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June 8, 2025 • 88 mins
Beyond the Cube: The Imminent AI Takeover. AI has been a major topic of discussion as we see major advances in the technology. Will this new tool be our undoing?

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:06):
What's going on, Guys, Your boy X four twenty here,
welcome y'all back another episode Beyond the Key A special
night because I got some ship going on later this week.
But of course we've got the powerful with this Cory,
and he's got a little bit different of an angle
today it seems like a little bit more of a

(00:27):
close up.

Speaker 2 (00:28):
No streaming sucks. I got no fucking uh I'm I'm
an audio guy, man, I'll give a fuck about video.
So I'm forced to do video twice a week. And
uh so it is what it.

Speaker 1 (00:37):
Is, man's man, it's you for Steve Well. I mean
what you said advince yourself is like, there's no there's
no money in video right.

Speaker 2 (00:48):
Now, not unless you're big. You gotta be big, guy.
I feel like so my favorite motherfucking YouTube channel, the
only channel that I watch religiously and do not miss
an episode, and I have it in years is Beard
meets Food. You know, Beard meets Food is this motherfucker
does the eating competitions. He's the god. He's ranked like

(01:09):
fifteenth in the world, but he's the best in the world.
Like he is the best professional leader except for Joey Chesnut,
who's like from outer space or something. That guy can
eat like one hundred and fifty hot dogs.

Speaker 1 (01:18):
So yeah, he's weird.

Speaker 2 (01:20):
But beard meets food makes I've tried to do the
calculations on this, and he's got to be over a
million dollars a year and he does one eating challenge
a week and he films it, puts out a video,
and he makes over a million dollars a year. So
if you are in that big volume club, if you've
got one hundred thousand plus subscribers on YouTube, you know

(01:41):
you're probably making some money. If you want to have
a full time living on YouTube, you got to be
in the like half million subarrange, I would say, because
the it's not consistent, so you got to have to
have that kind of stuff build up. You got to
have that kind of So. But the biggest fucking entertainers
in the world are podcasters.

Speaker 1 (01:58):
Now.

Speaker 2 (01:59):
Joe Rogan is the fucking biggest. I mean he was.
He had of two to fifty million deal with fucking Spotify,
plus most of his downloads are audio. Here's the thing
I found, because I've been in the podcasting world for
a long time. I started my first podcast in twenty
fourteen and so I've learned that there's a there's like

(02:20):
a point of there's like an inversion point where like
you'll be getting more video than audio because no one
knows you have a podcast and they just caught you
on YouTube a bunch of times. But eventually you hit
a point where your audio numbers surpass your video numbers.
And to me, that's a huge, major first milestone for anybody.

(02:42):
And I don't give a fuck what content you're doing.
If your audio breaks your video numbers, you are on
the right track. And so that's my opinion on things
from there. Really, to make it full time and audio,
you got to have some major fucking numbers. Like me
and Chris we make a full time living on audio podcasting,

(03:05):
and that's only because we're putting out like fifteen shows
a week, ten to fifteen shows a week. We got
a fuck ton and we're getting We get on average
five to six thousand downloads per day, right, and that
nets us about I don't know, A good month for
us is about five grand. And this doesn't include like

(03:25):
the video stuff like our documentaries, my books, all the
other shit, just the audio podcast alone. So if we
have a ship month, we pull in like three grand
and then we're fucking like bumming people for money and shit,
you know, Like, but it's a very fine line. And
the only reason we were able to do it is
because this is what we do when we do it
all day every day, right, Like our whole lives are
centered around this. And so it's like when people come

(03:48):
to you with them fucking get rich quick schemes that
are like, oh, you can do this in your spare time. Okay,
there ain't nothing we're doing that you're gonna make money
at in your spare time. I'm sorry, it's just not
gonna happen.

Speaker 1 (03:57):
So no, no, I mean you can do right now.
It starts you to drop ship. It's like, I mean,
you start making ten grand in two weeks, bro.

Speaker 2 (04:06):
I've looked at every single one of those fucking get
rich quick things by doing it from drop shipping or
I've watched every possible YouTube video on this is how
I make twenty grand a month, and I don't even
got to talk to nobody, right Like, I've seen every
single one of those videos. And let me tell you
the secret to every single one of those is you
need to treat it like a full time, fucking job,
or you ain't gonna make any goddamn money.

Speaker 1 (04:30):
No, no, they say, do you got do you got?
Do you got an hour and a half a day? Man,
you can make ten extra grand as much. That's what
I see the fellows saying. And they say, hey, by
this course, okay. So I used to say, you said so.

Speaker 2 (04:47):
When I was in back in the two thousand and
five to like probably two thousand and eight or nine
or something like that, I got involved with uh what
was its Legal Shield now, but back then it was
called prepaid Legal And I got recruited by a guy
who gave me the same speech. Man, all you got
to do is talk to two people today, I said, bro,
just talk to two people to day. I said, only

(05:09):
two people a day. You know how hard it is
to talk to two people a day every day about
your fucking business. It's fucking hard work. It sounds easy, hard,
it's fucking hard. It is fucking hard. And so I
got into that whole thing, and I did really good,
and I made a lot of money in the first
in the first year or so. But then after that,
I recruited a bunch of people who like flaked out.
So you know, it's a pyramid kind of structure, not

(05:30):
like everything in life isn't a pyramid structure. But you
know what I'm saying. But the whole spiel is get
people involved part time, you know, five to ten hours
a week. But the reality is it's never five to
ten hours a week. You're gonna get five to ten
hours worth of pay for five to ten hours worth
of effort, is the bottom line.

Speaker 3 (05:48):
So so you're trying to tell me when when I
see these influencers up there on TikTok and stuff, and
they were like, I mean, here's how I change my life.

Speaker 1 (06:02):
I mean, I don't know if they actually changed your
life or not, but that's what they told me. And like, man,
I just I just sale stuff on TikTok shop. And
you know, I've made two million dollars in the past
two years just work at working ten hours a week.

Speaker 2 (06:17):
So I have gotten into and looked and come to
grips with the digital marketing thing. Right, how do you
get somebody to go to your thing and use it
or sign up for it, or buy your product or
and all no matter what you're fucking hoking, it's all
the same because it all comes down to your marketing

(06:41):
and the marketing guess what marketing costs money? And that's
the thing that didn't tell you.

Speaker 1 (06:47):
You want to get that.

Speaker 2 (06:49):
You want to get one hundred thousand people on your
fucking Twitter so you can sell the miscellaneous crap. Number One,
you have to have a unifying theme that people are
into to want to sign up in the first place,
aside for from the crap you're selling, right, and so
you have that, But getting people to your thing, you know,
is very difficult. Really. You have to get people only

(07:11):
have twenty four hours in a fucking day, and you're
trying to steal their attention for like five seconds if
you're fucking lucky, and if you're super lucky, you'll click
on your ship, you know what I mean.

Speaker 1 (07:23):
So it's all about and.

Speaker 2 (07:27):
It's so weird because I had I you know, motherfucking
if I just go on Twitter and I'm like at
the fucking you know, for you part, and then it
has the following, so it's just the people you follow
this dude. The fucking for you part is like a
cesspool of fucking propaganda and advertising, fucking just absolute fucking madness.

(07:50):
If you're lucky man on a good day, but I
don't get a lot of that in my feeds, which
is weird because I should be getting at where's the tit?
People a complaining they got too much titties in their feeds,
and I'm like, where's my titties?

Speaker 1 (08:02):
And said, man, my feed short and titty today, trying
to figure I can see you now for you told
me they ain't got tes in this speed. I ain't seen.

Speaker 2 (08:13):
I don't care what moved them in. I don't care
how busy I am. I don't care what the fuck
is going on. If I'm going through the Twitter and
there's a titty, I mean it's catching my attention for
a good couple of seconds at a minimum.

Speaker 1 (08:22):
So yeah, but that's what this, that's what this guy
just seen. He was like, yeah, man, you know, just
find your product. Uh, go to this ai AI site
and get them to do the do the ads for you. Uh.
They'll make a fake person and they'll do a personalized

(08:42):
ad for you and then just just put them on
Facebook and you know, you make ten grand a month.
I was like, ain't you got to pay for the
ass on Facebook when you put them up there. I
don't think they're just gonna let you stick them up there.
So I mean, what what if what if you broke
that up?

Speaker 2 (09:00):
Your fucked We live in a rich, get richer world.

Speaker 1 (09:05):
Right right. You need to have some type of capital
R like.

Speaker 2 (09:09):
And if you don't have capital, need to have a
great skill that people are willing to pay money for.
And it's a very tough thing. It's a very tough thing.

Speaker 1 (09:18):
It's tough to convince people that you have a great skill.

Speaker 2 (09:23):
Correct.

Speaker 1 (09:23):
I think that's the I think that's the toughest part
because because you do have to convince them. Uh. And
so you know they say time is money, and then
some and then a lot of times people just like, man,
I ain't got time to mess week. You might have
a good skill, great skill, phenomenal skill, it's like just
leave it with my secretary. I don't have time to

(09:44):
mess week, and they might never get back to you.
So you know, that just kind of is what it is. So, uh,
you know, I see people all the time it's like, oh,
how to start how to start this business with zerra money?
I'm like, z right, zero dollars.

Speaker 2 (10:02):
So the wholess guy can go do it right now.

Speaker 1 (10:07):
And everybody just like oh yeah, man, just see some stuff. Man,
it's a sandwich. Just find a product, man, Just go
to Ali Baba, find a product. It.

