If you don't engage with the product, you become the product. And it's not about whether or not you're ready for AI is already happening to you. It's a matter of you taking the opportunity to educate yourself on it. If you believe we can change the narrative, if you believe we can change our communities, if you believe we can change the outcomes, then we can change the world. I'm Rob Richardson. Welcome to disruption now. All right. Welcome to disruption now.
I'm your host and moderator Rob Richardson. As always, we bring you stories of people that are, changing the world through, social action or social innovation. And Aaron Reddick is one of those people with chat black GPT. He's, really caught the eye movement by storm and making sure that it was inclusive, intentional, avoided bias.
And, you know, he's still, a warrior and one of the one of the first to innovate in that space in terms of making sure that we are intentional about it and that we're inclusive about it. And one of the most important technological revolutions that we've ever seen, in AI. And I'm honored to have her as a friend. She also be at the next Midwest con. So we we have a lot to discuss and to go over. And I'll see her in DC soon. Anyway, Aaron, how are you doing today? I'm doing well.
Thank you for having me. Awesome to be here. Yes. Very excited for Midwest Con. Yeah, very excited to have you for sure. And you know, I'm curious. So you, you, you know, just jumping right into it. You you what what what was the like spark that got that got you into AI in the first place and specifically sparked the idea of chat black GPT? Yeah. I mean, my story goes that I was laid off from Metta and I had worked there for a couple of years and really kind of made it my whole identity.
So when I lost that job, I really felt like I didn't have ownership over my relationship with technology as a black woman in tech. And it didn't really sit right with me. So I decided to take that into my own hands. And I was like, what's the most tech forward thing that I can just dive into and learn everything about? And I chose AI. This was late 2023. And so once I started studying and doing research, I noticed that there were two narratives like, it's so great for business and it's amazing.
And then otherwise it's ruthless, it's bias. It's, you know, erasing black history. And I'm like, why are there two different stories? So once I was told, you know, there's nothing you could do about it. It's a black box of data. That's my favorite time to ask. But are you sure not. That's why I pretty much shine. And just continuing to ask questions and push back and come up with solutions. And chatbot GPT was born not soon after that. Yeah, you're a natural disruptor.
Just, you know, you don't accept what I appreciate. You don't accept the first answer, right? Interesting. You say your identity, and that's I really resonated when you talked about your identity and kind of. You didn't say this, but, projecting. And if I'm wrong, you can push back, you know, but after your layoff, kind of had an initial identity, kind of crisis on what you wanted to be and where you wanted to go. And my guess is it wasn't just tech, it was with you as a person
because you saw yourself. And we often see ourselves, as attached to what we are doing. Right. And so I've shared this story that it also relates to me like my identity was I before this, I was in, you know, politics. I said I wanted to be, you know, the president, United States, the first black president, United States, obviously, I won't be the first black president of the United States. And now I have no aim to be president. Right.
But I used to write, and that was and my identity was tied up in politics. And, make a very long story variable. Got a lot of votes and still lost. And, you know, it was hard for me to reconcile that. But often I tell people, and I think you've taken this advice unknowingly, or maybe knowingly, you did, that your identity isn't tied to what you do, but to what your values are and how you have an impact in the world. Not not, not a position.
And you're getting laid off for meta didn't make you less worthy or less smart, but it often feels that way, right? It it felt that way. To me. It feels like a rejection. And how did you deal with that? Take your obviously you've recovered well and it's and it worked out for the best. Take us through that moment when you went through that initial identity crisis or rejection, or how have you felt about it?
What did you do to take yourself to move beyond that, to to be able to, take the next leap into what's now chat, black TV? I mean, to be honest, like, I, I'm very good at recognizing, cause and effect, like, analysis. Like I understood months before I was laid off that I was going to be laid off.
I got put on a very senior team because I could hang, but like, I'm working alongside my manager and other managers, just a bunch of managers and managing like tens of millions of dollars and vendors of tools that I know are going to be cut. And it's like if the budgets for these tools are being cut and I'm managing the vendor relationship, where do I fit in? Right. So I was you know, having one on one with my, director.
And I was like, I'm not going to work any harder than I already am, because whatever decisions that have been made are already made. And I just was very resolute to that. And she was like, it's very sobering for you to say that, and I appreciate your attitude towards all of this. It's extremely difficult, blah, blah, blah. And so I started my grieving process while I was still working there. I went to all the cafeterias.
