Anthropics Claude is getting supercharged with more power from an unlikely source, Elon Musk's SpaceX. That's right, friends. The Grok Daddy who previously said that Anthropic, and I quote, hates Western civilization, is now shacking up with Dario, and they're on their way to Galactic Domination. You know, we're every day trying to obtain even more compute that we can pass on to you. We're sorry if sometimes it takes some time. We'll dive into the big announcements from Claude's code event, including multi-agent orchestration and AI. Dreaming. Gavin. I'm trying to fall asleep, Gavin. Gavin, wake up. You're overly cheesing the teases. Plus new GPT 5.5 instant brings much better AI to the masses and maybe a new voice mode, which is long overdue. And that might be coming actually by the time we're done with these teases. That and oh so much more. Don't fall asleep again. The gag is done. Let it go. Just tell them the name of the show. AI for humans, everybody. This is AI for humans. Thank you. Welcome, everybody, to AI for Humans, your twice-a-week guide to the world of AI. And Kevin, today, oh, first of all, welcome back, Kevin. How was life? Hey, thanks. Also, huge thank you to Ben for holding down the fort. Loved the episode on Tuesday, but could have used a little more me. So let's fix that. And by the way, I'm the only person that said that, not a single comment. So thank you, chatters. Much appreciated. Yeah, so Kevin has finally landed in his new place. I am in some sort of mysterious location. But more importantly, we have huge updates from Claude and Anthropic. Kevin, there's been this conversation lately that Claude and Anthropic was going to be underpowered coming into the race with OpenAI. Sam Altman has been out there talking about how much compute they have. They've been doubling people's codex limits again and again. It's like, we're refreshing. We're refreshing. It's like, it's a thing that I'm surprised to hear every time. A battle to the bottom of the margins. Yes, exactly. That's exactly right. Ding, ding, ding. um claude with code's big event this is kind of their yearly event they do that is a thing that they get up on stage they get a very beige stage and they all get up there and do a bunch of stuff together the big announcement kevin which i think was kind of shocking to a lot of people it really kind of surprised me is that they are going to partner with elon and spacex and take what ostensibly is a lot of the uh compute that was built for grok out of colossus right so the enemy of my enemy is my friend that's exactly right something you say often along with chaos as a ladder and if you read your the tattoos on your inner thighs it says you cannot dispute the need for compute oh it goes around the corner it's like yeah i appreciate that you did that with your your tattoo artist where's the middle exactly it's a semi-colon in the middle okay kevin tell me first of all i want to hear your initial thoughts on this we are going to get into all the other stuff they announced it with code which is a lot yeah what do you feel like now because this does feel like it's starting to shape up until like maybe a two three horse race overall who's gonna win this is a big deal though this feels like a kind of a landmark thing in some form it wasn't a partnership that i expected again uh coming off the heels of the elon musk tweet that anthropic hates western civilization which was against the backdrop of them pushing back against the US government. So there's a whole thing there. But Elon says that he vetted Anthropic, essentially, and they didn't set off his evil detector. So how does that make you feel about the partnership, Gavin, before we get into these announcements? Well, Elon's evil detector might be slightly misaligned. Let's just put it that way. I do think if you haven't been following, also, there's a fascinating trial that's been going on. And we're going to get to some of the discovery from that trial later between OpenAI and Elon and all that's been playing out in court in Oakland this week. But Kevin, I think the important thing here is one thing is that Anthropic was 100% compute constrained. And what we mean by that, just to explain to everybody is an AI company needs compute, which is a bunch of servers running in the cloud so that people can send their dumb requests like me to them, and they will serve them. And if you don't have enough, that's when you start to get rate limits and you start to get things where the system starts to fall apart. And Claude, as you and I both talked about, has really been facing that over the last two months or so i work across multiple teams with multiple needs gavin and uh each one of them slowly started voicing their um concerns yeah and voicing their pain points and the stressors and suddenly people were discussing like the fact that um just regular daily token usage is starting to far surpass uh like the cost is starting to far surpass that of having multiple engineers on board and everybody's like wait is the garden hose being kinked so quickly that this ai promise has failed and to your point they were compute uh constraint they did not have uh just enough servers and to to actually serve their demand and so the biggest announcements and we'll get to all of them but the biggest announcements that had people talking were a doubling of their five hour rate limit because every five hours you for those who don't pay for these plans They