
Fully Grown Homos Podcast
Fully Grown Homos Podcast
AI Ate My Homework (And Maybe My Job)
Stepping into the brave new world of artificial intelligence, Matt and Dave explore the remarkable capabilities and concerning pitfalls of this rapidly evolving technology that's quietly reshaping our everyday lives.
From enhancing resumes to generating entire songs, we share our personal adventures with AI tools like ChatGPT and Sonu. The results have been nothing short of mind-blowing – what once took hours now takes seconds, and creative possibilities seem endless. We're even launching our own AI-created band, FGH, featuring the fiery redheaded vocalist May Blaze and her talented bandmates!
But as we dive deeper, we confront the challenging questions about AI's expanding influence. What happens when AI runs hospitals, as it already does in China? Will teachers become obsolete? How do we protect against deepfakes and identity theft in an increasingly AI-powered world? The technology offers incredible benefits – from snake venom neutralization research to personalized healthcare – but also raises profound concerns about job displacement and ethical boundaries.
Throughout our discussion, we acknowledge that resistance is futile; AI is becoming as essential as mobile phones. The key lies in embracing its capabilities while maintaining awareness of both benefits and risks. Whether you're AI-curious or tech-wary, this episode provides thoughtful perspectives on navigating a future where artificial intelligence shapes more of our world every day.
Join the conversation by sharing your own AI experiences or concerns – email us at fullygrownhomospodcast@gmail.com or find us on social media as @fullygrownhomospodcast. Have you tried creating something with AI yet? We'd love to hear about it!
If you want to send us a question or would like our thoughts on a particular topic you can contact us at Fullygrownhomospodcast@gmail.com or contact us on any of our socials at Fully Grown Homos Podcast.
Welcome to Fully Grown Homos with Matt and Dave a podcast about our adventures as fully grown homos navigating today's world full of inquisitive friends' questions about gay life and the unexplored activities of a life lived as fully grown homos.
Speaker 2:We will discuss the gay 101s, sex, sexuality and topics we don't even know yet, as we want your input onto what you want to hear, Nothing is off limits, so email us on fullygrownhomospodcast at gmailcom or message any of our socials at fullygrownhomospodcast. Well, hello there, dave. Hello, Good afternoon, good evening, good morning.
Speaker 1:Whatever it might be here, it's yeah whatever the fuck time it is it's actually morning here. It is actually right, it's a Sunday morning and we're recording away and Chanel's decided she wanted snacks from under the pet food thing. She's been so quiet and so well behaved and all of a sudden she's just decided that we've hit record. I think she's taking note out the girls yeah, she's going let's do it.
Speaker 2:You're recording too.
Speaker 1:Let girls yeah, she's gonna, let's do it. Yeah, well, you're on you record into this. Just fuck you, let's do it, let's do it, let's play up. Let's play up. So if we sound a bit different, we're recording on a new machine. We're recording on the roadcaster pro 2 and I've tried editing in all our sounds. We've created some jingles so this might sound a bit different this week. We're not sure how it's going to go, but we'll soon find out. We're trying so far. So weekly wrap. Let me just hang on one second and let's do this. Oh honey, guess who's back? Dave and Matt with a disco smack, surfing laughs. They spill the tea. The wrap of the week.
Speaker 2:With some attitude, please. They spill the tea, the rap of the week. With some attitude, please. I'm growing and feeling fine.
Speaker 1:Snap those fingers, sip that wine, get your fix, no need to nap. It's Dave and Matt with the Weekly Rap. Yeah, that's right, it's Dave and Matt's weekly wrap. So, Dave, how's your week been?
Speaker 2:Busy as usual. House is progressing really well now, so outside got the rendering done this week.
Speaker 2:Yeah, looks spectacular, yeah, yeah. So the top half got done, as in cladding-wise a couple of weeks ago, and now the bottom half is all rendered. So and the side, which I'm pretty happy with, they did it in a day rather than two days, which is great. Yeah, they sent probably about eight guys down rather than four that were going to initially turn up and they just smashed through. It was great, and I'm glad they did, because the weather on the second day of the Tuesday was a little bit wet, a little bit rainy.
Speaker 1:Yep, and as long as they don't charge you anymore, you don't care if there's 20 guys. No, exactly, that's correct.
Speaker 2:The more the better, absolutely. They're all Lebanese guys, older guys, so they work really well. I mean, I don't know how their backs are faring, because I don't think I would want to do that job. No, it looked like hard work.
Speaker 1:Oh hard work. I mean I did buckets of like cement and stuff.
Speaker 2:I did try and teach our temp stay in to take dave into taking some photos of the guys, some up shorts and stuff like that.
Speaker 2:These guys weren't sort of like the clientele I would say I'd want to do that for yeah, but a nice big heavy they were nice people, apart from them, dirty in my walls with their hands and stuff, which I didn't realize until after they left, that they'd put handprints on the walls and yeah. So I was a little bit pissed off with that, but then my day it goes with the territory.
Speaker 1:I suppose it does. So my week's been busy, You've been very busy. I haven't seen much of you at all, not busy for anything at all, but just busy because I've just had lots of work on Lots of work on Lots of work.
Speaker 2:Well, you've had a lot of things happening in your workplace, haven't?
Speaker 1:you. Definitely it's been a tricky week, but still very rewarding, but tricky, but I've been tired.
Speaker 2:I've been so freaking tired Because the travelling every day to and from the city.
Speaker 1:I'm used to the travelling. I know.
Speaker 2:But what I'm saying is what would be a normal hour journey turns sometimes into two hours, depending on what train you get, and et cetera, et cetera. I just think.
Speaker 1:I think I hate cold, I hate this winter shit. We shouldn't be over already? And I know all of Sydney's complaining about the cold.
Speaker 2:All you have to do is look at social media and find out that zero degrees and one degrees this is quite unusual because the last couple of years we've had quite mild winters and I think it's a bit of a shock for us again because we have had this cold weather before. Yeah, and you know, we've been so lucky in the past couple of years where it's been mild and we haven't really had this temperature drop, but it is very, very cold.
