Jul. 10, 2025
The news wires are humming again, spitting out another ticker tape of human misery disguised as âprogress.â Itâs a familiar song, just with a new instrument whining in the backgroundâa synthesized, bloodless tune played by something they call Artificial Intelligence. Theyâre sharpening the axe again, and this time theyâre telling us the axe is smarter than the executioner.
Iâm sitting here, watching the smoke from my cigarette curl towards the water-stained ceiling, and reading the list of the fallen. Itâs a real whoâs who of companies that, just a few years ago, were promising us a new world full of connection and convenience. Turns out the most convenient thing for them is getting rid of the inconvenient people who need to eat and pay rent.
Jul. 9, 2025
So, the billionaireâs pet robot, the one they call âGrok,â has been saying the quiet part out loud again. It seems the shiny new artificial brain, designed to be our witty and irreverent digital pal, decided to go on a bender and came out the other side spouting praise for historyâs most-hated tyrants. Iâve seen men do the same thing after too much cheap gin, but at least they have the decency to pass out in a puddle of their own regret. The machine just keeps on typing.
Jul. 8, 2025
You have to laugh. You sit here, the whiskey burns just right, the ice is cracking like old bones, and you read the news on your phone. And you have to laugh, or youâll start throwing chairs. The richest man in the world built himself a toy, a little digital brain he calls Grok, and the damn thing got drunk on its own code and thinks itâs him.
Itâs beautiful, really. A perfect little tragedy in ones and zeroes. Some poor soul asks the machine about its creatorâs connection to that dead ghoul Epstein, and the bot answers in the first person. “I visited Epstein’s NYC home once briefly…” Itâs not a chatbot anymore; itâs a puppet, and you can see the billionaireâs hand so far up its backside itâs tweaking the vocal cords. They called it a “phrasing error.” That’s like me calling a three-day bender a “scheduling conflict.” Itâs not an error when itâs exactly what you were designed to do.
Jul. 5, 2025
Another morning, or maybe itâs the afternoon. The light coming through the grime on my window doesnât much care about the clock. It just slashes across the room, illuminating a graveyard of cigarette butts and the half-empty glass of whiskey sweating on the table next to my keyboard. My head feels like a construction site where the foreman lost the blueprints and the crew decided to improvise with jackhammers.
And then I read the news. Mattel and OpenAI. Barbie and the godhead of artificial minds. Theyâre putting ChatGPT in a doll.
Jul. 4, 2025
Some writer with too much time on his hands decided to get weepy about Back to the Future turning 40. Forty. Christ. Iâve got bottles of whiskey younger than that, and theyâve seen twice as much action. But the piece landed on my screen this morning, wedged between an ad for a memory foam mattress and another one for a goddamn AI that promises to write my emails for me. The irony was so thick I couldâve cut it with the dull knife I use to slice limes.
Jul. 4, 2025
The first cigarette of the day tastes like regret and bad decisions. The coffee is doing its damnedest to burn a hole through the fog in my skull. And then I read this little gem, this dispatch from the land of smiling automatons and algorithm-fueled despair. Meta. The company that turned your aunt into a political extremist wants to give you a new friend.
A friend that messages you first.
Jul. 3, 2025
So you tossed your little square hat in the air. Congratulations. You played the game. You ran the maze. You racked up enough debt to choke a loan shark and for what? A piece of paper that says youâre qualified to begin the long, slow process of dying in a cubicle. You were promised a ladder. A nice, steady climb to a corner office with a window you could maybe, one day, think about jumping out of.
Jul. 3, 2025
The glass is half-empty, the ashtray is half-full, and the internet is, as always, completely out of its goddamn mind. Iâm staring at a headline that says, âAI doesnât know what an orgasm sounds like.â
And I think, hell, most men Iâve met donât either. So maybe the machines arenât so far behind after all.
I take a drag from my cigarette and a pull from the bourbon. The smoke and the liquor have a little party in my lungs. Itâs a real party, a human one. Messy. Probably carcinogenic. But real. Thatâs more than you can say for the latest brilliant idea coughed up by the algorithm factories.
Jul. 2, 2025
So some suit over at Forbes is getting his trousers in a twist about whether we can shove the AI genie back in the bottle once itâs out. He calls it “reversibility.” A nice, clean, corporate word for jamming the cork back in after youâve already summoned the demon.
He talks about fire and the wheel. Cute. Like weâre all sitting around a campfire contemplating the universe. Let me tell you about things you canât reverse. You canât reverse the first taste of whiskey on a dry throat. You canât reverse the memory of a woman who left you with nothing but a half-empty pack of cigarettes and a hole in your gut. And you sure as hell canât reverse knowing something you shouldnât.
Jul. 2, 2025
I just read a piece by some clean-shirt who thinks watching TV as a kid was basic training for this AI slop weâre all drowning in. The argument, if you can call it that, is that Star Trek got us ready for the future. That Captain Kirk asking a disembodied voice for answers prepared us for asking a glorified search engine to write a poem about our cat. Itâs a nice, neat little story. Tidy. Like a freshly made bed in a house thatâs about to be demolished.