119: Virtual Vixens - podcast episode cover

119: Virtual Vixens

Jun 21, 20241 hr 58 minEp. 119
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Episode description

ChatGPT says: “Dive into the latest episode of Unrelenting, where we tackle the cutting-edge intersections of technology, creativity, and society. From the intriguing rise of AI influencers and the evolving dynamics of virtual relationships to the financial habits of multi-millionaires and the world of high-end simulators, this episode has it all. We explore the fascinating …

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Transcript

Welcome and Intro Banter

You bet. Glitter bet. Your. You.

Carbon Dioxide Levels and Calmness

That's right. Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls and, unrelenting boys of all ages. Episode 119 of unrelenting. It's a Friday. How are you doing, Gene? I'm doing all right. I guess the carbon dioxide in your air is finally getting to you. You sound, very calm or calm or near death. I'm never sure which it is. I, I sent you the link to that video of the guy testing carbon dioxide levels right? I don't think so. I mean, you said a lot about. I'll have to unreal people.

I do like to send you unreal people. That's true. It it's true. And it's very easy to do. I mean, there's there's a multiple faceted thing here when it comes to creating a person, an influencer. And it was interesting because a Gary Vaynerchuk video popped up.

Creating Influencers and Gary Vaynerchuk

I guess he's written another book, man. The guy writes a lot of pieces. I know somebody writes a lot of books that he puts his name on there. Well, yeah, I mean, he I think he used to write his books. Probably not anymore. But you write a lot of books as well. No, I don't, you just. Well, you keep going. You keep going to Mexico. Like I'm going to Mexico to write my book. I do have a few books in progress. That's true.

You go like 14 times a year to Mexico to write, and then nobody ever sees any books coming out. So they're starting to think there might be something else involved with the I'm writing reports. Yeah. For what you're going down there for. But he was talking about exactly what you and I have been extensively, which is if you're a real live meat bag influencer, your days are really numbered. Oh, yeah, I think so. Way easier, way cheaper.

Although the conceptual the companies will just create the influencers and maybe they will. But this takes time. Still, in order to you don't have to create them. I mean, this is going back to the old Hollywood model right there. There's a point where. There's always been a flip flopping between who has real power in Hollywood. Is it the the people that you actually see on the screens or is it the people that are in charge of making movies? Right. The people that are the puppet masters? yeah.

And, and I think it's a similar thing here because the whole idea of influencer really came about out of the fact that these people were not controlled or, I mean, they weren't represented. Correct. And, they just were either Instagram or on YouTube or on Twitter or somewhere where they themselves got crazy big audiences and, and so they own their audience, not a company that, that they were working for. That's no good. Somebody's got to take care of that.

It's all about the so yeah, well, eyeballs, subscribers whatever way you want to put attention. Right. If a company wants to get their message out, you don't build a billboard that's in the middle of a cornfield. You build it next to a highway, right? So people can crash while they look at your wall. If it's a really good one. Yeah, yeah. If it's a good message, like a chick getting undressed, it's like, boom, I'm gone. No, I don't like I said, I'm Darren O'Neal, he's Gina Drew's you.

Because there's a funny billboard I saw a picture of. I didn't see the actual billboard I saw a picture of. And, God, I'm going to butcher it and try to paraphrase it, but it was hilarious.

Hollywood Power Dynamics and AI Influencers

It was a picture of a roof and the the little quote thing or the the verbiage was, hot shingles in need of getting nailed or something like that. This was a roofer who went to ChatGPT like, give me something sexy. It was it was something like that. But it was pretty damn funny. And there was actual billboard photo on the road, so somebody had a good sense of humor. But, yeah, the idea being that, you know, it's hot out, your shingles are going to start slipping.

They need to probably have somebody go up there, check your shingles, and then nail them and, did it in a very cute, memorable way because people don't really care if they're looking at a real person or a fake person because they don't know. And I think even if they know, they don't care. We never used to look at real people. We used to look at drawings of people in advertising through, you know, and then that was replaced by photographs.

But photographs are still not only are they touched up, but they're also like artificial the advertising photos. Yeah. You know that those are position those are manufactured photographs. They're not somebody's actual house. They're a fake house with fake people. So the way that they want it to be set up. Yeah. With fake food.

I mean, when you see those, early, I mean, I don't know what they're doing now, but for most of those commercials that they were showing you the big Whopper, it was just made with, like, whatever they're making the stuff out of, it wasn't real. Well, it was pseudo real. I mean, it was a lot of the stuff was made out of the actual ingredients, but it was hand carved and then glued in place, right? Like these are made to look appetizing, not to be eaten.

The concept, again with the influencers is having the eyeballs. Now, I'm not really sure because of the fact that it is now so easy to do this. Does this now not start to kind of kill the business as well? Because where there used to be, only I don't know what percent of the population is a hot young female, because that is what most of these influencers are. Hot females between the ages of, let's say, 18 to 16, 16. Well, it's really 16 to 20.

And then there's a little bit of an outlier, but okay, that's your main demographic. Yep. How many of those people actually exist? And then let's relate that to how many of those people that are going to be AI based are going to exist. They're going to the hot chicks are going to have like 5000 competition fake chicks for every one real chick. No, I don't think so. It takes it does take effort to make these things and to keep them going. Somebody's got to right. Write all the content.

Zero rated. Well, yeah, but someone's got to put in the prompt. it's not put in one prompt and be like, give me this for 5000 different. Yeah. And and then the actual hot chick just has to wake up and put on makeup. So it takes a long time to put on that makeup gene. Well, not if you use, virtual makeup, which is what a lot of them are doing these days. But this is true. You just, like, turn on the heat.

Just turn on the camera, and it clears up all the blemishes, gives you the right level of makeup, makes your skin look perfect. That's what you do when you're on any of these video shows, I know. Oh, well, you're looking at it right now. Yeah, I mean, you look, I just have the lights off, that's all. A lot, a lot younger now, too. I mean, that's a good look. but the overall ease and what you can do, this is getting better and better. I mean, meaning that it's getting easier on a daily basis.

It seems real. Yeah. And there is a bit of a, I guess a question as to what you mean by influencer, because traditionally influencer was somebody that does something online that attracts a big attention. Right. In the last five years, a bigger percentage of that has been OnlyFans. So it's not just a, attracting attention because you play a video game.

It's also because she plays a little bit of video games, but then steers people from the video games into seeing her naked for money, as one would. I mean, let's be honest, this is like I think that what we're seeing is a natural evolutionary process which has always been there. It's just utilizing slightly different technology. There's a reason that young women are more attractive than old women. You know why? Because they're young.

Because they're fertile and humanity would not survive if men were more attracted to women who are not fertile. But now they're going to be attracted to fertile looking digital images that are projected on the screen. Somebody who doesn't age ever, and just always looks like they're 18. And you know what? If she's like, hey, that favorite band you like sucks. You type a few keys in, and then all of a sudden she's like, hey, I love that favorite band you like.

Yeah, well, you're talking about the, the wife replacement. and that's another thing that's kind of here, but we'll be coming a lot more so, which is the virtual girlfriend slash wife, right. Who behaves more like the way that men,

Real People vs. Fake People in Advertising

would prefer women behaved than the way that women actually behave like, essentially, you know, rush it. Imagine. Imagine a wife that behaved the way that your fiancee behaves like. Right. The point at which a woman is a fiance, a free marriage and freebie and pre fiancé. Really? Well no no no no no. Here's the thing. Pre fiancé they're still like testing the waters with you. So they're going to do shit. And sometimes subconsciously like without even thinking what they're going to do.

Shit that stresses you out and challenges you because they want to see what your responses this is that that point where you have to prove to a woman that you're a good boyfriend. Once you get past the, her taking the ring, you've gone through that phase. You've proven that you're worthy of being with for a long period of time. You're going to provide her with money. I mean, you know, affection and all that stuff. Sure. Right. Money. So consequently, now it's the opposite.

Now she's in that phase where she can't do anything that'll piss you off enough to cancel the wedding. So the fiance phase of the three phases is the one where you get the best, most, desirable behavior from a woman. As a man. Because once you get married, remember the old, joke, which isn't really that much of a joke, which is, guy, is telling his buddy, man, I just got the best blowjob of my life, and, it's, it's the day before his marriage, and then you have, the next frame.

You have the, the fiancee talking to her best friend, saying, man, I just gave the last blowjob of my life. yeah. That contract is up to decided until. Yeah. You want this part done. Deal. and the other thing that that's also a, commonly said thing about marriage is, if you put a penny into your jar for every time you have sex the first year of your marriage, and then you take a penny out of that jar every time you have sex for the rest of your life, you'll still have pennies in the bucket.

You're going to be buried with a lot of copper. so. Well, they're not really made of copper anymore. No, no, not really. I think they're aluminum or something. but obviously those are, you know, exaggerated things, but they're nonetheless, they stem from a good reality. So for those of you that haven't been married, even if you don't think you're having all that much sex, trust me, you're having a lot more sex dreams. But she's been married 14 times now.

I think, you know, I. I learned my lesson the first time, man. Once was enough for me, once and done exactly. What? Yeah. Because she didn't understand, like. Oh, what what is this? $15,000? Did you buy a car? No. Spaceship? No Earth. Spaceship? You mean like the physical? Like some kind of rocket ship? You know, like like in a video game and, Yeah, the understanding level goes right out the window. It's funny how that works. I know. Right? Copper plated zinc is what they're made out of today.

Is that what it is? Copper plated zinc. Oh, so zinc must be cheap. Them. Yeah, they're making them out of zinc. I mean, I think the pennies still have more natural material worth than they do.

Virtual Girlfriends and AI Models

one said so the government. Yeah. Real upset if you start, like, melting them down. yeah, I could see that. What what else can you make out of zinc, I wonder? I don't know, we supposed to take zinc every day, man, so you can get your. So you could eat your penny, right? You can eat the penny. It'll just. Yeah. This is medical advice. That's true. That medical advice still need to convince. yeah. It's because zinc is, anti microbial. I believe the science phase.

I like that as a, show title. Yeah. The fiance phase is, it's it's the good part of any relationship. This is why you want to make that last as long as you possibly can. Guys. When the wife's like the he's like, oh, it's going to take a long time to plan the wedding. Be grateful for that. Yeah. Totally. A couple of years, three years, four years, five years of it. Take five, take seven. What are we what do we in a rush for?

