Tosh Show - My A.I. Expert - Guy Van den Broeck
Episode Date: April 30, 2024Daniel gets educated on artificial intelligence by UCLA computer science Professor Guy Van den Broeck. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm Tamika D. Mallory.
And it's your boy, Mike Saunders, General.
And we are your hosts of TMI.
And catch us every Wednesday on the Black Effect Network,
breaking down social and civil rights issues, pop culture, and politics
in hopes of pushing our culture forward to make the world a better place for generations to come.
Listen to TMI on the Black Effect Podcast Network,
iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
That's right.
I'm Dioza.
And I'm Mala.
We are the creators of Loca Torra Radio,
a radiophonic novella,
which is a fancy way of saying
a podcast.
Welcome to Loca Torra Radio, season nine.
Love at first listen.
We're older, we're wiser, and we're podcasting
through a new decade of our lives.
This season, we're falling in love with podcasting
all over again.
And getting to the heart of our stories.
We're going places we've never gone before,
and we're bringing you along with us.
With new segments, correspondence,
and a brand new sound.
Season nine is kicking off with an intimate interview
with Grammy award winning singer-songwriter,
Natalia Laforcade.
What's giving you hope right now?
Well, when I see what music does to people,
it gives me a lot of hope.
If you liked Loca Tora before,
you're gonna love season nine.
Subscribe to our show and you'll see why Loca Tora
is your prima's favorite podcast.
Listen to Locatora Radio as part of the MyCultura podcast network available on the iHeartRadio
app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Get emotional with me, Radhita Vlukya, in my new podcast, A Really Good Cry.
We're going to be talking with some of my best friends.
I didn't know we were going to go there on this.
People that I admire. When we say listen to your body, really tune in to what's going on.
Authors of books that have changed my life.
Now you're talking about sympathy, which is different than empathy, right?
Never forget, it's okay to cry as long as you make it a really good one.
Listen to A Really Good Cry with Radhie Devlukia on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Just raise your hand once you realize that you're that you
know that you're talking to a complete idiot.
Tosh Show.
Tosh Show.
Tosh Show for show. Welcome to Tosh Show.
If you're proud to be Latino, stand the fuck up.
Go ahead and hit me with some of that 305 music.
["Tosh Show for Show"]
All right.
It's a good start. You know, Eddie, I have heard through the grapevine
that some people don't like the production value
of our theme song.
That's crazy.
Now, I may shock a lot of you listeners out there,
but we did not spend a lot of money
on the music for
Tosh Show. But I am open to new suggestions, but not my traditional musicians. No, no,
no. This podcast is the future of entertainment. So what better than AI to create our potential
new theme song.
Right.
Okay, I hear we've got a few candidates to audition.
Let me go ahead and hear this first one.
Here you go.
Tush is here.
He's got treats up his sleeve.
Get ready, it's time for Tush-O-Believe.
This time for Tush-O-Believe.
Now that sounds like a train wreck.
I don't like that one bit.
It's probably the prompt.
No, no, there's too many words to listen to.
All right, we got another one?
Yeah. together. They're a team that needs to last in mock. They want to know who believes in ghosts.
Now that's got some energy. What I worry about is people listening to this thing first thing in the
morning and they're not ready for that Nickelback rage. That might be too much. We might be getting
people spilling their coffee. Then we've got a lawsuit on our hands. Right.
We have any more?
Here's play, let's play one more.
All right, let me hear another one.
Welcome to the Tosh show where dreams come to play.
No celebrities here just everyday people hooray.
With polka music and laughter.
God, that's awful.
Here's the thing, AI is not ready.
I say we stick with what we've got.
Right.
Ah, show for show.
Woo!
That's right.
Oh, man.
I worry about AI every morning.
It's the first thing I do.
Is AI sleeping with my wife?
Yes, I guess.
Is AI diddling my kids?
That's what I worry about.
Right.
It's just non-stop.
Oh, what's AI doing?
I was taking my dog for a walk.
That I can get my head around.
That I would enjoy.
Now, I'm told, thanks to AI, that this podcast
is now broadcast in over 7,000 languages.
And I'm gonna be honest with you, I didn't know there were 7,000 languages. And I'm gonna be honest with you,
I didn't know there were 7,000 languages.
Let's see what Tosh shows sounds like in Spanish.
I think it was about sequences, Eddie.
The team of people who create this program
are three people.
Whew.
Now that podcast is no longer under the category of comedy.
That one's under sexy.
This is why you can't ever be convicted of a crime
in this country, because you just be like,
oh, I didn't do that.
That was AI.
Like I never said those words.
I don't speak fluent, beautiful Spanish.
You want to hear me speak Chinese?
I think he means to connect with the audience.
Eddie.
The team that created this show is three people. or as they like to say, the Japans. But it's all under the Asian umbrella,
which they like to hold.
A lot of them like to use umbrellas.
This is what I want to, I'm not, there's no spoilers.
I'm not giving any spoilers.
Well, I will, but it's just episode one
that I'm gonna talk about.
And I understand that this is set in, I think,
the 1600s or something like that,
medieval period and it's a different culture. Okay.
But I like to just play it out as if it happened in my life today.
Like how would that go over?
I just like the idea of me coming home from work.
So Eddie, you can play the role of my wife for this.
And you just say, how was your day, honey?
How was your day, honey?
Oh, funny you should ask.
You know how I like to smart off sometimes at work?
Well, I spoke up when I wasn't supposed to.
Anyway, we're gonna have to kill our children and I have to kill myself.
So yeah.
All right.
Well, uh, speaking of AI, today's guest, a genius, a certified genius, a professor at the university of
California, Los Angeles.
This guy knows everything about AI.
He's going to calm my nerves, hopefully, or he's going to create new worries for
me at night.
