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Does anybody, Josh primarily, because I know you're playing around with AI, there's a 2.0 video creation model that's being used right now to create a lot of these videos like the cat stealing the fish from the grocery store or the two-legged cat robbing a case of beer from a convenience store, the cats and dogs that are driving vehicles and get pulled over by the police and then take off. I mean these AI models are getting really good, these AI videos. I mean you can pretty much tell it the names of popular figures and it will put those people into videos and create a whole situation. And I mean these videos, these look convincing these days. I mean I don't even know what I'm looking at if something's real or not. I mean some of them are just egregious. You can tell there's no way a cat ran into a store and stood on its hind legs and stole a box of beer from the store. There's no way. I mean cats just can't physically do that. But I mean other videos that show people in situations and they're talking to each other and they're using the person's actual voices, it's difficult man. It is real difficult. And I'd be the first one to admit, I don't know if it's my vision or what it is, but I'm having a difficult time determining a lot of the stuff I see today. And I mean it's just even a year ago. You couldn't do the stuff a year ago that you can do right now. And what about five years from now, ten years from now? I mean they've got an actor right now who's a female actor who's an AI. And booking agents are jumping over each other trying to book this AI as an actor. And that I think is disturbing. We could start watching movies and we won't know if this was really put together or if there's real actors in here or what's going on anymore. Previously, let me reset.
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