Yeah, it's interesting point because we came from the world of, standard definition television. And Playboy magazine that the big thing was well, this is portraying an unrealistic expectation of what women should look like. What the hell is happening now. Yeah. You know not only is it okay well that you picked up the magazine and maybe you found the chick attractive. Maybe you didn't, maybe you're like, fuck, it's a brunet. Yeah. You definitely found the chick attractive.

What are you talking about? Some more than other. I mean, really, I don't know, I am sure some more than others, but pretty much all enough. she's like, there was a bar. They all jumped right on over the bar. I mean, a Playboy, if you're. If a chick is in Playboy, she is going to be attractive enough. Well, now they could be men. Now they are men. But back in the day. Back in the day, they were the only place you had men in Playboy was the guys that made the cartoons.

Which is the main reason I subscribe to Playboy is for the cartoons and the jokes to be the one page of jokes were worth the price of admission. Yeah, I mean, Playboy really was sort of the the the dirty magazine that you as a writer wouldn't be, you know, made fun of for, for in it was a, a literal or a literate, I guess. magazine for it, it was high. Yeah. It was highbrow amongst that type of, publication.

Yeah. It was read by the Concerning Man who wanted to know all about the latest technology in shaving and grooming

Marriage Dynamics and Influence

and a lot of ads for a Cologne. Well, it was definitely an Alfred Dude magazine, that's for sure, which is a dying breed at this point as well, which is a little strange at the same. Yeah. Because there's no testosterone in American men anymore. It seems that way real. Well, no, it's actually true because they do tests, and those tests show a great decline in testosterone levels of American males. You have men that are 20 years old who have lower disaster zone than six year olds.

No wonder the old guys keep getting the checks. Wow. It's pretty obvious the old guys have the best form of astronaut called money money money money money. Yeah, women love money. Genius. Yeah. You know, why not come? Because women understand what money is. Money is is it's the retained work that's already been done, but not yet spent. See, when you work and then you spend everything that you just worked for. We got nothing. Yeah. You got nothing for her to spend.

But when you work and you don't spend all that work product, you save it up. That's what money is. That's what that means. Now, she can take the work that you did and then utilize it to make yourself look better, and then get a new husband. Oh, it works out really well for her. Wow. Yeah. I mean, the guy's got to be in play. You know, last night I was talking to, a buddy of mine. A guy that I used to do a podcast with.

In fact, back now, 6 or 7 years ago, we had a business podcast, that we did for about a year. a co-host seemed to make it beyond a year, except me. So I think I, I know, I know well, no bends over a year now. Two. Wow. the two at the same time to that you're not even a monogamous. No, I'm definitely. No. That was. Yes. I've been accused of that for a long time, but, I, I started well, there's two interesting things.

One was he was talking about his ex-wife because I, I asked him how how were the girls? How are your kids? Are you talking to him? And, I have no idea. I haven't talked to him for a while because, you know, they don't want to talk to their dad because they're both in college. And, you know, college students in general don't want to talk to their dad. But when your dad's divorced from your mom for the last decade, then they definitely don't want to talk that.

But, so he was talking about them and then mentioned that his ex-wife is now on her third husband with each husband being richer. So they the last time he, dropped off one of the girls here in Austin at her house back, when he came out for a visit. He actually lives in California now, but when he came out for a visit. So it was a, huge house on the lake.

So, you know, this this current marriage, she managed to snag somebody that's not just a millionaire, which this guy is, but, like, a multi multimillionaire. Okay, now that sucks. You think I'm a millionaire? I'm pretty set, but no, there's millionaires and billionaires out there. Oh, yeah? Yeah. When this guy was living in Austin, we were really good friends. And, I think in the five years that we're hanging out, I mean, other than doing the podcast, we're just good friends.

We went out a lot and hang out, went to bars. And, you know, we actually went on trips and traveled together quite a bit, too. And, I think, do you spend a lot of time in a Columbian prison together, by any chance? not that I'm aware of, but, but I spent about a million, and he spent about 2 million, and it was a it was, a fun time in Austin and traveling and, a lot of girls around in that time frame as well.

but, you know, I mean, it's all drop in the hat compared to what women spend, on a regular basis. It's like, given the opportunity that there is no problem at all spending a million a year if you're a female, guys, you'd have to, like, buy things that still retain their value, that you could sell later. If you want to spend a million a year virtual spaceships for women, it's that hard. Spaceships are worth more now than they ever were set up, man.

It just makes it just makes good fiscal sense, I know. Right? Well, you should invest in spaceships. I would love, love to be there for the, the conversation you're having with your, financial planner, if you have one. So where's your, portfolio that my portfolio resides in 22% spaceships and, it's great. The game. It's it's going to be big. People are going to spend lots more on this. That's right. Well, the game's up to 800 million now. That is just okay.

Okay, here's the thing. This is actually funny. I don't know if I mentioned this before or not, but, so in the game, you know, you know, discord is right. Yes. Yeah. Okay. So discord has groups. One of the groups I kind of stumble on to was other people that have spent a lot of money on the game wait, where they like commiserating, like, oh my God, I can't believe I spent $8,000 on, no jet fuel for my space. So this is this group is only for people that have spent

the minimum of $25,000 on a game. Wow. How do you how do you know if people were that crazy? because you, me, the game tells you. Okay. Oh, okay. So there's a leveling in the game. Once you get past a certain amount, it's a it's a prestige level. This is a sucker level is what it is. Exactly, exactly. So anyway, this groups, for people that have spent the minimum 25 grand in the game.

So in this group, when I popped in there at the time, I was there live online, there were people that had represented $11 million worth of money in the game, which is still in Alpha, which is not released yet. And that is a minimum, because I don't know how much each person spent, I can't all I know is the minimum that they spent, and that added up to 11 million. I will say see Brooklyn. That sums it up nicely in one word. Real nerds. Exactly. but more importantly, nerds that have jobs.

That's good jobs. Yeah. Good jobs. Here's a few questions. How many of these people because discord you can talk with, you know, audio, you can hear each other. I mean, I can talk to anybody if they want to talk to you, but, how many females were in this group of people that spanned over $25,000? What's a female game? What's your female exactly? That doesn't exist in that universe. Yeah, there there is.

I can tell you from the YouTube channels, there is one chick that I've seen that does YouTube videos for this game, and, her channels can be very popular if there's a very channel is quite popular. And the entirety of her crew, for Guild clan, whatever you want to call it, is men and, you know, like, and they all have a lot of spaceships. Yeah, well, they're all trying to impress the Queen. pretty much. And, like, she's married.

Everybody knows she's married, but that doesn't make any difference. And she's got a weird accent, and that doesn't make any difference. Okay. Define weird accent. Well, she's British, but she also has a speech impediment. Okay. It's, which makes it more interesting to listen to her. I'm trying to imagine that, I'll send you a link to her. Oh, thank you. Video. Yes, you can, because that's probably better. Yeah. it's it's a and she does make pretty good videos.

I will say she's like their whole group is into more of the the roleplay kind of thing. Now, wait, are you saying like, roleplay while you're playing the game? Or you mean you're dressing up while playing the game and you have built a bridge in your home, so it looks like the interior of the spaceship that you believe you bought virtually for $5,000. no. I mean, what I mean is by roleplay, I mean, like there people have actual role plays

The Importance of Money in Relationships

within the when they play the game together. So somebody is the pilot, somebody is a gunner. Then this group of people specialize in doing PvP. like with hand weapons and stuff like that, whereas other people are, mostly about flying the spaceships. So, you know, they're like, they're they're playing as though they're like in the military kind of organization. This is what I mean. They're taking it very serious like that. They're staying within their roles. It feels real to them.

That's the, yeah. That's the the central idea. Sorry, I distributed my PC here. I can, you know, I was hearing those up, but you probably won't hear it in the file. Yeah. Bye bye. But I would say, I would make fun of you a lot more if I was unaware of the fact that if I didn't blow my eyes out, I the latest things that I've seen over the last 5 or 6 years or and especially now that I got back into NASCAR, these simulators that Dale Earnhardt Junior and those kind of guys have.

Yeah. You know, with the $10,000 PC, with the full, cage, you know, with the three monitors, I totally be spending money on that. Oh, dude. Yeah, there's a there's a guy that I've watched his videos. I don't watch him regularly, but occasionally, that was a and the Canadian military dude for his whole life. So he retired at like 46 or something. You know, when you've spent 18 to 46 in the military, you get a good pension for the rest of your life.

And, so what he did after retiring is spend about 60, 70 grand and building out a really nice simulator at home, for spaceships, naturally. I mean, he was a military guy. I thought maybe he still wanted the of the vibe. yeah, I was on the Canadian Air Force or something. And, like, bombing people. Yeah, yeah, I am. He does do, like, pilots stuff, but like, he did piloting stuff in real life. So I think he enjoys the spaceships more so in different.

It's different because, well, it also doesn't have you don't have to worry about gravity. So it's you have six degrees instead of four degrees with, spaceships. It's another part of those younger women. They don't have to worry about gravity as much yet. Yeah, that's true too. That is a very good point. so she, neither do the AI models, man. True. There's no gravity in the gravity in the, you know, none at all.

And so he built the simulator, and then he started getting people sending me emails asking him. And then, naturally, because he had a decent audience of people, some people said, hey, can you build me one? I've got money. So now he's got a business building these things for people, and they charge $100,000 to make one, but they're probably awesome and they're awesome and take some, I think, two weeks to make it in your house. A lot of material. and a very expensive, gear. I'm guessing.

Yeah. So, like, one guy, in Germany flew them out to build one of these. He wanted a car. One rather than the spaceship. One. And his simulator was, for driving, race cars. And the one of the cars in that. Whatever. I can't remember the game because I haven't done, like, car games for a while. I think the last one I played was about 4 or 5 years ago, but. And I have got the wheel and pedals there. Anything but. Yeah, but you'll use those for playing semi truck simulator. Yeah. Yeah, exactly.

They're they're actually pretty cheap. they're like, you know, a couple hundred bucks. The, the high end, gear for car simulators is very pricey. It's like 500 bucks for a pedal. Yeah. And, several thousand for, steering wheel thing. Yeah, I remember what I then when you buy the actual wheel separately and those are expensive and you can get the Ferrari wheel, you can right the whatever other brand wheel, the actual wheel that goes on the actual wheel for the actual car. Yeah. Yeah, exactly.

