. Yeah, also a
20:24
documentary, but iron there's a guy on
20:26
this season right now who does this like
20:29
he has he's like a prolific sperm
20:31
donor and he's in a relationship and his girlfriend's like,
20:33
you have to stop this, like, and he's like, this
20:36
is my gift to the world. And he's always wearing basketball
20:38
shorts because he's like concerned about
20:40
his sperm count and overheating his nutsack
20:43
and takes all these supplements and
20:45
he's like, actually have like forty
20:47
times the volume of sperm than like a
20:49
normal person's ejaculation.
20:51
And he's like so, but he.
20:52
Has like this weird fucking god complex
20:55
too. It's really fun. He's a really like I'm
20:57
imagining, it's probably the same shit like people got.
21:00
These guys have. These guys
21:02
have a complex, and it's
21:04
complex. It's a complex, really
21:08
freaky.
21:09
Yeah.
21:10
Wow, Yeah, you learn you learn
21:12
a lot.
21:12
Yeah, documentaries,
21:15
How did you find sperm World? Because that feels like some
21:17
ship. I wish the algorithms are, like, Bro, you're gonna
21:19
want to watch this.
21:21
I just heard it about it through
21:23
a friend. I think it was on It
21:25
might have been like FX or
21:28
something like that. And this
21:30
guy just put out another documentary
21:32
called ren Fair.
21:33
I'm watching that, yeah.
21:36
The same guy.
21:37
Is it shot the.
21:37
Same way or no, it's really beautifully shot
21:40
and.
21:42
Yeah, yeah, beautifully Oh yeah, because ren
21:44
Fair is very cinematic, to the point
21:46
that I felt it was like really blurring the lines
21:48
of like if it was fiction or not. But all I
21:51
just listened to an interview with him and he was saying like no, no,
21:53
no, Like they're performers, so it just has that
21:55
feeling of like drama because they're also totally
21:57
way too invested in this Renfair big
22:00
time.
22:01
Yeah thing is such a funny.
22:04
She fucking hates it. She's
22:06
like, why are you always dressed like this?
22:08
Like he's on a europe like she lives in Malta and
22:11
he's like coming from the US, and
22:13
she's like, dude, the weather's nice.
22:14
Like you're always wearing these basketball She's like, I have.
22:16
To worry about overheating. And
22:18
it's like so just strange the
22:21
way money maker down there.
22:22
You know.
22:23
Yeah, in a way, if this dude pulled up
22:25
and he's like, I'm here to inseminate, you'd be like,
22:27
you know what now that I'm kind of seeing your
22:29
whole like vibe. No, yeah,
22:32
I cannot don't help care how potent your
22:35
your seed is. But yeah, they pride
22:37
themselves on that.
22:38
That's amazing. Yeah, all right,
22:41
well, uh, let's take a quick break
22:43
and we'll come back and talk about
22:45
Hunter Biden.
22:46
We'll be right back, and
22:57
we're back.
22:59
We're back. Hunter Biden's like
23:01
an unofficial one of those guys, right, like
23:03
he's he's got a lot of babies
23:06
out there.
23:07
There's a guy in sperm world who's got a very
23:09
similar Hunter Biden vibe.
23:11
The similar drugs.
23:13
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
23:16
not worried about what that might do to his sperm, right, like
23:18
a lot of drug use. Can't imagine
23:20
it's great for the old seed, but
23:22
it's some swim fast.
23:23
It makes them hungry.
23:27
I'm telling you, these tadpoles are tweaking.
23:30
I'm telling you they have really good ideas.
23:32
Yeah.
23:33
I feel like Hunter Biden is like, while,
23:36
you know, not, I don't think he's like anyone's
23:38
model, you know, role model necessarily,
23:41
but I do feel like he's like destigmatizing
23:44
crack use somehow, yeah,
23:46
like somehow, yeah, like a
23:49
white person, you know. Yeah, and
23:51
like also somebody who like all
23:54
that testimony where they're like, yeah, he would just
23:57
smoke crack and listen to the Fleet Foxes
24:00
is like like really
24:02
laid back, chill bandon like
24:05
and then he'd be like really nice and sweet
24:07
and like I kind of fell in love with him
24:09
a little bit. Was that he's just like that?
24:12
No, that wasn't because she did she say she smoked
24:15
crack with him too? Oh did she? Yes?
24:17
She was wo Wow, we beamed up.
24:20
Yeah.
24:20
Yeah, She's like I didn't know what to do, but
24:22
yeah we did beam up together.
24:24
Damn. So what
24:27
a run from that guy? Yeah?
24:29
Yeah. So it was found guilty of three felonies
24:32
on Tuesday. Yeah. I actually
24:34
like didn't know this was illegal in America.
24:37
That Yeah, you can't have a gun
24:40
and beyond drugs, that's what you.
24:42
Can beyond drug and be
24:44
a violent domestic abuser, right,
24:46
yeah, have a gun and domestic abuse.
24:49
Yeah, but again yeah, because I think
24:51
again those are obviously racist gun laws.
24:53
I think there's a very specific they're like, oh drug
24:55
charge no no, no, no, not for you.
24:57
Not for you domestic abusing then
24:59
that would be and a cop can't have a gun.
25:01
I certainly didn't know it was illegal for the
25:03
president's son. You know, it
25:05
seems like the sort of thing they'd normally get away
25:08
with.
25:08
But like, yeah, man, the right is having
25:10
like such a weird time with this verdict
25:12
because like since Biden took office,
25:15
right the emphasis has been on like.
25:17
This like Biden crime family.
25:20
Fucking narrative that they always hear on Fox
25:22
News and from the right wing talker sphere,
25:24
and they just can't get it to pop
25:27
because there's just no evidence of this. We
25:29
saw like they tried to go through with an impeachment
25:31
of Joe Biden visa v. Hunter,
25:34
but like well like they're like, if Hunter Biden's bad, if
25:37
so in fact, so Joe Biden is also bad, and
25:39
then we must find the evidence.