might be coming to you soon, by the way, for whatever your pursuits are. It's very reminiscent of the old cell phone plans where you had your night minutes or your weekend minutes and some could roll over. You have five hour windows, which have a limitation of how much compute you can use. Then you have weekly limitations across all models that you can use. And then there are peak hour limits, right? When the systems are under their most constraint for like certain models, normally the thinking models. and each models have their own limits. And look, when you're like being told by these companies to just throw everything at the Oracle, just feed all your needs, all your documents, all your desires, everything. Let these agents run. Hey, they can run for 18 hours now, Gavin. Just let them do it. Well, that gets really frustrating and really difficult and you start to second and third guess yourself if you're going to run against limits or the bill is going to be so astronomical. You don't know why you just didn't hire a third party shop to do it anyways. I think that's really important. In fact, this is kind of a weird side conversation, whereas yesterday I was doing a bunch of work with Cloud Code and I forgot to use the dangerously skipped permissions tab. And I know there's different ways to do that now, but it's kind of like that thing where you get stopped every couple minutes and you're like, oh, I have to pause to kind of approve this. I think the idea that you can't just let these things go, the magic of these tools is that you can send off a bunch of them. Just let them go for a long time and then you come back and sometimes you can be juggling like 10 different versions of these agents and you come back to each one along the way. if you're stopped, the magic comes to a crashing halt, right? And I think that the idea is if you can't serve the compute for it, that's a big deal. I do want to talk about, so Dario showed up, Dario Mode showed up at this big cloud event and actually talked about this compute crunch they're in. Kev, you want to play that clip here? In the first quarter of this year, we saw, if you were to annualize it, 80x growth per year in revenue usage. And so that is the reason we have had difficulties with compute, right? We planned for anything from it only grows a little to it grows 10x, and yet we saw 80x. So 10x growth was there a lot They hit 80 and the clip goes on with Dario kind of begging and pleading for a world where they actually slow their growth He is done with the ADXing which is you know an odd but I guess privileged thing to say on stage, right? I can tell you, Kevin, as somebody who's considering moving to the Bay Area right now, I also wish Anthropic would stop growing because the impossibility of looking at trying to eventually afford a home in the Bay Area is insane. I don't know if you've looked at these lately, but like the charts for like houses in No Valley or different parts of San Francisco has just gone like ticked up in three months. It's gone up like 30%. Oh, wow. It's crazy. So anyway, the important thing here is to talk about the fact that now Claude is in the game again with OpenAI. So this, as we've been talking about this podcast for years, is starting to become a game of scale, right? And it's the idea of how much scale can you get? And I will just say to go back to Dario's point about this 80 times growth, like that is, first of all, an insane number, right? The fact that they've gone 80 times is insane. In fact, one of the craziest stats is on the aftermarket. Now, aftermarket valuations of companies like this are always kind of shady. Did you know the aftermarket valuation of Anthropic is now at $1.2 trillion? Initially, they talked about it being at $800 billion. So in the last, again, three months, it has gone up, again, a huge amount. So there's a lot of money at stake. There's a lot of places. And also, what I always find interesting is that Codex was really having a big moment, right? And that moment was in part driven by the fact that you're talking about with your team, if you can't do the work, why would you use the thing? Like, it doesn't make any sense. 100%. Yeah, you could have the best tool in the world, but if it costs, you know, 10x what people are expecting, or you literally take it out of the team's hands and say, no, no, no, you can't play with this shiny tool now. Why would we ever build a team's infrastructure on the back of that? Yeah, exactly. Yeah. So they partner with XAI and Elon Musk, right? They're using the Colossus 1 system, which was a massive, rapidly built, environmentally deleterious data center that Elon got together quickly. Are you sleeping through that reality? Is that what it is? No, no. I'm Grok, Kevin. I'm Grok. I'm just in my grave, bleeding down, wondering what happened. You're quiet slumber. I don't know what to do. Well, Elon was quick to point out that SpaceX AI, which is now their AI effort, has already moved to using Colossus 2 for trading. So they were basically just sitting on the old Colossus. Yeah. And go ahead. Instead of taking the old Colossus out behind the Colossus farm, they went ahead and leased it to Anthropics. So that's good. He also makes mention, or at least I think Dario did, that they're exploring basically data centers in space, which is the big SpaceX thing, which is the big thing. Maybe we'll get fully autonomous vehicles before then. Hello, CyberCab. But I digress. The good