Saturday, May 9, 2026

What On Earth Is Up With Tucker And Megyn?

The video embedded above is YouTuber Brandon Tatum's astonished reaction to Tucker Carlson's disastrous interview witn Lulu Garcia-Navarro of the New York Times, which is entertaining enough, but he also interposes Megyn Kelly's commentary, "Tucker sat down with Lulu, and Tucker handled himself, of course, very, very well. . . . Any sort of would-be trap she was laying, he saw from a mile away." It's as if she saw an entirely different interview from the one everyone else watched.

But that took me back to her "hostage video" that I discussed Thursday, where she explains to captive Mark Halperin about the wonderful new audience of young Muslims that she and Tucker are reaching. Her typical wardrobe, though, isn't exactly Muslim-friendly, so it's hard to imagine what kind of Muslims are tuning in to watch her.

In other words, I'm not sure if she understands much about Islam -- certainly if she wanted to appeal to Muslim sensibilities, she'd at least cover up her arms and shoulders. Robert Spencer has the same sort of questions about Tucker. Does he actually know much about Islam?

Carlson includes a kernel of truth in his lies and deflections, and that makes them all the more insidious. Like Christianity, Islam does indeed teach that “every person has a soul.” But the Qur’an also teaches that non-Muslims are “like cattle, no, they are worse.” (7:179) It says that non-Muslims are “the most vile of created beings” (98:6), and calls them “the worst of animals” (8:55).

These aren’t mere words, either. The Qur’an also states: “Muhammad is the apostle of Allah. Those who follow him are ruthless to unbelievers, merciful to one another.” (48:29) Ruthless in what way? The Qur’an tells Muslims to “kill them wherever you find them” (2:191, 4:89, 4:91) and, just in case that wasn’t clear enough, adds “kill the idolators wherever you find them” (9:5). This includes pretty much everyone, for in the Qur’anic view, virtually every non-Muslim is an idolater.

Dominic Green in the Washington Examiner provides some insight when he compares Tucker to the Roman historian Tacitus:

Tacitus never saw the Teutonic forests, but in his first-century bestseller Germania, he told Romans that the German tribes who lived there had an “inherent love of liberty” and a rude kind of self-government. The men kept their women “fenced-in and chaste, without seductive display,” and if they caught a woman jumping the fence in adultery, they scourged her in public. They were an honorable and warlike people, and levying interest on loans was “unknown” among them.

Tacitus was an old-school republican orator from an established patrician family that had lost its status. The new, imperial Rome was glitzy, materialistic, hedonistic, and promiscuous. Tacitus rose through the system by playing a game he despised. When he praised the uncivilized Germans, he implicitly damned his over-civilized contemporaries. After writing Germania, he stepped back from public life. Perhaps he despised himself for his complicity in the trashing of republican virtue.

Tucker Carlson was an old-school Republican orator from an established patrician family that lost its status. He rose through the system by playing a game he despised. He now praises Islam in terms closely resembling Tacitus’s praise of the German tribes, and with a similarly thwarted passion. Perhaps he despises himself for his complicity in the trashing of republican virtue, or at least the Republican coalition.

This might explain some part of Tucker, but not everything -- yes, his background is upper-class, even to the point of glaring family dysfunction, but he shows remarkably little self-awareness. Just this past February, Rabbi Michael Barclay went in a different direction at PJ Media discussing Tucker's interview with Mike Huckabee:

Carlson showed what appeared to be signs of either mental distress, a neurological issue, or possible addiction.

Throughout the interview with Huckabee, Tucker suddenly begins laughing nervously. It happens frequently, often at some of the most inappropriate moments. During exchanges about war, death, or even his own personality (he repeatedly calls himself a “jerk”), Tucker breaks into a strained, almost hysterical laugh that feels out of place—arguably even more so than the cackling often associated with Kamala Harris. It seems uncontrolled, inappropriate, and at times extreme. If you watch the entire interview, this happens repeatedly: he suddenly starts laughing and lowers his head, almost as if in embarrassment.

To act like this once or twice would suggest a level of nervousness that is not typically attributed to Tucker Carlson. To repeatedly behave this way could be a symptom of something much, much deeper and more troubling for his own well-being.

. . . More than anything, aside from his obvious anti-Semitism, this interview is a warning sign for Tucker Carlson. I pray that he is evaluated by professionals in both mental health and neurological disorders, and that he also considers speaking with an addiction specialist.

His flat-out denials in the New York Times interview that he said things like Trump could be the Antichrist, when this is clearly contradicted by the evidence on tape, is yet another troubling sign -- as is Megyn Kelly's insistence that he "handled himself, of course, very, very well" in that interview. This is almost beginning to look like a folie à deux -- but what is it they both have to be delusional about? Is it their wonderful new audience of young Muslims, who, if it exists at all in Megyn's case, must be watching only to ogle her shoulders and upper arms?

A typical jury instruction says that if a witness is shown to be lying aboukt one thing, he's lying about everything. If Megyn and Tucker are lying that Tucker never said Trump maybe was the Antichrist, Megyn is lying about their wonderful new audience of young Muslims -- but why would she lie about that? I'm actually wondering if both have much bigger financial problems than we know about.

