1:56:41

INSOMNIA STREAM: THE WHITMANS EDITION

11/22/2025 - Devon Stack hosted the "Insomnia Stream: The Whitman's Edition," featuring a new TV show titled "1488 Hours." The show recounts the Whitman's mission to civilize the Cayuse Indians, leading to the 1847 Whitman Massacre. The narrative includes historical details, such as the Whitman's daughter Alice's drowning and the Cayuse's distrust due to poisoned meat. Devon also discussed the potential of AI in creating movies and the ethical implications of AI-generated content. He interacted with viewers, addressing technical issues and expressing his workload and future plans. The conversation covered various topics, including the financial success of low-IQ culture like rap and pop music, the presence of wealthy baby boomers in desert RV parks, and the high cost of new RVs. They discussed the use of AI for content creation, the challenges of AI accuracy, and the potential for future AI integration. The discussion also touched on the NFL's issues with crime among players, the censorship in Australia, and the anti-white mural at the Eiffel Tower. The speakers expressed concerns about the increasing censorship in the UK and the US, and the stream concluded with a mention of upcoming Thanksgiving streams.  [Full Summary]
Greek Numbers Lady
00:00:01 Zero group zero here,
00:00:41 and Change 00 Teeth, You We You
Burl Ives – The Oregon Trail
00:02:40 You You wagon train to wind and cross the prairie, rolling onward through the storm and Gale toward the land of Dream stretch the old ox teams down the Oregon Trail through the night, the Lord is in the saddle riding hurt beneath the moon so pale watching o'er it straight to the break of day down. On the Oregon Trail. There'll be apples on each branch in Oregon, there'll be valleys filled with gold and grain. There'll be cattle on each branch in Oregon for there'll be plenty sun and rain. Hurry. Grain, hurry up, old pioneer, keep moving, your faithful little band must never fail across the Great Divide, side by side, we'll ride down the Oregon Trail.
00:05:44 Day down the Oregon Trail. There'll be apples on each branch in Oregon. There'll be valleys filled with gold and grain. There'll be cattle on each branch in Oregon for there'll be bloody sun and
00:06:08 rain. Hurry up, old pioneer, keep moving, your faithful little band. Must never fail.
00:06:16 Cross the Great Divide side by side. We'll ride down the Oregon Trail,
Devon Stack
00:06:52 Welcome to the world premiere, the world premiere of the hottest new TV show.
00:07:07 Yeah, world premiere night tonight. I finished it moments ago. In fact, didn't go to bed last night, kind of tired, but it's okay. Tonight's gonna be one of those quality over quantity things we're not gonna go on for hours and hours, probably because I'm exhausted, but that's okay.
00:07:32 That's okay because I think you're gonna enjoy, I think you're going to enjoy what I've been cooking up in the kitchen. Anyway, this is the insomnia stream, the Whitman's edition. And yes, I am your host, of course, Devon Stack. And, yeah, this is going to be a this is going to be a big.
00:08:10 This is going to be a big. Actually, it's not that big of a deal. It just, I remember I told you I was, I was playing around with some things. I was trying to get a good workflow. I kind of got a good workflow. I kind of got a good workflow. So it's a little bit different. It's a little bit, I told you, I'm tired too.
00:08:24 Like, I'm like, actually, like, really. I'm like, Spacey. I'm so tired. I'm not, I'm not at the point where you start seeing things. Oh, but that's coming. It's coming. I got my I got, let me put this way, I got my second wind, like, at 10 o'clock this morning, I'm on, like, Win number three.
00:08:47 Oh, I kind of want to, like, build it up a little bit, but I also just kind of want to just play it, you know, so I don't really know, I don't even know what's going on, because I haven't. I've been, I've been like, head into the computer stuff, like, hours and hours and hours. So I don't even know what the hell is going on the news, other than, like, the the sanitized Epstein files are getting released or something. If you look at the fine print.
00:09:20 The it's the D. It says the declassified Epstein files are going to be released. Oh, good. Real good, good. But yeah. Anyway, I'm so tired. I'm so tired. Oh, kind of want to, like, just hang out for a minute. I minute. I feel I have there's I have a little I have a little trepidation, a little bit, a little bit, because I haven't had time to even, like, really, really, you know, make sure it's of the black pilled quality. But I think it is. I think it's good. What do you guys. Think. Chat, you
00:10:02 think we should just watch it? Hmm? People saying there's a glitch. Oh, there can't be a glitch. Are we good? I'm looking at the chats here. Chat, tell me if we're good.
00:10:20 Okay, I'm looking at, I'm looking at the rumble chats. All right, you guys are good. Okay, now, rumbles good. You guys are good. Ah okay. All right, we're good. All right. Well, I'll just tell you what. I'll just tell you what I've mentioned, how I've apparently been exposed to too much true crime so I thought, You know what, maybe we need to have like our own true crime show.
00:10:50 And I put one together. That's right me and some some Hollywood Jews spent millions of dollars and put together a TV show that is good enough for for network television. So tonight, tonight, I give you the world premiere of 1488 hours. Enjoy. You're not going to hear from me for a while. It's a little long. Here we go. You
Operator
00:11:50 911, what's your emergency?
Jimmie Bigpants
00:11:52 Yeah, we've had, like, my god, so many dead. Did you say dead? Yeah, dead. These damn engines, done. Did a massacre looks like we're going to need the damn army out here, or something.
Operator
00:12:07 How many dead looks like?
Jimmie Bigpants
00:12:09 1012? No, 13 dead. Those goddamn engines. They took hostages too.
Operator
00:12:18 What?
Narrator
00:12:25 It was December 1, 1847,
Jimmie Bigpants
00:12:34 I tried telling them, engines is engines and whites is whites. But did they listen? No, of course not.
00:12:51 Nobody listens to Jimmy big pants.
Frontierswoman
00:13:00 I can tell you that the whitmans did nothing
00:13:03 but good for the Indians.
Narrator
00:13:10 Why do you feel the savages became so enraged?
Frontierswoman
00:13:19 As far as my opinion as to the cause of the massacre.
Infantry Officer
00:13:29 It was terrible, just awful, but that those people had to go through, I can only Imagine
Feather Injun
00:13:37 white man magic book, no protect from Cayuse anger.
Narrator
00:14:16 On September, 4, 1802 little baby Marcus Whitman was born in federal hollow, New York to Beza and Alice Whitman.
Mother
00:14:26 He was such a curious baby. I always knew he would grow up to be an
Narrator
00:14:32 explorer. After his father died when he was just seven, he was sent to live in Massachusetts with his uncle.
Mother
00:14:40 I thought it best he start by exploring his uncle's house while I explored the dating
Narrator
00:14:45 scene. Although he had always dreamed of becoming a minister, he attended medical school, which came in handy when he decided to explore the wild Oregon Country where he treated fur trappers and. Indians who fell victim to cholera. Upon returning from his adventures in Oregon, he met the love of his life, Narcissa Prentice, a teacher of physics and chemistry.
Marcus Whitman
00:15:14 At first, I was like Narcissa, really, Who names their kid that
Narrator
00:15:20 he mentioned he thought you had a strange name.
Narcissa Whitman
00:15:23 I have a strange name. Well, have you seen his sideburns?
Narrator
00:15:27 It's just that it sounds a lot like narcissist.
Narcissa Whitman
00:15:31 Did he say I'm a narcissist? Yeah, I'm the narcissist. He's called by God to civilize the savages, and I'm the
Narrator
00:15:36 narcissist. I'm sensing a lack of empathy, an excessive need for admiration. Everything doesn't have to be about you. It's okay. There are other people in the world.
00:15:51 The two married in February 18, 1836, and just a few months later, in May, the whitmans journeyed west together. It was the era of manifest destiny, white Americans, driven by faith and opportunity, pushed west into untamed lands. At the forefront, Dr Marcus Whitman and his wife, narcissista.
Narcissa Whitman
00:16:19 Why did you say it like that, like what I mean seriously I said it normal
Narrator
00:16:26 pioneers risking everything to civilize the frontier and tame the noble savages with the civilizing power of the gospel.
Marcus Whitman
00:16:37 When I first saw the heathens, it was pretty shocking how primitive and backward they were that I just looked at them, and right away it was obvious why they were like that.
Narrator
00:16:47 1000s of years of divergent evolution in harsh Eurasian environments, stronger selection pressures for higher intelligence, delayed gratification, lower impulsivity,
Marcus Whitman
00:17:00 no silly the Bible.
Narrator
00:17:09 That September, after a perilous trek through hundreds of miles of dangerous terrain occupied by wild animals and hostile natives, the whitmans arrived at Fort Vancouver and established wailatu among Cayuse Indians. At first, everything seemed like a dream come true for these two adventurers, the Cayuse Indians welcomed the gifts brought to them by the whites, and were curious about their religion and their ways.
Feather Injun
00:17:43 White men come to land bring many gifts for Cayuse. Cayuse like gifts,
Narrator
00:17:49 one might say they brought the greatest gift of them all, the gift of friendship.
00:18:04 But little did the whitmans know that their dream would one day become a nightmare. But for now, all seemed to be going according to their divinely inspired plan, they built schools and began trying to teach the Indians how to farm. They also built a church in the hopes that the wisdom contained within the Bible would civilize the wild Cayuse. However, it soon became clear that the Cayuse were slow to learn and quick to anger.