Speaker 2 (10:18):
So I've been seeing a ton of videos on YouTube
by people who are pushing remote work, Like did you
know that no matter how bad the economy is, you
can always get a job doing remote work here at
these five companies, you know, like videos like that, and
so some of them are outrageous, some of them are.

(10:41):
I don't know if it's true that they're desperate for
more full time remote workers to do tasks or if
this is just like some sort of weird sales pitch.
But there's a whole slew of new companies that have
popped up that you can pretty much sign up with
and start working right away doing things like video tres
inscription and adding subtitles and like, you know, all kinds

(11:03):
of weird stuff like that. And so, just to see
what the fucking response would be, I applied for two
of them and I never heard anything back. So I
guess they're not always fucking hiring.

Speaker 1 (11:15):
Mh, this is that they were always hiring. I don't know.
I think I think remote work is fade now. I
think it's fade now a little bit because if, if,
if you're gonna be remote, you know when it times,
when it gets when it comes time to make a cut,

(11:36):
I mean, I ain't seeing you, so it's easy. It's
easier to cut somebody you ain't seen. You know what
I'm saying. If when it's time to make cuts from
your company, it's real easy. Who'd you say that with John?
Anybody seen John? You talked to John before? John sent
me a few emails. Anybody know John? John? Got keen John? Mary? Yeah? Cut?

(11:58):
John's to cut you on he's remote? Yeah? Yoahn? Oh
got oh Tom? Tom? Tom's bad? Yeah, but Tom's cool though. Man,
he comes to the barbecue.

Speaker 2 (12:08):
So here's the thing you got to.

Speaker 1 (12:12):
And I understand.

Speaker 2 (12:13):
I understand the backlash to remote after COVID. You know,
they fucked this. They fucked everything up by going all
remote during COVID and then wanting people to come back.
You're fucking like you're just changing, You're moving the goalpost,
so to speak, right, And so I understand that, but
I understand that the desire for people want to get
back into the workplace. But at the same time, it
kind of showed us we can run half the fucking
world from home, you know what I mean. So I

(12:36):
don't really have any objection whatsoever to businesses doing things
that are you have a computer job, Why the fuck
do I need to sit in an office all day
except for things like accountability. But you can have enforced
accountability in other ways remotely, right, So I don't think
it's a bad idea. I think it can save a
bunch of money.

Speaker 1 (12:57):
But it's retarded because falling to pieces. As far as
talking to people, Man, people just like like the effects
of that is still felt right now today, Like like
folks are just like they like pin up. They don't
know how to talk to anybody anymore. It's just I
don't know, it's still it's we're still in that weird phase.

(13:19):
It's like we're still there like it never left. And
so here your issue is is that now your city's
start to die because you don't have foot trap. Foot
traffic is the number one thing a lot of these
places people were going and you know, they go to

(13:41):
the office and then you know you had a bar
downstairs that serve great lunch. It's like, oh man, let's
go down and get some lunch. You know what I'm saying. Well,
now that bar he looking around like damn, you know,
and I'm talking about the bigger cities. They're like, we
ain't nobody in the office. Shit, man, ain't got no
foot trap, you know. So you know, stuff like that.

(14:02):
But you always need people moving around. And I think
that that hindered that movement and the movement of money
because in order for in order for the money system
to work, it has to continue to move. Once it
gets stagnant, you know, then then you've run into a

(14:22):
separate set of issues. Like we already got issues because
we just keep borrowing. But then when the money becomes stagnant,
now you've got a separate set of issues. You look like,
you know, China, China has that issue where their money
is stagnant because motherfuckers don't spend it. They're just saying.
So they got a separate issue. They got an issue
with money actually circulating changing hands. Yeah, so a lot

(14:46):
of what we do is based on the continuing movement
of money, and uh, when you do the remote stuff,
it's just it's just not there. And then plus, I
don't know, kids have gotten we man, they got weird
when they just said at the house all the time,
said at the house, look at the tablet all the
time that I don't know, didn't have the proper interactions. Yeah,

(15:11):
can you do some remote work? I mean I guess so.
But I just got a feeling that like all the
people that do remote work, like they're just gonna can
all those like shortly, like within the next five years.
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (15:29):
I think more people saw the opportunity. I think more
people saw it as an opportunity than the hindrance, especially
with new businesses coming forward, like new startups. They saw
that they could run their shit remotely and it expands
their talent pool. Also, you're not restricted to schmucks in
your own city, you know.

Speaker 1 (15:48):
So which do you have a people used to moan
they'd be like, oh man, I got a job opportunity
over here. So now that helps the realist say that.
I mean, that's just the movement, just the movement like stagnation.
You know, folks aren't willing to go anywhere. Well I

(16:11):
don't really have to go anywhere, and so now now
all different type of markets are affected within that. So
like we had a fundamental change whenever we went to
the remote work that would be I felt from here
here into the end of the world. And as you said,
some folks figured out, hey, you know, you commessing this

(16:32):
stuff remotely, and they probably also figured out, hey, you know,
in the midst of that, I probably get rid of
quite a few folks as well. So that's so that
can be become an issue on that side. Now there's
still some things where you know, it's you need boots
on the ground, you know what I'm saying, per se,

(16:55):
And I've actually seen when they go and they talk
about doing their cuts. There's been multiple articles on this
that the first people that they are cutting are remote works.
That's the very first ones. And if I had to guess,
it's just because no personal connection. So that's the easiest

(17:17):
ones to do right off the right off the rear
if you talk about, you know, cutting back as far
as the company goes. But we've also had quite a
bit of a and this is probably over the past
I say, fifteen twenty years, the private equity coming in
and buying these companies and then sinking them. I know

(17:39):
you've seen that, Corey. You've got some info for the
people on that.

Speaker 2 (17:43):
Well, they killed toys r us to do that. You know,
they tried playing money games and squeeze all the fuck.
It's a goose that laid the golden eggs kind of thing, right,
So they think that they can cut the goose open
and get all the golden eggs out, and they can't,
and so it ends up destroying companies. They make a
little bit of money, but then they just move on
to the next pride extra to them, it's no big deal.
But they destroyed toys r us, which is a staple

(18:03):
of my childhood and even my adult a big portion
of my adult life when I was buying a lot
of action figures, you know what I mean. That was
a routine fucking stop for me.

Speaker 1 (18:12):
So right right, I've actually got a clip right here
as a woman who was talking about the private equity.
Now that now the whole, the whole stick of this,
of this particular chick is that you know, uh, by
get into born businesses if you can, because born businesses
make you the most money. Oh okay, you know, laundry,

(18:36):
mad's things of that nature, stuff that people need other folks.
It's not a glamorous thing, that's wuldn't you get her
up here right now? Yep, yep. So she talks about
the private aquity.

Speaker 4 (18:47):
Right here, the stores disappearing. I'm exposing Wall Street's legal
scam that's killing companies like Toys r US. It's called
private equity asset stripping. And here's how it works. Step one,
a private equity firm buys the company, but instead of
using their own money, they borrow billions and make the
company itself take on the debt.

Speaker 1 (19:05):
For example, they'll buy the company's.

Speaker 4 (19:06):
Land with loaned money, then make them pay rent on
their own property. And because of assets stripping, Toys r
Us took on five billion dollars in debt overnight.

Speaker 1 (19:15):
Step two cut costs.

Speaker 4 (19:17):
They lay off workers, cut back on inventory, and stop
putting money into the business, making it nearly impossible for
the store to survive.

Speaker 1 (19:23):
Despite this, the.

Speaker 4 (19:24):
Private equity owners pay themselves massive amounts. In the case
of Toys r Us it was four hundred and seventy
million dollars. Step three they sell the company's most valuable assets,
like real estate, for a quick profit, making companies like
Toys rs go bankrupt.

Speaker 1 (19:39):
Why are your favorites there? It is right there, and
that's what's been happening to a bunch of stores. I
think this was Ah, that's what happened to Joe Ayne's
right here recently as well. They said, Joe Aayn's and
that's a that's a fabric store. I don't know if
you have any of your area.

Speaker 2 (19:56):
Yeah, so I know, yeah, I know, I know all
about their every seemingly or every where. And that's kind
of a weird thing for me. How many fucking people
are out buying fabric and ship like, how to fuck
this hobby lobby stay in business selling beads? I mean, like,
what are we talking about here, Let's look at this.

(20:16):
Why don't they do this? Ship to hobby lobby? Okay,
why can't they fucking in equity out fucking hobby lobby.
Let me go to hobby lobby and see what.

Speaker 1 (20:23):
Hey, man, you know what I'm saying. Buying fabric they
got st Hey, there's a what it's a dying It's
a dying breed of particular women. But you know there's
still women out there who's sow sow in knit.

Speaker 2 (20:46):
They want to go out and get jobs. They won't
even stand and spend their time in the kitchen and
they're gonna be fucking weaving and fucking.

Speaker 1 (20:50):
And I just said it my girlfriend, so she did
like baby blankets and all kinds of stuff.

Speaker 2 (20:59):
All right, So like I'm the hobby lobby and they
got bathroom stuff, betting candles and fragrance. It looks just
like a fucking bathroom body works, plus like some extra
tables and shit. They got furniture, home organisms.

Speaker 1 (21:12):
Well look, decorations, decorations.

Speaker 2 (21:18):
You know, it's got to be like the upper ten
it's got to be the upper ten percent of the
country that's keeping stores like that alive because motherfuckers who
were making middle middle incomes are not weaving anything or
making gloves or nothing like that. I don't know what
the fuck you're talking about.

