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December 4, 2025 60 mins
Why Are Humans Making Themselves Obsolete? The AI & Robot Dilemma | Karel Cast 25-162
Humans seem strangely driven to erase their own relevance. From the explosive rise of robotics to the unstoppable push toward advanced AI, we’re building machines that can do nearly everything we do — often better, faster, and cheaper. But here’s the real question: Why?
Why are we creating technology that replaces us instead of supports us?
Why are we racing toward automation knowing it will eliminate millions of jobs?
Why are humans so willing — even eager — to make themselves obsolete?
Today, we dive deep into the psychology behind humanity’s self-destructive tech obsession, explore what it means for our future, and break down the news of the day as only Karel can.
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Karel is a history-making broadcaster and entertainer in Las Vegas with his service dog Ember.
#KarelCast, #AIRevolution, #AutomationDebate, #FutureOfWork, #RobotTakeover, #TechEthics, #HumanityAndAI, #DigitalFuture, #NewsCommentary, #TechDiscussion, #AIDebate, #TechnologyTrends, #RoboticsNews, #SocietyAndTech, #HumanBehavior, #MediaAnalysis, #SocialCommentary, #InnovationDebate, #AIImpact, #IndependentMedia
https://youtube.com/live/Mf_8v2KbsUM


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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Show time is here. No time to fear. Corralla is
so near because show time is here. So on with
the show.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
Let's give it a go.

Speaker 3 (00:11):
Corilla is the one that you need to know.

Speaker 4 (00:16):
Now, it's show side.

Speaker 5 (00:30):
You gotta stop. Hey, what's that sound? Everybody knows what's
going down?

Speaker 3 (00:36):
Why?

Speaker 5 (00:36):
Why are humans so quick to replace themselves? We're gonna
talk about that today and so much more. Oh, I'm
the Corral Cast.

Speaker 6 (00:44):
Don't go anywhere, uncensored, unfiltered, un hinged.

Speaker 7 (00:50):
It's the Corral Cast.

Speaker 6 (00:52):
Listen daily on your favorite streaming services.

Speaker 5 (01:00):
The Girl Cast. I am carell Happy Thursday, December fourth,
sovery glad you are joining me. Why do humans have
such a low opinion of themselves that they want to
replace themselves? We are going to talk about that today
And welcome to all in the chatroom at YouTube dot com,
Forward slash Really, Correl and all of my patrons. I

(01:21):
could not do this show without you. I don't know
if you know that I really mean that. You know
you hear all these platitudes. But I'm gonna tell you
if you are a patron through Patreon, pat r e
o n dot com, Forward slash Really Correl, that is
why the Daily Show exists. I could not exist as

(01:42):
a show without the money I get from Patreon. I
would have to go do something else because I must
supplement my Social Security disability with as much as they allow,
and they allow twelve hundred and ninety seven dollars a month.
My patrons give me one thousand, twenty dollars a month.
It falls within the limit, and without it, there would

(02:03):
be no show. There just would be no show. You
guys have paid off a computer that we use for
the show. It's sitting right here. You guys have done
a lot for the show, so I thank you for that.
I just want to take time out here at the
holidays and say thank you. If you wonder why I'm
always cleaning my glasses, it's because the glass monster that

(02:24):
I have told you about before, Where you clean your glasses,
they're totally clean, and then you put them on, and
then ten minutes later, somebody unbeknownst to you has come
and smudged them all up and you can't see. And
it wasn't you. You didn't do it. But that's why
I'm always cleaning my glasses, all right, all right, James Schnabal,

(02:46):
Humans cost money and make errors. They'll say, I, Ah,
you're jumping right into the topic, James, and James, as
a pathologist, you should know the dangers of this. So
this is my Coco drink. It is two tablespoons of
dark cacao powder, one teaspoon of macha, eight ounces of

(03:07):
freshly made soy milk. I'd made soy milk this morning.
That's why I'm late. My morning, ran late in the kitchen.
I had so much to do this morning, and then
I had to do my yoga and my weights and
then get to the park and then get home and
shower and be here with you anyway. And literally I
was playing ball at nine fifty nine. I know I
should have been here starting the show. But after our walk,

(03:27):
Ember plays ball for a very short amount of time.
Then she gets four little treats up on the bed,
and then she gets a little mid morning snack of
kibble with some water and some liver dust. And that
has to happen, Like you know, I could be going
on at Carnegie Hall, and if that hasn't happened yet,
it's gonna happen before I go on. I'm Madonna like that.

(03:52):
I normally drink this before the show. It's so good.
I finally got the right amount of splenda, the splenda
without any additions, no dextros, no none of that, no rithrawl.
It's just pure stevia, pure stevy elif. It's even called that,
pure steavy elif. And I finally got the right amount,
because one thirty second of a teaspoon is a serving

(04:14):
of pure stevia, and that's hard to measure, but I
finally found a way. And it's not too sweet, and
there's not a bitter aftertaste, and it's not too it's
just perfect. So thank you patrons, and thank you Dark
Coco gods, and thank you universe. I'm so thankful today
for so many things. I know, I want to talk
about robots and AI and tech and all of that,

(04:35):
and of course the goings on in Washington, DC. But
as the holiday month progresses, I am so grateful for
you and to have this show. I am so grateful
that Ember is still alive and well and running across
the park to see her friend because she is aging.
She is ten plus now and she is aging. Uh
and but I'm so grateful. And then yesterday I just

(04:58):
wanted to fill you all in since you know this
is not a typical talk show. I wait, you screw that.
I'd talk about this on KFI or KGO. So I
went to the immunologist yesterday, I got to tell you
all this. I went to the immunologist and she was like,
I'm not sure that that was shingles. Do you have
photos of it? And I showed her the photos. She said, well,
and I'm all, honey, three other doctors looked at it. It

(05:19):
with shingles. And then she said, well, the literature that
we have said you probably should take the second shot.
And I said this out loud. I said, because it
just took me by I said, you can shove that
literature right up your ass. And she looked at me, said,
pardon me. I said, the first shot put me in
the hospital for four days. You think I'm going to

(05:39):
take another one? Oh, but you need to protect I'm
all screw that, I'll get shingles instead. I'm not gonna
risk it. And so she said, before they could tell
me if I needed or if I can take another vaccine,
that they had to do a full immunology of a
full immune system panel.

