Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You are now listening to Vigilantes Radio, presented by the
only One Media Group. This is the people's choice, but
quality interviews celebrities and special guests, hosted by Demitrius Denny Reynolds.
Call in to join the mix at seven oh one
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(00:24):
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Speaker 2 (00:27):
We welcome all.
Speaker 1 (00:28):
Enjoy the show. Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome your host
Demitrius who Demi Black Reynolds. Enjoy the show.
Speaker 3 (00:42):
Hey, good morning, good morning, Good morning, and welcome to
another incredible episode of Vigilantes Radio live right here on
iHeartRadio and I am your host of Deani. We have
a very special guest with you, guys, so you definitely
want to stick around for that. And as a matter
of fact, texts your buddies, family members are even sharing
(01:05):
on social media right now and let them know that
we are about to dive deep into another interview. Before
I bring my guests on, I do want to say,
don't lose fight. This is the frequency of the fearless.
You know, some people chase opportunities others created. Even when
(01:28):
the world says that they've aged out of the race.
At fifty eight years young, our special guest is rewriting
what it means to lead, to innovate, and inspire across generations.
She's not just keeping up with the future, she's building it.
(01:50):
From launching the first ever plus size fashion doll line
to running Good Morning Gwinette, a top tier media platform
with over a thousand and one hundred episodes, Aubrey's impact
has always revolved around one principle, and that is empowerment
(02:11):
through innovation. And now she's using AI to compose music,
build businesses, and teach a new generation, including Gen xers
and boomers, how to turn creativity into cash flow with
tools like clip vincey Vincey clip I can, he said
(02:36):
Benji dot Ai. She's proven that technology isn't just for
the young, it's for the hungry, and her message is simple.
AI isn't here to replace you, it's here to release you.
So this morning we are talking vision Voice and the
(02:58):
vibrant future of human creativity in the age of machines.
We're not just here for a talk show, and this
isn't just radio. This is revival for your mind, body,
and spirit. This is Vigiliantes Radio Live. My name is
Coach DEENI and change is possible. Are you ready?
Speaker 2 (03:28):
Are you ready?
Speaker 3 (03:34):
Are you ready radio?
Speaker 2 (03:40):
Are you ready? We'll let it go though.
Speaker 3 (03:47):
All right, all right again, welcome to the show. You're
listening to vr L. That is Vigiliante's Radio Live right
here on iHeart Radio and I am your host at Deani.
Our interviews are designed to go beyond the music, news, books, art, acting, films, technology, education, entrepreneurship, entertainment, spirituality,
(04:09):
and sometimes even past that thing that we call the ego.
Our interviews are designed to go behind the scenes and
into the minds of these brilliant people. You know, the
ones ab out there given it. They're all for me,
for you, and for the world. Well, ladies and gentlemen,
Today's guests is living proof that innovation has no aspiration dates.
(04:35):
Audrey Bell Corney is a fifty eight year old entrepreneur, grandmother, author,
media mongol and ai visionary leading a movement that bridges
generations as the president of Gwinnett Women's Chamber of Comers,
Creative Clipvinci dot Ai and host of Good Morning Gwinnette.
(04:57):
She's empowering others to c AI not as a threat,
but as a tool for freedom and creativity. So please
join me in saying welcome friend to Audrey. Hey, hey, hey,
good morning, good morning.
Speaker 4 (05:15):
I love that intro. Good morning.
Speaker 3 (05:16):
How are you pretty good? All are you doing?
Speaker 4 (05:20):
I'm great? Thank you?
Speaker 3 (05:21):
Thanks, say absolutely we are excited to have you with
us this morning. Before we just really dive into everything.
What's been on your heart and mind lately? Audrey?
Speaker 4 (05:34):
Oh god, so, Dannie, you know I have really been
trying to block myself away from from the news that
has really been on my heart. I gotta tell you
quick serve.
Speaker 3 (05:46):
You know.
Speaker 4 (05:47):
So my brother is a high school football coach, my
nephew is a college football coach, and my baby nesk
you just got Nli Indian who's yours. So we're a
football Fanily, my mother was a big football saying like,
we watched football all the time. So and she raised
my brother and stuff by herself. So my brother has
been playing football since he was six, and he raised
(06:08):
his voice football. They both in college on scholarships and
all that this stuff. But a couple of Fridays ago,
I was at Friday night Lights. So I'm in Georgia
and I'm at Friday night Lights. Now you read my bio,
you only had a snippet of all the things that
I do. So my mind is constantly on the go.
And with the advancement of AI, with me thinking about
all the things you could create, and I'm telling people
(06:30):
how to create stuff, my mind is constantly going. So
I go to the football game with my daughter and
my husband and the kids and my boyfriend. My brother
is on the verge of moving the games, like thirty
seconds the other team got the ball there on the
twenty twenty yard line right before the touchdown. I'm like,
oh my god. So everybody's streamingly yelling or whatever. Right
(06:51):
they missed. My brother wins the game by the skin
of his seat, and so everybody excited. As we leave
out of the bleachers, my husband stopped off with the bathroom,
so my daughter and I and the kid were saying,
they're talking or whatever. I remember my husband's coming out
of the bathroom and that's all I remember. And the
next thing I remember, he was saying, hey, taking you
(07:13):
to North Syde Hospital. And I was like, why, he said,
because you don't remember what just happened, Well, what just happened?