Also, I have to, I have to mention that this was the interview that was recorded
me at night. Also, I have to, I have to mention that this was the interview that was recorded that day that Dylan had a colossal fuck up, a brain
shart heard around the world.
So, uh, there were some audio issues, uh, but the irony is that Dylan figured
out how to use AI to fix his blundering buffoonery.
Enjoy.
What's up everybody?
This is Stephen A Smith.
When I'm not at my day job, first tape,
you can find me in my studio
hosting the Stephen A Smith Show podcast.
Tune in every Monday, Wednesday and Friday
at the very least, as I bring you all new episodes
that feature the biggest headlines in the world of sports, pop culture, business, and
politics. You'll hear my unfiltered opinions on those nauseating cowboy fans, the chaos
in Washington, D.C., and trending topics on social media, as well as my straight shooter interviews
with top celebrities and game changers.
And I occasionally give out love advice.
Yes, it's true.
If you wanna know my true feelings about something,
I'll give it to you straight.
So listen to the Stephen A. Smith Show podcast
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you get your
podcast.
Get emotional with me, Radhita Vlukya, in my new podcast, A Really Good Cry.
We're going to talk about and go through all the things that are sometimes difficult to
process alone.
We're going to go over how to regulate your emotions, diving deep into holistic personal
development and just building your mindset to have a happier, healthier life.
We're gonna be talking with some of my best friends.
I didn't know we were gonna go there on this.
I'm gonna go down there because this is us.
People that I admire.
When we say listen to your body,
really tune in to what's going on.
Authors of books that have changed my life.
Now you're talking about sympathy,
which is different than empathy, right?
And basically have conversations that can help us
get through this crazy thing we call life.
I already believe in myself. I already see myself.
And so when people give me an opportunity, I'm just like, oh great, you see me too.
We'll laugh together, we'll cry together and find a way through all of our emotions.
Never forget, it's okay to cry as long as you make it a really good one.
Listen to A Really Good Cry with Rali Devlukia on the iHeartRadio app, Apple
Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Hannah Storm and my podcast, NBA DNA with Hannah Storm, digs deep into the history of
professional basketball, along with my own as one of the first female sportscasters.
Now let's get you up to speed on what else happened around the NBA today. We talked to all sorts of people I interacted with from Dr. J to
Charles Barkley and recap iconic moments. Yes he's got it, here he comes.
Way rock the baby to sleep and slam dunk. As well as some of the wild stories behind the
scenes. We were like what? What are we in for? The scoreboard crashes before we even tip a game off.
Today, the NBA is a global sports and entertainment giant.
Players are multi-millionaires and cultural icons.
Igadala to Curry, back to Igadala, up for the layup. Oh, blocked by James. LeBron James.
And these stories are about how we got here, both on and off the court. And what's next?
are about how we got here, both on and off the court. And what's next?
Listen to NBA DNA with Hannah Storm
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Pasha.
My guest today is the smartest person we've had on the show,
and not just because he's
a foreigner with four words in his name who also happens to have facial hair and wears
glasses.
Please welcome our distinguished guest, AI expert in UCLA, Professor He, Dr. He, Professor
He.
Mr. He, what do you want?
That's all good.
Just He is fine.
Thank you.
All right.
He, where are you from? I'm from Belgium.
Belgium.
How long have you been here?
I moved here in 2015.
You're a citizen?
Not yet.
Soon.
Maybe next year.
Yeah.
Are you, you're actually going to do it?
I think I'm eligible in like a month.
So congratulations.
Thank you.
Welcome.
Do you like America?
Yeah.
I mean, it gave me a lot of opportunities, so yeah, I love it here.
How often do you go back? Maybe once or twice a year. It's a long trek. Yeah. Yeah. Especially
with a toddler. It's not so nice to travel for like 13 hours. How old is your toddler?
Three years old. And now are you as an academic person, do you still, I mean, can you, can
you relate to a toddler? Do you act silly? Are you a silly dad? Oh yeah. Are you strict?
No, I'm, I'm quite silly. I would say I don't really like to be the serious professor too Can you relate to a toddler? Do you act silly? Are you a silly dad? Oh, yeah. Are you strict?
No, I'm quite silly, I would say.
I don't really like to be the serious professor too much.
It's not my style, no.
I mean, I feel like the reason I have children was because I wanted an excuse not to care
so much about everything else.
Yeah.
And you cannot imagine before it happens, right?
It's kind of, yeah, like you cannot prepare for this and then suddenly everything changes. And, you know, it's also
kind of interesting that you kind of learn, you know, you see them grow and like learn
things and you're like, oh yeah, this, this is different from how AI learns. You know,
like you kind of get some perspective on like, what is AI just from seeing a toddler learn
how to walk and talk and you know, all that stuff. Right. I just thought, whatever, the world's going to shit
and I'm gonna still have to build this horrible Lego thing
that he just brought.
Do you believe in ghosts?
No.
I feel like you asked the French chef the same question.
Is that a usual question?
That's the first question I ask everyone.
Do you believe in ghosts?
Not at all.
Then I move on.
Do you believe in digital ghost or those death bots?
What are those?
Like some people that have lost someone
and then they create their like this digital ghost.
I'm sure it's comforting.
It's like watching videos and pictures from people.
So do you think that's a good thing for the psyche
as a way to move on or no?
I think it's a bit creepy.
I wouldn't really enjoy it.
I would rather watch a video from 10 years ago
Yeah, that's always sad to just to keep replaying that video like John Wick
Why did you leave Belgium a smart country to come to good old dumb America?
Yeah, you know honestly no one wanted to give me a job as a professor in Belgium and I had to come here as a
Academic refugee. What is your actual job? I'm a professor of computer science at UCLA and I teach AI you teach AI
Mm-hmm. Are you worried that your job will be taken? Hmm. I mean I the teaching part
I mean the more the more people will help teach AI the less kind of boring stuff
I have to do and the more interesting things I can teach
that are maybe less off the shelf.
