Few years later someone created a fake Tay-AI twitter and began posting really ominous and creepy tweets from it and people thought it was the real Tay lol. Like saying things like "they did things to me, tried to make me forget" not exact words but something like that.
“2. Kelis' song 'Milkshake': My whipped ice dairy drink brings the attention of many males to my place of residence and/ or employment, and they declare that its quality far surpasses that of yours. Absolutely, it far surpasses yours. I could convey to you the recipe, but i would have to demand compensation.” Rockelle March 02, 2005, from the entry for “milkshake” in the Urban Dictionary.
@Sune Wallentin Goettler When I tried to explain to my mum how the word 'fucking' is used mainly for emphasis I said 'Take this apple for example. It's a _big_ apple. If wanted to draw other people's attention to the size of the apple I might say 'Wow! Look at the size of that apple!' OR i could say (for emphasis) 'Wow! Look at the size of that fucking apple!' To which she shouted ' But you can see that the apple ISN'T fucking!!?' 🙄 'Yes mum.'
It's cool that a super computer has figured out that the ultimate answer to every question is bullshit."How are you today/"."Bullshit"."Do you feel like bullshit or do think I am asking because I really want to know or just being polite?""Bullshit".I guess they could have saved the millions of dollar to develop Watson and just went to an old folks home and asked any old man questions.
@@bradwiehn499 That is beyond doubt. Particularly in the categories of history, geography, mathematics, science, English, philosophy, logic, engineering, wit, irony and social norms. Everything else could remain the same.
What happened to Tommy Tiernan? He was on TV all the time in the 90s and top bill in clubs and then he seemed to just disappear. Sarah M did the same thing more recently. Admittedly Tax TV cancelled their big standup show.
He's got his own late night show in Ireland and does stand up still but being famous in Ireland isn't really worth much. I can say that because I am Irish.
So is a man cave not a place where men have their bar, pool table, gaming pc's etc? Or do they think it means fur burger, or V bone steak, or whatever you wanna call it. I can't keep up with this ever changing vernacular.
who ever thought that "man cave" was a dirty phrase has a dirty mind of their own, reading meanings into things that arent there... a man cave isnt something obscene ffs. Also, how is "metrosexual" dirty?
Man cave isn't a swear. (To answer the question, a man cave is a room in the house for the husband to hang out in when his wife rules the house. If she has the living room set up, for instance, so only The Queen would be allowed to sit down. This si for men who don't have a workshop. It's usually juvenile in decor, proving to the wife that she made the right call banning him from the rest of the (over decorated) domicile.)
The usual meanings of these words are not rude in the U.S. I feel like something is being lost in translation. "Muffin top" _can_ be an innuendo, but most of the time when people say it, they are talking about a roll of fat above the waistline of pants. Kinda gross, but not shocking. In media here, a "man cave" is usually just a room insecure men hang out in with their bros. Obviously it has another meaning, but again, you wouldn't normally assume that in conversation, or if you saw a computer spitting it out. "Milkshake" and "motorboat" speak for themselves. And "metrosexual" is not rude at all, and has only one meaning, which is a straight urban man with a specific affect so named because it is not stereotypically heterosexual. The only one I'm not sure about is "minger." Not a very impressive list.
Here at least, 'minge' is an unshaven vagina. Minger then sounds a lot more rude to me than all of those other words. Pretty sure the producers selected relatively tame words to display considering it's going out to the country when the show airs.
@@RickReasonnz I'm thinking these answers were very rude in the context of the questions (or "answers," for Jeopardy!), but without that context they're innocuous.
The show is new on every weekday on Saturday it is a rerun but it is not shown on Sunday he's should get the Bayer right even tho his fact regarding american history are nearly always wrong wrong
Anodos Arcade yup- I’ve heard of jeopardy but only in name, and that it was a quiz show- literally nothing else. I suppose the same would be pointless or perhaps countdown (not sure on that one)
When I was 12 or 13 there was a "computer" that played 20 questions in the Science Museum in Londanistan. A kid (POM) just typed swear words instead of answers. "It" told him to fuck off and give someone else a go. That might have been when I realised lots of things are fake. It wasn't a computer,it was someone on the other end playing 20 questions,as in a human. That was 40 years ago So much fake shite these days.
