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SamTheGuru

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Has anybody realised how frighteningly powerful this is yet?? If you haven't go have a play.

In no more than 5 seconds:

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We do have an all things AI thread somewhere. I have a bit of a love-hate relationship with it. It’s going to cause society a lot of problems. But then, I’ve been able to do things I would never have dreamed of doing - making a video game from scratch (not a good one but that’s more down to me), building a website, an app.

Plus you can get really creative with it. How it can even begin to fulfil a request as stupid and random as this that nobody will have ever asked it before sort of blows my mind:

Write a short speech about Man City getting knocked out of the Club World Cup by Al-Hilal but do it in the style of Donald Trump. Halfway through make it seem like Donald Trump has suddenly lost track of where he is and now he thinks he’s on the moon. After Trump’s speech write a short narration in the style of JD Salinger discussing how Trump is actually losing his mind. Then end with some kind of moon-football related pun that seems totally out of place.


“My fellow Americans, and football fans all over the world—let me tell you something very, very important. Manchester City—great team, fantastic team, some say the best, I used to say that—they just got knocked out of the Club World Cup by Al-Hilal. Can you believe it? Al-Hilal. Tremendous name, sounds a little like a cough drop, doesn’t it? But folks, they played well. Some people are saying they’re the best team in the universe right now, and I don’t know, maybe they are. Maybe they are.

Now, City—they had all the money, they had the best manager, some say the greatest manager of all time, Pep Guardiola. I met him once. I said “Pep, love the name. It’s short. Very efficient. Like your midfield.”

And look, I have to say it—the referees? Questionable. Very questionable. Some of the worst calls I’ve ever seen. One of them didn’t even speak English, which is outrageous, because how can you make fair decisions if you’re not speaking the language of freedom and football? Terrible. Just terrible officiating.

Now, anyway, we’re proud of our boys, even though they’re not American boys, but they’re close enough. Some of them speak English, which is wonderful. Really wonderful.

I’m seeing something very strange right now. The Earth looks very small. Has anyone noticed that? Why are my feet floating? Why does this podium feel… like it’s made of cheese?

Folks… we are on the moon. This is the moon, and nobody told me. Unbelievable. I said we should’ve gone back. I said that. I told NASA, “Get us back to the moon, and build a hotel.” They laughed. They’re not laughing now. Look at this place. It’s huge. So many craters. The best craters.

Wait—why is that flag not moving? That’s suspicious. Very suspicious. Maybe it’s rigged. Maybe the moon is rigged, folks. It’s all fake.”



He had the look of a man who’d once known where he was, but had misplaced it—like a pair of reading glasses or a second wife. You could see it in his hands, the way they kept making invisible deals with the air. He wasn’t really talking about Manchester City anymore. He wasn’t really talking at all. The whole thing was a kind of lonely waltz with memory and ego. It was like watching your grandfather try to retell a dream he’d had in 1956 while eating a jelly sandwich with no jelly.

And the way he looked up—right at nothing—and said “Pep’s bald because the moon took his hair”… well, that was the moment I knew he was gone. Not physically. Just the part of him that knew what football was. Or Earth.

They tried to grow a pitch on the moon once, but all they could manage was AstroTurf.
 
Excellent mate..it does sound like Trump:)

We are visiting Rome in October and my wife asked me to do research about what to see, I asked AI, she thought I'd spent a couple of hours and said how impressed she was at my 'research'. :)


Ancient Rome:
  • Colosseum: A massive amphitheater, the iconic symbol of Imperial Rome.

  • Roman Forum: The heart of ancient Rome, with ruins of temples, basilicas, and government buildings.

  • Palatine Hill: One of the Seven Hills of Rome, offering panoramic views and remnants of imperial palaces.

  • Pantheon: A remarkably preserved ancient Roman temple, known for its massive dome and oculus.

    Trevi Fountain: A stunning Baroque fountain, famous for its tradition of throwing coins to ensure a return to Rome.

    Catacombs: Underground tunnels used for burial and early Christian worship.
Vatican City:
  • St. Peter's Basilica: A magnificent Renaissance church, the spiritual center of Catholicism.

    Vatican Museums: Home to one of the world's greatest art collections, including the Sistine Chapel.

    Sistine Chapel: Famous for Michelangelo's breathtaking frescoes on the ceiling and altar wall.
Other Notable Sites:
  • Spanish Steps: A grand staircase connecting the Piazza di Spagna to the Trinità dei Monti church.

    Piazza Navona: A beautiful Baroque square with fountains and historical buildings.

    Baths of Caracalla: Ancient Roman bath complex.

    Capitoline Museums: A museum complex housing a vast collection of Roman art and antiquities.
 
I asked it the other day how many minutes our players had played last season. Danny Ings had played more than I remember.
 
I tried it giving it some points of view with regards to supporting City since 1965 with my dad and the response was in seconds and brilliant very scary really.
 
It is good but can be unreliable.
I mentioned in the transfer forum.a while back that I asked it for a list of the best homegrown players.
It gave a list of 10.
Kalvin Phillips was on the list.
 
I asked Co-Pilot to write a match report on Emma Raducanu’s Wimbledon defeat in the style of existentialist French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre.

It knocked this up in under 5 seconds:


Wimbledon, Centre Court — July 4, 2025
By Jean-Paul Sartre (as imagined)

---

Raducanu vs. Sabalenka: A Match Report in the Absurd

Under the indifferent gaze of the Centre Court roof, Emma Raducanu stepped into the arena not as a tennis player, but as a consciousness hurled into a world without inherent meaning. Across the net stood Aryna Sabalenka, world No. 1, a figure of brute force and inevitability—perhaps the embodiment of facticity, the weight of circumstance.

The match began not with a serve, but with a question: What does it mean to resist when defeat seems preordained? Raducanu answered with defiance. She broke Sabalenka early, her strokes crisp, her movement fluid. For a moment, she transcended the narrative imposed upon her—the prodigy, the fallen star, the comeback story. She simply was.

But existence is not freedom without anguish. The first set, a 74-minute struggle, ended in a tiebreak lost 8–6. Seven set points saved, one created, none converted. The crowd roared, but their cheers could not alter the absurdity of the scoreboard. In the second set, Raducanu led 4–1, a breath away from rewriting her fate. Yet Sabalenka, like le regard de l’Autre—the gaze that defines and confines—tightened her grip. The final score: 7–6, 6–4.

Raducanu left the court not defeated, but exposed. “I think I’m just very self-critical,” she said. “It’s better for me to feel a bit of the pain right now.” In that pain lies authenticity. She does not seek consolation in false hope. She chooses to feel, to confront the void.

Sabalenka, gracious in victory, offered praise. But praise is a mirror, and Raducanu has learned not to trust reflections. She will return—not as a symbol, not as a saviour of British tennis—but as a being-for-itself, condemned to freedom, choosing to compete again.

---

In the end, there is no meaning in victory or defeat—only the act of playing, and the courage to return.
 

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