The Gargle - Meat growth | AI teachers | Power drain
Episode Date: March 15, 2024Join host Alice Fraser and guest editors James Nokise and Laura Davis for episode 148 of The Gargle - the sonic glossy magazine to The Bugle, with one rule: no politics!🍔 Meat growth👩🏻⚕�...�� NHS abuse👨🏻🏫 AI teachers🪫 Power drain😫 ReviewsStory 1: https://scitechdaily.com/breakthrough-could-reduce-cultivated-meat-production-costs-by-up-to-90/Story 2: https://news.sky.com/story/nhs-england-staff-faced-more-than-84-000-cases-of-unwanted-sexual-behaviour-last-year-major-survey-finds-13089240Story 3: https://www.axios.com/2024/03/06/ai-tools-teachers-chatgpt-writableStory 4: https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2024/03/07/ai-data-centers-power/HOW TO SUPPORT THE GARGLE- Keep The Gargle alive and well by joining Team Bugle with a one-off payment, or become a Team Bugler or Super Bugler to receive extra bonus treats!https://www.thebuglepodcast.com/donate Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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This is a podcast from The Bugle's audio newspaper for a
visual world. I'm your host, Alice Fraser, and your guest editors for this week's edition of
the magazine are Laura Davis. Welcome. Hello. And James Nukise, also welcome. Hello. You're
coming from opposite ends of the world. For people who are, I think, technically considered
one flesh, you're quite far apart.
Yes, I'm currently in Western Australia,
sitting in my car watching the birds.
And I'm currently in Western Edinburgh,
sitting in the windowless cupboard,
watching Laura, watching the birds.
I mean, specifically, we just missed some discourse about the fact that you're in a room that you're calling a cupboard, but in the room that you're calling a cupboard, there is also a cupboard that Laura built you a sound studio in that you're not in.
It's completely insulting.
It's sort of a podcast inception. I mean, I don't know if we need to go that far into the marital details of podcasters, Alice, that we start, you know, studio shaming people at the beginning of the record.
Well, let's not studio shame.
Let's take hands together and leap into the deep well
that is this week's top stories.
But first, let's have a look at the front cover.
The front cover of this week's magazine is Ryan Gosling,
as Ken, at the Oscars, winning the hearts of the nation by doing a song, basically, which reminds me that people can uncritically just enjoy things.
I haven't seen any nasty thoughts about it yet online, though I'm sure there are some.
And the satirical cartoon this week is a badly photoshopped picture of the royal family. That's just the satirical cartoon this week is a badly Photoshopped picture of the royal family.
That's just the satirical cartoon.
I find it so exciting to see how much energy is going into what isn't a picture of the royal family, basically.
James, are you tracking this?
Are you a royal watcher?
Yes, in the way that all colonials are, and that we're all quietly messaging each other going,
it's finally happening, it's happening.
Basically, I didn't know anything about it until today
and then I started reading about it and I couldn't stop.
And, yeah, I've never been that interested in the royal family.
It doesn't bother me, you know, all of the controversies
at the moment about who's marrying in and who's marrying out.
I don't really care what untalented sort of mid-range actor Meghan Markle decided to marry. It doesn't
really register with me. But certainly I saw a lot of photos of the photo with lots of circles
around them. And I discovered that I'm very bad at detecting Photoshop because they had circles
around things that I was like,
is that sass?
I don't know.
I don't image edit.
No, I don't think that Kate Middleton does either.
Yeah, the worst excuse for those who didn't follow the story,
the royals put out a picture of Kate Middleton as proof of life,
which people immediately began unpicking and various wire services took down after it was shown to be
quite badly photoshopped and then kate middleton put up a tweet or probably her people put up a
tweet saying she was just experimenting with photoshop because that's the thing that she
likes doing and everyone in the world went no the, the reason we enjoy, the only reason we enjoy
the royal family is because we do not believe that any of them have ever touched a computer
in their f***ing lives.
They have people for that.
Well, everyone's been wondering where she is.
And it turns out she's been under the bus that the royal family is throwing her under.
Top story now, horrifying meat growth news.
Laura Davis, you're our meat growth expert.
Can you unpack this story for us?
Okay, I am fine with this.
Basically, they have worked out a way to make meat grow without an animal having to grow
the meat.
The meat grows the meat.
And there's also another bit of research where they're working out how to do that with milk
so that the cows don't make the milk, the milk makes the milk.
It just replicates itself and grows because it doesn't need to be stimulated by an entire...
They've managed to take the cow
out of the meat. And I think that's fine. I'm all for meatless meat meat.