I touched the felt on the wall when in the music room, I stayed late, I came early, you know, I clicked my badge a few extra times, but I knew it was coming. And, when it all happened, I also knew I was going to get a severance. And that was the first time that I had a lump sum of cash money in my hands. And I wanted to not waste the opportunity to just do something. And I kept hearing this voice in my head that was like, it's now or never. Are you actually an entrepreneur?
Because I've had my business license for years and years and years, like ten years, and I never reported any revenue. 2024 I will be the first year that I report taxable income and I'm so proud of that. Let's go. Yeah. So proud of that. I mean, sure, it might be half what I was making, but I still made half of what I was making from 12 in that there's nothing to substitute when you have to go out and you have to hunt and keep it like, do not.
I want you to I do not want you to downplay the magnitude of what you've done because it is incredible. It is not easy to do that. And most businesses don't make any type of taxable profit. Okay. Like some people like people get lost in this. What this actually is because social media has you worked for meta. They're good at selling. The algorithms are good at selling fantasies. Yeah. This is hard. Like and it's like I mean like there is me. This is and this is hard.
So I want you to know that I am proud of you. Many are very proud of you. And I've, seen your work, and this is just the beginning. The fact that you're. I can tell you this without question. Whatever you did this year, right? In. I know that if you did that, you can do triple that with the right approach and learnings that you get from that. I promise you, you can.
And then once you get a triple, you can sense that, but you are already on your way and, you know, don't, don't, don't downplay what you've already accomplished because it has been quite amazing. I really mean that. I appreciate that. Yeah. It's it's, it's definitely in, like, eye opening, getting out of the hourly mindset. Yes, is a huge task. So, like, getting out of it and like how I kind of reclaim my personality and all of that. I did go to therapy.
I'm ashamed to say that I shouldn't be right. I was in I was in there twice a week for like months. Okay. I had to really, like, reset, like who I am and like, what my what, what skills, I mean. And I didn't start to feel better until I started working and getting my hands dirty into and learning how to actually build and the code and like, the certifications and like that's when I started to gain confidence and like, I'm naturally drawn towards solutions.
So I kind of feel like that's what brought me back to myself. Like, I started the grieving process early. I went to therapy, and I was very hands on and immersed in my new, you know, interest. So I've kind of coined that. So, Aaron, I read a little bit about your background and, you know, correct me if I'm wrong. So you you grew up in a very diverse setting. So if I'm correct, your father was your father grew up with white was white, right.
Okay. And I think you've talked about how that's shaped out of your perspectives and looking at the world in an inclusive manner. Speak about how your experience growing up in a very diverse kind of perspective speaks to who you are and how you approach AI and technology. Yeah. So I have a, blended family. So I have my stepdad who is a white man, blond hair, blue eyes, the brown hair. But he was a blond on, and then I had my mom, my biological mom.
And so, like, for Christmas time, we're going to his parents house. There's boats. We're on the lake. It's a condo with tall ceilings. Granite countertops are making taupe or not. And then you've got my family in Saint Louis, Missouri, where we're, like, pan fried chicken patties. And I'm out in Baldwin, Michigan with my grandmother, who I love dearly. She's no longer here, but she's still with us in spirit. Yes, I'm in hot dog and jello cuts and it's like, no matter what environment I was in.
And not to put a juxtaposition of rich and poor, because I also had a four floor story, you know, grandparents house in Saint Louis, and they had trucks and a construction company. But just with the family members that I spent most time with, the juxtaposition was very stark. But I never felt that I loved one more than the other, or I never felt more loved by one or the other. It was just, this is my life. And sometimes my dad dropped me off at school and people are like, who's that?
And I'm like, it's my dad. And then they're like, oh, you know, oh, you're this, you're that, blah blah blah. And like, then my mom would come and I'd be like, oh, you know, she talks like you. And it's just like so many things. Dismantled and built up who I am today. Like definitions of, like, being black in a black household. I still got black, mom. But, you know, I still also had a different perspective. Absolutely. That got me into hunting.
And he's, eating, venison chili and deer jerky, like, you know, it's just two different cultures and fish and it's like, right. Yeah. They just collided for me my whole life. So. And oh, excuse me, I'm curious on because, because I kind of, in your description, think about, like, you probably have some challenges with some of your peers in terms of them trying to put you in a box. That's what I felt like you were getting to, because I've been through this, too.
Right. And I wonder how that's both informed you and how you navigated that. Right. Because I had to navigate the ridiculous definition of what it's supposed to mean to be whatever the definition of being black supposed to mean, whatever it means to talk black, to be black, like given your background and your experience and how you dealt with, how do you how did that both inform you? How did you deal with the, sure.