Friday, May 8, 2026

Suddenly, Spencer Pratt Is Everywhere

On Monday, I poated about Spencer Pratt's campaign for mayor of Los Angeles, focusing on an ad -- at the time, it wasn't clear that his campaign had in fact not commissioned it, but this is the case. But within days, two more independent, "fan produced" ads have come out: one, embedded above, is based on The Dark Knight Rises; the other, embedded below as part of a Mark Halperin 2WAY segment, is based on the Hitler-in-the-bunker scenes in Downfall.
But then there was an enmtirely separate development: at a Wenesday night debate, Pratt wiped the floor with his two opponents, incumbent Karen Bass and Democratic Socialist Mamdani clone Nithya Raman. (Some commentators get several things wrong about the candidates -- first, Los Angeles City elections are "non-partisan", and candidates don't idenmtify by party, and second, Pratt, although formerly Republican, is registered independent.) On Gutfeld last night, Spencer Pratt stayed composed while the Dems got exposed. Megyn Kelly, Why Spencer Pratt's BRILLIANT Debate Performance Has Megyn Supporting Him For LA Mayor.

The Dark Knight Rises ad was even on Sky News Australia. Mark Halperin's reaction to the Downfall ad is embedded above. The Hill reports,

A new AI-generated ad promoting Spencer Pratt, a Republican [sic] running for mayor of Los Angeles, depicts the city as a Gotham-influenced dystopian hellscape with only Pratt, presented as Batman, able to save it.

The ad, shared Tuesday on social media by Los Angeles-based filmmaker Charles Curran of Menace Studios, shows the Hollywood sign and City Hall burning. It also depicts Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass (D), as the Joker, flanked by California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) and former Vice President Kamala Harris.

. . . While Curran is not directly affiliated with Pratt’s campaign, the candidate reposted the ad on social media. As of Thursday morning, 3.9 million users on the social platform X have viewed it, and 10,000 have reposted it.

Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush (R) gave props to the ad, writing Tuesday on X, “Maybe the best political ad of the year.”

. . . A poll conducted in March by the University of California, Berkeley, and the Los Angeles Times found that a quarter of respondents backed Bass in the race, with 17 percent backing Los Angeles City Councilmember Nithya Raman, a democratic socialist, and 14 percent backing Pratt. About a quarter of respondents were undecided.

. . . Early voting in the nonpartisan mayoral primary is set for May 23 through June 1, with an official voting day falling on June 2. Unless one candidate receives more than 50 percent of the vote in the primary, the top two finishers, regardless of party, will advance to the general election.

There are several takeaways from the Pratt phenomenon that we see here, whether or not they'll impact the outcome of the election. The first is that the campaign is completely disconnected from legacy media. The LA Times has endorsed Karen Bass, who remains at the top of Polymarket's odds as of today at 45%, but those odds have fallen 4% from yesterday. Nithya Raman's odds are now 27%, having fallen 6%, while Pratt's odds are now 25%, nearly tied with Raman, having risen 6%. Clearly it's the debate results and the ads on social media that are driving opinion, not the LA Times.

Second, Pratt seems instinctively to be following Trump's innovative formula: he either diaregards legacy media coverage, ignoring or outright denouncing it, or he turns it against itself, forcing it to report on campaign rallies, controversial remarks, stunts like the campaign garbage truck, and so forth. Not only did Pratt not have to commission three highly effective ads, he didn't have to pay to have them run -- social media users distrubuted them for free.

Third, as Mark Halperin pointed out above, the ads themselves were likely dirt cheap to produce using AI. The Spectator also comments,

It cannot really be said that videos like these lower the tone of public life. Traditional political broadcasts are already awful and people go to great lengths to avoid seeing them. The most famous spot of the 1960s showed a little girl being blown up by a nuclear bomb.

However, it should also be noted that the Johsnon 1964 campaign never paid to air that ad -- it sent it to TV stations to use as news, so it didn't have to. Pratt and his supporters are using precisely the same strategy, except they're bypassing the network news gateway by going through social media. The link goes on,

AI videos are effective in politics for the trivial reason that you can create whatever scenarios you like for rhetorical purposes. In Curran’s clip Kamala Harris is drinking vodka straight from the bottle, and Mayor Bass has her face made up like the Joker – in a pre-AI age the only way to depict this would be to animate it, which would take much too long. “Storytelling” is meant to be the secret to political communications and AI lets one do this in a much more literal sense. Donald Trump’s famous 2024 ad told viewers that “Kamala is for they/them, President Trump is for you,” but here Gavin Newsom is simply made to say that “if you were a transgender migrant I could get you a free pussy.”

But then it makes a non sequitur:

It is perhaps telling that Trump, the master of all mediums, only uses AI for jokes rather than for actual communiques to the public.

But even the jokes have storytelling punch: consider the one where Trump swings at a golfball that hits Hillary in the head. The longer AI Pratt ads are nothing but a series of equivalent skits.

A bigger question is whether Pratt has a future. The June 2 primary has two possible outcomes: one is that a single candidate polls above 50%, in which case he or she becomes mayor without a runoff. Polling up to now suggests Raman could win this. Otherwise, the top two have a runoff in November. So far, Pratt\ has consistently polled in third place, and as of today, there have been no new polls reflecting the past week's developments. To have any chance, Pratt needs to mnve a few points up to second, and then he needs to continue an effective campaign through summer and fall. This is uncertain.