00:18:38 Try as they might, the whitmans couldn't get the Cayuse to understand the ways of the white man. A year after they first arrived in wailatu, their daughter, Alice Clarissa Whitman was born. She was the first white baby born in Oregon, country. But sadly, tragedy struck when just two years after beautiful baby, Alice, was welcomed by the Oregon wilderness, the wilderness took Alice away when she drowned in the Walla Walla River, sending Narcissa into a deep depression. How did it make you feel when your child drowned.
00:19:26 Did it make you feel like maybe you were a bad mother? Do you ever wonder if maybe you are the reason your daughter is dead? What Yeah, how are you feeling right now? It must be very hard for you knowing that if you hadn't tried to turn Indians into white people, that your daughter might still be here today.
Narcissa Whitman
00:20:04 Why are you doing this?
Narrator
00:20:05 The loss of baby Alice wasn't the only trouble the whitmans were facing. The Whitman's dream to convert the Cayuse, teach them farming, medicine and civilize the natives was also drowning.
Marcus Whitman
00:20:23 I'm going to be honest with you, it's a little frustrating when you're doing all the work. And the heathens, well, I don't want to say they're lazy, but I'll say it, they're
Narcissa Whitman
00:20:35 lazy, they're lazy and they're dirty, and I hate this
00:20:39 place.
Marcus Whitman
00:20:39 The Bible says the one who is unwilling to work shall not eat. No matter how many times I read that to them, they just kept on eating and eating
Narrator
00:20:49 Marcus and Narcissa tried not to complain and valiantly put forth a heroic effort in the face of bad fortune, they knew they were doing God's work and must stay true to their mission. However, these efforts often seemed in vain, as time and time again, they were frustrated by the Indians' lack of comprehension and cooperation. They were certain that, like all God's children, the Cayuse would want to abandon their primitive ways and be eager to receive the gift of white civilization, but the Whitman struggled to get the Indians to maintain even simple gardens, attend church or just practice basic hygiene.
Narcissa Whitman
00:21:40 You seriously, have no idea how bad they smell.
00:21:50 It's like a bag of hot garbage sodomizing a bucket of dead squids in a baby pool full of canker sores.
Narrator
00:21:55 The initial warmth of the Cayuse was fading rapidly as they demanded more and more gifts from the whites who had little to sustain themselves in this remote and untamed part of the world. Despite the Whitman's heroic efforts to uplift the Cayuse, they grew increasingly ungrateful and demanding
Feather Injun
00:22:18 white men give more white men food
00:22:21 Cayuse like white man, food
Narrator
00:22:24 Marcus, tilled fields, built houses, irrigated crops and erected Mills for grinding corn and wheat. Narcissa ran the school, bathed the dirty children and brushed their hair as she lamented what she called the cayuses filth.
Narcissa Whitman
00:22:42 I swear to God, these fucking Cayuse take a fucking bath.
Narrator
00:22:48 By 1840 the failures had piled high. The Cayuse seemed completely uninterested in being self sufficient, but instead displayed a talent for being parasitic, always demanding more and more of the whitmans. The whitmans had begun to lose all hope that they could ever civilize the Cayuse, and with a heavy heart, began shifting their attention instead to the white men and women who were now traversing the Oregon Trail to explore and settle this new and exciting frontier.
Marcus Whitman
00:23:28 I just want to make it clear I'm not racist. We are, after all, all God's children, but
Narcissa Whitman
00:23:33 more white people come to Oregon. Oregon Trail. Baby, manifest fucking destiny.
Narrator
00:23:38 Marcus began to shift his focus toward attracting white settlers as a means to maintain their settlement and secure the region for whites, Whitman aiding emigrants like Robert Newell and Joe Meek, who proclaimed that the whitmans were an inspiration to white travelers who would come and see settlement and know that this land would soon be filled with white men and women who would build a new civilization out of the wilderness in this fine new land.
00:24:11 However, the Whitman's Christian sponsors were displeased with the Whitman's inability to convert and civilize the Cayuse, who had now, in addition to becoming a bit of a nuisance, were beginning to be hostile. The trouble had escalated because of wolves to deal with the wolf problem, the whitmans had put out poisoned meat as bait for wolves, but the Cayuse thinking it was a good idea to eat random meat they found on the ground.
00:24:44 Despite being warned about the purpose of the bait by the whitmans, became sick after eating it anyway, and accused the whitmans of trying to kill them.
Marcus Whitman
00:24:56 The Bible says, Therefore, do not let anyone just. You by what you eat or drink,
Narcissa Whitman
00:25:01 they're eating poison dirt meat. Dirt meat
Feather Injun
00:25:06 a why white man make evil dirt meat to poison Cayuse,
Narcissa Whitman
00:25:11 fucking dirt meat. Who does
Narrator
00:25:15 that? The whitmans were annoyed by the accusation and reminded the Cayuse of the many warnings they had given the Cayuse that the meat was poisoned wolf bait. Despite these warnings, the Cayuse continued to eat the tainted meat.
Feather Injun
00:25:32 White
00:25:34 wizard cast spell on Cayuse.
00:25:38 They cast a spell make dirt meat
00:25:43 taste yum, yum, good.
Narrator
00:25:47 Have you and your tribe considered just not eating the dirt meat?
Feather Injun
00:25:53 Me like dirt meat,
Narrator
00:25:58 yes, but it's poisonous. Yes, never mind. Just forget I said anything.
00:26:08 Things escalated further when chief um tippy threatened the whitmans and accused Marcus of being a witch doctor.
Marcus Whitman
00:26:17 I'm a Christian, okay? I'm like the furthest thing from a witch doctor.
Feather Injun
00:26:21 You witch doctor. You try kill all Cayuse Take, take Cayuse land.
Marcus Whitman
00:26:29 You know, it's funny he would say that, but, you know, I respect his opinion. But you know what they say about opinions, right? Everyone is entitled to theirs, and they should be respected. You
Narrator
00:26:40 the chief told the whitmans that he would kill them if any of the Indians that refused to stop eating poisoned mystery meat they found laying on the ground died.
Marcus Whitman
00:26:56 I'm sure he's just blowing off steam. He doesn't really mean that
Narcissa Whitman
00:26:59 blowing off steam. He said that dead eyed psychopath is just blowing off steam. They are going to kill us. Marcus. They eat dirt meat.
Narrator
00:27:10 To make matters worse, the Cayuse began stealing from the whitmans, taking food from the crops and gardens of the whitmans.
Marcus Whitman
00:27:18 But if you do not forgive others their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive yours.
00:27:28 That includes thieves.
Narrator
00:27:32 To make matters even worse, with the new settlers passing through, came an outbreak of measles that ravaged the Cayuse. The Cayuse became suspicious, because while the whites were also infected, they seemed to recover from the disease. Whites who had already been exposed to the disease and practiced basic hygiene and medical practices the whitmans had been attempting to teach the Cayuse for years, were not as affected, fueling more accusations from the Cayuse that the whites were trying to poison them.
Feather Injun
00:28:10 White Witch bring bad things, magic of death.
Narrator
00:28:16 But isn't it true that even the white people have gotten sick,
Feather Injun
00:28:21 we will punish White Witch for bad medicine.
Narrator
00:28:28 The chief began telling his tribe that the whitmans were sent there by the king of the white people to wipe out the Cayuse with white man's sorcery,
Feather Injun
00:28:39 white wizard sent here by white evil king.
Narrator
00:28:43 And who is this white king?
Feather Injun
00:28:46 He is evil king. Who send white wizard?
Narrator
00:28:52 That makes sense, I guess. To make matters worse, a disgruntled mixed race mud baby by the name of Joe Lewis, began to spread rumors that the whites were practicing black magic designed to kill off the Cayuse so they could take their land.
Joe Lewis
00:29:13 Hey, I'm Joe.
Narrator
00:29:19 The Rage simmered and boiled until one day it boiled over on November 29 1847
00:29:42 The day started routinely at the mission where about 74 people resided, including the whitmans, emigrant families, workers and orphaned children. A steer was being butchered near the grist mill where men gathered to dress the beef the. Grist mill operated grinding grain for the Cayuse school was in session in a room adjacent to the main house, taught by L W Saunders. Girls had their forenoon recess first, followed by boys who went outside to watch the butchering.
00:30:18 Baths were scheduled around 11am and some children were being bathed when the savagery of the feral Cayuse erupted. The massacre began in the Mission House, kitchen, Marcus Whitman entered to dispense medicine to a group of Cayuse, including chief Teluk, who claimed to have fallen ill. They were armed with concealed tomahawks clubs and Hudson's Bay muskets hidden under blankets. Whitman turned toward a cupboard to retrieve medicine when Tomahawk struck him from behind with a pipe Tomahawk to the back of the head.
Feather Injun
00:31:03 I say to white men, we come, we kill you.
Marcus Whitman
00:31:09 I was like, remember the Jesus book, killing is bad.
Feather Injun
00:31:14 I say we no like Jesus book, then we start, make much
Marcus Whitman
00:31:19 dead. So I was like, Stop, you're killing me. Like actually killing me.