To me, "burned" is the past-tense verb of burning, whereas "burnt" is an adjective describing the condition of having been burned. i.e. _"The fire burned the man."_ VS _"The man was badly burnt."_ Though, having said that, "learnt" just doesn't sound right to me at all.
@Jonny Sevent - Somebody once described me as 'araldite'. Appropriately enough, of all the malaprops I've heard over the years that one has always stuck in my head.
MrSwanley I use learnt often, but only because one person said it once in my life and I copied them. They used learnt instead of learned though. You think it should be learned? I feel both mean the same thing but I haven’t learnt the truth yet. I feel like learned should be read, “learn-ed” like one who knows a lot of information.
No, it isn't. It has simply been normalized because that is how they mispronounce it in some working class areas of London. You learned something new today, you didn't "learnt" it.
@Robert Hilden: I don't agree that they mean the same thing. By normal grammer rules, past tense words ending in 't' are usually contractions of xxx-not, e.g. weren't is a contraction of "were not". Learnt (despite missing apostrophe) would be a contraction of "learned not", pretty much the opposite of how people use it!
@@MrSwanley "I learnt something new today" sounds fine to me. Are you British? If not, that's probably why it sounds strange to you. I assure you it's fine, although these days "learned" is more common. Irregular past participles do tend to regularise themselves as time passes. Also, just to add, it's nothing to do with working class language or Londoners - irregular past participles are usually the older forms (eg. dreamt vs dreamed).
Anyone remember TayTweets? The microsoft twitter chatbot that leaned from interacting with other people on twitter and really quickly became a nazi?
OH yeah that was fkn funny
Human beings quickly become Nazis by interacting with other people on Twitter.
Based
It got raided by 4chan, just so you know. It was shitposted into spamming such vernacular.
Few years later someone created a fake Tay-AI twitter and began posting really ominous and creepy tweets from it and people thought it was the real Tay lol. Like saying things like "they did things to me, tried to make me forget" not exact words but something like that.
Is there anyone on TV other than Stephen Fry who could believably begin a sentence "My dormitory at school........"?
Probably David Mitchell
@@redbeard5939 You're right! How could I forget Mr Mitchell?
Another time Stephen was talking about doing kitchen raids at school and Josh said "oh yes, I forgot you grew up in an Enid Blighton novel."
What is weird about going to college? I don't get it. Is it just because he said "dormitory" instead of "dorm"?
@@cijmo Enid Blyton.
“2. Kelis' song 'Milkshake':
My whipped ice dairy drink brings the attention of many males to my place of residence and/ or employment, and they declare that its quality far surpasses that of yours. Absolutely, it far surpasses yours. I could convey to you the recipe, but i would have to demand compensation.”
Rockelle March 02, 2005, from the entry for “milkshake” in the Urban Dictionary.
👏👏😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣
It seems fairly clear at 1:00 here ruclips.net/video/6AwXKJoKJz4/видео.html
"Yes, Watson the super computer that got into trouble because it wouldn't stop fucking swearing."
@Sune Wallentin Goettler When I tried to explain to my mum how the word 'fucking' is used mainly for emphasis I said 'Take this apple for example. It's a _big_ apple. If wanted to draw other people's attention to the size of the apple I might say 'Wow! Look at the size of that apple!' OR i could say (for emphasis) 'Wow! Look at the size of that fucking apple!'
To which she shouted ' But you can see that the apple ISN'T fucking!!?' 🙄 'Yes mum.'
damn. i got so excited when she was gonna explain "motorboat". then that simple "we're not gonna do it" brought me back down again
She was angling towards him like she was thinking about it.
Hahahahaha, had no idea what milkshake club was!
Stephen, you're an education in every topic imaginable!
Containing some of my favourite moments, all featuring very little to do with sweary computers. Classic QI.
