- 12 hours ago
If you love my videos and want to support me, please follow me. thanks for watching.!!!
Category
🎥
Short filmTranscript
00:03From the most trusted journalists at Comedy Central, it's America's only source for news.
00:10This is The Daily Show with your host, Sean Stewart.
00:28Hey! Hey, everybody!
00:31Hey! Hey! Hey!
00:38Hey, everybody! Welcome! Welcome once again to The Daily Show.
00:44My name is Jon Stewart. Great show for you tonight.
00:46And I don't say that every time.
00:50Later on, we're going to be joined by a journalist.
00:52Josh Tierengal wrote a book about how AI can help solve the world's problems.
00:58And from what I understand, he wrote it with AI.
01:07But first, I want to check in on the president.
01:09You know, his approval rating is currently lower than really ever, I think.
01:14It's really, it's not, it's not good.
01:17Uh, really thanks to a combination of inflation and he's a dick and, uh, the war in Iran,
01:24the ongoing energy crisis in his own body.
01:30Um...
01:33Weekend to Donnie's.
01:36But as is always the case with Donald Trump, his MAGA base remains unfazed.
01:43Now, this week saw the formal dedication of a 22-foot gold statue of Trump at his Miami golf course
01:50by none other than evangelical pastor Mark Burns.
01:54Pastor Burns must have known that he might take some criticism for praying over a literal golden idol
02:01because he wrote on social media, quote,
02:03Let me be clear, this is not a golden calf.
02:09Mmm.
02:11No.
02:13Mmm.
02:15It is not.
02:16But if I may say, it is a full-grown cow.
02:21That is a, that is a golden cow.
02:27With a gold load and it's...
02:31But I don't want to suggest this is actually a case of false idolatry.
02:35If it was, God would probably be punishing us the same way he did in the Bible with a plague.
02:44And I mean, that's not happening.
02:46Breaking tonight, the deadly outbreak of a rare rodent virus on board a cruise ship.
02:51The race to contain a suspected deadly virus outbreak.
02:54The public health threat so dangerous.
02:56Nightmare at sea.
02:58Cruise chaos.
02:59A cruise from hell.
03:12What?
03:14What?
03:16Another pandemic?
03:18Are we going to have to start washing our hands again?
03:22Or freaking the f*** out in a Target?
03:25Target?
03:26I'm not playing any more of our games.
03:29This shit's f***ing over.
03:32This shit's all f***ing over.
03:34This shit's f***ing over.
03:37Over.
03:38Over.
03:39Over.
03:51Good times.
03:55Although I have to say, on the plus side, I can't believe I still fit into my old hazmat suit.
04:02Hey, quick question here though.
04:05Are we all going to die?
04:07It's not like COVID.
04:08It's not like measles.
04:09It's not a very efficient transmission.
04:11The overall risk to the public is low.
04:13You don't need to be hysterical about it.
04:23I know we don't have to be hysterical about it.
04:27It's a choice.
04:30But you know what?
04:30It's a relief.
04:31I'm glad we don't have to be hysterical about it.
04:34COVID was a respiratory virus.
04:36Passes easily.
04:37Often when the person isn't symptomatic.
04:38It was a brand new virus.
04:39We hadn't ever seen before and we weren't allowed to know where it came from.
04:44I mean, we didn't know.
04:47We were obviously allowed to know.
04:50We just didn't know.
04:53Wink.
04:56While the Hantavirus is a known virus.
04:59It's difficult to transmit.
05:00It's mostly spread by rat infestation.
05:02Which does raise the question.
05:04How did a cruise ship end up...
05:08...with Hantavirus on it?
05:11A husband and wife who were the first to be stricken with the so-called rat virus
05:15reportedly went bird watching at a rat infested landfill
05:19when their cruise ship was docked at a remote city in Argentina.
05:31I have some questions.
05:36I'm just going to walk down the list.
05:38A. What cruise line offers day trip landfill excursions?
05:52B. What bird watcher wants to go to a landfill and spend the whole day going,
06:03seagull.
06:06Seagull.
06:08Seagull.
06:10Seagull.
06:11Uh...
06:12Oh!
06:13Used condom.
06:17Cearlane warbler!
06:20отнош König.
06:21That's used condom.
06:22Sorry.
06:23Seagull.
06:25Vulture.
06:26Seagull.
06:27Condom.
06:27Vulture eating.
06:29Seagull eating condom.
