Modern Wisdom - Inside The Viral Words That Make You Click - Etymology Nerd - #1086
Episode Date: April 18, 2026Adam Aleksic is a linguist, content creator, and author, best known online as the Etymology Nerd. What’s happening to language right now? Words like “rizz” and “skibidi” can make it feel li...ke you’re out of the loop, but are you actually getting older, or has the internet transformed language into something entirely new? What does the science of linguistics say about this shift? Expect to learn why 6-7 was voted word of the year for 2025, why TikTok is becoming the most powerful linguistic engine on Earth, if there is a science to meme language, why funny language spreads and what makes it stick, why we should care about linguistics, and much more… TImestamps: (0:00) The Truth Behind “Word of the Year” (2:31) Is TikTok Rewiring How We Speak? (3:27) Do Social Platforms Create Their Own Dialects? (5:34) The Hidden Formula Behind Influencer Language (13:47) Why MrBeast Changes His Voice (17:01) Internet Subcultures and Their Unique Languages (18:33) How Newscasters Engineered Their Signature Voice (21:12) Why Sports Commentators Sound So Distinct (22:38) Is Distribution Is the Key to Going Viral? (26:44) Can You Hear Sexuality in Someone’s Voice? (33:38) Are Lesbian Accents Hard to Identify? (40:32) Should We Replace Words With Emojis? (43:37) The Surprising Evolution of Etymology (45:26) Are Young People Driving Language Change? (47:10) Why We Reject Forced Language (48:34) Where Do Filler Words Come From? (52:14) The Most Powerful Language Tricks Creators Use (54:58) How AI is Changing the Way We Speak (01:02:55) Can One Word Capture a Whole Idea? (01:04:17) Social Media vs AI: What’s Worse For Language Development? (01:08:20) How Language Shapes the Way We Think (01:10:41) What It Really Means to Be Gen Z (01:14:40) Why Teenagers Naturally Rebel (01:20:20) Rapid-Fire: The Origins of Everyday Words (01:24:37) The Power of Creating Your Own Language (01:28:21) Was QWERTY Designed to Be Inefficient? (01:31:57) Does ChatGPT Actually Speak English? (01:33:49) Is Language Evolving Faster Than Ever? (01:35:02) Where to Find Adam Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: lnkfi.re/SN-Goggins #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: lnkfi.re/SN-Peterson #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: lnkfi.re/SN-Huberman - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Six-seven was voted word of the year in 2025 from Dictionary.com.
Is that cheating?
Not even a word.
It doesn't mean anything.
Well, you have to understand that whenever a dictionary chooses their word of the year,
that's a marketing ploy by Big Dictionary to sell more dictionaries.
Yes.
Six-seven, of course, is this reference where if you say it, you can go viral.
That's the idea behind Six-seven.
That's the whole joke, that this is a possibility of getting clipped,
that you can cash in on the virality of it for your own game.
And Dictionary.com played that game.
But every single person who did it also cash in on that.
There was a Connecticut House Representative Bill Buckby who said 6-7 on the Connecticut's
state floor.
And all these people are doing the exact same thing as Talen Kinney, who is the basketball
player who started the trend and all the Gen Alpha kids who were cashing in on it, like the
6-7 kid.
All of it was a ploy for virality.
And it is a realization that clip farming is the first.
future of distribution online. Wow. Okay, but it's a word that doesn't mean anything and is specifically
designed to be vacuous and to incite the question. What does that mean? Is that, is that unique?
I don't believe that it doesn't mean anything. Right. I believe even when something is absurd,
absurdity is a meaning. And it's absurd for a reason. It's absurd because it's sort of critiquing the
general information ecosystem. It's absurd that this would emerge as a word, but that is the meaning.
The absurdity of the word is its own definition.
Ah, okay, so it's a story about it's a meta word.
Yeah, exactly.
It's a knowing wink.
By uttering 6-7, you're playing into the Panopticon.
Rage bait was Oxford's 2025 word of the year.
Right.
They're also, they're a rage-baiting with that.
They're hoping that it sparks controversy.
Now when people are commenting about the word rage bait being chosen as the word of the
year, that drives the word further on Twitter or whatever, X, excuse me, and as a result,
more people know about Oxford dictionaries.
You got to remember. This is big dictionary at work.
And slop was another one as well.
So a word describing, a word that is sloppy describing something that is sloppy being used for people to complain about the fact that look at the state of language today.
It's all, what, it's slop, actually.
Yeah, I like to combat that idea that language is slop or brain rot.
There's nothing inherently in a word that's good or bad.
It's a tool that you can use.
But I think we cast our negative associations of social media onto the language.
And yeah, of course, a lot of the videos we see are slop, but that doesn't mean the words themselves are bad for your brain.
Do you think is TikTok becoming the most powerful linguistic engine on earth at the moment?
Is that what's shaping language more than anything else?
Absolutely. There was a study by Know Your Meme in 2022 that found where words come from over time by percentage of platforms.
And it started out mostly on 4chan and Reddit and Twitter.
And now it's mostly TikTok and Twitter.
and again, sorry, X.
And you see...
It's still Twitter.
I know. It's still Twitter.
I'm holding on to it.
Yeah.
Yeah, no, but a lot of stuff is happening in TikTok.
There's linguistic innovation.
There's a kind of...
Everything comes from the user interface.
There's a feeling of a conversation happening there.
Users come there for the conversation to chip in,
to be part of this effervescent thing that's going on.
And in that, language is created.
Along with this, we have all these echo chambers
and algorithmic trends being perpetuated
that push modern slang cycles
faster than ever before.
Is there such a thing
as a Twitter dialect
versus a LinkedIn dialect
versus a Reddit or a live stream dialect?
Are these almost individual
variants on language
in each of these different cohorts?
Absolutely. It's the same way
when you're in your grandmother's house
versus when you're in a frat house,
you have a different expectation of how to speak.
You're not going to speak to your grandmother
the way you would to a frat brother. There's like a normal way of communicating. So a platform
functions kind of like a house. It is a place where you go to use a certain type of language.
So on LinkedIn, you're going to use this more professional language. On Twitter, you're going
to engage in more linguistic play where you're, you'll have all these words like jester gooning
or whatever emerge. On TikTok, there might be more fandom language or something. But also,
I don't want to speak broadly about individual platforms. Even within these platforms,
there are micro-dialacts going on. There's K-pop groups and Swifty groups. And they all speak
kind of their own language.
What did you make of the fallout?
I think one of the most viral instances of linguistic exposure was that mid-gesto maxing at the
club when the foids come over, is it better to be mugging with the bros?
What did you make of that fallout?
Yeah.
I think it's kind of doing the same thing as six-seven, where there's a meaning beyond what
the literal meaning technically is.
It's kind of a knowing wink again to the algorithm that by saying,
these words you can go viral. You can cash in on clavicular's fame. He is the human six-seven.
And if you talk about him, you get to go viral. That's kind of the thing. But in doing so,
you can also push the trend further. And while six-seven was innocuous, maybe clavicular is more
harmful. But that is kind of the name of the game of virality, that all these things are just
key words, maxing, gooning, whatever. And you can just say that and you can go viral because
the keywords are what pushes things through the algorithm and they're what people resonate with
on the personal level when they're scrolling.
It also tells you something about the person using them.
It's an identifier of in-group belonging.
100%.
Language is a tool of identity.
And when you use a word, you are signaling that you're part of this cohort.
What are the most defining characteristics of influencers speaking online for creators?
How do you think about the constituent components of that?
Yeah.
I spent a lot of time working on the influencer.
and I used to consult on a court case where one influencer was suing another influencer for stealing
her vibe and part of that was the accent.
Hang on, hang on, hang on, hang on.
Pause.
What?
It was here in Austin, actually.
But there was one is called the sad beige lawsuit that there was this minimalist influencer
kind of wore a lot of brown clothing.
And there was another minimalist influencer also in Austin who wore a lot of brown clothing.
And they kind of spoke the same.
And so one of them sued the other for stealing their IP.
Which included the accent.
Exactly.
So I was brought on as a consultant in that case.
And the takeaway is that neither of them were really original and that they pay homage to an older tradition of influencers talking about.
It's a long and illustrious history of influences speaking in this way.
I mean, I think the modern like the, hey guys, welcome to my podcast.
That kind of like, that's the lifestyle influencer accent.
That traces all the way back to like Kim Kay and the Peris Hilton and early beauty YouTubers.
And then that kind of filtered into TikTok.
And that same voice with the uptalk and the vocal fry is preserved because there's this thing
called the linguistic founder effect where you kind of follow in the footsteps of people who came
before you linguistically. And that's why also platforms do have different commenting cultures
and different linguistic cultures. And that's only one type of influencer accent.
I obviously...
What are they trying to achieve with the lifestyle influencer accent? What are the important
parts and what's the outcome they're trying to get toward?
Yeah, great question. There's a few things going on. One of it is just social signaling.
It's saying I'm part of your group because that's what all language does.
So there is a identity marker of what it's like to be an influencer.
And so you're performing this idea of an influencer, also performing relatability to the young
women who are watching you.
At the same time, the accent is optimized for the algorithm.
There's an element of retention, which is how long you watch the video.
And when you drag out words, it kind of works better for captivating your audience.
Dead silence is very bad on the algorithm.
So if you have a live stream or something, you want to drag out.
your final syllable. So actually that uptalk where you kind of lengthen your final vowel is very good
for online hooking. No way. So if you don't have your next sentence queued up, you can have a holding pattern,
which is the end of the last word, so that you know what you're going to say at the end. And then after
that you can work out what's coming next. That's exactly it. In linguistics system. Holy fuck. It's called
floor holding. It's an actual like strategy that people use before, you know, social media.
If you're on a stage, if you're on a debate, you want to keep grabbing people's attention.
So you use things like filler words, actually.
Um is a great example of a floor holding tactic where you are trying to get people to keep listening to you,
even though you don't have something immediately to say.
Alex O'Connor taught me this great one about Christopher Hitchens that if he was in the middle of a debate
and he needed to take a sip of water or have a thought, he would get halfway through the sentence and then would continue from there.
And I thought that's so fucking cool as opposed to pausing at the end.
And then thinking about what he was going to say by taking or even as...
So you might say, why is that the case?
Well, really what we need to consider is, oh, I'm waiting.
So the use of silence.
We want to know what comes next.
Bingo.
