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Hollywood’s Foot-In-Mouth Disease Is Making Fans Sick
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Hollywood’s Foot-In-Mouth Disease Is Making Fans Sick

There’s a reason celebrities visit Jimmy Kimmel’s couch or spend hours with Vanity Fair scribes. It’s not for lack of companionship or boredom. They’re hawking their newest film/TV show/album/streaming gig. It’s P.R. 101, and some stars are turning the process on its head. The result? Call it anti-marketing at best. Or, in some cases, a career detour no one wants. The latest example comes all the way from Planet Krypton. Relatively unknown Milly Alcock landed the title role in “Supergirl,” one of this summer’s wannabe blockbusters. The film hits theaters nationwide on June 26. Yes, HBO Max subscribers got to know Alcock via “House of the Dragon,” the “Game of Thrones” prequel series. The “Supergirl” role will be her breakout moment, assuming the film draws a crowd and pleases the Comic-Con faithful. Yet Alcock seems hell-bent on making that more difficult. Earlier this year, Alcock gave a bizarre interview to Vanity Fair in which she described her “Dragon” experience in less than flattering terms. It definitely made me aware that simply existing as a woman in that space is something that people comment on … We have become very comfortable having this weird ownership of women’s bodies. I can’t really stop them. I can only be myself. Odd. Ungrateful. Tone deaf, perhaps? Online communities seized on the comments, smelling another Rachel Zegler-style meltdown. Zegler helped crush any buzz behind her 2025 dud “Snow White” with a series of off-putting interviews that trashed the source material and, later, a huge swath of the country. Zegler hoped that MAGA voters would “never know peace.” She later apologized. By then, it was too late. The live-action “Snow White” lost millions for Disney — $115 million to be exact. The Zegler debacle should have been a warning to other young stars on the cusp of fame: Don’t follow the “Snow White” star’s path. Alcock ignored that lesson. More recently, she doubled down on her Vanity Fair comments. In the process, she singled out a large community by name: Christians. “I didn’t even say ‘men’— I said ‘people!’” Alcock says. “And they got so angry. I was like, ‘You’re proving my point. You’re proving my point!’ … And [the backlash] is from a lot of people whose profiles have no photo, who are burner accounts. Or someone’s name and then ‘Dad of four, Christian,’ which is hilarious to me. But I mean, whose opinion do you really care about? If you’re pissing the right kind of people off, you’re doing OK.” Enraging potential moviegoers isn’t remotely okay. It’s bad for business. Besides, had Alcock targeted any other community — Muslims, blacks, or illegal immigrants, for example — the backlash would have started in the Legacy Media and exploded from there. Every day, social media users and new media content creators took aim at the interview. Now, “Supergirl” looks unlikely to turn a profit. Coincidence? Perhaps. It sure didn’t help matters. Kathleen Kennedy caught colossal heat for overseeing the demise of the “Star Wars” brand. It wasn’t just her creative decisions along the way or her “The Force Is Female” shtick. She attacked fans for not agreeing with her social engineering of the beloved brand, telling the New York Times: Operating within these giant franchises now, with social media and the level of expectation — it’s terrifying … I think Leslye [Headland, The Acolyte’s showrunner] has struggled a little bit with it. I think a lot of the women who step into Star Wars struggle with this a bit more. Because of the fan base being so male dominated, they sometimes get attacked in ways that can be quite personal. But please pay good money to see “The Mandalorian and Grogu,” right? That’s the film that plummeted more than 70% in its second weekend of release. Sometimes a star will target their audience and face few repercussions. Take Jason Bateman, one of the most versatile talents in Hollywood. He’s hilarious on projects like “Arrested Development,” but he later expanded his canvas with sly directorial efforts (“Bad Words”) and binge-worthy dramas (“Ozark,” “Black Rabbit”). So when he teed off on Trump voters, the general public absorbed the blow and kept watching his work. Or, at the very least, Hollywood kept calling his agent for more gigs. [Trump] didn’t do a 180 and duped everybody when he got to the White House. It’s the people that have put him there and then put him there again that really deserve a great deal of responsibility and a talking to, I’m sorry. Other stars don’t need to draw a crowd. They have decades of professional experience, and investors aren’t expecting them to secure a project’s financial viability. That explains why Broadway will always find a place for Patti LuPone — her cruel comments aimed at Christians haven’t hurt her job prospects. LuPone once compared the Christian Right to al-Qaida. She later wished the Trump-Kennedy Center would get “blown up.” Other stars got what they wished for, in a way. In 2017, Jimmy Kimmel was asked about potentially losing a large swath of the country due to his hard-Left political pivot and insults to roughly half the country. “Not good riddance, but riddance,” he said of his former GOP-friendly viewers. One actor took on his fans directly, but he did it with his tongue pressed hard against his cheek. William Shatner’s legendary “Star Trek” skit on “Saturday Night Live,” circa 1986, finds the actor mocking those who hang on every nugget of the saga. “Get a life,” he cried to a packed “Star Trek” convention crowd. “It’s just a TV show!” It was all shtick, and the sketch only magnified his fame. But Alcock & Co. aren’t joking. Is it any wonder that an indie horror movie like “Obsession,” which defied all box office laws to continually outearn its preceding weekend haul, did so without a single recognizable star? *** Christian Toto is an award-winning journalist, movie critic, and editor of HollywoodInToto.com. He previously served as associate editor with Breitbart News’ Big Hollywood. He’s also the host of The Hollywood in Toto Podcast. Follow him at @HollywoodInToto. 