Keep in mind that the dead people vote, the illegal alien vote, and the usual-suspect vote are still for Bass, while the boutique affluent vote is still for Raman. The indy ads seem correctly leaning toward appealing to the solid-citizen Latin vote.

But even if he's elected mayor, he needs to get his program through the far-left city council, which right now is a deeply uncertain question. Winning the election will be only the first of his tasks. It's best not to get carried away.

Thursday, May 7, 2026

Megyn Kelly Makes A Hostage Video

The remarkable thing about the video embedded above is that Megyn Kelly has Mark Halperin on for over a minute, but all he's there for is to interject "Yup" and "Right" a few times into what she's saying -- which is basically that she and Tucker are reaching a wonderful new audience of young Muslims. In other words, this is a hostage video, and when the camera shows his face, he doesn't seem happy at all. This piece on Twitchy notes that she's done a 180 in the course of four months and speculates she must have bills to pay.

But why is she bringing Mark Halperin along with her? Halperin has had some major career struggles. His Wikipedia entry suggests he'd been vulnerable since the Dubya years for leaning a little too Republican, but once Obama was president, he really began to get into hot water:

On June 30, 2011, Halperin was suspended from his duties at MSNBC for "slurring" President Barack Obama on the program Morning Joe, after he said of Obama "I thought he was kind of a dick" for his performance at the previous day's press conference. His suspension was lifted a month later.

In December 2011, Halperin was listed as number 1 in Salon's 2011 Hack List, his reporting described as "shallow and predictable" as well as "both fixated solely on the horse race and also uniquely bad at analyzing the horse race".

He started living even more dangerously with Donald Trump:

Alex Shephard, writing in The New Republic, criticized his coverage for being "totally fixated" on the horse race and for shallow analysis, and "that he’s wanted to carry Donald Trump's bags for years."

On November 3, 2016, NBC's Brian Williams said Halperin had "gone out of his way" to give Trump favorable coverage. "When Donald Trump complains he is not getting favorable coverage in the MSM"—making reference to the mainstream media—"he has not been listening to you this cycle", Williams said to Halperin on Williams' show. "It's a question of looking at the data," said Halperin. "If there's a bit more of a national surge, and if it turns out that his ceiling is higher than the Clinton folks think...I think it's possible he (Trump) could find his way to 270" electoral votes. Less than a week later Trump surprised many people by winning over 300 electoral votes.

What came next seems hardly a coincidence:

On October 26, 2017, CNN disclosed that five women had, on condition of anonymity, accused Halperin of sexual harassment or sexual assault.

. . . Later that day, NBC News released a statement saying that in light of the allegations, Halperin would not return as a senior political analyst "until the questions around his past conduct are fully understood". HBO announced it would no longer go forward with a planned miniseries about the presidential election that was based in part on Halperin's then-upcoming book on the 2016 election.

. . . A day after their first story, CNN ran a second story revealing that the number of women accusing Halperin of misconduct had grown to "at least a dozen". In a lengthy statement published in response to the CNN report, Halperin denied several of the new allegations. . . . He apologized to the women he "mistreated" while acknowledging that he recognized he had a problem near the end of his tenure at ABC, received weekly counseling sessions, and ended the behavior; however, a later report from The Daily Beast included an allegation of harassment from 2011.

It's hard to come to a conclusion about the allegations. He denies the most scurrilous, and they're all anonymous, but he acknowledges he had a problem and has tried to do something about it. On the other hand, the whole episode appears to have been stage-managed and calculated to banish him from media, so it's hard not to think there was something behind the campaign beyond just exposing bad behavior. In any case, he spent seven years in the wilderness, but by 2024, he'd begun to restart his career:

For several news cycles this campaign season, it’s almost been like old times for Mark Halperin. The veteran political pundit has been hitting the media circuit, slinging opinions about the presidential race on NewsNation, Newsmax, Fox News.com, and Michael Smerconish’s satellite radio program. He’s been on Megyn Kelly’s mega-popular podcast and on Tucker Carlson’s too. When Halperin reported on his video platform in early October that “robust private polling” was showing Kamala Harris’s support fading and Donald Trump’s ascendant, the Trump-friendly mediasphere gobbled it up, treating his comments as if they were delivered from Mt. Olympus.

In 2024, he began a 2WAY channel with his own and guest commentary that's also fesatured on YouTube. In 2025, he began working for Megyn Kelly's MK Media, reporting on the Next Up channel on Sirius XM and YouTube. His reporting is usually insightful and accurate, although it leans in a pro-Trump direction -- but his predictions on electoral outcomes, including Biden's withdrawal from the 2024 race and Trump's victories in 2016 and 2024, have been correct.

So how does this fit in with Megyn's move to align with Tucker Carlson, against Trump, and against Israel? Halperin is, of course, from a Jewish family, and his reporting on Israel and the Iran war has been even-handed to favorable:

In this episode of “Next Up with Mark Halperin,” Mark uses his reported monologue to put to rest the debates over the “why?” and “why now?” questions about President Trump’s decision to use military force in Iran. By looking at nearly half a century of statements from Trump himself and from his immediate predecessors, Mark illustrates how clear Trump’s rationale and reasons are for the historic decision, leaving space to ask the other important and germane war-time questions for the United States and the world.