25:41
And then they're like we don't. We can't
25:44
really find any shit to do this.
25:46
Yeah. So it's just like Joe
25:48
Biden does not seem competent or
25:51
you know, like he doesn't seem like the
25:53
type of person who could be the head of a crime
25:55
family. Yeah, when you see that movie
25:58
they made about Hunter and like
26:00
that they had to like turn him into this like
26:02
Kaiser, So's a like type
26:05
thing who's like all of a
26:07
sudden becomes this like sinister motherfucker
26:09
behind the scenes, Like he just has a
26:12
complete personality shift. He's
26:14
like, that's right, hunter, you're
26:16
doing my bidding right, and.
26:18
You're gonna or anything.
26:22
Yeah, like you could
26:24
with the Clinton's that's good casting. Like
26:27
Bill Clinton. You're like, yeah, of course, that
26:29
guy's like fucking up and you
26:31
know, having sex with anything that will
26:33
allow him and uh
26:35
sometimes not and you
26:37
know, like it's just that Joe
26:40
Biden, it just doesn't. I don't I don't think
26:42
he's.
26:42
Just too fucking boring, you know what
26:44
I mean. You can't map anything
26:46
onto Joe Biden aside from like literally
26:48
sleepy, like as even Trump said,
26:51
I'm like I buy sleepy Joe Biden.
26:52
I buy that.
26:53
I would even buy World War
26:55
one ghost Joe Biden, like
27:00
he might have a better time. Like I think this guy's a fucking
27:02
World War One ghostost
27:04
with.
27:05
This, he's just stuck in between worlds.
27:07
Yeah, yeah, he
27:12
needs to right his wrongs.
27:13
Do you think this will change the rights view
27:16
of sort of the justice system in general,
27:18
with Trump being.
27:20
Well, here's the thing right this
27:23
no, well here, this is the thing right because everything
27:25
is also they have to also keep the other narrative
27:28
going that the Justice Department has been weaponized
27:30
against all conservatives. They're rounding up
27:32
conservative parents or January sixers,
27:35
like well, yeah, I mean the people who fucking storm the
27:37
cap gall with surprise anyway. So
27:39
then if you look at right Trump being prosecuted
27:42
for all the ship that he's done and the hush money shit,
27:44
weaponize DJ is what they cry
27:46
and scream and fundraise off of. Then when
27:49
Robert her who's another special counsel
27:51
who was also a Trump appointee, looked
27:53
at the Biden sort of documents
27:55
thing that he had some documents in his garage,
27:58
he was just like, yeah, honestly, like I I really
28:00
can't find any evidence to prosecute this at
28:02
all.
28:02
And they're like, oh wow, weaponized d o
28:05
J.
28:05
They're protecting him. It's like that guy's a fucking trumpet.
28:07
Point. And then that is one crime
28:10
that I can imagine him doing, right,
28:12
just like misplacing some ship
28:14
next to an old put this, yeah,
28:19
kids to ask them like how to find
28:22
something or you're
28:24
not making airplanes with that those papers again,
28:27
are you? I
28:29
think the box of papers was like in a
28:31
garage, like next to an old antique
28:34
car it's like, yeah, that's Joe
28:36
Biden, Like none of this is like and
28:39
then I'm gonna, like, you know, make a
28:41
deal with a shady company
28:43
to enrich myself.
28:45
If they can do that outwardly under the guise
28:47
of yeah legal ways
28:49
to do that, right, but yeah,
28:52
And now that Hunter Biden has been
28:54
found guilty, they're
28:57
like, oh h well, but
28:59
for the other stuff, it was easy to say that. Like
29:02
so, for example, Charlie Kirk said, quote,
29:04
Hunter Biden guilty, yond
29:07
the true crimes of the Biden crime family
29:09
remain untouched. This is a fake
29:11
trial trying to make the justice system appear
29:14
balanced.
29:15
Don't fall for it.
29:16
Then you have mister teenage
29:18
mutant Ninja Gebels Stephen Miller
29:21
out here saying quote, the gun charges
29:23
are giant misdirection, an
29:25
easy opportunity for the Justice Apartment to hoodwink
29:28
a client media that is all.
29:30
Too willing to be duped. Don't be gas lit.
29:32
This is all about protecting Joe Biden,
29:34
and only Joe Biden. So again,
29:37
it's also important to note here that the prosecutor
29:39
that just secured this conviction against Hunter Biden,
29:42
guess who he was fucking appointed by
29:44
Donald Trump. Okay, so you
29:47
have a Trump appointee who took
29:49
a case to trial, presented the facts,
29:51
and got a conviction. But somehow
29:53
this is an example of how no fair
29:55
the judicial system also is. But
29:57
I think again, for them, it's a lot easier to raise money
30:00
when one of your guys is found guilty and
30:02
then you can always be like, exactly,
30:05
man, they're trying to fuck with us. But when your opponent
30:07
is also subjected to the same legal system,
30:10
you have to fucking pivot quick.
30:12
And now it's just like, oh no, they're just doing this to distract.
30:14
Now, like that that's not even like yeah, maybe it work,
30:16
but it's just it's a distraction.
30:18
Don't believe it? Do we think there was a point
30:20
where they like came to Joe Biden they were like,
30:22
do we like, do you want us to
30:25
protect like make sure this comes
30:27
back innocent? And he was just
30:29
like, nah, man, like you did the
30:31
gladiator thumbs, Yeah, yeah, because
30:33
I mean Hunter is fucking up out there.
30:36
You know, I'm sure that he doesn't sleep
30:38
well at night for a number of reasons, but
30:40
like that, yeah, that being one of them,
30:42
and then also just from a public
30:45
like this is kind of good for his campaign
30:48
in a way because it doesn't like,
30:50
yeah, like it fucks up their messaging
30:53
that the systems being weaponized
30:55
only against conservatives. So like, I
30:57
do wonder did make me like seeing
30:59
how a playing out? I was like, oh, I
31:01
do wonder if like there was an opportunity
31:04
for him to put his thumb on the scale and
31:06
here I mean just truly chose not to.
