The Trans•Parency Podcast Show
In The Trans•Parency Podcast Show podcast, the host team, Shelbe Chang, Shane Ivan Nash, Jessie McGrath, and Bloosm C. Brown take you on a journey exploring the transformation stories, community dynamics, advocacy, entertainment, trans-owned businesses, and current events surrounding the lives of trans individuals.
Join us in enlightening conversations as we sit down with guests from the trans, LGBTQ+ community, and allies. Through powerful storytelling, they delve into their journeys, highlighting the trans people's transition from who they once were to their authentic selves. Also, this podcast uncovers individuals' experiences as allies who positively impact the trans community.
Our purpose-driven mission is to empower the trans community and uplift our voices, ensuring that we can be heard and beyond far and wide.
The Trans•Parency Podcast Show
Zuckerberg's Censorship Revelations, Kamala Harris's Policy Shifts, and Billy Carson and Terrence Howard Breaking the Internet
Is social media censorship compromising free speech?
This weekly live episode dives into the explosive revelations from Mark Zuckerberg about Meta being pressured by the Biden administration to censor COVID-related posts. We also tackle the heated debate around TikTok's potential sale to an American company to control its narrative. Tune in to explore the political undercurrents influencing these platforms and the implications for our freedoms online. What role does Zuckerberg's board of directors play in guiding these crucial decisions?
Our conversation doesn't stop there. We also dissect Kamala Harris's evolving policy positions amidst new experiences and changing political landscapes. How consistent are her core values, really? We weigh in on criticisms about her stances on the Green New Deal and border security and scrutinize the Democratic Party's strategic errors, including Joe Biden’s second-term aspirations and Harris's delayed presidential vision.
Lastly, embark on a fascinating journey with Black innovators like Billy Carson and Terrence Howard as they merge quantum physics with ancient wisdom on the Forbidden Knowledge YouTube channel. Their groundbreaking work and the unending human drive for innovation, especially in AI, are not to be missed.
Download the podcasts on all your favorite platforms: https://bit.ly/3wOecFr
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This is the Transparency Podcast Show.
Speaker 2:All right, we are live. How are you doing, Thomas? Happy Labor.
Speaker 3:Day weekend. I'm doing great today. Shelby, how are you doing out there?
Speaker 2:I'm a little bit tired today, but I made it here. Yeah, we usually start at like around 8, but today we start at 10. Yeah, it's a long weekend, so I think my body is already ready to have it, you know.
Speaker 3:I'm gonna take it easy this weekend myself.
Speaker 2:I was gonna do one workout, but just try and get in say I did something yeah, so if anyone joining us, they might be listening or watching on the road driving to their little getaway on the long weekend. So this week there's something happened. First one is the Mark Zuckerberg's letter from Facebook, or Meta, and that made a lot of controversy. Seems like every time he come out and say something, he just makes himself a lot of trouble, right.
Speaker 3:Doesn't he have a board along with him? Because I know he serves as a CEO, as far as I understand it. But I mean he's got to have a whole board that advises him and stuff right.
Speaker 2:I have no idea. So, basically, facebook Meta came out with a letter saying that they were pressured by the Biden administration during COVID to censor the posts that people post, so a lot of vaccines or COVID, any related with the COVID poses. They got taken down and that, of course, upset a lot of people. And now they, you know, four years later now, they turn around and say we were pressured by the you know administration and, as we know, that same time we have the election. So I don't know it did this just kind of lead me to to earlier this week with tiktok. Tiktok was, was in the in the mix. They were trying to pressure them and they're saying you gotta, you gotta sell it to their american company or someone who's in america. I think that's the same you know play card that they put in for Meta Facebook.
Speaker 2:So because I personally been putting out a lot of content, more like a controversial content these days on TikTok and I get you know my content got removed and this type of content is not like, it's not like out there. And I get you know my content got removed and this type of content is not like out there. It's kind of like what everybody does as well, and it's like involved with again COVID or even talk about Donald Trump, and I can see the algorithm is controlling that. Anything that has to relate with Donald Trump, I get less views. Anything that related to COVID, even today, they will say we have to remove the guidelines. Yeah, so what do you have? What is your thoughts on that?