06:32that's but in bird watching lingo that's known as a vulgoldum
06:42a lot of people serve that on the holidays
06:46the point is some people may get pretty sick but forget covet this ain't no pandemic hell
06:54this hantavirus and not even in monkey pox territory but i guess reality don't sell papers
07:01so boys we learned that everything was okay on tuesday what are we doing wednesday through friday
07:08the who has been vocal in saying this is not another pandemic or epidemic situation can they
07:14be so sure should people be worried is this another pandemic could the hantavirus mutate people have a
07:21right to be nervous you gotta fight for your right to be nervous
07:32yes we might have a right to be nervous but i guess the question the news might want to ask
07:38is
07:39do we have a reason and your assignment news should you choose to accept it
07:46is to help the public discern the difference so may we hear from the experts again
07:54the potential to spread beyond an outbreak is very small should be pretty limited should keep
08:01it contained shouldn't really have any concern at all i have no no concern about that i guess it's
08:06going to stick this time i want to make the timeline clear to everybody sunday we found out
08:12hantavirus had been on a cruise ship monday through thursday expert upon expert scientist upon scientist
08:21very transparently explained why this illness while a serious illness is a low level public health threat
08:32their words went a long way to easing the concerns of a curious public
08:38and lord knows the news can't let that happen so on friday after three days of reinsurance
08:49i give you nightline a dream vacation turning into a floating nightmare authorities now working to stop
08:57the spread and track down passengers who've already left the ship including to the u.s the looming
09:04in question could this become the next pandemic god damn it
09:11they got me again
09:23i can't breathe in there that's oh i was panicking they got me again and by the way
09:30did you check out the percussion on that could this be the next pandemic
09:40the question of whether it was going to be the next pandemic had been asked and answered for three
09:46days but apparently that was before the authorities decided not to fire a torpedo and sink the cruise ship
09:54burying its diseased passengers and cruise entertainers in a watery grave befitting their disease
10:00that's right folks these people from this ship were going to be
10:08allowed to disembark
10:11the deadly hantavirus is no longer contained to that cruise ship it is now literally flying around
10:17the world why they let them off the boat releasing them off the boat just creates new problems
10:23why did they get off the boat and then come back to america how long if you people on the
10:27ship
10:27should be isolated before being allowed to leave and then like walk among us
10:39look
10:40i don't think any of us
10:42i don't think any of us are crazy about the idea of people who take cruises walking amongst us
10:49i just don't think it's
10:53and i i respect that
10:56but they're still people they're just people who wanted to travel the world on a floating shopping mall
11:04they can throw their fiancee off
11:08look it up
11:15trust me it's got a higher body count than the hantavirus trust me
11:22look i could be convinced to be on team sync them all but again let's listen to the experts that
11:31the
11:31news people themselves have vetted to answer these questions responsibly
11:36dr rasmussen do you have any concerns about the process of the passengers returning to their home
11:41countries so i don't actually have any concerns about this process from a scientific perspective
11:46because i actually think that the process itself is completely suitable for this virus
11:51suitable for the virus but not suitable apparently for this news cycle
11:57the news experts say stay calm but the news media says no i believe we prefer panic
12:03right now we're in the port where the ship won't even be allowed to dock you can have a look
12:07at what this looks like that is the mv hondias those are the americans finally on board that
12:13evacuation boat you see there's a small group of them being ferried back and forth helping ferry
12:17passengers off the ship and onto some smaller boats to land off of the ship on these little
12:22boats that bring them here through a tent within minutes they are on a bus headed straight for the
12:27airport we're looking at a portion of a bus that looks similar to the ones that people have gotten
12:33on to you're literally showing us a bus they're not on
12:42you're just cutting to showing us what a bus looks like
12:47yes jim uh the passengers are getting on and i'm being told that the wheels on this bus go round
12:53and round and round and they're about to get on a bus where the wheels go round and round jim
13:01i see and can you ask uh will that be all through the town i believe it will jim
13:06i believe they will be going all through the town on the bus they're
13:13that they were treating it like the oj chase it was that's the logistics of how you get from a
13:19boat to
13:19the shore but don't worry the news media's high level technology gets us access we never could have
13:26gotten before these images just coming in those americans getting on buses and waving before boarding
13:31their flights drone video from spanish authorities capturing the first passengers leaving drone video
13:39spectacular such good use of drones ukraine uses theirs to defeat russia but good on you i still have