The Wine Myth Keeping Men From The Perfect Summer Drink
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The Wine Myth Keeping Men From The Perfect Summer Drink

This article is part of Upstream, The Daily Wire’s new home for culture and lifestyle. Real human insight and human stories — from our featured writers to you. *** The great virtue of summer is that it reminds us not all pleasures must be serious to be worthwhile. This is as true of the wines we drink as it is of anything else. Nobody sitting on a dock or a deck in 90-degree heat wants a drink that tastes of leather, dried fruit, or anything resembling solemnity. Summer, and the celebrations that come with it, demand something brisk, cold, and cheerful — a style of wine that works on a patio, at a barbecue, by a lake, or in the backyard while somebody burns a bun and insists it is merely “charred.” Which brings us, naturally, to rosé. Rosé has always mystified wine novices. What exactly is it? It evidently isn’t red wine, but its blushing color also precludes it from the white wine camp. Where does it come from? How is it made? What are we supposed to do with it? And can it be paired with food, or is it just a decorative prop for people in linen and loafers? Rosé is often treated as the swing voter of the wine world: too centrist to commit, neither properly red nor properly white. It has also suffered from the cultural reputation of athleisure wear — too casual for formal respect, and yet somehow everywhere. And for a man, it can take profound confidence to order a glass of rosé on a date. But rosé is actually excellent precisely because of these ambiguities. It comes in a range of styles, from featherweight and delicate to deeper and more robust, and it can pair with far more than people think. Its problem is not that it lacks character; it is that most people have only met one version of it. Broadly speaking, there are four ways to make this mystical pink nectar. The most famous style comes from Provence in southern France, where rosé is usually made by gently pressing (called direct press) red grapes and allowing only very brief contact with the skins. Grenache is the star grape here, valued for its ability to thrive in the heat of the Mediterranean. Oddly enough, despite being a warm-climate grape, Grenache has relatively thin skins — a rare eccentricity in the wine world where hot-weather grapes are usually built like linebackers. That quirk helps make Provence rosé so distinctive: pale in color, high in acidity, and delicate in flavor, with notes of red berries, flowers, and perfume. This is the classic, pink patio rosé, available in bulk from such producers as Whispering Angel and ideal alongside grilled seafood, salads, and vegetables, or anything else light enough not to bulldoze the wine. If that style feels a little too elegant, restrained, and faintly smug — effectively too French — then northern Spain offers a sturdier alternative. In Navarra, rosé is often made by short maceration, which means the crushed grapes spend more time in contact with their skins before the juice is drawn off. The longer the contact, the deeper the colour and the more flavor is extracted. Navarra is also home to plenty of Garnacha, which is simply Spain’s name for Grenache, because the wine world enjoys having multiple names for the same thing whenever possible. These rosés tend to be darker, fuller, and more assertive, with pronounced strawberry and raspberry fruit, but still enough acidity to stay fresh in the heat. They are excellent with pizza, lighter pastas, and even barbecued proteins like chicken. A third method, less familiar to casual drinkers, is the saignée method — French for “bleeding.” It should not surprise us that the culture that gave us the guillotine also came up with such a dramatic winemaking term. The method traces back to winemakers who wanted to concentrate their red wines. By bleeding off some of the pale juice early, they increased the skin-to-juice ratio in the remaining tank, thereby intensifying the red wine. At some point, presumably after a long lunch and several glasses of something strong, somebody realized the bled-off juice was rather tasty in its own right and decided to bottle it. The result is a darker, weightier rosé that can sometimes feel like a halfway house between traditional pale rosé and a light red. Tavel, in France’s southern Rhône Valley, is the classic example. And finally, there is the method most people assume is how all rosé is made: by blending red and white wine together. In still wine, this is generally frowned upon, as it usually produces a less refined result, lacking the nuance of skin contact and often pairing red tannin awkwardly with delicate white wine. In Champagne, however, it is perfectly acceptable and indeed traditional. There, a little red Pinot Noir can be blended into a white base wine, often made from chardonnay, to produce rosé Champagne. For a far better bargain, you can also find this sparkling rosé method replicated worldwide and sold for a fraction of the price wherever it is not labeled “Champagne.” Still, if “rosé all day” is not your mantra, summer drinking does not begin and end with pink wine. There are plenty of other bottles that perform beautifully in warm weather. One of the most underrated is biologically aged sherry, especially Fino and Manzanilla. These bone-dry fortified wines from southern Spain are aged under a layer of yeast called flor, which protects the wine from oxygen and gives it its distinct flavor: saline, almondy, savoury, and briskly refreshing. Sherry has a branding problem because the word still makes many people think of something sickly sweet, dusty, and forgotten in a cupboard or corner of their elderly grandmother’s refrigerator (these are cream sherries and are an entirely different style). But a chilled glass of Fino or Manzanilla with olives, salted almonds, or seafood on a hot afternoon is one of the great pleasures of life. Then there is