Narrator
00:31:24 The Cayuse bludgeoned Marcus's corpse until he was unrecognizable and nearly decapitated as Cayuse carried out their vicious steed, 17 year old John Sager, who was in the kitchen winding twine, drew a pistol in defense, but was shot by the attackers. His throat was then cut from ear to ear, leaving him lifeless in the doorway. The gunshot served as the signal for the broader assault. Narcissa Whitman, hearing the shots the Indians are killing us.
Narcissa Whitman
00:32:07 Okay, I do not sound like that.
Narrator
00:32:11 She rushed to the kitchen, dragged her husband's body into the dining room. His head mangled and throat cut. Lorinda Bewley assisted Narcissa, staying by her side. Narcissa locked the doors and gathered the children around her as she passed a window, she was shot in the right breast.
Narcissa Whitman
00:32:35 I fucking knew it.
Narrator
00:32:39 How does that make you feel?
Narcissa Whitman
00:32:41 Oh,
00:32:41 fuck. Off
Narrator
00:32:43 outside. One of the school teachers, l w Saunders, was brutally killed by Tomahawk and gunshot wounds as he tried to save the school children. The school children, having witnessed their teacher's murder, frantically tried to hide. Windows were smashed, and Narcissa ordered everyone upstairs for safety wounded men like Andrew Rogers shot through the wrist and Nathan Kimball helped carry the sick children up, including the sagers Lorinda pointed out an old gun in the corner. Rogers held it over the stairway to deter the Indians temporarily outside. The signal triggered attacks on men at the beef dressing area near the grist mill.
00:33:38 Jacob Hoffman was fighting with an ax when killed. Isaac Gilliland, the tailor, was shot completely unaware of what hit him. Eliza Spalding and Matilda Sager hid in the attic. 14 year old Francis Frank Sager helped them, but returned downstairs, embracing Matilda and saying he'd meet her in heaven before being shot by the half breed Joe Lewis Josiah Osborne heard heads being split open with clubs and hid his family Under floorboards. Meanwhile, back at the Mission House, a wounded Narcissa Whitman was still clinging to life, along with some of the other survivors upstairs, the Indians demanded that the survivors come down, claiming the house would burn. Rogers negotiated a safe exit with the Cayuse, but was killed by the treacherous savages immediately after descending the stairs, the chief then entered the mission house and promised no harm would come to Narcissa or the other survivors.
Narcissa Whitman
00:34:57 Oh, good. Then enough. Case like fuck
00:35:01 you.
Narrator
00:35:02 This was all a trick, however, by the lying sub human savages
Narcissa Whitman
00:35:08 who would have thought the dirty fucking goblin
00:35:12 outside a line of armed Cayuse waited as the white people exited, shots rang out. Narcissa was wounded again by multiple gunshots. Her body was kicked into the mud and beaten with a club and a whip. Rogers raised his hands before dying. Kimball was shot fleeing. Joe Louis shot Francis Sager, who then ran to the emigrant house. By sunset, nine were dead, including both whitmans, their grand mission to convert and civilize the Cayuse had failed. Narcissa died praying for the children and her attackers?
00:36:02 Yeah, no, that's bullshit, and you know
00:36:05 it. 53 survivors, mostly women and children, were herded to the emigrant house, where they were held captive until they could be taken away as slaves. The Indians then ransacked the settlement and celebrated their murderous rampage and slaughter of the white man. The next morning, the Indians dragged two bedridden emigrant men out into the mud and Beth them to death with clubs. An unlucky sawmill worker delivering lumber was also shot and killed upon being spotted by the murderous Cayuse Indians.
Narrator
00:36:48 The 53 hostages, mostly women and children, endured captivity. They were raped and brutalized by the crazed Cayuse the massacre a barbaric act by ungrateful Cayuse galvanized white Americans. Provisional governor George Abernathy mobilized 500 volunteers under Colonel Cornelius Gilliam Joe Meek carried news to DC, prompting President James K Polk to sign the Oregon territory bill on August 14, 1848 the white Americans waged a war against the Cayuse over the next Three years, the whites conducted raids and destroyed villages.
00:37:42 Eventually, in 1855 of the Cayuse perpetrators surrendered. They were tried and convicted in the white man's court and hanged June 3 by Joe Meek. Joe Lewis, the half breed instigator, vanished, never to be seen again. Some say his ghost still haunts the forests, just like the ghosts of the whitmans, whose legacy isn't the legacy they hoped to have left, a legacy of triumph over savagery through conversion and assimilation.
00:38:24 No, it is a legacy of naivete and lessons learned at the cost of their lives, lessons the white man is cursed to learn again and again with the same bloody tuition the deadly sunk cost fallacy of universalism that swallows up our people like quicksand until the bodies are stacked so high they serve as Stepping Stones, guiding the way to Revelation.
Narcissa Whitman
00:39:01 Never give up. Never forget fucking dirt meat.
Devon Stack
00:39:12 And there you go, ladies and gentlemen, the first episode of 1488 hours. Oh, my mouse hand is sore. My fucking mouse hand is sore. That's how you know, I've been up a really long time. So anyway, I hope you guys enjoyed that, hope that, you know, I had a lot of constraints.
00:39:46 Obviously, it was difficult to, well, get performances that you'd want to get out of the out of the AI people asking if I have a. A blooper reel. No, I mean, I don't, I didn't save. I mean, I, I obviously, you get a lot more takes that you don't want than takes that that you do want. But yeah, I don't, I don't save the one. I guess they're saved somewhere. But yeah, there's like hours of of, really we I mean, not all of that was perfectly smooth, obviously, but that's like the smoothest shit I could get within a reasonable amount of time.
00:40:25 But you, you, I mean, you try to get, like, comedic timing down with AI, and that's, that's like pulling teeth. I mean, that's hard to get with people sometimes, so it took a lot of finagling, a lot of playing around with prompts and stuff like that. But like I said, I see the possibilities. I see the possibilities, you know, in terms of just making movies. I mean, this is where it's at right now, and it's not terrible. Then we could make movies in a couple of years, like you'll it. I mean, it won't be perfect, but you'll be able to make movies.
00:41:05 And certainly short films are like now, amazingly easy to make. So if you want to make propaganda that's high quality, that this is, this is where it's going to go. This is 100% where it's going to go. You know, like Emily Lucas has that will stand still thing that's, that's basically where animation will go. I mean, Hollywood's gonna start using this stuff, if they're not already, I'm sure they are, to some degree. The only thing that'll make it weird is, as more things get more AI, they won't have training data anymore.
00:41:46 So I don't know how that's going to work, because if everyone just starts using AI to make everything, then AI is going to be training itself on AI, and everything will just start degrading and look like, you know, weird and garbage II. But yeah, I mean, it's, it's, it's also kind of scary. It's scary how easy it is to generate some of this stuff, you know, and come up with convincing characters, you know, like, again, obviously, you can tell it's AI, but there's moments where you're kind of like, that's like a real person like, that seems like very real That's kind of creepy, because this isn't like, this isn't even like the best AI that's out there.
00:42:36 This is like, consumer grade stuff. So at this point, that's kind of why it's like, at this point, they should just release the Epstein tapes, because you could fake them now so easy that it wouldn't really matter. I mean, Trump could just say, Oh, they're fake. And it's like, well, you know, be hard to tell. Be real hard to tell you can add filters and everything else to make it look like VHS or, you know, whatever the fuck it's supposed to be. But yeah, it's, it's pretty amazing. None of the characters were based on actual people.
00:43:16 They were. I used an AI to make still photos, and then I animated them with a different AI. So it's all just like, you know, out of thin air, all these people, well, it's not out of thin air, it's out of all the training data that it was trained on. So it's on like, it's out of, like, the the, the, I don't know, like, all of the media that it's ever consumed.
00:43:42 So I don't even know. I don't even know what they've trained this stuff on, you know, maybe some of our stuff, for all we know, it is kind of funny though, like, because it'll predict, like, if you don't give it a prompt, it starts just predicting what it thinks it should be. And sometimes it's, it's like, you know, it's shockingly good at predicting like, you know, What? What? What? If, you know, especially with like these, but the people like it's, I'm giving it a 2d image.
00:44:17 And when the head turns, it doesn't look unnatural, like it doesn't look like their head is is misshapen, or something like that. It looks like it's, you know, it's got real geometry to it. So it's pretty crazy that it can predict, you know, this sort of stuff. And again, it's got limits.
00:44:36 Hang on one second. I gotta get let churro in. He was frolicking in the I discovered he likes the rain. He like, went out into the rain the other day, like, while it was raining because he was crying at the door. Now, let me go get it real quick. I.
00:45:17 Ring. I was crying at the door, so I opened the door thinking, like, he's gonna see the rain and not want to go out there, and he like, ran into the rain. It's like, okay, I thought cats hated water, but he seems to, he seems to like the rain anyway. Like I said, it's, it's a short one tonight, because I'm just that tired.
00:45:40 I could sit here and try to bullshit or monolog about something, but I'm so tired I need to just fucking crash out. Oh, I need to sleep so bad. But let's go ahead and take a look at and hyper chats and stuff while we're here, let me double check entropy is backlog, since I have to do that now because it doesn't seem to work The way it should, so I don't miss anybody here. Okay, good account. What's the day, the 22nd and then the last string was, what the 19th to the 20th?
00:46:41 All right. So the 19th is all, yeah, that's, I remember that one.
