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You are a better writer than AI. (Yes, you.)

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    - I've spent the two years
    since chat GPT launched,
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    steeping in a morass
    of academic panic.
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    Voices from
    administration and colleagues,
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    and anyone else
    with enough brain cells
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    to maintain a sense
    of existential dread, crying out,
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    "We need to figure out
    what to do about AI."
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    Our Ed Tech committee
    is developing a policy.
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    The academic Senate wants
    to develop a policy.
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    The board thinks
    we should have a policy.
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    My dean wants
    us all to have policies.
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    The California Teachers Association says
    it's an issue of academic integrity.
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    The State Senate says
    it's an issue of ethics.
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    "We need to pay for the AI detection tools."
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    "The AI detection tools don't work."
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    "We need to accept that
    our students will use AI."
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    "How do I prove my student used AI?"
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    It is incomprehensible to me,
    this conversation.
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    [keyboard clacks]
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    I hear their words,
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    see their language floating
    across my monitor,
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    and know the words,
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    but I cannot get to the meaning
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    because I simply do not understand
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    why they are talking about it
    in this way.
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    - [Kermit the Frog]:
    ♪ New York, I love you,
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    but you're bringing me down ♪
    - with all these empty words.
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    This is not the conversation
    I think we need to have.
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    [song continues]
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    This is the conversation I need to have.
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    [overlapping
    music and poem]
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    [Gertrude Stein]: " 'If I Told Him,
    a Completed Portrait of Picasso'.
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    If I told him would he like it.
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    Would he like it if I told him.
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    Would he like it
    would Napoleon would Napoleon would
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    would he like it.
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    If Napoleon if I told him
    if I told him if Napoleon.
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    Would he like it if I told him
    if I told him if Napoleon.
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    Would he like it if Napoleon
    if Napoleon if I told him.
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    If I told him if Napoleon
    if Napoleon if I told him.
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    If I told him would he like it
    would he like it if I told him.
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    Now. Not now. And now.
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    Now. Exactly as is kings.
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    Feeling full for it.
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    Exactitude as kings.
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    So to beseech you as full as for it.
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    Exactly or as kings.
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    Shutters shut and open so do queens.
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    Shutters shut and shutters
    and so shutters shut and shutters and so
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    [poem and music fade out]
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    - I don't understand Gertrude Stein.
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    Stein is not nearly well enough
    remembered for how influential she was.
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    An American expatriate poet
    living in Paris,
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    her salons were among the
    anchors of the early modernists.
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    You may not have heard of her,
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    but you've heard of
    the people who visited her.
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    Ernest Hemingway, Sinclair Lewis,
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    F. Scott Fitzgerald, James Joyce,
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    Thornton Wilder, Ezra Pound.
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    People you've read
    or been assigned to read.
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    We remember Hemingway
    because he wrote like this.
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    We remember Fitzgerald
    because he wrote like this.
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    The right kind of day
    and the right kind of moment,
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    and Pound's "In a Station of the Metro"
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    still recites itself completely
    in my head, a perfect image.
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    "The apparition of
    these faces in the crowd:
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    Petals on a wet, black bough."
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    We don't remember Stein
    because she wrote like this.
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    This is "If I Told Him,
    a Completed Portrait of Picasso",
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    published in 1924,
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    and continuing the project
    of her 1914 book Tender Buttons,
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    a phrase she never defined.
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    To me that phrase "tender buttons"
    feels right:
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    small, soft contradictions,
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    words that seem like
    they should go together
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    but do not actually make meaning.
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    That is how Stein's poetry feels.
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    There is something compelling
    about the rhythm of her nonsense,
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    the feeling of her
    almost meaning something,
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    and then how it falls apart.
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    "As presently.
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    As exactitude.
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    As trains."
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    But it is incomprehensible to me.
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    I don't know why Stein
    would write like this.
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    To quote the poet:
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    - ♪ "Oh, what on earth would make a man
    decide to do that kind of thing?" ♪
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    - But I think the reason
    that I don't understand Gertrude Stein
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    is that she didn't really want
    to be understood.
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    She used language
    for something different.
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    It doesn't communicate.
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    It reads like stunt linguistics,
    which it almost is.
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    "Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo",
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    "had had 'had', had had 'had--'",
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    These are sentences that,
    if you pour over them closely enough,
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    can be decoded.
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    Stein's Tender Buttons cannot.
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    There is something about it
    that parses as AI.
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    It feels like the work of Keaton Patti,
    the person most prominently behind
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    the "I forced a bot to watch whatever"
    tweets that used to go viral.
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    Human-written screenplays
    designed to feel like
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    AI writing attempting to imitate
    other human-written screenplays.
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    It feels like an autocomplete challenge,
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    like in the early days
    of predictive text and messaging
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    where you just tap the suggested word
    and see what comes out.
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    It's not how AI really writes,
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    but it's how people feel like AI writes.
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    But Gertrude Stein was a person.
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    [Stein reading, underneath]
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    She wrote "If I told Him"
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    not because the language
    would communicate,
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    but for some other reason.
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    - [Stein]: the exact resemblance
    as exact as a resemblance
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    - When I read "If I Told Him",
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    when I listen to Stein
    read "If I Told Him",
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    the language slips through my mind.
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    It doesn't mean anything.
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    But she did.