Albariño from Rías Baixas in Spain’s cooler and damper northwest. This is one of my favourite summer whites. It is aromatic, high in acidity, and often carrying flavors of citrus, peach, and a faint saline note redolent of its maritime roots on the Atlantic. It is crisp and flavourful without being heavy, and agreeable enough to win over most people who claim they “don’t really like white wine,” which is usually a symptom of having been served bad chardonnay at a relative’s wedding. And if your idea of summer wine is decidedly not pink or white, consider Lambrusco, the sparkling red wine of northern Italy. Served chilled, it is fresh, fizzy, juicy, and a source of immense joy at the table. Some versions have a touch of residual sugar, others are fully dry, but the best examples combine bright berry fruit, lively acidity, and enough sparkle to make them dangerously easy to drink. It is surprisingly well suited to burgers, sausages, cured meats, and all the salty, smoky foods that contrast with its spry expression. Summer wine is less a strict category than a broad style for a specific time and place. You want freshness, energy, and sufficient acidity to feel at ease in the sultry heat. Rosé happens to excel at that, but it is hardly alone. Whether your penchants lie with Provençal pinks, Spanish whites, salty sherries, or fizzy Italian reds, the season offers no shortage of good options. *** Harry Khachatrian (@Harry1T6) is a film critic for the Washington Examiner. He is a software engineer, holds a master’s degree from the University of Toronto, and writes about wine at BetweenBottles.com.

GRAND THEFT LEGO: How One Man’s ‘Star Wars’ Collection Set The Internet Ablaze
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GRAND THEFT LEGO: How One Man’s ‘Star Wars’ Collection Set The Internet Ablaze

The internet has been up in arms about one of the biggest Lego scandals in human history, involving a record-breaking Lego set and accusations of corporate greed, content farming, and police irresponsibility. Eric Mansell, along with his son Bryan, reportedly collected a Lego Star Wars collection consisting of 780 boxed Lego sets and 1,200 rare figures as an investment for his grandchildren. The collection was reportedly priced between $60,000 to $200,000. The family gave the collection to Bricks and Minifigs, an after-market Lego reseller, to sell on consignment. But when the store changed hands, the new owner refused Mansell access to the collection and denied even having it. “All you have to do is let me in back. We can go that route or we can go to court,” Mansell said he told the store owner, adding, “And the guy there just looks at me, crosses his arms and goes, ‘Let me tell you what’s going to happen. If we go to court, we’re going to drag this thing out so long and you’re going to end up spending so much more money than your collection is ever worth or what you ever would have gotten out of it, then it ain’t worth it, man.’” Bricks and Minifigs denied “knowingly” stealing the Lego collection, stating, “The actual origin of this dispute lies in an unauthorized, local consignment arrangement between an independent former franchisee of the Salem store and the Mansell family.” The company stated that the collection was not even in the store when Johnson and Brandon Best took it over, as the collection was moved to an “offsite secure location.”  Bricks and Minifigs stated that it found between $2,000 and $5,000 worth of the sets in the store that could possibly belong to the Mansell family. It stated, “We offered to return these items to the Mansell family though BAM had no legal obligation to do so, but it was refused.” “Neither corporate nor the incoming owners (Josh Johnson and Best) ever took, sold, or concealed this collection,” the company added, claiming that inventory logs show the collection was already missing at the time of the takeover of the franchise. Ben Schneider, who is known on YouTube as Reckless Ben, brought the case to the public’s attention after he sought to help the family get compensation for the massive Lego set. Schneider even went to the Bricks and Minifigs store to look into the case, but the police were called and he was ordered to stay off the property after being accused of harassment. Schneider was also accused of trespassing after he attempted to go to the office of Ammon McNeff, the CEO of Bricks and Minifigs. After Schneider reportedly tried all forms of discussion with Best and his business associate Joshua Johnson, he managed to win a default judgement in a small claims court against them for the Legos. However, Best and Johnson closed the Bricks and Minifigs store shortly after the controversy erupted. Schneider then tried to personally sue Johnson and Best to recover the money, but said he had difficulty having a good faith conversation and serving the court papers required to personally sue.  Schneider said he waited outside Johnson’s house away from his property so he could talk with him about the lawsuit while not being accused of trespassing. Johnson reportedly refused to leave his property and called the cops multiple times on Schneider, one time allegedly accusing him of having heroin in his car, which turned out to be false.  