Chilluminati Podcast - Midweek Mini: That Time Sammy Hagar Met an Alien

Episode Date: July 24, 2025

It's true, all of it. All you lovely people at Patreon! HTTP://PATREON.COM/CHILLUMINATIPOD Heroforge - http://www.heroforge.comPromocode: Chill Jesse Cox - http://www.youtube.com/jessecox Alex Faciane... - http://www.youtube.com/user/superbeardbros Editor - DeanCutty http://www.twitter.com/deancutty Show art by - https://twitter.com/JetpackBraggin http://www.instagram.com/studio_melectro

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Intro I'm going to make a two month. Hey, hey, what is going on? How's it going? Hey, what do we what do you got for me? What do you got? Tell me what's going on in your weird world. I got a great I got a great one today, and it's great because it's a crossover between mine and Jesse's, one of our biggest interests, Gordon Ramsay.
Starting point is 00:00:50 Okay, go on, I'm in. So first things first, there was a TikTok that I saw on High Strangeness that is this guy, you know, like creepers on the internet sometimes, or internet sluice, let's call them, will triangulate someone's location based on like topography that's visible in photographs of where they are. Right? You know, that kind of thing, kind of stalkery. So there's, I'm going to send you this post right here, which is a tick tock of somebody proving using topography that Gordon Ramsey was at Area 51 in a jet. So that's the first thing that I need to check out. So that's like basically what he did was he was like, he was like, oh, I'm in Nevada or something like that. And then he was like, there's only three airports in Nevada. Time out. Whoa, time out. What time out? Uh, I don't want
Starting point is 00:01:49 to roast the deliverer of the news. Yeah. But this young gentleman, potentially young, could be 80 years old for all I know. That's the craziest filter I've ever seen. Yeah. As the crisis, what filter? Oh, look at the video. This filter, his hairline, plus the filter, plus everything else. Like I just didn't look like a hybrid. He's like a vampire. I don't know how old this man is. He looks like he speaks. Yeah, he has something going on, but anyway, yeah, okay. So he matches it up. He's like, he basically the thing is he's like, okay, he sees it, he's in Nevada, but that would mean he would have to be at these three airports.
Starting point is 00:02:33 But none of the airports have the topography that's visible from the window. The only one that does, and it's a perfect match, is Area 51. So bang, that's his like conclusion, definitively. And I'm like, that's crazy. Is there anything to back this up? So, I go diving a little bit and I find a video from this flight attendant girl who's on Instagram and she posts this thing where she's like, I was on a plane with Gordon Ramsay. We, it was like a weird flight. It was almost like a fairy flight because he was the only person on it. And we landed in the desert somewhere and some guys in black came on the plane
Starting point is 00:03:10 and escorted Ramsey off the plane. And I went to his seat and there was a little pan there. And she has the pan in the clip. And if you look at the TikTok, you can see that in Ramsey's post, there is a little pan that is there. So conceivably, this could all be real. But also, in the comments of the post,
Starting point is 00:03:32 there's somebody who points out that maybe the pan is not the same pan from the image. If you look closely, like maybe they don't match each other. But I'm not sure about that. I think it's kind of, it's kind of up to you to decide I can't really tell whether it's the same pan or not. I think he says that there's a hole or something that needs to be there. But I
Starting point is 00:03:53 think maybe that could just be a reflection. I'm not sure. But there you go was Gordon Ramsay there a bunch of the people in the comments are like speculating maybe he just like is there to cook for somebody or something like that because it is just a military base in the end right and if they can have Gordon Ramsay there and he doesn't end up seeing any alien technology you know maybe it's still nice to have him come cook a beef wellington for your guys. On the more like normal side the last couple seasons of Hell's Kitchen have been in Vegas. Yeah. And Vegas is very close to Area 51 and maybe he just had to stop there.
