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April 3, 2024 70 mins
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(00:01):
Oh sure, running dos wucking loudand freeze. The yellow said to show
force for you and me if Icould come hand no long and truth we
have the same. So they shoutus down, trying to make us sail.

(00:25):
We stood tallis making change of sense. Ship, I miss a metal
rail, but every single rail andgoing a little felion. I'll fire faturflies
so they may have stong me awe sided to tim lass wont be silence

(00:50):
will never be contains you keep onrocking. I'll stare and can't we take
the honest says so sad. Hello, friends, exem here, and yes

(01:11):
the show is indeed banned. Thoseare not bogus lyrics. If anyone thinks
that's just a clever way to doit intro, it is not. And
I realized that as I was gettingready to do this show about AI.
We talk about AI a lot.It's been coming up a lot because it's
here to wreck our lives and probablyput a lot of people out of work.

(01:34):
But we talked previously on the lastshow about AI generation. When it
comes to the music industry, I'vetalked about video. Excuse me video AI.
Let me take a sip of Pepsi. As you know that I have
on deck AI generation of videos whereyou just put in a simple prompt and
I played obviously the audio. Thisis a non video show because I've been

(01:57):
banned from YouTube. And that's along way of me coming about saying the
title track to this show today,band is true, the lyrics You're true.
I've been banned not only from YouTube, as you know, from Twitter.
I know there's new listeners all thetime to the show, and I've
been telling new people that I've metabout the show, and I think they

(02:19):
think the band thing is just kindof like, I don't know, a
cool way to start the show,you know what I mean, Like everybody
want there's a point in radio whereeverybody wanted to be Alex Jones. Oh
my god. I saw the mostbrutal hit piece on Alex Jones on HBO
Max. It was called The TruthVersus Alex Jones. It's actually a pretty
good documentary and it gets into AlexJones, who, by the way,

(02:44):
was banned months after your good friendAlex ExHAM here was banned. So that
should tell you something. I wasdeplatformed before Alex Jones, and that was
from YouTube of course, which wasthe big one because I had a big
channel, Twitter Discord and what wasthe other one, mastedon. I know

(03:05):
nobody cares about that, but thepoint is I was getting banned everywhere.
The big one was YouTube and thiswas months before Alex Jones. So it's
just funny when people say to mewhat you were banned? Why would they
ban you? I'm like, yeah, I know, they won't tell me,
never gave me a reason. It'sjust violation of terms of service.
Now. I have also was notmaking millions of dollars a year like Alex

(03:29):
Jones with his show and selling hissupplements, but they get into that in
this documentary, and yeah, itwas an absolute hit piece. Look,
I'm no fan of Alex Jones anymore. I used to listen to him quite
a bit, but ever since hejumped on the land mined with both feet,
which is the Sandy Hook conspiracy,I don't even like talking about it
because the wackos will come out andwant to debate me on this, which

(03:53):
is a dead issue for me.When people come up with all these conspiracy
theories about Sandy Hook. When Iused to live in Connecticut and family members
who know some of the victim's relatives. So when people and look, I
know some people out there who hearthat, go I'm digressing here. But
quickly who hear that, go,well, wait a second, Alex.

(04:17):
People actually believe that Sandy Hook didn'thappen and the children, No one died
at Sandy Hook. There's actually abook and a movie with that title.
Not kidding, and the answer isyes. When you watch the documentary Alex
Jones versus the Truth, they hadextensive courtroom There was an obviously an HBO

(04:40):
documentary filmmaker there or whoever they boughtthis from. It was an independent guy
at the courthouse every day filming.I mean they got a ton of it.
Not what you see on court TVwith the bad grainy video. This
was a professional camera and cameraman filmingdocumentary style in the courtroom they must have

(05:00):
had. They had a front rowseat to the entire thing. We saw
the jury. We the jury reactionswere actually very good. Alex Jones was
like acting his usual buffoonery in thecourtroom. But what was interesting is he
did come out and admit Sandy Hookhappened. And you know he was under
a form of psychosis because he's beenlied to so many times by the government

(05:21):
and all this stuff, right,but it's an interesting documentary. For one.
Alex Jones was shadow band basically becausehe was saying not shadow band permanently
banned. Shadow band is different.Sorry, wrong use of terms, but
he was banned. Deplatformed is abetter word for multiple platforms overnight. I've

(05:44):
never seen anything like it. Hegot it worse than me. I just
got it first because it had happenedto him all one day. But Alex
Jones was deplatformed because he was sayingSandy Hook didn't happen, that it was
a hoax, that it was aconspiracy to grab your guns. I Alex
ExHAM, who was banned before AlexJones, was saying that Sandy Hook did

(06:09):
in fact happen. What does thatmean? I don't know. You're smart,
you'll figure it out. So howdoes that make sense? They basically
ban you for whatever they want,and they just it doesn't matter what side
of the argument you're on. ApparentlyI was getting all my videos are getting
flagged, I was getting demonetized,my millions of views and thousands of followers.

(06:30):
Just we all woke up to mychannel being gone after they threatened and
harassed me by telling me that Ihad violated the terms of service. I
shouldn't even talk about this because everytime I do, I digress and I
have a big show on AI,and I have to tell you it is
shocking what I'm gonna show you.I know, I've scared the pants off
everybody, telling them they probably willlose their jobs unless they get a job

(06:55):
now in AI. All the kidsout there don't want to be ticked stars
or YouTube stars or getting degrees init or cybersecurity. Do yourself a favor.
Switch over to AI and start learningthings like TensorFlow and stuff. And
look, even people who know howto use chat GPT four to the fullest

(07:19):
already have a huge advantage over otherpeople. But if you are a tech
guy and you want to get intotech, I know, cybersecurity is a
big thing, and yeah, alot of people want to get into that.
I understand because there's a huge,massive need for that too. Matter
of fact, they're using AI tohack. I saw a disturbing video from
one of these hacker newsletters that Isigned up with. It was shocking what

(07:40):
it can do now, But getinto not only cybersecurity, cool, fun
like it too. AI. Imean, if I could have known five
ten years ago what I know now, I would have went and just started
learning everything I could about AI.But it really hit the general public when

(08:01):
we had the text based chat GPT. Now here's the big deal. And
you know, I think without AI, not only will it be hard for
you to find a job, becauseall jobs are not They're all gonna revolve
around AI. There's certain things youwill not revolve around AI, but it

(08:22):
will be touched by AI. I'mjust thinking, for example, you're a
car mechanic. Are you gonna beable to go to a local shop and
an AI machine fixes your car?No, But a mechanic who is versed
in chat, GPT or a systemthat is built on AI for car mechanics
and they have access to that systemwill have an advantage. You see what

(08:43):
I'm saying. Now, you justput in there. Whatever they do,
they can't figure out what's wrong withthe electrical system. They put in what
are the top ten things? Theyscroll through them, checked all those didn't.
It's just it's gonna change things.It's not like just looking it up
on the internet. I know alot of people think, well, it's
in chat GPT, isn't it lesslyfigure got one search engine? No,
not not quite not quite trend eventhough now bing has its own AI kind

(09:05):
of built into the the chat holdon. Apologize my voice is scruffy for
some reason today allergies. I don'tknow, but dah, everything that we
do will be touched by AI,virtually everything. So if you don't know
about chat GPT and what I'm goingto tell you right now from open AI,