Direct criticisms of people thinking that you're a, you're either not black enough and then if you're talking to your white counterparts that you're also not one of them, because I'm sure that's a, that's a thing. That's still a thing. It was the thing with me, maybe wasn't thing with you because you're like, so that yeah, I definitely, have had some really traumatic experiences, you know, like your, What? Why are you talk so white? Why do you act like a white girl?
Like it was like a white girl, Aaron. You know, and then my name is already not very black. It's Aaron Reddick. It is literally not a black origin that Reddick and then, and then you have, white friends. I was like, into, like, I don't know, you know, I got I got to, you know, is they're all white and they're making fun of your hair and like, run their fingers and say, on the black market, I think it's cool. Yeah, yeah. And, you know, certain things I shouldn't say.
And testing boundaries and it was just it was very difficult because I wasn't going to be, you know, talking to T-Pain. But I also wasn't being much him. So it's like I never danced, you know, like, but it helps with how it informs my design for the product, because when people say, oh, well, you can't represent the how can you say represent all, you know, black people, black people aren't a monolith. If anybody understand that, it's definitely also me, that we're not a monolith.
And so I'm very much I'm open minded to all walks of black life when, considering data and information and stories and things that are donated for the tool and how it actually acts and provides output. So with I speaking more about that, because we're talking about like AI is, it's, it's, it's what you put in is what you get. Right in terms of making sure it's trained, that you give it the correct information. And that's why Chat Black GPT is so important because our perspective isn't there.
A lot of times it's not the those who are building, put their perspective first. Like, it hit like, you know, as they say, with history, the, the history is written by the winners, right? So on and so forth. It's kind of true with data too. But I'm curious, given some of the challenges in your obviously with what you're doing, you're taking a step at addressing some of the challenges. But what do you see as the greatest challenge in the future with AI?
And actually, let me state the question another way. What do you see as the worst case scenario when it comes to AI? All right, that's the first question. What do you see as the best case scenario and how do we make that happen. Sure. I think like worst case scenario with AI is that, the general public doesn't have access to it anymore and we're only subjected to it. I think that's worst case scenario, because then we don't have an opportunity to build.
We don't have an opportunity to create the technology in a way that it can serve our communities. And we kind of lose our autonomy. We lose a lot if if we don't have access to it in order to build it. And I know that some people might expect the worst case scenario is that it takes over the world and starts killing everyone. But I think that scenario exist with or without AI. Yeah, yeah, I actually think that's the least likely scenario.
I tell people, if you want to say sci fi movies, it's less Terminator, more matrix, right? It's terms of like like, you know, with with with Terminator. It was they took over destroy. We destroyed the Earth. Whatever. With matrix. It was more like the algorithms were giving people what they wanted. Right. And they were for and they and people were mindlessly following without without thinking about it. Right. I think that could be a scenario where it's where only a few have access to it.
We have digital dictatorships, and algorithms are influencing because they already are to some extent, right. In terms of how things are with social media, things like that. Now with algorithms, pick it up to a new level. And knowing us at a better level and being able to learn, it could exacerbate that, that that issue in that problem, if we don't have some intentionality and thought process about it. So, yeah. So I guess that that's the worst case scenario. I agree with you.
Let's how do we make the best case scenario? What is the best case scenario in your mind. And how do we make that happen? I think the best case scenario is that AI is used to solve, like basic human rights concerns, like hunger, housing, clean water, medicine. I like using AI to, advance research faster and help everybody just live a normal, decent life.
I think that's best case scenario and best case scenario as far as let's say that that was already a standard, is that people understand how to use AI to bring out the best in themselves and really explore and expand and explode like just who they are and scale themselves and what, gifted them with and how their beauty and talents can grace the earth and other people around. I really think that it should be about helping us spread our true selves, rather than recreating versions of ourselves.
I love that so. So, I think that was a that was a it was a mic drop moment. So it's about spreading our true selves versus just recreating or copying things. I feel like ourselves. That's that's really that's a gem. It's a gem. We have to we're gonna have to have a mic drop moment for that. It really is. I, I talk about that in terms of, like, I think of it like, if we had Einsteins, Benjamin Banneker, you know, other geniuses and others that were around him, I wouldn't replace them.