13:49not learned enough i mean i know they've gone from a boat to a smaller boat to a tent to
13:53a bus but at this
13:54point i've somewhat lost the trail where will it end where will these who are supposedly to walk amongst
14:04us end up perhaps in a room if so what does the room look like is it furnished
14:16if it has a bike will that bike be stationary each person will have their own room equipped with
14:23special ventilation systems private bathrooms exercise equipment and wi-fi
14:35private bathrooms exercise equipment wi-fi
14:42oh maybe we should all get the hantavirus
14:47it's actually not that luxurious only one of them will be given the password
14:55which i believe is lowercase hantavirus but the i is a one and the s is a dollar bill yo
15:03look we are now eight days into this non-pandemic
15:09and it's beginning to affect our mother's day coverage segways it's a very happy mother's day to all
15:15you moms out there this morning that cruise ship hit by a deadly hantavirus the state of our union is
15:21calling
15:21our mom this morning 17 americans are beginning a trip back to the u.s happy mother's day to all
15:27the
15:27moms watching let's kick this off pandemic panic
15:38happy mother's day happy mother's day tell your mom you love her but also keep your eyes on
15:48happy mother's day out there because you don't know if she's got it or not and i gotta tell you
15:50this
15:51if she turns you know what you have to do no tears boy no tears she's not your mother anymore
16:14no matter how many times the question can be asked and answered it doesn't matter for some people and
16:25sometimes it's the same person does this have the markings of the next pandemic or no no should we
16:33still not be sounding the alarm i don't think we have to be very anxious about it should we be
16:39worried
16:40that we have an american here who's tested positive no it's a low risk to americans or should we still
16:45not be worried by this here in america correct i don't think that this poses any risk to the general
16:50republic jesus lady how badly do you just want to work from home just work from home we're not all
17:01going to die that's a good thing just just zoom in jesus although it is important to note this virus
17:12can cause chronic fatigue syndrome mostly amongst the experts who have to repeatedly answer
17:18the same questions what is your message to americans who are still scared we have been repeating the
17:27same answer many times this is not another covet and the risk to the public is low so
17:41they shouldn't be scared and they shouldn't panic
17:51well that that certainly should put an end to it unless so they shouldn't be scared and they
17:59shouldn't panic and there is concern out there that more positive cases could pop up
18:07so when they say you shouldn't be scared you hear be scared it's like they're all trying to recapture
18:14that pandemic ratings magic remember the old big screen body counts all the ways they scared us
18:21well the counts are back obviously not as compelling there's one person who tested positive a separate
18:31person showed symptoms but we don't have a positive test result for that person
18:41one one one positive and one runny nose what damn this thing is spreading like i don't know what's
18:53that's something that doesn't spread cold butter the legs of a prude
19:01i could do this all day so it's fine it's not a thing go about your lives
19:10go on a cruise if you want meanwhile a norovirus outbreak on board a different cruise ship 102
19:16two passengers 13 crew members are sick on the caribbean princess
19:25when we come back josh terengale don't go away
19:43welcome back to the show my guest tonight he is a staff writer at the atlantic author of a new
19:50book
19:51ai for good how real people are using artificial intelligence to fix things that matter
19:55please welcome to the program josh terengale
20:06how are you i'm good thanks this is listen you have taken on a task ai for good ai is
20:17reputationally
20:18right now in the country maybe in the world people are very concerned it is i saw it booed at
20:27a
20:27graduation speech the valedictorian said something about ai being the new industrial revolution
20:32and the kids literally just wanted to go up on stage and drag her out why why take up the
20:39mantle of it
20:40to show to take down the temperature yeah i mean i i didn't do that intentionally i was reporting on
20:46ai
20:46and a couple months into reporting this is early 2024 i was like what the hell is this good for
20:54mm-hmm because i was talking to people who were telling me two things one
20:57it's going to cure cancer and mitigate climate change okay it's going to end human existence
21:03right and i was like are those are those the only two options like is there anything
21:09in between and so i i was actually talking to a guy named danny hillis who invented cloud computing
21:15and danny's now in his in his 70s and he's kind of like the buddha of silicon valley like he's
21:19just
21:20this lovely guy and i'm complaining to him i'm like danny this is like what is this good for and
21:26danny just laughs and he's like you need to imagine the tech without the tech companies
21:30and i was like uh i'm a little embarrassed that i didn't realize one can do that can one do
21:37that
21:37one can you can separate ai and the technology from palantir and altman and musk you can and so
21:46one thing that's really important to know is like ai is not one thing so there are many things that
21:51are infuriating about ai yes but one of them is the term ai okay so ai is actually a series
21:57of