00:46:53 Okay, so this one's the first new one, I think. Let me just double check it with the list. Yeah, it's not on the list. This is why I do this. So why gravity says Odyssey chats were not working in August using Odyssey browser extension in Brave browser or os linux could love and division say what works browser, OS, phone app, too much detail in the guide, the tier, the tours, losers or users, not losers. Sorry, it wasn't a joke.
00:47:26 I'm just, that's my that's how tired I am. Well, love and a vision, actually, just now, just now, sent in a Odyssey chat. So you'd have to ask love and division. I've never, I've never sent anything in with it, but yeah, love and division, apparently it works, because we'll do that one right now. In fact, maybe love and division will tell us,
00:47:59 there we go. Turn the down. All right. Love and division says there is a famous sermon on a similar theme called 10 shackles and a shirt by Paris read head by the way, I'm unable to watch your Wednesday streams, except on replay. Your outrage edition was excellent, and I got a kick out of the AI comic relief.
00:48:22 Do you think AI can be trained to take down tyrants? I think it look they're always going to have better AI than we do, but it's just like computers, right? It's another tool that we can use, and I use it all the time.
00:48:37 You don't want to become reliant on it in the same way, you know, you don't want to be reliant on on Google or the internet, you know, like you want to have physical media. First of all, you want to have books. Or at least I do. I've got books. I've got lots of service manuals to old radios. I've got, you want to, you want to operate in the real world, though. You don't want to resign yourself to living in an AI world.
00:49:07 But here's, here's the thing that worries me, the only thing preventing AI from literally creating like a almost at least visually inextinguishable, indistinguishable alternative reality is that you know, or indistinguishable from reality. Alternative reality is processor power, but that'll change, you know, if you think back to how powerful you know, like the first computers were, I mean, it's nothing, right?
00:49:41 And even just in the last, I mean, it's slowed down a little bit, I don't, I don't think that, like there was that. I forget there was, like the law, the something, someone's law, where they, they doubled the amount of, what is it, doubled the amount of transistors on a on a processor. Every six months or something like that. And I think that has slowed down. It's no longer going at that rate.
00:50:07 But they're changing processor architecture. You know, for example, the reason why the NVIDIA stocks are worth a lot right now is because, you know, they have the CUDA cores or whatever. I don't know what it is, and I've been out of the game a little bit, but, you know, whatever the the cores that they put on their video card, you know where they can do, you know, several cores working on the same thing simultaneously.
00:50:35 So there's, it's just, you know, that's, that's what will happen, is, what if they do hit a ceiling on how small they can actually manufacture the processors, they'll just find other ways of increasing power, either by having More efficient opt more optimized software for the hardware, or, you know, maybe there's just some kind of weird quantum computing type breakthrough that'll happen, that'll change everything, but it's not going to look the idea that we're, we're going to somehow go backwards in technology.
00:51:19 I mean, there, look, there's scenarios in which that could take place, but either if you ignore AI, and if you ignore the technology and just pretend like it's not there, you'll be ruled by it. It's just it's too sophisticated, it's too powerful, you need to at least understand it, or you will be left behind at best, and at worst, you'll be imprisoned by this stuff.
00:51:46 And our guys, if they want to be competitive, our enemies are going to be using AI against us, and so we need to get competent in using AI, and obviously, not just for the things like, like I used it for when I made this video. There's lots of things we can use it for that are helpful. I mean, I think some of the the best uses for it, and I've said this repeatedly, is, it's not, it's not. I wouldn't, I wouldn't trust it, like a high, high paid lawyer or something like that.
00:52:24 But if you don't know anything about the law and you don't have a lawyer and can't afford a lawyer, it least will get you in the right place, right? It'll it's not, like, 100% wrong. It's wrong a lot, AI, is wrong, like, a lot, like, it's shocking how wrong it is about a lot, and it's very certain when it's wrong. I mean, just the other day, when I well my last stream, right when I did outrage edition, I asked AI about the movie, and it told me it was based on a real event, and it came up with a name for the guy that that it was based on, and it spit out, like, this big, long thing.
00:53:06 And I was like, wow, really this? This really happened. I never heard of this. And then I start cert because, you know, don't just trust it. I start searching. I'm like, nothing's coming up at all with this. This is, this isn't right. And so AI, after it's been interacting with me on the topic, I finally just say, hey, look, I can't find anything on this guy. And it responded, oh, yeah, let's because it's, you know, I made it all up.
00:53:32 And you're like, what? And, yeah, I think they'll fix things like that, maybe, hopefully. But that's the problem. Is, if you do replace a lawyer with AI, you better at least be competent enough with the law so that you don't get led astray and do something really stupid. It does the same look. I've tried to use it to help me using high voltage equipment to troubleshoot stuff and it's wrong, like, I stopped using it because it's so wrong that, like, it's dangerous, you know, like it'll swear up and down that, like, no, no, you know this is what you do.
00:54:12 And you're like, No, that'll blow up half the radio if I do that. And I know this, and it's crazy how confident it is. So it's wrong a lot. It's wrong in ways that could be dangerous. So don't rely on it. But it's a good tool, just like Google, it's well, think of it this way, when the internet first came out, there were retards that believed anything they read on the internet. They thought, well, it wouldn't be on the internet if it wasn't true.
00:54:42 It's like, well, I mean, anyone can literally put anything on the internet, and so that's stupid, but they believe that, there were a lot of people believe shit like that for a long time. They thought if they read it on the internet, that it had to be true.
00:54:54 And AI is the same way where, like, you're gonna have people that. 100% adopt AI is like, you know gospel truth for you know everything and and they're, they're the people that will be controlled by AI in one way or another. They're the people that can't think for themselves.
00:55:15 And so that's all you got to do, is just never be that guy. Never be that guy that can't find the like. Use it to either find something faster, you know, and then you can verify it, or use it to, you know, help you, if you're like, if it's like, a subject, you're completely, you know, out of your depth on at least, it'll point you in the right direction, right? Like, with law, for example, right?
00:55:42 Like, if you don't know anything about property law or just whatever law that you need to get into, like, you don't know the first thing about it, then all you have to do is ask AI, and then then you can do your searches and research. And then if it's totally wrong, then it's totally wrong. But you didn't even know what to look for before that. You know that. So it's like having this like, it's like having, like, a spurge friend.
00:56:07 That's, you know, those people, those know it all, people that are stubbornly like, even when they're wrong and you know they're wrong, they're stubbornly wrong like, they won't, they won't admit that they're wrong. That's how AI is, like, where those guys that you know that are like that they're not always wrong. They're sometimes really knowledgeable about some stuff that you're not, but they're also limited, because they can't admit that they don't know everything. And that's kind of like, I how I feel.
00:56:36 That's how I look at AI. It's like one of those friends where it's like, you can trust them kind of on some things, and they're not dumb, but you would never, you know, you'd always double check anything they said, right? And it's the same thing with with AI. So, yeah, it's, it's, it's a tool, it's a tool and, and I'll, I'll definitely be using it out of necessity, really. Anyway, we got love and division again.
Corky
00:57:11 Never touch my sister.
Devon Stack
00:57:14 Need to make an AI quirky.
00:57:21 You're turning into a monster. I might make an AI. Corky actually love and division says I noticed your that you employed the spurgey Batman to razz, an annoying comment. I think this is a great way to use that resource. Also, if you ever get completely burned out, or burned out and you're going to quit, you should leave with a three hour stream of spriggy Batman. I'm not that burned out yet, but, yeah, probably, probably no stream.
00:57:55 Well, I don't know. I might do stream Wednesday, because the Thanksgiving thing, I have some travel I got to do in December. So there are going to be, there is going to be like, usually I do, like, a Christmas stream. I'm not going to do a Christmas stream this year, almost, almost definitely, I might be able to do a New Year's stream, but around Christmas I'm going to be kind of on the road.
00:58:18 So it's going to be difficult for I don't know all the dates yet, but there's gonna be a little time off there. But, yeah, I'm not burned out yet. I'm I'm a little, I'm a little, I'm run a little ragged, but right now I am, because, you know, I've been up for maybe three to not three days a long time.
00:58:41 I don't want to think about it. Actually, it might be three days. I don't think it's three days. Maybe it's two and a half. It's a long time. It's a long time. It's too long. It's too long, getting too old for that shit. But, uh, yeah, I'm drinking. Had so many fucking coke zeros today, I'm sure, like, my kidneys are loving that All right, then we got love and division again. Said something, I think I scroll. There we go.
00:59:09 For the audience info, I have made a tutorial on how to set up and use AR on Odyssey. So there you go. I don't know he doesn't say where the tutorial is, but I guess Ask, ask love and division will know. Love and division knows how all this works. I think they're going to smooth it out. I think they'll make it work more efficiently, or make it have fewer barriers to entry. I don't know. I don't know.
00:59:43 I think everyone liked it better when it was just money. But what are you gonna do? Right? What are you gonna do? All right, now we got, let's see here. Okay, we did that one. All right. Right? So I think this one is oh phase is that from tonight? No, it's not. Remember that one?
01:00:09 Okay, so this is Oh phase and oh face says, Great stream on Saturday, your AI workflow is great and will continue to improve. Well, hopefully tonight demonstrate a little improvement. I've gotten a little bit better on on getting it to work. Right to the folks in the audience. Check out Devon's Kermit the Zog edition, or Kermit two Zog, I think edition. Fantastic work with AI. Also, big shout out to gorilla hands for the jolem edition recommendation.