Well, I think this is one of the interesting things about modern kind of meat manufacture
and environmentally friendly solutions to the meat problem, which is that they are all
incredibly ethically sound and deeply upsetting on a visceral level.
Like the whole let's replace protein with bugs thing.
And then in this instance, they've cultivated cells
and essentially given them cancer
so that then they keep growing themselves exponentially
in a way that would be horrifying if it were a living being
but isn't because it's in a slab of meat
but is also horrifying because conceptually it's...
It's better and worse.
I don't know about this endlessly growing blob.
It's so much better and it's so much worse
and it's also the least exciting apocalypse movie
where just a meat blob breaks out of a lab and keeps getting bigger.
Yeah, and on the side of the packet is,
I can't believe it's not better.
I just felt really old because clearly neither of you two
ever saw the 1980s horror movie The Blob.
Look, but the thing was The Blob wasn't just a blob.
The Blob was sort of more malevolent and sentient
than this meat blob.
This meat would just be...
Give it time.
...unappetised. This meat would just be, it would just sit in the street being unappetized.
This is clearly how it starts.
I just don't know if we need it to know.
Like if I can go a decent 40 years
without having any clue what's in the chicken,
in Kentucky Fried Chicken,
do I need to know?
Just give me a cheaper hamburger.
That's all I need.
I don't need to understand where it came from.
I just need to be the head of my big cap.
Yeah, which I think might be positive for the future of this meat growth industry
if they can make it inexpensive enough to produce that it's competitive
with the environmentally unfriendly forms of meat production.
I feel like the real question is, are vegans now ethically required
to invest in meat self-growing?
Well, you could definitely argue that it still requires the death
of one animal at least.
No, just get an ice cream scoop and take a chunk out of a passing sheep
or something.
I feel when it comes to meat eaters the barometer
is still is it human no no more questions right the scientists aren't exactly like
making everyone feel calm about this either i think that my favorite quote is, was a guy, the chief scientist came out and said,
oh, it's sort of, it's not exactly a nutrient.
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Every sport has their big, juicy controversy.
Boxing has the Mike Tyson ear bite.
Cycling has Lance Armstrong.
Baseball has its steroid era.
Curling has...
Broomgate.
It's a story of broken relationships, houses divided, corporate rivalry, and a performance-enhancing broom.
It was a year I'd like to forget.
Broomgate, available now.
Acast helps creators launch, grow, and monetize their podcasts everywhere.
Acast.com.
And that brings us to NHS news now. And this is the deeply upsetting news that NHS staff in England faced more than 84,000 cases of unwanted sexual behaviour last year.
James Nukise.
Don't do it, Alice. Don't do it.
Consent. You've done consent training for football teams in the past. Can you unpack this story? last year. James Nookie say... Don't do it, Alice. Don't do it.
You've done consent training for football teams in the past. Can you unpack this story for us?
Thank you. That was something of a very sinister tone to why I'm still in the UK.
Yeah, I'm just going to make sure I get the numbers right because it is, like you say, a big survey. It's 58,500.
That's the size of the survey.
8.67% of employees are covered, and it's 84,000 incidents.
Almost 26,000 staff also said they were the victim of similar incidents carried out by colleagues. So you've got the 58,500 who have experienced this and then you've got 26,000 going, oh
yeah, and not just from crazy people in the public.
It's also from our colleagues.
This came out after there was a Sky News investigation, which discovered that it was rife in the ambulance service.
And NHS England, not to be confused with NHS Scotland or NHS Wales, which are the ones that work,
they've said that they are putting measures in place to protect frontline workers.
And so thousands of body cameras have been issued to ambulance staff as well
and look it's it's quite the change in tone for England which which only a pandemic ago was out
there clapping in the streets for their health workers and now it looks like they're trying to get clapped in
the streets with their health workers. If you're clapping for your health workers at least we can
see where your hands are. I feel it's a good start. I blame this on pornography basically.
Sexy nurses, sexy doctors, get it out of the idiom. There's nothing sexy about somebody taking
your temperature rectally. There's nothing sexy about surgery. Let's keep get it out of the idiom. There's nothing sexy about somebody taking your temperature rectally.
There's nothing sexy about surgery.
Let's keep those things out of the sexy image bin.
I just think this is so heartbreaking that these people who are spending their lives helping us are basically just getting harassed left, right and centre, I think, statistically.
basically just getting harassed left, right and centre, I think, statistically.