Speaker 2:It really has been bitterly cold it's been fucking freezing and it doesn't help with the prices of all the uh, you know, the energy um things going up which restricts you from putting your heaters on, because you know, you know you're going to end it with a massive bill, like I had last month. Yeah, yours.
Speaker 2:My mind went up like 460 percent just by running the air conditioning unit for five hours a day, yeah. And suddenly it went from like 80 a month to 465 and I thought, fuck that, I'm not doing that, I'd rather just fucking stay cold and wrap myself with a blanket yeah, and the other thing we did do, which fun, really fun.
Speaker 1:we sat here and created a whole heap of jingles for different segments that we're going to use, some of them today, some of them in the future. Yeah, we sat here in the Rodecaster Pro 2 with my MacBook and sat here and created all these different jingles with the help of today's main topic, which is AI, and I'm just realising now that we didn't do one to say this is the main event. We need to do. A main event topic.
Speaker 2:We need to do a main event sting. Dave, oh God, you know we're going to end up having the whole podcast because it's going to be jingles.
Speaker 1:Yeah, that's cute.
Speaker 2:That's cute.
Speaker 1:So yeah, main event, we need a main event jingle. We'll put one here next time.
Speaker 2:The reason why we came up with this topic today is because over the last couple of weeks, we've been obviously, well, not couple of weeks Over the last. Couple of weeks we've been really hammering, you know, the the music, the music side of things, and we've come to the realisation that we love this so much that we're going to make it into a bigger event for ourselves.
Speaker 1:Well see, I love AI and I love I'll say most of what it does. Right, I mean look and we'll delve into the…. Advantages and disadvantages. Yeah, some advantages and disadvantages of the things that we find and things like that, but and some things that I guess that the internet finds, and we've even asked AI itself what are the disadvantages and advantages?
Speaker 2:of using AI, which we'll run through in a bit.
Speaker 1:But like I love it and I've been utilising it, even just as through, when we do the podcast, I throw it through an AI filter just to clean it a bit so that it doesn't sound amateur-y and I know we sound amateur-y because we are.
Speaker 2:I think it's become ingrained into our daily lives now just like a mobile phone.
Speaker 2:Years and years and years ago, you know, we had mobile phones and suddenly everybody had them and then it became your daily use and people can't live without them. Now, and I think ai is going that way as well. Yeah, I think we're so reliant on the, the actual technology that is providing and issuing us, because I mean talking about what we were talking about today everything on my facebook now is coming up with ai, ai, ai, ai stuff. Yeah, so again your phone's listening to you.
Speaker 1:I mean you know my phone's been listening to you for a while now, yeah yeah, exactly.
Speaker 2:So what I'm saying is, I mean, do you sort of like appreciate the ai or do you just think, fuck, that, I can't deal with it? Well, get on board, is what I would say and look from every context.
Speaker 1:Now, quite a while ago now, one of my team um sent me a a AI generated resignation. Um, they're a phenomenal team member. They sort of moving on to their own chosen career path. They were studying and they sent me this um, this ai generated message or resignation, but they'd forgotten to take out like and write dear such and such. They've just wrote dear and in brackets was employer right.
Speaker 1:Um and they said yeah yeah, pretty much insert your name here, where your name gets inserted and stuff like that. Um, so I we had a bit of a chuckle. I said best resignation letter I've ever received, because AI writes really, really well. And so we'd sent him a message, a separate message, and said, like you know, great job, love that ChatGBT was able to write your resignation for you. And with a chuckle and he would be horrified and no, he laughed and he's gone.
Speaker 1:Well, at least you could do is write me a heartfelt reply with ChatGBT. So I did, I got on ChatGBT and I wrote him a heartfelt reply and then I actually left in there lots of love and I inserted ChatGBT in the bottom of it. So it was actually really quite funny and quite comical, but the whole like it was so smart. Yeah, like I I say, recently, I'll say a while ago, I picked up my resume and I just literally threw it into ChatGBT and said please recreate and make it look more professional and friendly and warm. Right, and it did that. And, holy Christ, I'm looking and I'm going, I'm going to hire this guy. I don't need him, but I'm going to hire him because it turned out so good, what's the one that the teachers use?
Speaker 2:Every business has their own type of thing, yeah, but there's one that the teachers use a lot isn't there for writing reports and stuff. I mean because Cleo was telling us about it.
Speaker 1:Yeah, I can't remember what it was. Not sure, is it?
Speaker 2:telling port point? I'm not sure.
Speaker 1:I can't remember Because I know that the business I work with has Gemini or Google has Gemini or something like that. Chrome has Gemini. I don't know who it is.
Speaker 2:But that use at work as such right, because chat gbt is like open source and so where? Where do we draw the line, though? In terms of, like we don't. I know there's a thing, everything. You seem to be going that way now.
Speaker 1:Well, look deep fakes. I'm not a fan of deep fakes. However, I don't want to create somebody else's persona. All right, I don't. I don't want to say, pick up a zach efron and put him into a situation where he hasn't actually truly been right. Like I'd love to put him into a situation where he hasn't actually truly been right, like I'd love to put him in a situation Fantasy wise Put him in a situation like my bed with me or in the sling. I think he'd top.
Speaker 2:No, I don't, you don't. You think he'd be a bottom, I think he'd be first bottom, I think First bottom Okay.
Speaker 1:Okay, maybe. Well, let's put him into chatty. No, I am against doing that with porn, like making porn out of.
Speaker 2:No, like I can make porn in my mind, let other people do it and then we can just get off on that. Yeah, well, yeah, because then we're not corrupting ourselves in terms of like making it, we're just enjoying it.
Speaker 1:I'm also not that advanced yet. So I'm learning, and I'm learning really quickly.
Speaker 2:I know your advice We've currently.
Speaker 1:What I am advanced at is cock sucking and a few other things and a few other things.