31:08
Yeah, or he did that thing where he's like, you know, like
31:11
you get in trouble with the police and they call your parents, They're
31:13
like, do you want to come get your child? They're like no, I think
31:15
he needs to learn a lesson.
31:16
Yeah, yeah, he's hit too many rock
31:19
bottoms. He needs to sit
31:21
in prison for just a couple of days.
31:24
But you know, it's a first defense, so it's really unlikely
31:27
that even that happens. So it's kind of
31:29
like, yeah, now you can you
31:31
just like you can't buy any more guns,
31:33
Hunter, no more bang gangs for you. But
31:35
like but all the like Biden crime.
31:38
That's what if he like was objecting to that, He's
31:41
like, cool, on, wait,
31:44
get my gun back. Well, I'm not gonna stop smoking
31:46
crack, So uh.
31:49
That's my progative what if I
31:51
keep the guns but I never buy bullets. I just think it's
31:54
cool to have and to hold it stuff
31:56
in the mirror, like freeze, motherfucker, and
31:58
then.
31:59
High I can throw the bullets.
32:01
At you really think, I mean, it seems like samurai
32:03
swords would be more of a crackhead kind
32:06
of thing, right, You
32:08
should just have a bunch of samurai swords
32:10
on the wall.
32:12
There's no chance that that motherfucker
32:14
doesn't have at least a couple of samurai swords
32:18
in at least like one of his places
32:21
that he flops that. Yeah,
32:23
yeah, yeah, I mean it.
32:28
I can totally see him. Or what was it? Who's
32:30
it in Boogie Knights the Alfred
32:35
Molina style?
32:36
Just have the homie out there just throwing firecrackers
32:39
around while you just kick it in your robe
32:41
and pull out your empty revolver, although Molina's
32:43
was loaded, but anyway, Yeah, but like all this stuff
32:46
always has like this undercurrent of like revenge
32:49
to it, and like these people
32:51
are so bad, and because they're doing weaponized
32:54
doj to us, it only makes sense
32:56
that when Trump is back in office, we're gonna
32:58
do weaponized do OJ to them, because that
33:00
has been the rhetoric that's really picked up in
33:02
the last couple of months about yeah, I
33:04
may have to, I may have to, you know, like the doctor Phil
33:06
thing. He's like, revenge is sometimes
33:09
doctor Phil, it is good I got Unfortunately
33:12
I disagree with you. There Phil, it is healthy.
33:15
It is doc got to disagree with you.
33:17
And like this fundraising emo that came
33:19
out of the Trump campaign, like right after this,
33:22
within you know, hours of the the conviction
33:25
was said.
33:26
The subject line was haul out the
33:28
guillotine, like this
33:30
is.
33:31
This is yeah, it's an escalation, but somehow
33:33
nothing of it all has to do with the This
33:35
is what I said. Remember when that sicko Kathy
33:38
Griffin made the rounds parading
33:40
my beaded head when I
33:42
was when I was president, the radical left
33:44
cheered, Obama and Biden were silent,
33:46
and the fake news blasted it everywhere.
33:49
And then he goes on to be like the sad
33:51
fact here is that this is still the
33:53
sick dream of every Trump deranged
33:55
lunatic out there. Stand with me, and it says,
33:58
and it's not just about me. They're
34:00
really coming after you, sick,
34:02
sick sick, And you know, I think
34:05
that's where they're going with this again, it's
34:07
to get the feeling that we it'll
34:10
be justified when it goes totally
34:12
extra judicial in a second
34:14
Trump administration if that happens,
34:17
but definitely likely.
34:19
Yeah, So is he saying haul out
34:21
the guillotine? Like I
34:23
don't know, I like, I know, Fascism's whole thing
34:26
is like co opting talking
34:28
point, co opting what the left should be
34:30
doing, right, right, right, But so
34:33
is he saying, like
34:35
like start beheading the bidens.
34:38
I don't know.
34:39
Like that's why it's like vague enough that you're like,
34:41
yeah, yeah,
34:44
this.
34:45
Does feel like it was literally written by him
34:47
with the all caps six six
34:50
guine.
34:51
Yeah, well, I mean yeah, this is where his
34:53
head is at at the moment.
34:55
Yeah, they're going to start killing people at some point.
34:57
It feels like, I mean, yeah.
34:59
The police are to do that for them. But I would say that,
35:01
you know, when the trial started, these same
35:03
people were basically saying, you know, like,
35:06
well, the weaponize Biden, do OJ's
35:08
actually gonna tip the scales to get a not guilty
35:10
verdict, Like that's what they're gonna do. Like that was
35:12
they kept being insisting like watch this
35:14
shit, he's gonna be he's gonna walk out
35:16
of there.
35:17
Uh.
35:17
And then they and then they even pointed to the fact
35:20
that like, why would his own
35:22
stepmother, Jill Biden go
35:25
to the fucking trial unless
35:27
she was trying to completely politicize
35:30
this, why would his family go
35:32
to the trial?
35:33
Uh?
35:34
But meanwhile you had they the literal
35:36
fucking Speaker of the House like shrieking
35:38
outside the courtroom when Trump was
35:40
on trial, being.
35:41
Like, this is their trying. This is a summary
35:43
execution in broad daylight.
35:45
So I'm not gonna obviously point out the
35:47
hypocrisy there. I mean, I did, but it's not
35:49
meaningful at this point looking at the Republicans.
35:52
But yeah, this whole election narrative for them
35:54
is just about how fucking corrupt the
35:57
Biden crime family is, because it's certainly
35:59
not gonna be about policy, since they
36:01
literally have no ideas outside of just
36:04
punishing people who want abortions
36:07
or you know, are not cis had Christian
36:09
people. Yeah, that's the only policies I think
36:11
we hear articulated. It's like, oh, and they're going to
36:13
get it.
36:14
I feel like they at least part of the problem
36:16
with the story is that like they
36:18
kind of have to at least partially
36:21
like Hunter Biden, like on the right, you
36:23
know, like having gun, yes,
36:25
right when the government says you shouldn't.