Speaker 3 (07:18):
He said, he.
Speaker 4 (07:18):
Couldn't remember anything. So for seven minutes of my life
two weeks ago Friday, I lost my memory and I
had money gained it. And so what had been on
my heart lately is not paying so much attention to
the news, taking so many things off my state, and
really enjoying the life.
Speaker 3 (07:35):
Yeah, Audrey asked someone who's used to being on the
go all the time, you know, thinking big thoughts, playing
big things, being involved. Is that an easy task for
you to kind of let go of some of that?
Speaker 4 (07:52):
You know? If you had asked me four two weeks ago,
I would have said no, right, but the fact that
I literally my husbands, I got in the car, drove
the car, talked to everybody. I remember none of that,
he said. It wasn't until he It wasn't until I
said I need to get my barns because he thought
I was playing. If you had asked me this two
(08:12):
weeks to go before that Friday, I was saying, no,
I could, I could do it. I could do it.
Now I don't want to do it because I realized,
because I don't shut my brain off, it's always even
subconsciously is always working, and I was just like, and
I asked him, did I hug my baby before she
left it? He said no, And I what I realized
is I think I was it was happening like as
(08:32):
we were leaving, because I remember I remember a little
bit about the end of the game, So I think
what was happening to me was happening as we were leaving,
because I don't remember my brother going on the field
to shake the coaches hens, which I always remember that.
I don't remember any of that. So you know, now
that that has happened to me, I'm finding a lot
easier because I realized I just don't want to I
(08:54):
don't want that to happen to me again. So immediately,
like when they they put me in the hospital, they
read only test and everything, so they couldn't figure out
what happened. So they told me I had something because
transit transient global amnesia. And I was scheduled to go
to Africa on over mid the fourteenth till Liberia to
to help them open some AI stuff there. They had
booked my plane ticket and everything. I was like, I
(09:15):
can't travel travel out the country. I don't even want
to leave out the house at this point, so I
had to cancel all my trips. I was sending to
go to Jersey at the end of November. Just had
a whole lot going on. I came home from the
hospital and canceled everything, and I was like, yeah, let
me finish our client at work. It's gonna fall back
for ste get my bearings to you know, start to
(09:36):
focus on what really matters with the family and friends
and life experiences to me.
Speaker 3 (09:41):
Mm hmmm hm, take a sabbatical, you know. Yeah. Also,
since this has happened to you and you are knee
deep in AI, did you end up creating like some
automation within AI to kind of help take some of
(10:03):
the load off your brain.
Speaker 4 (10:05):
I have a lot of AI automation that I create
for clients I don't see personally. For myself, I do
Good Morning when that that's what I do every day,
which is the news podcast. And then I I got
AI news anchors that come on at six o'clock in
the morning do the news for me video style. So
I've done that. It's really good. I have a automated
(10:25):
anchis whom I don't feel like doing it. I use
other tools to create the whole podcast segment for me.
So I use it a lot, but that's pretty much
what I do. Most of my time has spent helping
other folks. Yeah, other people who let me tell you this,
the it's people who don't want to read. It's not
even people who can't do it. It's the people that says, hey,
and I have to stop doing that. Hey, how do
(10:46):
you do that? And you could just you ain't even
gotta read anymore, just ask shat duct. It's suposed to
be a whole school. They don't even want to do that.
And I realize that's my fault, right because I'm so
used to helping people get to where they got to
go and do this. Things they need to do to
me is like second nature. But it's draining me. And
now it's called me to glitch, you know, out of
(11:08):
glitch for seven minutes if they can't remember. So it's
a matter of cleaning up my caseload. And there are
clients that I you know, that I always had because
they're on subscription services with me. But there are other
clients who just need to use the tools themselves that
I'm not going to be answered the questions for. So
I use it for a lot of different things.
Speaker 3 (11:27):
Absolutely, Adre. My my past career was in retail sales
and management customer service, so customer service centric. But as
of lately, in this, in this podcast radio world that
I've been in, you are absolutely correct, people hate to read.
(11:49):
And I find myself like, oh, come on, come on,
come on, Dany, be patient, be patient. But in my
booking process it's one two, three steps. I'm still I
still get inquiries on how the process works, how to
do this, how to do that? And I was like,
you know, if you read through it f a Q
(12:11):
or if you read the page, you know you'll see how.
But even when I explained it, still like can you
call me and walk me through it?
Speaker 4 (12:20):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (12:21):
Yeah, it's like, what is happening?
Speaker 4 (12:26):
Because you know what I think that they talked about
when AI first came out, I'm always when these pop up,
I'm always like, yeah, I'm gonna do it, even with podcasters.
I've been podcasting since two thousand and nine, and even
when that popped up, I was like a twenty right,
did two hundred episodes before I was like, I'm not
making any money for this, I gotta stop. When AI
(12:47):
popped up, the first thing they said was, oh AI
is gonna make people lazy. Now people already lazy, lazy,
lazy because the tool is so the fool to store.
You gotta do it. You didn't even gott it tight.
He got to look through your talks and they were
won't do that. So you know, to me, AI makes
(13:09):
me more creative and fast. I'm really fast now.
Speaker 3 (13:15):
You know.
Speaker 4 (13:15):
Before I would type out my books and didn't type
it all out. Now I talk it out. I go
to the park and sit down in the park for
like a couple of hours and think of what I
want to say, put it on my phone, come back,
transfer it. I got a book.
