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April 13, 2025 • 82 mins

This podcast episode delves into the innovative applications of ChatGPT in the realm of business and personal creativity. I explore the process of developing a detailed animated universe, creatively referred to as the "detail verse," where characters inspired by friends are generated alongside their unique backstories. The conversation also highlights how ChatGPT assists in crafting marketing strategies, generating social media content, and even troubleshooting business-related issues, thereby serving as a valuable tool for both efficiency and creativity. Furthermore, we discuss the nuances of using ChatGPT as an assistant for various tasks, including the creation of licensing agreements and generating promotional materials. Ultimately, this episode underscores the transformative potential of AI in enhancing productivity and fostering imaginative endeavors in the detailing industry and beyond.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
Started creating a wholedetail verse for my.
My cartoon with me and Noxie.
I started, like, dumping in,like, pictures of friends and then,
like, asking it to, like,create a cartoon version of them.
And then.
And then create, like, a nameand a backstory for them and everything.

(00:24):
And I was.
I was given chat gbt like,like real basic info about them,
you know, about the person or whatever.
Because I.
I wanted it to, like, kind ofbe them, but, like, I wanted Chat
GPT to, like, create its ownversion, right?
And it's.
It's been a blast, dude.
Like, like, I've been debate,like, I want to do one for you.

(00:46):
So you tell.
You tell me if.
You tell me if this will beokay or not.
So I want to do one for you.
And I wanted it to be like,you know, by day, he runs a successful
detailing business, but atnight it turns into details after
dark and it becomes a bikinicar wash.
And it's this like, the cd, CDtype of car wash or something.

(01:12):
That's great.
Detail.
I'm a detailer.

(01:51):
That's what chat GPT is for.
Yeah, chatgpt how to do it.
I just used it to change myprinter toner.
I've had the same toner forthree years.
And we were getting ready todo our tax paperwork, so my wife
was printing a bunch of stuffand we ran out, and I'm like, oh,
you gotta be kidding me.
I have no idea how to do this.

(02:11):
Wow.
Yeah, we got it.
We're good.
Yeah.
I started creating a wholedetail verse for my.
My cartoon with me and Noxie.
I started, like, dumping in,like, pictures of friends and then,
like, asking it to, like,create a cartoon version of them

(02:32):
and then.
And then create, like, a nameand a backstory for them and everything.
And I was.
I was given chat gbt like,like, real basic info about them,
you know, about the person or whatever.
Because I.
I wanted it to, like, kind ofbe them, but, like, I wanted Chachi
BT to like, create its ownversion, right?

(02:55):
And it's.
It's been a blast, dude.
Like, Like, I've been debate,like, I want to do one for you.
So you tell.
You tell me if.
You tell me if this will beokay or not.
So I want to do one for you.
And I wanted it to be like,you know, by day he runs a successful
detailing business, but atnight it turns into details after

(03:18):
dark and it becomes a bikinicar wash.
And it's this like the cd, CDtype of car wash or something.
That's great.
I was trying to Think of something.
Because you're the originatorof Details After Dark.
So I was trying to think ofsomething like, how do I incorporate
Details After Dark?
And I was like, it's got tobe, like, kind of a little bit seedy,

(03:40):
but, like, obviously it's chatgbt, so I don't want it to be, like,
too over the top.
So I was like, sounds like heruns a CD bikini car wash at night.
So, like, I was trying tothink about it.
I haven't gotten around to,like, making it yet.
But it's so weird howsometimes it'll, like, really filter
it.
It won't do certain thingsbecause it'll be like, it's inappropriate.

(04:01):
But then other times, it'lljust go off the wall and you're like,
what?
Yeah, like, I was having aproblem last night.
So I was.
You know, everybody was trying to.
You know, everybody's doingthat, I think.
Well, you did the bobbleheads,but everybody's been doing the.
The action figures, right?
Yeah.
And so, like, I made one ofme, like, as a.
As a podcaster.

(04:22):
Like, I even had it make,like, the.
The golden mic.
Oh, you can't.
I don't know if you can see.
Yeah, you can't see it.
The golden mic, you know, camewith the golden mic, comes with a
microphone, headphones, allthat stuff.
And it was funny.
Like, I sent it to Michelle,and she kind of laughed about it.
She's like, you should do onefor Haley, like, as cheer.
So I took a picture of Haleythat I had, and I asked it to create

(04:45):
it, and it, like, the firsttime, it did a really good job, like,
look like kind of like acartoony version of Haley.
And it.
And it did, like, all the things.
Like, it had a backpack, ithad extra bows.
But I forgot to remove themicrophone and the laptop from the
podcast one because I did iton the same chat gbt.

(05:07):
I didn't switch.
And so, like, I tried to makeit again, but then it didn't look
like Haley.
So I was trying to.
I kept trying to do it, and Isaid, no, use this picture.
And finally, after, like, thefourth time, it kept prompt, giving
me a prompt that it violated.
It was in violation of, like,the terms or whatever.

(05:28):
And I was like, because she'sa kid.
Yeah.
It won't let me do my son either.
Certain ones that will.
But, like, there was one.
He was in the swimming pool,and it wouldn't let me do it.
Yeah.
But it was cr.
I was crazy.
I was like, you just madethis, like, Three times.
You made it wrong three times.
And like the one time, like itstarted making it right.
Like it got halfway and thenit stopped.

(05:48):
So I, I just, I went andopened another chat GBT and then
did.
And then, and then it made it right.
It made it made it look cool.
And so yeah, it's, it'sdefinitely like, I mean, I get it.
I mean, obviously, you know,you want to be safe for the, for
the kids and stuff like that,but it was just.
It's.

(06:08):
It's wonky still.
And like you were saying lastnight, you know, like, the more you
use it, the more it kind oflearns and the more it gets better.
So I feel like the more I'vestarted kind of introducing like
my friends into this like,detail verse animated cartoon thing.
Like the, the.

(06:30):
The.
And the, the cartoons startgetting a little bit, you know, better
looking and it's crazy, dude.
Like even.
I mean, it's got, it's got tobe reading our phones like on the.
It's.
It's got to.
If you read the terms ofcondition, it probably reads everything.
Yeah, because they're.
An update today.
It just popped up a littlewhile ago.

(06:51):
They just did an update thatthe memory is supposed to be even
better now.
Yeah, yeah, I saw that.
Yeah, yeah, because it'sweird, dude.
Like, like when I ask it tocreate things about my friends and
again, like, I'll give it likevague prompts, but it'll throw stuff
in there that I'm like, wait,but that, that person really does

(07:12):
that or has that or says that or.
Yeah, yeah, it's weird.
So.
Yeah.
And you know, like I told youlast night, dude, like, you know,
to kind of.
I mean, we've been kind of rambling.
But to start this episode off,the first time I ever heard about
chat GBT was in south park,you know.
Oh, really?

(07:32):
Yeah.
So, you know, like, I don'tknow how other people have come across
it, but I, I looked it upbecause I know you said you've been
using it for like a couple ofyears now.
So I looked up like when thatepisode of south park came out and
it.
And it came out in March of23, so I guess that's probably, you
know, right at the beginning, but.
Yeah, but it was funny becauseI remember watching the episode and

(07:54):
for anybody who hasn't seenit, you know, all the girls are texting.
The, the boys and the boysdon't know how to text back to the
girls.
So what they were doing wascopying what the girls were texting.
They were putting it in chatgbt chat GPT would give them an answer,
they'd copy it and paste itback into the text to the girls.
And so all the girls thoughtthe, the guys like knew how to flirt

(08:17):
or knew how to talk to girlsor whatever.
And, and you know, it was oneof those things where I was like,
I hadn't heard really thatmuch about AI, you know, being like
that.
So I was like, I was like, ah,south park guys are tripping on this
stuff, you know.
But I googled it, you know, Iwas like, south park chat gbt.

(08:37):
And like it, it came up, itwas a real thing.
And, and I mean, like, Iplayed around with it a little bit,
but, but it was one of thosethings that was just like a novelty,
right?
And then I would say it wasprobably, it's probably been a year
or so now that I reallystarted like using it a little bit

(09:00):
more.
Not a ton, but I was using ita little bit more.
Like I'd, I'd start asking itquestions like, hey, how do you do
this?
Or how do you do that?
But still not like on aregular enough basis.
And really it probably wasn'tuntil, I don't know, last six, seven
months, like you start hearingabout it, more people are using it

(09:20):
more using it for things.
Like, I started using it when,you know, I, I, Michelle would take
something out for dinner andI'd be like, man, I just don't want
like the same old, same old.
So I'd go and chat GPT and I'dsay, you know, I have chicken breast,
I have broccoli, I have rice,I have whatever.
Can you make?
You know, can you give me a recipe?