Yeah. I have a three master that one of the first ones, they came out with the force feedback and they were just a few hundred bucks then. But damn, they've gotten better. Yeah, they've gotten better, but also way more pricey. Well yeah. And again, the guy actually had a Ferrari race car in his garage, like one of six that's still around from whatever year back that he that was in that video game.

So he wanted to get the this build so he could go driving on a racetrack in the simulator without putting any miles on his actual car, but drive his same car. Right. That's. And so he spent a hundred grand to get these guys to fly out and build a simulator for him. Well, this is exactly what the race teams do now that the actual amount of practice that they can get is very limited by the series, there is no limit on the amount of time you can spend in a simulator.

So if your simulators good, it's an advantage. Exactly. And and when I say simulator, it's not just it has all the bits. I mean it's hydraulic right. It actually tilts in in every direction. So when you're cornering you feel it in your whole body because the simulator is tilted 45 degrees to simulate that sort of, cornering force that you would feel in the car or spaceship or helicopter or whatever, he built another one for somebody that was a helicopter should matter.

Yeah, those crash a lot more, but not in the simulator. I mean, that's the beauty of it is. Yeah. You you may crash, but you can get right out, right on around. Helicopters are not something to mess around with. Yeah, I, I, I send that, videos that I watch that are helicopter related because he does still like helicopters more than the airplanes, but, Oh yeah. Well, because it's, you're you're a batter. Asked pilot. If you fly helicopters than you do if you fly airplanes.

I mean, there's an a lot of people. I mean, there's like 15 year old girls that are learning to fly Cessna. Oh yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's totally true. Totally true I think. Yeah. There's two things you can do to get kind of away from the crowd of private pilots. One is to get your jet certification is there's way fewer people that are jet certified. the other thing is helicopters. So both of those are a much smaller percentage of pilots than General aviation then, you know.

Yeah, like your Cessna, like you're talking about. Yeah. But I'm guessing back in the day when Adam got there in his helicopter, he went up to put on the ride of the Valkyries and just started the whole Apocalypse Now thing. I don't know how you can fly a helicopter, even in a simulation without having, the right of the Valkyries playing. It's like it has to be. why do you think he plays it? Every time at the start of No Agenda, right. It gets ready.

It reminds him of of his glory days, of actually flying a copter.

Millionaires and Multi-Millionaires

Yeah, totally. It's like. But way too many people were killed in helicopter crash. I mean, it's amazing. I mean, people die in every which way, but, you know, Davey Allison, NASCAR, technically, they're actually really safe because, you can land without power in a helicopter for less than with play. I mean, planes you can land without power because you got to start. Yeah, but you need a runway. But. Right. I mean, this is true. Helicopters. If you can have just enough run time. Yeah.

If you go into an out of gyro mode where your, your, your blades are spinning in the opposite direction from the body, which is also spinning, the rate of descent is. Yeah. I don't know if I would call it controlled, but it's definitely a reduced rate compared to freefall. Right? Oh yeah. Freefall bad. Yeah. Freefall is not good. I think you're still gonna feel it in the helicopter if you land that way. But I think the problem is.

Yeah, in the moment of an emergency, doing the things necessary to get you into that. Like you have to change the pitch on the blades. You have to make sure that they're still connected to the transmission so that there's full force against the actual body of the helicopter, like there. There's a number of things you need to do to, you know, to actually maybe disconnect the transmission.

I don't know, I, I've never done this, obviously, but I'm imagining that there's a list of things that you have to do to get ready for an emergency landing with no power. So you simulate that in your helicopter simulator, and then you have your fiancé simulator that you play along with your fiancee simulator. That's way she says, yes, dear old time, this is right. This is a great game. We should have it right now.

We should say simulator by unrelenting tells me, okay, I'm going to look it up on steam right now. I suspect it probably would be outside simulator. No, I don't think anybody is this twisted that they came up with that exact thing. Really? You don't think? Probably. Okay, let's. I'm out. Let's. But, hey, I mean, you're kind of a coder. Ambrose's kind of a coder. We have an AI guy. Hey, AI is a pretty good coder. We can put that all together. And we have a game fiance simulator. I like the idea.

Make sure I spend FIA and the ANC and, the FIA. Yeah, there's no fiancee simulator. Holy shit. Okay, who wants to? Right now I see no beret. Deji guru Omega project certainly. Mofo. Who is in the fun this first round? Yeah, I think I might have to do a Kickstarter for this new, fiance simulator game. Yeah, this. I mean, we in this stage just make sure that, there is a game called other people's fiancée became my woman. That's an actual game title. That's a lot.

I mean, that's somebody that didn't understand PC. This is somebody who's clearly Chinese or some other than English persuasion. That right, made this game because you don't make a title like that in English. That's you get the point. But that's not proper English. Net needs in on funding the fiance simulator game. I think he's in for at least a mil. Oh, nice. Okay, well we just gotta get like ten of those and then we'll be the get to go. that's that's crazy, man.

And, 25 minutes to go see Brooklyn. 3333 came in with the boost. How do you boost? Oh, there you go. We're on our way to funding the unceasingly. but I will boost your on your consistency. Seems that's hard to find these days. Thank you for your courage. No, I get that part. I get the, There's a lot of shows on hiatus. I was suggesting. He's not saying we have a good show. He just saying we have a show that we don't stop. We show up, we show up. That is all that's important. Although I'm.

I was thinking taking some time off in in July because my buddy Larry took the week off. That's that's your week. These are for a few weeks in July. I'm like, oh, this is a good idea. Maybe just, just take some time. No, that's a bad no. You're like, never take time off. Never take time off. You can take all the time off you want when you're dead. Surly mofos like you will a volunteer for the simulator testing.

See the people are like okay we got a, yeah we got a tester and I well I mean that's kind of that literally was what was his job memory I was doing? Yeah. For work for a long time. Software testing. Do you really want him? Professional tester of Microsoft pornography games. Right. When they came out with some of the best ones. Leisure suit. Larry. Justice. Larry. Yeah. Membros behind that. You have a lot of people don't know that he was. Larry in his own.

Well, but not like Larry fucking Larry the, Larry Blinder from Planet Rage in that Larry show. No, that's a different Larry. Completely different Larry, but I like what's that Larry do for work? No, I'm not really sure now. I mean, he's written. What is the radio written books, all sorts of things. So you never had a real job? Got it right. He. I would think he wrote for. I thought briefly, like the man show he wrote for some other show.

He had a, They never made it, but he did have a, what do you call it, a project or a treatment that CBS bought. So he was in the biz. Larry knows the business. He started out he like still looking to find this commercial. It was a Wendy's commercial. He said when he was like 60. And he was the kid going through the drive through. Oh nice. So he's a professional actor. Yeah. And he was he was the original I think ladies, you can't just eat just one of them, kid. Oh, nice.

So he's been around in the business for a while. That's why he just got the hell out of California and moved back east to California is a shithole. Well, the people are. The place is beautiful. Oh, yeah. If you can get rid of the people. I've said that for years. If you get rid of the Californians. California is a beautiful place. We could just make them move somewhere else. Like they are trying to work on extinction there. So give them another decade or so and I'll take care of it for us.

Then we could just move back in and reclaim that land. Yeah, I have established the, you know, Ronald Reagan. permanent, Republic of California or something. Sounds good to me. Yeah. And I did. It really is too bad that such a nice place is populated by the worst people on the planet. What's the great weather? It's very, I don't want to say completely mild, but it's more mild in most places. Is more concerned off as farmers and gold diggers. That's what California is for.

One literal one's looking for gold, not the gold. Because throughout California.

Virtual Spaceships and Expensive Hobbies

But yeah, they're a little bit different all through Bel Air and, Malibu. The women, when they find out Gene has millions and spaceships, they all want in on. That's right. They they're like, ooh, spaceships. Tell me more. It's not, nobody ever says, tell me more about that, do they? They're like, thanks. No one ever says when you mentioned spaceships, which is why there's only one female with a speech impediment in the discord server. Pretty much. And everybody else.

Now, is this where people have a, a good vibe? Are they happy they've spent the money, or is this a commiserating group like, oh my God, I can't believe, there's a bit of both. I mean, people are realistic because this video game is, you know, it's 12 years old and it hasn't been released yet, which is there's an eternity. Well, yes and no. The problem is that it's still for saints, so I'll give him. Well, it does exist.

But for the entirety of those 12 years, they're they've been talking about how they're on the verge of releasing it. Now, that would be what would piss me off if, like ten years ago, they're like, hey, yeah. We're like, we're like, we're like six months away from. It was supposed to be they're they're they're they've been perpetually two years away for over a decade. Wait, this is what you do, what your fiancee to. If you're perpetually two years away, you are in good shape.

Yeah. Just keep that going. that is that. That's the way to do it. So, as we create the virtual fiance game, that would part of the game be actually getting somebody to become your fiance? I think you would have to. You would have to be like it would start as a dating game growth, but then you'd have to convince her to be your fiancee. Now that's too much work. And then if she said no, well then you'd have to lose a lot of points. But, you know, you think about this, the in-game purchases.

Well, do you really want to impress her by her? That virtual spaceship, or in this case, virtual diamonds? Yeah. You buyers buyer, this diamond, these diamond earrings for, $5,000. And I bet you. That's right. For for real, $5,000. The fake $5,000 diamond ring. The rings in the game. Yeah, you're. I think a lot of that stuff is sort of, It's almost here. If it's not here, it'll be here before too long.

The idea, like, there's tons of stories of of people now that have met online and gotten married for real. Oh yeah. And it's very lots of those. It is still very strange to me, but I know we're in a different well, it makes sense because there's always been a small percentage of nerdy chicks out there, and it used to be very uncool, just like the male nerds were uncool. But over the last 20 years, that has greatly changed because the like nerdiness has become a lot more cool.

Not as cool as some other things, but a lot more cool than it used to be. Because I think the the women, the realize that the nerdy men that are making 300 grand a year and, the nerdy girls are still so few and far between that there's like 100 guys, wanting to make them their fiance no matter what they look like. If it's a chick who's into nerdy things, she is pretty much guaranteed she has a bigger picture of the of the, you know, whatever.

But they had she has a bigger selection of men than a chick who's not nerdy. So you're saying is a fact right now. My wife buying a Harley Quinn comic books and playing with Lego is somehow a plus for, whole. I'm just saying that, probably a week after you're dead, your wife's going to get multiple engagements. offered up to her. That's all I'm saying. Like, that's it. Like. Oh, perfect. Great. Thanks. Something else to put on the oven simulator. Don't die.