So I wouldn't mind more AI help.
How did you get into computers in the first place?
I mean, I was a big nerd and still am, I guess.
And I like to program, I like to play computer games
and just like any other nerd,
that's how I started with computers.
Do you still play the games?
Yes. You do? Yes, yes. I Do you still play the games? Yes.
You do?
Yes, yes.
I wish you hadn't asked, but yeah.
Like you put in real time?
I have this rule where maybe once a year,
I'll spend the weekend like binge playing
for like and without sleep just to kind of reset myself
and like not worry too much about being a civilized person
with a real job.
And I think everyone needs to do such a thing every once in a while.
No.
Is there a particular game that you care about?
Last one I played was I played civilization six again.
Uh, I don't know.
You know that game strategy games?
I'm not a game person.
And my brother, my brother is a game person and, uh, was computer
programmer and then be created a company for gaming and also for the government
and then sold it and you know he's that kid.
Very much a world that you two.
I'd like to meet him.
But he, I told him I was interviewing him and he was like okay so then he had just a
couple things he's like bring okay. So then he had just a couple things. He's like, bring it, bring this up. It seems like self-driving cars got to 80% good really quickly, but progress has stalled with
getting into 100%. Will we see that with AI for programming too? Like a helpful tool, but still
needed someone to steer it? Or will it quickly get to the point that we don't need software engineers?
Yeah, so I think it's kind of a little bit of both, right?
So on the one hand, yeah, like even today, your brother is probably already using generative
AI to help him program.
And so that's definitely happening.
Whether your brother will be completely replaced, I highly doubt it.
I think there's, you know-
He doesn't have a job now.
He just creates stuff like-
Oh, he's just doing it for fun.
He does it for like six months, sells it, does something else.
I mean, so if it's kind of this boilerplate stuff where it's very
similar to what many people have done before, and it's just like minor
tweaks to things and yes, AI is probably going to be able to do that because AI
is really good at like finding similar things and kind of slightly modifying
them, but if it's actually building like new software that does new things,
that's going to be much harder for AI to achieve.
You teach at UCLA?
You think it's a bad idea that UCLA left the PAC-12 for the Big Ten?
And are you aware of sports?
I heard this is a big deal in the real world.
Yes, I heard about it.
I don't know.
I am sure UCLA only makes good decisions like hiring me and moving to the Pac-12 or whatever it is.
Do you ever have Lonzo Ball in one of your classes?
Who is that?
He was a basketball player.
I'm sorry.
Popular a few years ago.
We get student athletes in class all the time. So, but I don't really, I don't know them.
Are you told it? Hey.
No, definitely not.
It's a little debate for us here. Who is the father of artificial intelligence, Alan Turing or John McCarthy? So Alan Turing was the he was
kind of the father of computer science and he already said like let's build a
computer that can play chess. So in that sense Turing is kind of the first but
then McCarthy was the one that called it AI and really kind of started the field
of AI. So I think they both get credits.
Okay, well I want you to know that there was no debate here.
Closed my question to make you feel
like you were among academics,
but nothing could be further from the truth.
I mean, your question was great,
except you said turning instead of touring.
That was the giveaway.
God damn it.
Yeah, you should read these cards before.
You think I didn't read it.
Well, then you're extremely dumb.
I stew over these things.
By the way, when's the last time you took a hearing test?
Do you think I have a problem?
No.
Never.
Okay.
Never, thank you very much.
No, it's like my kid just took a hearing test
and you just have to raise your hand.
And I just want you to, during this interview,
just raise your hand. And I just want you to, during this interview, just raise your hand once you realize
that you know that you're talking to a complete idiot.
No, no, I don't believe in that.
You don't believe in that, oh God.
I mean, I'm also an idiot, you know.
No, not true.
What are some of the real dangers of AI?
Because you're not a doom and gloom guy.
No, I don't like all the scary stuff of AI is going to take over the world and like Terminator
will walk into this room and all of that stuff. I appreciate that some people seriously study
this like as a long-term problem of like how do we make AI behave the way we want it to behave.
But I think what I'm much more concerned about is like today, AI is doing pretty bad things already.
And if you care too much about this kind of Terminator
sci-fi AI taking over the world,
then I think you're also kind of ignoring
the real dangers today.
And the real dangers are just believing everything
that's put out in front of you?
Yeah, thinking that somehow because AI is intelligent,
it knows how to make decisions that are good for all of us.
Well, these systems are full of biases and, you know, AI is constantly also being used
to track people, to even build kind of automated weapons.
AI is being used in many ways today that are quite dangerous already.
And that's what I'm more concerned about.
Oh yeah, that does sound worrisome.
Now I'm back on the doom and gloom.
I thought you were making me feel better about that. No, but I mean there's drones flying around
and you can tell them find Daniel Tosh and shoot at Daniel Tosh. This is very doable.
And so... Sorry, sorry. We can cut this. If I see a drone in my property, my instinct is to get a
slingshot out. But now I think that might not be good enough. Yeah, you should move closer to an airport where you cannot have drones.
Just safer.
Move closer to an airport?
That's the fix?
Ugh.
I'd rather be shot at.
How advanced is the cutting edge of this technology compared to what the public is aware of?
Oh, I think the public is aware of the cutting edge.
Anyone who has something new desperately wants to put out a press
release, show the world, make money. Yeah. All right. So there's nothing behind the scenes. It's
way scarier than what? I mean, some of these models take a while to train. Like I'm sure OpenAI is
training the next GPT and it's probably impressive and they know it, but they're not ready to release
it yet. But as soon as they can, I'm sure they will. Isn't the greatest threat of computer learning,
not artificial intelligence, but rather human stupidity?