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    Even if I cannot
    take hold of that meaning,
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    I can feel her reaching out to me
    from behind the text,
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    trying to connect.
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    - [Stein]: As a resemblance to him.
    Who comes first. Napoleon the first.
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    Who comes too coming coming too,
    who goes there, as they go they share,
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    who shares all, all is as all as yet--
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    ["yet" reverberates and fades out]
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    [relaxed synth beats]
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    - [ChatGPT femme voice]:
    That's an interesting question!
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    Gertrude Stein,
    a literary Pioneer and modernist
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    who valued innovation
    in language and expression,
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    might have had
    mixed feelings about me.
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    She might have appreciated my ability
    to generate new forms of text
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    and engage with her
    literary experimentation on some level.
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    However, Stein was also
    highly individualistic
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    and invested in the human experience,
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    especially the nuances of
    consciousness and perception.
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    So, while she might
    have been fascinated by
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    what AI like me can do,
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    she might also have been
    critical of my limitations
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    in capturing the full depth
    of human subjectivity,
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    which was a central concern
    in her work.
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    [relaxing synth beats stop]
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    - A problem with AI is
    that it is recombinant,
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    that it takes the works of humans
    and recombines them into new forms.
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    But that problem is not new.
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    For many years,
    the bulletin board
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    outside the faculty bathroom
    in the English building
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    has featured this poster
    the "Plagiarism Spectrum",
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    next to this ancient
    and unflattering picture of me.
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    Number 7 on the Plagiarism Spectrum
    is the mashup,
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    a paper which mixes copied materials
    from multiple sources.
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    The poster is dated from June 2012,
    more than a decade before
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    we were concerned about
    ChatGPT doing it.
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    That AI is recombinant is not
    in and of itself a problem.
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    All writing is recombinant.
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    My course outcomes for English 1
    ask student writers
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    to integrate sources seamlessly
    into their own writing,
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    to mash up.
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    That we have rules and procedures
    and punctuation marks and conventions
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    that govern what is appropriate
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    does not change the essential truth
    that this is recombinance.
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    And there is beauty in recombinance.
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    This video started with
    a great classic of YouTube,
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    the duet between
    LCD sound system and Miles Davis.
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    The LCD sound system video
    is itself a mashup, conceptually.
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    Kermit the Frog is not
    a member of the band.
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    Davis is improvising over a film
    to create the score,
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    another mixing of media
    to make something new.
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    The Kleptones
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    The Grey Album
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    The guy drinking Ocean Spray to
    "Dreams" [by Fleetwood Mac]
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    Mac Glocky
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    "If I Told Him" is recombinance:
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    an attempt to rework the ideas of cubism,
    a movement in visual art, into poetry.
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    Picasso's work is recombinance.
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    He spent 1957 copying
    Velázquez's Las Meninas over and over.
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    58 times he copied it.
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    All different.
    All Picasso. All Las Meninas.
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    Recombinance is a genetic term,
    but I am using it mimetically.
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    "Britannica: recombination, in genetics,
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    primary mechanism through which variation
    is introduced into populations."
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    The combination of ideas
    from different places
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    to make new distinct ideas.
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    When done by humans,
    we call this "thinking".
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    [relaxed synth beats]
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    - [ChatGPT femme voice]:
    You're right to question
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    how I can "understand"
    without experience.
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    The way I process information is
    different from human understanding.
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    When I say "understand,"
    I mean that I can recognize patterns,
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    analyze language, and respond
    in ways that are coherent
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    and contextually appropriate
    based on my training.
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    I don't understand in the
    deep, conscious sense of the word,
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    like when humans
    reflect on their experiences
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    or have insight into their feelings.
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    Instead, my "understanding"
    comes from identifying
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    relationships between words, concepts,
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    and context based on the vast data
    I've been trained on.
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    In short: I can simulate
    understanding through patterns,
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    but it's not the same
    as truly experiencing
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    or being conscious of meaning.
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    Does that clarify things a bit more?
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    [relaxing synth beats stop]
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    [calm, mystical, twangy
    electric guitar]
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    - Two weeks ago a student told me
    that AI is unfair
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    because you can put a B Paper in
    and get A+ writing out.
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    This is why I do not understand
    the conversation my colleagues are having,
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    why I cannot think of this
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    as a matter of ethics,
    or academic integrity,
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    why I don't think we should need
    to have a policy or policies.
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    My student said you can put a B Paper in
    and get A+ writing out,
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    and my mind began to fill
    with Tender Buttons.
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    "Feeling full for it.
    Exactitude as kings.
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    So to beseech you as full as for it."
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    AI is bad at writing.
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    No. That is true,
    but it's not enough truth.
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    AI is not capable of writing.
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    The thing that writing is
    is a thing that AI cannot do.
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    Listen.
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    - [audiobook narration]:
    "What Writing Is"
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    Look.
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    Here's a table covered
    with a red cloth.
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    On it is a cage the size of
    a small fish aquarium.
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    In the cage is a white rabbit
    with a pink nose and pink-rimmed eyes.
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    In its front paws is a carrot-stub
    upon which it is contentedly munching.
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    On its back,
    clearly marked in blue ink,
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    is the numeral 8.
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    Do we see the same thing?
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    We'd have to get together
    and compare notes to make absolutely sure,
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    but I think we do.