Yeah. I'm saying your wife will be taken care of after you passed. Don't worry about that. Yeah, thanks. At the go is a good way to go about it. Well, I figured that was your biggest worry. Oh, yeah. Of course. Yeah. If not killing her first, then that, more like a, a murder mystery or something like that or something. Yeah, well, if she hadn't killed you yet, I think you're safe. Well, this is why I don't let her cook. I don't, so you have been playing it smart, right?

Can't be poisoned if you don't, then the wife got to my. My solution was always going the other direction, which is, just slowly adjusting to all the poisons so that when someone tries to use it, I, So, yeah, I got to work. She's got the new girlfriend, and she's cooking every night, and after about 3 or 4 weeks, she seems a little off and you're like, you know, rat poison doesn't do anything to me, right? And built up a tolerance. I've been like, fog, and she leaves, and that's the end.

Exactly. I've been taking cyanide for 30 years. Man, that that's doesn't affect me. Research on me. Doesn't affect me. I've got a multiple, bacteria that don't affect me because I've got all the antibodies for him. So, yeah, you know, there is a benefit suggesting the offshoot, which would be funerals, not medical advice. That's dope consuming poisons in order to get immunity. People. The guy on the podcast said it would help me live longer.

Yes. And while you're at it, don't crank up your house to, 2000 parts per million, CO2. Everybody that listened to no agenda yesterday, all million or so heard about how your CO2 levels are really high in your house, and how your snakes love it, and how you think it's healthier and, ditalia. When CO2 is, it's a very valuable, positive thing. And it goes right. Funny, I did not hear that episode. I need to yeah. You were you were spoken about.

That Omega project was a funeral simulator as the extension of the, these other. See that one? This I mean, this is this is such an interactive episode. I get to type things in it is. And, what's my wife's number? Just in case. So it's like that simulator. There's no funeral simulator. There is a funeral home simulator, but. So. Yeah. Wait. You right? Because you want to be the guy constantly dealing with making money, right? Making my own.

There's also a game called funeral, which is a first person horror game. Is that a B-52 flying over your house? And it might not even show up in the final episode, but if you were listening live, you heard the B-52. Yeah. Have you seen the stories lately about a black B-52 circling my house? What's that all about? It's not good if they start, bombing or if you have helicopters filled with, guys in mercenary gear.

There been a couple of stories lately about southwest planes which plunge two, 400ft above the ground. Yeah, but that's kind of what that sounded like. Like do not. Yeah. dude. So I flew out to, Seattle, about a week ago, and, I have to say, more so than in decades, the thought of the plane falling apart at 35,000ft was in my mind, because the planes didn't used to do that. But these days, it seems like it's more likely.

It does seem like we are regressing as a society with the inclusion now of all of the woke stuff, it seems that people are getting worse at doing their jobs. And it's not just the burger flippers, it's everybody. Idiocracy predicted this 20 years ago. Well, the concept that you would let the idiots be in charge of the most important things.

That's where we were hoping that would stay comedy and not be like, well, you know, Gene, we looked at the number of brain surgeons here in Illinois in the not not enough, black or not women or whatever. So we have to add, there's just not enough retarded brain surgeons. We need to fix that. The retarded need to be represented more. Yeah, you really shouldn't be cruel about not letting them do those jobs. I mean, yeah, I mean, that's that's very, retarded this of you.

And I really mean somebody with bad vision. Like. What do you mean? I can't be a race car driver? No, I think it's important to have a representation of blind people who overall represent about 16% of the population. See, to have them be represented in every NASCAR race by about 16%. For a more interesting series, let me tell you, if it would be a man, I would pay for that. What if there was one person that had to go in the opposite direction on the oval as everybody else?

I think that would very quickly turn into a lot of people going, that's the direction. Yes. It would not be good, it would not be good. But but no, just putting like one blind or retarded person in NASCAR would

High-End Simulators and Realism

have a interesting effect. Yeah, yeah. Incidentally, retarded is not an insult. That is a medical condition. I know, but people, it's another one of those words we had hijacked and converted into something that was, oh no, that's mean or that is derogatory. Well no no no no. Again, I get it. If you're calling somebody that is completely not retarded retarded. But that's what kids did man. That was that was like the big one. Nobody ever called anybody retarded. You called them a retard.

That's that's an insult. I think I've heard retard is an insult. Retarded is a medical description. I think I've heard both quite equally at the, well, or literally the person saying that was themselves a retard. Did you? Guru says someday you will thank me for recommending Idiocracy to you. I don't know about that, dude. You're like the only one who doesn't like that movie. I don't I don't understand why I do high brow.

I suppose I don't understand why I would just much rather be watching Downton Abbey. No, you wouldn't love Downton Abbey was great. Mr.. Okay, how about Mr. Selfridge with my buddy Jeremy Piven in it, which was kind of like Downton Abbey, but slightly different. That was a good series as well. You're a chick, aren't you? I don't know, man. I love watching them hallmark movies. They're great. Oh my God. Yeah. Okay, well, this explains a few things. Like why you still have a wife, for one.

Let's see. I finally learned the secret. yeah. Act like a chick, right? Yeah. Yeah. She's like mean. She doesn't like hallmark movie. Exactly. But I have as far as the a blind thing to that. I did see the retina guy. Everything is a stable. See the oil still in the eye. That was bad since they did that surgery now. Yeah. Well that was before Trump. So I mean we're going back 7 or 8 years. Mean like, well there's a little bit of oil coming forward. There's a little bit of scarring on the top

or the bottom of the cornea whichever. Yeah. And he's like, this only really matters. And he's like, I really still wouldn't suggest you do anything because, you know, getting the oil out shouldn't be a big deal. The retina should stay where it is. But you never know. Yeah. He's like, we are now 3 to 5 years away from the stem cell treatment that may be able to regrow the retinal. Oh yeah. Well that may be okay.

So if he, if the actual American real, optometry or what if he is ophthalmologist, optometrist, whatever he is, you have to just. Yeah. If he's telling you you're three, five years, that means they're currently doing that in other countries. Yes. Oh, yeah. You talked about we're always the last to get shit. So if you really want to do this, you just find out like it's Mexico's doing it. Like, can you recommend something?

I don't know if I do it in Mexico, but if he could send me to, you know, dude, there's no difference. If you go for a high end medical procedure, there's zero difference where you do it because they're the average Mexican can't afford it. So basically so the best doctor not going to be like, where are they? Enough. The best doctors in, you know like Germany. No, no. Anywhere. Because you get really expensive. Where can I go take a vacation to procedures like that?

they're they're servicing like 95% non Mexican patients. So these are not like, oh my God, you went to a Mexican hospital to get some work done. It's like no. Same thing with high end. Like if Adam wanted to redo his teeth the way that he did them here, which I think cost him about $80,000 if you wanted to get them done in Mexico, it would have cost them like 15,000. Well, it wasn't the same level for them. I mean, that was a friend thing to do. I definitely did not pick up the bill for it.

But but it's something I'm going to probably have to do at some point because, I've got a few teeth that need some work, so I'm not looking forward to those costs. No. You be and it's not fun. I mean, that's the other thing. It's not like it's definitely not fun. It's way too close to your head. To your face? Yeah. You know, in your face there is pain and discomfort involved. It's not. Yeah. like an easy operation to, to go through and then be like, oh, I wake up, I'm fine.

Like the gallbladder thing. Yeah. Okay. That was gone two days later. Pretty much fine. That's not the case with the oral surgeries. Yeah. I mean, they just like, took and put, a hole in you and then suck your gallbladder out through that hole, right? Yeah. The DaVinci machine, which is only malfunctioning a few times. I've read, but, and one of them was, like, exposed wiring or something, which then electrocuted somebody or zapped something inside of them and killed them.

Yeah. That happens. That would not be good. my megaprojects in South America would be the place to look for stem cell clinics. I wouldn't doubt that. Yeah, yeah, it's like I'm not in a in a. So the Nazis have done a lot of research on this, in, one of those areas. So you might want to check there. Oh, sure. And he mentioned which I had read about these like it was not a functioning AI. He's like, but they have now done the first full AI transplant. Yeah. Yeah, I've heard of that.

Yeah. He's like it. Didn't you know they couldn't see out of the AI. So there's a big way to go still. But the fact that you could transplant the AI is still a pretty impressive thing. is it though? I think so. you know, the technology has to be there. They're doing head transplants right now. Well, you could try that. I mean, somebody would be like, I'll pay big for that beard, man. They do beard transplants. That'd be good. It translates. Yeah. Yeah. There's that yeah.

What do you think some Trump said though. Well there you go. Jet was Gene's beard from 1976. it's not my mind's not blond, but, you could diet. Probably could. I think you should. I think that'd be a good look to you. Why don't you dye the hair of your beard really red? And you could be. You could look like a gnome beard. Red beard? Yeah. Be red. Red, I tell you, you being red. Red. The pilot of my own spaceship army with a Polish accent. Yes. That makes perfect.

Gene, getting ready for a play video game with me. I love you. I thought the sky. It's the way it was. it was doing that project with CSB and, I know now he's kind of, bailed out because this was going to help him with something. and then Membros never helped him with something, so I don't know. Well, that's to be expected. So I don't know where that is at this point. it's like, who knows? I'm sure that you can't. Yeah. He csb you can't trust podcasters now. Well, not that membros.

I mean, that guy who. You can trust me. I'm always honest with him. He just doesn't always like what he hears. Oh, but I'm like, hey, we're okay. You're not bad. I see how that works, right? It's like you're just not buying an ad read. But, well, we read it the way you want us to 99% of the time. Yeah, probably. if we ever get to the point that, you know, the donations are so thick that we can't read something at five bucks. Well, that could happen more if you just said fuck with them.

True. This is also just. I mean, the way I look at it is any donation with a message or note is there to be content and including, I shall say, the one we got, this morning from our buddy Dale from Down Under. Who? Oh, yes. What's they'll say he comes from a land down under. He came in with one 2305 again, which I think is something after the, the penalties. So that's probably like $200 Australian. Well could be.

Well that's I was the other day I was looking at something online for there's one of these AI novel writing software. And it's not the only part of it's I, it's a very interesting bit of software that is, you know, it incorporates AI, but it is also very interesting where you've got the rather than just opening up something in word and typing. This has areas for you to, you know, kind of have a database of characters and put in a description and places and put in a description.