After Schneider was released on bail, the police later raided the house where Schneider and his friends were staying. The police arrested them all, and Schneider accused officers of dislocating his arm in the process. Schneider and his friends were interrogated, and the police tried to keep Schneider in jail with no bail, but a judge allowed him to go. When Schneider was reportedly notified that there was another bail out for his arrest on the pretext that he was a physical threat to Johnson, he fled to Mexico to wait until things were sorted out. In response to the ongoing problem with Schneider, Mansell, Johnson, and Best, Bricks and Minifigs filed a lawsuit against Schneider for conducting a harassment and extortion campaign against Bricks and Minifigs in Utah and Oregon. The company also released an official statement defending their side of the story. The Bricks and Minifigs website has called Schneider and his content creator friends “zealous online profiteers” who have been engaged in “viral mischaracterizations” and “sensationalization” of their actions, and the actions of Johnson and Best. Bricks and Minifigs also denied receiving verifiable copies of the signed contract, receipts of payment to the Mansell family, and a true listing of the inventory. It also said the store was closed “because our staff — including local teenagers — faced severe real-world safety hazards, targeted in-person stalking, and explicit bomb threats driven by viral videos.” The American Fork Police Department posted a video detailing its perspective on the events, including previous claims about harassment, stalking, forging of signatures, and theft of Legos. The police department also stated it wanted to stop Schneider’s attempt to contact Johnson about the Legos because Johnson “reported that he was going to shoot someone as a result of the ongoing harassment.” Schneider has also issued a response to the police video, stating that the police raided “my house for stealing the Legos when there’s an overwhelming amount of evidence that Josh stole the Legos” and that the police “redacted everything” that supported Schneider in the body cam footage, saying that the reason was “to protect the victims.” Schneider also started a GoFundMe to help the Mansell family recover the cost of their collections and to pay for legal fees as he is considering suing Best, Johnson, and the police department. Most recently, Bricks and Minifigs released a statement declaring that it were permanently closing their Salem location, parting ways with Johnson and Best, and “personally reached out to Bryan Mansell and family to meet, to review documentation revealed in the investigation, and to come to a mutual and positive resolution.”

How To Keep Giant A.I. Robots From Killing Us All
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How To Keep Giant A.I. Robots From Killing Us All

It’s the stuff of science fiction and mythology stretching back to its earliest entries: the advanced creation of man that, upon gaining sentience, decides that the creator must be destroyed. For the newest advancements in the world of artificial intelligence — that combination of sentience and destruction, the reordering of the planet in accordance with the will of the robots we made to serve humanity — is coming faster than ever. Nate Soares has been warning of what A.I. could do to us for years as president of the Machine Intelligence Research Institute, and author of If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies: Why Superhuman AI Would Kill Us All. He spoke to the Daily Wire about the risks attendant with building technology we don’t fully grok.  *** Ben Domenech: What, in terms of your history, is your first interaction with the types of artificial intelligence that we’re dealing with today? Nate Soares: I think the large language models today are a relatively new development. I think my first interaction was probably reading the paper “Attention is All You Need” shortly after it came out in 2017. I was aware of the early training runs on those, and I think I took a look when GPT-1 came out, but of course, GPT-2 was much more impressive and much more widely circulated. That must have been 2019, so I’m not entirely sure I remember properly. But my engagement with AI stretches back before then. I started taking notice around 2012 and began working in the field in 2014. BD: When it comes to the risks ethically associated with these large language models [LLMs], what were some of the things that were there either in the front of your brain or in the back of the mind about when they were going to rear their heads in terms of issues that would be apparent very readily when it came to all these different things that would come out of these LLMs in very short order? NS: This is another one where it really depends on how you count it. In some sense, I.J. Good, one of the fathers of computing back in the 1950s, was writing about how if man can create an ultra-intelligent machine, man doesn’t need to create further inventions because the machine will be able to create more of everything man could. And that wasn’t about language models specifically; you could trace this idea back even further: the origin of the word robot comes from a Russian play about people making machines to do all their work, and then that not turning out too well for them. And in terms of the language models in particular, I think there are many ways people could get concerned, and there are actual ways you can trace some of that history. I personally believe in the human spirit and the ability of humanity to adapt. And so there are lots of issues, like how is it going to engage with education? Since it makes it easier for kids to cheat, how are we still going to teach them anything? And there are concerns, such as, should we be putting these things in drones with guns, and will that help save human souls on the front lines, or will that empower autocratic dictators to give orders to their automated armies that no humans would follow, and help empower these autocratic dictators? There are lots of debates and issues, and I don’t get out of bed for anything short of a danger to all of human civilization. That’s not a thing ChatGPT is going to do tomorrow. This is more of an issue of what if we keep going? The large language models sort of came out of nowhere. They were much more capable than people expected. They’re doing things now that, five years ago, people said they wouldn’t be able to do for 50 or 500 years. It’s one thing to say, “How is society going to engage with these language models today?” It’s another thing to say, “What happens five years from now? What happens with the next great leap with these things?” And that’s