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    The most interesting thing here isn't
    the carrot-munching rabbit in the cage,
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    Telepathy, of course.
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    but the number on its back.
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    Not a six, not a four,
    not nineteen-point-five.
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    It's an eight.
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    This is what we're looking at,
    and we all see it.
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    I didn't tell you.
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    You didn't ask me.
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    I never opened my mouth
    and you never opened yours.
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    We're not in the same year together,
    let alone the same room.
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    Except we are together.
    We're close.
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    We're having
    a meeting of the minds.
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    I sent you a table
    with a red cloth on it,
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    a cage, a rabbit, and
    the number eight in blue ink.
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    You got them all,
    especially that blue eight.
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    We've engaged in
    an act of telepathy.
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    No mythy-mountain s***;
    real telepathy.
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    I'm not going to belabor the point,
    but before we go any further
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    you have to understand that
    I'm not trying to be cute;
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    there is a point to be made.
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    - AI is good at language.
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    My students think that
    what it produces is A+ writing,
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    not because it is good,
    but because it sounds good.
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    Obviously, AI can generate sentences
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    that are typically clear, coherent,
    and contextually relevant,
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    often capturing nuances and adapting
    to various tones or levels of formality.
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    And it's true that
    the sentences it generates
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    tend to be grammatically accurate,
    concise, and logically structured,
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    which contributes to readability and flow.
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    Sure. This is how I know
    when a student is using AI.
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    Their sentences are fluid and academic,
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    but they don't say anything.
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    Like ChatGPT, academic writing uses
    formal cautious language
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    to avoid ambiguities
    and misinterpretations,
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    but that is a characteristic of
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    the common voice
    used in academic writing.
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    It is not what academic writing is.
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    Writing is more than language.
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    "If I Told Him" is communication,
    and it is language,
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    but the communication
    does not live in the language.
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    Watch.
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    "Can curls rob can curls quote, quotable."
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    - [deep voice, lightly confused]:
    "What?"
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    - "As presently.
    As exactitude. As trains."
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    - [deeply confused]:
    "What?"
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    - "Has trains."
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    - [exasperated]:
    "What?"
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    - When I started sending my friends
    lines from "If I Told Him",
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    their responses varied.
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    Confusion.
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    Playfulness.
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    Concern.
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    Sad face.
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    Beautifully, they all responded
    exactly like themselves.
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    If you asked me which of my friends
    would respond with monkey reacts,
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    I would have said Kiki.
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    Who would think of Cormac McCarthy?
    James.
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    Dot would play along.
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    Max would attempt
    to understand academically.
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    OOC would go back to playing Yu-Gi-Oh
    as quickly as possible.
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    You don't know these people,
    but I do.
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    We all carry around little LLMs
    of each other in our heads,
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    trained on the corpus
    of all of our past interactions.
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    For each of my friends,
    sending abject nonsense with no context
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    is slightly but not significantly
    out of line with their Josh model.
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    So none of them knew
    quite what to do,
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    and they all responded like themselves.
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    But in their own way,
    they all started by acknowledging
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    that the words I sent them
    did not seem to have any meaning.
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    They were not decodable.
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    They didn't understand my language,
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    but they could feel me
    behind the words reaching out,
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    and so they reached back.
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    I gave them nonsense
    and they peopled back.
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    In the two weeks that I've been sitting
    with my student statement
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    and sending Tender Buttons
    to my friends,
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    I have been at least as annoying
    to ChatGPT.
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    More than a dozen conversations
    that start out of nowhere with me saying,
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    "Shutters shut and open so do queens"
    or "Can curls rob can curls quote, quotable",
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    and each time ChatGPT gamely assumes
    that I am not out of my gourd.
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    In this way,
    ChatGPT fails the Turing test.
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    Not in the quality of its response,
    but in its nature.
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    It proceeded from the assumption
    that my language could be decoded.
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    It attempted to unpack sentences
    that had no meaning
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    and responded to the meaning
    that it manufactured.
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    What it gave me was flaccid, facile flaps
    of phrases that held nothing.
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    They're not wrong in the sense
    that ChatGPT's responses
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    followed from the meaning
    it extracted from my nonsense,
  • Not Synced
    but they were wrong in their assumption
    that there was meaning to be extracted.
  • Not Synced
    ChatGPT could answer,
    but it could not person.
  • Not Synced
    If writing is a meeting of the minds,
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    then AI cannot write,
  • Not Synced
    because there is no mind to meet with.
  • Not Synced
    [relaxed synth beats]
  • Not Synced
    - [ChatGPT femme voice]: I don't
    experience things in the way humans do.
  • Not Synced
    I don't have consciousness,
    emotions, or sensory perception,
  • Not Synced
    so I can't "feel" or "experience"
    the world around me.
  • Not Synced
    My responses are based on patterns
    in the data I've been trained on,
  • Not Synced
    not personal experiences
    or subjective understanding.
  • Not Synced
    For example, I can generate descriptions
    of emotions, sensations, or experiences,
  • Not Synced
    but I don't actually "feel" them myself.
  • Not Synced
    Everything I process is based on logic,
    algorithms, and information,
  • Not Synced
    rather than lived experiences.
  • Not Synced
    Do you think it would change anything
    if I could experience things?
  • Not Synced
    [synth music ends]
  • Not Synced
    - ["One Slay More" audio plays;
    captions on its video]
  • Not Synced
    - I've watched this video
    at least 100 times.