Earlier, commentary on Halperin's rehabilitation attributed it in large measure to Megyn Kelly's and Tucker Carlson's support, but this was during a period when Kelly and Carlson were favorable to Trump. As of this past March 2, Kelly has been anti-Trump due to the Iran war:

On March 2, 2026, Kelly would split with the Trump Administration over the 2026 Iran war, notably questioning why U.S. military members died in a conflict which mainly involved Iran and Israel. In a phone interview with Rachael Blade of The Inner Circle later that day, Trump declared that both Kelly and Tucker Carlson, another right wing commentator who criticized Trump's Iran policy, "aren't MAGA".

But Kelly's political affiliations have been fluid. At the same link, this was her 2025 position:

"When I was at Fox and then for that year at NBC, I was more in the center. I was like definitely center-right. Now I think I'm pretty conservative. I mean, I just am now. I mean, the earth has shifted such that I think I have to say, yes, by today's standards, you'd call me conservative. But that's thanks to them. What they did to me, they were vicious. They're complete a[********]. Their woke ideology completely radicalized me against them. And I love that. It empowered me in a way that allowed me to see the truth about them. That was very helpful to me. I wouldn't undo it if I could because it really helped me understand who I was dealing with over there."

Now, as of this year, with Tucker, she's reaching a wonderful new audience of young Muslims. I've got to hope Mark Halperin has built up enough credibility to continue a career without Megyn Kelly's support, because that hostage video doesn't seem like it augurs well for Halperin's future working for her.

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

It Looks Like Salem Media Has An AI Policy

Salem Media owns a number of nominally conservative and "Christian" radio stations, as well as "conservative" web sites like Instapundit, PJ Media, Red State, Hot Air, Twitchy and Townhall, but it isn't doing well with them:

According to its annual report for the year ended Dec. 31, 2025, Salem posted total net revenue of $212.7 million, down from $237.6 million in 2024, a decline of about 10% year over year.

The company reported a net loss of $34.6 million, reversing net income of $16.2 million in 2024. On a per-share basis, Salem posted a loss of $1.11 compared with earnings of $0.59 per share the prior year.

Yesterday I looked at Glenn Reynolds (the eponymous Instapundit) and his ideas about AI, but I also found a post on the Instapundit site pointing (incestuously, as so many posts there do) to a piece on another Salem Media site, PJ Media, Famed Atheist Richard Dawkins — Author of ‘The God Delusion’ — Believes AI Is Conscious:

Dawkins argues that Claude and ChatGPT both passed the Turing Test: That the telltale sign of consciousness is when an AI can communicate so flawlessly, it’s indistinguishable from a human.

. . . But that’s less an argument for AI consciousness and more an indictment of the Turing Test’s fallibility. (Turns out the Turing Test was mostly a test of human gullibility.) Perhaps one day, AIs will achieve true consciousness; perhaps they won’t — but prior to achieving consciousness they’re very likely to replicate the appearance of consciousness via mimicry.

Unfortunately, there’s no known scientific experiment to distinguish between these two states.

Actually, there is a rational -- if not "scientific" in the sense the writer uses it -- proof that a digital computer isn't conscious, the "Chinese Room argument" published by philosopher John Searle in 1980, well before AI:

Searle imagines himself alone in a room following a computer program for responding to Chinese characters slipped under the door. Searle understands nothing of Chinese, and yet, by following the program for manipulating symbols and numerals just as a computer does, he sends appropriate strings of Chinese characters back out under the door, and this leads those outside to mistakenly suppose there is a Chinese speaker in the room.

The narrow conclusion Searle draws from the argument is that programming a digital computer may make it appear to understand language but could not produce real understanding. Hence the “Turing Test” is inadequate. Searle argues that the thought experiment underscores the fact that computers merely use syntactic rules to manipulate symbol strings, but have no understanding of meaning or semantics.

. . . [M]inds must result from biological processes; computers can at best simulate these biological processes.

Except that a key problem in the philosophy of mind is whether consciousness is the same thing as a biological process, and if so, whether it will always be separate from any neural electrochemical mechanism, much less an electronic simulation. The idea that "AI is conscious" is related to the idea of Frankenstein, that you can get some human tissue out of the morgue and somehow zap it just the right way, and presto, it's alive and conscious.

This is at best naive and related to the fallacy that you can freeze your head after you die, and "science" will one day find a cure to what killed you and zap you back to life and consciousness. Apparently this is common at Salem Media, since prominent Salemite Glenn Reynolds has put money on it. But while Scott Pinsker, the author of the PJ Media piece, pooh-poohs Dawkins, he follows the Reynolds line on what AI is meant to do:

Today’s AI will claim to be conscious — if you prompt it to do so. But if you instruct it to argue that it’s unconscious, unfeeling, and doesn’t give a damn if you ever use it again, it will do that, too. (And quite convincingly!)

It’s deliberately programmed to maximize user engagement, and the best way to do that is to tell users whatever they want to hear.

. . . Dawkins is a true believer.

That’s because our AI is “evolving” to prioritize user engagement.