(09:28):
the makers of chat GPT is goingto blow you away. And if
you want to see it now inall it's glory because I thought about,
well, I could take the videosbecause they're basically putting them out there for
anyone to download on their page.You can download it freely. So I'll
just post this in my blog.And I said, oh wait a second,
I forgot again, going back tothe banning, I don't have video

(09:50):
hosting anymore, so I don't havea YouTube and that's one of the things.
You know, everyone knows YouTube's free, so you can upload as much
video, do whatever you need.Not when you're alex Eximn you've been banned
for life. See it has longreaching consequences. I don't recommend getting banned
and deplatformed when you want to seeprobably the most mind And I'm not over

(10:16):
I'm not over exaggerating. I don'twant you to underestimate this. This is
probably the most incredible use of AII've seen. And you know, I've
been playing with this stuff for awhile, a couple of years now.
When did chat GPT four come outtwo thousand and twenty one ish twenty two,

(10:37):
friends, that's when the rumblings.There were rumblings and then you couldn't
get access, and then you couldget it and they opened it. It
was basically when they opened it tothe public and it was in the news
and you heard it everywhere. Ithas surpassed in like the first few days,
if not weeks. I forget theactual stats sites like Twitter and Facebook

(10:58):
when they all launched, like itwent from like how many other hundreds of
thousands in the initial day or whatever, to like the next day like thirty
million people or something crazy, andthen the next day sixty million, and
it's just gonna keep growing. I'msurprised at the very few amount of people

(11:18):
who are actually using it. Italked to people like, oh yeah,
I heard about it I'm like,why are you using it? Let's talk
about Buddy Trump. I was saying, dude, hear your own business.
I see you posting content and putsending out a newsletter and all this stuff.
Why aren't you using it? Youbeef up your your site, your
seo, your newsletter, make it, you know open. Your click rate
will go up if you have reallyinteresting titles that bypass people's guards and blocks,

(11:43):
and they're so people are spammed allthe time and they have banner blindness.
That's an old term. But youknow the point, there's so many
ads that I mean, you know, I can't even watch and going back
to YouTube. I still actually watchYouTube videos because sometimes that's the only place
they're posted. And every freaking video. I remember when YouTube didn't have many

(12:03):
ads. There were none at onepoint that I remember a lot of the
channels I watched didn't have any ads. Now it's every freaking three or four
minutes. If you watch a televisionprogram, it's at least what twelve minutes
before you get an adder commercial.With YouTube, it could be every damn
minute. Have you seen this?And you keep hitting skip and if you're
not at your computer, you don'thit the skip thing. In the first

(12:26):
what five seconds, You're like,oh God, I don't want to listen
to this thing, so you skip, and you got to go back to
your computer and skip again. SometimesI'm listening to videos or a news story
or whatever, and I'm doing otherthings. I'm not even near the computer.
All of a sudden this ad comeson. It's blaring. It's way
louder than the other video, andI'm like, what the every five minutes?
Five minutes? That'd be good ifit was every five minutes. Fine.

(12:48):
A lot of videos on YouTube areonly five every minute. It's just
a hive of ads. Anyway,they digress YouTube socks. Can you tell
them? Still? Episode about meband from YouTube? The all of the
songs are gonna say the song thatyou heard the title song, but all
of the songs I have about beingsilenced and banned by the way. Silenced

(13:11):
is the name of my book onthe entire topic buying on Amazon. People
think it's funny, even though it'stragic in my life. But the book
Silently it was funny. I kindof had to write it with the kind
of funny slam because then nobody youwant to be depressing about it. Who
cares this point. I don't evencare about YouTube. I don't even know
if i'd want a YouTube channel now. It's so stupid and ad written,

(13:35):
and the people on there, Alot of the people that I used to
watch don't even really they're not onthere anymore. Some have just basically done
all their stuff and video on Twitter, others Instagram, Others have gone to
what's the other one? Rumble?Rumble is that the one I'm thinking about?
Anyway, forget about all that.I don't know why I'm babbling.

(13:58):
I want to tell you about themost edible AI that you're ever gonna see.
Let me give the url. That'swhy we're we're we got the video
things. I don't have a placeto upload video, and I just realized
I do have a Rumble account,so I could upload the video there.
But what's the point. I'll giveyou the url. You can go there
and look at it. Now.It's called Sora. Now you may have

(14:20):
remembered. I created a video juston a text line, like a line
of text, create a video aboutthe afterlife, and it came up with
this kind of explainer video, likethe kind you would see on YouTube.
It was fantastic voiceover titles. Obviouslythe video which looked like it was stock
video, but now I'm wondering ifit was something like Sora, which we're

(14:43):
gonna look at now. Go toOpenAI dot com slash Sora s O r
A. Since I can't upload thevideo acause I don't have a YouTube anymore.
But see see see see how itstill bothers me? Go check out
the video. These there were amazingvideos generated by AI. They're incredible,

(15:05):
They're incredible. There's one of awoman walking down the street in Tokyo.
Looks one hundred percent real. There'sanother one of Mastodons. We know,
we don't have real footage of Macedons, so you know it's AI, but
it's so well done. There's anotherwith an astronaut with a AI generated actor
cinematography. Every looks real, likewalking over to a spaceship. I'll go

(15:26):
to the next one. Another oneof an amazing lighthouse on a cliff with
waves splash. It looks amazing,waves splashing up, it looks majestic.
Another little AI gremlin type guy playingwith a candle. Okay, like I
don't want to say Pixar quality,but pretty narn close. Another underwater video

(15:50):
of just kind of zooming around.When you see these, you're gonna be
like, what these were text promptsIn other words, one said I want
an underground scene with sea turtles andsea horses, and boom. It creates
amazing videos, some lifelike, somecartoonish, like the Pixar Pixel one Pixar

(16:15):
Pixel one AI animated obviously CGI generated. But there's here another beautiful one of
a pigeon. Looks this is cool. It's two pirate chips battling each other,
but it looks like they're almost ina cup of coffee. Incredible.

(16:38):
I mean it is scary, scary, batpoop scary. How far this has
come. So it's like I'm seeingvideos that I hadn't seen before because now
I'm scrolling through some others. There'sone where the camera is zooming through an
art gallery. I would not Youcould tell me that this art gallery existed

(17:00):
and all these paintings are real,I'd believe it. I'd believe it.
I said, that's a nice gallery. I'd like to go check it out.
Incredible stuff, stuff that doesn't exist. What is this going to do
for reality? You know when peopleare starting when this opens up. By
the way, you can't use soraright now. There's only examples. I
can't imagine what they're going to chargefor it, because chat GPT is relatively

(17:22):
inexpensive for what you get. Butsome of these are so incredible. It's
like, why would anyone go tofilm school? Why would you learn cinematography
when you can put into prompt Ineed a sweeping, wide shot, and
that's what I'm looking at right now. I'm just making this up how they
might have done this. Here's theprompt. Actually it says it here historical
footage of California during the Gold Rush. You go, okay, what's that

(17:44):
going to produce an amazing video?It looks like a drone shot going through
gold rush times. What the eighteenhundreds, bunch of cowboys, there's some
cattle. It looks like a Westernmovie. But it looks like it like
even a Western movie. You know, it's all fake buildings and it's only
so big. This does a sweepingkind of like panoramic zoom at the end,

(18:08):
and you can see the houses inthe background, the whole town.
It is totally authentic, like itwould you. You couldn't even do this.
In Hollywood, they would film asmall and I've seen it. If
you go to Universal Studios, you'llsee where they film a lot of them.
You'll see all the movies Quicken theDead, all these movies that you've
seen. You'll see certain buildings thatthey keep reusing. They might put a

(18:30):
different name or a sign on it, but it's these old, tiny Western
towns. They just reuse them overand over. For them Universal Studios or
any other studio to create what I'mseeing right here, it would cost them
hundreds of millions of dollars. It'sthis huge town, looks like an entire
city almost as it pans away,you see all the houses in the background.