Starting point is 00:04:28 Oh, yeah. Because he couldn't land. Maybe do the finale at Area 51. Yeah. That's when disclosure is going to happen on Hell's Kitchen. On Hell's Kitchen, when they cook poorly, he kicks all of them out of the kitchen and brings in the aliens. Yep. Wow.
Starting point is 00:04:43 Aliens are real. Wow. Is yours alien- related, Jesse? It is not even remotely. All right. I'll do mine then, because it's still alien related slightly. So our government's falling apart. And in that, maybe not.
Starting point is 00:04:58 In that, though, a lot of people are either getting fired, threatening to be fired, and some information is starting to kind of came out of the cracks in the UFO world because of it. There's, this is from Politico as of the third, so literally two days ago from us recording this. Some FBI agents who work in the group also worked on January 6th cases.
Starting point is 00:05:18 This particular group, a secret UFO investigation branch within the FBI. Their worries that the move could lead to Trump ordered purge at the agency, a secret UFO investigation branch within the FBI. Their worries that the move could lead to Trump ordered purge at the agency, said the people, some of whom were granted anonymity to discuss personnel matters. Quote, I have spoken to several agents from the UAP working group who were afraid
Starting point is 00:05:36 of losing their role in the investigation getting unintentionally compromised, said Ryan Graves, Executive Director of Americans for Safe Aerospace and the former Navy pilot. Qu quote, I am concerned that the FBI's UAP working group could be affected by transition changes and these leaders might not be aware of the incredible work these agents are doing and how their investigation could be empowered as part of a formalized intergovernmental effort. The existence of the FBI's informal working group on the issue has
Starting point is 00:06:02 not been disclosed publicly before Graves and three other people familiar with the group said it consists of a national program manager and more than a dozen employees across the country who spend much of their time tracking down UAPs. Graves said that for more than a year, his group has worked with the FBI team to refer interested witnesses, leads, open source intelligence and so on to help the Bureau's efforts to protect the country and the aviation industry from unidentified phenomenon. He said the agents have interviewed interested witnesses and quote plus up these reports with classified information.
Starting point is 00:06:32 Quote the FBI working group is uniquely positioned to investigate UAP due to their joint law enforcement and intelligence authorities. He said adding he was deeply worried that agents keyed the investigation of UAP could be removed which would undermine the Trump administration's commitment to take the U out of UAP. That was your first mistake, thinking he had a commitment to anything. While we have no comment on any questions regarding FBI personal matters, the FBI investigates unidentified anomalous phenomenon when there is potential for a violation of federal law, particularly unlawful acts that could adversely affect our national interests, and to gather,
Starting point is 00:07:04 share, and analyze intelligence to combat security threats facing the US. The FBI statement said in a statement. So I was from an FBI statement after this was all kind of came out. Yeah. And they go on to talk about how the Pentagon had a similar effort called a the a tip, which we've talked about before, which is leaked in 2017. You know, another, another quiet secret UAP investigation group maybe another intelligence branch that only is coming out
Starting point is 00:07:30 because cracks are forming. Another one. Interesting. That's Mulder's branch. Yeah, that would be right. Yeah, that'd be his. That's the X-Files. All right, cleanse that stuff of aliens, Jesse.
Starting point is 00:07:43 I shall do just that. So, interesting little tid shall do just that. So interesting little tidbit out of Italy. Absolutely think this is Italy bit. No, yes. Um, so there is a pretty, we'll say Italian famous. This is definitely something I don't expect a lot of Americans, for example, to know about. But for decades, historians, researchers, just people in the archaeological fields have been really interested in this place called Sforza Castle, mostly because it is notorious for having a bunch of hidden things in it, tunnels and structures and all sorts of stuff. But, um, they've not found any real evidence of it.
Starting point is 00:08:25 Like in, in the writings of the time, in that there's like a lot of mystery going on with. Oh, I think I heard about this, right? Yeah. And so the thing that cracked the code for them was the, the, the, the Renaissance man himself, Leonardo Da Vinci Da Vinci, no, thank you. A 500 year old sketch by Leonardo Da Vinci has led to a remarkable discovery of hidden tunnels. No less. It's a castle in Milan, Italy, literally Da Vinci code stuff.
