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May 7, 2025 123 mins
On this episode of BZ's Berserk Bobcat Saloon Radio Show: BZ's cybersecurity expert MIKE FITZPATRICK of NCX Group returns to talk about digital security, and the huge inroads made by A.I. on every level imaginable! Plus: • An A.I. musical surprise on the show! • Happy Stories and otherwise! • More buttery political goodness! 🎙️ New to streaming or looking to level up? Check out StreamYard and get $10 discount! 😍 https://streamyard.com/pal/d/5768029124820992
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
You're listening to Late nine Radio on the s HR

(01:20):
Media Network cushion. There will be mature themes explored and
potentially adult language used. If Conservatorian words, phrases, certain concepts,
or rhetoric offends you, tune out.

Speaker 2 (01:32):
Now, I have come here to chew bubble gum, then
kick asss all.

Speaker 3 (01:38):
Out of Freedom is never more than one generation away
from extinction. We didn't pass it on to our children
in the bloodstream.

Speaker 4 (01:45):
The only way they can inherit the freedom.

Speaker 3 (01:47):
We have known is if we fight for it, protect it,
defend it, and then hand it to them with the
well talked lessons of how they in their lifetime must
do the same. And if you and I don't do this,
and I may well spend our sunset years telling our
children and our children's children what it once was like
in America when men were pretty.

Speaker 5 (02:30):
I'm turning through the keos, got through them back if
the stars ain't Google list and pushing.

Speaker 6 (02:35):
Them back from the salon to the.

Speaker 7 (02:37):
Day we's spinning new role, constitutions macmfass.

Speaker 8 (02:41):
There's a big cost creaking shadows on the land.

Speaker 7 (02:45):
Fence with the schemes trying to put my hands but
I'm the shirtfer gotten.

Speaker 5 (02:49):
Through the storm.

Speaker 7 (02:51):
Wouldn't do your freedoms of mo.

Speaker 9 (02:53):
They spend its hairs better see through the haze.

Speaker 8 (02:56):
He maggots lost in the maze, calling it out. No
fear in my soul.

Speaker 7 (03:02):
This patriots firing, losing control, shampo the touching, the stand
for the truth, battle the game.

Speaker 8 (03:13):
Sure bulls, come and remember my This judge is twisted,
trying to steal our rights.

Speaker 10 (03:30):
But I'm locked unto.

Speaker 7 (03:31):
They gotta been my sights from change six to the
border of the cell in the South, I'm screaming from
the mountain of a revolution.

Speaker 11 (03:38):
They marked the.

Speaker 10 (03:41):
Stars and stretch forever under God's open sky.

Speaker 8 (03:44):
No global has change gonna change this land.

Speaker 12 (03:47):
I'm the sheriff, bollet the truth in my head.

Speaker 10 (03:50):
They pushed their agenda bottom bringing the ball, they promise
it's empty.

Speaker 7 (03:54):
Their heart size.

Speaker 9 (03:55):
Called Chicago's bleeding.

Speaker 13 (03:58):
I'm fighting for the people with.

Speaker 7 (04:00):
Warriors start stand for the truthful games.

Speaker 10 (04:11):
Come and remember my Dame.

Speaker 5 (04:15):
And the storms walked the line forty one years badge
on the grind.

Speaker 4 (04:29):
Now I'm on the day, my voice like a plate
cutting through.

Speaker 5 (04:33):
The lines that the traders made Hurricanes range boys standing
tall sheriffs.

Speaker 8 (04:38):
Something constant sends are in the corn.

Speaker 7 (04:43):
Taking America stand.

Speaker 8 (04:58):
Remember Conservatives of Freedom's battle ground, A certain.

Speaker 10 (05:19):
God in country.

Speaker 6 (05:20):
This fot is real.

Speaker 10 (05:28):
Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, children of all ages.
Oh my god, the things you can do with a
I welcome to be Z's Bersert Bob Katsaloon Radio Show,
live and direct from the s h R Media Studios
in North Idaho, in an actual free state. I am,

(05:48):
if you haven't guessed it by now, your conservative sherpa,
and I am guiding you through the mailstrom of demarant
leftist globalist lie, chaos, decit, betrayal and all of that.
Thanks for being here tonight. S We're gonna discuss that song.

(06:09):
We're gonna discuss a whole bunch of stuff. Shoot, I
almost didn't go through my whole spiel. I almost started
the show. I've got a great guest for you tonight.
By the way, what you're going to hear tonight consists
of my opinion, my opinion only, and of course the
opinion of my guest, who is Mike Fitzpatrick. I am

(06:29):
doing the job the American media maggots won't. I am
fundamentally changing America, one leftist diaper at a time. We
don't water our drinks, just like we don't water our conversations.
We are still serving stiff drinks right here in the saloon,
along with facts, history, logic, rationality, proportion, context, tradition, clarity
and common sense for normal people like you all. We

(06:52):
talk about politics, religion, crime, culture, race, sex, economic science, law.
We talk about it all right here at the saloon
where the speed which is free, but the booze is not.
And with that having been said, I will bring in
my guest in just a moment. Have you ever had
something where you've read, You've read a piece in say

(07:17):
social media, and.

Speaker 9 (07:21):
In that piece.

Speaker 10 (07:24):
You commented on something, and someone that you didn't think
would say or write something similar to that commented back
to me. I'm going to go off the rails just
for a moment, and then your normally scheduled programming will return. Well,

(07:48):
what I mean by that is, I had a very
brief one conversation with an individual who claims that he
is very religious. And with that, I don't even need
to put this guy's name up there. If I do,

(08:11):
I'll put it up very briefly. This was his post. Now,
having said that, in that particular post, he responded to me,
and in the response that I gleaned off of that,

(08:32):
this is a person who indicates that he is very religious,
and I'm not really happy with the response. And this
is a continuing series of things to indicate why, Besy,
I'm not really happy today. I'm going to be very
happy shortly. But this is one of those things where
I simply have to get it off my chest. I

(08:54):
am about to illustrate to you that this is why,
in my opinion, all together, too many religious people are assholes.
They're not far from getting what they deserve, eradication if
they continue like this. So note two religious people like
this other one who responded to me. I'm not even

(09:16):
sure i'm going to read the comment, but essentially from
a very religious individual who said, essentially, well, I'm going
to hell because i'd like to see a conservative pope
and i'd like to see someone do something about the
various problems that are in the church. Now, when I

(09:37):
said eradication, let me make this very clear to everyone.
Islam wants religion eradicated. Certainly Christianity, demarrats, leftists and globalists
want religion eradicated except Islam, because Islam plays long ball,
it fights back, and it will kill you. They know that,

(10:00):
if given the chance, Islam will kill you. So let
me state to this gentleman, fuck you, you pious piece
of shit. Now, some people may say at this point busy,
because that's my name. I wish that occasionally you would

(10:24):
come out of your shell and tell us what it
is that you really think. Well, let me see if
I might be able to go over.

Speaker 14 (10:33):
To this.

Speaker 10 (10:34):
Oh damn, how come I can't get the comments? All right,
that's all right. I can do it later, or I
can just forget about it. But this torqued me and
corked me so much.

Speaker 15 (10:48):
That it.

Speaker 10 (10:52):
Okay, I'm two ten over one ninety right now, just
in with the news, out with the mouth. Thank you.
I had to get this off my chest. It's my show.
I shouldn't let this happen, right right, I shouldn't let

(11:14):
this happen. I shouldn't let people get to me. But unfortunately,
maybe it's just my great luck. The people that I
encounter that I have encountered in my great deal of
time on this planet, who are really religious people turn
out to be the biggest assholes. Okay, maybe I should

(11:35):
drop it. I should drop it. I will drop that,
and then I will drop in. This happens to be
Mike Fitzpatrick, who is with me tonight. And Mike, thank
you very kindly for being here. I appreciate it.

Speaker 9 (11:49):
Hey, BZ, it's my pleasure. Ben, tell us how you
really feel. I know you're holding back a little bit here.

Speaker 10 (11:55):
I now someday people have they've I've been excoriated for
this on any number of times. Someday I will crawl
out of my little shell and I will be able
to find the words and grasp them so that I
may express myself. Let me go back to the chat,
all right, because already in the chat room we have

(12:17):
a ton of people. By the way, I recommend everybody
that you go into chat right now and notice this
down below. No things are changing slightly. Go subscribe to
the SAHR media channel. We are forty three people away
from reaching that magic number of five hundred in the

(12:39):
shr Media YouTube channel. It's very important. We don't exactly
know what we'll get. Maybe we'll get a pie in
the face delivered by Benny Hill, who will come up
from the dead to deliver it to our gaziqites. I
don't know, I don't know how that works. Let's go
to comments anyway, Mission Ready Men, unleast Jeremy Hanson loves

(13:04):
the music. Mission Ready Men says, good evening, welcome back,
Hey there, shr Media says howdy, and also shr media says,
I am liking the song. Mission Ready Men says, yep, baby,
it's outstanding. Unleash, Jeremy Hansen says it's great. So SHR

(13:25):
Media sp Lewis Sean Lewis says, dude, I agree, and
he welcomes all, All welcome him, All welcome each other,
all shake hands, and it's nine millimeters at midnight, come
out fighting and welcome to everybody. Oh my gosh, and
printing the reefer of common sense is printing at Count

(13:47):
Dooku's lightsaber. Huh okay, oh look the Lost Wanderer, proving
once again that not all who wander are lost and
the lost wonder oh yeah. Loving the Galactus shirt So
for those of you who may not see it, I

(14:09):
have to have my shirts made by Omar the tent Maker. However,
I asked Galactus if I could copy his photo and
put it on a seventy five X T shirt and
he gave me permission. So it was a wonderful thing.
It was a great thing. So everybody, thanks for being
in chat, and you two can be in chat. Also,

(14:33):
I have one hundred and four followers now on the
SHR Rumble channel. There are thirty five people watching live
and if you would kindly share the show from the
SAHR Media YouTube channel. Also from Rumble, as you can
see over in this little bitty box right here, you
can follow me at Bez's Saloon on x otherwise known

(14:55):
as Twitter, and if you wish, you may also up
into the SHR media network sumptuous, polacial and resplendent, oh
and plush chat room. Highly recommended that you do it
from the sahr Media YouTube channel. Side that's the best

(15:17):
side to go and shoot. Just thanks to everybody for
being here tonight. I want to see the numbers climb
as we're being on the show. But mostly thanks to
Mike Fitzpatrick for being here now. First, last, I had

(15:38):
a show last Saturday night. Mike, you may or may
not have been aware of it. I started going one
direction with the show. I was going to cover all
the stuff that I had yet to cover. I had
Jersey Joe on, and I also had Sean Lewis on
a Jersey Joe is from a reaver of common sense

(15:59):
in Sean Lewis's Edge of Liberty. They were both gracious
enough to come on the show and we spoke, and
then the Lost Wanderer came into the show. And now
I have had him on before. This should be no
massive revelation. His name is Jeff Stoner. Now Lost Wanderer

(16:20):
does in fact have one of the coolest last names
in the history of history. Okay, especially if you ever
went through high school. Having said that, now we got
into a discussion about Metallica and led Zeppelin and music,
and then it went over to AI. Lost Wanderer had

(16:44):
created and I played on that show two songs that
he had created in AI. One of them was accepted
to Spotify. So that is one of the reasons, which
I think is a trum tremendous accomplishment. But the cool
thing is about him is that he himself is an

(17:07):
accomplished musician. And we discussed about the implications for AI
in music. Is it just a tool? Do we need
to get over it is going to kill everybody, kill everything.
There will be no music anymore, it will all be soulless,
direk how's that going to happen? And then we discovered that,

(17:30):
and we kind of came to the conclusion.