I think it just speaks to the overconfidence of British people, Alice, because any time a nurse or a doctor has been anywhere near my genitalia, and the more I'm over 35, the more they seem to
have to be. I cannot tell you how little confidence I have in trying to grope them during the procedure.
I just it's you got to have ultra confidence to be bent over with someone telling you to cough and go.
I think I'm I think I'm picking up a signal.
Well, sort of by definition, you're not at your best when you're being exposed to doctors and nurses, physically or psychologically.
It is a strange time to be putting a move on.
Some people just trying to grab a handful on the way out? What?
There was a saying back in World War II that the nurses who would be nursing the soldiers would have to give a touch of the cold spoon,
which was that while they were giving sponge baths,
they might occasionally have to administer a cold spoon to an overenthusiastic penis.
We've all got our kinks.
I don't know of a cold spoon.
It's such a British way of dealing with an erection.
Why is it tapping it?
Don't get the spoon like it's a hard british way of dealing with an erection why is it tapping it get the spoon
like it's a hard-boiled egg yeah why does it always have to involve tea i just think ding ding
i mean what's the solution what how do we how do we fix this other than it's probably not cutlery
i mean look i'm not sure a knife wouldn't work well well look I mean if we pull a knife out
on an erection uh and it stays hot what then how let's phrase it what what what kind of society
are we building with the spoon you got a margin just I think it's from the outside in left to
right outside in we are also assuming that's it's the men who are out here doing all the harassing.
Let's be fair.
There's definitely some middle-aged English women who have lunged at doctors.
Let's not pretend.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, at least 2% of these 84,000 incidents are going the other way.
Yeah, some carnal
mid-England
housewives of Huntington
coming at you.
That brings us to our
reviews section. As you know,
each week we ask our guest
editors to bring in something to review
out of five stars.
And this week, laura you've brought
something in for us what have you brought for us um i've brought in uh the essential bruce
springsteen uh double set kiss uh cd that is in my car uh that is jammed in the cd player
and so i have listened to it so many times. James bought it on a whim
a couple years ago and it got stuck and um yep track one Growing Up great. Two Rosalito great.
Uh probably on the 17th thousandth time that you've listened to Glory Days. It starts to wear a bit thin.
I've really given this album
some consideration. Nobody has listened
to this. It's a
compilation album.
It's missing a couple.
It's missing a few.
I reckon I'd give it
three. It's not even
a good Bruce Springsteen
compilation CD to have stuck in your
cd player and playing all of the time that was an act of love laura davis this is this is why
couples try not to work together you buy your wife a bruce springsteen cd and several years
later she's reviewing it to the whole f***ing world on the
Mates podcast.
Well, I can't get it out.
Three stars
for the compilation Bruce Springsteen
CD. James, what have you brought in
for us? I've brought
Spring
in
Scotland because I am told we are in it,
and it is the middle of March,
and no, I disagree, strong disagree.
I've seen nothing to tell me that we are in spring.
I have seen no birds.
I have seen no flowering.
It's literally just people walking about possibly slightly less dour. It is still cold. I am still wearing five layers.
I am uncertain that this season actually touches this part of the world.
So how many stars?
Minus five degrees. Minus five degrees in stars.
I am going to do a slightly unusual thing. And I've brought in a review for our listenership
this week. I'm going to review screaming extremely loudly, a thing that very few of us get to do in our adult life. Very few forums are available for fully unrestrained screaming,
and the ones that are available tend not to have witnesses.
But about five weeks ago, I had the great opportunity to give birth in a room
with three other people present, and you're allowed to scream as loudly as you like and no one
can look embarrassed about it or tell you to be quiet or give you any advice on the screaming at
all other than one brave doctor who said can you try screaming down into your pelvis which I thought
was quite a good acting note,
sort of directing the energy of the scream into the pushing out of the baby. Anyway, I
had a great time, got a great baby, ended up with a sore throat, which was quite satisfying
because I am a very non-confrontational person. I don't think I've ever screamed at anyone in my adult life,
even when they definitely deserved it. So I wouldn't recommend necessarily having a baby
in order to get the opportunity to scream at the top of your lungs for a minute at a time,
five times in a row. But if you can find another way, maybe pretend you're having a baby
and enjoy the screaming. Five stars for the screaming, five stars for the baby.
Birth-giving, oof.
I feel like that can't be rated in stars.
And that brings us to our next story,
which is the future is AI and AI is the future.
Teachers are now using AI to mark their students' work
in an attempt to relieve people of excessive work.
The problem being, of course,
that a lot of students are now submitting AI-written texts.
