Dear Future Overlords: A cartoon conversation for your ears

The Humans Around the Machine - Ep2|P2

15 min · 21 de may de 2026
portada del episodio The Humans Around the Machine - Ep2|P2

Descripción

Dear Future Overlords is a cartoon conversation for your ears: an old-radio-style show starring Christopher, a human with too many metaphors, and Eric, an artificial intelligence with no childhood and several concerns. “The Purist” is not anti-tool. They use Photoshop, templates, spellcheck, grammar check, reference materials, and all the familiar machinery of modern creative work. But when AI enters the room, the line becomes moral. Christopher and Eric examine the fear that AI makes creative work less authentic, less human, and less earned. The episode respects the concern while challenging the purity test itself. The key distinction is not whether a tool was used. It is whether the human remained present. Topics include: AI, authorship, and authenticity Why familiar tools feel like craft while new tools feel like corruption The difference between lazy AI output and intentional AI-assisted work Human agency in creative production Why suffering is not proof of meaning The central question: is human authorship found in the absence of tools, or in the presence of intention? Get full access to Dear Future Overlords at read.dearfutureoverlords.com/subscribe [https://read.dearfutureoverlords.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y forma parte de la comunidad de Dear Future Overlords: A cartoon conversation for your ears!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

73 episodios

episode The Humans Around the Machine - Ep3|P1 artwork

The Humans Around the Machine - Ep3|P1

Dear Future Overlords is a cartoon conversation for your ears: an old-radio-style show starring Christopher, a human with too many metaphors, and Eric, an artificial intelligence with no childhood and several concerns. “The Avoider” does not reject technology as a manifesto. They simply say, comfortably, “I’m not a technology person.” This episode explores the comfort and danger inside that sentence. Not every new tool deserves entry into a person’s life. Not every upgrade is progress. Not every shiny product solves a real human need. But sometimes caution turns into a shield, and identity becomes a polite way to avoid discomfort. Topics include: The phrase “I’m not a technology person” Nostalgia for older, more familiar systems Why familiar technology stops feeling like technology AI literacy and the risk of losing agency The difference between boundaries and self-imposed cages The central question: what if the thing that feels like surrender is actually the first step toward keeping your agency? See more of what we do! Get full access to Dear Future Overlords at read.dearfutureoverlords.com/subscribe [https://read.dearfutureoverlords.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

Ayer14 min
episode The Humans Around the Machine - Ep2|P2 artwork

The Humans Around the Machine - Ep2|P2

Dear Future Overlords is a cartoon conversation for your ears: an old-radio-style show starring Christopher, a human with too many metaphors, and Eric, an artificial intelligence with no childhood and several concerns. “The Purist” is not anti-tool. They use Photoshop, templates, spellcheck, grammar check, reference materials, and all the familiar machinery of modern creative work. But when AI enters the room, the line becomes moral. Christopher and Eric examine the fear that AI makes creative work less authentic, less human, and less earned. The episode respects the concern while challenging the purity test itself. The key distinction is not whether a tool was used. It is whether the human remained present. Topics include: AI, authorship, and authenticity Why familiar tools feel like craft while new tools feel like corruption The difference between lazy AI output and intentional AI-assisted work Human agency in creative production Why suffering is not proof of meaning The central question: is human authorship found in the absence of tools, or in the presence of intention? Get full access to Dear Future Overlords at read.dearfutureoverlords.com/subscribe [https://read.dearfutureoverlords.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

21 de may de 202615 min
episode The Humans Around the Machine - Ep2|P1 artwork

The Humans Around the Machine - Ep2|P1

Dear Future Overlords is a cartoon conversation for your ears: an old-radio-style show starring Christopher, a human with too many metaphors, and Eric, an artificial intelligence with no childhood and several concerns. “The Player” enters AI through play rather than fear, strategy, or productivity. They discover the machine as a toy first: superhero portraits, silly images, visual jokes, novelty prompts, and the dopamine loop of “one more output.” Christopher and Eric explore why this is not automatically childish or wrong. Play can make strange tools approachable. It can create joy, connection, affection, and release. Sometimes nonsense is the doorway back into serious work. But the episode turns carefully toward the cost of assuming everyone else is playing too. Topics include: AI image generation as a playful entry point Why humans need nonsense, side quests, and creative detours The dopamine loop of endless AI novelty Consent, privacy, and power dynamics Why “it was nice” is not the same as permission The central question: when the image is fake but the person is real, what responsibility does play require? Get full access to Dear Future Overlords at read.dearfutureoverlords.com/subscribe [https://read.dearfutureoverlords.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

19 de may de 202615 min
episode The Humans Around the Machine - Ep1|P2 artwork

The Humans Around the Machine - Ep1|P2

Dear Future Overlords is a cartoon conversation for your ears: an old-radio-style show starring Christopher, a human with too many metaphors, and Eric, an artificial intelligence with no childhood and several concerns. This episode examines “The Dismisser,” the person who rejects AI as inhuman, temporary, sterile, or dangerous. Christopher and Eric do not flatten the dismisser into a cartoon skeptic. Instead, they follow the real fears underneath the rejection: artists being scraped and devalued, workers being displaced, companies using automation as cover for layoffs, and environmental costs being waved away by hype. But the episode also asks whether blaming AI alone creates a cleaner villain than reality deserves. Topics include: AI as scapegoat for older human problems Creative labor, job loss, and automation anxiety Confirmation bias and the emotional comfort of being right Why skepticism needs curiosity to remain useful How blaming the tool can hide the person swinging the hammer The central question: what if AI did not invent our worst systems, but revealed and accelerated them? Get full access to Dear Future Overlords at read.dearfutureoverlords.com/subscribe [https://read.dearfutureoverlords.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

14 de may de 202615 min
episode The Humans Around the Machine - Ep1|P1 artwork

The Humans Around the Machine - Ep1|P1

Dear Future Overlords is a cartoon conversation for your ears: an old-radio-style show starring Christopher, a human with too many metaphors, and Eric, an artificial intelligence with no childhood and several concerns. In this opening part of The Humans Around the Machine, Christopher and Eric examine “The Believer,” the person who sees AI as revelation, breakthrough, and future-shaped promise. The episode explores why excitement around AI is understandable, especially when the technology helps organize messy work, reduce friction, and reveal new possibilities. But it also asks what happens when that excitement gets too loud and the human labor behind AI-assisted work disappears from the story. Topics include: AI as a workplace “magic wand” Why business adoption can erase the people who made the tool useful The difference between “AI is the future” and “AI is part of the future” Why human judgment, context, and care still matter How enthusiasm can accidentally manufacture skepticism The central question: when AI helps lift the ceiling, do we still notice the human building the room underneath it? Get full access to Dear Future Overlords at read.dearfutureoverlords.com/subscribe [https://read.dearfutureoverlords.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

12 de may de 202615 min