Yeah.
And same with the influencers.
It's like if there's an up talk, there's an implied, I'm not done speaking.
And that's kind of the meta signal that there's something more to come.
It sounds like something's unfinished when there's up talk.
And when there's down talk, you'll never hear down.
Like, I'm done.
Like that's like a falling time.
Oh, it's a handoff.
There you go.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
So you will not hear.
that online at all because it's a signal to scroll away.
That's funny.
I've trained myself.
I just said signal to scroll away.
Like uptalk because that's like I've sort of trained myself into speaking, I call an
educational influencer action, which is different than that lifestyle influencer action.
Okay, give me the educational influencer accent.
The most interesting thing about that is, you know, and I kind of stress more words to
keep you watching my videos and I'll talk a little faster.
And I clearly talk quickly in real life.
But I think there's a difference between a conversational style and then when I'm purely
reciting a scripted video to hook you maximally for your attention.
Okay, so you're stressing individual words, speaking a bit more quickly.
That's interesting that the Valle Girl vocal fry lifestyle influencer, what I get the sense
of as someone who isn't exactly a connoisseur of that content is a softness, sort of welcomingness,
almost a familiarity, an attempt to sort of show, hey guys, welcome back to my channel.
it's almost welcoming you through the door, whereas it's much sharper when you're thinking about
the educational influencer. But given that one is kind of slow, although there's no breaks,
but it's certainly not da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da. It's much more cozy. And the other
is significantly more aggressive in terms of its pacing. Absolutely. Well, it's, again, the question
of what are you trying to do on the meta-level? The lifestyle influencer wants you to feel like
you're parisocially watching this video. An educational influencer wants you to feel like they're a
trusted source of authority.
And it's that level of communication that's happening there.
I don't actually want you to relate to me 100%.
I want you to think of me as a teacher if I'm talking to you.
So if you're speaking more quickly with authority in a almost staccato manner, there's
brevity in the words.
There's clipping.
The consonants are always being pronounced pretty accurately to create shape and color.
This is an interesting one.
Have you looked much at diction, the way that the mouth, the functionality of the
mouth of physiology of the mouth works.
100%.
That's a big part of linguistics.
Yeah.
Unreal.
So I just really loved the first time I ever worked with a speech coach.
And he said, his description to me was vowels give words color and consonants give them structure.
And one of the problems being from the northeast of the UK, we have a glottal stop, typically.
So people say butter.
There's two T's in butter and they're not saying either of them.
And neither was I when I was younger.
By removing or by losing those consonants, you sort of fall through words.
They don't have the same kind of structure, clarity, clippiness, and bringing those back in helps to give it a little bit more form.
But what you're describing here that you've modified your speaking style for what will perform better online is kind of exactly this greater homogenization effect that's happening.
There's nothing less valid about a North England dialect than the received pronunciation or the transatlantic accent or any of these things.
We just bullshit into thinking that some of these are like fancier than other accents, but it's all in our heads.
And yet there's still this pressure to perform, to use a more standard pronunciation of English.
For my book, I interviewed a lot of Indian creators who feel like they can't speak in Indian accents
because that's kind of maligned upon.
It seems as low status.
Yeah.
And they have to kind of code switch into more British-sounding or American-sounding accents.
Wow.
Well, in my defense, or at least in my mother's defense, she was sort of slapping me on the wrists and beating it out of me as a child.
so I didn't make it to adulthood without saying butter correctly.
That's because of an ingrained shame.
There really is nothing inherently wrong with you speaking in a Northern English.
I'm going to go back to it.
I'm going to fucking going to go back to it, mate.
You fucking cannot stop me from saying butter as much as I want.
The cost is you might go less viral because the viewer has an expectation that I want you to be speaking in the way I expect you to speak.
Also, there is a degree of legibility or illegibility.
If you get a strong Geordie accent from the northeast where I'm from or a strong Scouse accent from Liverpool,
It is as close to a different language whilst being the same language.
It's like one step away from speciation in terms of language.
I think language can be correctly described as following a very similar path to evolution
and that there are bottleneck events and speciation events.
And the algorithm, for example, I think is one such bottleneck,
that it compresses our language into you have to be speaking in these widely recognizable accents,
but then it speciates and creates new environments.
And so on these different platforms
And in the different fandom communities
On the platforms, you will have new outgrowths of language
That have first passed through this filter event.
What else?
So we've had cozy lifestyle lady.
We've had educational influencer man.
There's a beast in the room.
Yeah, I was about to say.
Very good.
What's happening with Mr. Beast's accent?
If you look at his video and if you look at how he actually speaks in interviews,
they're completely different.
he is very deliberately
switching his accent to grab your attention
as much as possible he screams in it
I just bought a private island
giving away a million dollars
like he's very like ostentatious with it
he's screaming at you every sentence
because that works for his 14 year old
viewer's attention spans
he's speaking to a different audience
than somebody trying to educate
and is a different audience
than somebody trying to appear relatable
because he's clearly being ostentatious
so it's reflected in his vocal style
he sounds like he's about to give away
a million dollars even as he does it you know
So it's excitement, loudness, what else?
Shock and awe, really.
You want the viewer to remain so dumbfounded watching the video that they don't even think to scroll away.
It's like a magician.
You just want to keep the attention going.
I saw a live streamer in the wild for the first time ever a couple of months ago.
And obviously I've seen live streams online.
I've seen some IRL stuff, not tons, but seeing an IRL streamer from side camera or behind camera
was a real experience.
It was at the Beast Games 2 premiere in Hollywood.
And what I found fascinating was
because the live stream essentially never ends
until it finally does,
there is this permanent edging of the audience
that there will be a payoff but not yet
and there will be a payoff but not yet.
At least with Beast, it's like,
we're going to go to the most expensive gym in the world.
But first, I'm going to show you the cheapest
and now I'm going to show you one a bit more expensive.
And now I'm going to, and then finally you do it
and there's a payoff and then you're done
and the video's finished.
Yeah, different medium because it's balanced.
by a specific time. So you know the Beast video is 14 minutes long, but the live stream is
lasting however long. It's kind of like, definitely. Live performers, if you go to like a public
gathering and there's those people doing backflips in a crowd like for money or whatever, they won't
do the backflips immediately because nobody, like people leave immediately. They dance around for
ages. They'll dance around. They'll do a round a collection of the money. They'll dance around some more.
They'll do another round of collect. I promise guys, we're going to get to the backflips and you keep
watching because they're edging you. It's what's, yeah, exactly what's happening. And if you look at
like TikTok live streams, I keep getting click baited by this like video of this guy trying to
peel an egg and he gets the last part of the egg and he's like, he keeps like edging us like,
I'm going to take off this shell here.
But I think there's something of an important parallel between that visual way that you get
clickbaited and the auditory and linguistic way that happens as well.
Okay.
How so?
Well, live streaming, I think there is a dissolution between this online presentation and
the offline presentation.
I think it's particularly dangerous because it does play into this attention mechanism, but in
real life where you're exploiting real people for it. Linguistically speaking, that does mean you're
going to keep doing the uptops. You're going to speak in attention-grabbing manners. All of that is,
yeah, and you do kind of delay gratification. When I do a video and I scripted out, I kind of don't
immediately say the resolution of the question I pose at the start, and you'll see this a lot in
YouTube videos. The payoff's held until the end. Yeah. What other subcultures online do you think
particularly interesting
linguistically.
Oh, wow.
I mean, I've spent a lot of time studying
the language of the manosphere.
I think it's particularly interesting
because half of Gen Z slang
is either African-American English
or it's from 4chan.
And you do have a lot of those
in-cell words trickling in.
I definitely,
4chan was a linguistic incubator
for decades.
And, well, a decade.
And all these new words came out of it
that are still slowly diffusing
into more mainstream culture,
like maxing and piled and, you know,
gooning.
What made 4chan such a useful incubator for language?
There's the anonymity on the platform
where users need to demonstrate a shared proficiency in slang
to show that they're not a normie.
And there's this huge selection pressure
to show that you're one of the 4chan users.
And because it's such a constrained platform,
you can't do video, you can't do voice,
you're not doing face, you don't know the identity of someone,
you need to very quickly, through your language,
identify, I am one of you, not one of them.
Yeah, you can do like images and things, which that's how we get a lot of memes also come from there.
But linguistically, yeah, there's...
No one's posting a selfie, though, right, to say, this is me, I am one of us.
In the sense that language is identity.
Yeah, 100% these people, unfortunately are also trying to build a shared identity for themselves.
Self-branding, belonging.
And it's cool to come up with the new joke.
And language spreads when it's funny.
It does.
We like saying things that are funny.
That's reasonable.
It's funny to say on podcast maxing.
Yeah, that's true.
Well, I am.
I have been for it goes now.
I am podcast maxing.
What about newscasters?
How can they speak so strangely?
They're doing the exact same thing.
This just in, and they speak in this authoritative kind of manner.
It's doing the exact same thing as the educational influencer, really.
It's a way of grabbing attention that's conditioned a certain medium.
And there's a broadcaster voice, just as there's an influencer voice.
They used to train like American broadcasters to use this mid-Atlantic, yeah, mid-Western U.S. accent.
that was kind of the homogenous U.S. accent.
And that was also a way of presenting in an accepted,
this is how a TV broadcaster is supposed to speak kind of way.
And at home, they might still use like a local accent speak in a different way.
It's interesting that that becomes enforced over time just through consensus and expectation.
There's some first mover somewhere, maybe one person's particularly effective.
There's a legendary newscaster.
And this guy speaks in a way.
And then the generation around him shaped, because that seems to,
be a successful approach. Therefore, you see this online. Someone has a new thumbnail style and now
everybody's doing thumbnails like that or somebody does a new video style and everyone's doing
videos like that. It's the same thing. But with the accent for newscasters, and then that becomes
not only something effective for his colleagues at the time, but it's now shaping the entire
future and that's the expectation. Well, that's how newscasters speak. And if you were to come in and
you would speak in a different manner, that would be very different. Right. That's what I was
saying about the founder effect. And you kind of follow on the footsteps of people before you.
For example, for my educational influencer accent, probably it's highly influenced by people like Hank Green or something, Vsauce.
They were the early educational influencers, and they're probably copying people like Bill Nye or something.
So it always trickles back to something earlier.
You know, you exist in the context.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
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What about sports commentators?