(18:53):
It's just you know, this isjust a twenty five second video with
a prompt which was historical footage ofCalifornia during the Gold Rush. What would
that take you two three seconds totype that in, to come up with
the idea, a minute or two, and then you type it in and
it produces this amazing, amazing actorswalking around, extras, everything totally authentic.

(19:17):
You wouldn't know it was AI generated. You just wouldn't. Now,
I'm sure if we took it andyou know, went frame by frame and
blew it up and looked at everydamn pixel. Okay, but if you're
making a documentary, you're making ashort film, I just forget film school.

(19:37):
How about learning lighting on film?How about sound? Sound is not
I already told you music is done. So what one that you know?
You just put in sound effects dialogue? I need an actor, You create
the actor in AI and you justtell them what to say. You know,
why would you go to film schoolto learn this when somebody can just
have the the pro basically access tothe aisystem in the prompts and if chat

(20:10):
GPT four, which is talk aboutpure gold, pure gold for anyone who's
doing content creation, I don't carewhat it is, any part of your
business. Chat GPT can probably help, especially online businesses. But if I'm
a young film student, let's say, and I actually know not even just

(20:32):
one a few of my friend Charleneher Son studied to be a I don't
know if a cinematography directing that's whathe studied. I know other people through
well, I know other people personally, but also at my acting studio with
Charles great guy. Always try toshout out Charles and my acting studio.
Go to my Acting studio dot comif you want to get into acting,

(20:52):
take classes. He's a great guy. Genevieve Bergdorf is also teaching a intro
to acting class. You gotta gocheck them out. That was a plug
for them for free. They didn'tpay me for that. I just I
believe in that studio and it's oneof the only acting not only acting experiences,
but acting classes that I would recommendin LA just that. I've taken

(21:15):
classes from here to the Pekos Folks, New York City, you name it.
The points being why would anyone nowacting? Yeah, I understand why
people would still want to get anact And there's just certain things. AI
is not gonna be able to dothe emotion. We'll see, I guess
we'll see. I shouldn't. Ishouldn't say that because things are moving along
so quickly. I can't imagine itwould be hard for them to create a

(21:38):
lifelike AI looking. You know,there's a movie with al Pacino that predicted
all this. It's called Simone.Is that it? I think it's called
Simone? And the whole thing isI believe he's a talent agent. I

(22:03):
just want to make sure I don'tgive you the wrong name because then you're
gonna get aggravated. Oh yeah,simone e, it's s one m O
n E. I didn't know that. I thought that was just okay,
that's the way. Apparently it's titleds one like sih Moan because she's AI

(22:25):
and he creates her in a computer. The title of the or the subtitle
rather of the poster is a staris dot dot dot created instead of born.
Right, And it's actually pretty goodAI for back then, but you
can tell it's a little wonky.This was created in two thousand and two.

(22:48):
But I wonder if there was anactress for this or was it really
AI generated. There has to be, yeah, there was no hmm,
I'm looking here. I want tosee if there was an actual actress or
if they did create it with CGbecause it could have been. No,
no, it is. It isa real woman. Knowing Hollywood, of
course, it's easier to use areal actress and then put a layer of

(23:11):
aion to make her look like she'sAI generated slightly you got me, then
actually create the AI, which ismore expensive, especially in two thousand and
two, but in twenty and twentyFourer, My friend, you could create
this simone played by a beautiful RachelRoberts that was her name. Yeah,
she's beautiful, she and that's whyshe was obviously picked. She's got very

(23:33):
asymmetrical features. She looks almost fake. That's how she you know, she
almost looks like she's too pretty.Anyway, when you watch the movie,
he finally gets into a problem alPacina when people want to see her live
and do events. And I thinkit's a a super Bowl or maybe a
sporting event if I saw this solong ago, obviously twenty twenty two.
But she's doing an event she's supposedto be live, and they use like

(23:56):
a hologram to simulate her singing.It's crazy, and I remember thinking,
could that really happen? I rememberwatching the movie going, you know,
because we'd come a long way withCGI by then, of course, but
not to where you'd be able tofool people in public. The AI movie

(24:18):
thing, I thought, yeah,we can do that. I'm sure that'll
come but in person, almost likeyou've seen, or you can find it
on YouTube if you haven't seen it. The Tupac Shakur at the was it
Bonaru? I forget what concert.It was outdoor Music festival and they had
a Tupac hologram. It looked cool. You could tell it was a hologram.

(24:41):
I'm sorry. People were saying,oh, so real, come on,
you could tell it was a hologram. And by the way, I
know he's dead. He's not stillalive. So but it was pretty damn
impressive, and apparently it was moreimpressive in person. You can't get the
full effect on a video. Ihave digressed so far in so many ways
from how I initially. I justwant to turn the mic on and talk

(25:03):
about Sora. This was an impromptushow. If you can't tell, no
show notes. I don't have anycurrent events nothing. I saw this system
and freaked the f out. Here'sone that's amazing. There's a little puppy
doorman and he's walking which looks likehe's got to be like at least two
stories up from one window ledge tothe other, and you're looking at it,

(25:27):
going, oh my god, don'tdo it, like he's gonna fall,
and of course he makes it,but you're looking at it and going,
well, there's no puppy, there'sno buildings, none of this is
real. Here's the prompt, thecamera directly faces colorful buildings in Burano,
Italy. An adorable Dalmatian looks througha window on a building on the ground
floor. Many people are walking anddot dot dot what and what and cycling

(25:52):
along the canal streets in front ofthe buildings, And this is what it
came up with. Holy smokes.So the prompt isn't quite what you'd expect,
but the video is amazing and interestingand better than the prompt? Do
you under see what I'm saying?Like, I don't know how. I

(26:15):
do know how this works. Ijust saw a documentary on it. I
do know how this works, butI don't know how the AI is coming
up with what I'm seeing After thatshort prompt, which doesn't really give this
video justice, It's just incredible,I'm telling you. So go to OpenAI

(26:37):
dot com slash Sora s O R. It's gonna blow you away. And
here's what it says. Sora isa diffusion module which generates a video by
starting off with one that looks likestatic noise and gradually transforms it by removing
the noise over many steps. Sohere's how it works. If I read
this paper, your eyes are gonnacross, but I'll tell you what I
got from this documentary I recently watched. That's basically exactly it. So what

(27:00):
people think is happening when you putsomething in to now, I'm not talking
about chat GPT, although it doeswork kind of on a similar model.
But when it comes to AI generatedart, we've all seen that at this
point, right, Instagram's full ofAI generated art, people who have made
art that is generated by a prompt, just like this video, same thing
what it's doing. And this iswhere people don't quite get it, because

