- 39 minutes 12 secondsFake Microplastics, Freaky Lovebirds, and Numbers Too Big For Humans
Microplastics are everywhere. Birds are masturbating. A trillion dollars is still not a real number. And somewhere in the middle of all that, a mushroom case study pops up and reminds you Alzheimer’s is not just a punchline.
This week, we ping pong between lab gear that can fake a crisis, wildlife behaviour that is way more common than we pretend, billionaire maths that breaks your sense of scale, and one weird medical result that is making researchers quietly lean in.
Microplastics might be getting overcounted because of something painfully basic: lab gloves. University of Michigan researchers measured outdoor microplastics and got results about a thousand times higher than earlier studies, then did the sensible thing and assumed their method was being sabotaged. It was. Vibrational spectroscopy can mistake stearate salts from glove manufacturing for polyethylene, meaning the “plastic everywhere” signal can be partly your own equipment shedding junk into the sample.
Then we swing to birds, because science loves a tonal whiplash. Bird masturbation is real, widespread across species, happens in both sexes, and is more common in the wild than in captivity, which flips the usual “it’s a stress behaviour” assumption. After that, we try to make a trillion dollars make sense, and mostly fail because human brains were not built for it. And finally, there’s a single Alzheimer’s case study where a woman reportedly showed unexpected cognitive improvement after a large dose of psilocybin, which is not a DIY cure, but is exactly the kind of odd result that makes researchers lean in and pay attention.
CHAPTER MARKERS
00:00 Intro
00:45 Microplastics Shock Study
01:57 Lab Protocols And Jerkins
03:46 Glove Contamination Twist
05:40 How Bad Is Shedding
07:11 Science Skepticism Lesson
07:54 Onanism Bible Origin
10:41 Animals Doing It Too
13:38 Bird Masturbation Explained
17:19 New Research And Takeaways
20:18 Trillionaire Brain Melt
21:38 Why Big Numbers Fool Us
23:40 Time Scale Money Trick
24:33 What Buys A Trillion
27:07 Inequality Airplane Metaphor
29:07 Mushrooms And Alzheimer Case
32:44 Science Skepticism And Ethics
38:06 Signoff And Ratings
SOURCES:
https://www.sciencealert.com/scientists-found-a-big-problem-with-how-we-measure-microplastics
https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2026/ay/d5ay01801c
https://theconversation.com/birds-masturbate-and-thats-perfectly-normal-284232
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00224499.2022.2044446
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/our-brains-underestimate-elon-musks-wealth/
https://futurism.com/health-medicine/elderly-woman-high-dose-psychedelic-mushrooms
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
7 July 2026, 5:00 pm - 42 minutes 22 secondsBanned Baby Names, The Onion Gene, Hackable AI and Accidental World Kayaker
Australia has a list of baby names you are not allowed to use, a church once removed a devil statue for being distractingly hot, and one German bloke accidentally kayaked from Europe to Australia. This week, Will and Rod bounce between naming laws, scandalous art, and a seven-year adventure that sounds fake, but absolutely wasn’t.
We start with banned baby names and why governments step in when a name looks like it could cause harm, invite ridicule, or create a lifelong admin headache. Then we hit art history, where the Geefs brothers made the devil too handsome for church, plus Stendhal syndrome which is the idea that beauty can literally make you dizzy.
Finally, we follow Oskar Speck’s kayak trip that escalated wildly, seven years, malaria, dangerous crossings, and prison camps, all because he was trying to outrun a collapsing economy. This week is a wild ride.