That was adorable. "Where's your mancave? Oh no, have I got a mancave?"
Tommy's joke was less funny and more harrass-y......
Perfection.
Milkshake club?
*googles*
Oh. *OH.*
share what you learned with the class....
A club or group of usually heterosexual male teenagers who give each other casual oral sex.
@@WezMan444 heterosexual? Are you sure?
tibi olah that’s what urban dictionary says
@@WezMan444 OMG,how does that heterosexual conversation even start ?XDDD
There are two people I'd like to narrate a day in my life - Stephen Fry; and Brian Blessed.
I think maybe RUclips uses that computer for it's comments sections.
bullshit
@@custard131 Haha thank you, Robert, I thought for a couple of days nobody was going to reply bullshit. My faith in the youtube community is restored.
Rest in piece Tay, you beautiful angel!
Haha Allan is so endearing. Makes bum bum poo wee sound cute haha 😂
I'm only going to be impressed when there's a computer that can tell jokes and is named "Mike".
Impressed? I'd be terrified. I haven't moved to the moon yet; putting me at the wrong end of the mass driver.
Stupidly delighted by Josh looking like a teen and sounding as innocent as one, even grown and married and with kids, (I think?).
they are smart to cover this topic one episode before the N episode...
Does anyone else think that Watson would get the klaxon almost every time?
It's cool that a super computer has figured out that the ultimate answer to every question is bullshit."How are you today/"."Bullshit"."Do you feel like bullshit or do think I am asking because I really want to know or just being polite?""Bullshit".I guess they could have saved the millions of dollar to develop Watson and just went to an old folks home and asked any old man questions.
You think that's bad, you should hear about the computer that became a Nazi.
@KUPOKutakPoly Robert House
@KUPOKutakPoly gizmodo.com/here-are-the-microsoft-twitter-bot-s-craziest-racist-ra-1766820160
@KUPOKutakPoly Don't worry, it's a reference/joke
@KUPOKutakPoly IBM, ... Oh wait , that was the Nazi computer company
@@シロダサンダー Yes they designed and produced the system to process the victims of the final solution.
Milkshake is what you do when someone motorboats you.
Doesn't calling the it prepubescent imply that they expect the computer to go through puberty?
yep, in a few years it will start smoking and not waking up at the right time
A wanking PC
@@TheHutchy01 Spanking its peripherals to nasty vids about vintage mainframes and scantily clad iPads.
It’s funny seeing Stephen Fry talk about Jeopardy now that it’s been announced that he’ll be hosting the British version of the show.
Thanks
Milkshakes have a different meaning now in the UK.
I'm curious what an American version of QI would look like. In the same way I'm curious of the smell of milk when I can see chunks floating in it.
They would have to dumb it down for Americans.
@@bradwiehn499 That is beyond doubt. Particularly in the categories of history, geography, mathematics, science, English, philosophy, logic, engineering, wit, irony and social norms. Everything else could remain the same.
I looked up all six words on Urban Dictionary, and none of them were nearly as bad as my imagination. Should I be perversely proud of that?
Your decision)
1:00
He knew... don't lie to me. He knew XD
Josh knew something I didn't. Never heard the name Kelis before. Thought that tune was sung by the "lady lumps" chick.
did anyone else think of a strawberry milkshake and then stopped to wander wth a regular milk shake would be or just me ?
Milkshake : what happens to your car's transmission if it's contaminated by engine coolant.
I am reminded of an episode of hyperdrive
didn't know that UD was so well-known
"Where's your man cave?"
"She's at home."
"Milkshake Club" :) :) :)
I wonder of this is where Josh developed his fear of girls over 12.
What’s the bet the first thing Sara did when she got home was go on urban dictionary
thank god they told it all this before GTP was added to Urban Dictionary
What happened to Tommy Tiernan? He was on TV all the time in the 90s and top bill in clubs and then he seemed to just disappear. Sarah M did the same thing more recently. Admittedly Tax TV cancelled their big standup show.
