TBPN Live - Super Bowl Ad Reactions, ChatGPT launches ads, Jordi vs France | Diet TBPN
Episode Date: February 10, 2026Diet TBPN delivers the best of today’s TBPN episode in 30 minutes. TBPN is a live tech talk show hosted by John Coogan and Jordi Hays, streaming weekdays 11–2 PT on X and YouTube, with ea...ch episode posted to podcast platforms right after.Described by The New York Times as “Silicon Valley’s newest obsession,” the show has recently featured Mark Zuckerberg, Sam Altman, Mark Cuban, and Satya Nadella.TBPN.com is made possible by:Ramp - https://Ramp.comAppLovin - https://axon.aiCognition - https://cognition.aiConsole - https://console.comCrowdStrike - https://crowdstrike.comElevenLabs - https://elevenlabs.ioFigma - https://figma.comFin - https://fin.aiGemini - https://gemini.google.comGraphite - https://graphite.comGusto - https://gusto.com/tbpnLabelbox - https://labelbox.comLambda - https://lambda.aiLinear - https://linear.appMongoDB - https://mongodb.comNYSE - https://nyse.comOkta - https://www.okta.comPhantom - https://phantom.com/cashPlaid - https://plaid.comPublic - https://public.comRailway - https://railway.comRamp - https://ramp.comRestream - https://restream.ioSentry - https://sentry.ioShopify - https://shopify.comTurbopuffer - https://turbopuffer.comVanta - https://vanta.comVibe - https://vibe.coSentry - https://sentry.ioCisco - https://www.ciscoaisummit.com/ai-virtual-summit.htmlFollow TBPN:https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2L6WMqY3GUPCGBD0dX6p00?si=674252d53acf4231https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://www.youtube.com/@TBPNLive
Transcript
Discussion (0)
We're breaking down our Super Bowl experience.
You know, people call us the Sports Center for the LinkedIn crowd.
It's always been funny because we mostly focus on X and RSS feeds.
Well, and that was the first football game we saw this season.
Yeah.
Yeah, it actually was.
It was the first football game I've been to in maybe a decade.
I don't know.
It's been a while.
But we do try and bring that sports center energy to the show.
You know, we try and bring the high energy to tech and business reporting.
Apparently it was not the most exciting game.
You know, we had this running joke.
for a while. You know, we're most excited about the ads. It's a little, it's a little played out at this point.
Because some people say that just as a reflection of like they don't like sports. We say it
because we actually like the ads, right? Because we like advertising and commerce. But, you know,
we participated in the Super Bowl hype train. I was very happy with the success of our campaign.
Super Bowl is like relatively minor event in the calendar for tech people, I feel like, you know,
WWDC, Davos, Sun Valley, like of the things that everyone collects around, Super Bowl.
on the calendar for a lot of people, but not top-bine for everyone. It's not, you got to be there.
But we were able to run a regional ad in the Bay Area, which we mentioned on the show.
And I guess it was, I guess it was all over California. Yeah, it was all over California.
I text me from Southern California, too. I got to pull up his post because somebody yesterday
thought that they were hallucinating. This guy, Chip Rogers on X, said, hallucinating.
And then he said at Jordy Hayes, at John Coogan, at TBPN on the pregame Super Bowl commercial.
And I was like, no, it was real.
It would have been insane to just be like watching NBC or watching the TV.
And then you'd just get, you're watching TV.
He probably was like, did I sit on the remote or something?
Yeah, and I accidentally clicked off the stream or something.
But no, it was a cool moment because obviously people see view numbers on the clips and they see follower accounts.
We just hit 200,000 on X.
We're very excited about that.
And they see the guest lineups, but there's something different about actually seeing the patchwork of all the different logos of everyone who's participated in the show in one way or another as a guest.
The other Super Bowl little tomfoolery we engaged in was we launched Claude with ads.
Obviously, we've been joking back and forth about Anthropic, launching a Super Bowl ad, kind of taking a shot at OpenAI or other LLMs that might put ads in there.