Speaker 3:Do you have any thoughts on that? Honestly, I'm a little surprised that they're trying to flex on TikTok but at the same time, not really Okay. I mean TikTok. There's been so much controversy surrounding TikTok Right Over the last just decade alone, it's not surprising at all that they're in the mix. But one of the things I do find disingenuous with TikTok is that they're trying to pressure them into selling it to an American buyer. Back to. You're not really concerned about social media and its effect on the people or youth or any of these things.
Speaker 3:You just you're just concerned about controlling the message yes, I'm like yeah, let them keep it yes and let the trying to keep it.
Speaker 2:And it's kind of interesting that the timing that Mark Zuckerberg came out and said this is right after the ex, that Elon Musk interviewed Trump. And Elon Musk is about free of speech, which I'm very admire of that. I'm also very supportive free of speech, which I'm very admire of that I'm I'm also very, uh, supportive free of speech. And now they you know they he came out right after that. It sounds like okay, you know.
Speaker 3:It seems like, oh, if I don't make a move, then I'm gonna facebook or meta is gonna be left behind, some sort of that kind of feeling yeah, I've got've got Johnny come lately, but here's the thing it's like he's trying to ingratiate himself with Trump instead of Harris, you know, and that's obvious because he came out First order that I just knocked was the Biden administration pressure.
Speaker 2:Yeah, he also said he's not going to donate to the Democrats. Yeah, I also said he's not going to donate you know, to the Democrats.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I'm like, ooh, you're not going to donate in your wife's name to a political party. Ooh, you know it goes back to our earlier conversation when I said Mark Zuckerberg, just like you said before, every time this guy opens his mouth to make a statement, it's like somehow he finds a shovel and it's like. And that's like what I was asking before. Does this guy not have a board of directors advising him? I don't know, Honestly. Does he not have?
Speaker 4:a board of directors advising him? I don't know.
Speaker 3:Honestly, does he not have a board of advisors advising him or anybody?
Speaker 3:No that's not really a good look. We don't really want to go there, because Facebook has been involved in one controversy after another about their legitimacy period. Anyway, as a social media company, involved in one controversy after another about their legitimacy period anyway, yeah, as a social media company. So for you to come out and say the Biden administration pressured me, I felt pressure. Yeah, I mean, everybody's just giving you, we giving you the side eye Mark, we're giving you the side I'm Mark.
Speaker 2:Yeah, that makes me also think back. Relate to the January 6th, when Trump is being canceled across all the platforms. That might be also related to the share. You know, just to let the audience know if you're on YouTube or if you ever go on my channel, I create a lot of posts around what we talk about here and then we have a lot of people sharing different thoughts and comments. Even someone said he should put in jail for election interference.
Speaker 4:So yeah, so this is you know, I get that Huh.
Speaker 3:Yes. So you know again, we're not going to censor anybody's comment unless you two did it, I would let Mark Zephyrus say everything he wants to say. I'm a full believer in everybody digs their own hole, right. I've just got gotta be honest. When he says stuff like that, it's like you got no zero credibility whatsoever.
Speaker 2:I hear some. Are you playing some video? I hear some noises in the background the webpage started up over here yeah, you need to turn it down cause it's shit. Yeah, trying to my bad, the webpage started up over here.
Speaker 3:Yeah, you need to turn it down, because this is shit.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I'm trying to my bad, it's all right, because I don't want people to think where's that come from?
Speaker 3:Yeah, no, the plane flew in on the screen and it's like no, it's just trying to, it's all right. Yeah, it was no. When we go back to things that Mark Zuckerberg has been, that guy's been in front of a congressional committee. I think he's been in front of a congressional committee more than Trump.
Speaker 2:Many times with different subjects. How do you say it? Accusing, accusing, accusation.
