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May 8, 2026 34 mins

The Pope is having issues changing his address in his small bank in the Southside of Chicago! And a woman broke up with her boyfriend after finding his ChatGPT searches were about their relationship!

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
What happened when the last time you've seen a grasshopper?

Speaker 2 (00:05):
Clearly in northern Michigan.

Speaker 3 (00:08):
Clearly you have good pest control or something. I don't know,
because where all these bugs are? Please go outside, please.
Fred's show is on Friday May It's the French show.
Is how Good morning kaelin Good Morning, Hi, Jason Brown
Hiking shoe by Shelley. We have a tiebreaker next hour
in the Showdown, five pop culture questions against our pop

(00:30):
culture experts. Soul is back for eight point fifty waiting,
Metaphone is new? Why did somebody get ghosted? The Friday
Throwback Dance Party with d Danner Roddick that's coming up
this hour. We'll get to blogs, our audio journals, headlines,
biggest stories of the day, and the Entertainment Report. What
are you working on?

Speaker 2 (00:44):
K you guys?

Speaker 4 (00:45):
The Pope is having a hell of a time changing
his address from Chicago to well.

Speaker 2 (00:49):
You know, the Vatican. And I gotta tell you this story.
It's hysterical.

Speaker 3 (00:53):
It is a wild story. Indeed it is. I have
a new complaint.

Speaker 2 (00:57):
Sounds like you feel like it's wild.

Speaker 3 (01:00):
It is, but I don't want to I don't want
to say too much, because then it gives the story away.

Speaker 2 (01:04):
Yeah, don't do that.

Speaker 3 (01:05):
Gets mad and I don't want to be doing it.
And then sometimes, you know, I used to guess about
a story and then I was right, yeah, and then
I got in trouble. So I just don't Now I'm
just like, wow, I cannot wait to learn about that.

Speaker 2 (01:16):
For the verse times I basically told the story like
what happened, you'll.

Speaker 3 (01:20):
Tell it better because it's more.

Speaker 2 (01:21):
I just can't wait. I love him, I love the Pope.

Speaker 4 (01:24):
Yeah, you often need to see what he was rocking under.

Speaker 2 (01:26):
His little robe the other day, so I'll tell you
about that. She's just my favorite character right now.

Speaker 3 (01:29):
Yeah, I love it. Well, you're you're a you're a
big time media journalist, and I'm sure you've got to
be able to meet him somehow. I don't think I
could sneak in on it, you know, so you have
to do some sort of right, I'm kinda sit down.

Speaker 2 (01:40):
Yeah, I want to be friends of management.

Speaker 3 (01:42):
Friends management of the Pope. I mean, he was an
altar boy, just that part of it. You can just
call him up.

Speaker 5 (01:47):
I probably have my little license thing off the cloth
as well. I don't know there's probably some certificate and
that I was blessed.

Speaker 3 (01:57):
He really did it. And not only were you an
alter boy, Jason, you were the lead older boy.

Speaker 5 (02:02):
Yeah, the first one carrying the cross yep for all
the special events. So I got all those baptisms, those
funerals because you get that money you need get a
little tip o.

Speaker 3 (02:11):
Wait a minute, if you guys used to get pete
for funerals.

Speaker 5 (02:14):
Oh yeah, you wanted the funerals in the weddings and
the baptisms because then you get some money. I mean,
do you want to try to be the best? Do
you get booked for though you get the high dollars
And if you were.

Speaker 3 (02:23):
The lead, then you would get booked first. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:25):
Well yeah, you the lead person is the one that
does the most.

Speaker 3 (02:28):
Wow. Okay. And so you're like, oh, man, mister Smith died.
That sucks, But that's a good that's a solid twenty
right there.

Speaker 5 (02:35):
You're looking to that funeral able, Wow, that's awful, that's
gonna happen.

Speaker 2 (02:42):
He might as well get his coin, right, Yeah, I'm working.

Speaker 3 (02:46):
Wonder where else is preying on the dead in the
week the ultra boys? Who else favors?

Speaker 6 (02:52):
Who has a funeral business, you know, yeah, funeral.

Speaker 1 (02:56):
Yep, Yeah, she's business. Oh yeah, I mean you're always
gonna have a client.

Speaker 3 (03:01):
Yeah, I thought about that too. You know, my grandparents
have a they're in a mausoleum in Arizona where they lived,
and it is a fancy my mom calls it the condo.
It was pretty expensive and also also strange. Also also
also strange, it's Friday, is that my grandmother picked it
out because my grandfather died first, and so we went

(03:22):
to the place and she chose the place. And then
knowing that, you know, it turned out a year later
she lived there too, right there next to him. But
it was in like a glass sort of room and
it had a view, and my mom and grandmother insisted
on the one with a view, the condo with a view,
because it has a glass front and you can like
put pictures and stuff in there or whatever. But I

(03:43):
thought about this. It was very expensive, and then I'm like, well,
how in one hundred years, no one's gonna know who
my grandparents were. No one is going to know who
my parents were. No, maybe no one will know who
I am. In one hundred years, they're gonna tear that
thing down and build right on top of it, aren't
they and then sell it again, you know the Smith
family mortuary. They're just it's just generational, right, because you

(04:04):
don't get it forever, because who's gonna be who's gonna know?
So I've never read the fine print on the deal,
but I bet somewhere deep in there it's like to be,
you know, a couple of generations from now. We can
tear this thing down and then just build right on
top of it.