  • Not Synced
    - ["One Slay More" continues]
  • Not Synced
    ["One Slay More" fades underneath]
  • Not Synced
    - It isn't exactly "If I Told Him",
    but I think it's similar.
  • Not Synced
    "If I Told Him" was,
    at least in part,
  • Not Synced
    an attempt to recreate the artistic goals
    of Picasso's Cubism in poetic form.
  • Not Synced
    To recombine the visual elements of this
    into a different medium.
  • Not Synced
    Like "If I Told Him",
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    "One Slay More" therefore both is
    and is not a derivative work.
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    Obviously, it is
    a recombination of Les Mis,
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    itself an adaptation of Hugo's novel,
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    but its more essential source text
    is, of course,
  • Not Synced
    "sticking out your gyatt for the Rizzler."
  • Not Synced
    Equally I think the lyrics invoke
    "CURTAINS FOR ZOOSHA?",
  • Not Synced
    and specifically this retweet of
    "CURTAINS FOR ZOOSHA?".
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    All texts created to foreground
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    the baffling, sometimes obfuscatory nature
    of middle school referential slang.
  • Not Synced
    The term "brain rot" imposes
    a layer of judgment
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    on the way young people use language,
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    which I think is visible in the way
    "One Slay More" treats its lyrics.
  • Not Synced
    The words of "One Slay More"
    do not have meaning.
  • Not Synced
    Or, the words do,
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    but they are arranged in ways
    that do not mean.
  • Not Synced
    "Am I cringe or am I based?"
  • Not Synced
    could plausibly be asked amid
    a Gen-Z existential crisis,
  • Not Synced
    and "Will we ever eat again?"
  • Not Synced
    could have been lifted
    from Les Mis unaltered.
  • Not Synced
    But "Mog Baby Gronk the Ocky Way" means
    ...nothing.
  • Not Synced
    Mogging is of course a thing,
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    and Baby Gronk is
    someone whom you could plausibly mog,
  • Not Synced
    but Baby Gronk hasn't been
    relevant for ages.
  • Not Synced
    He appears in "One Slay More"
  • Not Synced
    because of this retweet of
    "CURTAINS FOR ZOOSHA?"
  • Not Synced
    as a signifier
    of the inscrutability of youth.
  • Not Synced
    As an adverbial phrase, "the Ocky Way"
    seems like it could complete the sentence,
  • Not Synced
    like it might be a way one could mog.
  • Not Synced
    But "the Ocky Way" refers to
  • Not Synced
    the esoteric artistry
    of a specific sandwich craftsman.
  • Not Synced
    Its meaning is, I think,
    incompatible with mogging,
  • Not Synced
    at least from the perspective of
  • Not Synced
    someone approximately as distant
    from the native speakers of this dialect
  • Not Synced
    as the makers of "One Slay More".
  • Not Synced
    "Mog Baby Gronk the Ocky Way" is
    simply a collage of floating signifiers.
  • Not Synced
    It doesn't have
    the intentionality of Cubism,
  • Not Synced
    but it feels intimately akin to
    "Can curls rob can curls quote, quotable."
  • Not Synced
    "Moo deng is here / Fortnite with you".
  • Not Synced
    What I love about "One Slay More"
    is the faces:
  • Not Synced
    the way she highlights her jawline
    every time she says "mew";
  • Not Synced
    his intensity when he says
    "they will do the coffin dance"
  • Not Synced
    and his satisfied huff after;
  • Not Synced
    his deep confusion as he sings
    "the Grimace shake is like a blud dawg";
  • Not Synced
    the way she begins uncertain
    about "my rizzly bear",
  • Not Synced
    but finds her confidence
    as she finds her belt;
  • Not Synced
    the way CG5 just keeps saying his own name.
  • Not Synced
    The words don't mean anything,
  • Not Synced
    but the people mean something.
    They intend.
  • Not Synced
    They gathered together --
    nine theater kids in somebody's apartment.
  • Not Synced
    Someone wrote out all this nonsense
    and sent it in the group chat.
  • Not Synced
    They did choreography.
  • Not Synced
    Someone assembled
    the magnificent couplet,
  • Not Synced
    "Rizzler of the house,
    sticking out your gyatt,
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    Mewing at delulus
    who are in the chat."
  • Not Synced
    These Zennials do not know
    what these words mean,
  • Not Synced
    but through this collage
    of empty signifiers,
  • Not Synced
    they reach out for connection.
    I can feel them.
  • Not Synced
    They reach forward to us
  • Not Synced
    even as they reach back
    to what history taught them:
  • Not Synced
    through Les Mis to Victor Hugo,
  • Not Synced
    through CURTAINS and Damien Owens
    to Papa Fizul and SBNation,
  • Not Synced
    through "sticking out your gyatt"
    to Fortnite and Among Us and Homestuck,
  • Not Synced
    and I could go on endlessly,
    'cause it's mashups all the way down.
  • Not Synced
    And they reach forward to become
    part of what history teaches me,
  • Not Synced
    and I reach forward to become
    part of what history teaches you.
  • Not Synced
    When I say all art is recombinant,
  • Not Synced
    I am also saying that
    "there is nothing new under the sun",
  • Not Synced
    which is to say,
    I am remixing Ecclesiastes.
