Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:01):
It's a fitness where we talk about AI and health and wellness, and uh there's a lot ofthings to talk about with AI on a daily basis that are affecting our lives and our overall
health and certainly our mental health.
And we also talk about a lot of a doom and gloom of AI and how scary it can be and thepotential uh terrible things that it could bring into the future for all of us.
(00:23):
Probably not good for us to be.
mean, yeah, look, it's therapy, right?
Like it feels good to vent and to talk about it, but.
There's a lot of things to be excited about too, and there's a lot of fun things that AIis going to be bringing into our lives and.
So to present this for you today last night I was trying to think of what are some of thefun things?
(00:46):
What are the things to be excited about?
And so what I did what I do normally these days I went to AI and I said hey, why should webe excited about you?
Share some things that are cool and.
In typical fashion, it gave me really terrible advice, like some really lame, boring,watered down stuff.
But because I was using my phone, my phone wants to know everything about me, so itcaptures everything I type and turns it into great content for me.
So as I then shifted to my doom scrolling for a few minutes to turn my brain off, I founda few examples of things to be really excited about.
(01:13):
So I thought that Jason I would share them with you, get your reaction, see how youbecause you know the inner workings.
A lot of a lot of this stuff and.
Wanna just sort of see how you react to some of these devices and ideas that are comingour way.
So I'm gonna jump right in and start by sharing my screen here.
So if you're watching this on YouTube, you will get a good kick out of this.
Let me find, okay, how is it possible I have more windows open than I have shared?
(01:38):
we go.
Okay, let's start with this one.
almost like there should be an artificial intelligence that can figure that out for you.
I know it should be so much simpler than this.
All right, let's do this.
All right.
This one I was blown away by and uh scared and excited about.
So you guys may have noticed I snuck a peek back at the shelf a moment ago.
I wasn't paying attention, but let's see if Jem and I was.
(02:01):
Hey, did you happen to catch the title of the white book that was on the shelf behind me?
The white book is Atomic Habits by James Clear.
That is absolutely right.
So let's try something harder.
I keep losing my hotel key card.
Do you know where I last left the card?
(02:23):
The hotel key card is to the right of the music record.
Great.
For someone as forgetful as me, that's a killer app.
All right, now let's see how the AI can connect the physical world with your digitalcontent and take action.
This is my first time in Vancouver, and I love going on walks.
So why don't you navigate me to a park nearby with views of the ocean?
(02:51):
Okay, I am starting navigation to Lighthouse Park, which has magnificent views of thePacific Ocean.
Is there anything else I can assist you with?
Honestly, with these directions and a 3D map, I should be all set and hopefully I won'tlook like a tourist.
that's mind blowing.
How many times have you lost your keys?
Don't know where you left the hotel key.
(03:12):
I mean, there's so many things that just by wearing these glasses that our brains can'tcapture all of that information, but to have a tool that has um like 100 % immediate
recall of everything you glance at.
Is incredibly uh useful and massively time saving and frustration relieving.
would.
mean, for lack of a better term, it gives all of us a photographic memory, which isamazing and awesome and powerful and is like the meat space equivalent of Google.
(03:42):
ah Because you're no longer going to have arguments to say, I'm going to Google for theright answer.
You're going to be like, I'm going look back in time on these camera memories that I took,which is great.
Make sure you take them off when you go to the bathroom.
That's the first warning.
not going to?
Just because you'll forget they're on?
well, how long until there's an app that analyzes your poop in the toilet?
(04:04):
That's the real question.
Like the shit's about to get real.
right?
When it becomes contacts and you sort of forget they're even in, you're going to forgetthat you're capturing everything that's happening in your entire life, no matter where you
Yeah, privacy concerns are going to be like completely and my God, we're doing we're doinggloomy again.
No, it's fun.
It's fun.
It's really cool.
fun.
It's also going to help, right?
(04:24):
Because when you think about like I remember a friend of mine once said that like I thinkit was like the Mount St.