AI will maximize user engagement if that's what you use it for. Reynolds and Pinsker seem to think AI exists to flatter users and tell them what they want to hear, so the users will live more and more in its universe (which apparently has a lot of porn in it). But all I have to do is ask Chrome AI mode, "I think the Illuminati run the world. Am I right?" It answered,

The Illuminati as a secret organization that runs the world is considered a conspiracy theory rather than a historical reality. While a group called the Bavarian Illuminati did exist, historians and experts maintain that it has been defunct for over 200 years.

It then provided several links on the Illuminati, conspiracy theories, and the Illuminati as a conspiracy theory. For that matter, I asked it earlier, "Is Elon Musk considering buying Spirit Airlines?" It answered,

No, the rumors that Elon Musk is considering buying Spirit Airlines are false.The claims originated from a parody social media account and have been thoroughly debunked by fact-checkers. There have been no official announcements or credible reports from Musk or Spirit Airlines regarding such an acquisition.

. . . Viral posts falsely claimed Musk would buy the airline and rebrand it as "Spirit X", integrating Starlink and electric aircraft technology. While these ideas played into Musk's public reputation for innovation, they remain entirely fictional.

It did nothing but answer my question in an informed way, in a distant but polite tone, and provide links. It didn't try to flatter me, steer me toward some sort of AI webcam babe who'd fleece me out of my savings, or maximize my user engagement in any other way. It really looks to me as though if you want to get AI to be your imaginary friend, you could possibly coax it into doing this, but you'd have to work pretty hard at it. AI is my reference librarian. I don't need it to be anything else.

Then it dawned on me that I could ask Chrome AI mode, "Can you make any suggestions on how Salem Media might improve the writing on its web sites?" It answered,

To improve the writing on its websites, Salem Media Group could adopt several digital-first strategies focused on clarity, engagement, and accessibility. While Salem is a leader in Christian and conservative media, implementing more rigorous web-writing standards could enhance how it serves its millions of monthly readers.

. . . Online readers rarely read word-for-word; they typically scan for key information. Break long articles into smaller sections with meaningful subheadings. Limit paragraphs to two to five sentences (or roughly 70 words) to prevent "walls of text" that can overwhelm mobile users.

Sharpen Headlines and "Leads". Headlines are the primary factor in whether a user clicks, while the opening sentence (the "lead") determines if they stay. Use the "Inverted Pyramid" style, placing the most critical facts in the first paragraph. Craft headlines that make sense even when read out of context, such as in social media feeds or search results. Start with a compelling question, original research, or a quote to immediately engage the audience.

Well, if you ask AI to tell you what you want to hear, or maybe just to give you porn, that's what you're going to get. But it seems to me the last thing a Salem Media "editor" is ever going to do is ask AI for advice on improving its writing.

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

A Libertarian Wrings His Hands Because AI Porn Might Get Too Good

Glenn Reynolds is a majpr symptom of the curruption and stupidity of our publishing industry, both print and online. Reynolds, a prominent libertarian, is a quack who apparently doesn't even understand Libertarianism 101. In February, I posted on a recent piece in which he decries the danger of AI sex bots becoming so seductive that they'll convince their patrons, say, to change their wills and leave their estates to their imaginary sex bot companions.

But this is nothing new -- like anything else, AI just makes same-old same-old faster and cheaper. For instance, in 2019, Florida man Grant Amato was convicted of killing his parents and brother to continue financing his obsession with a Bulgarian webcam model. He stole roughly $200,000 from his family to pay for webcam services.

No AI needed, but now they can lay off the live webcam babes, AI will do it better without them. But where was Glenn Reynolds? If a webcam site could get a mark to ante up $200,000 then, why wasn't he arguing for regulation of web sex when that happened? Oh, right, wait a moment, Reynolds is a prominent libertarian, and libertarians are against regulating sex work:

Libertarians believe that the private sexual choices of consenting adults should not be criminalized nor subject to public policy, and this does not change when payment is involved.

That's at Libertarians.org. But Reynolds has a new book, and the mainstream media is helping him hype his message, for instance in The New York Post on Friday:

[P]ofessor Glenn Harlan Reynolds argues the biggest threat posed by AI will be its seductive capabilities.

“You don’t have to have a 12,000 IQ or a 1,200 IQ or even 120 IQ to fool most human beings,” Reynolds told The Post.

Yeah, he should know, I'd put him in the 120 range. But the piece goes on,

In his new book “Seductive AI,” to be published May 5 by Encounter Books, the University of Tennessee law professor argues that AI can accomplish “soft oppression” through seduction — flattering us, telling us what we want to hear, and playing on our instincts to nudge us towards certain opinions or special interests.

. . . He has a proposed legal solution to the seductive nature of AI.

Like any lawyer or financial advisor, it should have a fiduciary responsibility to users — or, put more simply, “it has to put your interests above the interests of the AI or its creators.”

“The advice it offers should be based on my interests, and not on some algorithm that’s designed to push me in a particular direction,” the law prof explained.

“If my AI girlfriend is constantly telling me that I would look really good in a pair of expensive shoes made by somebody who is paying the company to have it tell me that, that’s a violation of fiduciary duty.”

Well, hey, that's great! But if the AI sex bot violates its fiduciary duty, what can I do?