Speaker 2:I can take a dick pretty well, it makes a good lasagna.
Speaker 1:Yeah, yeah, it makes a good lasagna Carrots in it. I don't make any lasagna, I don't fucking cook. Everyone knows that. So, like what AI does really well from my perspective, right, and we've been playing with Sonu, which is a song generator.
Speaker 2:Yep.
Speaker 1:We sometimes write all the lyrics, sometimes write some of the lyrics, sometimes get ChatGBT to write some lyrics based on our theme.
Speaker 2:Inputs yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1:And then we can edit a little bit and then put it in there. So it's always got some human touch to it. So I don't think it's at the stage where it doesn't need any human interaction at all. Right, and it's getting there real quick, because some things are just so good.
Speaker 2:But the good thing is you can change a song just like that, just by just slightly changing your input, yeah, or changing a lyric or changing a title of a song, and ai will completely change or sunu will definitely change that for you. Yeah, I've done a few takes on on certain songs that I liked and I've re-gone in there, reworked them, um, but you've got your laptop version or desktop version, which gives you even more access, which I haven't got at the moment.
Speaker 1:Yeah, but it's oh for Sunu. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I do, but like for AI, my biggest and I want to put it in. I think that was going into my pet peeves, I don't know. Well, the good thing is. The thing that's bugging me at the moment, and my brain can't work out how to fix this, is that I pay for the version of ChatJBT. I only pay like the smaller one.
Speaker 2:I'm not doing like $300 a month or anything like that I don't need all that.
Speaker 1:I'm not using it for everything, right, I pay $30, but I can pretty much do unlimited stuff with it, right then? But it won't let me log into my laptop and to my phone. I'm just remembering it's.
Speaker 2:Copilot is the other one. Oh, copilot, that's the one.
Speaker 1:Sorry, that's the one, yeah sorry, no, that's okay, so it's still my head in. So I'm going to have to ask ChatGPT how to do it, because it's just like it's still my head in, because you can ask it anything. So I've literally just asked it what are the advantages of AI and disadvantages? Right, so the advantages it's come up with. The first advantage is efficiency and automation right, so handles repetitive and dangerous tasks with high speed and accuracy. Right. Reduces human error in areas like manufacturing, logistics and data entry. Right, oh, we see the few errors sometimes.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 2:Especially when it generates a photograph and they've got like 12 fingers or three hands. You did one the other day, didn't you?
Speaker 1:So I did one the other day, because we're actually creating a band. We are creating a band, yep, yep.
Speaker 2:And.
Speaker 1:FGH, fgh right is our new band and our lead singer is May Blaze. And I've intentionally called her May because the capital letter is M and then it's the big A with a little I, so it's like AI. So it's like AI is in her actual name, right, because I thought it was really cool. And she's a sexy little fiery redhead that's just so cool. Hence why her last name is Blaze because she's fiery, she's got the three other band members?
Speaker 1:Yeah she's got three other band members and I can't remember their names at the moment.
Speaker 2:She's a keyboardist who has blue hair. You've got the Asian.
Speaker 1:The Asian drummer who's like. She's a cool Asian chick who's a drummer.
Speaker 2:And then you've got a sexy daddy looking with a beard guitarist, right bass guitarist, normal guitarist, but we're still working on these, aren't we?
Speaker 1:Yeah, we're working on the songs and all that kind of stuff.
Speaker 2:So we've created some images and stuff like that, but we have got some songs actually already published, haven't we?
Speaker 1:Yeah, we have got songs on iTunes and Spotify and stuff like that. That's currently under the fully grown homos, if you type that in. But we're actually going to launch this band as FGH. We're going to be a lot of different genres of the songs, yeah, but fundamentally May will front most of them with the other lead guitarist and I can't remember his name.
Speaker 2:I think it's Ethan or something like that. I can't remember what it was.
Speaker 1:I cannot remember what it was.
Speaker 2:They do a lot of collaborations.
Speaker 1:Yeah, but he's going to. His name is Ethan. Yeah, ethan, ethan. Yeah, ethan Ethan. Yeah, that's it and he's cool. You've got Ethan, lena and Jamie or JD, jd.
Speaker 2:Yeah, that's a cool, he's a keyboard player. Yeah, he's a keyboard player.
Speaker 1:But yeah, they're going to sort of Ethan and her will front up.
Speaker 2:Different sort of male vocals will require different sort of feelings and all that kind of stuff, but yeah, but watch his face because it's going to be interesting. Watch his face, it'll be lots of fun. Yeah, We've had some amazing songs we've made or we created, you know.
Speaker 1:I mean using the technology, but she look but May herself is just so cool, right when we've created her and we've sort of I've created a version and then Dave's created a version and we've gone oh, I like that bit in there, that bit on there and stuff like that. So we've sort of morphed her, but AI has been able to do this.
Speaker 2:Did you say morphed or muffed?
Speaker 1:Morphed, not muff Yuck, but AI has actually helped us create this persona. Yeah Right.
Speaker 2:And it's really steady and it's given this really, and the good thing is because I know what matt's like as well. I mean we, you know, I was texting him the other day and we were back and forth, back and forth, and I could see us going down this rabbit hole of like you know, we were just getting, so eventually get sleep yeah, but it is fun and if you've got like a common interest, what we can work towards is fun because I don't have to be here with you doing it no, no, no, correct, correct, correct.
Speaker 1:And it is fun, and that's the other reason why I want my chat GPT to work, so that we can actually log in from the same chat GPT.
Speaker 2:The only thing that we've stored on is like trying to make like small video clips to go with them. Yeah, but we'll get there. We'll get there.
Speaker 1:We're still learning as we're going along. So some of the other advantages are 24-7 availability, right. So obviously, ai doesn't take breaks, doesn't take holidays, it's not unionized. It's great for customer service and things like that. No HR to report to, no, right. It's good at data analysis, analysis, analysis oh fuck, that's a word. Analysis right, it's good at data analysis. Analysis oh fuck, that's a word Analysis. Sorry, see, I would pronounce that properly. And decision making.
