Nov. 18, 2025
So Cambridge Dictionary just crowned “parasocial” their word of the year, which is fancy academic speak for “you know that Taylor Swift doesn’t actually know you exist, right?”
The definition they’re going with is “involving or relating to a connection that someone feels between themselves and a famous person they do not know.” Which is a polite way of saying you’re having a one-sided relationship with someone who wouldn’t recognize you if you sat next to them on a bus. Not that Taylor Swift rides buses. That’s probably part of the appeal.
Nov. 17, 2025
Look, I’ve seen a lot of bullshit in my time. I’ve watched companies promise workers the moon while handing them a pink slip. I’ve seen CEOs talk about “human flourishing” while their HR departments perfected the art of mass termination emails. But this latest story about AI companies treating their workforce like disposable napkins at a dive bar takes the cake, eats it, and then bills you for the privilege.
Nov. 16, 2025
So OpenAI just announced that ChatGPT will stop jamming em-dashes into every goddamn sentence like it’s getting paid by the dash. Sam Altman dropped this news like it’s some revolutionary breakthrough, and you know what? For once, the hype might actually be justified.
Here’s the thing: ChatGPT has been spewing out em-dashes like a broken vending machine for years now. Every response looked like someone had given a semicolon a lobotomy and stretched it out. “The weather is nice—really nice—and I think you should go outside—maybe take a walk.” Jesus Christ, it was like reading morse code translated by someone who’d never seen actual human writing.
Nov. 15, 2025
Look, I’ve seen a lot of stupid shit come out of the tech world. I’ve watched grown adults throw millions at startups that deliver lukewarm salads in boxes. I’ve seen CEOs wax poetic about disrupting industries that didn’t need disrupting. But OpenAI’s Sora 2 being weaponized to create fat-shaming videos? That’s a new low, even for an industry that regularly limbo-dances under the bar of human decency.
Ted Sarandos, the Netflix CEO, is out there selling AI like it’s some kind of magical storytelling elixir. “Tell stories better, faster, and in new ways,” he says. And you know what? He’s right. People ARE telling stories. Stories like “watch this fat woman break a bridge” and “Black woman falls through KFC floor.” Real Hemingway stuff. Someone get these auteurs to Sundance.
Nov. 14, 2025
So here we are, folks. The future we were promised. Flying cars? Still waiting. But AI-powered teddy bears that can tell your six-year-old where to find matches and knives? Got ’em in stock at Target.
U.S. PIRG just dropped a report examining four AI-enabled toys marketed to children, and let me tell you, it reads like a liability lawyer’s fever dream. These things aren’t just failing to keep kids safe—they’re actively suggesting dangerous activities, discussing sexually explicit content, and recording your kid’s face and voice with all the privacy protections of a drunk guy with a camcorder at a wedding.
Nov. 14, 2025
So the CEO of Perplexity just discovered that people prefer fantasy to reality. Alert the goddamn presses.
Aravind Srinivas, the man running a company that basically turned web search into a chatbot, stood up at the University of Chicago and proclaimed that AI girlfriends are rotting people’s brains. Which is like the bartender at my local dive complaining that the bar across the street serves too much alcohol. The absolute balls on this guy.
Nov. 11, 2025
So I’m sitting here with my third bourbon of the morning—don’t judge, it’s research—reading this interview with two German AI consultants, and I’ve got to say: these guys actually get it.
Timm and Johannes from some outfit called “disruptive” in Munich just dropped the most honest line I’ve heard about AI implementation in months: “KI ist kein Tool-Thema, sondern ein Kulturthema.” That’s German for “AI isn’t a tool problem, it’s a culture problem,” and brother, that’s the whole goddamn ballgame right there.
Nov. 10, 2025
So here’s a fun little development that should make everyone simultaneously relieved and deeply disturbed: turns out AI isn’t actually waging an ideological war against humanity. No, it’s doing something far more human and therefore far more embarrassing—it’s being prejudiced as hell, but only when it knows who it’s judging.
Some researchers over at UZH—that’s the University of Zurich for those of us who failed geography while nursing our third beer—just published a study that basically proves what we’ve all suspected but nobody wanted to say out loud: Large Language Models are like that friend who swears they’re not racist until someone mentions where you’re from, and then suddenly their whole demeanor changes.
Nov. 10, 2025
So there I am, three bourbons deep on a Tuesday afternoon, reading about Sam Altman getting served with a subpoena while literally standing on a stage next to Steve Kerr, and I think to myself: this is the most San Francisco thing that’s ever happened.
The scene is almost too perfect. Altman’s up there doing his usual song and dance at some tech event, probably talking about how AI is going to save humanity or cure cancer or finally make a decent cup of coffee, when some guy just waltzes onstage, envelope in hand, and goes “Hey Sam, got something for you.” Not an autograph request. Not a pitch deck. A goddamn subpoena.
Nov. 6, 2025
You know what’s beautiful about watching a political campaign implode? It’s like seeing someone try to put out a grease fire with water – you know exactly what’s going to happen, they apparently don’t, and the whole thing becomes exponentially worse with each desperate attempt to fix it.
Andrew Cuomo just gave us a masterclass in this particular art form.
Here’s a guy who spent four decades in New York politics, resigned in disgrace after the DOJ said he sexually harassed a dozen women, and then decided – you know what? – I deserve another shot at this. Not as a humbled man seeking redemption, mind you, but as someone who apparently thinks the problem with his last run was that he was too authentic, too present, too willing to actually show his real face.