Speaker 2 (04:16):
We'll talk about you, your family.

Speaker 4 (04:17):
We still talk about people like one hundred years back
in our family and like you, you know, you made
a career of you made something of yourself.

Speaker 3 (04:25):
I can only imagine what with the with the conversation, Well,
but thank god he didn't bro create.

Speaker 2 (04:29):
Like wasn't great Grandpa like this? This radio?

Speaker 7 (04:33):
Dude?

Speaker 3 (04:33):
You know what's the radio? Did you know that Britney
spears lady? No, no, I wonder which side he was on,
Christina or Brittany. The biggest stories of the day. There
was a hacking, you guys, the education platform Canvas was

(04:55):
hacked for ransom. What do you do in canvas? We
didn't have that, Oh we were still all.

Speaker 2 (05:02):
That's where I was like, shots, we were still using.

Speaker 3 (05:05):
Like stones and etching things into stones when I was
in school. Okays, yeah, like were we lived like the flintstones?
My parents car that had the two rocks on the
front wheels. You know. So I don't know what this is.
Some users at the learning platform Canvas are still reporting
problems today after a massive breach by a hacking group
that caused widespread disruption to schools across the country. Students
try to access the software On Thursday had to deal

(05:28):
with issues trying to take finals. I guess they were
met with a message from the hacking group Shiny Hunters,
claiming responsibility. The group was threatening to leak data held
by the parent company. Anyway, this thing has two hundred
and seventy five million users across nearly eight thousand educational
institutions worldwide, including Princeton and Harvard. The group gave schools

(05:51):
until May twelfth to negotiate before releasing the data. As
of last check, most users reported being able to access
Canvas again. Five US are monitoring those passengers who apparently
left the cruise ship, the one we've been talking about
with the hantavirus. The hantavirus whatever, it's called So they
left the cruise ship. They live in the US, and
this was all before cases were confirmed on board. So

(06:13):
health officials in twelve countries are monitoring people who left
this haunt to virus stricken cruise ship before the cases
were confirmed, and five of them, I guess live in Georgia, Texas, Virginia, Arizona,
and California. None of these individuals are showing symptoms, but
the World Health Organization confirmed yesterday that the strain aboard
the ship is rare and it can spread from person

(06:36):
to person through close contact, unlike other hant of virus
strains that required direct rodent contact. So they were saying
you couldn't get it from person to person, but now
you can get it from person to person. Here we go,
Here we go, you guys, Here we go in a
wedding brow here we go hantavirus. Guys, we're gonna have

(06:59):
to shut stuff down through the summer. Remember that. Remember
remember that that funny joke they told for COVID, that
funny joke in February when they were like, guys, this
could affect us through the month of June. And it
was February, and we're like what June. That is several
months away. That is outrageous crazy. This is another I'm

(07:22):
not going on this bird migration cruise anymore. I was
gonna go on it, and now I'm not going because
this is the kind of thing that happens. You go
to bird That's what these people were doing. They were
going to look at birds in Antarctic. Antarctica. It's always
a bird, right, you know what. Always there's a theme
this week. Yep, it's always a bird. There's a theme
this week. The US State Department will begin revoking the

(07:42):
US passports of thousands of parents who owe a significant
amount of unpaid child support. That's right, you did, beat parents.
The Department told the AP on Thursday that the revocations
would begin on Friday, and they focused on those who
owe one hundred thousand dollars and more. This would apply
to about two thousand, seven hundred American passport holders, according
to figures studied by the State Department and the Department

(08:03):
of Health and Human Services. The revocation program these plans
were first reported, and they might be greatly expanded to
people who owe more than two thousand, five hundred dollars
unpaid child support.

Speaker 2 (08:15):
You don't get to go to turks and Keiko's. I'm sorry,
you don't get.

Speaker 3 (08:18):
To go anywhere. Apparently you pay your child right.

Speaker 2 (08:20):
Pay your bills, pay your child support.

Speaker 3 (08:22):
Ya dead, be dead. I think you're going to secrets.
You know you're not going mandels or sandals or that.
What's that heating ism?

Speaker 2 (08:29):
You're not going.

