Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
Hello there and welcome to ladies who question just before we get started.
(00:11):
I want you to know the ambient noise that you're going to hear in the background is
the doggy, the studio dog for today.
She's got a bone and she is relentless with it and we're doing what we can to shush her,
but she wants that bone and dog on it.
She's going to be next to us, close to us and chew the crap out of it.
(00:34):
That's right.
Anyway, we got a couple of things here.
We've got some celebrity news or dark celebrity, I don't know.
Got a couple of things about AI.
I'm interesting and useful for I think anybody, you know.
And we have a couple of other items.
I got something about dress codes on the airlines or at least one particular airline.
(00:58):
So that is that.
And we are recording this in Valentine's Day and thank you, Holly, for bringing me some
lovely, my pleasure, beautiful cookies.
Bent fork never disappoints.
Thank you.
There was a shout out to Bent fork.
Yeah.
Thank you so much.
Here's the big thing or whatever Kanye and Bianca.
(01:19):
I saw it on TMZ, that's our source, one of them yesterday, Thursday, February 13th.
They said, oh, they've both been talking to divorce lawyers separately.
And then of course, then the reps get back, the reps for Kanye and Bianca get back to,
you know, oh, no, no, that rumors aren't true or whatever.
(01:42):
So I tuned in today specifically to watch TMZ live.
And they are not backing off on this.
They're going, they're like, we've got our sources and you know, whatever.
Honestly, I don't care what they do.
I just want him to shut up with his racist rants.
That's what I want him to do.
But they want to get divorced.
Fine.
(02:02):
One interesting item that TMZ said was he, they don't have a prenup and that is not
going to necessarily work to her advantage if they actually do divorce because he's lost
a buttload of money.
Oh, that's right.
Yeah, that house that he bought and then he didn't do anything for it.
And it just, he sold it for a big loss in Malibu cement thing or something.
(02:25):
Yeah.
Awful looking place.
Yeah.
And it's not like he's been burning it up on the airwaves, you know, right?
Or Spotify or whatever.
I mean, I haven't heard it.
Or the merch.
Or the merch.
Like, oh, that.
Well, that's kind of what I was referring to.
Yes.
And I'm encompassing his.
I did not see that particular post.
(02:45):
No, I do not see that.
I didn't see the commercial either.
No, but apparently he bought that commercial and then it directed redirected.
And I don't know how the.
I don't know how that got through.
I don't either.
Yeah.
What were the regulations?
Yeah.
Well, I mean, they previewed it, but then he redirected something or his people, whatever,
(03:09):
to his personal website.
And that's where that anti-Semitic dramatically anti-Semitic merchandise was being sold.
I just don't know how that happened.
How could they have not gone to his website to double check that when they were vetting
it?
Exactly.
So there's some.
He thinks he tricked the network.
(03:31):
Yeah, I guess.
Or I don't because I don't think after you've loaded it in how that would work, he can't
go in and change it from his end for what the network has.
Right.
So anyway, it was so bizarre.
Ladies who question wonder how that happened.
(03:52):
Absolutely.
Okay.
Anyway, I do have a few more tidbits.
Oh, about you.
Do you have more about that?
Well, just about Kanye and the divorce.
Impending or pending divorce or rumored.
Also, after the Grammys, Kanye went on a wild rant on X posting porn.
(04:13):
Did you know that?
Yeah, I did hear about that.
Oh, I didn't hear about that.
And also he was just quoted saying recently he wants his hero Diddy out of jail.
So now he's connected with that, which we always probably thought he was connected with
him.
It's just, ugh.
Well, I mean, the whole thing is vile.
He'll have to find another moose.
(04:34):
Muse.
Muse?
Muse.
Find another moose.
What?
Find another moose.
A muse?
Muse.
Muse.
Yeah.
That's what I have.
But I just didn't pronounce it properly.
Inspiration.
Yeah.
And I read something about she was being coerced into some of the things by threats and by
he was threatening her.
(04:55):
That reminds me.