Speaker 3 (13:28):
Yep. And that's what they said about AI when they
first started releasing it to the public. Now, AI has
been around since forever. Even when I was growing up.
Microsoft Word used to have this this paper clip called
Clippy and he would pop up and give me suggestions,
rewrite things, fine mistakes. Microsoft Work always had AI. Yeah, yeah,
(13:54):
Microsoft for Corotronto. So they said, if you're not using AI,
you will be left behind. Yes, all right, So you
said that AI isn't here to replace us, it's here
to release us for you. What inspired that belief and
how did your personal journey with AI? Begin?
Speaker 4 (14:17):
So what was interesting. I didn't even realize I was
interaction with AI, probably in two thousand and eighteen. So
I have an election. I have a bunch of elections
all over my house. My daughter has none. She said
she doesn't like me. She doesn't have much. I just right,
So then I launched Good Morning when that it started
out as just a podcast, but I wanted to put
it everywhere. So I was like, I wanted to put
(14:39):
a family, and I built an Electa skills for the
Alecta acts, so anybody with an Electra device in the
house to listen to the show on their Alecxa device.
Speaker 3 (14:48):
Right.
Speaker 4 (14:49):
I didn't even realize I was interacting that AI didn't
because I didn't think of as AI. And then I
was like, wait a minute, I've been doing this in
twenty and eighteen when I put my podcast on an election,
so I've been interacting with the sincident. But fast forward
to twenty twenty two. At the end of twenty twenty two,
when chatgues He came out, I was like, need tried
(15:10):
it south, So I tried it out the first The
second thing I did was write my first fiction book.
I was like, you know what I've written. I had
been writing book since ninety eight and at that time
I think I was one book number eight that I
had already written, like sat down to my computer to
type it out, get a brain dump, that kind of thing.
(15:31):
I had never written fiction before, because what would happen
is when I would meet people, they would say, well,
how do I do this? Because I knew how to
do it, I was like, you know, let me just
write a book and put it out there, so now
people know how to do it all the time. I
did that all the time. When I started the Dog Company,
it was like, well how do I do this? Let
just write a book. As I started homeloder Bities, I'm
just write a book, and that's what I had been
doing for the eight When Chack to T came out,
(15:55):
I put out my first fiction book right said, I'm
about to write fiction. Had never read the fiction in
my life. At that time. I think I had written
eight nine sixtus. I wrote my first fiction, put it
on all the platforms. To this day, I'm get I
get ray audio, not my voice. I don't even know
who voice is on the audio. It's on Spotify. It's
(16:16):
called the Lighting Legacy. The book is on all the
book platforms. I get ross from two different places, one
from the book place, one from the Spotify and I'm like,
this is crazy. I don't do anymore for me. I
just did the book to seek that I do it,
and I did so that right there shut me down
a real rabbit hole. Like what else can I see?
I just read a book that you know I can
(16:38):
honesty the and this is bad to say the truth.
I can't even tell you what the books is.
Speaker 3 (16:44):
Mm you have.
Speaker 4 (16:45):
Read that is never read it on my own books.
That sends me royalty. And I was like, because I
want it was an experiment to me. Let me see
that I do this book and put it out now
people who have read so, oh my god, that's a
great book. And I'm like, really people have told me
that because they correct the book. I wanted to see
(17:05):
where it worked, and it worked. I get ropi different platforms,
one from the audio, one from printing printing the books right,
so it worked. And then after I realized it worked,
I was like, oh, yeah, this is much what else
can I create? Because I started creating all kinds of apps.
I created an app called Turf Dreams, right because I said,
I said, I'm a football fans, but this app is
(17:26):
so sophisticated. The parents was like, we don't know how
to use it. So that's another thing about it. And
it's what it's anybody who has a kid trying to
get into college and they're trying to be like the
football pros have all those things do into it. And
I was able to do that because I saw all
the things that my brother and my nephew went through
trying to you know, get into the into the and
(17:47):
get scholarships and things like this. I built all of
this stuff into that app called Churf Dreams. And my
daughter and boyfriend a pop one football coach, right, so
I was like take this one. You know. He's like, no,
the kids will love it. Like we don't know how
to do sex. So now that's just kind of sitting.
So I tried to sell. I was like, well, I'm
not gonna do it. And my brothers they don't have it.
(18:08):
Let me tell you, they don't do nothing but football.
Anything outside of football. If it ain't them on the
field off, they don't care. Especial when it comes to
text I'm the tech person. So I was like, well,
I'm just gonna sell it because and it's just sitting
in my account, like I have about fifty at just
sitting in my account. But I was like, yeah, maybe
I sell him one day. So that kind of took
(18:29):
me down a rabbit hole of building building building because
you can do it so fast. Like I've taught people
how to. I did three boot camps in July and
they were three day boot camps, teach you how to
do this. You're gonna watch your singing. And there was
a guy in the class. He was a dessert caterber,
and he was like, I don't see, like what can
(18:49):
I I'm a dessert caterer, Like what can I build?
So we did some ideation and know what his biggest
his biggest bottle neck and his business was that's that
the taxing other than green m And I said to him, well,
that's a problem, but he that's a problem for other people.
He was like absolutely, because this is a big problem.