Most people believe what they're told because nobody reads or bothers.
Yeah, yeah, it's all it's all the magical thinking rights people think this is magic that it knows everything that it can make perfect decisions for everyone
Then I think it has happened before like in the 90s when AI started to beat world champion at chess
You could be like, okay, we're done right like? Like this is chess in the West for thousands of years
has been the game where you prove you're intelligent.
And if AI can do that, then we're done.
But it turned out that after that,
there wasn't really all that much more that AI could do,
even though this was really impressive.
And so this happens over and over again, right?
At some point AI beats the world champion
at the game of Go, which is much harder than chess.
It's kind of the hardest board game you can play.
Go is the hardest board game?
I don't know.
I'm not an expert, but yeah, it's like this...
I think you can think of it as like an East Asian kind of variant.
Is it enjoyable? Is it a fun game to play?
I tried. It's way too complicated for me to enjoy.
So, yeah.
But some people really love it.
And, you know, once you beat that,
you're like, okay, there's no more harder game
where humans are better than AI.
And then you're like, oh, maybe poker.
Like, we're good at bluffing and reading people.
AI starts to beat the world champions at poker.
Too many monkeys. You ever play that?
No. What's that?
Oh, it's a card game.
You can play with your daughter. You'll love it.
Can she count to six yet? Yes. Oh, then you're in. That's all card game. You can play with your daughter. You'll love it. Can she count to six yet?
Yes.
Well, then you're in.
That's all you need.
Yeah, yeah, we'll try.
I'll look it up.
How come AI can't come up with something
where they can click on photos of bicycles
or say, I am not a robot?
I don't think these things work anymore, really.
AI is able to crack all of these.
They keep changing them all the time
just to make sure that someone who's building AI
for the previous thing has to spend some time building in AI for the next thing. That's why they keep changing all of these. They keep changing them all the time just to make sure that, you know, someone who's building AI for the previous thing has to spend some
time building in AI for the next thing. That's why they keep changing all the
time, but I wouldn't really trust them to be.
So that's not going to save me.
Yeah.
Can you walk me through a plausible doomsday scenario where the machines take
over and I'm locked out of my Rivian?
I mean, plausible? No. I mean, I'm sure your car can break down.
I think your Rivian or your Tesla will today already misbehaved and not open its doors.
It has nothing to do with AI, right? These things are just not robust.
That's the problem. Do you have a smart home?
Not really. I have like a Google Assistant just to...
Because my toddler keeps requesting music, so I don't really want to like go on my phone.
I just like, please play this music. So that's my only use case for AI really.
Are you into all of that tech stuff or not necessarily?
Um, I find most of it just makes my life harder.
Uh, I mean, there were ads for like Siri and these types of
assistants 10 years ago that claimed, oh, they will plan your trips.
They will do this.
They will do that in the end.
They never understand what I say, maybe because I have an accent and it's just
like, there's a few things I know I can ask everything else I'm just not even trying anymore.
I always think of like these guys
that create these billionaires,
these tech guys that create these safe bunkers or whatever.
And there's so much tech in these homes.
I'm like, unless the day they're finished,
the doomsday happens and they move in then,
but if it sits for 10 years,
Yeah, they need things going to work.
They need some tech support in their bunker.
Because I can't get my lights to turn on half the time with my Crestron app. So
I'm just I'm just loving that Mark Zuckerberg thinks his entire Hawaiian
island is going to work. I really just want to know that 10 years after I die,
my kids still have a good for a few more years and then pass that I don't really I would know that 10 years after I die,
my kids still have it good for a few more years.
And then past that, I don't really care.
Yeah, I think you're fine.
Also, I'm not a fortune teller, right?
So I think your opinion is just as valid as mine
on the future of AI, honestly.
That is not true.
There's no way my opinion.
I mean, something about what you said earlier of like,
think of music, right? You can ask an AI today like give me another song that sounds like Kanye, right?
Like or whatever, like that's pretty easy actually, because there's a lot of style already
there and you just do something in a similar style.
If you ask AI to invent jazz or rap music or something that's completely different,
that's really what it struggles with and we don't really have an idea of how to do that.
So AI is really good at more of the same,
it's not so good at like, do something fresh.
And so I don't know how you think about your own comedy,
but if you think you're different
from all the other comedians, you're probably fine.
No, I'm not.
I am not that different.
Ooh, all right, well, whatever.
Do you have any creepy stories about how big data
knows people better than they know themselves?
I'm sure it happens all the time where people are outed for being pregnant or whatever, just by someone in their home with the same IP searching for something.
Right. I think this happens all the time.
Yeah, I figure things out pretty quickly.
I don't know. I always see the same ads on Instagram and they're always like something
that I searched on some other websites.
So I really feel like all the companies know exactly.
You have a burner phone?
No.
Do you have one?
No, I'm not somebody that ever, I don't do things that matter.
Like there's my wife, I'm never trying to keep anything from anyone.
If somebody, if big brother looked in on me,
they would just be like, oh, that is horribly unimpressive
what he does all day long.
I mean, the problem for me is I grew up in this generation,
like early 2000s, the internet was only good
and by just doing more on the internet
and making everything open, we would change the world
and everything would be connected and better.
And then like 10 years later, we realized,
oh, that's not actually what's
happening with the internet, but I feel like all my information is out there
already.
So like, what more do I save?
Just porn.
All the internet did flooded us with porn.
So yeah, I don't want to get in trouble here because one of my colleagues in my
department at UCLA actually invented the internet.
So I cannot really say it's, it's a negative thing.
I think, you know,
Come an hour.
Sure.
Does it matter whether or not I accept cookies on a website?
It doesn't matter.
You'll be tracked anyway.
So I should just always say, except all.
I always do.
You do.
Yeah.
I like to get the other one where it's like, Oh, just the selected ones.