Starting point is 00:08:59 Revelation confirms that Da Vinci actually did not just draw up like theoretical concepts, but actually was the blueprint for much of what happened at the castle. And the reason why is because it was a strategic military fortress under the rule of Ludovico Sforza, one of Leonardo's most influential patrons. And because of that, I assume because he was throwing money at Leonardo Leonardo was like, here's some really cool designs for your fortified military base. And until recently when they actually used, uh, 3d modeling and ground penetrating radar and stuff, were they even able to discover that it wasn't just, uh, you know, mystery and riddles and nonsense and Leonardo's just drawings. But really the
Starting point is 00:09:46 sports themselves straight up just took those ideas and implemented them into the castle. And so advanced scans reveal that there's underground passageways, escape routes, supply tunnels, all sorts of different things to, you know, if the castle came under siege, it's how you would escape, it's how you would bring stuff in. It's how you'd last. And the fact that they were never discovered and they clearly lead to an outside point just shows how good of a design it was. And yeah, that's how I feel when I come out of a dungeon in Skyrim sometimes I'm like, how did I not see this? Yeah. How did I not see this door? Yep. And that's that's another really cool thing. And so that's just, uh, a very fun way of seeing history and archeology and science come together.
Starting point is 00:10:31 Discover something you didn't know before. Indiana Jones. When you find some shit like that. Yeah, I can't imagine. I used to be like, I wanted to be an archeologist when I was a kid, just because of that moment of just being like, Whoa, finding something nobody's seen in a thousand years. Go play the new Indiana Jones game did I beat it. It was phenomenal I love that whole thing in the Vatican and you like do like the thing So perfect Indian cool. It's so cool. Just do do Indiana Jones games. No more movies. I'm fine with that
Starting point is 00:10:56 Yeah, I would be alright. I mean a okay. Give me dial of destiny do dial of destiny Do it fate of Atlantis, but modern-day. Yeah. Yeah. Oh that'd be fucking sick Yeah, all right. We're out of here. That's your mini mini. So everybody we appreciate you. We'll see you next week. We love you So to 17 Really we're already there, huh? Yeah, dude. We're there. We've been there been there you know what's funny next week is our seven-year anniversary Seven years yep, we'll be recording years the the day after our seven-year anniversary February 18th is uh I Started this podcast. I was still in my 20s You're so old now oh
Starting point is 00:11:47 My god, don't you feel more enlightened now though? Yeah, don't you feel like you're slowly crumbling to dust I feel like my age matters less and less the older I get That's what I feel That's that's the honest truth. I Need you to start this out Jesse That's the honest truth. I need you to start us out, Jesse. You need me to start you out. The third I won.
Starting point is 00:12:08 The third I won. Alex, you need me. Oh, you want to know about Grant Morrison? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. OK, so I've talked about this before on the show, but a little bit. But I want to get into a little bit more. So just like I mentioned, Grant Morrison
Starting point is 00:12:20 has been writing comics since the 80s, very famous comic book writer. They wrote a very famous comic book called Arkham Asylum. That's about Batman. That's like kind of psychedelic and kind of upsetting, but very modern. The artist is, I think his name is Dave McKean. He's the guy who does like the covers of all the Sandman comics. So it's like a very trippy artist to be doing the interior of a comic, if you can imagine if you've ever seen the cover of a Sandman comic. But this story, Arkham Asylum, it was like at the right time, that same Sandman time hit like gangbusters, dude made like millions of dollars. dude made like millions of dollars and he was in his 30s. Right? So Grant Morrison's in their 30s and they're like,
Starting point is 00:13:10 all right, when I was young, I was poor, it's time to party. Went around the world, went to India, went to Bali, went to Nepal, New Zealand, Thailand, shaved their head, vinyl and leather kind of outfit vibes, like very like almost like a comic book character in real life. They were sober their entire life starts dropping acid, shrooms, ecstasy, hash, which brings us to Katmandu, where we were in the story that I teased. So basically what happened was he had a fifth
Starting point is 00:13:49 dimensional experience in a hotel room which resulted in him seeing the universe from the outside and meeting silvery blob-like entities who explained the connectedness of all life on earth. But they say it felt like it was a higher intelligence and there's no proof it wasn't. I remember space and time just being a flat surface. I was only on a little lentil-sized piece of hash and that won't give you that experience. God knows I've tried. Also, this was before True Detective. God knows I've tried.
