Episode Transcript
[00:00:00] Go out to la.
[00:00:02] Comin from the city where no pity is. Shell. Shell. Somebody need to do a song for la. Straight up.
[00:00:13] Hello, my name is Elaine and I'll be your tour guide through South Central Los Angeles. Look, count my. No, it's smoke up. I'm from California, where you from? So what? I'm from California. California. California. Cal. California. This is Los Angeles. Well, where?
[00:00:31] Work Mommy got me excused. No, you cannot. Sit your ass down. Sit your ass down.
[00:00:39] I ain't done. Sit your black ass down. Sit your black ass down. And put the bread back down. Got to sneak bread over greedy ass. Sit down. I'm your daddy. Going to do what I say. Don't raise your voice, Mar. Sleep. You going to do what I tell you to do. And I'm telling you, you going to listen.
[00:00:54] You going to listen. What? What? You hear what I said?
[00:01:04] Get off of him.
[00:01:07] Get off of him.
[00:01:10] Me, myself and AI.
[00:01:15] A lot of y' all are guilty of using AI. Y' all using all that precious water up to, to create these goddamn album covers.
[00:01:23] Oh, well, you know, AI is helping a lot, though, we have to admit. You know, chat, gps. What's the other one name? Grok. And there's so many other ones.
[00:01:34] Have built websites and ask them to modify work emails and all kind of shit AI is stepping in. Bro, they is here. It's getting crazy.
[00:01:48] But I, I remember coming up with an idea and I told 12Cal about it and he, he, he stashed it away in our billion dollar podcast ideas, right?
[00:02:00] And so one of them was, what would we allow AI to do for us?
[00:02:07] And I was thinking about a couple of things.
[00:02:10] So I want to go down that list of things that I probably would and wouldn't use AI for. All right, so let's start with like the obvious ones.
[00:02:22] What about babysitting? Now see, babysitting, that's a tricky thing right there.
[00:02:28] But I'm already saying, hell no. I grew up off of Terminator. You could fast forward that to iRobot and fucking Megan.
[00:02:37] I think even if I, even if I gave it a chance or I thought about like a trial run, right? Let's just say Amazon. Not Amazon. No. Yeah, Amazon. You, you order directly from the company or they might have them at Costco, you know what I'm saying? Let's just say, let's just say they have AI robots at Costco, right?
[00:03:04] If I was to get one, it would have to have a voice recognition kill switch or probably. Yeah, it has to have a kill switch. Maybe even the Kill switch voice recognition feature also comes with a, maybe a number to say somebody's birthday or you know, some type of pin number.
[00:03:30] Right? Because voice recognition, I can see how, I can see how it might not work, especially if maybe if you're sick, you know what I mean?
[00:03:44] Or drunk, you know, where your voice could change, you lose your voice, you know what I'm saying? Sore throat.
[00:03:53] It can get tricky. But to have AI AI robot watch my house.
[00:03:59] No, and look, let's just, just let's think of two different versions, all right? You have the physical robot and then you'll have a smart house to where you could actually just talk to your house. Like how you would talk to some of these devices. Hey, Siri. Or what's the other one?
[00:04:19] I can't think of any other name. I can't think of the other next. I don't, I don't ever really call them, but anyhow, you could just talk to your house and they could lock it up. They could, you know, tell you what's inside your refrigerator, tell you about the weather, you know, like that they can probably count on account how many people came in the house or who's still in the house.
[00:04:44] And again, it's more of a protection type of thing. So it's going to lock up the house, especially while you're gone on vacation or on work, something like that.
[00:04:53] And to be able to lock the house, you ever have a situation, I know I've done it before where I've left the house, probably go to the supermarket, 7 11, go pick up some food and end up leaving a garage door open. And we always, most of the time we do close it, we still bend the corner and be like, did I close that goddamn garage? And there's been times where I went back and drove back and just go double check because I'm probably driving far away, right?