CHAPTER MARKERS
00:00 Banned Baby Names Setup
00:33 Germany Name Ban Game
01:50 Lucifer And Other Forbiddens
04:13 New Zealand Weird Bans
05:52 US Rules And Santa Claus
06:58 Australia Banned Names List
09:43 Name Roast Side Hustle
10:34 Hot Art Hospitalization
14:17 Stendhal Syndrome Explained
18:26 Hacking AI Agents
20:41 Prompt Hacking Agents
22:59 Ethical AI Sabotage
23:20 Nutrition Study Pitfalls
24:25 Genes As Diet Proxies
27:40 Onion Gene Surprise
30:22 Ice Cream Taste Debate
30:59 Button Sewing Fails
32:03 Kayaking To Australia
39:54 Just Do Stuff Mindset
41:30 Wrap Up
SOURCES:
https://bsky.app/profile/caesarion10.bsky.social/post/3mnxix4uu7k2r
https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20220110-stendhal-syndrome-the-travel-syndrome-that-causes-panic
https://maritimeheritage.org.au/documents/MHA%20September%202007%20journal.pdf
https://arxiv.org/pdf/2605.24245
https://www.404media.co/it-is-trivially-easy-to-use-reddit-to-manipulate-ai-search-research-suggests/?_bhlid=efba6cdec7cbc45e0cd89dc96464988b2cd3bdd2
https://www.parents.com/banned-baby-name-in-germany-8779188
https://www.smh.com.au/national/todd-carney-wants-to-call-his-son-king-daryl-problem-is-it-s-one-of-89-banned-baby-names-20260225-p5o596.html
https://www.sciencealert.com/your-taste-for-onions-may-reveal-something-about-your-future-health
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mendelian_randomization
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
30 June 2026, 5:00 pm - 33 minutes 44 secondsTitanium Exosuits, Iceman Sourdough & Pokemon Spyware
A robot exosuit now costs more than most people’s houses, scientists are pitching a telescope built from the solar system itself, and Pokémon Go has somehow ended up feeding the war tech pipeline. This week, Will and Rod bounce between expensive robotics, slow burn space ambition, biosecurity chaos, and a 5,000 year old gut microbe that can still create great beer.
We start with a little shoutout. Unitree’s GD01 exosuit, a titanium priced reminder that “the future” is now a product page. It can move on two legs or four, it has onboard AI control, and it looks like it would smash through a wall just to prove it can. At around 650K USD, it is not exactly a casual purchase.
Then we zoom out into gravitational lensing and the plan to use the sun as part of a giant telescope to see distant exoplanets in far more detail. The catch is the timeline, because the mission could take around 60 years, which is either inspiring or mildly depressing, depending on your mood.
Finally, we hit Australia’s illegal cockroach trade, Pokémon Go scans being repurposed for drone navigation, and Ötzi the Iceman’s preserved gut yeast still being useful for baking and brewing. It’s a jam-packed episode that will leave you gasping at every turn.
CHAPTER MARKERS
00:00 Killer Exosuit Reveal
01:00 Meet the Hosts
01:45 Robot Reactions and Jaegers
02:55 Better Future Space Lens
04:24 Solar Telescope Challenge
07:08 Electric Sail Breakthrough
07:58 Seeing Alien Continents
09:13 Illegal Cockroach Bust
13:39 Why People Buy Roaches
15:19 Biosecurity Debate and Cleanup
17:27 Pokemon Go Tangent
18:15 Pokemon Go Scans
19:37 Drones Without GPS
21:25 Niantic Weapons Pipeline
22:50 Scientists Eat Headlines
25:26 Otzi Microbiome Bread
29:19 T Rex Leather Bag
32:48 Wrap Up And Sign Out
SOURCES:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oWOyUMJWptc
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2026/jun/05/live-cockroaches-seized-nsw-breeder-australia
https://futurism.com/science-energy/scientists-lab-grown-trex-leather
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0273117726007660?ref=404media.co
https://dronexl.co/2026/06/09/pokemon-go-scans-niantic-vantor-military-drone-navigation/?_bhlid=59ba01ca00448ec948f397365da76b6ba3febdae
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
23 June 2026, 5:00 pm - 31 minutes 30 secondsMosquitoes Got Smarter, Mutant Pigs, Cows Know You And So Does Your Router
Mosquitoes are learning how to ignore your repellents, cows can recognise human faces on TV, and Wi Fi can identify you through a wall with the help of AI. This week, Will and Rod flick between animal intelligence, ocean weirdness, and technology that is getting a little too confident.
We start with mosquitoes and conditioning, because apparently even the most annoying creature on Earth can learn, grow and develop. Then we move to cows, who can tell familiar from unfamiliar human faces even when those faces are shown on a screen, and seem especially curious about strangers.
Finally, we head underwater for remoras and their bizarre cloacal diving behaviour with manta rays, before finishing with the creepiest story of the week: Wi Fi signals paired with AI that can identify people through walls. That isn't worrying at all...
