エピソード

  • Episode 10: Dana Georgiou on Why AI Is Best Used by People Who Don't Need It
    2026/07/16

    Episode 10 takes the topic the guest picked and runs at it: AI is best used by people who don't need it. Dana Georgiou is a Chief Revenue Officer at a private lender, a cattle rancher, and the self-appointed mother of Kevin the goat, and she means the line as a compliment to the tool, not an insult to the user.


    Her argument, sharpened live: AI is not a crutch, it is jet fuel, and jet fuel only helps if you already know where you are going. Andrew calls it the smartest intern he will ever hire, one with zero context. The Turn lands on Liz, who admits the framing changed how she sees the whole debate. From there they hit the Picasso principle, the steroids analogy, why AI is not the next Google, and why the real danger is the loan officer who lets AI think for them.


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    43 分
  • Episode 9: Dylan Latour on Whose Words They Are When the Ghost Is a Machine
    2026/07/09

    Episode 9 takes on the question the show was built for: whose words are they when the ghost is a machine? The guest is Dylan Latour, a ghostwriter who launched an AI-native agency in 2024 serving the mortgage industry, and who is blunt that writing is less than half the job.


    The real work, he says, is pulling ideas out of a client's head and getting them brave enough to publish. Then the turn. Everyone blames AI for the flood of soulless content, and Dylan flips it: this is human slop, so stop blaming the AI and start blaming yourself. From there the three of them follow the thread through the creator economy, why the studios should fear AI more than the actors do, why an online presence is now mandatory, and a genuinely optimistic vision of a future where the boring work is automated and people do what gives them life.


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    36 分
  • Episode 8: Chen Gu on What 15,000 Years With Dogs Tells Us About AI
    2026/07/02

    What if AI is not a machine we built but an intelligence we are domesticating, the way early humans domesticated dogs 15,000 years ago? Chen Gu, an engineer who became a lawyer and now builds AI tools for the legal profession, brings a theory that reframes the whole debate. When humans tamed dogs, he argues, we may have domesticated ourselves in the process, and the same thing could be happening now with AI.


    Andrew takes the optimist seat and sees a path to symbiosis. Liz presses on control, morality, and who gets to set the rules. Chen lands somewhere sharper: you cannot guarantee a moral AI any more than you can guarantee a moral human, and the only real safeguard may be individual ownership of your own model. A conversation about power, trust, and whether we end up as partners or pets.


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    31 分
  • Episode 7: Is the Engineer Dead? (An MIT Founder's Answer)
    2026/06/25

    Episode 7 takes on the topic Andrew has been itching to argue. The death of software as we know it. The guest is Eilon Shalev, CEO and co-founder of Elphi, the show's first guest from MIT, and a self-described business graduate who is not a software engineer.


    That last part is the whole point. Eilon now builds end-to-end features inside his company's actual codebase, tests them himself, and hands a working product to his senior engineers to ship. Not a demo. Not a wireframe. Real code. From there the three of them follow the thread. If a non-engineer can build the feature, what is the engineer for? Eilon's answer reframes the job around architecture, judgment, and prompts, not typing code. Then it gets weird and fun: a hundred years out, custom LLMs, neural links, two societies, and whether you are the product.


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    37 分
  • Where Is the Female-Led LLM?
    2026/06/18

    Suha Zehl noticed her AI kept drawing the same white man. So she asked a harder question. Is AI sexist? She joins Andrew DeGood and Liz Short on where the bias comes from, why training it out is so hard, and where the female-led labs are.

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    29 分
  • Episode 5: Baby LLMs and the End of Free Will
    2026/06/11

    The first guest arrives, and the show goes off the deep end on purpose Antoni Tzavelas joins Andrew DeGood and Liz Short on simulation theory. How likely are we living in one? Anthony says zero. Liz says fifty. Andrew says ninety-five. Free will, baby LLMs, and whether AI is here to save us.


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    35 分
  • Episode 4: Andrew DeGood and Liz Short on Everything AI Is About to Break
    2026/06/04

    Liz Short took the room. For thirty minutes she walked Andrew DeGood through what AI actually breaks. Who owns the benefits. The wealth gap. The death of the entry-level job. Critical thinking. The ethics nobody wants to own. Andrew defends. He does not win this one, and that was the deal.

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    35 分
  • Episode 3: Andrew DeGood and Liz Short on the Optimist Case for AI
    2026/05/28

    Andrew DeGood spent thirty minutes trying to sell Liz Short on the optimist case for AI. By the end she conceded most of it.

    Five futures, all inside ten years. Biotech that crosses the "one year and one day" line where life expectancy improves faster than you age. Energy that goes near-free as fusion catches up and AI rewrites the grid. Knowledge becoming a commodity once an expert lives in everyone's pocket. The smartphone retiring in favor of smart glasses with AR overlays and continuous context. And the answer to the loneliness epidemic that nobody is comfortable talking about until they have an aging parent who is alone.

    Andrew closes on why optimism is not naive. If you only talk about the doom, you build the doom. Episode 4 is Liz's turn to push back.

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    28 分