She set out trying to figure out how to make
(19:10):
the cupcake thing, this app thing. He made a tool
for other cupcake cares, others of dessert caterers because that's
a big bottle necks in a business. How to source
and price the products that they need to make the
cupcakes in the cake that's what he created. There was
a woman in the class. Her husband was a fitness trainer.
She was in Corporate America. She's like, yeah, I'm chaking
(19:32):
this because I'm trying to say something for my husband.
You know, he he's instructed her. So she sat there
and were positive. She said, when you look at this paper,
because she held the paper up to the camera, they
had all these colored squares on and I was like,
what is that? She said, it's about menopause. But like,
did you know it's all these different things of menopause.
(19:52):
I was like no. So you know what she did.
She put her husband's app on the back and she
sailed the apple the possibility. That's what person like me
that's going down a rabbit hole.
Speaker 3 (20:10):
And he just stay in Invaders. All right, So let's
talk about your AI powered music. I've heard Hello Monday,
and I've heard good Morning. What story are you telling
through these songs?
Speaker 4 (20:28):
You know, honestly I love music, So and his advation.
Years ago, I was engaged to Marvin Hagler's son right,
and we had a daughter, and he was in the
music and I thought I was gonna be like a
music mobile manager kind of thing. But he grew up
(20:48):
in that life. So even though he loved music, he
did not like that life. He grew up in that life.
You know, his dad is a box so they travel
all over the world, they live in these houses. He
didn't really like the light. If you met him, you
wouldn't even know that that was his fun. Me, on
the other hand, I grew up in the hood New York.
I'm thinking, yes, we're gonna go out here, We're gonna
(21:09):
do this music thing. And it never kicked off, but
I always loved it. I can't sing, I couldn't raft.
I'm like the person behind the scenes, make it stuff happen.
And after a couple of times of me realized that
he's not serious about it. And then when when I
find out people are not serious, I kind of tell
him like, like, you know, she's not serious. He'm not
gonna do this. It's about the mess up our relationship.
So we stopped doing that. Fast forward to like two
(21:31):
thousand and we had broke up. By this thousand and
or I moved to North Carolina, and I met another artist.
He was at the mall passing out his CD. Beautiful
CD I'm talking about. The music was amazing and so me.
He actually his music. Okay, great, let's go. He told
me he don't want to leave North Carolina. He just
(21:51):
wanna be a household name in North Carolina. Now I'm
from North like, I'm up there and there Puffy and
jay Z and Biggie and I'm up there with Queen
Chief has lived on the same but all kinds of
craziness like this. I'm like, bro, it's so much more.
He said, No, I just want to be a household
name in North Carolina. When I walk with somebody's do
I want them to know who I am. So he
(22:12):
wanted me to come to all these little nightholes with
him every night. I thought, I can't do that. Plus
I was married, I got a kid. I can't do that.
But stop right there, here comes ai music right and
I'm sitting there on I forgot the platform. I forgot
what it was. I made my first a song. I
was like, oh my god, this is amazing. But then
(22:33):
another platform. Now I'll call it sooner better made some
more songs. I made one hundred songs. I put out
one every day. It's not a song. Then they up
their games it's better. And so the song that I
sent you was just me putting out a song every
day on Facebook to point back to the good morning
when that drive traffic back to my news. That's all
(22:56):
it is. It's not even me. It's not even me
trying to be in the music business. It's just me
trying to inspire people every day. Because I get up
every day and I do what I love. I've been
doing it for twenty eight years. There are some people
who get up every day and it's like, oh my God,
that I do this for me today. That's not me.
So what I did was I was like, well, I
don't talk about bad news on my on my news site,
(23:16):
I don't talk about bad news on my podcast. I
started out talking about general news, but I want to
inspire people because right now we're living in some crazy
times with all a lot of bad news. So how
about me put out something that's inspiring. So the song
that you heard, I think the name of it is wrong,
but because it's called I Got It from the Mudd,
that's the one I sent you. I got it from
(23:37):
the Mud because I think the name on it is wrong.
I wasn't a Hello.
Speaker 3 (23:41):
Monday, Hello Monday. Yeah, well I wasn't. You sent me
both songs Hello Monday and good Morning maybe good No, yeah, yeah,
the one's called good Morning, one's called Hello Monday.
Speaker 4 (23:52):
I sent you two wrong ones. So it's one called
I Got It from the Mug, which is a really
really nice song. And that song is so powerful, like
I share it with people that was like, this song
is I said it straight to Spotify. I say, you
know what, see can we do something with this? So
I'm waiting for Spotify now to give them my pool.
I had to put in my ideas, you know, say
(24:13):
who I was, to verify who I was. So now
I'm just waiting to see this or they're gonna accept
the song. Because you know, when you put out a song,
if you just put it out there and then YouTube
and TikTok and Instagram take it if people can clip it.
If you're not registered with one of these platforms, says left,
then you're royal be You're gonna miss money. And when
I heard people say how much they loved the song,
(24:34):
I was like, nope, I gotta sendenal note. So if
they clip it, I'll get royal to.
Speaker 3 (24:39):
That's right, that's right. What do you think about the
music industry at this point with the with the inclusion
of AI.
Speaker 4 (24:50):
So when when people first started writing books with ya, right,
all of the authors lost their minds. And remember I
had said I had been an author to Thy eight.