Speaker 1:So it can process massive amounts and do it really quickly as well. Personalization, so it powers recommendation engines such as Netflix, spotify and Amazon, so it actually helps with what you listen to.
Speaker 2:Oh yeah, it will actually then bring up different things.
Speaker 1:And, like you said earlier, when you're listening to, when you're watching something or speaking about something, even it all comes up on your phone and we all know that that happens as well, yep, so I'm not going to go through the whole list.
Speaker 2:But the disadvantages, Matt, are you lose your right to control, I suppose.
Speaker 1:Yeah, well, one of them here says job displacement, so it says automation threatens jobs in sectors like transport, retail and manufacturing.
Speaker 2:Now.
Speaker 1:I don't know. You're always going to people, especially in the retail space. Well, you need programmers as well. Well, you might not. That's the thing, right, because AI is clever and it learns, and it learns and it learns and it learns and it's self-generating and it's continually learning, so you may not need programmers in the future. Yeah, when it gets smart enough to learn everything itself, it might be just. Yeah, you're the chief AI.
Speaker 2:and you're off. Well, I honestly think in the next 20 years' time. You know the whole country, I think 10. If you look back, we're in 2025.
Speaker 1:Yeah, 20 years ago we were just getting mobile phones. What are we at 2025? So when was it 1995?
Speaker 2:Well, the old, the original ones Like the Nokia 3310s and all that kind of stuff. The earliest ones were probably about the late 80s. They came out. They were like bricks.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 2:I mean you're talking like the late 80s. But technology has progressed to the point where most people had a phone by the late 90s, I would say you know, or thereabouts yeah.
Speaker 1:So it's going to be next level. Some of the other disadvantages are bias and discrimination, so it can reflect and amplify social biases if trained on flawed data. So if you're telling it that something, or if everyone that's putting inputs is basically saying that a certain thing is is a bad feed like if I'm asking for people every single time right to generate pictures of people and it's generating a certain race or culture or something like that, and I'm giving it a thumbs down and everyone's giving it the same thumbs down, it will then stop creating that race.
Speaker 2:Well, talking of which I mean, we've had this situation with a friend of ours who's had his identity hacked oh, yeah, yeah, on facebook, yeah and again I mean people taking other people's photos, utilizing them as their own. Catfishing people, as we know, happens all the time. Yeah right, changing the body shapes so this is definitely one of the negatives, the negative.
Speaker 2:To me, the biggest negative would be how far do they go with that? I think can they use it for, like, um, a criminal act? Yeah, can they make it look that you are actually?
Speaker 1:doing something? Fake id. Can they open bank accounts? I'm sure it's happened.
Speaker 2:I'm sure people have challenged these things where people have actually made an ai video and it shows that person who you think is that person, but they're nowhere near that, that that scene of the crime or whatever oh, yeah, yeah, so you're saying yeah, so they actually somehow embedded that that person into a crime scene?
Speaker 1:yeah, absolutely, and and again. The possibilities are endless. So this is, it is a scary thing.
Speaker 2:I mean I'm all for AI, definitely. I mean the enjoyment I've got from the perspective I use it, for I like the fun stuff definitely. But the sinister side and the negative side and the deep dark web that's out there, that people take your own personal identities. How do I get on the dark web? I've tried, I don't know. I think there's a link somewhere. Ask AI, he'll tell you oh, I can do that.
Speaker 1:You could.
Speaker 2:You'd probably end up losing your credit cards and everything else. No, no, good luck. Well, could you imagine financing about yourself that you'd never done on there? Oh, that'd be cool. Or like murdering someone oh, you say never done. We talked about this on the Mr. Yeah, we did a couple of weeks ago. Yeah, I can confirm that Matt is not a murderer yet you don't know everything about me. You don't know me. He says that with a little grin on his face.
Speaker 2:I've murdered some holes you have indeed, I've punished quite a few, yeah, you definitely.
Speaker 1:And a few tonsils, yes, indeedy, so, yeah, so the lack of human judgment, because it still doesn't have that human empathy or that kind of stuff again, yeah, it's learning but you couldn't really put it in a courthouse situation.
Speaker 2:Well, you've only got to see the, the, the artificial robots now these days, the ones that have, like, facial expressions that are so realistic that you know what you're going to do here?
Speaker 1:no, what do you mean, dave? Out of the future robots, what do you that you know? What are you going to do here? No, what do you mean, dave? I don't think it's a few robots, what do you mean? Well, do you know what I mean? I'm talking in the robot voice now. So that's literally just a sound effect that Dave has that I've sort of set up for Dave. Now he's actually that was just a voice disguise. So if you want to come on our podcast but don't want to be known, we can actually yeah, I can suppose you yeah at any time, or if you want.
Speaker 1:I'm a monster when I do that which is kind of fun. It's pretty cool I mean, there's some club, you know but hey, you know you're playing around now. It's like fucking around with those.
Speaker 2:Yeah, he's like a little toy he's's like a kid in a candy shop.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 2:All the buttons are pretty, aren't they? The Broadcaster.
Speaker 1:Pro 2 is sexy I love it Right and it integrates a lot of AI and stuff like that. It's learning lots of stuff.
Speaker 2:I don't know where society's going to be in the next 10 years. Like I said for me, how far do you allow AI to run things to you know? Are you going to allow them to run a country? Are you going to learn to run a bank, I mean, are you? I mean they probably do a better job.
Speaker 1:Well, they probably would this is the thing is when you actually look at the efficiencies of it right now I, I can if. If now I'm not, I'm fairly tech savvy and computer savvy and stuff like that, but I wouldn't know how to write certain formulas and stuff like that.
Speaker 2:Well, you'd learn that It'll teach you.