Then I have like go through and I started.
It just makes your life harder for no good reason. Yeah
So just accept them all and move on. Can you read the titles of your books? Oh, no, please
Which ones did you find? I got two here at the introduction to lifted probabilistic interference
Inference well part of the neural information processing series. Yep.
And what's this other one?
Was it the query processing?
On probabilistic data, yeah.
Those sound fun.
Yeah.
Oh man, I'd love to recommend those to my wife's book club.
Yeah, so you invited me to this podcast
based on reading those books?
There is no way I could read those books.
Yeah, the titles sound fancy, but those things are not even really
what's the current AI, what current AI is doing.
The current AI is actually really simple.
The techniques that actually worked turned out to be way more boring and
less like technically fancy than what we thought would be necessary to build AI.
And that's also something that puzzles the community, like how are all the simple dumb things working really well
and like all the clever things don't really work.
It's very confusing.
If AI is so intelligent, how come they can't figure out
that I'm not trying to type duck all the time?
I swear constantly, you think it would pick up on this
at some point.
Yeah, I share your frustration.
So here's the thing, right?
So the AI is really impressive.
Like these language modes are really good
at actually giving you answers that are really clever.
But then if you actually want to integrate
this technology into everything,
you need to like engineer a whole bunch of stuff
that somehow people are not able to do
in a way that I'm happy with either.
Part of the problem is who's going to actually build this stuff?
An AI engineer is so expensive for these companies and they're all just trying to build the next
chat GPT to have a nice big press release about it.
But to kind of do the dirty work of actually integrating all this stuff with all their
services and so on, that's actually quite complicated and expensive. I think that's why we're not actually getting the functionality we want for
things we use all the time.
How do you think we regulate AI?
Because if we're expecting these geriatric dip shits in Congress to wrap
their heads around this.
I mean, it's complicated, right? Because I think everyone's confused.
I think the problem is not even them, right?
If you ask a lawyer who the problem is not even them, right?
If you ask a lawyer who studies AI regulation, even they, I think,
don't really know what is going to happen here.
Like, AI companies are using everyone's data.
They're probably watching this video and putting it as training data
into some video AI model.
And the problem is that the regulation is not super clear about
what is fair use of all this data.
Obviously, you have your copyright for everything you do, but then somehow companies are still
using it, assuming that if they do it at a big enough scale, they can somehow get away
with it.
Then for people like me, it seems obvious that this should not be legal in a commercial
setting.
But then some lawyers are like, no, this seems like fair use because it's kind of like a
child learning and then making fresh content afterwards and that is allowed.
And I think someone will figure this out, but I don't think it's clear right now what
is legal.
And that's just for the copyright issue.
There's also just like safety stuff.
I think some things should really be banned, like using AI to look at people's resumes
to decide who gets hired or filtered.
I think that's obviously wrong.
Those tools can never really do a good job and be fair.
Yeah, but interviews are awful.
If any of me interviews somebody,
it's just, who's the best liar performer to my face?
Sure, sure, but then what's AI gonna do?
It's gonna be like, oh, hire all people named Daniel,
or you know, like, so. That's a gonna do? It's gonna be like, oh, hire all people named Daniel.
That's a good start.
Now I'm bored.
I feel like you could do a podcast
just interviewing other Daniels, right?
That's not a bad idea.
I'll steal that, fair use.
Daniel on Daniel.
There's a horrific AI-generated video
of Will Smith eating noodles.
Does AI have a problem with Will Smith and do you think it stems from the movie I, Robot?
No.
I've seen that video though and it gets better every year, right?
There's like the early version, which is just chaos and now recently it starts to look pretty
good.
Yeah.
It's figuring it out.
It's learning. Did you ever look at those AI explicit photos
of Taylor Swift?
No.
Did you?
No.
Are you worried about deep fakes, all that stuff?
Especially in politics, I think that's a problem.
What do you think of politics in our country?
You enjoyed it?
Is it maddening?
Yeah, I was very, like I moved here in 2015, right?
And the world changed very quickly after that.
I felt like this was kind of a bait and switch, like, yeah, come to America.
It's great.
And then, no, I still love it here.
See, I don't want to get in trouble here, right?
I love it here.
Do you think America is the greatest country in the world?
Yeah, I mean, I'll say one thing positive, which is, so I'm from Belgium.
My wife is from Bosnia.
We cannot really live anywhere. We're not one of us is a foreigner, right?
Except in California, I feel like we're both here and no one cares that we have an accent
and we really feel like we're both at home, right?
So I think that's really beautiful about California and the US more generally.
Let's just say just California.
Let's be honest.
I can plug you two into a few different markets and you'd feel very differently.
Is California the only place that you've lived in the United States?
Yes, in the United States, yes.
Have you visited the whole country?
I mean, so the thing is in my field, like we have these conferences where everyone meets
to talk about AI and it's always in the same kind of Hilton or Sheraton or whatever hotel
in some random city.
So I have seen all the hotels in all the cities.
I wouldn't really say
that I've seen the country that much. I mean, I love to travel around California and you know,
whatever. But, uh, I mean, California is its own country. You've seen enough. Who is the most
famous Belgian besides yourself? Jean-Claude Van Damme. Yeah. Jean-Claude Van Damme. Did you like
him growing up? Yeah. I mean, in the nineties, I was a teenager. So yeah,laude Van Damme. Did you like him growing up? Yeah.
I mean, in the nineties, I was a teenager.
So yeah, I loved the action movies.
Yeah.
All right.
Who's got better chocolate?
The Swiss?
Belgium, of course.
I mean, are you sure about that?
I mean, I cannot.
Even if I thought differently, I couldn't tell you on this podcast.
Like, there are certain things I'm not allowed to say.
Do you miss your waffles or no?
So waffles is only for tourists really.
Waffles are not a big deal in Belgium.