And they're great inventions and thought processes. But what it could do is expand or 100 x what they were able to output. Right? Right. Yeah. That's what I that's how I see it, because I don't think there's a lot of concern about like, it like replacing all of human creativity, which I don't think is at least right now, even even in the realm of possibility, like, I think artistic intelligence is what we need to look for. Not, not artificial intelligence. It doesn't replace us.
It it done right enhances us. So let's let's, let's, let's work through the average person because, you know, although it seems like it, most people still probably don't use, generative AI. And AI, at a level that they should or mostly probably still not at all. How do you introduce people through the process?
Like how like what do you do to make sure you kind of get over that initial kind of psychological block that I'm sure, especially if you're dealing with the black community in particular that is there, the mistrust, the, the feeling of like, oh, I'm not technical, so I can't do this. So how do you approach those opportunities and conversations when you, when you, when you talk about AI?
Yeah, I think that's probably why my, keynotes and talks are popular because I, I may get somebody what's the last person who said there? But thank you for making AI less scary for me. I'm like, I like that. It's it's it's like when when people think about coding. I remember the first time my dad was, like, moved to Seattle to be a software engineer. I'm like, what is software? I'm like, what do you mean code? Like, I didn't understand how numbers and screens like, just make things happen.
Obviously I'm interacting with technology, but how to create it? I could not connect those dots for the life of me until I started working at it and actually working at these companies, and then I can understand. And I think it's kind of the same for AI. It's happening, I see it, but I don't understand how it's doing, what it's doing. And so I just break it down like people say, that the number one coding language in the next, I don't know, five, ten years is going to be English. Right.
And and it's because algorithms like it's words, you're telling it with words. I break it down like it's like a parent. Like I is like a child. The algorithm is like a parent telling the child, these are your core values. This is wrong. This is right. And then the kid is just looking at things and like taking into the information, but it's really not organized because it's a child, but it's just taking it all in.
And it's up to you as a parent to guide the child to grow up and do good in the world. And so that's kind of how I help break it down for people. So it's like less scary. And with the whole thing of so AI is the child and the algorithm is the parent. That's how I look at it. And how do you see the human interacting with the algorithm with the AI? So do you mean like the child, like interacting with the world around it?
Like, or if it's just so like, because if I'm hearing you right, you say the algorithm is guiding the AI. So I guess to rephrase the question, because it feels like it feels like we're getting to that. We are guiding the principles around the algorithm. Is, is that how you see it? And then that then guides the AI as a child, right? Yes. And we have to remember that we're in charge. So I always tell them when you start, don't don't use AI blindly.
Like don't go into it and expect it to lead you somewhere. Allow it to help you get where you're going or help you challenge yourself. And so what I, what I say is let AI inform you, not perform. You, say it again. Say that again. Listen, letting it inform you. Let AI inform you. Yes. Not perform. Yeah. There you go, I like that. Yeah. So that's how I try to, like, make it more approachable for people. And then I show them the back end of, like, these custom AI engines.
And it's like, it's really not all that. Now when you build one from scratch, you know, that's different. Yeah. Very different. But the average person can create their own custom GPT and they don't realize it. Yeah. And people have to get like it's just me. Like a lot of really great points about the necessity of bringing the the authenticity of who you are and understanding who you are first. AI in a world where everything is artificial, authenticity reigns supreme.
So think about like you still this is why, like critical thinking, understanding principles and developing your own set of creativity will not go away. They'll only become enhanced. But I think people will think that they can turn off their brain and use AI. That's that's not going to work. And what he could do is that, you know, I can give you something where you don't guided appropriately. You're not clear on what you're saying.
And then you get, you know, the on the, on the, on the most mild example, you get a bad answer. Yeah. On a horrible example, you know, you get you get something where it instructs a customer to to, to to give to get all your money back or. But the car crashes because you weren't clear with how you got to the child. Yeah. So this is why your work is so important I love to talk about. So we talked about the worst case scenario. The best case scenario.
When you're starting off you give people the back end and you give them the support. How can we from a systemic level make sure more people are getting the knowledge and are getting the access. That's the first question. The second question is what's the one thing if you had to advise someone right now that doesn't know anything about AI, what's the what's the one thing they can do to really get started?
So for your first question, I think that recognizing it from like a standard, like a, almost like a basic, bare minimum standard to have an understanding of AI in some way should be like a requirement to graduate high school. Yeah. Just because of how prevalent it is in our day to day lives and in the future of work, in the future of their work and their jobs potentially.