(27:23):
what everyone thinks is, oh,it's taking a bunch of pick Let's say
you want a picture of a dog, and so what it's doing is taking
all these pictures of dogs, goingthrough them and piecing together a dog to
give you. That's not what's happening. So I understand why a lot of
people are saying, well, it'sjust artists stealing from other artists, when
it's not something that any artist technicallyhas created. They're saying, oh,

(27:45):
you're stealing from thousands of artists andcompilating an image from that theft. That's
the way people look at it.That is not the case. It's much
more interesting, and it explains whythat doesn't happen, because you would think,
oh, I see what's happened,So we're all gonna have a bunch
of the same iage. No,and anyone who's worked with these kind of

(28:07):
things, you can put the sameprompt then multiple times, multiple generations,
and depending on what you're using,you can have I'm sorry, my throat
is done. Probably shouldn't even cameon air today. I was gonna wait
till tomorrow, but I had toget this out. You can put in
a prompt and expect that this iswhat people think it is taking from all

(28:33):
these other images and compiling your newimage. That being said, then how
come you could use the same promptand keep generating over and over and over
and get multiple different images completely differentlooking dogs. Unless you're using a system
where you want to recreate the samedog in maybe different situations, you can
do that too. But if youjust use the same prompt and keep generating

(28:56):
and general you're like, well,how come there was a brown dog?
Unless you put in there you wanta specif a colored dog, the dog
could be purple, it could bea Dalmatian like the realistic one I'm seeing
here. But so how is that, Well, I'll tell you how instead
of what most people think. It'sstealing from multiple images of dogs and compiling
one based on your prompt that bestgives you the result. No, here's

(29:19):
what it's happening. And they saidit actually here and the very beginning of
the research techniques. The video,it says, sore is a diffusion model
which generates a video by starting offwith one that looks like a static static
noise and gradually transforms it by removingthe noise over many steps. So that's
that's a fancy way I guess ofsaying, or not very clear at least

(29:40):
of saying instead of in this case, it's a diffusion module. Most people
who use it know if you're usingart it's a Dolly dolly or a stable
diffusion module. But the point is, instead of compiling a bunch of already
created images, what it's doing isit's giving you a and what's the best

(30:03):
way to do it. It's itlooks like a picture you put in I
want a dog, and what comesout is unrecognizable at first. It looks
like almost black and white newspaper printcolor from what I've seen. Sometimes there's
colors barely ever in there in thevery beginning stages. But it looks like
nothing but gibberish almost. It lookslike just a bunch of pixels randomly literally,

(30:30):
there's no rhyme or reason. Itdoesn't look like anything. And then
so what happens is the AI diffusionor Sora for video or Dolly or whatever.
They're all based on the same stuff, but there's other names for them,
like Leonardo or whatever. But thepoint is mid Journey is a very

(30:51):
popular and robust one. But thepoint is mid Journey they're all doing the
same thing. They take this verypixelated image and then sends it back to
the AI algorithm and says, wewant a dog, and then it will
look at that entire picture of staticand then take images from existing dogs and

(31:14):
fill in the gaps a little bit. What the And then the image comes
back again and says, no,this isn't a dog. I want a
dog again. And it's this kindof the way it was explained in the
documentary. It's a request and thena nope, you got it wrong,
Do it again. And then it'sanother request and the nope. So this
back and forth goes on. Obviously, bazillion times in a matter of seconds.

(31:37):
But what it's doing, because wehave the computing power is off,
the richterscale can happen so fast.So it's going back and saying, give
me a dog. And every timeit goes back, it slowly transformed this
very pixelated gobbly gook and it startskind of molding it into what looks like
a dog. So it sends itback again and says, that's all I
want. I want a dog thatlet's just say, in this case,

(31:59):
an adorable Dolman Dalmatian Dolmen and adorableDalmatian looks through a window on a building.
So it's then it's coming back.Now, if it was that prompt,
that would say, well, thebuilding doesn't look right right. So
it slowly starts to decipher this pixelatedgobblygook and say, give me some more
fill in some of those gaps,and it creates a new image of a

(32:23):
dog, not one that exists,but a new image based on your prompt.
I don't know if any of thatmade sense. You know, they
say that you know you really knowsomething when you can explain it to like
a seven year old. I thinkI obviously don't know anything, because a
seven year old will go, Idon't know what you're talking about. I

(32:45):
have no idea, so do you. If you go to Sora, read
the technical notes there at the bottom. You gotta scroll past all the video.
Then it says here all videos onthis page regenerated directly by Sora without
modification. So they didn't go backin there and do some fancy editing or
it just that was the prompt.Here's the video. It's incredible. I

(33:07):
just can't even tell you. Sowhy would you go to film school?
I don't want to like ruin people'scareers or say, like, you know,
you're a young film student, youwant to make movies. I get
it, the human touch is necessary. But let's think about let's say commercials,
advertisements, jingles, whatever YouTube intros. It could be something as simple

(33:30):
as you want to cool new YouTubeintro, and you can type in show
me skydiving out of a plane,crashing through a studio and landing at the
mic. That would be rad right. I just came up with that.
That's my new intro. Once Iget access to Sora, it's all over.
Once I get access to Sora,I'm going to start look, I've
made short films. I've made shortfilm some of you know that. Don't

(33:55):
really advertise that because this is aboutthe show. By the way, in
the top ten percent of podcasts worldwide. There is a major shakeup of the
podcast industry going on. All thepeople who are dumping money into podcasts are
pulling back. There's only a fewthat are doing really well, and all
these other ones, like their numbersaren't really that good. So I am
proud to say that you can readthe blog at alexxm dot com. I

(34:17):
didn't know this until I found itout, but I'm let me just check
before I shoot my mouth off.But the last time I checked the xum
experience. That's why I've shifted everything. There ranks in the top ten podcasts
worldwide. Let me just go backand check it again. Global rank top

(34:37):
ten percent. The listen scores ametric that shows the estimated popularity of this
podcast to other RSS based public podcastsin the world, from a skill of
zero to ten zero to one hundred. Sorry global rank. This podcast is
one of the top ten percent mostpopular shows out the there. Out of

(35:04):
is that right, three million,three hundred and twenty five thousand three hundred
and sixty or seventy six podcasts globallythree million, three hundred and twenty five.
I remember when it was in thehundreds of thousands. It's now three
million. I wonder how many ofthose are still active though, you know,
people pod fade. The point isthis is pretty cool. I'm not

(35:28):
trying to brag here. I'm justsaying the podcast industry has been hit hard,
just so you know, and alot of podcasts are just suck and
win. So thank you for yoursupport and listening to this jumbled show,
and I hope to always give youlike cool information and hopefully keep you above
the curve. I talk about technologyall the time in the show, and
it's a nice switch from society,culture, news and stuff that may enrade

(35:51):
you. I know that we havethe upcoming election, it will be an
absolute hellscape on talk radio. Conservativetalk radio, liberal talk radio, liberal
television, you name it, youknow it. And yeah, I'm trying
to find other things for us totalk about. Nobody wants to talk about

(36:13):
COVID, Nobody wants to talk aboutmy arcarditis with the vaccines anymore. I've
beat people over the head with thedangers of that damn vaccine from Pfizer.
I don't care which one you took. There's other things in research you can
do, but at least the Pfizervaccine we know is not safe and not
effective. Look, I don't evenwant to talk about the safe because some
people say, well, I don'tknow, there's conflicting. Okay, fine,
Look it's not effective. It's lessthan one percent effective, and I'm