Speaker 3:Well, I wouldn't say accusation, because the congressional committee has no. The thing about the congressional committee especially. A lot of people don't understand. Okay, let's make this quick. I'll make this real quick. A lot of people don't understand. This is how this works. When you hear your government say our government, when you hear our government say we're going to hold a congressional hearing on A, b and C, that's just an investigation.
Speaker 5:How should voters look at some of the changes that you've?
Speaker 3:made that you've explained some of yeah, yeah a congressional hearing is just an investigation for congress to gather more information so that they can make an amendment to a constitution, an adjustment to the amendment to the constitution set or or draft a law for to be put in place. A congressional hearing is no judiciary function whatsoever. There's no. There's no legal recourse to a congressional hearing.
Speaker 3:So when I that's why whenever I hear somebody tell me oh, we're in a congressional hearing and the congressman was tearing into so-and-so, who cares? The only thing you can't do is refuse to show up, in which case you'll get a fine for not showing up. But at the end of the day, who cares? A congressional hearing is just an investigation for Congress to T's you know, as they're drafting legislation for a law, that's it. If you're talking about, you want trouble, judiciary trouble, court trouble, you've got to go to court. Congress and Congress cannot overturn anything. Supreme Court says Period. They can write a new law, but they can't overturn interpretation or create interpretation yeah, I want to just mention this.
Speaker 2:Every time we talk about, we talk about law or what not. I want to make a disclaimer we're not lawyers. We're not attorneys so whatever we talk about here, it's just our own opinion.
Speaker 4:It's just our own opinion.
Speaker 2:We're just our own opinions entertainment purpose.
Speaker 3:The only reason I know this is because I looked up what a congressional hearing was for. That doesn't mean I'm an expert on it. Yes, we're not giving any law advice we're not giving any law advice, all right.
Speaker 2:So, since we're on this topic about law, let's move on to the next topic, because we're going to. We're doing a short one today I know everyone is, you know, on vacation. So the next one, since we're on law, we're going to talk about our good old Kamala Harris. She's an attorney general right From California.
Speaker 3:before, yes, she's a former attorney general.
Speaker 2:Yes, so this week's topic about her is she finally, finally, finally have her interview, public interview, and it's on CNN, and everybody's been waiting for this right and everybody's suspect why she doesn't do any public speaking or any interview at all. Yes, and the first interview she went on she had Tim Watts with her, you know. So that's kind of I don't know, that's kind of strange, because some people Not really because the thing is, she should have been doing interviews before this?
Speaker 3:Why?
Speaker 2:Yeah, so I have a clip to share with everyone. She's, what's her name? Interviewed on CNN with Dana Bash.
Speaker 3:Lena Bash.
Speaker 2:Mm-hmm. Dana Bash Okay.
Speaker 3:Yeah, for some reason I couldn't find her name on any of the tickets.
Speaker 2:Yeah, so Dana Bash.
Speaker 5:Yeah, Dana Bash. Generally speaking, how should voters look at some of the changes that you've made, that you've explained some of here in your policy? Is it because you have more experience now and you've learned more about the information? Is it because you were running for president in a Democratic primary? And should they feel comfortable and confident that what you're saying now is going to be your policy moving forward?
Speaker 4:Dana, I think the most important and most significant aspect of my policy perspective and decisions is my values have not changed. You mentioned the Green New Deal always believed and I've worked on it that the climate crisis is real, that it is an urgent matter to which we should apply metrics that include holding ourselves to deadlines around time. We did that with the Inflation Reduction Act. We have set goals for the United States of America and, by extension, the globe around, when we should meet certain standards for reduction of greenhouse gas emissions as an example. That value has not changed. My value around what we need to do to secure our border that value has not changed. I spent two terms as the attorney general of California prosecuting transnational criminal organizations, violations of American laws regarding the passage illegal passage of guns, drugs and human beings across our border. My values have not changed, okay so there's a lot of controversy.
Speaker 2:Talk about she flipping around her quote-unquote value and, yes, and you know, the one thing that everybody probably know or seen is the border. I forgot, was it? Lester Hulse was interviewing her back in the days about have you been to the border? Have you been to the border? And she's, like you know, saying we will go to the border. Remember that Clips.