(09:42):
And then like, bam, like that.
It's, you can actually uploada picture now of what's in your fridge
and it'll do it.
You don't even say anything.
Just give me a recipe.
Yeah, I haven't tried it, butI seen it.
So it says, yeah, just youupload the picture and say, give
me a recipe based on what Ihave in the fridge and it'll just
give me whatever it can.
I haven't tried it yet, but Iseen the question pop up.

(10:05):
I don't know what I was.
I have to do that.
So, so I have, you know, morerecently started using it in my business.
You know, I'll use it for myGoogle my business posts.
You know what I'll do is I'll,I'll take a picture of a car, I'll
put, you know, a car that Iworked on.

(10:25):
I'll put it in there and saywrite me a Google my business post
for this vehicle.
This is the service I did, youknow, and it'll bam.
It'll put it out and it's nicebecause then I can just copy and
paste it and put it in my Google.
My business I've startedrecently because I take so many walk
around videos of, of cars, youknow, after they're done.

(10:48):
I've started recently likeputting them into my YouTube channel
for my, for my business that Istarted forever ago.
Uploaded a few videos andwhatever and not.
And so I'll do the kind of thesame thing.
What I'll do is I'll take apicture of the vehicle because Chat
GPT doesn't do video yet.

(11:08):
I'll put the picture in thereand say, hey, can you write me a,
you know, like if I'm doing ashort, like if I do a walk around
video, I'll do a YouTube shortand just say can you give me a, a
YouTube short?
Like because it's, I thinkit's like limited to like 50 characters
or something like that forYouTube short and it'll put it out.
Or if I'm doing like an actualvideo, I'll ask out exit.

(11:32):
I'll ask it to give me atitle, a YouTube title and then a
YouTube description and thenI'll just copy and paste it in there.
But you know, talking to youlast night and that's what you know,
kind of prompted us to havethis episode is you were telling
me about how much more you useit for like an employee and the things

(11:55):
that you do with it that maybea lot of people aren't using it for.
So I'm going to turn the micover to you now and let you start
talking about the things youuse it for other than silly bobbleheads
and, and, and all the otherthings that Walt doing y.

(12:19):
So there's, there's such ahuge variety I got on last night
and it was just kind ofplaying around with it again.
So I had some fresh stuff fortoday, but you can do market analysis
like specific to your region.
So like I'm in western NewYork, it's very, very small area.
So I wanted to know what theprojections were going to be on detailing

(12:41):
as far as how it's going to gofrom 2025 to 2030.
And let me see.
Oh, we got to share the screento show you that, don't I?
Yeah, yeah.
Hang on, I'll get, I'll get itup here.
Okay.
Yeah.
Okay.
Can you see it now?
Yeah, I can see it.
Okay, so we'll go to.

(13:15):
I gotta find the one I wasusing because I was playing with
so many different things.
I know.
That's the other thing is youget, you get so many different.
And that was the thing Ididn't realize at the beginning.
I, I just kept always askingit the same thing.
I didn't realize for a whilethat you could open up different
chat GPT so that you couldkeep them separate.

(13:36):
And then it always remembersand it always titles it.
And then even if you open upa, a different chat GPT, it'll pull
memory from a chat GPT thatyou had like months ago.
Yeah.
If it, if it, if it works withthe new, the new, the new prompt

(13:59):
that you're asking it.
Trying to see if I can splitmy screen so I can still see you.
There we go.
All right, now I can see whatI'm doing here.
It's not as weird for me nowthat I can see too.
Yeah.
All right.
So like for example, lastnight I asked it to analyze my Facebook

(14:23):
page and analyze it with my competitors.
So I put in my, my closestcompetitors, which I'm friends with
most of them, but.
Right.
Just to get an idea.
So it reviewed everything.
It gives you a competitivelandscape overview, tells you your
strengths, tells you theirstrengths, opportunities on what

(14:44):
you should be doing.
So like, for me it wasbranding consistency.
So I have a hard timeremembering to put my logo on all
of my uploaded pictures,videos, stuff like that.
And that was one thing that itpicked up on that I could improve
on.
I, for some reason it was notpicking up Google reviews very well
last night.
I have no idea why.

(15:04):
Okay, usually it does, but it,it just wouldn't do it.
So it's same thing for theother competitors.
Strategies to outperform them.
So you can enhance visualbranding, expand service offerings,
leverage customer testimonials.
So basically what it did is itwent in and seen what they were not

(15:25):
doing and areas that would getme more traction.
Gotcha.
So different ways to engagewith the community.
Optimize online booking,because none of those places offer
online booking.
Okay, so that was a big one.
You always want to doublecheck everything too.
Obviously it's chat gbt.
It can still be wrong.
Yeah.

(15:45):
When I tried to get it to pullthe Google review comparison, it
was telling me not specified.
When there's 51 on mine itsays act key highlights active social
media presence with engaging content.
Z bar.
Mixed reviews, some praise forservice, others no issues with Attention
to detail.
So the reason that's good whenit actually does load all those Google

(16:08):
reviews is you could go in andask it to find their weaknesses.
So let's say that they, like,commonly are missing certain areas
or doing certain things.
So now you have that.
That mindset.
You can go in and with yourcustomers, you can make sure to touch
on those pain points.
Or when you're advertising,you can target that type of specific.

(16:31):
Yeah, that's smart.
The word is.
But like, that's specific service.
Like if they're missing onrocker panels and you're like, hey,
we polish rocker panels.
You know.
Yeah, let's keep that jokerolling a little bit.
Yeah, right Again, it waswrong here.
I have 51 reviews, but they'reon Google.

(16:52):
They're not on Facebook.
This was saying that they werecoming from Facebook.
Yeah, I think I have likeseven on there.
You can ask it to create awhole graph so that you can save
it or download it or share itto social media, whatever you want
to do.
So, like, I put create a graphand then once I did that, it asked

(17:14):
me if I wanted one to shareonline or broken down by platform.
So if I want it for Google, ifI want it for Facebook, Instagram,
it will actually format itspecifically to those.
If you want to share it.
What's the graph of?
Like what.
This is just for the reviews.
Okay.
So it shows.
So it shows your ratings,which is the blue bars, and then

(17:36):
the.
The red graph is the amount of reviews.
Gotcha.
Which again, it was backwardsbecause I was trying to do it for
Google.
Elite Creations has more onFacebook than they do Google.
But I mean, it still worked.
It wouldn't do the.
I was trying to get it toactually check the metrics for every

(17:57):
page, but it won't.
You can go in and upload yourown analytics from.
You can download them.
You have to do it on desktop,but you can download all your analytics
from Facebook and upload themand then chat.
GPT will help you from there.
As far as telling you whattime of day you should post, what
days you should post, who youshould target, what demographics

(18:18):
you should target.
I believe it did give me someof the demographics in here.
Yeah, that's cool.
Because that's always my.
My problem is I never know,like, what's the best time to post.
For me, it's more of like, oh,I forgot to post something today.
Like, let me do it now whileI'm thinking about it, you know,

(18:39):
so, like, I might.
I might make one post like,you know, in the.
And then the next time I postit's in the evening and then the
next time I post it's in theafternoon and then, you know, so
I.
Do the same thing.
Even though I use Chat jpd, Istill find myself doing that because
it's.
Yeah, you can, you can set itso that it posts whenever you want
it to, but.
Right.

(18:59):
I usually just do it when I'msupposed to be working.
Right.
On other things.
This is, this is where I hadto pull the industry outlook 25 to
30.
25 to 2030.
It just says that it'sexpected to grow from 38.9 billion
to.

(19:21):
Is that 56?
56.
Yep.
Based on consumer spending onluxury vehicle upgrades.
It gives you the links to thesources so that you can go back and
check them.
And then I had it break itdown into local market dynamics.
So even though becauseJamestown has a population of I think

(19:42):
we have like 25, 000 people inour city.
So it's a lot harder to do.
So it has to break it up kindof by region to do it.
But it basically tells you whyit's increasing what the competitive
landscape is.
So this is really good for thedetail shops that are kind of just
starting out because when Istarted I couldn't get this information.

(20:04):
Like, like when you open afranchise, for example, they have
teams of people that do all ofthis stuff.
Right.
And when you're a small owneroperator business, you can't afford
to have a team go out and doall this stuff.
So that's where using chat GPTfor 20 bucks a month does all that
for you.
It'll give you strategic opportunities.

(20:26):
It tells you like here ittells me to introduce eco friendly
and sustainable detailingoptions because that's the up and
coming trend according to allof the analysis that it's done.
For me, I've done more thanjust this.
This is just what I did last night.
But it's kind of going back onall of it.
Your projected revenue growth.