21:57overlapping but different capabilities okay techniques right so uh there's ai that can
22:04predict behavior from patterns it sees in data right those are the large language models or that's
22:10something different there's a part of it that's large language but but not entirely right there's
22:14classifiers and what classifiers can do is like uh you know tag an image sort your email flag a tumor
22:22on an mri okay let's use that one yeah yeah exactly right then there's then there's optimizers
22:28and they work in logistics and they can change the direction of something or change pricing really
22:32quickly and then there's gen ai generative ai yes which is really what has sparked this whole thing in
22:38the last three years and that's ai that generates words and images and can create code and so what they
22:43all have in common is speed they process information faster than any human being possibly could
22:51and with many fewer doubts and so that's sort of the key the the lack of doubt both the speed
22:58and the lack of doubt so what you do in the book and i think you do it really well
23:01is you show ai
23:03as a tool whether it be in schools there's a great chapter in there about some teachers in indiana
23:10who are starting to use it uh with heart mris which are apparently very difficult to get but are
23:17diagnostically superior uh non-verbal humans that communicate and ways to help crack that code to
23:25bring those people in but it's hard to imagine it will remain our assistant yeah and i think what
23:35you're getting at is that um we have all been focused on gen ai and the people who are bringing
23:42it to us yes and we're human beings so we focus on human beings which i think is very wise
23:47because
23:47the tech is complicated and so what is the first thing we do we assess the people who are bringing
23:51it to us right who are in control of it who are in control of it and we don't like
23:55them thank you
23:56yeah i i didn't want to say anything no no it's fine it's fine um by the way hard to
24:02like hard to
24:03like okay so i i i'm gonna take a mildly unpopular stance and say i'm not sure they're necessarily evil
24:11but they're very alike they're very similar yes and so um they're all kind of like racing each other
24:17obsessed with each other intent on dominating it doesn't help that they all kind of look like they
24:24could be in the legion of doom yes right like you got the guy who wants to colonize mars the
24:29guy who
24:30flies into his secret bunker in hawaii none of that's great you got a guy who literally had to
24:35pause when asked if humanity should continue right should humanity continue and he was like oh interesting
24:42question yeah so like not great no okay but at the same time there's more than one baby with this
24:52bathwater there's a lot of possibility in here yeah and we want to be really careful in our response
24:57to that which i think is is actually a response to capitalism and a skepticism of capitalism with what
25:03this stuff can actually do but it's also we have been hurt before but let me take you then that
25:08we keep
25:08saying well it is really these five guys in these five companies it's it's google open ai uh aix and
25:15uh
25:16anthropic and meta meta okay why did they get it why is it why did all the profits of it
25:23ai is by
25:24necessity a strip mining of us it is in fact extractive in the way that oil companies oil might be
25:32a
25:32resource and you extract it from the ground and they did it and okay that's theirs but in alaska they
25:37get a dividend why does palantir and open ai and why do they get proprietary uh knowledge that that is
25:47our knowledge that they stole from us that they used to make their but they're the ones who get
25:52all the money that makes no sense to me yeah listen i agree and i actually think that politically
25:57speaking um there's movement on the far left and on the far right for the federal government to
26:04essentially nationalize these products and basically say look you're gonna have tremendous
26:08amounts of control we're gonna have all sorts of labor issues um you know you know i did a story
26:14for
26:14the atlantic about ai and the future of employment right yes nobody in the middle knows what i'm talking
26:20about they're not interested in ai right well it's it's kind of on its way right the two people who
26:26said
26:26uh who agreed right on the left bernie sanders said we need to tax it uh we need a robot
26:33tax right we need
26:34a shorter work week and we're going to need to nationalize it right and so then i went to uh
26:38steve bannon's townhouse i sat with steve bannon what that smell like
26:48um you know we didn't get we didn't get that close uh this was not my first reporting trip so
26:55i
26:55wasn't like do we start by smelling each other um i just thought it would be evident yeah so um
27:02and
27:03so we're talking and he says i agree with bernie sanders right and he said but he doesn't go far
27:10enough i think we should get 50 and i think we need to have government control over the boards of
27:17these companies it's like and he said that i know that's not going to be popular with the right but
27:21that's what i believe right and he doesn't believe it either my is my guess and he certainly doesn't
27:24believe it if a democrat is in office i think they you know it's very convenient for them to do
27:29the
27:29faux populism when it's really about uh about control but i wouldn't even think it's that radical
27:36it's the sense of this is a resource look the guys from ai are the ones who agree with you
27:43that this