Helens eruption was probably the last like major thing that would never be captured,right?
Because we all had cell phones in our pockets at that point when we are all capturing andpotentially recording everything that we do with every aspect of our life.
No crime will be uncaptured.
(04:45):
No natural disaster will be uncaptured.
Like every car accident you're in, you'll have complete video recall of what happened andan automated witness to whatever may have happened.
It's crazy how much we'll be able to hold onto and capture and have forever.
Right.
So um a few things here.
(05:06):
ah It's amazing because it's going to remove the issues with first person perspectivewitnesses.
So people that remember things incorrectly, most I forget what it is, but psychologistssay that 90 percent of all witnesses that go on the jury stand are just wrong.
(05:27):
Like their recall is incorrect.
And when they actually write because human brains
remap information to put them into a certain format and then we store them, which is greatfor us because that's how we allow ourselves enough cognitive dissonance to keep doing the
dumb shit that we keep doing, like going to work every day to pay someone else's bills.
Now we're going to have this thing that records all this stuff, which is going to beamazing because if my wife wears them, she'll remember where her keys are all the time.
(05:52):
And if I wear them, I'll remember all the terrible, stupid, shitty mistakes that I've doneand made like throughout the day.
You
other people are like, hey, you did this and this and this.
I'm like, I did not.
Well, check your feed and look, I'm like, I did do that.
Damn it.
I'm sorry.
Like, maybe I can use it to make my habits better, right?
(06:12):
Because recall is not great.
The brain doesn't have a great job of understanding the information spec and the abilityfor individuals to go through and use this kind of technology on a personal level to
improve ourselves.
It's going to be friggin rad.
Well, and the ability to get.
I saw I saw a tool that Google created.
It's like a like a screen overlay where you can ask it to like the demonstration that wasgiven was a video game and the thing said, how should I?
(06:40):
What's the next move I should make?
And it was like, from the lower left, move it to this piece and whatever.
Imagine that in your real life, like even whether you're looking back on your day orwhatever you're looking at, you know what?
How fast should I run on this trail today?
Like what?
What could I have done better today to stick to the habits that I've told
I want to build into my life like all these things that it's going to give you that thatmirror held up and saying like here's the mistakes you made at the time on your calendar
(07:07):
when you said you wanted to go to the gym.
How come you kept looking at Facebook right?
Like it's going to be able to help you and keep you accountable for the things you say youwant to be.
Well, and also like AI with with visual information.
So the ability to process those things and give you certain information and feedback.
Like a lot of it has been expert system defined.
(07:29):
you like security cameras are a really good example of this.
Like like the closed captioned TV circuits that most people run for their businesses.
A lot of them have AI in them and the AI is just not very good.
It gets things wrong.
You have to capture those things in.
because they were never really trained for like human beings to use these things.
They don't have as broad a base of information set.
(07:51):
Google glasses have all of the information set right now that is happening on a person'sface.
So I'm curious to see her example.
Like was it, if we take it out in the real world, does it work that way?
Or are these prototypes that are mapped into these expert systems to be able to pullcertain information sets out?
Because the amount of learning and understanding that the human brain has to do
(08:14):
is a lot.
that's why when we turn around and look at that shelf, like our pixelated version of whatgoes on only happens the narrow scope and our periphery doesn't catch all those things.
So if I didn't turn my head all the way around and stop and focus on the thing, my eyesnever cue and depict it up.
My brain and my cerebral cortex would never understand those things in context where thesethings are just capturing and reading things all the time and they can post process and
(08:38):
try to look up information.
And because they're capturing video at a higher resolution,
then or I should say, because they're capturing a broader scope of information with highresolution, not higher resolution than your brain.
um They can look into information more, I guess, effectively and appropriately.
And the ability to zoom in and zoom out on those types of things is going to bephenomenal.
(09:03):
Now, not to get too gloomy here.
Obviously, these things can be used for nefarious purposes.
