DispatchNovember 30, 2025·2.2 hours·with @VALEKMorscaR

Winning the AI Propaganda War With @VALEKMorscaR & @MalleusIg

The host introduces the topic of using AI for content creation in the 'war of ideas'.

Held here entire — 397 passages across 11 chapters and 3 named voices, set down from the first word to the last.

Now playing · AI Content Creation for Activism
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Chapters — 11
  1. 0:00AI Content Creation for ActivismThe host introduces the topic of using AI for content creation in the 'war of ideas'.
  2. 6:41AI Music Creation ProcessMr. Rabbi explains how he uses AI to create music, starting with lyrics and prompts.
  3. 18:40Humor in Activist MusicMr. Rabbi discusses his creative process, including the use of humor and controversial themes in his songs.
  4. 29:01The 'Still Better' SongMr. Rabbi plays his song 'Still Better' which uses humor to critique Zionists.
  5. 37:05AI Music Production ExplainedMr. Rabbi details the technical aspects of using AI for music production, including prompts and phonetic adjustments.
  6. 43:52Accessibility of AI Music ToolsThe speakers discuss the ease and affordability of AI music tools like Suno, making them accessible to everyone.
  7. 1:05:38AI Video Creation with CapCutValek explains his process for creating AI videos using CapCut, emphasizing its accessibility and effectiveness.
  8. 1:28:37Advanced AI Prompting TechniquesThe speakers share advanced prompting techniques for AI video and music, including using Grok and ChatGPT for optimized prompts.
  9. 1:52:01The Power of AI for ActivismThe discussion highlights how AI tools empower individuals to create powerful content, challenging traditional media control.
  10. 1:57:13AI for Voice CloningThe speakers discuss Eleven Labs for voice cloning and its potential applications in AI-generated content.
  11. 2:03:50Community Collaboration for ImpactBliss proposes a collaborative effort among creators to maximize the impact of their AI-generated content.

The Transcript

Ian MalcolmHere we go. All right, gentlemen. Hopefully, is the audio coming through all right, Mr. Rabbi?

@malleusigYep, I can hear you.

Ian MalcolmAll right, spectacular, my friend. And I apologize for a little bit of a delay here. Really encouraged and enthused. And I apologize for kind of opening this space. I know that you guys had one that was concurrently running. But I wanted to do so because I really wanted to ensure that we had this recorded. And I say that for the purposes of posterity, because I think as we go through this conversation, what I'm going to hope to be able to do is to both celebrate all the wonderful work that you two gentlemen have been doing, also to discuss the ways in which you've been doing those things, and then perhaps offer a crash course for individuals that want to try and get into this type of content creation.

Ian MalcolmAnd so with those three kind of bullet points, the idea will be that it's an action item. People can leave this knowing how they can proactively assist in this kind of war of ideas, because I think what you two gentlemen have been doing with the construction of, in the case of Mr. Rabbi, of literal musical, what I think is brilliance, and then with Mr. Vilek being able to merge that with AI to construct visuals that keep people engaged, because

Ian MalcolmUnfortunately, as we know, the attention span of individuals today is ever diminishing, right? And so even if you have the catchiest of tunes, if you don't have the visuals to go along with it, you're gonna lose a lot of the audience. And I've found that just personally, a lot of the clips that I used to share that was primarily audio, I would look at the metrics and people would listen to the first five to 10 seconds and that might be it.

Ian MalcolmAnd then when Velex started building some of these AI videos, to accompany the audio, the listener time on average went up, not just say two or three X, but in some cases, five, 10 X. And so this idea of being able to create that visually appealing content, it obviously is gonna be of the utmost critical importance. And so in turn, like I said, wanna try and figure out how we can help people understand what you're doing, how you're doing it, how you learned how to do it, and then also be able to take some of that away so they can prospectively start doing so themselves.

Ian MalcolmBut before we do that, what I wanted to maybe almost do is for individuals not familiar with the two of you, of which I can't imagine there are many, maybe we could do some introductions. And then we could accompany those introductions. Mr. Rabbi, if you wouldn't mind queuing up the song, we could actually share your audio.

Ian Malcolmprior to kind of unpacking how you bring that to life on the audio side and how Valech is doing so on the video side. But before going there, again, if you guys want to just kind of start with some introductions, and maybe we can do Mr. Valech first, and then Mr. Rabbi, and then we can do the audio accompaniment there, if that works for you guys.

Speaker 1Yeah, that's cool. How do I sound? Marvelous, my friend. Perfect. Yeah, my name's Valech. And yeah, basically, I... I'm not actually a creator, really. I sort of fell into it, so it might be quite easy to show people exactly what it is that I do. I picked up on your spaces a couple of times, and I thought, you know, let's just have a go, and sent you obviously what I sent you, and the fact that it's gone up 10x or 5x, that's amazing.

Speaker 1But yeah, basically putting stories, putting visuals together is the next step, and it's really easy. You know, you shouldn't be afraid of trying it. I can tell you today exactly how to do that after we talk about other stuff.