I didn't lose my mom. I'm looking at this like
what you do this fast? Quicker better? So like the
six million dollars woman right now, That's how I was feeling. Right,
(25:12):
there were a lot of authors who was like, they're
taking away out right, They're doing all the things, and
here's the thing. They're gonna do it anyway. So that's
if you have the money to reinvent yourself a million
times and different ways, go ahead and do it. People
already love you, you already have a fan base. Go ahead
and create the best versions of yourself and you home
(25:33):
with your family. Why not if they gonna do it anyway,
Sam Altman, you know Bill Gates, you know Elon. They're
gonna do AI anyway, So get on board with it.
It's like anything pivot or die. That's that's how I
feel about it. And I know, you know, uh, people
using AI get a lot of black backglass because they're
using the tube. They feel like they're taking money out
(25:56):
of artist's mouth. They're gonna do it anyway. So in
my mind, if you're already an artist with a fan base,
how about you leverage that technology to triple yourself. Put
yourself in the in the in the hologram, the concept
somewhere else while you over here with your kids. Are
you over here running your other bench, Let that part
(26:17):
of your life do it, do it things because you
got the money to bring the team on board to
make sure that side of your business runs put out
new music quicker, faster, better than ever, and you're running
this other bench over here.
Speaker 3 (26:28):
How I see it right? All right? So you've also
built platforms that lift uplift women, like the Quetnet Women's
Chamber of Commerce. What's the most common barrier that you
see women facing and teching business today?
Speaker 4 (26:45):
Fear mhm when it comes to take it straight up
instead of not being smart enough, instead of you know
what if I don't know what I'm doing. And then
on the business side, it's always access to capital and
the resources that they need and mentorship. And then women
as woman. I can. I can, honestly says, because I'm
(27:07):
one and I have a I'm a lot, I'm around
a lot of extrogen. Most of the time, we sometimes
let the smallest self like derail up from what we're
supposed to be doing, like the tiniest thing. Give your
prime example, we had a member she joined she has
an event center, right, so she joins the event center.
(27:28):
She has terrible customer fell like terrible, so she but
her decorations feels are beautiful because about lovely. Right, So
we had to me event in her location, and she
was nasty to everybody. So what do they do? They
come straight to men. It's like, we don't think you
should ever use this place again. So I go to her.
(27:48):
I was like, poor men, because I'm trying to be
all nice, you know, seet about it, and you know
people you know said that, you know, that's even kind
of means to us, right, So she sends me a picture.
She goes to her car, she sends me a picture.
Sending in the car. She's crying and she says to me,
this happens all the time, Please help me. And I said, okay, well,
(28:09):
let's meet. So instead of her meeting with me, she
quit the chambers. She quits and she was a family
member when I want the chamber. But then there are
people who come to me and say, hey, I need
a location. I can't refer her location because if you
won't treat the people mean and nasty, I can't. So
(28:32):
lack of access to resources in capital, that's a big one.
And that they're technology, and then they think that because
they do very things so well, they don't need technology,
like a tax person think that they do their at
taxes so well that they won't need technology. And I
can undesertly tell you I built a tool called hey daisy.
It will take all their flax business. It is a
(28:54):
bookkeeper and one hey daisy. They don't even need you
at this point, right, So for you to say I'm good,
you know my clients by me, No, your clients want
to save money. They want to get their taxes done.
They want to save money, and you best to leave.
If there's a too that's gonna help them, you both,
(29:16):
and they can say, you know, the thousands of dollars
and they can pay nineteen ninety nine. They're gonna choose
nineteen ninety nine all day long, especially if they're W
two all day long.
Speaker 3 (29:26):
So yeah, all right, So what's your favorite AI tool
right now? Oh?
Speaker 2 (29:33):
God?
Speaker 4 (29:35):
Then I have so many. So I'm a role with
chat GBT because that's the one I use the most,
but I use about ten or twelve pretty much daily.
Speaker 3 (29:47):
I keep hearing comparisons with Gemini and Chat GTP. I've
never used Gemini. I frequently use chat GPT, but never Gemini.
Have you?
Speaker 4 (29:59):
I have so Gemini. When jem and I first came out,
it was called Bard. I didn't like it. I didn't
like Bard. Then they named it something else. Forgot what
it was, but I just Google Platform right now. They
built in Nano but Nana, which is nice that the
images that it creates is better. They have Notebook LM,
(30:22):
which is absolutely amazing that you've never used that, please
do because you can take texts and turns for all
kinds of suff videos, power point podcast episodes, all kinds
of stuff. So when it comes to that side, it's good.
But I still find that Chat GPC for me is
when it comes to crating my help me create my
(30:42):
thought process about things, it's better. So I've been comparing
the two when it comes to that because I used
chat GDC a lot of ideation and I was like,
let me test it against Gemini. I still like chat
GBS better then I like the way Gemini id because
I feel like Jemini doesn't give me all my answers
like chat to B. He gives me like, Okay, that's
a good idea. His why it's a good idea. It
(31:03):
tells me that, here's why the good idea. Even with
that song, I get it from the mud. My chat
GVT knows me so well. So when I tell you
the brighte Meal song and I give it a title,
it knows me and it knows that I'm gonna love
that song because it knows me that well. Now that's
the scary part about it. About AIP, it can really
learn who you are.