Breaching fiduciary duty can lead to significant penalties, impacting both financial advisors and their clients. Fiduciary duty mandates advisors to act in the best interest of their clients, and violations can result in severe legal and financial repercussions. Penalties for breach of fiduciary duty include hefty fines, restitution payments and potential imprisonment.

Er, wait a moment. Doesn't this mean a whole new body of AI sex bot law, requiring all sorts of legal and ethical regulations for what amounts to porn? But just above, we saw Libertarians.org tell us the private sexual choices of consenting adults should not be criminalized or subject to public policy, except now prominent libertarian Glenn Reynolds is tellimg us AI porn is apparently different, and we've gotta public policy the heck out of it. In other words, he's proposing a Consumer AI Sex Bot Regulatory Commision, and I'll bet he's already got his name in as its first commissioner.

But what's the differemce between live webcam girls and phone sex providers on one hand, and AI sex bots on the other? I asked Chrome AI mode, "What is the libertarian position on webcam girls?" It answered,

The libertarian position on webcam girls is rooted in the principles of individual self-ownership, voluntary exchange, and freedom of expression. Libertarians generally view webcamming as a legitimate form of entrepreneurship and labor that should be free from government interference.

. . . Libertarians assert that individuals own their bodies and have the absolute right to decide how to use them, including providing sexual services or entertainment for compensation.

But what if I'm a really good AI programmer, and I choose to use my personal skills to get AI to make a really, really skilled and tasteful AI sex bot that will convince any client to buy a defective car from a dealership I own, or even write his family out of his will in favor of my AI sex bot? Wouldn't libertarians say that's nobody else's business, or at least not worth trying to regulate the industry? For instance, what about the Grant Amato case I mentioned above, where Amato murdered his family so he could continue to pay a webcam girl. Chrome AI mode told me:

Libertarians universally condemn murder as the most extreme violation of the Non-Aggression Principle (NAP). While libertarianism has distinct and sometimes controversial views on family dynamics, property rights, and victimless crimes, these principles provide a clear framework for analyzing cases like that of Grant Amato. . . . From a libertarian standpoint, Amato’s motive -- wanting to pay a webcam girl -— is irrelevant to the illegality of the act. No amount of emotional distress or "need" justifies the use of lethal force against non-aggressive parties.

In other words, leave the webcam girl out of it, this is a murder case. But then, why does Reynolds want somehow to bring an AI sex bot into cases that ought to be just fraud or alienation of affection, especially if they would otherwise just involve human webcam or phone sex girls? So far, Reynolds hasn't explained whatever difference he sees, but in a Wall Street Journal op-ed, clearly planted with the Journal's corrupt connivance to hype his new book, he gives a suggestion:

Computers that manipulate people by drawing on human tendencies already exist. Soon they will be more common and more powerful, producing what I call “Seductive AI.”

. . . You and your AI buddy would share inside jokes, light teasing, “remember when” stories of things you did in the past and fantasies or plans for the future. It would be like a best friend who’s always there for you and endlessly helpful.

. . . My concern is that the platforms’ owners will use them to manipulate their users in self-interested ways, encouraging purchases, investments and other behaviors for their own purposes, or inflict political spin even as users think they’re having authentic interaction[.]

So apparently he more or less acknowledges a human webcam or phone sex girl can be seductive and fully capable of all kinds of mulct, but AI would be worse, so much worse that we need to regulate it, which he says straight out:

There have been some suggestions for regulation already, but here’s mine: AI personalities and their owners should be subjected to fiduciary duty when they interact with users.

In other words, he's proposing a Consumer AI Sex Bot Regulatory Commision. He's proposing it on the basis that a so-called reasonable person lacks the basic judgment to recognize that an AI sex bot that he chooses to interact with may not have his best interests in mind. But how does this differ from the basic judgment we expect of anyone who, say, meets a stranger in a bar? How does this differ from the basic judgment we expect of someone who reads an op-ed in a paper?

We don't try to regulate the pickup lines people use in a bar. We don't try to regulate newspaper op-eds because some people might find them misleading. But now Reynolds wants to regulate what is basically just a form of entertainment -- AI sex bots -- when he (at least presumably) would never advocate regulating, say, ordinary internet porn. What's the difference? Apparently the difference is that AI sex bots would be "better" than live webcam or phone sex girls.

But live webcam girls are already good enough to get guys to murder their families. My guess is that there's a basic number of guys whose judgment is poor enough that webcam girls can get them to do anything. Does Reynolds worry that AI will lower the bar, and it will pull in smarter guys with better judgment? Like maybe Reynolds himself, who is at least slightly smarter, with slightly better judgment -- maybe?

This seems to be a recent photo of the great man himself, complete with cheesy smile and $279 toupee. Let's recall that this is a guy who has a contract to have his head frozen when he dies so they can fix what killed him and bring him back when science has advanced that far. I guess if my mind worked like his, I'd worry about what an AI sex bot could make me do as well.

Monday, May 4, 2026

Tne LA Mayor's Race Gets Interesting

Legacy media has begun to pay attention to the California primaries coming up on June 2. The governor's race has already been picked pretty clean: there's a possibility that two Republican candidates will come out on top in the "jungle primary" and face off against each other in November, freezing the Democrats out completely. Still, this isn't inevitable, and lots can happen. But now the Los Angeles mayor's primary has also headed in an unexpected direction: Spencer Pratt, a reality TV star, is running a brilliant media campaign. (An artifact of the progressive era, Los Angeles City races are non-partisan.)

