café snake - découvre un médecin de famille [Extrait Patreon]

Episode Date: May 27, 2025

NOTRE PATREON: patreon.com/cafesnakeMounir couvre le Streamer University du streamer américain Kai Cenat en le mettant en rapport avec le projet de loi 109 sur la découvrabilité. Daphné nous plong...e dans un rabbithole sur l'intégration des nouvelles technologies dans le domaine de la santé et les compagnies qui profitent de ces changements.Recession Indicator, SAAQclic, Google Veo3, Duo Lingo

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, I'm Daphne. I forgot that I was watching a movie about a bear. I was really frustrated. I don't watch that movie. It's Café Snake. Hello, I'm Daphne. I forgot that I was watching a movie about a bear. I was really frustrated.
Starting point is 00:00:10 I don't watch that movie. It's Café Snake. Hello, I'm Daphne. I forgot that I was watching a movie about a bear. I was really frustrated. I don't watch that movie. It's Café Snake. Hello, I'm Daphne.
Starting point is 00:00:18 I forgot that I was watching a movie about a bear. I was really frustrated. I don't watch that movie. It's Café Snake. Hello, I'm Daphne. I forgot that I was watching a movie about a bear. I was really frustrated. I don't watch that movie. It's Café Snake, Café Snake number 44. Thank you to everyone who listens, Café Snake, everyone who shares.
Starting point is 00:00:33 Today, it's an episode that's only available on Patreon. Yes, patreon.com. If you're on the free channels, you just have access to an extract. But for real, Patreon is worth it. We're also taking the opportunity to remind you that we're preparing episodes in Navajo for the July month. We're taking a little break, so we asked you to send us some voice memos where you can express one of your takes on the web culture or culture in general. We're going to react to your takes and comment on them. We're taking the format of the open lines.
Starting point is 00:01:04 We'd like to be able to listen. Take up the format of the open lines a bit. We'd like to be able to listen to you in the episode, and the audience can listen to you too, and that we can have your takes. Yeah, you can send us takes either on our Instagram accounts or on our email address at www.cafesnake.com info.cafesnake.com at commercialjumelle.com
Starting point is 00:01:24 All in one word so info.cafesnake.com no accent at commercial.gmail.com Thank you my dear. What are you going to talk about today? Well I'm sure we're going to talk about a lot of things I decided to cut my segment into two subjects
Starting point is 00:01:40 I'm going to talk about one side of Streamer University which is this media program realized by the American streamer Kai Sennat, who has more than 200 streamers on a regular American campus. I think it's innovative in the media media world. I also want to talk about the law on discoverability, which was just passed by the Minister of Culture of the CAAC, Mathieu Lacombe, and what I think is wrong with this law. I think both topics go together a bit because we're talking about media innovation in both. culture of the used in the sorting of patients in family medicine in Quebec. So without further ado... The DG News! Tududum!
Starting point is 00:02:26 The DG News Hey, you should have shut up, man! You just got an enemy and you didn't choose the right one! Do you think we don't see the little piece of junk of your father who is a politician and who is on the radio who makes his son come to the radio to build his brand in politics so that maybe one day he becomes famous and he can take back the family flame. Do you think we don't see that coming?
Starting point is 00:02:51 I confirm one thing, my top. I'm going to do a personal mission, that you are never elected in anything. Here, we are not a record store. Why? Because we just want to know about quality. Do you love the way I do when I'm loving you? Here, we're not a gay. I'm a gay. I'm a gay. I'm a gay. I'm a gay. I'm a gay. I'm a gay.
Starting point is 00:03:34 I'm a gay. I'm a gay. I'm a gay. I'm a gay. I'm a gay. I'm a gay. I'm a gay. Rich, rich! No, no, no, stop it! You're making a mess! Hey, rich, what's the price for you? When we started DJ News, I had to come back on... That was the subject of the week a little bit. I had to come back on SaClic. SaClic doesn't click at all actually. The Galant commission that evaluates the
Starting point is 00:04:16 fund attribution and the management of the contract of the design of the SaClic web platform. It gives me some flashbacks of Commissions Charbonneau. You see old men who are there like me, well we didn't really know how it worked, but we kept going. It's a bit of a lonely vibe. We see how the costs are spent in the concept of the web platform, it clicks. It was like a kind of portal where you could have access to the services of the Quebec automobile insurance company. Directly online, it was still in time, in 2025, renewing its plates or renew or his license, pay a ticket, whatever. We talked about it in an episode of Café Snake, I think it's called
Starting point is 00:04:49 The birth of SaClic, where we covered a bit like when the scandal had burst and we saw the call to the investigation commission. And there we talked, I think there should have been a more large commission on the entire industry of digital transformation and its relationship to the government of Quebec. But in fact, I'm going to retract a little on this position because with this commission of inquiry, I think that focusing on one situation, one contract, how one thing happened, it allows us to imagine how it goes in other fields of activity, in other similar contracts. So I think that since we are doing a commission of inquiry, just on its click, we see
Starting point is 00:05:25 how there is no safe management, how in fact it is a racket, our officials are being stolen by German and American companies, like literally, there is no oversight, there is a kind of money laundering game of the government of the country, of these companies, young engineers, young programmers who start at $ 80 and end up at $325 in 6 months without producing anything. They had promotions and they didn't even have the guts to say what they did to get this raise. The staff, the auditors, the directors, the CEO, they had no idea what they were doing. I think it's one of the best demonstrations. Incompetence. And I didn't have the chance to tap in this week.
