WBM Podcast aka Witty Banter Media

Elon Musk, AI, and Robotics: Imagining a Future Inspired by Sci-Fi

Oski, xFer, and Merc Season 4 Episode 28

Is Elon Musk the real-life Tony Stark, and could his creations lead us to world peace? We explore Musk's revolutionary endeavors at Tesla and SpaceX, drawing fascinating parallels to the fictional tech genius. From imagining the role of Tesla Bots in transforming industries like construction and security, to humorously considering Musk's potential impact on global challenges, this conversation is a thrilling journey into the future of AI and robotics. We reflect on how these advancements could reshape our world in astonishing ways, all while keeping an eye on the ethical implications.

Picture a world where the AI-driven future of science fiction becomes reality. Our discussion takes an intriguing turn as we explore the potentially ominous future of AI and robotics, evoking the spirit of iconic works like "Dune" and "iRobot." As AI technology rapidly advances, we ponder its ethical challenges and potential misuse, drawing attention to Asimov's Three Laws of Robotics and their vulnerabilities. The geopolitical race for AI supremacy, the economic and moral complexities of AI in warfare, and the transformative power of AI-driven machines—these are the vital issues we unravel as we envision a future where robots redefine security, warfare, and even peace.

Imagine a future where robots are not just helpers but companions, transforming daily life in unexpected ways. We dive into the potential roles of robotics and AI, from acting as family members and providing companionship to revolutionizing healthcare with complex surgeries. Concerns about accessibility and inequality are part of this conversation as we consider the exciting prospects of fully automated restaurants and delivery systems. As we dream of personal mech suits and explore advanced technological possibilities, we maintain a balance between enthusiasm and caution, offering a captivating and thought-provoking vision of the future.

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Speaker 1:

Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you so much for tuning in to the WBM podcast. This is one of your hosts. It's your boy, Mark Welcome back everybody.

Speaker 2:

It's your boy X-Fam, and it's your boy Oski and the Migs.

Speaker 1:

And the Migs Tell it, Mark Guys, do we have one hell of an episode lined up for you this week?

Speaker 2:

We're talking AI. We're talking about Iran, husky.

Speaker 3:

We.

Speaker 1:

We're talking AI.

Speaker 3:

We're talking about Elon Musk we're talking about. We are robots, Tesla and SpaceX bro.

Speaker 2:

Iron Iron man, the real life. Tony Stark, the real Iron Legion ladies and gentlemen, that's right bro.

Speaker 1:

The future is nine. Chat GPT with feelings.

Speaker 3:

We're going to talk Arcturus in real life in the next arc. Spotify GPT. Well, it's going to be the next season of our technology.

Speaker 1:

Find out today on this week's episode of the WBM Podcast. You guys ready, let's go? Damn, that was a harding hail. That sounds just like his mom.

Speaker 3:

We'll see you next time this is going to be our professional episode where we have a TED Talk. When is?

Speaker 1:

it starting.

Speaker 3:

I can't believe I forgot that, elon Musk wants to see the Iron man 2.

Speaker 1:

He was he talks about it An electric jet. Yeah Damn, that's crazy.

Speaker 2:

He made it happen. He did. He was that movie, he was a spy. I was like, why would I make this happen? I am Iron man. Because Iron man 2 was called in the real life, tony Stark he was. Iron man 2 is the one where all the robots attack. Tony Stark, right? Yeah, yeah, man, I think he has his own private army, because y'all saw that thing, he did that event, he did the demo of the Wii robot.

Speaker 3:

They were Tesla around there, right? Yes, the Optimist robots, yeah, it's crazy. And he showed them off and they interacted with the audience, which was insane. The interaction was wild. It sounded like real people. I really want to know how advanced they truly are Because, at the end of the day, today's AI what people don't realize today's AI is just a really advanced Google with the fastest way to search answers. That's what AI today is. It's not actual AI.

Speaker 1:

Expert had a great example. He's like Elon. The shit he has in his house, bro, is like 20 years in the future We'll get what he has, I wonder if he had that robot already in his house, like the twinkie you know like in 2014 that he already had in his backyard, but he was like fuck with him, like don't take me.

Speaker 2:

It's like right now he has that worldwide like release in 2045.

Speaker 3:

That'd be crazy, you know, does that make sense? Whatever, going back to the Tony Stark, I mean he always had Jarvis at his home, just you know, helping him out. I think about that. He always called him Optimus and now he really is Optimus and what he has now is Bumblebee. You know, Bumblebee is like super advanced compared to Optimus you know what Bumblebee transformed?

