The Daily Zeitgeist - Weekly Zeitgeist 293 (Best of 9/25/23-9/29/23)
Episode Date: October 1, 2023The weekly round-up of the best moments from DZ's season 306 (9/25/23-9/29/23)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
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I'm Jess Casavetto, executive producer of the hit Netflix documentary series Dancing for the Devil, the 7M TikTok cult.
And I'm Clea Gray, former member of 7M Films and Shekinah Church.
And we're the host of the new podcast, Forgive Me for I Have Followed.
Together, we'll be diving even deeper into the unbelievable stories behind 7M Films and Shekinah Church.
Listen to Forgive Me for I Have Followed on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get
your podcasts.
I'm Keri Champion,
and this is season four
of Naked Sports.
Up first,
I explore the making
of a rivalry.
Kaitlyn Clark
versus Angel Reese.
Every great player
needs a foil.
I know I'll go down
in history.
People are talking
about women's basketball
just because of
one single game. Clark and Reese have
changed the way we consume women's
sports. Listen to the making of a rivalry
Caitlin Clark versus Angel Reese
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast
or wherever you get your podcast.
Presented by Capital One, founding
partner of iHeart Women's Sports.
Hey, I'm Gianna Pardenti
and I'm Jermaine Jackson-Gadsden.
We're the hosts of Let's Talk Offline from LinkedIn News and iHeart Podcasts.
There's a lot to figure out when you're just starting your career.
That's where we come in.
Think of us as your work besties you can turn to for advice.
And if we don't know the answer, we bring in people who do,
like negotiation expert Maury Tahiripour.
If you start thinking about negotiations as just a conversation,
then I think it sort of eases us a little bit.
Listen to Let's Talk Offline on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts. Hello, the internet, and welcome to this episode of the weekly Zeitgeist. These are
some of our favorite segments from this week, all edited together into one non-stop infotainment laugh-stravaganza.
So without further ado, here is the weekly zeitgeist.
Miles, it is a full...
We needed this for our system.
We've been having all these damn experts on lately.
We needed...
Intelligent guests.
Thoughtful guests.
Thoughtful, intelligent guests.
We needed a pure chaos episode.
We are thrilled to be joined in our third seat.
Oh, yeah.
By a comedian, a writer, an actor.
Stand-up albums, Blake albums, Stuffed Boy, Live from the Pandemic.
All debuted number one on iTunes, Amazon.
His album, 12 Years of Voicemails from Todd Glass to Blake Wexler,
charted on Billboard.
Please welcome the hilarious, the chaotic.
He's riding a recumbent bike in short shorts,
and his plumpers are on full display.
It's Blake Wexler!
The B!
This is Blake Wexler aka i have a special a stand-up comedy special but zeitgeist my peak
i have two plumpers what the hell am i doing here i am a wexpert i'm a wexpert baby this is
i heart media at its finest.
Blake Wexler, I'm joined by Jack and Miles.
Thank you so much for having me.
Oh, my God.
We're going to host our show now, too.
Yes, I have data.
We're going to dive into the data. We're going to talk to the people on the ground, and we are going to say that they're wrong.
And that is what we say up top.
Dude, dive in.
Dive in on that.
We have data that we're diving into today.
We're going to bring up the electoral map here.
And I'm going to show you which groups are reporting as of yet.
Blake, how are you doing, man?
This is the Electoral Community College.
That's right.
It's a two-year associates.
I'm doing great, guys.
Thank you so much for having me.
Electoral Online College. Phoenix University doing great, guys. Thank you so much for having me. Electoral Online College.
Yes.
Phoenix.
Exactly.
This phoenix will not rise from the ashes.
It has burnt itself to death.
But yeah, no, I'm so psyched to be here as usual.
It's great to have you.
We got started a little late.
We're busy integrating the Damien Lillard trade into our into our beings
into our personhood didn't see that coming it's hard is he even gonna play for them didn't he
he only wanted to go to miami right and now he's going to the miami of the north milwaukee
yeah i have a body of water up there, right? One of those great lakes.
It's like, I'll be in charge of that.
Yeah.
He's like, you're not going to Miami,
but the team does have M and I in the first two letters of the city.
Yeah.
So...
You got to read it.
You got to read the whole word.
I mean, that feels like...
Pay attention to the opening sound
and the ending sound of the word city
that he was asking to be traded to.
Nothing in between.
Me. I think this trade
is really fun. I know this isn't our
NBA podcast, but I think it's
fun. It brings Damian Lillard, puts
him on a team that gives him a
real chance at winning a title. It makes
Giannis relevant again. Giannis is
probably our most fun and lovable
celebrity basketball player
at the moment.
I'm here for it. I i think james harden's the most fun wow wow wow lovable one i think we can take
our self-hating sixers fandom off the uh off the mic but my yeah miles suggested a good new new
line for for us when people ask if we're sixers fans that we we only recognize one team
of sixers yeah uh-huh miles you want to tell them what it is the january sixers yeah that's the only
that's the only sixers i recognize and i'm not a fan of them and i don't even know about another
another group carmen we do like to ask our guests yeah what is something from your search history
well i was gonna say your first topic is a good one but uh we'll go back to the no-fault divorce
but i'm gonna tell you you know what and this is not even a plug or anything but um carrie
washington's new memoir she's just doing interviews and it just came out.
And here's the thing.
I had to Google it because I'm reading everything about it.
I haven't gotten the book yet.
But she also, like me, found out that her biological father was not who she grew up with.
Oh.
Oh, wow.
And that was kept from her her whole life until she got booked on, you know,
Henry Louis Gates Jr. Skip Jr.'s show on PBS.
Oh, for real?
Yeah.
And then I'm not telling you anything that's not out there.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. But then they contacted her and she was all excited.
And her parents were excited until they said, well, you need to do a DNA test.
Oof.
And then her parents were like, oh, excuse me, Carrie.
Can I please talk to you
will you take a second yeah you have something to tell you that is the premise of the show
so yeah yeah so um and it's funny because she i mean this also happened to me as well which is
what i write about but what she describes really really well which i so appreciate because it's
not necessarily something people would think about is she, like me, grew up our whole lives knowing something was wrong. Something was off.
Right.
Almost like feeling like something was wrong with our bodies. Like we didn't,
things didn't match up and that, and it was really uncomfortable. It's very like a subconscious thing
and it's lots of anxiety and perfectionism, all this sort of stuff just happens and you don't even know why right and then this all this stuff comes out and you're like oh
my parents have been keeping the truth for me my whole life and you imagine living with them and
then they know and every time they look at you so yeah all to say people please talk to your
children tell them the truth please tell them the truth. Please tell them the truth.
Right.
But that was my last, that was my last Google search.
Yeah.
Are you, like, how radical is the radical honesty with the kids?
Are you like a no Santa Claus thing?
Or are you, like, how far are we going?
Are we saying, like, straight up, look, Santa Claus is a a thing your friends believe because their parents are liars right first of all my child figured it out before i even had to say
she's like she's that kind of kid she's like she's my kid she was like so i know who you are
i know you are santa so you can stop it but please keep writing it on my presence because
it's cute right but i think
that you know like she she mentions as well carrie is like when the secret is another human being
right you gotta talk right like you're creating basically i say to people it's like look
and i get asked this a lot when i give talks it's like well, well, what is it? Is it entitlement? Like, what is it that makes you feeling it? Look, a secret is yours as long as it's yours. But when you create another human
being, that is no longer yours. That is actually a person. So it's no longer a secret. It's a human.