Speaker 16 (17:32):
That it was.

Speaker 10 (17:35):
It was a tool to be utilized by persons who
were once fascial in another way of expressing themselves musically,
and then people the cream will always rise to the top.
And whether it's musicians. I don't play an instrument, I

(17:59):
wish I had been forced as a child to learn
to play piano or something. I mean, I played bass
guitar very badly in a number of garage bands. And
when when I joke about you know, you know, possbucket Postule,
and I make fun of it, Yeah, that was my
forty fourth garage band. I actually was in a band

(18:20):
at one time, and it hurts me to have to
say the name of this band, but it was girl
Fight and we thought it would attract you know who,
because that's what we were all about back then. And
as I said, I played the bass and very very badly.

(18:43):
But then let's go back to AI because Lost Wanderer
allowed me, He gave me permission to play these two songs.
So if you want to know what the songs are.
I'm not going to play him tonight. I'm not going
to ask him for permission again. If you want to
see him, you can listening to them.

Speaker 9 (18:59):
You can go to spot.

Speaker 10 (19:01):
If Jeff wants to talk about what's happening with his
songs in chat, I will certainly be happy to put
them up. But I don't want a crowd in my position.
With regard to Jeff, his songs were gorgeous, Mike, I'm
going to point you in the right direction so that
later on, if you want to see the show, which
was this past Saturday night, they were number one was

(19:25):
very point. The first one was beautiful and the second
one was poignant. I mean, he wrote all the lyrics,
he created the song. And that's about the time that
this intriguing interplay came to fruition and everything sort of dovetailed.

(19:46):
Because this is about the time that I thought, huh
Ai talking about it on Saturday. AI was talking to
you about it, and I need to give credit where
credit is due. I gave it to Lost Wanderer, to
Jeff Stoner, who created wondrous music. This was gorgeous. Highly

(20:12):
recommended thirty eight people watching live in Chad right now.
Thank you very much for watching live in the show.
But I need to give credit. We're due where credit
is due, folks. The song that I was so proud
to play at the beginning of the show was created
by this guy right here, Mike Fitzpatrick, and I heard

(20:42):
it the first time, and just like the song from
Lost Wanderer, the first time I heard it through because
I heard it in the green room at KLRN where
people chat in the background about what's happening and whatnot.
So he put those two songs in there and I
listened to him and I thought, bullshit. He didn't create wrong.

(21:04):
He created that. He created that music, and you created that.
So one of the first things that I said to
you was mouth a gape. How the hell did you
do that? Mike Fitzpatrick.

Speaker 9 (21:22):
You know it's you know, I've I've been messing around
with AI now for a better part of four and
a half five years, and I always tried different tools
and different applications, and I had a need for music
for something I was doing and didn't want to buy
something that was already out there and available, so I

(21:44):
wanted to try AI to see what could be done.
With that, and then that ended up leading to doing
a birthday sixtieth birthday gift for my brother of a
song made up of events in his life. Use chat
gpt to write the lyrics, and he loved it. He

(22:07):
really liked it. He said, Man, I'm gonna use that.
I'm gonna if I had an answering machine, I would
put that on my answering machine. But I think I'm
going to mandate it work that. It is my announcement music,
my theme music every time I walk into a room.
So he really liked it, and my brother doesn't like much,

(22:27):
so I was I was pretty interesting. I was pretty
impressed with that. And then Friday I just didn't I
really didn't feel like doing anything cybersecurity related. I just
wanted to mess around, play around with some stuff. And so,
you know, knowing beasy as I do. You know, you know,

(22:48):
all the concerts that he was part of at is
Filmont right, Fillmore, Filmore Right.

Speaker 10 (22:56):
I went to Fillmore East, Fillmore West, the cow Palace,
the Agora Theater, the Great Western Shoot, I'm missing a bunch,
the cow Palace, the Palladium, just all the old classic

(23:16):
sixties venues.

Speaker 9 (23:19):
So you know, I know that BEZ likes Cream and
some of the some of the older bands like that
as I do as well, and so you know, I
utilized Grock on X, I pulled up Bz's profile. I
had Grock write the lyrics based upon Bz's posts on
on X and next thing I know, I've got lyrics.

(23:41):
I told it what kind of music I was thinking about,
you know, Cream sixty siled with a little post grunge,
mixed in a little driving bass and drums, maybe tinge
of E d M on it because Bez needs a
dance beat and out of being about a boom, there

(24:02):
we go. Okay, let me ask you less than two minutes.

Speaker 10 (24:08):
You told me that before and my first snaps that
snapped said, Mike just lied to you. Something that good
couldn't have taken two minutes in AI minutes, And I thought, okay,
on on what the seventy fifth try, the first tenth try,
first time, two minutes, first try. AI wrote the lyrics,

(24:35):
did the music using all sorts of bullet points from
who I am. I was just stunned. I was floored.
I was flabbergasted. I was smacked in the gob.

Speaker 17 (24:50):
Just like that.

Speaker 9 (24:52):
I actually did one for Lonnie Poindekster as well.

Speaker 10 (24:55):
Yes, you played that for me now for me and shoot,
I could play it here over the phone. I could
bluetooth it, but I don't want to. I don't want
to because it's his song. You did it for him.
He can play it when he gets better. By the way, folks,
for me to you, despite what I said at the

(25:17):
beginning of the show.

Speaker 9 (25:19):
Here comes to the religious place.

Speaker 10 (25:22):
Now, the plea is Lonnie Poindexter had open heart surgery
late in December and he is still recovering multiple He
had something very serious occur in the surgery. He's still
in recovery. He's doing much better. So if you happen

(25:44):
to have any extra prayers floating around the ozone tonight,
if you would keep Lonnie Poindexter, who used to be
a wonderful broadcaster here on SHR plus. After he did
he wasn't doing his show anymore. He moved from DC
and he moved over to California. Always spell it with
a gay, and he wasn't doing his show for a while.
And then I would have him on the show. Sean

(26:06):
would have him on the show and we just had
a rollicking time. It was a great, great time. Lonnie
Poindexter is great people. So if you would flip up
a player, you know what I meant, send a prayer
out to Lonnietely.

Speaker 9 (26:23):
I talked to him just before the show and we
were doing this, and you know, he's he loves the
way his turned out and his is more of a
politics meets religion point of view, and so I used
gospel and I had it write lyrics based upon Lonnie's
posts on X and it's spot on. It's it's so

(26:48):
tied to him, it's not even funny. As matter of fact,
he just texted, Oh, by the way, Lonnie's dad turns
ninety four on Thursday.

Speaker 18 (26:57):
Oh my god, and my dad hit in eighty eight,
but ninety four Lonnie's dad is about as close to
my dad as there is.

Speaker 9 (27:11):
H Man, those two guys are very much alike.

Speaker 10 (27:15):
Lannie is also like our SAHR guy, Earl Biggie Jackson,
whose show is Mission READYMN. He's in the chat tonight,
so his show is is like Mission Readymen, which I
highly recommend. It's on Tuesday and Thursday days in well

(27:35):
the morning on SHR And by the way, I should
add s hrmedia dot Com shrmedia dot com. It works now,
it's fully functional. It's a great place. So when we
now say if you want to watch the show, you

(27:55):
can watch it on s HR media dot com. Sean
spiffed it all up and it's a great website and
everyone and anyone needs to visit if you want to
do so. And that's where Mission Ready Men is. Let
me get back to Earle. His show is, in fact

(28:17):
Mission Ready Men. Tuesday and Thursday mornings nine am Pacific,
eleven Central and noon Eastern. Mission Ready Men. You'll hear
the promo for him tonight. Oh speaking of which, darn okay,
let me do this. We were talking about AI and

(28:39):
Mike had done this. This was completely done by AI. Now,
after we take a break, I want to come back
play this and I want to have Mike Fitzpatrick, cybersecurity expert,
founder and CEO of nCX Group. I want him to
explain this and this is the kind of quality that

(29:03):
we're getting now out of AI. And then I want
to address all the various issues in terms of AI
is going to kill us? Will it rapids? It's little tendrils,
It's little metal tendrils around our throats as we sleep,
how is AI going to affect us? And we've got
a lot of things to talk about. So if you

(29:24):
need to use the electric winkle chamber, do so and
we'll be right back.

Speaker 15 (29:28):
Conservative Media done right.

Speaker 9 (29:32):
You're listening to the shr Media.

Speaker 19 (29:35):
Network mission log entrgues. I mean, let's face it, who's
even counting anymore? A Lost wonder is officially off course
chasing roade, rocket launches, fringe science and things that probably
viiholate causality if it burns fuel, ends time or make science.

Speaker 10 (29:55):
Everybody stop. Hold it right there. I may as well
tell you spent the entire day pounding the shit out
of AI so I could have all these images at
the beginning of the show. And then I set up
all my images for the new promo packs that were
created that are are our virgin promo packs just for

(30:17):
this show tonight, because Mike Fitzpatrick had created this wonderful
intro song. And so what did I do?