Speaker 1:

you know what I'm saying. I can get him.

Speaker 3:

Okay, we're coming up with real life theories, but it's not a TV show. How perfect is that okay.

Speaker 2:

So like, what do you want me to solve? Like you know, like peace on earth. Like, hey, hey, google peace on earth, peace on earth is on earth there's no humans.

Speaker 1:

That's the problem.

Speaker 2:

Unless it happens in the desert. It's like alright, look, all you gotta do is like stop drinking Coca-Cola. And it leads you to like you know world peace, exactly right. And then you do this and it equals world peace. But you know, it's like some sort of butterfly effect?

Speaker 1:

where, like we gotta stop using batteries. Nah, I mean, if it's like stop drinking coke and quit using batteries, society would never make it.

Speaker 3:

I think he cares about world peace. I don't know I'm thinking too political. No, no, no, he cares about like creating shit, bro.

Speaker 1:

you know what?

Speaker 3:

Again I talked about this.

Speaker 1:

He's not the real. For me, I was a real life, victor Bond.

Speaker 2:

Same mask, different task. Sorry, good shit.

Speaker 1:

What is that one called again? Fmd, fmd. Right, yeah, infamous. Yeah, yeah, yeah, infamous.

Speaker 2:

Infamous.

Speaker 1:

Iron man yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

I was going to say what's the?

Speaker 1:

name of that bad guy.

Speaker 2:

What's the name of that?

Speaker 1:

bad guy from DC, not Clark Kent.

Speaker 2:

Tinker? What's his name? Homeboy from the DC. He has no powers and he's Superman's greatest rival.

Speaker 3:

Oh, Lex Luthor, that's a better reference. I'm sure one day he's going to be president.

Speaker 2:

He's got a middle gear Just in case any of you know a middle gear is a walking robot that can shoot a nuclear missile anywhere around the world. Oh, like a mech Anywhere on the world.

Speaker 3:

He really has a gun down in the backyard.

Speaker 1:

Yes, he does. He has a gun down. Yeah, that's what he's got, bro, because.

Speaker 2:

I think it up because if I had the money, bro, I would buy that robot security people bro. I would walk around the streets of Columbia with like 10 of those dudes, bro, let's get back to it.

Speaker 1:

They don't have those models. They don't exist. We're thinking in the future yeah, because that's what they're going to do.

Speaker 3:

They're going to be a version, but I mean they can be pushed over by human beings.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, like.

Speaker 1:

Elon in the business side of me I'm thinking. I'm like hey, do you want one that can do construction work? Look, I can give you these super ones, heavy duty ones. Exactly, I got heavy duty ones. The hands are interchangeable with machinery and you never have to worry about workers comp. It'll cost you 120,000 for the year to rent them out, or you can pay $120,000 for four people at a construction job.

Speaker 3:

I'm sure that's on the way too.

Speaker 2:

man, that's what I'm saying, if it turns out the hour of the day, you pay subscription now, but if you pay in advance.

Speaker 3:

At the event. Some of them were bartenders. They were serving drinks and having conversations, there was one that kept saying, amigo, he had a hat on. That's what I'm saying If you he had a hat on.

Speaker 1:

So if you give them real jobs like, if you give them like an AI, your task, your goal is to do X, y, z Serve drinks, serve drinks. You come here to help out with groceries, you mow yards Well, that's what you do.

Speaker 2:

This is a Japanese restaurant I love. I won't give you niggas, I forgot about it. It costs 30 bucks when you can eat for like Steak and sushi, and then you're just like what do you want? I want this, and then just bring it out and you're already paid. There's these little waiters that, whenever you want your drinks- oh, they have them on a bunch of Reptile places.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, because they have them over there and I get to bring it.

Speaker 2:

You see it, it's already existing.

Speaker 3:

They bring the drinks to you.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, when are you going to get the one with the chilaquiles? You know you're like hey, cameraman, here you go and like full authentic. Like hey, you know this is, you know, michael and Mary, in the middle of Iowa. But the robots have authentic accents and speak mode of Spanish that they give the experience so they no longer have to like bring Miguel or Juanita. One of them out there, but they have 17 and 18 out there serving chilaquiles, and they're better.