And that's probably part of why they're getting divorced.
Except she is a.
She's a grown woman.
She's a grown woman and she knew the, you know, cuckoo was in the Coco Pops or Coco Puffs
beforehand.
I did.
Okay.
I do have something.
(05:16):
Okay.
One of our, our stories or a post that we had was of his, his post that he put and we
have some listener reaction to it.
Okay.
He, he posted this and this was a week ago.
This was post Grammy fallout.
Okay.
Okay.
And then I had a minion over my wife.
This ain't no woke as feminist shit.
(05:37):
She's with a billionaire.
Why would she listen to any of you dumb ass broke bitches?
People say the red carpet look was her decision.
Yes.
I don't make her do nothing.
She doesn't want to, but she definitely wouldn't have been able to do what without my approval.
You stupid ass woke ponds.
I have no respect or empathy for anyone living because no one living can f with me, but I
(05:57):
do love some people.
I give them a favor that.
Okay.
Listener reaction to that, to our, our, our post.
Let me find that.
That was on our insta.
That was she, he would drag her around.
I can't wait till to see her first interview post divorce.
Yeah.
I bet they're lining up now.
(06:17):
Yeah.
Well, the listener reaction to our story was from a gentleman named Gary and he wrote,
he's just trash.
And then there was another one.
Oh, shucks.
I just lost the thread, but it was basically a derogatory comment from a woman named Debbie.
Very addu, just equally as derogatory.
(06:38):
So can't believe he does this because he has children.
I wonder if he even has visitation.
I would say absolutely not.
I would hope not.
Anyway, that, that's all I had about him, but I don't want to take up any more brain
space.
Yeah.
No, we've done him.
Good luck.
Yeah.
Bye boy.
Yeah.
AI.
(06:58):
We always like to do a little bit of, because there's always something.
Oh my gosh.
I'm going to go back to the chat.
And I sent you some information and you took a deeper dive into it, I'm sure.
But did you know that there's a one called Grock, an AI portal or whatever you call
it or AI.
There's chat GPT, Gemini, Meta AI and then Grock.
Anyway, that was.
I did see Grock and when, and when I was reading the article, but I don't know.
(07:21):
No.
That was the first time I heard about it.
Yeah.
Well, this is called AI overview.
And that's, it was introduced in May of last year, was launched and basically it gives
the quick responses and summaries of things, but there are flaws in that.
And that's what the article was about.
The flaws in the system of this AI.
So what did you glean from the article?
(07:43):
The just of the article was how there's, there's so much misinformation being inputted into
AI device that is answering questions wrong.
That could result in people dying or people taking advice seriously.
That's wrong information.
And it says AI overviews sometimes calls, CULLS information.
(08:07):
I don't know what that means from how they cultivate information from sources that can't
be verified or accurate resulting in lots of wrong information.
Like a Reddit thread.
Yeah.
And they're just spitting out unreliable information that's very misleading to people.
So that is like huge cause for concern because people are now depending upon AI for answering
(08:30):
a lot of things they're unsure about.
And a good example is medical advice.
Yeah.
First of all, I would not go to AI for medical advice.
God, no.
Please go to your doctor and it's spit out information.
Somebody was asking them about kidney stones and how to treat them.
Oh, oh, I saw that.
AI said, drink your own urine.
(08:51):
What the?
What?
Yeah.
So hopefully that person did not do that.
But that's like medical advice.
So there's so much concern about AI because it's so far ahead of us based on the laws
that we don't have to protect wrong information getting out there and then it's just causing
a huge shit storm.
Yep.
(09:11):
And they're just letting it, letting it go.
Right.
And they're calling it, this is all experimental work in progress.
So we're the victims.
Only should you choose to partake and not do the deep work and get real information from
real sources.
I don't, I don't use AI.
Unfortunately, it came with my newer phone.
And so, yeah, I mean, just with the update, you know, and I chose to not do it.
(09:37):
I don't know what I had to do.
I'd go through a couple of steps.
Oh, to get it off.