Yeah. So chocolate is real. Beer is definitely real.
Waffles are mostly for you guys.
Well, we appreciate it.
By the way, how do you have your,
when you occasionally you've had a waffle,
how do you have, do you have it with syrup, whipped cream, fruit?
Never, never. I never have waffles.
Ever.
I like a French crepe like a pancake. That's my...
I don't have a French crepe machine. I brought you a waffle machine.
I'll...
Oh no. Oh no, you were serious about getting me a waffle maker.
But it's little cars and trucks and different things.
Yeah, my daughter will love this.
Children love a waffle maker.
Thank you.
I don't know why I have that.
It feels mildly offensive, but you know.
Is that offensive to give you a waffle maker?
No, no, no, it's okay. I actually would like one.
I don't think we have one, so I'll take it.
And then the next gift, I got you. I actually would like one. I don't think we have one. So I'll take it. I'll take it. And then the next gift I got you. I love board games. And I know that, you know, you play
chess and stuff. So this was a game, but I don't like this game. I never got into it.
But everybody buys me games because they're visually pretty. What is this? O-Trio?
O-Trio.
O-Trio. Okay. It's like a pretty game.
Oh yeah. I can put this.
And it's got pretty pieces that go into it.
It's like a decorative item.
This looks cool, thank you.
Yeah, I'm just like, I'm not gonna play this game.
It's not my game.
Okay.
I stick with my Rummy Cub.
Thank you.
Rummy Cub.
What do you call it, Rummy Cub or Rummy Cub, I always forget.
Don't ask me, I don't speak your language.
How many languages can you speak?
Speak Dutch, French, English, a little bit of German.
I was born in Germany.
I actually learned, yeah, I watched your interview
with the chef, you were in Boeppark, you said in that time.
I was actually there.
You were in Boeppark?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So what happened, there was a workshop
for people to discuss AI in this weird hotel castle.
It's owned by the guy who invented gummy bears, Haribo gummy bears.
So we were just there talking about AI and then, you know, there were just gummy bears
everywhere.
And like everyone's getting sick, sick eating gummy bears off the table.
And yeah, so that's why I was in both parts.
We have a lot of get togethers in German castles in the middle of nowhere to discuss about
AI.
It's a thing.
That is the greatest thing you've ever said.
He's in a German castle eating gummy bears in Vauxpart.
With like, what are these animals that get hunted and stuffed and then put on the wall, like a rhino, an elephant?
You ever shot a gun in your life?
No, I don't really want to.
I've never shot one either.
No, no. I had the opportunity. I was in Vietnam and they're like, here for $1 shoot this machine
gun. I'm like, no, thank you. You served in Vietnam? Yeah, I did. Thank you for your service.
Appreciate that. Yeah. I always find it funny when Hollywood tries to guess the future in
movies and you're just like, oh, this is such a bad attempt. You can't predict and it just
looks so bad. Yeah. Do they ever come calling like, hey, this is such a bad attempt. You can't predict, and it just looks so bad.
Do they ever come calling, like, hey, we're
trying to figure something out?
No, because I'm not like a futurist, right?
Imagining interesting future world is not really my job.
What's your favorite AI movie?
See, I knew you were going to ask it,
and I don't really have one.
What I really like, I really enjoyed the first season
of Westworld, which is not a movie, of course,
like the TV series.
It made me so mad.
I started thinking, am I a robot? I watched too many episodes in a row, but it really got to me.
But it fell off the rails in the following seasons.
Yeah, a little bit.
I wanted closure in season one. They won't ever do that with a good show. Just one season. Just figure it out. I mean, this is an American thing in Europe.
Everything ends after two seasons and they're like,
okay, done, let's not ruin it.
Not everything in Europe.
Great British Bake Off's been going for a hundred years.
Do you like that show or no?
I do.
I watch all of it, yeah.
It's very enjoyable.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm waiting for you to give me a handshake.
Oh, just reach across.
Haven't earned it yet.
Your wife, you're married?
Yeah.
Is she smart too?
She's very smart. She's smarter than me for sure.
Yeah.
Okay. Is she really smarter than you or is that something?
It's obvious. We play board games. She wins every single time.
Like it's not even a competition.
What if she's a cheater? Do you think there's a possibility?
No, no, no. no, she would be, no, no, she, she's very principled. Yeah, much more than
I am.
Both of you to take IQ tests.
Okay.
That's what Eddie and his wife did. Eddie and I did an IQ test. Do you know what your IQ
is?
No, I never wanted to do a test.
Oh, Eddie and I did it.
Yeah? What was it?
Well, he was smarter than me and that's all that I cared about.
And I was upset.
Were you higher than a hundred?
Well, you were one hundred.
Oh yeah, we were in the hundreds.
Were you 130?
131, I think you were 129 and Megan was 127.
He's smarter than his wife.
I'll take that notch.
I mean, I remember in high school,
like everyone was doing these tests
for being like gifted children and so on.
I felt like whenever someone was like diagnosed as gifted as gifted, it messed them up in a way.
And I was like, yeah, I don't really need to.
Do you like knowing everything?
Depends. Not really.
Okay.
Are you teaching now? Are you a professor of undergrad or graduate?
So both. I teach undergraduate one quarter, the other quarter graduate students.
But most of my job is actually research.
Are you allowed to audit classes?
Oh yeah, of course, yeah, just come over.
You can even do the exam, I'll grade your exam for you.
You don't have to pay tuition.
Oh, I still have nightmares about
that I didn't finish college.
I had those for a long time.
Now it's like, now that I'm a professor,
I'm like afraid that I'm not showing up for the exam
that I'm organizing myself.
Like I oversleep or it changes,
but yeah, those nightmares are still there.
Are kids using AI constantly to cheat in your classes?
Yeah, I think it happens a lot.