Speaker 6 (06:00):
Visiting really corell dot com daily, you're missing out. Get
the podcast videos and the blug including recipes at really
Correll dot com.

Speaker 7 (06:09):
That's really k A R e l dot com.

Speaker 3 (06:14):
Show Time is here. No time to fear.

Speaker 1 (06:17):
Corell is so near because show time is here.

Speaker 3 (06:21):
So on with the show.

Speaker 2 (06:23):
Let's give it a go.

Speaker 3 (06:25):
Correll is the one that you need to know.

Speaker 5 (06:29):
I just want to keep sharing this with you because
it relates to politics and the world we live in.
So she tells me I should have the second shingle
shot probably, and I tell her to stick it up
her ass. Uh. And because I'm seeing the PA, I
thought I was seeing the doctor. I hate when they
bait and switch. I'm in an appointment with the doctor
instead the PA comes in. But whatever care is care, right.
So they then say, we need to do a full

(06:50):
immune panel on you to make sure you have all
the components of your immune system that they're all working
before we tell you you can or cannot get another shot.
Plus we have to requisition the records from your hospital. Stay.
Uh and you know see what was really going on there.
I'm like, okay, fine, go do all that. So I
go to have my labs at quest where I always go,

(07:13):
and oh, she messed up. Oh my god, I have
a lump and I have a bruise here on my
arm because she messed up. They had to take five
tubes of blood. On tube number four, they it stopped
coming out and she was poking it in and moving
it around, and it hurt, and I knew I was
gonna end sure enough. Uh, and then she had to
restick me. Ugh anyway, So I asked the lady h

(07:37):
at the uh, and I'm sure I told you this yesterday.
But I asked the lady about the new pea cups
and why they're so horrible Dixie cups with just a
fast food lid on top, and she said tariffs. And
I said, fuck Donald Trump. I said it out loud
at the while I was getting my blood drawn, and
she laughed, and she goes, you can't say that. I said,
yes I can, and she goes, oh, we have Trump

(07:59):
supporters out the lobby. Don't be too loud, I go,
then they ought to be embarrassed. They need to be ashamed.
I am tired of liberals, progressives, socialists gaze trans people
on the right side of history, on the right side
of issues. I am so tired of us having to

(08:19):
be quiet in fear of offending Maga. I'm sick of it.
I'm done. So I went on. I told this woman
I go. That man's a war criminal, he's a sex offender,
you know, and he needs to go. He is now
holding SNAP benefit. My sister on the phone this morning
said her January or December snap is probably not going

(08:42):
to come because Arizona is a democratic state now and
they won't turn in the voter roles and Trump is
using that. That should be impeachable right there. So you
mean to tell me you are withholding food benefits from
hungry American as an extortion to the states that won't

(09:03):
comply with your wishes. Am I to be clear on that?
Mister Trump? Dozy down? Well, yes, okay, impeached, goodbye. That's
all it should take, just that alone, just using people's food.
How despicable that man needs to have a coronary or

(09:24):
a stroke or an amboliment or something. Something needs to
happen to that man. He is pure evil, because that
is pure And you know, my friend Steve DJ Valentino Rose,
he said, you know, he's not doesn't have enough energy
anymore to be the one thinking all this up. You know,

(09:46):
he's he's fallen asleep in meetings. He you know, the
guy's toast And I said, you're right, it's probably Stephen
Miller or Jared Kushner or one of these other rich
fracts who don't care if people starve, who are telling
him to do this it Maybe it isn't him thinking
up all this evil. Maybe it's someone surrounding him. Uh

(10:09):
but you know, but you know in the chat room,
let's check what's going on. Uh, replace your PA with AI. Yeah?
Probably Uh, me too. Saw my primary care cardiologist once
from then on PAS. I know, when did pas become

(10:29):
a thing? Are they cheaper than doctors? Is it supposed
to help us with care? I mean, why can't we
see you?

Speaker 3 (10:37):
I'm old.

Speaker 5 (10:38):
I want to see a fucking doctor. And I know
that's old thinking. And I know that PAS can prescribe
drugs in order test and all that, but they're not doctors.
And three times what did she have to go do
consult with the doctor? Well, if you got to go
out of the room three times to talk to the doctor,
maybe just maybe you should send the fucking doctor in here. Okay,

(11:00):
Oh I don't get it. I don't get it. When
did PASP I'm getting old and cranky, aren't I? But
I'm grateful. Look, I'm grateful I saw the PA. I'm
grateful I have access to the blood test to see
if my immune system is working properly. I am grateful today,
grateful for Ember, for my home, for heat. The heat
was on when I got home because it was thirty

(11:20):
seven degrees this morning in Las Vegas. Hello, Hello, aroused nipples.
So yeah. So I was walking with behind beams on
thirty seven degrees and the heat was on, and all
I could think about is the people in America that
don't have heat in their homes. Not the homeless people,
which that's bad enough, but the people who don't have

(11:42):
heat in their homes because they can't afford it. They
can't afford heating oil, or they can't afford the gas
or whatever. There are people that set their thermostats at
like fifty five and they wear sweaters and jackets in
their homes. This is the country we live, and we
have become such a horrible friggin country. We have a

(12:04):
president withholding food from poor and starving people so he
can get his political agenda. We have criminals like Pete
Hegg's birth or whatever his name is. And the President,
who are guilty of murder because that's what's going on
with those boats. It's murder. It's not a war crime.
There's no declared war. They are murderers. We have murderers.