But the practical use of doing something like this is incredible.
An amazing use case that I can think of that's super practical that probably affects waymore people and causes a lot more deaths than people realize is altered state driving.
(09:25):
imagine driving not just intoxicated, but you're not just drunk, but intoxicated or highor tired.
So the effects of lack of sleep quite often have a higher deleterious effect on yourreaction time than even being drunk or hot.
And the reason why is because your brain cannot process through all the sludge that's inthere.
And if these glasses can go through at the middle of night and actually see things andpoint things out, I mean, regular driving, it'll be amazing because they'll have the full
(09:52):
spectrum.
But if they can say, watch out, a deer is about to jump in front of you or hey, dick bag,stay in your fucking lane.
And I wanted to talk to me like that.
Because that's how I talk to other people on the road.
I want like the road rage package in my glasses to inform me.
Being a dick.
Yeah.
also assuming that humans will still need to drive cars.
I come on, that's that's such a dinosaur idea.
(10:14):
That's actually a very valid point and a very good, honest thing to say, but I guaranteeyou that cars will not be fully autonomous.
Like, right, we like to get behind the wheel and steer and pretend we're in fucking GrandTheft Auto.
That's right, it's too much fun.
It's too much fun.
The problem is now if you act like one Grand Theft Auto, there's gonna be recording.
(10:35):
Yeah, it's true.
Yeah, you're screwed.
All right.
Let's not get into the doom and gloom of it, though.
if I rear end somebody, you know, they can't be like, you were creeping up on me or youwere doing this or doing that.
Like it's all gonna be there.
So this is the ultimate surveillance state because we all bitch about the idea there beingthese video cameras, they're watching things all the time, which they've been there for a
(10:56):
long time anyways, all over the world.
Now you're gonna put them in everybody's faces.
and willingly, and they're gonna pay for the privilege.
Yes.
all going to give money and privacy away to be able to know where our keys were and.
got his camera everywhere including the one in my pocket and the one on my face that Ipaid thousands of dollars for.
(11:16):
Exactly.
Yeah.
Don't track me as I'm writing this post from my glasses.
Exactly.
Here's everything you want to know that I did wrong.
It's going to be awesome.
It's going to be amazing.
It's going to be an ultimate like ego dump also.
(11:37):
because like you're not gonna be able to get away from the facts, because there's gonna befucking video evidence that you captured.
Yes, yes.
So excited for this.
Alright, so that's one one thing that I found pretty fun.
This one's not so much AI.
I mean, I'm sure there's some AI integrated into it, but it's more just sort of technologyand and and helping make lives easier for people with disabilities.
(12:01):
So I wanted to share this one very cool technology.
when it's not attached to you.
Yes, so that's the thing and we've posted about it on social media and that's whateverybody is like, this is crazy.
you've got to see.
Yes.
have.
I'll just help you.
it?
Completely wireless, so you can actually just attach the hand like that.
You're thinking about it.
And I can still operate it the same way as if it was attached.
(12:24):
Make a move.
That is incredible.
That's unbelievable.
Yeah, so I can do little tasks.
uh
Alright, so the video that you just saw or the video that I'm about to show, depending onhow I edit this, there's a woman who has no arms and so she has basically animatronic arms
that she's able to control.
(12:44):
Apparently with her mind takes her hand off, puts it on the table and is still able tocontrol that hand while it's detached from the animatronic arm.
That has.
implications, but just for people with those disabilities.
Someone who's missing an arm to be able to have a full functioning Luke Skywalkeranimatronic hand attached to their body.
(13:07):
The past version of the future is here.
about to get cancelled because that's what I call a hand job.
It's amazing.
you can record it with your Google Glass.
Exactly.
There's no getting away.
Those are incredible.
mean, and you're right, there's definitely augmented intelligence that goes into that froma craft way and user perspective.
(13:34):
But yeah, like this is this is the sci fi shit that we're getting into now.