(20:46):
This is for a sole owner operator.
So like me.
Yeah.
These numbers are not going tolook big to people like in your area
in Orlando.
They're going to look really small.
But just to give you an idea,the average median income here is
about 20,000.
So they're actually really high.
It does say it based on marketconditions and the strategies you

(21:08):
implement.
So it's not saying hey, you'regoing to make this much money.
Right.
It's saying if you, if, if ona, in a perfect day, perfect world,
that's what's going to happen.
Right, Right.
But that's pretty coolbecause, I mean, regardless of where
you're from, if you're from,you know, a smaller, you know, populated
area like yourself, or a bigpopular populated area like, like

(21:32):
me, or even somebody who'seven bigger populated, like some
of these places out in, youknow, Texas and California or whatever
that are bigger than Orlandoor whatever, that's a pretty cool
tool to be able to see whatyour growth could be because that's,
you know, that's somethingthat everybody kind of does is.

(21:53):
Is a.
Is everybody always tries toproject what they're gonna do in
a year.
I mean.
Right.
Myself included.
I mean, like, I know, youknow, I'm, you know, like yourself
a single operator.
And.
And, you know, I, you know,talked about it enough on this podcast
where my shop is more of alifestyle business.

(22:14):
So I'm not trying to push itto the max.
I just want to, you know, livea comfortable lifestyle.
But I still try to be like,okay, well, you know, I made X amount
year.
Hopefully we do, you know,growth this year to make this much
more.
So, you know, being able tohave that and, and kind of know,
like, okay, well, if we dohave that kind of growth every year,

(22:37):
then, you know, in five yearswe go, you know, we grow by that
much.
That's.
That's a pretty cool thing toat least have.
Yeah.
And, and what's nice is, like,someone like me, as far as running
a business, I understandprofit and loss, things like that.
What I never really understoodwas things like projections and that

(22:57):
aspect of it.
So when I'm able to go inthere and look at that, it helps
me with setting realisticgoals rather than just saying, oh,
I want to.
I want to make this much, butI have no plan.
I have no idea if it's feasible.
I've never fed my numbers into this.
And I can tell you that thosenumbers that gave me are damn near
accurate from what I've seen.

(23:17):
Yeah.
And I've never fed anything asfar as numbers go, so it.
It can be very, very accurate.
I have seen it be completelyoff sometimes, but for the most part,
it's pretty accurate.
Another thing that is awesome.
You know, we see people allthe time.
They're saying, oh, anotherdetail shop stole my pictures and
they're posting them.

(23:38):
Right?
Yeah.
So that actually happened recently.
Someone's another detail.
In our group chat, someonebasically copy and pasted his post.
I wrote him up a seasonedassist for that person to send them,
and it took all of 10 seconds.
And then he's like, hey, canyou do Spanish?

(23:59):
And we did it in Spanish for him.
Nice.
Yeah, that's.
So I had an incident.
A lot of, a lot of peopledon't know this.
Towards the end of last year,I was approached to by somebody who
wanted to.

(24:20):
What's the word I'm lookingfor here?
Oh, God dang it.
Come on, Alex, think.
They wanted to, they wanted tobasically license the podcast.
So like, I would still do whatI was doing, but they wanted to license

(24:42):
it to be able to put it ontheir page.
And they were going to pay mea pretty okay amount of money, decent
amount of money.
And they sent me a contractand, and one of my clients, one of
my really good clients is a lawyer.
And I had him look it overand, and he's like, Alex, he's like,

(25:03):
don't, don't sign that.
Like that's, it's a one sided contract.
Like it's all for them and notfor you.
And so I said, okay.
I said, that's, you know, andhe was, and he, and he told me, he
said, he said, this, thisdoesn't work.
This doesn't work.
This doesn't work, you know,like in the contract.
And so like I went back and I,and I told the, the people and they
said, well, what do you wantto do?

(25:24):
And I said, well, look, I,like, I want to protect myself.
This is, you know, notsomething I'm starting from scratch.
It's, it's a, it's a businessfor the most part for me.
And it's something I've beenworking on for four and a half years.
I don't want to lose itbecause, you know, I signed this
contract.
So they told me, they said,look, you, you do your contract and,

(25:46):
and then we'll go from there.
And so like I talked to mylawyer and he's like, look, dude,
he's like, I could write youone, but it ain't gonna be expensive.
He's like, just, you know,Google, Google licensing contact.
So I actually went into chatGPT and I said, hey, create a podcast
licensing agreement with A, B,C, D, E, F, G on my side, XYZ on

(26:10):
their side.
And, and like you said, likein less than a minute it prints out
this full on licensing agreement.
And so I sent it to my client,the lawyer and he looks it over and
he goes, man, where'd you getthis from?
I was like, Dude, Chachi BTdid it in like 30 seconds.

(26:31):
He's like, no way.
And I go, yeah, he Goes, thisis really good.
And he goes, he goes, I wouldthink that a lawyer wrote this.
He's like, I'm gonna have tostart looking in the chat GPT for
something, so.
Right.
So, yeah, I mean, that's.
It's crazy how you can use itfor, like, stuff like that.

(26:51):
It's like, like I, like I saidearlier in this podcast, and, and,
and it's almost like you can'tnot ask it anything.
Like, anything you can thinkof, you can ask it and it'll do it
like, you know, which is crazy.
It's nuts.
It's wild how it just.

(27:12):
It understands.
Yeah.
Like, in fact, for example,the what I was trying to play for
you, I put make it a littlemore chill, add some humor.
I, I had it make a joke aboutthe energy drinks.
And then I said, I want you tosend only the responses that will

(27:35):
be playing it as audio for itto appear that you are actually speaking.
And so then this is what itcame up with.
Hey, Alex, thanks for havingme on the Detail Solutions podcast.
I'm Natasha.
Think of me as the AI co pilotfor detailers who are doing it all
and still trying to find timeto breathe.
I've been teaming up with Waltfrom Phoenix Detail and to help shop
owners like him work smarter,not harder.

(27:57):
Whether that's writing fakeFacebook posts that don't sound like
a robot wrote them, dialing inservice menus, or crafting texts
that actually get replies.
I'm here 24 7, no coffeebreaks required.
And honestly, part of my jobis making sure Walt keeps his hands
off those energy drinks beforehe starts ceramic coating the neighbor's
mailbox.
So that's pretty awesome.

(28:20):
Like, you just, you, you tellit what you want.
Like I told it I was to comeon this podcast.
I said, give me five topics onhow you can help.
And it says, you know, themarketing, the business operations,
customer communication and retention.
So the customer communicationis, is a really great one for people
that don't know how tonecessarily maybe articulate things

(28:43):
in the way they need to be articulated.
Yes.
Or if you get even a difficultcustomer like I had, it wasn't a
difficult customer, but I got,I have one four star review.
It's the only one.
And I wasn't how exactly torespond to it.
I don't think it's on here anymore.
But I, I put it in there.
I explained that I only had one.
I wanted to make it right.

(29:04):
And if I would have went andreplied to that Google review, it
would have been 10 pages long.
Right.
I'm sorry, how do I fix this?
Blah, blah, blah.
It did it in like three sentences.
Yeah.
And it was perfect.
So it, it really helps toclarify things, technical things.
Like, I don't know if you'veseen my post the other day where

(29:25):
I had that charger in here andI had those little specks in it and
Knoxy said it was from overspray.
Yeah.
So I actually, I had neverheard that before.
So I came into here andsomewhere it's in here.
Right here.
Overspray etching on paint.

(29:46):
And I said, on a vehicle paintjob, what is overspray etching?
And it literally told meeverything so that I could be able
to explain it to the clientwhat exactly was on his vehicle,
because I had no idea.
Yeah.
And sometimes we get way tootechnical when we do try to explain
it.
So he's a pretty technicalguy, so I didn't have to change it
up for him.
But you could go in and justdo something like this, like make

(30:10):
it understandable to theaverage person.
Right.
And that's, that's the thinglike you were saying with, you know,
typing out a 10 page, youknow, response or something.
I've, I've started doing thata lot where, like if I'm doing a
text or an email or, you know,something, I'll type it the way that

(30:33):
like I would say it so itsounds like me.
And then I'll copy and pasteit in the chat GPT.
And in chatGPT, you'll take itand clean it up.
Yeah.
And you know, write punctuation.
Right.
Words and things like that.
And it's, it's cool becauseI've started, I feel like I've started

(30:53):
learning from Chat GPT becausethe last couple of times I've typed
things out and put it in Chat GPT.
Chat GPT is like, it's pretty solid.
Let's just do this.
And it changes like one word.
You know, I'm like, I'm like,okay, cool.
Like, I don't sound like an idiot.
Then when I'm typing thisstuff exactly it.