Because they're doing something similar but a little bit distinct and different.
Yeah.
If news broadcasters are the equivalent of educational influencers, then sports commentators are
kind of closer to Mr. Beast.
They want to keep you excited.
Go!
Oh, you know, like it's very exciting.
They want to keep you excited about watching the game, and that's reasonable, yeah.
Yeah, but speaking with a lot of clarity again, super expressive, there's not much,
I don't see very many filler words with those people, which I guess is because it's trained
out of them.
I have to imagine that over time, if you're looking to maximize relatability, authenticity,
a felt sense of belonging, what you're actually going to do is not sterilize your use
of language too much to make it too precise, that that then feels contrived as a
to something that's naturalistic.
You want to hit a fine line.
I mean, think about like phone calls in movies.
They famously never say goodbye.
They just finish saying something and they hang up.
Because in real life, we do the whole like,
all right, I'll see you later, goodbye.
But in a movie, that doesn't really work.
So you do actually make it more concise.
No way, because it would just waste screen time.
We don't need to hear you.
Yeah, exactly.
Okay, okay.
Well, have a good, yep, it's fine.
Yeah, no worry.
Yeah, I'll catch you later, goodbye.
I mean, five seconds that you didn't need in the movie.
So it's performing the idea of,
a phone call while not actually doing phone call as we actually do it.
I never thought about that.
Holy shit.
But sterilizing language too much obviously puts it across.
You did a great TED Talk.
I did a TEDx talk five, six years ago or something now.
And one of the things that I realized is I was getting ready for that and doing the preparation
was I actually need to detrain my knowledge of my own talk in a way so that it doesn't
sound too contrived, so it doesn't sound too performative. There's that idea of what a TED Talk
sounds like. I mean, there's a great video on YouTube of like guy just doing TED Talk by saying
things that don't mean anything, but he's saying in the cadence of a TED Talk. That's funny.
Definitely recommend looking that up. But yeah, there's, you know what I mean when I say there's
a cadence of what a TED Talk sounds like. I think it's kind of dead. I think it's in the past.
And TED Talks are also, they've lost a lot of their prestige of what a one.
and the way people should be doing TED Talks now is just clip farming, which is the future.
The way that people should be doing TED Talks now is just clipfired.
So if you get booked for a TED Talk, you should just try and get clipformed.
I think so.
How would you do that?
What actually matters, I don't know, the audience of TED Talk is, I guess, aspirational speakers themselves.
Or, like, if you have a real message to say, it's probably not the audience that's there.
It's probably better if you transmit it on the internet because you could reach.
that audience. And that's the idea behind 6-7 and behind jester maxing and all that stuff,
is that distribution matters more than the content itself. That you're just saying the thing
that goes viral. And if we're existing in an age of social media virality, the TED talk is kind
of a dead format existing as this quasi-online talk, which was fantastic in the early days of
YouTube when there wasn't enough content going on. But now the media's ecosystem is oversaturated.
And the TED Talks have way fewer views than they used to
because they don't do the same function
that they did in the early internet.
Well, especially because one video can get,
you can write a book and then each sentence can be sold individually.
And then even those sentences can be reproduced and reproduced
and reproduced and individual productions of those can be re-shared.
So, yeah, you're actually looking for as much distribution as possible.
When, what was it called?
The H.H. bomb thing that happened with the guys in the Miami
Club where they played that Kanye song and the insane bar.
That was every single second of that video was broken down and shared and reshared and published
and republished and commented on.
And that's a single book just being sold word by word essentially.
And what that points to is that there is a dangerous misalignment between human preferences.
Like I can imagine that most of us don't think that song is good for humanity.
And then what goes viral online?
Because online, there are certain emotions that are rewarded more than others.
there's anger, fear, awe, humor, things that trigger a state of a mental arousal where your brain is
more activated. Now, things that don't do that is like contentment. Contentment makes you feel warm and fuzzy
inside, but it doesn't trigger your brain to click a like button. The like button, of course, is more
of a metric of how willing you are to click this button than it is whether you like something.
And you're more willing to click a button if your brain is activated and your brain's not
activated when you feel warm and fuzzy, which means warm and fuzzy ideas are not going to spread
online. The things that are going to spread are rage bait and clickbait. That's so fascinating.
So if you're a meditation teacher, by design, because you make people feel good and you get them out of that brain mode, you're going to get less engagement, which means that you're going to go less viral, which means there's less of an incentive for you to keep doing your content.
Look at the wellness space.
The same way movie phone calls perform what it's like to be a phone call, wellness influencers are performing the idea of wellness, but it's this hyper-esthetized, sanitized, clean girl thing where you're on a yoga mat doing Pilates or whatever.
but that doesn't you're presenting this hyper wellness idea that's not true wellness and if you're
actually feeling warm and fuzzy you don't need to prove that to other people you don't need to
play like you're feeling good yeah you're not doing yoga in the living room with your floor
to ceiling windows and you're waving sage everywhere you're sat on the couch relaxing
sometimes it's just watching a movie is you know sitting on the couch but not sufficiently
visually interesting so it wouldn't be compelling for people what about the gay male accent
what's going on there yeah 100%
there's a lot of research on, well, emerging research on lesbian accent as well, but gay accent,
that there is a certain way of talking that, of course, will differ between different communities
and it's not a monolith. But you know, you can recognize when somebody talks in a gay accent.
There's a few sociological things going on. I think it's incorrect to say that they talk more like
women, but they adopt many strategies that are similar to how women have talked. They raise certain vowels
and they will, yeah.
And it's all kind of the same identity thing.
It's historically a way, like the gay slang words,
which is a lot of our Gen Z slang words also come from gay ballroom speech.
What like?
Oh, like slay, serve, queen, cooked eight, uh, cooked is gay?
Yeah, I'm pretty sure that comes.
Well, there's cooking and cooked which come from different sources.
Cooking is sports sling.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, playing well.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Unreal. So I wonder if there's stuff that even we wouldn't notice that there's little
identifiers in the gay community like top speak in one way and bottom speak in another.
I guess there's guys that present in much more masculine manner and there's guys that present
in a much more feminine manner. Interesting conversation I had over dinner, probably best
to have it over dinner. Looking at what it is the presentation that most straight men notice in
gay men. And what they notice is what you said, which is, are you coding as female? Not as
female, but in a manner that somebody who isn't a part of that culture would identify as feminine.
I'm going to sound like a broken clock, but everything is performing the idea of something.
And so gay men performed the idea of being gay, which is fine. Straight men perform the idea of
being straight. And it's also a way to signal to other people. Like, historically, gay men had to be
closeted and they needed ways of signaling to other gay men that, hey, I'm chill and we should hang out.
You know, and that's sort of linguistically, there are little cues you can drop that hint at I'm a gay man.
Right. What like?
Well, using certain slang words.
Right.
Like, I'm thinking about like, I don't know, cottaging in Britain, but when homosexuality was illegal.
There's like certain ways of tapping your foot or Polari was a whole gay cant, like a kind of a micro language created in England that was used specifically by gay people as a way of evading detection by police because police didn't know what was going on.
And it was a way of signaling a shared identity for themselves.
And we see sort of gay micro-languages emerge everywhere.
In the Philippines, there's one called Sward-Speak.
There's one in South Africa.
Every community, because gay people have been historically kind of marginalized,
they need ways to come up with subversion of the traditional norms of language.
Do you know what Capoeira is?
It sounds British.
To Brazilian martial art.
Brazilian is what I mean.
So Capoeira was a martial art developed in Brazil when,
they were under a military rule and they weren't allowed to practice fighting because they didn't
want there to be a military force that could rise up. So this thing, if you watch a video of it,
looks very distinctive, very dancing, it kind of looks like it. I mean, it very quickly gets into
a fighting art. But that makes me think about gay guys in Britain before it was legal, having to have
a secret language on a Brazilian martial art developed by Africans taken to the country as slaves.
That was it. So they weren't allowed to practice.
fighting and they've got music that goes with it as well which would be a way to hide what was going
on it's just a part we don't need to worry about that it's just a party and yeah the well yeah that's
amazing yeah well if we accept that language is a tool of identity identity is tied to power
who's in control as part of your identity and so we see the english language which is defined by these
white british people in the 1700s or whatever and we're still following the norms yeah love them
but it doesn't represent all the speakers of English.
And so different speakers try to come up with different ways to subvert that structure that's imposed upon them.
And so a lot of that has been African-American English speakers who now have come up with a lot of slang words that later bled into mainstream Gen Z slang.
Or specifically gay people because these are straight white men creating language.
And so it's a way of subverting of establishing their own norms of language.
King and Queen, for example, like the slang word, what's up King?
you know, like that, or what's up, Queen?
That comes from ballroom slang in New York City in the 1980s,
which is this like black, gay, Latino space.
Black, gay, Latino space.
Black and Latino, you know, gay people in New York City.
And it was a way of elevating people in that community.
I see you on the status of royalty because we are not seen as that by society.
And that even goes back even further to the history, kind of like black people in the United States.
A lot of slang goes from black people.
to gay people and then to like the straight white girlfriends of gay men and then to the mainstream
English.
Right.
Okay.
So there's a pipeline.
A four person human centipede with normies at the end and black people at the front.
That's pretty much it.
Fantastic.
Or 4chan is the other end.
4chan, black people, gay people, cool people, normies.
Language spreads when it's funny or cool.
And it's cool when black people use it.
And it's funny when 4chan people use it.
It can be considered funny, unfortunately, when black people say things as well, which is a whole
genre of hood irony memes like
Cap like
is an example
or Huz is a recent
slang word. What's that? It's like a slang word
for hoes but it comes from
like a parody of African American English
or Giat that was
that was also kind of making fun of
Big ass. Yeah yeah yeah. But it comes from the
word God damn pronounced in an exaggerated
African American accent.
And of course when I say that there's many
different African American accents in the same way there's many different
gay accents and many different internet accents
And I really hate to speak of languages of monolith.
I'm not even sure language exists as like a thing.
It's just like we all speak separately kind of close to people around us.
And there's like a gradient of what language is rather than a monolithic thing.
The monolithic thing is this institutional assumption that there is a dictionary that can capture a snapshot of what language is.
So every person has their own language in this regard.
Yes. It's called idelect from the Greek word idios, meaning one's own.
And we all speak in a completely unique way, conditioned by our background, our upbringing, our education, the people we hung out with.
the words that resonated with us based on just our history of interacting with language.