Speaker 3 (31:26):
Yeah, so about that. I used chat GPT a lot
with streamlining documents or maybe I'll do like a profile analysis,
say hey tell me, not like tell me who I am,
not like that, but like tell me about my strength
(31:47):
and my weakness? Is what can I improve on? What
should I enhance? Things like that. I've used it since
it came out, paid this description and everything. So I
have a business partner who didn't know that and wanted
to include me in one of his projects and it
gave him my complete profile, and he's like, didd he
(32:08):
checked this up. I was like, well, yeah, I guess
the AI knows me, did I you know, I shared
it with him what I've been doing building my uh
building my persona. He was like, man, this is crazy,
this is crazy, like he was so excited. I was like, yeah,
you know, I guess the machines are talking to each other.
Speaker 4 (32:25):
They are they are. And I tested it because I
wanted to see, you know, I did a I get
Google and I did Chat and I was, yeah, this
song is way better. But I realized that's because chat me,
like you, I've been on the tape when I remember
when it first came out, and it's like, well, if
it's moving really slow, that means you're in the free
birds and everybody's on it. And I was like absolutely not.
(32:48):
I'm gonna pay this sweet house because I needed to
move really fast. And so it knows me so well.
I mean it had I started. When it started, it
goes back and pull something I forgot. I said. I
was like, oh yeah, yeah, I'm like that.
Speaker 3 (33:02):
That kind of stuff.
Speaker 4 (33:03):
So when they created my songs, you know, I give
it a title, give it like the wanted to be
R and B. I want to be smooth, the R
and B. I want to be soulful. I want to
be anthem staff Pread's a person song, Almo, Yeah and I.
But we'll say this, A lot of people are scared
(33:24):
of it, right, And what I will say to anybody,
you have a right because there are some really scary
things that they could do right now. On your voice,
it can go on your face, it can remix your video,
it can do a lot of stuff. I don't know
if you saw the news episode where the Young Black
Boys was going there, they was talking about something in
June about Iran, and somebody took it and took their
(33:44):
video and made them talk about killing ice. So now
like the federal government that's coming. They're like sixteen years
over something. The federal government has been after them, and
they got both of the videos on showing them this
is the original video, and you putting out all these
news pressure leaders and these kids are talking about killing
ice and they never said that. That's the scary part
about it because it's almost impossible to tell a difference
(34:08):
if you don't see the original video. So that's the
scary part. The other scary part is that the other
scary parties that people feel like it is gonna take over.
But you still need to understand is that we as
humans have the opportunity to pull the plug, like if
it gets to the point where it's nuts for the unplugging,
(34:31):
because at the end of the day, it doesn't run
on battery, it runs on electric power. Plugging to the
outlet unplugged, So we're gonna be without it, but it
at least we'll be here exactly.
Speaker 3 (34:45):
Yeah, so that's what happened. I've only heard the version
about them attacking Ice. I never knew there was original.
Speaker 4 (34:52):
Yes, there's no original. And because of these dummies over
there saying, you know, we know this is a fake.
They're like they're putting it out it's spry attack, and
I know the original was right there they were talking
about when something happened. I ran. They made a statement
about that. Someone took that video and edited and made
them because you can you can do it. Just take
the picture, right, you can take the picture, put it
(35:15):
in hage it like you let me tell you this
real quick. So if you go to my winning. With
that Facebook page, you'll see a woman doing the six
am news. Her name is Tina Jones.
Speaker 3 (35:26):
Right.
Speaker 4 (35:27):
So I had a friend called me last year. He
goes hey, I go, hey, what's up? He goes, yeah,
I want to say I was gonna say, and somebody
so he read. He's like they were doing good morning
when at six am, Oh lot, that's me.
Speaker 3 (35:40):
It's what you mean.
Speaker 4 (35:41):
You know what I mean putting that out? He said, who
is a lady? Hey? I he look, Oh she does
my six am news every day. But you can take
a picture of yourself and drop it in Hayjen or
synthesia and it's you doing the doing your thing every day.
I just didn't like the way my mouth looked, so
I was like, now I'm like, my mouth looks it's
moving kind of crazy to me, I'm just gonna use
(36:02):
a whole different character. But some people get it to
the point it's down passed. Their voice is exactly the same,
their mouth movement is the same. I just didn't go
that deep yet because I ain't have time. I was like,
I need to get this going to stay relevant every
morning six am. But you can take you solid picture
of you change the close up and hay hayjen every day,
Like I changed her clothes every day, but she has
(36:25):
on a different outfit every day, you know, and she
puts out the news for the day every day.
Speaker 3 (36:32):
Wow, I love that.
Speaker 4 (36:34):
So the whols are there?
Speaker 3 (36:36):
Yeah, all right, So before we get into the music,
you've helped countless entrepreneurs start their first ventures. What's one
mistake new business owners makes when integrating AI into their brand?
Speaker 4 (36:57):
Not knowing much too to use?
Speaker 3 (36:59):
Right?
Speaker 4 (37:00):
Thing that chatting t is b tools. You need to
understand your business so you'll know which tools are good
for you. Like, I'm a creator, so I know for
me mostly every tool I use have a creative asset, Right,
I use chatg to VC, I use gyminoch for certain things,
I use Leonardo Are you soon? Or I use Opus
levelass all creative tools. That's what makes my business flow.
(37:23):
That's what makes it flow. So you need to know
the right tool. It's so many. There's a there's a
site that called future Tools.