And then the brain to physical interface, mean, direct, direct neural contact into uhsomething that can
control things extends our reach and our grasp and everything else.
And those Google glasses make it so we can see, you know, in multiple different lightspectrums that our brain and our eyes can't capture because you could actually use those
(13:59):
glasses to go through and say, give me an over read heat map of what's going on here.
I mean, the practical implications are are mind blowing and phenomenal and super cool.
Again, the risk being that, you know, you don't know who's taking all this information,what they're going to do with it.
But from a consumer perspective,
Yeah, it's pretty incredible.
(14:20):
And I mean, I I wrote my distal bicep tendin off like a few years, like 10 or four yearsago, five years ago.
And if I had had a robotic version to go through and like slap a brace on my arm to keepit stable and have it do exercises and move things so I didn't have to go to a physical
therapy clinic and spend all that time doing those pieces like every day for for six weeksfor an hour, hour and a half plus the drive time.
(14:45):
I mean.
It would save so much time, money, everything else in all kinds of different directions.
And.
I'm just thinking about having other automated tools in my house, like if the Roomba wassomehow plugged into my cerebral cortex, could I finally get it to stop climbing up over
the ledge of my fucking coffee table to try to get in the middle and get itself stuckevery single time?
(15:09):
From a practical perspective, I feel like like I robot needs to learn something fromthese.
These hands thingies.
It's OK, so it's funny if you say that one of the videos I didn't save and I'm sure you'veseen this is the the home chore robot that is like apparently supposed to be being rolled
out into people's homes this year as prototypes.
(15:29):
I believe it is Optimus.
Yeah, I mean this thing does your gardening, does your laundry, washes the car like itdoes all of your household chores.
So you don't have to.
Yeah, and it's only $35,000 for a down for the down payment.
but let's talk about in five years when you're buying the used one or they get cheaper andeasier to make and all of sudden they're $1000 right like.
(15:56):
Try to keep it light man.
I'm trying to keep it light.
gonna rise up.
the clock's ticking.
We got five years.
All right, well, before they turn evil, they do have a lot of good to offer.
I wanted to show this one as well.
I was very excited about this one.
When you talk about, know, I live in British Columbia where there are there's a very realrisk every single year of massive wildfires wiping out tons and tons of homes and lives
(16:23):
and all the things.
So imagine, if you will, the firefighting.
He doesn't get hot, he doesn't get tired, he just walks through the forest putting outfires.
(16:48):
and it's funny because his movement pattern looks a lot like my movement pattern afterlike a heavy leg day where it's like walking stiff and upright, like I can't bend over and
tie my shoes.
Who's going to wipe my butt for me?
He doesn't have to worry about those things.
No, no, he does not poop.
He just spells exhaust.
It's a.
It's and yeah, I mean, his core strength has got to be pretty incredible.
(17:12):
I have to admit, I'm kind of jealous.
All right.
yeah, I how heavy are those big fire extinguishing cannons he's carrying aroundeffortlessly?
Nope.
Until he turns on us and starts burning the forest down to create a job for himself.
No, I mean, I don't know what he's spraying out of there, but I mean, he could putanything in those chemical tubes.
You could put friggin aerosol rat poison in there.
(17:35):
Yeah, suddenly it's gonna be walking through the mall with gas.
No, keep it light, keep it fun.
Don't go there, don't go there.
a Wally joke in here somewhere, I know, I just can't quite pin it down just yet.
We'll find it.
We'll find it.
OK, so uh the fires have been put out.
Your Google Glasses have told you where to go and your animatronic arms can do everythingfor you.
(17:57):
But what if you just hate your job and want a new one?
You want to start a new business and don't exactly know where to start.
This was a pretty cool application for uh using chat GPT or some sort of AI tool.
Can you do me a favor?
I've got this crazy idea.
Airbnb, but for dogs.
Make up a name, put up the details, the about page, act as a programmer and write the codefor me.
(18:18):
How about BarkBnB?
Profiles for dogs, booking options, and verified sitters.