36:28
I think they're complicated feelings all around.
36:30
They see themselves in the sky, but they
36:32
don't want to.
36:34
Yeah, exactly right.
36:36
I mean that tends to be the thing we hate most in other
36:38
people, the things that remind us of ourselves.
36:41
A lesson in some armchair psychology
36:43
for all. There you go, all right, let's take
36:46
a quick break. We'll be right back, and
36:58
we're back.
37:02
All right. There's this article in what
37:05
was it in, I don't know, Apple
37:08
News, So one of the reporter
37:10
probably a Hollywood reporter, one of those places
37:12
that makes you subscribe, or you can
37:14
get it through Apple News, but the headline
37:17
is Hollywood Nightmare. New streaming
37:19
service lets viewers create their own shows
37:21
using AI, and the promise
37:23
is the generative artificial intelligence,
37:26
the auto complete thing that
37:29
chat GPT does is coming for streaming
37:31
with the release of a platform dedicated to
37:33
AI content that allows users
37:35
to create episodes with a prompt of
37:38
just a couple of words, Oh
37:41
wow, what would those words be that
37:43
you think you would get a good show
37:46
out of?
37:47
Step Mom? Bubs?
37:49
Right, Yeah, Like that makes
37:51
sense to me if you're telling you what's
37:57
going to happen, and sure like
37:59
that if you told me that, I'd be like, I bet that would
38:01
be pretty popular. But like creating
38:04
long form entertainment that
38:07
like competes with Netflix just
38:09
like seems I don't, like, I
38:11
don't even know how they think that's
38:14
going to work. And like
38:16
what So I read
38:18
the article and the example. I
38:20
was like, do they have like an example that we can look
38:23
at? And they have this south
38:25
Park deep fake that is
38:28
so it's just a south Park episode
38:30
without jokes and where
38:32
the characters instead of like doing
38:34
anything, just like kind of stand in a hallway
38:37
and say lines towards the camera. Yeah.
38:40
But it's and like they sound
38:42
like all the south Park characters sound like tech
38:44
bros. Like the questions are
38:47
like they're they don't.
38:48
I mean, all the voices are just like no, it all
38:50
sounds like yeah. Just
38:52
but like even the nuances between the
38:55
characters they talk like tech bros
38:57
in this thing, right, it's like you literally pick
38:59
like who's the hero of the episode, which characters
39:01
do you want in the episode, and then what's your prompt?
39:04
This one says, uh, Cartman
39:06
heard of the screen actors guild
39:08
strike and blah blah blah blah blah.
39:11
So this is what the shit sounds like.
39:12
That's ridiculous, Cartman. Is it ridiculous
39:15
or is it so ridiculous that it just might work? No,
39:18
it's definitely just ridiculous. Well,
39:20
then I guess you guys won't want to cut the profits
39:22
when Queepy takes off more for me, then
39:24
there won't be any profits, Cartman, you're going to get sued.
39:27
Not if they can't prove it.
39:28
Now, if you'll excuse me, I have a deep fake streaming
39:31
empire to build.
39:32
Yeah, uh huh so and then cut
39:34
to next scene where they're just delivering
39:37
lines like I'm
39:39
just repeating the same premise
39:41
over and over again. And then they're like they've
39:45
seen episodes of South Park before,
39:47
so they're like and then Tom Cruise makes a cameo,
39:49
but like he doesn't do like there's no
39:52
content, there's like no ideas
39:54
in it, there's no jokes in it.
39:56
It's just like, wait form
40:00
inform a South Park episode?
40:02
Are they taking so you can write
40:05
your own quote unquote write
40:08
your own shows? But it's
40:10
is it all through existing ip it's
40:12
not even like they generate new characters
40:15
that look like you or anything like that.
40:17
I think this is just like a demonstration
40:20
of just demontration.
40:22
Yeah how but I think.
40:25
The far out version, the far
40:27
out version will be like I want
40:29
to see a like Steve
40:31
McQueen esque movie where my
40:34
uncle is the getaway drive,
40:36
you know, like that kind of shit. I think is what they they're
40:38
trying to say is the fucking future. But
40:41
I think again, the only ship that this stuff
40:43
is good for is like playing around, not like real
40:45
creative shit. So I think porn is probably
40:48
the thing that would get the most use out of it because
40:51
in a way, like it's you're trying to externalize
40:53
your fantasies in some way people don't
40:55
know how to Everyone knows a story
40:58
like just.
40:58
Very functional, right, It's not like
41:01
you're trying to have the subtlety of
41:03
like art with commentary or anything
41:05
like that. You know, Yeah yeah.
41:07
Yeah, I mean again, like I think hopefully, if
41:10
anything, this helps people understand
41:12
like, man, I don't know how to fucking make anything, dude,
41:14
Like I tried to make a cool show with the fucking AI
41:16
and I'm like, man, fucking I'm
41:18
back Yeah.
41:19
If everyone realizes they're out of their league,
41:22
they.
41:23
They can keep.
41:25
Graphic designing or whatever.
41:27
Right, I recommend everybody. Why well, we'll link
41:29
off to the south Park episode. It's
41:31
worth like forcing yourself through five
41:34
minutes of it just to like get a
41:36
sense of because I feel like it really
41:39
illustrates the people
41:41
who are doing this and like what they
41:43
think is cool and just
41:46
how depressing and like bereft of
41:48
any soul. Like
41:51
it is like not that South Park is
41:53
like this soulful thing, but it's
41:56
just it really is wild.
41:58
Like it's hard, it's hard to describe it. It
42:01
will make you want
42:03
to do a hard reset with a gun.