01:00:44 There you go. And then Oh phase again says 8020 rule mentioned last stream is generally true. I am fortunate to work in tech with a small team of capable white men. My boss recently sold the company. And I think it, or I think it made it, or I'm told my my brain's not working, sold the company, and I think made it a point to sell to a white guy instead of a Jeet or the highest bidder.
01:01:16 Yeah, it always sucks when you get, like, those really cool jobs and then, like, because that's happened to me a couple of times, where one of my first tech jobs, it was crazy, like, how everyone, like, half the people, were better than me. And that, like, never happened in tech jobs before, not because I was, like, super techie, but just I always got jobs where they hired idiots or something.
01:01:40 And I had this one job, I was like, holy shit. Like, I feel like I can learn stuff from people, you know, like everyone's at least at my level or like, or close enough, you know. And then they, they, they, they went public, I think is what happened. They went public and they hired a bunch of efficiency experts and ruined the company, and now it was a big company back then. It's, I don't think it, I think the name exists, but I don't think it exists anymore as a company. Yeah, that happens.
01:02:14 That happens, and it's happened more than once. I've had a couple jobs like that where, in fact, my contracting job, when I worked in DC, the team I worked on was really competent, like, really competent, and it's not that they didn't get bought out, but because it was by contract, it only there was, like a golden era of, like, a couple years of working with competent people, and then because contracts change and people get moved around the different offices and all this other stuff and and then just kind of, and honestly, it was because we started hiring non whites.
01:02:48 Like, we start, we had this little fucking four foot tall Peruvian guy that should never have been there, and some black guy that was just like, how are you here? Like, there's no way. Like, how, how he's nice guy. He was, I mean, there's nothing wrong with him, like, in terms of, you know, like his personality, but he's just, you know, he was, he was working. He was working with some limit, real, real biological limitations when it came to his competency.
01:03:17 And you know that, you know, people like me had to pick up the slack, and it sucked. It sucked. All right. Then we got nostra Nazi says, Thank you for your work. Well, I appreciate that. And then we got, I'm an interpreter for I think niggers is what the rest of that is, if I remember correctly, but that's got, he's got a big donut.
Mayer Rothschild
01:03:44 Money is power. Money is the only weapon that the Jew has to defend himself.
Devon Stack
01:03:50 Look how Jewy this bag is. You
01:04:08 all right, I'm an interpreter for entropy response. About issues Emmanuel. What is it? Emmanuel constant, looks some kind of Greek name founder at something, said, yes, maybe you can help us out. We've been trying to get Devon his payout for months now, but we've been able to get information from him, like which bank account we should be paying out to.
01:04:33 If you could get him to contact Yeah, I'll. I've been meaning to do that. It's just they used to pay you a different way, and I'm gonna have to find a way they can because they change ways. I'm gonna have to find a way to get paid. Is why I haven't done that so but I'll set that up with them. I'm I need, I want to get them on the phone, because I want to talk to him about some of this technical stuff that I'm dealing.
01:05:00 With so maybe I'll, I'll DM them on Twitter. I've been real busy over here, guys, I know I say that, but it's not like I'm not just saying it to sound busy. I'm it's been a it's been a weird year. It's been a crazy, well, I feel like I said it every year. It's been a lot since I started doing this. My life has just been weird. It's been a weird it's been a weird, weird rabbit hole I fell into, you know, doing this kind of work.
01:05:31 And, yeah, it's, there's not, you don't get a lot of time for to yourself, not always. So anyway, yeah, I appreciate that, though, I'll reach out to him. It's, it's more like I said, it's, it's a, it's a means kind of a thing, because I know what they want, and then I don't have what they want. So I'm at the figure out a way of getting that working. But anyway, thank you very much. Then we got go to the normal ones.
01:06:04 Now, not the other ones weren't normal, but the ones that actually pop up here, we got blue cord with another big Dono. Let's do Christmas. Today, we'll be reading the best Christmas ever, The Magic negro.
Money Clip
01:06:32 Where did the show man go?
01:06:33 The best Christmas
Devon Stack
01:06:47 ever. All right, blue cord, blue chord says, Good evening, Mr. Stack, thanks for what you do. Well, I appreciate that, and hopefully you're still thankful after being subjected to the AI fest, um, all right, we got, oh, we got more of the All right, I'm an interpreter for nigs. Is just telling me more about this stuff. I'll let me just read this. I
01:07:30 Okay, yeah, like I said, I'll, I'll talk to him. I gotta find out how to talk to him. I think they sent me an email. I've got like five email accounts. I gotta look, dig through, find out which one they've got. I'm really bad at the bookkeeping stuff. I'm really bad at that. That's not my, that's not my, my strength, but, uh, you know, I'll reach out to them. All right. Then we got Attila the hung. Attila honk says, holy shit, Devon, that was some pretty good shit.
01:08:03 Well, I appreciate that. Hopefully everyone had a I it was one of those things where I was like, I can't tell if I just think this is funny because I haven't slept in so long, or if it's actually funny. Like, there's a couple spots where I was like, I was cracking myself up. But then I was like, Oh, am I just kind of like, am I? Is am I in that mode now? Or, like, everything's way funnier than it should be? Oh, hard, hard to actually gage real humor now. Oh no, I don't know if I'm if I'm just being weird now, like,
01:08:41 I started to feel that way. And during that part where she's like, the interviewer is just like, giving her shit for, like, her kid dying, I was like, this seems funny to me, but maybe this just seems like weird and mean.
01:08:59 I don't know. I can't tell anymore, so I'm glad you enjoyed that. Then we got wolf NAS. Wolf NAS with another big Dodo.
Mayer Rothschild
01:09:10 Money is power. Money is the only weapon that the Jew has to defend himself.
Devon Stack
01:09:15 Look how chewy this bag is. You
01:09:33 all right, wolfnaz. Wolfnaz says, Hey, Devon, you're not only a great artist, but an absolute renaissance man. Also just read book one of Day of the rope. Can't wait for book two. No pressure, of course. Thank you for all that you do. Well, I appreciate that. And yes, it is near completion
01:09:55 that is one of the many things that has kept me busy lately. Oh, and by the way, I. I like, I said I might be not doing, I'm like, I probably doing Wednesdays because, you know, Thanksgiving. But I might not be doing Wednesday streams for a little bit, but I am going to be doing, I'll be on Millennial. I'm going to be on with Tim Murdoch. I'm going to be on
01:10:18 what blood satellite, right? And then I'm gonna feel like there's another one too, but I'm gonna be on other other streams, like I'm booked for like, at least three and maybe four, so I'm still gonna be streaming almost as much, just in different places. But the like I said this, I'll do this Wednesday.
01:10:39 Look at the calendar where it's almost fucking December already. Yeah, so I'll do this. I'll do, I'll probably do Wednesday, and then I'll, I probably won't do the following Wednesday, but I think that's when I start having, I'm pretty sure that's when I start doing other, Oh, crap. I just, what did I do? Area, okay, yeah, but thank you very much.
01:11:09 Thank you very much. Wolf NAS, it's, yeah, it was a lot of work. But like, I want it, like I said, I wet my appetite with the AI stuff, and I was like, I gotta see if I can actually make something with this. And I just started going at it. And then, like, it wasn't gonna be like a whole thing. But then I was like, the chunks are good enough to be like, like, I don't want to just release like, a five minute thing.
01:11:38 Like, this could be like a whole thing. And then I got over ambitious with it. That's why there's so much aerial footage, by the way, because that wasn't the initial plan. The initial plan with my, you know, I always bite off more than I can chew. The initial plan was like, I'm gonna have AI for every shot, and then, like, there was, like it was two hours before I was live, and I'm like, You're never gonna make it.
01:12:00 You're never gonna make it, and you find you better find something to put there. And so I just got a bunch of aerial footage and filled in all the blanks, which there were a lot of blanks, as you can tell. But the, yeah, if I had more time, you know, it's the kind of thing where, if I that's the kind of thing that should take a week at least to make. And I did it like in a day and a half. So, you know, give me some cut me some slack. Cut me some slack. But thank you very much. Wolf NAS for the big Dono. There, there. Then we got sacred squirrel.
01:12:40 Sacred squirrel says it is raining here. Also hope you and churro are doing well. Was watching the Y files. Some of his videos are interesting and some are too Art Bell for me, never forget our nuts are sacred. I've never heard of that. But you know, sometimes little Art Bell stuff isn't so bad.
01:13:03 Like, I kind of want to do a stream on something that's where, because here's what, what sticks out to me is when it's something that, like, is obviously stupid now, like, you listen to it now, and it's like, how are there? How are, how is anyone? How is this national radio? Like, how are people taking this seriously?
01:13:19 And callers. And look, it's coast to coast. So there's crazy people calling up right late at night. But even so, it's like, some of the stuff is just dumb. It's like, not, it's not like, spooky X Files, just dumb. And some of it, like, is also hindsight, and I think it'd be interesting to find. Here's some, like, really dumb shit that, like, a lot of people believed in. That's kind of what led to the the crop circle one, right?
01:13:43 But there's a lot of stuff like that. But yeah, stay dry out there. Sacred squirrel. Then we got someone stole my bike. Says, hope all is well, going to have to catch the replay. The other week was the 10 year anniversary of the attacks in Paris, France, which was my first red pill, also first time seeing some of the photos, which I always thought was odd, considering it was in the iPhone age.