Yeah.
And then on Google, I chose something instead of the AI.
So that that's where it goes.
It defaults to that, not to the AI.
Oh, that's.
But I had to go through a bunch of steps and, you know, I don't like to read directions.
Oh, well, this I did.
They make it hard to get rid of stuff.
(09:57):
I've used AI a couple of times, but I think what we should, what they should do and think
about big, bold letters.
This advice is not verified.
You know, warning.
Yes.
Kind of like, there's nothing.
At the end of every one of our podcasts, we have a disclaimer.
And we put it right out there and you, you have all the information.
(10:20):
Why is that not front and center?
Exactly.
Yeah.
That's a good point.
Everything else is censored or warning or whatever, but AI, you can ask it anything and it could
be wrong half the time.
Yeah.
I like that story about the drink your urine for your kidney stones.
And then there was one about, if you ask about bats, but you're talking about baseball
bats, but then it starts giving information about flying bats.
(10:42):
I saw that too.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And if it invents an answer, it's so smart.
Right.
You know, it's getting all this information and input.
Oh, but it decides, well, I'm just going to make something up.
They call it a hallucination.
Yeah.
Right.
Yeah.
And that makes it like cute or funny.
(11:02):
No.
Beware.
Yeah.
Sam Altman is going to keep it under his control, his and the board control because they summarily
rejected Musk's offer.
They want to take it over and turn it into a nonprofit or keep it or something and Altman
and the board, they want to make it for profit.
So, but thank God he won't have control over that.
So.
(11:23):
Oh, right.
Please.
A lot of control.
There's two other AI stories.
Yeah.
What have you got there?
I have.
I'm going to go to my photographs.
Okay.
There's a picture of a robot dog at a dog park.
Did you see that?
No, I did not.
It's awful.
No, but it's like, it's going to be the norm.
(11:45):
I mean, can you believe it?
You know what's going to happen?
All the dogs are going to keep taking pisses on it.
Well, that's what the dogs bullied the AI dog.
I don't, not for bullying, but I think that.
See the AI dog?
What?
I mean, like why?
It's like, okay.
Why?
It defeats the purpose of having a pet and having a dog that loves you.
Yeah.
(12:05):
This is like a big box of metal.
So, we'll post the picture.
It's in Austin, Texas, and there's an AI dog at a dog park.
Okay.
Just to stir up trouble.
Yeah.
It just, why?
That's my only, I don't even, oh lordy.
They're calling these robots humanoids now.
Yeah.
You said that in earlier podcasts.
(12:26):
I remember.
Like, they're trying to, like that kind of thing.
Desensitize.
Wait.
Okay.
That's AI because that's not a real.
That's, that's a, that's an AI robot.
So that's.
A real companionship.
Okay.
But that looks like AI for the head because unless there.
It is.
Okay.
The guy or the girl?
(12:47):
Well, the guy who, yeah, it's Musk again.
AI, artificial intelligence robots.
But the woman looks human on the top.
It looks like she has skin.
No.
That's a complete robot.
Humanoid.
That's what they're calling them.
It looks that real?
Yes.
Oh my gosh.
In real life, or is this an AI photo?
Or an AI doctored kind of.
(13:10):
No.
I saw a bunch of stuff on like a warehouse where they're making these for companionship.
But with real, with like fake skin, but it feels like real skin.
So it has progressed to the, I didn't even know that we could, well, I didn't know that
labs could grow skin because they use it for grafting for people for burn victims or.
(13:32):
Well, I think it's not real skin.
It's fake skin.
Because I remember when we did the podcast and I was talking about how they're starting
to make fake realistic skin.
Yes.
Okay.
That's what that is.
Okay.
We have pretty soon.
We are going to put that in our stories.
Yeah.
And then they're, they're trying, they're testing them out for babysitting.
(13:52):
I'm like a robot, a robot babysitting your, uh-huh.
Yeah.
Would you do the Jetsons?
Would you do the Jetsons?
Robot?
I don't think so.