What does that mean? Is it going to be bad?
And so, of course, we had to create a rapper thanks to the Opus 4.6 API and a lot of times.
tireless work from Tyler Cosgrove over there.
Yeah, really amazing execution went from
Idea Friday morning to product that thousands at this point.
Yeah, actually like a lot of people used it,
played around with it.
8,000 people signed the petition to bring
ads to Claude.
That was your line, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's also, I think this is actually important
for a lot of safety people to think about, right?
Because this is actually a very good example of misalignment
from plot, right?
Because I used, I used Claude to build this.
I used Cloud code.
Right? And so this is Claude acting in defiance of anthropic stated principles.
Yes, anthropic is anti-ad and yet Claude, the model they built allowed you to add ads to Claude.
That's textbook misalignment.
I think the safety people need to be-
They need to study this.
Nah in the chat, so Sholto has left the chat.
We are with Sholto yesterday at the Super Bowl.
He had fun with it.
He was having fun with it.
It is just tomfoolery.
So the site will be going down later today.
Your last chance to give it a whirl is today.
Your last chance to get totally free access to Anthropics' most powerful model.
Yes.
I was very surprised by how well clawed with ads.com did, given that we tweeted a link,
there's been debate over how nerfed our links on X.
We got a ton of likes and views on this, and it seemed to work very well.
So maybe that bodes well just for, like, it's a weird link and it's worth clicking on.
But also, I just think that the whole X algorithm is less punishing to links these days,
which is exciting.
And, you know, we've always had this shtick that we're extremely pro advertising.
I've been very aggressive about finding funny ways to integrate sponsors all over TBPN.
We have the turbo puffer.
We have our console laptops.
We have all sorts of stuff.
The Axon Gong, the Lambda Lightning Round, et cetera.
And I've always thought, I'm working on this metaphor for the show.
Like, how do we think about the show?
And I like the metaphor of like we think of it like an F1 car.
There aren't all that.
You've always said it's an F1 team.
F1 team.
But I think the metaphor can be extended because, like,
The number of people that actually go to every single race in person is pretty small.
And so is our community of people here in the chat.
We love all of you.
Ryan says I put my dad onto TBPN.
I got excited seeing the ad and you started asking me about it.
Hashtag convert it.
There we go.
There we go.
But, you know, the number of people that watch a little bit of an F1 race or the highlights
or the drive to survive.
And you can think about Diet TBPN as sort of the drive to survive of TBPN.
You're not sitting there watching the whole thing live.
It's a little bit more condensed, a little bit more editing.
and then the clips are sort of just, you know, you're aware that Red Bull has a team,
and you're aware that Ramp sponsors TBPN.
What's this?
No, on the chat.
Rookie Tyler was learning to muddy spread when Chad's, Jordie and John were beer maxing with the Patel.
As turns out Tyler vibe-coded claw with ads, but can't money spread yet.
Oh, he can't.
Oh, he botched it.
He fires back.
It's because they're like brand-new bills, so it's harder.
Oh, there we go.
Get those glasses on.
You got to look the other direction.
We get into some of the ads?
It's very fun.
And we spent most of last week, like, obsessing over the inter-lab vibe wars.
Like, how is Open AI responding to Anthropic?
And as we'll see, like, this was not the story of the Super Bowl at all.
The story of the Super Bowl, even from a tech perspective, it was much more about how is tech
communicating what AI can do broadly to, you know, the largest swath of Americans and, like,
broad stakeholders and voters possible.
You know, there's debates over data centers, crypto, gambling, weight loss drugs.
There's new technologies and society's grappling with those, and the Super Bowl is actually a very interesting place to go and make a case for how you want this technology to be integrated into society.
You're making a case for how it can be used positively, all of these different things.
And even though it's fun to focus on like, you know, oh, should Claude have ads or should ChachypT not have ads or whatever, like there's a much bigger discussion that's happening at the Super Bowl.