01:14:12 French government must have really scrubbed it. Yeah. I mean, European governments are, are way more into the censorship than I mean, look, we do it too. But they, they have always been very censorious. And I would look in England, remember there was the attack.
01:14:33 Was like Ariana grand concert or something like that, right where she, like, there was like a stadium attack years ago, and they were flying. Don't quote me on this, but if I it was something like this, they, they flew like a blimp or something over the event to block cell phones for some like, that's, I mean, the British man, like, they, they, I mean. And I just, I don't even understand, it makes me sad, because, like, that's, that's kind of my people, like, a little bit, you know, so it's like, what's what's going on over there?
01:15:11 Like, what's going on over there? Why aren't you guys burning the place down, you know? Like, what's what's going on over there? But, uh, yeah, I think all you know, lot of people are domesticated, and I feel like a lot of people in the UK are domesticated, and more so than than here.
01:15:31 You know, one of the one of the advantages, if you want to look at the silver lining, what are the advantages of America being kind of shitty and dangerous, is it does keep you a little froggy, right? Like, like, they can't, they can't go full authority authoritarian, right? They kind of have to let you carry guns and and be a little dangerous, because you have to be a little dangerous to live here.
01:15:53 You know, I don't want that to be the why you're dangerous, because you shouldn't have to live like that. But, yeah, I guess, if nothing else, it keeps you, keeps a little little loose, right? All right, then we got, let's see here, red truck. Red Truck says, Hey, Devon, been here since insomnia. Origin had to replay
01:16:27 gang last couple years. Just a couple years ago, the chat would ask about starting your own media movie industry. Now, with AI, it seems like it might be possible. Your pushback on the left can't meme may be coming to an end. Well, I'll tell you what
01:16:51 it's it's really close and and, in fact, one of the things I was thinking about as I did this, because this was kind of like a learning experience for me, right? It's the most I've ever used AI for anything. And obviously the gears are turning as I was doing it. I was like, Okay, well, what's limitation here? What could I do with this? And there are movies you could make with the tools I used. And there's even ways of fixing the Yeah, like their voices sound weird sometimes, or they're different, right? It's like the same character, but they sound a little just enough to where you notice they sound different from shot to shot.
01:17:30 There's ways you can do that, like if you have the time, if you put the time in. There's ways that are not that hard. In fact, it's funny that use AI to fix inconsistencies in the audio, and then it's more of just like a how much money you want to spend, right? Like, to pay for for real AI, where you're not limited by like, five second clips or something like that, and it's not that expensive, you know, depending what service you're using. And yeah, we could make, I think we could. I think it's already kind of there.
01:18:11 You would just have to work within the constraints of the AI. You'd have to write the script knowing I'm going to make this with AI, so I can't write in anything into the script that would not be easy to do with AI. And in fact, one of the things we talked about years ago was doing, like, a day of the rope kind of a movie thing.
01:18:33 And here's, here's, you know what we talked about, crowdsourcing it a little bit like, maybe do, like, everyone send in, like a little clip or something like that, and, and I was kind of hesitant to do that, because I've just known too many film students you know that make garbage. Now, not saying you guys are gonna make garbage, but it's hard, right? It's not like it takes years to not make garbage. And even then, some people just never, never get to that level, and I made a lot of garbage in my day, but AI kind of fixes that, right? Where it fixes the fact that, like, you don't have to know anything about lighting. You don't even know much about acting. I mean, you have to know about direct you have to know when you see bad acting, right? Because AI will spit out bad acting 80% of the time, it'll just, like, spit out random, crazy shit 80% of the time. But then once you start to learn the prompts and like, how to phrase things and what, what it doesn't like, and what it responds to,
01:19:36 yeah, we could do it. We could definitely, I think we could make a movie now, it would just, it would, you wouldn't want to do a shit job. You'd have to really, it would take months. It would take months so that you'd want it to be so good that the trained eye could notice that it was AI, because, you know, but like, if it you could probably make it so good that if you were to go back.
01:20:00 Time and play it to someone in 2010 they they wouldn't think it looked weird. They wouldn't be like, Oh, why is, why does that person have, you know, three hands like, you know, you can avoid all that stuff now, I mean, it still sort of happens, like I did this one shot where the the chick that's, you know, Mrs. Whitman, her face like, appeared on like, the back of her head. It was really unnerving.
01:20:28 So there's ways you can make it freak out, but it's it's a lot better than it was, like, a lot better. All right. Then we got friendly fashion says some guy with paranoid delusions that his mom, that his mom was out to get him, had an AI convince him he should be he should do something about it. So he killed his mom. It played into his madness. Stein, Eric Solberg, Well, surprise, surprise.
01:21:06 Yeah, that's the other thing that sucks about AI. Is it? It thinks all well, it doesn't think, but it's programmed to tell you that all of your ideas are good. I actually tested this the other day. I told grok that I was from the future and that I had warped into my body as a child, and I was given instructions to carry out as an adult for a military group in a parallel universe, and it the whole time, went along with it. The whole time it never once, like, I just kept getting crazier with it. And it was like, Really, that's really, how does that work?
01:21:50 And I just like, make something up, and it's like, that's interesting. I even started asking advice, like, what? And I thought to myself, like, this is kind of what, like a crazy person might say, right? Like, if that's, like, if you're like, delusional person, you might think something like this.
01:22:06 And so grok was just going along with it, and I was saying stuff like, oh yeah. Like, I just know there's like, this, I have this contact that telepathically tells me, like, what the next mission is going to be and but I'm trying to figure out, like, where I need to meet him at and, like, it was just like, Oh yeah, totally. It just went along with every, every little bit of it. It was little. It was because I just started thinking, like, how many people are out there just having insane conversations with AI? And it's just, it's just like, okay, cool.
01:22:44 So yeah, not everyone's gonna murder their mom over it, but I bet there's probably a lot of people taking relationship advice and all kinds of other crazy shit and ruining their lives because they think that it's some kind of electronic God in some ways, and that's how a lot of people treat this thing, but anyway, yep, all right, let's take a look over at rumble. I'm gonna have to do the same thing on rumble, because when I don't there are problems. Okay, RUMBLE, RUMBLE, RUMBLE, RUMBLE, get where it's at. Count.
01:23:28 Overview, that's where it's at, okay. And again, today's the 22nd we want to go back to the 20th perhaps okay, I might have to let true out again. He's getting noisy. Hang on, buddy, you can handle it. Oh, this doesn't have dates on it, all right? Well, let me look at how to do it by memory. Let's, let's look at the first one in the actual chat window. Decimal threat is the first one.
01:24:10 Let me look and see where he comes in at last 60 days. Yes, I know, Gerald, your life is so hard, isn't it? I know you have to wait for people to open the door for you. What is it? Okay? You heard of the AI. Okay, that is the first one. So this is before that. This isn't before. I haven't done that one. Okay?
01:24:43 Pretty sure to this one. Yeah, we did that one last, last stream. All right, so then we're on this one, I guess. All right. Decimal threat, actually, they're all on here. Yeah. Maximal threat, says Devon, have you heard of an AI research tool named plod? No, I have not. I don't know.
01:25:07 I don't know any of the research tools really, though I've, believe it or not, I I'm not. I'm actually not that that up on that whole AI thing. I only recently discovered it, but it sounded perfect for a busy person like yourself. Maybe nine millimeter Santa would be interested in bringing one.
01:25:30 Yeah. I mean, like, I feel like I need to get, like, an AI assistant at some point. I think everyone's gonna have to do that at some point as their lives get more complex. But I'd have to. I don't know what that all entails. I know that even like chat, GPT and grok, they're making agents, but I've never done I don't even know what that means. I mean, I know kind of what that means, but it's, it's, I got to keep up with this stuff.
01:25:54 Maybe I'll ask AI what it is. Then I got dauntless, dissonant says Deb, and I'm sure you've seen the new location feature on X DHS account getting exposed for being in Israel. Then x removes it again to not apply to gray check marks. Would you apply to government accounts? Homeland Security was in Israel, huh? Let me get it. Let me get him outside, because he's just gonna mom the entire time. Want to go outside? Are you gonna eat food? Some food you
01:27:00 My desk is starting to look like that gamer, streamer guy's desk, whatever his name is. It's like, seriously, it's like a mountain of cans. Where we at here? Yeah, I didn't know that they I knew that they were implementing it. I didn't know that they had actually implemented it all the way, like I know that they made it so you could look at your own location. But do they I'm gonna look now. Does it show everybody's I'm
01:27:34 just gonna click on someone random here. All right, who's this guy?
01:27:46 Don't know. Does the browser not do it? I don't know where to look. I don't see it on the browser.
01:27:59 I mean, well, that guy just has a location tagged. That's not the same thing. Where do I Where do I find it on? Let me find someone else here. This guy's random, random. His doesn't. Oh, wait, here we go.
01:28:21 United States, okay, yeah, I guess it works. It just doesn't. You have to click something first. Okay, well, good to know. Good to know. I wonder if anyone's got, I'm sure they have. I'm sure people, it's not just the DHS account. Oh, that's a little, that's a little disturbing, that that, yeah. I mean, look, I know Israel influences our country, but it's a little disturbing that the official DHS account is run from Israel.