Speaker 1:

You know what I'm saying but yeah, no 100% I mean, but I just think about it like, even if it's implemented in schools, bro, like now there's no more prejudice, there's no more like and now we're talking about all this like a sci-fi movie it's inevitable they.

Speaker 3:

They take over some of the other jobs, slowly take over our society. Break that down.

Speaker 2:

Bill gates advocates that. They're like the option has to be like that tax revenue has to be given to the public because there's like then they have no reason to go to like work. It's like okay, hey, your job, the job that one does is automated by AI and the AI can detect there's always a human aspect. But the human aspect would be like hey, I just make sure the robots work.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it's bare bones. Cool bro, it's like Chuck E Cheese.

Speaker 2:

No reason to go out there and play the banjo for the Chuck E Cheese, but they just make sure that the Chuck E Cheese arm are up and down.

Speaker 3:

That's true. Well, I did read something about it just this week, actually, an article came out about McDonald's and they put all the AI test screens Yep, they ended up giving more work, like it ended up being counterproductive, because the issues. The workers that were left had more work, so they were slower.

Speaker 1:

Well, see now, I'm not saying the technology is perfect as of yet but it's already being implemented here now because we have self-checkout grocery stores, we have self-checkout at McDonald's, we have ATMs.

Speaker 3:

The other day I went to Taco Bell and Taco Bell had an AI that you can order at the drive-thru.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, what? Yeah, you don't have to do that anymore.

Speaker 3:

How may I help you?

Speaker 1:

There's so many times where that was an AI voice yeah, chad JPT two sugars separated not in the coffee, and instead of instead of Derek being like hey man, I didn't hear you. You got the robot tweeting back to you. Oh chat, you're tweeting back to you. Hey man, I just want to make sure I got this for you.

Speaker 3:

And again it's just a really fast Google engine, like giving you a pre-recorded answer.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and it even gives you like the filler that it's thinking is the um well or not?

Speaker 3:

Google, but whatever you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

But it's just a search engine, not interact with people already, as it is Like if I'm going to the grocery store and I have 20 items, even if they're vegetables, I would much rather type them in myself than feel like I have the inconvenience of somebody. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

Like that's just me, so what are you going to do Like? What are humans being going to do Like? Hey, there's no need to work Like like where it goes down.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, man, I guess because you can even tell your robot like hey robot.

Speaker 3:

I'm financially. I need financial help. How do I make money? Well, first of all, you're spending way too much money on me?

Speaker 2:

Yes, I am, but besides me, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Give me the whole plan first, before everything, because when these Optimus Robots come out to the public.

Speaker 3:

They're going to be pricey.

Speaker 1:

He already said $20,000 or $30,000. That's it. That's a car, less than a car. A Jeep costs $40,000, bro.

Speaker 2:

I made used to be shit. Back then I made that robot piggyback me to work. You know what?

Speaker 1:

I'm saying and then you avoid traffic.

Speaker 3:

Piggyback me to work, Nah fuck the HOV lane, bro, hov, oh, speaking of the cars, the cars Tesla also released new cars.

Speaker 1:

What is that one called it's like?

Speaker 3:

the iCab or something like that.

Speaker 1:

It's a. It's a no steering wheel, no pedals, nothing. It just drives you, it just drives yeah. So basically what the cars were going to be. They realized that the technology was never going to get there, so he just made a whole new vehicle. I like the time, yeah, I mean. But hey, you can do the Tesla route.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, whatever. So it's like in the movies, it's like I remember that. Or Minority Report these cars without pedals and without steering wheels.

Speaker 1:

They just take it and put it in the car. When Elon shows up, he's literally chilling in the car like this.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, and he gets out, but yeah, it doesn't even have anything to drive it no more DWIs, bro.

Speaker 1:

There's never another reason for a DWI. I mean, I can be with. How many lives? How many lives to save though Driving?

Speaker 2:

Sir, pull over. You're driving a bucket, you can't be driving a bucket.

Speaker 1:

Why not? Why not? Sorry bro, you know, this robot's Always gonna take like Sex workers job bro.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, Cause like you can like, you can actually, you know, you actually like Been From 1962. Yeah, Because like you can like, you can actually, you know, you can actually like been from the you know edition 1962, yes, you know what I'm saying. Yeah, Got a load of skins for it.

Speaker 3:

You know what I'm saying? Like yeah, exactly what it is, bro. It's all behind a paywall.

Speaker 1:

Like you get to pick, like the type of Look at the boxes.