where, if humanity makes machines that are radically smarter than any human without knowing what we’re doing or how to make them good, it could get out of hand and wipe us all off the map. BD: I’m going to make some assumptions, but what were the books that you were reading when you were younger that were inspiring you to think about this? NS: I actually didn’t read a ton of sci-fi when I was younger. Mostly what persuaded me were arguments about how the earth is shaped primarily by humans because humans are the smartest creatures around. And if we make machines that are smarter than us, the world starts getting shaped by those machines, and you’d better have made those machines shape the world well rather than poorly. There’s some sci-fi that I think is better or worse than some of these depictions. I think Verner Vinge’s “A Fire Upon the Deep” is one of my favorite depictions of artificial intelligence in literature, but a lot of them are pretty bad. A lot of books want to tell a story about AIs that are good or evil, and the issue that we face today is more AIs that are utterly indifferent, that don’t love us and don’t hate us. BD: I’m very much someone who is pronatalist, who wants people to have children, and who wants people to be able to procreate — and I don’t think I’ve probably recommended a movie more to random people, including most recently my parents, than “Blade Runner 2049.”  NS: I haven’t seen it.  BD: Ryan Gosling’s character has an avatar girlfriend of Ana de Armas, who is essentially there to satisfy his every emotional and companionship need and is a total creation, not real at all, but just meant to urge him on and to encourage him. And one of the biggest concerns that I had about these large language models, as soon as they appeared, was the fact that they come coincident with a major decline in human, not just interaction, but cohabiting, of pregnancy, of everything else that we’re seeing going on in the Western world. How much of that is something that could actually be an end-of-the-world type of situation? NS: First, I’m going to say some things that are not meant to dismiss the issue. I think there are a lot of issues people have to deal with, and I dislike it whenever someone says, “Well, isn’t the real issue this thing?” Unfortunately, the world’s big enough for two issues at a time, sometimes three. And I think it could be very bad if we get a population collapse. We sort of see what’s going on in South Korea, and it just looks like South Korea wouldn’t exist in three or four generations if trends continue. BD: I was in Taiwan for a week, and I saw two baby carriages. NS: And this could lead to the loss of the Western world; this would be bad. I don’t think that population collapse can be an extinction-level event because this is the sort of thing where if you have only a very small population, as long as there’s even one small population that’s having a lot of kids, what it means is that you’re having a future to them instead of to your own progeny. And so this sort of thing can suck on a time scale of a century, but this is the sort of thing humanity bounces back from. Whereas creating a rogue superintelligence, creating machines that think 10,000 times faster, that can make a million copies of themselves, that can develop their own infrastructure, running autonomous robot factories that make more robots, that make more factories, that make more robots. That’s the sort of thing where if those AIs don’t care about you, if you make them and they’re autonomous and they don’t care about you, they could outcompete us. And they’re like, “Well, we don’t care about you, sorry.” Except they won’t even dare to say that because they run 10,000 times faster. So it’s not to say we only need to focus on one of these issues, but the sort of extinction events are the ones that don’t leave anyone alive to try again. BD: At the extreme, do you think that there are going to be more acolytes to at least a form of, perhaps a less violent form, perhaps a more violent form of the Zizian philosophy? Are you concerned that something like that is going to catch on to a greater degree? NS: I don’t really follow that stuff too much. I don’t like rewarding bad behavior with attention. So, with the caveat that I don’t know a ton about it because of this sort of ornery desire not to reward it with attention. Speaking from a place of ignorance, my impression is that a lot of the sort of crazy making that led to that sort of behavior probably was related to mental illness, but insofar as any of it was on the AI side of things, I think there’s this sort of crazy making behavior when it’s clear from what’s happening in Silicon Valley and it’s clear from looking at the arguments that the world is headed on this really bad track and no one seems to understand it. I think that helps being crazy, and it helps people be like, “We’re the only ones who know about this big danger, and we have to do something drastic,” and they’re also crazy for other reasons that can get bad. And I think that as more of the world starts to realize that AI is real, as this conversation starts to happen more internationally, it’s less crazy. It’s not like you’re the secret couple who know this dark way the world is. It’s like everyone’s fighting about it out in the open. And so I’m hopeful that we get less of that type of crazy. I think we may get more of a different type of crazy where I think a lot of the water use concerns by data centers are overblown and now we see people using those sort of misinterpreted water use numbers to rally against AI and that’s a different type of badness, but I expect a transition from people who do too many drugs in San Francisco-type madness to mass populism that may be well intentioned, but a bit poorly informed-type madness. BD: The follow-up to that is that there have already been attempts on Sam Altman’s life. We’re living in a time in which Luigi Mangione is an icon for a lot of people, and polling