Speaker 3:Yes.
Speaker 2:And then also, you also mentioned about two weeks ago, our show. We were talking about her and you mentioned she has to get her message straight. Remember that, yeah, she has to get her message straight.
Speaker 3:Remember that she has to get her message straight and define, and I was waiting for her to do this. Make that statement and bring it forth, so you know we could see it. And here's my take.
Speaker 2:Okay.
Speaker 3:Go ahead, kamala Harris, you're running for president. Ok, go ahead, kamala Harris, you're running for president. Drop that. Drop all the stuff Joe Biden was, was, was carrying.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 3:Make this your presidency. You know the parts of the administration and what was going on that didn't work. That failed. So the last thing you need to be doing is doubling down that failed. So the last thing you need to be doing is doubling down on hopes and feelings that it's going to work because you just make yourself. Look, you just played yourself on your first interview. You just played yourself. Second of all, you should have had an interview. You know, way back before you even introduced walls. You should have had an interview way back then. You should have done it then.
Speaker 2:And this interview seems like a very scripted safe. You know, I can feel, because we've been talking, we've been, you know, sharing a lot of interviews on here already and you can sense this is very subtle, very safe. There's no out of blue questions like crazy questions or whatnot. Right, Do you have that?
Speaker 3:feeling. It's almost as if she's trying to give the voters a comfort feeling about her and I'm like great if you were running against the Republican Joe Biden you know, if you were running against almost any other Republican.
Speaker 3:Okay, yeah, that's great, you can take that route. You know, because none of them were ready. None of them were ready to get in the ring anyway. Trump was the only one ready. He was the only one planning. He was the only one, you know, because none of them were ready to get in the ring anyway. Trump was the only one ready. He was the only one planning it, he was the only one setting it up. And the guy's been dancing circles around you.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 3:From day one.
Speaker 2:Trump already went on so many interviews, you know like even with one with Dr Phil. Have you seen that one? I saw a little bit. You know Elon Musk, that's why he's questioning what Trump's view is.
Speaker 3:He may not have given his plan, but we know his views, we know how he feels and that's saying a lot. The Democratic Party you fumbled the ball. First of all, they fumbled the ball letting Joe Biden run. Believe he was going to actually run a second term anyway. That's right off the bat. Okay, they fumbled the ball right there. They should have never brought that up. And then, if Harris was going to run and they were going to arrogant supporter, she should have been running right out the box With a solid message on her presidency how it's going to be done, you know, not make a whole 90 degree divergent from Joe Biden's presidency, but you know enough that it's definitely her presidency and not another regurgitation of his time in office.
Speaker 3:so you can, you know, distance yourself from that and they've, they've just failed in every single capacity yeah, and another controversial talk is um.
Speaker 2:She's somehow came out now identify identified herself as Black.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I haven't seen that yet. And to me personally, I just wanted to beat my kid with a hammer.
Speaker 2:Okay to me personally. I really feel that that's a little bit wrong, you know, because it seems like she's identified herself, like that is because she wants to get the vote from the Black community, and you know what's your thought on that?
Speaker 3:My thought on that is that's a shaky boat to. That's a stupid shaky boat to get in. I would have never brought it up, I would have never mentioned it.
Speaker 2:Right.
Speaker 3:Because now you got people looking. Yeah, it sounds like it's they're going to mention it once and just let everybody believe what they're going to believe.
Speaker 2:So it's like a birth certificate kind of thing all over again, don't you think so later on?
Speaker 3:No, this one's going to be one of those. This one has every opportunity to turn into one of those. She says she's Black, but she's really Hindu. Then you start looking into the Indian culture more closely, and how.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I know it's complicated.
Speaker 3:Saying it's complicated is an understatement. You're going to bring up stuff that there's a lot of stuff in the Hindu culture that doesn't align with American values.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 3:And these are fundamental things. And it's like you spent a long time making yourself American. Why are you proving to be a dumbass on top of that? Like, what was it? Who was it? I'm trying to remember. I think it was in. I really hate to say this. I really hate to say this. I really hate to say this, but Hillary, the reason Hillary failed. Hillary had every opportunity to win. The reason she failed she made a lot of the same fucking mistakes.