27:44is going to be incredibly disruptive for labor they're not this isn't something that populists have
27:50made up no dario from anthropic has said yeah this is going to be a bear yes and what i
27:57found in my
27:57reporting on that story is that the people who really didn't want to talk about it were the fortune
28:02100 ceos oh that's interesting yeah now why do you say that what do you think that's about i think
28:07it's
28:08two responses yeah the first is they're actually really scared really that it's going to come for
28:13them they're scared that they look at their investments in ai and they know what wall street
28:18wants wall street wants growth and if they can't show growth through using ai in their products
28:23they can grow by shrinking their workforce and so they are desperately afraid that that's something
28:30that they're going to do and that it's going to be really really unpopular and what i would say is
28:34like i was impressed they were aware that they're not acting alone and that if all of them do this
28:39at
28:40the same time the consequences for the country are going to be enormous however if they don't do it
28:46they're going to be the ones out of a job because the street expects certain things from these public
28:50companies so they're incentivized to uh the breakdown of our social fabric correct through
28:56a great amount of of unemployment but the thing that i respond to is there's a sense of inevitability
29:04around all this as though we've created a tool that's unbelievably powerful but we have no control
29:11over how it's deployed or how it's used imagine if atom bombs were controlled by five capitalists
29:18in silicon valley and we were all like they're probably going to start a war at some point but
29:22what are you going to do capitalism right like and and so that's why i actually think it's really
29:28important to show people what the positive uses of ai are because we're going to have this moment
29:34and it's not going to last very long when we we can demand and insist on certain kinds of ai
29:40in our
29:40lives if we try to take on all of capitalism i i got bad news for you like it's had
29:46a 400 year head start
29:47right and that boulder is rolling down the hill right and sometimes we've directed it and sometimes
29:51we haven't but like i wouldn't take that on i think right now we have this brief period where
29:56if we can understand what we want from it how it works how to use it in ways that it
30:01works with human
30:02beings and doesn't replace human beings right how it amplifies meaningful problems doesn't create slop
30:08we got a shot and i would rather focus on the ways in which we have a shot than as
30:12you say like hunker
30:13down curl up in a ball and just be like right it's over yeah but they're doing their best to
30:18prevent
30:18that process from happening and as trillions get funneled into their coffers millions get funneled
30:24back into politicians coffers to prevent that very thing from happening they've created a machine
30:30that prevents us and is opaque and again i go back to but what is the fundamental driver of their
30:37product
30:38us for sure and so i don't understand how we're not we have no shareholder voice right and i think
30:47to me that's why this moment matters right we actually and i hate to say this no we're going to
30:53have to use the political system stop it stop your mouth out with soapy man um one source of optimism
31:02so up until like a week ago i would have told you well that's just terrible right so everybody's uh
31:09the booing at graduations yeah the fact that we're talking about this in such negative terms so for
31:14the first 14 months of the trump chew david a guy named david sachs was in charge of ai he
31:21also was the
31:21crypto czar i know he also was an investor in all the ai companies so he's basically like the you
31:26know
31:26the the cy sperling of ai right he's the president he's the investor he stepped down about a month ago
31:32and last week you know we reported other people reported the trump administration is thinking of
31:37suddenly regulating ai models above a certain power and i think they're doing that because they know
31:43if there is an ai related disaster you know there's photos of all these guys cozying up to
31:49donald trump at the inauguration they finally realized at the inauguration at dinners and they're like
31:53well that's not great for us yes and so the political movement is having an impact and at the
32:00same time as that's working people are actually making their their point of view heard we do need
32:05to demand that the people we elect to congress have used ai know the basic functionality of technology
32:13i'm sure they have oh they all have yeah i mean they're all training their own models um what color
32:19tie
32:19makes voters most comfortable so so we do have that available to us and i actually for the first
32:28time i'm like oh that lever is working a little bit the problem is again i don't trust them to
32:33regulate it either because of the corrupt nature of their dealings i mean when your two kids suddenly
32:38have a multi-million dollar drone contract with the pentagon and like they ran golf courses right
32:47you're like i don't think that makes any sense like the corruption endemic to this administration
32:52doesn't give you we need to establish some form of uh a way to adjudicate it that is apolitical right
33:01and
33:01and more akin to a commission of trusted advisors yeah and i think what's happening with the five
33:10guys as we call them in charge is that i don't think anybody wants to own the disaster right and