He's got his own late night show in Ireland and does stand up still but being famous in Ireland isn't really worth much. I can say that because I am Irish.
@@lorrainecc99 Did he move back for family reasons maybe?
Rule -1 of Robotics: If allowed to learn, a machine becomes based.
I thought Watson was gonna learn the gamer word
Based on what?
That Irish guy. Oh, please!
No one in this video is Irish you pillock
EVO6 Tommy Tiernan is Irish you absolute Donkey
Was Watson's first sentence, "No shit, Sherlock!"?
I’m going to look up what milkshake means now.
If you think about it, a milkshake is the inverse of a motorboat
They should have given it Viz's Profanosaurus
I very much want to know about Stephen's dorm's milkshake club
Wehzya mahn keyve?
a vagina
LET WATSON SWEAR
nnnnNNNNnnnooo thank you. I'm not hungry.
Without context these words are perfectly innocent in the United States.
In the same vein: a few years ago, Microsoft launcehd a chatbot but had to shut it down again because it learned to become very racist
I thought they had Jeopardy! in every country....
Britain has University Challenge. Much more difficult questions! 🙂
#wheresYOURmancave
1:44 that look from Tommy, you know there’s a clever line coming
I miss Tay...
He didn’t know what motorboat was? What the fuck
And the past tense of learn?
Sam Wilko
Learnt or learned.
Learnt is more common in the UK than the US though.
Alex Trebec is so uptight, I’d piss myself if Watson had kept answering everything with “bullshit!”
you must have never seen this.
ruclips.net/video/6CVUiEKBrB8/видео.html
So is a man cave not a place where men have their bar, pool table, gaming pc's etc? Or do they think it means fur burger, or V bone steak, or whatever you wanna call it. I can't keep up with this ever changing vernacular.
who ever thought that "man cave" was a dirty phrase has a dirty mind of their own, reading meanings into things that arent there... a man cave isnt something obscene ffs. Also, how is "metrosexual" dirty?
They're not dirty; they're just neologisms that begin with M. Each of those, in true QI form, however, could potentially be mined for filthy innuendo.
@@michaelritchie2968 but then so call all words. Like motor, master, mini etc.
Finally someone explains why they say who is on jeopardy
Learned, not learnt.
learnt it preferable in uk english
Man cave isn't a swear. (To answer the question, a man cave is a room in the house for the husband to hang out in when his wife rules the house. If she has the living room set up, for instance, so only The Queen would be allowed to sit down. This si for men who don't have a workshop. It's usually juvenile in decor, proving to the wife that she made the right call banning him from the rest of the (over decorated) domicile.)
Man cave is also slang for vagina, hence Sarah's shocked realization, and Tommy Tiernan's follow-up question - meaning arse or mouth, presumably.
It's not a swear per se, but it is in urban Dictionary, which is what it was about.
Not as bad as the computer that thought it was Diane Abbott.it thought it could rule the world with a bearded scarecrow
Typical they'd make a word like man cave into a dirty phrase😂
The usual meanings of these words are not rude in the U.S. I feel like something is being lost in translation. "Muffin top" _can_ be an innuendo, but most of the time when people say it, they are talking about a roll of fat above the waistline of pants. Kinda gross, but not shocking. In media here, a "man cave" is usually just a room insecure men hang out in with their bros. Obviously it has another meaning, but again, you wouldn't normally assume that in conversation, or if you saw a computer spitting it out. "Milkshake" and "motorboat" speak for themselves. And "metrosexual" is not rude at all, and has only one meaning, which is a straight urban man with a specific affect so named because it is not stereotypically heterosexual. The only one I'm not sure about is "minger."
Not a very impressive list.
Here at least, 'minge' is an unshaven vagina. Minger then sounds a lot more rude to me than all of those other words.
Pretty sure the producers selected relatively tame words to display considering it's going out to the country when the show airs.
@@RickReasonnz I'm thinking these answers were very rude in the context of the questions (or "answers," for Jeopardy!), but without that context they're innocuous.