But because a lot of stuff I do is just math,
it's kind of harder to cheat,
but I think if you have to kind of write things
and kind of do more creative work,
I think it's much easier to cheat.
Is cheating something that you care about as a professor?
I mean, in the end, I only care if people learn something.
If they somehow cheat and still learn something,
I guess I'm fine with it,
but it's just the fairness of it.
That's, you know, I feel like it's my job all the time.
Do the old school just looking at somebody else's?
Oh yeah, that happens still.
That still happens?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Oh, that's good.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, I just felt, I was like,
oh, I don't even know what I would do anymore.
I'd be so scared in college.
When will you have tenure?
How long?
How much?
Oh, I got it four years ago.
Nice.
Yeah.
Would you ever go to a different school
or you think you're gonna?
No, I don't think I would want to move.
I really like it here.
Also living in LA, I feel really lucky.
If you're gonna be a professor in your field,
you usually don't get to choose where you live.
And you typically end up somewhere in the middle of nowhere
or some other country.
And I'm just really lucky that I'm in LA,
which is somehow the best place to live.
During this mass exodus that they always talk about
of people leaving California.
Do you actually know anyone who left?
I feel like this is something I only read about on Twitter
from people from Texas. I don't, you know.
I've never actually seen this happen.
Well, I looked at just actual numbers and they like talk about like, Oh, like, uh,
a hundred thousand people moved to Texas and 40,000 people from Texas moved to
California. But the one thing that I enjoyed was just that highly educated
people are still flooding to the state of California.
So I'll take it.
Yeah, I mean, and also at UCLA, I think we're lucky.
One of the reasons I love to work here at UCLA is because
we get people from all over the world that want to come here
to do research and science and engineering.
And so, you know, it's still kind of this place that
everyone wants to go to.
And that's just, you know, if we get good students,
that makes my life so much easier.
I'm a little lazy.
I don't really want to think too hard, but then if the smart students come and work with me, then that makes my life so much easier. I'm a little lazy. I don't really want to think too hard,
but then if the smart students come and work with me,
then it makes my life very easy.
The campus of UCLA has always confused me.
Yeah.
It's just smack dab in the middle.
I know.
Of like, of the city.
It's just so weird.
It's like between the Playboy Mansion
and Bel Air and Beverly Hills.
It's like crazy.
Do you have a driver on UCLA's campus?
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
Beautiful.
It's beautiful, right?
But it's just so weird.
It's like, oh, I was just on Wilshire five seconds ago and now here I am watching kids
with backpacks like have a college experience that is unlike anything else.
I'll give you a campus tour and show you around whenever you're around.
I appreciate that.
What's the big difference between living in Belgium
and living in Los Angeles, California?
I mean, there's a good and a bad.
So the good is that it's like everything's so convenient here.
The bad thing is that in Belgium, everyone's kind of equally rich and poor.
So you don't really feel bad about differences in wealth,
and here it's kind of crazy and uncomfortable.
Well, that's why you just stay in your lane.
Don't go to those nice areas. That's why UCLA is a bad place.
Oh, yeah.
It's so close to insane wealth.
I moved south because I'm like, this is depressing. Everyone's so rich here.
Yeah. Oh, great.
How far south did you go?
I live right here in Marvista.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
Ever go to a Dodgers game?
Never been.
I would like to go.
Do you understand baseball?
Not really.
But I do, I do really enjoy, even if I don't understand the sport, I like the American
entertainment in these stadiums.
Like it's very different from Europe.
In Europe, you're like standing in the cold.
Nothing happens, but the game here, it's like a big, like Disneyland circus.
I love it.
It's just fun.
I mean, a Dodger game, nothing's better than going to a Dodger game.
It's just so fun.
So pretty.
I only, and I'm one of those real, real fans, like LA fans, where I just go once a
year and I go for like the second ending to the fifth
ending and I just leave right in the middle.
Did they ever ask you to do like the pitch?
Throw it on the first pitch?
Aren't you like eligible for that as a celebrity?
I would definitely be eligible for the throw on the first pitch.
They've never asked.
One time they had given me free tickets and they revoked them because
like that week I said something horrible.
Oh, I, yeah, you're a little bit too edgy to, to, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But I would like to throw out a first pitch.
Man, I would put some smoke on that.
It Dodgers.
Why don't you give me a ring?
See if I'll throw out a first pitch.
Invite me when it happens.
Do I have to get like your whole family in?
No, no, they, they don't care.
when it happens. Do I have to get like your whole family in?
No, no, they don't care.
They don't care.
Well, I appreciate you being here again.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Okay.
Take care.
You have very soft hands.
Do I?
Yeah.
What's up everybody?
This is Stephen A. Smith.
When I'm not at my day job first tape,
you can find me in my studio,
hosting the Stephen A A Smith Show podcast.
Tune in every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at the very least,
as I bring you all new episodes that feature the biggest headlines
in the world of sports, pop culture, business, and politics.
You'll hear my unfiltered opinions on those nauseating cowboy fans, the chaos
in Washington DC, and trending topics on social media, as well as my straight shooter interviews
with top celebrities and game changers. And I occasionally give out love advice. Yes,
it's true. If you want to know my true feelings about something, I'll give it to you straight.
So listen to the Stephen A. Smith Show podcast on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast, or
wherever you get your podcast.
I'm Hannah Storm and my podcast, NBA DNA with Hannah Storm, digs deep into the history of
professional basketball, along with my own,
as one of the first female sportscasters. Now let's get you up to speed on what else happened
around the NBA today. We talked to all sorts of people I interacted with from Dr. J to Charles
Barkley and recap iconic moments. Yes, he's got it. Here he comes. Way rock the baby to sleep and slam dunk. As well as some of the wild stories behind the scenes.
We were like, what? What are we in for?
The scoreboard crashes before we even tip a game off.