Speaker 3 (08:29):
You are one hundred grand and child support. You trying
to go to hedonism? No, can't go there. Absolutely not.
The NCAA, Jason, this is for your sports are executive
vice president of Sports Report and now some on Thursday,
it has officially decided to expand its basketball tournaments to
seventy six teams. That used to be fifty two, which

(08:50):
is very easily divisible by two sixty four. Oh, now
it's seventy six games. Each tourney will kick off with
a twelve game opening round. The new format will provide
what they're saying is even more compelling games for fans
and student athletes from that measly fifty two they had before.
It just rolls off the tongue, doesn't it. So how

(09:11):
would they do that? Jason? Fifty two divided by two?

Speaker 5 (09:13):
I don't do brackets twenty six and a half or
something like that.

Speaker 3 (09:18):
Too much math? Or is it twenty? It must be?

Speaker 2 (09:22):
Well, I think what the creative side of my brain?
You're the fast.

Speaker 3 (09:25):
I don't know. Actually, what did you say? It's fifty two,
twenty six, twenty six teams two. I guess it would work.
A viral TikTok trend called egg coffee is getting attention
this morning for it's creamy, dessert like taste, but health
experts worn that it could come with risks. The drink,
which originated in Vietnam, is made by whipping raw egg

(09:48):
yolks with sweetened condensed milk and then pouring it over
hot coffee. Experts say the biggest concern is salmonilla, since
the raw egg yolks usually aren't cooked enough to kill bacteria.
Symptoms can include oh diarrhea, vomiting, fever, and stomach cramps.
Doctors also warned that the drink could be very high
in sugar, calories, and saturated fat because of the condensed
milk and egg yolks. Some experts suggest using pasteurized eggs

(10:12):
or alternative creamy toppings. If you want to try this,
remember when people were putting up maybe still doing it
like sticks of butter in their coffee. Yeah, you call
like bulletproof coffee or something like that.

Speaker 2 (10:21):
Oh people do that?

Speaker 3 (10:22):
What it was? Yeah, protein, and I don't remember there
was some reason why they wanted their hurts to stop.
I don't know the entire sticks of butter in coffee.
But then again, people look at the stuff and people
do pour in their coffee. Like here we're saying, no
egg yolks. That's gross people. Did you ever watch people
with the creamer thing?

Speaker 2 (10:39):
It's so upset?

Speaker 3 (10:40):
Why is the creamer thing always empty? It's always empty
because someone just poured half of it in their drinks?

Speaker 2 (10:46):
You really do?

Speaker 4 (10:46):
Like I want to tell those people, I don't think
you like coffee and that's okay.

Speaker 3 (10:50):
Yeah you know what I mean. You like milk and sugars?
What you like? Yeah? Okay, no, because then it's like
dump all this and they're dump all that and I'm like, well,
wait a minute, wait, you don't need the middle.

Speaker 2 (11:00):
Step right, what's water in there?

Speaker 3 (11:03):
Yeah, you'll be fine. And a Florida couple was arrested
after allegedly burning a neighbors one two hundred dollars drone
in their backyard fire pit. I think this may have
been your dad.

Speaker 2 (11:14):
I'm in trouble, by the way, So that's all allegedly.

Speaker 3 (11:17):
Okay, So allegedly a drone was falling flying over your
dad's house and he shot it down with a rifle, allegedly.

Speaker 4 (11:23):
Allegedly pssibly, I got in trouble for that one.

Speaker 3 (11:27):
Well. In this case, the drone had crash landed on
their property after losing signal during a late night flight. Again,
why are you flying a drone over my house late
at night? That's what it is? My house. I'm out here,
you know, with Rihanna in my airstream. Do an adult things,
and I don't need you to see it.

Speaker 2 (11:42):
Do you own like the airspace around your home?

Speaker 3 (11:45):
No? I guess it's technically not your technique. I can't
talk to it. It's really difficult. I can't. It's a
technically illegal I don't think to at least fly over it.
But what are you doing at night with your night
vision drone over my house? When you own attracted it
down and knocked on the door, The homeowner reportedly told
him through a ring camera, don't have a blank drone anymore,

(12:07):
or you don't have it anymore. Police say the couple
admitted to torching it because they were fed up with
drones flying over their house. They now face criminal misshief
charges because the drone was worth more than a thousand bucks.
That's not fair if you fly over the house, my
house and crash it in my backyard, spying on me.
That sounds like a you problem. Why do I have
to give it back to you so you can do

(12:27):
it some more like you crashed it in my backyard, don't.
It's have a coke Day, National Provider Appreciation Day, National
Student Nurse Day, and shout out to Showvishelley National Military
Spouse Appreciation Day in all of you. Fred not knowing
that a number ending in two can be divided by
two is pretty bad, is it?

Speaker 2 (12:47):
Okay?

Speaker 4 (12:47):
You guys, couldn't you do me a favor and not today?
Just y'all on the text line.

Speaker 3 (12:52):
Honestly, it is pretty bad, my friend. It was the
five that threw me off. Okay, it's early. I shouldn't
have to do math on the fly. I'm glad that
all of you are a much smarter than I am.

Speaker 1 (13:01):
But then we all sat here and let you do that.
It's really the problem, none of us.

Speaker 3 (13:05):
I'll take this one, guys.