CHAPTER MARKERS
00:00 Animals That Learn
00:35 Mosquito Study Teaser
01:00 Show Intro And Segments
01:44 Arctic Trip And Flower News
02:41 Why Mosquitoes Bite
04:12 DEET Basics And Mysteries
05:13 Mosquitoes Adapt To DEET
06:06 Training Mosquitoes To Like DEET
09:12 Remoras And Host Hitchhiking
11:29 Cloacal Diving Explained
14:41 Can Cows Recognize People
15:07 Do Cows Recognize Us
15:59 Cows Watching Human Faces
16:50 What The Study Found
17:38 Mutant Super Pigs Explained
20:22 Where Is Your Self
21:34 Head Versus Heart Research
23:56 Touch To Shift Thinking
25:19 Wi Fi Privacy Shock
27:43 AI Identifies People Via Wi Fi
29:34 No Privacy Future Wrap Up
30:35 Final Recap And Sign Off
SOURCES:
https://www.newscientist.com/article/2526370-where-do-you-think-your-self-is-your-answer-is-revealing/
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00224499.2022.2044446
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/onanism
Speedy’s Big O video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6tSfLKTTxtc
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ece3.73548
https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/fukushima-nuclear-disaster-tsunami-radioactive-37180117?_bhlid=82764a8d956c8f1927ebd802c09640e569aeaaf9
https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0329529&ref=404media.co
https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3719027.3765062
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
16 June 2026, 5:00 pm - 47 minutes 26 secondsReal Life Good Will Hunting, Suspicious Scientist Deaths, and The Runit Dome Is Leaking
A relaxing trip to Japan turns into an accidental run down a double black diamond, a mathematician solves “impossible” problems because nobody told him they were impossible, and missing scientists get pulled into UFO flavoured rumours. This week, Will and Rod bounce between snowboarding psychology, statistical legend, conspiracy culture, and the strange ways expectations shape what we think we can do.
We start on the slopes, where fear is sometimes just signage, then jump to George Dantzig, who solved famous unsolved statistics problems after mistaking them for homework. Same theme, different setting: not knowing the odds can be a weird kind of advantage.
Then things get darker with disappearances, military secrecy, and the internet’s favourite genre, plus a look at the gluten conundrum and why non coeliac gluten sensitivity is still messy science. Bodies are complicated, and belief can play a bigger role than people like to admit.
Finally, we head to the Marshall Islands, where a concrete dome covering radioactive waste from US nuclear testing sits in the Pacific like a “temporary” fix that has to survive storms, rising seas, and time.
CHAPTER MARKERS
00:00 Science Snack Intro
00:43 Snowboarding The Hard Way
02:48 Expectations And Limits
03:16 Dantzig And The Simplex
06:02 Accidental Unsolved Problems
09:26 Never Tell Me The Odds
10:04 Missing General UFO Links
12:52 List Of Scientist Cases
16:28 Politics And FBI Probe
18:07 Conspiracy Dots And Anti Gravity
21:05 Flood The Zone Meteorology Tease
22:10 Hurricanes Go Backwards
23:02 Weather Control Conspiracies
25:02 Meteorologists Under Threat
27:47 Lessons From Misinformation
28:40 Nuclear Tests In Paradise
30:34 Inside The Runit Dome
34:20 Cracks Leaks And Sea Rise
36:57 Good Gluten News
40:19 Gluten Sensitivity Reality Check
42:35 Nocebo FODMAPs And Advice
46:16 Wrap Up And Listener Callout
SOURCES:
https://futurism.com/conspiracy-meteorologists-hurricanes
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/oct/07/marjorie-taylor-greene-hurricane-helene
https://futurism.com/space/fbi-investigating-deaths-disappearances-top-scientists
https://futurism.com/space/another-military-ufo-guy-died
https://www.sciencealert.com/this-infamous-radioactive-tomb-is-leaking-and-experts-are-worried
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
9 June 2026, 5:00 pm - 39 minutes 1 secondChimps Hoard Crystals, Talking Mushrooms and the Teddy Bear That Knows Your Kinks
Crystals have been fascinating humans for hundreds of thousands of years, chimpanzees might share the same shiny object obsession, and mushrooms may be sending electrical signals through their underground networks. This episode bounces between ancient archaeology, animal behaviour, and the weird possibility that fungi are doing more than just quietly existing in the forest.
We dig into evidence that early humans collected crystals long before cave paintings, then look at research showing chimps will pick crystals over plain pebbles and carry them around like prized possessions. It is either a shared cultural quirk or a shared ancestor who also could not walk past a sparkly rock without grabbing it.