(36:37):
gonna stop talking about this. Intwenty twenty four, you know, I
wrote a damn book on it.I should have been able to drop the
mic then and never talk about itagain. But every folks, I don't
talk about it much anymore because Iknow there's plenty of evergreen content in the
archives if anyone's interested in this topicat any length whatsoever. I've got long

(36:58):
shows, full shows and tie showstwo hours long dedicated to this. But
and if the book didn't help,I don't know what else to tell people.
But I have got to get awayfrom this because every time this is
mentioned, every once in a while, somebody's like, oh, I totally
know what you mean, your hundredercentright, But most of the time people
look at me with their wide eyes, dimly lit by the way, wide

(37:22):
eyes just looking at me, marvelingthat I would even say such a thing,
And I'm like, where have youbeen? What bubble do you live
under? I don't know if it'sthe newsletters I'm signed up to and the
stuff that I watch and what I'mdialed into every not every day. I'm
not going to over exaggerate. Everyweek, at least it slowed down because

(37:45):
I just frankly stopped looking at it. But at least every week, every
week, I mean I was onthe show. I was on the air
five nights a week. Almost everyother show, I talk about some new
article that came out, some horriblestudy that was done, whether it was
mass don't work, or the Pfizervaccine is ineffective, or myocarditis is like
one of the number one issues peopleare having dropping dead the young, All

(38:07):
these athletes having heart attacks. It'snot just Lebron, was it Lebron's son?
Yeah, who had issues, folks, It's Jamie Fox. People thought
was gonna die because he had thevaccine, and nobody knew what this mystery
is. There's legions of people who'vecome out and talked about neurological things.
Oh look, here I go talkingabout it. But you know, I

(38:30):
just I don't know how this stuffdoesn't reach people. I've done what I
can, Like I said, Ineed to drop the mic on it.
But once I wrote the book,or I should have done it, that
I should have been it. Iactually shouldn't be talking about being banned all
the time that wrote the book onthat silence. But to this day April
third, twenty twenty four, tothis day, people still don't know that

(38:53):
one of the three vaccines Maderna,Johnson and Johnson and Pfiser, we find
out one of them is completely ineffective, the one I've researched the most.
Pfizer, we also find out theypulled another one which you may have taken
off the market. Oh you didn'tknow that pulled it off the market.

(39:15):
Most people didn't even know that whythere were safety issues? Now was that
in your nightly news during this wholeCOVID debacle or were you told it's safe
and effective and then when they tookit off the shelves, did anyone come
and tell you, hey, youknow, sorry, but yeah, that
vaccine you probably shouldn't have taken itbecause people are having health issues. You

(39:36):
didn't know that. Did you goto alexexim dot com. How the CDC
silently pulled the J and J Johnsonand Johnson vaccine from distribution. Oh you
didn't know that? Yeah? Okay. So people look at me, oh
wild eyed when I tell them thesekinds of things, and I'm like,
just go google it, looked up, look it up. Listen to this.
I just pulled it up because noone will believe me after. This

(39:57):
is from the CDC, the Centerfor Disease Control and Prevention, and I
quote. After conducting an updated analysis, evaluation and investigation of reported cases,
the FDA has determined that the riskof thrombosis with thrum by Tapaina from Bikode
to Pena I don't know syndrome TTSa syndrome of rare and potential life threatening

(40:22):
blood clots. What were people saying? There were YouTube videos mortician saying we
don't know what this stuff, Thesecrazy blood cuts that are coming at people.
A syndrome of rare and potentially lifethreatening blood clots in combination with low
levels of blood platelets, with onsetof symptoms approximately one to two weeks following

(40:44):
administration of the Jansen COVID nineteen vaccinewarrants limiting authorization authorized use rather of the
vaccine. That is a quote fromthe CDC. They then told people to
pull it and get rid of Thisis on the website. Hold on,

(41:06):
they removed it. I had alink. Oh here it is. Oh
here it is. They changed thelink for some reason. Oh, this
page is archived for historical purposes,so they didn't want it on the home
page anymore. Jansen COVID nineteen vaccineis no longer available in the US.
All remaining US government stock of JansenCOVID nineteen vaccines expired May seven, twenty

(41:27):
twenty three. Dispose of any remainingCOVID nineteen vaccines in accordance with local,
state, and federal regulations. Now, were you told this after you took
this and they told you everything's fine. Did they come back and tell you
later that there's issues with this withthrombosa. You didn't know that. Did

(41:55):
they come and knock on your door? They surely tried to where'sh you to
take it? But when the wholething goes belly up for people who took
the Johnson and Johnson COVID vaccine.When I say belly up that goes in
the news and they're like, oh, we got to pull this thing,
get rid of any remaining stock,dispose of any remaining Jansen COVID nineteen vaccines.
That is their quote from an announcementthey made on their page. Are

(42:20):
you trying to tell me that theywent out and told everybody, Hey,
you know, I just want tolight it. No, probably shouldn't have
taken that vaccine. People who arehaving life threatening thrombosis or whatever neurological you
know, people were having all theseweird symptoms in about the same time,
within a couple of weeks after takingit. Pfiser Maderna and the Johnson and

(42:44):
Johnson Jansen vaccine, which they pulledfrom the market. So let's recap.
Let's recap. So the Pfiser vaccine, which I wrote the book Pfiser's Efficacy
Illusion, go find it on Amazon, is less than one percent effective.
But they were telling you it's ninetyfive percent effective. Were they lying to
you? Frankly, I consider itlying. But they would say, well,

(43:05):
we're using relative risk reduction, notabsolute risk reduction, which would tell
you the full picture. So youknow, smoking beer is there. So
we find that out about Pfizer doesn'twork, doesn't work, then we find
out the Jansen Johnson and Johnson COVIDnineteen vaccine has health issues, could possibly
kill you, and some people have, apparently from the reports I've read over

(43:30):
the past few years, dropped deadafter taking some of these vaccines. They
dispose of it, get it offthe market. Didn't really tell many people
unless you're a frequent visitor of theCDC website, which no one is.
So then what do we have?One other vaccine from Maderna that frankly,

(43:51):
what they were saying was the efficacywasn't as high, and I'm sure it
wasn't. The most popular Pfisers was. Pfizer's was the most marketed vaccine probably
in the history of the world.I'm not kidding, probably the most advertised
and marketed vaccine in the history ofthe world. I saw that bastard Albert
Borla, you see here I go, it's just aggravating that people don't know

(44:17):
this. But when I saw thatbastard Albert Borla, the CEO of Pfiser,
up there shooting his mouth off,how he was a damn god in
his book Moonshot, like he's somesort of astronaut. He's an asshole.
But anyway, he's up there withGail King kissing his big white ass,

(44:38):
saying she's a Pfeiser girl. Youcan't make this stuff up. You want
to talk about complicit, absolute collusionwith the media and the news and every
I played the clip before a supercutof Pfiser sponsoring every damn news segment CNN,

(45:00):
Fox, MSNBC, This this healthand news report sponsored by Pfizer.
I mean, every damn show.You think CVS Morning News is gonna have
Alex Exhemont about his groundbaking book,the Pfizer's Efficacy Illusion Doubt that. Yeah?