Speaker 2 (13:07):
If I hear math or numbers, I clock out, like
I'm not interested.

Speaker 3 (13:11):
And I did correct myself, but I'll take that one on.
You guys don't have to have any responsibility. But yes,
I did watch four other adults stare at me. And
that's the same thing. By the way, the joke was
fifty two. That the joke wasn't the dividing part Calin's
entertainment report. He is on the press show.

Speaker 4 (13:28):
Okay, this is the pope story and it is well
worth the weight. So Pope Leo, the first American born pope,
tried calling his Chicago bank to change his address and
phone number, you know, when he moved to the Vatican,
and this was two months into being the Pope.

Speaker 2 (13:44):
What his papas run or I don't know what people papus.
I don't know what they say, PA don't I think
it's that I don't know, y'all. I don't know, right,
paw black and drop us exactly.

Speaker 6 (13:56):
And you can assume you know that the teller thought
it was a p even after the Pope answered all
of his security questions and insisted she insisted that he
come in in person, which he probably really couldn't do.

Speaker 2 (14:09):
By the way, I would love to know what his
security questions were, like, oh yeah, like what street did
you grow up on? Who's your best friend? Like who's
your savi here? Who is your Lord and savior? And
you like I don't know. By the way, like.

Speaker 4 (14:22):
His friend who is also a priest, told the situation,
but it's just really funny.

Speaker 2 (14:27):
Of course it got figured out afterwards, but she was like, no,
you have to come in.

Speaker 4 (14:31):
I mean I wouldn't believe that call either, but source
his friend father Tom McCarthy, So talk to Tom right story.

Speaker 2 (14:40):
By the way, I did see.

Speaker 4 (14:41):
Also, I don't know if you guys saw the photos
him rocking Nike sneakers under his little rope.

Speaker 2 (14:45):
I love it.

Speaker 4 (14:46):
It's a hysterical photo. They're coming out of the bottom
with the swoosh. If that's not the best add for Nike,
I don't know what is. We talked about this, but
Taylor Swift is getting sued by that Vegas show girl
Marion Wade, who says that Taylor her brand Confessions of
a Showgirl and wants to block any type of merch

(15:06):
that Taylor wants to have or even speaking about the album.

Speaker 2 (15:09):
But her team. Of course, Taylor's team is not having it.

Speaker 4 (15:12):
They say that that would lose tens of millions of
dollars if the judge issues that.

Speaker 2 (15:15):
Kind of order.

Speaker 4 (15:16):
They are fighting their requests and I think this is
it happened a little while ago, but this is the
first time they're answering it. They say that this woman
is attempting to get the attention of Miss Swift's fandom
for her own gain, but she.

Speaker 2 (15:29):
Really is trying to say that Taylor copied her. Okay,
did you Fred? Did you see this?

Speaker 4 (15:34):
Diana Rossini had a very interesting take on having relations
with your husband or wife.

Speaker 2 (15:41):
Did you see this? So there's an all, Oh.

Speaker 3 (15:43):
No, I didn't tell me. I have a feeling I
know what hers are. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (15:47):
She says that, you know, you need to have your
eyes closed while you're doing it, And it's a resurface
clip that's now going viral, and she is playing Barstool's
family Feud game with a bunch of dudes, including wait
for it, you guessed it, Mike Rabel.

Speaker 2 (16:01):
That's right, he was there. He was there.

Speaker 3 (16:04):
Crazy, what would he be doing there?

Speaker 4 (16:06):
He's everywhere the Patriots coach with whom you know all
these cozy relationship rumors.

Speaker 2 (16:13):
I don't know what we're calling it.

Speaker 4 (16:14):
Yesterday it was the boat story, but she was forced
to resign. But in this clip, Diana is asked by
the game's host, what is something that you might close
your eyes to do? And she says, when you have
relations with your husband and wife, which is wild, and
then Rabel is seen shaking his head.

Speaker 2 (16:32):
A lot of weird stuff resurfacing apart, that's some.

Speaker 3 (16:35):
Other stuff about him too, that was like demeaning like that.
Did she want to be with an average guy or something.

Speaker 2 (16:40):
About her husband?

Speaker 3 (16:41):
Yes, she was like, I don't know, like my I
have to look it up.

Speaker 2 (16:43):
Way, isn't he a billionaireyah?

Speaker 3 (16:45):
And he's also rare. I think he's a fast food
like a shake check executive or something like. The guy's
got tons of money.

Speaker 2 (16:52):
He needs to go. I'm sorry.

Speaker 3 (16:54):
Allegedly, yeah, it was something something like.

Speaker 4 (17:00):
Shakes shah, I do better, Yeah, senior executive ch shakeshek okay.

Speaker 3 (17:03):
Here was the comment. Diana Russini's comment about her husband
Kevin Goldschmidt resurfaces. I think we all do weird things
that we're in love. We overshare an overpost I'm married
to someone average. I don't post a lot about him.
If I was married to someone beautiful, I'd over post
it too. What she said that about her own husband.
This was in tow I Get to Well twenty twenty. No,

(17:24):
it was his shared recently.