Starting point is 00:14:24 Yeah, this was before True Detective, by the way. Hmm. I was utterly sure for a long time after that when I died, I would wake up there like looking up from a video game, realizing you're in your room. But now I don't feel like that anymore is what Grant Morrison said. But I wanted to also tell another story about Grant Morrison really quick, because in this article, there's something about them trying to manifest creatures. There's themes in their work constantly of crossing the lines of fiction. If you've ever read The Invisibles, which is one of the best Grant Morrison things ever,
Starting point is 00:15:00 King Mob is this character in there that like they like Started to believe they were this character and the character in the comic hallucinates a bacterial infection And then they had like a huge bacterial infection on their face that like still has a scar that they like almost died from and so they like started writing the like the King Mob character to have like Success and hot ladies and stuff so that they would also that would happen to them also Success and hot ladies and stuff so that they would also that would happen to them also But so chaos magic you dude that is yeah So I'm a big fan of Grant Morrison, and I subscribe to their sub stack Which is called Zana doom
Starting point is 00:15:40 You know think what you will about sub stack. There's some really good Creators on there. I don't think Substack is the greatest company in the world, but I do recommend Grant Morrison's Substack. And on there, there's just a lot of good stuff to read. There's a story, I'm just going to read it like it's a listener story. And then you can think of it as something you can check out if you want. And I can just promise you that it's real. And I'll try and link you guys to it. I don't know if you guys can read it or not, but it might be free. I can't really tell. So here we go. On October 9th, 1993, which would have been John Lennon's 53rd birthday, had the arch beetle not been shot dead by Mark Chapman in 1980, I performed a ritual intended to incarnate Lennon as a god. And you can think of me talking with a Glaswegian accent. I'm not gonna do it, but Grant Morrison is from Glasgow. So you can just picture that.
Starting point is 00:16:29 I wanted to make a dedication at the beginning of what was a whole new life for me in many ways. I wanted to summon a spirit of pure psychedelic inspiration into a linen-shaped environment. I sought not to manifest the real man, the troubled, cruel, and violent linen with his flaws and contradictions, to manifest the real man, the troubled, cruel and violent Lennon with his flaws and contradictions, but instead evoke Lennon, the twisted mystic, the pop star intellectual, the elemental heir and the four beat- of the four Beatles as stripped back to their cartoon archetypes. To get in the mood, I wore a paisley shirt, skinny jeans and Chelsea boots. I sat at the center of a circle made of Beatles albums and had Tomorrow Never Knows playing on loop.
Starting point is 00:17:05 My new 12 string white Rickenbacker stood in for a wand. As sacrament, I took a microdose of LSD, not enough for a full-blown trip but sufficient to soften consensus reality. People sometimes misunderstand when I talk about what happened that night. I was not possessed by the spirit of Lenin. This was not a mediumistic example of channeling the alleged dead. This was magic, intention willed into form. I altered the temple environment using sounds, smells, and images as powerful triggers to
Starting point is 00:17:38 push out of my consciousness all associations that did not relate to Lenin. This overload of environmental cues was organized or compressed by will into a singular, visible compound idea of Lenin-ness, so that everywhere I looked reminded me of John Lenin. Everything I heard was Lenin, until all other qualities the space around me may have once possessed were edited out and replaced by the Lenin sphere.
