Це відео не доступне.
Перепрошуємо.

KOI: A Twilight Zone Analysis Show - The Lonely #7

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 8 сер 2024
  • Spoiler alert: We’re discussing important portions of this episode, so if you have not yet seen the episode, I encourage you to watch it first, and then come back and enjoy our analysis.
    This week, we're using the Twilight Zone episode "The Lonely" to discuss some really important questions. Should we let robots become the caretakers of our elderly? Can artificial companions solve our loneliness problems? Rod Serling's Twilight Zone was already asking these questions before we even knew they were possible. "The Lonely" stars Jack Warden as James Corry and Jean Marsh as Alicia. I never made the connection until I started doing my research for this episode that this is the same Jean Marsh who played Queen Bavmorda in Willow. How awesome is that? So, if you're interested in joining us in the fifth dimension, pull up a chair, put on your favorite set of headphones, and sit down, as we use the brilliant mind of Rod Serling to explore some very serious topics that we're struggling with today.
    Head over to thekeyofimagination.com to rate the Twilight Zone episodes and to continue our conversation.
    Episode outline:
    00:00 Opening monologue
    01:03 Plot discussion
    04:34 Episode Specifics
    07:03 Episode tidbits
    09:07 My initial thoughts
    10:54 Question 1
    15:08 Question 2
    17:02 The love doctor is like totally in =)
    22:43 Question 3
    25:11Episode rating
    25:30 Next episode "Escape Clause" and your questions
    26:10 Announcements and Shout-outs
    31:00 How to get involved and how to support the show
    No show did a better job than The Twilight Zone at generating awe and wonder within its audience. It just so happens that awe is exactly what we need in these difficult, divisive times. So, join me, Joe Meyer, and let's walk through the fifth dimension with Rod Serling. Along the way, we'll discuss big questions and relate them back to our Twilight Zone episodes.
    Opening theme: "Inconsciousness" - Mini Vandals
    Ending theme: by Jacob Williams @jakeproduces on Fiverr
    Love doctor theme: "Kate's Waltz" - Bad Snacks
    #twilightzone #rodserling #scifi #zone #outerlimits #sciencefiction

КОМЕНТАРІ • 17

  • @thekeyofimagination
    @thekeyofimagination  6 місяців тому

    We're on a journey to learn about life through The Twilight Zone. Consider joining us. But, even if you don't, thanks for taking some time to be with us. Do you think robots will become an answer to our loneliness problem?

  • @CSiri-cc2hq
    @CSiri-cc2hq 6 місяців тому +1

    We havent failed as a society, we've simply extended life beyond whats reasonable. So a "machine companion" makes so much sense as a pacemaker or an artificial heart valve.

  • @totorod
    @totorod 6 місяців тому

    Downward inflection perfect

  • @LifeofWalk
    @LifeofWalk 6 місяців тому +1

    Nice doc and analytical discussion! I like the factual tidbits like how the lady is still alive! Good chance we are a simulation so not that much different. Arguably we can have feelings and freewill in the confines of a simulation because we only know what we know just like a robot. My favorite part of the episode was how he kept calling her "RoButt" instead of "Robot" 😁

    • @thekeyofimagination
      @thekeyofimagination  6 місяців тому

      I miss us saying, robutt. 😆 Thank you for the interesting thoughts. You’ve made me want to go back and listen to Bostrom’s thoughts on simulations again.

  • @jackiekjono
    @jackiekjono 6 місяців тому +1

    Jean Marsh was also a companion on Dr Who.

    • @thekeyofimagination
      @thekeyofimagination  6 місяців тому +1

      I didn't know that. She has had a wonderful career. I'll have to check that out. Thanks.

    • @melissacooper8724
      @melissacooper8724 6 місяців тому +2

      I mostly remember her as Mombi in the 1985 film Return To Oz.

    • @thekeyofimagination
      @thekeyofimagination  6 місяців тому +1

      I haven't seen that movie in at least 2 decades. I'll have to check that out.

  • @sladen3884
    @sladen3884 6 місяців тому

    It'd be even more fun if your entire script was chatGPT.
    The weird part of the moral quandary is that If Alisha looked like bender or c3p0 leaving 'her' behind would somehow be more palatable.