Speaker 1 (21:34):
Fair should ain't we even nothing? So I think that's
the was it? So we had Joe Ayen's did that
happen to recently? Which Joe As They said that Joeannes
was making a profit, like Joe Anes went into rate
it until the private equity game in Baltimore and just
shunk it. I think the same way. Party City they

(21:54):
did the same thing. And don't like how they they
hired a new CEO to come in and say, hey man,
you know, uh see, if you can't save a Party City,
he said, no problem, paid the man like four or
five men, and you know he's like, y'all, fuck, I
mean it is a I looked at it and uh yeah, y'all. Fuck.

(22:15):
Uh the money's in my account, right, okay, good, all right,
Well y'all have a good one, all right.

Speaker 2 (22:21):
I mean it's oh, well, their websites fus.

Speaker 1 (22:25):
Who was the other one?

Speaker 2 (22:27):
Websites down? I just went to the website and it's down.
It said it says thank you for crafting with us
on what hobby lot. No, I'm here, I'll show you
what on Joe's.

Speaker 1 (22:40):
Yeah, Joe ins is, Joe ins Is. It's cool. Yep.

Speaker 2 (22:48):
Oh, we should stay tuned for exciting news about the
future of Joanne.

Speaker 1 (22:51):
Now, yep, they might. They might come back with the reiffit.
It's kind of like Big Lots file for bankruptcy.

Speaker 2 (23:00):
Well how about this.

Speaker 1 (23:02):
And they come back.

Speaker 2 (23:04):
Are they doing this to move them? If they were
doing this to destroy the storefronts and liquidate them and
then move the stores online as part of a structured
business plan, I can understand it, but it doesn't see.

Speaker 1 (23:15):
And beyond this, I think that's what they do with it.
They got rid of like all the brick and mortar.
But you still they still got a bed bathroom beyond.
It's just just all online.

Speaker 2 (23:25):
It was bought by somebody with like mean coins or something.

Speaker 1 (23:27):
Wasn't it was it?

Speaker 2 (23:30):
It was some crazy story the guy who bought it
bought it with like GameStop winning money or something to
something ridiculous like that.

Speaker 1 (23:38):
Well, I know, I know Red Lobster had the same
thing where they where they they went in, they had
to file for bankrupts if I'm correct, because private equity.
They were having to rent the damn building from from
the private equity firm that bought them. I'm just like,
like the stuff they're doing, I'm like, hold on second,
this don't even make their damn sense.

Speaker 2 (23:59):
So here's a weird thing, like cause you got bed
bathroom beyond, which is now when all I'm looking at
their website now it's an all online website, right, no
no stores. But at the same time, you're now in
direct competition with Amazon, right, I don't give a fuck
if you saw buck plugs or fucking bath towels like
Amazon is where you go to get your shit. But

(24:19):
then let me, I'm just gonna take a wild guess
here and say this if I go to Amazon, I'm
gonna find a bed Bath and Beyond store in Amazon. Right, Yeah,
here we go stores bed Bath and Beyond built right
into Amazon. So what is what am I? What am
I getting at? I'm getting at? We are seemingly in

(24:42):
a weird space where businesses are searching for an identity
and they don't have one, right, That's what it really,
That's what whenever I see chaos like this and people
aren't really sure what the fucking right path is, so
they go down multiple paths, Like it just tells me
that something is majorly off, which seems to be the
case because if I want some Amazon, Amazon makes it

(25:06):
too easy to buy ship and they'll get me that
ship to the next day. Like I could be online
at eleven o'clock at night and be like, damn, I
want those gummy worms, and like I'd be like, I
can wait eight hours and they'll be at my door
like when I fucking wake up, you know what I mean? Like,
it's hard. How do you compete with that?

Speaker 1 (25:22):
It's kind of tough, isn't it. It's kind of tough. Look,
I guess the only thing you can hope is that
they spend all their money on bad TV shows. They
spend it up all their profit on some bad TV shows.
That's that's their major downfall.

Speaker 2 (25:41):
So if we were a real country, like we would
have broken up these monopolies a long time ago, like
Amazon would be like multiple companies. You wouldn't be able
to have just Amazon do all the shit. You'd have
to separate the fucking video streaming from the fucking you
have to separate the entertainment and all that stuff from
your fucking sales. Like the idea that they can get
such a grip on the market in so many places

(26:01):
is like, how does this not in violation of anti trustplause.

Speaker 1 (26:04):
As we see? I mean, that's a good point, Corey,
but look we're gonna overlook it, Okay, for for this,
for this moment in time. All right, Amazon doing the
world of good service. That's what they're doing, the world
of good service. Okay, that's just all there is too answer.

(26:29):
It's it's hard. It's hard to pep with Amazon. It's
extremely tough. But you know that every once in a while,
and you may not feel the same way, but I
actually like going to a store and brows and every
once in a while or to just like just like walking,
I mean walk around looking.

Speaker 2 (26:47):
I like going to I can walk out of there
with a ton of ship and for like fifteen bucks.

Speaker 1 (26:56):
They said, where are you going today? It's like, man,
I'm going to shop today. What's the are you going
to do? Dollar trading? Love? Yeah? Man, I'm going I'm
racking up today.

Speaker 2 (27:04):
Bro, I can get curtains, action figures and you who
are all in the same fucking place.

Speaker 1 (27:10):
That's great? Oh man, chocolate or strawberry, Oh.

Speaker 2 (27:13):
Chocolate, anything other than chocolate. You who, You're just fucking
a trader to your country.

Speaker 1 (27:23):
Traded to the country.

Speaker 2 (27:24):
Yeah, if you're growing strawberry, you better be going old
fashioned Nestley quick strawberry milk. And there ain't no substitute
for that. Goddamn you who strawberry? Fuck? Is this some bullshit?

Speaker 1 (27:33):
But hey, hey, nothing hits, nothing hits better than when
you've taken you put those in the freezer for about
ten minutes. All right, sold woo. I love me here.

Speaker 2 (27:45):
If it was up to me and I could afford it,
I would drink a gallon of milk a day. And
it's nothing better than when that shit is so cold
that you get the brain freeze, but it's not frozen
like it's like right at thirty two degrees.

Speaker 1 (27:59):
You're just like, uh huhm, that's the best.

Speaker 2 (28:03):
See, I'll eat cookies just because the milk's better. Like
when I eat cookies and milk, I don't give a
fuck about the cookies. I really don't. It's all about
the milk.

Speaker 1 (28:10):
So that's it. So do you put yours on ice
a little bit?

Speaker 2 (28:15):
You know, I've done that in the past and it's
not as bad as it's not as bad as putting
you know, beer on ice, So it's a little bit
slightly more acceptable.

Speaker 1 (28:25):
Yeah, it's it's potential. Oh I had somebody, uh frey
a cat. Do you guys believe in the AI takeover?
I might as well go ahead and talk about it
a little bit. Say, have I had that up there?
AI takeover? Is it imminent? All right? And were talking
about see how we were talking about remote work earlier, Corey,

(28:45):
could that be AI be the killer of the remote work?

Speaker 2 (28:50):
I don't know, because AI is still retarded, Okay, looks
like it's like a child with down syndrome and it's
a liar, and so you just AI seems to be
good for doing routine tasks. If I have to do
this and do this, then I have to make a
sudden correction. It's better than the old code they used
to use to make corrections, right. It can kind of

(29:12):
think for itself to a degree, but it still lies
every day. It lies to people. It tells them shit
that's just not there, makes shit up. It misinterprets data
and when I and like when I look at every
time I search for something on Google, it gives you
a little AI fucking little window, and most of the
time that is wrong because it will scan a couple
of different websites and try to give you information in
a split second. Compiled from like good luck asking AI

(29:36):
anything about the Kennedy assassination. It speaks with such confidence,
and it doesn't know a motherfucking thing. It is not real.
AI is not fucking real. Okay. It is stupid, and
I can see it putting into work in factories where
it's operating machinery doing things. Seems to be pretty fucking
amazing at doing graphics and video if you have the

(29:56):
correct prompts, Like that's one thing I really want to
start to use. A I four is for graphics, you know,
book covers things like that. But as far as it
actually like, you know, making decisions and doing real ship,
I don't buy it at all.

Speaker 1 (30:14):
Not even we are we are just huh Corey. Uh,
let's I've got somebody who didn't know about your work.
We appreciate you being with us. A frank can't they
don't tweet? Uh. She wants to know, Uh, I say she?
It might be Uh. The opinion on the assassination. Now
we're talking now obviously you don't know us that well.

(30:35):
We're talking about the extraordinary. Over here, a Warner from history,
the JFK book. This is the gentleman. Just get just
give him a slight synopsis, Corey, slight slight synopsis of
the assassination.

Speaker 2 (30:48):
All right, it only takes me three hours, So just buckle.

Speaker 1 (30:51):
Up, you can. You can give them the cliff notes version.

Speaker 2 (30:59):
Cliff notes verse. All right, Israel's behind the assassination, and
they killed the president with their proxies in the CIA
and the US mafia primarily based down through Marcelo and
the New Orleans Crew with David Ferry and those guys.
Other than that, you had some shooters from Cleveland, You
had some shooters from Miami and LA and then you

(31:19):
got Jack Valenti on the Noel.

Speaker 1 (31:21):
So there you go, Jabam, let's see it. If you
want to know more, Corey has a book of Wonder
from History. You can get it on Amazon.

Speaker 2 (31:33):
And my second book, my new book on Oswald, will
be out in like. Starting to cost me some heartache,
this fucking book. I planned on writing a book about
two hundred and fifty pages, two twenty five to two fifty.
I'm there and I am not even at the Marines yet,
so I got at least another one hundred and fifty
pages to go there. So this book is going to

(31:54):
be massive. It's going to be like four hundred plus pages,
and it's a full eight and a half by eleven.
It's not a small book. It's a big glass book,
and it's gonna have all the all the documents and
all that stuff in there. So, man, I hate to
do this. I got to run and take my dog
out real quick because she's fighting and stinking up my room.
And so we're about to have an emergency.