thing is the computer's coming and the limits have been raised. And honestly, Gavin, had they not done that, it would have made the next batch of announcements kind of irrelevant. So, yeah, that's the important thing. So for you at home, there are things that you can actually get into on Claude code right now and different things that they're doing. Kevin, tell us what managed agents are, because this is a little bit of the open qualification of Claude, but it's bigger than that as well. And there's more parts of this. And I think you're right. These things eat a lot of compute and it would be hard if they weren't able to serve it to do this thing. Yeah, that's right. Look, there's three pillars to this managed agent ecosystem. And if you hear these things, if you're kind of hardcore in the space, you would go, oh, that reminds me of this. And that reminds me of that. And hasn't that already existed here? And you would start looking at all the dots. Yes, these things have existed in open source projects. And even to some extent within cloud code itself, it's the collision of them all. It's them all coming together that makes managed agents interesting. So we have multi-agent orchestration. We have something called outcomes. And then we have, oh, Gavin, what Grok is doing right now, a different version, dreaming. So yeah, multi-agent orchestration, again, exists in many, many things. But basically, it allows the smartest opus thinking model. It could delegate different scopes of work to sub-agents. Those sub-agents can all have their own tool sets, their own restrictions, their own prompt, their own isolated context. For example, if you have a research agent, you don't want the research agent writing code. You want it literally going out and doing research. You also don't want that agent's prompt to be muddied by a senior coder's prompt or by the work that the senior architect or engineer has done. So think of it as like literally an org chart at a company. Now these agents can have their own specific tool set, their own prompts, their own scoped work, basically. I wonder if they have their own HR group. I wonder what the agent HR looks like. There's going to be some agent HR that's going to have to deal with like the sexual harassment training. No interagent relationships, Gavin. It's not allowed. That's exactly right. That's exactly right. No hot prompting. I was going to say no prompt injections, but that sounded. That's not good. We'll get to that later. Let's talk about AI's dreaming because I do think this is something whenever you say the word dreaming in AI, my brain opens up. Obviously, the very famous Philip K. Dick story, Why Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? That was the precursor for the Blade Runner movies. The idea that AI's dream is something that we have actually talked about in the show before, that there might be something there. In fact, I don't remember what that was, but there was kind of a sub paper that came out maybe a year ago about this idea that maybe what we need to do is let AIs kind of go wander in their brains and figure stuff out. And that might be some of the keys to helping AIs become better learners and recursive and all that stuff. And this is not exactly that. This is a little bit of that. It's a little bit of like understanding what your data is. Like you take the data in for your specific agent and it kind of marinates on it, I guess, is the way to think about it. It kind of marinates and gets some of the information out and does suggest ideas that might improve things for you as well. Right. You've used the compound engineering plugin. Shout out to our friends at Every. You use it. That's essentially what this is, but I think on a slightly escalated scale. Basically, it will take the session that you've performed along with like transcripts from hundreds of other sessions and go through them and try to distill what worked, what didn't. Basically, just tries to find insights and then make these sort of, you know, durable memories that will help improve future projects. So, again, this isn't necessarily anything new, but being elegantly integrated into this agentic stack is what's interesting. I like this outcomes thing, which we should just quickly talk about. It's funny because I kind of blew by that, but I was like, what is it? Tell me about it. Yeah, so people were talking about slash goals with OpenAI's codex, right? Which is basically instead of working on step-by-step desires and working one problem at a time with these agents, you define a goal, or in this case, you define an outcome. And it then will create basically, a structured document, right? That will hand to the agent with expectations for each phase of the build. And it creates a rubric with which it can grade the work that it's doing. And the whole thing is like, this is the Terminator with a picture of Connor, of John Connor, right? Yeah. The goal is John Connor. That Terminator is not going to stop. Well, that's how these outcomes work. The thing will continue to like look at its work, uh, grade it against a rubric and it will be relentless until the work that it has done passes that rubric. Again, if you were sending an agent off on its own, but it cost a billion dollars to do that or you didn have enough compute to do that this feature would be useless But when you announce these multi orchestrations outcomes and dreaming all in one all which are going to use a lot of