(45:22):
That? Did I tell you I'vebeen banned? Yeah, okay,
I won't be on Oprah's Book ofthe Month club. No, that ain't
gonna happen. Friends, Let's nottalk about vaccines anymore because we just you
know where I go. A spiral, a spiral out of control, because
it is still shocking to me.I guarantee you if tomorrow they said,

(45:44):
look, COVID's up again. Wehave a new vaccine. We just pulled
it out of thin air. Peoplewould start taking it, not do any
research on it, not look atany of the unanswered questions about the last
three vaccine. Do you know howmany people took the Jansen, Johnson and
Johnson vaccine who don't even know itwas pulled from the show and there's health
issues with it? You know howmany people? Most of them? By
the way, that's the answer.Okay, let's bring this in for a

(46:07):
nice smooth landing. I don't wantto talk about it anymore. You need
to go to open ai dot comslash sora and watch the entire video,
film, advertising, and possibly anyindustry that's based on advertising and video.

(46:29):
Go billy up people who are filmingall the stock footage. What's the point?
What's the point of having even thesestock footage subscription services where people in
advertising agencies, we need video ofa kid with a ball, all right,
go pay one thousand dollars for thatfor like, you know, six
months of licensing. Some of theselicensing agreements, they're restrictive and they cost

(46:51):
a lot of money. Some arecheap. You can get a lot of
stock footage really inexpensive from places likestory blocks and the like. But the
point is shut her stock, asyou know. But the point is,
why would I even pay a royaltyor anything and have restrictions when I can
just generate it and known it anddo whatever I want with it what I
want, and create amazing thing Rightnow, I could if I had access

(47:16):
to open AI's Sora, which,by the way, Open AI. I
am a huge fan. If youneed a beta tester, call me.
I'm available. I would love toget my hands on the Sora. I
just I am drooling looking at thevideo it's created. I mean the title
video under creating video from text showsit looks like paper planes flying like birds

(47:43):
through the trees, and it looksamazingly real. Something like this alone would
have cost you got thousands, ifnot millions of dollars to put in a
movie. You know, these AIvideo generators were making money handovers over here
in Hollywood, not far from me. Guess what their days are numbered.

(48:05):
Why do you think the writer's strikewent on for so long and they were
freaking out about AI? It wasn'tabout royalties and we want this, No,
No, it was about AI becausethey knew all it took they could
do the pilot. Bring a pilotto a studio. They say, okay,
yeah, we kind of like it, but we're gonna have our ai
write the whole thing because you're notvery funny, and we like the pilot,
we like the actors. Yeah,we'll take it. And they wanted
to get paid for everything that goesdown downstream, right, You could You

(48:30):
could hire a writer to write,like just you know, write one or
two episodes and flesh out the charactersfor us. We need like five characters
for a new action film. Theywrite all that, you go, okay,
we'll think of me here. Youdon't need them anymore. You don't
need to rewrite. You know,it is getting crazy. Just go to
chat GPT and ask it to giveyou lyrics to a song or a poem,
or write a letter, write acover letter, write a press release,

(48:52):
write a blog post something you're interestedin, and then you can tweak
it to your personality. It's justit's this is all very very incredible.
It's all happening so fast. EvenI have a hard time and I'm watching
this all the time, as youknow, and I'm like, what this,
Sora is incredible. I mean,that was the big kahuna, at

(49:16):
least as far as I was concerned. I knew the art we had,
I knew the generative text we have, but I was like, when are
they gonna have video? And youcan basically create a character out of nothing,
air, out of an idea.I want to make a gangster film
a la Quentin Tarantino, you know, based in Tokyo about the yakuza.

(49:38):
You know. I mean, youcan have chat GPT help you with the
script. You have Sora create thedamn movie. You need the theme song
boom psuno. I mean, itis getting nuts. Think about if you're
just using the three tools that Imentioned about music generation, text gener content

(50:01):
and then now video when it becomesavailable, what can't you do as a
either content creator marketer. You haveyour own business, you could literally chat
GPT could write a commercial for you, write the whole script for the actors.
You could then put it in toSora and have Sora create all the

(50:21):
video. And then let's say youneed background music or a jingle. You
could use Suno and that would createthat and you just put it all together.
Whoa whoa, I mean, whoaman? And you? I mean
think about how many low budget horrormovies and B movies that were created with

(50:43):
like a meager budget. Some ofthe movies that I loved in the eighties,
late seventies, early eighties where alot of horror movies, a lot
of teenagers do right, horror movies, B movies, TNA movies. That's
what you're watching, your teenager,and a lot of them had meager budget.
Right, But imagine like paying maybewhat how much is chat ept ten

(51:05):
bucks? No, twenty bucks forthe plus? Twenty five for the team?
Right? Which how many in theteam? Does it matter? Twenty
five dollars per user per month?Why that doesn't make sense fast moving teams?
Oh, because they want to beable to collaborate. I get it.
So under one account that makes sense, right for businesses, makes it
makes sense. But so you're justan individual, you want the plus account

(51:28):
twenty bucks a month. I don'tknow what sore will be, but it's
from chat ept. They're not charginga whole lot for it. So let's
say it's fifty bucks a month.Let's just let's just go a little higher.
And then you're looking at like seventydollars a month, and you could
generate scripts, then create the video. You could have an entire advertising agency

(51:50):
with one guy just using this stuff. It's crazy tree. So this is
why I keep saying, yeah,people are to lose the jobs. I
don't see how they can't. Idon't see how they can't. It's just
like everyone warned with this twenty dollarsan hour that slick Willie Governor Gavin Newsom

(52:12):
as I like to call him,or the bastard from Hell Newsome, it
just started what Monday of this week, I believe, passed a law that
all fast food companies except for bakeriesbecause he had homies, his buddies at
Panera Bread who he didn't want tobe affected by it. This whole scandal

(52:32):
broke as usual with him. Buttwenty dollars an hour for fast food workers,
and all I keep hearing all overthe place is yeah, we're firing
people or we're we're cutting their hours. So how's that work? So now
what are they going to use?Well, thanks Newsome, a lot of
people are going to lose their jobs, by the way. But and by
the way, you're now going topay like twenty five dollars for a cheeseburger.

(52:52):
You think I'm kidding, I'm notkidding. They're using was it Wendy's?
I forget what fast food changed?So if it wasn't Wendy's, I'm
sorry, but one of burger King, Wendy's, Carls Junior Jack in the
Box. It was one of those. But throw them all in so I
don't get sued for singling one out. But they were talking about doing surge
pricing. So if you go atlunch, your burger might be a dollar

(53:15):
more than if you go after lunch, If you go around dinner time,
it'll be more than if you goat two in the morning or whatever.
So surge pricing, like with uberand stuff. Apparently that's not going over
very well from the reports I heard. But you're gonna have a instead of
going McDonald's and being able to geta reasonable and that's all gone up too.