And we can say as parents, like, well, you're my kid. Listen, kids do not. Please, everyone get this through your head.
Kids do not belong to you.
They are not belongings.
They are people.
So you must treat them as such.
And they're separate humans.
And you need to treat them that way.
And part of that is being very honest about how they came about and what's going on in your life.
and what's going on in your life. But I will tell you a funny thing is I don't,
my daughter and I, we talk a lot, but one of my nieces said something about my first husband.
I can't remember how old my daughter was, but she was like maybe 10. And she was like,
you've been married before? Like, she was like, you haven't kept this from me? And it was like,
I was like, girl, I just didn't think about telling you. Like it was a long time ago. And so that's not a secret. It was just, I just didn't think about it, but it was, it was like, I was like, girl, I just didn't think about it. Tell you like it was a long time ago. And so that's not a secret.
It was just I just didn't think about it.
But it was it was hilarious.
Right.
Right.
If I think if like to your point, like if a secret alters someone's total understanding of themselves and the world they live in, it's like, no, no, no.
Then that's not a secret.
That's a potential like psychic bomb that you have to diffuse as quickly as possible.
Yeah.
Tremendous bomb.
And it affects your whole life.
It literally affected me from the time I was a kid.
Like, I remember it.
It's definitely there.
And you can't subconsciously carrying a secret like that and then living with your secret.
Right.
Like, what does that do to you and your relationship with that person?
And my thing is like, look, you keep secrets and lies from people that you love.
That creates such a big distance.
That person can't be your real friend or your real like love or your real whatever, like where it's just a huge distance that separates you from people you love.
So, right.
Kibosh it.
Don't do it.
Kibosh.
Come clean.
Have the courage to come clean
dr mcnerney what is something you think is overrated i feel like i'm not gonna win myself
any friends i'll be like how to like lose friends and stop influencing people but all the disney
live action movies i've hit a stage where i'm like no more live actions like the little mermaid
is beautiful i love the original cinderella but you know you know, I don't want to see more and more of, like, the same movies again.
Like, it makes me a bit sad.
And, like, what other stories could be told if it weren't, like, always making these live actions?
But, you know, maybe I'll be proven, like, totally wrong.
And the next ones will be amazing.
But I'm ready for something else.
Just, yeah.
Based on everyone's first, like, sort of reaction.
Like, oh, you saw it how it was?
And they're like, yeah, it was okay like yeah it was like no one was like it was so good i'm gonna see it nine times everyone just kind
of i think they're they have to reconcile like their love for the original source material with
that and not fully be like i didn't like it they're like yeah i mean it's it's yeah it's
interesting you know it's like their voice just goes up. Yeah. You know, it was like, I'm glad I spent my afternoon going to that.
I think that's right.
I I've never been more confident in a prediction about the future of a like subgenre of movies than in saying that they're not going to suddenly figure something out about the disney live action reskins of the animations like
we we know what the original cartoons look like and what happens in them we know what is possible
here like right i can't i can't imagine a version like what what they're gonna pull out where we're like oh no that is not
did not see that one coming whoa that bear is talking and singing hold on oh they already did
that that was the best one i think was jungle book and that was uh the first one they did and
ever since i feel like yeah been diminishing returns although I didn't see the little mermaid so I
cannot speak to that one is you what's your favorite genre of film though Dr. Carey oh I mean
okay so I really have a soft spot for like old school superhero movies but my like most recent
most amazing film I feel was the latest uh into the spider verse film what was it spider man across the spider verse yeah and i just i love animation in that film it's so witty and
the visuals are extraordinary and just great films so i wax oracle about how much i love these films
at work and everyone has to deal with me being like go watch it so anyone listening go watch it
favorite favorite spider character spider person in the universe?
Oh, my goodness.
I can't remember the name of it,
but the really dark noir run for the first one.
He's from all those 1930s,
kind of like dark mystery films,
you know, in black and white.
I kind of love that.
Yeah, yeah.
Was it just Spider-Man Noir?
Yeah.
I think that's noir spider-man maybe
i don't know or i'm sorry spider-man nor nor what is when you say old school superhero movies
do you mean like christopher reeves superman or are you talking about like the original man the
first iron man uh i think it's almost less specific films.
I love almost films that have that really cheesy origin, coming-of-age story.
It's really just about discovering themselves.
It's such a simple narrative.
I feel like I should crave more complexity than that,
and I should want it to be more nuanced stories.
But sometimes it's just really satisfying
when you watch this clean-cut narrative
of this good guy defeating all these bad guys.
When I want to relax, I really enjoy that.
In my day job, I think about lots of complexity
and nuance and what we do with the future of society.
Sometimes I find it very relaxing
just to be like Star Wars.
You're like, I love a Joseph Campbell type flick.
Just give me that hero's journey in every shape and form.
Still gonna be okay.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Nothing's gonna go wrong.
Challenge your old self to become your new self. Yes!
But Doc Ock is an example of what we're facing with AI, like in the immediate future. I think we can all agree on that, right? Spider-Man 2.
In a way, you're like, it's giving me the equivalent of like eight arms in a way.
You're like, oh, boy.
What is something, Dr. Higgins, that you think is underrated?
Underrated?
Asking people for help.
And I know that I listen to the show daily and I know people have such good responses,
but that was the only thing that came to mind for me in terms of underrated.
And so that's why I'm on the show.
Come to my live show on October 11th.
Yeah.
Help fill the seats.
Come.
Come listen to us babble about absolutely nothing.
But no, seriously, asking for help.
And I think the older I'm getting, you know, I think there's this, you know, and again, this could be the social justice in me, but I think as, you know, a marginalized person, we're always expected to have the answers to everything.
We're always supposed to be the person like the world teaches you to be the smartest person in the room all the time.
And I've just gotten to the point now where it's like, yes, I have a doctorate, but I'm still not the smartest person in the room.
Like, wouldn't anything say like support me bitch like
that is literally how i feel all the time now like i'm like if i need help i'm gonna ask i'm not that
girl that's like i've got it together like i'm good like my life is great no my life is literally
three seconds it's a string from falling apart so like please help me like if you can help me in
any way whether it be like you know giving me
you know a network or an email or a connect to something like i'm never below saying help me
right because this life is hard like just it's it's really really hard so oh yeah and i think
there's also yeah there's people don't want to want to struggle in public that's a huge reason
why people don't ask for help or act like they they don't like they got their shit all figured out but it is it is like the most liberating and sort of like
life-affirming thing when you ask like you'll be surprised you ask for help the help that you will
receive from people that are like in your circle and i think that's also one of the underrated
aspects of asking for it is like you will also realize like damn i got people on my corner yeah i'd say this is probably the most underrated thing of my adult life this is this is a great
underrated it's something i've had to do for like addiction issues i've had to do in like it's made
my marriage better and just in in terms of it being good at good advice we did this thing like there's this
hack yeah one hack that ben franklin wants you to know but there's this thing that ben franklin
talks about that he realizes this like counterintuitive thing that if you ask someone
for a favor they and they do the favor for you, they will like you more. And it's a weird,
because you're showing vulnerability and there's like something like subconsciously of them,
like doing something for you, like their, their brain is like, well, they must be cool then.