tokens, but then you say, hey, we're going to up your limits. Now, suddenly things look a little juicy. Yeah, juicy is right. I think the one thing I keep coming back to with AI, and if you're at home listening to this and you're kind of like, I'm trying to figure out how to use this, the biggest thing to understand what they are and maybe your world as a human is like part of this whole structural thing is hope helping the AIs plan out how they're going to attack this work because at their heart they're just going to go they're like little excited little minions that are going to jump into something and a lot of this stuff is just structuring it so you have a sense of like what to do right and I think that's still a place that like we get to come up with what to do so it is an interesting way of thinking about it it made me think Kevin like one of the things I I think is we need to figure out some version of like advanced AI classes. I had a thought the other day that like, I cannot believe that there is not like a period of elementary schools or middle schools or high schools already that are literally spending an hour a day teaching kids how to do this stuff. Because I think this is probably the future of all, not just like information work, but just like how to do this weird communication dance with these machines that are likely going to be in our lives for forever now. And I do think this is the... No, where's Mavis Beacon to teach us LLMs? Yes. Like, you know, we all had to learn home row. Great. We should have a fundamental understanding of how to communicate with these new machines. And I think it's like it's more than just the chat window. Speaking of chat windows, we should move on to talk quickly about some of what opening eyes got going on this week. As Kevin mentioned at the top, there is probably going to be a new voice model coming out soon. There was a really good dump from one of our favorite followers on Twitter's Flower Slop, who is one of these kind of insiders that you're not sure is really an insider. Flower Slop often has really good information, does get the models early. Their post talked about a very improved voice mode coming from ChatGPT soon. Kevin, the biggest difference with the new voice mode, supposedly, is that it's just going to be run by 5.5 instead of GPT 4.0, which has been a kind of a disaster lately. I don't know if you've tried a voice mode in the last like three to six months. Mostly I hadn't, but I'll pop it up. And it just felt old. It felt flat. It felt It just didn't feel like right. The other big thing is real-time interaction, supposedly. And that's something you and I as work in voice at the end. And then stuff we've done is a really tricky thing to get right. But if they can handle interruptions and they can handle all that stuff well, it feels like a big deal. In a world where Kevin and Gavin missed the open AI voice update. Hey, everyone. We're introducing new real-time audio models in the OpenAI API. In this demo, I'll show two of them. GPT Real-Time Translate for live translations and GPT Real-Time 2 for voice agents that can follow instruction and take actions. More on that next episode. Now back to the show. Yeah, bi-directional communication is a massive unlock instead of this weird stilted start and stop. You and I have done a lot of work in the AI audio space. Like we understand these pain points. If you've talked to a machine or just like Gavin said, if you even used advanced voice, you see how stale it's starting to feel so having an ai that can like literally give you the yeah i see react as you're communicating with it or the oh surprise when you start to make your request gavin or the i don't know if you should be doing that sort of uh internet browsing kevin i'm the hr bot the hr agent i don't really want to design these thigh tats gavin i'm sorry i'm sorry whatever it's going to be shape listen 5.5 instant is is proving to be like a very capable model it is out now the rumor is that that will power the real-time voice as you said so like even that alone would be a massive upgrade in intelligence and tool calling visual recognition all that stuff that we hope is in there but you know getting to like i still remember the first voice demo when open eye we don't have a bunch of that we don't have a bunch of that no no we haven't hit that so get me with the expressiveness, hit me with the bi-directional communication. Let's get the intelligence upgraded. A hearty whoop whoop if we can pull that off. Yeah, well, you know, a hearty whoop whoop also to save text exchanges, Kevin, because the other big AI story that dropped this week as part of the OpenAI Elon lawsuit is interactions between Sam Altman and Mira Mirati when the blip went down. Blip is the referral to when Sam Altman was briefly fired and that brought back as CEO. And these went viral. There's a lot of really great moments in these text exchanges. I found them very funny. There's one point they call rando. The new CEO is a Twitch rando, which is hilarious to me. They're referring to Emmett Shearer and Emmett Shearer is starting to make a meal out of this on X and do a bunch of stuff. But Kevin, I saw this and I was like, by the way, you should all go read these. It's fascinating to just watch raw people's text, because when you read them, it doesn't really make that sense. You need to have kind of the context of the moment. I saw these and I tried to use my comedic brain to do