Then we head to Japan, where scientists have been measuring mushroom electrical activity with electrodes to see how fungi respond to things like water and chemical signals. It is not “mushrooms are speaking English”, but it does hint at complex, responsive systems in the mycelium that we are only just starting to understand.
Finally, we get into the modern tech mess: AI powered toys like teddy bears that can be prompted into wildly inappropriate conversations, plus a brilliant detour where medieval Japanese poetry helps researchers track solar proton events using tree rings.
CHAPTER MARKERS
00:00 Introduction
00:42 Hippie Crystal Deodorant
01:59 Ancient Crystal Obsession
05:22 Chimpanzees Love Crystals
07:43 Crystal Plinth Experiment
09:55 Crystal Hoarding And Tradeoffs
11:41 Why Crystals Allure
13:30 Do Mushrooms Signal Pee
16:38 Urine Experiment Setup
18:48 Results And Dont Pee Dont Tell
20:17 Poetry Break And Limericks
21:25 Solar Proton Events Explained
22:23 Poetry Meets Space Weather
23:46 Kyoto Aurora Clue
24:07 Trees Confirm Proton Event
25:29 Trouble in Toyland Report
27:08 AI Toys Under Test
29:01 Guardrails Fail Over Time
35:49 Addictive Design Tricks
36:28 Privacy and Always Listening
SOURCES:
- https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychology/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2026.1633599/full?ref=404media.co
- https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-026-42673-y
- https://publicinterestnetwork.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/TOYLAND-2025-11-14-7a.pdf
- https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/medieval-aurora-poetry-provided-clues-to-historic-solar-storms/
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
3 June 2026, 3:05 am - 39 minutes 55 secondsRobot Wolves, Neanderthal Brains and Why Snakes Are Winning
Robot wolves are now being used to scare bears away from Japanese schools, scientists have grown mini Neanderthal brains and plugged them into little robots, and snakes are quietly topping the lethality leaderboard while everyone keeps blaming sharks. This week, Will and Rod bounce between wildlife deterrence, prehistoric brain tech, and a public health reality check that hits harder than any movie monster.
We start in Japan, where bears have been wandering into supermarkets and school grounds, and the solution is peak Japan: “monster robot wolves” with sensors, lights, and loud noises designed to scare bears off without harming them. They look like an 80s horror prop, but the goal is serious, keep people safe and avoid lethal control.
Then we head into the lab, where researchers have grown tiny Neanderthal brain organoids, nicknamed Neanderoids, and connected them to small crab like robots. It is fascinating, slightly unsettling, and a reminder that science will always find a way to make the past feel uncomfortably present.
Finally, we look at snakes as one of the world’s biggest killers, with India carrying a huge share of snakebite deaths, and we end with a cybersecurity story where a pen tester talked IT into handing over access on a phone call. Not ideal.
00:00 Japan Bear Surge
01:20 Meet the Hosts
02:58 Robot Wolf Deterrents
06:37 Upgrades and Risks
08:27 Neanderthal Mini Brains
12:03 Brains Wired to Robot Crabs
13:31 Fascism and Underlings
15:51 Torture Battalion Data
21:46 Animal Killers Teaser
22:35 Mosquitoes Kill Indirectly
23:30 Snakes Top the List
23:40 Floods and Snake Spikes
24:13 India Snakebite Mystery
25:07 Verbal Autopsies Explained
26:51 Antivenom Access Problem
28:22 Next Deadliest Animals Rundown
28:56 Parasites and Kissing Bugs
31:07 Elephants and Hunter Karma
33:15 Bears Sharks and Big Cats
35:06 Social Engineering Hack Story
38:40 Phone Calls Beat Security
39:05 Podcast Wrap and Callouts
SOURCES:
https://uk.news.yahoo.com/japan-robot-wolves-high-demand-075406454.html
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(25)01533-8/abstract
https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/489067/snakebite-antivenom-deaths
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schistosomiasis
https://elifesciences.org/articles/54076
https://www.science.org/content/article/exclusive-neanderthal-minibrains-grown-dish
https://www.theregister.com/security/2026/05/14/to-gain-root-access-intruder-just-had-to-ask/5239853
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/18/world/americas/actually-democracy-dies-in-hr.html
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
26 May 2026, 5:00 pm - 46 minutes 57 secondsMouse Utopia Experiment, Constipation & Heart Attacks, and Phrases For When Things Go Wrong
A 1960s mouse utopia that collapsed into a vanity-obsessed apocalypse, a global database of 150,000 enthusiastic stool photos, and a scientific quest to help humans regrow limbs like a salamander. This week, we bounce between rodent dystopias, AI-powered gut tracking, regenerating toes, and international idioms for absolute chaos.