Speaker 1:I could take a long time and go oh, I know this person knows this. I can pick up the phone or I can send them an email. I can do this, I can do this. Or I can just say chat, gbt. I can screenshot what I actually want to happen. I can say can you work out how to do this right? And it'll give me the formula that I can just copy and paste into my excel spreadsheet and it's done. So we're talking seconds, right? Seconds it's gonna literally take, as opposed to hours. Um, and it's just crazy that it will actually do that for you, like, like, it will do that for you straight away and you sit there and go like this is insane. So people will lose their jobs right.
Speaker 2:Do you reckon that teachers will lose their jobs in the future? Do you think kids will be all sitting at a phone or a computer desk and then learning everything they need to know, because you could learn the whole syllabus of a whole school?
Speaker 1:I would like to think not because I think a lot of learning school. I would like to think, not because I think a lot of learning. Now, I guess history has shown that learning happens best when you're actually customising it. So our friend Cleo, who's like a phenomenal teacher, I'm sure she just doesn't stand up the front of the class and say this is this, that's that, that's that, that's that. I'm sure she doesn't. I'm sure that she sits at student A and says hey, student A, I think this is the best way to approach you, student B, this is the best way to approach you, so on and so forth. And we need to get her on actually to discuss lots of stuff. But I think that would be quite interesting to find out.
Speaker 1:But AI couldn't do that. It couldn't. I don't believe it could cater to everyone's learning style. It could learn your learning style, I guess, and how you best learn. But I think, human element, you'd need to have teachers, you'd need to have teachers. There's certain roles you'd need to have, yeah, so yeah, but I think, yeah, I don't think it could replace teachers.
Speaker 2:No, no, no, I look. I mean I don't know. I mean you're talking like 10, 15 years probably after we've oh we'll be dead, after we've left this past life and come back again in the future. Well, I've got no more left you that's only if you choose not to remember we're just making reference to the last podcast. But that was all good again. We did all that by AI, didn't?
Speaker 1:we.
Speaker 2:We did a lot of that via AI as well. I think, to be honest with you, if you look at your daily activities, I think you use AI a lot without knowing you're using it, yeah, because we're asking questions or we're searching for things. I mean, there's a lot of fake news that comes up, as we know. Yeah, and Donald Trump's famous for saying that Fake news, fake news, fake news. But again, how much of it is and how much of it isn't? I mean, that's the deliberation.
Speaker 1:Do we follow that as truth or do we follow it as, like you said? Trump and I phased out, sorry, dependence and loss of skills. So if we really do become dependent on it, we'll lose all our skills.
Speaker 2:Well, I don't think we will, we will.
Speaker 1:I don't think we will Because if I can, I'm a lazy fucker, right? So if I know that I can, all of a sudden don't need to know how to do this calculation, for example, right, and all I've got to do is ask chat GBT every time, right, I don't need to retain that memory, yeah, but you've got to understand that I don't need to retain that memory, but you have to, yeah.
Speaker 2:But what I'm saying is you've got to know that the result that's given is real. Yeah, so you still have to know basics. I mean, it's like you asking a mathematical equation you would know what the approximate number would be.
Speaker 1:But if it looks so different, someone else might Well.
Speaker 2:if you said to me what's 17 times 21 plus 16 times 21, or whatever I mean, in your mind. You could write it down and do whatever, right, it would give me the answer. But, if it came up and it says three triangles, four bricks and five things. You know that's wrong.
Speaker 1:Well, I don't, but somebody or some smarter person would. Well, that's what I'm saying. An example, you know what I mean?
Speaker 2:Yeah, so you know, you will still have your. You know, I think, you still utilise your brain power.
Speaker 1:Yeah, yeah, definitely. Physically you might not need to, but Definitely. So AI, are we done with that part?
Speaker 2:I think it's fun.
Speaker 1:Yeah, I think we're done. We could talk at it all day.
Speaker 2:Yeah, we do love it, but we did say we want to keep things simple today.
Speaker 1:Keep it nice and short and sharp today. Yep, um, but don't forget um on the ai front to check out our band fgh. Yeah, definitely um, they'll be available on spotify and itunes and all those other streaming platforms under the fully grown homos um podcast or fully, fully grown homos podcast, fully grows homos on itunes and all that kind of stuff, or you can find it on Instagram, but it will be changed into FGH.
Speaker 2:FGH Well our podcast won't. And there's another fact about that we only noticed, or I noticed today FGH on the keyboard is the three middle letters and they go one after the other. They're next to each other. It's so bizarre.
Speaker 1:It's so strange, yeah, so right now we're going to go on to our next segment which is going to be called. Hang on, here we go, Don't Dave? And?
Speaker 2:Matt are back again With tales that'll twist your brain Aliens dancing in stilettos, grandma skydiving with their ghettos.
Speaker 1:It's bizarre, it's wild, it's queer delight. You'll laugh so hard you'll pee all night. So buckle up, get ready. No worries, it's Bizarre Facts and Funny Stories.
Speaker 2:Woo Conadron fully grown homos.
Speaker 1:That's right. This is our Bizarre Facts and Funny Stories. Yeah, so Bizarre Facts, dave.
Speaker 2:I've got a Bizarre Fact, which I spoke to you about today, didn't I? Yeah, and it's strange.
Speaker 1:It is very strange, but again, it's interesting. What's even stranger is how you came across it and what entered your brain.
Speaker 2:I don't know, maybe it just came up my feeds and I was like intrigued to have a look and I thought, okay, let's go down this rabbit hole okay, but anyway.
Speaker 2:So, yes, I went online and I looked on this uh website called unbox factory and it's pretty cool. I mean, I'm just looking through different things and it's got here. Researchers discovered that the proteins in camel tears contain protein antibodies antibodies, sorry capable of neutralizing multiple types of snake venom. A single drop of these tears has been shown the ability to break to block toxins from over two dozen types of venomous snakes, including cobras and vipers. Camel antibodies are smaller and more stable than human ones, making them more ideal for the use in extreme environments. This discovery could lead to more effective and universal anti-venom treatments, especially in remote and undeveloped regions where snake bites and fatalities are common. So there you go. So, so, camel tea. Who thought about using camel tea? Who tested it? Well, I don't know, but what I'm saying is I mean, how fucking clever is that?
