It's the Lapsed Fan Wrestling Podcast with Jack encron Seo and JP Sorrow. Oh ho ho, We're back in the saddle, boss m hm. It's the twenty twenty three TLF Christmas Show. We continue the extension of our spectacular beyond just gifts given by the Solar System. We've now reached the point and we're giving back to you in the form of bite sized podcasts, stocking stuffers if
you will. It's Lapsed GPT. We're your co chairman. Belly up to the Chat GPT prompt armed of course yes, with the deep ten year corpus of TLF memory making and character building, and see what it comes up with. See what happens when the immovable force meets the immovable object in cyberspace. It's been a wild ride so far, as we've played around with the idea of Hulk Hogan discovering plots in both the classroom and his neighbor's garbage can oh, oh God, game is this? Brother? This? And a pinchon
asque concluding scenes. The last time we were with you now, I was thrilled when the boss Man told me that this was something he wanted to do for the Solar system this Christmas season because I had, I think, as we all probably have by this point, played around a little bit myself with GPT and in lapsed characters and seeing how they interface, if you will. And so I'm about to send you boss a little a little something I decided
to do, not because I was bored or anything. Very very important things to do. That's always the problem, So please don't get that. Yeah, you're right, it does kind of screw up the formatting. Huh. Let's see what did you do it? In words? I did a word? Yeah, yeah, trying to share this with the boss Man, but it's uh. I love to see sort of like how we can best describe in a brief prompt what a character in the Solar system is? Like,
yes, how good? Like I like doing multiple versions too, because it's like, yep, you know, ooh that they didn't. I see where the model went because I gave it reason to believe that this was the part of the character based on my word choice. But that's really not what I meant. Let me change this word and see if it gets it a bit back on the rails to where conceptually I think the character should be. And that's that's half the fun of it. It's just like tweaking it until it
gets it right, till it's speaking your language. Have you had that experience where you're like telling you to go somewhere and it's like going in a different path. You have to get it back on the rails. Yep, yep, all's that's well, as you know. No, I haven't done that, But usually it's something like, well, I'm like, oh wait, I need to add this to it. It's always like that. I've never had to really go off the rails in a way that that you know,
makes me nervous. So I do mine in kind of a different style than JP does, where the boss man will prompt it to write natual script and so we'll have dialogue and sort of like descriptions of the looks on people's faces and things like that, and there's like a scene and with me, I just like say this, say this, all right, I'll say this. I'll say this like talk like deliver your piece of shit. Like I treat it much more like a jukebox or a soundboard, And so my prompts are
sprinkled within the dialogue. It's not like one prompt and then a full script. It's line by line by line as I kind of realized what the model's doing with my with my fact pattern and then try to make it do something different or more fun. So uh. And another thing Chat GPT does is they sort of like they read through what you told it and title it.
You know, they title chat without you having to title it yourself. Right, And they decided boss, and I'm going to turn it over to them on this one that the best title for the following is Baggy Sweatshirts and Rebel Style. So you need to warm up your laps Nash this Christmas season, put that Nash Santa had on and here we go. Fuck it. So I'm going to read the proms. You read the voice, Assume Kevin Nash lapsed GPT is someone who always makes old movie references, so that you know
he appreciates classic films and has good taste. Assume that, by the way, that's not the case, of course, that how would he explain why baggy sweatshirts are so popular with young kids? Well, you see, it's like a scene straight out of an old Hollywood classic. Kid, you know, baggy sweatshirts. They're the modern day embodiment of rebellion, not to the anti establishment spirit of the past. It's like those cool cats from the fifties
and sixties. You know. Young folks today want to stand out, break the mold and make their own fashion statements. Plus they offer comfort and the laid back style reminiscent the the timeless legends. It's all about blending the comfort of today with the swagger of yesteryear's baby. I don't know if I'm chat
gpt here, if I'm Sean Oliver, but we'll keep telling. I then tell it include a reference to three films from the nineteen fifties in this well, you see, it's like a scene straight out of an old Hollywood classic kid baggy sweatshirts. They're the modern day embodiment of rebellion, not the anti establishment spirit of the past. You know, just like these those cool cats from the fifties and sixties. Young folks today want to stand out, break
the mold and make their own fashion statements. It's like James Dean's iconic style and rebel without a cause, or he defied convention. Or think about the charm of Audrey Heppert and Roman Holiday. You know where she brought to say that, totally say that where she brought a touch of elegance in the streets of Rome. Yeah, don't forget on the waterfront, where Marlon Brando's effortless coolness at a new standard. Now, these baggy sweatshirts, they're the canvas
for today's rebels to paint their own stories. I mean, come on, planning the comfort of today with a swagger of Yesteryear's baby. And it's at this point I get incredibly annoyed that it's ended both statements with swagger of Yesteryear's baby. Of course, Kevin Nash would never we never sent a sentence in baby exclamation point. So I told it this, but he thinks he's too cool to say anything with an exclamation unless it's the phrase, motherfucker, this
isn't about you. Well, you see, it's like a scene straight out of an old Hollywood classic kid baggy sweatshirts. They're the modern day embodiment of rebellion, a nod to the anti establishment spirit of the past. Just like those cool cats from the fifties and sixties, young folks today want to stand out, break the mold and make their own fashion statements. It's like James
Dean's iconic style and rebel without a cause, where he defied convention. I think about the charm of Audrey Heppard and Roman Holiday, where she brought a touch of elegance to the streets of Rome. And don't forget It where Marlon br you know, don't forget on the Waterfront, where Marlon Brando's effortless coolness set a new standard. But motherfucker, this isn't about you. It's about kids finding their groove and blending the comfort of today with the swagger of yesteryear's.
Oh Lex. So what would Kevin Nash say if I told him that I just don't understand the kid's style these days? Would he say, but, motherfucker, this isn't about you. Oh God? And finally this but have him say it's like anything else as a prelude to every other statement he makes. It's like anything else. You see, it's a scene straight out of an old Hollywood classic. Kid, you know, baggy sweatshirts. They're the modern damn bodiment of rebellion, you know, a nod to the anti
establishment of spirit of the past. It's like James Dean's iconic style and rebel without a cause, where he defies confor defied convention. They go right there. But motherfucker, this isn't about you. It's about the kids finding their groove. I'm blending the comfort of today with the swagger of yesteryear's. It's like Audrey Hepburn's charm and Roman Holiday, you know, bringing elegance to the streets of Rome. Or think think about on the Waterfront where Brando's effortless coolness
set of new standards. So you see, so you see, it's like anything else, a fusion of past and present in those baggy sweatshirts. A fusion of past in the present and those baggy sweatshirts. I do hope as well, if you have any teenagers in your life and they open a double XL sweatshirt and mauve this Christmas, that you do think about Kevin Nash's very thoughtful interpolation of how it recalls the classic Hollywood spirit of rebellion of the past.
And we hope this is one of many Christmas gifts we can share with you the solar system. As we head in to Christmas twenty twenty three and into Lapsed X twenty twenty four, we'll see you next time. On Lapsed GPTs of production of the Lapsed Entertainment Group. Its content is intended for private use only.
