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30 votes
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George Carlin estate sues creators of AI-generated comedy special in key lawsuit over stars’ likenesses
37 votes -
What do you guys think of these AI-generated stand up comedy specials?
So I came across this new dudesy video titled "George Carlin: I'm Glad I'm Dead" and it put me down a weird rabbit hole. I'm not a Carlin super fan but I know some of his famous bits and respect...
So I came across this new dudesy video titled "George Carlin: I'm Glad I'm Dead" and it put me down a weird rabbit hole. I'm not a Carlin super fan but I know some of his famous bits and respect his work and maybe that's the perfect setup for watching this because... I'm honestly blown away. I planned on listening to 3 minutes of it to make fun of stupid AI but ended up letting it run for the entire hour and actually laughed quite a bit. It all makes sense. It does sound like him. I don't know how much editing went into it, how much prompting and discarded material. I especially don't know if it just dug up old jokes somewhere else and copied them. But still.
It feels like we just had awkward AI-wordsalad experiments and things like the infinite Seinfeld stream which was fun in a so-bad-it's-good kinda way but... I mean, it obviously was bad. The funny part was that it was unpredictably bad.
But only a year later we're having some uncanny valley shit. I looked it up and apparently this started with a comedy podcast with an AI co-host which produced a clip for a fictional Tom Brady standup routine which turned out popular enough to get them sued, apparently.
There's this part in the fake Carlin special where he talks about the future of entertainment being 24-hour streams where an AI comedian comments on daily news events in real time or something and I can't say I wouldn't watch that. Just to see what it's like. But I also get people calling it disgusting. It kinda is. I get [his daughter says "machine will ever replace his genius"](machine will ever replace his genius), she's right of course. But that video got close IMO.
You can still point at little flaws here and there with AI generated content but with this trend, it will be 3 or 5 years before we get perfectly polished content machines that don't trip over any of the easy and obvious stuff. What place would such content have in the entertainment industry?
What do you guys think?
27 votes -
History of country code top-level domains, with a map of the most popular ones in use | Map Men
14 votes -
A literary history of fake texts in Apple’s marketing materials
27 votes -
The coming pro-smoking discourse: Predicting a future for takes
8 votes -
How Freddie Wong built RocketJump to nine million subscribers…and then left Youtube
6 votes -
Last year I secretly ghost-wrote and published my best friend's autobiography as a joke. This year I recorded the audiobook version using a deepfake of his voice, and released it for charity.
9 votes -
Zach Talks Tech - Apple Watch Series 6 review
6 votes -
Michael Reeves builds a surgery robot
19 votes -
Cards Against Humanity has purchased ClickHole, the satire site created by The Onion
15 votes -
Desktop Goose
20 votes -
A deeper look into the life of an impressionist (Deepfakes)
10 votes -
If PHP were British
25 votes -
Somnox sleep robot – like being in bed with a baby Darth Vader
5 votes -
Honest diversity in tech report
7 votes