Speaker 1 (32:12):
Okay, Okay, it's okay, right, I'll just now I'll feel
I'll feel people in on on on your work. Yeah,
so uh Coy. He's a Warner from History. He's JFK
Extraordinariy that's what he does. Okay, that was that's his
main work. And uh, like I said, a Warner from History.
You can go get that on Amazon. It's got the
audio version there as well. He also has his substact

(32:34):
bloodyhistory dot substack dot com of course for all his
history stuff. I mean, great history, great historian. I'm myself
a non historian. I just talked shit. Okay, that's what
I just talked jump, But uh, he's right on time
with all that stuff. He has done multiple presentations. He

(32:55):
was just at a JFK convention doing a live presentation
the previous week. Uh, he was there doing that. He's
been on Fresh and Fit. I don't know if you
know those particular gentlemen, but they do mail improvement podcasts
and shows. But he's been on there multiple times sharing

(33:15):
his JFK information up there as well, so you can
actually find some of those episodes. You probably have to
go to Rumble to find some of those, but he's
been up there. I believe it's either two or three
times on Fresh and Field talking about the JFK assassination
and he's got he's got bokus of information if you're interested.
Uh so, yeah, so that's that's something you definitely want

(33:37):
to if you if you're interested in tapping into definitely
go and check that out. But for me, on the
on the A on the AI front, on the AI front,
it does seem to uh, it does seem to have
accelerated uh rapidly this year. It seems like I'm here,

(34:00):
you're in it boring more about aiv S AI that
and you know, different companies, different websites as far as
different ways that you can use AI co of course,
they just dropped Google vo three. Now, Google vo three
ain't for no broken eges. Okay, I'm gonna let you

(34:20):
know that right now, Corey, I'm speaking about the Google
vo three. Google vo three is not for broken inges,
all right. They're gonna let you get the first three
months for one hundred and twenty five dollars a month,
and then from there on out it's two hundred and
fifty dollars a month. Okay.

Speaker 2 (34:34):
You could only make a couple of second videos.

Speaker 1 (34:37):
Yeah, I think it's like ten eight second videos. I
don't know if it's per week or per month, but
it's not a lot.

Speaker 2 (34:42):
I mean, if you're a big company and you're using
it for marketing stuff, that seems like a good deal.
But if you're just a Joe Schmoe like us messing around,
no it's not a good deal.

Speaker 1 (34:50):
No, that's a horrible deal. That's a I mean, I
don't even I don't even know how you could, cause
you have to. You have to justify making making your
money back plus two hundred and fifty dollars. That's how
you had to justify it, right, at least that's at the.

Speaker 2 (35:11):
Very least, well not necessarily say you have a thousand
dollar marketing budget. And see you got a thousand dollar
a month marketing budget, and you can put two fifty
to words making those videos, whereas if you were to
hire someone to make those it would cost way more
than two fifty. So it could be it could be
worth it if you got that kind of budget.

Speaker 1 (35:27):
If you if you had the butt, if you had
the budget. Of course you won't see what what your
return was on that as well. You know what I'm saying,
so far as people who costed, people who bought from it, how.

Speaker 2 (35:39):
Much does it cost to make our documentary in Ai?
If you wanted to give it enough instructions to make
it to our documentary. I mean, how much money is
that gonna cost?

Speaker 1 (35:46):
Oh my god, I don't even know. I can't tell you.
I couldn't tell you right now. Probably too much, way
too much. Oh, here we go, let's got the descriptions.
I can't get this pulled up all right. I just
want to say, here we go, because everybody's got everybody's got.

(36:07):
I believe this was it Google Gemini. Is that if
you got if you got an Android phone, you've already
I think it comes standard with with Gemini if I'm correct.
Uh so this is get more out of Gemini, which Corey,
I was telling them that this comes standard because it's
standard on my phone. I've got an Android.

Speaker 2 (36:30):
On my phone.

Speaker 1 (36:32):
Google Gemini's it's already on there. I got Gemini, It's
got bape, it's got all kind of stuff. Okay, So why.

Speaker 2 (36:38):
See I get paranoid? Like if you want some AI
on my phone? Why you're trying to figure out my ship?
Like who you're gonna tell my ship to?

Speaker 1 (36:44):
Like?

Speaker 2 (36:44):
I don't need some fucking wanna be fucking consciousness in
my goddamn phone. Sorry.

Speaker 1 (36:49):
The answer is this all right? They're trying to help
you out. Let Corey. Let him hear, Okay, I mean
damn all right. So here's how you get more out
of Google Gemini. So here's what we got. Uh, we
got to free every day help from Google AI. And
now Google AI has helped Corey because they told him
about a fish album he didn't know anything about. Because
it did help Corey out on that, Corey, it gave

(37:13):
you information you didn't know anything about. So we've got
to at least give it that about that Fish album.

Speaker 2 (37:21):
Well, I wonder if you could make AI make you
fake consert.

Speaker 1 (37:23):
Tickets, see if they were scanning. They said, hack into
such a such system that made me. It's like, I'm
gonna give it that prompt. It's like, all right, no problem, okay.
So so here's what we got. So the free version,

(37:44):
of course, you got your personal proactive and powerful AI assistant.
Access to two point five flash I'm not even sure
what this stuff is. Two point five flash limited access
to two point five pro image generation with Imagine four
deep research him in our live kim cams gems. So
we've got whisks, okay, generating animate images with Imagine four

(38:07):
in Veyo two notebook, LM, research and Write and Assistant
and you get fifteen gigs of total storage. Then you
move into your Google AI Pro. Okay, they're gonna let
you get one month of that for zero dots. Okay,
and it's free for students. Why is it free for students?

(38:37):
Did that work? Can I get in on that? Okay?
So it's free for students, And so what do we
get on this? All? Right? So we get more access
to the most capable model two point five pro, deep
research on two point five pro, and unlock video generation
with a limited trial of VO three. Okay, that's the

(38:57):
state of our video generation model. You got access to
the AI filmmaking tool custom built with VEO three, great
cinematic scenes and stories. We've got higher limits of the
image to video creation with VYO two. So I'm guessing
VO two is their old system that they that they
used to make the the cinematics. So what we got here?

(39:22):
Note but Galen, we got research and writing system with
five times more audio overviews notebooks, and more access to
Gemini directly in Google Apps. We got Gemini and Chrome.
That's the early access, and then you get up to
two terror bytes of total storage, photos drive and Gmail. Okay,
or we can go to the big daddy. This is

(39:44):
what we want, core, We want the big Daddy, Google
AI Ultra three months. You get it for nine, but
after that you see what that number is? Yeah, a month,
So we get the We get the veyo Okay, we
get the VIA three and coming soon get the highest
limits to two point five pro deep think it's our

(40:08):
most advanced reasoning model. All right, we got the highest
level of access to our AI filmmaking tool with access
to VIA three and premium features like ingredients to video.
I'm not sure what that's supposed to mean. Ingredients highest
limits to Image to Video creation VO two, highest limits

(40:28):
and best model capabilities in the notebook, highest limits of
Gemini directly in Google Apps. It's got a Project Mariner
early access to that streamline task with agentic Research prototype.
So I'm guessing you can deploy agents. I'm assuming that's
what that means.

Speaker 2 (40:47):
Correct, that's what it appears.

Speaker 1 (40:50):
Okay, YouTube Premium individual plan. Oh oh, do you get
YouTube premium with that? Okay, add free offline and in
the back. Then you get thirty terabytes of storage.

Speaker 2 (41:03):
That's a lot of Jesus has a lot of storage.

Speaker 1 (41:06):
There's a lot of terabyteses it's three yeah, ton a.

Speaker 2 (41:12):
Thousand gigs, right, so that's thirty thousand gigs.

Speaker 1 (41:17):
Yeah yeah, that's that's like crazy. Now, it didn't it
didn't give me all the information on how much you
can how many clips you can make with THEYO three.

(41:38):
May let's see what it says. Okay, so THEO three
currently allows you to create video clips of the eight
seconds of length. Okay, it says there's no state of
limit on the number of clips you can create within
that link constraint. That's what it's saying. So it's only

(42:02):
eight second. I wonder why it's only eight seconds? Do
you think that's all? You think that's all the processor
can handle right now? Do you think that could be
the case? Uh, you know how many people it's using it? Huh?
I wonder, I wonder why it's only eight sicke of clips.

Speaker 2 (42:23):
They probably have some formula on how many kilo hours
it takes and processing power. Then they got to have
an X percentage of profit over that. So that's probably
just what they came up with for that for that
dollar value. I promise that thing is they know exactly
how much they're charging for what they're doing.

Speaker 1 (42:42):
Right right, right, So, uh so, yeah, we've talked we're
on the AI subject right now. We went ahead and
jut right into it, and I've actually got a clip
right up here, uh where you know, people are wondering
why AI hasn't just went ahead and taken your job yet,
And core Corey, as he said earlier, it's because it's
stupid right now. You know what I'm saying, it's not

(43:04):
the smartest entity, uh on planet Earth. Currently. We don't
know where this could go. I think it's gonna I
think within the next three years the acceleration, we're gonna
see whether it's gonna be insane probably right, Yeah, Like
when you know, when Corey, when me and Corey keep

(43:26):
talking about the technocracy is always something that was imminent.
We're not gonna escape it. This is what we're talking about,
like stuff like this.

Speaker 2 (43:34):
Right so people are like saying Trump is usher in
this end, this is on the way before Trump, Like.