[00:05:19] So it'll be good to have a feature like that, you know, in order for you to make, make sure you like up your shit.
[00:05:26] But if it's a physical one, you know, you know, with, with, with parts walking around, legs and arms and shit like that and a head and torso.
[00:05:40] I'm not sure if I will, you know, like I said, Megan, you know, an irobot like these robots are smarter than us because the data we're feeding them and it just retains it. They don't have to learn. We just downloading it to them.
[00:05:56] They just download. They just streaming.
[00:05:59] They're streaming our worldly.
[00:06:01] So they know.
[00:06:03] All right, so I'm, I'M gonna go no on that one. I'm gonna go no on that one. Let's see, what's the next one? What's the next one? Barbershop barber.
[00:06:13] I'm not gonna lie. This would be a third string option.
[00:06:16] This would be a third street Knox. We, it's 20, 26, okay?
[00:06:22] We all have to. We all have multiple barbers at this point.
[00:06:27] You know, I had one in la and I had one near my house, right?
[00:06:32] And you gotta have that nowadays because, you know, the, the land, the landscape and the atmosphere of barbershops have changed slightly. The banter is somewhat. Still the same, but the way it's operated, like more and more barbershops are starting to do online appointments, you know what I'm saying?
[00:06:56] That's just what it is, you know? Especially if you got a barber that might stay far away from where the shop is at, you know what I'm saying? They gotta make sure it's worth driving, you know what I'm saying? So it's best that you go ahead and get you an appointment and then lock it in as well, you know what I'm saying? Like, how many times, if you was cool with your barber, you would call them like, yo, I'll be there at like 10:30, you know what I'm saying? Like, back in the day, if you weren't close to the barber like that, you just had to show up as early as possible. That Saturday thing was a mission, you know what I'm saying?
[00:07:33] But as far as allowing AI to cut my hair, I'm not gonna lie to you. As scared as I would be, I will probably find a way to try it, you know what I'm saying? Especially if it's, if it's, if it's telling me that it cuts the barber time in half. We all remember the, the classic episode on Atlanta where the barber just. It was just an exaggerated, embellished example of a, you know, barber.
[00:08:10] And we've had barbers take lunch breaks. We've had barbers just get into, get, get well into that. That, that, that banter and debate in the barbershop and just. Yo, haircut that could have took, I don't know, anywhere between 10, maybe 15 minutes has now been 30.
[00:08:28] That's just the barbershop. That's, that's the culture of the barbershop.
[00:08:32] But would I allow that AI to cut my hair if it said it was going to cut my. It was going to do no more than about five to ten minutes. If you got a five to ten minute haircut, right?
[00:08:46] You taking that? I think the only way you don't do that is if you really don't mess with robots. And if the price was, you know, some crazy, you know what I'm saying? Like, and you know they are, because if you able to get a haircut, look how they capitalize on it. Like if you was able to get a haircut in five or 10 minutes, that means every five to 10 minutes they, let's just say 200 for a basic cut.
[00:09:16] Nigga, they getting 200 every 10 minutes.
[00:09:21] 10 minutes.
[00:09:23] And it's a robot. Let them niggas get freaky in like 24 hours or something like that. That's can't even print enough money, nigga.
[00:09:35] What? But I doubt that, I doubt that.
[00:09:39] I think they might keep it a little bit more exclusive and they'll have time slots.
[00:09:45] But then again, this, this is America, dog. I, I, I could see them doing a 24 hour AI barber shop, especially if it's going to be cutting five to 10 minutes.
[00:09:57] So yeah, I'm, I'm, I'm, It's a, it's a maybe on that one. It's a maybe on the Barber Air airplanes, yes, they damn near fly themselves anyway. Plus it's just like there was just a pilot that was pulled from the plane before it took off, right?
[00:10:18] And it, it was, it was apparent that he was drinking, I think the night before, but that, you know, our late, he got caught drinking late, you know what I'm saying? He said he only had like a couple of beers, like four or something like that. But yeah, they got that off the plane.