    • @thekeyofimagination
      @thekeyofimagination  6 місяців тому

      Correy asks at one point in the episode, "why didn't they make you look like [a robot]?" It's a fair question, even if we already know the answer. I actually wonder if it will make a difference in the end. Can someone fall in love with a robot that looks like Bender or C3P0? The answer is probably yes.

  • @MarkFlavin1
    @MarkFlavin1 6 місяців тому

    I really like the lens you presented here. With the epic of loneliness we are seeing it is no doubt that synthetic companions be they ai chatbot or robots will start to fill the gap. But what happens when we start to care for them and they can’t care for us. Their models may mimic feelings but gap between feeling and mimicry is essentially infinite. But more scary is when they can feel and for whatever reason your companion doesn’t like you. Can you compel feelings? Where does the line between ownership, companionship and selfhood lay?

    • @thekeyofimagination
      @thekeyofimagination  6 місяців тому +1

      I think you're asking a lot of the important questions here, especially about compelling feelings and ownership. Those are going to be really difficult conversations that are probably not as far off as we might think.

    • @MarkFlavin1
      @MarkFlavin1 6 місяців тому

      @@thekeyofimagination I feel like the conversation is just starting. People are starting to form attachments and with the rise of date a virtual companion apps people are starting to establish attachments to chat bots and other synthetic relationships. One of the key things you said in the video was your concern that by automating and systematizing everyday transactions we are further devaluing authentic person to person interactions. You also mentioned the value and effort relationships require. The biggest loss I worry people are going to be facing in the near future is these daily interactions. It is amazing how much emptier your day feels when you don’t have to go to the office, your work is a series of tasks and not interactions then turning shopping, dining and other day to day micro interactions from person to person to person app is it any wonder people feel out of practice when socializing. Sorry for the ramble but this is a huge topic and I think your close hit it on the mark.

    • @thekeyofimagination
      @thekeyofimagination  6 місяців тому +1

      @@MarkFlavin1 I agree, especially about the daily interactions problem. I think many people feel a pull toward believing they want fewer interactions with others, but we often don't realize how potentially damaging this can be for our overall health--it can very quickly and easily become social isolation and depression. I see this a lot in my students. I used to have to remind them to spend some time in their dorms, but now I have to convince a lot of them to get out of their dorms and socialize.

    • @MarkFlavin1
      @MarkFlavin1 6 місяців тому

      @@thekeyofimagination there was a great book written on 1909 called the Machine Stops. It imagines the cost of isolation and looks into the future not so much to predict social media but see where the predictable outcome of chasing novelty and headlines will take us. I see this more and more especially in younger folks they do everything for the picture or share first and forget to be in the moment. The episode you highlighted showed the exact opposite where he had no one to share his moments with so he personified his attachment with his companion.

  • @BobbiCodes
    @BobbiCodes Місяць тому +1

    These episodes actually make me incredibly angry because I think they helped plant the seed in people's minds for desiring artificial companionship, and I believe this to be misguided and even delusional. As far as I'm concerned we might as well be talking about time travel, because in my opinion, we are so terribly far away from the development of human-level AI that society is likely to tear itself apart before we will get anywhere close. But... this won't stop companies from exploiting this misguided desire for profit, and we have this situation that we see now - fake AI being shoved into every tech product, making the experience worse, wasting resources, and setting the stage for continually fueling this obsession. All because people see episodes like this one and get the wrong idea, that this is something that is a) possible; and b) a good idea. When if anything, we should have taken away the opposite message, and interpreted it as a warning!
    We weren't supposed to take it as something that could ever happen, because it's a science fiction story, inviting us to temporarily suspend our disbelief in order to consider something new. So in this story, we are to assume that the robot *is* a person. And at the end, we witness a murder. After this, the victim's partner acts in such a way that I think ruins the story, because if all this is true, that she is a woman, has emotions, and feels pain, and they are in love, it shouldn't make any difference whether the inside of her head is wires and components or blood, fat, nerves and connective tissue. I think the episode betrays itself here by making him react so unnaturally. Allenby is the one who should be staying on the asteroid in my opinion, either as a prisoner, or a corpse. That would be, in my mind, the only satisfying ending.