Speaker 9 (30:24):
Oh?

Speaker 10 (30:25):
Yes, I've got lots of graphics, lots of overlays for everyone.
But one of the first things that I just now
remember that I forgot is I don't have an overlay
for Lost Wanderer, And I just remembered that.

Speaker 2 (30:43):
God don't drive me nuts.

Speaker 15 (30:46):
Is very uncomfortable.

Speaker 19 (30:47):
Yeah, I'm probably gonna talk about it every other Sunday
on KLRN Radio, A lost wonderer because space doesn't come
with a roadmap, and honestly, I wouldn't follow.

Speaker 10 (30:58):
If it did.

Speaker 11 (31:01):
Hello, I'm Matt, a student at Hillsdale College. Here is
Hillsdale President Larry Arne. On the continuing relevance of the Constitution.

Speaker 4 (31:09):
Many argue today that the Constitution is outdated because it
addresses problems peculiar to the eighteenth century. Some parts of
the Constitution do read rather quaintly. Consider the adjunction that
gives titles of nobility in Article one, Section nine of
the Constitution, but is not so outdated. The purpose of
the injunction is to prevent the government granting special privileges

(31:29):
to some for partisan reasons. This strikes at the heart
of the rule of law. The coney capitalism so common
today is a place where the government bestows favors and
tax dollars on some businesses to give them a leg
up over others. This is exactly the kind of thing
the Constitution was meant to prohibit. The Constitution is not
so outdated.

Speaker 11 (31:47):
After all, This Constitution Minute was brought to you by
Hillsdale College. To join the national conversation on the Constitution,
go to constitutionminutes dot com.

Speaker 15 (32:00):
Hey fellas, are you mission Ready?

Speaker 16 (32:03):
You need to check out Mission Ready Men via Earl
Biggie Jackson on Tuesdays and Thursdays nine am Pacific, eleven
am Central and noon Eastern. It's a show that equips
you to navigate our society's challenges from a Biblical perspective
with courage and conviction. Students of Mission Ready Men, as
we examine our culture through the prism of Biblical truths, teachings,

(32:25):
and how to apply them in our daily lives, prepare
to step out, stand out, and step into your role
as a man as ordained by God. That's Mission Ready Men,
hosted by Earl Jackson on the SHR Media Network and
get Mission Ready.

Speaker 20 (32:45):
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a critically ill child. You have the ability to.

Speaker 15 (32:51):
Do that right now.

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You can sponsor a dream back for a child which
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(33:16):
Want to become a dream maker for life yourself, go
to dreamflife dot org. That's dream for life dot org.
Help a child, help a family, There is always hope.

Speaker 21 (33:29):
You're listening to to the SHL Media Network.

Speaker 10 (33:33):
First half hours down. I'm busy. You are in the saloon.
Thanks to everybody for being here tonight. Great kudos to
Mike Fitzpatrick who is here with me. We're going to
be talking about AI and a bunch of other things.
And as I said before the break, will AI kill us?
Will It's little metal tendrils come up through my bed

(33:55):
and under my mattress, who wind its way into my
ear and then punch out the other side. Actually, it'll
be very easy because there is almost nothing interfering in
between the two sides. So that's a big plus as
far as I'm concerned. And I told you that I
would play this. This is manufactured by Mike to help

(34:17):
promote his stuff. This is only about forty seconds long,
but I'm going to play it and then you folks,
let me know what you think. This is created by AI?
How tough, how difficult, and does it get the message across?
And I think it does. Let's listen.

Speaker 13 (34:37):
When it comes to vendor risk, trust alone isn't enough.
You need proof, don't lose a trusted vendor over cybersecurity.
My CSO advisor assesses guides and certifies smaller vendors so
you can work with confidence. It's not a score, it's
real validation so you can retain trusted vendors, reduce risk

(34:57):
and protect your business. Schedule a console tation today to
discuss smarter ways to secure your vendor network. Visit ncxgroup
dot com for more information.

Speaker 10 (35:11):
Now, I think that gets the point across in thirty
eight or forty seconds or so. Now again, let me
give more kudos where kudos are deserved. SHR Media Sean
Lewis's SHR Media. Sean has created any number of promo
breaks that people at SHR play. I'm not a video guy,

(35:34):
and I'm not smart enough to play that stuff and
know what's going on. All my stuff in the breaks
are audio that I put overlays up because yeah, I'm
that stupid. But if you go to Sean's show Edge
of Liberty. He has gone into Canva and created all
those things at great time and just a lot of

(35:56):
diligent and very hard work. And kudos for Sean for
being able to do that. Now that said, everybody, including
myself and Sean and Reaver of Common Sense, Jersey, Joe
and Earl were all working to upgrade our shows. And

(36:17):
this is something that you, Mike Fitzpatrick that we just
played created in AI. So can you tell a little
bit is a little bit about how you created it,
where did you create it? And the difficulty hard easy

(36:37):
learning curve. This has got to be the future.

Speaker 9 (36:41):
Yes, it's definitely the future.

Speaker 20 (36:44):
You know.

Speaker 9 (36:45):
AI is an interesting set of tools. Like I said
at the beginning, I've been working with AI for the
better part four and a half. For five years, got
GPT has been out. Most people start playing with it
when Chat showed up, but I've been using it for
marketing related functions, for copywriting and things like that for
the better part of probably two or three years before

(37:08):
open AI came out. A tool that originally came out
was Conversion AI. Then they changed their name to Jarvis.
Then they realized there might be a fight with the
Marvel folks, and so then they changed it to Jasper
and it's really a bunch of AI templates for doing
different marketing things, and so that's that's kind of where

(37:30):
it started, and then it started turning into you know,
now it's a research team. Now it's you know, I
utilized it this last Christmas season as I had some
time off to go through and actually build a business
plan for this year for the business with the new
my CSO advisor services that we've launched, and so it's

(37:54):
it's really very handy. The amount of time that it
saves is incredible. As far as the video is concerned,
that really started as a result of probably about two
years ago, starting to do a summary of a blog
post that we would do, and then we wanted to

(38:15):
put a video along with it, nameless faceless, you know,
AI kind of video with it like Fox was doing
and like NBC was doing and things like this with
some of the news publications, and so we started doing
that and the first one we actually did was a

(38:35):
takeoff on the Grinch for Christmas and utilizing AI to
actually rewrite the Grinch to make it apply to ransomware
and how the Grinch told Christmas through ransomware. So you know,
you add a little creativity to it and you put
in the right prompts and sometimes you get magic. Sometimes

(38:57):
you just get garbage. But it is an amazing aid.
And you know, busy, you know, we talked on Friday.
I think everybody should one not be a not be
afraid of it. I think everybody should utilize the tool,
learn the tool, especially those that you know might think

(39:20):
that you know, their best years are behind them, because
I swear that I think there's businesses and let me
give you. Let me give you for instance, Uh, Sunday night,
my son's best friend came over to the house. And
you know, the boys literally grew up across the street

(39:40):
from each other here. They've known each other since one
was five and the other was four. And he came
over to take my son out for birthday dinner and
got to talking to him after they the boys got back,
and he was telling me about his side hustle. And
so he's actually a band director in a high school

(40:02):
and so he's developed a side hustle. He's never really
been interested in computers, but he's gotten interested in AI
and he's learned how to use AI, and he's developed
his whole workflow to take businesses and to where they
can offload all of their most tedious functions as far

(40:24):
as answering questions and things like that through their phone
systems and having AI do it with a human voice,
like it's a team member for that small business. And
now he's selling that as a subscription service. And you know,
I got to tell you, I'm so proud of him

(40:46):
because he's never actually had an interest in computers. It
wasn't something that he was on all the time growing up.
But now he's figured out, at age twenty six, how
he can build a business with AI and going in
and solving business problems. He's got a whole prospecting engine
that's going on. He sent it out one hundred emails
a day HVAC companies, for example, to get a meeting

(41:09):
and show what he can do. And then he charges
a fee and then a monthly retainer. A great little business.

Speaker 10 (41:17):
Sure, it's wonderful. It's a great thing to do. It
solves problems. Right now, you told me. The interesting thing
that I think you'll shit you'll find is that, as
I spoke to Lost Wanderer on Saturday night, just a
few nights ago he said that he had created both
of his songs in Suno, And then I went and

(41:41):
then I remembered, oh wait, Mike said that he also
created the song for me in Suno. So you'd been
in there. You obviously have a facility with Suno. But
before you even got into AI to produce songs or

(42:03):
images or anything like that, you must have done some
investigation to try to figure out okay, soon the best.
Then maybe you identified it and said, yeah, okay, I
kind of dig so know, so how long did it
take you to get into it, subscribe whatever it is
that you need to do, download, and then go in
start working it and you figured out, hey, this works fairly.

(42:29):
Well I'm starting to become a little bit more adept
at that. What kind of a learning curve was there?
I mean for normal people, not for fat morons like me,
but normal people.

Speaker 9 (42:39):
Well, in this particular case, I had a specific need
for a specific type of.

Speaker 18 (42:45):
Track, and.

Speaker 9 (42:48):
So I just, you know, I put in a description
of what I wanted to do and what in the
search engines or actually you know what, besy, I don't
really use search engines anymore. I use AI to do
for me. Yeah, and you know, the AI have choice
for that quite frankly is grock x is AI is phenomenal.

(43:13):
But anyway, so you know, I did a search using
AI for what would be a great AI music platform
to do this type of music in, and I came
back with Suno and a couple of others, and I
went and checked out Sono and I think they've got
a I think they've got a free plan, but you know,
I mean it doesn't come with a commercial license with it.

(43:35):
So I think I signed up for the twelve dollars
a month when I think it's a hundred bucks for
the year, and I've got a commercial license, So anything
I create is now licensed music.

Speaker 10 (43:47):
There's no royalty, none of that stuff. The level that
you're at covers all of that, and you get stricken
by YouTube or you know, all the other people that
love to know because.