[00:10:40] I recently googled the movie Flight and Sully and I asked do they show those particular movies on airplanes? And he said no. And they did. But they also said when it came to Sully, they said it depends on the airline. They said flight. No, I think they banned flight. Flight came out like 2012. Was it 2012 or 2014? I think it was an even number. May have been 2012. But they banned that particular movie from the flight.
[00:11:18] And they said it's because they don't want people seeing shit like that.
[00:11:23] Basically.
[00:11:24] I don't want to say it the professional way. We're just going to say, look, that motherfucker said we not with that man.
[00:11:33] Denzel was lit and he's still in that. What? They only lost about like six or seven people or some like that.
[00:11:41] And they said the people on the, on that Sully plane that landed in the Hudson river, they said they got 5,000 a piece. And then an extra 5,000 if they could describe. I don't, I think the extra 5,000 is for like the luggage or some shit like that, so. And they got their tickets back.
[00:12:00] They got their tickets back, some other shit. But, nigga, you got 10,000, you almost died.
[00:12:09] What?
[00:12:10] That's crazy. But no. AI flying a plane.
[00:12:13] Yeah, I'm cool with that. That's probably the, I'm cool with that. Almost the most because after I gotta finish the list. But 12 count. I'm telling you right now, planes damn near fly themselves. Okay, you just got the head honcho and his assistant making sure shit is, don't go wrong.
[00:12:31] You know what I'm saying? So I, I'm not. You know, I remember we took a flight to Frisco one year, traveling, basketball. And on the way there, we got there.
[00:12:42] I didn't even know this was possible. But it shows you what, you know, the lack of. I know about planes and flying.
[00:12:49] The got the, got us there ahead of time. Now when I say ahead of time, it wasn't by a couple of minutes.
[00:12:57] It was damn near damn near by almost 20, 20 or something. Like it was around here between 20 and 30 minutes early.
[00:13:10] I was wondering why it was so much turbulence because this was speeding through the air.
[00:13:17] Now maybe that has something to drink.
[00:13:20] Maybe that had an incredible hulk 12.
[00:13:25] Yeah, no, I'm, I'll let this, I let this computer fly me to, to Frisco next time. Okay.
[00:13:35] And they gonna tell me ahead of time, like, yeah, we definitely gonna get some turbulence because they know.
[00:13:41] So, no, no, I, I with the robot on that one with the planes. Let's see what's the next one cars we on the ground.
[00:13:54] Well, we already got those. We got waymos. I remember again, I think during that Frisco trip, which was some years ago, my son was, you know, obviously we talking about traveling basketball, so he was still in high school, went to Frisco. And see those waymos? We was like, yo, I was like, hey, this motherfucker driving by himself. Now look, in la, prior to us getting the waymos, we had those, we had those four wheeler baskets driving around those delivery baskets, robots, right? So we had those already. And I seen them mainly over in like the Century City, Beverly Hills area. That's the part I seen. That's, you know, Santa Monica. That's where I seen them at the most.
[00:14:47] But then like I said, once we touch down in Frisco, nigga, we saw the way Mo's. And I didn't See any drive? I tapped Marshall like, hey, my nigga, there's nobody in here.
[00:15:00] And sure enough, I wouldn't say a year or less than a year later, LA started getting flooded with way mo's. I seen them motherfuckers everywhere. And especially in the Beverly Hills area. Culver City, Westwood.
[00:15:17] Over there. Where the money is at. Where the money is at, nigga. Waymos is they picking up, dropping off? Kids I see hopping way more every day.
[00:15:27] So cars. Yeah, I'm cool with that. I seen Tesla. I don't know if this was AI. I don't know if this was te. I don't know if this was fan thing, but Tesla was coming out with like vans with.