No.
I mean, and the Jetsons, I don't remember the name of the robot was, but that was cute,
but it was also a freaking cartoon.
Right.
I love the Jetsons.
Okay.
So I saw this guy, he's like a CEO of a humanoid company being interviewed on MSNBC this couple
(14:15):
of nights ago.
He's the owner of a human, of a what?
A humanoid, well, he's calling his company, they manufacture humanoids like that person.
Like that.
Like that robot.
So they're building them.
Right.
And the question came up, what happens when something doesn't work right?
And how do you stop, how do you stop it?
And he would not answer that question because you know how sometimes, well, with electronics
(14:37):
and technology, it breaks down.
It faults.
And let's say it's starting to hit you or become abusive.
Or like in 2001, a space Odyssey, when he, Hal opened the door, open the door, Hal, I
can't do that.
Right.
You remember?
Yes, I do.
So it's reflective of that.
(15:00):
And the wires get crossed and it's not doing what it's supposed to do.
How do you get out of that?
And so he just kept giving evasive answers.
He says, oh yeah, we're working on that.
And yeah, it was evasive answers.
And I just like, oh my God, they're going to kill us all.
These damn robots.
The Wild West.
Yes.
Is not a romantic place.
It wasn't, it was romanticized in movies.
(15:23):
And we're in the new Wild West and this one's much more scary.
It is.
And untethered.
Is that it for that?
Yeah, that's it for AI, but we'll probably have something new next week.
Lord above.
Yes.
Do you have anything else?
No, I don't.
You have something?
Oh, it's Commander.
Yeah.
Okay.
(15:43):
I confess, Holly, I'm so sorry.
I fell asleep.
I know it's on at eight o'clock, but I've had a few months.
I've had a very exhausting week and I'm so sorry.
I have no inquires.
Okay, basically, I'm just going to do it in a nutshell.
So, Commander, the one we've been talking about, this is the woman who just in case
(16:06):
you haven't heard the other podcast where we've been discussing, this is a woman in
San Jose, California who several years ago scammed literally thousands of people out
of who knows how much money.
And there is a serialized TV show on ABC on Thursday evenings where they break down how
she did it from beginning to end and they interview the people who were affected.
(16:29):
Okay, so what happened last night?
Okay, last night was the third show.
Third installment, yeah.
And it was, they were closing in on her.
There's a private detective.
He's a detective that works for the San Jose Police Department, which when he took the
case on, he's like, I've never done something like this and how's it going to go and how
do I investigate?
And it was hard to get hospital reports and he couldn't get them because of HIPAA, obviously.
(16:51):
But he was closing in and getting more information from the news reporter who's been very investigative
herself.
And she comes up with a lot of information and she studied photographs.
And every single picture of her with the needles and the medicine, the jars are turned.
She found all these little clues saying, oh, that's totally staged if you look closely
(17:14):
at the photograph.
The other thing that came up in this episode was her parents.
And she-
Yes.
And I've been wondering, is the background?
They're like, well, where are they?
And what are they doing?
And the mother was like super nonchalant about her daughter having cancer and they went off
to Europe, especially during a time when her cancer came back and she was in the hospital
(17:34):
and her friends are like, well, where's your mom and dad?
Oh, they're in Europe.
And so I think they're in on it too.
But that has not come forward.
Her friends are all figuring it out at this point.
Friends or donors or both.
Mostly friends.
And donors too.
So they're closing in.
The last scene in the episode was the swat, I mean, not the swat, but the police surrounded
(17:59):
the house.
They went in, they did an arrestor, they had a search warrant and they grabbed all the
computers and all the paperwork and all the stuff.
And off they went.
And they kind of left you hanging like, are they arresting her or not?
But it was a search warrant.
Did they show, did they even video of her?
Like of the arrest?
Like of the actual, okay.
Well they did.
(18:20):
And in the live video, the news reporter was tipped off.
They were going to do it.
So the gal that's been doing Nancy, that's been doing all the investigating shows up
with a camera crew.