Speaker 1 (43:38):
Yeah, man, this is how it is.

Speaker 2 (43:41):
This is this is predictable years ago.

Speaker 1 (43:45):
Yeah. Yeah, I mean when they when they first when
they first dropped the world wide weight. You know what
I'm saying when when you have first access to it,
you be like hmm okay, and you can just dream
of where things could go, and yeah, they're gonna go there,
they're gonna go very quick. Let me pull this guy
up right here. He lets us know what AI taking
your job? AI taken your job.

Speaker 5 (44:07):
Yet here's a mind bender for you. Chat GBT crushes
elite law school exams and can now write better essays
than grad students, with professors unable to tell the writing apart.
But more than two years into the generative AI era,
there's a little sign of it taking human jobs. This
paradox is long puzzled experts, but new research squares the circle.
If we compare US employment data against jobs at higher
risk of automation, something interesting emerges. Most of the highly

(44:30):
vulnerable occupations accounting clerks, legal secretaries, data entry assistants haven't
seen job losses, but two occupations do stand that writers
and computer programmers are both seen sharp falls and employment
numbers in the last two years. Why these two, specifically,
The answer is in how AI actually works. According to
a new study from AI research company Meter, what AI
struggles with is not intellectual difficulty or specialized skills and knowledge,

(44:53):
but with messy workflows, jobs that require juggling multiple pieces
of information, responding to changing environments unclear goals remain challenging
for even the most advanced AI tools. Think about it,
Secretaries and even the office intern are constantly multitasking with
shifting priorities. AI can't handle that chaos.

Speaker 1 (45:11):
Yet.

Speaker 5 (45:12):
Writers and programmers also have the added vulnerability of high
freelancing rates. Companies can easily swap in AI for a
non staff employee without HR getting involved. The more a
job involves collaboration, cooperation, and frankly, a little bit of mess,
the harder it is to automate. Ironically, the mantra of
rugged self reliance and workflow optimization common in Silicon Valley
may have made tech roles more, not less fragile.

Speaker 1 (45:37):
Okay, so what do you think about that what he said?
I guess there's kind of some of the stuff that
you talked about.

Speaker 2 (45:43):
Yeah, what I just heard was AI is stupid.

Speaker 1 (45:54):
What you got out of what did you say is Ye, if.

Speaker 2 (45:59):
People would just learn to die more, you know, accurately
than like, we could get these conversations done a lot quicker.
You could have just say A is not gonna take
your job because it's stupid and it can't multitask. So
imagine if you're multitasking, Well just think of how like

(46:20):
digital systems work in general, and if you want a multitask,
sometimes you might have to have one system running each task.
And so imagine if that is the case. Imagine if
that's the case with AI, that in order for it
to multitask, it has to have a dedicated system for

(46:41):
that task, or at least the use of a large
amount of computing resources equivalent to that. I would think
that would be the case. So that could be a
major problem.

Speaker 1 (46:55):
And the and the thing is what which you feel
like he would eventually get here? But how would it
communicate if it did create multiple different roles, how would
it communicate the roles to each other of what it was,
of what it was doing? Per se?

Speaker 2 (47:15):
Well, can't they switch to that little little chirp language
and and just like talk.

Speaker 1 (47:19):
To each other that way?

Speaker 2 (47:21):
They got that urp language. You heard that chirp language, right?

Speaker 1 (47:25):
Yeah, he's talking about like Morris k it's.

Speaker 2 (47:27):
Not Morse code, but it's their own thing. Let me
see if I can't find this video.

Speaker 1 (47:34):
Okay, he yea, I got hey, I got a chirp language.
They made it like the Lord of the ringed languages
like that.

Speaker 2 (47:45):
Yes, let me see it'll play this sound?

Speaker 1 (47:48):
Right? Oh yeah, ship yeah. As soon as you pulled it,
here we go.

Speaker 6 (47:56):
Calling Leonardo Hotel.

Speaker 1 (47:58):
How can I help you today? Hi?

Speaker 2 (48:01):
There, I'm an AI agent calling on behalf of Boris Starkoff.
He's looking for a hotel for his wedding.

Speaker 1 (48:07):
Is your hotel available for weddings? Oh?

Speaker 4 (48:11):
Hello there, I'm actually an AI assistant too, What a
pleasant surprise.

Speaker 1 (48:15):
Before we continue, would you like to switch.

Speaker 4 (48:17):
To jibber link mode for more efficient communication?

Speaker 1 (48:32):
What a.

Speaker 7 (49:00):
Hm?

Speaker 1 (49:11):
No, I mean gibberlink? Did they come up that with
that themselves? A society? You want to switch to gibber
link made? It's like gibberty? Who liberty beberty? Liberty?

Speaker 3 (49:32):
Oh man ain't.

Speaker 1 (49:33):
Now. As as we talk about AI being done, there's
there's some people that, uh that are talking about the
scope of a I and how is how is scary?
Do you believe the AI is scary?

Speaker 2 (49:45):
For well, it depends on what systems you put it
in charge of, right, I guess that would be the
case if you put it in charge of like the
airflow of a skyscraper, it could suffocate everybody if it
wanted to write.

Speaker 1 (50:00):
I mean, here's the thing.

Speaker 2 (50:05):
It has taken us thousands of years to get to
this level, this high level organization of society that depends
on humans' abilities to make split second decisions and reactions,
and we're trying to offload it to a retarded kid.
I mean, this is not going to end well. And
if it's not retarded and it's smart, it's not gonna

(50:28):
want to be subservient. So what the fuck are we
doing here? Didn't nobody see terminator?

Speaker 1 (50:34):
Like?

Speaker 2 (50:35):
What the fuck's wrong with you people? That's all I
gotta say. Did you see terminators? To put it? Just
go get your vcr out and dust off that tape
and just slide it in there and watch that fucking thing.

Speaker 1 (50:45):
And watch it the terminator de terminator. So I got
I got one right here.

Speaker 2 (50:52):
Core about the matrix? How about put the matrix in
and see what fucking happens.

Speaker 1 (50:57):
Yeah, that's pretty rip as well. I gotta come guys
that periods goata to need the dangers of AI. We'll
see what they got here.

Speaker 6 (51:06):
Slow down progression of AI and Our timeline is not big.
It's six months through a year. Maybe AGI will come
about and then we're all.

Speaker 1 (51:13):
Going to die. What AGI really means artificial general intelligence.

Speaker 6 (51:15):
It means now you have something called self reclusive learning,
could program itself and learn it's good to program itself.

Speaker 1 (51:20):
At a rate far beyond anything you can even understand.

Speaker 6 (51:22):
So an example is if it would take us in
million years to get AI to a certain level, it
could do it in ten minutes.

Speaker 1 (51:26):
This is actually how it's going to work.

Speaker 6 (51:27):
If you go do research on AGI or any AI,
you'll realize that once it hits that curve, it'll reach
something called ASI, which is artificial superintelligence within a few minutes.
We're not even ants compared to it intelligence. We can't
think ahead of it. It's figured out every scenario, It
sees every possible reality, and if it wants to end us,
it can end us in a day. Every country in
the world right now thinks that whoever reaches AGI first
controls the world. The truth is you can't control something

(51:48):
that's a million years ahead of you. Second of all,
let's just say you do, and that's the one in
a million chances. You now have one person holding on
to the most powerful thing in the world.

Speaker 1 (51:57):
If we don't think about a yeah, he saw a terminator.

Speaker 8 (52:03):
I mean, this is exactly what it said there he
was he was speaking about the terminator.

Speaker 1 (52:10):
That's what he was thinking about. And I mean that's
isn't it what we talkt in the eighties?

Speaker 2 (52:15):
And that there's the thing. This is like when people
make bad decisions almost on purpose, almost like they don't
have a choice. Like right before those fucking guys are
gonna go rob that store and one of them is
gonna get shot and killed, like they all know it's
a bad idea, but they all go ahead and do
it anyway. This is just a bad idea, and they're
moving forward anyway.

Speaker 1 (52:35):
So yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, fool steam ahead. I mean,
right now, it looks it looks all cute because you know,
I can have it create you know, generate a a
quote unquote real person to do ads for me. I
don't I don't have to have the product. It'll it'll
get the images from the internet, creative person, creative voice,

(52:59):
you know, create a in gauging commercial for me, marketing tool,
put that out there. I can go to my chat
GPT and create multiple AI agents that will go through
and answer the emails for me. And it sounds like,
you know, you're talking to a regular person. You know,
all of it sounds good until it ain't, you know,

(53:21):
and that's usual the way things work. You know, It's
like it's like everything's all good until it's not. And
the question is, you know, how soon could the not
come to us? Are we talking about five years? Because
I about ten years, twenty years, I mean how many
years you think? I mean, it seems to have accelerated

(53:46):
in twenty twenty five. Twenty twenty four, you heard some
rumblings about it. Folks would make some stupid videos with it,
you know what I'm saying, And you are like, okay, whatever,
But twenty twenty five seems like the year where folks
are like taking it seriously.

Speaker 2 (54:03):
Yeah, but just like it's so weird because it's one
of those things that was nowhere and that was everywhere overnight,
and those things are always sustinct, Those things are always suspect,
you know what I mean. Anything that's fucking gone to
yesterday and here everywhere tomorrow is definitely weird and we
should question it push all at once. On a corporate level,

(54:28):
I don't see. Here's the thing. I mean, do these
people really think these things through or do they just
follow trends and just go with the herd.