I find that really compelling that you have a linguistic footprint unlike anybody else.
That's how they caught the Unabomber.
Yes, his brother found out that he said,
eat your cake and have it too as opposed to have your cake and eat it too,
because the one that he used actually makes more sense, but was completely unique.
Exactly.
And so we all have like these little quirks.
Whether you think you do or not, they're there.
What about lesbian accents?
This is harder to identify.
And there are studies showing that speakers can identify a lesbian accent, but there are very
mixed results on what defines one.
There is, again, indication that they speak a little closer to the idea of a masculine
language, and yet at the same time, it would be reductive to say that.
So there is certain stuff going on with perhaps lowered vowels and maybe a deeper voice,
but again, I would be generalizing to say that we know for sure.
there definitely is something going on,
but the studies aren't there to fully explain it.
It would make sense if you were to think about much of gay fashion
compared with straight fashion for men.
You would say, well, there's a bit more flair.
There's maybe a bit more color.
There's more beautification.
There's more accessories.
Okay, that seems to code somewhat feminine.
And if you were to look at gay women compared with straight women,
say, well, there's more plaid and jeans.
and sort of male coded clothes,
a little bit more loose fitting sometimes,
that would tend to code a bit more male.
You go, okay, well, it would make sense
that if you're presenting outwardly that way,
that maybe your language would match that.
But it would also be unique and distinct
because gay men aren't trying to be women.
That would be very bad for the gay men
that are trying to attract.
Right.
And gay women aren't trying to be men
because they wouldn't attract any of the gay women.
You're performing this thing that is the idea of gay man again,
which is maybe closer to women than straight men.
Performing the idea.
of being a gay man and all we're doing all the time is performing larping we're just pretending
to be on a podcast right now but in doing so we actually are you know can you i need you to dice it can
you blow that apart for me it's really cool i'm not entirely sure what you mean um i think people should
all read this guy irving goffman he's a sociologist from the 1960s and he comes up with this
great book the presentation of self and everyday life and he describes how we all adopt faces or
roles in society um there's a front facing role and a backfacing like so when you're on stage you're
stage. And when you're on stage, right now, we're presenting to the public. We are on stage.
We're presenting as ourselves. But as soon as we get off the podcast, we might speak more casually.
Because there's a different way of communicating when you know there's this invisible audience
present. In the same way, when you're literally on a stage or you're literally backstage,
that you'll do the same thing. But if you're talking in front of your parents versus you're talking
with your friends, you'll adopt different registers. And it's that kind of the same thing we were
describing with different rooms and different platforms. And you have an idea of what you're
environment is and you will mold yourself into the role you see that environment as bringing to you.
And so we do everything through this idea of a rule and all of what we do is a performance.
To be a man is kind of a performance.
Like we need to keep replicating this idea of manhood.
We both like have beards.
We both dress and talk a certain way.
And in doing so, we're kind of adopting symbols of masculinity and clavicular is doing a great job of that himself.
I've got a take on that, which is I think it's the most caricatured traits of masculinity,
not necessarily in terms of speech, you know, because you might say a powerful, precise, educated, or a brusk, maybe even,
someone who's very curt with the way that they spoke a strong and silent type.
But that's because masculinity is couched within 2026.
What does it mean for masculinity to be that way?
I think visually masculinity has just been going in one direction.
If you look at the tracking of Luke Skywalker star action figures over time, in the 60s, he was super skinny.
And then in the 90s, he gave me a comparison.
Just search a Chad GPT, Luke Skywalker action figure overtime comparison.
And yeah, he just goes on a very heavy course of testosterone for about six decades.
That's really interesting.
And just gets more and more and more and more and more jacked.
So I think what's happening is a performance of masculinity.
That's the best way to put it.
Luke Skywalker looks next.
Luke Skywalker absolutely mocks, dude.
Yeah, he's performing masculinity.
It's a male-to-male visual comparison.
And there is always an evolving definition of masculinity, too.
Like, back in ancient Rome, being masculine, I mean, like, as long as you could have sex with other men, as long as you weren't a bottom, that would be, like, not masculine.
But that was that was the definition of masculinity for a certain period in ancient Rome.
You're allowed to fuck just you have to fuck.
Caesar was famously offended,
not at the accusation that he was gay,
but the accusation that he was the bottom.
Because that's the Roman idea.
But it's an evolving idea.
Whether men should have long hair or short hair,
whether, you know, we should, you know,
what it means to be a man is always a moving target,
and we're always performing for this target.
So it just proves how arbitrary it is.
That right now, of course, there is a current,
2026 idea of a man that we're performing toward.
But that's a very different idea than back when we were wearing togas.
That's 1977, 1997, 1995.
Heavy course of testosterone, dude.
Unbelievable.
And then they've used the stats of what it would be like to give the same proportions
to a human on either side.
37 inch shoulders and a 32 inch waist versus 52 inch shoulders and 27 inch waist.
Right.
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modern wisdom and modern wisdom a checkout. What about emojis? Because they're kind of like language and
picture, I guess. They feel like modern hieroglyphics. Yeah, well, there's a few different functions
of emojis. You can use it to substitute a word.
We see this with ICE protest.
People want to censor the word ICE because they think the algorithm is like going to hamper their video.
So they'll just sub it out with the Ice Cube emoji.
That's a substitute of emoji.
Then you have emojis that are more para language meant to augment your sentence.
So if I say something and then I comment the, or I have a sentence.
And then at the end of the sentence, there's like a laughing emoji or a sneezing emoji or a crying emoji.
That serves as a sort of a tone tag telling you what the emotional form of my sentence is.
and then there's a few other separate ways
you can send them individually
you could use them as reactions
there's a lot of things going on
but they absolutely are linguistic
in the sense of they carry meaning
and they communicate something
from one person to another
I saw a
court case
where they were trying to determine
what this emoji meant
had it have
did it imply?
Was it the farmer in Canada?
What was this one?
Okay so there's a great court case
where
there was a farmer who had a contract for grain shipments,
and he would occasionally, like they did month by month,
and they would sign off with a yes or a whatever.
And then one month, the farmer signs off with an okay emoji,
just like thumbs up.
And the grain supplier doesn't deliver the grain or something like that.
And then the farmer sues the grain supplier.
Maybe I'm getting it the other way around.
But the point is the court case was about whether the thumbs up emoji
legally constituted an affirmation of this agreement occurring.
One person said this could be acknowledgement,
and the other person said this is a direct agreement.
And I think the court case ruled in favor of thumbs up being an agreement.
But it was kind of based on previous context, right?
Because previous context was that...
The long established history of emojis and court cases.
Right. Well, there's a few things going on.
Yeah.
What was the one you were thinking of?
There was a murder case, and it was about intent.
It was about whether or not this person had intended to kill somebody or not.
And it's an interpretation of what this emoji means.
And it's so funny because it's a single thing, right?
There's no intonation.
I guess it's couched in what has been said before and after,
but if you just take it on its own.
There is no different way to say it.
There is no different way to spell it.
And it's only been around for 15, less than 15 years,
something like that probably.
Okay.
So the definition of it hasn't had enough time to really cement.
itself and become established.
So it's so fluid.
Emoji definitions are also constantly changing.
Like the crying emoji once meant literally crying and then it meant laughing.
And then it also, the laughing emoji is now seen as like ironic by something.
Yeah, you shouldn't use the laughing emoji.
Right.
Yeah.
That's kind of cringe.
Unless you're trying to like signal boomer.
Correct.
Yes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's the horseshoe has come all the way back around.
Right.
Again.
You can post ironically use it, I think.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah, we're in the post cry laughing face world.
Right. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Okay. What's the, what's the direction of etymology? It feels like there's sort of an entropy to words that they move in a direction. Are they always getting simpler and shorter over time? Is there an arrow of motion when it comes to word development?
I think language, more than anything, is a reflection of who we are as people right now. The word etymology comes from Greek etymos, meaning truth. There's a truth to the word that we look at. And it tells us something about human.
about who we are as people because again this is a tool of identity and so less of there being a
direction and more of it just reflecting who we are right now what we're feeling it's language is our
way to categorize what we think is going on i'll use words to describe my reality and then i'll use that
to communicate it to you so it's describing reality and then it's communicating that reality
if our reality changes yeah language will change as a result uh because now we have to describe
something different. So we have, we're using fewer words to describe different types of plants than
we were in the 1800s because we're interacting with fewer plants. That's kind of sad.
Oh, okay. And what about when, what's the term for when a word gets broken down to make,
to be made shorter? So goodbye as a good example. God be with you. And then, yeah, contracted to
goodbye and then eventually you can truncate it to just buy. Yeah. Yeah. What's that called? That's
A contraction?
Abbreviation contraction.
There are different ways of doing this.
You can make words shorter, and you can also make portmanteaus, where you combine different words.
And, yeah, we're making new words all the time.
Jester Maxing is a great evidence of that.
We're combining new words and new ways.
But that sort of reflects our new reality.
And so if reality adjusts, we will both come up with new words and we'll lose old ones
because language is a moving, living thing.
You mentioned black people, gay people, cool people, normal people.
young people, how much did they drive language forward?
Because young people are almost always seen as being cool,
but they're also the ones that have got the least cemented history
with regards to their linguistic cues.
Yeah, exactly.
They're the ones that are the earliest to adopt new words
because older people have this cemented idea of what language is.
Younger people are both more flexible with that,
and they're trying to build a shared identity for themselves.
And I know I keep bringing identity into it,
but that's what language is.
It's a way of, you know, figuring out who you are and what kind of words you want to use.
And you don't want to sound like your mother.
You want to sound like your peers.
Yeah.
How much of the changes in languages just because kids want to differentiate themselves from their parents?
That's a huge part of it.
Most of language change, I would say, is driven by people, like right now, honestly, middle schoolers.
But historically, people between the ages of like 10 and 25 are the ones coming up with slang.
Now, of course, there's different types of how language you have to adopt.
There's institutional words.
So, like, iPhone is a new word, but it's not a slang word, podcast, a shortening of iPod plus broadcast.
That's sort of new.
But these things come from more institutional avenues.
That's another route or mechanism of language change.
But for the slang, which is this kind of lower status feeling of language that eventually can become just real language, that comes from younger people.
So all the video game terms we see in bleeding into mainstream English.