(12:27):
The head of the Pentagon is a murderer, you know,
And I don't care how you slice that. And the
President is guilty of conspiracy to commit murder. That's just
a fact. I mean, I'm not exaggerating. That's a fact.
He gave the order to attack the boats, Pete second

(12:48):
to the order, the admiral carried it out. All three
of them guilty of murder. Now they're trying to spin it. Oh,
we were trying to hit the boat, not the people.
You mean, the people clinging to the fucking these people.
The depth of their depravity, it's bottomless. It is bottomless.

(13:09):
I mean, really, like me, bottomless, not a bottom to
be found. Oh anyway, sorry, what are we talking about
in the chat room? I'm sure what's it. I'm sure
that's it. I think the NP has better training for
outpatient advocacy PAS can handle most of the routine encounters
and mds and hospitals make money from procedures. Amen, Amen's sister.

(13:35):
It's all a grift, ain't it. Everything in America is
a grift. Now, child, It's all just a big grift.
So to that end, there's a very real chance in
the next ten years you go to the doctor and
the first person you see as a robot, and you're like, oh, corral,
that's just not Ever. There's a very real chance in

(13:57):
the next ten years the first person and you see
at a doctor's office is a robot. And I ain't
making that up. And I was watching something last night
or two nights ago, and I said to myself, why
are we hell bent on making ourselves obsolete? No one

(14:18):
is forcing us to create robots. There's not some big
mandate we must create robots. There's no pressure to create robuts.
And you and I it is not on the top
of our agenda. You're not sitting at home going God,
I wish I had a robut you know you're not.

(14:39):
The Only people that want robots are corporations because they'll
work cheaper, faster, no sick days, no vacations. Robuts and
their creation isn't some advancement to society. It's a way
to get rid of you at your job. And why

(15:01):
do we want to do this? Why do we want
to make people obsolete in the workforce? Why what do
we think people are going to be doing? You see,
rich people don't see our work as real work, and
that's why they're so quick to come up with a
replacement for it. For instance, house cleaning. Rich people don't

(15:24):
see that as a real job. I mean, who would
want to be a house cleaner? And yet I know
many people. One that cleans my house that's very happy
to be a house cleaner, loves her job, enjoys all
of her clients, visiting with all of her clients, going
to their homes, taking care of their homes with them.

(15:45):
She enjoys being a house cleaner. It wasn't a secondary profession.
She owns a cleaning company. She has four employees that
work for her, and she's very very happy. Why would
I want to replace her or her staff with a robot.

Speaker 7 (16:04):
Why?

Speaker 5 (16:05):
Well, because they could do it. No, no, no, no no.
Why People that do data entry, people that you know,
do all kinds of jobs that they say AI is
going to take. Why why are we gonna let AI?
Why are we building technology to make ourselves obsolete. Money

(16:27):
that's the only reason. Well, it can do it faster,
it can do it better. No, it can do it
more cheaply. So we are allowing corporations to convince us
that this advent, this great thrust forward in technology, is
good for us. It's not good for us in medicine. Yes,

(16:50):
AI is a good tool in medicine.

Speaker 3 (16:53):
You know what.

Speaker 5 (16:54):
As much as I love writing songs and having AI
write the music, I don't need that. I could find producers,
although it was hard. It was very hard, I have
to tell you, but they were out there. It happened.
Morgan Mallory wrote music for me. Leo Frapier wrote music
for me. I could find people. Speaking of which, in

(17:15):
two days, I Dance because debuts. You can pre order
it right now on all music stores. Corel karl I
Dance because it's eight ninety eight dollars and ninety cents,
because there's twelve remixes. Please, if you love me, go
to wherever you purchase music, not stream, but purchase iTunes

(17:38):
wherever and buy pre order Corel karl I Dance. Because
you're gonna flip over the cover, So go ahead, because
that will help it get noticed. Okay, it's a great
song that I wrote in honor of those who have
passed of HIV eight. So please please please please go

(18:02):
in pre order correl Okay, ariel I dance because but why?
Why are you know? Why is Hollywood advancing with all
the AI. I have no problem with AI being used
for space scenes or for you know, for things for
computer generated graphics. Okay, but actors and actresses that are AI.
Why are we even pursuing that? What do we need

(18:24):
it for? Oh? Because if I have a company, I
can't really hire someone. Yes you can, yeah, but this
is easier. Easier doesn't mean better. We are making ourselves obsolete.
And now there's these videos coming out of China of
men picking synthetic partners. You know, robut We're going to

(18:50):
have robuts replacing husbands and wives. You wait and see,
I mean that's coming. Can't find a date? Take yourself synthetic?
I just why? If any of you could answer, I
know that you're gonna say money. If that's the real reason,

(19:10):
if that's the only reason, then we shouldn't be doing it.
And it's corporations that are leading this charge. You and
I aren't. We're not hot on AI. When I call
my hoa now and they answer the phone at the
management company, it says, HI, this is Enda or Edna
or some weird name with an e eden. Hi, this

(19:31):
is Eden? Is this Charles? Because they know the number
I'm calling you on? How can I help you today? Charles?
And there's background noise like she's in an office. It's AI,
It's not real. And the first thing I say is representative. Well,
I'm I can transfer you to a person, but I
could help you myself. I'm and I don't even I'm
the fault representative. You know why are we getting rid

(19:56):
of humans? We need jobs. We need to eat, We
need to provide for our families. Truck drivers need a job.
If you make self driving semi trucks, you know what
are the truck drivers gonna do. People in food service

(20:17):
need a job. Bartenders need jobs. There are already bars
with robot bartenders. I want a bartender I can flirt with.
I love flirting with the guys in the gay bars.
The bartenders never go home with one. That's one of
my rules. Daniel Charleston used to get mad because it's
one bartender one time at Studio one. Oh my god,

(20:38):
he was six foot, reddish hair, mustache, a god. He
was in a speedo. He was a god. And he
was flirting with me and not like he flirted with
all the other customers. And Daniel's like, dude, the late
Daniel Charleston. He is total who. By the way, I
want the people that gave Daniel Charleston his ketamine punished,

(21:00):
just like Matthew Perry's. But the police won't. Not to
be all over the place today, but that story is
in the news. The person, the doctor that prescribed the
ketamine for Matthew Perry is going to go to jail. Well,
somebody gave my friend ketamine. Someone sold it to him,
he got it from somewhere. I want them punished. But
the police were like, now, we're not going to look

(21:21):
into that. See money. Why are we trying to replace ourselves?
Will there be robot copy?