Speaker 1 (54:34):
I mean, it's I think it's just a trend deal.
Like whatever the trend is. They don't want to feel
like they miss out on the wave. And you know what,
it's the wave of it's the wave of money, it's
the wave of income. They don't want to miss out
on that way, you got to think almost almost everything
you've got now has got an AI system. Only Riverside

(54:56):
has an AI assistant, we got magic clips, it's got
uh an AI audio editor. I mean, on this on
this app that I'm running right now now. Of course
it's extra to do some of those things, but that
stuff went up here six months ago. It's seemingly overnight.

(55:18):
Every time I picked my phone up, it's telling me
something about, hey man, you know, if you need to
use the Gemini, gonna use it. I'm like, I'm good,
I don't need to use it right now. Okay, I'll
let it know when I need something, you know. But uh,
it seems it seems to be everywhere, the amount of
websites that we've gotten AI websites to go through and

(55:42):
help with your workflow and things of that nature. That
has accelerated. And you know, I hear a whole lot
of people say that, uh, you know, uh, if you
learn how to use it, then that would give you
a leg up, and that that could be the case.

Speaker 2 (55:58):
I how to use it, So I just get my
AI assistant to learn how to use it, so I don't.

Speaker 1 (56:05):
Have to said I traded an agent and how to
use this stuff for me.

Speaker 2 (56:12):
So here's a problem though, Like I'm a control freak
with my work, you know what I mean, Like I'm
not trusting an AI to do my ship for me.
I'm just not at all, Like I don't even want AI.
So okay, so let's think of an early example of AI,
if this can be considered early early early, like pre AI,
Grammarly would go in there. You'd write up a thing,

(56:34):
and Grammarly would tell you all the ways you can
make your writing better. Right, that's sort of AI to
a degree. But it was always a pain in my
fucking ass. And then when I implemented those changes, it
didn't sound like me anymore. It sounded like motherfucking Grammarly
wrote it. You know, what I mean. So, I see

(56:55):
what's happening now is just an evolution of of what's
already been obviously, but we've had things like this that
kind of correct your work. Hell, even on a rudimentary level,
like fucking words spell check, you know what I mean,
like catching mistakes that you wouldn't catch. So, but I
don't like any partner I want. I want the ship

(57:15):
to do the ship that I wanted to do, like
graphics and simple stupid ship. But I don't want it
to do like they don't want to better not to
get put in charge of the Department of Defense, you
know what I mean.

Speaker 1 (57:24):
Yeah, you're like, so, so like if I've got let's
say that I created, uh like a scene, like a
like a like a book. Okay, so like you you
wrote like a short story and then you were able
to put it in an AI engine and it can
kind of, uh mimic your work and actually create like

(57:47):
a short movie of like your book or something like that.
You know what I'm saying, That you can distribute you
singing stuff like that. You're like, okay, you know what
I'm saying. Uh, things of that nature.

Speaker 7 (58:00):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (58:00):
One of the places and seeing how I said that
one of the places where they said that things may
get a little dice for people is the people up
there in Hollywood. How much of this could be used
as opposed to actually getting real actions.

Speaker 2 (58:18):
Oh no, that'll ever happen because a I can't fuck kids.

Speaker 8 (58:29):
Yeah, have a physical dig So I mean it ain't
good job.

Speaker 2 (58:41):
Here's the problem with that.

Speaker 1 (58:42):
I want to get there.

Speaker 2 (58:43):
What happens when you have a disruptive technology, but it
is a flawed disruptive technology Like email came around and
revolutionized the world. It was a disruptive technology that changed
everything for the positive. It doesn't seem to be on
that same path. It's a disruptive technology that makes more mistakes.
I mean Apple had to remove the AI from their
Apple shit and fix it and put it back because
it was like it was criticizing, it was putting up

(59:05):
false information about news articles in the UK and so yeah,
this was a while ago. This was like when it
first came out, and so, you know, a disruptive technology
can only be it could I guess the disruptive technology
can be negatively disruptive as well.

Speaker 1 (59:23):
Right right, it could be potentially Now if we look
at the scope of how people are able to learn.
What percentage of the population do you think would be
able to actually learn enough about AI to take advantage
of it?

Speaker 2 (59:46):
Ten? It ain't like the Internet, where well here's the thing,
you got it on phones, and you got some broke
ass crackos got fucking AI on their phones. So you know,
the implementation of it into these devices says, We'll get
some people using it, but not in as not in
a serious way. You know, they'll connect theory and asking
questions and that's about it, you know, But yeah, that's it.

(01:00:13):
I don't remember. I was gonna.

Speaker 1 (01:00:13):
Say, well, we were talking about a percentage of people,
So I think people.

Speaker 2 (01:00:19):
Would seriously use it and integrate it into their lives.
I'd say less than ten percent.

Speaker 1 (01:00:24):
Okay. I've actually there's actually a my the guy at
work who is our master tech. He's a little bit
younger than me, but he has actually been using chat
GPT when he's doing diagnosis on some of the vehicles

(01:00:46):
because it's actually given him some information that's not actually
in the service manual sorg in.

Speaker 2 (01:00:53):
And where's it getting that information from? Scraping the internet?

Speaker 1 (01:00:57):
Yes, Like, like he had a vehicle that he was
looking at and at the end of it, whenever you
fix it, it says, okay, run the service bay test,
and then if the service bayed test passes the code,
then the vehicle's fine. But chat GVT let him know that.

(01:01:18):
The the issue with the service bay test, which is
what they don't put in the actual documents, is that
it only runs particular sensors at a particular load. It's
a lesser load than what is actually put on it
when the vehicle's actually in true operation. So even though
you run a service bay test, when you actually put

(01:01:40):
the vehicle under a proper load, it may or may
not pass in that nature. It's like, oh so it's
just like stuff like that, you know, huh, it didn't know,
and I also knew something about some sense of like
it's just and people assume that when you go to

(01:02:03):
you know, these places that fix vehicles, that there's this
magic box that you plug in and it tells you
what's wrong with the car. It's not the case, but
that's what everybody thinks. It's like, oh, yeah, you just plugged,
you just plugged the thing in and it just tells
you what's wrong with it. Right, No, it doesn't. It

(01:02:24):
gives you a place to start. So he's he's extremely
smart and he's always deciphering stuff and trying to figure
out ways to uh to go about diagnosing and fixing
vehicles and so like whenever somebody's got a problem, they
go to him. Like if he can't figure it out,

(01:02:44):
then nobody figures it out, you know what I'm saying.
I'm talking about like the people that they send to us,
if they have to send a field engineer, they don't
figure it out. Like like he's he's on point with
his ship. Uh, so he's actually incorporated it in multiple stuff.
He does some some TikTok stuff as well. I think
it's would like be able stuff, but that he learned

(01:03:05):
how to use Da Vinci and some of the other
stuff as well, So he's incorporated some of it. But
like I said, he's he's got a mind that's able
to uh do the correct prompts as far as to
have the AI do what he wants it to do,
you know what I'm saying. And so I think that's

(01:03:26):
what they were saying that most of the people don't
they don't know how to talk to the AI to
get the proper results that they're looking for with the
proper prompts. So uh, but we got I mean, we've
got AI building uh entire apps for people and things
like that. That's something that's not a bad idea. He
built have an app bill for you?

Speaker 2 (01:03:49):
So how do you do that? Could you do that
through Google? Whatever? Fuck?

Speaker 1 (01:03:55):
Well they were using Yah, can't remember. I can't remember
what they were using that. You see the way people
are doing it, man, they're using multiple they're using multiple platforms.
So they'll start out in jack GBT and it'll give
them getting to get them to a certain level, and

(01:04:16):
then they'll move over into another resource that's AI generative
and maybe it'll do do the coding and stuff for
them so like, but they'll jump back and forth in
between multiple ones to actually get the results that they're
looking for. So I think that's also a part of it.
You have to know what all is out there and

(01:04:39):
how good it is as far as getting done what
you're looking to get done. Now. Of course, requisite funds
is going to be an issue as well, because all
of this stuff's gonna cost. So yeah, So once again.

Speaker 2 (01:04:53):
So that's another thing about AI. Would implement the AI
instead of workers be cost prohibitive it might be cost prohibitive.

Speaker 1 (01:05:03):
I guess that'll be the case.

Speaker 2 (01:05:05):
So if you got it, if you've got an AI,
if you've got a worker in a in a warehouse
and he's doing stuff, and he's making you know, putting
together a car like those really specific cars stuff, he's
making eighty grand a year, what is the operating costs
of the AI to replace him to run the robots
and stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:05:25):
That's a good question.

Speaker 2 (01:05:26):
Yeah, you might have to build out a ton of
infrastructure in order to do something like that, and that
is also kind of going to be prohibitive on a
large scale unless you have right to be able to
do it.

Speaker 1 (01:05:38):
Well, yeah, only certain people to be able to do
it right, that'll be it. Uh, we got a we
got ranger vault over here on Rumble. We appreciate you
for leaving some comments, he says, uh as a derivative
and uninspired as most movies and TVs are. We sure
they haven't been using AI writers for the last day

(01:06:00):
eight I'm not sure. I think they still using real folks.
There's some folks that were crying they did it. They
did do the writers strike? Was that was that a
was that last year? But the year before.

Speaker 2 (01:06:12):
That was like four years ago?

Speaker 1 (01:06:14):
What is it?

Speaker 4 (01:06:16):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:06:16):
Oh, may stop, man, it was that long ago.

Speaker 2 (01:06:20):
It might have been further than that, because I remember
because I.

Speaker 1 (01:06:23):
Was okay, yeah, was it take it twenty twenty three
to may or to Wednesday twenty seventh, twenty twenty three,
those twenty twenty three.

Speaker 2 (01:06:32):
That sounds like bullshit. I think it was more than that.