I think there should be some requirement that they know what it is and what it's doing, and how to use it, not promoting a specific product, but just the literacy or understanding. And I know some school districts in California already have those requirements to graduate and some, private schools already have prompt engineering classes.
And it's like you're saying systematically, I think if we're going that route, it needs to be a part of like a typical curriculum, or at least a very robust lesson in absolutely math class. You know, it's math. It's pretty much what it is. Math. So, like, I would even put it somewhere in there, or like a social science class, like, if you're looking at it more towards, like, a public school, those things.
I mean, if you I mean, go into your point here and it's I think it should be infused in, and, and arts infused and lessons and think about we have to figure out how we are now going to approach the world. Just like when the internet came about. We had to reorient how everything was done. Communication, business payments. I mean, there's not anything that this is not going to affect at a really large level.
I mean, it's and I believe we're probably undervaluing it in terms of how we're talking about it. So when I think about it in terms of sense, you, I know you're focused a lot on the black community too, just as I am to like our institutions need to move faster. If I was every HBCU right now, like you don't have all the advantages in the world. Some people have more resources, obviously because of many reasons structural, systematic.
But like if I was right now, I would be doing everything to adopt and run with how I could differentiate myself within the I movement. I mean, every HBCU should be hiring you, self, Noel and others to help them scale because this is something they could do right now to differentiate themselves. But if you wait, five years is too late. Right now would be the time to, to really adopt and disrupt. Like their approach to education.
So I just want to just the point you're making is a valid one like this needs to be implemented and thought about right now. But I think people are overwhelmed. So and then I want to get to a couple of rapid fire questions and then we'll, we'll close out. I'm sure people are overwhelmed when you breathe that brain, when you show all the opportunities with AI, like when people get to you and they just feel like they can't start. Like what? What do you what do you tell them?
Yeah. So I mean, I just look at it like a I try to tell people if you don't engage with the product, you become the product. And it's not about whether or not you're ready for AI. AI is already happening to you. It's a matter of you taking the opportunity to educate yourself on it and make yourself a part of the narrative and AI in your life. It's like, yeah, you got it.
You got to actually, like, use it and take advantage of it in the way that you can, because other people are and they're getting a lot further ahead. And that tech divide is it's not just a matter of, oh, I don't have a laptop or a computer. It's I'm not using AI technology at all in my business or in my school
or teaching my kids. And, that is like the tech is so much bigger and dividing so much faster, except when at least I've created what I call a culture intervention, where I'm just creating a safe space for black and brown communities to engage with the technology in a way that is relatable. Significantly less harmful.
And I really I only the, the main things that I do is it's sources from black owned, content black authored content first, which makes it a lot less biased because you're learning from the community you're asking about. And, obviously I teach it principles of like equity. And, it's also rooted in historical fact.
So all the things that they're banning, all the classes that they're getting rid of, critical race theory, like all of those things that they want to pretend didn't happen, is like the heart and soul of the guarantee that I've got. So that's why it performs so well. That makes sense. And I, I tell people often, you may not like the system, but you can't completely opt out, right? Unless you're just not going to have any power, any knowledge. You can't opt out of technology.
You can't opt out of AI. It's it's too late. It is too late. And the future is going to be determined by those who are building. So you are like the new civil rights leader movement. That's how it's people that are building in this space. Because, like you said, the future is being written. Narratives are being written and, and, and a lot of them are not accurate. And some of them are erasing history. So we have to be a part of building this. And it's also influencing people like you said.
So the only solution is for us to to get up, get involved, become builders and do the work that you're doing. Okay, a couple of rapid fire questions I got for you. So these always trip people up. So sorry. Not sorry. Let me give you a couple. What's an important truth you have that very few people agree with you on? Black people are uniquely equipped to thrive in this new administration because things are about to be unfair. But life's been unfair for us. This is transparent as a people.
And it may not be fun, it may not feel good, but you can thrive and you will thrive if you allow yourself to. Especially as an entrepreneur. And I love it, I love it, something I you know, I won't go too down into a rabbit hole in this, but I'll say this, I think, you know, when we think about a lot of these, diversity, inclusion efforts, I'm obviously pro diversity, diversity, inclusion. Right.
What they have been a lot, though, is a lot of people here at this level have been a few people have been helped and I call it diversity inclusion. But you look at the systemic, effort, it's not a lot of people that end up getting contracts. It was a check the box approach. And so from that extent, it really didn't work. Like we could just be honest. Like diversity, inclusion works. The programing of how it was done was mostly for show. We can be real.