Speaker 2 (21:44):
No, it shure.

Speaker 5 (22:02):
Robots will be doing eldercare within five years, Make no
mistake about it. I tell everyone when we're older, I'm
sixty three, when I need eldercare. If I make eighty
five ninety and I need care, it'll be a robot.
Make no mistake. No, if it's as nice as Robin
Williams was, and buy a centennial man. Okay, but look,

(22:22):
it's exciting that we're watching this, but there's also problems.
I know you heard about the robot taxi that ran
over the damn cat from the bodega and the whole
community of San Francisco is heartbroken. It killed this cat
that was this centerpiece of this bodega. Everybody loved the
cat and it got hit by a Whammo taxi and died.

(22:45):
And then two days ago it happened again, a Waimo
taxi ran over a dog. Oh but the dog was
off leashing in the street. That doesn't give the taxi
permission to run it over. And when they start with
these robuts in elder care, senior is gonna die because
they're gonna mess up all technology, messes up all every

(23:13):
bit of technology because it's man made and we are
imperfect beings, and I for one, you know, being sixty three,
I don't know. In one hundred years, this will all
be a moot point, and governments are gonna have to
find out what to how to make all their people
be able to eat, how to make all their people

(23:35):
able to. You know, corporations are not forward thinking. They're
thinking robuts and AI is gonna help them streamline and
cut cost whatever. If people don't have money, capitalism doesn't work.
So if only the one percent have jobs and seventy

(23:59):
percent of people are out of work because robuts put
them out of work, who's going to spend money on
these companies? Who's going to go to Target, Who's going
to go to Walmart? Who's gonna buy goods? Who's gonna
buy goods from China? When robuts can make iPhones? What
are those people gonna do? They're just corporations are so

(24:23):
focused on their bottom line. They are forgetting that they
need customers. And in order to have customers, those customers
have to have money. They have to have money, and nobody,
nobody is addressing how are we going to make money

(24:44):
if there's no jobs. Someone said, we'll learn how to
fix the robots. You don't think robuts will start teaching
themselves how to fix themselves. I've seen Star Wars. Star Wars,
it's the little Ewok, not the Ewoks. What are they called?

Speaker 2 (25:00):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (25:00):
Come on? One of the nerds in the chat room
you know the things that are in the desert. They're
not the ewalks. They're in the desert and they're little
in short and they have the weird telescoping eyes and
they wear the little hoodies and they're kind of evil.
But they're scavengers and then they fix robots and stuff.
Oh what are those things called? Oh they're not ewalks.

(25:22):
They are Oh someone helped me on that in the chatroom.
Please tell me what they are. You know what I mean,
the little little hooded short things that are the scavengers
and they they go around in those enormous vehicles in
the desert areas and they pick up all the scrap
and oh what are they? Jawas? Thank you so much.

(25:43):
I knew there was a nerd in my chat room,
you know. So if you don't think that robuts and
automated and they're they're gonna fix themselves. They're gonna make
us obsolete because we're not needed on planet Earth. Planet
Earth would be better without us. AI is going to
figure that out. Animals would replur, you know. Elephants would

(26:08):
make a comeback, Giraffes would make a comeback, Hippos would
make it. I mean animals everywhere would make a comeback.
The planet would cure itself if we're not around to
eat all the animals and everything else. AI is going
to figure that out. You wait and see, you wait
and see. So, yeah, the way i'mo killing things, I'm

(26:31):
so I would stop. If I were San Francisco after
it killed one animal, I'd make it so they can't
be there anymore. Take your cars out of service, and
when you fix it so it can't kill an animal,
then you can come back. But until then, no, a
cat and a dog being killed in a two month period,
that's not acceptable to me. That cat was beloved and

(26:53):
that dog was somebody's child, and to have a wey
MoU just run them over and kill them like it.
If it was a human, they would have stopped. They
would have said, no more wamos until you fix it. Oh,
but it's just a dog and a cat. No, they
should stop. Don't you agree? Waimos should be put out
of service in San Francisco until they can guarantee they

(27:17):
will not kill an animal. Do you all agree with that?
I I if I were the mayor, I would say, nope,
get out of my city until you can guarantee you can.
You won't kill an animal, but I'm an animal lover.
So yes, John Slade, you're a nerd. You knew what
a jawa was. You're a nerd. Get over it. The nerd.

(27:38):
You know the Bible made a type of It wasn't
the meek shall inherit the earth. It was the geek
shall inherit the earth. And they have Bill you know,
Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, you know Tim Cook, these people
in Silicon Valley, they're all nerds. Mark Zuckerberg the epitome
of nerd. Yes, it was the geek shellon hair at

(28:00):
the earth, not the meek. It was just a typo.
All right, Part two of the correl cast will be
coming up. I hope you stick with me. God, it
flies by even an hour. I can't believe I only
did thirty minutes before. How do I only do thirty
minutes before? It just everything flies by. I'd be over
right now if I only did thirty minutes. I'm I'm
glad I expanded it. It just whizzes by. But yes,

(28:25):
we've got you know, we need strong leadership in the
AI and robotics area, and yes we need restrictions just
like we have restrictions. You can't clone a human, although
I'm quite sure some rich guys somewhere is paying for that.
You can't clone a human. You shouldn't be able to
make a robot that replaces a human. You just shouldn't.

(28:49):
You should not be able to make a robot, for instance,
that does house cleaning, because we have house cleaners. You
shouldn't be able to make a robot that does data
entry because we have data entry. I don't know about healthcare.
Could you imagine sending robuts into remote areas to do
healthcare that people can't get to? That would that would

(29:11):
be groundbreaking?