Speaker 2 (17:25):
But oh kay, she's not a billionaire husband.

Speaker 4 (17:28):
He deserves to be not talked about like that, even
if she's not a billion.

Speaker 3 (17:32):
She also yes, this is several years ago, but she
eventually joked that she needed to stop talking negatively about
her husband, otherwise the couple would be divorced by Christmas.
The comments came just a few months after the couple
married in September of twenty twenty. Well, I mean they're
still together, I guess in theory, but this is bad.

Speaker 2 (17:49):
It's really bad.

Speaker 4 (17:50):
And this relationship with Rabel dates back to at least
twenty twenty. That's the first photo we saw of them
kissing at a bar.

Speaker 3 (17:58):
So she just got married or was about to get
married then, yeah, I mean, if you are, if you
are making out with other men or women, why are
you getting married? That should be the number one clue.
It's a bad idea.

Speaker 2 (18:10):
I feel bad for their kids too. Michael and Joey.

Speaker 3 (18:12):
But yeah, I think we need DNA test. I'm sorry.
I hate to be messy like that, but we need to.
If I'm if I'm this Goldsmith guy, I am saying,
you know what, I need proof of life, of everything. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (18:23):
Right, and one of the kids is named Michael. Just
wanted to point that out. Michael looks like Michael, does he?
I think, so I'm looking well, I am no DNA,
You're not.

Speaker 3 (18:34):
No, I'm not.

Speaker 2 (18:36):
Twenty six Amazon.

Speaker 8 (18:39):
All I know is that this little baby looks like
somebody else.

Speaker 2 (18:44):
Like it.

Speaker 1 (18:45):
Don't look like no, no, no, I know, Marion, come on, she's.

Speaker 2 (18:50):
Pregnant on a boat. I don't know.

Speaker 4 (18:52):
I'm stressed out. These two are really sloppy with whatever
they were doing. If you want to catch up on
anything you missed, you can always do that on the
I Heard Radio app, which just free. Also, if you
want to follow us on social Fredshow Radio on YouTube,
we go live throughout the show.

Speaker 2 (19:05):
We also post some things there.

Speaker 4 (19:08):
We have Instagram and the frend show TikTok as well.

Speaker 3 (19:11):
All right blogs It just a second. Our audio journalist
waiting Mataphoni's knew why did somebody get ghosted? Will investigate
Time Breaker with show Bi Shelley, the Friday Throwback dance
party's coming up, and a bunch of chances at a
thousand bucks. Thank you for having us on. We appreciate you.
Here's an ethical question. Many ethical things have been covered
already this morning. Can I shoot a drone out of
the sky over my house? It's a little it's a

(19:33):
little unclear. You own some amounts of air over your house,
but not enough, so I don't know. Can I do it?
Can I not do it? If your drone crashes in
my backyard because you were spying on me at night,
then is it really outside of the realm of possibility
that I would destroy said drone and I wouldn't go
to jail for that? I guess. I think that's sort

(19:54):
of a buyer beware or flyer beware in this case.
If you're going to crash your drone over my house,
we'll try to spy on my wife and I doing it,
which would be very, very boring video. I don't even
know where i'd find this wife, but if I had one,
I think that's up to you, though, not to crash
your drone over my house while you're spying on me.
I'm sorry. I think that's I think it's a minimum expectation.

(20:17):
What else did we covered. We've discussed in fidelity already
this morning. We've really gotten to a lot of things. Now,
let's talk about ethics. A woman says that this is
from the New York Post that she ended her relationship
after accidentally discovering her boyfriend's Chat GPT history on his laptop,
and what hurt wasn't cheating, but what he was secretly
saying about her To the AI Paulina, I'm looking at

(20:40):
you because you act like AI is a therapist sometimes
and it's taking, it's recording what you're saying, and it's
accessible for people who have access to your computer to
go look and see what you've typed in.

Speaker 2 (20:52):
In court court records. Yeah, I heard the court record store.

Speaker 3 (20:56):
You're talking about hobby, asking for relationship advisor, you're venting
or whatever. This is not How is that.

Speaker 2 (21:01):
Any different than the radio what I'm doing right now.

Speaker 3 (21:03):
Because I have a feeling you're saying more to chat
GPT than you're saying on the radio.

Speaker 2 (21:08):
Yes and no, yes and no.

Speaker 8 (21:10):
What I like to do is I'd like to put
our text messages in there, and I'd be like, can
you analyze this for me?

Speaker 3 (21:14):
Oh god? What?

Speaker 4 (21:15):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (21:16):
Oh yeah?

Speaker 8 (21:16):
Or like can you respond to this but like be
a little sassy, but yeah, but like give a little attitude,
but like the understanding.

Speaker 3 (21:24):
Okay, So relationship okay, text between you and your husband, Yes, thread,
you're putting into chat.