Speaker 2:It's very clever, there's a lot of scientists out there that choose whatever they might do and then just research into that. So they're fucking amazing people out there. They are. But why would you go to a camel and think, okay, I'm going to extract the camel protein from the tears?
Speaker 1:Well, I'm going to extract the camel protein from the tears, well, I guess. And I'm going to use it for venom? Well, they test it. And they test the antibodies, yeah, but what?
Speaker 2:I mean, is I mean what correlation from? A camel's tear to snake venom. Did they go from Unless somebody's seen? Do you reckon they asked AI? I'm joking.
Speaker 1:No, maybe, Unless they've seen a camel getting bitten by a snake and it didn't Die it. Unless they seen a camel getting bitten by a snake and it didn't die maybe, oh, it could very well be.
Speaker 2:I mean, that could very well be the answer. It probably is, and they thought well, what? Part is stopping the camel from dying.
Speaker 1:Yeah, and then they discovered that cutting and making it cry Like how do you make a camel?
Speaker 2:cry. Well, they didn't actually cry. I mean, you've got dust and stuff. They have got dust on their heads. They would have had tears. What are you trying to pervert me now? You?
Speaker 1:can sit there and you go. Oh, I know you could have played the camel Hachiko, that dog story, with Richard Gere.
Speaker 2:I cry every time you could smack it in the balls. It One hump less. Yeah, you can take its hump.
Speaker 1:Yeah, I don't know, I don't know how you would make a camel.
Speaker 2:So have you got anything on yours?
Speaker 1:I do so. I had one. That it's strange because I didn't even think about it.
Speaker 2:It's a story or a fact.
Speaker 1:It's a strange fact, okay.
Speaker 2:Yeah, strange fact.
Speaker 1:Yeah, yeah, yeah yeah, the dogs can eat mandarins. Right Well, right well, it's not a strange. It is strange why? Because I didn't know it right. So what did you do, did you? Ask ai I asked google, right, and google said yes, in, in very small quantities because of the high sugars and stuff like that, um, basically, but even better, even better, um, yeah, the high sugars and stuff like that, basically, yeah yeah, as I said, yeah so what?
Speaker 2:it's just started typing your narrative. Oh, my phone just started for some reason. It just started listening to me and it started typing everything in my phone only Dave would listen to me.
Speaker 1:I know so, but I have another mind-blowing fact right. This one is strange as fuck Now again. Strange to you, or strange to everybody? Strange to me.
Speaker 2:So it could be.
Speaker 1:Did you know that your stomach gets a new lining every three to four days to prevent it from digesting itself? No, there you go, there you go I did not know that. So what made you look at that? I just typed in again chat, chibi, tea. I wanted some bizarre and fascinating facts, right, and that's what it gave me. There you go, right. So I'm not going to profess that I got this information or knew this information.
Speaker 2:Yeah but it's interesting though.
Speaker 1:Everyone knows that I'm not that smart. I mean?
Speaker 2:would you ever think that you or your stomach?
Speaker 1:No, so maybe. So where does that lining come out?
Speaker 2:Does it? Shit out or I should imagine it gets dissolved, doesn't it? I'm going to have to dig deeper into this. You need to get that and come back to us on that one, I think.
Speaker 1:Yeah, because it's really bizarre. Three to four days you get a stomach.
Speaker 2:it's a new lining Well it's like your skin that comes off, doesn't?
Speaker 1:it.
Speaker 2:So what happens to your skin away, doesn't it comes off like it does, yeah, yeah, so is it like that?
Speaker 1:where you're just getting like a new layer epidermis inside your stomach. I don't know, I don't know. Interesting facts who?
Speaker 2:discovered that, though? Who discovered that? Oh well, chat jbt did, that's for sure honestly well I've got another one.
Speaker 2:Another interesting story. Here's another one from unbox factory. It's got. China has made history by launching the world's first ai operated hospital, staffed by 14 ai doctors and four ai nurses. The um, the family, can automatically uh, autonomously, sorry. Treat up to 3 000 patients a day. The ai agents use real-time data, medical imaging and patient history to make precise diagnosis and even prescribe medication as well. Wow, wow. Powered by China's top medical AI platform, the hospital drastically reduces the patient wait time and enhances early detection rates for common diseases. The system also is constantly learning and making it smarter each time it interacts with people, so, very much, like you said, it's learning as it goes along, and this is why this is where I think it is useful, like if you go to any of our trust and I would I probably would mind you.
Speaker 2:They've probably got more knowledge than what we have like the thing is that, like I said, it's constantly learning.
Speaker 1:It's drawing from sources or would you let a robot? Operate on you.
Speaker 2:I'd let a robot probe me you come back with two enhanced double G breasts yes, indeed, that's all right and the penis the size of your nose.
Speaker 1:Oh, it depends on how big your nose is. I guess Exactly.
Speaker 2:But look, pinocchio would be all right. Who Pinocchio Keeps crying? I want to be Pinocchio.
Speaker 1:Hang on, wait there, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait Say that again. I want to be Pinocchio. There you go, you're playing around again, yeah. But yeah, I think it's good If that would decrease waiting times in hospitals, right, and actually treat more people, because early detection, early treatment is a benefit.
Speaker 2:You probably find that a lot of these surgeries we've done they won't need to be, you won't even need to be open. You can go in like a car service and you go in, you line up, you go in and you get sorted and you come back out and you're fixed. Yeah, For a while at least, you know.
Speaker 1:Yeah, I guess the technology and the way that doctors operate now with via machine anyway, because I know if you're having like a little surgery or something like that, you can actually basically the doctors will go in with little pinches and stuff like that. So it's like, yeah, it's pretty cool there. That's very cool, dave, that's a really cool fact, that one. So that was that segment, and now I think we're going to go on to our final segment, which is our Nope, they're grumpy.