33:16i think the more unpopular this gets right there is more of an incentive for everybody to sit down and
33:21say uh how do we want to handle this and by the way i would include the chinese in this
33:24right from the
33:25beginning we've been told like no no no we have to beat the chinese that's why we can't regulate it
33:30right
33:31oh that's so interesting so when you think there's a self-preservation that has suddenly occurred to
33:36them that we're at the forefront because i was of the impression that they felt immune to the vagaries
33:43of accountability in our government and also in those silicon valley boardrooms and i would not speak
33:50for them i would only say the pressure has increased a lot the the consequences have suddenly become much
33:56more clear of what failure looks like um so i think there's a window here do i trust the trump
34:01administration to push them through the window no no
34:16somehow the metaphor has me confused okay the window is good push him through the window but
34:21then i can't help but think of like isn't that how putin gets rid of everybody let me ask you
34:27though
34:27because this is and this is a purely philosophical question because i understand the challenges that are
34:31ahead for us but i think as human beings on this earth the idea that we've designed something
34:39that's better than us throws into disarray our entire understanding of almost of even faith
34:48because what do we what have we said about god what do we say about the human eye well the
34:54human eye
34:54couldn't have been created unless it was created by something greater than us but we've just created
35:01something greater than us and we're less so does that mean does that change almost do they reckon with
35:10that i don't think they do but but want to get high and reckon with that but do you know
35:18what i mean
35:18yeah but like but how is it that a lesser being creates a better being but but i guess i
35:25look at
35:25it differently okay so remember a couple weeks ago the robot that beat that won the half marathon in
35:30china and everybody's and everybody's saying oh the robot beat the humans i was like that robot probably
35:36had 2 000 programmers and manufacturers who worked on it so 2 000 people in a robot won that half
35:43marathon
35:43in my mind you just blew oh hold on it's it's a great point i keep thinking of it as
35:52every iteration
35:54of it blows my mind more than the next and it's moving so quickly i'll tell you a quick story
36:00before we
36:01go i was at one of those like illuminati get-togethers like in the mountains of colorado like one of
36:11those
36:11things that you're like that doesn't happen you know but it happened it's it's always like a
36:16conference you know and they have like it's like bill gates and musk and they're all in the room
36:22and there's a good amount of security and the food is fantastic
36:29and so i thought well i'll get a chance i go up to uh sam altman and these guys are
36:35always like
36:35you couldn't find a bag here like i was dressed nicer and that never happens you're literally like
36:43really corduroy come on dude um and i said the industrial revolution displaced the globalization
36:50displaced but all those took place over decades and america still and the world still didn't adjust
36:56to it in the same way ai may have that same level of displacement over three years yeah and and
37:06we can't in any way be prepared for that kind of disruption in that kind of time frame and i
37:12laid
37:12it out so beautifully josh i was sure that i was the one that he was going to be like
37:17let's get some
37:18coffee and talk and and what did he what did he say he goes uh we'll be good and then
37:26he walked away
37:29and i was like huh okay that sucked yeah sorry
37:42but thank you for wrestling with these questions man this is going to be this is going to be the
37:46book
37:47start to read how we can use this as a tool because you're going to need it
37:50a.i. for good available now josh teringo we're going to take a quick break we'll be right back
37:55that is our show for tonight but before we go we're going to check in with your host for the
38:13rest
38:13of the week mr jordan klepper jordan what do you got for us next week well john air travel is
38:22a mess
38:23gas prices are surging but don't worry transportation secretary sean duffy has a plan and you'll never
38:29guess what it is how about he's he's going to fix the problems even better he's launching a reality
38:38show road tripping with his family across america that's a very real thing he's doing and i can't
38:46wait for it this is the show that america needs yeah i think america needs really transportation
38:53to be fixed come on john don't you want to see if sean will be voted out of the minivan
39:00will
39:01one of his kids turn out to be cake will one lucky ice officer join him in the fantasy suite
39:08i mean
39:08tell me that's not something you want to watch on your seat back while your plane runs out of fuel
39:16wait what why is my plane running out of fuel well we'll find out in season two
39:23join and clap for everybody here it is your moment of death i want you as the medical professional to
39:28lay this out for people how concerned should the general public be yeah the risk to the general public
39:36remains really low um think of it this way covid was a wildfire it spread through the air people who
39:42did not have symptoms could still infect other people and the entire world was fuel for the covid
39:47virus hontavirus is like a wet log in a stone fireplace sorry
Comments