42:08
Yeah, yeah, just really get it out
42:11
the Uh So, you're never gonna guess
42:13
which actor does not seem to appreciate
42:15
the limits of AI. That's
42:17
right, it is Ashton Kutcher. He
42:20
recently made headlines after sitting down
42:22
with Google CEO Eric Schmidt and extolling
42:25
the virtues of AI. He specifically
42:27
heaped praise on generative text
42:29
to video AI tools such as Open
42:32
Ai Sora, which we
42:34
we've talked about Sora before. It's the one that like creates
42:37
weird, trippy, very
42:39
creepy video clips like
42:41
it's getting better.
42:42
See the new one the guy was eating ramen and it looks
42:45
better.
42:45
Yeah, yeah, yeah, hell yeah. They got the noodles
42:48
down, and it did that by ingesting like
42:50
all of YouTube illegally, Like
42:52
they just took everything off
42:55
YouTube and like put it into
42:58
this you know, generative engine,
43:00
I mean allegedly.
43:02
Yeah, if you asked the
43:05
chief technical officer of so they asked.
43:07
Someone did ask the CTO of this
43:09
company, and she was like, huh,
43:12
you know, I don't actually know. It's
43:16
an amazing.
43:17
Because like this journalist from the Wall Street Journal
43:19
like made a prompt like a mermaid thing with
43:21
a crab in it, but the crab
43:24
literally had a mustache like on SpongeBob.
43:27
And she's like, hmm, I feel like
43:29
this isn't wholly original because I've seen
43:31
a depiction of a crab like this elsewhere.
43:34
So that's what got her to ask the question.
43:36
Claire, they're coming for your paycheck, you know.
43:39
At least by residuals.
43:41
Yeah.
43:41
Well here she is defending you know what,
43:43
don't worry because it's not I don't know if we did.
43:45
Maybe we did, I don't know what.
43:46
Data was used to train.
43:48
SOA, we used
43:50
publicly available data and license
43:53
data.
43:54
So videos on YouTube, look.
43:58
At that face she's making much I'm not sure about
44:00
that.
44:02
Videos from Facebook,
44:05
Instagram.
44:07
You know, if they were publicly available
44:10
available, publicly available to
44:13
use, there might be
44:16
the data. But I'm
44:18
not sure. I'm not confident about it.
44:19
What about Shutterstock?
44:21
I know you guys have a deal with them.
44:24
I'm just not going to go into the details of the
44:26
data that was those used.
44:29
But it was publicly available or licensed
44:31
data.
44:31
Yeah, why the fuck am I on trial right
44:34
now?
44:36
Well?
44:36
Was it? That's the most Why do they get
44:39
the most basic question about
44:41
an AI think is like, there's an input
44:44
and then an output, and they're like, why
44:46
are you asking me about the input? Yeah, you're
44:48
the CTO, And you're like.
44:50
Ah,
44:54
so, well don't you said videos on YouTube?
44:57
And her mouth really.
44:58
Went, yeah,
45:01
you've been caught in a fucking four game.
45:04
Damn, what are you doing?
45:06
You know?
45:06
And then to end that with you know, I'm
45:08
actually not going to talk about this.
45:09
Wow, stellar defense. You
45:12
know, I actually didn't even think about that. Huh where
45:14
does the video come from? I
45:16
just paid attention to, like what came out
45:18
of it. But yeah, you're right, there must
45:21
be something going in It's like you're the chief
45:23
technical officer.
45:25
Yeah, yeah, they need a better
45:27
they need better liars in here. Like, it's
45:29
so weird that she thought.
45:30
Just saying you didn't do it.
45:33
Bring back bring back the sharahos
45:36
lady.
45:36
Right, are you not a powerful
45:39
millionaire just lie and say you
45:41
didn't do it.
45:42
Don't you know how these grifts go. You gotta
45:44
lie all the way to the end until
45:46
people going damn, all that shit was a lie.
45:48
But I guess, I mean, maybe they are.
45:50
Making it easier for us to be a little more discerning
45:52
because when you do interviews like this, it just
45:54
makes them look so fucking bad.
45:57
So Ashton Kutcher was like, it's gonna
46:00
gonna make footage you could ease, you'll
46:02
easily use in a major motion picture, a television
46:04
show like specifically, I think he was
46:06
referencing like establishing shots
46:09
like outside. He's like, we're not gonna
46:11
need people to actually, we're not gonna
46:13
need artists to use that shit.
46:16
I'm just gonna invent things. And that
46:18
does seem like a thing that it could
46:21
do. Actually, and that
46:23
sucks. That's fucking terrible
46:25
and instead of that being terrible, He's
46:28
like, no, this is the future what you better get
46:30
on board. But people are also pointing
46:32
out also I liked this Lene. Someone was
46:35
like, yeah, I think that Sara might
46:37
be able to make an Ashton Kutcher movie,
46:39
but not like a necessarily
46:43
a Sean O'Connor. Yeah.
46:46
And then so he defended himself
46:48
on Twitter saying, Hollywood ignoring this is
46:50
just gonna like be catastrophic for
46:52
everybody. He's like, no, what the fuck
46:54
are people who like righte
46:57
Like, what are the creatives like ninety
46:59
eight percent of the people in Hollywood?
47:01
What the fuck are they supposed to do with
47:03
this? You know, this is just a
47:05
thing that matters to the
47:08
like executives who are
47:11
trying to like cut the bottom line,
47:13
like the people that he hangs out with, Like
47:15
what is the DP who like
47:18
does the establishing shots for a film?
47:20
Like, what the fuck is he supposed to do with
47:22
this information that Like, and you've
47:24
been replaced by a fucking
47:27
AI software.
47:28
You should up your game. So a director wants you to
47:30
be the main director of photography and that's you're
47:33
not stuck there?
47:35
Yeah, Sep Earlier, this.
47:38
Fear monger ship where they're like, if they ignored,
47:40
it's going to be catastrophic, Like is that a threat?
47:42
They're like, because you know once AI comes, then
47:44
they're gonna get mad at you for ignoring it,
47:47
or that it's gonna somehow revolution. Like
47:49
I get that they're trying to say it's a tool, but
47:52
then when they also say shit like you know, jobs
47:54
are going to change, we need to be prepared, and you're not
47:56
following that up with something actually radical
47:59
about the nature of work, then shut
48:01
the fuck up about this.