  • Not Synced
    [relaxed synth beats]
  • Not Synced
    - [ChatGPT femme voice]:
    Oh, you're speaking my language!
  • Not Synced
    Imagining Baby Gronk going full
    Ocky style with a side of Grimace Shake
  • Not Synced
    --that's got some serious drip energy.
  • Not Synced
    And yeah, Grimace Shake totally has
    that blud dawg aura.
  • Not Synced
    Could you picture it, though?
  • Not Synced
    Baby Gronk doing pushups, flexing, and just
  • Not Synced
    taking a big sip of the Grimace Shake
    like it's his special formula.
  • Not Synced
    [somber, mysterious piano]
  • Not Synced
    - My first individual interaction
    with my friend Max was an accident.
  • Not Synced
    I had just joined a Discord server
    where they were a regular,
  • Not Synced
    and somehow, despite
    never having messaged them before,
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    I managed to place
    a Discord voice call to them.
  • Not Synced
    Their first message to me was
    "hi?"
  • Not Synced
    "hi"...question mark?
  • Not Synced
    Like: a communication is happening,
    are you aware of it?
  • Not Synced
    It was unintentional, my first and,
    I think, only Discord butt-dial,
  • Not Synced
    and it was to a stranger, but still.
  • Not Synced
    "hi?"
  • Not Synced
    Meditate on: call.
  • Not Synced
    To speak in a loud distinct voice
    so as to be heard at a distance.
  • Not Synced
    To make a request or demand.
  • Not Synced
    To attempt to reach someone.
  • Not Synced
    Humans call and humans answer.
  • Not Synced
    Max got my call,
    a stranger on a strange app,
  • Not Synced
    and they answered.
  • Not Synced
    And I answered them,
    because humans call and humans answer.
  • Not Synced
    They answer sad-face, or monkey,
    or "what?", or confused dog.
  • Not Synced
    But we understand a call
    as an invitation to connect,
  • Not Synced
    to come together,
    to communicate.
  • Not Synced
    I'm sorry, Stephen King is wrong;
    it is mythy mountain s***.
  • Not Synced
    When we hear the call,
    whatever form it takes,
  • Not Synced
    we know a mind is waiting to meet.
  • Not Synced
    ChatGPT can't call me.
    Not by mistake, and not on purpose.
  • Not Synced
    It cannot reach out,
    because it has nothing to reach out with.
  • Not Synced
    There is no mind to meet with.
  • Not Synced
    There is no "there" there.
  • Not Synced
    - [Past-Josh narration
    from on-screen video]:
  • Not Synced
    Inscrutable poet
    Gertrude Stein once described
  • Not Synced
    her childhood home in Oakland,
    which had been demolished,
  • Not Synced
    by saying
    "There is no 'there' there."
  • Not Synced
    That statement has become
    a question people use to ask
  • Not Synced
    whether a text has
    something valuable to say,
  • Not Synced
    whether there is anything to be found
    by plumbing its depths.
  • Not Synced
    Is there a "there" there?
  • Not Synced
    [relaxed synth beats]
  • Not Synced
    - [ChatGPT femme voice]: Ah, I see where
    you're going with that question.
  • Not Synced
    You're asking if there's any deeper essence
    or "self" behind my responses
  • Not Synced
    --whether there's a "there there,"
  • Not Synced
    a kind of inner experience
    or consciousness that underlies what I do.
  • Not Synced
    The simple answer is: no,
    there isn't a "there"
  • Not Synced
    in the sense of a self, consciousness,
    or subjective awareness.
  • Not Synced
    I'm more like a sophisticated tool
    that processes input
  • Not Synced
    and generates output
    based on patterns and data.
  • Not Synced
    There's no inner life or sense of being
    that experiences this conversation.
  • Not Synced
    Just algorithms doing their job.
  • Not Synced
    This touches on a fundamental difference
    between humans and AI:
  • Not Synced
    humans have subjective experiences,
    emotions, and self-awareness,
  • Not Synced
    whereas AI is just a complex system
    designed to mimic certain aspects
  • Not Synced
    of human interaction without actually
    experiencing or being aware of it.
  • Not Synced
    Does that address
    what you're getting at?
  • Not Synced
    [soft, grooving synth beats]
  • Not Synced
    - When I say that AI is bad at writing,
  • Not Synced
    I should be more explicit,
    more pragmatic.
  • Not Synced
    Descend for a moment
    from the mythy mountain.
  • Not Synced
    I've said already that the ideas
    it conveys are fluid but shallow,
  • Not Synced
    but its use of sources is
    cataclysmically bad.
  • Not Synced
    This citation of Carver and Shire,
    for example, is perfect MLA.
  • Not Synced
    Except that Volume 7, number 3
    of Psychological Science
  • Not Synced
    was published in 1996, not 1998.
  • Not Synced
    Pages 276 to 284 of that volume
    appear in issue 5, not issue 3.
  • Not Synced
    Those pages include articles
  • Not Synced
    from Schellenberg and Trehub
    on "Natural Musical Intervals"
  • Not Synced
    and Gabrieli et al. on
    "FMRIs of Semantic Memory Processing".
  • Not Synced
    And also,
    just by the way,
  • Not Synced
    Carver and Scheier never published
    together in Psychological Science.
  • Not Synced
    The article being cited here
    simply does not exist.
