Climate Culture

Stay human, please

24 min · Gisteren
aflevering Stay human, please artwork

Beschrijving

This week we're asking a simple question: in a world optimizing for efficiency, automation, and engagement — what does it actually cost us to be human? Three stories. One theme. A poem broke the internet. Shawn Smucker, a bookshop owner from Lancaster, Pennsylvania, wrote a piece of ironic poetry called "Please Use AI" that hit 13 million views in a week. It's not what you think. We break down why it landed so hard — and what it says about loneliness in the age of frictionless everything. A dictionary ethered Silicon Valley. Merriam-Webster announced their "newest Large Language Model" with purple gradients, floating buzzwords, and dramatic AI voiceover. The reveal: their 12th edition printed dictionary, slowly rotating. "There's artificial intelligence — and then there's actual intelligence." We get into why this 35-second video might be the most effective AI criticism of the last two years. Microsoft said the quiet part out loud. Leaked internal documents obtained by 404 Media show that Phase 1 of Microsoft's Scout AI assistant rollout was literally labeled "Make people addicted." We connect the dots to Facebook, Frances Haugen, The Social Reckoning (Aaron Sorkin's new film hitting theaters October 9), and why we're at a Facebook Files moment for AI — right now, on day one. The overarching theme: AI is a tool. You're still the point. And if you're going to use AI, use one that's giving something back to the planet.

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Alle afleveringen

9 afleveringen

aflevering Stay human, please artwork

Stay human, please

This week we're asking a simple question: in a world optimizing for efficiency, automation, and engagement — what does it actually cost us to be human? Three stories. One theme. A poem broke the internet. Shawn Smucker, a bookshop owner from Lancaster, Pennsylvania, wrote a piece of ironic poetry called "Please Use AI" that hit 13 million views in a week. It's not what you think. We break down why it landed so hard — and what it says about loneliness in the age of frictionless everything. A dictionary ethered Silicon Valley. Merriam-Webster announced their "newest Large Language Model" with purple gradients, floating buzzwords, and dramatic AI voiceover. The reveal: their 12th edition printed dictionary, slowly rotating. "There's artificial intelligence — and then there's actual intelligence." We get into why this 35-second video might be the most effective AI criticism of the last two years. Microsoft said the quiet part out loud. Leaked internal documents obtained by 404 Media show that Phase 1 of Microsoft's Scout AI assistant rollout was literally labeled "Make people addicted." We connect the dots to Facebook, Frances Haugen, The Social Reckoning (Aaron Sorkin's new film hitting theaters October 9), and why we're at a Facebook Files moment for AI — right now, on day one. The overarching theme: AI is a tool. You're still the point. And if you're going to use AI, use one that's giving something back to the planet.

Gisteren24 min
aflevering The Pope enters the chat artwork

The Pope enters the chat

This week we go deep on the story nobody in Big Tech wants you to connect: AI is draining the planet's water, burning fossil fuels to keep up, and the people most affected had no say in any of it. We cover: * Pope Leo XIV's 42,000-word encyclical Magnifica Humanitas — why the most influential religious institution on Earth dedicated its first major document to calling out AI's environmental footprint, and why it landed differently than the headlines suggested * The UN University report that put a number on AI's water crisis — and what evaporative cooling actually means for the communities living next to data centers * The Gen Z values gap: 79% care about sustainability, only 35% will pay extra for it — and why that's not hypocrisy, it's a broken system * Why Viro is free, and why the business model is part of the mission Plus: we're asking you what we should do about the water.

8 jun 202619 min
aflevering Solar Keeps Winning artwork

Solar Keeps Winning

Solar keeps winning. And this week we have the receipts. What we cover: Indiana Jones Gets It — Harrison Ford showed up to Arizona State's biggest graduating class ever and opened with "the world my generation left you is a real mess." No hedge. No optimism theater. Just accountability first, then a real ask. We talk about why it went viral during a commencement season where AI speeches got booed, what it means for a generation that cares deeply about climate and feels completely powerless, and why that order — own the damage, then inspire — is the only one that lands. Solar's Winning — Now What — BloombergNEF just dropped their New Energy Outlook and the headline is real: solar becomes the world's largest energy source by 2032. Not because of policy. Because it's too cheap to lose. We break down the numbers — 655 gigawatts added in 2025 alone, battery storage about to follow the same cost curve — and then we get into the catch. AI data centers run 24/7. Solar doesn't. Fossil fuels are still projected to power 51% of data center energy through 2050. We talk about what geothermal, nuclear, and hundred-hour iron-air batteries mean for that number — and why it's a default, not a destiny. Case Dismissed. Conscience: Billionaires win again — A jury took 90 minutes to throw out Musk's lawsuit against OpenAI on a statute of limitations technicality. The real question — whether it's okay to found a nonprofit on "AI for humanity," attract billions in funding and talent on that promise, then convert to for-profit and pursue an IPO — was never answered. We get into what that silence means for every AI company running the same playbook.

1 jun 202611 min
aflevering Spies, Boos, and Shein Buying the Soul of Sustainable Fashion artwork

Spies, Boos, and Shein Buying the Soul of Sustainable Fashion

This week billionaires are getting checked. By Utah women. By college graduates. And by the slow collapse of every brand that promised to do better. What we cover: Mr. Not-So-Wonderful — Kevin O'Leary wants to build a hundred billion dollar data center on forty thousand acres in drought-stricken rural Utah. Locals said no. He called them Chinese spies. On national television. By name. We break down the project, the process that approved it in a private room while residents watched on a livestream, and the two women who responded better than any PR team could have scripted. AI Gets Booed — Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt mentioned AI at a University of Arizona graduation and got booed. Repeatedly. We dig into why that reaction makes complete sense, what Pew Research says about how an entire generation actually feels about AI, and why telling people to just get on the rocketship lands very differently when you are the one who built it. Everlane Sells to Shein — Everlane spent a decade on radical transparency, ethical factories, and sustainable materials. It just sold for a hundred million dollars to the biggest polluter in fast fashion. Fast Company called it the end of the era of millennial optimism. We agree. And we trace the same pattern through Allbirds, Beautycounter, OpenAI, and everyone else who led with the mission and sold it when the money ran out.

19 mei 202616 min
aflevering Where's the Water? artwork

Where's the Water?

Episode 5 — Where's the Water? This week we follow the thing nobody in Big Tech wants to talk about. The water. Where it goes. Who takes it. And what happens when nobody is watching. What we cover: Where's the Water — A Georgia data center secretly drained twenty nine million gallons from a community's water supply over fifteen months. Residents noticed because their water pressure dropped. The county didn't fine the company. They called it customer service. We break down the Georgia story, the Pennsylvania transparency bill, and why only two out of eleven major tech companies publicly report their water use. AI Slop is Pollution With a Prompt — Shrimp Jesus. Fruit Love Island. Cats with twelve fingers. AI generated slop is everywhere and it is costing the planet real energy and real water every time someone stops scrolling to look at it. We break down the numbers and make a simple ask — stop feeding the machine. Claude Meets Colossus — Anthropic built Claude to be the ethical AI. They said no to government surveillance. They founded the company because OpenAI moved too fast. And now they are running Claude on the Colossus data center in Memphis — the one with the unpermitted gas turbines, the NAACP lawsuit, and the community with four times the national average cancer risk. We use Claude to make this podcast. We are calling it out anyway.

15 mei 202618 min