Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is deeper in the den with dangerous Day. Well,
have you ever done anything evil? And if you did,
was it a one time thing? Or was it a
taste of the dark side and you became a full
on villain? And a new poll, forty seven percent of
Americans claim they've never done anything considered evil, twenty percent
weren't sure, ten percent said they have but only once,
and eighteen percent said they have but more than once.
(00:22):
And let's be honest. For those people that answered that,
it probably wasn't two times right. That includes twenty three
percent of minute compared to just thirteen percent of women.
They did not define evil. They left it up to
each person to define it for themselves. So if it
could be anything from unplugging somebody else's phone charger to
plug yours in, I wouldn't consider that evil. I don't
know what would be the worst, like murder anyway. How
(00:44):
many American adults do you think have ever done something
that they consider evil? And that depends on how generous
you are with the definition. Five percent said all of them,
fourteen percent said most of them, seventeen percent about half,
forty eight percent some, and three percent said them. So
no one in America has ever done anything evil. I'm
assuming that those people believe humans aren't capable of true evil,
(01:08):
which is pretty generous. I wouldn't say I've done really
things evil? Well, stupid, immature. I'd go with those two
deeper in the two, Well, did you get in a
summer vacation this year or are you still planning on
getting one before the kids head back to school this week? Well,
if you wanted vacation inspiration thirty years ago, you went
to a travel agent. But things are different now, especially
(01:30):
with chant GPT, they can pump out different itineraries. There's
still a lot of options. The survey ask people where
they get their travel inspiration, and overall YouTube is number one.
Recommendations from family and friends the second, followed by Facebook,
travel documentaries, and even regular movies. When you break down
by generation, Boomers really avoid social media. They pay attention
(01:52):
to rex from family and friends, travel TV documentaries, travel
books too. There's a lot out there, believe it or not.
Biggest inspiration for gen Z, by the way, is TikTok, YouTube, Instagram,
Facebook movies. Roughly zero percent of gen zs use travel books.
Roughly zero percent of boomers use TikTok, so neither do
gen xers or millennials. The biggest inspiration similar YouTube, Facebook
(02:16):
recommendations from family, but AI will definitely impact in the
coming years. Twenty nine percent of Americans already use AI
comparing flight prices, twenty one percent trust plans to a
detailed itinerary. Millennials most likely to embrace AI, with gen
Z close behind. So using different ways to inspire your vacation,
(02:37):
I guess my biggest inspiration for my vacation is my wallet,
which shows why I haven't gone very far. To me
again for another episode of Deeper in the Den with
Dangerous Dave light Year.