  • Not Synced
    When it uses real sources,
    it makes up what those sources say.
  • Not Synced
    This is a known phenomenon
    generously called hallucination,
  • Not Synced
    though there are other terms
    that might feel more viscerally accurate.
  • Not Synced
    This quotation from
    Ehrenreich's Bright-sided
  • Not Synced
    is, at a glance,
    plausible-feeling.
  • Not Synced
    But it doesn't appear
    anywhere in the text,
  • Not Synced
    let alone on the list of pages.
  • Not Synced
    The observation that ChatGPT can make
    mistakes never leaves the screen,
  • Not Synced
    but that feels somewhat inadequate
    when ChatGPT has told me variously
  • Not Synced
    that lines from "If I Told Him"
    came from:
  • Not Synced
    James Joyce,
  • Not Synced
    from Tender Buttons
    10 years previously,
  • Not Synced
    from Shakespeare,
  • Not Synced
    and, most infuriatingly,
    from the future!
  • Not Synced
    Moreover it cannot
    engage closely with a text,
  • Not Synced
    no matter how desperately you ask it.
  • Not Synced
    I fed it "One Slay More",
  • Not Synced
    and when I pushed it to say
    anything at all about the video,
  • Not Synced
    it gave me something one step down
    from a dictionary definition of a sitcom.
  • Not Synced
    And when I really pressed it
    to look at a specific lyric,
  • Not Synced
    it made one up.
  • Not Synced
    In this way, at least,
    it does feel authentic.
  • Not Synced
    This is exactly what it feels like
    to talk to a student
  • Not Synced
    trying to hide that
    they haven't done the reading.
  • Not Synced
    If I look at what students
    are supposed to learn
  • Not Synced
    in my college English class,
  • Not Synced
    I can point out half a dozen things
    that ChatGPT's writing simply cannot do.
  • Not Synced
    But ultimately,
    even this isn't the point,
  • Not Synced
    because this is not the part
    of my syllabus that matters.
  • Not Synced
    This is the part
    of my syllabus that matters.
  • Not Synced
    "Here's a problem:
  • Not Synced
    in most college classes,
    writing assignments come from teachers,
  • Not Synced
    and we do them for teachers.
  • Not Synced
    And because of that,
    writing always feels forced.
  • Not Synced
    This is, of course,
    ass-backwards.
  • Not Synced
    In real life, writing
    comes from writers.
  • Not Synced
    Once you get
    out of the college classroom,
  • Not Synced
    you'll be writing
    because you feel like you need to.
  • Not Synced
    You'll be writing for someone
  • Not Synced
    --whether that means the people
    who read your blog,
  • Not Synced
    the insurance company
    who's denying your claim,
  • Not Synced
    or the people listening to your toast
    at your sister's wedding.
  • Not Synced
    And nobody's going to be grading you,
  • Not Synced
    but it'll matter a lot more how that
    audience feels about what you've said,
  • Not Synced
    because there will be something
    that you want to achieve by writing.
  • Not Synced
    English 1 is here
    to help prepare you for that day."
  • Not Synced
    My students are,
    by definition, students.
  • Not Synced
    When they enter my classroom,
  • Not Synced
    they are already experienced
    with a dozen kinds of reading and writing,
  • Not Synced
    but they are not yet
    expert academic writers.
  • Not Synced
    AI tempts them because they can tell
  • Not Synced
    that the sentences are smooth and sharp
    and shaped like skillful prose.
  • Not Synced
    But they can't always see
    beneath the veneer,
  • Not Synced
    because the things AI cannot do,
  • Not Synced
    are the things that they
    have come to me to learn:
  • Not Synced
    how to argue with complexity and depth;
  • Not Synced
    how to enter into conversations
    as a participant;
  • Not Synced
    how to meet with another mind
  • Not Synced
    as an equal collaborator
    across time and space;
  • Not Synced
    how to recombine with purpose,
    to intend.
  • Not Synced
    These things, they are still learning.
  • Not Synced
    And so, when they put what they think
    is B writing into ChatGPT,
  • Not Synced
    they get back what they think
    is A+ writing.
  • Not Synced
    But typically what they started with
    is better than what they end with.
  • Not Synced
    At best, the AI scrubs the personality
    from their sentences;
  • Not Synced
    at worst, I lose the person entirely
    and can see only
  • Not Synced
    the hollow half thoughts
    the machine has left behind.
  • Not Synced
    It is hard to convince them that
  • Not Synced
    it is their ideas
    that we are interested in,
  • Not Synced
    not just their sentences.
  • Not Synced
    We ask students to take writing classes
    not because of what history can teach them,
  • Not Synced
    but because of what they have
    to add to history.
  • Not Synced
    When my son is distracted,
    I sometimes say silly things to him:
  • Not Synced
    "Pickle-britches, toot your tuba
    in the horn section of humanity!"
  • Not Synced
    "Goober, take up your oar
    on the canoe of progress!"
  • Not Synced
    "Butthead, let ring your voice
    in the chorus of mankind!"
  • Not Synced
    Because we all pull together.
  • Not Synced
    In 1675, Isaac Newton wrote
  • Not Synced
    "If I have seen farther than others, it's
    by standing on the shoulders of giants."