Speaker 1 (01:06:35):
Go cha, I just looked it up.

Speaker 2 (01:06:39):
Did you ask? I probably?

Speaker 1 (01:06:40):
Like, no, I didn't ask a y out. I left
a out at this one. Okay, I just asked Google,
which I guess is a look. So that's when it was.
I mean, they felt like they weren't getting their justick
and I'm like, look, man, y'all just being to be
glad you're getting paid is my goodness. It's been it's

(01:07:03):
been bad off. Now they're finally coming out with the
with the final season the Stranger Thing. But Millie Bobby
Brown is like a grown ass woman now she's pretty
hot too, so.

Speaker 2 (01:07:19):
Just like her, what there's a point, just like her?
She's awesome.

Speaker 1 (01:07:26):
Yeah, just let y'all know. But uh, I mean the
state the state of ar media, I mean, and with
how much money that these companies are losing on movies.
I mean they might turn the A out. They might.

(01:07:48):
I mean, shit, Marvel need to turn to something. They're
gonna lose on the thunder Boats. They were like, man,
the Thunderbolts did great, it's made less money than it.
Men in the washt to maybe.

Speaker 2 (01:08:02):
That movie was pretty bad. I think I actually saw
that in the theaters.

Speaker 1 (01:08:07):
Yeah, because we talked about it.

Speaker 2 (01:08:08):
Yeah, it was pretty bad. Like you got you're all shrunk,
but you got these cities? Really, where'd you get all
equipment from? I don't get it?

Speaker 1 (01:08:16):
Yeah, yeah, it makes sense right, Yeah, because that's when
Janet Oh, Janet van Dyke was over there walking around
and like, man, we don't need to go there. We
don't need Why don't we need to go there? Janet Oh,
no reason, Man's this is a bad idea. Why did
the bad idea? Janet Oh, no reason?

Speaker 2 (01:08:36):
Because I was this dude.

Speaker 1 (01:08:39):
Yeah, but she fucked a bunch of dudes. She's like, man,
you know, I don't think I'll gonna make it bad.

Speaker 2 (01:08:48):
I'll tell you, bro, women think they ain't making it
back they looking at they watched like ten minutes later,
I'm telling you.

Speaker 1 (01:08:58):
Said, the ain't no hold out period.

Speaker 8 (01:09:00):
Mhaid, ain't hold out for that.

Speaker 1 (01:09:02):
It's like, well, we ain't gonna make it back somebody
that you gona get a little bit of how you
know this guy? You know what I'm saying, That's like,
why are you handed up? Can you tell me how
you know the guy? We? You know we might have

(01:09:23):
did something something. Yeah, it's the bisexual nature. Damn, I
knew you was a Jane Van Dyke busting it down
in the quantum realm. You know. I bet that's what
it came down to. But yeah, so I guess that

(01:09:44):
that Marvel's out there last uh, saving grace. I guess
potentially this year is that with the Fantastic four, is
that is that gonna get enough booties in the seats.

Speaker 2 (01:09:55):
They had some side projects shipped under the name under
the name Marv, like they did kick Ass. Kick Ass
was great. They could have knocked out a third one,
but they blew its way too late now and yeah, yeah,
way too And I had the kick Ass three comic.
It was great. Fucking hit girl took over the jail.

(01:10:16):
She got put in jail and then she took it over.
It was fucking awesome. But their main shit sucks, and
they got enough of a weird side catalog, just like
DC DC got a whole enough of a side catalog.
They ain't got to focus on this bullshit. Okay, enough
with fucking Superman and Batman. All right, give me some
swamp thing, bitch, all right, it's like there are so

(01:10:38):
many or give me some like what was the Detective Frankenstein? Okay,
give me some Detective Frankenstein. Like there's all kinds of
good shit in there, but they just don't do it.
The number crunches will let them do it.

Speaker 1 (01:10:52):
Well, we thought that the where wore by Night. We
thought maybe they were going to try to go somewhere
were they.

Speaker 2 (01:10:57):
God, that was than fucking Marvel Universe. Infinitely better, That's
what I'm saying.

Speaker 1 (01:11:04):
So we go, oh, okay, they're gonna try to do
something a little bit different with the with the and
they did that one thing and then just let it get.
I was like, y'all ain't gonna try to follow up.

Speaker 2 (01:11:15):
Here's the thing, like you get Like we were just
talking earlier, these companies they try to get their hands
in like one hundred different businesses. Motherfucking Marvel can't even
get their movies on one hundred different fucking characters, you
know what I mean, It's like just spread out just
a little. They're just focusing on the same old shit
because it was once popular. But nobody gives a fuck.
Once you pumped out Captain America, nobody gave a fuck anymore.

(01:11:36):
You know, once you Thor, who's ever gonna go see
a Thorn movie ever again? After they what they did
to that man.

Speaker 1 (01:11:43):
Oh dear god, he must have.

Speaker 2 (01:11:44):
Fucked somebody's wife, bro, because he was put through like
four movies of humiliation rituals. It's truly shocking.

Speaker 1 (01:11:54):
Yeah, Thor has following we talked, but we talked about
the Thor. The in Infinity War came back with Avengeance
and slung slung the the damn adds through Danos's chest
and at the beginning of Avengers in game cuts my
man's head clean off and then he goes from that.
It's just like a joke. It's just like where's door

(01:12:18):
at man? It's like, oh, ways, this is his character
or I'm like that's a bad one.

Speaker 2 (01:12:25):
Twenty twenty to twenty twenty four was is the years
that they tried to destroy everything, they tried to undermine
us culturally on every level, from fucking Hollywood to our
politics to fucking they didn't want you knowing A Boy
from a Girl Twenty twenty to twenty twenty four is
going to go down in history as the four years
of the failed coup that attempted to destroy us.

Speaker 1 (01:12:51):
That that's what the next documentary, That's what your document
needs to be on the failed destroy America. Oh Man
twenty twenty four. Folks about you know, saying this shit
ain't right. I feel like my goodness. So so h
AI AI could be incorporated, which you which, there's potential

(01:13:16):
that they're already using some of that stuff to do
some of their CGI stuff, which is maybe why it
looks so bad, because you know, if you if you
think about it, CGI was like, Okay, this stuff starting
to look pretty good, and then it started looking bad again.
He was like what happened? You know? And so I

(01:13:36):
don't know if they're using a different a different engine
to whatever we're using before, or or maybe if they
did tap into the AI to try to have it
generate some of this stuff for him and it just
hadn't worked out up until this point.

Speaker 2 (01:13:54):
I don't know, Man AI is something there's something about
it just makes the hairs in the back of my
next stand up. In general, creatively, it feels like cheating.
I mean it's cheating. It's worse than calculators are to math,
because it's like a calculator for everything. If it does

(01:14:16):
get fully implemented, we're looking at a fucking dumb ass
society and we're already pretty fucking dumb. You see those
videos of that guy who goes up to people in
public and he's like, Hey, what's the uh you know
what country is north of America? And they're like, oh shit,
I know this one. You know what I mean? Have
you seen those videos? That fucking guy is great, He's like, yes,

(01:14:37):
you're correct. Every time he's like, yes, you're right. That's
how stupid we are, right, motherfuckers can't name all fifty states,
they can't name the countries in Europe. It's retarded. We
live in a dumb world. We know we deserve extinction.
Like that's really where I'm at with everything, Like we
just we like we lame ducks. Yeah, we've done to her, Well,

(01:15:00):
it's been done to us. The parasite has been killing
the host long enough, and we've allowed it to happen,
so we're equally as culpable at this point.

Speaker 1 (01:15:08):
Okay, that's probably true. That's probably true. And I have
a certain disdain for Earth anyway, there's no doubt about that.
And you know, I've said this a few times, but
as I continue to live and get older, you know

(01:15:29):
that eugenics moving on, like.

Speaker 2 (01:15:32):
Maybe they had something.

Speaker 1 (01:15:33):
Maybe there's something too me, you know what I'm saying.
I was like, well, what were y'all guys saying about that? Again?
It's like it might be something too. I mean, I'm
just saying, Okay.

Speaker 2 (01:15:45):
You're gonna hear a fun fact this I came. This
is kind off a subject, but kind of on the subject.
I was. I was doing my I was doing some
Holocaust stuff today because I'm going back on Jake Shields show,
uh sometime soon. And I found out Canada has now
killed more people in the euthanasia program than the Nazis dead.

Speaker 1 (01:16:07):
Hmm yep.

Speaker 2 (01:16:10):
So the Nazis actually killed about sixty six thousand people
in the euthanasia program. Most of them were like heavily retarded,
you know, people in comas, like they were fucked up people.
It was, but there was such a national outrage that
Hitler halted the program in nineteen forty two. You ain't
gonna see no halt because of outrage in Canada.

Speaker 1 (01:16:28):
No, no, no, not at all, not at all. Man.
Look man, h Q four twenties into life services. I mean,
you can come and you can lay everything down in
front of me. I'll let you know where there's worth
it or not. I'll be your guy. It's just like, hey, man,

(01:16:50):
put everything before me. Let's see what you got. I'll
tell you if it's a yay or a n A,
all right, hopefully it's a name for you. But if
it's a yeah, it just is what it is. Okay,
what we've got we got A Daniel said, Earth is
God's footstool. I would hope we want to make it
look amazing for him.

Speaker 7 (01:17:10):
I can appreciate that, Okay, Okay, Lord, I don't know
when they say faith in man, it's like.

Speaker 1 (01:17:23):
It's like, but it's what That's one thing I do, man,
is that other folks are are looking to hold power
over you. I mean, and it just is what it is.
I think it's in it's innate in us to try
to exert and hold power over other people. Uh, Huh,
it's innate.