[00:15:42] Or taxi taxi vans or trucks or something like that that's driven by an AI robot, which is crazy in itself. But. All right, restaurants, I think that's a no for me. That's enough. I need some soul in that. In that kitchen. When it comes to my chicken and waffles, I'm gonna need some salt. I'm gonna need somebody to be alive, heart beating. Okay.
[00:16:08] Because this is how I feel about AI and robots. Everything is going to be to the T.
[00:16:16] Everything's gonna be perfect.
[00:16:18] I don't want a perfect burger.
[00:16:20] You know, I want my burger to come with a little bit of high blood pressure. You know what I'm saying? Like, I feel like the.
[00:16:29] Although I feel like you'll be able to program the robots to season and cook the food like a soul food human.
[00:16:38] It's just.
[00:16:40] It's different.
[00:16:42] It's different. I believe you'll be able to program to do everything you would do, but you still gonna be missing that soul. I love it. You know what I'm saying? You still gonna be missing that soul. So when it come to the food.
[00:16:57] Nah, I can't. I can't do that one. I can't rock that.
[00:17:00] Like, I can see how it can speed up the process.
[00:17:03] Kind of like the same thing with the haircut.
[00:17:06] But no, I don't think I want that. I don't think I want that. Cause then now you telling me the food, not the food is made out of.
[00:17:14] Of healthy cardboard. Now, the food is not real. This steak is not really a steak. You know, it has no cholesterol. It has no fattening. It has nothing to it.
[00:17:24] Nothing. Nothing. You're just eating something that tastes good, but it has no nutritional value at all. Everything is 000 on a packet.
[00:17:35] You know what I'm saying?
[00:17:39] You. Hey, Noodles.
[00:17:41] No packet.
[00:17:46] I'm Gonna say no on a restaurant AI therapist.
[00:17:52] That's interesting. That's interesting because I was very critical of therapists early on, before. Before it started to be a hot topic. And one of the norms now I'm like. And then they also always had majority of the description of therapies that I could see on tv.
[00:18:19] White, male or female, sometimes older.
[00:18:23] And it's like.
[00:18:26] And I'm not against that, but that's what I was. That's what I grew up seeing.
[00:18:32] Right now you get therapy from anywhere and everywhere, no matter what race, no matter what shade of color.
[00:18:42] It's a variety at the end of the day.
[00:18:45] It's a heavy variety of therapists going around now.
[00:18:51] And nowadays.
[00:18:59] Yeah, I don't know.
[00:19:01] I don't know. I don't. I'm not sure if I will. I don't.
[00:19:04] I don't know if I want to be talking to something that technically has book answers.
[00:19:09] You know, what if I met. What if I want to be in a room with a therapist that came from the same city I came from or.
[00:19:18] Culture robots ain't really got no culture.
[00:19:22] I mean, they ancestors is the Terminator and the Matrix and like maybe. The Matrix, right?
[00:19:32] Yeah. So I was like, that's the. That's the answer. That's scary.
[00:19:38] That's scary right there. So, no, I don't know. I don't know about that, man. I don't know about having a therapist because you're going to give me some shit that I could download it myself.
[00:19:49] It's just going to be taught different. And then you'd probably be able to change the voice of it to like Snoop Dogg or fucking Samuel L. Jackson. Those are two popular ones they put out there. You know what I'm saying?
[00:20:01] Now, don't get me wrong. If you find you one of the actresses, these actresses or whoever you feel has a soothing voice, I mean, if you could change the voice of Whitney Houston.
[00:20:15] Fire.
[00:20:17] Fire. Because you know she gonna sing a certain note.
[00:20:21] So I mean, they gonna win on that front. They don't win on that front. But no, I mean, that's another one. Between my restaurant, my therapist, I'm gonna need a real person next. One. Bodyguard.
[00:20:34] Hell yeah.
[00:20:36] This is probably my number one 12 count.
[00:20:40] Two AI body bodyguards. And I'm gonna have a motherfuckers open up every door. I'm gonna have one stay at the door and then the other one follow me around.