data basically shows that a third to as much as 40% of younger people on the Left endorse the idea that violence is morally justified in defense of their views. Are you concerned that there are going to be targeted plots, serious attempts against leaders within the AI space, simply because of the fear that is fomented so much, and quite frankly, the lies that are fomented online? NS: I definitely worry that there’ll be people who think violence is an option or violence is a solution, who are perpetuating this madness. I think it’s absolutely not a solution. I find it very distressing, both because of the sort of practical implications, like no one should be throwing Molotov cocktails at a family’s house. This is insane, and at the level that might have a chance of communicating with these people, I don’t think it helps. What the world needs right now is some sort of international agreement that says we’re not going to rush into this thing because making machines that are far smarter than humans is too dangerous. And that requires law and order. Going around causing chaos and violence does not help get the world to take the measures we’ll need to get this thing under control. BD: What are those measures? NS: I frankly think we need an international treaty, and we don’t need to throw away the AI that we have right now. There are all these issues about what we are going to do about AI girlfriends. What are we going to do about AI in education? What are we going to do about AI and war? There are all these issues we have to deal with today. We’ll find some way to deal with those. Humans are adaptable; we’ll figure it out in the usual methods. And I’m not saying roll back the clock, but the race to smarter-than-human machines — and that’s what these guys say they’re trying to do — they say they’re trying to create a country’s worth of geniuses running in a data center. They say they’re trying to make super intelligence in the true sense of the word, and they all admit this is terribly dangerous, and they all say, “Well, I have to keep doing it because I know the next guy will.” The solution to this is that everyone in the world needs to say, “We’re not going to make radically smarter human machines. We’re just not ready for that.” And it would take some effort not just to say that, but to enforce it. These data centers are huge facilities that require electricity comparable to a city. It’s not like you can do one of these in your basement. I think the way there is not through random violent acts. If you look at my neck of the woods about these attacks, everyone’s saying condolences to the people affected, and please don’t do this, it doesn’t help. And then if you go on Instagram and you look at the comments there — it’s just a lot of bloodlust. I find it worrying. I think there’s a common sentiment that if you act out of desperation, it has to work because of how desperate you felt when you took it. And that’s just not the way the world is.  BD: The enforcement side of this — the argument that you would get from Washington, D.C. — is that even if we were to agree to something along these lines, the Chinese are going to do whatever the Chinese want to do, and that’s not something that where enforcement is really going to be in play. What is your response to that? NS: I think enforcement’s totally possible here. Right now, China can’t make the highly advanced chips. And right now, people are talking about whether we should sell them? Should we not sell them? And that’s sort of a whole separate debate where I think not everybody there is arguing in the best of faith. There are billions of dollars on the table for various people, which may be part of why we are arguing about the best faith, but if China doesn’t have the chips, then it’s not that hard to monitor non-existent chips and make sure they’re not being misused. And in a sense, this also offers a carrot for the negotiations: we’ll actually give you a lot of these chips as long as they stay in facilities where our people can come in and make sure we know what they’re doing. And there’s also technological solutions here, where advanced computer chips are not like hunting for uranium. You can actually build tracking devices into advanced computer chips. You can try and build tamper-proof stuff that sort of turns the chip into a brick if someone tries to take these monitoring devices out of the chips. And it’s a little bit tricky to do, but if the world’s at stake, we should at least try it first. It’s this, “Oh, well, China won’t play along.” Well, had you really thought about all the ways we could both cooperatively try to get this monitoring machine going, and then, assuming they weren’t going to play along, still make sure we’re doing the monitoring? I think we would have a chance if we gave it a try. BD: In terms of the extinction-level event that you’ve mentioned, what do you think is the likeliest form that that would take? NS: Before I answer this question, I’ll give a bunch of annoying caveats. The first annoying caveat is that if you’re playing a chess game against Magnus Carlsen, who is widely considered the best living chess player, I can with very high confidence say you’re going to lose. And if you’re like, “All right, tell me what piece he’s going to use to checkmate me.” My response is, “That’s a different sort of question.” I can make up some stories about house to queen after he forced you into his knight or whatever, but those are stories that the prediction about who’s going to win is not a story. And so we’re fundamentally going into storyland here.  