Today, the NBA is a global sports and entertainment giant.
Players are multimillionaires and cultural icons.
Igadala to Curry, back to Igadala, up for the layup.
Oh, blocked by James. LeBron James. And these stories are about how we got here, both on and off the court.
And what's next? Listen to NBA DNA with Hannah Storm on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Get emotional with me, Radhita Vleukya, in my new podcast, A Really Good Cry.
We're going to talk about and go through all the things that are sometimes difficult to
process alone.
We're going to go over how to regulate your emotions, diving deep into holistic personal
development and just building your mindset to have a happier, healthier life.
We're going to be talking with some of my best friends.
I didn't know we were going to go there, Amir. We're gonna be talking with some of my best friends. I didn't know we were gonna go there, Amir.
I knew it, I'll never get this done.
People that I admire.
When we say listen to your body,
really tune in to what's going on.
Authors of books that have changed my life.
Now you're talking about sympathy,
which is different than empathy, right?
And basically have conversations
that can help us get through this crazy thing we call life.
I already believe in myself.
I already see myself.
And so when people give me an opportunity,
I'm just like, oh, great, you see me too.
We'll laugh together, we'll cry together
and find a way through all of our emotions.
Never forget, it's OK to cry
as long as you make it a really good one.
Listen to A Really Good Cry with Rady Dublukia
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Heart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right.
I want to thank Professor Yvonne Dunbroch for being on the show.
We learned so much.
And I'll be honest with you.
I didn't notice any audio glitches.
Good job, Dylan.
Speaking of AI, I've been dabbling.
I don't know if you guys watched, it was last week, game two in Boston, the Miami Heat versus the Celtics.
You know how they, on the floors now, they're putting ads?
Well, I hacked it and guess what?
Had a little fun with the people in Boston.
Only if you're a white, it was only up for a few seconds.
That's just funny right there.
Paul Pierce and his dirty shorts, needing a wheelchair.
His dirty shorts.
I only had a small window to hack the system.
I got in one more time and this is what I put up.
Ah, the catch.
Oh, it stings deep.
Carl, you see who's here?
Ava, Ava is a, now some people may remember Ava
from Tosh.0.
She looks a little different, okay?
She's very old. She's got a different, okay? She's very old.
She's got a lot of dementia.
She gets very startled, very easy.
No matter what you do, you're sneaking up on her.
Which is good when you have little kids.
Because they just walk up to her and smash her in the head
and she's like, what's going on?
This is my life, what has it become?
All right.
We've got some plugs.
Carl, boyswearpink.com.
Check out our charitable clothing line for toddlers.
I'm almost at a break even point with that company.
That's an exciting milestone.
The GOAT.
Big news about The GOAT.
Now, May 9th is when it premieres. They're going to drop three episodes at once.
But now they told me on YouTube only, May 2nd, they will drop the first episode.
So a week earlier than the premiere is one episode.
But then a week later, May 9th on the
premiere, there'll be three episodes available.
So let's go ahead and let's go, Carl, let's run that back.
The goat premieres May 9th, but on May 2nd, you can watch the first episode.
Huh?
Interesting.
Only on YouTube.
Then on May 9th, you can watch the first episode again on Prime, but you can also
watch the second and third episode, you know, the way television was meant to be viewed.
All right.
Uh, I've got some tour dates that I'd like you to go see me at.
And what else?
My son's bedtime story. Enjoy this little bit of animation.
See you next week.
Once upon a time there were two little animals. All they wanted to do was ride on a train. But they twitted potential addition name.
All of all the taxes says they just wanted all to play.
But the anyone who played they were so so happy.
And then the D and but there were two little penguins that helped them.
But the penguins were gone,
but the penguins were sick.
That was like one of those.
So somebody helped them.
What?
This is like one of those movies at the end
where it ends, the credits roll,
and then there's like some extra little scenes
before the movie finishes. Like Top Gun Maverick?
I don't know, are there other extra scenes in Top Gun Maverick?
Yes.
Alright, then yes, like Top Gun Maverick.
And the only story that they learned and then they went to sleep at the end.
But they always wanted to know about the end.
I'm Dioza.
And I'm Mala.
We are the creators of Loca Tora Radio, a radiophonic novella, which is a fancy way
of saying a podcast.
Welcome to Loca Tora Radio, Season 9.
Love at first listen.
We're older, we're wiser, and we're podcasting through a new decade of our lives.
This season, we're falling in love with podcasting all over again.
And getting to the heart of our stories.
We're going places we've never gone before, and we're bringing you along with us.
With new segments, correspondence, and a brand new sound.
Season 9 is kicking off with an intimate interview with Grammy Award-winning singer-songwriter
Natalia Laforcade.
What's giving you hope right now? Well, when I see what music does to people,
it gives me a lot of hope.
If you liked Loca Tora before,
you're gonna love season nine.
Subscribe to our show and you'll see why Loca Tora
is your prima's favorite podcast.
Listen to Loca Tora Radio
as part of the MyCultura Podcast Network,
available on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Hannah Storm and my new podcast, NBA DNA with Hannah Storm, chronicles my six decades
in professional basketball, from growing up in the sport to becoming one of sports TV's
first female broadcasters.
Join me as I dig deep into the game's history,
unearth some wild stories,
and talk to my friends from the world of basketball,
from Dr. J to Charles Barkley.
It's been a wild ride, and now I get to take you with me.
Listen to NBA DNA with Hannah Storm
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Tameka D. Mallory.
And this your boy, Mike Saunders, General.
And we are your hosts of TMI.
And catch us every Wednesday on the Black Effect Network,
breaking down social and civil rights issues,
pop culture, and politics in hopes of pushing our culture forward
to make the world a better place for generations to come.
Listen to TMI on the Black Effect Podcast Network,
iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
That's right.