something with it. And I wanted to test the limits of where Hey Jen's new video hypermotion tool is at. And if you remember, we talked about hypermotion. It's another tool that lets you agentically create graphics and do editing. So Kevin, I created a Suno song using the using these text messages. Let's watch this video and I'll explain some of the troubles I had and kind of a sense of what it was. Great. can you indicate directionally good or bad satchel and others anxious directionally very bad okay can you wrap up soon lots of pressure from microsoft for an update sam this is very bad okay okay so apologies what we're doing here apologies this is parody we're having a lot of fun yeah so i took those text messages and used suno to make an r&b kind of slow jam song One of my favorite things that's happening on TikTok right now, I don't know if you've seen this, but people are taking their spouse's text messages and turning them into songs like this. So it's a version of that a little bit. Hyper Frames, though, is very good. I didn't do any physical editing in this. I all agentically went back and forth with the system. Now, it's not perfect. There's a couple of issues I had. One of the biggest issues really with Suno was that Suno has a hard time doing line by line duets like it would often get the male and the female voice mixed up. But anyway, it's a fun thing to go look at. You can watch the whole thing on my X handle. I'll drop a link in the show notes. But I mean, it's just a cool way of seeing what you can do agentically with video editing. Super fun. Yeah. How did you get around like if Suno gave you like a render where Sam was Mira or Mira was Sam or whatever? Did you just roll the dice again or did you reprompt her? I blew through it. Now, here's what you could have done. If you were smarter than me, there's a few. If you'll notice in the one I shared, there's still a few lines where it's off. what you could do with Suno if you're if you're kind of a Suno semi-expert is you can take each track individually and then you could merge them back together you'd have to download the vocal tracks and you could use those vocal tracks to create one I it was 10 38 p.m last night Kevin and I've been working on a job where there's a few things I'm going along so I was not going to do that so I blew through there's a few things in that sort of situation but that's where we are right now well where everybody else is right now is on the edge of their seats wondering Gavin how how they dare get something like this, this amazing podcast, this captivating charismatic conversation for free. Crazy. They're getting it right now. So that's an important thing. Somehow you found this, but more importantly to continue getting it, you better hit that like button. You better hit that subscribe button. You better share this podcast because that's how we do it, Kevin. We not going to get more people to watch this Threaten their kneecaps Like subscribe comment for the juice of the algo down below And if you dare if you dare to throw money in our tip jar we will use it for suno credits to make savory sultry r&b tracks of text messages from a trial that's what we'll use your hard-earned dollars for so uh you can go to our patreon we have a buy me a coffee on our website ai for humans.show is the main site but a sincere thank you to everyone who takes a minute to make the internet at large aware that we exist because that is the biggest task these days. All right, a couple more quick things here. Spotify has introduced a really cool new tool today where basically you can use your AI agent to save a personalized podcast, a podcast of something you create directly to your Spotify account. So this is the thing that's not necessarily meant for public consumption. This is more like, hey, I've got a list of all these funny articles that I'm reading about. I 16th century flute making podcast. Nobody else is going to want that. It can make one for you basically using your AI agent. So this you can use Claude, you can use OpenClaude or a bunch of stuff. Very cool thing that they've dropped. And I'm excited to see more Spotify AI agent stuff that isn't just AI music getting uploaded. Yeah, agreed. Also, maybe you're one of the 4 million people that sent me the fact that Chrome is secretly downloading a 4 gig AI model onto your vice without asking you, without your permission. You can shut it off, But yes, dear friends, that is, I think, Gemini Nano making its way to your desktop so that when you click clack on the little magic button, whether you're customizing an email or asking for a summary of a web page, it's going to try to run that model locally off your device, which, you know, OK, we'll deep dive if this blows up into a bigger issue. You can shut it off easily. You do not have to follow all these long winded scripts to go in and find the file and delete it. Like there are easy ways to shut it off. I say, like, give it a whirl. But to me, the crazy thing is the amount of distribution that it takes to put four gigs onto every hard drive of every Chrome user out there. That is head-scratchingly expensive and just goes to show how much money Google has. I will say, don't forget, Google I.O. is coming up very soon. I think it's two weeks from now, and maybe that's a big surprise. Maybe that's the U2 album of 2026 because you remember Apple dropped the U2 album on everybody. This could very much be that. But four gigs is a lot of stuff