Speaker 2:A lot of what.
Speaker 3:She made a lot of the same mistakes.
Speaker 2:Okay.
Speaker 3:Comments on comments that don't have nothing to do with that, don't or shouldn't have anything to do with her actually being a president One because it's like you're a woman, you're trying to be the first female president. Right, you don't need to be talking to women.
Speaker 1:No, you need to be talking to women.
Speaker 3:No, you need to be talking to men. You need to be getting talking to men, reassuring men that you can have a conversation, you're cool-headed, you can manage an argument. You need to be concentrating on talking to men, and men alone. The women will follow behind you because you're a female. The more men you box into your corner, the more women you're going to have in your corner, because the women are going to see oh, all these guys believe in her, all these guys are rallying behind her. That's who you need to be talking to.
Speaker 3:You need to, be damn sure, pick a position don't change it until you get hard evidence that this might not be the way we want to go.
Speaker 2:Let's reassess, but pick a position first yeah, it made me feel like she right now try to throw different things and see which one sticks. So then she sticks, she sticks Right, kind of like that.
Speaker 3:Yeah, it's really. She's like I said, this is the problem that Hillary had a lot and then Hillary's team made a lot of embarrassing mistakes for her too.
Speaker 3:You know and it's like don't surround. The biggest thing I could tell Kamau Harris mistakes for her too, okay, you know. And it's like don't don't surround. The biggest thing I could tell Kamal here is do not surround yourself with people that make you feel good about you. Do not surround yourself with people that make you feel good about your decisions. Do not surround yourself with anybody grandstanding or hand clapping hopes and dreams, because you're going to be the president of the United States. You are going to be the one that has to make a lot of hard decisions. I don't know if you've been paying attention, and you obviously hasn't. You obviously haven't.
Speaker 3:You obviously haven't Sitting in the office as the president will age you, I don't understand. Look at Joe Biden. Joe Biden came out of his two terms as vice president, like do, do, do, do, do. Obama came out eight years looking like he aged 30. You know Obama went into office he had almost all his hair was black by the time he came out. He had so much salt in there. Ooh, ooh, reagan in presence. He almost killed Reagan.
Speaker 2:he had two terms too um, clinton aged him so so it looks like Donald Trump is the only one who looks the same Kind of.
Speaker 3:You got to also remember Donald Trump. The biggest things about Donald Trump was he shut down a war he shouldn't have really been involved in in the first place. So he shut that down and the biggest thing he was dealing with was personal issues People coming at him for personal issues while he's the president, and then COVID at the very end.
Speaker 2:Witch hunt and COVID yes. Witch hunt and COVID yes. Huh, witch hunt and COVID yeah.
Speaker 3:He had to deal with the beginnings of COVID happening at the very end and then he did a lateral to Joe Biden like here you go, bud, here you go sleepy.
Speaker 2:I had you at it. So do you have a clip that you want to share for us? I?
Speaker 3:had a clip about them in any of this we were talking about. I had one about. They're talking about the Kamala Harris interview, but it's not the one that you had, but it's similar. Okay, go ahead.
Speaker 2:Oh, so you don't have one.
Speaker 3:No, no, no. I mean I have one, but we've already discussed those and moved beyond it. The only other clip I have is the remainder of our discussion.
Speaker 2:Okay, All right, so let's hop on to that one one. Uh, so, uh, this two days, two, three days ago, uh, two gentlemen that I follow and I very admire is billy carson and terence howard. They came together to do a show on forbidden knowledge channel youtube channel. Um, I mentioned about bill billy cars Carson before on another episode, and he talked about a lot of quantum physics, a lot of Egyptian ennealaki and tablets from the ancient histories, and he went really deep into those kind of things and he matched with Terrence Howers, which Terrence Howers is about geometry, secret geometries and flower life. So these two met together. The show is very interesting. However, you know we can go on. This is going to be a very large topic to talk about, but during that live show that they have, I found one section that's very interesting, so I want to show that section and see what your thoughts on that, because you can probably piggyback on that one.