Speaker 2 (37:29):
Right.
Speaker 4 (37:29):
Pretty much every AI tool that come out is on
freuture tools. And then there's another tools right that they're
called there's an AI for that. It's tighten. Millions at
this point and the fact that people can buy cold
I got. I got about ten to fifteen myself, so
you know you can put them out there. So the
first thing is not knowing what you exactly need in
(37:50):
your business, right because you don't know what a bottleneck
is because you haven't done like a real audit of
your business. You think it's one thing, and it's probably
something totally different, and there's probably a tool for that.
But you need to find out what a bottleneck is
so you can pick the right tool, because otherwise you're
gonna be going in service with a whole bunch of
different tools and then you're gonna say, this is not
working off with me too much money. I got all
these subscription services. Find out what a bottleneck is first,
(38:13):
find out figure that out which tool is gonna solve
that problem, because it's probably not even the problem.
Speaker 3 (38:20):
Yeah, yeah, all right, guys, We're about to jump into
some music and may be labeled wrong, but what I
have is Hello Monday, We'll be right back. Stay tuned.
Mm hmmm mm hmmm.
Speaker 4 (38:45):
Side through my.
Speaker 3 (38:48):
Copies on.
Speaker 5 (38:51):
That sweet try to Wake Me, but I made it
through down my dreams on schedule.
Speaker 6 (38:59):
H playing tain No Room for I'm gonna do it
all again. Sometimes of comfort heavy, but I was built a.
Speaker 7 (39:11):
Right steady no more running from the shart of the week.
Speaker 4 (39:16):
I found my rhythm, my.
Speaker 7 (39:17):
Soul, Judy, because I was made for Monday. Turn impression
and a praise in the world.
Speaker 5 (39:25):
Is weight I played away, I'm.
Speaker 6 (39:28):
Stepping into my day or food just gold and ride
tie wentday fade away.
Speaker 5 (39:35):
I was made. I was made for Mondays, emails in
inbox dreams and my drive, working on my purpose, feeling
soul life. I've got fathing, my hustle, peace in my land,
(39:59):
dancing through us, pay us, stinging through the.
Speaker 7 (40:04):
Sometimes they call.
Speaker 6 (40:05):
It just another day, but for me it's moorrow away.
Every suner rest he is a second chance.
Speaker 5 (40:12):
O put my grind in and.
Speaker 7 (40:14):
Up because I was made for Sundays, turning prisoner into
praise in the world, to wait up, saying away, I'm
stepping into Monday, Albo, just go shine.
Speaker 5 (40:30):
When they paid away out made, I was made for Monday.
Speaker 8 (40:40):
I don't read the dawn.
Speaker 5 (40:42):
Almost here you walk the heavy open doors, surpasing my
post fire and my soul Mondays just a melody, bayavy.
Speaker 8 (40:57):
Some more Monday. Now I thank God, I'm still here.
I'm walking in vision, I'm walking in peace.
Speaker 4 (41:10):
This is my week.
Speaker 5 (41:12):
I was made for Monday to ride, play when the
losing way.
Speaker 7 (41:18):
To pay the way I'm stepping in till Monday.
Speaker 6 (41:23):
No, dude, just rold in life shine, Wednesday stayed away.
I was made.
Speaker 5 (41:30):
I was made on Monday.
Speaker 6 (41:41):
Every Monday is a new and I'm able to ride.
Speaker 8 (41:45):
I was made on Monday.
Speaker 3 (41:52):
Monday. All right, all right? That was Hello Monday by
created by Audrey Bell Carney. The score ahead and invite
her back. Hey, hey, I loved it. I loved it.
(42:13):
I loved it.
Speaker 4 (42:14):
Oh yeah, and you know it was crazy because I
said I sent you I got it from the mud.
But yeah, that's a good one too. And so I
put these out every day because you know, I feel
like people who just want to put out good, good
energy in the world because right now we got a
lot of stuff that I just don't agree with and
can't focus on. You know, I got to think about
(42:35):
myself too, and putting out good energy for me good
for me as well.
Speaker 3 (42:42):
Absolutely, Yeah, this Monday song sounds like my Monday coffee
and checking emails.
Speaker 4 (42:51):
That's a lot of fun.
Speaker 3 (42:51):
I have to I don't have to play that song
every Monday now, you know, just to set the move
because it's it's it's not like a hectic Monday, it's
a peaceful Monday song. So I really love that. Well,
thank you absolutely all right, So Audrey, this is our
mic drop moment. If someone's listening right now, steeling afraid
of AI or behind on technology, what's the first small
(43:17):
step they can take today to change their perspective and
their future.
Speaker 4 (43:25):
Create something. So go to tack to DT because once
you create something, it's almost it's like a right. I
remember talking to their guys and every year we hosted
Georgia AI Summit. That Woman's Chamber hosts the Georgia AI
Summits and it's a full day event all about just AI.
So this year, twenty twenty six, we're going to be
(43:47):
doing a panel in the morning, but the rest of
the day is going to be just creating something like
we're gonna bring your laptop because it's a working summit.
And I said to this guy who took my class,
take the class back in nice in the class, and
I say, I'm gonna tell you now, you're gonna like this.
