WT: Cooler Than 1 Pie?

Episode Audio
Skitched 20110225 175343

Manimal and actors jumping between comedy and action. Call Samantha? It’s a living! The Starship bet is updated and it’s double-or-nothing time! Got something weird? Email [email protected], subject line “Weird Things.”

Picks:

Andrew: Chaos on the Bridge and What We Left Behind: Looking Back at Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and Dave Not Coming Back

Brian: Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves

Bryce: World’s Greatest Con S3

Episode Notes

The episode opens with a long, playful discussion of the old TV show Manimal, with the hosts joking about its simple premise of a man who turns into animals to solve crimes and comparing it to other 1980s transformation or action shows. That flows into a broader chat about actors and roles that surprised them, including Harrison Ford de-aging in the new Indiana Jones trailer, Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Simon Pegg, Jason Statham, Bradley Cooper, and Steven Lang.

A major middle section focuses on AI tools and their practical uses. Andrew describes transcribing and searching a podcast with Whisper/MacWhisper, while the group also discusses Bing inside Skype, a voice-based ChatGPT service called Call Samantha, AI at CES, job-loss headlines, and uses like help bots, show notes, formatting lists, and contractor bids. The episode then shifts to recurring segment material: a Starship betting update, news about Virgin Orbit bankruptcy and the difficulty of space ventures, and the pick segment featuring a Dungeons & Dragons movie recommendation, World's Greatest Con promotion, Star Trek documentaries, and Dave Not Coming Back.

Key topics

  • Manimal as an 80s high-concept TV premise: The hosts repeatedly explain Manimal as a man who can transform into animals to help solve crimes, and they joke about how quintessentially 1980s and high-concept the show feels.
  • De-aging CGI in the new Indiana Jones trailer: Justin comments that the de-aged Harrison Ford footage looks surprisingly good and may be a milestone for the technology.
  • Acting ranges and typecasting in film and TV careers: They use examples like Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Simon Pegg, Jason Statham, Bradley Cooper, and Steven Lang to talk about unexpected career shifts and casting choices.
  • Podcast transcription and searchable audio with Whisper/MacWhisper: Andrew explains using Whisper through MacWhisper to transcribe and search an MP3 quickly for research.
  • AI integrations in consumer tools and voice assistants: The group talks about Bing in Skype and Call Samantha as examples of AI being embedded into ordinary software and services.
  • Skepticism about AI gimmicks at CES: Justin and Brian joke about CES being full of AI-enabled appliances and other gimmicks that add AI because it is trendy.
  • Alarmist headlines about AI and employment: Brian objects to a headline about AI eliminating massive numbers of jobs, and the hosts respond cautiously rather than accepting the framing.
  • AI-generated show notes and routine admin work: They discuss using language models for podcast summaries, name formatting, and other repetitive administrative tasks.
  • The Walmart effect and invisible consumer gains: Brian frames retail disruption as something that can lower costs and improve quality of life even while harming older businesses.
  • Retail decline and store shrinkage: Andrew describes walking into a severely downsized Sears or JCPenney and finding a strangely limited store, using it as an example of hollowed-out retail.
  • Starship launch terms and bet rules: The hosts clarify the bet conditions: Starship must launch and pass the Kármán line by April 30, with some discussion of what counts.
  • Space startup failures and launch risk: Virgin Orbit's bankruptcy leads into a broader discussion of how hard space ventures are, even for famous and well-funded founders.
  • How the Dungeons & Dragons film avoids parody: The hosts praise the movie for being a sincere fantasy-action-comedy rather than a wink-wink parody.
  • Marketing and cult potential for the D&D movie: They argue that the film was poorly marketed but could gain a cult following and justify more installments.
  • What makes a successful D&D sequel: The hosts speculate that a sequel could work like a tabletop campaign, with changing party members and returning characters.
  • Star Trek documentary nostalgia and fandom history: Andrew recommends documentaries about TNG and Deep Space Nine and reflects on Gene Roddenberry, cast dynamics, and differing fan attachments.
  • Streaming and access to documentary content: Andrew mentions Shout TV as a free ad-supported place to watch some of the Star Trek documentaries.

Picks

  • Brian Brushwood: Dungeons & Dragons movie — Strong recommendation; he says it was quite good, tightly paced, and full of clever writing.
  • Justin Robert Young: Dungeons & Dragons movie — Strong recommendation; he praises the movie's tone, casting, action, and humor, and says he hopes it leads to more.
  • Justin Robert Young: World's Greatest Con — Clear promotional pick framed as a launch announcement; he urges listeners to check it out when it returns Monday.
  • Andrew Mayne: Chaos on the Bridge — Recommended as a documentary about the making of Star Trek: The Next Generation and Gene Roddenberry.
  • Andrew Mayne: The Things We Left Behind — Recommended as a Deep Space Nine retrospective and presented as a worthwhile behind-the-scenes documentary.
  • Andrew Mayne: Dave Not Coming Back — Strong recommendation for a sad but very well-produced documentary about a deep underwater cave recovery attempt.