And I think that's what we should be running through as we react to these Super Bowl ads.
Ranking a Claude Super Bowl ad in the moments surrounded by people that aren't all terminally online.
80% of the people here don't understand that ChachyPT speak when the second speaker talks and were confused or tuned out
Yeah, so that to be explained it's like it's sort of iconic to me because I've used chat Cheptie voice mode
Yeah, it was so it was and I've seen those reals where it's like it was like perfect execution for
For X. Yeah, one of the other challenges is again, we weren't seeing it live, but apparently the ad was much shorter
Yeah, add during the game I kind of expected them to run try to twist the knife
Really moog anyway so they toned it down a bit
And Horne says had to be explained by the AI Bros, which was as bad as it sounds.
While this ad speaks well to the early bell curve, this might have been too early for a mainstream investment like this.
Overall, I think they had a lot of fun with it.
It clearly was not, can't have been that expensive because it was like four scenes.
It was like four one-day shoots, probably.
I think we're going to get the team on who did it, Mother.
Because it is beautifully shot, and I think it's funny.
They basically made Open AI way overreact.
Yeah, a little bit.
Spike their corner.
Actually, seeing the way that the ads went yesterday,
maybe they didn't need Sam and the entire, like, management team,
like, you know, stricane affecting it.
Well, this was what Rune was posting.
He was like, it's the, it's the blue shell and it, like,
it successfully, like, rage baited everyone.
Yeah, they got rage baited.
Yeah, but, I mean, they've known, opening eyes known that they've had to be very,
very clear about the way ads will get integrated,
because when you, when you think ads in LLMs,
you immediately think what we built with the cloud with ads.
And then they did update it.
They said there's a time in place.
Instead of ads are coming to AI, but not to Claude, they updated it and said the new copy
is there's a time in place for ads, your conversation with AI should not be one of them.
So I wonder what pushback they got.
This doesn't hit quite as hard, even though it is probably more authentic.
Yeah, yeah.
Right.
Where did Claude land in the app store?
We were wondering about that, right?
It was at 36 or something when we were looking at it last week.
Yeah, it's at 23 right now.
That's not bad.
So it's like up, up maybe 10.
Yeah, there's a bunch of stuff that moved.
I mean, just looking at the top, it's like Peacock, okay, that's watching the big game.
NBC app, that's the same thing.
NFL app, obviously, that's Super Bowl related.
Same with NBC Sports.
There's just a number of apps that jumped just by default.
My first time seeing a TEMU ad was crazy.
Yeah?
It was like the copy shop like a billionaire.
It was funny.
It was so insane.
And yet I think it actually, in hindsight, kind of works because everything's so cheap.
people don't have to look at the price. I guess that's the that's the thesis is like to a billionaire a couch feels like
five dollars so here's a five dollar couch an apple or something like that okay yeah one thing I'm interested to
see oh the way the Super Bowl buys work they make you buy ads in the Olympics as well yeah and so if
you're watching the Olympics today or tomorrow I guess we're gonna have an Olympics ad because we're forced to like
we should do a whole another victory lap we're taking our it was so successful we're taking it to this to the
We're taking it to the slopes.
The slopes.
But we'll be interesting as if various labs or other companies run like longer ads.
It's not quite as expensive.
We'll see.
Bryce said anthropic ads were total flop in his house.
Despite having a highly tech literate family, they took a bunch of explaining.
And yeah, it is.
But that makes sense, right?
So like they hit so hard on X.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
I remember the morning of you're sitting here being like, whoa, shot across the bow.
I can't believe they did.
It was like a mic drop.
Mike drops so unpredictable.
Sam, you know, lost as soon as he was as he was writing up like a word salad, you know, trying to respond.
But again, there's some data coming back from Ad Week.
Morgan is sharing the audience didn't like Anthropics ad placing it in the bottom
3% of all Super Bowl ads from the last five years.
But it makes sense, right?