Then you could be like, what? Where, where is this character mentioned? If you have something with a bunch of characters you're trying to keep up a pace on, like, my writing too much for this one, not enough for that one. You can just go in and see every time a character is mentioned where they appear, do all sorts of weird stuff. But I went to look at what it cost and forgot for a minute that I was on a Canadian VPN and point oh yeah, I was like, Holy shit, that's a lot.

And then I like converted it back to us and I'm like, oh wait, that's not bad. How much was it? The, it was for U.S if you wanted it to include the I 14 bucks a month and it is you get two months free. Of course, if you do the yearly thing, this does not include. To be fair, this does not include your AI access. You still have to go through another service like open router, to get the access.

But the amount of AI that it uses, I mean, I put ten bucks in crypto in the open router like a month ago, and it's down to $5. So it's not like it drains that. So all that quickly, did they have a George R.R. Martin addition. They should that there's unlimited memory. They should because you well this is what you need because there's so many characters. The chat GPT four is in you know ingrained with this. So yeah, it was quite interesting. I took some tests T4 sucks.

I can't wait for five to come out. Well, this next one's always better, but I will say that it had the ability for it to be said because they warn you then because you can go into. One of the most interesting things to me was being able to chat with the system about the story. So. And it warns you, it's like if you're putting like your whole transcript, I mean, if you've got, you know, a hundred thousand word book. It'll be able to do it, but it's going to cost some money, which I try to do.

Here's the other problem. When you put that transcript in everything you do with the AI, the AI use it itself. So any image you put in it, it will steal any text you put in there. It'll take bits out of right to other people as suggestions, right? Oh yeah. It uses that to learn. And yeah. So keep this in mind. I think a lot of people think they're just using a tool. The tool is using you just as much. Oh yeah. And so if I was a professional writer making money I might look at it differently.

Yeah, exactly. And this is what Elon Musk, I don't know if you've been following, said that with Apple phones, new inclusion of open AI to process information that he's saying they're basically stealing from you says that any Apple device of any employee that works for him has to be put in a Faraday cage at the start of the day, and you can't touch it until then. The day we have Rob Brackman, the privacy guy, and, yeah, YouTube.

He had a whole thing about the one of the chips that is in every new iPhone. that is basically the AI chip, which is very concerning, because he said, again, maybe they're not using this for this. They're this is what they were using to check the images for, you know, the child porn and the bad stuff. Yeah. He's like, but it doesn't have to be an exact image, which is where this started.

These like, if a three letter agency had a picture of, you know, that Ned's face and they're looking for that, they could upload that to everybody's phone and that phone any time the camera catches an image of somebody. Yep. Checks it against that and it only phones home if it finds them. Yeah. So and that's technically not considered an activity that requires a warrant either. Which is crazy. That's technically you're allowed to do that any time you want to.

If you think anybody is able to be anonymous anymore, anywhere that you can't be cell phones and ring doorbells exist. It is very. You want to be anonymous. You have to go old school, use a GPS, or you can use a satellite phone. Well, and you have to wear a mask, which some places now are like, you know, you can't legally wear it because it used to be illegal before you have to wear a mask, you're not allowed to not wear a mask in the bank. I don't know if a lot of pride.

I don't know if a lot of people know this, but in a lot of places, wearing a mask in public was illegal before Covid because totally, it was illegal during Covid.

Helicopter Safety and Emergencies

You out? Yes. They just made the that only was an exception. That was then the rule of like it was never an exception. Like no one changed laws. They just ignored them. Right? Right. It's like walking into a bank with the mask on, like, will you please give me all of your money? Dude, I did that during Covid. I remember I went to the bank to get some signed. I needed to get something signed or do something at the bank, and I show up without a mask.

They're like, you can't come in here without a mask. I'm like, I can't come into a bank without a mask. Says, nope, this isn't well, do you have my money? Do you want to just cash me out then? And, I think they went in and checked my account and that said, here's what we can do. We'll have a banker come out here to the lobby and talk to you. Wow. You got your own banking guy now, I always had my own banking guy, but I had a guy that actually came out.

I mean, I I'm not trying to sound like crazy toity. It's just that at my local bank, there was a guy that, had was assigned to my account. So I did have my. Okay, well, let me talk with Eugene about sponsoring the random thoughts podcast with an exclusive. tell me about the sponsorship opportunities that. Yeah, he got some for $5,000 a month. I will talk about all of your podcast and, virtual space ships. That is a bargain. Wow. That sounds like a great deal. The paying, like, double that.

Right now I am giving you a bargain. It's the friends and family and co-host bargain of the Friends and Family. And so I like how I'm excluded from the friends and family there. I mean, it's no, it's because you hit every one of those categories. That's why I such a good deal. It's like you, you're. We are stacking the discounts for you. Yeah. Stack discounts. Only $5,000. You gotta stack those things. Well, I mean, it's because the audience is so large, it's under a thousand people a week.

So you are getting a wow. So it's super, super direct to Denver ties. Yeah. See though people don't understand you don't want this to go to more people. No. You're not doing mass market every day. You're doing super fine tune directed advertising just to the hardest hardcore listeners directed towards an audience that will be the most susceptible to whatever it is you're selling, whatever it is. Relationships, right?

These virtual spaceships that, I do need to bump up my rate of sales of those things. But I was intrigued, going back to this book, software throwing in a manuscript, you know, 100,000 words or so, and being able to ask it questions about the character, be like, well, give me three more arcs where it can go from here. And the results, while not the all the most creative thing, were workable, definitely. So it's free go.

If you're a writer and you're stuck, a lot of people like, well, no, this thing's just writing for you. It's like it goes beyond that now where the thing can give you ideas, it can give you a few points that are like, well, here, have this, this and this or this could happen. And then you have to go write it. I mean, I'm sure the thing could write it for you, but that's also that I don't know what the fun in writing is if you're just hitting buttons. That is the fun.

It's just to have it magically appear. Now, if you can sell that, I guess that's a, that's a different concept. But I thought overall was very interesting as far as being a like, what were you saying? What's the fun in writing? That's literally the exact same fun that people that have ghost writers have. Oh of course. Right. Hey, I wrote a book. Look at that. It's your virtual ghost writer. And actually, you're probably doing more work because these things you can that when you break it down.

Let me ask you this. Yeah. Do you think actual ghost writers right now are not using ChatGPT? I think they have to be using ChatGPT. The only question would be how that is being edited because, yeah, you put these. Oh yeah, you clearly you have an editing GPT well, this is it. This is the most intriguing thing. Okay.

So you have ChatGPT because I played around with that a little bit, which also leads to another funny story with another company that was we talked about it on the last show, the one that claimed that they could d ChatGPT they could write out your text. Yeah, yeah. And I looked at I'm like, okay there. You know, their site had things like oh USA today story, this story, this story. And I'm like, oh. And they say they'll give you, you know, it's money back if you know your thing, blah, blah blah.

So yeah, I'm like, okay, of course, you know, one month was like 20 bucks and a year is like, you know, 100 bucks. So you're like, well, of course I'll just I'll just take the year. And I put in like 2500 words. And it was shit. Was that I mean, okay, maybe it wouldn't set off the AI things, but it started losing the meaning and some of the things that were put into it. So it's like, well, this it just means just a human's going to have to edit it anyway.

So I went and I'm like, you know, I only tried this once. Literally within minutes of signing up, I was like, just, I just want a refund because it's, you know, it doesn't really work for me. It's not the quality sucks. And they go, well, no, we we added fields notice. Are we only nothing? No, we don't give refunds, you know. Then I'll wake you. Well I can give you a refund. You know, just accept for like one month at full price again, which was like 20 bucks.

and I went back and forth with, five, six, seven times. Oh my gosh. And they're just arguing like, well, can you tell us what was it? And I'm like, it was just it wasn't good. You know, like, can you tell they were asking like, shit. And I'm like, no, just just give me a refund. And they're like, no. And then I'm like, I'm a podcaster. And I gave links to every one of my shows. I'm like, I talk about AI and pretty much every one of these shows. Do you really want to make it this hard for me?

You played the, I'm Famous card. No, I played the I will I have a small platform that I will make sure to tell everybody, and then all of a sudden I was getting the refund and it was processed. So I'll give that amazing. I will give them that much for like, no, no. Yeah, dude. Come on, come on. You totally played the influencer card. That's literally what you did. I played the do you want me to be a Karen card?

You know, it's like, no, no, it's a lot more than that because you showed I'm a I'm a podcaster. I have these are all my podcasts that I control. And if you look, you know this, every one of them talks about AI in some way, shape or form because. Yeah, why wouldn't you just I was everywhere. Yeah. And I then I went look and I which I should have done in the first place. This was a lesson to myself.

I took the quotes from the USA today and whoever else and put them in the Google no match, no match. So it's like they just made all that shit up nice and it's like, come on. And it's like, this is the interesting part because the AI could write some very interesting stuff, but obviously it's still hard to rewrite it in a way and have it under.

So that's interesting because I actually watch somebody doing that with ChatGPT for where they said, rewrite this in a in a style that doesn't sound like it's been written by I. I did that as well, and it worked. And it worked exactly relatively well. Yeah, yeah. So there's no reason to go elsewhere except ChatGPT for if you have anything it doesn't like in there that it will. No, I cannot do that. If you, if you objective. Yeah. You got to have a book.

You couldn't just if you want to use GPT four without the restrictions. There's a couple of ways to do it. or a couple of companies, I should say. I think one is something like, I'm not looking at the site. I'm going off memory. So it may be wrong, but I, I believe it's like, what's it called on something AI unrestricted AI or, which would make sense. Uncensored. Uncensored, I think, as a company.

So they have access to the model, but they are not, which I've noticed with the, when and then the other one is gab. Gab is running their own in AI and you could do anything on gab. You can have, you know, the I crank out articles about how great Hitler was on there. Nice. Well, I didn't notice that using the chat GPT four through the novel writing software, which was using open router, it did not bark at anything.

So that also may allow for, I mean, that may be a loophole at this point where there, you know, ChatGPT for is not realizing that the, the API or whatever these other companies are using are bypassing their. Their moral filters. but, I still thought the software beyond the AI was quite interesting though.

They knew what people want the software for because it was the $80 a year had everything meaning you could do all of the regular stuff that the program does, and it would do the AI as far as you could give it story beats and it would write prose for you.