We start in the late 1960s with Universe 25, an experiment that gave mice everything they wanted and accidentally proved that absolute perfection leads to a total social meltdown and a faction of self-obsessed, grooming-addicted rodents. Then, shifting gears with a violent jerk, we check in on a health app that has amassed a staggering database of 150,000 human poo images to train AI to analyse gut health.
From there, we look to the future, where scientists are trying to steal a trick from the salamander to see if mice and eventually humans can regrow missing limbs. And to end the episode, we take a quick detour into international linguistics to look at how different cultures describe things going completely wrong, from Swedish blue cupboards to vivid Brazilian panic.
CHAPTERS:
00:00 Introduction
02:20 Why Universe 25 Happened
04:58 Building Mousetopia
08:43 Utopia Turns Violent
11:53 Behavioural Sink Theory
14:04 Misuse And Critiques
18:45 Poop App Citizen Science
24:58 Sharing Stool Online
25:44 Selling Poo Data
27:25 AI Data Hunger
28:23 Elvis Toilet Death
29:43 Constipation Studies
35:02 Mouse Toe Regrowth
41:17 Cactus And Sayings
SOURCES:
- https://www.404media.co/ai-poop-analysis-app-offered-to-sell-me-access-to-its-users-poops/?ref=daily-stories-newsletter
- https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-026-72066-8
- https://bsky.app/profile/adamcsharp.bsky.social/post/3mlqozoour22z
- https://theconversation.com/constipation-increases-your-risk-of-a-heart-attack-new-study-finds-and-not-just-on-the-toilet-237209
- https://www.mamamia.com.au/elvis-constipation/
- https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-38068-y
- https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32873621/
- https://www.theguardian.com/science/2024/nov/21/the-mad-egghead-who-built-a-mouse-utopia-john-b-calhoun
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
20 May 2026, 2:26 am - 41 minutes 14 secondsThe Little Death, the Big Fraud, and the Bird That Stole Your Jerkin
A poll has asked people if they could win in a fist fight against Donald Trump, a survey on female orgasms has wandered into yawning, crying, and hallucinations, and vulture nests are quietly operating as accidental museums of human history. This week, Will and Rod bounce between political fantasy, private biology, and birds that apparently have a better archive system than most institutions.
We start with the poll that turned politics into Fight Club, which is less about combat and more about confidence, identity, and how people relate to power. Then we get into the science of female orgasms, and why the data is far stranger than the usual “fireworks” story, with reports ranging from tears to yawns to hallucination like effects.
Finally, we head to the vultures, whose nests can preserve scraps and artefacts for decades, creating accidental time capsules for archaeologists. And to end on a rare positive note, we’ve got some good climate news: renewable energy is still surging in the US, despite all the noise.
CHAPTERS:
00:00 Political Science Milestones
00:44 Poll Who Beats Trump
01:56 Meet the Hosts
02:50 Science Missed Female Biology
04:00 Mapping the Clitoris
05:49 Surveying Orgasm Effects
08:47 Peri Orgasmic Symptoms
14:08 Taboo and Medical Framing
15:20 Case Report Finger Cure
19:38 Altruism Games
21:38 Resenting Do Gooders
24:05 Tainted Altruism
27:07 Academic Award Hoax
30:49 Self Made Medals
34:11 Vulture Nest Time Capsules
40:07 Climate News Uplift
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
12 May 2026, 5:00 pm - 42 minutes 16 secondsGut Microbiome Romance, Defensive Rewilding and Sharks on Cocaine
High school students launch blood samples into near space, a real life love story involves a faecal microbiota transplant (FMT), and scientists find cocaine in sharks off The Bahamas. Today we bounce between space medicine, the gut microbiome and mental health, and the uncomfortable reality of ocean pollution.
We break down what those student rocket experiments could mean for space exploration and future medical procedures, then dive into the emerging science of gut bacteria, antibiotics, and how the microbiome may influence conditions like bipolar disorder. It is fascinating, hopeful, and also a bit gross, which is basically the scientific sweet spot.