Cause I just did this thing for them. So it's like, it's all around, like just being willing to be
vulnerable enough to ask for help opens this world of possibilities and increased, you know, just
everything. It makes your life better and richer in so many ways, you know, decreases loneliness,
which is such a huge problem like right now. Yeah. Yeah. And all that being said, I can
speak about it for a long time, and, like, I still don't do it enough, you know? Yeah. Neither do I.
Because it's hard. It is hard. And I think, I was going to say real quick, I think a really
important thing is, you know, masculinity is, as a, like, a thing, right? Whether you talk about
toxic masculinity or masculinity as a whole, like, we're all three men and i think so being even even for me being non-binary there's still this
presentation of i'm male presenting to people in some way and so i'm supposed to never be emotional
enough to say i'm struggling and i actually had to like acknowledge that a couple of like days ago
like two weeks ago i was literally sitting in my office going like here comes the ideations here comes the like no one loves you no one cares like
you're you're feeling very alone so i had to get my therapist back up and i had to say like hey
i'm going i'm literally slipping into this mindset again of being lonely and feeling like the world
doesn't need me here like i need help and she was like you know let me get you back in and you know
let me get you back on the roster.
And so I think that that's something that, like, I try to emulate in everything that I do that, like, just because you see, you know, the shows and you see me on the network and you see me on TV and you see me with, you know, celebrities.
I mean, I went to dinner with a celeb friend of mine just this weekend.
People are like, oh, that's so cool.
I'm like, yeah, but we were sitting at the table literally almost crying with each other because we're all struggling like we're all going through
it so yeah it's just you know ask for help literally like people are not going to judge
you for asking for help so yeah and that it's okay to be struggling i think that's the other
hard part is like whenever i start getting like you know i start having i start ruminating on
shit or whatever it's like man you don't fucking start having I start ruminating on shit or whatever.
It's like, man, I feel like you get your shit together, whatever.
It's like, no, that's not that's not how you get out of it.
You get out of it by being like, OK, OK, that's where we're at right now.
Let's try and find a way to sort of pivot to something that feels a little bit better
and then incrementally get out of there.
But the whole like brute force of like, I don't need to feel like this.
Damn it.
It's yeah.
Guess what?
It only makes shit worse. brute force of like i don't need to feel like this damn it like it's yeah guess what it only
makes shit worse yeah what if you just said no to sadness though ah if you just said no
like to drugs yeah like i don't know that that seems well just like a no-brainer to me yeah
it's just gonna make me do more more sadness that's right more sadness all right let's take
a quick break and we'll come back.
And speaking of sadness, we'll talk about the Republican Party and how things are going for them.
We'll be right back.
I'm Jess Casavetto, executive producer of the hit Netflix documentary series Dancing for the Devil, the 7M TikTok cult.
And I'm Clea Gray,
former member of 7M Films and Shekinah Church.
And we're the host of the new podcast,
Forgive Me For I Have Followed.
Together, we'll be diving even deeper
into the unbelievable stories behind 7M Films
and LA-based Shekinah Church,
an alleged cult that has impacted members
for over two decades.
Jessica and I will delve into the hidden truths between high control groups and interview dancers,
church members, and others whose lives and careers have been impacted, just like mine.
Through powerful, in-depth interviews with former members and new, chilling firsthand accounts,
the series will illuminate untold and extremely necessary perspectives.
Forgive Me For I Have Followed will be more than an exploration.
It's a vital revelation aimed at ensuring these types of abuses never happen again.
Listen to Forgive Me For I Have Followed on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Gianna Pradente. And I'm Jemay Jackson-Gadsden. We're the hosts of Let's Talk
Offline, a new podcast from LinkedIn News and iHeart Podcasts.
When you're just starting out in your career, you have a lot of questions like, how do I speak up when I'm feeling overwhelmed?
Or can I negotiate a higher salary if this is my first real job? Girl, yes.
Each week, we answer your unfiltered work questions.
Think of us as your work besties you can turn to for advice.
And if we don't know the answer, we bring in experts who do,
like resume specialist Morgan Saner.
The only difference between the person who doesn't get the job
and the person who gets the job is usually who applies.
Yeah, I think a lot about that quote.
What is it, like you miss 100% of the shots you never take?
Yeah, rejection is scary, but it's better than you rejecting yourself.
Together, we'll share what it really takes
to thrive in the early years of your career
without sacrificing your sanity or sleep.
Listen to Let's Talk Offline on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
How do you feel about biscuits?
Hi, I'm Akilah Hughes, and I'm so excited about my new podcast, Rebel Spirit,
where I head back to my hometown in Kentucky and try to convince my high school to change their racist mascot,
the Rebels, into something everyone in the South loves, the biscuits.
I was a lady rebel. Like, what does that even mean?
The Boone County Rebels will stay the Boone County Rebels with the image of the biscuits.
It's right here in black and white in print.
A lion.
An individual that came to the school saying that God sent him to talk to me about the mascot switch.
As a leader, you choose hills that you want to die on.
Why would we want to be the losing team?
I'd just take all the other stuff out of it.
On the segregation academies, when civil rights said that we need to integrate public schools,
these charter schools were exempt from that.
Bigger than a flag or mascot.
You have to be ready for serious backlash.
Listen to Rebel Spirit on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And we're back. We're back we're back and dr mcnerney as mentioned i am an idiot on this ai stuff i think i generally have like my version of ai up until last week i, like researching for our last expert episode was what I had read in, you
know, mainstream articles that went viral and films like Hollywood films and then like
messing around with open AI and or chat GPT.
So I had this kind of disconnect in my mind where it was like, from an outsider's
perspective, we have this C plus level, like copywriter thing with like in chat GPT, GPT-4,
and then like the godfather of AI, who I'm just trusting people is the godfather of AI.
But that's what everyone uses that same phrase. They're like, the godfather of AI just quit Google and says we're all fucked in the next couple of years.
And I think it's confusing to me because I don't know exactly.
Like, I can't even, like, picture the way how he thinks we're fucked.
And there was this letter that was like, we need to pause development on AI in the near future.
And I guess I'm just curious to hear your perspective
on that pause letter
and what the kind of dangers of AI are in the near future.
Yeah, because to Jack's point too,
also, we were talking with João Sadoc last week at NYU
about it and like, at the end of it, we're like, okay, Sadoc last week at NYU about it.
And at the end of it, we're like, okay, so it's not Skynet, right, from Terminator.
And they're like, oh, great.
But then we realized there's a raft of other things that come along with just not being the Terminator.
So, yeah, I'm also from a similar perspective where I always assume Skynet.
Yeah, I mean, I think you're totally not alone in the dominance of ideas like Skynet and
Terminator because so much of our cultural framework for understanding what AI is comes
from a very narrow set of movies like the Terminator, like the Matrix, which always positions
AI as something that's going to dominate us, it's going to take over the world, and it's going to
control us. And it's important to, I think, highlight that that's definitely not the only ideas that we have about AI. We've got
thousands of years of thinking about our relationship with intelligent machines.