(53:37):
But you know, I don't know, fourteen to fifteen bucks for like
a meal deal. Isn't that whatthey cost with tax? Do they now
something like that? And what it'llbe like twenty twenty five bucks some of
these people are saying. And yougotta remember a lot of the I know
it's a chain, so you think, oh, well, McDonald's they can
handle a big corporation. You gottremember there's a lot of independent franchise e
owners, not just McDonald's but otherfast food places. So they're running an

(54:00):
independent business. But yes, theyget a lot of support from the big
guy McDonald's or whatever the corporation is. I get it. But still that
really cuts in their bottom line.And I'm not saying that people should work
for a unreasonably low wage. Idon't believe that right. I think people
should be paid decently enough to live. Look even at twenty dollars an hour,

(54:21):
at least living in major cities NewYork, LA, I can imagine
most cities. Forget San Francisco,forget it, forget New York, Fairfold
County, Connecticut, where I spendsome time. Very expensive. Now everywhere
you go, everything's going up.You know that. I know that inflation
has hit everybody hard. With theprice of food, with the price of
gas, with the price of heatingyour home, with the price of the

(54:43):
cost of a home, with interestrates, credit card debt, everybody's getting
squeezed. But twenty dollars an hourin a big city like this, that's
just that's like survival wage. You'renot getting rich, you're not saving for
a home, You're just getting buy. So may make it seem like this
twenty dollars an hour is going tosolve everything. Well, not if someone's

(55:05):
working thirty five forty hours a week. Now it's fifteen or twenty. How's
that helping them? How's that helpingSome people say, well, they're making
more money. Yeah, but thattwenty dollars an hour if they were making
let's say fifteen or sixteen whatever they'remaking before, that is not really going
to offset a whole lot when you'reworking fifteen hours. And guess what a

(55:27):
lot of people who are asked togo part time never never fails. Nobody
calls unless I'm on the phone.Some of those people asking to go part
time asked to go part time ratheror forced or volunteld to go part time.
We'll lose health insurance. What's thatgoing to cost him? Oh?
On average, you know a lot. Go try and get Obamacare. Told

(55:49):
it cost you seven eight hundred dollarsa month, unless you're flat broke,
then they give you discounts. Butthe point is, look, I understand
why people want twenty dollars an hour. That should probably be in twenty twenty
four, with the inflation, twentydollars an hour should probably be minimum wage
for every job, not just fastfood. But what they were also saying

(56:12):
is this is going to force otherbusinesses to Let's say you're working in tech
support for eighteen dollars an hour andyou're like, why work here? I
can go to McDonald's and get twentydollars an hour. Have very little responsibility,
Right, Yeah, it's fast food, but I don't care. Some
people don't care. They didn't wantthe money. You know, they're doing
a job they hate already, solike, why don't I go to this?

(56:32):
So it's going to force other companies, at least here in California,
I believe, and this will havea ripple effect around the nation because everyone's
going to say, well, inCalifornia they get twenty dollars an hour or
McDonald's. Right, Well, yeah, but that's a very expensive state.
That's I can imagine what the employeeis going to say. But let's say
you're in California, someone wants tohire you for eighteen nineteen dollars an hour.

(56:54):
You go, well, no,you gotta give me twenty five twenty
five, Now that's not what we'repaying. Well, I can go to
McDonald's and get twenty right, that'swhat everyone's gonna think. Employers are gonna
think that what kind of an employeeam I going to get if I'm offering
what someone can get doing fast food? And you know, I'm not knocking
people who work in fast food.I'm just saying it's a job with relatively

(57:15):
no someone with no experience. Youcould be a teenager and they'll hire you
and you could learn how to workthe grill, or learn the cash register,
or work behind the scene, whatever, become a manager. I remember
when I was younger, it wasa good job to be a manager at
McDonald's. You got paid well,like people thought, oh you're a manager.
McDonald's almost be doing pretty well becausenobody would manage a McDonald's for sixteen

(57:36):
bucks an hour, right, Butpeople will work there. I mean,
I remember when I was a kid. I'm sure it was like what eight
six seven, eight dollars an hour, So it seems like a big jump.
You go twenty dollars an hour.Wow, well it's twenty twenty four.
But have you looked at the priceeggs? Have you looked at the
price of steak gas? I keepseeing this on the news, people say,

(57:59):
oh gas all time highs and theyshow it in like North Carolina for
like three dollars and fifty cents,and they're all freaking out. Come to
La bub Come to California. You'repaying five dollars a gallon minimum minimum.
People realize the rents are ridiculous inCalifornia. I've told you before, there

(58:20):
is virtually although I do have abusiness here which I can relocate and that
doesn't bother me. I have andfriends. I get it, like,
yeah, there's there's reasons to sayhere. I get that. But when
you look at the cost of livingin other places, it's almost like you
feel like a fool. Sometimes rentis so high, gases so high,
the straits you're falling apart. InLa Prime is out of control. Everywhere

(58:42):
you go. People are stealing rightin front of you, walking right out
of the CBS or the grocery storewith merchandise. You're like, why am
I paying like a suck? Right? So we got a lot of problems
in California. Now, what especiallythink about it? How many It's gonna
really hurt people who won low incomepeople because guess what they eat? Fast
food? It's cheap, right,fast food cheap. So people who were

(59:07):
normally say, well, at leastI can go get like hit the dollar
menu. I remember doing that,bro, I've been there, done that
dollar menu. Dude, you couldget a burger and like a coke for
like two bucks. You can geta whopper Junior for a dollar. I
don't know if you can do thatanymore, but they still have dollar menus.
I don't know if you get awopper Junior. I'm talking like nineties.

(59:30):
When I was working at a itwas like I was renting a place
with a bunch of other dudes,and I was selling suits, and I
was young and kind of broke andtry to go to school at the same
time and still go out and drinkand party with my friends at the same
time, and you know all thatstuff. So times are tough, and
miraculously we all got by. Anda lot of it was in part two

(59:53):
dollar whopper Junior burgers, because youcould be starving and like, well I
could if I just have a dollarand I could drink water. I remember
those days, bro. Look,time's tough. Times are tough for everybody,
So twenty dollars an hour is probablythe minimum. But I keep hearing

(01:00:14):
everywhere all these restaurants because a lotof rest of you gotta remember, they're
not all McDonald's. There's still likefast food independent owners of there's rallys here,
and then what's the one on thecorner. They're everywhere. You probably
have one in your town. Someburger joint owned by a family, could
have been for twenty years. They'regonna be forced to pay twenty dollars an
hour, whether they like it ornot, and whether they can afford it

(01:00:35):
or not. So if they've gotlet's say they've got ten full time employees,
it now might be five full timeemployees, and you know two or
three part time, and two peopleget fired just because they can't. They
can't do it. They got topay. They've got by law, they've
got to pay that twenty dollars anhour, and if they don't, they're
totally screwed. The fines will beastronomical. They know it. So they're

(01:00:55):
like, all right, and that'sthat started. So if you're seeing an
increase in prices, at least inCalifornia, this is all the only place
that's been mandated, you can blamenewsom. Okay, when you pay twenty
five dollars for burger, fries anda coke. You're paying ten dollars,
you know more, because who doyou think is gonna eat this cost?
Who do you think is gonna eatthe cost? Who? You? That's

(01:01:22):
who? You're gonna eat the twentyfive dollars burger? And then you're gonna
take it in the bum because they'reraping you with this. You twenty dollars
an hour minum? Wait, street, it's gonna happen. Should all jobs
be now twenty dollars an hour?Maybe? Because if fast? Look,

(01:01:43):
I can't think of many other jobsI'm trying to think. I can't really
think of any where the requirements areso minimal, I guess, like working
at a gas station pumping gas.Okay, like the I'm not knocking anyone
who does not I pumped out?Do they even have full service stations anymore?

