Today feels like a good day to ignore dumb AI stunts and watch the real George Carlin
Carlin released 14 HBO specials and even more albums across a 50-year career, all of which are going to be better than any kind of AI "comedy" garbage

Earlier this week, “news” broke that quickly caused a lot of people to disregard Paul Anka’s classic advice on monsters (and whether you should give them the precious, life-giving attention that they crave): The announcement that some folks (including, bizarrely, former Mad TV star Will Sasso) had fed a bunch of routines from late stand-up comedy legend George Carlin into an AI and caused it to shit out an hour of “stand-up” presented in a digital facsimile of Carlin’s voice.
From a very narrow, very cynical perspective, this was a brilliant idea—because there are few forces on this planet more motivating than irritation, and few stunts you could pull more irritating than taking the work of a beloved, dead comedic iconoclast and subjected them to this sort of algorithmic hell. Across five decades of comedy, Carlin was an incredibly hard voice to pin down: Profane, cranky, cynical, strangely hopeful, and often, shockingly, silly, playing with language, ideas, political concepts, and more in an effort to both delight people and make them think. Shoving all of that into the woodchipper and reducing him to a series of machine-crafted memes is an act designed to kick the amygdala of anyone with even an ounce of affection for comedy into high gear, and the responses to the “special” have, presumably, been exactly as intended.