48:02
Well. So the thing that I think
48:05
the bait and switch they're trying to pull off the
48:07
executive class here is they're
48:09
using somebody who is like nominally
48:12
an actor, who is actually
48:14
like a media executive. He has
48:16
a venture capital firm, cool
48:19
Sounder Ventures, your sound Adventures. Yeah,
48:21
he was able to start it in twenty
48:24
fifteen when with nothing more than
48:26
his beautiful face, his business
48:29
talents, and one
48:31
hundred million dollars from Liberty Media, oh which, oh,
48:33
oh, Libertal Group. So
48:36
he's like a media investor and
48:38
that's where this is coming from. He's just
48:40
trying to do the work
48:43
of being like, guys, this is nothing to fear.
48:45
This is the future, and it's
48:47
gonna make sick shit.
48:50
Dude, Like you don't you don't have you don't even
48:52
have the discerning abilities to know
48:54
that Danny Masterson was a piece of shit
48:56
for how the fuck am I supposed to be? Like, yeah,
48:59
dude, but what about this technology
49:01
stuff Pashton, Because like
49:03
you said, he that Sound Ventures
49:06
has like a two hundred and forty million dollar AI
49:08
fund, so they're so they're so
49:10
deep in on this shit. And this
49:13
is the thing, man, every time Kutcher starts opening
49:15
his mouth about technology, you have
49:17
to presume it's a grift. Because he was doing
49:19
this with crypto too, Like this isn't
49:22
this is like his new thing, like he likes to
49:24
be like, oh man, these NFTs are fucking sick
49:26
man. They're gonna make this new show called Stoner Cats,
49:28
or like doing funny videos with
49:30
like the creator of like Ethereum and trying to make.
49:33
Like yeah, dude, we're just like out here just like trying
49:35
to figure out what this stuff is.
49:37
And he he made a donation to Ellen
49:39
like a charity that she was running like but
49:42
as a crypto donation to bring more
49:44
eyeballs onto it. So everything he does
49:47
is about propping up his own investments.
49:49
Yeah, but
49:51
it's yeah, I mean he's like
49:54
all these a lot of these famous people
49:56
like get rich and
49:58
famous, and then the people that I hang out
50:00
with our other like
50:02
media executives and like other millionaires,
50:05
and so they're just going to think
50:07
all this shit is cool and like think thoughts
50:10
that like those people are putting in their
50:12
heads.
50:12
But yeah, I mean this is
50:15
this This is the thing that keeps going is like,
50:17
you know, the New York Times is embroiled in a
50:19
lawsuit because they're like, I'm
50:21
pretty sure you're probably skimming our articles
50:24
to train some of this ship. Yeah,
50:26
many industries are like no,
50:29
like you keep saying you're skimming the internet
50:31
for like to train these things, So how the fuck could
50:33
it not you You're you're constantly
50:35
going like, oh, not that that's copyright. And like
50:37
the way that even that CTO is like I
50:40
believe it's publicly available, Like
50:42
what do you mean that you can.
50:44
Just access it?
50:44
Or they're saying that the licensing it's it's available
50:47
for any kind of use to the public, and
50:50
it was available.
50:51
To me and that I just like went in and
50:53
fucking hacked that ship.
50:54
And yeah, I used YouTube downloader
50:57
and got it off the not me.
50:58
I can't I can't pay it past the paywall.
51:01
I only at the first four senses. I
51:05
don't really know what you guys are.
51:06
Talking about, but I get the gist.
51:08
I always try to get the GISTs. Yeah,
51:11
I wonder what will happen when this comes back to bite
51:13
Ashton in the in his sweet little ass
51:16
and there's a video that comes
51:18
out of him, like fucking a pig's head or
51:20
something.
51:23
I generated.
51:24
Yeah, yeah, exactly, And
51:26
then.
51:26
Issue and AI generated half hearted
51:29
apology video in front of the
51:31
wooden wall. Yeah,
51:33
with a wrinkle T
51:36
shirt, looking like he hasn't
51:38
slept in a while.
51:39
I guess it's forever the circle.
51:42
Yeah. Do you think before that apology video
51:44
they had like a makeup, like a
51:46
person come in and like make them
51:48
look disheveled.
51:50
No.
51:50
I think they're both actors enough that
51:53
they I think they're having enough savvy. Yeah,
51:55
because they had like these like poor poor
51:58
us faces on.
51:59
They look you smell the bad, you
52:01
know, because you're so stress.
52:03
I mean that is a good point. Yeah, I mean, like in a way I
52:05
could smell the stress sweat, Yeah, through
52:07
the computer screen.
52:09
For that. I feel like, I feel like they
52:11
have their hair and makeup person come through and
52:13
be like, but like this time, like make us look
52:15
like ship, like make it likely make us
52:18
down.
52:18
Okay, then I would say, I would say,
52:21
you don't need me. If you want to look like shit,
52:23
I would say, don't put any makeup.
52:25
It's that no makeup, makeup. Look, Yeah,
52:28
I'm doing it.
52:29
Yeah.
52:29
They're like hydrated.
52:31
Yeah, yeah, Oh that's good.
52:33
That's good. Dehydrated. I don't know.
52:35
I'm not going to get dehydrated because that could totally
52:38
fuck up levels.
52:39
Yeah, but actually that reminds me
52:41
I need to drink a gallon of alkaline water right now.
52:43
Yeah, you bring it over, bring it over, bring it over now. And I'm fucking
52:46
freaking out. I'm freaking out. Not
52:49
always the best stories you hear
52:51
behind the scenes about the ash Man,
52:53
But that's all. That's all I say about that. The
52:56
Tribeca Film Festival also getting
52:58
in on the whole thing with some
53:00
Sora shorts, which are short films
53:03
created by chat GPT's like video
53:05
thing.
53:06
What a fucking slap in the face
53:08
to people who actually want.
53:09
To make filmmaker.