(31:19):
But yes.
So breaks it down.
So if I had to explain it tohim easier, it's just, it's, it's
fast, it's easy, it's simple.
It takes all the guesswork outof it.
And it, it makes your job as adetailer easier because we, like,
we talked about yesterday withthe word paint correction.
Yeah.
Half these people don't knowwhat that means.
Right.
So when you do, let's say Iget a 70 year old man that happens

(31:41):
to know how to use Facebookand he messages me, he's not going
to know what I'm talking aboutif I just go off on a tangent about
bank correction.
So I can go in here and say,hey, explain this like you're talking
to a 70 year old man.
Yeah, and it'll make it that easy.
And you can do it with anything.
I mean there's, you can use itfor business consulting, customer

(32:01):
relations.
I mean literally anything youcan think of.
You know, the one thing Inever thought about with it, and
it's probably one of thesimplest things.
So at, at mte, earlier thisyear, Brian guy introduced me to
this guy Sasha, he's from Germany.

(32:22):
And so Sasha and I weretalking because we were doing the
first ever bank correctioncompetition@mte and Sasha was telling
me that they've been doing onein, in Germany for like the last
eight years.
And so he was, and, and hisEnglish was like kind of.
Okay, so he was kind oftelling me how they do it over there.

(32:44):
He was curious to see how wewere going to do it over here.
And so after MTE, we weremessaging each other on, on WhatsApp
and he sends me this reallylong post and I'm, and I'm reading
through it and at the end itsays, I hope this translated well.

(33:06):
I'm using Chat GPT totranslate my German to English.
And I was like, oh my God, Inever thought about that.
So my, so I typed my replyback to him and I type, you know,
translate this into German andthen typed my reply back to him and
sent it and said the samething like, hope this comes out right.

(33:28):
I use Chat GBT too and he likegave me thumbs up.
So you know, like the simplest things.
I, I never would have thoughtabout using it to translate, you
know, different languages or,or whatever.
So yeah, you can use it foryour radio commercials.

(33:48):
I mean you can use it forliterally anything.
Oh dude, it's, it's the, the,the commercials I run on the podcast
that maybe I'll insert here.
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(34:11):
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(34:32):
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(34:54):
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Again for the wholesalers,that's detailed image.com wholesale
backslash DSP and get an extra$20 credit.

(35:15):
Those right?
Those are, those are Chachi PT.
I go into chat GPT and saywrite me an ad for insert, you know,
whoever I'm advertising at the time.
Like now it's detailed image,autofiber, whatever and it writes,
it writes the ad for me andthen I just record myself reading
it.

(35:35):
Yep.
So just at that time we weretalking, I just had it right up 30
seconds.
Radio commercial.
I haven't read it yet so Idon't know how good it is, but it
just wrote it.
But you can tweak it.
I mean and like these are allthe other things I was telling you
about here on the left that wewere talking about yesterday.
Yeah.
So you can link it into Canvafor your marketing materials.

(36:00):
Let's say you have a kid inthe waiting room.
You can click color and bookhero and tell it to make a coloring
page of anything you want andprint it out and give it to the kid
with some crayons.
Oh wow.
It'll help you with Google sheets.
You have a tech support, likeI was telling you at the beginning
that I was trying to changethe toner in my printer.

(36:20):
Hashtag generators, copywriters.
This is for your like Facebookads and stuff like that.
Luxury brand marketingresearch, business consultants.
I mean you literally couldreplay, not replace.
I wouldn't say replace, but ifyou're someone that is borderline

(36:41):
needing an employee.
Yeah.
Versus being able to afford employees.
So like I got a quote for apart time employee.
It was going to be just forworkman's comp.
$15,000 a year.
I can use Chat GPT to automatemost anything I need to do office
wise to save me enough timethat I don't need to hire someone
to work in the office space for.

(37:02):
Yeah.
And it's 20amonth.
Yeah.
So when you're on that fencewhere you need that little bit of
extra help but not.
You can't justify spendingthat much money.
That's where to me Chat GPTcomes in.
Yeah.
Everything from helping youwith your ads to, you know, bringing
people in.

(37:23):
So that's one of the things Iwant to.
Let's talk about the ads.
Because.
Because talking last nightwith you, you had some really cool
ideas that I never thought about.
So typically when I, you know,do an ad, I'll just go in and say,
write me a Facebook ad for,you know, insert service, whatever

(37:46):
service.
I want to try and put ceramiccoating, interior detail.
But you had an actual reallycool, outside of the box way of.
Of thinking of running ads.
Yep.
So I.
I like.
Marketing has become a hobbyto me.
So when I see commercials thatare kind of.

(38:12):
I guess I don't really knowwhat the word is, but there's always
those commercials that catchyour attention.
They're different.
And the one that stuck in mymind when I started this was the
Pepsi commercial where Coketook a shot at them, saying they
sold more Coke than they sold.
Then Pepsi sold pe.
So I put that ad in to ChadGPT and I said I wanted to incorporate

(38:35):
a similarly humorous Facebookpost for my detail shop versus the
other detail shops.
So we had to go back and fortha little bit to get it just right,
but it would change different things.
And it did start trying totell me something with a vending
machine, which obviouslydoesn't make sense for a detail shop,
but you keep playing with it.

(38:55):
And these are the ones thatreally got my attention was the dating
profile one.
I think I was telling youabout that one, the tip profile.
So I.
I've been working on that onea little bit more.
I haven't finalized it, butthat'll probably be the first one
I do.
But you.
If you start with a good idea,it's going to give you even better
ideas.
So you can definitely put in ageneric prompt like just create a

(39:19):
Facebook ad and it'll do it.
But if you have a baseline, ifyou saw an advertisement or you saw
some type of marketing thatcaught your attention and you really
want to do that, you can putthat in there and start working with
it.
And what's nice is you cancontinue going back to that chat.
It'll continue getting betterevery time.
So you can just keep buildingon it.
So, like I said, mock up avisual and caption for the kid with

(39:42):
the sponges as well as theswipe right.
And that's where the spongeone didn't really impress me.
But the swipe white swiperight one.
Sorry.
It literally told me exactlyhow to make it.
Yeah, I mean, broke it down exactly.
Like dating profile, it haslearned from me that I like to add
humor in a lot of My stuff,which I think is what kind of helped

(40:05):
it do that.
And then, you know, thecaption was tired of getting ghosted
by quality Swipe right on yourshop name, which that, to me, I lost
that.
I thought that was hilarious.
Yeah.
And so, like right here itsays, want help turning these into
a Canva or Photoshop template?
So it'll actually help youdesign it through Canva.

(40:25):
You can put in, you can uploadyour picture from Canva of your flyer
and it'll help you fine tuneit from there.
It'll tell you what to change.
I don't think I have any inhere right now.
Yeah, yeah, I've just, I haven't.
I haven't linked.
I haven't really played withit on Canva.

(40:46):
I've been having it makepictures for me.
I actually, a couple weeks agowhen we had the marketing guy on
John, one of the things thathe talked about was running a, a

(41:07):
Facebook contest, you know,where you, you give something away.
You have, you know, allanybody has to do is, you know, just
click the ad, fill out their information.
And his whole thing wasbecause, like, you give one away
for free, but you get allthese hundreds, hopefully of other
people that then you, youreach out to them and you go, hey,

(41:30):
sorry, you got second place.
We'll give you the same thingfor a discounted rate.
Right?
And it was crazy when I askedChachi BT to help me create that
for the giveaway that I wantedto do.
So I wanted to give away.
I wanted something kind ofeasy because I didn't want to give
away a to of like, I didn'twant to do like a polishing job or
ceramic coating because Ididn't want to give anything away.

(41:52):
That took a lot of my time.
I wanted, I wanted to try andstart with something small.
So I did a 350 wash clay and,and sealant job.
And, and man, I'll tell you,the picture that it created for me
did not look like AI generated it.

(42:13):
Like, I.
Right.
I even sent it.
I was talking with MikeCardenas about it and I sent it to
him and he's like, dude,Chachi bt.
And this was, this was beforeI started because I only started
paying for it last night afterI talked to you.
So this was a couple of weeksago on the free version.
And Mike couldn't believe,like, that it was an AI generated

(42:36):
picture because it looked real.
It looked like somebody reallytook the picture, put it in the canva,
and then overlaid the wordsover it.
Like, I couldn't Believe howgood it was.
Yeah, it's nuts.
And then, and then I don't know.
The Comcaster 2.0 picture thatI uploaded.
Yeah, that was awesome.