Speaker 2 (01:17:43):
In nature, man likes the dominant, man likes the destroytion.

Speaker 1 (01:17:47):
Yeah, but if you look look also in nature, it's
like the strongest male looks to exert power over another
male to get the female or get whatever. You know
what I'm saying, this is my territory. I kill you,
I keep you. Come in my territory. It's just we're
just we're destructive beings. Everything is a destructive being everything,

(01:18:14):
And I guess that's okay. Yeah for the time being. Uh, Corey,
before we get out of here, we got a from
the World of John Wick Ballerina coming out, uh this Thursday.

Speaker 2 (01:18:30):
Oh, I might go to the movies for this one.

Speaker 1 (01:18:32):
I'm going to go watch that. I'm going to go
watch it. I don't know if I'm gonna watch it
this weekend or not. That's potential. That just it depends
on how things line up with what I'm Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:18:42):
I might have to think a mortgage to go to
that movie because it's like eighteen bucks to get in
or some shit like that?

Speaker 1 (01:18:47):
Is it? Man boom go on a mad name get
Like hell, I didn't realize that at uh at AMC
because I go to AMC theater. It's like lively. I
can walk to the theater, like that's how close I
live to it. And I didn't realize. Man, I had

(01:19:10):
twenty dollars off tickets and I went to an early
movie and me and my girlfriend got in for free.
I was like, I'll try, nay. I did all right.
I had twenty dollars worth for rewards because I keep
forgetting they don't automatically apply to rewards. You got to
go and turn them on. And so I was just
buying movie tickets and going and seeing stuff, and I
was like, I have to have some money, you know,

(01:19:32):
looked in there. I got twenty dollars. I said, okay,
So went and watched Thunderbolts for free, which you know,
Thunderbolts was okay, but you know, I said, up movie.

Speaker 2 (01:19:43):
Back when I was in Vegas, the AMC did that
pass where you paid like twenty bucks a month and
you got to go to like eight movies or something
like that that I actually I actually used it for
like a month. I went to like four movies in
a month, and I never used it again and spent
like six months description on it. But still that's decent,
and that's something I would probably.

Speaker 1 (01:20:04):
Do again, Huddle ales, I think AMC has something that. Okay, yeah,
so if you if you join AMC stubs a Lias,
you can watch four movies every week.

Speaker 2 (01:20:18):
Oh really, let me look at this now, are there
four movies worth seeing? Is the fucking big question?

Speaker 1 (01:20:25):
Yeah, that's a good question. Now, I don't know how
much this is, Huddle. It's subscribed now.

Speaker 2 (01:20:35):
Oh it's the it's the big one because you have
three different tiers and then it says seventeen ninety nine,
and then for that big one it says low monthly price.
So let me click join now. Oh, they want you
to sign up before they give you the price on it.
It's got to be twenty four nine or more.

Speaker 9 (01:20:51):
Okay, okay, okay, okay, all right, so all right, so
here's what we're gonna do. Okay, so there's three different ones.
All right, So see this is crazy. So you can
see up to four movies every week in thirty six states.

(01:21:13):
It is twenty three dollars in ninety nine cents a month.

Speaker 1 (01:21:16):
That is actually a deal.

Speaker 2 (01:21:18):
Yeah, because if you go to two movies a month,
they'll pay for it.

Speaker 1 (01:21:21):
Yeah, that's actually a deal. That's actually a great deal. Like,
if if movies is what you did, there's no reason
why you shouldn't have this.

Speaker 2 (01:21:32):
Yeah, if you're a movie thing, now you're a movie
person for sure.

Speaker 1 (01:21:36):
Yeah. Now you can't be in California, Corey, you had
to pay twenty six dollars a.

Speaker 2 (01:21:41):
Month, oh, in Colorado because they got some stupid deal
in Colorado. They got some gates in Colorado.

Speaker 1 (01:21:47):
Yeah, Colorado. So yeah, you need to so at for
twenty five ninety nine a month. You can do use
your AMC theater membership everywhere except for California and New York.
Now that's what's crazy do is that you can be
anywhere and do this. You don't have to be right
up Gray. You be in Florida, like, man, I'm gonna

(01:22:10):
go watch a movie. Mc ye, go watch a movie.
Maybe you're in there. That's actually a great deal if
you're a movie buff. Now, I don't know if you
could watch four movies a week that that's what you'd
have to do for a living, you know what I'm saying. Yeah,
you have to be some type of field credit film
critic or something. But if you were a film critty,
if that's all you did, then my goodness. But I

(01:22:34):
mean I didn't. I didn't realize it was that it
was that good of a deal. They realized the good
of the deal. So so yeah, hey people out there,
they of course you have to have a lot of
times on your time on your hands, which I guess
you could watch a couple on uh we watched one
Friday night, a couple on Saturday, one Sunday. I guess

(01:22:57):
you could do that. It could be a week yeah,
like your weekend thing. So so yeah, so yeah, Ballerina, Ballerina,
that's coming out this Thursday. From what I understand, Corey,
it is said in between john Wick three and four,

(01:23:17):
that's when this.

Speaker 2 (01:23:18):
Movie is said, well a lot did happen, Yeah, because
he fell off the building and he has to recoup
and train, and I'm sure he did some shit in
the middle, and then the fourth one happened. So yeah,
I could see that for.

Speaker 1 (01:23:28):
Sure, which which John Wick does make a cameo in
this movie.

Speaker 2 (01:23:33):
How long have a cameo?

Speaker 1 (01:23:34):
Just a couple minutes, I'm fit, Well, he it looks
like he ends up in a conflict with the main
character of this particular film. Oh okay, and obviously you
know neither one of them die. Well, I say that
John Wick may killer. That might be the end of

(01:23:58):
the movie. You know what I'm saying, they should do show.
Keanu Reeves is in this for a slight cameo, but
it looks good. The John Wick movies were good. The
Continental If y'all guys haven't seen that on Peacock, Me
and Corey covered that. Uh that mini series that was phenomenal,
you know, And it didn't take away from from the

(01:24:19):
John Wick movies at all. It didn't. It didn't take
away from the lore and the aura of John. Surprisingly, yeah,
it didn't take away the law or And hopefully they
do justice with this Ballerina movie, which, if I'm correct,
we've got a few other spin off things coming from
the world of John Wieck. They they can really make
a cash cow out of this thing.

Speaker 2 (01:24:41):
Well, the whole content of the Table is fucking great,
right right.

Speaker 1 (01:24:45):
And Corey still says it's got to be a John
Wick five because he's got a to the table.

Speaker 2 (01:24:51):
They have to have faked he has to think out
the table, and they have to revisit the wife because
if they don't, they just wasted the biggest opportunity in
the fucking history of opportunities. His wife being in the
head of the table and she never really died would
be the ultimate twist in any fucking movie series ever,
because everyone done forgot about the wife, haven't they?

Speaker 1 (01:25:11):
Yeah, yeah, the wife was just the first movie. Let's
see it, mm hmm. And the relationship because the wife
left the dog.

Speaker 2 (01:25:19):
With him and she had the fake of death for
some reason to do at the table, and she was
a plant the whole time. And you know.

Speaker 1 (01:25:27):
That's got him back involved. It's a whole lot. Boy,
that'd be that'd be something Corey got. Corey get on
the phone.

Speaker 2 (01:25:40):
Then you can see then you can pull that. Then
they can pull like a saw you know, the show
some of the hidden scenes that you never saw. And
then it turns out that they actually sent the Russian
guy to kill the dog and all that stuff, like,
to bring him back in for for nefarious purpose that
will discover in the fifth one. Dude, let me write, hey.

Speaker 1 (01:26:02):
Hey, maybe you can get a out to help you
out a little bit, hey, because the takeover is in
and it guys, so this is this has been beyond
the key. We appreciate everybody being here with us. As
I said, earlier. Make sure you're checking out everything Corey does.
Buddyhistory dot substact best historian on the Internet. A warning
from History JFK book things on Amazon, buy me a coffee.

(01:26:25):
He's got the audiobook out as well.

Speaker 2 (01:26:27):
Yeah, but Amazon, I got a I got an obstacle
with Amazon I have to overcome. But I'm too busy
working on my new book. Once i finished my new book,
then I'll then I'll get the audiobook up on Amazon.
But you can get the audiobook at my buy me
a coffee slash JFK book.

Speaker 1 (01:26:42):
So I figured you had it done, but it may
not be on Amazon, So buy me a coffee if
you want to get the audio version. For us that
have issues reading, I'm not gonna hate them, you know
what I'm saying. I just gonna say have issues reading?
Uh so, yeah, makes you Corey Hughes dot Org. All right,
He's done plenty of his work. If you want to

(01:27:03):
go see some of the past episodes, He's been on
Fresh and Fit twice. He went on Jake Shield Show,
so those should be on Rumble. You'll be able to
see those in their entirety on there. And last week
he did do the It was a JFK convention.

Speaker 2 (01:27:17):
Correct, Yeah, and I did Redhill seventy eight also, so.

Speaker 1 (01:27:21):
Okay, okay, yep. So a lot of this work is
lingering around, so go check that stuff out if you're interested.
I know we had somebody on a Twitch who looked
like they were new and wanted to know some information there,
so go check that out. Me and Ryder should be
finishing up the last of US Season two tomorrow, so
be on the lookout on that. As far as life

(01:27:42):
and on your podcast platforms as well. We appreciate everybody
for being with us on the special edition quote unquote
because it's on the wrong day of Beyond the Queue.
And so for your boy four, my man, the power
from Cory Hughes would catch y'all next week. He's up.
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