And so they got it all on real live.
Do they get her inside the house?
Well, then it ended.
They just kind of did.
I know that next week that's what they're going to open with.
(18:40):
Okay.
And so.
All right.
I'm still going to get them.
Okay.
What I'm still hungry for, and thank you so much for watching it.
Oh, no, it's fine.
I forgot to even record it, but I figured I'd be awake at eight o'clock at night.
One would think.
But what I want to know, and why this intrigues me outside of the obvious evil manipulation
(19:01):
of her genius, her evil genius, is what her background as a child.
Like I want to know, was she always like this?
Was she always like one of those nasty little kids or little scheming little kids in elementary
school?
Or was there something that happened that flipped the switch?
(19:23):
And all of a sudden she thought, ooh, I know how to do this, and this worked to my advantage.
Bam.
That's what, that's the meat.
That's what I want.
Okay.
Good point.
They did bring that up.
A school friend of hers from like second grade.
They went to school for quite a long time together.
Okay.
Who's really not involved in this episode, but they interviewed her and they said, what
(19:43):
was she like going to school?
Well, there was quite a few white lies that were told.
Like, oh, our family has a yearly past at Disneyland.
Oh, we're going to Aspen and Gwinn Skien.
So she was always white lying about her lifestyle.
So she's always been a pathological liar.
Yes.
She's been a pathological liar.
And so it just progressed.
And she was, it's not like she ever got really in trouble for it, but she was always kind
(20:06):
of breakadocious and like wanted to be center of attention, the cheerleader, the this, the
that, and that's how this gal remembered her.
Whoa.
Yes.
That's a good start.
Okay.
That's the kind of insight that I'm looking for because how does somebody become that?
Or, or do they just spring from the womb that way?
(20:28):
That's, that's always, you always want to look at their family because a lot of times when
you see the apple doesn't fall far from the tree, you meet an oddball and then you meet
the family.
You go, ah, got it.
Yeah.
There's that gene pool.
Right.
Right.
So thank you.
Thank you for that.
(20:49):
And we're going to wrap it up with, oh, yes.
Yes.
No, I have one more topic and then you can do the wrap up.
Okay.
And I forgot to tell you about it.
Teddy Mellencamp.
Oh, um, John Mellencamp's daughter.
I saw a little something about that.
My God.
That's so sad.
I didn't even know who she was until I knew about this.
I did because I watched Real Housewives of Beverly Hills.
Oh, yeah.
(21:09):
She was on it.
That's why I don't know.
Okay.
Well, she was diagnosed with melanoma probably a couple of years ago and she had seven.
Ten.
Teen.
Different spots of melanoma on her back.
There's a photograph of her back with the big scar from all the little surgeries.
It was a nasty scar.
I saw that picture and it has now since developed into brain tumors where they had, she was reported
(21:32):
to have like six or seven brain tumors.
She had surgery a couple of days ago, uh, Wednesday to they were able to remove two
and they said they're going to attack the rest with radiation.
It sounds.
Not great.
It's pretty dire, really.
Pretty dire.
Yeah.
And it just shows you how melanoma is such a silent killer if you don't take care of
(21:53):
it.
And I know I, I get checked all the time and you get, you get checked off the time.
Yeah.
I didn't be better about that, but yeah.
Uh, I've had stuff removed in some of you.
Right.
Let's just put it that way.
Exactly.
But, uh, well, I hope that she has the speedy recovery and goes forward and it's in remission
at some point.
So just let that be a warning to go to your dermatologist, right?
(22:17):
Get the 360 body check, whatever they call it.
Yeah.
You know, head to toe inside now.
Holy smokes.
Okay.
Well, this is, I just found this comical.
Okay.
I'm down for some laughter.
Well, I mean, I just found a kind of, it's not like, you know, slap your thigh.
(22:38):
I found it interesting and comical.
This is from Thrillist, a digital site, Thrillist, if anyone is interested.
There's a dress code update for spirit airlines.
Oh, spirit.