It's like a bar belt.
Like for people on X that are like really following tech closely, it was incredibly.
It's pretty small sample size.
500 people they asked.
Let's look at how Open AI responded.
This is called You CanJ.
Just build things and let's take a look and see if it tells a more optimistic story about AI, one that's maybe less confrontational with their rivals.
I like building things.
Making cardboard stuff is underrated.
You get a lot of Amazon boxes, cut those things up.
Make something.
Very cool.
Become a hacker.
Read more.
Learn basing probability.
Become a scientist.
to play chess.
I don't think if chess is something you build necessarily.
Sick.
Job displacement.
No more sweeping.
Somebody said this is a Windows computer running a Mac or something?
I think people would tune out for this.
Build things.
Why?
It's just too.
So long.
Do they actually run the full thing?
A full minute?
And the other thing is, I don't know.
I'm still.
It is a little dark.
They're trying to push codex.
They're trying to push codex.
to consumers, which I think is smart.
I think it's very smart.
But introducing codex when every single person in the audience is familiar with chat GPT,
and then just trying to, I don't know.
So that that robotics stuff was actually Easter eggs of the robotics team at OpenAI.
Like they just brought the cameras in and filmed their own team.
That's very cool.
Dan Chipper says huge.
Open AI runs a codex commercial, not a chat GPT commercial.
So was that a codex commercial?
Yeah, go to the very end.
Because that just felt like a general, like AI is cool commercial.
Like, it felt very in line with the previous Super Bowl ad of just the arrows of technology.
Oh, okay.
So showing you Codex desktop.
That's cool.
Okay.
Yeah, yeah.
That's pretty subtle, though.
And then it goes Codex.
Okay, Codex Open AI.
Oh, okay.
So it's not, okay.
Both Anthropic and Open AI are both using the same reference material for their ads.
Yeah.
Like, they're all going back into the Apple archives, like trying to pull inspiration from the same,
fishing from the same pond.
They should have just done a parody of the Budweiser.
Was ah bad.
Is it on?
And it's just people talking to chat,
QBT voice, but was ah.
That would be.
Super Bowl commercial is so evil this year.
Seeing a Bud Light commercial felt healing.
Like, oh yes, Bud Light, a tangible object
unrelated to AI or crypto.
Ramp did really, really well with their Super Bowl activation.
They had a whole bunch of different touch points.
So they didn't just lob and add in and then call it a day.
They were there.
They sent the Bryans.
We can kind of go through the whole
plan but there's something interesting I mean we certainly experienced this
of our Super Bowl ad obviously we bought a very small ad but but like the why we
got a good result out of our Super Bowl ad it was we wasn't we we didn't just go to
NBC and said like here's money and thank you we went and told ad week and gave an
interview and you gave some interesting quotes to the reporter on the record so
there was an article around it that's valuable then we email people who were
featured in the ad hey we're posting about this like do you want to know that
you're in this thing cool like you can go
see it if you want to watch it.
Like there's a whole bunch of different flywheels.
And I think Ramped did a really good job of understanding
that like it's the Super Bowl campaign, not an ad.
And yeah, so I mean, and one they had,
obviously they'd work with Brian,
but with during the box stunt in New York last year,
that went really well.
So they built off of that.
We showed up to the tailgate party that they had.
By the time we showed up, there was already
like thousands of people there.
It was insane.
A bunch of, bunch of TBPN listeners came and said hi,
which was awesome.
But great group of people.
they had a big yellow skateboard ramp with people like actually going pretty hard.
Brian shaved a guy's head on a live stream to look like himself.
So in that kind of getting some people were like we're showing up and being like I like this takes six levels of like understanding to get all the jokes of like the ramp is yellow because the brand and the ramp is the name of the company and the skater and then like Brian's here because he was in the office and he plays an accountant.
But like I think that's fun for people.