And there's a lot of different cultural traditions that have really different ways of thinking about
our relationships with AI and intelligent machines that could be much more positive,
much more harmonious. And so I do think our immediacy of jumping to this idea of Skynet is reflective of very
much where we are right now, right?
I'm in the UK, you're in the US.
These are countries that have a really long history of thinking about AI in very binary
terms.
So yes, I think it's important that we think about these long-term risks of AI.
And you mentioned the pause later calling for a halt to
generating more large language models like chat GPT until it had a bit more of a moment to think
about some of the long-term consequences of these models. But I think it's really important not just
to think of the long-term risks, but to think about which long-term risks we prioritize. Because
I think the Skynet Terminator fantasy eats up a lot of oxygen about how we talk
about AI's risk, but there's a lot of different risks that AI poses. So another long-term risk
that we don't talk about very much at all is the climate cost of AI, right? Because AI,
it's hugely energy intensive. Data centers require a huge amount of water to function.
And we have this massive problem of e-waste produced by a lot
of electronic systems. But that long-term problem of climate crisis is much less exciting. It's
really scary. It's really grounded in a lot of our experiences. And so it just doesn't seem to
get as much airtime. So that's something that I think is really important, is changing the
conversation a bit to say, okay, it's sometimes interesting, sometimes scary to think about the Terminator option,
but what are some of the other long-term options
that could really shape our lives?
Yeah.
Like the degree to which the deck is being stacked
towards the Terminator option was surprising to me.
We dug in last week a little bit to the two stories
I had always heard that are like kind of put into
the Terminator version of AI taking over a category. There's the AI that like killed a
person in a military exercise that decided to like eliminate its controller. And then there's the AI
that hired a task rabbit to pass the CAPTCHA test. And like in both cases, those are was the AI that hired a TaskRabbit to pass the CAPTCHA test.
And like in both cases,
those are like the AI that killed a person
in the military exercise,
like that was somebody claiming that.
And then when they went back,
they were like, oh, I was just saying
it could hypothetically do that.
It was a thought experiment.
Yeah, it was a thought experiment
of what an AI could do in the right circumstances.
And the TaskRabbit one was more similar to the self-driving car Elon Musk thing, where it was
just there was a human prompting it to do that thing that seems creepy to us when we like start
thinking about, oh, it's like scheming to get loose and get like overcome the things that we're using to keep it hemmed in.
So it does feel like there is an incentive structure set up for the people in charge of some of these major AI companies to get us to believe that shit like to think to only focus on the ai v humanity like ai
gets loose of its control of our controls for it and takes over and starts like killing people
version of it i'm just curious like what what are your thoughts on like why why are they incentivized
to do that when it would seem like you,
well,
you don't want to make it,
you don't want it to seem like the,
this self-driving car will take over and start,
you know,
kill your family.
Yeah.
Start killing your family.
It's so powerful,
but it seems like with AI,
they're more willing to buy into that fantasy and have that fantasy projected to people
who are not as
closely tied to the
ins and outs of the industry.
Yeah, I mean, I think that's such an important
point because it's a weird thing
about the AI industry, right?
You would never have this kind of hype wave around
something like broccoli where you say, oh,
the broccoli, if you eat it, could kill you or
it could transform the world. And then you wouldn't expect that to somehow get people to buy a lot
more broccoli and just be like oh i don't want to eat broccoli now but if they were like it's so
fucking good and powerful if you explode like maybe like maybe that's what it is even worse
you can then also eat you know what the broccoli would be doing.
But I do think that we see this real cultivation of hype around AI and that a lot of firms
explicitly use that to sell their products. It gets people interested in it because on the one
hand, people are really scared about the long-term and short-term impacts of AI. On the other hand,
they're also scared then though of getting left behind. So you see more and more firms saying,
now I've got to buy the latest generative AI tool so that I look really tech savvy and I look tech forward and I look futuristic.
And so it's part of the bigger hype cycle, I think, to draw a lot of attention towards their products, but also to make them seem like this really edgy, desirable thing.
But I think what's also interesting about both the stories that you raised is when you looked under the hood, there was human labor involved, right? There were people
who were really central to something that was attributed to an AI. And I think that's a really
common story we see with a lot of the type around AI is often the way we tell those stories erases
the very real human labor that drives those products, whether it's the artists who originally
made the images that trained a generative AI through to data labelers, all sorts of people who are
really central to those processes. Right. And I know like in the in your episode of the good
robot, when you're discussing the pause letter, you know, I think that the I think the version
that we see as like sort of the short-term threats, at least in the most
immediate way is like for me working in and around entertainment and people who work in advertising
and seeing like an uptake in that section, I go, okay, that's easy. Like I can see how a company
immediately goes, yeah, it's a tool. And then suddenly it's like, and now you're on your ass
because we'll just use the tool now. And we don't even need a person to prompt it. Or we need many,
now you're on your ass because we'll just use the tool now and we don't even need a person to prompt it or we need many, we just need fewer people to operate it. So to me, I'm like, okay, that's an
obvious sort of thing I can see like on the horizon. And you did talk about, well, there was
a lot of talk of these sort of long-term existential or quote unquote existential threats,
that there were a lot of things in the short term that we're actually ignoring.
What are those sort of things that we need to bring a
little bit more awareness to like i know you mentioned the climate um and i i look at it
from my perspective i see like the just massive job loss that could happen um but what are sort
of like the more short-term things that kind of maybe are less sexy or interesting to the people
who just want to write about killer terminators and and things. Yeah, I mean, I think less sexy is exactly the right phrase for this,
which is a lot of the short-term issues are very much about entrenching existing forms of inequality and making them worse.
And that's often something people don't really want to hear about because they don't want to acknowledge these inequalities
or because it takes away from the shiny newness of AI.
It makes it very much like a lot of other technological revolutions
that we've already seen.
And that's super boring.
Like you don't want to hear about how the wheel
somehow brought about some kind of inequality.
The wheel is racist and we all know it.
The big hot take from today.
But yeah, I mean, something that I look at, for example,
are like very mundane but important technologies
like technologies used in recruitment and hiring
so i look at ai powered video interview tools and look at how that affects people's particular
you know likelihood of being employed and how they go through the workforce and yep it's less
exciting seeming than the terminator but again when you look under the hood and dig into them
you're like oh wow this could actually, really compound inequalities that we see in the workforce
under the guise of the idea that these tools are going to make hiring more fair.
And that's a massive problem.
Right.
So because like the idea with those hiring tools, like it will actually take away these
sort of like demographic cues that someone might use to like, you know, they'll apply
their own biases to.
So in fact, it is the most equitable way to hire.
they'll apply their own biases to. So in fact, it is the most equitable way to hire.
But is it because of just the kinds of people that are creating these sort of systems? Because they tend to be a bit one note, that's inherently where like sort of that begins to wobble a bit?
It's a mixture. So of course, yes, the lack of diversity in the AI industry is like
very stark. And also sadly, in the UK, an industry where, for example,
women's representation is actually getting worse,
not better.
So that's a sad slap in the face
for a lot of the progress narrative
that we want to see.