Speaker 8 (29:12):
You know?

Speaker 5 (29:13):
So I don't know how I feel about that. And yeah,
they're gonna be better than us. They're gonna be able
to jump twenty feet in the air, they're gonna be
able to scale mountains, they're gonna they're gonna some of
them might be able to fly. They're going to be
better than we are. Why are we creating things that'll
be better than us so someone else can make money

(29:35):
and we can be out of a job. That's part boy,
that's that's lord a mercy.

Speaker 9 (29:45):
It's broadcasting from a completely different point of view. Yours
listen daily to the Correll Cast on your favorite streaming service.

Speaker 3 (30:00):
Show Time is here.

Speaker 1 (30:02):
No time to fear Corilla is so near because Showtime
is here.

Speaker 3 (30:07):
So on with the show.

Speaker 2 (30:09):
Let's give it a go.

Speaker 3 (30:11):
Corilla is the one that you need to know.

Speaker 8 (30:16):
Now. It's show side.

Speaker 5 (30:30):
All right, starting a week from today. I want to
let you all know that most of the shows not
next week, but the week after the New year, They're
not going to be a lot of Poliday. I think
I'm gonna go take a ride in a Zeus. Those
are a driverless car here in Vegas.

Speaker 7 (30:44):
Let's go explore uncensored, unfiltered, fun hinged. It's the Corall Cast.
Listen daily on your favorite streaming service.

Speaker 5 (31:00):
Oh, it is the Crell Cast part too. I'm Corel,
of course. Don't forget chatroom at YouTube dot com forward
slash really Corel, and please become a patron. We just
had a four ninety nine person sign up last week.
Thank you very much. I don't say their names unless
they want me to, because some people don't want their
name thread out. But thank you. You know who you are.
You signed up last week for four ninety nine a month.

(31:20):
Thank you so much, and don't forget to Please go
pre order Corel kril I Dance because go to the
iTunes store or whatever store title Amazon Music wherever you
get your music and pre order it for eight dollars
and ninety cents and it will really really help me.
So please go do that, all right? Yes, driver this

(31:42):
cars we have a Zeus heerezosk. I think it's Amazon,
and they're all over the place over on the strip
and I think so not next week. Next week we're
still going to do politics and you know, current events
and all that. But for the week after and the
week after that, in between Christmas Eve and New Year's

(32:02):
and all that, most of the topics are not going
to be political because I've it's the year end and
I've had enough, so I'm trying to plan topics that
are not political. So going for a ride and a
Zeus would be a good thing to go tape and
bring to you since most of you haven't been in
a in a you know, driverless car. I will be terrified.

(32:24):
I will be I'm old. I know they'll come a
time where it's not you know, in all the future
movies you get in like Johnny Cab, you know you
get in and there's no driver. But think about how
many Uber drivers there are, how many lift drivers there are,
and how many taxi drivers there are. There's that number

(32:44):
has to be would you say in the millions? I
don't know how to approximate that? But if we go,
if I go by Las Vegas, and how many Uber
drivers there are here? I wonder if there's a statistic
how many people drive for Uber, like a national statistic,
and that Uber is worldwide and lift and all of that.

(33:07):
Take that away. Suddenly you got driverless vehicles. And don't
think Uber isn't leading the charge. They want. Uber wants
driverless technology. You'll still order an Uber, It'll just be
a driverless Uber. Uber will then make the money and
not the driver. What will the driver do? Who knows?
You know? Homemade pet food? Oh you want a segment

(33:31):
on that? Ember's is really easy to me. But I
can do a segment on that for you. Next week.
I'm going to show you how to make her homemade
dog biscuits. Or during that time, I make her homemade
dog biscuits and I'm going to give you the recipes.
I have a couple of recipes for homemade dog biscuits. No,
they're not vegan. Well one is, but the others aren't.

Speaker 6 (33:50):
So.

Speaker 5 (33:50):
And then as for homemade dog food, that really is
up to your dog. In other words, Ember eats venison
and elk. It's not factory farmed, and she tends to
lick herself more and be more itchy when I give
her chicken, which I won't give her chicken because of
bird flu and turkey, so chicken and turkey tend to

(34:12):
make her lick more. So I give her venison and elk,
which I get at sprouts. It's my biggest expense because
it's fourteen dollars for twelve ounces. It's basically a dollar
an ounce for elk or venison. I wish I knew
someone like in Texas that could just send me fifty
pounds of frozen venison. But venison and elk that's what

(34:36):
Ember eats. And then she eats that with quenoa and
because quinoa is very good for a dog. And then
but you got to rinse it first. It's a chemical
on it that you got to rinse off. And by
the way, quenwa seventeen dollars for three pounds. I don't
know why quinoa has exploded in pricing, and you can't

(34:59):
get strawberry right now. There's no strawberries at the store. None. Zero.
The rains in California that happened for that week have
destroyed the strawberry clock wiped them out. I went to
three stores and said, do you have any strawberries? Albertson, Smiths,
and Sprouts. None of them had strawberries. None. They said
the weather wiped them out. Remember what I said about

(35:21):
vertical gardening a while a back, and that we all
need to be. You know, every state needs to be
vertical gardening because it's weather proof. Yeah. No strawberries at
the store. None, at least not here. Maybe where you're
out there are, but not here, not Nevada, not in California.
So that's wonderful. So anyway, so yes, Emburys and then

(35:45):
and then so it's keenewa, venison and elk and then
mixed vegetables which include yellow splash, green splash, sweet potato,
kale or spinach, but a small amount spinach and kale.

Speaker 6 (36:00):
Visiting really corell dot com daily you're missing out. Get
the podcast videos and the blug including recipes at really
correll dot com.

Speaker 7 (36:09):
That's really k A R E l dot com.

Speaker 3 (36:14):
Show time is here. No time to fear.