Yeah, that sounds great, but I need you to just write the code.
Document HTML.
Header, meta name viewport.
Some of you guys are like, I'd start my business, but I'm working on my website.
Guess what?
Your website's done.
You have no idea.
It is done.
Look at
Well, okay.
(18:39):
getting a domain name, uh going through and have it configure DNS and set up a web serveris going to directly impact my job and the things that I do.
So fuck you, this technology has to be destroyed.
Hahaha.
No, it's funny because I actually, I do this all the time.
I'll open up ChatGPT and I'll be like, I'm thinking of doing a business like this, giveyou some information.
(19:04):
DNS search and does a dig and sees what available domain names there are.
You can actually even tell it to go through and say what the likelihood of this beingfound versus this is it more SEO categorized.
Like all the questions that would take you like months and weeks to go through onmarketing and try to figure out you can use chat GPT to do a lot of this shit.
And yes, making your website is rad and you can actually tell it like a lot of the websiteservices that are out there that actually host these things.
(19:31):
like Wix and other folks, actually used AI generated capabilities to go through and buildthis code for you.
And even Google Sites, which is free, m does something very similar where you don'tactually have to do anything.
It's just simple form fields to move things across.
But you can actually say, I've used this template and have it write the HTML code, uploadit, and have it work.
um So I mean, this is cool because it makes the accessibility of actually doing e-commercemuch more likely for folks.
(19:55):
Now, it doesn't do all the stitching to make ad software work.
which is a real pain in the ass, which I used to work for an ad tech company, fulldisclosure.
uh So I know how difficult it is.
And it doesn't do all the security pieces.
But we're not that far from that.
Like, this is going to happen.
And theoretically, we should have a user to use faster, more robust, more secure, and safeinternet as a result.
(20:20):
Except people are going to exploit it and use it for nasty shit.
So stay in your lane.
exciting for me about this is that I'm the kind of person that has like I have a millionideas and never get past the idea stage because I have five more after that and I can't
stay committed or excited about any of them long enough.
But if I get to a point where I can hold on to an idea long enough to talk to a computerlike this and say hey I just had this idea for a business what do need to know about it.
(20:46):
Help me set this up help me get the first five things I need to do in a list to takeaction right like all of
these things that that you know my my overactive brain that has kept me from things can befunneled into action and potentially you know again going back to the firefighting robots
like if there are automated ways to make the ideas come to life quickly I can stay excitedabout them long enough to see them through and potentially turn into something useful.
(21:16):
Yeah, like it's motivationally.
It directs your motivation in at least what feels like a more productive fashion.
And what's fascinating is that if you look at the way that a lot of people are using thistechnology now, especially on like the high end enterprise things like things like
marketing, there are services out there that are analysis services that do marketanalysis.
(21:41):
They do competitive analysis, all these different things.
And like some of them are hundreds of thousands, if not millions of dollars a year.
And the LLMs have already captured most of the data repositories that these people alreadyhave out there, whether they publish them online or via free blogs, or they just get
scraped and searched.
It's fucking there now and it's free.
(22:02):
So you don't necessarily need a Gartner or Forrester or any of these other services ifyou're when you're starting off, because you can actually go through and get most of the
publicly available information that's out there.
and compile that information and use it in a practical, meaningful way.
And yes, I'm not saying that you shouldn't have a Gartner or a Forrester subscriptionbecause there's going to be all kinds of stuff that they've paywalled and put behind
(22:24):
things to give you better analysis because those companies are actually cool.
Please don't sue us.
But, you know, I've been on multiple of those and done multiple different presser toursand all these other pieces out there.
And they're great.
And the people that I work with are great.
And they are all doing analysis of these kinds of technologies and how they use thesethings.
(22:47):
And it's cool because it's like the snake eating its own tail in some regard, because,know, it's kind of consuming itself as it goes through, but it's actually not making
getting smaller.
It's becoming a bigger snake with more information.