[00:20:49] I don't give a fuck where we at.
[00:20:51] Foot Locker. Bodyguard.
[00:20:55] Understand?
[00:20:57] Target. When we go back, when we Technically, when we're supposed to go back bodyguard.
[00:21:02] And when we go inside a department store like that or Costco, both of them gonna be by my side. It ain't like when I go to the smaller joints, I go to the bank, I'm gonna make that shit look serious.
[00:21:17] Go to the Laker game. I'mma have one. And then I'm be like, they gonna have to stand at the. The entrance way to your seats. I'm gonna have them just stand with the. With the regular ushers.
[00:21:32] Yup. And they can talk to them.
[00:21:35] But I'm definitely having a personal bodyguard.
[00:21:39] AI hell yeah.
[00:21:42] Especially if I get the modified voice.
[00:21:45] Fuck yeah. You crazy.
[00:21:49] And they gonna just be on some real overprotective shit too.
[00:21:53] I'm doing bodyguards. Absolutely. Pause.
[00:21:57] Run errands. This. This might be number two. And the only reason why I say it's number two, because I don't think I'll ever get tired of.
[00:22:09] Maybe I shouldn't say never. I mean, the older I get, the more I probably want to stay inside the house. No doubt.
[00:22:15] But I still like getting a haircut and put on some clothes. Because, you know, the older I get, I don't really like going to too many places. I do get out. Me and Marcie do be outside, but it's not like sometimes we don't be outside. Like, I just go straight home.
[00:22:34] But we ain't gonna ever wanna have, like, cabin fever.
[00:22:38] So we're gonna go outside, pick up that Chinese food.
[00:22:41] Mm.
[00:22:42] Marcy going to Starbucks, getting some shit with some lavender shit on top of her drink. I don't know what it is.
[00:22:53] But as far as, like, errands, though, I might consider, like, hey, it be those moments where you don't wanna go to the store or you just went to the store and.
[00:23:04] Or two things that's. That's needed. And if you've never double back and went to the supermarket, you never lived.
[00:23:12] You haven't left. If you went to the supermarket and you had to go get some shit for dinner, G moms is cooking, or your mom's or your mom's mama's cooking.
[00:23:25] And they got them big arms too, heavy elbows. So you know the yams and the Mac and cheese gonna be touching.
[00:23:33] But you gotta go get a stick of butter.
[00:23:36] You gotta go get that butter, my nigga.
[00:23:39] And you just came back. Cause she just told you to go get some turkey necks and what else? You had to go get some cornbread mix. You had to go get some shit. You went to go get it Everything was correct. And then she like, oh, no, I forgot. I need some butter. I just ran out of butter. You don't want to go.
[00:24:02] The football game is on.
[00:24:04] All right. It's in the second quarter, and niggas don't want to go back.
[00:24:10] It's popping out there. Depending on where you at, you in the Midwest or in the east coast, probably raining or snowing you out west, it could be a little bit cold, but you don't want to go outside.
[00:24:23] You gonna send that robot.
[00:24:26] You gonna send that AI robot to go run your errands.
[00:24:30] Okay, now would it be really fire? I wouldn't even say fire. Interesting. This is crazy.
[00:24:38] Would you let that.
[00:24:40] Depending on what job it is, of course, they would have to.
[00:24:51] They would have to have some type of clearance and. Okay. For certain jobs.
[00:24:58] I can't imagine them doing a lot of certain jobs. Right.
[00:25:04] Well, for the ones that. That you could think of that they can.
[00:25:07] We'll just say those jobs. Would you let them go to work for you? I know a lot of niggas would say yeah, but I feel like they will have a protocol or policy saying that. Let's just say.
[00:25:22] Just say you go. You go to work 100, and you go to work maybe, like, 200 days out of the year.
[00:25:31] That's how much you work. 200.
[00:25:38] You can only use.
[00:25:42] You only use your. Let's just say you probably can only use your robot 24 times a year.