Starting point is 00:18:03 Using a traditional three-part That's where spheres come from in DCL's world. Dude, you joke, but that's exactly where they come from. Using a traditional three-part, actually Grant Morrison invented Hyper Time. Using a traditional three-part summoning where the magician first speaks to the chosen god, angel, or specified other in the third person at a worshipful remove. He is the walrus, the egg man, the moon dog. The call is repeated, this time in second person and with more fervor as to a lover, you are the walrus, the egg man, etc. And finally, with all the passion, intent, and language available, the magician
Starting point is 00:18:40 pronounces, I am the walrus, I am the the egg man and assumes full responsibility for whatever happens next. This total possession of the ritual space by coherent manifestation, what I was looking for was what I was looking for and it expressed itself visually and audibly as a four foot tall head that fit inside my temple space, but felt much bigger made of thousands of intricate multicolored and chiming shards of what resembled musical notation as rotated through a higher direction, intense flashing colors, digital high fidelity, shimmering musical glissades and drones. I bathed in electric fluorescent creative kaleidoscope, searing yellows and electric
Starting point is 00:19:19 pinks, UV blues, receiving a download of powerful, effervescent excitement and creativity. It felt most like the imagined Lenin of Revolver and Sergeant Pepper, a psychedelic god on acid. The ritual formed the basis for the above scene in the first issue of The Invisibles, which is pictured here on the page. It is literally a scene of John Lenin visiting as the Giant Head, where most of the accompanying captions, Buda Gong, Universal Harmonics, Monastery, Acoustic Hiss and Drone, Looking Glass Language, Reverb Red and the Red Room of the Head, and so on – come directly from my magical diary
Starting point is 00:19:54 record and were my immediate attempts to describe the texture of my experience. A great many mysteries and marvels came out of that night, including seeds of what became the Invisibles itself and the beginning of an inexorable escalation of unleashed intent, which climaxed eight months later in Kathmandu, Nepal. And then as more as a more minor side effect of the ritual, I found myself with this song I'd strummed into life composed almost automatically, complete with lyrics and music. It always sounded to me at best like a throwaway B side from 1965 as imagined by the Ruddles. But that's why I've always liked it. It's a very authentic scribble of the moment. It is emphatically not a communication from beyond the grave. And there's an acoustic version of it performed by Grant Morrison at Meltdown Comics, which was in LA. But there's on the sub stack page an acoustic version from 1993. That kind of sounds like Hey Bulldog. But I don't know if you guys can hear it. It doesn't look like I'm signed in on the page, so if you guys want to try and go
Starting point is 00:20:58 to their sub stack and check it out, it's there. There it is. Oh yeah. I can hear it. Yeah. It's another not quite Beatle song for you guys. A little throwback to one of the first Alex episodes, I guess, if you want to call it that. It really, it does have a vibe. It has a Lenin-y flavor. Yeah. I'm expecting Yoko to show up. Right out of the little linen sphere. Yeah. So, so there you go. Grant Morrison, interesting chap. If you want to read a really great book that's like a look at that, you know, like a look at Grant Morrison's like philosophy and stuff. There's a great book called Super Gods that they wrote that is like nonfiction that is about comic books and writing but is also about like magic and psychology and philosophy.
Starting point is 00:21:50 It's why so it's fun fun because like the grant morse and stuff that is straight up like chaos magic. Big time feel like after the seven years we've been doing this we've laid a foundation for the Chaluminati verse because we're going to see from here on a lot of just like names from other series that we've done There's a lot of cross pollination from everything from true crime down to the mystical stuff There's like so many recurring characters. I told you the Chaluminati becomes real this year. Yeah, I'm excited Jesse I feel like you and I might have the same article. So why don't you go first?
Starting point is 00:22:22 Cuz whoa, I wonder I most certainly don't have the same as you. Okay, go. I'd be willing to, unless yours features rock legend Sammy Hagar. Does not in fact include rock legend Sammy Hagar. There you go. So. That's tight. That is so.