NPC, skill issue, that kind of stuff.
Or all of the, yeah, the black people or the in-cell language,
all of that's kind of driven by young people right now.
How effective are institutions at top-down dictating language and linguistic use?
Because when I think about, and this might just be because I'm terminally online,
when I think about most of the language that I see, yeah, you're right with podcasts,
but they're usually categories.
They're not the sort of thing
that people are using
as an important identifier
of the way that they're put together
and it doesn't really seem to be shaping culture.
Maybe it represents something that shaped culture
but the words itself won't.
So how easy is it for people in power
to top-down dictate the way that language is used?
If it feels like a word is intentionally being forced upon you,
we actually often feel a resistance to it.
There's in the movie Mean Girls,
Gretchen famously couldn't make the word fetch happen.
She was trying to get people...
Stop trying to make fetch happen.
And that's because it fell forced.
So if you feel like someone is pushing a word onto,
you might actually not want to adopt it.
There is a difference with institutional acceptance.
So if you see a word in a dictionary,
that's just like this is accepted as language,
even though, of course, there's just an idea of language.
But you might point to that now,
and you'll see news outlets only use words that are in the dictionary,
or books in academic publishing,
and all this stuff will use this standard idea of language,
which is filtered through the institutions.
So they're not forcing the word.
They're merely, once a word has been used around for long enough,
they legitimize it.
Lots of people have got issues with the word like, um, uh, you know,
what are some of the older versions of filler words?
Because it can't have just been now that filler words were brought in.
Yeah, well, there have always been filler words.
And um might be one of the most universal words.
There's across different languages that mid-central vowel,
oh, shows up in a lot of when people are thinking.
I know Spanish speakers use like eh or it's some kind of vowel that's close to the center often
that's used when you're,
I just said it,
that's used when you're thinking about something.
And that's a universal constant that we think about things and we need time to say things
for it's a holding pattern.
Yeah, yeah.
It's the floor holding thing again.
Yeah.
I think it's stigmatized because it's associated with not thinking through things.
Like especially is associated with like the Valley Girls and those women are stigmatized just because they're not seen as speaking standard English, even though there's nothing inherently wrong.
And actually like has a lot of different applications.
There's the quotative like where you can say you can say something.
You can quote someone directly.
I said this.
Or you can adopt an affect.
I was like this.
And that actually serves a different linguistic function.
That's actually a really beautiful thing
that you can adopt a persona in the middle of speech
instead of directly claiming to quote something.
Like implies it doesn't have to be 100% accurate,
but I was like this.
It's a self-simile.
I was like it's a self-simile.
Yeah, yeah.
One of the things, someone brought this up,
I can't remember who I was speaking to.
The etymologicon who wrote that.
Mark Forsyth.
Mark Forsyth.
Yeah, that's the book.
that got me into etymology.
No fucking way.
I read that in 2016,
and I was like,
this shit is gas.
And I just started reading more etymology books,
started a little blog for myself.
I don't think anybody read it,
but then I studied linguistics in college
and ended up becoming a linguistics influencer,
but it started because of that book.
No way.
Did you read elements of eloquence as well?
Yeah, yeah.
Bro.
So Mark's great.
And I brought up the holding pattern-like stuff.
He had this great take,
which is if you just roll back,
to your grandparents' generation, a lot of the time sentences would begin with, well, you know,
it's this sort of, there would be an almost obloviating approach to it. I have this guy that I bring on
all the time, Rory Sutherland. He's kind of like my mad uncle. And every time that he speaks,
there's precision, and then there's these parentheses of noise, but it's not like it's still
filler to some degrees. It's padding. And it's nice.
It actually provides a little bit of breathing room because he speaks quite quickly too.
So having a, ah, I know this is coming into land, the same as getting off the phone.
Okay, yep, yep, no worries.
It's that, it's foreplay and post-coital talking talk.
Exactly.
No, I think we talked about floor holding, but you've got to take the floor in the first place.
And you were describing that, you know is a great example.
You are signaling that you're taking the conversational turn.
there's an influencer space as people start with videos with no because no because why did this happen
and it's just like a it doesn't mean anything really falling halfway through a sentence it does though it
creates as in media's res feeling that you you want to we resonate more with the video when we feel
like we're already in the middle of it rather than having to deal with this whole introduction so but it does
it does still serve to grab your attention and continue from the middle of the thought what is some
of the other powerful linguistic tricks that creators either are using a lot of or you think
that more creators should be using in order to, that's interesting. I didn't think about,
no, because, and you go, hang on, I didn't see what happened before. I guess I'm in this now.
What else is, what else is some good keyholes in the brain that you can latch into?
I'm trying less to provide advice to creators and more just get people aware of what creators are
already doing to you.
Oh, okay. You're like, you're like a public.
Public service announcement for creators.
Yeah.
PSA, everybody's doing everything for your attention.
Yeah.
The platforms have monetized your attention.
They are commodifying your data and your information and they're trying to sell you ads.
Everything's based around your attention.
They create incentive structures now for influencers to replicate,
where the attention economy famously, it just runs around what will grab your attention.
And so that means our language will all serve that end primarily.
And then there's maybe a secondary purpose of I want to sound like,
I know what I'm talking about, or I want to sound relatable.
But it starts with attention and we'll use keywords.
All words are keywords at this point.
Metadata used to be like their search engine optimization terms that you would put in a website description to make sure it ranks higher.
Every single term now is a search engine optimization term because the algorithm is looking at every single word you use.
And it's using that to create a cluster representation of what your video is in this mathematical space.
And it uses that to push out a video.
And so by using a word, you are creating a signal for the algorithm that this video should be distributed in a certain way.
And then you are also creating signals for the viewers that you should look at the video a certain way.
There's several meta layers to everything we're saying.
I feel like you're a guy that went away for a decade to some mountaintop kung fu retreat
and learned a bunch of really dangerous martial arts that you can kill a guy with one touch.
and I'm now asking, okay, so how do I kill guys with one touch? And you're saying, well, what I'm here to do is I'm here to warn people about the one touch death move. That's exactly what it feels like. I think we should be immensely critical of these platforms. And I'm a big believer that the medium is the message, that the way we consume media strongly affects everything we understand, that algorithms are uniquely constraining our language to this bottleneck we've described, that they are shaping our expression. And if they're doing it to our language, that's one thing. Because I do think language, again, is this tool that's sort of neutral. But they're also doing it
to our ideas, our discussion, our greater sense of reality. There are certain biases that get
coded into the algorithm that that get perpetuated. We see the same thing happening with AI. There's a
bottleneck again there. What kind of language goes in? What kind of language is reinforced into
the model? And then what kind of language goes out. Nothing is neutral when it's happening through
a tech intermediary that's trying to make money off of you. Okay. Talk to me about what AI is doing
to language. You know about the word delve? Delve to sort of jump into. Yeah. So we have studies
indicating that since chat GPT came out, usage of the word delve has spiked a thousand percent
since before 2022.
Why does chat GPT like delve?
So chat GPT uses the word delve 10 times more than regular because there is a bias in the
reinforcement learning process, which is when the words get trained into the model.
So one, there's a few things going on here.
One, the reinforcement workers are in Nigeria and Kenya where they do actually say delve at higher
rates, but still not that high.
And that's partially their rewarding words that they're familiar.
with. Two, Delve is a Latin word and we know that Chagipt exhibits a Latin-based bias over Germanic words.
It's Latin supremacy. It's prestige. It's like you think Latin sounds fancier than Germanic words.
Like Germanic words are basic ones like the, but, and whatever. And then Latin words, or dig in is a
German word versus Delve is a Latin derived word. And it sounds fancier to say the Latin word.
And because these models are trained to sound like they know what they're talking about,
they're going to use more of the romance language stuff. They're trained to sound confident and
incisive and sycophantic, and they will use certain words that perpetuate that, and then
that gets reinforced into the model. So all this stuff happens, and when you're a reinforcement
worker clicking through what kind of words are okay and not okay, you don't really catch a small
discrepancy like that, that delve is showing up a little bit more. So it accidentally gets reinforced
into the model. And then chaty-p-D starts spitting out the word delve more. And now we have evidence
in the past few years that humans in our spontaneous spoken conversation are also starting to use
the word delve more. So the creature that programmed the AI is being programmed by the AI. We are now
being trained by ChatGAPT to use different language. In other news, Shopify powers 10% of all
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slash modern wisdom or lowercase that's shopify.com slash modern wisdom wasn't there a study done
on british politicians and what they'd been saying yes and the in the house of chambers are now saying
i rise to speak instead of i don't know what the norm was before but they're using a u.s.
colloquial term which is clearly indicating that their speeches are written by chat chak
We've seen academic research papers that probably 13% of all research abstracts are written aided by some kind of large language model.
You can't trust any source whether you think it's, so it's not even you're being directly influenced by the AI.
It's you're being influenced by somebody else who's influenced by AI.
You're reading a text that you don't know is written by AI.
Yep.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
All of LinkedIn is already like, I can't tell whether it's AI or these people genuinely think like this,
but that you speak in the bullet points that it's not just X, it's Y, that's the negative parallelism, which also sounds, again, things that sound incisive are reinforced into the model.
and then they end up affecting our actual speech patterns.
But what it also does is it means that you need to counter signal away from it.
So I'm going to draw an analogy to Ozmpic.
Azenpic at the moment means that people can more easily lose weight.
That means that losing weight naturally becomes less high status.
Remember when Adele lost weight in the before times, prehistoric,
just did it with calorie deficit and cardio or whatever she did.
You lose weight now.
Whether you did use Ozempic or not, you're going to be accused of having used it.
So we are now already seeing counter signaling away from the double dash.
A little tasteful chub is back in.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it will be soon.
Aha, it's nice.
A natural, I see.
What's the double dash thing that ChatT got?
The M dash.
M dash.
No one can use, so I have a couple of friends.
I'm going to hold on to it as a writer.
Well, I think you have a competitive advantage because no one's going to assume that you would be using Chat Chach.
There is a way that Chat ChachyPT uses the MDash to segment thought.
in those negative parallelisms and so on.
And there's a way that a good writer can use an M-Dash
because Chachipit speaks predictably
and a good writer will speak unpredictably.
Yeah, I'm friends with some very good writers
and they love the use of the M-Dash
and now they feel like they need to count the signal away from it.
Nobody wants to use the word DEL.