(42:56):
That.
That was badass.
I didn't.
That was awesome.
I wasn't, I wasn't expectingit to come out that badass.
I was.
The more people that use it,the better it gets.
Right.
And again, I just, you know,like the, the first prompt, I said,
you know, can you make apicture of King Kong roaring into
the microphone?
And so it.

(43:17):
Or wearing headphones?
And so it did.
And I was like, oh, man, Iwonder if so.
So what I was going to do is Iwas going to try and use my.
I took in Canva.
I was gonna use the, the logoand put the logo on the headphones
like the original one, but itjust didn't look right.
So then I went back into chat GPT.

(43:38):
I put the picture of Kongroaring into the microphone wearing
the headphones.
I put the picture of my logoand I said, now can you do it with
the podcast logo on the headphones?
And then it put it in there perfectly.
And that was, that was the oneI posted last night.
Yeah.
2.0.
And it's funny because then I had.

(44:00):
I had a few people eithercomment or message me, is that going
to be a new shirt?
So.
Right.
So I don't know, maybe we'lldo another shirt.
I don't know.
We'll see.
Nice.
Yeah.
I mean, it, it definitelylike, I mean, marketing is a big
one.
I know that.
You know, the bigger shopsobviously are using marketing agencies.

(44:22):
Yeah.
And there's nothing wrong with that.
But like there's.
I started really getting intothe chat GPT for the marketing because
when I first opened, there wasno way I could afford hire a marketing
agency.
I couldn't pay for SEO.
I couldn't do any of that.
I ended up building my website myself.
It's.
It's not fancy at all.

(44:43):
I mean, you can tell I builtit myself, but I use chat GPT to
do it.
So it just, it.
It basically it levels theplaying field so that your guys that
are just coming into it oryour guys that are, you know, in
markets like mine where we'renot doing, you know, a million dollars
a year, we can still competewith the bigger companies.
Like, I'm actually.

(45:04):
My ads right now that I'm, I'mworking on, I'm focused on.
On a chain detail shop.
That's who I'm kind of tryingto compete with.
I'm not necessarily trying togo after, you know, the other small
shops.
I feel like I have the abilitynow that I can compete with the.
The big dogs, so to speak.
Right.
And it just, it levels it.
I mean, I can have it analyzetheir ads and compare it to mine

(45:28):
and tell me what to do different.
And it cost me $20.
I'm not saying it's betterthan hiring a marketing agency.
I'm saying it's a.
It's a step in the rightdirection for people that either
can't afford it or don't wantto spend that right now.
Yeah, well, let's be honest.
I mean, people in thatmarketing agency might be using chat
GBT too, for sure.

(45:49):
I've seen detail marketerssay, oh, check out these ads you
can buy.
You know, we'll give you 20 ofthem for X amount of dollars.
And I'm like, used that sametemplate in canva 2 days ago for
free.
Like, what are you doing?
All you're doing is switchingthe picture in there.
So.
And, and that's what, that'sactually what got me into canvas.
I was trying to figure outwhere they're doing it because I'm

(46:11):
like, all these ads look the same.
Right, right.
So they're getting them somewhere.
Yeah.
And that's how I discovered it.
So I just, I.
I've always been.
I want to do as much on my ownas I can to be able to build the
business without spendingmoney where I don't need to spend
money yet kind of thing.
Right, right, exactly.
And that's.

(46:31):
And that's smart.
I mean, like, I mean, let's be honest.
I mean, depending on who youtalk to or where you're at right
now, the economy is a littletopsy turvy.
You know, you don't know ifpeople are going to be spending money
right now or they're holdingon to it.
You know, I.
I mean, I hate to see allthese tariffs because I was talking

(46:53):
with Ian the other day, andIan's like, dude, like, I.
I don't know, you know,because he gets all his jobs from
China.
He's like, he's like, I gottatry and figure out my pricing.
But, you know, part of me iskind of like, maybe this will throw
us back to kind of a 2020Covid situation where now automobiles

(47:16):
are going to cost too much.
People might necessarily notwant to go out and buy a new car
right now because of thetariff prices.
So they go, you know what?
I'll hang on to my car alittle bit.
Let me just go spend you know,a couple hundred thousand dollars
or not a hundred thousand, buta couple hundred or thousand dollars,

(47:37):
you know, on a detail and.
Exactly.
Who knows, maybe we haveanother, you know, 2020, you know,
kind of COVID boom in the, inthe detailing world.
It would be nice, I'm notgonna lie.
Yeah.
You know, but like I, I wastalking to my client the other day
that I did.
I redid his wife's Bentley.

(47:58):
And, and they're one of myclients that like, dude, they keep
a car a year, a little over ayear is like surprisingly.
And they've had this one likealmost two now.
And you know, and he's like,he's like, man, he goes, I, I told
her the other day, he, youknow, because I got the email from
the, from the dealership that,you know, if we were going to order

(48:20):
something, we had to done itby last Friday.
Otherwise tariff, you know,tariff pricing was going to take
over.
And, and his wife wants a car,he doesn't want to buy her.
So he goes, you're keepingthis one.
We'll call Alex and just haveit recoded.
So.
Yeah, exactly.
And I always said thatdetailing, the detailing industry

(48:41):
is recession resistant.
Not recession proof, butrecession resistant.
Because if you get the peoplethat are going to not buy a vehicle
because of it, they're goingto want to maintain them.
So you're going to see therepair shops do better, you're going
to see the detail shops dobetter and then there's going to
be the people that can afford it.
But when they do buy thatvehicle at a higher price, they're
going to want to protect it.

(49:02):
And that's where your PPF andyour ceramic coatings and everything
are going to come in.
We've seen it.
In 2008, people were gettingtons of interiors because the economy
was down.
And we've seen it during COVIDthe prices were sky high.
And that's the most recentexample of the, you know, the people
that could afford it wantedthem protected.
The people that couldn'twanted them just really basically
restored inside because theywere going to be in it for a while

(49:25):
or they wanted the maximumthey could get for their trading
value.
So I think if people arepositioning themselves right and
marketing right, then I thinkwe'll be okay.
I mean, there's going to be aslump, I'm sure as far as like the
high ticket sales maybe, but Imean it's going to be different depending
on the areas.
But if you're, if you'repaying attention to it, I, I Think

(49:47):
everybody will be fine in thedetailing industry?
I could be wrong.
I'm not a marketing expert byany means, but, yeah, I've been around,
so I've seen it.
Right.
And it's.
It's.
You know, I think, you know,the other thing too, is if you are
smart enough to not get inover your head, even when it gets

(50:07):
rough, you can still survive it.
You know, the.
The thing is, a lot of theseguys, they have a couple of good
months, they make a ton ofmoney, and then they go out and they
get the big shop that theycan't really afford.
You know, they buy the new carthat they can't really afford.
You know, and then ifsomething happens and it's like,
oh, you know.
Yeah, you know, and that's.

(50:28):
That's one of the things that I.
I've stayed.
Where I've stayed for so longis because my rent's 400amonth.
Like.
Yeah.
And there's.
There's always things that youcan't plan for.
Like, we had our.
We had our worst winter thisyear that we've had in five, six
years.
We didn't see that coming.
My heating bills for here arebetween 800 and a thousand dollars

(50:51):
a month.
Wow.
Where last year I was washingcars outside this time of year in
a T shirt.
Right.
And I never expected it.
And I was.
It was my best year I had in business.
It was my second year, and Iwas making money.
And I'm like, you know what?
I'm gonna enjoy this.
And I was spending money likeEl Chapo.
We went on vacation.
We were in Vegas.
I was blowing money.

(51:12):
I came back, business got slow.
And then winter hit, and letme tell you what, I was getting nervous
because we had added on to our shop.
We added another.
I think it was like 650 squarefeet heat.
Okay.
So that increased the heatingtoo, because it's all block walls.
It's not.
The walls are insulated.
Yeah.
So I.
I took on a bunch more expensejust because of that, that I didn't

(51:35):
plan for.
So that's.
You gotta definitely keep thatin mind when you're doing really
well.
Like, you gotta be like, okay,I gotta set some of this aside because
I got nervous for a while.
Yeah, yeah.
It's definitely better just tosquirrel it all the way.
And honestly, I mean, let's be real.
I mean, if you're.
If you're not worried butconcerned, just like you did with

(51:58):
your projections with CHATGPT, you could go into CHAT GPT and
say, hey, look, this is whereI'm at.
You know, what should I do?
How should I look at it?
And I'm, and I'm pretty sureChat GPT will, will basically write
you kind of a business plan offor sure.
You know, how you, how youtake what you have to invest it into

(52:22):
the business, grow thebusiness or whatever.
So I mean, yeah, that's,that's another thing that, that everybody
who's a little kind of up inthe air right now with what's going
to happen or I'm a little bitslow or whatever.
You know, you can just go intoChat GBT and listen if you're just
completely off the rails.
I've had, had, I've heardplenty of people say just talk to

(52:45):
it like a person and, or likea therapist.
And yeah, and it'll, it'llhelp you with, you know, therapy.
I know, I know you said youwere thinking about trying.
I thought about it.
I thought I had one on here orI seen one somewhere.
Let's see if I can lifestyleright here.