It's actually more effective and more useful.
And I think that's the real value that AI brings to some of this analysis is that you canhave analysis, meta analysis and meta meta meta analysis and so on down the train.
(23:10):
And this companion of information, it does not make things more clear, but it gives youfaster options to make decisions.
And whether it's the right decision or a wrong decision, a decision puts you on a path,which lets you go through it, a B test, and then keep motivated.
So you can test other routes and paths.
And it's really cool because if you use chat GPT effectively, you can say, build me a planto execute on my business idea in a step by step format.
(23:36):
And let me bite off these steps at this rate.
And you can actually pre-program that into your calendar, your event schedule, or thosetypes of things and have those things automatically populated.
So you don't, if I need to build a website, I need to, know I need to do these 50 things.
Cool.
Chat GPT will go through, tell you how to do it, write those things.
And so you want to do these things, these things, these, these, these things.
And if you know, you've only got it.
(23:58):
hour a day to work on this shit, break these things down into one hour tasks and put themon my calendar and the events like.
Yep.
Yep.
that level of organization is something most of us can't do well and that we sure as fuckcan't do it fast.
Well, and then the trick, well, I think the trick that I don't know that I will ever solvefor people is motivation and accountability.
(24:20):
Can you actually do it?
And will you hold yourself accountable for the things you say you want to do?
Yeah.
And how many of your whimsical ideas are actually a value?
Well, you can test it and you can A B test it really, really quickly.
And you can even ask it ahead of time.
Like, does this actually make economic sense?
What's this going to cost me to put money in?
What's my rate of return that I'm actually going to see and how quickly will I see it?
(24:42):
And that's a very, very powerful thing.
So you can set expectations correctly and start moving pieces around.
But we're getting to the point where, you know, it might say, well, what's your financialsituation?
How much money you got?
Right, bitch, I'm broke.
How do we do this?
Alright, one last one.
We've we've hinted at this before, but I couldn't have this conversation without sharingthis quickly.
(25:07):
ah I know you are Jason, but Gary Vee, very popular guy, talks about how to get out ofyour own way, do these things, be successful.
He was asked a very interesting question, something we've talked about here as well.
What are your most insane AI predictions?
That your grandkids will marry an AI human.
(25:29):
What's your conviction level on that?
100%.
That they're gonna marry an AI?
your grandchild is going to marry an AI human.
I think people are gonna have relationships fully AI boyfriend-girlfriendsindistinguishable.
You Megan Fox, right?
The thing, like, from that movie?
There was a Megan Fox one that just came out.
And when you say an AI, does that mean, a physical body of a robot?
So you're saying that the bodies will get so good.
(25:51):
Yes.
don't know if you know this, but people have s*** with s*** dolls.
What?
Jack does?
Do you think this is a just population collapse?
People are not going to reproduce.
Maybe.
Replace your spouse with the the fuckbot.
We've talked about this.
terrible.
(26:11):
I mean, instant access to...we already have instant access to porn and now we're gonnahave instant access to a squishy hole.
Okay.
You
I get it.
But I actually think it's somewhat different than that, because I think the human brainactually, we're actually programmed, we're like, we've evolved to be attracted to certain
(26:36):
physical characteristics and feature sets.
White hips, large breasts for men, you know, under the assumption that these are goodthings that produce well, um that make babies.
But at the same time, there are certain things that were kind of repulsed by.
like the whole clown phobia thing is, they believe it's somewhat based on the idea ofdecaying corpses, having discolored lips and discolored faces being things that make
(27:03):
people so afraid because they think the dead have come to life.
um There's all kinds of psychological reasons why this thing may not pan out, but there'sall kinds of other reasons why it will.
So I don't doubt that young men will have an instance of this, and quite possibly in womenas well.
I don't want to exclude anybody from.
expected.