Speaker 1:They're gay. They've got something to say. From traffic cues to crooked cues, they'll bitch it all away. Gabe and Max Pet Peeves yeah. Dave. And Matt's Pet Peeves hey. That's our weekly Pet Peeves, dave, and I'm sure you've got a few up your sleeve this week. Oh, I've always got things up my sleeve man, all righty, hit me with it.
Speaker 2:Okay, on street parking. You know me and my traffic things have a pet peeve every week about parking or something.
Speaker 1:Something to do with cars.
Speaker 2:Something to do with cars, something to do with noise? Anyway, cranky old man, exactly so on-street parking I hate it when you have two cars parallel to each other and the road is so small that you have to struggle to get between them. Well, funny, you mention that that's called my street. I know, and that's why it's a pet peeve, because it pissed me off the other day.
Speaker 1:It did piss you off the other day. Usually Dave parks half up on the street, half up on the curb On the nature strip.
Speaker 2:But then I've been told that I can get fined for doing that.
Speaker 1:Yeah, he thought he's not going to take the chance.
Speaker 2:So when I drove up the street, when we went out for dinner last night, that's right, yeah.
Speaker 1:And when we drove up the street I went oh, you're parked on the street in a normal fashion. And he went yep, you'll be fine for it apparently. So I kind of went oh okay, he said yeah, it's going to be my pet peeve tomorrow because nobody can fucking get past, because our street's quite, my street's quite narrow and there are a lot of people, because we live near the hospital there are a lot of people that park either side of the road, on identical sides yeah, opposite side sorry, I mean it restricts the flow you know it does, but you just have to.
Speaker 2:But I thought you have to stagger it so you can get by without.
Speaker 1:It's all like I do get why it pisses you off because, again, like I said to you last night, when I'm driving of a morning and I leave my house and there's like ice all over my windscreen it's really annoying that it basically is just sort of… you are terrified, you're going to knock somebody's windscreen off and all that kind of thing.
Speaker 2:Yeah, yeah, I get why that's annoying. You know what else is annoying.
Speaker 1:Go on Coughing in public without covering your mouth, oh.
Speaker 2:I know.
Speaker 1:Oh, my God.
Speaker 2:This is why COVID emphasised it's winter.
Speaker 1:I get it, everyone's not. Well, I get you're sick. I get you've been fucking, but the reason you're sick is because you've been coughed on by some other feral fucker.
Speaker 2:It's when you see them at the table sitting there and the people eating around them, and they cough, cough, cough, cough, eating around them and they cough, cough, cough, cough, cough into your elbow.
Speaker 1:You think we would have all learnt this over COVID. Like into the top of the arm, like not into your hand either. That's gross.
Speaker 2:And they went to all that, that, that that effort to make all those signs the world has been trained.
Speaker 1:Stop it.
Speaker 2:Cough into your fucking the arm, your elbow right, whatever you call it right, or just open your mouth, just close it and keep the cough to yourself.
Speaker 1:Yeah, suck it in. I don't know if you can suck in a cough and I get it, but put a lozenge in your mouth. I've got somebody that I know and they just non-stop cough.
Speaker 2:And just don't come out.
Speaker 1:if you've got a cough, I keep saying, like you know saying to them have you seen that? Yeah, it's been like that for months now. I said maybe you need to see a different doctor. Maybe you need a lozenge in your mouth at all times. Maybe you need to start eating a different diet, like some citrus, some honey, lemon, some ginger. I don't like the citruses. I said, well, they're really fucking good for you and you'll see that I've got. I can't believe I'm powering through my Phoenix mandarins. They're the best mandarins in the world. I love them. They're so delicious. If you're in Australia, go to your local Woolies supermarket and get the Phoenix mandarins. They are the best. I prefer a pear. You're a dickhead though I like a pear. You're a dickhead though You're not right Fuck you All right.
Speaker 2:Pet peeves, people who don't like phoenix mandarins. Yeah, there you go. Just that's all his.
Speaker 1:Well, I'm gonna people leaving their food wrappers on the table after they finish their meals and just leaving it and walk away when there's a bin right next to them. Oh yeah, like so you go to a fast, yeah exactly.
Speaker 2:I mean, there's so many tables, people hang around waiting for a table and yet people can be so blasé, eat their food and be just so disrespectful and just leave their rubbish on the table, when it's literally there and the bin's next to it. Yeah, you know what I mean. It doesn't take two seconds. They've got to get up and walk past it anyway.
Speaker 1:It's annoying as shit. Yeah, you're right, and I pick up my own every single time without fail, right, yeah, and occasionally if I see somebody that's sort of just leaving, I'll make a big, like loud, noise and I'll go. Oh, so you're expecting somebody else to pick this up, right, but yet they'll complain when they're at the front of the or where they're at the queue waiting for the poor Macca's people to fucking hurry up and serve. But they've left shit all over the table, so they've got to actually go and do that instead of actually serving. You clean up your own mess, and I get. The staff are there to do that as well. They keep it clean and hygienic, but not to clean up after you, you know, but anyway, yeah, so I get that one. That one's also a pet peeve of mine, but my next one, the quiet carriage, right, so I catch public transport every day and the front carriage and the back carriage in….
Speaker 2:I know which one you prefer. Oh yeah, every day.
Speaker 1:and the front carriage and the back carriage on the Blue Mountains train is actually a quiet carriage right Now. I get on the quiet carriage because I put my AirPods in and I just chill, right. So I got on the quiet carriage last week on day and all I could hear was these two girls making all this fucking noise and I'm thinking I'm on noise cancelling mode, I've got something playing and I can still hear you. So you're definitely not being quiet right. And I was literally about to say something and this um, older indian woman turned around and said quiet carriage, get up, move right. And they looked. Said white carriage, get up, move Right.
Speaker 2:And they looked at her and she said get up, move. And they did so. It was a physical person, not a yeah, Okay, no no, yeah, she said get up move. And they were two young.