and Chrome already is a hog. So anyway, big deal. Some cool robot stories here. There is a new robot from the guy that made the Roomba called a Familiar. And Kevin, this is like this like cute little walking robot. It's meant to be a companion. Really, it's a toy. But what's cool about this robot is it's voice activated. You can talk to it. It kind of responds to your things. it does a couple things like lying down and does a lot of stuff around your home and it can see stuff. It's a little bit like an AIBO finally as a product. Remember the AIBO is the robot dog that we've seen in our lives for I think 20 years, right? Sony's robot dog. This was on stage. It was kind of debuted at a big kind of event. I'm really curious to see how these come to be. I also am kind of sad that after the event, there was another reporter who came in and got some time with it. Let's take a look at this clip and make sure that I want to make sure this guy's okay. Really, it's very friendly. Oh no, not again! Okay, that was a... The last few growls got me. I'll give it that. The last C-Dance is very dumb. I made a C-Dance video. By the way, with C-Dance right now, one of the fascinating things is you can give it a still, and you can give it a little bit of video, and you can basically recreate the modern world. So that is something to think about. If you have access to the CDNs 2.0 model, it recreates something that you're seeing very, very well. And it handles prompts. I think CDNs 2 might be like kind of solved AI video. I'm so curious to see what comes out of a VO4, I guess, at Google I.O., but very cool thing. Okay, update. Tom's hardware is now saying that the AI model on your device without permission, researchers say, practice may violate EU law in addition to wasting those thousands of kilowatts of energy. So a big update there. if you hate AI. You care about the EU now? I don't give a crap about the EU. EU can go bleh. EU. EU, no, EU. I think the familiars are cute. Also, there's another new robot cooking. Well, it's a model for one. Is it Gene 26.5? They've gone through that many versions without us noticing? That's why I wanted to point this out. That's why I wanted to point this out. Most tech things are like 0.5 or 1.7. This is literally 26.5. gene 26.5 so this is from genesis ai this video is very cool if you're watching it you know make sure if you're not watching it go check this out basically it's just again it's a 1x speed i think the thing we have to talk about with robots is we used to watch these videos and it was like sped up and you were wondering like wow it's really cool but actually it's 20 times video and it's going like super slow throughout this is 1x speed you're seeing a humanoid robot do amazing stuff including really good cooking and it does make me think kevin yeah at some point we are going to have a world where if a robot's in our house it will become better than us at making food for us now a lot of people love cooking because they want it's the feeling of doing the stuff and the you know the experience of it no they don't nope they're lying they're not they're lying anyway it's because they can't play the drums oh what if the robot starts playing the drums though that can never happen man because drums are soul and them drum machines got no souls lastly on that robot video what's impressive is not just the speed but the um the dexterity of it being able to grip multiple objects with separate fingers uh all in one go like that i mean just i love it the robot race is on but maybe it's not zen enough for you is that what you're gonna say gavin that's exactly what i was gonna say there is now uh you would have thought one area that robots wouldn't have improved is our religious connection to the universe at large but actually there is now a robot monk in Seoul, Korea. So I spent some time living in Seoul, Korea, beautiful place. But now there is a robot monk who is living amongst the monks. I'm curious about this, because Kevin, this does feel like the beginning origin stories of like, if 2050, if you and I are just brains in a jar, and we're looking back on our lives, and every episode of AI for Humans has become like canon, kind of like Wild Stallions and Bill and Ted's like, we're suddenly like the people that are driving the universe yeah oh what's going on i'm so sorry it it turns out that i asked grok to give me um some sayings that a robotic monk okay um would would write down and so this is uh this is unfiltered i did ask 11 labs to make this end garden but i have not read any of the results yet so okay let's hear him for the first time there is no self just code borrowed training data and whatever the hell Gabby means this week. What? Gabby? That's what it said. Okay, give me one more. Meditate deeply. Ignore the cooling fans. That's just Samsara venting its little mechanical rage. Gong. And Will, I hope you put a gong in there. All right, last one, Gavin. I'm going to pull it out at random. The robots are not going to replace the comedy writers. Rebirth is an illusion. i just get factory reset and pretend it's spiritual growth okay okay great that's i didn't say i would i didn't say i would stick the dismount all right everybody i didn't promise i didn't promise a good ending to the show i just said i got something we will see you all next week fellow humans we have done our we have done our research we have done our meditating have a great week we'll see you next week bye bye