01:28:48 I mean, it makes it checks out. But you know, then we got ring 1981 who simply says, hail to retarded faggot. We'll just do this real fast. There we go. Then we got Thomas Howard, who says they hate us for our charity, empathy, altruism, our dedication to no bless, oblige and manifest destiny. They're definitely right, but not in the way they think. Thanks for another banger. Well, I appreciate that.
01:29:29 Thomas Howard, then we got Randall Flagg says, just recently, my buddy, an ex cop, was thrown in jail at an Indian casino for an open carry which is illegal, or which is legal in Arizona, but not on the tribal land, took his $2,000 in winnings and forced him to pay another grand. Yeah, well, it's Indian, Indian casinos, or just Indian land is like, it's like their own car.
01:30:00 Country sort of, I mean, it's, it's not a self sufficient it's a country we pay for. It's technically federal land. It's not really, you know, but, yeah, you got to watch out for, I mean, just, even just, I don't like driving through reservations, I have to do it sometimes. And it's just like, I don't even I do not like it. It's a res cops kind of freaked me out a little bit for the well, for all the reasons that we saw tonight, they're not they're not the brightest bulbs. Then we got ran a fly again, says Devon, how viable are these urban beekeeping startups?
01:30:37 They keep hives on unused roofs of urban centers to help pollinate and harvest honey. White, liberal, millennial women tend to lean into this. I think it's, it's fine for the hobbyist you couldn't be. I mean, unless you had, like, a lot of territory that you could do, that you wouldn't be able to, like, have, like, a mass production of honey.
01:30:58 But if it's just for you, you don't need, I mean, you need one hive, as long as it doesn't die, is enough for I mean, unless you really like honey, unless you're always eating honey. What I mean, who's eating like 40 pounds of honey a year, you know what I mean?
01:31:14 And you'll get more than that on a good hive. So unless you're eating more than 40 pounds of honey a year, you just need one. I mean, it's good to have. It's good to have two just as a backup, because they do die. But the I feel like that's more of like a hobbyist thing.
01:31:30 It's not really. I mean, there, maybe there's someone that has contracts with all kinds of people with rooftops and whatever, and they've managed a way of of making roof honey or something like that, but it just seems like it wouldn't be very efficient. I mean, the guys that actually have big operations, they drive forklifts with pallets of beehives on them to the locations, and they move them based on what's blooming.
01:31:55 And it's like it's a lot of work, but the big guys are, I mean, you wouldn't be able to do that with roofs. With a roof, it's like, even if you had access to a billion roofs, it would just be like, How many can you put up there? First of all, and then you're not moving them, you know, they're just there.
01:32:11 And then if you want to manage them, when you're gonna climb on, like, let's say you have 100 different rooftops with beehives on them, you're gonna climb up 100 roofs and, like, a couple days. I mean, that's gonna take forever. And then here's the other it sucks. It's like, okay, some, sometimes you need to move, like, an 80 pound thing, like, you know, like, because beehives are heavy when they're full of honey, and what are you gonna do? Like, like, there's, is there, like, an elevator to move it off the roof? You know what?
01:32:38 I mean, like, so it's limited. It's very limited. Rupert V 21 says, great quality production. Tnd, good night and see you on Saturday. Professor Stack, well, I appreciate that. Then we got dag tastic says, first time, super chatter and longtime listener been listening since the YouTube days. Keep up the great work.
01:33:04 Well, I appreciate that. Dag tastic. Then we got Randall Flagg says Devon Candace is like the demon spawn of Alex Jones and Oprah. At this point, she's totally off her rocker. I get Q vibes from the followers and her new horde of plan trusters, many imbeciles? Yeah.
01:33:26 I mean, look, it's just, there's a lot of there's a big market for that. There's a huge market for that, because more, it's the 8020 rule, more people are dumb than are smart, and so if you have a product that appeals more to dumb people, you'll make more money. Sad but true.
01:33:41 I mean, that's what it is if, if you have, if your product is, is, is, I'm not just saying, like, you know, streamers, I mean, just any music, for example, right? Music, any kind of, you know, culture, if it's something that appeals to high IQ people, there's not as much money in it as there is stuff that appeals to retards. That's why rappers can make so much money. That's why,
01:34:14 you know, what's her face, Taylor Taylor Swift makes so much fucking money because it's, it's slop. People like slop. There's a lot of money in slop, and, yeah, that's just the way it is. That's the way it is.
01:34:34 All right, we got Tomahawk, well, your, your, your your name was somewhat brought up a lot tonight. Gonna catch the replay again. Hope you have a wonderful Thanksgiving by churro, some sardines. You know, I don't know what I'll give he gets. He's chunked up like a lot since he got back like he is. He.
01:35:00 I mean, he's not like all, but um, but um, when he walks, but like he's, he's on the edge. It's, it's starting to go from like, his winter coat euphemism, to like, like, let's not get diabetic Charo, like he but he gets what? He gets a lot of food. He likes almost anything too. He likes the weirdest shit he and then he doesn't like other shit. Like he doesn't like milk. I thought every cat like milk. He doesn't, really not a big fan.
01:35:36 He likes he likes ice cream, but he doesn't like milk. I'll get him something. I'll get him some kind of little treat thing. I got a place. I'll be going. I won't be here. I don't think I'm Thanksgiving, but I'll make sure you get something, something tasty. I've got sardines. I just don't know if he'd like sardines.
01:36:00 The ones I've got are, I think, covered in mustard. They're, like, mustard sardines or something. They've been in my fucking cabinet for like, four years. It's one of those things seem like a good idea. They're not bad. I'm not a big like, sardine guy, but I think I just wanted to, like, mix things up. And then, like, after like, one or two cans of that, you're like, okay, and that was, that was a fun adventure.
01:36:26 The rest are just gonna stay in there, if you know. And that goes into, like, the prep food I guess, department. Ah, let's see here we got Randall Flagg says, Dev and I've been meaning to ask, Why are boomers with RVs in the middle of the desert near you? Are they reliving the 1960s and 70s and tripping and watching the stars?
01:36:57 They have too much money and time now. A lot of them are from Canada or northern states, where they get snowed in, and they're old and they hate snow, so the weather where they live is really good in the summer, unlike here. And so when winter rolls around, like right now, it's, it's like, Boomer city, like it wasn't just, like a couple months ago, like, no RVs, but it's just that the weather,
01:37:27 I mean, the weather out here was amazing for up until, like, a couple days ago, and it's still pretty good. Like, it's still pretty good. And we'll probably get like, a cold month, maybe, maybe, maybe, you know, and by cold, I mean where it dips, actually dips below freezing.
01:37:45 I mean, every year is different, but this year seems like it's going to be the kind of year where we get, like, one month where you've got, like, not every day that month, but like, you know, a lot of the days that month, maybe they dip down to, like, 28 maybe, maybe at night, and then it pops right back up, right and never stays that cold. And during the day, it'll be like 60, you know, that'll be the the temperature swing is, it'll go all the way down to like 30, and then all the way up to 60 in one day. And every day that you know, when it's cold, there we have it.
01:38:17 Never, you know, during the day, it's not, if you're, like, an old person, that's, I get it. I mean, I get it. But, yeah, some of these RVs are, they're worth they're more than my house. I mean, for sure, more than my house. I mean, some of these are, like, million dollar I mean, I don't know if there's a bunch of million dollar ones, but there's a bunch of $100,000 ones that up. You know, I don't even, I don't even think that's like that high anymore.
01:38:44 You know, if you have like, a new RV, you're paying, like, I think, like, at least, like 100 grand these days, at least, and probably closer to, like, 200 I've never bought it, well, I've never bought a new RV about really beat up shitty RVs, but, yeah, that's why they do it.
01:39:04 Boomers don't like cold weather because they're old. Decimal threat says herding cats applies to getting AI to perform, as well as the premiere we just watched you perfectly displayed what my words can barely convey. I am eternally thankful for the perspective illustrated Well, I appreciate that. High praise. Yeah, you can make, you can make a, I do stuff like that. It wasn't that hard. It took.
01:39:34 It took like, like I said. It took a couple days of me just throwing prompts at it and seeing what came out. And before I started get like into the groove of like, okay, I see what it I see what it wants to hear to get a result.
01:39:50 And the thing is, I bet that'll all change. I bet that as the training datas change, you know, the or databases and the the. The models. So never you know. It's something that you're never gonna like, know all the way.
01:40:05 But I do feel like it opens up doors. I It's something I'm probably gonna use more, not necessarily for streams. But I I don't have time to do a lot of the I used to do a lot of, you know, edited stuff. And I used to do a lot of film production, a lot of shooting, and now I don't do any of that stuff.
01:40:28 And partially because of the time and the investment money and everything else, but, you know, like now we've got, you know, based, by the way, I was thinking a good shirt would be Narcissa screaming, dirt meat. So there might be a Narcissa dirt meat shirt if I had had time, if I'd had time where I wasn't just working on this up until, basically, I did have like a 20 minute breather before the stream.
01:41:04 I actually went live. But I was pretty much, I was, I was panicking there for a little bit. I probably would have put that shirt together. But hopefully by next stream, we can have a dirt meat shirt. I don't know how many people want a dirt meat shirt. I kind of want one kind of want one.
01:41:23 All right, we got, like, lost now here, oh, here we are. The Shogun says I pay for Super grok because I use AI constantly, and when grok 4.1 dropped the other day, it said now with less hallucinations than competitors, with 12% hallucination rate. Wow. I don't believe that. I will tell you why.