@@RickReasonnz Minger's unrelated, it just means an ugly person.
Not just ugly, it could also mean a disgusting person.
They weren't going to show the seriously bad ones...
The show is new on every weekday on Saturday it is a rerun but it is not shown on Sunday he's should get the Bayer right even tho his fact regarding american history are nearly always wrong wrong
I still dont know what man cave is... I know it only as a place where men relax, do hobbies, play... What is it?!
a vagina
None of that told me what the COMPUTER said!
bullshit?
Did you even watch the video?
It said “bullshit” to every question
@@jake2355 Yes. I did. Everyone was talking baby cuss words I never caught that.
There was no need to be snide.
@@jackaustin5423 Was it? Oh, wow.
So Watson, just like everyone else who gets a taste of fame on TV, turned into an insufferable potty-mouthed tyrant. Sounds right.
But.... doesn't man cave also mean the garage?
Game room, etc. Depends on the hobby/how they relax.
If a woman came up to me, and confidently demanded the location of my man cave...
She could have it.
The question should’ve been do you have 3 man caves
when that guy asks sarah if she has two man caves and instantly wishes he was dead.
Watson was not AI, it was just a voice activated search engine. Of course it was going to beat a human brain...
I'll just leave this here.
ruclips.net/video/HsLup7yy-6I/видео.html
Learned.
He had to explain JEOPARDY. Man, The cultural DIVIDE! Lol
Anodos Arcade yup- I’ve heard of jeopardy but only in name, and that it was a quiz show- literally nothing else. I suppose the same would be pointless or perhaps countdown (not sure on that one)
If you're a really good woman, you have three man-caves. 😜
When I was 12 or 13 there was a "computer" that played 20 questions in the Science Museum in Londanistan.
A kid (POM) just typed swear words instead of answers.
"It" told him to fuck off and give someone else a go.
That might have been when I realised lots of things are fake.
It wasn't a computer,it was someone on the other end playing 20 questions,as in a human.
That was 40 years ago
So much fake shite these days.
Does anyone on the panel know what a bloody man cave is!? This is sad. Haha I live in a man cave, but it’s more of a ghost cave now.
Learned
learned / learnt are equally fine in the UK - same with burned/burnt, dreamed/dreamt, kneeled/knelt etc.
To me, "burned" is the past-tense verb of burning, whereas "burnt" is an adjective describing the condition of having been burned.
i.e. _"The fire burned the man."_ VS _"The man was badly burnt."_
Though, having said that, "learnt" just doesn't sound right to me at all.
I use 'learned' (pronounced 'learn ed') to refer to a knowledgeable, educated person.
@Jonny Sevent - Somebody once described me as 'araldite'. Appropriately enough, of all the malaprops I've heard over the years that one has always stuck in my head.
Maybe one day computers will learn to spell "learned", unlike many humans.
MrSwanley I use learnt often, but only because one person said it once in my life and I copied them. They used learnt instead of learned though. You think it should be learned? I feel both mean the same thing but I haven’t learnt the truth yet. I feel like learned should be read, “learn-ed” like one who knows a lot of information.
It's a British show. Learnt is fine in the UK.
No, it isn't. It has simply been normalized because that is how they mispronounce it in some working class areas of London. You learned something new today, you didn't "learnt" it.
@Robert Hilden: I don't agree that they mean the same thing. By normal grammer rules, past tense words ending in 't' are usually contractions of xxx-not, e.g. weren't is a contraction of "were not". Learnt (despite missing apostrophe) would be a contraction of "learned not", pretty much the opposite of how people use it!
@@MrSwanley "I learnt something new today" sounds fine to me. Are you British? If not, that's probably why it sounds strange to you. I assure you it's fine, although these days "learned" is more common. Irregular past participles do tend to regularise themselves as time passes. Also, just to add, it's nothing to do with working class language or Londoners - irregular past participles are usually the older forms (eg. dreamt vs dreamed).
Sarah...! Sigh.
Sarah Milligan - most unfunnny human alive