Speaker 1:Okay, give me one second that black people are capable of.
Speaker 1:It's mind boggling, because if you just go into the actual list of actual inventions that exist throughout the known world, you'll find out that predominantly the majority of them were created by black people, especially during the time of slavery. Because we had to become innovators because of the amount of labor and work that we were doing, and so our minds were like listen, man, we can't be, we can't keep bending over and picking this stuff with our hands. We need a tractor, we need a, we need a you know, a motorized plow, we need a real toilet bowl, you know so. And the innovation just consistently kept growing and growing and building and building. And if you look at, if you want to look at it from a historical standpoint, the modern the quote unquote modern world was built on the backs of black people and our inventions, which predominantly, most of them, were taken away and siphoned away, and we didn't get full credit for a lot of the work that we did, because, of course, the plantation owner will take the credit.
Speaker 2:But we were the inventors. Nonetheless and that's part of what Terrence Howard is doing is he patterned a lot of his innovations and discovered towards, like I mentioned, the geometry, the life of flower and the void that he discovered, and so they mentioned about the innovation for the Black people.
Speaker 3:Do you have anything to chime in on that one? Well, no, no, I mean, I've looked at what they both had to say and I find both of them very engaging and forthcoming.
Speaker 3:They're not trying to sell another yarn and with that they both speak about putting down your mark in history when you do something or you develop it. That's, that's putting in the patents and trademarks, and I fully believe. I fully support and believe that you should be doing that. Yes, like it was, it was easier to. It was easier to mislead and or steal an idea before, because the laws were set up so that you couldn't even do it anyway, or you had to get somebody's support in order to even put a patent in through the patent office. You had to have a specific kind of somebody's support just to do it. And that's back. That was back in. I want to say it was back in England, but I believe it was that same way. It was like that here too, in the US. That's how Tesla. That's how Tesla was deceived and lost a lot of his ideas and had his patents held up or just outright denied.
Speaker 2:Yeah, we're talking about Nicholas Tesla, not Tesla.
Speaker 1:The car, tesla, oh yeah.
Speaker 2:Just to let everyone know.
Speaker 3:Yeah, it's Nicholas Tesla. Yeah, Nicholas Tesla. We're talking about Nicholas Tesla. Yeah, nicholas Tesla, we're talking about.
Speaker 2:Nicholas Tesla, yeah.
Speaker 3:It's a big deal to. If you spend the time, especially as a person of color, if you spend the time to learn and develop a process and an idea for an equation, do the patent, do the work and do the patent, do the work and do the patent Right. You deserve that recognition and, as Black people, you deserve to have your name remembered too for this country. There's a lot of things Black people have done in this country that get overlooked on purpose, because a lot of people feel guilty about how things used to be. They feel guilty about how things still are, and I'd say this Fine, that's your problem, not mine.
Speaker 2:If you feel guilty about that.
Speaker 3:That's on you.
Speaker 2:Yeah, so these two come together. I know it's going to open a lot of doors, push a lot of envelopes, because a lot of people are very, you know disbelieve what they're saying. You know what I mean.
Speaker 3:Yeah, yeah, I think Terrence needs to start pushing a lot of his stuff towards the academic community for peer review too. I know he feels like he doesn't have a peer with him. Like, don't think of it so narrowly. With your line of research, you know, get the peer review done. So get the peer review done. It will go a long way to supporting your words and your assertions, you know, within the scientific community alone. Don't flex on that, because nobody's actually there's either nobody or next to nobody going down the research path you're going down. You don't need them to be doing that. You need a peer review to come behind you and be like, wow, he's dotting all these I's and T's, he's crossing these T's, I'm seeing it.
Speaker 2:I'm seeing it. Yes, it's a very interesting discovery.
Speaker 3:And you say you have a video that you want to show. It was the video you put up we had the same video.