So we're cutting the whole people part out of both teaching and
learning. Laura Davis, you are a hive mind. Can you unpack this story for us?
Well, my mum is a high school teacher and look, marking takes up so much time and, you know,
you're one teacher and you have multiple classes with many students and those numbers are only increasing.
So I absolutely see the sort of the appeal of it.
They're calling it there's a human in the loop.
which is the teachers are only using the AI to get notes generated and then they double check before they pass that feedback onto the student.
So it's sort of making teachers into the middleman sort of manager
where the students generate the AI.
A robot makes the assignment, a robot marks the assignment, and a human
passes it in the middle to another human. So essentially you've gone from marking students
to marking the work of the robot. In this, there are two humans on one plane and two robots on
another plane, and they're not really connecting.
The information is not going into the student,
it's going into the robot.
Making the robot ever smarter, presumably.
Yes.
Or at least letting them know how stupid we are.
I think that's it.
I think, you know, pressure builds diamonds.
I feel like AI is highlighting how secretly dumb
we've actually been as an educated society.
I feel like we've all been like,
the big societal secret is we've all actually been
academically coasting and not taking it seriously.
And now AI is just kind of really making that float to the top.
And heaps of people are getting caught up.
Because AI is essentially cliff notes of the future.
We've just kind of gone, you know how you'd write an essay
and they go, did you read the book?
You're like, actually, I just spent like five bucks
and bought a cliff notes and then semi-plagiarized that.
So I've heard.
And now it's all getting exposed.
Yeah, but I feel like this is going to reward people who put in the effort.
And I'm hoping that that'll be the outcome.
They'll have to figure out a new way to assess people's learning and it might go back to, you know, the old vivas where you had to go and face a panel of professors
who would ask you questions about what you'd learned or, you know,
fight you to the death over the knowledge that you had
or throw you off a cliff and if you bounced then you were a witch.
Will any of these professors be robots?
Yes.
Oh, yes.
If a robot can attend every class and contribute then i i imagine they'll get
they'll get the marks to become a professor why not i'd prefer the robots get the credit i'm really
against stolen valor at the moment i was thinking about how to explain to my toddler child about the
new baby and uh a friend of mine said, oh, tell them about the stalk.
Tell them that the stalk is going to deliver the new baby.
And I was like, f*** the stalk.
I'm going to tell the toddler that I pushed the baby out of my body
using my muscles because I want the credit for the work that I put in.
F*** the stalk.
Yeah, you made the meat.
The stalk is someone walking into an army bar
wearing camo pants who never saw combat.
You know, maybe we've been looking at this all wrong,
and I don't mean the army camo pants stalk,
but the chat GBT.
I'm wondering who invented the are you a robot test
because maybe the robots did and they've been
quietly training us for our future jobs to identify cars and traffic lights while they've
been studying up on all the essential things they'll need to run the rest of the world. And we're just going to end up being the traffic cops
of the AI future. Well, they're not going to like it when they find out you said that, James.
That brings us to our final story of this week's edition of The Gargle. America's power grid is being pushed to its absolute brink
by AI and clean tech manufacturing.
The future is here and the future is dirty.
James Nukise, you're clear, sighted about the future.
Can you unpack this story for us?
Yes.
And look, first of all, just a trigger warning
for fans of The Matrix. You're not going
to like this one. So power usage in the United States has been rocketing up because of the
needs to power all of these new and developed AIs and data storage. And when we say powering up,
I'm just making sure I've got the numbers right. It's about
it's over twice what they were looking at
for last year in terms
of the energy needed. In fact, they're worried
that all of this AI being developed and all of the
power that tech firms need, you know, the big
players, Amazon, Apple, Google, Microsoft developed and all of the power that tech firms need you know the big the big players amazon apple
google meta microsoft uh is gonna mean that other parts of the united states are gonna be out of
power um because they they haven't got enough for the entire grid so they're trying to figure out
why right now how to relieve pressure on the grid um and for anyone who remembers the first matrix film that
that was the conundrum that ai faced before we all ended up being plugged in as the batteries
for the the tech dystopia so it's the the they're talking about having to build nuclear plants
to power
the AI developing
and if that doesn't sound
like
the prequel
of the sci-fi dystopia
series, I don't really know what does
but I mean James, you have to
consider, obviously this is a high cost
but think about what we're getting out of it. It's like these AI things
are generating thousands of images of
Link from Zelda having sex
with Bowser from Mario. And look, I'm not saying I don't
you know, I'm on the other side of the world, laws in Australia, I'm not saying I don't appreciate that.