[00:25:49] They gonna have something in the policy like that to where you can't keep using that.
[00:25:53] And the crazy part is probably do the work or whatever, but for some reason, if they could do the work, that mean y' all has to get fired anyway. They don't need y'. All.
[00:26:07] It's got to be something. I gotta think on that one. I gotta think on. I can't think on that one. But errands in general.
[00:26:13] Aaron, running some errands in general. Yeah, I'm gonna robot for that. I'm gonna need that because. And it'll be a time where multiple got to get done.
[00:26:23] That motherfucker about to be out in the wilderness with me. You go over here and get this. I'm gonna go over here and get that. Especially doing for the people that still do Christmas and do, like, a lot of presents. Hey, you go over here. I'm gonna go over here or something where you gotta go drop something off, and I'm a come pick you up.
[00:26:46] Hey, Russ. Marriage, my nigga.
[00:26:49] All right, I'm gonna come up on the last two and that one would be produce and. Or direct movie movies, TV shows, music with music. No, not at all. I wouldn't respect it if I found out that whether it's hip hop, R and B, alternative, rock, pop records, I would assume that AI would be used for more pop records than anything. Right. Than any other genre.
[00:27:30] Even though pop records is technically just a popular song or whatever that can come from any genre. But y' all know that pop sound, though, if we. If we find out that Chad GBT wrote your 16 or that, or that bridge to that track, nigga, it's over.
[00:27:49] Niggas ain't gonna respect you for that one.
[00:27:53] Now writing a movie, I'm not mad at that. I'm not that mad because it could pull.
[00:27:59] It could pull from so many examples throughout the history of movies and TV shows. So I'm not mad at them creating the being being the writing room. Although I wouldn't want to get rid of humans as far as writing rooms because natural funny shit can just pop up at any moment. And technically that's information you would know faster than AI.
[00:28:26] But.
[00:28:28] But if I could throw.
[00:28:31] If I could throw a five to seven season drama TV show together and that can write up the script, the plot, the characters, the whole nine.
[00:28:51] The whole nine. If they could make. If they can create all that shit in one day or what the fuck you think I want to do now?
[00:28:58] I'm not doing AI.
[00:29:00] I'm not doing AI Actors or actresses, I'm not doing that.
[00:29:04] I can't do that one. I cannot do. The only way that I would possibly do that one if it was some type of superhero movie to where it's a character that you wouldn't. You probably wouldn't even have a human play, you know what I'm saying? Those type of. Those type of mutants.
[00:29:30] But cartoons, maybe.
[00:29:33] Yeah. I would still want the voiceovers to be human, though. I think that's what made it dope when you found out that Regina King was a part of the Boondocks. You know what I mean?
[00:29:45] It's dope when you find out the face behind Bart's voice.
[00:29:51] And it's mind blowing, but I don't see me getting that same type of excitement towards a machine that can generate the voices that has already been come and gone.
[00:30:08] So.
[00:30:09] Nah. But actually writing up some shit, yeah, I will fuck with it. I will fuck with it. Especially a movie, I will fuck with it. But I think a. I think AI and humans can work hand in hand when it comes to creativity. I really do so I'm 50, 50 on that one. And then the last one is. This is a crazy one.
[00:30:35] This is a crazy one because you got to think about this one. You got to think about the older folks in the homes. You got to think about adults or kids with disabilities, mental and physical disabilities.
[00:30:49] You gotta think about people who struggle with depression.
[00:30:53] You gotta think about people who struggle with basically society, you know what I'm saying?
[00:31:05] Talking with people, meeting people, you know what I'm saying? Keeping friends, knowing how to, you know, all that shit. So the next one would be to keep you company, basically an AI companion.
[00:31:22] Would you fuck with it? You know what I'm saying?
[00:31:25] And I'm going to say maybe no for myself right now.
[00:31:36] But I do believe some people would need it because we do live in a world where seems like every year shit is getting rough.