Speaker 9 (44:00):
Because I mean, it's all original music, it's all original content,
So you know, it's it's something that belongs to me
at this point and I've gifted it to you, so
it's it's but it's really quite interesting where they're going

(44:20):
with this. There's a great tool out there that I'm
probably going to play with an experiment with this weekend.
It's an AI I guess aggregator would be the best
way to say it. It's called Abacus AI and Abacus
is really a routing AI routing platform, so it chooses

(44:45):
it's connected and you end up with access for ten
dollars a month. You end up with access to every
AI model out there that's connected to Apicus, no additional charges,
which phenomenal. And so I mean you can get some
of the you know, cream of the crop video ais,

(45:10):
you can do music with it. You can, I mean
anything and everything. It's got Gemini, it's got Rock, it's
got all the latest models of all of them. It's
got the deep site there you go, thank you.

Speaker 10 (45:21):
This is the one that you're talking.

Speaker 9 (45:23):
Yeah, that's what I'm talking about. So you just get
the individuals and small teams. That's the chat LM teams there.
And it's ten dollars a month. Not bad, not bad.

Speaker 10 (45:40):
I almost signed up for chat GPT about four or
five days ago. And then there's still this thing that's
that's living inside of me, like a bad dead ferret
that says something similar to don't do it, don't let
it on your computer. And don't go to sleep in

(46:03):
the same house.

Speaker 9 (46:05):
There's just them.

Speaker 10 (46:06):
I don't know what the hell it is that is
keeping me from going full chat into this thing. Oh,
lost Wanderer says, uh, yeah, I haven't played with that yet,
but it is on his radar. But there's so much
stuff that you can do. I mean, you did that
song in Suno. Lost Wanderer did that song in Suno.

Speaker 9 (46:30):
When we get through the love the AI music, you
know idea kid rock kid rock is huge on AI.

Speaker 10 (46:38):
Oh okay, well hold on, that is the whole direcord.
By the way, I have to ask everybody here, at
least the people that listen to the to the song
that Mike did at the beginning of the show. I
thought that the vote goals in that sounded very kid rockish,

(47:04):
which is why I thought when I heard that, I thought,
oh and kid rock that doubly rocketh as well. So again,
going back, kudos to you for being able to do that.
Now here is let me. I always like to welcome
people that are new into the chat room.

Speaker 9 (47:26):
I may you may have.

Speaker 10 (47:28):
Been here before, Richard Gibbs, but welcome to the chat room,
and thank you for being here. You're always welcome to
jump in the show, unless you start banding around F
and S words, because that's my job in nobody else's.
And then the phantom laughed, Well, let's let's go. Let's

(47:49):
go further into this. I got twelve more minutes, okay,
I wanted to talk about Well, let me just put
this up on the stage. It seems to me that
there is a huge competition either brewing or it's already here.

(48:16):
And leftists, demorats and globalists are all pushing and mandating
and regulating for evs. And now let's just shove AI
side just for a moment. Humor me if you will
on this folks, even without AI, how are we going

(48:37):
to possibly handle the electrical requirements for a grid to
support all of the evs that the DLG were mandating.
Now some of those mandates have subsequently been dropped due
to President Donald John TRUMPO and b Orange Man bad
the guy with the dead orange cat on his head.

(48:58):
But still have that CONTENTE, how would we have possibly
accommodated all of the electricity that would have been necessary,
all of the rewiring, all of the infrastructure that would
have been required for evs now and in the future
that was damned near and impossibility. So now add a

(49:21):
I and here's a story data center.

Speaker 22 (49:25):
Boom.

Speaker 10 (49:25):
Now AI, Mike Fitzpatrick, I want to make sure that
I am interpreting this properly. Okay, in terms of AI.
The electricity you need is for these things over here,
massive massive server farms, row after row after row of computer.

(49:51):
There isn't sort of one central star Trek computer in
the core of the NCC one seven oh one. It
doesn't work like that. It is like, and you tell
me again if I'm way wrong, but it looks like
corridor after corridor after corridor of all of these computers,
punishing and pummeling and pumbling. Just it's just there's so

(50:15):
many servers. They're all they all look alike. They all
require I would guess many of them require liquid cooling.
Would that be correct?

Speaker 9 (50:25):
Well, there's cooling built into the racks within the within
the data center. So servers are either a one U
or a two U. So it's either where's my camera
that thick or that thick? And so I mean, these
data centers are built to really cool these servers and

(50:48):
and and and keep them functioning. The the energy issue
is a is a massive issue. And one, you're right
about the evs. There's just there wasn't enough power for
everything we do, the EVS and the grid just you know, shit,
the grid is still nineteen fifties America grid in a

(51:12):
lot of ways, so it just won't be able to
accommodate it. The real issue now, and I've been in
the meetings because a friend of mine has developed a
technology that literally does three things. One, it encrypts data
basically a post quantum proof technology, so it would take

(51:35):
something beyond quantum computing to be able to crack the
encryption in it. Two, it improves bandwidth utilization by eighty percent,
meaning throughput gets better and faster. And then three the
final thing, and this is where it applies to AI,
and that is that it reduces power consumption energy consumption

(51:59):
by also eighty percent.

Speaker 10 (52:03):
Okay, so that to me, that would seem to be
a major major break in this.

Speaker 15 (52:10):
And let's.

Speaker 10 (52:14):
Let's talk about quantum computing just kind of for a
teeny ween See time here you've addressed this before. I
have heard it said that quantum computing is going to
be the answer to everything in terms of computing. It
will be faster, cooler, smaller, more readily accessible. Its speed

(52:43):
will be beyond anything we have ever experienced before, and
it will potentially solve so many problems that current computers
can't fix. So the realistic question is how far are
we away? I mean, it is quantum computing like the

(53:05):
next deause x machina. You know, it's coming down from
above being and it will solve all of the Earth's problems.
Are we even close to quantum computing? Mike?

Speaker 9 (53:18):
Yeah, there's a Microsoft hast come out with the their
take on a quantum processing quantum chip. Google has done
the same. Both are a little different approaches to it.
No one really knows what quantum is going to bring.

(53:39):
I mean to be to be absolutely realistic about it,
No one really knows. You know, Google made a claim
as far as solving this or that and opening doors
that we never thought of, as far as you know,
processing and utilizing the power of the chip. But you know,

(53:59):
the question that I have is with AI. There is
there is a thing called hallucination with AI where it
just makes sh it up for no apparent reason. So
it just goes into a hallucination. As far as as
just making something up it'll just because this version of

(54:23):
AI that we have is not really it's an advanced
version of machine machine learning, if you will. It recognizes patterns,
it recognizes how you put sentences together, how what kinds
of words do you use, And that's kind of how
it builds things out. So the next when we get

(54:45):
past this basic era of AI and get into a
g I, you know, where it's general intelligence, which is
what you and I have, then it might actually be
Now it might be actually going through and processing even

(55:05):
though you see some of that basic rudimentary stuff within
rock or within deep side of how it applies the logic,
you know that will get better rapidly. This is all
moving exponentially right now. We're not in a linear path.
This is this is exponential growth.

Speaker 10 (55:26):
But see, I want to go back to this in
this story in terms of data center boom in world's
largest market isn't slowing down. Dominion Energy says. Dominion provides
electricity in Loudun County, Virginia, nicknamed Data Center ALLI because
it hosts the largest cluster of data centers in the world. Okay,
but if does that, then that means it has to

(55:49):
have ready access to a vast amount of electricity. And
so you and I spoke, and I think I may
have said this also to law to Wanderer, but I
may have said this to you in texts or something
like that. I said, you know, if a state wants

(56:11):
to be the leader in this, then the state that
wants to lead AI in the entire nation is the
state that is going to start building electric generation stations
like a motherfucker, because we are so vastly far behind

(56:32):
right now, We're incredibly far behind. And so if State
X decides that it wants to make its mark in AI,
if it were smart, it would figure out some way
of creating a vast swath of electrical generation stations and

(56:52):
at the same time try to see how it can
avoid the conflict, the major conflict from demo rats, leftists
and globalists, which is, we demand evs, we demand AI,
we demand all our toys, but don't you build another
electrical generation station and don't even think about nuclear power

(57:16):
or coal or any of that. We need about fifteen
hundred gen zs on bicycles to create some kind of
a little friction generator thing going on. How do we
resolve the comp that's the biggest conflict that I could
possibly think of.

Speaker 9 (57:32):
Well, I mean, you're not wrong. I mean you're going
to see in what you're seeing now is Microsoft, Amazon
are two that come to mind that have bought data
centers with nuclear reactors next door.

Speaker 10 (57:49):
Oh I remember here hearing something about that.

Speaker 9 (57:51):
I show you so you I mean, it isn't a
whole bunch of you know, it isn't far flong. I
think you're going to see the building of many reactors
along with data centers. Quite frankly, I think the big
loser in this, given the current political climate in California,

(58:12):
is going to be the state of California.

Speaker 10 (58:15):
Because will they respond though I don't know.

Speaker 9 (58:20):
I mean, they're so married to the whole renewables idea
that they've taken literally any other form of power generation
offline in California. So you can't you cannot power a
data center or an AI driven data center for doing
AI things, you know, off of renewables. You need something

(58:44):
more than that. I mean, one of the things my
friend has been in a meeting in one of the
companies that he works with is the oldest UH in
the world's largest test and measurement company. So anything that
gets done in computer technology or mobile cell phones, anything
along those lines that has to be modeled before you

(59:06):
go build it to determine one whether it will work
and to what the usage and bandwidth requirements are going
to be. You know, Billy's working with them, and in
a meeting that he had with them, the question of
power came into play and they said this, and again,
this is not somebody speculating. These are people that measure

(59:29):
such things. They said that the AI will consume ninety
nine percent of the world's power by twenty thirty seven.

Speaker 10 (59:42):
Okay, I have to go to a break say that
one more time, and then when we come back, I
want you to say that again. Let me put you
in the big picture right here and just repeat what
you said. Listen, folks, to Mike what he's saying.

Speaker 9 (01:00:01):
Now, the world's oldest and leading test and measurement company,
people that measure such things, say that AI will consume
the world's power ninety nine percent of it by twenty
thirty seven.

Speaker 10 (01:00:18):
And how is it possibly that you resolve that? What's
the resolution? What's the answer all that? And more? When
we come back. I'm buz. That was Mike Fitzpatrick's CEO
and creator and originalist of nCX group will be right back.
Hey if you if you've been drinking heavily, now's the

(01:00:39):
time hit the electric winkle chamber. Thanks for watching.

Speaker 18 (01:00:42):
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No, seriously, I'm just kidding.