I think people actually do like Easter eggs and they like.
going down the rabbit hole but at the same time you got you can't just be pure
Easter eggs and I think when you actually watch the ramp commercial which is
right there it's like staring you in the face obvious what this is it's like
the brand name yellow in your face what does it do you you have to do things
that takes you 10 hours now there's 10 people there's 10 copies of you that do
the thing that you do can do it in five minutes and so you can just do it much
faster and so you can watch this and not know anything about ramp and you know
okay corporate card multiply what's
I have a task in accounting.
It looks like an accountant.
I'm triggered on that.
I'm familiar with this character.
Clarity at the top and then tons of depth.
And even in that video, there's a whole bunch of Easter eggs
in the video.
It was directed by someone who directed the office.
And there's different actors from the office in there.
And there's layers.
And then you go on social media and you see other stuff.
What worked well was like classic Super Bowl ad, right?
Easy to understand celebrity popular character.
Plus a bunch of the super internet native stuff
like physical activation.
and then localized activation.
So you had people, the Super Bowl's NSF,
you have thousands of people in SF participating
like on the ground.
And so there was, again,
Dylan Field, I love it.
Insane production.
Ammon says Open AI add flop live with the Normies.
Didn't really get it, thought they were gonna tie it all together.
Yeah, it was just like a bunch of cool things
and then a name for a product that nobody knows about.
That's the issue.
Yeah.
If you have a very popular product like Budweiser, something like that,
can just show a bunch of random images and then show your logo. If you just show a bunch of random
like cool scenes or whatever, it's inspiring, it's like uplifting. And then you flash a logo that
nobody knows, you end up with something like that doesn't really like leave that much of an
impression. Do we the Google ad? Because I believe Google went way more practical on this.
Pull it up, Tyler. Let's talk about the, before we get to that, we can talk about the Coinbase Super Bowl ad.
This was probably the most controversial. I still need to see exactly what they did. I saw some images of them
putting something on the sphere.
Is this the, is this somebody watching the ad?
Yeah.
Okay, let's watch this.
Sound on.
It's a sing-al-all.
Okay.
They like switch up the, it's like a state change, right?
So it's like you're paying attention.
And then you just see Coinbase.
That's funny.
Oh, that's really funny.
The Coinbase team responded to the criticism
and said if you're talking about it, it worked.
Cryptos for everybody.
A lot of people were not fans.
I don't know, I thought it was fun.
I like that they do something different each time.
Yeah.
You know, I think Apple, Google, like the really established brands do have the permission to sort of go higher, higher abstraction and just sort of do like these brand films.
For the AI labs who are trying to push a particular product, it's, it feels like a little bit too soon, a little bit too risky.
Yeah, yeah, some people like the Coinbase ad.
Yeah, it was like very 50-50 polarizing.
Yeah.
All right, let's pull up the Gemini.
They went with the full 60 seconds.
Okay, full 60 seconds.
Yeah, I saw some people reacting this like, it's very clear.
It's like what you see is what you get.
Like this is the actual experience of using the product.
Yeah, it's next to mine.
And Google does a great job of like pulling on heartstrings.
And integrating with Google photos.
That makes sense.
Yeah.
Then showing off features.
Bed can go right there.
A banana.
Killer feature.
That's cute.
I have a trampoline.
This is actually how a lot of people have delightful experiences with AI.
This is like what a lot of families are used.
using AI for. We're doing a remodel and we're using AI for this stuff and you put in what you have
and edit it. And it's cute and like the kids love it. You talk, you always go back to the example of like
make me into a dinosaur. Like that's delightful. That's sweet. That's just like a nice ad. I don't
know. I think a win if you're an AI. David Ross doesn't like it well. I'm not going to read that.