Speaker 2:

Look at the pay-, not shaved, shaved yellow mustache jungle 70s, 80s, 90s, cleanest wood edition classic 2000, retro 2000 period.

Speaker 1:

I'd be like sparking zero. I'd be like retro before Z ball super hell yeah, but it's like it's just the same outfit.

Speaker 3:

It's what it is. It's just like you. Yeah, that's it. They also showed up the new band, the new passenger. Yeah, but it's like it's just the same outfit, but it changes each time. It's what it is, bro, it's just like you. Yeah, that's it. They also showed up the new band, the new passenger band, that holds like 20 people.

Speaker 1:

Yes, now again. That shit is insane. Amazing though.

Speaker 3:

It's self-driving too.

Speaker 1:

Again, that's going to be the new public transportation.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, some of these signs are like I rub it that Will Smith movie from 2004. It's a pull 100%.

Speaker 2:

The government's going to use it because if the next riot breaks out, the world is going to be like go home, Go home.

Speaker 3:

Go home, Go home, the deity in. I Rub it too. There was a riot towards the end of the movie and they're like please disperse Go home, please.

Speaker 1:

They had the curfew, yes, and they're taking over the city and they're fucking the robots up and guess what? There's no prejudice, there's no anger. Hey, they started it and they're just still doing their job. Yeah, and guess what? Police, hate crimes go away.

Speaker 2:

That's right, that's right, and the politicians can go, can like. Politicians can put aside, like hey, I didn't start this, I wanted to go home To start a riot. They start throwing bricks at the robots, so the robots have to secure the area, you know. So like hey, it's up to the people.

Speaker 3:

They hit me, so they hit me. It's an area where like, okay, well, the people are prejudiced against the robots, right yeah.

Speaker 2:

I can see that they start destroying them, and that's when the AIs want to fight back.

Speaker 1:

Skyden bro happens every time, that's it.

Speaker 3:

There's a bunch of books that Skydive is still gonna happen. We kept pushing it back with the movies. It's still gonna happen.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, dean, talked about that.

Speaker 2:

A great war against the robots, and that's what they do. Is the spice, you know. Bringing it back to our episode of Dune, oh, dune, yeah there's like a we mentioned there's a great cybernetics against robots, because the robots, the AI, rebelled against humanity and it was like a big ass war yeah that's why they outlaw AI.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they outlaw AI so eventually, right now, it's like we're just using it for fun, like it's like any kid whenever they get a toy or a new item, we just play with it. So we just play with it out.

Speaker 1:

I mean I'm excited for it, bro, At the end of the day I'm sorry, I'm still excited for it.

Speaker 2:

Like right now.

Speaker 1:

I'll tell you what, because it's not going to go, even on my lifetime, at least I think I hope I don't know. Because guess what? Remember the shit like if 15 years ago they would have told you hey, bro, seconds you mean google. No, bro, more advanced, better, more accurate, and they can talk to you like a person, like the actual robot, and that's just chet gpt. That's not even again. We would have told you 15 years ago. You're fucking crazy. We're nowhere near that fucking now.

Speaker 3:

The way it's advancing now, what we're talking about is probably gonna happen in our lifetime.

Speaker 1:

Absolutely that's what I'm saying, because remember I robot, I robot, shit was like bro, maybe one day in 100 years we'll get there. No, that's today, that was last week.

Speaker 3:

Speaking of iRobot. Irobot is based on a collection of short stories from a writer called Isaac Asimov. Isaac Asimov, oh, I didn't know that. That collection was written in 1942. The short story was written in 1942. It was included in a collection that they say in that movie. That's where it comes from, because of that short story. Asimov's loss and that came out in 1950. My dad was still alive at the time. Constantly, the road in 1950 are likely to happen right now.

Speaker 1:

So seven years later, they're just out coming for us. Yeah, man. So what's going to be in the next step? It's like we're going to talk about the laws.

Speaker 3:

How does your convince the laws? You're thinking that Elon Musk is going to program the laws.

Speaker 1:

Absolutely. There's going to be a global law and everybody will beat it.

Speaker 2:

If it's not Hamers and Narcos, like it's going to be, because, like cartels, like they're going to jailbreak them. They jailbreak them, they will do for it usually definitely use it for like soldiers or like go at night because, like now, you have like a squadron of robots hunting you down 24 7 365 and like you're, you're hit man. No one has to be on drugs or anything to do these horrible crimes. You know, like slaughter the town and the robots will start a town.