Starting point is 00:06:08 I was sick of watching the live show, as I saw clips. But this week I'm going to catch up on the show. I can't wait to hear it. Me... Me too. Let's see. I thought we had to address the digital transformation more broadly. But I think that through itain is really focusing on one event that has cost savings of almost 1.1 billion.
Starting point is 00:06:30 We already know that, we also investigate the cost savings festival. And I find that there is a kind of clash going on right now because François Legault is doing the media tour. There is even a new advertising campaign to talk about the government's investments. And everyone is talking about Nordvolt, Lyon Electric, all these entrepreneurial groups that the government has decided to lead. We often hear commentators talk about the losses that our government has made in investments in a few companies.
Starting point is 00:06:59 We have to put that back in context. When I became Prime Minister six years ago, I asked my team to help a lot more businesses invest here. So, for six years, our government has invested in hundreds of businesses in Quebec. We've had hundreds of successes. It's those who have had losses in some files. There's one we talk about a lot, we lost in North Ball. But you have to put that in context.
Starting point is 00:07:31 Well, we have a good means to the stick. It's always this baseball metaphor that the government, yes, we have flops sometimes, but we make good investments. The fact that they do this campaign, at the same time that we see how there is no regard and no consideration for public spending when it comes to extending a contract, renegotiating a contract, paying more to construction companies. There are cuts in health, there are cuts in education, the Maisonneuve hospital unfortunately collapses and we are told
Starting point is 00:08:00 that we don't have enough money to do the work, we don't have enough money to do that. We also see that all the costs of public service, no matter what the government does, it costs more. Whether it's in construction, or in digital transformation. No matter what the government wants to do, it costs more. And we see how it goes in these controls. Obviously it's not just because of inflation, and the cost of materials, and targets, and all that. It's clearly the companies, the people that the CAC engages in, that are finessing the government, and that's really it.
Starting point is 00:08:28 And they see no service or big deficits, just as a communication problem, how are we going to get out of it in terms of comms, not how we could fix it as a fund, why are we constantly being fooled? It seems like it doesn't lead them to think about their practices. Well, that's it. And you see who engages, the Quebecer, who is a big file on who had positions at the CAC, It seems like it doesn't lead them to think about their practices. Well, it's that. And you see who's involved.
Starting point is 00:08:45 Quebec has a big file on who had positions at the CAQ, who functioned and who were placed. And it's friends, friends, friends. I worked with him. I worked with people who don't necessarily have the necessary skills, but who have loyalty. And I think that's what comes with a party that is really centralized like the CAQ, which was founded by François Legault. That François Legault, all decisions go through him. Well, one of the most important things for François Legault is loyalty, it's not necessarily competence. When you have people who are competent sometimes, well if they see something that doesn't work well and they make themselves say what they don't work well with, well they will say it like no, I think it's the worst thing. And at that moment we wouldn't listen to them and...
Starting point is 00:09:19 Exactly. So these fiascos, these controversies, these overshadows are as muffled as possible until there's no choice but to talk about it. Just me, this investigation commission, it makes me say that it's just the tip of the iceberg. David, I have the impression. Yeah, but I agree with you a little. After that, you follow politics more than me, but it seems like it affects my segment today, in relation to the money we spend to be on the page and innovative in terms of technology. Recession Indicator number 59, I ordered food last night.
Starting point is 00:09:53 Open the door, delivered by a white woman. Ok, but I wanted to talk about a meme that's been circulating for a while now on the internet, so I talked about it last night. Maybe it was like, let's see Daphne, this thing is not new. What we call the Recession Era Indicator. At one point I saw that appear, obviously it's been a goal that we see, for example the most popular of them, I think it's the Lipstick Index. The index of lipstick entered popular culture around the 2000s when Léonard Laudeux, the former president of Estée Laudeux,
Starting point is 00:10:27 noticed an increase in the sales of lipstick after September 11. And there he put a theory that the sales of cosmetic products that were more affordable, for example lipstick, which even when you buy a luxury lipstick, it's between 30 and 50 dollars, it would increase in economic recession periods, that is to say that we will change our consumption habits, and yes we will always offer luxuries, but luxuries that would be more affordable. Instead of, for example, buying a 3,000 dollar bag, you can buy a lipstick. So that's it, it's something I've heard a lot, obviously because I'm interested in makeup, but it's not necessarily a theory that is proven or necessarily reliable. For example, during the
Starting point is 00:11:11 pandemic, people didn't necessarily buy lipstick because we were wearing masks. And data also, in relation to the sale of lipstick, it's not necessarily data that is super accessible. It's more anecdotal than anything else. But that's. But I really saw everything becoming an indicator, a sign of a recession. So as much the frozen yogurt, the laboubous, as much as what I saw this week, the straightification of Jojo Siwa, who ended up, after participating in a TV reality, falling in love with a man, while before she was in a relationship with a woman.