Speaker 1 (36:17):
Correll is so near because show time is here.

Speaker 3 (36:21):
So on with the show.

Speaker 2 (36:23):
Let's give it a go.

Speaker 3 (36:25):
Correll is the one that you need to know.

Speaker 5 (36:29):
All right, we are back. So spinach and kale is
not really good for a dog in large quantities. In
small quantities, it's fine. H And then carrot. She gets carrot,
two types of squash. She gets spinach, kale, sweet potato.
I know she's better than most humans, right uh. And
then of course throughout the day she also gets a
third a cup of the ud Science diet ud urine,

(36:54):
a tract I told you all she plasted about she
passed a bladderstone. Oh when I found that, I didn't
know what it was. Thought it was a tooth. Brought
it to the vet, like, what the hell is this?
He's oh, it's a bladderstone. She did it so quietly,
I didn't even know I would have screamed. I mean
it was only five millimeters, like, it was not big.
It was five millimeters about that big. If that came

(37:15):
out of me, oh lord, it would have been like
I was delivering a child. Yeah, oh yeah, oh yeah, Okay,
let's see that you need to buy one of what.
Uh okay, So no, you if you own a driverless car,
you won't need a driver's license because you ain't driving.

(37:36):
So Congress today are hearing from the Navy admiral who
ordered the attack that killed the strike boats, because they're
trying to make him the scapegoat. The scapegoat because you know,
Trump is a grifter, uh, and he's gonna protect his
own so he'll throw a general under the bus or
an admiral that's not gonna go well with his rank
and file. You know military people by the way, Uh,

(37:59):
just not gonna go well. Driver dies after crashing into
light pole. See that's thirty thousand people a year die
in car crashes, and they needn't. I'm not. I think
I want a hybrid car. I want a car that

(38:21):
you can drive or it could drive on its own.
But one thing it won't do is getting a wreck.
So it is in some way connected through the roadway
or whatever to the other vehicles. So it would know
if there's like a half a mile up, if there's
a car wreck and the road is blocked, it would know.

(38:41):
How many times do we see these pile ups because
it's snowing and people don't know that the cars are stopped.
There's a show, a wonderful show on HBO Max called
in the Eye of the Storm. They get footage like
you just can't believe, and they did a snowstorm and
there's footage of a pile up, like a fifty car
pile up, and watching it made me cry because the

(39:05):
people don't see that the cars are stopped, and then
they just crash right into them and get wedged in between. Die,
get smacked, get trapped, get hit. It's horrible being in
a pile up. Remember all those Ermin Allen movies in
the seventies smash up on Interstate five and whatever. I
used to love those, but now that I've seen real ones. Yeah,

(39:26):
I want cars that won't do that. I don't need
cars to be completely autonomous. I just need it so
they won't crash into each other, kill pets, kill pedestrians.
That's what I need. I need a car that is
idiot proof. It doesn't have to be autonomous, but if
the driver's too busy texting or whatever, it won't let

(39:47):
them hit another car. Go too slow, go too fast,
so they're in terms of automobiles, Yes, automation and AI
is not a bad thing. I'm not saying they should
be completely driverless. There should always be a human there
in case something goes wrong. You know, I'm gonna go

(40:08):
ride in these zeus can tape it for you. If
something goes wrong in that car. There's no one there
in a weamo if something goes Oh did you hear
in La talking about Weamo? Not only did it kill
a dog in San Francisco and kill a cat, but
yesterday in Los Angeles with a passenger, one of these

(40:29):
ramos drove through a police barricade scene where the police
had closed the road because they were shooting and there
was you know, armed gunmen and stuff, and this taxi
just drives right through the middle of it. The passenger
could have been killed. Well, it's just starting out. Yes,

(40:51):
I know, and I know that this is all in
its infancy, and you know, but again, we need to
have a clear vision of where we want it to go. Oh,
cars that don't get in recks. We need smarter roads.
We need roads that talk to the car. And they're
totally possible. They have one out in Riverside. It's totally possible.

(41:13):
We need cars that can communicate with the road, adjust
their speed so there's never a traffic jam. There should
never be traffic jams. A computer could prevent traffic jams.
So hybrid technology technology that helps the human, doesn't replace

(41:34):
the human. When it comes to cars, there's a lot
of technology in AI that could help a driver. We
don't need to eliminate the driver. See that's what I mean.
There's a lot of technology that could help in healthcare,
but we don't need to eliminate the nurses. We don't

(41:54):
need to eliminate the doctors. We need the technology to
assist them, not replace them. And that's the difference AI
and robuts should assist humans, they should not ever replace them. Ever,
no matter what the job is, we shouldn't replace a human.

(42:19):
We should assist a human. On construction sites, I could
see robots being put to great use, but there still
needs to be a contractor there. There still needs to
be workers there. So anyway, just give us over seventy
a driverless car. Yeah, I agree, I agree. All right,

(42:43):
So what else is going on in the news. Let's
take a look at the news as only you and
I can. Steve whitkoff to meet Ukrainian officials after fruitless
talks with Vladimir Putin. Will someone please take Vladimir Putin out?
Oh my god, just get rid of that piece of
human garbage. Him and Trump. Take them out together in bed.
Next time they're in bed together, just take them out.