But the thing that jacked you up from 80 bucks a year to the 140 was being able to chat about the work, which again, I get it, because all what you're paying them for and it may be worth it, because what you're paying them for is to take your data and create the most efficient prompts for you to get what you want. That's the tough thing because even with ChatGPT for it,

Blind Race Car Drivers and Inclusivity

if you noticed, our last episode, how you doing ChatGPT for we have chapters and they were pretty good chapters. And again, this was all just putting the transcript into ChatGPT for. But you every time you have to do something because by default it's going to do the Json where the chapter start time is two words start time. Where did work with all the podcasting 2.0 stuff they want start lowercase capital t than lowercase. I mean all one word. So you just have to do a global search and replace.

You could do that. Or you could just tell ChatGPT, you know, write start time as this and show me the time in seconds. But you have to do this prompt every time, because by default it's going to do what the Json standard is not. And what who uses the Json is that like everybody else other than podcasting? Well, I don't even know what the Json has been around, but that's the way these chapters files are. But the Json, the format. But I'm saying. So who uses Json for chapters like Adobe software?

Everybody. I mean, that's the whole podcast. The 2.0 is Json, the Pembro is the GitHub and do the Membros. That's all it creates. The Json file. What's what's the bumrah's? He has, the software, it's very it's called memories. It's very simplistic, but he's got a podcasting 2.0 chapters. So you can download run the XY and it just opens up a very simplistic interface where you put in the time and it will convert it into seconds, which is good.

So you don't have to have the seconds you can put in, you know, 13 minutes and 13 seconds, and I'll convert that all into seconds. And then just put whatever you want for a title. You can put in an image if you want to, and you can put in a URL if you want to. And it's very simplistic but it does the job. But the reality is JTP still do all that for you and it'll listen to your podcast and it'll do the times that you don't have to do actually.

Dude. Yeah. record a screencast video of a how to to do this because I guarantee you if you do that, Adam will frickin talk about it. And because a lot of podcasters, you know, either don't know they can do this or they may have heard about it but don't know what's all involved. So now that you've gone through that process multiple times, you should really do a video on it. You'll be like it. I don't like this. I stuff it bad. But if you look at our channel, no it's not.

No no no no no no no. If it helps podcasting 2.0. He's not going to say it's bad. For the last episode, ChatGPT made 32 chapters for unrelenting. Let's get a few intro and medicine musings then. Welcome back, sir Gene. That's right. You were away, I was away. Musical memories and John Williams is the next chapter. Remember that? Yeah, yeah. Chicago fireworks fiasco like that. economic musings and war predictions. The economy and daily struggles. Global warming and CO2 debate.

Yes, we are talking about CO2. We always talk about CO2, the science of oxygen, health benefits of CO2. That was at 19 minutes into the last show. Yeah. Gun talk and bump stock reverse soul aliens and atmospheric toxicity. That's right. We're talking. No I mean this is just fantastic. Cicada season. Hey I and music recognition I enhancing productivity I mean, this is, really for this one. One of the chapters is going to be AI creating chapters.

Yes. Creating chapters for AI, creating be meta AI creating chapters for AI. For AI. Yeah. For podcasts. Yeah. If you do a show like ours, there are a lot of them out there which are very conversational, which jump back and forth. Doing the chapters by hand can be a complete pain in the ass. I've stopped. I mean, I'll tell you, I used to do them manually for, just to get old boys.

I stopped doing chapters for that reason because, doing chapters was taking me like 15 minutes every episode at least, because minimum, doing it with the transcript. And then, you know, you're missing something. Yeah. And I would just be like, okay, I just need to get like ten things out of there. I'll just make ten chapters. That'll be good enough, right? Because when I first started, I, I started well for Gene, like, what, 3 or 4 years ago, whatever it was, I did chapters for it.

So what I would do is I would relisten to the episode and I would stop every time I think, oh, this should be a new chapter, right? Then I would find an image to put in there, for that chapter. So every chapter had its own image, and then if it referenced something, I would find the link to that thing and put that in there. So it was literally taking me like an hour per hour to create chapters. Who I two hour show would take two hours.

I bet you I could have ChatGPT add an image to each one that I could that probably do. It's pretty quick. yeah, I'm telling you, dude, this is something that a lot more people that make podcasts would love to see an example of. You should just do a screen record, like you don't need to be on camera, you just need to be doing the voiceover. You know, really what we should have this is very much and the the writing software is called Novel Crafter, which is it's relatively new.

But as I said, the main thing it's doing in the background would be organizing your things and helping to write the prompts. The reality is, we should just create the software to create the prompts so somebody could I agree, I totally agree. You know, upload the you know it really you can do the I believe the transcripts I've never tried with ChatGPT to see how much different I think it can do transcripts.

If you give that the MP3 of this episode, I'd be curious how different the transcript would be from what Adobe's pulling, but I believe it could do the recognition and then give you the transcript. So maybe that's another thing I shouldn't even be worrying about. Adobe to do the transcription of ChatGPT could do it. Yeah, exactly.

And then just have the thing the sophomore set up to be well give me chapters and you know, do the formatting and just have a couple chat buttons like do you want chapters to be, you know humorous or dry. Do you want it to be, you know, a couple different things. Boom, a few different choices. And all of a sudden they've got the transcript, they've got the chapters, they've got the files.

All they need to do is upload the three files, your MP3, your chapters, your transcript, and boom, Bob's your uncle. why would people buy into that? Because that might be a, check. Your, signal might be a good business, especially with the open router thing. Like, just get your, yearly, yeah, from the generator. That's what we need, man. We need the prompt generate and do exactly what we want, exactly what we need. And I found it to be quite useful.

I have had to you know here's the thing that be that be kind of neat is do you have, GPT three listening continuously during the recording of a podcast to come up with things that are relevant to use as, links or potential bits to add in later? Real. Well, the fact that it can talk also means that you could just be a part. Yeah, look at this place. You running me, right?

Idiocracy and Societal Regression

you go into 11 labs, you take genes. Voice. Yeah. you don't even know my voice. It does not do a good job on my voice. I did my voice in live labs. I've never tried it, but I bet you mine is yours. I've got yours on 11 labs. I already did that a long time ago. Right. But I knew it wasn't me. It didn't even sound like me to me. Maybe it was people literally just like you. I bet you thought it was, you know. But he did think it sounded very weird. very weird. Literally sounded just like you.

But is something I may try as well to see how that works. I'm curious on that. With the podcast, it would be nice to be able to do short form content and just have that throw the, throw the audio out there. Well, and I think you're, you're right.

And this is something I haven't spent any time playing with, but I probably should and say that I probably could come up with, like a short list of things and then have it using my voice, put out an episode of Surgeon Speaks once a week without me even having to talk right. And just purely based on. Here's the five bullet points that I want to have a talk on this topics. And then we have a just spit stuff out, spit it out, do the transcripts, do the chapters, do the marketing blurbs.

That's what I do as well. For these shows, the marketing blurbs. Yeah. nice and easy. And again, it's something that you really then somebody else will use ChatGPT to give me a summary of this. Right.

Well, that's what the kind of exactly the same thing for the last one, GPT, I said, give me your best pitch for the last episode of unrelenting, and it gave me dive into the latest episode of unrelenting, where host sir Gene and Darren O'Neill take you on a roller coaster of engaging topics and spirited debate from the quirky yeah, which literally means nothing I know, from the quirky tales of cicada season to the critical discussion on firearm safety and the surprising benefits of CO2,

this episode is packed with insights you won't want to miss. Explore the future of AI and writing. Uncover the secrets of grading trading cards with a high precision, and enjoy a nostalgic trip down memory lane with John Williams iconic music scores, with subtopics ranging from swimming pool memories to the economic impacts of daily struggles, this episode promises a blend of humor, thought provoking content, and the unique chemistry of your favorite podcast duo.

Tune in now for a dynamic and unforgettable listening experience. I don't think a person could do better. I mean, it's total bullshit, but I don't think better, right? I mean, it's just it's all the marketing speak. Yeah, because really, you you don't. Yeah. You can't get into any really details on a two hour show that crisscrosses so many topics. Yeah. But yeah, it's it's what that is, is exactly the kind of promo that a radio station would run for. Talk show. Yes, exactly. It does it well.

And I think a lot of people are going to be losing their jobs pretty quickly with that. Yeah. So Billy Bowen says that's a long elevator pitch. Well, I said give me a paragraph. I didn't say, yeah, yeah. You know, give me two sentences. But back to Dale. We we can't forget Dale with his, you know, 12305 he says, hope all is good with you, comrades. If one tweeted on Twitter, does one now excrete on X? I think maybe it's a lot.

This is a problem with using X as a name, because I think there is an official like recommended name for ex post, but it's not as natural as, you know, tweeting on Twitter, right? As the word Twitter is the the person or entity that tweets. So naturally you would be tweeting if you're on Twitter. Yeah. But if you're on X you're axing I don't know. I mean it's a you definitely not excluding although you could argue that most content on X is excrement. Yes. But yeah, I don't know.

I still say you tweet an X, which is funny. I mean, because really the alternative would just be post it. Yeah, I'm saying post doesn't release the well, what do you do on Instagram? A post you do post on Instagram. That's always a people views because there was no cute little thing like I Graham or I instead. Right? not so much. It's just. Yeah, you post there, you post on Facebook everywhere else you post,

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which is what made Twitter different because you tweeted were you right you I think even on TikTok, you know, people would say, I posted to TikTok, yeah, you don't like talk on TikTok or something. You don't, you don't tube on YouTube. No. You post a video or you post a video. Yeah. So tweeter to a tweeter, Twitter. Twitter is the only thing that really had its own distinct name for posting.

And Elon ruined it by going to X. He kind of did, but I think that was just a like he wanted to bury the name Twitter because he really dislike that. Yeah, it was a fuck you to Yeah, I see you. Yeah, exactly. It's like I bought your company and I changed the name, that people would never remember. You knew you're dead. you said Dorsey totally let that thing get fucked up.

You know, when Twitter first came out, I was at the launch of that thing, and I got my old account that that was banned long time ago. like on the day of of their initial release. Mr. love it free release or whatever it was at South Bay. It was at South Bay. And, you know, the only stuff you had on there is people posting. They went to lunch and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. There were no pictures. You only had 140 characters. Yeah. It was very innocuous.

It was like just people posting about what they're doing and like, and occasionally you'd have, hey, I'm at this exhibit at South By. Come and meet me at 1 p.m., stuff like that on there. There was no way to tag or message anybody else. There was nothing. And it was the best Twitter ever was because of that. Well, and and you know, I made a website that had a feature like that back in the 90s. Oh, you could have been Jack Dorsey, man. Could have been if it was more popular.