Speaker 3:

You know, you never know, because that's the way, the laws you know, remember, a robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm. First law.

Speaker 1:

What did you say? The last one, the first two laws?

Speaker 3:

Well, the second law, a robot must obey the orders given by a human being, except where such orders will conflict with the first law and the third law. A robot must protect its own assistant as long as such protection does not conflict with the first or second law, but of course. I course there's paradoxes and there's loopholes.

Speaker 2:

That's the thing, that's the jailbreak. Asimov never saw an iPhone so he never knew what jailbreaking meant. So he would have understood, like I'm saying, evil organizations If it's not him, it would be like an evil government that just buys it.

Speaker 1:

It's like the Iron man. That's what he wanted to prevent a mass production of it, because if other countries got a hold of it, it would be a weapon a terrorist weapon, yeah, I would like I.

Speaker 2:

I personally would buy like six of them, the biggest baddies, like martial arts edition and like travel to like bulgaria or third world countries. But I feel secure because I got six badass robots with missile launchers that's me imagine something like you must, bro, it's gonna work because his argument is look nobody's.

Speaker 1:

We're years ahead of anybody else being at this shit, bro, we got this on lock, and then russia's working on it, and then korea's working on it, and then that's gonna be some real shit, you know because? But then again you take out the, the human element of war. I would send in a thousand Iron Legion robots oh yeah, you know, I mean. And guess what? They're expendable? Yeah, you know, I got insurance on these motherfuckers.

Speaker 3:

That's why we send drones now. We already took it out, man, we already send drones. Yeah, some drones, but again there's still human astronauts.

Speaker 2:

I'm going to say because it becomes an economic thing.

Speaker 1:

We're like no, I'm not fighting why.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, if the robots can't do it, then I can't do it. And then, like humanity, just accepts the feedback.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but I can see that happening. World peace. Sorry, but I'm just saying, I'm just saying I can't do it. What the fuck man.

Speaker 2:

You think I'm going to do?

Speaker 1:

it. You're telling me, this fucking genius machine, they want the land, they can have it, they can have it, they can handle it. You're telling me a thousand-man Iron Legion couldn't do it. What the fuck am I?

Speaker 2:

doing. I love it. A thousand-man Iron Legion is fucking dope bro. It sounds crazy.

Speaker 1:

The Iron Legion is they call him Optimus Robert. Die Release the Transformers, no Autobots.

Speaker 2:

Optimus has cool, but I'm going to be sick as fuck.

Speaker 3:

But he must have had a really busy weekend too. He had the SpaceX launch.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, OK, so the rockets are now being cut by his fucking ship bro, which is insane.

Speaker 3:

He launched Starship and it was a really good launch all the way to space. And then the heavy rocket booster that's connected to Starship. It basically got remote control back into the launch pod and a mechanism called chopsticks basically catches it it's like robot arms and just lands it To reuse it later. It doesn't crash into the ocean.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I mean that's pretty crazy bro. That's millions of dollars worth of technology. They're just throwing it away. It's going to be space travel.

Speaker 3:

Some people were saying it's already more advanced than NASA has done.

Speaker 2:

I believe it.

Speaker 3:

Without government involvement. Maybe SpaceX's program is going to go a lot further than NASA.

Speaker 1:

Here's my thing. This is the shit that I don't get. How do we we know we're closer to the Jetsons, bro, and that was in the 70s dog All right, we got no talking dogs. We barely got the main robots. All right, we got no flying cars. We got Siri, though Thank goodness she's not talking. That was as close as we got. Hey, bro, siri, that's true man, but look, because we stopped inventing shit, we stopped doing shit Once we hit the cell phone, like touchscreen. We stopped doing shit after that, bro.

Speaker 2:

We should have went closer there, bro, for 20 years.

Speaker 3:

But there's still a lot coming out that you wouldn't think you would have 20 years ago.

Speaker 1:

Totally, I'll say it like this the coolest invention that we've had, probably in the past 20 years, other than the cell phone and the internet, is going to be an electric car, cell driving car.

Speaker 3:

That's it how we had the, but we have like 18 different versions of a fucking cell phone now Again like, the cell phone that we have now is nothing compared to the cell phone that came out 20 years ago. That's something you got to think about. This cell phone that we have now is, you know, you could video call, you could take pictures, high def pictures, you could do all kinds of stuff. It's a video game console.