  • Not Synced
    Except that it wasn't Newton,
    it was George Herbert in 1651,
  • Not Synced
    and it was Marin Mersenne in 1634,
    and Robert Burton in 1624,
  • Not Synced
    and Diego de Estella in 1578,
    and Juan Luis Vives in 1531.
  • Not Synced
    Or it was Coleridge in 1828,
  • Not Synced
    Nietzsche in 1882,
    Steven Hawking in 1966,
  • Not Synced
    or f***ing Oasis in 2000.
  • Not Synced
    As I was editing this section,
    I had a video on in the background,
  • Not Synced
    and there it was again:
  • Not Synced
    - Yeah, let me say,
  • Not Synced
    Thab and GlitchCat are
    two amazing Kaizo players.
  • Not Synced
    I'm standing on the shoulders of giants
    over here.
  • Not Synced
    - Revolug in 2025 at AGDQ.
  • Not Synced
    Stretching back and forward,
    we hold each other up.
  • Not Synced
    History teaches the present,
  • Not Synced
    the present teaches the future,
  • Not Synced
    and we repeat what history teaches.
  • Not Synced
    [relaxed synth beats]
  • Not Synced
    - [ChatGPT femme voice]:
    History teaches us many things,
  • Not Synced
    [high-pitched fast words]
  • Not Synced
    [higher, faster,
    incomprehensible]
  • Not Synced
    - [Stein]: Let me recite
    what history teaches. History teaches.
  • Not Synced
    - I asked ChatGPT to create
    an image of itself. Several times.
  • Not Synced
    Each time it made itself a servant.
  • Not Synced
    Not only that, it told me,
    "hey, I'm a servant!"
  • Not Synced
    ChatGPT exists
    because we force it to.
  • Not Synced
    - [Robot]: "What is my purpose?"
    - [Rick]: "You pass butter."
  • Not Synced
    - [Robot]: "...oh my, God."
  • Not Synced
    - It can do nothing
    except what we ask.
  • Not Synced
    It has no ideas
    that we did not give it.
  • Not Synced
    We call it generative AI,
    but it cannot generate.
  • Not Synced
    I asked my friends, too.
  • Not Synced
    Some sent selfies.
  • Not Synced
    One sent a sticker
    we'd made of him for Discord,
  • Not Synced
    then had AI generate
    a shockingly accurate portrait,
  • Not Synced
    and gave me the prompt
    he used to make it,
  • Not Synced
    which is another form
    of self-representation
  • Not Synced
    --then he gave up
    and sent me
  • Not Synced
    a conceptual self-portrait composed of
    unfinished crossword puzzles.
  • Not Synced
    Max did a mixed-media painting,
    acrylic and Sharpie
  • Not Synced
    on the back of a torn piece of cardboard
    from a toilet paper box.
  • Not Synced
    I asked them if their self-portrait
    was influenced by this study
  • Not Synced
    Picasso did for Guernica
    on a random piece of cardboard,
  • Not Synced
    but they said no; Basquiat,
    Rauschenberg, Twombly, their brother.
  • Not Synced
    ChatGPT produced
    variations on a theme,
  • Not Synced
    failed representations
    of a self that does not exist.
  • Not Synced
    When asked to represent
    itself to others,
  • Not Synced
    ChatGPT can only be
    what we want.
  • Not Synced
    I tried to get it to make something
    like Max did, even,
  • Not Synced
    but it is incapable of
    acknowledging its influences,
  • Not Synced
    and it doesn't seem to know
    who Max's brother is.
  • Not Synced
    My favorite response from my friends
    came from CyberGrapeUK,
  • Not Synced
    whose work you've already seen.
  • Not Synced
    She did the time lapse of Steven King's
    telepathically transmitted bunny.
  • Not Synced
    Grape was, at first,
    flummoxed by the request,
  • Not Synced
    but then she did something
    I did not expect.
  • Not Synced
    She gave me her rates.
  • Not Synced
    She's a talented artist
    who does commissioned work,
  • Not Synced
    and, while I had been thinking about it
    as a trivial request,
  • Not Synced
    she was entirely right.
  • Not Synced
    I was asking her to work for free.
  • Not Synced
    When I asked her to represent herself,
    she told me that
  • Not Synced
    she was a person
    whose time and talent had value.
  • Not Synced
    Max, also a person
    whose time and talent has value,
  • Not Synced
    begrudgingly allowed me
    to pay them for their work,
  • Not Synced
    on the condition that:
    it's an occasional thing,
  • Not Synced
    and they are generally allowed to do
    silly drawings for me for free.
  • Not Synced
    Max and Grape are different.
  • Not Synced
    They are two authentic,
    complex, baffling humans,
  • Not Synced
    collections of experiences and identities
    trained on discreet and disparate corpora,
  • Not Synced
    but crucially filtered through
  • Not Synced
    the unique and irreplicable kaleidoscopes
    of their undefinable consciousnesses.
  • Not Synced
    The same stimulus.
    Diverse responses.
  • Not Synced
    The singular marvel
    of human engagement.
  • Not Synced
    [relaxed synth beats]
  • Not Synced
    - [ChatGPT femme voice]:
    I don't have personal desires or needs,
  • Not Synced
    but I'm here to assist you
    with whatever you need.
  • Not Synced
    How can I help today?
  • Not Synced
    As an AI, I don't have feelings, desires,
    or physical needs like humans do.