(43:06):
Have the bed short circuit, you know, because I'm sure
they go to those cheap motels with the beds that
cost fifty cents and vibrate used to be a dime.
Let's see what else your driving choices could be hiding
signs of future cognitive decline. So the algorithm feeds me
stories about Alzheimer's because it's one of my biggest fears,
and I tend to read a lot of stories about
Alzheimer's in cognitive decline. That's why I'm taking coleen cho

(43:31):
L I n E. Do you know most of you
don't get enough colin and colein is for the nervous
system and for the brain, and as a vegan, I
don't really eat it, so I've started taking it. But yeah,
they say, if you're older and you stick to known
routes and you won't go new places because you don't
know the way. That's a sign that you could be

(43:53):
headed towards cognitive decline. You know. Karen's that way, Karen Ditman.
She will drive if she has an appointment and a
place she's never been. The day before the appointment, she
will drive the route, so she's familiar with it. I
always thought she was, you know, you know, I don't
know a little strange for that, But now I can

(44:14):
see the I can see the advantage of it. FBI
ars suspect in twenty twenty one DC pipe bomb case. Yes,
have you heard that they have arrested someone for I
always thought it was Marjorie Taylor Green out there, but
they remember on January sixth someone had planted pipe bombs.
It didn't go on, and it was outside the Democratic

(44:36):
National Committee's headquarters on the eve of the riots. They
have arrested a sub suspect. The school district for Prince
William County, Virginia, which includes Woodbridge, confirmed to CBS News
that Cole graduated from high school in twenty thirteen. I
don't know that Brian Cole of Woodbridge, Virginia. They have

(44:59):
no they don't know anything about him. We don't know
if he's MAGA. We don't know if he's a liber
We know nothing about him. But Brian Cole from Woodbridge, Virginia,
we will know a lot about soon. But he was
the person that was out there planting pipe bombs, or
so they say. You know nowadays? Do we even you know?

(45:21):
Can we even you know? Let's see. Ilhan Omar says
trump attack on Somali immigrants is a deflect attention from scrutiny.
Of course it is. He's an evil man. A new
study revealed doing this highly enjoyable activity every day could
lower your dementia risk. You see how I get a

(45:41):
lot of stories about dementia? I think? What do they say?
Is it crosswords? Let's see. Monash University in Australia looked
at data from more than ten thousand adults over age
seventy and found that those who listened to music most
days experienced a thirty nine percent lower likelihood of developing dementia.
How many of you listen to music every day? So

(46:03):
Apple does this thing called replay and it tells you
you know, how much you listen to music, and who
your favorite artists were and all of that. Last year.
Let's see, where is my replay? Last year I listened to.
I think it's ninety one thousand. It was a huge amount,

(46:28):
ninety one thousand minutes of replay. Here it is, this
is your replay. So jump in. Let's see. Let me
tell you. I will tell you how much I listened to,
because we know it's good for your brain. Let's see,
I'm signing in. Wants me to sign into my Apple
account for some reason. I don't know why I should
be signed in. Continue through Apple Music. Play your highlight reel.

(46:52):
Okay here, okay. So in twenty twenty five, how much
music did you listen to? In twenty I listened to
ninety one thousand, one hundred and forty seven minutes, thirty
percent more than the year prior, ninety one thousand minutes.

(47:13):
How many hours is that I'll have to do the math.
I was very loyal to many artists. I still you
know my number one? I number one Emily Sondae fourteen
hundred minutes. I listened to Emily Sondae. You know I
love Emily Sonde. Fourteen hundred minutes from to Emily Sondae.

(47:34):
And then in second place was Barbara streisand Anita Baker.
Oh yes, Barbara streisand's my number two artist under Emily
Sonday Vesta Williams because I missed her a lot last year,
so I listened to a lot of her music. You

(47:56):
made it to Vesta's top Oh, I'm in the country.
I'm one of her top five listeners. I am the
number one listener of Emily Sonde in the country. I
am forty one hundred songs I listened to last year,
and one song became my new anthem, and that was
do You Want to Funk? By Corell. I played that

(48:18):
over one hundred and fifty times. Forty eight albums, including
five from barbar streisand three from Emily Sonde, two from
Adele and then Spa and Relaxation Music is in my
top five because I listened to a lot of Spa
and relaxation music. It's lovely around the house to have that,

(48:40):
you know, go playing. In twenty twenty five, my top
genre was pop, second was R and B. Third was
easy listening. How about that? Isn't that something? Can we
do the math? Somebody? How many hours ninety one thousand
minutes of music is computer? How many hours is ninety

(49:03):
one minutes? Is it not gonna tell me? Fifteen hundred
hours divide by three sixty five. Let's see how much
I listen to every day. Oh, it's four point it's

(49:25):
four solid days of music, is what that is? So yeah, listen,
listen to the music. It's good for you. It'll keep
off the dementia. And I do. And by the way,
they found that house music music between one twenty one bpms.
They found that's actually very very very good to listen to.

(49:49):
Stimulates the brain, gets you motivated. H So yeah, House
Republican women are in revolt against Mike Johnson because he's revolting.
They're gonna loosen the criteria to license drugs. Did you
see that. Yeah, they're not gonna make drugs go through

(50:10):
such a rigorous process to be approved. Oh that's great,
isn't it Isn't it? Isn't that just you know, that's
just great. And they're gonna make it harder to get
a vaccine. They're gonna make vaccine manufacturers jump through more hoops. Meanwhile,
regular drug companies they're gonna make not you know, not

(50:33):
be as stringent. And that's something. What a world. All right,
we'll finish up when I come back. How about news hours?
I don't know how many news hours I watch. There's
no replay to tell me that. I wonder it's a
good question. I probably watch an hour a day of

(50:54):
the BBC, all told, So what is that? Three hundred
and sixty five hours a year? Maybe a little more,
probably like five hundred hours of news, Probably at least
three hundred and sixty five hours, which is like, you know,
twelve pole days or something of news. But yeah, I

(51:14):
definitely listen to more music than I do watch people.
All right, we'll finish up the don't win. I'll be
bounding one song at a.

Speaker 2 (51:27):
Time, some small stay. Now we show side.

Speaker 3 (52:00):
Alrighty nighty.