You're gonna go down a rabbit hole literally for the
five day boom here literally the next thing he says,
(44:08):
Oh my god, or I stayed up all night. I
would tell anybody create something. And here's a good thing
about chat T right now you can actually go in
there and code something. And people don't know this either,
like you, I did a good morning when that. It's
a news platform. It's a business news and tech platform.
But I wanted to create a widget to go inside
(44:28):
of the page. Right so I just want to chat
GBT and I said, Hey, I want to create this widget.
You need to do this, this, and this. Let's say
you wanted to create a calculate. Let's say you had
a financial a financial news website or financial website where
you talked about money and stocks and all that kind
of stuff. You can go to chat they create me
a financial calculator branded with my logo, all these different
(44:51):
things what you wanted to have on it. I want
to embed this into my website DSS or the HTML
coaches in bet it'll create that very interactive tool. Take
the cold and you drop in and see your what
you could say, Hey, Tree created me a fitness tracker.
I get up at twelve o'clock in the daytime, I
go to bed at twelve o'clock at night. I want
(45:12):
to track my sleep, I want to track my water,
I want to track my weight, I want to attrack
my emotion. It's my own personal tracks. And this is
just for you. You ain't gotta do it for nobody else,
just for yourself, and it'll create that tracker for you.
And now you got your own trackers. That's what happened
with Clippventui, right. So I wanted to do comic strips
and I was so I had to go find a
(45:33):
tool that did comic strips. I had to go find
a tool that did audio clips. I had to I
had to use something that didn't mean that was three
different tools. I was like, I'm not doing no more
tools because I already spent a lot of money your tools.
She said, what, I'm about to create one tool that
do all three. That's how I clip missing thing about
because I wanted to create comics, audio clips, and means
all that together. So I created my own tools. Find
(45:56):
a problem in your life that that was a problem
in my life, but now it's like, well, heck, that's
a problem in my life that may be a problem
to somebody else's wife. They may want to use clip Benchi.
Let me put it out there for them. That's what
I did, and that's what you do, and that's the problem.
Pray something just for yourself.
Speaker 3 (46:12):
First, absolutely all right, Where can our listeners connect with
you on the internet, maybe join a course or two
and get more information about what you do?
Speaker 4 (46:23):
Absolutely so, good Morning Gwinette on Instagram, on Facebook, good
Morning Ginette. And the website is good Morning Genette dot com.
I have courses that come up as you go to
Noisemedia dot us. That's my media company that covers everything.
I have a whole bunch of stuff there. I have
mvts that people can buy. They want to buy it
(46:44):
prompt to do the things that I've already done. And
I have a new studio that's coming out because I
do a lot of lot online stuff and I realize
some people are never going to do it. So I'm
just creating things because I can and sell the cold
because I'm not. I can't do them all, Babie. I can't.
If I do all the things that God gives me
ideas for, I would leave my mind for real completely.
(47:06):
So it's set me doing that. It's a lot of
fun for me. And I was like, well, I'm not
going to create all I'm not going to run all
these businesses, so I'll just create the code and tell
the code. But the people who are never going to
do it, they can just buy the code and go
drop it in and now is running.
Speaker 3 (47:19):
Yeah, oh man, absolutely, all right, All right, listeners. I
will include the links in the description of this episode
and in the show notes, so all you guys have
to do is just click the link. This morning, Audrey
Bell Quaranty reminded us that age isn't a wall, it's
(47:39):
a window. She showed us that the future doesn't belong
to the youngest or the riches. It belongs to the bold.
It belongs to the innovators, the creators or those who
want to create, to those willing to learn, adapt and
believe that reinvention has no deadline. From craft and to
(48:01):
redefined beauty, to composeing ai music that redefines creativity. Audrie
continues to prove that you know, legacy and technology can
grow side by side. So Audree, thank you for teaching
us that empowerment doesn't end with experience, it begins with
evolution and to everyone listening, make sure that you help
(48:24):
Spotify get these songs into their algorithm so that we
can enjoy them outside of Facebook. Make sure you explore
Clipvinci dot ai and follow Good Morning Gwinnett for more.
Check out the Georgia AI Summit this may. If that's
coming around this next year, and if you're ready to
start your AI journey, visit aifounders dot biz and remember
(48:50):
to subscribe a visionnanties ready alive, leave us, are rating
and support the show. So AI is in the future.
You are and this isn't just radio, this is revival.
Stay fearless.
Speaker 4 (49:06):
Thank you so much, Audrey, thank you for having.
Speaker 3 (49:08):
Me absolutely, take care and have a wonderful day.
Speaker 4 (49:12):
Thank you the thing, Thank you, Peace to all.
Speaker 2 (49:17):
My name is Deni and I am the host of
Vigilantes Radio Live. I think that we are beyond just
asking cool questions and getting cool responses. I think that
we are here as creatives to provide an example that
(49:37):
you can do things different outside of expectations. Because some
of us simply were not born into the club. But
there is perhaps a door window or back gate that
we can leave a clue for you to get into
Life is short, but there are plenty of moment to
(50:00):
try and get it right. Pursuing your dreams and learning
from mistakes may be tough, but regret it's tougher to
book your interview. Email us at V radio at only
one MediaGroup dot com. That's a V as in victorious,
or visit only onemediagroup dot com. I'm counting on you, Heaven.
(50:26):
We all are counting on you to step into your
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Speaker 1 (51:05):
You and now listening to vigil Lances Radio, the people's
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