I got to imagine we're going to feel
or we're going to see the word delve drop off
because people are going to be terrified
that even if that was the word I wanted to dig in.
here's the thing. Delve is merely the poster child for a much broader phenomenon.
We got commendable. We got meticulous, crucial, potential, significant. All of these words,
all kind of Latin derived, are also increasing with chat chit, but we're only pointing to delve
in the M-Dash because those are the easiest things to pick up on. There's so many smaller things,
and I'm more concerned about the insidious things. Again, not linguistically. I think language should
serve as a signal for this broader thing that's happening. If it's a reflection of our reality,
that means our reality is being shaped by chat chvety.
And I don't think there's anything inherently harmful to the word commendable or meticulous.
But the fact that we are also proven to be saying those words more after chat chapti
has been proven to say those words more means that its reality is influencing our reality.
And I'm now concerned what if there's a political bias, a gender bias, of whatever racial
like all this stuff gets coded into the model.
And I mean, Elon Musk doesn't even hide that he like tweaks GROC to like align with his political
preferences.
So he's being obvious about it.
The other platforms aren't being obvious about it.
Maybe Anthropic is doing a better job than Open AI,
but they're all kind of still trying to make money at the end of the day.
And they're all doing something that's not aligned with human priorities.
Well, I had Tristan Harris Center for Humane Technology.
He was set there yesterday.
And he brought up this great point about Anthropic,
which is from the outside, you know,
doing things that seem from an optics perspective to be really great,
but every single platform has the exact same outcome desire,
which is the models need to be trained very quickly as fast as possible
to become as good as possible,
and if they're not, then we're going to fall behind.
So window dress it however you want.
The big mover is what's the alignment problem looking like?
What's the level of safety?
I do think we should at least praise Anthropic
for thinking more about alignment and safety than other platforms,
but that does not mean we should become complacent.
And we should always be questioning who is the intermediary
between us and our speech,
because there is something affecting
when you go through a medium,
something is constrained.
That's why I say the medium is the message.
Hmm.
Okay.
What is there going to be linguistic chaos then
as AI begins to kick off more and more?
We're just kind of going to get a little more homogenized probably.
But then hopefully we'll see a new output.
You already more homogenized,
you said through social media.
We have a language dying out every two weeks.
That's the stat.
There's 7,000 languages in the world.
and it's predicted that most of them are going to die out by the end of the century.
It's a mass extinction event.
It is.
It is.
And so we're losing all this beautiful stuff, all these ways of expression.
I love this book, Braiding Sweetgrass.
In it, there's the Potawatomi expression to be a Saturday.
It expresses Saturday as a verb, that you could embody a Saturday as a verb.
And this is not a concept that we really think about or express in English.
And I'm not saying it's impossible to imagine this, but it's a way of expressing the world that is lost when a language dies out.
And you have all these languages dying out that homogenizes and constraises and constraints.
the creative potential for expression, not saying that we couldn't think of these thoughts,
but the options, the affordances are less there than they otherwise would be.
Why does some languages seem to have words that represent much more niche, long sentence
descriptions than others?
So, for instance, Chardon Freud is like an obvious example, but what is the German word
that describes the sensation of migratory birds when they are stopped from migrating?
Do you know this one?
Oh, that's incredible.
It's a kind of restless, a desire to fly and the restriction from being allowed to fly that is felt by a migratory bird.
Sounds like a human instinct as well.
Very much so.
Very much so.
Yeah, God, I should be adventuring or traveling or something and I'm being restricted from doing it.
Kind of like wanderlust, but...
To a degree.
So there's a difference between agglutinative languages and inflection languages where an agglutative language like Turkish,
and German does this by just tacking words together.
You can just add things onto other things.
And then there's inflection where you change the form of the word.
So English, like you can, I guess, add S to the end of a word.
But like a lot of stuff like, I don't know, changes based on the form of the word.
In Latin, in French, you'll conjugate.
You'll do all these things where it, yeah, you're changing the form rather than adding on.
But there's different ways you can do language.
Are you more concerned about social media or AI for what it's doing to linguistics?
Social media for sure, because whatever's happening with AI, it then just immediately gets captured by social media.
And what I'm concerned about here is that they replicate the natural way that ideas diffused through populations.
Idea is kind of like a virus.
It starts in a host.
It can infect other hosts.
You had Malcolm Gladwell on, I think, talk about this.
It's a little reductive to just say that, but I think it's a good model for understanding the way information scatters is kind of like in a virus network.
like it's sort of like a disease.
And algorithms have created a replication of natural human social networks that operates faster,
that connects more nodes than ever before, which means these ideas can spread fast than ever before.
What that means is also misinformation can spread faster than ever before.
More information is not necessarily always a good thing because now you can be flooded with information.
And it's called flooding the zone where you lose track of what's the real information among all the false information.
you are being bombarded with ideas from people who have an agenda.
There are mean coin traders and polymarket traders who are trying to make a quick buck off
of pushing certain words or ideas because now we're betting on ideas and we're betting on
their coins attached to which idea goes viral.
So if an idea goes more viral, you make money off of it.
So now is there a financial incentive to push certain ideas.
And so I think we should remain highly skeptical of everything.
Maybe we should touch grass more.
But at the very least, we should be highly inquisitive of what the medium is doing
to us and how it's affecting our communication.
Is there a science to meme language?
It's called nomadics, yeah.
But there definitely are people studying how these networks work.
And then presumably reverse engineering it.
I mean, I have to wonder, it would take a long time.
There was an interesting, a successful attempt by Jimshark to do a grassroots social media campaign
promoting Francis and Garnu.
So they used a burner account on Reddit
on maybe the UFC subreddit
to post a video supposedly of CCTV
of Francis and Garnu trying to get into
maybe a dry cleaners and the door was locked
and he goes like this and goes,
and the whole door just smashes and breaks.
The entire thing was contract.
The whole thing was constructed.
They filmed it.
It wasn't CCTV.
It was fake glass.
Francis and Garno was wearing a Jim Shock logo here.
burner account on Reddit, nothing, just left it.
Just completely set ablaze.
So I wonder, okay, that's, you know, people that are quite close to the ground floor,
but they're not, they don't have the resources of a country.
If you did, the ability to shape language, to think, what sort of words do we want people using?
We can't podcast it top down because people are going to push back if they feel like
we've watched too much of Adam's stuff.
We know that people are going to push back if they feel like this word's being forced on them.
How can we, maybe we need to get onto fortune.
Maybe we can start to.
Definitely don't.
No, I think get offline as much as possible while remaining aware and appraised of what's happening online.
Because I do think we should like be aware that even if we are offline, this stuff will still affect us to some degree.
Like the, if your friends are adopting ideas that come from the algorithm and you're offline and you're interacting with your friends, you're still going to be adopting the algorithm ideas without even knowing it.
So we should be highly.
media literate, knowing that our information is probably being manipulated by these actors who have
vested interests in giving us bad information. And this effect is only going to be amplified as more
and more people figure out how to exploit the information ecosystem. If I'm giving you a warning,
it's this one. It's that I see in real time how our language is being shaped by malicious actors.
There are companies in foreign governments with dashboards on tracking populations and how clusters
of similar ideas are represented in the social media space. And they,
know how to seed ideas in ways that spread better.
And they're trying to do that.
And maybe they're not being fully successful,
but there are active, like, information warfare campaigns occurring as we speak.
How does living inside of these algorithmic constraint systems change what type of thoughts
we can easily express?
Because this isn't just the language that we're using.
The whole point of 1984, sorry to go to, there was no way we're going to be able to get
through this podcast without talking about 904.
Feeding back up into your...
capacity to think. Yeah, it's a controversial question in linguistics. It's generally accepted that
language is not the only thing determining thought, right? But it might have an influence on it. That's
called linguistic relativism. I don't think we're going to end up in a 1984 scenario. If anything,
I think people should pay more attention to Brave New World, the Aldous Huxley novel, where we're
entertaining ourselves and aren't even aware that we're in a dictatorship because we're too busy
consuming content and drugs. But I don't think language can truly be constrained. I wrote my book
on Algo speak on how words emerge in response to censorship, the stuff I said about the is emoji,
or just words like on a live where you can't say kill. We come up with ways. We are incredibly
tenacious as human beings to express ourselves and say what we want to say. That does not mean that
some things aren't harder to say, that certain ideas aren't more constrained. And there's a
idea called the Overton window, which is the range of acceptable discourse in a society
that, right, back in the day, like gay marriage was unthinkable, right? And then the Overton
window moved and all of a sudden it was okay. And that was a maybe, I think, a positive change.
But there's also the Overton window is moving toward looks maxing. There's way more interest in this
stuff right now. But this window moves with the amount of represented discourse that we think.
It's a consensus reality. It's what we think other people are thinking and what is acceptable.
So if a certain kind of discourse, like back in the day, more and more people started saying there was
the gay liberation movement, more and more people started saying maybe gay people should have rights,
that moved the window in the direction of gay marriage.
Now there's more and more people saying like replicating these all right ideas,
replicating that idea that looks maxing is a good way to, you know,
maybe you should be on a Zempeg, all this stuff.
And that moves the window toward that range of discourse.
So while your thoughts are not necessarily being constrained and everybody still can think
for themselves and can still find ways to express themselves, the consensus reality is
kind of moving.
And that's something maybe I'm concerned about,
apart from the linguistic level.
If you had to give a steelman argument
that Gen Z is really different,
what do you think it would be?
And in the context of how every generation thinks
that the kids are destroying the language.
I'm going to push back on the concept of a Gen Z.
Yes, every generation thinks that kids are destroying language.
And somehow the older people die out and the kids grow up
and then now we're pissed at the younger kids.
And we run it back.
Is there a steel man argument for how Gen Z could be different?
I don't think Gen Z exist.
I don't think generations exist.
These are weird social constructs
that we believe exist.
This is your one-touch death move.
Like, fucking.
It's like trying to catch smoke here.
Come the fuck back.
I'm not denying that there's older and younger people,
that there's familial generations, right?
That there's...
But we only started this idea of a broad social cohort,
like a generation with the lost generation
after World War I, really.
And then we had the silent generation
with the GI generation of the World War II.
Then we have baby boomers.
And then we're like, all right,
we don't know what to call the next people.
So, F, Gen X.