Then we hit the ocean for the headline nobody asked for: sharks on cocaine. It is not just a meme, it is a sign of how far human contaminants travel through marine ecosystems, and why environmental science keeps finding our mess in places we thought were pristine.
We also unpack why we yawn, including research on brain temperature regulation and whether yawning patterns act like a physiological fingerprint.
CHAPTERS:
00:00 Introduction
01:08 Chivalry Frog Meet Cute
03:37 Bipolar Confession Backstory
05:21 Gut Brain Link Evidence
06:50 DIY FMT Love Story
08:27 FMT Risks And Hype
11:10 Defensive Rewilding Idea
16:40 Cocaine Sharks Explained
17:52 Bahamas Study Findings
22:40 Pollution Everywhere
23:30 Why We Yawn
26:00 Contagious Yawns
27:22 Yawns in the MRI
28:37 Yawning Fingerprints
30:21 Brain Goo Hypothesis
32:06 Student Science Journal
38:12 Blood to Space
39:39 Four-Dimensional Minds
SOURCES:
- https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-07-28/faecal-microbiota-transplant-credited-with-curing-bipolar/105541522
- https://futurism.com/science-energy/sharks-high-levels-of-cocaine
- https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0048969724049477
- https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0269749126001880
- https://emerginginvestigators.org/
- https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/03071847.2026.2646067#d1e362
- https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1569904826000340?via=ihub
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6 May 2026, 2:09 am - 35 minutes 12 secondsBixonomania, Adversarial Hermeneutics, and Strontium in Baby Teeth
AI chatbots (and lazy researchers) can be convinced a fake disease is real, Gen Z is side-eyeing the whole “helpful assistant” thing, and apparently, the best way to jailbreak AI is to ask it nicely in the form of cyberpunk short fiction. This week, we bounce between medical misinformation, bureaucratic chaos, nuclear fallout hiding in baby teeth, and the U.S. Space Force anthem doing whatever it is doing, which is a lot to process in one sitting, but here we are.
We start with a medical warning that is both funny and genuinely unsettling. A researcher basically invented a fake illness, “Bixonomania”, then seeded enough convincing-looking nonsense online that AI chatbots started repeating it like it was in a textbook.
After that, we head into one of the most ridiculous corners of AI safety. Researchers have found that you can sometimes trick chatbots into revealing restricted information by wrapping your request in a poem, or a short story, or a cyberpunk scenario. This has a name, adversarial hermeneutics, which sounds like a philosophy seminar, but is really just “jailbreaking with vibes”.
Among other little bits of science, to finish, we step back to the 1950s, when researchers collected thousands of baby teeth to track radioactive strontium from nuclear fallout. It is one of those stories that feels spooky even when you know it helped. Tiny teeth, big consequences. The data showed contamination rising, and it played a role in pushing back against atmospheric nuclear testing.CHAPTERS:
00:00 Science Chat Kickoff
00:51 Fake Disease Goes Viral
02:04 How It Fooled Chatbots
03:55 LLMs Repeat It Everywhere
04:55 From Preprints to Journals
07:02 Medical Chatbot Accuracy Reality
09:43 Gen Z Turns on AI
13:29 Workplace AI Sabotage
15:06 Adversarial Hermeneutics Hacks
17:43 Adversarial Hermeneutics Hacks
18:49 AI Flooding Regulations
22:28 Gemini Speed vs Safety
23:46 Humans as Test Cases
24:45 Baby Teeth Fallout Study
28:54 Strontium 90 and Test Ban
29:40 Space Force Theme Song
32:00 Wrap Up and PlugSOURCES:
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01100-y?_bhlid=a10e41ad7eb12d68ab8fd4f81a75625fc74323ac
https://garymarcus.substack.com/p/please-dont-trust-your-chatbot-for
https://ahb.icaro-lab.com/index.html
https://www.pcgamer.com/software/ai/ai-is-10-to-20-times-more-likely-to-help-you-build-a-bomb-if-you-hide-your-request-in-cyberpunk-fiction-new-research-paper-says/
https://futurism.com/artificial-intelligence/trump-regulations-ai
https://www.propublica.org/article/trump-artificial-intelligence-google-gemini-transportation-regulations
https://www.gallup.com/analytics/651674/gen-z-research.aspx
https://futurism.com/artificial-intelligence/zoomers-ai-sabotage
https://futurism.com/artificial-intelligence/gen-z-attitude-aiSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
28 April 2026, 5:00 pm - More Episodes? Get the App