53:11
Really, Yeah, so they're
53:13
they're going to celebrate people who just typed
53:15
a fucking prompt into it and being like,
53:18
and that's.
53:18
An art form two miles.
53:20
Okay, no, it is fucking
53:22
not.
53:23
But yeah, oh they're all created
53:25
by Sam Altman and he is a
53:27
genius, I swear to god. But
53:30
yeah. People were also pointing out similarly,
53:33
like it it really always feels like
53:35
you can just trace this bullshit back
53:37
up to somebody who has hundreds
53:39
of millions of dollars invested in this shit. In
53:41
this case, Tribeca Film Festival
53:44
is owned by Tribeca Enterprises, which
53:46
is owned by Lupa Systems, the company
53:48
run by Rupert Murdoch's son James,
53:51
and Lupa Systems has multiple investments
53:53
in AI companies, including one that produces
53:55
generative music, which
53:58
is my favorite genre of music.
54:00
Yeah, generative, Yeah,
54:02
because it will generate a fucking headache
54:04
and crisis as you listen to it. Yeah, but yeah,
54:06
I get yeah, everything, Like that's what's They
54:09
make it so easy though, Like with these grifts,
54:11
like you just have to do a little bit of digging and you're
54:13
like, what's celebrity, where's their money?
54:15
Who? With so much
54:17
information that I feel like people
54:20
who don't listen to this show. Yeah,
54:22
and there are people like that still out there, folks,
54:25
So talk to your friends and family. But
54:27
you know, like I don't know, if I was just reading
54:30
headlines, I'd be like, man, it seems like Hollywood's
54:33
warming up to a you know what I mean, Like it's
54:35
just easy when when the
54:37
mainstream media is like kind of in on the
54:40
grift. In this case, like with Crypto,
54:42
they were at least like somewhat
54:44
skeptical, but in this case
54:46
it feels like the corporate
54:48
overlords just have it so that they're like, hey,
54:51
I wave of the future, right, yeah,
54:54
and then they have like the stupid human trick
54:56
of like chet GPT seeming to be alive
54:58
by doing all to complete
55:00
really well, and so that's
55:03
enough to like get the momentum they
55:05
need. But just keep it to tricks, man, Just
55:07
keep it to fun party tricks. Stop saying
55:09
it'll do it. That's all else. But yeah,
55:13
you think it's fun party trick, Well you're gonna
55:16
be a fun party trick of
55:18
history because this is the future
55:20
of Hollywood. I mean, we already know
55:22
it's happened podcasts too, Like it's
55:25
not people, are you like you
55:27
know.
55:27
That joke very well was written
55:29
by a
55:32
wait I wrote that
55:37
special party
55:39
trick of history.
55:40
Are they doing that and podcasts
55:43
ship?
55:44
Yeah, there's there's a lot of like
55:47
like the like trying to build voice models
55:49
and things like that to be able to like automate
55:52
stuff down the road, you know, like and
55:56
that.
55:56
I've been doing it for a while. That's
55:58
like comedy podcast that's
56:01
they claim as all AI, but it's actually
56:04
made by two comedians and it seems like
56:06
the comedians are actually writing it.
56:08
That's kind of funny.
56:09
Yeah, is that that one Will Sasso is involved?
56:11
Yeah, I think Will Sasso is involved in it, and like
56:13
it just seems like it's a bit. But there
56:16
have been others that are like
56:18
actually a I generated and I
56:21
haven't seen them catch on yet, shockingly.
56:24
No, because you can even like do you even see the AI
56:26
videos that they have, like the AI voices you
56:28
see a lot more on like uh social posts
56:30
like or like TikTok ads or things like
56:33
that, Like as they're they're basically cutting
56:35
out like cheap voiceover actors by just
56:37
having AI voice, like the voice
56:40
to text.
56:41
Yeah, yeah, it's so wanked.
56:43
Like it does like these things that are you know,
56:45
adds a few positives or things like that, but
56:47
it's still to the human ear.
56:49
You're like, is this.
56:50
Person like like take a bunch of Valume
56:52
and then a bunch of Oppers or something, and they're like
56:54
they're completely cross wired here.
56:56
It's very odd to listen to.
56:58
But again, my
57:01
hot take is that something worse than
57:03
AI generated content like that
57:05
are Have you ever seen an ad on Instagram
57:08
where it's like a fake two people talking
57:10
about a product on a fake podcast?
57:13
Oh seemingly like, Oh,
57:16
this person who created this product happened
57:18
to be on a podcast talking about it
57:20
and they filmed it, but it's clearly just
57:22
for Instagram.
57:25
Yeah, Like that's because that's a popular clip
57:27
that looks like style. Yeah, interesting
57:31
podcast.
57:32
There's so many quote unquote podcasts that are
57:34
also just like that, where like we just need to make like a two minute
57:36
video in here, but let's just put mics in
57:38
front of us with like a flat screen TV
57:40
with a graphic and then.
57:42
Crazy, Oh they're really talking about on that
57:44
podcast or.
57:45
That Rocket Money ad. Have you seen those
57:48
Rocket Money ads where they're
57:50
they're fake like stand
57:52
up Pecklar clips where there's a
57:54
stand up talking about like yeah,
57:56
and you know when you have all these subscriptions
57:58
and it's just crazy, right, and someone in
58:01
the audience goes rocket money,
58:04
and then the comic goes, oh,
58:06
oh, that's exactly right, rock and
58:09
like it's shot like a stand up clip.
58:12
It's really freaky. They do it with like
58:14
three different fake
58:16
comedians.
58:17
That's wild.
58:19
I can't believe you haven't seen this yet. I don't
58:21
got to see it.
58:22
That's good. That's usually on Instagram.
58:24
Maybe it's on my my algorithm specifically,
58:26
but yeah, if you're heavy in the stand up clips,
58:29
that's what you're saying.
58:30
Love crowd work, dude, there's someone so cool
58:32
about all these crowd work clips. I think
58:36
that's the future of comedy. Just someone's talking
58:38
to a bunch of people they don't know, not even doing material,
58:40
and.