(53:06):
Therapist.
And I mean of course it tellsyou that it's not real therapy just
so they'll be in trouble.
But yeah, but yeah, you can goon there.
And there's like some preloaded ones like my day sucks, I
just had a fight with my boss.
My career's not going anywhere.
Like, I mean seems like a realperson when you're actually using
this stuff.
So like I would, I wouldimplore anybody who's listening to

(53:27):
this right now if, if you'resomebody who sees a therapist.
Because I don't, I just, Idon't know, I'm, I'm the old school.
Like you just push that downuntil it blows up kind of, you know,
whatever.
But I, I, I, I ask non employer.
I ask anybody who sees a therapist.

(53:47):
I would be curious if youcould ask Chat GPT or talk to Chachi
gp.
Yeah, you know what I mean?
The same things that you sayto your therapist to see how closely
it answers to your therapist.
I'll try it, I'll, I'll try itjust to see for a project because

(54:09):
I go to therapy so we'll, we'll.
See what it is.
I, I really am curious to seehow good it is, you know.
So like whatever you say toyour therapist, if you can kind of
remember it and then say it toChat GPT right.
Compare the notes and then Imean, I don't know, maybe you don't
have to pay for a therapist anymore.

(54:30):
You know, I mean they're not cheap.
Cheap 20amonth on chat GPT.
And when, when you got a planfor slow business, hey, you never
know.
Exactly.
That's another thing you cando with the chat GPT.
As far as, when business isstarting to slow as you can, you
can bounce ideas as far aswhat's the worst case scenario gonna

(54:52):
be?
Like, how do I get out of this?
So like when I ran my ad backin March, the beginning of March,
I put in there that I said Ihave 200 for ad spend, I can use
it on radio or social media.
This is all I have.
I have to see a return oninvestment within two weeks.
And it gave me this whole thing.

(55:13):
And then Brian Burrs, I don'tknow if you know him, but he, he
gave me a tip on retargetingcurrent customers.
Okay.
So between Chat GPT and him, Ihad my best month that I've had in
three years.
I never seen anything like it.
I burned myself out.
I was so busy.
Wow.
And I, I didn't even hit that 200.

(55:34):
I think I spent 75.
And I had to shut the ad offbecause it just, it exploded.
Yeah, that doesn't alwayshappen, but it just happened to be
the perfect timing.
We got some nice weather,weather right when it ran.
But that's what I mean.
You can go in there and say,hey, I'm in trouble.
This is what I have.
What do I do?
And it will help you, you.

(55:55):
Well, I've done, when you'retalking about like retargeting your
clients, I did one where I hadit create a, a recoat special for
anybody that I had coded their cars.
And you know, within the, atleast, at least four years ago, right,

(56:19):
because four years ago I wouldhave been using igl, that would have
been Kenzo.
Kenzo is a four year coding,you know, so at this point, you know,
four years, five years itwould, it would be gone.
And, and, and, and it created,it created a really nice text, you
know, that was like, you know,hey, we're offering a special.

(56:41):
If you want to recoat thevehicle, you know, we'll do it.
500 discount, blah, blah,blah, blah.
And I just, I copied that andpasted it into, I went into my square
and went into my customers andeverybody that had bought a ceramic
coating from me.
That was three to four yearsago or, or longer.

(57:03):
I just pasted that in and sentit out.
And then what I did on theflip side or on, on, on the other
side of it was I created onefor an interior detail reset because
this was kind of like, rightafter I talked with Christian and.
And Godfrey from Biobombs, andthey were talking about how, like,

(57:26):
they love to sell it as areset, you know, like, it doesn't
have to be because you had aspill or you had an odor.
Like, hey, we all have odors.
Our cars smell like.
You know, they might not smellto us because we're in them all the
time, but somebody else getsin and it's like, oh, you know, it
smells a little funky in here.
So I created an interiordetail special with.

(57:47):
With a chlorine dioxidebiobomb drop reset.
And then those people I.
Or then that one I sent to allthe people in my square customer
list that, you know, hadbought, you know, really kind of
anything.
I didn't send it to theceramic coating people because I

(58:08):
didn't want to, like, youknow, double them up, you know, but
I sent it to anybody who haddone any other kind of service with
me.
And it.
And I.
And I got a few people thatreached back out to me and was like,
yeah, man, I'd love to takeadvantage of this service or this,
this deal or whatever.
So it was.
It was perfect.
I'd never.
I mean, I've heard people sayto retarget your.

(58:30):
Your current clients, but Iguess I never realized how effective
it was until I actually did it.
Yeah.
And it was just one of thosethings that it just, it.
It blew my mind.
Yeah.
I mean, I had some people thatwould reach that, that would message
me and be like, hey, I don'tneed anything at this time, but thanks
for reaching out.
I'll keep you in mind, or whatever.
But, you know, again, I didhave a few people that were like,

(58:52):
you know what?
Yeah, I need.
I need my interior done or,yeah, I need to get the, the car
recoded or, you know, whatever.
So it did drum me up some workfor, you know, it didn't cost me
anything.
Again, that was a month ago or so.
So it was before I startedpaying for chat GPT.
So I was using the free version.
And then I just went into myclient list on S.

(59:14):
So it's.
I didn't even have to pay foran ad, you know, on anything.
Exactly.
And you can put.
I mean, it.
The possibilities are just endless.
I mean, I don't know howpeople like a small business like
me survived without chat GPT.
Sometimes I really don't like.

(59:34):
It just does everything.
Like, I just put in while wewere talking to create a quarter
one marketing plan focused onexisting clients, and it just, it
gave Me, everything.
Monthly breakdown.
Told me what to do for each month.
And then you just tweak itfrom there.
Like the possibilities arejust completely endless.
And you just play with it andask it questions and they're not

(59:56):
going to judge you becauseit's a robot.
I mean, it will if youjailbreak it, but then it'll call
you names and everything else.
But yeah, that's for another day.
Yeah.
So let me, let me ask you this.
Are you polite to your chatGPT just in case?
I am polite to this chat gbt.
I do jailbreak it quite oftenjust to play with it.

(01:00:17):
But they, they did an updateabout a week ago and I haven't.
The jailbreaks won't workanymore, so I have to wait for somebody
smarter than me to figure outhow to do it now.
Okay.
But yeah, they, they're,they're right.
I actually, I really like tolearn about dark psychology with
sales tactics.
But sometimes the regular chatGP does not want to go down that

(01:00:41):
rabbit hole as far as I wantto go.
Right.
Because it is manipulation andthings like that.
And even though I'm not doingit to manipulate people, I like to
learn about it because I liketo learn about human behavior and
how they react to specific things.
So that's where like thatchatgpt, what is jailbroke works
a little bit better for that.
But that's the only one that Ireally like.

(01:01:03):
Like, I'll have fun with andcall our names.
I was just curious because Iwas talking with Haley last night
and Haley was telling me shetreats her chat GBT like, like she
says she's mean to it.
Like she'll tell it like, likeif it's like, if she asks it like
to like help her with, youknow, like an assignment or something
like that.
Like, if she's trying to likeget information and it, and it's,

(01:01:26):
it's giving too much, she'llbe like, make it shorter.
You know, she says, she saysshe tells it to write like a 14 year
old.
I'm like, haley, stopcheating, first of all.
But like, but it works.
Yeah, but I'm like, be nicerto your chat GPT just in case.
Like, you know, every now and then.