Speaker 2 (21:31):
GPT when I need help with a response.

Speaker 3 (21:33):
And asking for an analysis and then you're responding to
him with something that chat GPT wrote.

Speaker 2 (21:39):
I absolutely do.

Speaker 3 (21:41):
But this is a real relationship debate that you're having,
Like why wouldn't you want it to be entirely authentic
and organic? Why are we using cheat codes?

Speaker 8 (21:48):
Oh, it's authentic, Like it's my thoughts. It's just condensed
nicely because you know, I can go on and on
and on. But I also don't want to be like
so I know, I don't want to be like so
harsh because like you guys know, I take it to
hell like people take it low.

Speaker 2 (21:59):
I go to the bottom. I don't want to be
that person anymore. I'm done. I'm done being that for.

Speaker 3 (22:03):
Chatgypt is just going to run your relationship for you,
and then you won't be responsible for your own words.

Speaker 8 (22:08):
Well, they'll just help me say it nicer I can.
I can say like the most insane thing, but like
in a nice way, wrapped in a bow. She does
a great job.

Speaker 3 (22:16):
I found out that every fight I was having with
my significant other was being filtered through CHATCHEYPT. I may
as well just chat fight with the computer. Then, yeah, oh,
because I'm not really fighting with you anymore.

Speaker 8 (22:27):
My husband knows. He called me out once. He would go,
he goes you and those chatgypt responses.

Speaker 3 (22:32):
That's what I mean. So now he's not taking you
seriously because he knows that's not what you would say.
It's a formulated response based on what some textbook.

Speaker 2 (22:40):
Would You want to know what I want to say, Like,
it's not nice. You guys know I'm not nice when
I'm fighting him. Okay, this woman is doing it for him.

Speaker 3 (22:48):
She founded chat titled Relationship Issues and Uncertainty, Which that's
your first mistake. Let's not be so specific with how
we're naming our chat.

Speaker 2 (22:56):
So wait, so you name I don't.

Speaker 3 (22:57):
I'm used, I have it and I don't use it
very Apparently we're supposed to move on now to Claude.
Who's that girl? Apparently we're supposed to be moving on. Yeah,
I ever heard about head Yes.

Speaker 2 (23:09):
Claude now? Oh yeah. My best friend Jonathan was like,
get off Chat, We're at Claude.

Speaker 3 (23:12):
I guess we're done with Chad. We're moving on at
Claude now. But anyway, So, he apparently had written to
chat GPT asking whether she they should stay together, whether
he should stay with her. He complained about things like
her lifestyle, her cats, her past struggles, and even question
whether he was attracted to her. One comment especially crusher
when he wrote to CHATCHYPT, I'm just not proud of her.

(23:36):
Paul said, the raw honesty this woman changed how she
saw the relationship, and although the couple stayed together a
few more months after confronting the issue, the damage was
done and they eventually broke up. She later said that
she doesn't think that her ex is a villain, but
the experience showed her how painfully can be to see
someone's completely unfiltered private thoughts, especially when they're being shared
with AI instead of another person. Here's my question eight

(23:57):
fi five five nine one one three five you can
context the same number. Does she have any right to
be looking at that? And does she have any right
to be holding it against him when she would have
had no idea, arguably no idea that he felt this
way had she not read essentially his diary or is
he sloppy? And we shouldn't be typing into computer programs

(24:22):
for advice about our relationship relationships plural And because he
did that, it was fair game and she found it,
she can go read it. Because how is this a
whole lot different than if I were talking Well, it's
very different than if I were talking to a therapist,
but not maybe in the authenticity and the sort of
unedited nature of the communication, you know what I mean?

(24:42):
So I probably shouldn't be using chat, sheep and T
to run my relationship Paulina, And maybe shouldn't be so
sloppy as to be typing in things that I'm trying
to work through in a way that's being documented. But
if I go to my therapist and say all the
same things, that's a more healthy way of dealing with
with it. But you're still saying a bunch of really
mean things essentially that you're thinking to someone else that

(25:06):
that person wouldn't have any access.

Speaker 2 (25:07):
To, right, You wouldn't know, right? Is that mean?

Speaker 7 (25:10):
Though? Like?

Speaker 2 (25:10):
I know what he said, wasn't wasn't kind.

Speaker 8 (25:13):
But if he's that's how he feels and he's being honest,
is that mean necessarily if you want to a therapist,
like a real life person, like there's a human.

Speaker 2 (25:20):
Talk to her about it first, or do you know
what I mean?

Speaker 4 (25:22):
Like, I think that's unfair to have all these thoughts
and not like I mean, you can't say, hey, babe,
I'm not proud of you, but like, no.

Speaker 3 (25:27):
I feel like but if he had gone to his
therapist and said all these things to try and figure
out with his therapists how to communicate these things to
her in a way that doesn't burn the relationship down,
how is that really any different than a computer? Well, okay,
but like on the basic level, I mean, yes, of
course it's different. You really probably should be interacting with
a licensed therapists and not a computer for life advice.