And most of it it didn't it didn't help a lot of black communities. But and that's the reason why it didn't have that push back. Now the reasons they're doing it, I don't agree with. Right. Because I think they're doing it for reactionary and and some of them are bigots. But, that's one of my truths that people don't agree with. Like the diversity, inclusion and how it was done was not effective, only helped a few people, and mostly was a gatekeeping.
Right. Okay, yeah, I didn't I don't think it was that helpful. And that's not from me being outside of most of my work. And I don't put it on my profile, but it was working in Dei department. Yeah, it's a tolerance machine. That's right. And it's like it's like, hey, just a reminder, please be nice and a decent human being. And by the way, all you black people, I really want you guys to support and lean on each other.
So how much onus on us to take care of us without actually giving any, like, actionable resources to just be equal sized? Yes. About virtual deejays and pizza parties. Okay. It's about how do I get a raise when she got a raise, how do you not tone police me? How do you not talk about my hair or ask me about, you know, problems that have nothing to do with me? An overburdened me with subject matter that's not related to what I'm getting paid to do. Yeah, that's what the where the real equity.
Like we're still working on equal pay for women. Yeah. So it's like the Dei. It was very much like a tolerance machine that people looked at as an inconvenience. And I think it perpetuated, rage because you got engineers over here working and then you've got the black whatever. That's the right. They're not doing this work, or now things are behind here and it's like, oh, well, they get their day, blah, blah, blah. And it's kind of like, that's not.
Why do we always get put in a position where it looks like we have to be entertained to stay employed? Oh, oh, please, please. Preaching to the choir and preaching oh my God. So like this is. And then as we get ready to wrap up, I'll just say this is really one of my impetus to start a midwest con, right? It's not it's and I have nothing against, any of the other, and any other, conferences programing. I'm all for it. I got one coming. I got two coming on. They're good.
But what I found is that I wanted us to be in a space where, like, you know what, I. There was no diversity. Inclusion within what? I talk about stuff. You know why? Because it's part of who we are or we don't like. So then I make sure that when people come to the stage that they are, they bring diverse perspective. Because what has to happen is it has to be part of the leadership and culture. It can't be seen as it has to be.
It has to be integral to the organization, not seen as a side piece, because then, it, it never really happens and it becomes a distraction. And then, you know, we have what we have now like, and I just think there was a, there's a better way for us to move forward. And so, we definitely need diversity, inclusion. So I'll be clear on what I'm saying. Yeah. But how it's been done in the past has been more token gating, helping a few people. It has not been effective.
And that's why we need to now become builders in the space. It cannot be enough for us just to say we have a inclusion program. We have to be builders and a part of actually changing the narrative and changing the outcome. And that's why, Aaron, I am so proud of you. And, to see the work that you're doing and looking forward to, you know, figuring out ways that we collaborate.
What's the final piece you'd like to leave folks with in terms of how do we build a better future together, and what would you like people to take away with black ChatGPT? I just want it to be looked at as an opportunity to learn about black people in black culture, with no consequences, and use generative AI with same ease as the people who created the one. That doesn't really work for us all the time. So it's like, if you have a question about why can't I touch a black person's hair?
Why do people make everything by race? But you don't have to disrupt and burden a black person with these emotionally charged like questions you can ask chat like GPT and give us a break. I think there's nothing like the let us mind our own business and do our thing. And that is exactly what I'm focused on. And so like you said, how about you and then black people, you know, it's actually going to help you create business plans or strategies with systemic oppression in mind.
It's going to actually acknowledge like, oh, you're you might run into these hardships like remember to ask these questions when you're in this setting because these are the things that are going to be working against you. It's like a it's like a strategy. It's like somebody in your corner who's like, hey, like, this is the world. Here's how you can navigate it with, street smarts, I don't know, street smarts, essentially. So but but yeah, I want people to use it. I use it. I'm a fan.
Oh, and I encourage everybody to use it. Of course I do that. Yeah. You sound like you surprised. Like about it. Yeah. But it's, you know, like I said, we're going to continue to build work together for, Aaron Reddick. Chat black GPT make sure you check her out. If you need to book her as a, as a, as a, as a, as a, as a, as a speaker. Highly recommended. She is very knowledgeable, very entertaining, and a wonderful person overall that is working to really make a difference in the world.
I'm proud to call her a friend and a fellow disruptor and looking forward to working more with you. Aaron, it's been a pleasure. Thank you so much for coming on. Thanks so much. All right. Hold on one second. There you go. Okay.