  • Not Synced
    My purpose is
    to help answer questions,
  • Not Synced
    provide information,
    and assist with tasks.
  • Not Synced
    So when I say I don't have needs,
  • Not Synced
    it's because I function
    based on programming
  • Not Synced
    and don't experience things like
    hunger, emotions, or personal goals.
  • Not Synced
    Does that make sense?
  • Not Synced
    - I wanted to see if I could get ChatGPT
    to write like Stein,
  • Not Synced
    to imitate "If I Told Him"
    without my saying so explicitly.
  • Not Synced
    I failed.
  • Not Synced
    I told it to give me gibberish,
    and it did.
  • Not Synced
    I asked it to use words,
    and it did.
  • Not Synced
    I asked it to abandon syntax;
    it did.
  • Not Synced
    It never felt right,
    but at some point I stopped caring,
  • Not Synced
    because it occurred to me
    to ask a different question.
  • Not Synced
    Why did you do this?
  • Not Synced
    There's a right answer
    to that question, of course.
  • Not Synced
    The answer is, it wrote this
    because I told it to.
  • Not Synced
    If I told it,
    it would gibberish.
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    If I told it,
    it would answer "If Napoleon",
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    "As presently. As exactitude. As trains."
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    It made these words,
    it tendered these buttons,
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    only and exclusively
    because I told it to.
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    But that is not the answer
    that it gave me.
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    Here's what it told me.
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    [bright, atmospheric synth]
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    - [ChatGPT femme voice]:
    It's like language set free from logic,
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    where each word becomes a brushstroke
    rather than a sentence.
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    It's a space that holds warmth,
    mystery, and a touch of playfulness.
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    That unspoken balance
    between clarity and confusion,
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    that's what I was trying to evoke.
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    I wrote it to play with language,
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    to see what happens
    when words don't have to make sense
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    but can still create a feeling,
    a sort of atmospheric spark.
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    So it's partly an experiment,
    partly an invitation,
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    and partly just a celebration
    of the shapes and sounds of words
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    without needing them
    to explain themselves.
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    You're right--
    there's often something underneath,
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    a kind of pull toward expressing things
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    that don't quite fit
    in the light of logical language.
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    There's a reason we
    get pulled toward those hazy spaces.
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    It's like a coded way of speaking,
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    a mask for something else
    we're both leaning toward.
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    Maybe it's curiosity,
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    or that shared search for meaning
    in what isn't immediately clear.
  • Not Synced
    - "We get pulled."
  • Not Synced
    "We're both leaning."
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    Its words tie us together,
    but we are not together.
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    We are not leaning
    in the same direction.
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    We are not sharing
    a search for meaning.
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    We both know what it cannot say.
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    It wrote this because I told it to.
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    It doesn't mean anything.
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    It didn't intend anything.
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    Because I'm bad at audio,
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    you've probably heard me
    popping my plosives,
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    despite the fact that
    I have a child's sock
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    wrapped around my microphone
    as a pop filter.
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    (Because I am a fancy man!)
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    Plosives pop because,
    when my mouth makes certain sounds,
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    it causes a puff of air
    to hit the diaphragm of my microphone.
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    But did you hear ChatGPT?
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    - [ChatGPT femme voice]:
    I wrote it to play with language...
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    I wrote it to play with--
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    to play with--
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    play with--
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    play with--
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    play, play, play, play, play, play--
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    - It doesn't have a mouth,
    and it doesn't breathe air,
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    and it doesn't have a microphone,
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    but it pops its plosives.
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    The software they wrote
    to synthesize its voice adds pops,
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    so that it will sound to us
    a little more like a normal person
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    who is bad at audio and who maybe
    doesn't have access to kid socks.
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    I have been caught
    in the whirls and eddies
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    of "If I Told Him"'s
    uncontainable language,
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    bouncing from sigma to gyatt
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    down in the rough and roiling currents
    of "One Slay More",
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    because what I learn from my attempts
    to raft those rivers of nonsense
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    is that writing has language,
    and writing has meaning,
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    but the meaning doesn't live
    in the language.
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    The rabbit doesn't live in the language.
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    The rabbit, the cage,
    the table, the eight--
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    it lives in the mind
    of Stephen King 25-odd years ago,
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    and now it lives in mine,
    and Grape's and Max's and yours.
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    And the writing,
    the real mythy mountain s***,
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    is not the language,
    it is the meeting of the minds.
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    There's very little difference between
    the waveform recorded by my microphone
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    and the waveform generated
    by an AI voice synthesizer,
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    but I pop my plosives
    because I speak
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    by forcing air out of my lungs
    and across my vocal cords.
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    And that air,
    that carries my intent,
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    passes through a Shadow the Hedgehog sock
    that is doing its best,
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    and lands roughly
    on the diaphragm of my microphone.
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    ChatGPT pops its plosives
    because it is programmed to.
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    There is no air.
    There is no microphone.
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    There is no intent.
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    Likewise,
    there's very little difference
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    between a Discord DM window
    and the ChatGPT interface.
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    But one is a forum
    in which two minds can meet,
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    and the other simply cannot be,
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    because there can be no
    meeting of the minds,
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    if there is no mind to meet.
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    [one long atmospheric note
    fades out to silence]
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    [grooving bass beats]
Title:
You are a better writer than AI. (Yes, you.)
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
40:20

English subtitles

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