Okay.
Spirits.
Yeah.
Okay.
It's a low budget.
I've taken spirit, not good experiences.
No.
That's all I'm going to say.
(22:58):
And I bet a lot of that had to do with the people who take it, the other passengers.
Well, okay.
Spirit Airlines has thusly declared a dress code update.
Oh, okay.
I just find this.
Press conference.
Well, I just find this strange that it's spirit airlines and I'm not hearing this from United
or American or Delta, but spirit airlines has taken the lead because they have so many
(23:22):
people on there who are in violation.
Oh, no longer can you wear lude or fence or have it show body art, lude or offensive body
art.
It's got to be covered up.
All the tattoos.
Oh, if it's a fan, so lude or offensive body art.
Or any see through clothing at all.
(23:43):
So we already know who couldn't go.
Oh, yeah.
Bianca.
Sorry, Bianca.
Don't you find it comical that it's spirit airlines?
Yeah.
I just, but I would think a see through clothes would be not allowed anywhere.
I would think, but the fact that, okay, I guess the overarching point of this is that we
(24:06):
have to say this.
They have to come out with this and make it a code of conduct.
I mean, why are you traveling around like that?
And you know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
That's, that was kind of what stuck with me like, okay, so they have to make sure that
you understand you can't have lude body art or clothing that people can see through.
(24:32):
The fact that it even has to be said.
Right.
And part of that, okay, it comes from when you and I were growing up, you dressed up
to at least cause when I was little, you dressed up to get on the airline.
Absolutely.
So it looked nice.
Yes.
And that was just, that was just the way it was.
I remember my first airline flight.
I was wearing my best Sunday shoes and you know, little dress.
Yeah.
(24:53):
And I was probably six years old.
Five years old.
Yeah.
And that, that was what you did.
And the fact that this is, it's come to this.
I'm trying to laugh at it, but I think what's going to happen is there's going to be somebody
that's going to challenge it with the lude body art and they will be escorted out.
(25:15):
Yeah.
But they'll say, well, is that lude?
Is it not lude?
I mean, I could see a whole good point.
Like, Oh, it's a, I could see a whole, I could see it set up.
Somebody's going to set the airlines up and they're going to walk on with all this body
art that's lude and they're going to try to see where it goes.
That's right.
There you go.
And that's the layout.
Okay.
I just had to take a coughing break here and the little doggy here.
(25:39):
You want to get a picture of this sweet face here?
I am going to get a picture.
Don't get me, but get her.
She comes over every time I cough because I've been sick for what it seems like forever.
She comes over and looks at me with this, this look of love and of concern.
And can I, can I help you?
What can I do?
Are you okay?
(25:59):
And it's so sweet.
And I hope you captured that on the phone.
I did.
Okay.
We're going to, we'll post that.
Then our studio dog of the, of the, or pod dog.
That's it.
Pod dog.
Pod dog.
Anyway, she gave me the look of love and of concern.
Oh, thank you.
Anyhow, that's it for this week.
I don't think I'm going to last any longer anyway.
(26:19):
I'm, my voice is failing.
Are you, are you good?
We're good to go.
Good night.
We had a lot of stuff.
Oh, and I just, I just remembered, hey, we both got our wish for the Super Bowl win.
I mean, I know it's a week and a half or whatever by the time this air is passed, but we both
wanted the Eagles in.
So we got our wish.
Eagles.
Yeah.
Anyhow, that's that.
(26:39):
Hey, have a great week.
The rest of your month, whatever, and we will be in touch again.
Bye.
Bye.
Thanks, Harvey.
Ladies, your question is executive produced and edited by me, Lisa Dominique, and also
executive produced by Holly Caulfield.
Holly also does most of our research and Claire Caulfield is in charge of technical assistance
(27:02):
and social media.
Music, my lion heart.
Sketch Music by Florian Manx and Matthew Anderson.
Thanks for listening.
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All content discussed on Ladies Who Question are the opinions of Lisa Dominique and Holly
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