(25:48):
That being said, how would it be any different for
him to confide in a human these things that are
not nice versus writing them down like let's say chat
GPT weren't involved and this WE was just his diary
and he's working his thoughts in his head that you
would never know. But essentially she opened up his diary
and read it and held it against him. So my
question is is that fair? Yes, because now she knows

(26:10):
his raw thoughts. However, he might have processed them and
then communicated them with her in a more healthy way
that then could have affected change, and therefore her feelings
wouldn't have been so fundamentally hurt. Did she really? I
don't think she actually had any business reading this information.
And yeah, once you read it, you can't hear it. Yeah,
but that's not her business.

Speaker 2 (26:30):
My friend. Things happen for a reason.

Speaker 9 (26:33):
You know.

Speaker 1 (26:33):
Information falls in my lap all the time, all the time,
you know, and you have to take that as a said, no,
you have to take that.

Speaker 2 (26:39):
What's kind of information?

Speaker 9 (26:40):
You know?

Speaker 1 (26:40):
I do a ninety day check on the phone just
to see what's up. Yeah, and it's a it's cool,
you know. It's because he doesn't need privacy, right, No, right, no, man,
but no. But honestly, in this case, I think she
like if that's her lap for a reason. She saw
this search history for a reason, girl, don't ignore the
signs the man is proud of you.

Speaker 3 (27:00):
The reason was that the reason was that she was
spying on him.

Speaker 1 (27:03):
Well, she might have just been going to order some dinner.

Speaker 2 (27:05):
And control you're going to find something. If you go looking,
you're always going.

Speaker 3 (27:11):
To find a hundred percent and I.

Speaker 2 (27:12):
Always find something. But yes, you do.

Speaker 3 (27:15):
So you think you think that he you think that
she has a right. I mean, she has a right
to do anything, but you think it's fair. And I
guess it doesn't matter what's far and what's not fair
because she knows it now and she's not going to
unknow it. But like the fact that they're not together
because she read something that he wasn't ready to communicate
with her or maybe never would have. I mean, come on,
I think we all have had intrusive thoughts about people

(27:37):
or things at times that are that are natural, you know,
and that we work through in our heads and then
we moved past, but we wouldn't necessarily want someone to
know that we thought it. Now, Is it slopped me
that he was doing it this way? Yeah, he's asking
to get hey hunter, good morning, how.

Speaker 7 (27:51):
You doing good?

Speaker 3 (27:53):
Hey?

Speaker 2 (27:54):
Is it cool?

Speaker 3 (27:54):
Like if if I read someone's diary, or I go
look at their search history, or I go read their
GPT log or whatever, and I see they're saying bad
stuff about me, is it really fair for me to
be like, I'm done with you. I'm completely done. I'm
not going to accept this. No, Fred, I.

Speaker 7 (28:10):
Don't think it's fair. But if you're thinking and saying
those things, you got no business being with me. That's
not love and that ain't right. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (28:21):
But Hunter, so you've never been with someone romantically or
loved someone and thought things in your head like, man,
right at this very moment, I wish this, but you'd
never say it to them, and then you will move
past it, Like isn't that a human thing?

Speaker 9 (28:34):
Yeah?

Speaker 7 (28:34):
Maybe, but to think to say I'm just not proud
of her? Do I want to be with her?

Speaker 3 (28:41):
Yeah, that's great. That's not love, that's not real, right,
thank you. I appreciate you Hunter every day. No, it
means sense. But again, if it were in my brain
and in this moment, I'm like, God, I'm embarrassed by
this person. They're drunk, they're acting stupid, they're you know,
getting in I don't know, making a scene or something,
having a bad day. I'm like, you've never in your
head thought I'm so embarrassed right now, But you're not.

(29:02):
You wouldn't want them to know that because tomorrow you
might not be, and then for the next fifty years
you're together, you might not be.

Speaker 2 (29:08):
But a thought is a thought.

Speaker 1 (29:09):
But you took time to type it into chat and
having a whole conversation with a computer. That's really on
your heart. That's what you think, that's what you feel.

Speaker 3 (29:17):
Hey, Emily, Emily, yes, Hi, So what do you think?
How much if I stumble upon someone's diary or I
don't know, search history or something. Am I really is
it fair for me to take it out against them
that I went and read this stuff without their permission?

Speaker 4 (29:37):
I mean me personally, I'm going to keep it a
thinker that I even know.

Speaker 6 (29:42):
I don't think it's fair.

Speaker 2 (29:45):
I don't think it's fair for me to hold it
against you. But like you said, now I know it's
all out in the.

Speaker 4 (29:50):
Open air, so obviously I'm going to take it to
heart and I'm not going to forget.

Speaker 2 (29:55):
So for me, Hunter said, I'm.

Speaker 4 (29:58):
Done because why could you tell tay gpt this?

