ICYMI - The AI Helper That Only Tells You You're Great
Workplace AI adoption challenges start when your assistant stops challenging you. You're using ChatGPT. You draft something. It responds: "That's a great idea. This is good." You refine it. Same response. You've entered what Mohit Rajhans calls the Ralph Wiggum effect. The AI isn't helping you think better. It's placating you. And now you have to prompt it to disagree, which is the opposite of what anyone taught you to do with AI. You thought AI was a laser beam. Point it at a problem, get 1% of what it can do. Turns out it's a bulldozer. It gives you 100%, and now you're writing rules to exclude the 99% you don't need. That's more work, not less. Meanwhile, knowledge management is the single biggest corporate AI issue. People won't use sanctioned tools because they're worried the first five drafts will be documented and look bad. So they're using ChatGPT on their phones instead of the Copilot their company pays for. More people are using unauthorized AI than the approved tools. It's called shadow AI, and it's happening in real time with no rule book. Cloudbot and Moltbot are the counter-trend. Personal AI hubs you air-gap from the internet so they only train on your information. The nerds are building sovereignty. The rest of the workplace is still figuring out whether the efficiency tool is making them more efficient or just telling them they're doing great. Topics: workplace AI challenges, ChatGPT productivity, shadow AI, corporate AI tools, knowledge management GUEST: Mohit Rajhans | http://thinkstart.ca Originally aired on 2026-01-30
NEW - The Three-Hour Drive This Fan Makes More Than 41 Times a Year
Edmonton Oilers superfan known as McMullet just attended his 200th consecutive game. You're doing the math: he lives 30 minutes east of Calgary, drives two and a half hours north to Edmonton, then 30 minutes downtown. Three and a half hours each way. For every single home game. Including matchups against Columbus Blue Jackets. Including games during emotional breakdowns when the team struggles. He bought season tickets after being sober for a year when his wife told him to do something for himself. Now he helps others in recovery too. Meanwhile, dental floss has expiry dates despite being string with no medical ingredients. Netflix greenlit a show where a man climbed Taipei 101's 1,800 feet with bare hands, creating content with only two possible endings: success or watching someone die in high definition on live television. The ethical question: is this different from Evel Knievel's Grand Canyon stunts, or does HD change everything? French climber Alain Robert did it with ropes in 2004 taking four hours. This guy did it ropeless. Oscar Meyer Wiener 500 returns with cars named after hot dog flavors racing around the Wiener Circle. Three and a half hours each way for 200 consecutive games isn't fandom. It's commitment bordering on madness, powered by sobriety and wife encouragement. Netflix betting on either triumph or tragedy in 4K raises questions Evel Knievel never faced. Dental floss expires for reasons nobody can explain. The world keeps getting weirder. Topics: Edmonton Oilers fan culture, sobriety through sports, Netflix extreme content, unnecessary product expiration, hockey dedication stories Originally aired on 2026-01-30
The Expiry Date You're Ignoring (And the One You Shouldn't)
Food expiry dates dictate what you toss and what you keep. You open the fridge, check the date, throw out the yogurt. But here's the thing: some of those dates are meaningless, while others you're ignoring completely. Your dental floss has an expiry date. So does bar soap. Honey that's turned into a brick technically lasts forever, but the package says otherwise. The hosts test the logic: eggs float or sink to reveal freshness, not the carton date. Milk? Your nose knows better than any stamp. Spices fade but don't spoil. Meanwhile, you're gambling with wedding budgets and wondering when "sell by" became "throw away by." One co-host is planning a wedding, discovering that family politics cost more than the venue, while the other admits counseling beats lawyers every time. You'll recognize which dates protect you and which ones just sell you more product. The next time you're about to toss something, you'll know whether the date matters or the manufacturer just wants your money. And you'll understand why some things expire when they shouldn't, and others never should have lasted this long. Topics: food expiry dates, wedding budget planning, marriage counseling, food safety myths, consumer product labeling Originally aired on 2026-01-30
NEW - Why Every Pop Song Sounds Like a Breakup Now
Why pop music turned dark isn't a mystery anymore. You turn on the radio expecting something catchy, something that lifts you up for three minutes. Instead, you get lyrics so spiteful they make '80s breakup songs look like love letters. The melancholy isn't occasional. It's the default. Every chart topper trades hooks for heartbreak, and the stuff sticking in your head is embedding something darker than you probably realize. Algorithms on Spotify and TikTok reward longer listening sessions, and heartbreak keeps people clicking. Climate anxiety, COVID, economic collapse shifted the collective mood, and pop music stopped being escape. In the '80s, Duran Duran sang about reflexes and Honeymoon Suite had new girls. Now platforms cherry pick confessional lyrics that hit emotional triggers, mostly targeting heartbreak. Justin Bieber leads this year's Junos with six nominations, joining only k.d. lang, Alanis Morissette, Celine Dion, Shania Twain, Arcade Fire, The Weeknd, and Drake as three-time Album of the Year nominees at both Grammys and Junos. The Cure's Boys Don't Cry just hit a billion streams because one line in that song powered the entire resurgence. The next time a song gets stuck in your head, you'll notice what it's actually saying. Pop music isn't broken. It's reflecting exactly what algorithms discovered keeps us listening. Those melancholic lyrics your kids are absorbing aren't accidents. They're the inevitable result of platforms that profit from sustained emotional engagement, and escape isn't on the menu anymore. Topics: dark pop music trends, Juno Awards 2025, streaming platform algorithms, melancholic songwriting, music industry economics GUEST: Eric Alper | @thatericalper, thatericalper.com Originally aired on 2026-01-30
When Awkward Becomes Iconic: The Catherin O'Hara Effect
Catherine O'Hara legacy built slowly, then suddenly you realize she's been everywhere that mattered. You're reading she died January 30, 2026, at 71, and scrolling through the list of credits. Home Alone. Beetlejuice. Best in Show. SCTV. 30 Rock. Modern Family. Kids in the Hall. The Last of Us just last year. The weight of what she touched becomes clear when you see how quietly she influenced decades of comedy and drama without demanding attention. SCTV remains the greatest Canadian TV show ever, and O'Hara was integral to making it undeniable. Her first major film role in Beetlejuice proved range most comedians never access. Rewatching it two years ago when the sequel released revealed how incredible she was when most audiences were just discovering her. The Schitt's Creek family seemed like a unit because O'Hara built real relationships everywhere she worked. Eugene Levy partnership lasted decades. Dan Levy's recent Instagram activity shows connections with castmates that extended beyond scripts. This pattern followed her entire career. Not luck. Intentional presence, kindness, saying yes to opportunities while maintaining authenticity. You'll rewatch her work differently now. The roles you loved will carry new weight. Her influence on how women age onscreen without apology matters more than most realized while she was building it. Fifty years of showing up, being present, creating joy. That's the actual legacy. Topics: Catherine O'Hara career highlights, SCTV influence, Beetlejuice performance, authentic acting legacy, comedy and drama excellence GUEST: Bill Brioux | brioux.tv Originally aired on 2026-01-30