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Speaker 21 (01:04:53):
You're listening to the SHL Media Network first Hour in
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Speaker 10 (01:05:05):
That means it is eleven O six pm Central and
twelve O six midnight six on the far far far
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not right at all. Right, anyway, thanks for being here tonight.

(01:05:25):
I appreciate it. My fine guest is Mike Fitzpatrick, who
is the founder and CEO of nCX group. We're talking
about all things AI. He was the gentleman who was
kind enough to create my intro song and if you
missed it at the beginning of the show, as I

(01:05:46):
thrust this out into the ATM later on in podcast,
I would highly recommend that you come back and listen
to the song because so much stuff is going to AI.
I sort of went, I can't believe. I can't believe
that I'm going to do this. I'm probably going to

(01:06:07):
get a subscription to chat GPT. I know, everyone, Settle down,
settle down, Okay, I would go, besies, go spend the
ten bucks on Avacus and you get them all. Okay,
all right, ten bucks a month, one hundred and twenty
bucks a year. Even I can do that math. That's
simple enough for me. And then the other thing is

(01:06:28):
would I I think you said, or perhaps it was
Lost Wanderer who said that the Suno subscription that fit
best was also not more than about ten bucks a
month and about twelve bucks a month, and you get
the full licensing royalty free. You can use it in

(01:06:49):
perpetuity by yourself, or you can smoke it, or you
can pat it and push the duck in the bathtub
along with it. Whatever it is that you want, you
can take it out for inner, in dancing with a
ficus or another houseplant. You can do all of those
things with Chat. Now we were talking about AI and

(01:07:11):
Mike Fitzpatrick. For those of you who just tuned in,
would you please and I want to emphasize this and
phazingly tell us what it was that you said about
power consumption just prior to the break.

Speaker 9 (01:07:29):
Well, what I said before the break is according to
a meeting that a friend had regarding his technology which
saves energy, with the largest and oldest test and measurement
company in the world, they are saying that AI will
consume ninety nine percent of the power by twenty thirty seven.

(01:07:49):
So that means no electricity for your home, nothing to
cook with, nothing to plant crops with it. When they
say all of it, they mean all of it has
to be dynamic change related to that.

Speaker 10 (01:08:04):
Who is it?

Speaker 9 (01:08:04):
Eric Schmidt, one of the founders of Google, recently said
that's all going to happen in three years. He said
that two weeks ago. I think, so.

Speaker 10 (01:08:16):
Everything we're seeing and hearing about you have to There
was Mike Fitzpatrick there was a theorem in computing that
I forget and you may remember because that's your shindig.
Something similar to the progression of computing isn't just sort

(01:08:41):
of a little bit of a hockey stick incline. It's geometric.
So I'm assuming that would be absolutely accurate for AI
in terms of its ability to understand itself and for
power canssumption. So if somebody prognosticated, yeah, in twenty threety

(01:09:03):
seven will need this, you might even at that point
put it on the bullshit meter and say, oh, no,
it's going to be a lot sooner than that.

Speaker 9 (01:09:10):
It's coming fast, because again, like I said, this is
all now happening, happening exponentially, so AI is learning rapidly.
One of the things that who is it Glenn Back
has been and I have to say this as far
as conservatives are concerned, Glen Beck has kind of been
at the forefront of AI for the better part of

(01:09:33):
ten years now, so he's he's really talked to a
lot of the folks in Silicon Valley, spend some time
been learning. He actually had I just went blank on
his name. We'll come back to anyway. He was responsible

(01:09:53):
for Google's AI project and helping it learn. Ray Kurtzwel
he invented the Kurtzwi organ He also invented fax machines. Okay,
he's a futurist. So Ray is responsible for this singularity concept.
That is out there because Ray's grandfather died and he

(01:10:15):
wanted to be able to save all of his grandfather's
memories electronically so he could get aarry on his own
conversations with his grandfather. So that's the singularity. Uh, if
you want to look that up, boys and girls, that's
a that's a fun one. So Ray was put in
charge of Google's AI project, and if you had an
Android device, uh, it has been listening to you with

(01:10:39):
Ray's direction, and that has how Google has been teaching
their AI is by listening to everybody's Android conversations. According
to Ray, that's not Mike, that's courting to Ray.

Speaker 10 (01:10:54):
Well, otherwise, you know, if Google people said this a
long time ago, Saka Seawan said, it's probably five or
six years ago. He had one of those cursed things
in the SHR media studios, and I knew the son
of a bitch was listening to us, because otherwise, if
if you said, wasn't the the instigation, Hey Google or

(01:11:15):
something like that. So if it responds to hey Google,
that means it's listening all the time to you.

Speaker 9 (01:11:24):
Oh, I mean the Stazi have nothing on what tech
companies can do about v has nothing so I mean, yeah,
it's an interesting dilemma that we're facing. And when Billy
first told me this, I you know, I it went
in one ear out the other, and you know, okay,

(01:11:46):
so they're going to use up all the renewable power
by twenty thirty seven. And I asked, Buddy, so you're
talking about renewables, right, He said, no, no, no, it's
all of it. How has it? I got any idea?
I mean, when was the power plant actually built?

Speaker 10 (01:12:03):
Because California, I would say it's probably California always spelled
with the case. Sorry, I forgot to say that. I
would guesstimate forty years ago.

Speaker 9 (01:12:13):
I mean, these things don't just pop up overnight.

Speaker 20 (01:12:16):
No.

Speaker 10 (01:12:17):
Plus, California has been on the CUSP. Not on the CUSP,
but it has been on the leading leading edge of
deactivating nuclear power plants and deactivating other power plants as well.

Speaker 9 (01:12:30):
Almost all renewable. Now, Diablo Canyon is the only nuclear
plants still online in California. Santa No Free they took
Offline's five years ago. So, I mean it's interesting. I
think the states where you'll see the back to your

(01:12:52):
original point, I think the states where you'll actually see
a lot of growth and energy. Are going to be
states that are forward thinking, predominantly read where there's less regulation,
and I think you're going to see it in Texas.
I think you'll see it in Florida. I think you'll
see it in Ohio with Vivek who I really like

(01:13:16):
that guy and what he's going to do in Ohio.
I think you'll see it in other forward thinking states
because you know, if you're going to attract the big
data centers into your world, there has to be power.
It also is going to take a revamp of the

(01:13:36):
power grid. And again, why the power companies one don't
do cybersecurity assessments and number two don't make the grid
capable of withstanding an EMP is beyond me. But those
are just my two pet beeves with the power companies.

Speaker 10 (01:13:56):
But see the other thing that you make I had
completely forgot and about this I should not have is
there are golden opportunities in order for us to take
advantage of. That is to say, if we decide that
we're going to update the grid, and we're gonna have to,
what alternative is there so you can you can kill

(01:14:17):
two birds at once with run one rock by upgrading
the grid, creating more power stations. And by the way,
when I say nucleonics, I'm also talking thorium. Folks, go
go check thorium in terms of nuclear reactors. That would
logically be the future, but nobody's thinking about it because

(01:14:38):
the IAEA, I don't think would make a shit ton
of money off of it. That's a story for another day.
Move along, bes, But while you're doing that, it would
also be of primacy to make sure that you emp
proof your new stations, to make sure that you emp

(01:14:59):
proof your lines, your transformers, your neighborhood stations. I mean,
this is a golden opportunity if they do it right,
to do it right, right in your laps, do it
with the coffee out of course being where are you
going to get the power and where you're going to

(01:15:20):
get the money because everything and everyone else is clamoring
for more money. And on top of that, you've got demarats,
leftists and globalists who don't want the government to save money,
who want to continue spending and puking out all this
cash to their friends, NGOs, et cetera. So it's a

(01:15:40):
huge maximum culture clash. It's a huge culture clash.

Speaker 9 (01:15:46):
And I mean you know, China just bring online the
first thorium plant.

Speaker 10 (01:15:51):
Did they really?

Speaker 9 (01:15:52):
Yeah?

Speaker 17 (01:15:53):
This week?

Speaker 9 (01:15:53):
Last week? My god, it's recent, okay, and beat us
to that. I mean, this is AI is a race
to energy dominance, and Trump's right about that. Now, if
we can get get out of the court system and
actually go get some things done, we might have a shot.
But again, you know, it's a battle between the US

(01:16:17):
and China, and that easy. That's the other thing I
want to mention. We talked about this on Friday too,
and I think I really think that good bad are indifferent.
You need to go spend some time and I'm not
talking about you specifically, everybody listening needs to go spend
some time with AI. Learn AI, figure it out, learn

(01:16:41):
how to write proper prompts, learn how to get the
research data out of it that you can that you need.
It really is a benefit to your business and even
a lot of your everyday kinds of activities. My son,
who's gen z Man, he wants nothing to do with AI,

(01:17:01):
but then again, his best friend has now created a
business using AI. So it's it's it's an interesting world
out there, but don't be afraid of it. Go learn,
Go learn and understand it, because it is there's no
going back. It's it's not a fad, it's not a trend.
It is a tool, and it is a tool that

(01:17:23):
is going to be with us from here on out.

Speaker 10 (01:17:27):
As I've said before, folks, there's there are no two ways.
The genie is out of the bottle, and you can't
shove the genie back. It's like squeezing all the preparation
h out of the tube, mistaking it for toothpaste. And

(01:17:47):
you can't shove it back. Okay, it's out.

Speaker 9 (01:17:50):
You can't redo it.

Speaker 10 (01:17:53):
It can't and and and won't be done. And so
I finally realized after the Saturday Night Show and what
Sean and Earl and Jersey Joe and Kaylor and all
the other people have done with AI and yourself as well,
which you've done with AI and for me, is I

(01:18:17):
do need to get into this?

Speaker 23 (01:18:19):
You know?

Speaker 10 (01:18:21):
Maybe it will be too much for me. I don't know.
Brain cells are flitting out of my headphones even as
we speak. But I'm going to try to give it
a shot. I think, I see, I think you'll enjoy
it would be fun. It could actually be fun. What

(01:18:41):
if I sit down one day and I attack Suno,
It's going to take me one point seven nine years
to figure it out. Well, one day, what if I
figure it out and I create a cool song there you,
and then I bring it here and I play it
to people and it actually has, as opposed to me,

(01:19:03):
an actual baseline. That makes sense, even though I'm not
a musician, but musicians today, as we said Saturday, something
similar to musicians are going to have to adapt or
die now.

