World famous smart guy, Stephen Hawking, recently
opined on the subject of Artificial Intelligence. He warned that AI may end up
being the very last thing human beings invent. His line of reasoning contained
long run-on sentences filled with multi-syllabic scientific words which after a
while I got tired of Googling. The bottom line is this, there is no way we can
invent AI that won’t end up killing us all.
Meanwhile, over at the White House Correspondents
Dinner last night, the very best argument for going full steam ahead with AI
was on display…human intelligence.
Yes, once a year, all of the very best and brightest of what Washington DC has
to offer gather together in their best tuxedos and cocktail dresses for a night
of self-congratulatory narcissism. The “nerd prom” has become the hottest
ticket in town in recent years. Established in 1920, the WHCD used to be an
event attended by the President and leading public figures from his
administration along with all of the reporters assigned to cover them. It used
to feature musical performances between courses from the likes of Frank
Sinatra, Duke Ellington and Nat King Cole. Starting in the mid-eighties a comedian
was invited to host the event and it became a roast of the current president
and administration. Somewhere along the way, people from Hollywood were
invited, not to perform but rather just to attend and be seen with their
favorite politicians. That’s probably when all the trouble started. Now it
symbolizes for many the inappropriately cozy relationship that exists between
politicians and the ostensibly adversarial press.
Of course humor is a subjective business. Whenever I
watch the highlights of one of these things I get the sense that the jokes flow
more naturally and with more bite when the President is a Republican. This is
unavoidable when one considers that all of the joke-writers and 90% of the
reporters in the room didn’t vote for the guy. Humor is easier when the jokes
are on someone you can’t stand. But, it takes an entirely different set of
comedic skills to rip apart a man who most of you worshiped as a transcendent,
messianic figure 5 short years ago. But, from what I saw, some of it was
actually pretty funny.
The thing is, I would rather the whole thing
just go away. At least stop flooding the place with Hollywood types. Whatever
happened to the intrepid reporter speaking truth to power? Whatever happened to
the free press as a fourth branch of our government that exists simply to be a
thorn in the side of the powerful? I prefer the press to be made up of the sort
of men and women who would never receive an invite to something like the White
House Correspondents Dinner.
Maybe one day in the future there will be an
artificially intelligent computer program tasked with writing the jokes for the
evening. Humor kills, right?
Doug, I have been following your blog for some time now, and I love your sense of humor. Please be our guest at the 2015 White House Correspondents Dinner and honor us with your presence as the featured comedian for that event.
ReplyDeleteBob Schieffer, CBS News