But sometimes it's not even necessarily
that the people creating these tools
have bad intentions.
Maybe not even that they're using faulty data sets
or biased data sets.
These are two of the really big problems
that are flagged. But sometimes the underlying idea behind a product is just bogus.
It's just a really bad concept. And yet somehow it gets brought to market again because of all
this hype around AI. So with the video interview tools that we look at, for example, they basically
claim that they can discern a candidate's personality from their face and from their words.
So how they talk, how they move, they can decide how extroverted you are or how open you are,
how neurotic you are, how conscientious you are, all these different markers of personality.
To which I would say, firstly, no, there's absolutely no way an AI can do that. This is just
a very old kind of racial pseudoscience making its way back
into the mainstream saying, okay, we can totally guess your personality from your face. It's like
your friends looking at someone's profile picture on Tinder or whatever and being like,
they look like they'd be really fun at a party. It's about that level of accuracy.
And then second, is that even a good way of judging if someone's gonna be good for a job
like how extroverted do you want a person in a job to be maybe in your job that's really really
helpful in my job i don't know how helpful it is so there's just kind of a lot of flaws at the very
you know bottom of these products that we should be worried about just like a C minus level job hiring process. Like that's what I feel like
so many of the things like when you get down to them and see them in action, they're like not
that good. Like it does feel like the whole thing is being hyped to a large degree. And like that's
something I heard from somebody I know who like works know who works in, like all of my friends
who work in finance or any of those things, my brain shuts off when he starts talking
about what he does.
But he was saying, he pays attention to the market and he was saying there's a big thing
propping up the stock market right now is AI.
And it really is.
That's where so much of people's wealth is tied up is in the stock market right now is AI. And it really is like that. That's where so much of
people's wealth is tied up is in like the stock market. And it's just tied to like what you can
get people excited about in a lot of cases. So it really like that from that perspective,
the incentive structure makes sense. Like you want people talking about how your ai technology can do all these
amazing things because that literally makes you have more money than you would have if they knew
the truth about your your product without being like yeah how many seven fingered trump pictures
can we create and right be like man, fucking dump millions into this.
Yeah, I mean, that's kind of something that's really come out of the last few years
is how many firms just use the label of AI
to get funding. I think there was a
study a couple of years ago that said
40% of European AI startups
didn't use AI.
At which point you're like, well, what are you doing?
What are you doing?
Well, we could, though. this podcast is actually an ai podcast
because eventually it could use ai and before we were recording miles was actually putting in he
asked an ai to uh pitch him an episode of friends in which the cast and you know the people on the
the friends on the show deal with the fallout from the events
of 9-11 and it wouldn't do it so we can't quite claim that we are an ai podcast yet but but we did
it did do it when i said do a uh pitch me an episode where joey and monica drive uber oh right
from yeah and it did so clearly it because you can see where these guardrails are.
They're like, don't do 9-11 stuff, though.
That's, no.
Don't do that.
So, yeah, I think there's two things we're talking about here.
Like, from one perspective, like, yes, you could put it in the category of, like, well, yes, the wheel makes racism or colonialism more frictionless is a word that gets used a lot.
But like literally in the case of the wheel, frictionless.
But AI and like a lot of technology is designed to make groups of people and like our interactions and the things that make people money more frictionless.
And that's something that you guys have have talked about on recent episodes of Good
Robot. There's this one example that really jumped out to me that I think was from your most recent
episode, or at least the one that's up most recently right now as we're recording this,
where you guys were talking about a company that asked a regulating body to make an exception to a law around like a high
risk use of AI. And the law said that people had to supervise the use of AI, like just because it
seemed dangerous. And the company appealed to the regulating body by saying, well, we just like that
would cost too much and we would never be able to like scale this and make a profit.
And it feels to me like our answer as a civilization to that complaint needs to be,
that's not our problem.
Like that, then you shouldn't be doing it.
But instead, it seems like the answer too often, not just in AI, but just across the board, especially in the U.S., is like, okay,
well, we have to make an exception so that they can make a profit around this technology or else
the technology won't get developed because the only thing that drives technological progress is
the profit motive. But that's, you know, as I think you guys talked about in that episode, that's never been the best way to develop technology. Like it's it's been a good way sometimes to democratize existing technology. But like that's I don't know, I feel like that idea of you have to make it profitable. easy on these companies to keep trying different things for AI to become profitable is baked in
at a cellular level at this point in how a lot of Western colonial civilizations operate.
Yeah. I mean, I think too often a lot of the technologies that shape our daily lives are
made by a very narrow set of people who ultimately aren't beholden to us. They're
beholden to their shareholders or to their boss. So they don't really have our best interests at heart.
For example, take this whole rebranding of Twitter to X by Musk. I remember waking up and
finding my little Twitter bird replaced with this huge X and just being like,
firstly, because it was part of Twitter's low decline. But secondly, it made me feel pretty disappointed or really aware of the fact that one guy could
have such a huge impact on how literally millions of people use a social networking platform
that's actually super important to their daily lives and has played a huge role in activist
movements and fostering different communities.
And I think that's a story we see time and time again with some of these big tech companies, which is not only do they have their own profit motive
at heart, they're not beholden in any way to the public and they're not being compelled by
regulation to make good decisions that necessarily benefit the public. So I think a really important
question going forward is how do we support kinds of technology development that are
very much based in the communities that the technology is for? I think one really big part
of that is recognizing that so many AI models, as you mentioned, they're designed to be scalable,
and that's how they make money, this idea that you can apply them globally and universally.
And I think that's a big problem, partly because it often is really homogenizing. It can involve like exploiting a model from the US usually out to the rest of the world.
It's probably not actually appropriate to use in those contexts.
But also a lot of really exciting and good uses of technology, I think, come from these really localized, specific community-based levels.
So sometimes I think it can be about thinking smaller rather than bigger.
Yeah.
think it can be about thinking smaller rather than bigger yeah yeah i that was like another thing that struck me about like just all the warnings and even in that pause letter is sort
of like the presumption that it's like well all you motherfuckers are gonna use this so we gotta
talk about it where it's like i don't know i don't even fucking know what it is like a second ago i
thought it was skynet and now like you, you have your company being like, yeah, we now have enterprise AI tools, like welcome. You're like, but what am I, huh? Like what? And I think that's
what's in it. Really interesting thing about this as like a sort of technological advancement is
before people even really understand what it is, there is like from the higher, the powers that be
sort of going into it being like, well, this is it. Like everyone's using it, but I'm still not sure how.
And I guess that probably feeds into this whole model of generating as much, you know, excitement,
market excitement about AI is by taking the angle of like, everything's different because everyone
is going to be using AI. Most of y'all don't know what that is, but get ready. And I think that's
what also makes it very confusing for me as it's like a lay person outside of the tech sphere to just be like, wait, so are we all using it? And even
now I really, I still can't see what that is and how that benefits me. And I think that's a big
part of, I'm sure your work too, or even like any ethicist is to understand like, well, who does it
benefit? Like first we're making this because
it benefits who and how yeah and i think yeah is it right now it benefits the companies that are
making it it sort of feels like that's the way it's being presented or slightly being like yeah
you guys are going to love this but really it's we're going to benefit from the adoption of this
technology yeah i mean i think that's this crucial question is this stepping back and saying actually
is this inevitable and do we even want this in the first place and i think that's this crucial question is this stepping back and saying actually is this
inevitable and do we even want this in the first place and i think that's what really frustrated
me about the pause letter and about a number of kind of big tech figures signing on to it
is that they're very much pushing this narrative of like oh this is like unstoppable and it's
inevitable and it's happening we've got to find ways to deal with it and it's like you're making
it like you're the people literally making these technologies
in a lot of cases.