I and I had actually had websites one for Chicago and then another one for Minneapolis, another one for Kansas City. And they had a live chat component in there where people, as long as you were logged into the site, you could, you know, type something that was limited to one line and that would be displayed, like the last five of these posts would be displayed on the scrolling thing on the website.

And, you know, it was like, you can make a comment or just chat or do whatever it was like, old school interactive chat for website users. that was which was the greatest thing when the bulletin board systems, became multi-user simultaneous. Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah. And added the chat room I remember that, I remember doing that. I'm like, yeah a color computer. Way back in the good old days. That's really old days. Yeah. Yeah. The first girl I ever went out with I think on a board. You believe it.

Oh my God you're such a nerd I know right. That was like 86. Time flies were the ones having fun. Now that's true, that's true. Those local bulletin boards, man, they was hot. Yeah, I ran a bulletin board back in the day. You you just imagine all the stuff you are reading that people didn't know you could read. Oh, well, yeah. Yeah. And I was very exclusive, believe it or not. No. No braces. Gene almost made AOL. I mean, very close. He was. Yeah. Pretty close. Disney the walled garden.

Yeah AOL well remember AOL didn't have internet until after the fact. Oh yeah. They added internet. They blocked you from the internet because the internet was dangerous. They couldn't control it. I mean we should get back to that for kids and idiot. Well it wasn't just that. It was that in the early days of AOL, the internet was not for business.

Like, I remember distinctly having these arguments with people that the that you will violate internet law if you start selling products on there commercially. Right. They did not like that. It was all supposed to be a. Yeah it was it was for research. Yes. Education and non-profits. That's what the internet was for. And the military. But that's literally that was the argument. It's like you can't just go out and start advertising shit on the internet.

You can get kicked off. That's not what's for it. Yeah, think of OnlyFans. It took about a year to change and all of a sudden there was like, everybody's building your website even even Playboy by these have websites now what the hell I know. And again I've told those stories multiple times how yeah, much Playboy went after them was fantastic. Really. When you look back at it to see another company really trying to grappling with the fact that they knew losing control there, right.

Like we don't want influencers, we want to control these models. Right? Because if the girls can do this on their own, then what do they need us for? Oh yeah. Exactly. Now and then the OnlyFans came out about right. Which is like exactly that concept. Like, well, no, you want to do your pictures and videos come over here. Well, and to be fair, way before OnlyFans there was what was the other site?

It was there was a kind of a porno ish site where basically it was anybody could upload their own point videos and then they were sold. I can't remember the name of it, though. good times. can't remember it, but it was it was like something content or something. Click clips for sale. It was the stupidest name. That's what it was. It was like clips for sale, I believe, I think was the website way better than spaceships for sale? I mean, it's such a stupid name.

Clips for sale only fans is much better if I did like that. Billy Bones mentioning CNN was talking about most likely the story he's referring to here is that, like the surgeon general that wants to have warning labels on social media like him? Well, yeah. And again, I covered this on the random thoughts this week. The internet is global. People. You know this concept two Ted fucking Cruz, your guy down there in Texas. Yeah I'm like, oh, we need to pass laws for for deepfake porn.

And and it's like, how are you going to fucking do I mean, the porn has to be deepfake only, so that's where they want to, you know, they don't want people to have their face used to them, like, well, 100, you know. Right. Well, well, how are you going to do this? I'm like, if the porn then created in, you know, Estonia, what are you going to fucking do Ted. Nothing. You can do. And I mean that's not true.

We have a law here in Texas that said you can't look at porn without providing, your driver's license. I know you gotta love that Texas. You gotta love more porn. No more porn for Texas. And I will make the case that maybe we've made this before here, that anybody that has an Instagram, TikTok, whatever account you have now put yourself in the realm as a public figure who have way less actionable things to go after people

AI and Ghostwriters in Creative Writing

when things like fake porn and all that are created. I think once, you know, because again, you want to know how to not have fake porn made with your face. Girls don't know for sure, right? It's very simple. But the minute you want to be an influencer, it's all ridiculous anyway, because at the generation that's currently in college and younger, they've all sent nudes to their boyfriends girlfriends in high school, all of them 100%. So everybody's nudes are out there already. Anyway.

Now the intriguing thing becomes, if you're saying they're doing this in high school, then there's a lot of people who should be going to jail for child porn. Yeah. Like Apple. Yeah. Well does that because they're want to turn you in, man. Well they will, but they're what are they going to turn themselves in? Because, you know, these kids took photos of themselves to send to other kids, right? So you can't be, you know, it's that I don't know.

Yeah, it's it's a catch 22 because technically, they're allowed to have sex with each other and just not with somebody older. But in video it, you can't photograph it. But if you photograph yourself, they can't prevent you from photographing yourself. Now, if you distribute that. I was fully behind. I covered this when it happened a couple of years ago, I think in Pennsylvania or something. The girl, and that was being charged and people like, well, this law was never meant to.

I'm like, yeah, but otherwise you're turning the girl into Heisenberg. She can create all the child porn she wants and sell it, but oh no, you can't prosecute her because she's a child. It's like it doesn't make sense, right? But you got a real. I mean, this is. I think that's because this is the the uncomfortable truth that you get to with child pornography is it's not the pornography portion that is evil here. It's the child portion. Right.

And and so what what people rightly don't want is child pornography, not because it's child pornography, but because they want to protect the children from being in something unwittingly right now, when they make it that. What about the child who willingly is okay with doing their full? Well, you could say, well, they're not. Their brain has matured. They can't make the decision. I would tend to say that that's yes, that would be the argument I would make.

But technically speaking, you know what? If you have full consent from the child, like how do we allow children to decide what gender they are, right, and get mutilation surgery at 12? And that's okay. And we don't let them simply turn an iPhone on themselves having sex with somebody right? What? How how do those two things balance then? There's really not a whole lot of information besides just the fact that the covenant shooter, Audrey Hale, was, for 22 years.

It sounds like a patient with the Vanderbilt Hospital mental issues part, there's going to be some very interesting stuff coming out. Well, I post regularly, I don't three week goes by where I don't post on X that this is what happens when you close the insane asylums and well, obviously this was closed. I mean, not an asylum, but this person was getting treated by professionals for that treatment. If it doesn't work and for 20 for 20 years of treatment, the end result is a mass shooting.

Is that treatment working? No one, especially when it seems like this person was very clear about having these kind of fantasies. So it's like you can't even be like, well, nobody saw this coming. Yeah, like, well, everybody saw it coming. And there's, psychologist. You're required by law to notify, authorities if your patient is expressing violent, ideas. I mean, that's the there are laws on the books for that. You can't not disclose that. I didn't say Heidelberg.

I said Heisenberg, didn't I? The guy you know, for now. Yeah. That's right. number eight, we got to hear it. Got it. It was a Breaking Bad reference, but it's true. I mean, I got it, I got it. You reference. No, no, he was a little short. He said I said Heisenberg, we'll see the I will let us know in the show. Know you said it correctly I thought so, yeah. I'm a highly trained podcasting professional. Yeah. You could do this with your eyes closed. And I do with one.

Does it makes it even more fair for everybody. Yeah, I, I'm just just in the spirit of, of that I, I do mind with my eye closed as well. I close my right eye usually when I do the podcast solidarity man let's me take a little bit of a nap while I'm doing it. It's a half nap, right? It's I don't know if it works that way. Yeah.

but speaking of women in states of undress, our buddy Dale continues, I hope you gave that cicada a bit of lettuce or something for getting the missus to get her gear off as soon as she got in the door. That's some value. Yeah, but she wasn't. She wasn't in a frisky mood at that point. when the cicada gets underneath your clothes that you instantly want to have sex. I know how that works. It's like you're just so, like, freaked out. Oh, I have bugs crawling on me. Just jump in the sack.

I mean, this is a good excuse for any, like, husband. If you just want to remain close, take a shower. And, you know, a shower is always better with somebody else in there. Well, yeah, because you don't want to have to, like, soap up yourself. I mean, that's just no crazy yes energy. Yeah, I agree with her.

I guess for all the husbands or boyfriends out there, just rip your wife's clothes off or your girlfriend's clothes or somebody else's wife, whatever it is, and be like, oh, I thought there was a cicada. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I heard a cicada coming from inside your clothes. Yeah. And I was just trying to help out. Do you not hear that pitch? Are you. Are you deaf to that frequency? Might be. And I that just came in with a thousand safety says I close my eyes only for a moment in the moment's gone.

It's. I'm very demon nasty. But I can't believe you read his, ad read like that. I know I the only if the other cabs would give us some, good ads money. CBS yes, we're waiting for that CBS money. Important question, though, from Dale from Down Under, sir. Gene, what happened to the wrongly delivered mirror? Is it in the workout room to check your form, or is it on the ceiling over the workbench bed to check your form? I can't believe he remembers that.

That's the wrongly delivered mirror is still in the original box, sitting in the hallway, still sitting right by the door, just in case somebody's pretty much up. Well, it's I, I don't know what to do with it. I can't throw it away. I had lunch, I made some. Yeah, exactly. I at some point I may have to just leave it at somebody else's door. That's that's a great idea. That's all I can think of because you can't dispose of a mirror. It's it's like ten years of bad luck.

You're seven years. Seven years of bad luck. So what you're really waiting for is an attractive female to show up with your and food daughter. Yeah. You'd be like, you want a full length mirror? I mean, you look like you could use a full house. I'm going to give you a tip and, you know, it might be a little unusual, but, and work with me on this. It's a really nice man. Are we sure it's a nice mirror? Are we sure? It's actually. I have no idea what kind of mirror it is, but the box does

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say mirror on it, so I know it's a mirror in the box. And what size is the box? Approximately. It was like, it's about, probably four feet by two feet. Interesting. Now, what I would like to do is have you give that to somebody and then the story be on the news like random Uber driver gets a tip of a rare painting that was inside of a box. yeah, that would be funny. They would come up about $1 million painting. Now, I did get a purse delivered by mistake recently.