Speaker 9 (01:19:20):
But you're going to have to adapt or die with this.

Speaker 10 (01:19:22):
On the other hand, though, as a lot of people
pointed out on the Saturday Night show, that may also
make small musical venues even more valuable in terms of
making music, and it will make people appreciate the human

(01:19:47):
soul that people and the mistakes and the humanity that
people bring to music when they produce it. Not to
say that AI music won't be bad or will be bad,
but to say that it may create a secondary appreciation
for things that are created by hand by people. As

(01:20:07):
you pointed out, Mike, a lot of people and gen
z ers are going back into the trades. They are
issuing Kazootite colleges and universities, and they're going into the trades.
That is a wonderful thing. And if that's the generality
of gen Z, I think they're making wonderful, wonderful decisions,

(01:20:31):
great decisions.

Speaker 9 (01:20:32):
Now gen Z is searching for things that are authentic.
They're more conservative than the generation before them, the millennials,
as we were talking about on Friday, gen Z is
a generation that has experienced some things. You know, you've
got whether they realized it or not. I mean, my

(01:20:55):
son's at the forefront of gen Z. You know, in
two thousand one, nine to eleven, that changed travel, so he,
you know, he had to go through a different travel
process than any of the rest of us did. Growing
up here where we live in southern California, our area

(01:21:16):
was heavily hit with foreclosures during the Great Recession, so
a lot of kids have people know, people that lost
homes during that period of time. Then you've got the pandemic,
Now you've got the you know, changed college, a changed
high school, graduation, changed my son's whole trajectory. He was

(01:21:37):
going to be a doctor, and now he's decided he
wants to be a fireman. Now he's already a paramedic,
and he starts fire Academy in August, so it changed
a whole direction of where he's going with his life.
But it is that generation is not given the credit
for being more traditional than many before it.

Speaker 10 (01:22:00):
Okay, let me I've been watching the chat and thanks
to everybody who's been in chat tonight, and I really
enjoy the interactions.

Speaker 2 (01:22:08):
That are there.

Speaker 10 (01:22:09):
There's a new gentleman who is here, and I will
throw this open to you. The man's name is Richard Gibbs,
and he has indicated in chat that he has concerns
that artists are going to be hurt by AI. Let
me throw this out here and perhaps you'll pick up
on it. Perhaps you'll take the ball and run. That

(01:22:31):
opens some questions to me. And it's much easier to
talk person to person than it is in a chat room. So,
Richard Gibbs, there's the phone line down there at the bottom.
The phone lines are open and I don't know, maybe
a couple of minutes, it doesn't have to be long.

(01:22:53):
If you'd like to chat about this, give the phone
number a call. I'd like to hear your concerns out
whatever it is that you do as an artist being
replaced by AI. Because if you have those thoughts, it
would seem to indicate that a lot of other people
who are artists in whatever genres they utilize would likely

(01:23:14):
also have a lot of concerns as well. So if
you were interested, I would like to hear your thoughts.
Nine one, six, eight, three, five, three three two nine
nine one six eight three five three three two nine.
I will let the chiron run there at the bottom,
and we will continue. And Jeremy Hansen points out that
gen Z is the closest thing to the genera greatest

(01:23:34):
generation we have we have had.

Speaker 9 (01:23:37):
I said that to you on Friday, didn't I?

Speaker 10 (01:23:39):
You certainly did. Things have changed, not not gen X,
gen Z, and lost Wanderer also notes I'm an artist.
I've been creating medieval fantasy art and doing KLRN logos. So, then,
lost Wanderer, if that is true, then when you do

(01:24:03):
the logos. Now, there's a there's a gentleman that did
well right up here. If you look at the upper
left the excuse me, the upper right Bez's Bersik Popcat
Saloon radio show. A gentleman named Scottie Roberts did that
for me by hand. The guy is a phenomenal artist.

(01:24:24):
He's had some medical issues. Oh my god, what a
tortured soul that poor guy has been. But he still
draws by hand. I don't know. Maybe he's moving over
into AI, but I can't help but think that it's
affected his income as an artist who takes I don't know,

(01:24:45):
a piece of paper or a board or whatever medium
he chooses to use and create things. And he also writes.
He has designed and created books. The guy is phenomenal
in terms of that. I've never seen AI create a

(01:25:06):
better logo.

Speaker 1 (01:25:07):
Than I have.

Speaker 10 (01:25:07):
That said, what it does is tremendously well. I take
my art. It takes my art and elevates it. See,
and that's what I said about.

Speaker 9 (01:25:16):
Music.

Speaker 10 (01:25:18):
If you're already fascile with music, using AI as a tool,
you'll be able to continue with that ability in AI
and then at leash. Jeremy Hansen says, Scotty's a good friend.
He's still in the hospital. He's a good soul. Oh
he's a great soul.

Speaker 9 (01:25:39):
You see. I would say, you know, you could make
the argument as far as whether you know AI and art,
and I mean there's some people that could make the
argument that Adobe illustrator, you know, which has been used
for art and creating a lot of images for the
last twenty five years. You know, is a form of

(01:26:01):
artificial intelligence with the way that allows you to lay
out a page or the way it allows you to
draw or allow you create an image. So I mean
you have that. I mean, is spell checking the use
of rudimentary AI back in the day.

Speaker 10 (01:26:20):
Sure you could make an argument for that. And you know,
me an older guy. I had a massive collection of
Marvel comics from the sixties. I made a horrible mistake
with my Marvel comics, but I have original art from
John Bessema, John Romita and who's the other one? And

(01:26:43):
Gene Colan, And you can look at the layouts on
the pages and you can see where they have, you know,
used white out and all sorts of things to plug
the the issues and comics are completely digitized today. If
you want to have art, and if you want to
put it into a comic book, you're going to be

(01:27:04):
doing it digitally. Now maybe with your hand on a
pad where you create things on the pad, use all
the things that the artists do. But it has been
entirely digitized, so to speak. And last Wanderers says Clippy
was from the first chat gpt h Yeah, are you

(01:27:26):
I'm guessing you mean clip art. Oh my god, I'd
forgotten about clip art. Holy moly, this is interesting. I
had not heard about this. Jeremy Hanson indicates they say
AI will be able to kill cancer cells in the body.

Speaker 9 (01:27:43):
And I just said, that's ivermectin right now if you
watch the reports, Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 10 (01:27:48):
Wait wait wait wait wait wait, Richard Gibbs, I think
I know who you are. You're on Facebook. I think
I recently friended you on Facebook, and I think that
I've been looking at all the various forms of art
that you've been displaying on Facebook.

Speaker 9 (01:28:11):
Are you that guy?

Speaker 10 (01:28:13):
Because when you mentioned comics flyers album covers, my thought was,
wait a minute, that name sounds familiar to you to me,
and just confirm if you would in chat? Are you
that guy? And the reason I ask it's self serving
is I was going to send you a message and

(01:28:36):
ship you an image and ask you, because you said
you know your hired pen do you do things on consignment?
So I may be sending you something And now you said, yes,
that's me. Okay, cool, I'm going to be sending you

(01:28:57):
some things and perhaps we can chat a little bit later,
and I'd like to see because your work is pretty amazing.
So thank you for being here tonight. That's great, I
appreciate it. That is Ivermiedon on cancer, and Richard says, yep,

(01:29:18):
that's me. Let me ask you this now. We were
sending texts back and forth Mike Patrick and myself. Oh shit,
I'm gonna have to do this after the break, folks,
I'm busy. That's Mike Fitzpatrick. We are going to have
to take a break if for no other reason that
BZ here has to do something important and find out

(01:29:39):
why the dog is now scratching at the door. In
any event, folks, I'll be right back. This is the
final break. Thanks for being here tonight.

Speaker 15 (01:29:51):
Conservative Media done right. You're listening to the shr Media Network.

Speaker 17 (01:30:02):
Listen in to the Reaver of common Sense, where we
cut through the noise of news and politics with the
show equipped for Bombbast. Tune in Mondays and Fridays at
nine pm Eastern, APM Central and six pm Pacific, featuring
a refreshing dose of reality. Jersey Joe fearlessly tackles the
top topics with no nonsense, just peer common sense. Visit

(01:30:25):
shrmedia dot com where you can hear the reaver of
common sense and action. He may not always be polite,
he may not always be refined, but one thing's for sure,
he always tells it like it is.

Speaker 22 (01:30:41):
Are you looking for a way to boldly express your
faith in love for your country and check out seven Armors,
the flier power company for patriotic men of God, where
faith meets freedom and style. Our t shirts are more
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(01:31:02):
every patriotic man of God, where your beliefs proudly with
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Armors dot com. Seven Armors dot Com faithful, vigilant, steadfast fashion.

Speaker 2 (01:31:25):
Are you looking for bold, honest conversation about the issue
shaping America, Well, let me welcome you to Unleashed one
oh one with Jeremy Hansen, where we take you beyond
the headlines. We dive into politics and culture struggles of
everyday life.

Speaker 10 (01:31:44):
If okay, stop stop okay, guilty twice. Okay, you caught me.
I was busy up to my ass and alligators all
day long creating CGI through grock for the show. And okay,
I forgot to include a graphic for lost Wanderer. He's

(01:32:05):
gonna send me a graphic, Jeremy, if you're listening right now. Uh,
maya coupa, mayacupa, may omega cuppa. I forgot to have
a graphic prepared for you tonight because of your promo.

Speaker 15 (01:32:22):
I apologize really unfiltered.

Speaker 2 (01:32:27):
If you're ready for truth with a punch, pull up
a chair and join us. That's right, unleast one O
one where real.

Speaker 15 (01:32:36):
Talk feels like home.

Speaker 2 (01:32:39):
Find us at unleast one o one dot com, Spotify,
Apple Podcasts, I'm on Radio, and more.

Speaker 14 (01:32:48):
We look forward to seeing you unleashed one O one
with Jeremy. As freedom. One nation in all of human
history was built on that bedrock hours a republic of

(01:33:15):
the people, by the people, and for the people.

Speaker 12 (01:33:21):
Self government requires freedom, just as freedom requires an individual
willingness to self govern. Freedom has made America exceptional, but
it can only last as long as you and I
seek the good as expressed by the laws of nature
and Nature's God. It can only last if you and

(01:33:43):
I choose to act as people of character.