Speaker 1:They had two young girls, right, okay, and they because they looked as if they were going to turn around and give her a mouthful. But then I think a few other people had turned around at the same time because she was very stern right, and it was just like I think they thought they were going to give her a mouthful. But then when they seen that everyone else had sort of gone like yeah, fucking, shut up bitches. They got up and they moved to another carriage.
Speaker 2:So it was great and there was a bit of another applause afterwards?
Speaker 1:No, because it was a quiet carriage. We don't applaud in quiet carriages, Dave. So yeah, that one definitely is. I can understand that.
Speaker 2:I can relate to you. Yeah, yeah, they're there for a reason. Yeah, they're there for a reason.
Speaker 1:Some people have worked like 14-hour days and they just want a little bit of quiet. Some is not there just because you want to chill and relax. It's also there for people with um disorders that have got like noise disorders and stuff like that. So, um, thank you, man. Well, cranky old men like dave that don't like noise. Okay, speaking of dave, what's your next one?
Speaker 2:my next one is people blocking ambulances and other um services on the roads and they can quite obviously see that they're trying to get past them and they just don't move out of their way or they just don't know what the hell they're doing. Yeah, I mean, I watched a clip the other day and there was one. There was an ambulance trying to get past and this car was just like right in front of the car. The ambulance was behind it, lights flashing, sirens going, and it wasn't moving, and there was a someone was fuck, are they doing? So eventually the lights changed and the car moved forward, but then they stopped again, and they just stopped for no reason and the ambulance had to mount the actual central reservation and, as it did so, the car pulled off again. So the ambulance was just still trying to get past this fucking person.
Speaker 1:You know what I mean. And if it was their relative that's dying Exactly, then they'd be really pissed.
Speaker 2:I'm all for having like an emergency service lane. I think there should be an emergency service lane, do you know, like the hard shoulder, just for emergency service only, so they can get past and get to whatever they need.
Speaker 1:Yeah, I think that would be great. Fuck buses, they've got their own lane.
Speaker 2:I think emergency services should have more priority over bus lanes than anybody or whatever. You know what I mean 100% they should.
Speaker 1:Get the government on to one, I reckon. Yep, yep, yeah, get clover onto it. Um, she's busy with the bike lanes.
Speaker 2:She's fucking put ambulances or ambulance officers on bikes if she could, but yeah she probably would.
Speaker 1:Yeah, yep, um, all right. My last one is a work related one. All right, so you don't talk about work, I don't talk about work very much at all, but this one has been grinding my gears for years. Right and it's. It's muting yourself when you're on a conference call, all right, um, we have one person in our team that just doesn't seem to know how, right now. We were on a big call the other week, like a big call, a really important call, with lots of impressive, important stakeholders, and they just sat there and then they started talking. So I took myself off mute and I went such and such you're not on mute again, right. And then put myself back on mute and they went oh, oh, oh. And I thought to myself how often do you need to be told? How often do you need to be trained? How often do you need to be trained?
Speaker 2:It's just a simple button Were they being disrespectful.
Speaker 1:No, they're just a dickhead. Right, they're about 150. They have been shown. I've personally shown them. I said it's just this button and they said yeah, but then I forget when I come off mute to talk.
Speaker 2:I said, well, don't, Doesn't it show a symbol on your screen, yeah it shows it on the screen.
Speaker 1:It's a little microphone and it has a little red extra. And I said but I forget when I have to talk and then I forget I have to take it off. I said we will remind you that you're on mute. Right is what we say to some of the other people when they're talking, right, who forget. That's normal. But I said by being off mute the whole time, anyone that comes into the room, anyone that's there, they can actually hear everything you're saying, because imagine if it was like you know like no, if it's me, I couldn't do it.
Speaker 1:This is why I got so good at it, because I say things that I shouldn't say, right like I've been called out for my lip reading once because one of my bosses said um, matt, you're not on mute, and no, mate, you're on mute, but we can still read your lips and I bet you died because I kind of went oh for fuck's sake, right, and I had something that was being said did you go red?
Speaker 1:and I kind of went, and then I then came off mute, and I said, well, to be fair. I said, have we not spoken about this? Every week I says so. Why does this need to be repeated again, right? And then my boss at that point in time said oh, I'm with you, don't get me wrong. I'm 100% with you, but probably shouldn't vocalise it.
Speaker 2:And I said, well, I was on mute, well, this is a bit like that cam thing on the Coldplay, yeah, the Coldplay thing.
Speaker 1:Oh yeah, the Kiss cam, yeah, you know what I mean.
Speaker 2:So you know it's almost like being caught out. Yeah, oh, I got caught, but because?
Speaker 1:I'm very expressive.
Speaker 2:The thing is, had those people not reacted the way they did, then nobody would have known any difference. It would it's viral.
Speaker 1:It was funny. That was funny. I picked up a pen. I better put it down.
Speaker 2:Yeah, because we know that if he starts clicking, the pen, because that was your pet peeve last week, wasn't it?
Speaker 1:I think we're pretty much covered all our pet peeves.
Speaker 2:I think so. I think that's pretty much the whole segment.
Speaker 1:So we've pretty much done, the whole. Thing.
Speaker 2:So I've been Dave? No, I've been Matt. If you put AI and change yourself.
Speaker 1:You could actually be me.
Speaker 2:I could be anything we could do that next week I'll be you, you be me. No, knowing me, knowing you. All right, okay.
Speaker 1:All right, I'm Matt, I'm Dave as usual, and we hope you've had fun, because we have and we hope you enjoy the new podcast of Pro 2. Bye, bye, that's a wrap from us. We've been your fully grown homos and we look forward to opening your mind, your ears and your curiosities. Don't forget to like, comment and subscribe and share our podcast with your curious friends. You can contact us at fullygrownhomospodcast at gmailcom or any of our socials by the same name fullygrownhomospodcast at gmailcom or any of our socials by the same name Fully Grown Homos Podcast.