Oh. What's your name on there? no. Did you know where it was belonging that I would get? No, no, no. Right. Address. it was the right address, but a different name. Interesting. So somebody mis ordered, and I thought, well, what the hell is this? Open it up. Is. I don't remember when I if maybe I bought something, but. Nope, it was a purse. It was one of those, you know, fancy brands. Gucci, Louis Vuitton.

something it was though it wasn't a Louis Vuitton that was either a coach or Gucci or something like that. And, it was used. What? Yeah. So somebody. Well, it was like, was from China then it came from. Yeah. It was an eBay things and somebody clearly had put it in the wrong address. And, I was too lazy to go searching by their name to find them. I'm like, well, you know what? That's what you have insurance for. So I still haven't thrown that away. I don't know what to do with it.

I think I'm just going to throw it away. I'm just. I'm just picturing a whole brand new game here of people scouring eBay for very weird items and shipping them to you. What a jean get today. I mean show. Yeah. There. You know, that exists. There are there are plenty of YouTubers that do a, box opening videos. Oh, yeah, because I can't stand those otherwise I would. A lot of fans send shit to people, you know, like vibrators and things

of that kind of shows. Sure. No, I mean, like, they send them to video gamers because it's funny when they open up a box and there's a vibrator inside, and I would do like a glitter bomb with it that. But I'm just a dick. Okay, well, you're just an asshole, then. Thank you. Thank you very much. A glitter bomb, that's the worst possible thing you can give somebody under the dildo to.

The dildo comes up first, and then, but there's, like, a little extra special box, like, open this last pop. Yeah. I would also build the glitter bomb to have one of those little audio. Very cheap, like, you know, greeting cards that you can program on the open them up and just be like, I fuck you. Yeah, well, you make glitter bitch. Yeah. Anyway, so that exists. The other thing I was going to mention is I came to realization that, I watched quite a few YouTube videos that I didn't.

The realization isn't about YouTube, it's about you. But there are a lot of videos that are reaction videos, like go to YouTube or watching somebody else's video and then reacting to it. Or not necessarily another YouTubers video, but it's a YouTuber watching a video from something and then reacting to it. Do you think to realize, like, dude, that's what you and Larry do. That's frankly what Adam and John do. They're doing a reaction. Audio. Yeah. hearing a clip and then doing a reaction.

Yeah, pretty much we can get totally better. And we could do reaction videos to people doing the reaction videos. There was one that I watched the other day that was a meta meta meta. It was basically a guy doing a reaction video, video gamer dude who does reaction videos, doing a reaction video to another guy, about the game Star Citizen, in which that guy was talking about the game and then reacting to the first guy's video in the game.

And and then he was in the, chat section of the first guy doing the reaction and say, I'm totally going to make a reaction video to your reaction video to me reacting to you. So it's like I met him at a thing, dude. The only I really I've seen a few. The only one, the only person I see with regularity, for whatever reason that pops up on my YouTube recommended list is the classical musician chick redheaded that does a bunch of these things with, like, mainly rock music and things, you know?

So me, like, I watch a few of those, there's a couple of red headed chicks. I wonder if one of them is the same as what I'm probably. She's quirky looking. She's adorable doing the videos that. Oh, yeah. Well, that's definitely sounds like the one that I've seen. It's a fake red hat that probably. Yeah. Send me like, a C for that is the one I'm thinking of. Is she, is she, British? I don't think so. Oh, maybe it's a different one.

I don't know, I'm thinking it was British because she's definitely quirky and cute. That was the one. The first video I saw was of The Who, where Roger Daltrey starts swinging the microphone, and she basically had an orgasm like, oh, what's he doing? Definitely. And this is a different chick. The chick that I'm thinking of is a vocal coach, which makes sense. This is how you start doing these videos of let me watch great performances.

People request things that you've never heard before and let Julian, and the other take on this that I enjoy, and there's not really enough of them out there, but whatever the drum site is, does one where they play with drummers. And the first one I saw was a really hot female drummer, so that helped play them a song with out the drum track, and I watched that too as well. Yeah, those are amazing. What these musicians can do is really amazing.

When you think about how quickly they can hear a song

Technology and Privacy Concerns

and then have the drum track down, like the next pass through. Yeah, and it always sounds any instrument through what I mean. Yeah, that is absolutely true. Yeah. Like that. There's a similar thing to where they play the music without a bass, and then they have a bass bassist add the bass line to it, and it's usually like 85% the same with like 15% slightly different. Now the question is, can we add AI into the mix and be like, are you better than AI?

Coming up with the part on the fly, boom, boom, boom? I think it's going to be pretty good. Gayle from Down Under closes out his note by saying, stay unrelenting, mofos. We say that right back to you, Dale. Thank you. yeah. Thanks, Dale. 12305. The rest of you should learn from Dale. Yeah. If you want to get a long ass ass read and read the way that Darin just did deals that took like half an hour, send then 100 bucks or more. We give the best ass reads.

Just go over to unrelenting dot show nobody this ass reads the way that they're in this highly professional, highly professional. There's a lot more room open now. He's the ass master that CBS stopped sending this $5 per week. A lot more room open. That's true. And I really haven't noticed a subtle difference in my life with these. So while I appreciate him CSB, we're not gonna whore ourselves for for under five bucks or five bucks? Nah, 50 bucks. 100 bucks.

Now you're starting to get it to the right that you want to just spend like $100 and then have Darren read an ad, read about how horrible a person he is. He'll probably do it. Yeah, yesterday I know agenda. Overall, not a lot of donors, but there was one who came in with two donations, one for $3,333 000 and another 1000 tonight. Somebody else. So 4333 from one donor. Wow. That's somebody with a big house. Yeah, I would hope so. But they may need a mirror. Did you get in contact with them and.

Yeah. Do you need a full length mirror. Yeah. I'm waiting for that day on any one of my shows. I mean, not discounting. Dale, we love you. That you have been more than generous, but the first time, I mean, I think I might just wet myself a little when you open up the, the donation and be like, oh, you're getting to that stage where you haven't count me so. Well, you have 54 man. I mean, isn't this where I start buying those disposable underwear just to be on?

I mean, but I guess when you go out to the Taylor Swift concert so you don't have to go to the, I think at the Taylor Swift consent, there's an awful lot of wet pants for a variety of reasons. I read an article and I wonder, and I'm sure this happens at every concert, but the Taylor. You know, it's an interesting thing because the audience, I do believe, is 90% women. It is. And or more more accurately, girls, probably a lot of girls, for sure. The problem being girls can't handle their liquor.

And I guess there have been quite a few instances of people being spewed on, at these concerts. And the funniest thing to me was the reaction being and then the venue, they didn't do anything like, well, what do you expect? What did you expect the venue to do because some other asshole threw up on you? Yeah, we're we're a raincoat. Right. Exactly. It's a do you think the venues like what we have? we have multiple, changes of clothes for everybody that we can just hand out?

no, you're going to see they serve liquor at those concerts. Oh, yeah. I mean, with this. Wow. When the show started, I don't know if this is still, I'm guessing it's probably got worse. But when the tour first began, I saw somebody post that there were specialty drinks going along with some of the song titles in. The drinks were like, 20 bucks apiece. Oh my God, yeah. I'm like, wow, this girl is a capitalist. Yeah, yeah.

Even though she talks about communism being great, but yeah, she makes a lot of money for a commie. You know, most commies make a lot of money. Well, yeah, when you're leading the cause, then you've got the money coming in. You just get everything, you get the excuse. You know, I need that airplane so I can talk about how bad global warming is. Right? Well, that was, who I was at. I think it was mom. In the latest No Agenda newsletter, I believe, where it was, not Musk. We like Musk. Mark Cuban.

Oh, yes. The. Oh, no. Global warming. Global warming was the quote they had from him. You know, I'm paraphrasing. Yeah, yeah. And then the next article was inside Mark Cuban's private plane collection. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It was like Mark Cuban. his is this tweet was, I'll never hire somebody who doesn't believe in global warming. Yeah. And then and then, yeah, they talked about his airplanes and all that crap.

Here's the thing. It's it's really easy for people like that to have a holier than thou attitude because they can in their minds, they can pay for and justify being the exception. Right. But because they are special, because just because they're the exception in their minds, it doesn't diminish what they're saying. It just means they're the exception. Like al Gore with his house that uses more power than every other house in tennis in the city. Yeah, exactly. J moon card with 3333. Thank you.

J moon says Pew pew pew. Just a few digits for you two. I like that it writes to rhyming helps as well. Ksbw or CBS if you want to send things in. Rhyming is makes the post more interesting. Unrelenting is a little show about nothing. About everything. It's about I it's about life. It's about being a influencer. It's about hating influencers. It's about food. Did you order your food for today? No, I ordered food yesterday. Oh, you're not eating today. They're.

What? You're not eating today. What? I mean, I, I ordered groceries. Yes. Oh I got yeah I made some chicken shawarma yesterday. All was so good. And I think it actually worked better in the frying pan than it did making the chicken in the air fryer. And I bought some of this Greek flatbread. It just put that right in with a little bit of hummus. It oh so good. So good. Yeah. And I think you're right, I think the the beef in the MSG is bad. The chicken's the way to go.

Yeah I this is the way to go. We we found this. If it's l fed it. Yeah, yeah.

AI Novel Writing Software

It's an extra step that this takes time. And most places don't want to do it. They just want to put sauce on top and just call it a day. But if you can find a place that actually does marinate, it's just so much better where you do it yourself. If you just cut that chicken a little strips and put it in, let it soak up for six hours to overnight overnights. Best? Yeah. And the best way to do it. And I haven't done this for a long time. I used to do it back in the day.

Is, use the attachment from your vacuum sealer to, we a vacuum seal it. Yeah. Well, basically, here's what you do. Is you you put in the, the chicken and or you use to. But I was thinking with chicken usually, but in the chicken cover it with marinade. and then you want to poke holes in the chicken with, like, a, you know, bamboo skewer or a, some or a fork. You could do it with a fork or something, but it's right on in.

Yeah. Well, you you you put the whole thing into a container that you suck the air out, which pulls the air out of chicken and everything, and then you let the air back in and then pushes the sauce, the marinade, into the chicken through those holes. So you're like, impregnating it very quickly. That way you don't have to do a full overnight marinate. You get the same amount of flavor even after a few hours. you using the vacuum marinade method?

but also you could, you know, without using a vacuum sealer thing, you could still do it with just time because eventually that flavor does penetrate the chicken. We do not give you financial advice. We do not give you medical advice. We will give you plenty of food advice. You can try it out, see how good it tastes. Then let us know with a big boost. Yeah. Got anything else going on this week and that really I think I'm Yeah. I'm not really. Yeah. Me you. And live in the show.

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