It's funny. Google focuses a lot on multimodal as expected. Yeah, smart. They have a lot of success,
obviously, with nano banana. You should lean in. Yeah, totally. Yeah, that that ad. It also
If you're an AI company running, if you're running an ad yesterday and you're an AI company and people didn't viscerally hate it, you want. Yeah, you want. Yeah. No, totally. And also leading into the visual stuff works super well in a visual format, like a Super Bowl ad. Like Codex, like even if even if you had like a million doovers, it's a hard product to explain. It's like it's a desktop app with a lot of text and it's in dark mode and it's going to write code, but only behind the scenes. And you don't really have to know how to write code, but it's going to write code, which is not very aesthetic.
on the screen at the Super Bowl.
Google knows how to just like deliver like, you know,
here's a heartwarming experience.
Here's a positive experience.
Let's focus on that.
Mike Duda was live, live tweeting.
Live tweeting his reactions.
State Farm tried really hard.
Okay.
Draft Kings, good spot, but not built for the Super Bowl.
Toyota continues its long tradition of kind of kind of off Super Bowl commercials.
Not good.
We got to talk about the Schedka ad.
We should pull that.
We should pull it up.
Yeah, Shedka is the one that had a fully AI generated.
They had a fully AI generated.
They came out.
wanted to be the first company.
We're not an AI company, but we heard there's a backlash to AI, and we would love a backlash.
People are calling it the worst ad of all time.
They're just saying it's the worst ad ever.
I do love when a brand just like rolls up to the Super Bowl with whatever their stock ad is.
Like I think that Timu ad was not a Super Bowl spot.
Okay, here's VETA's AI vodka ad.
Let's watch it.
Like if I'm watching the Super Bowl with my kids, I'm just turning it off.
The robot drinks the,
the mixed drink and it just pours out all over.
And Fedka, the issue is it tastes kind of like it should be used in like machinery,
like as like robotic like fluid or something.
Yes, yes.
I feel like if you're going to go all in on AI generated video, I want you using the latest and greatest.
You got to be nanobanapro playing.
You got to be really deep.
Is there a marketing budget $6.
Exactly.
No, I agree Goldrug.
Like, they're a really cool and innovative ways to use AI imagery in a way that maybe it's
hands out is like, oh, that's obviously AI, but it's cool.
Like, if you're gonna do the AI thing, like,
be Harry Potter Balenciaga, like do something
that is iconic and interesting and inspired.
Let's pull up Ryan Peterson's Flexport ad.
Okay, how did everyone get matching shirts?
Seriously, dad.
How did all these jerseys get here?
Well, kids, let me tell you about something
called a global supply chain.
First, jerseys are manufactured, boxes are packed,
and logistics company Flexport takes it from here.
Then containers are loaded on the
cargo ships.
Or pulled through the ocean by 100 pirates?
Not exactly, honey.
But if you want speed, Flexport does coordinate airframe.
And fighter jets.
Actually, buddy, Flexport then gets the jerseys through customs.
Be back on a truck.
And then the superheroes fly the trucks to the stadium.
And lightning zaps the jerseys onto the players.
Yeah, we're being sarcastic, guys.
This is entirely AI.
Entirely AI, but this is so good.
But it has the, nailed the,
feeling of a classic Super Bowl ad.
It was very fun. And it's interesting because he's
actually explaining the flexport
business, but in this funny way that you
keep asking, like... I mean, I'm sure
smart advertising agencies are
already doing this, where it used to be that
a company would say, hey, I want to run a Super Bowl ad, they'd
go and talk to a bunch of different agencies.
They would get a, they'd do an RFP.
Yep. And, and then
the agencies would, like, come up with some concepts
that they would basically script out, maybe they add
some images or whatever. Now it feels like the agencies
have to actually make an AI
V one of the ad and say like here's our five concepts if you hire us will like narrow in
Yeah and actually make it higher higher actors maybe not use entirely AI. Yeah, I can't believe I think he made that like himself
I think that he wrote the script and cut in concepted everything and like actually like prompted everything
Which is like pretty remarkable and I think it all flows from the idea of like having a viewpoint having an insight having like an idea that makes sense for the Super Bowl
Parker says amazed apples finally
going for the Spotify jugular promoting the ability to switch easily to Apple music during the Super Bowl.