Speaker 1:

Why did we stop here, though is what I'm saying. Like Elon was like. You know what I can make? Irobot to real life. To real life. Why in the fuck. That movie came out in 2008 and in fucking 16 years he's done it. Nasa's had all the fucking you know however long, and we're like yeah, the moon landing is still fake. We don't visit other planets, we don't do other shit, yeah, we just throw away millions of dollars.

Speaker 3:

Look into it now. It's like the moon landing was probably fake.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's more, you know.

Speaker 1:

Well, guess what? We can go there now. Yeah, spacex.

Speaker 3:

SpaceX is gonna. Spacex is gonna take us there.

Speaker 1:

It's gonna have tourists On the moon. Now Exactly. It's gonna be crazy. Hey bro, go get a moon rock.

Speaker 3:

For 100 grand We'll get you a moon rock, I wonder. You gotta wonder how much those tickets Are gonna be 100 grand, I know, for the first 10 years. They're going to be like Only for the multi-millionaires. But the billionaires will be. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

But after 20 years I think it'll be affordable In 20 years.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I think it'll be affordable. Billions will be walking In space right now.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, there are, first off, yes.

Speaker 3:

SpaceX.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I mean it's already happened. But in 20 years, yeah, spaceship tours Eventually.

Speaker 3:

It's going spaceship tours. Eventually it's gotta become affordable in my opinion now that it's privatized and everything.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, maybe more companies are gonna come up they were showing how, like they wanna do, the one where, like the plane, the plane would go so high that it dumps them out there, right then the earth rotates and they just go back down. Hence like cutting, like the time of travel.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Time of travel. Yeah, I know exactly what you're talking about. Yeah, when they strap him on top of that shit, they send them all from, like the stratosphere, basically.

Speaker 2:

And then as they come down, they hit the like boom, yep, and they do China like in two hours. Yeah, that's interesting. That's the flight and I'm following with space travel.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, eventually we'll just send the rockets on the way to fucking China.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that man. Can you imagine New York?

Speaker 1:

City 30 minutes. Yeah, cause like the come down would be so fucking fast. Yeah, that's right, there'd be no fuel, it'd just be straight gravity.

Speaker 3:

It's cool to see all that stuff that you see in sci-fi also becoming like real and stuff we're now stepping into the future.

Speaker 1:

I can say that guys like we're there. What if?

Speaker 2:

it was nothing real. What if it was all AI?

Speaker 3:

and we thought it was all one in the matrix right now but that's advanced like it happened during covid. We're in the matrix right now the covid.

Speaker 2:

The covid was the, the nanotechnology yeah, so yeah, man it's.

Speaker 1:

I'm excited for it because, look, I think about it like for elderly people, elderly people who want to have a companion there. You can't afford to be like an eye rubber. Like, exactly just like an eye rubber. You can't afford to be with your parents all day long, but if they slip and fall in the shower and they need help, hey, robot call, fucking help. You know what I'm saying?

Speaker 2:

I can see the robot having the face like your daughter's calling, and it does the face of the daughter.

Speaker 1:

And it starts mouthing what you're saying Like the nanobot shit to the face.

Speaker 2:

That'd be cool shit. Well, it's like a WhatsApp call. There's just a robot that assumes the face of the person you're having a conversation with.

Speaker 3:

That'd be cool as shit. I'd be down for that That'd be creepy, but okay.

Speaker 1:

Face swap technology already exists. It does, it does.

Speaker 2:

Companies like Tinder and Pornhub can be like long-distance relationship have your robot and then like Be your bitch.

Speaker 3:

Oh no, but I know you, I know you're my expert in sex toys over here. This is already sex toys that you could like connect via Bluetooth to Wi-Fi, yeah, or you could like activate them.

Speaker 1:

You can fuck your bitch long business right now. That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

You could have your own version like your own pocket pussy and the girl could have her own version.

Speaker 2:

There's going to be, like the Pokemon edition Misty version for you to buy, bro, like shit, like that, like shit, like that is just murdering us.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, we got sued. We got sued by them, but yeah, no, I mean look, bro, cause look, we're simple.

Speaker 1:

I'm sorry, there's gonna be an AI guy. No, there's gonna be an AI chick a guy. There's gonna be an AI guy, a guy who's very happy an AI guy, and there's gonna be a bitch on the floor with a cardboard sign that says it says must be six feet, six pack and six figures. Get the fuck out of here, bro.