Speaker 2 (30:01):
But you couldn't tell me right to my faith and
you already feel those things. So for me, you're not
even proud of me. Come on, dude, get out of here.

Speaker 3 (30:09):
But like see, I might say that to Google or whatever.
But I might not. I've said things to my you know,
to my executive coach, Yes, that I go to sometimes
I've said that to my executive coach that I would not.
I say it how it's in my brain, trying to
formulate a more healthy way to actually communicate it. Right,
So like maybe that's what he said in the moment,
but he didn't really feel that way. But now you've

(30:30):
seen it, you weren't supposed to see it, and then
we're not together anymore, and that's the reason why.

Speaker 2 (30:34):
Well yeah, but at that point, it's just too late.
It's too late. Like your coworker said, you can.

Speaker 3 (30:39):
Formulate ideas and explain things in a more gentle way,
but you know what, it's all out in the open.

Speaker 2 (30:46):
Now, how you truly feel I'm done, baby late.

Speaker 3 (30:49):
Now, all right, thank you, have a good day. Yeah, yeah,
you can learn it, but I's just like that's how
you learn.

Speaker 6 (30:54):
You would spying on me, the fact that she could
hold that as a secret, like for the rest of
the relationship, the call I would not be able.

Speaker 1 (31:03):
To do that, okay, argument were arguing over the dishes. Yes,
and you're not even proud of me.

Speaker 3 (31:10):
It would come out of the worst side. Yes, I
would never defend a man. Some one said, however, we
have all had bad days and thought really terrible thoughts
about people that we love dearly that I would never
want them to know. It's healthy to get those thoughts out,
then to keep them in and ruminate on them. Maybe
they just got into a fight about something and he
needed to vent. All right, one more is it? Is it? Kaisha?

Speaker 9 (31:32):
It's good morning?

Speaker 3 (31:34):
How you doing.

Speaker 9 (31:36):
I'm doing great? You guys in the morning, I'm doing great.

Speaker 3 (31:39):
Thank you so much. You get the final say, I do.

Speaker 9 (31:43):
Agree with you. It is more like a privacy issue,
because when you're in a relationship sometimes sometimes you don't
want to say things out loud at first thought because
it comes off unkind, and when you go to a therapist,
not everybody gets to hear that information. When you write
things in a diary, that is a privacy issue. And
for her to go through his stuff like that, she's

(32:04):
looking for something. She was looking for a reason out
and she found it. And it's horrible that it came
across that way to her, And maybe he wanted to
stay it nicer, but she was looking for it and
she found it, and that was his own private thought.

Speaker 3 (32:17):
It would be impossible to forget something like like he's
not proud of me. That being said, you also have
to realize that you were never supposed to see that,
Like what if that was something that he worked through.

Speaker 9 (32:28):
Exactly looking at the intention of it, it wasn't malicious.
It was for him to work through an issue he
had for learning her.

Speaker 3 (32:35):
But it was sloppy too. Keisha was sloppy. I mean,
come on, now, I was we write this stuff down
for everybody to see, you know, right next to the
door down shore to.

Speaker 2 (32:43):
Come on, he delete it, delete the threat.

Speaker 3 (32:45):
Thank you. Keisha had a good day on YouTube. Yeah, hey,
I can tell you if I'm writing stuff like that
on my computer that I'm making absolutely sure I don't
just actually leave that open. That being said, I've left
things up on the browser that I was done with
and then gone to show someone something else. You know,
you open it up. That's never happened. I just heard

(33:05):
that it happens to people trying to do a good job.
And now I got the Drone Pilots Association coming after me.
I got the Drone Pilots Association coming after me. They're
like Fred, you know you own this land over your
house and this air rights. And then I'm a drone
pilot FAA certified, and then here are the rules, and
people think we're creepy, and hey, here's the thing. I

(33:25):
googled it and chat GPT did along with my relationship
advice needs. But it says you do not own the
entire sky above your property. Your legal rights to airspace
are limited by federal law, i FA regulations, locals owning rules. No,
it is not legal to shoot a drone out of
the sky and you should not do that. However, the
issue that we were having previously was with the creepy
drone owners. It's not everybody with the drone and invest

(33:48):
that says drone pilot, I'm not mad at you. I'm
mad at the ones. They're looking at my window. Okay,
always happening.

Speaker 4 (33:55):
I do like real pilots and drone pilots have beef.
Like I'm learning doctors and pharmacists.

Speaker 3 (34:00):
It's a little different.

Speaker 4 (34:01):
It's a little different, like like a drum pilot can't
be like I'm a pilot too.

Speaker 3 (34:04):
Oh boy, I'm going down this. You're piloting something. It's
there's something for everyone, there's a there's a there's a
hot for every lip. I will say something about licking,
and I don't know where that would have come from.
But anyway, waiting by the phone is new. Why did
somebody get ghosted? Blogs or audio journals? Big money with
Shoe Bis, Shelley and Chance at one thousand bucks more
Fred's show next right here,

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