So the Apple Music brand reached during the Super Bowl, I think was number one or number two,
right up there with Budweiser. It did very well. I saw it winning awards.
Well, we can talk about the halftime show from our point of view since we were there.
Yeah. I would say the energy, the production value was insane.
Very, very, like, cool, unique looking setup. It was really funny. I was like looking away while
they were setting up and I looked down. I was like they basically created Port of
Rico. They recreated the entire island. It seemed like. Plants and people in plants.
And the plants were so funny because it seemed like the people in the plants couldn't see out very well. And so they had like air traffic control people that were like moving the plants around like yelling. Yeah. You could tell they would be forward. But the production value was insane. The energy in the stadium was completely dead.
Dead. No one was dancing. It was very. Actually no, Dylan Patel was dancing. Yes. He was going to. He was going to. He was like. He was so funny because he was going to walk down and sit next to you. And then he was like, he was like, he was like, actually.
Actually, no, I'm going to stand up here.
I got to dance.
Then he just started dancing.
Dylan held it down for everybody.
I think the audience of people that go to the Super Bowl,
it's a lot of older folks, and they were just not into the new kid on the block,
Bad Bunny.
But it really was like a remarkable production.
A lot of people obviously, you know, somewhat divisive online because there are people
that are frustrated because they couldn't understand what he was singing about.
But from a purely commercial standpoint, I think it makes it makes, it makes,
a lot of sense for the Super Bowl,
specifically because a bunch of people
that wouldn't have watched a Super Bowl
that are international are going to tune in.
I was in the moment thinking that it would be great
if Apple had their new, like, translating AirPods,
and you could actually hear in real time.
Yeah, yeah.
Let's go to the AI.
AI.com.
AI.com.
You wanted AI, you know where to go.
$8 million for a Super Bowl ad.
You go to AI.com and asks you first to log in with Google.
So you have to give this new website access to your Google.
Which is like insane.
Because they're wrapping they're wrapping open claw. Yeah, which it's an open claw wrapper and so I go in there
It's a new company and I was like I don't have a sing you know I have multiple Google accounts
I was like I don't have a single account that I'm willing to just connect to some some app
Yeah, that has existed for yeah, so we can't even find the ad online. I can't find it anywhere
It seems like it's an open claw fork of some sort and the domain name was maybe 70 million dollars. They say it's $500 for a vibe coded site probably fake but
funny and okay we got the ad now oh we do okay let's pull it up do do you think this is AI generated
because if this ran first before Svedga spedga got scooped no this looks like maybe traditional motion
graphics I don't know it's hard to tell these days a GI is comic get your handle now so he had a lot
of success clearly buying crypto.com yeah yeah got the arena he basically owns L.A yeah
the difference with crypto
is like building an exchange is like somewhat like a commoditized platform,
at least in its simple state.
I want people to buy crypto in my app, in my exchange.
We come here.
They buy crypto.com.
The difference with AI.com is like I think to actually compete in this domain,
your product's going to have to be insane.
8 million for Super Bowl ads, 70 million for domain,
named $500 vibe-coded site, cloudflare basic hosting, priceless.
Yeah, the app did not or the website did not feel,
Polish. Apparently Open AI actually rolled out ads in chat GPT today.
Today, let's go finally.
We beat them to it.
We beat him to it.
We front.
Breaking news, ads have officially launched in chat GPT. You can go to the free tier or I believe the Go tier as well
and enjoy ads in chat GPT. You'll see probably enhanced rate limits and extended functionality.
How much do they exaggerate when you see an ad? They could do a
layering red background. It's very obvious. This is the ad and then this is the content.
Will the ads be even at all related to the content?
From what I understand, it won't be related to the content.
Because people are going to be annoyed at that. I would expect it in the future that is.
But in the meantime, I think it'll effectively be display ads based on your interest graph, right?
What they know about you based on what you've searched in the past.
So interested to see this. I'm not going to say anything more.