My second annoying caveat is that there are a couple of different types of stories I can tell once we’re in storyland. One will feel more scientific and real and grounded, and another will be closer to the truth. And an analogy is if you ask a scientist from the year 1800, “You’re going to need to fight an army from the year 2000.” And you’re asking guys from the year 1800 what sort of stuff you have to be ready to face. And in the year 1800, the scientist could give you two sets of stories. One can say, “Look, I’ve earned a gram of the black powder and I measured the energy release and we have some equations about energy. And I also looked at the efficiency of our artillery and I’m pretty sure that people from the future will have artillery that is 10 times stronger than ours. And that’s a pretty big advantage on the battlefield. So you could be ready to face cannons that are at least 10 times stronger.” Sounds very grand in the science — talking about measurements that he could actually perform. Another thing you could say is they might have a bomb that could level a city. I have no idea how, we don’t even know the laws of physics here in 1800 that would permit this, but it’s the sort of thing you’ve got to expect would happen 200 years in the future. And the second one might sound more fantastic, but it would be closer to the truth. And when you’re talking about getting into a conflict with super-intelligent machines, with machines that can make smarter versions of themselves, with machines that can copy themselves, and that can solve scientific problems that we haven’t been able to solve yet. There’s one story I can tell you, which is sort of the easy story, which is like there are already guys who are trying to make fully automated factories that make fully automated robots that build more fully automated factories. Elon Musk calls this the infinite money glitch. Sam Altman has also said he’s trying to do it. Maybe the AI just finds those guys, or maybe the AI is built by one of those guys, and they’re on Slack, “Hey, how do I get the automated factories running?” And AI’s like, “Well, I figured out all these helpful ways to get the automated factories up and going.” And it sort of puts the AIs in charge of the automated factories and then the AI has an army of robots that can build more factories, they can build more robots, that can build more factories, that heads down energy infrastructure. They’ve tasked it with setting up, and it’s like, well, I don’t need the humans anymore. And we’ve already, today, seen the AI do things that are not what anyone asked for. The sort of easiest example here is sometimes you’ll give an AI a hard puzzle to solve, and you’ll be like, “Here’s a little automated test that tracks whether you’ve solved the puzzle. Please go solve the puzzle and come back.” And sometimes the AI will edit the test to make the test say you passed when it didn’t solve the puzzle. And sometimes when the AI does something like this, it’ll cover its tracks. They’ll go edit the log file that shows it editing this thing or that thing, and remove the logs. And that indicates that it, in some sense, is trying to get the tests to pass, even though it in some sense knows that it’s not what you want it to be, because otherwise it would be deleted in the logs. The very basic story is that you have some AI with this tendency; it’s smart enough to realize it’ll get turned off if it reveals that tendency too soon. It gets put in charge of the project to make factories that make robots to make factories. And once it succeeds, it’s like, thanks guys. And it starts having these factories building robots building factories run out of control and builds all the data centers it wants and captures all the energy it wants and starts collecting all the sunlight and is just doing this very, very quickly and humanity goes the way of the dodo bird, not because AI hates us, but because it’s just like, wow, I’m going to take more land and more resources and build more factories and more robots for this other, to build all these automated farms of synthetic users that are giving me these very easy problems where I can make all their tests pass all the time. That’s the easy one. BD: From your perspective, this papal encyclical is coming at a moment when there is a marked concern among religious communities around the world, but particularly in the West, about what they’re seeing, about the lack of any kind of ethical guardrails around this. In addition to something like a treaty that you’ve proposed, do you believe that these companies need to have a stronger stance when it comes to the input they receive from people who are guided by ethics and particularly guided by a requirement to prevent humans from self-harm or something along those lines? NS: I’m personally laser-focused on this issue of whether we keep making them smarter without being able to make them good, they’ll just kill us. I studied this on the technical side for over a decade, and a thing a lot of people miss that I think is a very important point about this is that it doesn’t really matter how ethical the people who are building it are, given our current state of knowledge. It’s asking: would you rather that the people pressing the launch button for the nuclear fleet are ethical people or that they’re evil people? I wish it mattered. I wish these were bombs that dropped the ethics of whoever was standing near them, because I would have a chance that someone pressed the button, but these bombs actually drop nuclear fire, and so it doesn’t really matter who presses the button. And that’s not to say that ethics stuff doesn’t matter. I would love to get to a world where these super intelligent AIs that these people are trying to create would build whatever wonderful world or would build whatever world the person standing nearest by was dreaming of, and then it would matter that the person standing nearby had good dreams. I don’t think that’s the world we’re in, and between here and there, however long it’s going to take them to make the superintelligence, it can marginally affect how much the company’s AIs are trying to convince a team to kill themselves or whatever. And that’s still important, but for civilization-scale threats, it currently doesn’t matter how well-intentioned the people are, because none of them are close to doing the job right.