(01:02:04):
That was a job in high schoolyou could get for sure, right,
All I have to know how todo is pump gas and know how
to check a dipstick and make surethey have oil and pour the oil in
there. Although some dudes I knewwould be so damn high and stoned they
probably couldn't even do that. Butthe point is, by the way,
that worked at the gas station forgetit, long story Insania, California,

(01:02:27):
the Shell station right smack down inthe middle. Oh yeah, I have
a varied work history when I wasin high school. But anyway, I
don't know why I'm telling that.I'm laughing. I'm smiling and laughing because
it was like dazed and confused.That's what it felt like when I worked
there. Long story. Anyway,the Shell station in Encinitas, California,

(01:02:47):
would hire someone like me who wasin high school, who had virtually no
work experience at the time, andwhat's kind of stupid. Let's be honest.
I wasn't well educated at the time. I was going to Disneyland by
the Sea, San Diego High School. Yea, the teachers were good.
I'm not knocking the teachers, butyou had to actually do the homework and
go to class. I ditched alot. The point is, and then

(01:03:09):
yes, I became the fine youngman that you see before you. But
the point is I was able toget the job at the gas station because
you didn't really have to have anyrequirements, and they'd hire part timers after
who'd work after school. That's whatI did. Yeah, McDonald's. Yeah,

(01:03:30):
fast food pizza place right, deliveringpizzas if you had a car.
You know, that was always goodfor kids because they get the tips.
They'd love that newspaper route. Okay, but there's not a whole lot of
there's some jobs that you just haveto have experience, right, and the
bar is relatively low. I guessyou could, like, I'm not knocking

(01:03:51):
people who work there. Again,I have to be careful, right because
some of these are good jobs andyou never know what I'm going to be
doing. But but you know,a Walmart greeter, you know, a
lot of times be a senior citizenwho's still you know, working. You
know, sometimes I don't need themoney. Sometimes they do, but sometimes
I just want to get out ofthe house, you know, and have
a twenty five you know, houra week type thing where they don't work
a lot, but yeah, theystill feel active and they're doing things and

(01:04:12):
you know, their mind's working ajob in the mall teenagers would do that
working at like a clothing store likecinnabun something like that. Right, Yeah,
But then other than that, shouldn'tall that those jobs get twenty dollars
an hour? I'm just saying they'renot like, they don't have to be
highly skilled. It's like a firsttime job. Everybody had them, we

(01:04:35):
all had them. I did allof those, by the way, I
delivered peaches at one point, didn'tdo well in that. I worked in
a toy store. I worked ina like lumber yard, which is almost
like a home depot. There's notmany like independent ones anymore. I worked
in like just about every pumping gas. I told you that was like one
of my first jobs, you know, when I was like sixteen seventeen.

(01:04:57):
But yeah, you know, somejobs probably deserve the twenty dollars, Probably
not all of them. And I'mjust saying, you're a kid living at
home, you're saving up for yourfirst Yeah, you're working for the summer,
you're working fifteen hours a week.Oh another one, I thought of
lifeguard. Remember a lot of kidswanted to be a lifeguard, and that

(01:05:18):
actually paid a little bit better.So those are, you know, landscaping.
Those are kind of jobs that youget as a teenager maybe young adult,
maybe not pay that well. Shouldthey all be twenty dollars an hour?
I don't know, but I knowyou're gonna have a twenty five dollars
Burger coming soon in California, andwe just get squeezed here, man,

(01:05:39):
we just get squeezed. If you'resmart, you will look into AI so
you will have a job, hopefully, or you can start your own business
or do something online where you're makingmoney. It will help vastly. If
you're a musician, sorry, Ialready told you in the last show that

(01:05:59):
you got a lot of competition withAI. And if you're making movies,
if you're a advertiser, you wantto make television shows, film, I
don't care what promotional videos so oram I ruin that career idea for you?
So you might want to switch overto cybersecurity or AI or one of
these other jobs that will be indemand in the future. No matter how
many jobs AI gobbles up, thatthey're going to be half to people working

(01:06:25):
on the AI side, whether it'ssupport keeping these systems up, innovating them,
creating new ones, working with companieswho want to use AI in their
business. And you're the official AIofficer, you might want to start looking
into it because I'm just telling you. I'm just I'm scared and excited at
the same time because I don't knowwhich way this is going to go.
It's almost like like the world rightnow with AI is like a monkey with

(01:06:47):
a grenade. We have this shinynew plaything, right just like a monkey
with a grenade, and we're lookingat it, we're throwing it around.
This is so cool and exciting andwe have no idea in our hands is
pure death. The monkey's gonna throwit to his friends, They're gonna play
with it. But it just takesthat one monkey to get a little too
curious, who pulls the pin andboom kills them all, or at least

(01:07:12):
kills the one who pulled the pin, and the others scatter off and go
running. They thought it was thecoolest thing in the world. Now it's
instant death. Mm hmmm, thatcould be AI. I'm not saying like
Skynet terminator stuff, We're all gonnadie. It's gonna take over. Realize
human human beings are a pestilence hasto be exterminated from the I'm not saying
all that. I'm just saying,once it's fully capable of all these things

(01:07:34):
and we all have access to them, and it's unleashed on the world,
for good or for bad. Itold you they're using AI to hack people?
What are going to be the trueconsequence? Are there gonna be so
few jobs because AI is gonna takeover so much stuff that the only people
are the only jobs will be supportingAI? I get it. There's manual

(01:07:55):
jobs are gonna have to be doneright, labor jobs, other creative of
you know, are you gonna wantall AI art? Are you gonna want
all AI music? Probably not.You're gonna want some from human artists,
the soul, the passion, thehuman touch. Right, yeah, But

(01:08:15):
stuff that can be used for AI, why wouldn't Why wouldn't they use it?
It's cheaper, some of it's free, use it for free, use
chat ept the basic version for freethree point five four you gotta pay for
four is much better. By theway, it's twenty bocks. Who can
it's twenty bucks. You're gonna probablyspend that on a burger. Twenty bucks

(01:08:38):
a month. Think about all youcould do in a month. People are
generating books, coarse material, whitepapers, everything. It's crazy. So
here's the thing again, I'm gonnashut this down. I only came on
to tell you about Sora. Igot into vaccines. Also other sorts of
nonsense. So this went way long. I thought I was gonna do ten

(01:08:59):
minutes. Of course, we're anhour in. Do yourself a favor.
If you're still on the fence aboutAi, go to OpenAI dot com slash
Sora, Go look at it,Go look at the video that it's creating,
and you tell me if there's gonnabe a lot of opportunity in the
future for people to make videos inmovies and films. I know some assholes

(01:09:23):
out there going, oh, it'snothing can beat the human touch when I
stroke my guitar or I play onmy piano, or when I'm acting in
the theater or I'm on stage,Nothing can reproduce that. You sure?
You sure? Because what if Ishowed you and AI generated Tupac, who

(01:09:45):
could do a full concert and neverget tired. What about the toke is
it Tokyo from Japan? The Aigirl I forget her name, the anime
seven foot dancing hologram that has numberone not kidding, number one hit singles?
Completely fake? Yeah, okay,you obviously haven't seen what I've seen.

(01:10:09):
Bub Oh looks duck shoom uk shoomuk soom duck, soom duck soom
Duck, soom uk so
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