Starting point is 00:11:45 So all of this would become economic indicators that would lead to a recession. I read a little bit about it yesterday, but it's not from yesterday either. Before even being a meme, this thing, we were not only talking about the lipstick effect or the lipstick index, but there would even be the hemline index which would talk about the length of the skirts of women depending on the economy. So in the time of recession, skirts would lengthen and then when there would be economic prosperity, then the skirts would become shorter. Yeah, yeah, and also in The Big Short, the big meme is if you want to know how the economy
Starting point is 00:12:22 goes, go to the strip clubs, see how people spend, how strip clubs spend. So there's a plethora and the meme is a bit of inventing anything so I could say that Dubai's chocolate is a recession indicator. Benson Boone is a recession indicator. The hyperpup as we talked about in one of our first episodes of Café Snake, but I thought, couldn't we say instead of Recession Era Indicator, Late Capitalism Indicator? Because what happens is that the more we move forward, the deeper we go into capitalism, the more there's an increase in the wealth gap. And finally, it transpires in our consumption habits. In the last episode, I talked about the laboubous, these kind of keychains, little hairy monsters that
Starting point is 00:13:06 people hang on their bags. There was this in an article that I read about the laboubous, like, well, Emile... So my first topic is on the stream journalist, yes I am employed. Beginning of the school day, J5, who was an hour late to DDG's class, along with Tylel, FunnyMike, Reggie and a few other people, took most of the viewers. Until India Love, who had her class at 11am, took most of the viewers that she was getting dressed for class. For obvious reasons.
Starting point is 00:13:35 T-Banks and R-key spotted. Big elephant in the room for most of the morning was the terrible wifi. I'm telling you, it was terrible. Everybody's shit was lagging the whole time. Everybody's views was fluctuating. The hood baby opts for the double camera. Very interesting approach. You can tell a lot of small streamers didn't want to overstep. A series of streams organized by Kyle Senate, the most followed American streamer on Twitch. 23 years, he's been streaming since 2020.
Starting point is 00:13:55 He's done a lot of variety, he's received a lot of stars, produced events like Sobatons, which will be live for 30 days, he and do interviews, games with his subscribers. He is really followed by a lot of people. There are several episodes where I define what universe he is in, in the American streaming world. But he decided to launch the Streamer University. 100 streamers who are gathered on the... So I called my segment, IA in the wheels, like sticks in the wheels,
Starting point is 00:14:24 the introduction of expensive gimmick in the health system. It's not a segment that's super pushed because right now I don't have the time to do research on that. And I find that it cuts out topics that we've already addressed, initiatives, sometimes government-based, that aren't necessarily positive, both in their social impacts and in the cost that all these initiatives. It all started, as you said earlier, on TikTok. This week, I came across a video from Quebec's political news account.
Starting point is 00:14:53 Yeah, it's a news issue. It's probably on my For You page. It showed an exchange between Health Minister Christian Dubé and Deputy Vincent Marissal. It talked about the arrival of artificial intelligence in patient sorting, a process that, so to speak, should improve the effectiveness of the health system. The arrival of artificial intelligence in patient sorting,
Starting point is 00:15:15 is that serious? Do we go into that? Yes, yes, it's very serious. The reason why we are very comfortable, and I'm going to pass on the the floor to Dr Bergeron, is that we have been testing it for a long time, in about 70-75 gmf, and the results are very conclusive. When you say that the results are conclusive, do you mean that you have reached certain conclusions? One of the conclusions is that we save on average, and I don't want to take up too much of your time,
Starting point is 00:15:42 but between 10 and 15% of the returns are directed elsewhere to the satisfaction of doctors. In the 70 or 80 GMFs we've done. We're not stopping the progress, and I don't want to sound like a dinosaur, but there are doctors who say that this system is limited. And human interaction remains important in the treatments prescribed to patients. The certified intelligence will miss it. I don't think they say so. That's not what I'm saying. It's the doctors on the front line who say, we don't capture everything with this.
Starting point is 00:16:08 It immediately got me thinking because I think that the screening is a nerve-racking fucking step. That's where everything can play out. Really, the decisions taken in the screening can have a life or death impact on patients. It's not often either the step that lasts long. In any case, I was thinking probably about the emergency. When you go to the emergency, it's the after-trial
Starting point is 00:16:32 that is really the most feared. So the time you're going to wait in the waiting room before seeing a health professional, more precisely a doctor. But that's it, the TikTok clip, in the description of the clip there was a link and that link brought us to a report from Radio-Canada called The Intelligent. This is the end of the free extract of Coffee Snake available to everyone. If you want to listen to the rest of the episode, you can go to our Patreon, patreon.com, www.cafesnake.com. Thank you very much for the question. Bye!

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