Speaker 14 (01:33:50):
Forging character has been the pursuit of Hillsdale College since
eighteen forty four.

Speaker 21 (01:34:01):
You're listening to the SHL Media Network.

Speaker 10 (01:34:05):
It's the final half hour of the show. I do
not anticipate that I'm going to be going into overtime tonight.

Speaker 25 (01:34:13):
Ah.

Speaker 26 (01:34:13):
That will make a lot of people happy, or they'll boohoo,
but mostly they'll be happy that the show will be ending.
But again, I emphasized everybody with great em fasis m fasisizingly,
I just created a.

Speaker 10 (01:34:30):
New words to that I did. There, go back to
the beginning of this show. In podcasts, I will kick
it back out in podcast give me about an hour
after the show ends, and I always kick the podcast out.
That gives me time for rumble to requ so to speak,
and I can ship it out. And when you see

(01:34:51):
it says podcast of blah blah blah blah hit it.
Listen to the first listen to the beginning of the
show and the music that was played. That was the
song that was created by Mike Fitzpatrick right here. And
I also want to say, with great m fasis. This

(01:35:12):
is important, folks.

Speaker 23 (01:35:14):
This is Beusy's final hour, step up, last call for alcohol.

Speaker 10 (01:35:19):
Because it ain't gonna go any longer than this. Thanks
to everybody for being here tonight. Now, my guest tonight
is the wondrous Mike Fitzpatrick. He's been here a whole
bunch of times. I counted, and I believe, if I'm
not mistaken, I counted. This is time number appearance number
twelve for Mike. So Mike has been here a whole

(01:35:39):
bunch of times. Yeah. I was kind of surprised too,
in a positive, pleasant way. You and I were.

Speaker 9 (01:35:45):
Exchanging tests as opposed to the the you know, the
unwanted guest kind of way.

Speaker 10 (01:35:50):
Well, yeah, because I've had on Oh I've had unwanted
guests before. Okay, let me do this. When I first
started the show, I would go out into the ether
on the Internet and I'd look at somebody and or
I'd try to find people that already had had podcasts

(01:36:12):
because they thought, oh, don't know what they're doing. They
will be able to come on and I'll just wind
them up and let them go. And some of those
people were the worst, most dull folks I've ever had
the displeasure to feature. I will not name names. One
of them has since passed away. Let's let's just let

(01:36:37):
that go, you know, let's let's let it go busy again,
like at the beginning of the show, following the rant
just through the nose, out through the mouth. In texts earlier,
and folks were talking with Mike Fitzpatrick about AI, AI music,

(01:37:00):
AI ramifications, AI energy, and in a chat that we
had you said there was a change in AI. Anything
using using open AI has developed a leftist bias. And
you said you saw it after an update to the
l l M Large Language Model. And then of course

(01:37:23):
you indicated as the models get larger, they consume more energy.
Now I didn't understand this because okay, I'm stupid, but
you had written in there AI currently costs open AI
three thousand Now is that dollars?

Speaker 9 (01:37:41):
Yeah?

Speaker 10 (01:37:42):
So typically minute per energy?

Speaker 9 (01:37:45):
Yeah, so the energy cost per computing minute per server,
according to that Large Test and Measurement Company, is three
thousand dollars per minute minute minute per server.

Speaker 10 (01:38:06):
Okay, now wait a minute, stop, let me go back
because I want to confirm something. Shoot, do I still
have this? I don't. I can't find it. Oh yeah,
here we go. No, that's not it either, damn it you. Okay,

(01:38:29):
let me put this back up. Three thousand bucks per
minute per server. Now, using this graphic as a representation
of a server farm, does that mean that every server
up and down this line and in a room like that,

(01:38:51):
for example, Mike Fitzpatrick, how many servers could there be
in there?

Speaker 15 (01:38:55):
Easy?

Speaker 10 (01:38:56):
I mean it's one hundred, two hundred, three hundred.

Speaker 9 (01:39:00):
Thousands, thousands and thousands.

Speaker 10 (01:39:02):
Okay. So that's why I wanted to make sure that
I understand you correctly. There could be a thout. Let's
say in this building, if this is a server farm,
in this building, there are one thousand servers. The cost
is per server, let's say a thousand servers, three thousand

(01:39:28):
dollars per minute, per minute, per minute. Who can't afford this, well,
they're burning through cash at just a crazy rate. Okay,
So only only this this again with the you know,

(01:39:54):
ninety nine percent of energy is going to be consumed
by by AI that blew my brain, that literally made
me look like this, and then the staff that you
just indicated three thousand dollars per minute per server in
a room like this, which could possibly have one thousand servers,

(01:40:18):
So who could possibly afford all that unless.

Speaker 9 (01:40:26):
You're a billion billion billionaire.

Speaker 10 (01:40:30):
Or a mega billionaire company, or because of the amount
that you charge for lodging information on your servers, you're
making bank. So the question is, are these people making
bank on their servers?

Speaker 16 (01:40:50):
You know?

Speaker 9 (01:40:50):
Probably, I mean, I mean, I think at this point
in time, BZ, I think they're probably just looking for
break even. I was just gonna ask Rock how much,
ask Roc how much a open ai has raised?

Speaker 10 (01:41:05):
Okay, not a simulated picture in anyway, in any event,
while Groc does that, let me go back.

Speaker 9 (01:41:20):
Okay. So open ai has raised through their through their offerings,
fifty seven point nine billion dollars. Okay, and they're still
raising money.

Speaker 10 (01:41:37):
But but they're also just blowing through money. All of
the the the people that have server farms must be
blowing through money.

Speaker 9 (01:41:53):
Well, I mean, the big the big ones out there
are Google, Microsoft with Azure, and Amazon Web Services. Those
are the big ones out there. From data center land
at and T's got data centers. There's some small ones
that are out there, but the big ones are Microsoft,

(01:42:13):
Google and Amazon are the big ones.

Speaker 10 (01:42:19):
You know, when we talked about this and I knew
we were going to be discussing this, and I knew
that there were going to be some some massive figures,
some massive indicators about energy consumption EVS versus energy consumption,
the money that it takes, the power that it takes,
the water, the cooling that it takes. And yet on

(01:42:43):
top of that, let me put this up on the stage,
there are still people in leftist states. For example, there
are a consort of people in Washington that have decided
that they want to take down four dams on the
Snake River because it's interfering with sand women. You can't
do that anymore. Demo rats, leftists and globalists. You are

(01:43:08):
fucking insane. How are you going to sit and stand
and demand serving the power consumption that evs have to have?
You want your AI? You have no concept. If you
watch the show, you know this gentleman right here gets

(01:43:31):
it obviously in a good percentile of the people that
are watching the show right now. But so many people
are working at cross purposes. None of this makes sense,
none of it can occur, and it is there is
such a major conflict occurring in the goals of two. Essentially,

(01:43:58):
what are soon to be if They're not already worrying
entities in terms of I gotta have this over here,
and I gotta have this over here, and I don't
care what you want, and you don't care what he
or she wants over here. These no way, No, they

(01:44:18):
are not gonna They're not gonna happen. They can't happen.
It can't happen here. How do we get past Mike
Fitzpatrick These what I consider to be naked, huge, abject
really when you think about it, stupid conflicts. You can't

(01:44:43):
have both things at once, you know.

Speaker 9 (01:44:48):
It's the thought that you were talking about the dams
being decommissioned and returned back to the natural flow of
the Snake River. The thing that came to mind, you know,
related to data centers is the dust bowl in Kansas
and Oklahoma during the thirties, right, I mean, I mean

(01:45:10):
from a business standpoint, you know, the states that are
going to excel at this are going to be I
think in the Midwest. I think that. I mean, if
you look at the communications hub of the United States,
it's in Overland Park, Kansas, and it's in Saint Louis, Missouri.

(01:45:33):
If you want to look at where the nexus point
is for most of the communications across the United States,
they come out of those two locations. So if you
need data centers, they've got to be located next to
what communication centers if you want redundancy, if you want
different different bandwidth, different pipes, different back. I mean, so

(01:45:59):
it's going to be inter Texas is going to be
a winner because Elon's in Texas. Texas is I mean,
the Elon's be building Colossus and all the other stuff
that he's got going on is being done in Texas.
He's relocated the entire corporation to Texas out of California.

Speaker 10 (01:46:17):
Okay, if you would look below Richard Gibbs, who is
this is the first time here, and thank you Richard
for being here. You are cordially invited to each and
every show that I do on Tuesday and Thursday nights,
and I sometimes I do him on the weekend as well.
And as a matter of fact, it might be kind
of interesting to chat with you sometime on the show
and have you on the show. You knew I was

(01:46:40):
going to go there, Mike, you knew I was going
to do there. I was going to invite him anyway
in chat. His comment is, and he'd like you to
weigh in. My son just told me AI is going
to be dead in five years due to cost and
nothing is going forward, and he thoughts about that.

Speaker 9 (01:46:56):
Well, I'm one I would be curious. What is nothing
going forward means? I mean the United States and President
Trump are all in on AI and wants to make
it the AI capital of the world, the energy capital
of the world. And quite frankly, AI is the new

(01:47:17):
arms race, so they're going to spend whatever they have
to spend on it. Quite frankly, period, did you ever.

Speaker 10 (01:47:23):
Nail that one? That's true? AI is the new arms race? Oh?
Oh my god.

Speaker 9 (01:47:29):
Yes, So whoever controls AI, whoever has the best AI,
is going to win, because I mean from a cybersecurity standpoint,
going back to what I do my day job, and
that is, you know, we're looking at AI being used
and to deal with millions and millions and millions of

(01:47:50):
threats every day to normalize that data for humans to
actually be able to understand. But we're coming to a point.
I mean, when we get into a gi an as
I super intelligence, then you're talking about a type of
cyber attack utilizing AI that will have the ability to

(01:48:12):
evade detection. Okay, you said ag I was artificial general intelligence.

Speaker 10 (01:48:23):
Okay, so what is a SI.

Speaker 9 (01:48:28):
Is artificial super intelligence, so it's two hundred times so
it's you know, two hundred times human intelligence.

Speaker 10 (01:48:38):
Okay, that sounds creepy and scary.

Speaker 9 (01:48:43):
Well, everybody will be at then and.