Starting point is 00:22:38 From the world of music radar, turns out that Sammy Hagar, before he became famous, had a little run-in potentially with aliens oh and they they sent him on this path let me let me explain and this is how this happens huh let me let me stress when asked about this back in 2013 he said is super for real it definitely happened at his home at night in California has a fucking UFO encounter too. Did you know that? Gamble Del Toro has a lot of crazy stories. No, I did not know that. Him and a show where him and Steven Spielberg were just at a sit down table and they were just talking about each other and talking to each other comparing their lives.
Starting point is 00:23:17 He talks about he's out in college. He's on a back road with his friend with a six pack. They were about to go sit on like the desert and drink. And as they were out getting out there, they saw a light in the distance. And he was like, yo, pull over. What the hell is that? And as they pulled over, the light dropped down, came right at him as he stepped out of the car.
Starting point is 00:23:34 He says, I've never been more terrified. I felt like an aunt. He said they got in their car and he's like drive, drive, drive. And they like sped away and it followed him for a bit. And then at one point they looked back and it was gone. Hmm. Yikes. Interesting.
Starting point is 00:23:47 Yeah. Good shit. Continue. Sorry. Yeah. Um, he says I was living in my house at the foothills of the San Bernardino Mountains.
Starting point is 00:23:55 I was just lying in bed when I felt something weird going on like someone was tapping into my brain at the time. I didn't know how to explain it, but they were downloading or uploading. I don't know. That's it, but they were downloading or uploading. I don't know. That's the simplest way to put it.
Starting point is 00:24:06 Dude, that's that term. I'm just trying to let you know that term is pervasive. Like people talk about this kind of thing. I won't say all the time, but the people who experience this thing, that's a term they always say. They just suddenly know things that they didn't know before. Hmm. The best part is he said, you could see them two guys on this little hillside. They were playing with the numerical code, but it wasn't from our numerical system. And then suddenly this telepathic connection broke and I could actually see them go back to their ship in a beam of light zap light lightning. For a second, there was this infinity of white. I couldn't move. And then it was over scared me nearly to death.
Starting point is 00:24:45 It was an experience I couldn't understand. But he says he put it to good use. He's like my ego is telling me these aliens programmed you to be a rock star. That's awesome though. Fucking awesome. How old was he when that happened did he say? This was during the 60s so I imagine he was a teen at the time. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So I used it to, uh, as a tool to write songs about outer space in the future,
Starting point is 00:25:09 songs like cracking the world and silver lights, which is about second coming of Jesus Christ who comes back in a spaceship. Um, they, they, the article says, you know, like silver lights is from his first solo album and crack the worlds from his third solo album. But Hagar explored themes in his first band, Montrose. And I guess that was 1973 with a self-titled track.
Starting point is 00:25:32 The album was self-titled Montrose, but track on it was called Space Station 5. And on his first album with Van Halen 5150, the hit ballad Love Walks in had Hagar singing about contact with an alien. As he told Classic Rock, the night in the 60s had a complete profound effect on him. He says, before it happened, I didn't know about planes or psychic phenomena. I wasn't interested in any of that. But from that point on, I became extremely interested in outer space, reading books, Einstein. I went on a quest. I'm still on it. So I think that was pretty fun. Like Robert Monroe. A similar thing. Like the one thing that just shatters you what you think is real and it
Starting point is 00:26:13 just changes. I've never thought of Van Halen and Sammy Hagar as like alien folk. Yeah, that's great. But that's hilarious. Yeah. Soft disclosure is what they are. I love that. That's awesome. Well, I'm taking us out of here with science today. This is why I thought this was going to be the article.
Starting point is 00:26:29 Ladies and gentlemen, the scientists have achieved said that a little just a little bit weird. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Scientists quantum teleportation, but not not the way you think it is. But it's still very interesting, like very impressive. Basically, while they're not scientists are not teleporting physical things, they are able to teleport information almost instantaneously. Basically, it demonstrates that they could be close to building an actually useful quantum computer rather than just theorizing about it at this point. rather than just theorizing about it at this point. Interesting.