Speaker 2:

This is going to be a robot. And you say a robot is six, five, six figures.

Speaker 1:

You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

He's going to be like why would I deal with this bitch? Oh Lord, have mercy. But I know I was going to have a smart segue out of that the Matrix glitch.

Speaker 2:

It's going to happen bro.

Speaker 3:

It is.

Speaker 1:

I'm sure AI is going to get too long Again we're not going to say that the human element is going to be completely removed, because it's not.

Speaker 2:

For example, like doctors and nurses, you can't remove bedside manner Until you get the old robot with the upgraded version that can do cardiac surgery on the spot. We've got to put a description for that.

Speaker 1:

Or you're still into bedside manner, or we're going to end up in cyberpunk where not not everybody can afford healthcare see, I hope not, because that would suck, you're right, because then you end up with the janky ass doctors because your insurance only carried so much. Or could you make it to the high end spot where you make it, to where they?

Speaker 3:

have the robots that's the one.

Speaker 2:

That's the one you want to go to, because that's the one that like how can you afford it?

Speaker 3:

but it's definitely expensive.

Speaker 2:

Absolutely, absolutely, but it's.

Speaker 3:

It's going to be a paywall?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's going to be a jailbreak. It's going to be a jailbreak, the motherfucker.

Speaker 3:

It's going to be a jailbreak, and then he glitches with surgery.

Speaker 1:

Nah, bro, it's a pay to win system. I risk it, bro, but my thing is because look here's on the doctors that are on call that never had to sleep. That can go to any situation that you needed.

Speaker 3:

Eventually, we're going to get to where it's more convenient, but we're not there yet obviously the technology is still being worked out.

Speaker 1:

Like you said, McDonald's tried to do a whole AI automated, no person interaction, and it was terrible.

Speaker 3:

It just ended up making more work. I think that's what the article said.

Speaker 1:

It just wasn't productive, but I could see it getting there one day. I will say, though it's McDonald's. Elon Musk probably got a little bit more pull with the AI that he has access to.

Speaker 2:

And everything's coming to him. Imagine a little car, imagine a little restaurant cart when the restaurant comes to you.

Speaker 3:

They have those delivery bots.

Speaker 2:

Like a restaurant. A full fish restaurant comes to your house, you watch it open up, the little robots come out and cook the food. That's fifth element.

Speaker 1:

You're claiming fifth element, remember who wakes up In the morning time and that guy in the restaurant. Both comes out.

Speaker 2:

Outside of his window. Yeah, he pulls up. Hey, what's up, brother you?

Speaker 1:

got like 12 arms too To cook the shit up and everything it's gonna be like the little refills Italian, so we're kind of like authentic hey yo, ricky, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

Like the robot box. The box opens up and it's authentic Napoleon from Pixar. I'm down bro. I like that idea Pat him that shit he's already doing it.

Speaker 1:

But no man. But I think overall the entire concept is going to be insane. And we're going to Raleigh, bro, there's no need to go to work.

Speaker 3:

And one day we're going to have the Gundams, We've got to have the Gundams.

Speaker 1:

You know, I just want it to be a mech suit. If I could have a Gundam mech suit, I'd be A mech suit. Yeah, I don't know, to me maybe the. I'm curious on what she has to say about this. Oh no, there's our time. Ladies and gentlemen.

Speaker 3:

Hopefully you like our conversation on SpaceX and Tesla. That's right, guys.

Speaker 1:

WeRobot is out now. Make sure you guys are staying tuned to that.

Speaker 2:

I do look forward to it because I would buy one. I'm going to buy me a robot fish, all right.

Speaker 3:

Stay tuned for the next edition. Maybe that's an SR Kavilo monster, maybe.

Speaker 1:

Suki may get replaced, who knows? Optimus 2.0. We're going to end up in X-Head Island. Ah, I love that. All right, guys. This is WBM Podcast. This is one of underscore podcast.

Speaker 2:

Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, all that jazz Make sure you follow us on Spotify, amazon Music, apple Music, stitcher and all that jazz that's right and check out the website WBMPodcastcom.

Speaker 3:

This is your boy, oski Min, in the mix. In the mix, in the bottom of the description, you're going to find two links.

Speaker 1:

One to support the show for a shout out.

Speaker 3:

Shout out to uh, what's her name? Sarah sarah.

Speaker 1:

Sorry, I forgot it had to on my nose, fucking sarah.