So if you really think it's an existential risk to humanity, stop.
It honestly could even be that simple.
But that's what makes me really then question their motives
and sort of coming forward with a lot of this kind of
very doom and gloom language.
I think it's also interesting if you look at, for example, countries as national AI
strategies.
So if you look at, say, like China and the UK and the US and these countries that are
now thinking about what their national long-term AI strategy is going to be, they also very
much frame it around the idea that AI is completely inevitable, that this is going to be the
transformative technology for imagining
the future, for geopolitical dominance, for economic supremacy. And again, I think as an
ethicist, what I really want people to do is step back and say, I think we're actually at a cross
road so we can decide whether or not we think these technologies are good for us and whether
they are sustainable, whether they are a useful long-term thing for our society, or actually
whether the benefits of these technologies are going to be experienced by very few people and
the costs are going to be borne by many. Right. We talked last week about the
scientific application that used deep learning to figure out the shapes of proteins,
learning to figure out the shapes of proteins, the structures of proteins, and that that could have some beneficial uses, will probably have some beneficial uses for, you know, how we understand
disease and medicine and how we treat that. But there are ways to probably differentiate and
think about these things. Like, it's not, you don't just have to be either luddite or like ai pedal
to the floor you know let's just get out of the way of the big companies you know it feels like
but but it is such a complicated technology that i think there's going to be inherent cloudiness around how people understand it
and also manufactured cloudiness
because it is in the overall system's benefit,
the overall system being like capitalism,
it's in their benefit to generate like market excitement
where there shouldn't be any, basically.
Yeah, I mean, I think it's easy to generate
this kind of nebulousness around AI
because to some extent,
we still don't really know what it is.
It's still more of a concept than anything else
because the term AI is like stretch
and you describe so many applications.
Like I spent two years interviewing engineers
and data scientists in a big tech firm
and they would sort of grumble,
well, 15 or 20 years ago,
we didn't even call this AI
and we were already doing it. It's just a decision tree. You know, again, it's kind of part of that branding.
But also we have these, again, thousands of years of stories and thinking about what
intelligent machine is. And that means we can get super invested and super cloudy very, very quickly.
And yeah, I don't want people to feel bad for being scared or being cloudy about these technologies. It is dense and confusing, but at the same time, I do think that it is really important certain things about these technologies that really excite me.
But I'm really sympathetic to some of the kind of old school Luddites who weren't necessarily anti-technology, but were really against the kind of impacts that technology were having on their societies.
So the way that new technology is like, I think would be things like spinning and weaving were causing mass unemployment and the kind of broader ramifications that was having for people in the UK socially. And that kind of has quite a scary parallel to today in terms of thinking about
maybe what AI will bring about for the rest of us who maybe aren't researchers in a lab,
but who maybe might be replaced by some of these algorithms in terms of our work and our output.
algorithms in terms of our work and our outlook. Yeah. Can you talk at all about open source like models of because, you know, when we talk about this idea that corporations have all this
power and are incentivized to do whatever is going to make the most money, which in a lot of cases
is going to be the thing that removes the friction from consumption decisions and, you know, just how people interact and do these things, which,
as you guys talked about in your episode, like removing the friction, like friction can be really
good sometimes. Sometimes your system needs friction to stop and correct itself and recognize when bad shit, when things are going wrong. But, you know,
there's also a history in even in the U.S. where corporations are racing to get to a development
and ultimately are beat by open source models of technological organizing around getting a specific solution.
Do you have any hope for open source in the future of AI?
Yeah, I think I'm really interested in community forms of development. And I think open source is
a really interesting example. I think we've seen other interesting examples around things like
collective data labeling. And I think that these kinds of collective movements, on the one hand, seem like a really exciting community-based alternative to
the concentration of power in a very, very narrow segment of tech companies. On the other hand,
though, I think community work is really hard work. We had Dr. David Adelani on our podcast,
who's a very important figure in Masakana, which is a grassroots organization that aims to bring some of the over 4,000 African languages into natural language processing or NLP systems.
And he talks a lot about how the work he does with Masakana is so valuable and so important, but it's also really, really hard because when you're working in that kind of collective decentralized environment
it can be much slower and as you said there can be a lot more friction in that process
but counter to this move fast break things kind of culture sometimes that friction can be really
productive and it can help us slow down and think about you know the decisions that we're making
very intentionally rather than just kind of racing as fast as we can to make the next newest shiniest
product i was i'm also like in your work too you know you talk about how you know like looking at
these technologies especially through a lens of like feminism and intersectionality and you know
bipoc communities and things like that i don't like broadly in science there's like you know
there's an issue of like language hegemony in scientific research where if things aren't written in English, a lot, sometimes studies just get fucking ignored because like, I don't speak Spanish or I can't read Chinese. Therefore, I don't know if this research is being done. And therefore, it just doesn't exist because the larger community is like, we all just think in English.
doesn't exist because the larger community is like, we all just think in English. Like,
so how do you like, you know, specifically, because, you know, when hearing the description of your work, help me understand, like, and listeners to like, of how we should be looking
at these things from that also from that perspective, too, because I think right now,
we're all caught up in like, it's fucking skydive. And it's not, you know, hold on,
like, there are other subtleties that actually we should really think deeply about, because to your point, I feel like those are the dimensions of an emerging technology or trend or something that gets ignored.
Because to your point, it's like the thing we of course, it's unequal, of course, it's racist or whatever.
But what are those like, what are those ways that people need to really be thinking about this technology?
What are those ways that people need to really be thinking about this technology?
Yeah, I mean, I think English language hegemony is a really good example of this broader problem of the more subtle kinds of exclusions that get built into these technologies.
Because I think we've all probably seen the cases of AI systems that have been really
horrifically and explicitly racist or really horrifically sexist from, you know, Tay, the
chatbot that started spouting horrific right-wing
racist propaganda and had to get taken down through to Amazon hiring tool that systemically
discriminated against female candidates. These are really, I think, overt depictions of the kinds of
harms AI can do. But I think things like English language hegemony are also incredibly important
for showing how existing kinds of exclusions and
patterns of power get replicated in these tools. Because to an English language speaker, very
crucially, they might use ChatGPT and think, this is great. This is what my whole world looks like
if they only speak English. Obviously, anyone who is not a native English speaker or who doesn't
only speak English, it's going to be an incredibly different experience. And that's where I think we
see the benefits of these tools being really unequally distributed.