Speaker 2:Okay, okay, yeah, we had the same video I just hadn't moved it yeah, so innovation and and it's kind of like we, you know, as a human, we are always looking forward to how to advance our life, our experience right. So, you know, right now, including AI, or even we're trying to go to the Mars, and that's all part of innovation. So I mentioned about AI platform about a couple of weeks ago. So I just want to let the audience know that the platform is coming soon. It's going to be in the middle of September. Then by that time we'll do a little episode that's introduced to everybody.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I want to check it out when you push it forward.
Speaker 2:Yes.
Speaker 4:Right now.
Speaker 3:I'm still playing with ChatGPT yes, yes and learning how to use it.
Speaker 2:And learning how to use it. And, as far as you know, the topic on this more like a spiritual side, more of like a how do you say, spiritual meets science. That's what I call it, right, those two are talking about. Those are topics that are very interesting as well. So we're going to have more on this type of topic as well, and we have some already. You know I have, I already have some contents towards that. Uh, more spiritual, psychedelic, uh, dmt, you know, all those brain opening, my opening eye opening, right third eye, yeah anyways. So do you have any before we go? You know, because this one today is going to be shorter because a long weekend, so do you have anything?
Speaker 3:that you want to add. No, I don't have anything extra I look forward to. I am. I'm glad you mentioned that ai. Yes, uh, product and service. I'm looking forward to seeing what that brings forward for you and I would really love to check it out as soon as you get it working, working a product out that's serviceable. Really like to check it out. Thank you, I'm working through the chat, gpt and there's a lot of different functions. Some of it's extremely it's like with everything, some of it's extremely helpful and some of it's like what is this thing trying to do?
Speaker 2:This is what I learned early on in the stage about AI is they also have a good day and bad day, seriously. So when you ask some question or some prompts today and then you come back tomorrow, they'll give you a different answer or different. You know different.
Speaker 3:Yes, yes, it's been my experience with AI. With the AI I'm using, you have to think about your question. You can't just throw the first thing off the top of your head. You can if you're not trying to get a deep answer. You just want an answer. Yeah, throw the first thing off the top of your head, because that stuff works with the AI models too, if you want a deeper answer, you got to think about it more. You might want to think about it more.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I want to come at it from a different angle, right, but you can also have it reference other things. But, like you said, some days is that you're getting outstanding material. Other days, right, this is giving me so like craps. Yeah, like I've had days where I had chat gpt, just being purely creative image wise and video wise. You know, I'm just giving it as little input as possible, letting it create yeah I'm like I want to see what this thing can make.
Speaker 3:You know, and some days it was giving me stuff I just blowed away like I don't even know. Let me know where, where it got. You know, I couldn't even give you the first clue where it got information to to put this in. And then other days I given giving it input and it's like way, it's like not even in the ballpark, he's out in the parking lot walking. This is no you know, I'm like that is not anything close to what I was talking about, or?
Speaker 2:what I wanted if that happens again, try again the next day, when it is in a good mood, right?
Speaker 3:I just come back later and mess with it some more, but I've had to focus down because I was getting carried away for a while. The ChatGPT has a lot of functionality to it to narrow down the algorithm usage Right. So I've had to focus down and just peel off a lot of things like I don't need this, this, this, this. So I've learned you keep a train running of questions and answers. It can also use that as material and then you get really. Your answers get a lot better when you have, when it's got something, a history it can look at of four you know right up front ideas.
Speaker 2:Yes.
Speaker 3:Okay.
Speaker 2:Thank you for sharing with us your little tips on that. Thank you for having me and thank you for joining us, and thank you everyone for joining us and, if you're in the United States, happy Labor Day weekend and be safe out there. Be careful.
Speaker 3:Happy Labor Day weekend everyone.
Speaker 2:Okay, so tune in for next Friday when we go on live, don't forget. Yeah, so tune in for next friday when we go on live. Don't forget. Subscribe, share this video with your friends and family and hit that notification button if you're on youtube. Okay, see you next week bye you.