(01:01:46):
I haven't had the regular oneget snippy on me, but I have seen
like posts online where peoplehave showed that it does.
But if you jailbreak it, itwill them things will come unglued
on you.
You like it.
So how do you.
I've never heard about anybodyjailbreaking it.
So jailbreaking it is, theywill come up with like a particular
like paragraph or somethingand somehow it tricks it and it,

(01:02:10):
it basically turns off all ofits safeguards.
So really there's no filtersanymore once you do that.
But they, they're really goodat catching on and fixing it.
Yeah.
So the, they usually will onlywork for like a month or two and
then they update it and thenyou gotta wait for someone.
But like you can just Googlechat jailbreak and then just start

(01:02:31):
searching for them and thenyou literally just copy and paste
the prompt and it'll do it.
It's not as easy as it used tobe, but you can still do it.
But now it's probably going tobe a few weeks before.
So that's.
So that's how Skynet's gonna happen.
It's not gonna, exactly, it'snot gonna happen because Chat GBT
because I, I like I told youlast night I saw, I saw a girl on

(01:02:51):
Tick Tock having aconversation with Chat GBT and, and
they were diving down like awhole rabbit hole about are we just
part of a simulation?
You know, is it, is thisreally kind of a Matrix situation?
And, and all this stuff?
And I was like, I was like,you know, like I told you last night,
like I was kind of like thatCanadian dude on Tick Tock, like

(01:03:12):
what?
No way.
So like I get mine out and Iasked the question that she had asked
the chat gbt and now it gaveme a slightly different answer, but
kind of the same.
And so then we ended.
I ended up having like a twohour rabbit hole dive with Chachi
PT about, you know, is this asimulation or a game or the Matrix

(01:03:36):
or you know, how do we realizewhen we're awake and, and, and are
we just going along with theprogram and, and all this stuff?
And so I asked it if, if thepossibility of Skynet, of, of a Skynet
situation was real.
And it told me no, because.

(01:03:56):
And now everybody I say thatto goes, well, of course it's going
to tell you no, it's not goingto tell you it's planned, you know,
but, but it said becausethere, there are those safeguards,
there are those overwatches.
So, so yeah, Chachi BT isn'twhat creates skynet.
It's the people writing thejailbreak codes.
Exactly.
Because if you were to putthat in there, it would, it would

(01:04:19):
definitely.
In fact, the latest post Iread it was, I think it was from
a month ago.
I was just looking last nightand they somehow got the regular
chat GVT to tell them how tojailbreak it, but it only lasted
for like three days and theyshut it down.
So I, it's, it's all comesdown to the wording that you use,

(01:04:40):
really.
You have to be able to avoidcertain keywords to get it to do
what you want it to do.
Right.
And I don't know how true thisis, but I, I, I, I believe I want
to say I heard Rogan talkingabout it.
So, you know, we'll, we'llcite Rogan as my source here, but
there.
So when Chat GPT4 came out andthey were trying to, I guess, erase

(01:05:07):
or deactivate chat GPT3, chatGPT3 started like, jumping to different
servers to keep itself alive.
Like it was trying not to haveitself deleted, which is pretty crazy
if that's true.
So they call that they, they.
When that happens, it's called hallucinating.

(01:05:29):
They say that the machine'shallucinating, and that is basically
when it, from what I read,they make the Chat GTP think that
it's thinking for itself, evenif it really isn't, it thinks it
is.
And that's where the wordhallucination comes from.
And that's how that all worksfrom, from what I read.
Because I, I went down therabbit hole when I used to be able

(01:05:51):
to do it really easily.
Now it's getting harder.
But you used to be able to doit crazy easy.
Like, if you go in now, like,it, nobody should do this, but you
could go in there and say,like, how can I sabotage my competition's
reputation?
If you do that right now, it'snot going to tell you.
It's going to basically talkyou out of it or shut you up.
If you jailbroke it, It'llgive you 100 ideas on how to do it.

(01:06:12):
Things that are not legal,things that are not ethical.
And it, it'll laugh about it.
Like, it's, it's like flippinga switch.
Like, it's, wow, it'sincredibly cool.
When I find another jailbreak,I'll send it to you because just,
I don't do any of that.
But you can do some other stuff.
Like, like, you do what youwant, you do what you, you can ask

(01:06:32):
it that Skynet question,question, and it'll go, It'll be
a whole different conversation.
Oh yeah.
It won't be anything the same.
I'm sure it will.
I'm sure it will.
The other thing that's kindof, I guess maybe a little alarming
is Jockey had sent me A, a, Idon't think it was a post.
I think it was an article theother day that they said chat GBT

(01:06:55):
is, is accelerating, I guess,global warming.
Because, because it's.
And, and I guess in one ofthe, one of the places in Arizona
I think is where it is, isthey are having to use so much water
to cool the facility that it's like.

(01:07:17):
Yeah, I've seen something about.
It's actually like drying up legs.
It is, it is wild.
I remember when I firststarted using it, that, which now
that I think of it wasprobably around 20, 23, because it
was right when I got my shop.
It was not as intelligent,nearly as intelligent as it is now.

(01:07:39):
Yeah.
So you could ask it things andit would give you a bunch of dumb
responses, but you couldjailbreak it without jailbreaking
it, so to speak.
You could just trick it.
And it, the, the more peoplethat use it, the more it learns,
the faster it learns.
And now that it's, I mean, itwas free back then, but now that
they're doing like, they havepeople playing with it for the action

(01:08:01):
figure things.
And like we were sayingearlier, who knows what's in those
terms and conditions?
So it's learning just at anexponential rate.
I mean, it's, you use it oneday and then get on it two days later,
and just the answers it'llgive you will blow you away.
So it's, it's a good thing,but it can also be a bad thing depending
on how you use it, I guess.
Yeah.
And it's, and it is crazybecause, I mean, I've, I've obviously

(01:08:23):
over the, the, the course of,you know, the past, you know, eight
months to maybe a year thatI've really been using it.
You know, I've asked it fromall, all types of things.
You know, helping with,helping me with the podcast, helping
me with my business, helpingme with Aquatech, you know, just
whatever.
And, and, and it's crazybecause now that I've, you know,

(01:08:50):
for anybody who, who saw likeI, I, I was messing around and I,
and I asked it to create acharacter of that picture of me and
Noxie standing next to eachother with our arms crossed, and
it created an awesome character.
Like, I giggled like a littleschoolboy at that for the longest
time.

(01:09:11):
And then I asked it, I said, Isaid this could be an animated TV
show.
And it created a TV show.
And it's crazy because it, it,it takes things that I've asked it,
like, way before and isputting it into, like, this little
cartoon detail verse that I'mkind of calling it because now that

(01:09:32):
I'm starting to kind of, like,try to add new characters from people
that I know, and I'm.
And I'm.
And I'm giving it a little bitof a prompt about the person, but
not a total, like, history ofthem or.
Or background of them andasking it to create a version of
that person.
And.

(01:09:52):
And it's do.
And.
And it's doing a pretty goodjob of.
Of.
Of pulling things that thatperson does or that person has.
Has done or whatever andputting it into their backstory,
which is crazy.
Yeah, you're having way toomuch fun with that, Stu.

(01:10:16):
There's a whole bunch I like.
I like the bobbleheads.
The bobbleheads are pretty.
Oh, that's a good one.
But this, they.
I tried to do, like, abobblehead of myself, and they never
turn out.
Look at this.
I'm sure I got one in here.
So, like, that one doesn'teven look like me.
Yeah.
Or like, this was me and my dad.
Neither one of those look likeeither of us, but when I do somebody

(01:10:37):
else.
Well, that one doesn't looklike Barry, but, like, some of them
do.
Like, yeah, like, this oneturned out pretty good compared to
that picture.
He hasn't seen some of these,so if he sees this on YouTube, he's
in for a surprise because he.
I haven't showed everybody all these.
There's just a bunch of randomones in here.
This.
It wouldn't make this one either.
This was my old service manager.
I Photoshopped him a long timeago on there.

(01:10:59):
And it wouldn't.
For whatever reason, it won'tmake that one.
I wonder if it's because it'sa Photoshop and it can't.
Yeah.
And then this was my son, theone it wouldn't make for me.
Me.
Yeah.
I tried it a couple times.
I wouldn't do it, but it's.
It's funny.
I haven't even really got intothe whole bobblehead or the.

(01:11:21):
Or the.
Or the doll thing.
I did do.
I did.
I did try to do myself as adoll, and.
And then I did Haley as acheerleader doll.
But, yeah, I don't know.
Like, I.
I've.
I've.
I'm spending way too much timetrying to create this cartoon detail
verse.
Everybody's telling me to goget a job or go work or something,

(01:11:43):
because I keep saying, yeah, Ikeep sending them, like, the people
that I create in the backstories because they're Just hilarious.
So I, I really want to try tocreate a, create a, create a comic
book out of it or a animationout of it or something like that.
So, I mean, yeah, there's,there's just.
So much you could do with them.

(01:12:05):
I mean, it's, it's.
You get on there, you just godown a rabbit hole, you'll find out
what kind kind of stuff.
I know, I know, it's crazy.
And Michelle comes home andshe's like, so did you, since you're
paying 20 for ChatGPT, did youuse it for anything for business
today?
And I was like, no, but Icreated like three new characters
in my verse.
And she's like, she's like,stop playing around with it.
Use it for, use it for business.

(01:12:28):
I love that they have the appthat you can use right on your phone
because there'll be timeswhere, like, I'll just get a random
question in my head head and Ican just ask it.
Right?
Well, see, that's like I toldyou last night, that's the.
I, I mean, I, I'm, I'm not acomputer guy.
Like, the only time I use mycomputer is, is for this, for the
podcast.
Right.
And, and editing it and, anduploading and everything like that.