I think it's also important because there's such exclusions in which kinds of languages and forms
of communication can get translated into these systems. So for example, I work with a linguist
at the University of Newcastle, and she talks about the fact that there's so many languages,
like signed languages and languages that don't have a written language, but they're never going to be translated into these tools
and never going to benefit from them. You might think, okay, well, do these communities want those
languages translated into an AI tool? Maybe, maybe not. I'd argue, of course, it's up to them,
but those communities are still going to experience the negative effects of AI,
like the climate cost of these tools. And so I think it's just really important, like you said, to think about what kinds of hegemony are getting further entrenched by AI-powered technologies.
All right, great. Let's take a quick break and we'll come back and finish up with a few questions. We'll be right back.
few questions. We'll be right back. I'm Jess Casavetto, executive producer of the hit Netflix documentary series, Dancing for the Devil, the 7M TikTok cult. And I'm Clea Gray, former member
of 7M Films and Shekinah Church. And we're the host of the new podcast, Forgive Me For I Have
Followed. Together, we'll be diving even deeper into the unbelievable stories behind 7M Films and
LA-based Shekinah Church, an alleged cult that has impacted members for over two decades.
Jessica and I will delve into the hidden truths between high-control groups and interview
dancers, church members, and others whose lives and careers have been impacted, just
like mine.
Through powerful, in-depth interviews with former members and new, chilling firsthand accounts, the series will illuminate untold and extremely necessary
perspectives. Forgive Me For I Have Followed will be more than an exploration. It's a vital
revelation aimed at ensuring these types of abuses never happen again. Listen to Forgive
Me For I Have Followed on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Gianna Pradente.
And I'm Jimei Jackson-Gadsden.
We're the hosts of Let's Talk Offline, a new podcast from LinkedIn News and iHeart Podcasts.
When you're just starting out in your career, you have a lot of questions.
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Or, can I negotiate a higher salary if this is my first real job?
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Each week, we answer your unfiltered work questions.
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The only difference between the person who doesn't get the job and the person who gets the job is usually who applies. Yeah, I think a lot about that quote. What is it like
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Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
It was December 2019 when the story blew up. In Green Bay, Wisconsin, former Packers star
Kabir Bajabiamila caught up in a bizarre situation. KGB explaining what he believes
led to the arrest of his friends at a children's Christmas play.
A family man, former NFL player, devout Christian, now cut off from his family and connected to a strange arrest.
I am going to share my journey of how I went from Christianity to now a Hebrew Israelite.
I got swept up in Kabir's journey, but this was only the beginning.
Hebrew Israelite. I got swept up in Kabir's journey, but this was only the beginning.
In a story about faith and football, the search for meaning away from the gridiron,
and the consequences for everyone involved. You mix homesteading with guns and church,
and then a little bit of the spice of conspiracy theories that we liked. Voila! You got straight way. I felt like I was living in North Korea, but worse, if that's possible.
Listen to Spiraled on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And we're back. And dare is somehow still a thing. Having been born in 1980 and like lived in like all my early memories are in a decade where it was just your brain on drugs, like just this weird, straightforward, just say no to drugs. I thought drugs were a thing people were going to make me do, like force into my bloodstream when I got to high school.
Well, that's only in Seattle, Jack.
If you drive through Seattle, that will happen to you. That will
happen. They will force it actually through your
car. Through your car window.
Well, you can't. You have to have your windows
up. Come on. They're going to blow
heroin into you.
And you have to have the air recycling
in your car air conditioning
or else the heroin gets in.
But, so I
think we assumed that the D.A. But so I think we assumed
that the D.A.R.E. program went away most of us, right?
Until I saw some people outside of a Best Buy.
Same, Best Buy, yeah.
Did you see that?
Wait, you saw D.A.R.E. people outside of a Best Buy also?
Yeah, it was the Best Buy, yeah.
D.A.R.E. people stand outside of the Best Buy.
I don't know if they have like,
there's a contract where they work together.
Yeah.
But that's where I saw dare people too.
I've seen dare people outside two Best Buys before with like trying to get you to sign something.
And all I said was like,
y'all are what the fuck?
I was like,
nah,
man,
I'm here.
Where the hell did y'all come from?
I'm here for a mouse pad.
Now leave me the fuck alone.
So,
yeah. Yeah. I mean, there's obviously a epidemic of overdose deaths.
Like the thing that Pee Wee Herman was saying in that PSA that we listened to up top is that was not true of crack.
Like crack didn't have like a epidemic of ODs, I don't think.
But it did like that. That is happening with fentanyl like fentanyl is
causing a massive spike in overdoses like that and you don't know if there's too much and people
like that does seem to be like the thing that they told us about drugs in the 80s has absolutely
come true it's called manifesting. Yeah. They've manifested this.
It might not be this one,
but one will happen
and we will go fucking hog wild
over this shit.
Yes.
So they've decided,
okay, this is real.
No more fucking around.
Let's go back to that idea
that was proven to not work
and was just a way to get money,
to funnel money to cops right essentially yeah so the dare
program is being brought back to several school districts following a prolonged absence this time
with a specific focus on fentanyl doesn't seem like they've learned anything from the first time
like that the thing that people say was wrong with the dare program in the first place
first of all that it was cops cops going into classrooms yep yeah that part second of all they
were doing it too early they were targeting kids who weren't really they're trying to like get it
in kids brains before like drugs were a real thing to them and just like it that's why
it didn't work for me my drug was power rangers at eight right i don't like i have no idea what
a crack pipe is you know yeah totally or like i knew it from a movie but like other than that i
was like yeah i mean i've seen seen new jack city but yeah that's not that's not how I live. So, yeah.
Because I think I was in fifth grade.
Yeah, same.
I was probably in like fourth or fifth grade when they started pushing dare down my throat.
And I just remember being like, this is, if anything, you're educating me on how dope drugs are.
Yeah.
That's all that was.
That was like my first real conversation about drugs where like the cop brought drugs into the classroom and we passed it around.
You smell that pipe?
That's the worst smell you're ever going to smell.
I remember him saying that.
I was like, that smells good.
Yeah.
Fine.
It smells better than cigarette smoke.
It smells better than cigarette smoke for failure, but go on.
Yeah, no, 100%.
Yeah.
It was, I didn't realize it was created by the LAPD chief of police, Daryl Gates, who his thoughts on recreational drug users is that they should be taken out and shot.
Oh, well, okay.
It's a very humane approach to drug abuse.
He was Duterte before Duterte.
Yeah.
Duterte got his shit from the Johnny Appleseed of the DARE program.
At its height, DARE was being taught at a whopping 75% of schools.
By 1998, it was reportedly costing taxpayers $600 million a year.
Yeah.
That is loud.
And the presentations were just full of racist dog whistles.
Or just not dog whistles, just racism.
Like pointing to the broken black family as the source of the drug crisis.
Yeah.
Going to a predominantly white school, have the officer be like miles you
know about that yeah yeah does your parents or your family yeah you're like um i have no idea
what this is i always see your mom picking you up right yeah wish dad you're like man get out of my
life but the thing that always bugs me about dare was like it's like the gum theory i don't know if
you all are familiar what i call it the gum theory it may not be real but i think about it it's like when you tell some like when you tell kids to not chew gum in school
they're gonna chew gum because you're telling them not underground gum racket yeah there was a whole
like i was the girl that was bringing the gum to school to give to everybody like what are you so
like dare was always like it was so dumb to me because i'm going you're telling kids not to
quote unquote do something and all you're doing is you're telling kids not to, quote unquote, do something.