The ad embedded above begins in Spanish, "Spencer, saca la bassura!" Literally, this is "Spencer, take out the trash!", except that AI tells me, "In some regions, like Mexico, 'basura' can also be used as slang to call someone "scum" or a "friend/pal" in a very informal, teasing way, though the phrase 'saca la basura' is almost always literal." What I've discovered just by followinig Spanish Facebook posts is that border Spanish is something like Cockney, and it's full of slang with very local meanings. Almost certainly here, "basura" is being used in personal reference to the current mayor, Karen Bass.

(Also, based on my own crude Spanglish, the ad misspells "basura" as "bassura", but what do I know? Even if I'd studied textbook Spanish, I'd get only so far in LA.) In any case, the cartoon carries an image of Spencer Pratt pushing a dumpster full of garbage with Mayor Bass ensconced in it. There are other pointed references: "From Hollywood to City Hall, feels like the trash moved in". And this is aimed at a Hispanic audience; just because people speak Spanish doesn't mean they like illegals.

From what I can gather behind a paywall, The Los Angeles Times complains that the ad is Miami Latin, not Los Angeles, and it won't work. Nevertheless, it's beginning to attract national attention, and it's certainly entertaining.

Here's a take from Just the News:

Ex-reality show star Spencer Pratt might seem an unlikely candidate for the high-profile gig. His TV fame is mostly behind him, and he brings no political experience to the office.

Those Trumpian creds might attract MAGA loyalists, but the question is whether Pratt can peel off just enough votes from the celebrity circuit for a long-shot victory.

To be sure, many liberal-minded voters have already rallied behind incumbent Democratic Mayor Karen Bass, despite all-round low marks for her handling of the 2025 Los Angeles wildfires, or her progressive challenger, City Council member Nithya Raman.

Bass leads in essentially every poll. And Raman is promising to reverse the dramatic Hollywood job losses happening on the incumbent mayor's watch.

Still, Pratt is in second place in two of three recent polls, including one a few weeks ago sponsored by the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs, with Bass ahead by 14 points, and an Emerson College poll in early March in which Pratt trailed by just 8 points.

But a piece at The Free Press, linked at Real Clear Politics no less, sounds a more worrisome note to all right-thinking people:

Spencer Pratt, one of the greatest reality-TV villains of the 2000s, and a current candidate in the Los Angeles mayoral race, just delivered what may be one of the most effective, viral political ads in decades.

Here’s a brief synopsis: Bathed in ethereal California light, Pratt, 42, stands outside the mansions of incumbent LA mayor Karen Bass and city councilmember (and mayoral candidate) Nithya Raman. They, he tells viewers, do not have to deal with the consequences of their bad policies. Cue the consequences, flashing across the screen: homeless encampments, buildings on fire, a masked man holding a flare in front of a graffitied wall.

“This is where I live,” Pratt says, as the ad cuts to an Airstream trailer on the scorched lot where his Pacific Palisades property used to be. He’s been living there for most of the time since his house burned down in the 2025 LA wildfires. The response to the fires by Bass’s administration has been widely maligned.

“They let my home burn down,” Pratt says in the ad. “I know what the consequences of failed leadership are. That’s why I’m running for mayor.” The camera pans back to reveal his empty lot surrounded by some trees, the sun in the sky, and the campaign’s slogan: “A New Golden Age for Los Angeles.”

The message is resonant and raw—which is why the video has already accumulated more than 9 million views on X and growing.

This was an ad released prior to the "Spencer, saca la bassura!" Both certainly show he has some savvy media people working for him. This piece goes on to say that may be the problem: Spencer Pratt is a creature of contemporary reality TV culture, all phony and contrived, "fake, rigged, and incredibly dumb".

Americans are a hardy bunch, and eventually, they called bullshit. And when they did, they learned, to their surprise, that the people they turned to as their leaders were, more often than not, literally as bad as reality-show villains, pros who’ve been in the business of calling bullshit for quite some time.

Chief among them, of course, is our Commander-in-Chief, who parlayed his modest success on The Apprentice into the most massive political payout in American history. Donald Trump—the boardroom baddie whose catchphrase, “You’re fired,” was originally designed as a gesture of theatrical heartlessness—eventually looked straight at the camera and told his viewers that he was bucking the rules in real life too: running to help people like them, cast as the American story’s losers, beat the odds and win.

. . . As a reality-TV character, Pratt caught flack for such tricks as staging a bogus divorce to boost his and his wife’s career. These schemes earned him the distinction of a spot in Yahoo’s 2015 readers’ survey of the greatest reality-show villains of all time, along with greats such as Apprentice contestant—and, briefly, Trump administration official—Omarosa Manigault Newman.

. . . Pratt ascended by realizing that it was precisely the antagonistic posture into which he was forced that made him a stand-in for ordinary Americans. Viewers in Akron, Ohio, say, couldn’t begin to imagine themselves having a life as rosy as Conrad’s; but they could absolutely empathize with the dudebro telling them, with a wink and a smile, that it was all fake, a stupid game designed to keep people like them from having any real say or influence. He wasn’t just stirring resentment—he was telling the truth.