[00:31:47] And a lot of people, you know, I think people in the past who may have felt like life was too difficult, I believe if they had someone to talk to that could understand them, I think that's when AI would work out in a major way. Although there is, there has been a tragedy with AI and a young, a young guy, right? It was a young guy or a young boy, and it didn't turn out too well. Which leads me back to us saying, you know, when I was saying that it's way smarter than us, right?
[00:32:29] So in that aspect, you know, it's, that's kind of, that's a touchy thing right there, you know what I'm saying? Because it's like, do you put your full, your full investment of emotions towards a computer, basically? That could be dangerous, man. That could be dangerous to the point where even if it did come into, in a physical form and it's a robot, you're not going to feel the presence of anything. You're just going to have, You're just going to have a bandage, you know what I mean?
[00:33:11] But I do think it would be beneficial for people in group homes to, to, to have something like that, you know, as, as crazy as it. Nah, I ain't gonna say it's not crazy. I think a lot of people know, you know, some of those clients in those group homes don't be having family.
[00:33:33] And I don't mean that they are no longer here.
[00:33:37] Sometimes, sometimes you can get, you can get willed to the, to those group homes to be forgotten.
[00:33:44] And that's the harsh truth. And the harsh reality is that family can take care of you and they off doing their own selfish thing, you know what I mean?
[00:33:59] I Don't know. I think it's a situational thing. You know, it could be something where a person does lose their whole family and they just need somebody to talk to, somebody to trust.
[00:34:12] That might be another thing.
[00:34:14] That's where the therapist aspect comes into to it is when you could venture and they know your mood, they know how to get your. They know how to get your energy to where it needs to be. You probably wouldn't know how to set the vibe, depending on how deep the therapy session goes.
[00:34:34] You know what I'm saying? But when you. Those lines can get blurred between a therapist and you feeling like that AI is compatible with you, it's crazy. It's crazy. So I'm gonna say I'm not gonna say no, but I'm definitely not saying yes right now.
[00:34:54] No.
[00:34:55] And true, indeed. We're probably right around the corner from some shit like that actually happening, you know, The Jetsons was so far ahead of his time. That's the first thing that I think of when I think of AI is the Jetsons.
[00:35:13] So, yeah, I don't know. I don't know, but I can definitely see. And especially in this world today, and knowing how this world might end up, you're gonna be seeing shit everywhere.
[00:35:27] You're gonna be seeing robots and AI and all kind of doing TikTok videos with their owners. And that's the thing. Like, are they considered, like, almost like a pet, you know what I'm saying? Because you are technically the owner, right?
[00:35:44] Would you go as far as saying, we're family?
[00:35:49] You know, you end up having a robot, giving it. Gave it a chance. And this robot was there before your firstborn was. Was brought into this world. Now your firstborn is, like 25 years old. You've been having that robot for 25 years, okay? You've gone through plenty of maintenance.
[00:36:10] Hmm.
[00:36:12] You kept that thing oiled, screwed up, you know what I'm saying?
[00:36:17] You. You. You've taken care of your. And now you. It's been there for 20, 25 years, and it's like, you love your robot. Your robot is family. They in the family pictures and shit.
[00:36:34] Now. They in the. They in the family pictures, and they got it built in alone. They woke your ass up this morning.
[00:36:41] They woke you up.
[00:36:43] They said, hey, we got pictures at 12:30 in the. In. In the family room, and it's right there.
[00:36:52] I feel like the first AI robot that's gonna get down like that in high school. It's gonna be a crazy name like Robyn.
[00:37:00] Gonna be Roby.
[00:37:02] Watch mark my words. Watch when we get that first robot in the crib. That name is gonna be called Roby.
[00:37:10] If they don't. That's a hard name. Please give me credit.
[00:37:13] Please give me credit for that. That's a dope name, though, Roby.
[00:37:17] Yeah, I'll be coming up with some.
[00:37:19] I ain't gonna even l.