And all you're doing is you're just piquing their interest.
But yes, it was very much riddled in anti-Blackness.
And that is something that I've always had an issue with when it comes to this program.
Yeah. You're paying the least cool, least trustworthy people in your community to come into school and talk to the part of your community that most despises them.
Right. And they put drugs on people. They put drugs on people. So how are you going to tell?
Yeah, I don't know. I've always had issues with D.A.R.E. I've always had issues with the police.
But I will say very openly that I think D.A.R.E. is just a way to make Black people look worse than
what the world
already does so yeah just yeah reinforce like the police perspective or what drug use even is
yeah it's it's black people mostly and then also like getting kids like snitch on their parents
and shit like that it's like they have where the drugs are I remember them having a box that you put anonymous notes
into, the DARE box,
and then at the end of the class,
the DARE officer would
read the questions, and
this was just a thing that smart
asses used to, like,
be funny, make them read
stupid shit. But,
yeah, apparently it ended, like,
that DARE box resulted in children
like narking on their parents and being removed from their own homes by social services because
they revealed that their parents were taking drugs aka smoking a little bit of pot. Wow. So really cool problem solving there.
Yeah.
Creating fucking just horrible situations.
But like to Dr. John's point,
like it,
it's like verifiable that dare did fuck all to prevent kids from using drugs.
Right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The stats are officially in and it would either had no effect or made children slightly more likely to use drugs and alcohol at an early age.
I'm I'm telling you it did because I legitimately wanted to smoke PCP. told us yeah he said i'm not joking i'm here with my fucking best friend but it's so funny i know
but this is my fucking 10 like my 11 year old brain right officer first of all the first thing
we always ask him at the top of every dare class was can we hold your gun yeah he never he was like
no there's no way but we asked it every time he's like you guys have to stop asking what can you
pull it out and show us the bullets and he's like bullets he's like we have to get going he's like what is that and then like we have kids who like new guns
and he would always get annoyed but so he's talked about this like so we're gonna talk about pcp
angel dust shit like that i got this exact same speech right crazy he said he went to a call at
a jack-in-the-box where a guy had just beamed up, smoked some PCP and was fighting the police there.
And they had they needed backup.
He said when he got there, this guy who smoked PCP lifted a fucking dumpster above his head.
I remember that story.
And threw it at a cop car.
Yeah.
And me and my friends were all like, holy shit.
We were like, yes.
Are you for real?
Superpowers.
Yeah.
We're like, how does it give you how does
it give you strength he's like i'm not sure it's like the drugs the drugs duty it's like but then
like we're like what is it like you your muscles like could you work like i remember asking shit
like if you worked out on pcp would you keep that strength and he was so again irritated by my
curiosity around pcp induced superhuman strength but yeah he just got
mad he's like guys this is not a cool thing and and i and it's funny that everybody i guess someone
everybody heard this version of pcp gives you superhuman strength yeah to the point where like
youtube came out i was i was scouring youtube for footage of somebody on PCP with that kind of strength, never found it.
And I was like,
was this,
was this cop lying to me?
And he was,
Oh,
Oh,
you believe that shit?
Yeah.
And so as the stats are coming out,
the dare program is doing their own research,
you know,
and they're like,
all right,
well,
we're going to get the DOJ to fund this study to see what the,
like what actually happened, what's actually going on here. And a month later, for the first time
in memory, the DOJ refused to publish a study it had funded for the first time ever. Because it
found that the DARE program was useless and was taking money away from programs that actually worked.
Behind the scenes, DARE went ballistic,
and they just kept saying this one,
like every time they get attacked,
the DARE program is like,
criticizing DARE is like kicking your mother
or saying that apple pie doesn't taste good.
And then a decade later,
they were criticized or like proven to be fraudulent again. And their response was,
it's like kicking Santa Claus to me. We're as pure as the driven snow.
So like we're as pure as the Colombian cocaine we put in front of children.
You're a Colombian flake. I just want to know where the money went.
There was a lot of money that was being moved
in the 90s around D.A.R.E.
and I'm just wanting to know where it went.
To police. To corrupt cops.
I'm wondering,
did it go into some
benevolent police fund, I wonder?
Or it was just like, if you got that D.A.R.E.
gig, they're like, oh shit, man, you're off
the street beat? You're just doing fucking dare classes oh that's right right there they were
they were confiscating luxury cars like porsches and bmws and turning them into dare vehicles
like with a dare decal on it that they got to drive around they were like yeah well it becomes
pretty apparent
who's winning here, though.
You know what I'm saying?
Right.
And then a kid's like, wow,
the police department buys you guys cars?
Like, no, we can't afford that.
Drug dealers get rich enough
to buy cars like this.
And then you're like, oh, okay.
That's the wave.
Yeah.
In reality,
they were doing the same exact thing
that drug dealers were doing.
Right.
100%. 100 100 they were
selling you something it's yeah it's ridiculous but amazingly dare still uses the dare box
like they still have the write down questions for cops folks it's anonymous purely anonymous
uh psych we're actually gonna investigate your parents if you say that you know what any of these things are.
That smell familiar to you?
Oh, yeah?
And where to?
Like, I could totally see being like, oh, yeah, I know what that smell is.
That's weed.
And then being like, whoa, yeah?
How do you know that?
My parents?
Yeah. You know, like just fucking panicking and throwing your parents under the bus yeah i don't know i don't know i was at a reggae festival recently that's why i know
next question no questions i need a lawyer officer for the questions your honor yeah all right that's
gonna do it for this week's weekly zeitgeist.
Please like and review the show if you like the show.
Means the world to Miles.
He needs your validation, folks.
I hope you're having a great weekend, and I will talk to you Monday.
Bye. We'll be right back. Outro Music I'm Jess Casavetto, executive producer of the hit Netflix documentary series Dancing for the Devil, the 7M TikTok cult.
And I'm Clea Gray, former member of 7M Films and Shekinah Church.
And we're the host of the new podcast, Forgive Me For I Have Followed.
Together, we'll be diving even deeper
into the unbelievable stories
behind 7M Films and Shekinah Church.
Listen to Forgive Me For I Have Followed
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Keri Champion,
and this is season four of Naked Sports.
Up first, I explore the making of a rivalry.
Kaitlyn Clark versus Angel Reese.
Every great player needs a foil.
I know I'll go down in history.
People are talking about women's basketball just because of one single game.
Clark and Reese have changed the way we consume women's sports.
Listen to the making of a rivalry.
Kaitlyn Clark versus Angel Reese.
On the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Presented by Capital One,
founding partner of iHeart Women's
Sports. Hey, I'm
Gianna Pradenti. And I'm Jermaine Jackson-Gadson.
We're the hosts of Let's Talk Offline
from LinkedIn News and iHeart Podcasts.
There's a lot to figure out when you're just
starting your career. That's where we come in.
Think of us as your work besties you can turn
to for advice. And if we don't know the answer, we bring in people who do, like negotiation expert
Maury Tahiripour. If you start thinking about negotiations as just a conversation, then I think
it sort of eases us a little bit. Listen to Let's Talk Offline on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.