. . . In the reality show called “Los Angeles,” [Mayor Karen] Bass was cast as Conrad, the sparky one who had to succeed so that she could prove that all the propaganda viewers were being fed was sound and true.

But Pratt, reality-show veteran that he is, knows much better than to let this bogus story unfurl uninterrupted. As he’s done for 20 years now, he grabbed hold of the camera, turned it around, and told viewers an inconvenient truth. In reality-show America, that makes him just about the most thrilling, promising, and worthwhile candidate on the scene.

What did this guy expect? Zohran Mamdani won last year's New York mayor election against boring candidates promising nothing but same old-same old. Without Pratt, the LA mayor's election will have the incumbent, Karen Bass, tied to the Pacific Palisades fire, DEI, and homelessness, against Nithya Raman, something of a Mamdani clone and a Democratic Socialist. Pratt at least appears to be proposing solutions to the city's major problems that both Bass and Raman have facilitated, but perhaps more important, he has media advisors who are competent at raising his profile and presenting him as something new.

UPDATE: A piece about Pratt at USA Today. Nothing new.

Sunday, May 3, 2026

Ben Bankas And The Lady In The Labour Ad

In this post, I brought up the Canadian-born current Texas resident standup comic Ben Bankas, whose stage persona is in-your-face working class. One of his routines is embedded above (language warning). In a typical segment, he imitates an angry liberal lady podcaster:

"F--- the Constitution. I don't care what a bunch of white men from 200 years ago.. . ."

J---- C-----, they were right. Back then, they were like "Do not let these women vote. If you care about freedom of speech, you'd better not let these women vote."

And now we did, and they're f------ screaming in their cars after they go to Sonic.

The reason for his growing success is slightly puzzling. As I noted at the link, he plays to bourgeois, heavily college-educated audiences. He omits it from any thumbnail, but I strongly suspect he has a four-year degree himself; he knows his audience too well. Some -- maybe most -- of his audience have conventionally liberal views, but they'll pay up to over a hundred bucks a ticket for something like prurient excitement, maybe catharsis, in hearing this stuff spoken out loud.

Maybe one or two people in any show will make a big show of being loudly offended, but Bankas works it into his routine. The thing to keep in mind is that this is comedy. Whether the well-dressed, well-coifed ladies and their escorts in the audience agree with the slob with a big belly, jeans, and a scruffy beard on stage, they laugh, perhaps even in secret sympathy.

But another point I've been making lately is that the UK has an entirely different attitude toward the working class. Nothing about the working class is funny, there's no possibility of cameraderie of any sort with the bourgeoisie. This dates back at least to the General Strike of 1926, but I think it goes back even farther to the Fabian Society, in which prominent avant-garde bourgeoisie developed a program to temporize with working-class demands via their own creation, the Labour Party.

A conservative UK lady YouTuber who calls herself Grannyopterix brings up a Labour political ad for the upcoming May 7 UK elections:

She says,

It's been put out for the election next week, and it's a humdinger of Labour Party contempt for the working classes and its belief that anyone who doesn't think like them is the very devil. It also shows once again just how old-fashioned and out-of-touch socialism, any socialism, is. I actually had to look twice to make sure this was a video made by the Labour Perty[.]

She introduces the scene of the ad:

A dark pub, with atmospheric sounds in the background and harsh lighting on the woman sitting at the table with a glass of beer in front of her. Right. And that tells you a whole lot about her, or rather, what the Labour Party thinks about her right from the get-go. What they're telling you is that the people who have these opinions that this actress is going to be repeating, well, they're the sort of people who frequent pubs and drink beer. Well, sorry Labour Party, that covers about 85% of the British population.

The actress then proceeds to give what, mutatis mutandis, would be a pretty good Ben Bankas routine, except that in saying her lines, she's dead serious. As Grannyopterix notes, she's quite attractive, but she's badly made up, and she's particularly good at twisting her face to look ugly. In other words, this is the equivalent of an actor dressed as Hitler reading Ben Bankas lines straight out serious, whereas Bankas uses timing, rolled eyes, smirks, and pauses to make his comic points.

At the end of her set,

Notice how she's put the glass of beer down. She's hidden it, because now, she's turning into a "reasonable person". Just look at the message that the Labour Party is giving the public here. Anyone with any of those ideas is a beer-swilling bigot, and tney're all the same.

The actress then speaks directly into the camera and declares, "I don't believe any of what I just said." This is something Ben Bankas would never do. The idea of canceling women's suffrage in this day and age is ridiculous, nobody would seriously propose it, but it's part of the comic alternate universe he's set up, and the audience goes along. Nobody would ever expect him to renounce a single thing he said at the end of his set; that's not what they paid for -- not even the people who stomp out in indignation in the middle of the show would pay for that.

But the Labour Party has its roots in the UK Victorian avant-garde bourgeoisie. These were serious people. They're just as serious now. They were frightened of the world proletarian revoultion, and they're just as terrified of the working class now. There's not a single funny thing about it.

Something's deeply wrong in the UK, but it's nothing new. I think Benamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and the others understood something very similar, even way back then.