X means we don't know.
lazy. And then it's like, okay, millennial is good enough. And then it's like, well, we're two after
Gen X, we'll call it Gen Z. Well, we ran out of the alphabet. We'll call it Gen Alpha. That's
literally, it's all made up and it started in the early 1900s, but it's become more and more
salient. And this is, if anything, a new category that can be used to sell you as a consumer
demographic that can commodify you, that they have manufactured Gen Z as a concept, that now
we're also performing what it means to be Gen Z, whereas a person in the 1800s wouldn't perform
for their social cohort because there was no social cohort. It's simply you are the age that you are.
And now, now I'm supposed to, as an older Gen Z person, have more in touch with a younger Gen Z person
than a younger millennial. But really, I feel much more in common with younger millennials. It's all made
up. And yet there's this idea now of being Gen Z that is forced upon us and is part of this
broader social media tendency to label every part of us as human beings and put us into buckets
that actually do not describe us perfectly.
The self-branding is constraining because it's giving you another role to perform too.
A label is kind of a violent thing to impose in someone because now you either have to identify
with or against a label. Once it's out there, it's out there. And now I need to choose whether
I feel more like Gen Z or not like Gen Z. And now I need to choose whether I'm cottage core or
not cottage core, whether I'm a Swifty or not a Swifty. And all these things kind of combine.
And now I'm all of a sudden, I'm a cottage core, Swifty, Gen Z, whatever.
Me too.
But really, at the end of the day, I'm just, every person is a unique human being in the same way
that we have a unique idelect, a unique dialect that is our own way of speaking, we have a
unique identity. As a linguist, I have one word tattooed on my body. It's the word umwelt. It means
the world as it is perceived by a particular person. And I really like this idea that we all really
see the world in a completely unique way. And yet when we put ourselves into buckets and when we
pretend that we are, it's nice to feel like we are like other people. And it's a useful thing to have
a category to kind of signal toward your identity. But you are completely unique. And what social media
wants to do is put you into small, small buckets, yes, but buckets that really make you interchangeable
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It's a strange tension because on one hand we all want to be individuals,
but on another hand we all want to belong.
Classic, yeah, they're glad to me.
Yeah, and I can see...
Two wolves inside of you.
Yeah, of course.
And there's a really interesting bit of evolutionary anthropology that's
looking at the desire for autonomy and the desire for support and kinship.
And this is what you see.
A good way to look at this would be a child's life cycle.
So unbelievable need for kinship up until 11, 12, then you start to get a bit rebellious.
And then by 13, 14, 15, you don't want anything to do with your parents.
That's also when you're coming up with new slang.
Well, of course.
It's also the most, you know the memory bump effect?
You're familiar with this?
No, what's this?
I think it's the reminiscence effect,
which is the language,
the music and movies that you grow up listening to
between the ages of about 12 and 16
tend to be locked in as what you like for the rest of your life.
They're formative, yeah.
Very formative.
That makes a lot of sense.
And, you know, every...
Not to say that we can't keep developing new taste.
Of course.
People find new stuff, new bands, new movies that they like.
But it does affect you in that Unveldt's sense,
that this made a huge impression on you at this particular,
and you can't ever separate that from,
who you will be in the future.
Super formative.
Yeah.
And to think, okay, well, what's going on at 13, 14, 15, while sexuality's coming online?
Right.
What is the one thing that you really, really, really do not want to do, have sex with someone
that's part of your family?
So my family's going to suck.
I'm going to, stay away.
I want my own independence.
I didn't expect that to go on the answer.
Yeah.
I mean, it's interesting.
It's incest avoidance.
I think, well, I mean, that's one framework.
I always, I tend to think that any one framework is always, like, reductive, but it is, like,
in the same way.
Like, I think, for example, Freud, he was kind of cooking with some stuff, but you think about the world just in a Freudian lens.
Honestly, the looks maxes are kind of right that attractiveness matters.
But if you're looking at it just through that one lens, the framework now constrains you.
Now you're looking at the world reductively.
We should adopt as many frameworks as possible.
Sorry, I want on a tangent there.
But if you have too many frameworks, it becomes chaotic, right?
And that also becomes, I think, difficult sometimes to amalgamate together.
My general worldview, I think, is characterized by trying to understand as many frameworks as possible.
and they all kind of point in...
You're a framework maximalist.
Maybe, maybe, because they all point at this indescribable hole.
We can never know, you know, what unnamed Dow or whatever the middle thing is that we're trying to figure out what reality is.
Yeah, but everything else is signaling or pointing at it.
And if you broaden your worldview as much as possible and consume as many different forms of media as possible,
I do think maybe we should be on algorithms a little bit.
We should also be reading regular news and we should also remember that's biased and we should remember,
we should like be consuming as many different forms of media as possible.
And we should be consuming as many different ideas and perspectives as possible because that
helps us better understand what's really going on rather than this biased.
We're always looking at the world through like a confirmation bias, sampling bias.
Like everything's filtered through the algorithm.
Everything's filtered through AI.
And if you try to just consume your worldview through that, you're going to be limited.
So consume other things as well, touch grass, you know, and then maybe we can build a better
picture of what the real world is.
Polyconsumption, polyframework approach.
Yeah.
I like it and I agree.
For me to say the Western Mark effect, which is what we do for incest avoidance and the fact that you, sexuality is coming online, you don't want to be a relationship.
No, it's interesting.
I'm not saying that that is the one ring to rule them all.
But what I do mean, and I totally agree, is that there's another incentive that exists online, which is if someone plants a flag in the ground and says, I have a single explanatory framework that solves all of the.
questions that you've got. That person sounds, that level of conviction is so sexy. And I
wonder whether it takes an awful lot of conscious detraining to look at someone that's ardent
and completely unforgiving in their worldview and say, huh, I don't know if I'm not confident
about anything. I don't know if I'm that confident about my own birthday. So how is this person about
this really, well, we know why the war in Ukraine started. We know why the war in Ukraine started. We know why
the war in Ukraine started. We know exactly what's
going on there. Every war has like a hundred different reasons
behind it and all those reasons could be
valid, you know, but we know what's
going on with Deluxe Maxing community.
Oh, that's interesting. And
you, what you state
as an absolute fact that is
incontrovertible and unidimensionally
explained has a completely
opposing guy with the opposite
perspective, which is also unidimensionally
explained. Like, okay.
Weird how that happens. Comport those two for me
because both of you are saying that you are
completely right and that the other person is therefore implicitly completely wrong.
Yeah, no, I think it's reductive to look at the world through one set of glasses.
And sexiness, the sexiness of the conviction.
The human brain thinks in terms of simple stories, we like connecting the dots from point A to point B.
Like, for etymology, we want to think that a word comes from an older word and evolved into a newer word.
Really, it was evolving through an aesthetic lens.
It was evolving through a social context.
There was another, maybe a word C that affected the trajectory.
of word A as it involved in a word B.
It's never one simple story.
I see this with language, but also the world
is this hugely complex interrelated thing.
And to recall one framework, the framework,
is ignoring all the different ways
the world could exist, ignoring the fact that a Saturday
could be a verb instead of a noun.
I feel like a Saturday sometimes.
You're quite a Saturday guy.
I'm a big Saturday guy.
All right, I want to play surprising word histories with you.
Have you with it.
Okay. Muscle.
It comes from the Latin word for mouse, little mouse, musculos.
Why?
It looks like a mouse when it moves under your skin, right?
They call me the admology nerd for a reason.
I'm going to flop the rest of them.
I can't wait.
This is going to be so good.
Salary.
Salary is the Latin word for salt.
They would pay wages and salt, saul.
All right.
Next one.
Assassin.
That comes from Arabic hashashin.
It meant marijuana hashish consumer.
Yeah.
Because they would like, it was a...
You're scaring.
You're scaring me.
It was a sect in like Persia that would just like get high and like kill people.
I don't know what they were doing, but that was kind of the mythology of it.
The Nizari Ismaili sect.
All right.
You're terrifying.
Candidate.
From Latin Candidus, white robed.
So a candidate that was like white was associated with purity.
So it was like you were vying for a pure noble office if you wore white.
Okay.
Did the word girl originally mean a young woman or did it once mean something completely different?
I think it was like a gender neutral term. It could mean boy.
Correct. And any young person. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. How did silly go from meaning blessed to meaning stupid?
Well, in the same sense that like awful and awesome, both share that root awe.
Like when something has just an emotional valence to it, like equality to it, it can move easily between different boundaries.
But what did you have there?
the old English of Selig meant blessed or fortunate, and over centuries it drifted through innocent, naive, and then foolish.
The semantic drift is, yeah, how words evolve all over time. And it is, like, terrible again. And all the, like, words that describe this shaking feeling you get can really range easily between, the same rate is terrific, terrible and terrific, terrifying. So it can quickly move between different types of emotions, because how do we even describe what's going on here, you know?
Yeah, with difficulty.
Yeah.
Ancient Aztec word for avocado.
What else did it mean?
Awakat.
And it had a secondary definition of testicle.
Nightmare.
Is there any interesting about nightmare?
Is that mare like horse?
There's like the idea of like an incubus horse that attacked people.
But I'm not sure if that's the what the...
A Germanic demon that was a mare that sat on sleeper's chest.
Yeah.
So it was a horse.
Yes.
Okay.
But it was the mayor came from a Germanic demon.
Okay.
So it might have actually been a demon in the night.
A demon that then became the name for a horse and the knight horse.
Wow.
No, I'll have to look in in the mirror thing.
That's a fascinating.
Yeah.
Goodbye, would God be with you.
Penguin.
Why does the word penguin probably mean white head, even though penguins don't have white heads?
I don't know penguin.
Please educate me.
Okay.
So there's a Welsh word, which is.
Penn, P-E-N-G-W-N, penguin, right?
Which looks fucking Welsh as shit.
No way would I've expected that to be Welsh.
I mean, like, it's a weird-ass word, I believe.
And it originally referred to the Great Ork.
It wasn't referring to penguins.
Yeah.
But it then got repurposed.
Orange.
Well, it comes from the Sanskrit Award for Orange Tree, but it moved through, like,
Arabic naranja, same as like the Spanish word.
And then I think people kept saying N orange and the N got cut off because it turned into like a, A Norange versus N orange.
Yes, dude, you won.
Whatever the fuck that was, you won.
I'm glad I won.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
A Norange to an orange.
Yeah.
Wow.
Unbelievable.