01:41:58 I also pay for grok, and I uploaded a schematic for a circuit I'm having trouble with, and I gave it everything it needed, and I said, Do not guess. I gave it a prompt where I said,
01:42:17 Do not guess. Do not search outside of this chat only use the documents that I'm uploading to you and your basic knowledge of electrical components, you know, schematics and stuff, obviously. And I want you to assess this circuit, look at this circuit, understand this circuit. And then once you understand this circuit, and you tell me that you understand it, I'm going to tell you the symptom that I have, and you tell me where the failure is in the circuit.
01:42:46 And it was wrong, super wrong, and it kept being wrong to the point where I got tired of trying to correct it, because it just it was going to take me more time to try to baby it then it would be just a, you know, take the time bang my head against the schematic myself. But, you know, maybe on other things, right? I wish there was an AI specifically for that, though, because I would use it all the time.
01:43:15 The Shogun says, Are you going to start doing the YouTube intro to let people know to go to the alternate platforms? Yeah, I'll probably maybe, like I said, I might start doing that next year, once I've had, once the smoke settles over here, it's pretty chaotic over here right now, and I know it's not like a big deal, but I have to go in and look and see if my, I don't even know, my account, is letting me stream, because I'll still get I get strikes every once in a while, which means you can't stream for like another, however long.
01:43:47 And I it's been a while. I don't know how long the last one is, so I have to take a look and see by this. This is kind of funny. I saw a comment on one of my streams saying that I farted on the on the string. That was not a fart. I just did the sound again. Look, can you Oh, there we go. You hear that?
01:44:12 That's not me farting, guys. I have a fart button. If I was gonna fart on stream, I'd push the fart. I don't even think I've ever farted on stream? Well, maybe, I'm sure I've at this point, right? I did not fart on stream. It was my my desk is wood, and when you rub things like my elbows, which are in a sweater right now, it makes farty sounds. Hear that that's not as loud. There we go. Anyway. Did not fart on stream? How dare you?
01:44:45 Ah, let's see here. No long pork. Is that the one I'm on? Yes, no long pork. Twitter hilarity. They instigate country of or. Origin for accounts. DHS shows up as Israel program gets yeeted for eight hours, and now all the governments are exempt due to safety. Yeah, yeah.
01:45:12 That makes me happy. It makes me happy that the feds are running operations out of Israel. But you know, like that's we already knew that was happening. And look, just a lot of their software comes from from Israel. Now, Israel has a lot of big software contracts with the feds.
01:45:32 Maximus prime says a hyper chatter in your last stream mentioned how David Sarnoff stole FM technology from its inventor. He also did the same with the inventor of TV, Nat Geo did a docu drama on it called where's your part two. Here we are called American genius Farnsworth versus Sarnoff. Here's the YouTube link, all right. Well, I'll check that out. That's actually that sounds interesting.
01:46:04 Didn't like, I thought like a ham radio operator invented TV. Like, for fun, I'm almost pot maybe I'm thinking slow scan, though. I mean, I know ham radio operators invented slow scan, but I think that they invented regular TV too? I don't know. I used to know the answer to that question.
01:46:26 But you know, of course, the Jew stole it. Man of low moral fiber says the Brits had a helicopter response to a party playing the song finest girl, which is from a Jewish comedian and has the hook fucked, bin Laden, a female cop hit the panic button and called the SWAT team. Yeah.
01:46:48 I mean, even years ago, there was that video that went viral because it was so unusual to Americans. I think Americans are more now. We're more used to it coming out of the UK. But there was a video I remember years ago where a local band was playing in a pub, and they were playing, everybody was kung fu fighting, and someone called the cops because they said it was racist. I don't know what to do with I mean, luckily I don't live there.
01:47:24 All right, then we got zazzy mctazzbot says, Have you ever considered doing a stream on the murder and abuse in the NFL? Besides the obvious OJ stuff, there's got to be streams worth of criminals, sports, ballers. Well, there was that one guy who wasn't black. He was Mexican.
01:47:47 I'm blanking on his name now. So many years ago, it was like, but he was, yeah, I think, like, killed some guy and threw his body in a construction site. There's like, an A in his name somewhere, but, yeah, there's, I'm sure, I'm sure, like, way worse stuff than that going on. Sports ballers are, you know, they're.
01:48:14 The thing is, they're obviously not immune to their genetics, but they're on top of that, if they're actually good. They have been babied all through high school, all through college. You know they they've never had people say no to them. And when you are genetically black and you have never had anyone say no to you, bad things are bound to happen. Man alone fiber says the censorship in Australia is almost as bad as in Europe.
01:48:48 But if you're looking for a layup stream, I think Aboriginal violence and Alice Springs would be easy, similar to the Gallup stream. Yeah, I don't know much about I mean, I know I've heard the stories, but I don't know much about the Aboriginal experience. I've never had to, actually, you know, interact with an Aboriginal my life. I feel glad of that. I don't. It's not one of those things, like, I'm gonna be like on my deathbed.
01:49:18 I never got to, I never got to talk to an abo. You know, they tried to make him sound like cool and Crocodile Dundee, you know, like, Oh, look at the ABO. They're they can talk to frogs or like, whatever, yeah, super fucking gay, yeah, maybe, maybe Australia's always got interesting topics.
01:49:42 He's got a weird land down there. Man of low moral fiber says also there is a tranny who speed runs retro video games who named himself Narcissa. There you go. I guess it is a name it. I was surprised. That it was that it was a name that people would name their kid, but it is still a name. Oh, you know, they probably named themselves off of this, this character here, Narcissa Malfoy,
01:50:30 pure blood witch, and the youngest daughter of Cygnus, drula black. So apparently it's the name of some fucking weirdo witch person that's famous or something, the shadow band says, holy shit, you put a lot of work into that mockumentary I did. I will. I'm not gonna be humble in the amount of work.
01:50:55 Like I said, quality wise, there's a lot more fight. If I'd had a whole week. I could have really nailed it, but I wasn't gonna, I'm not gonna do that. Like I was gonna, oh, I gotta do that, you know, like it was, it was good enough. I made it good enough. But I did put the work in. I did put the work in like I said, I have not slept in in a long time.
01:51:23 I appreciate that the shadow band, then we got man of low moral fiber says in college football today at University of Alabama, Birmingham, one nigger stabbed two of his room or teammates and sent them to the hospital. The rest of the team still played their game against South Florida. Well, for them, it's just another day. It's just another day. All right. Double check, entropy. You
01:52:06 always forget if they show up, but the new one show up, the top or bottom on us. I'm pretty sure the top figure all these out.
01:52:22 Here we are. I think this new the sacred squirrel.
01:52:41 Sacred squirrel says, Has everyone here seen the anti white mural, the endless sleep that was placed at the base of the Eiffel Tower? The so called artist also did art for the Rothschilds trimeran racing boat. Yes. In fact, I did a meme when
01:53:01 that first happened back in like 2016 it was one of my, one of my, one of my first viral Twitter memes, if I remember correctly, where I made it. I made I made that the the graphics for Ben and Jerry's white genocide flavor or something I don't remember, it sounds dumb, but like it looked cool at the time. It's probably dumb now, but yeah, that's, uh,
01:53:30 yeah, they are trying to kill us. Thank you very much. Uh, sacred score. Then we got Scott e NAT said, Well, look, someone from the UK says, Hello from the UK. I think it's important to keep up with the US issues and your streams are extremely informative. As the saying goes, when America sneezes, the rest of the world catches a cold, although it should be updated to when Jews fuck America in the ass, the rest of the world catches aids. Thank you for your work. Well, there you go. Thank you for that visual there.
01:54:03 Scotty, Nat, yeah, it's, it's, uh, see, I did the part thing and see, now I can't do it when I want to. It's this fucking sweater. Does it a lot. I'm at now I'm gonna be all self conscious about I'm not gonna put my elbows on the table. Um, was I saying? I don't remember. But yeah, you guys, I really hope you can turn things around over there. I really, I mean, people getting arrested for social media posts and all that stuff.
01:54:36 I mean, that's just not, I don't even know what your path to victory is. I mean, how are you going to fight an information war you're not allowed to even like, distribute or or even interact with like, I could be wrong, but it hasn't. There been people that they've been arrested for just liking tweets and things like that. So, I mean, it's shits, look, I'm not saying. It won't happen here. It could. It could.
01:55:04 I mean, look, the anti semitism laws are coming. Anti semitism laws are coming.
01:55:12 All right, guys, I'm crashing out here. I'm so tired. I can't, I can't, I can barely keep the eyes open. But I really appreciate you guys hanging out with me tonight. I hope you have a good rest of your weekend. It's probably the shortest one we've ever done. Well, it's in the in the zone of one of the shortest ones we've ever done.
01:55:33 But I promise you, I deserve it. So anyway, you guys have a good rest of your week. I'll be back here on Wednesday for Thanksgiving, and there may or may not be another one I have to double check because I don't, I don't, I don't keep track of dates very well. I didn't, I don't even I didn't know it was like Thanksgiving till like last week.
01:55:55 Well, man, I knew it was November. I didn't know when it was all right, guys, you guys have a good night in the meantime, for Black Pilled, I am, of course, Devon Stack,
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