Shane Hewitt and The Nightshift

NEW - AI: You Can't Tell If That Influencer Is Real Anymore

19 min · I går
episode NEW - AI: You Can't Tell If That Influencer Is Real Anymore cover

Beskrivelse

AI-generated content has gotten good enough that most people scrolling past it have no idea — and tech and DIY expert Andy Baryer argues the brands using it secretly are taking a risk that transparent ones aren't. Andy traces how influencer marketing gave way to AI content creation, why the NDAs brands are requiring are a red flag, and what the Sports Illustrated AI writer scandal tells us about where this ends when it gets exposed. The dead internet theory isn't a theory anymore for a growing slice of what people see in their feeds. Before that: a powdery mildew diagnosis from a listener photo, the difference between cosmetic damage and real plant harm, and why a vertical indoor herb wall is closer to buildable than most people think. Topics: AI influencers, brand AI disclosure, social media authenticity, powdery mildew, indoor living wall DIY GUEST: Andy Baryer | handyandymedia.com | @handyandymedia Originally aired on 2026-06-22

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til å kommentere

Registrer deg nå og bli medlem av Shane Hewitt and The Nightshift sitt community!

Prøv gratis

Prøv gratis i 14 dager

99 kr / Måned etter prøveperioden. · Avslutt når som helst.

  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • 20 timer lydbøker i måneden
  • Gratis podkaster

Alle episoder

300 Episoder

episode The Happy Beep Is Costing You More Than You Think cover

The Happy Beep Is Costing You More Than You Think

Most people have no idea what they're spending until the statement arrives. Cash fixes that — which is exactly why almost nobody uses it anymore. Shane and the team open the week with a conversation about what happens when you can't find your debit card, can't make change, and can't explain why your balance is lower than it should be. Ryan O'Donnell's cash experiment in Mexico turns into a genuine argument for bringing a little friction back into how you spend. Noah weighs in on why tactile money still has a psychological edge. And the team previews tonight's conversation with personal finance educator Dr. Preet Banerjee on Robinhood's arrival in Canada and what the GameStop era actually taught us. Canada Day is next week. The long weekend math is getting complicated. Topics: cash vs digital payments, cashless society, spending habits, Robinhood Canada, Canada Day Originally aired on 2026-06-22

I går9 min
episode NEW - AI: You Can't Tell If That Influencer Is Real Anymore cover

NEW - AI: You Can't Tell If That Influencer Is Real Anymore

AI-generated content has gotten good enough that most people scrolling past it have no idea — and tech and DIY expert Andy Baryer argues the brands using it secretly are taking a risk that transparent ones aren't. Andy traces how influencer marketing gave way to AI content creation, why the NDAs brands are requiring are a red flag, and what the Sports Illustrated AI writer scandal tells us about where this ends when it gets exposed. The dead internet theory isn't a theory anymore for a growing slice of what people see in their feeds. Before that: a powdery mildew diagnosis from a listener photo, the difference between cosmetic damage and real plant harm, and why a vertical indoor herb wall is closer to buildable than most people think. Topics: AI influencers, brand AI disclosure, social media authenticity, powdery mildew, indoor living wall DIY GUEST: Andy Baryer | handyandymedia.com | @handyandymedia Originally aired on 2026-06-22

I går19 min
episode SHIFTHEADS: It Cost Shane How Much in Fees to Get His Own Money Out? cover

SHIFTHEADS: It Cost Shane How Much in Fees to Get His Own Money Out?

Bank fees, ATM limits, and a marketplace transaction that required three separate e-transfers to produce four hundred dollars in cash. The cashless future has a cost, and it's not always obvious until you need actual bills in your hand. Shane and Ryan dig into what cash access actually looks like for Canadians who don't live near a branch, can't drive to one, or just got hit with a hundred dollar fee because an eleven dollar automated payment came out of an account with five dollars in it. Ryan pulls 2024 numbers that complicate the narrative: 79% of Canadians have no plans to go fully cashless, and a Manitoba restaurant just went cash only by choice. The little old lady walking past Shane's house with her grocery bag every day doesn't have a square reader. She has cash. The system isn't built for her anymore. Topics: bank fees, cash vs digital banking, cashless Canada, rural banking access, cash only businesses Originally aired on 2026-06-22

I går9 min
episode Build It Here, Buy It Here: Canada's Electric Car Gamble cover

Build It Here, Buy It Here: Canada's Electric Car Gamble

Three police officers down across three provinces on the same Monday. Lesley Kelly and Jimmy Zoubris open the week by acknowledging what that costs before the panel moves into the policy questions that follow. Bill C-14 gives police more tools to deal with car theft, gang violence, and repeat offenders — but Kelly's question is the right one: will the resources actually be there to use them? Then the panel splits on Chinese electric vehicles. Jimmy would go electric tomorrow. Lesley puts on forty thousand kilometers a year farming in Saskatchewan and needs to see a decade of improvement first. The government's answer — build where you sell — sounds reasonable until you remember that Canadian labour costs are exactly why affordable cars come from somewhere else. Canada also unveiled a nuclear strategy this week. The Simpsons may have had something to do with why it took this long. Topics: bail reform Canada, Chinese electric vehicles, nuclear energy Canada, electric car affordability, police shootings GUEST: Lesley Kelly | highheelsandcanolafields.com GUEST: Jimmy Zoubris   Originally aired on 2026-06-22

I går19 min
episode Shiftheads - Clive Davis Shaped Every Era of Music for 66 Years cover

Shiftheads - Clive Davis Shaped Every Era of Music for 66 Years

Music industry commentator Eric Alper on the death of Clive Davis at 94 — the man whose roster reads like the history of recorded music and whose ear for a hit never stopped working, no matter the decade. Davis didn't just sign artists. He picked the songs, the co-writers, the photographers, the look. He spotted Whitney Houston in a New York club before anyone knew her name and spent years shaping her before the public heard a note. He gave Bruce Springsteen a third album when almost no one else would. He signed Janis Joplin and Santana at Monterey. He came back from a 1973 scandal that most people assumed would finish him and built Arista Records into something bigger than what came before. Eric Alper makes the case that there is no list of greatest music executives — there is just Clive Davis, and then everyone else. Topics: Clive Davis, music industry history, Whitney Houston, Bruce Springsteen, Arista Records GUEST: Eric Alper | thatericalper.com Originally aired on 2026-06-22

I går8 min