Speaker 10 (01:48:45):
Really frightening, you know, and what will the cold mental
palm on the top of my head feel like? Good dog, here's.

Speaker 9 (01:48:55):
Go back and watch Terminator.

Speaker 10 (01:49:00):
Okay, let me recommend this. There were a series of
books that were written. I can't think of the guy's name.
He was English, but it was called Colossus the Foreben Project,
and he wrote three books, a trilogy I believe in

(01:49:20):
the late sixties early seventies. I maybe getting some of
the details off, but basically it's called Colossus the Foreben Project,
and this author in those three books had Russia creating
an AI, the United States creating an AI, an intelligent
self aware computer, and the two computers, though they tried

(01:49:43):
their best not to found each other, shook hands and
took over the world. And then it was the attempts
subsequently throughout the rest of the other books as to
how humanity. D. F. Jones thank you The Lost Wanderer DFG,
and I still have my copies. I have a huge
bookcase about fifty feet that way, and I still have

(01:50:06):
my paperback copies of those D F. Jones Colossus, The
Foreman Project. Haven't read them. I would highly recommend it,
and a lot of these people. That's why I enjoy
science fiction, because a lot of that stuff is prescient,
coming from people that have already thought about this. And
I can remember nineteen eighty Uh when did Terminator come out?

(01:50:29):
Nineteen eighty four, maybe James Cameron's first Terminator film, YEP,
and myself and a deputy named Dave Murray watched that
and as soon as we watched the robots crush the
human skulls, we thought, uh, this is going to be
a Debbie Downer movie or it's going to be really stupid.

(01:50:50):
It turned out to be one of the more creative
movies that we had ever seen up to that point.

Speaker 9 (01:50:55):
Well it's it's good. I mean, it's going to be
an interesting it's an interesting future. And you know, you've
got a gold rush that's going on right now with
AI and they're you know, like every aspect of technology.
There will be companies that come and go during that
gold rush, you know, boom bust kind of thing. But

(01:51:16):
going back to my original point, AI is here. It's
not going to go away. There will be winners, big
winners with it, and a lot of those tech companies
that are out there now meta fate, you know, the
meta X Amazon, Google or Apple. I mean, the interesting thing,

(01:51:39):
one of the interesting things to me is.

Speaker 10 (01:51:40):
Exactly what will it do with those forms of technology.

Speaker 9 (01:51:46):
Well, it's going to be interesting. Apple had decided to
utilize open ai in its new Apple Intelligence with its
new iPhone sixteen that came out, So they're running behind
and having some issues. But I guess in a bay cough,
you know, basically a test between open ai and Google's

(01:52:10):
new Gemini two or two point five. They ended up
choosing Google as the AI for the new Apple phone. Hmmmm,
not open AI. So there's some issues with open AI
and I. You know, I'm not sure what the issues are,

(01:52:33):
but there's some initial big supporters of them, Microsoft as
well as Apple that have sort of pushed back.

Speaker 10 (01:52:45):
Well, I got about seven minutes before the end of
the show. This show has gone swimmingly and quickly, and
most Rikitic like quick Lake bunny. And as I say,
when I get into that thing and do that DIALECTA,
the first thing I have to say is moose and squirrele,
Moose and squirdle. This is from Canary Media, Lots of

(01:53:09):
demand to little grid. The state of the US power sector.
An underbuilt power grid is preventing the US from meeting
surging demand with new clean energy. These charts show why
it's the case. Well, they're talking about clean energy, and
I think we're beyond clean energy. Everybody's going to be
scrambling for Just gimme the energy. Okay. I don't particularly

(01:53:33):
care where it comes from. I don't care about any
of that stuff. So if you can, in your finest
Mike Fitzpatrick fashion, what do you think is occurring with
regard to the United States, We have a pretty good
idea what's happening here. I see this as fundamentally a

(01:53:57):
huge play between China and the US. Russia may be
involved in there. Certainly they've had some technological developments, but
I don't think they're quite on the beam like China
is right now, though in and of themselves. The Chinese
are having incredible problems right now, economic and otherwise, so

(01:54:20):
do you would that be accurate to say something similar
to Yep, it's going to be the US and it's
going to be China, and whoever manages to swing that
bat most accurately will probably knock it out of the park.
And then once you make that inroad, can anyone make

(01:54:43):
up lost ground?

Speaker 9 (01:54:46):
Well, I mean yeah, okay, so yes to the first
part of the question. Yes, I think we're we're looking
at a predominant battle, you know, Godzilla versus you know
Meglodon kind of thing, you know, with the United States
and China. Now who comes out of that? I mean,
that's the beauty of AI is And that's kind of

(01:55:08):
the thing China showed with Deep Site is they built
something that was almost every bit as good as Open
AI for a fifth of the price and a fifth
of the engineering talent. So I mean, it's crazy what
can be done. And there's going to be efficiencies that

(01:55:31):
come with AI building other AI, So it's going to
be it's an interesting future. The other thought that came
to mind too busy is you might want to read
a book series. It's by a guy by the name
of Daniel Suarez. The book the first book is Demon

(01:55:54):
and Demon is a computer technology term. It's a one
function kind of process. And in this particular case in
the book, it's one demon leads to another demon, to
another demon to another demon to commit murders and then
hide them. It's a it is a phenomenal cyber kind

(01:56:16):
of story. Yeah, there you go.

Speaker 10 (01:56:20):
Oh wait, no, oh wait a minute. Now I'm looking
over here and it says demon and novel, but it
says lenan Zerous and then it says up here Daniel Swarez,
So okay, apparently.

Speaker 9 (01:56:33):
Daniel, Okay, some disputer application.

Speaker 10 (01:56:38):
A one of three books.

Speaker 9 (01:56:40):
Yeah, this is fiction fiction, Okay, but it will it's
what is the term. It's it's based on some realities
but taken to an extreme.

Speaker 10 (01:56:54):
Okay, alrighty, good to know.

Speaker 9 (01:56:58):
I think you'll like that, all right, But it is
it's kind of the roots of what AI could potentially
do when connected to everything.

Speaker 10 (01:57:11):
But doesn't it make Doesn't it make everyone wonder because
you would never know how do we have any kind
of inkling as to results? Because everything dealing with AI

(01:57:35):
is so by its very nature geometric. When I think
Hawking said something similar to extraterrestrials when they come will
kill us all. And there was another individual of Richard Fine.

(01:57:58):
He was a physicist. I can see his face. I
can't live. Basically said AI.

Speaker 9 (01:58:03):
Will be the death of this hall. It's definitely slippery,
slippery slope.

Speaker 10 (01:58:11):
And to say it also goes back to the Drake equation,
which is something similar to finement. That's it, Richard Feineman
lost wonder, thank you. It also goes back to the
Drake equation, which says you will only have space faring
civilizations if they can survive two things. They're equivalent of

(01:58:35):
nucleonics and their equivalent of AI. If you can survive
those two huge blockages and somehow blast past them, you
may live maybe to travel the galaxy. See stuff like
that I find extremely interesting. So, Mike fitz Patrick, thanks

(01:59:00):
for being here. Tell folks where you are, what you do,
and if they have issues with stuff that you handle,
where can they find you? Pretty please?

Speaker 16 (01:59:09):
Well?

Speaker 9 (01:59:10):
Okay, So one, we're a cybersecurity consulting firm and that's
usually what I'm on here talking about, not AI. But
you can find us at ncxgroup dot com, and then
all the socials Facebook x LinkedIn is all at ncxgroup
and so as always busy it's a pleasure. I always

(01:59:33):
love spending some time with you. I'm glad you liked
the song, man, I thought it was pretty good.

Speaker 10 (01:59:38):
Excuse me, folks, cover your shell like little ears, because
I'm going to say, Mike Fitzpatrick, that song fucking rocked. Okay,
thank you very much, so Mike, thanks for being here tonight,
and folks, that's going to be it for me. I
appreciate everybody in chat, everybody who watched it, up to

(02:00:00):
about forty five people or so watching live, almost fifty
but not exactly quite quite that, and still in all
I love Mike pet Fitzpatrick. Great guy, great friend. I
apologize to Jeremy and The Lost Wonder for not having
overlays for their promos. I should have had that covered,

(02:00:24):
but I was a busy little boy today. Richard Gibbs,
I'm gonna be contacting you a little bit in the future,
just to kind of see what it is that you
can do, because as God, let me see if I
get this right, George Bush said a while ago, George
Bush Junior. He said something similar to Ozzy, my mom

(02:00:48):
likes your stuff, and Richard Gibbs, I have to tell
you I like your stuff. So expect to contact and
if you're amenable, you know, sometime, if you're interested, you
could jump on the show and we could chat.

Speaker 15 (02:01:05):
And with that having been said, conservative media done right.

Speaker 10 (02:01:11):
Okay, how about this? So, ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls,
children of all ages, thanks again for listening to Bz's
Berserk Bobcat Saloon radio show live and director right here

(02:01:34):
on the s HR Media Network, also on Rumble, on
the s HR Media YouTube channel X and Twitch and
look right there there's my ex handle at Bz's Saloon
on Twitch and KLRN will play the replay of this
tomorrow night. I do believe that's very kind of Rick

(02:01:57):
Robinson to do that as well. And you can find
it when I'll put it out in podcasts. Any place
you can find a fairly decent podcast, you'll be able
to find Bez's Saloon and as per normal and I
usually also say something similar to promotional consideration is by

(02:02:18):
the Lockheed Martin Skunkworks, also by Sure and Electrobe Electrovillase
Inictrivelease microphones are the ones I use here in the
studio my mixer Aracus, and also promotional consideration by Pratt
and Whitney Engines featuring Thrust You Can Trust and as

(02:02:38):
per normal trros are by My Little Pony. Hey, I
may or may not be drinking shortly. Everybody, God bless,
take care, see you Thursday night.

Speaker 3 (02:02:55):
Everybody, not Mama, not fan, everyone a right Jerry, good night, children,
good night, Da, good night, Elizabeth night.

Speaker 25 (02:03:04):
Young Boy, good night, Timbob night, jim Up, good night, Jimba.

Speaker 21 (02:03:11):
What's going on?

Speaker 26 (02:03:12):
I was a slip.

Speaker 8 (02:03:13):
What's everybody doing?

Speaker 9 (02:03:15):
Good night, good night and good luck
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