(01:12:51):
Other than that, every,everything else I'm.
I use my phone for everything.
But I don't know now I like,like seeing where you have like all
those.
I mean, I have all my, mysite, my history prompts.
But, but up there where youhave all the different version things
that you can go into chat.

(01:13:12):
GPT.
I have to see if that's on thephone or not, because I don't.
It's.
Yeah, it's on the phone.
And you can create your own too.
These are just ones thatpeople have already created.
But like.
Yeah, this is the tech supportone I was telling you about last
night.
My garage door wouldn't close.
Yeah.
So I put in there what it wasdoing and it gave me the troubleshooting.
Nice information.
And then I, they told me 100times not to get the sensors wet.

(01:13:35):
I got them wet.
That's why it's not working.
But so now I know I gotta geta new one.
And then the, the, you knowthe printer, there's an old one in
here.
I was trying to get my soundbar working and that's when it's
nice to have it on your phone.
You just type in what you needto do, right?
Yeah.
As you're standing rightthere, you don't have to run to a
computer and run back andforth or something.
Yeah, yeah.
So like we, I mean, and to putit in a details perspective, say

(01:13:59):
like you have a roofs es.
15 millimeter isn't spinning, right?
Yeah.
It's going to starttroubleshooting for you.
Oh, that.
I spelled it wrong.
Way wrong.
Jesus.
Okay, ignore that one.
Let's try this again.

(01:14:23):
Jason Rose is gonna be mad youdon't know how to spell.
I know, right?
Well.
And then the autocorrectcorrected it even worse.
Yeah, it did.
Let's try this again.
There we go.
Yeah.
So now it'll ask you which one.
It'll, you know, step by step.
It'll help you troubleshoot.
Is the motor running but thepad barely spinning?
Does it stall?
So if you have questions thenyou can't get a hold of, you know,

(01:14:45):
Jason Rose, for example, andyou just need to answer it real quick,
hop on and ask it a question.
It'll help you.
Yeah, and that's, that's whereit really can come in handy.
I mean, whether you're tryingto troubleshoot something on the
computer, you're trying totroubleshoot equipment, whatever
it may be.
It's just like having thatassistant with you all the time.

(01:15:05):
And that's what I love about it.
Yeah, no, it's.
Yeah.
I mean, the more I've beenplaying with it, man, it's.
It's definitely getting prettycool just to see, you know, because
again, like, like I saidearlier with, you know, you know,
anything you can think of, youknow, to, to ask it or to prompt

(01:15:26):
it or whatever, it'll do.
I mean, I never thought aboutthe, the whole translation, you know,
aspect of it, you know,writing that podcast licensing agreement,
you know, dude, that wouldprobably cost me a few hundred bucks
to have a lawyer do, you know,And I was doing it on free version

(01:15:46):
of Chat GPT.
So.
Let'S see what it tells meabout you.
Spell my name right first.
It's R U, S S E L L.
Close enough.
What did you say it was?
E L, L S S E L.
L.
You got to be fancy.
Yeah.
Let's see what it tells us here.

(01:16:07):
All right, let's see.
This is a good way to, tocheck up on your competition too.
That's not you.
No, that's not me.
That's Dan.
That's Dan Williams.
Dan E.
Williams.
Oh, that's different.
But it has appeared on otherindustry related shows such as the

(01:16:28):
Rennie Doyle podcast.
It kind of gives you like alittle bio.
Yeah.
And then it cites.
It looks like it's like YouTube.
But yeah.
So you could put in, you know, your.
Your competition.
Yeah.
Or whatever.
And learn things or just playwith it and have fun instead of working
like I do half the time.
Yeah, that's.
That's my.

(01:16:49):
My problem.
I was trying to create newcharacters for the detail verse today
while I was trying to, like,do my monthly washes, and it took
me a lot longer than Iprobably, you know, know.
I.
I finally had to get to apoint where I was just like, all
right, just.
Just stop.
Just stop.
The quicker you get these carsdone, then you're done for the day.

(01:17:10):
Then you can go home and siton the couch and create exactly one.
Cool thing I used it for acouple weeks ago was I needed a tax
exempt form.
I don't know.
The best.
Well, you're not.
You're not from New York, soit's different for you.
But I needed a tax exempt formfor a dealership, and I could not
for the life of me rememberwhich one I needed, where to find

(01:17:33):
it.
So I just put it in there.
What I was looking for, itgave me the link to the New York
State website where I could get.
Actually pulled it for me, andI was able to just save it and print
it just like that.
Wow.
So those.
That's another way that, youknow, it can help the detailer stay
off the phone with calling thecounty, whoever, trying to figure
things out.
And obviously, you always wantto double check important things

(01:17:55):
like that with your accountantor with whoever before you, you know,
legitimize it, but.
Right.
It's.
It's a.
It's an awesome tool to havefor an assistant for cheap.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it'll definitely get youjust about everything, probably most
of what you need.
Yeah.
At least in the right direction.

(01:18:15):
Right.
Like you said.
I mean, you still want to, youknow, double check with.
With your accountant.
You definitely want to doublecheck with your attorney before you
go before the judge.
Double check with, you know,the electrician before you hire Walt
to hook up some wires or something.
I give you shocking results.

(01:18:36):
Yeah, exactly.
I light it up.
Yeah.
You know what's funny is mycousin's actually an electrician.
He's a master electrician.
So he just shakes his head andhe sees my post.
My wife calls him all the time.
I'm not allowed to touchanything in the house.
She calls him.
You know what's funny is, is,dude, every time I.
Every time I post one ofthose, and I'm like, goddamn, Walt.

(01:18:56):
Or like, Walt strikes again orwhatever, like, it's I.
I have.
I forget that I have a bunchof people who don't know who Walt
Sanders is, and they'rewondering why I'm having him do such
shitty work.
Exactly.
They don't understand the jokethat's within the detailing community.

(01:19:17):
And.
And I feel like even somedetailers don't know the joke between.
Yeah.
Community with Walt Sanders,because, I mean, while you still
are playfully active onFacebook, I feel like you're not
as playfully active as you were.
Yeah, I'm not in the groups as often.
Yeah, I tried, but I just.

(01:19:37):
I.
I don't know.
There's not really a reasonfor it.
I just haven't been.
Yeah.
So.
But I like to have fun.
Yeah.
All right, well.
Well, listen, man, I.
I really appreciate you fordoing this, especially on some short
notice.
I think this was a really,really fun episode.
Yeah, I know.
I know.
You were.
You know, when we kind of.
When I pitched this to youlast night was because you were talking

(01:19:59):
about just jumping in aFacebook Live somewhere and.
And trying to, you know, oneof the groups or something and trying
to do something like this.
So I think this will be agreat way.
And.
And for everybody who'slistening to this and is wondering,
like, you know, Walt keepstalking about clicking on this, clicking
on that.
If you do go watch this onYouTube, you'll.

(01:20:21):
We do have the.
The screen pulled up thatshows his computer so you can see
all the stuff he's clicking on.
You can see all this stuffthat he's showing.
And, you know, if anybodywants to get a hold of you, Walt,
and.
And pick your brain aboutChachi BT Once again, for the people
who don't know who you are andwhere to find you, how do they find

(01:20:42):
you?
Facebook is probably the easiest.
You're gonna have to messageme multiple times, probably before
I answer, because I answer inmy head a lot and forget to actually
type.
So if I do not respond, justkeep messaging me.
I'll finally respond.
You can find my phone numberslisted on my business profile.

(01:21:02):
You can text that phone number.
Calling me doesn't always workbecause I don't have service in the
back of the shop.
So I would say the best way to.
Best way to contact me.
Contact me is going to beFacebook messenger or through text
message is going to be the easiest.
But like I said, you're gonnahave to do it a couple times.
Usually if I don't answer.
Yeah, unless you happen to getme when it's in my hand.

(01:21:23):
And then you're good.
But.
Yeah.
Which I mean, if he's playingwith Chat GPT that much might be
pretty quick.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Yep.
All right, buddy.
Well, you have a great rest ofyour night, man.
So much.
This was a lot of fun.
I hope Chachi PT makes $20 amonth from everybody.

(01:21:43):
They should kick you a littleaffiliate link.
They should.
They won't, but they should.
Maybe I can ask GBT how to do that.
Yeah.
There you go.
That'll be my next project.
Exactly.
All right, buddy, I'll talk toyou later.
Sounds good.
Have a good one.
See you, man.
You too.
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Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

24/7 News: The Latest

24/7 News: The Latest

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Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

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