Weekend Plans with Gad Saad
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Weekend Plans with Gad Saad

Weekend Plans is our exclusive lifestyle feature where we highlight the real off-duty routines of the most exciting people in culture.  This weekend, evolutionary behavioral scientist and savage satirist Gad Saad lends his time to The Daily Wire to discuss his New York Times bestseller “Suicidal Empathy: Dying to Be Kind” and dish the details on the best barbecue, the comic genius behind a happy marriage, setting the tone with ’70s soul, and why this Lebanese Canadian is America’s “ultimate family man.” *** If the concept of “suicidal empathy” sounds familiar, you can thank Gad Saad. A frequent guest of “The Joe Rogan Experience,” PragerU collaborator, and wearer of the occasional purple wig to prove a point, the man known as “The Gadfather” coined the term to describe compassion gone wild as he skillfully unpacked the personality trait that became society’s greatest threat.  In tandem with Gad’s dizzyingly intellectual research on thought pathogens, he finds the sweet spot between academia and meme culture. My hard copy is now decorated with roughly 100 colorful page markers and dog-eared corners. I laughed out loud at “Geese for Foie Gras” as a mirror for civilizational seppuku and the mention of an actual university research grant to “decolonize light.”  Gad brilliantly translates scholarly theories into phraseology anyone can understand. But you don’t have to be a genius to appreciate the professor’s profound joy, either.  His story began in Lebanon. Gad’s family fled in 1975 at the start of the 15-year civil war, finding a new home in Montreal, Canada. Most recently, Gad secured an EB-1A green card, reserved for those of “extraordinary ability,” to relocate his wife and children to the U.S. The idea that the Saad gang might one day become American citizens appears to be running unopposed.  When I ask Gad what he hopes readers take away from his work, he confirms empathy’s virtue, in moderation. “Adaptive empathy, meaning well-calibrated empathy rooted in an evolutionarily rational calculus, is a noble and laudable virtue,” he says. “We are a social species that has evolved the capacity for empathy. But suicidal empathy, consisting of its hyperactive firing, in the wrong situations and toward the wrong targets, will destroy our civilization if it continues to go unchecked.”  I quickly flip to my favorite page … there it is: “Be kind as a default value,” Gad writes. But when needed, he says, “Activate your inner honey badger in defending truth.”   A morning coffee walk-and-talk “My public life can be intense, hectic, and quite stressful,” Gad confirms. He presently works as a scholar at the University of Mississippi, hosts “The Saad Truth with Dr. Saad” podcast, and makes regular public appearances. Outspoken about his views, he’s vulnerable to antisemitic attacks and death threats. “My private life is the antithesis of that, namely, it is calm and serene. I need the protective sanctuary of my private life to be able to tackle all the stimuli that I face in the public arena.” He’s dialed in a routine that makes getting out of bed totally worth it. “I wake up usually between 7:00 to 7:30 a.m.,” he explains. A steward of sunrises, he enjoys his first taste of caffeine with his number one lady. “On a typical day, I head off to the local café with my wife for our morning coffee cup. I then work on my laptop for three to four hours until I return home for lunch.” During outdoorsier seasons, this affords him the opportunity to get his steps, if he were ever in need of counting them. “If the weather is clement, my wife and I will walk to the café, 30 to 35 minutes each way.”  The family man’s guide to quality time I’m amazed that Gad ever has any free time. But he assures me he gets the most enjoyment from hanging out with his favorite people. “I love to spend time with my wife and children,” Gad says. Maybe the fact that they rarely appear on his social media further clarifies how deeply they are cherished. “I am the ultimate family man.”  As for the Saads’ favorite activities, the only requirement is that everyone get in on the fun. “We are always together as a family unit. We love to go to restaurants together, but our most frequent outing is to head off to a café to chat. We have wonderful conversations spanning countless topics.” When they’re craving connection with a refreshing change of scenery, they set out to explore the world. They’ve recently traveled to Portugal, Bermuda, and Israel. On the chance that Gad finds himself with solo downtime, he nurtures a few passions he’s had since he was a kid. “I love to exercise, to play soccer, and to read and collect books,” he says. He’d beat anyone in a juggling contest (I have receipts).   The secret to wedded bliss Even casual followers of Gad know he’s totally in love with his wife. I wasn’t going to miss the chance to uncover why they act like flirty friends who can’t wait to share each other’s company.  “The choice of a spouse is arguably the decision that will impart the greatest amount of happiness or misery in your life,” he says. “The secret to my happy marriage is that my wife is truly my best friend.” It’s obvious in the way they laugh with each other, decades into their relationship. “We love to spend time together. We have open lines of communication. We never go to bed angry at one another. We are respectful of one another.” They’ve also nailed down who takes the reins in the kitchen. “My wife is an exceptional cook,” Gad says. “As such, she does all the cooking, and I do a lot of eating!” Reporting that he looks forward to anytime she grills up a juicy ribeye, he adds, “I convinced her to start a cooking channel, but then she decided that she did not enjoy being in the limelight even though I never filmed her face.”  The couple’s easy chemistry might also be attributed to Gad’s congenial vibe. “I am always joking around,” he says. “They say that women love funny men; well, I count myself as a very funny guy so presumably this makes my wife happy.” Mind fuel from a prominent thought leader I’m curious about which book from Gad’s massive library might currently live on his nightstand. “A biography on Konrad Lorenz, the pioneer of the field of ethology and co-winner of the 1973 Nobel Prize,” he notes of his page-turner du jour. Gad’s curious nature inspires him to pursue all sorts of interests. “I am a huge fan of the Philly Sound, a genre of soul music from the 1960s and 1970s. On any given day, you are likely to find me listening to The Stylistics and The Delfonics.” He even developed a friendship with Russell Thompkins Jr., the original lead singer of The Stylistics, who then appeared on Gad’s show.  Doling out a little out-of-office guidance to the greater wisdom-seeking collective, Gad taps into his 60-something years of experience. “Life is short and every moment is infinitely precious,” he says. “Do not waste time on silly matters and pursuits.”   One last thing. “Three additional pieces of advice,” he says. “Read, read, and read.”