Starting point is 00:27:03 Yeah. So what they're doing for perspective, last year, Google said its quantum chip Willow had managed to do calculations in minutes, which would take the world's best conventional supercomputer 10 septillion years to complete. Given this is vastly longer than the universe has even existed, you're, you know, like it's like impossible. The new research was published in Nature, which told how it's thought to be the first time logical gates were quote unquote teleported, even though data has previously been teleported without moving qubits, which are quantum bits. Logical gates are operations which manipulate qubits to tell them which state they should be in.
Starting point is 00:27:40 The study led by Dougal Main said, quote, previous demonstrations of quantum teleportation have focused on transferring quantum states between physically separated systems. In our study, we use quantum teleportation to create interactions between these distant systems. Professor David Lucas, principal investigator of the team said, quote, our experiment demonstrates that our experiment demonstrates that network distributed quantum information processing is feasible with current technology. Scaling up quantum computers remains a formidable technical challenge that will likely require new physics insights as well as intensive engineering
Starting point is 00:28:13 effort over the coming years. So they have basically figured a way to instantly move information from one qubit to another. And I think it was a two, they kept them a two meters apart in the experiment to do it. Which if that's true, I'm curious and I may be thinking of this wrong. But if that's in, I got the science paper on nature.com. I'll link you if you care to read it. It's like long. Sure. But basically, if this is something that's possible, does this not imply
Starting point is 00:28:42 that quantum communication would be possible? If you can instantly transfer information from one qubit to another while they're entangled, doesn't that mean you could use it to pass information, aka communicate, if we could get to the technology to that point? I'm not saying at this point, but if people are saying- I'll say right now, this paper is- Yeah, it's a lot. I don't know. This paper is pretty much impenetrable to me. Yep, me too. I have no idea what any of it says, the math or any of that, but it's there.
Starting point is 00:29:10 But yeah, cause I remember being like well, you know, cause I go back to like, thinking about communication with radio waves and how we think like that's the best way to communicate cause radio waves travel at light speed and all this stuff. But if you can just instantly transfer information via entangled qubits,
Starting point is 00:29:25 doesn't that just mean you could literally do communication? Like that this proves you could communicate with quantum teleportation of information? I mean, does it prove it? I don't know. That's what I'm saying. Asking people smarter than myself. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Like scientists weigh in.
Starting point is 00:29:41 Does it prove it? I'm not sure. Yeah. Because if it does, or at's it's if it does or at least It's moving towards that. I mean that opens up whole new ways of communicating across vast distances without concern of Even light speed travel right be instant. So I don't know but yeah, you're right. This is this paper QC there's a lot of symbols zero. Yeah, it's deep. So much shit.
Starting point is 00:30:06 And this is why I can never do this shit. It's interesting either way, because it's a breakthrough like one way or another. This is fucking a huge breakthrough. They said they demonstrated mixed species to qubit gates between two math problems. I don't understand at a fidelity of 99.81% therefore conclude that the technical limitations of our implementation can be overcome. Basically it's like, it worked really fucking well.
Starting point is 00:30:32 The other notable source of error is the remote entanglement of the network qubits across the photonic quantum network and then they lose me. So, you know. Yeah, I don't even know what a photonic- We had a very smart scientist person once explained things to us again. I would love that. I love that. I love when that happens. We're big fans of being explained know, yeah, I don't even know what a smart scientist person once explained things to us again. I would love that. I love that.
Starting point is 00:30:46 I love when that happens. We're big fans of being explained to. Yeah. Yeah. Please. God. Uh, what do you call it? Influencer? Explain, please. So many people have done so many great little like written articles. The videos are always great. And it's always like so polished, so great. Yeah. Unlike us. Thank you guys for listening. Consider this information now instantaneously cubitly transported into your brain. And we'll be back next week with another minisode
Starting point is 00:31:12 right here at patreon.com slash Illuminaughtipod. We appreciate you, we love you. Thank you for your support. Goodbye. Bye. Cubits.

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