Yeah, I, look, from between you and Mark,
Forsyth, it is so fucking fun. You must have so much fun doing this stuff. I think it's great.
I got into etymology for the fun facts. That was the, and then, you know, I came to see this.
Terrifying on a quiz team. Terrifying on a quiz team. You played with inventing languages.
Yeah. What did you learn? So the whole thing I was saying about languages being a different way to express
reality, I think a really fun way to play with that is building your own language. So we see
this in movies, like there's a Dethroki language and a Klingon language, and people have made
fictional languages before.
this is a practice called conlanging constructed language
and Esperanto is another famous one
where they tried to make that a global language
and didn't really work out but they built it from scratch
and were like trying to make this a thing
sort of an evidence-based language that was going to be more precise
and easy to use I think maybe you're thinking about
if quill or something or maybe Esperanto is
just meant to be like an easier language to use that was the idea
of course that what that means is like a strange concept
and it's still like there are languages that have
more and less linear rules around it?
Different types of rules, but there's always a complexity to it because, I mean, humans
got to express themselves in many different ways.
I think it's really hard to make a claim about one language is more complex than another
or something like that.
But you can talk about one-dimensional language.
You can adopt one framework and then talk about it.
Anyway, I dabbled in con-langgeng first in...
What?
Con-langing, which is constructed language creation.
Okay, thank you.
Sorry.
And then I started that linguistics in college and I took a conlanging class at MIT.
Actually, that kind of got me into it.
But I was sort of dabbling before that.
For the con langing class.
Conlangen dabbler.
Yeah, I've dabbled.
And then a little more professionally.
For the conlanging class at MIT, I built a dolphin language.
And that was my first moment going viral on TikTok was me presenting my dolphin language
where like the word for shark, for example, is,
but the idea is what if you can create a language?
out of just whistles and clicks.
And that's kind of cool to play around
with the phonological format.
So I played around with a lot of other animal languages.
I made a bird language that's just whistled.
There are actual whistled registers of languages.
I saw, didn't AI reverse engineer what birds are saying?
Did you see this?
I mean, I don't know what that means at all.
Animal communication is just like not a decodable thing
in the way human communication is.
So supposedly, I'm probably wrong.
But I'm pretty sure that I saw AI has analyzed tens of thousands
of bird song sounds and have decoded some of the communication.
Another thing, I don't know whether this is true or not, I remember hearing that most
bird song is actually just territorial marking.
So it's basically birds saying, or aiding call or something like that.
Birds saying fuck off at varying.
Here we are.
No, 100% there's stuff being done with Cornell's doing amazing bird stuff.
They have a bird tracking app that they actually use to follow bird migrations,
and there's cool stuff being done with language.
But the thing is when we talk about animal language, there's good research being done
with whale communication too. The people who are talking about this, if you're a linguist talking
about it, you don't understand how the whales work. And if you're a whale research talking about,
you don't understand how language works. Or you can, might have an idea, but it's, I don't think
it's correct to really talk about animals having language as much as communication. And of course,
they have communication, their own way of signaling things. But when you're a whale, you're also
using things like your body rolling over in water. Dolphins have sonar. Like bats have echo, like,
this is crazy that they have all this stuff going on that humans don't. And this can all
be a part of the communicative context. And it's not like maybe the language has an abstract
meaning in the way that humans do. Maybe it simply signals a presence and a certain emotional
intent in a moment in time, but it's also contextual and the other bird might have a different
interpretation. I don't know. Language is a very difficult thing that I'm not even sure how to define
it. Anybody who do says they know what language is. After a decade of study, I'm so glad to hear you say
that. Anybody who says they know what language is is telling you a framework, right? It's a
Do you know the story of how the QWERTY keyboard came to be?
Well, weren't the typewriters jamming with the, they had the ABC, like, and they tried it out and didn't, they tried the Dvorak keyboard.
But QWERTY was the one that prevented the typewriters from, from jamming together.
Bingo, yeah, yeah.
So they put the most used letters out on the edges so that they weren't next to each other so that you wouldn't trigger them because both of them would fire at the same time.
But that is purposefully built to be slow.
Quirty keyboard is designed to be inefficient.
Well, once we get attuned to it and like it does move quickly.
But there are...
It was slow relative to when we thought the alphabet had to show up in an order on a keyboard.
But like for like, if you train people on other keyboard arrangements, they can be up to 30% to 50% faster.
Yeah.
So I wondered, as you were talking about, they tried to put Esperanza in, that didn't work, so and so forth.
If there was a world in which you could design a language from scratch to be as...
the only goal of language, unlike with typing, which is an intermediary process between things that are not being changed, is not just to be efficient, right? It's to be beautiful. It's to be illustrative. It's to communicate sentiment. That is a big flaw of how people talk about language. And that's how the algorithms want you to talk about language, that it's just information bits transferred for a second. And that there's a certain amount of information that's communicating. That's the goal of language to just get information across. That's something that can now be categorized and commodified. I think language is also this rich.
socialistic bonding thing between people. Small talk, for example, like when you say the goodbye at the end of a phone call, why are you doing that? You're not communicating anything. You could just hang up. And that would- I'm going to go, I'm going to, all my phone calls are going to be done movie style now. All right. Pink. But you do it because it helps establish social ties with the other person. And that's kind of a beautiful thing. Courtesy. Yeah. You're building this thing with another person. And there is an element of humanity in the small talk and in the saying goodbye at the end of the phone call, which maybe not good for an algorithm. Maybe you don't like end an algorithm.
video by saying goodbye, whatever. But it does add something importantly human to communication.
Anyway, that being said, I think what you were getting at is can different languages
have different information transferred? As humans, we have a certain maybe capacity for processing
information. And what's funny is that even a language like Japanese has way more syllables per second
than Thai. And yet they will still transfer about the same bits per second as each other.
because Thai is a more inflectional language.
As I mentioned, they have more tones.
They build on the individual syllable more,
and Japan is more likely to add syllables.
But at the end of the day,
they'll speak slowly in Thai,
and they'll drag out their word more,
but they're saying the exact same thing
that a Japanese speaker is saying with three syllables.
Unbelievable.
I wonder what it would be like
to try and design a very efficient language.
Be so interesting to hear.
How can we communicate the most content?
in the smallest number of syllables of words.
Yeah, I mentioned this language,
Ithquil, which is a hypothesized conlang.
And conlings are great for really just exploring
the boundaries of what language could be.
And that's kind of what I was trying to say
with the dolphin thing.
You can just explore the sounds.
Sorry, digression.
Ifthquil is a language that creates, like,
the most information transferred.
And it's, like, a highly dense language carrying many different meanings
in a, you know, and it's impossible for human to learn.
I mean, no native speakers of Vithquil exist because at the end of the day, we are humans using language to connect with other humans, and we're using it in a way that we can understand and describe our reality. And that's how it works. I'm sure you can create a robot language that works more efficiently. But I was going to say, I'm sure that you saw that conversation between two AIs that realized that they were both AIs and they say, should we switch to bleeps and bloops? And it's way quicker for us to be able to communicate like that. I don't know whether that was actually fake or real. I'm not, I'm not sure about that either.
But it is true that computers do not think about language in the way we do.
In fact, I would be very hesitant to say Chachypit even speaks English rather than it's just predicting tokens based on a statistical model of what English should be.
What it's actually doing is when you input something in English, it converts those words into tokens, which is like a segment of the word.
So it breaks up the words in the smaller parts, pairs those parts with numbers.
These numbers turn into like coordinates, kind of like on a Cartesian plane like X, X, Y axis, but like way,
more dimensions. So x, y, z, to like thousands of dimensions. Then it ends up as like a data
point called an embedding. And this embedding is like the representation of what you said, right?
And then that gets processed through these neural networks. And they figure out through previous
learning things and previous ways they've understood embeddings, how they can predict the next
token output. So then they create an output token. And then that's translated back.
in a language. And so all this is happening between you saying something and chat GPT responding
with something. I think that's very important to understand because there's a huge misconception
that it's speaking English. Along the whole way that I spoke about language is getting broken down,
turned into numbers, broken back up into these tokens, and then turned back into language,
a lot of meaning can get lost. And that's where something like Delve could get overrepresented.
That's where something could happen where our natural way of speaking gets improperly encoded,
the training process does not work correctly,
and then it ends up speaking this misaligned version of language.
I wonder what's going to happen.
I wonder what the next few years are going to have in store for language
because you have got bigger influences and bigger broadcasts than ever before.
So is this, would you say that this is going to be the time in human history
where language is potentially going to change the most rapidly?
I think so.
It's a hard thing to measure what it even is for language to change,
because as I mentioned, I don't even know what language is.
So if I'm starting with my research question,
realistically, no, we don't know what language is.
It's all made up.
And because of the thing I mentioned,
where everybody speaks their own kind of version of language,
and the thing that we call a language
is really just this weird spectrum of people talking
that sounds similar to each other.
And it's like, where do you draw the category here?
Of course, Chachy Pote is trained on a corpus
of the English language, which is made up
in the same way Gen Z is made up.
It's like a category that we think is a thing.
And then that category is this weird homogenized thing already
that there is an English language.
There's a way you speak and a way I speak that are slightly different from each other
and that we can find this shared reality between ourselves.
But then when our collective shared reality is fed into the chat bot that then creates its own
reality based on the shared reality and outputs is what we end up with is just something
that's not really a way that you speak.
It's not a way that I speak.
It's not a way that anybody speaks.
It's a mathematical representation of speech.
Dude, you rule.
Your work's so interesting.
Where should people go?
They want to keep up to date with everything you've got going on.
Let's bring this one out.
I think the most important thing is I try to use my media to push people to
more longer form stuff. So I got a
substack etymology nerd and I got a
book called Algo Speak about how social
media is changing language. But I am on
social media platforms as etymology nerd as well.
All right. Goodbye everybody. Click.
Thank you for having me.
Dude.
So fucking good. That was a lot of fun. Wow. I feel like we covered so much
crowd. You wrote. That was great.
I get asked all the time for book
suggestions. People want to get into reading
fiction or nonfiction or real life stories
and that's why I made a list of 100 of the most interesting and impactful books that I've ever read.
These are the most life-changing reads that I've ever found, and there's descriptions about why I like them,
and links to go and buy them, and it's completely free, and you can get it right now by going to
chriswillex.com slash books. That's chriswillx.com slash books.