58:41
The thing they're saying that they're brilliant
58:43
obser vision, is just how good a product
58:45
is. I love that app?
58:48
Oh yeah, I love that app. We're all
58:50
talking about it backstage.
58:52
This coca cola tastes good and
58:54
there's no calories.
58:56
And that's what I like about the crowd work is just
58:58
the exchange of ideas is about how
59:01
what apps are cool.
59:04
Wow, unbelievable.
59:06
Unbelievable, Claire Okaine,
59:08
unbelievable having you on
59:10
the show. It was great having you. Also
59:13
written by AI. Can people find
59:15
you, follow you all that good stuff.
59:18
You can go to Claarocaine dot com
59:20
for all your claar Ocaine needs. You
59:23
know, I got shows coming up, but I do
59:25
actively have COVID right now, so I
59:29
think I'm going to cancel tonight's show.
59:32
But check out my calendar. I'd
59:35
be I'll be good. I'll be
59:37
ready for some shows in the
59:39
future. And yeah, I'm all over
59:41
the place. I got this new album Everything I Know How
59:43
To Do. It's very good, all
59:46
over the place.
59:46
Thank you. Go check it out,
59:49
check it out? By it God damn it.
59:51
Is there a work of media that you've been enjoying.
59:54
I am obsessed with this. I'll
59:57
call call it media. This account
1:00:01
called crisis acting. Do you guys know
1:00:03
about chrisis.
1:00:04
I know about crisis Actors.
1:00:06
I don't know about this
1:00:08
Instagram They're basically
1:00:10
like every post
1:00:13
is a ten or so different clips sort
1:00:15
of just random moments from
1:00:18
videos taken from the Internet or Instagram
1:00:20
without context. So sometimes
1:00:23
it'll be like, you know, a guy
1:00:26
blowing something up in the middle of the desert
1:00:28
and all his friends going like yeah. Then
1:00:30
you go to the next one, and then it's like some
1:00:33
sort of Eastern European ritualistic
1:00:35
dance that you don't really know what's going on. Then
1:00:37
you swipe to the next one, and then it's like a
1:00:39
little kid playing basketball
1:00:41
and a kid like kick clipping for the first
1:00:44
time next to him. It's just like all these little
1:00:46
moments that sort of remind
1:00:48
you of your humanity
1:00:50
in the world's humanity, but
1:00:52
without context, and just
1:00:54
like these weird things like lightning
1:00:57
storms, just like everything that could happen in
1:00:59
the world that curated
1:01:02
in.
1:01:02
These curated good clips, right,
1:01:04
curated.
1:01:05
Good interesting sometimes like beautifully
1:01:07
shot clips by normal
1:01:10
Ask people from around the world. That's
1:01:12
crisis acting.
1:01:13
Love it. That's on Instagram.
1:01:16
It's on Instagram, the app so
1:01:18
Instagram, the app. Hey have you
1:01:21
you know how you can't find videos anywhere
1:01:23
these days? Instagram? That's
1:01:26
right, that's
1:01:28
what I'm talking about. Proud Miles.
1:01:33
Where can people find you? Is there work of media
1:01:35
you've been enjoying?
1:01:36
Uh?
1:01:37
Yeah, find me on the Instagram,
1:01:39
the Twitter at Miles of Gray. Find Jacket
1:01:42
on the Back of Ball podcast Miles and Jack Mosty's
1:01:45
like I said, I listened to I watched ninety Day
1:01:47
Fiance, but you can listen to me talk about ninety
1:01:49
day Fiance on four to twenty Day Fiance
1:01:52
with Sofia Alexandra A
1:01:54
tweet I like, I'm still on that Shams
1:01:56
tweet about kristavs zingis so
1:02:00
this one now is from Kyle at
1:02:02
Kyle A Madsen. It said need to hear
1:02:04
E forty say this tweet out loud and it said
1:02:07
Celtic Trista Brazil is over to tour
1:02:09
media written this you will allow this location?
1:02:13
Uh?
1:02:14
And yeah, it's it's it's
1:02:16
it's so malleable that tweet. So thank you for
1:02:18
putting e forty fons really in my brain.
1:02:21
Yeah yeah I too, I had too, So
1:02:23
yeah that's mine.
1:02:24
Uh, Twitter, I've been enjoying Shane
1:02:26
five hundred and fifty five days until Avatar
1:02:28
three at the Monkey Jungle
1:02:31
on Twitter tweeted showing up
1:02:33
two hours late to work with tiger face
1:02:35
paint from the Zoo. Good.
1:02:41
You can find me on Twitter
1:02:43
at Jack Underscore O'Brien. You can find us
1:02:46
on Twitter at Daily Zeitgeist We're
1:02:48
at the Daily Zeikeeist on Instagram. We
1:02:50
have a Facebook fan page on a website, Daily zeikeist
1:02:52
dot com where we post our episodes and our
1:02:54
footnote. We link off to the information that
1:02:57
we talked about in today's episode, as well as
1:02:59
a song that we think you might enjoy.
1:03:01
Miles, what song do you think people might enjoy?
1:03:04
This comes from like a singer drummer producer
1:03:07
named Diella d A I E l
1:03:09
A. And this is like a really kind of
1:03:11
futuristic drum end bassed pop track
1:03:14
that she made. It's called hyper die hyper
1:03:16
d A I Uh And it's just
1:03:19
like it's just it's got her vocals
1:03:21
are really cool and layered on it and the production is
1:03:23
really cool.
1:03:23
So check this one out. Diella with
1:03:26
hyper Dye. We will link off
1:03:28
to that in the footnote for Dall these guys
1:03:30
as a production of My Heart Radio. For more podcasts from My
1:03:32
Heart Radio, visit the iHeart Radio ap Apple podcast
1:03:35
wherever you listen to your favorite shows. That's gonna do it
1:03:37
for us this morning. We are back
1:03:39
this afternoon to tell you what's trending though, and
1:03:41
we'll talk to you all then Fight Fight
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