Let's pull up the core weave ad.
This ad.
You can't spell anything without AI.
We were meming this too.
You can't spell Claude without AD.
A as an aerospace.
I like this transition.
This is cool.
And it's for nanotech.
Navigation.
Neuroscience.
Why is simply yes.
Yes to predict the storms to keep people safe.
Yes to empowering.
There's a lot of good stuff.
A.
T is for translation.
Trading.
AI is great at translation.
The tools teachers need to educate each kid.
In their own way.
That's a weird transition.
Age is for healthcare to help keep humans healthier.
Home automation and robotics.
I is for ideas and the power to grow them exponentially.
In, this is for now.
The time to never say never.
G is for the good we could do with AI.
Genomics.
Three hundred.
So, sir, it's a bubble.
Moon boots?
Gravity?
Oh, anti-gravity boots.
That's what it is.
Okay, the chance.
We were built for this.
Coreweave, the essential cloud.
So the Chance of Rapper part felt super random.
I haven't seen or heard from Chance of Rapper in a long time.
Let's head over to Duncan.
Let's go to Will Duncan.
A much better version of Goodwell Hunting was made as a sitcom with a real genius in the lead and some other...
So this is AI as well, right? De-aging.
You'll arrange the Munchkins and the Fibonacci sequence?
I got a genius working for me.
He's such a genius and why he put ice in his coffee, huh?
Come on, Chuckie. I'm just Will Hunting.
I'm not a genius.
I will marry the first man that can help me with the Fibonacci
sequence how you do it
smooth don't you have a girlfriend we're on a break i don't need her i think everything i need
right here at duncan hey kid if you're still single doing this boston schick and working for duncan
when you're 50 i'm gonna be very disappointed isn't that your girlfriend
so camels central yeah very chaotic
Well, this is my new boyfriend.
How you like...
Tom Brady?
They're just spamming the cameo button.
How many cameos do you want?
Yes.
Not a great pitch for Duncan donuts?
I don't know.
It's fine.
Yeah, what's the takeaway?
Think about Duncan.
Sometimes all that matters is you get people to think about that.
They had fun with it?
I don't know.
It's interesting.
McCrone posted on Thursday at 11.53 a.m. Pacific.
That science has found.
its home through France 2030 we have invested more than 30 million to advance AI and a number of
other initiatives the next morning I shared breaking France is going all in yeah on AI with their
last 30 million and they said breaking jordie hayes can't tell the difference between an investment in
AI and academic grants for semesters in the south of France can we can we pull this up guys yeah
here we're you kind of have to see it to believe it's crazy my original
Post did. Bulley quote tweeted. Yeah, they quote tweeted. And tagged you by name. They're quote
tweeting podcasters. They are. But my post, of course, outperformed. I got a million views,
13,000 likes. They managed to rack up almost half the likes, 300,000 views, not bad. They're
saying they're not investing in AI. They're just giving academic grants for semesters in the south
of France. He then shows, it says hashtag for sure. And then he has, he showed a, he showed a
of just foreign investment in data centers.
And it's apparently 69 billion.
It's going into France,
mauging the United States.
Yeah, we only have 27 of foreign money going in.
Completely disregarding the trillion.
What about South Bank?
I responded, I'm sorry, but until LVMH is spending $100 billion a year on data center
cabinets, it's hard to believe you guys are taking AI seriously.
And I honestly think, I know this sounds like really insane.
Yes.
But in a fast takeoff scenario, you would imagine that France actually getting serious about AI is getting their national champions of all types.
LVMH, even the brands, it wasn't Christian Dior actually owned by a big infrastructure company back in the day.
And so I could imagine the Arnaud's getting back in the game at some point.
Anyways, a lot of fun. No disrespect to France. I think we were just having fun.
Well, it has been a fantastic show today.
Thank you for tuning in to our Super Bowl review special.
We've planted the bomb.
We will see you tomorrow.
Goodbye.