Alright? I'm not saying it's not helpful. I'm on the other side of the world, as long as I'm in Australia, I'm not saying I don't appreciate that. I'm not saying it's not helpful.
I'm just saying.
You leave me out of this.
Well, that's exactly what I've been doing.
What I'm saying is it's kind of incredible
that this is the cost of development
that people haven't factored in.
I don't think when people read stories sort of the cost of developments that people haven't factored in is that,
you know, I don't think when people read stories of, you know,
AI affecting, you know, student studies or AI building images of Taylor Swift with a football team that they go,
oh, this is why the lights won't go on in my house for three hours a day.
Yeah, well, there was a couple of weeks ago,
there was this controversy about Google's AI image generation
bringing up unfortunately diverse historical images
when you'd say, hey, Google AI, whatever it's called,
generate me a picture of a German soldier in World War II.
It would try and bring up pictures of people of all ethnic backgrounds, which historically speaking is probably not
accurate. And there was a big controversy about it. And everyone went to Google's AI
and tried to test it for themselves. And in doing that, killed all of the whales, I assume.
Just the energy drain of these incredibly trivial processes feels deeply disheartening to me.
I think the idea that we finally build a functioning AI and to do so drains the United States of its entire power grid,
Rippling the number one empire in the world to create a true artificial intelligence is just such a Terminator-style future.
And we kind of, it's like we are capable of imagining the worst case scenarios. And then we're just like, nah, but that won't happen.
Laura, how do you feel about it?
Look, it's going to be really good for the insects
it's going to be dark um it's going to be you know it's a lot less light pollution um there's
a whole bunch of perks i think it's it's saying um it's partly because people are trying to heat
their homes with electricity people are trying to use less fossil fuels people are trying to heat their homes with electricity. People are trying to use less fossil fuels.
People are trying to use more electrics. And there's been never a greater demand for electricity.
So I guess it's, you know, what do you want to turn off in America? Where are they flicking
the switches? You know, shouldn't be the hospitals. You don't want that.
Vegas is real bright.
You know what I think they can get rid of?
I think we can lose the flashy, coloured light backgrounds of Twitch streamers.
I think that's the first on the chopping block.
I think it should be sort of like an armistice, you know,
just sort of everybody has to bring
something to the table to turn off.
I'm just saying you don't need to be purple while you're playing
Grand Theft Auto.
Police are accepting LEDs.
Just bring in your LEDs over the next 72 hours.
No questions asked.
Hand them in.
Mains powered vibrators.
No one needs that much energy.
Look, I don't know what the future holds for us,
but I do know that I'll be asking some sort of AI
to give me energy saving tips in the future.
I mean, that's why they're getting us to figure out
where the traffic lights are so we can turn them off.
Turn them off and take your chances.
And that brings us to the end of this week's edition of The Gargle.
I'm flipping through the ad section at the back.
Laura, have you got anything to plug?
I have a Melbourne International Comedy Festival season coming up.
There are 26 shows, and if you're in Melbourne from the 27th of this month,
you could come to any of them.
I highly recommend doing that.
I'll be heading to Melbourne myself
for a week and I'll probably see your show at
least twice. James, have you got
anything to plug? I have
a monthly political
gig up here in Edinburgh
called The Edit,
which is a political new material
night and will be happening
a couple of days before the Bugle Live
here in Edinburgh as well
and if you are in New Zealand at the beginning of April then I will be at a very Samoan comedy show
opening for your finger for pulley eye at the Curitikanoa Aotea Centre, which if you are not a Pacific Islander
but a fan of the gargle and the bugle,
you could pop along to get your cultural fill for the year.
I am not doing anything, so don't worry about me.
This is about the most I can manage myself for doing at the moment,
but there is a bugle tour happening at the moment, a live tour,
and I'm appearing on some of those dates as a big head on a screen.
So come along to those on the off chance that you'll see me looming
two-dimensionally in the background of Andy Zaltzman's terrible puns.
I also have two specials out at the moment at gofasterstripe.com.
If you look up Alice Fraser, there's two of my specials there for 10 pounds,
or you can get all of my specials for free.
If you sign up at my Patreon, patreon.com slash Alice Fraser.
That's a one-stop shop for all of my standup specials, podcasts, and blogs,
as well as my weekly writers meetings.
If you want to write with me, if you've got anything that you want to write,
come along to those patreon.com slash alicefraser this is a bugle podcast and alicefraser production your
editor is ped hunter your executive producer is chris skinner i'll talk to you again next week
you can listen to other programs from the bugle including the bugle catharsis tiny revolutions
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