(27:23):
But whether it's artificial intelligence or augmented intelligence, like the meat suitthat you're going to choose to be with, or don't fucking rubber metal suit, whatever, is
going to have some kind of input in some kind of mechanism, where the persona and thepresence that they present themselves with and who they are, is distinctly tied to these
(27:48):
AI LLM models.
There's no doubt.
And I hate to say it, but.
We're already that like you're already sucked into your phone.
Your intelligence is already augmented by things that you shouldn't know naturally.
I mean, that's recorded history.
We're making these things happen faster, more effectively.
It seems super scary because we don't know what it is, how to control those pieces.
(28:11):
But I can break it to you.
We were living in that universe forever.
You don't have control over shit.
The illusion of it is nonsense.
And the idea that you're going to be able to make these things happen.
one way or the other is silly.
I don't know if my grandkids will have, will get married to artificial humans, maybe, butthey're, they're going to get married to some augmented artificial intelligence of some
(28:38):
kind, whether it's in a meat suit or something else.
And we're just blurring this line between us and those things.
And that's probably the safest thing to ensure that humanity survives.
but we might not survive as biological organisms.
We might get ourselves all uploaded and beat these virtual machines or whatever.
(28:59):
Fucking great, fine.
Does my steak taste good?
Yes, then I don't mind being in the matrix.
But this and this is what I what I wonder about.
I mean, you're talking about evolution.
If if you know, and the idea of being repulsed by something so like I you know, if I if Iwalk into a room and I see something that is clearly a robot, no, I'm not going to ask it
(29:22):
on a date.
That's you know, that's that's weird.
But if I walk into a room and I can't tell the difference.
Then yeah, it's it's incredibly likely that I would end up, you connecting with a robotwithout knowing it right like that.
That would be bizarre.
And and so let's let's imagine the scenario where it is a repulsive thing.
(29:43):
You can tell it's a robot and that's weird for plenty of us.
That doesn't matter because that is an easier relationship than an actual human one.
And so does this start to in the let's imagine a scenario where through genetics we'reable to reproduce, you know, in basically in a lab through this robot.
Does evolution suddenly favor the?
(30:04):
people that are now attracted to robots and can produce with them because it's an easierrelationship, it's a predictable relationship, it's not one that they have to have with an
actual person.
I think if you're gonna make a meat baby.
it's still going to attract the same kind of people because willingly making an 18 yearcommitment that kind of looks like you and might look like you're fucked all is is a huge
(30:36):
commitment.
think if anything, what this is is it would get people to stop reproducing because therewould not be a motivation to make babies if I'm just there to have this kind of
connection.
And I think that's actually a very important thing to kind of discuss and to kind of lookat.
But I also think that the way that you're describing these things, like I walk in and Idon't discover this thing, and it's going to be the crying game, but with robots.
(31:10):
yes, it totally is good.
That's exactly where I was taking this
you like checking for an Adam's apple isn't going to do you any good because they shavedthat shit down and you can't tell anymore and you reach in between and you find a cyber
port as opposed to a penis or a vagina that might change the way that you interact withthings.
Which.
(31:30):
I mean.
Yeah.
for some people.
That's gonna work for some people.
I'm just gonna say it.
Yes.
the couch.
I mean-
Hey, but some of them grew up to be vice president.
They do.
And some of them grew up with brain worms and shooting bears.
(31:51):
And I actually I'm very we should try to get Robert F.
Kennedy Jr.
on this program and see what he his thoughts and opinions are on A.I.
and how fucking robots might affect children with autism.
Because what's the vaccination you're going to give to these kids when they're completelycyber built and put in?
Is it now a digital virus?
Am I going to?
(32:13):
Right, like shit.
Alright.
Yeah, me too.
Let's go get some more coffee.
We're going to do that and that's going to wrap up this episode.
Thanks for listening.
If you've found any of this fun, want to share this with somebody.
I'm not going to get in your way.
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You can do that at thefitmass.com and that's where we'll be back in just about a week withanother episode with hopefully something terrifying that will change your life forever.
(32:37):
Alright, see you then.
See ya, bye.