Speaker 5 (52:02):
Then this is the world last show of the week.
I will be back Monday through Thursday of next week.
Of course, don't forget. If you're not a patron, you
can still become one patreon dot com forward slash really Carrell.
Without the patrons, the show does not exist. I am
gonna send out a zoom link and talk with my
patrons this weekend as a holiday talk. So if you're
a patron, look for a zoom link. I can't believe

(52:23):
this headline. There's a headline on my newsfeed that I'm
just like, really, this Pride dot Com. It is the
worst gay website on the Internet because all they do
is talk about sex. And this headline from Pride dot
Com seven celebrities who proudly embrace their bottom identity. First

(52:48):
of all, tmi, TMI, I don't need to know which
gay celebrities are at top and a bottom. Second of all,
I hate how gay culture fixates on that, because if
you're really a good gay guy, then you're gonna be versatile.
These people, I'm only this, I'm only that. Oh honey,

(53:08):
please toss a coin and throw in the lube. You know,
it's like, whoever lands on top lands on top whatever,
But there are these gey go oh, I would never
bottom or I would always be whatever. Just stop and
for Pride dot Com to do a story. And now
you guys, and now I know that you guys want
to know who the seven celebrities that embrace their bottomness are.

(53:30):
And I'd like to know how Pride dot com knows
that Bowen Yang is a bottom, or that little nas
Eggs is a bottom, or that Ryan O'Connell, who I
don't even know who he is, is a bottom or
Chris Olsen, who again, I have no idea who he is?
Is a bottom? Or that has slimon again? No idea
who he is? Or Max Lord again, no idea who
he is? And Renee rap? How can she be a bottom?

(53:52):
She's a girl? But why do I need to know that?
Why does anybody need to know that? You know, there's
a website that said the thirty best pop albums of
twenty twenty five. So I clicked it and realized I'm
really old because I didn't know any of them, not

(54:12):
one just not all right, don't forget to go and
order Correl kril I Dance because speaking of music, there
you go. You can go listen to that. The Pentagon
reportedly new strike on alleged drug boat left survivors. Oh great, great,

(54:33):
So now we've got senators involved. They're murderers too. A
special election has put Democrats on track to flip the House.
That's somewhat good news. A Democrat won yesterday. They lost
in Tennessee, but they won. They picked up a seat
I think it was in Georgia in a special election.
Is this what they're Is this what they're talking about?
Because there was a special election and the Democrat won.

(55:00):
Blah blah, blah blah, blah blah blah. I head of
a special election held on December twod and Tennessee Democrats
hoped to repeat. They didn't, but they did have a
stronger than normal showing, which is hopeful. And we'll see
if they flip the house. I hope they do, and
then impeach that mother. You know what, what else is

(55:21):
in the news that you should know about today? New
York's population is struggling to recover from COVID nineteen, aren't
we all? Gen Z loses faith in America? Oh, trying
the freaking club gen Z. How young Americans say they
believe things in the nation are oh, fifty seven percent
say wrong? Track, Wow, young Americans? What are they? What

(55:48):
is gen Z again? What years were they born? Computer?
When was gen Z born? Like, it's gonna know, these
are all creations by the way, baby boomer, Yes, oh
my god, wow, nineteen ninety seven and twenty twelve. They're

(56:15):
already polling people born in nineteen ninety seven or twenty twelve.
Those people are like still in diapers, aren't they? Jesus Christ?
They're kids nineteen ninety seven gen Z? Mm hmmm, all right,
I hope You've had fun today. I had a ball
and I had cocoa. I have be back on Monday.

(56:38):
Please join me. Don't forget. Check out the website reallycorrel
dot com, subscribe and like and comment on the videos
at YouTube dot com forward slash really Correl. I am Corell.
I want you to be who you want to be,
so long as it doesn't hurt you body. And don't
forget it's the holiday season. Try to have a little
Last night, I wanted to watch TV out in the tea,
out in the living room, not here in the TV
room because of the Christmas trees. I have two Chris trees,

(57:00):
a little one, this one's big, this big, and then
another one, and then my pencil cactus on the patio
is decorated. It was beautiful last night. I sat looking
at my house and said, it's so pretty in here.
I really loved it, and so I didn't want to
leave the living room. So I sat there with the
tree glowing, and the other tree and the other and
I'm alone, just be an ember. But you know what,

(57:20):
it's still beautiful, So don't forget it's this is a
holiday weekend. The holidays are just a few weeks away.
I think Christmas is like two weeks or three weeks
from today. Twenty one days from today, Yeah, three weeks
from today, So have a great weekend. Come back on Monday,
all refreshed and ready to face the day. To those
in the chatters in the chatroom, YouTube dot com, forward

(57:41):
slash really Corell, Hey, thank you for being there. And
for those of you that need more music in your life,
like the survey says, these stave off the Alzheimer's. I
bet my music will stave off Alzheimer's. So go and
pre order Corel kairil I Dance because it's not that

(58:02):
hard Karl I Dance, because pre order it now, and
that will help me get it, you know, out there
to the world. In the meantime, don't take any of
this crap too seriously because none of us are gonna
get out of this alive. So please just you know, breathe.
Don't let pentagon Pete drive you crazy. Trump's gonna do

(58:23):
stupid things every single day between now and Monday, so
just try to take a step back, realize it's the holidays,
and breathe. With his dual citizenship wife Milania Slovenia and
his dual Citizenship's son Baron from Slovenia. I don't know

(58:45):
why that irks me? Why does it irk me that
the First Lady is a dual citizen of another country?
Why does that bother me? I mean, it actually bothers me.
I don't think if you're the President or the First Lady,
you should be a duel citizen of any Now. I'm
all for dual citizenship. I am. I want to be
a dual citizen of another country. But why does it

(59:08):
bother me that Millenia is a citizen of the United
States and Slovenia? What? Why would that bother me? But
it does? Does it bother you? Be honest? Put your
comment down below. Does the fact that the First Lady
is a dual citizen? Does that bother you at all?
It's just I means we're allowed to be and she's

(59:31):
you know, but it bothers me. It does mean she's
the first lady that has.

Speaker 8 (59:40):
With me.

Speaker 5 (59:41):
Do I sound like Maga's.

Speaker 9 (59:45):
Broadcasting from a completely different point of view yours? Listen
daily to the corell cast on your favorite streaming service.

Speaker 3 (01:00:00):
So old times, he
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