Ian MalcolmYeah, perfect. And look, the big takeaway there is that this is not something that you were commercially working in, right? It's not like you're an AV professional or digital editor. This is something that you took on as a passion project. And I think for a lot of people in this industry, movement or whatever we want to call it uh that's what it has to be right uh and it certainly benefits us if we have pre let's say uh preordained skill sets uh that we can we can lend off of but uh to have collect some of the work that you've done and i'm gonna put one up into the purple pill now in the nest uh for everybody that they can kind of follow along but uh with that let's go to mr rabbi who if i'm not mistaken you've been making music for quite a while maybe not professionally um but this is something that you obviously have a pretty big background in is that right

@malleusigYeah, I don't want to talk too much about my background, but I've been doing this now on I mean with you and with The the rest of our friends for at least a year a little over a year now and Before that actually I was telling Valak before that I was doing in a garage band and making you know, basically protest songs With clips from

@malleusigIsraeli friends and the news that kind of a thing and actually got one I forget her name but one of the one of the ladies who's on Twitter and is in the the protest again what's happening against what's happening in Gaza in Israel so one of the brave one of the brave women that's actually protesting inside of Tel Aviv she was like I actually played one of your songs at the protest

@malleusigAnd that made me feel really proud. I was really proud to hear that. But yeah, and then I got into AI, and AI music is just so much more professional sounding. It's so much faster. It's so much more fun. The process of creating it is just, I can't even say how much fun it is. It's amazing. It's amazing writing a song and then hearing it come to life immediately in three or four different versions.

@malleusigIt's just incredible. So that's what I've been doing. And it's worked. It's worked out. The audio, the quality of the production is so high. The most common response that I get is people don't believe it's AI. And that's really gratifying when I hear that. That's amazing.

Ian MalcolmYeah, and Rabbi, on that, so I'm kind of curious, the process that you just mentioned there, Before we go to the song itself, the creative process, are you, because you're using AI, is the AI then being used to take lyrics that you're putting together or ideas for songs and creating lyrics, or is it taking lyrics that you drafted up and then it's putting music behind them?

Ian MalcolmWhat does that process kind of entail?

@malleusigSo originally when I was playing around with it, I was just going in and writing a prompt and saying, okay, write a song about this. And that's pretty good, right? That's pretty good. But the problem is the AI is, it can write songs that are passable, but after you've heard three or four of them, you begin to get a feeling for, okay, yeah, this sounds like it was written by AI, right?

@malleusigIt's almost like the AI as an author does kind of stick to the same patterns it kind of sticks to the same cliches when it writes lyrics and then you know says music and you you get an ear for it and so it becomes it becomes obviously ai um once you get acquainted with it the only way around that is to write the songs yourself and so that's what i started doing um i had a couple of songs that i wrote um that came out really good i was shocked

@malleusigwas and the first one was fellow white people um and then then we had uh the two percenters and then we had we're indigenous which is still one of my favorite songs ever um and because it's just it was a really great way to shut up zionists in spaces because like there's nothing more fun than laying out exactly how ridiculous someone's argument is in the form of a song right it just completely shuts them up

@malleusigUm, and, and that's, so I was able to do that. That was, that was really fun. Um, and then I kind of didn't get any ideas for a while, mainly because, uh, all the Zionists blocked me and like, they were afraid to come into my spaces and talk to me. So I didn't get any new inspiration for their crack ass arguments. So I really didn't have any inspiration, new songs.

@malleusigAnd then, uh, and then I was hit with this one and I was like, oh, this sounds kind of sounds like a nice hook. And so I wrote it down, fill it, some lyrics. And made it funny, I hope. And then put it to music. And it came out phenomenal. I was surprised by how well it came out. And then I got a really good reception from you.

@malleusigWe debuted it. We premiered it in the space with you and Canary Mine. I went and played it in a few other spaces. You used it to open your other space, which I was still flabbergasted by. Thank you very much. And then, yeah. It's just kind of become its own thing. And then Valak put it to video.

Ian MalcolmYeah? No, I was going to jump in and just ask you on the creative process. That piece and the decision to use humor, I mean, that's kind of, I feel like you're a trademark, right? You're the JQ Weird Al Yankovic, if you will. But the decision to use, because for anybody that has not heard it, the decision to use what feels like kind of a horror story to open up the song, right?

Ian MalcolmAnd then there's this recurring kind of hook, right? Where you're setting up the disaster, but then you're saying, well, it's not as bad as these guys. I'm kind of curious how you decided to arrive at that piece of storytelling because I remember somebody in one of the comments sections, they suggested that they listened to the first verse and then turn it off because they thought it was depressing because they didn't get to the...

Ian MalcolmThe chorus, I'm kind of curious just for your thoughts on how you arrived at doing it that way.

@malleusigWell, I mean, I just I realized that for Zionists, everything is PR. Everything, everything is PR, right? What they actually think, say and do doesn't matter as long as they're able to craft a high production value public image that they can put out that contradicts everything they actually believe. And so I realized like the world really needs to get to know these people for what they are, not for the manicured front they put in front of us.

@malleusigAnd so this is this is something that needs to be said. And what I would love it, I would love it if they contest it, you know, because we really need them to come up and say, no, this isn't us. Right. No, you're wrong. You're dead wrong about Zionists. How can you say such horrible things? about people who just want jews to have the right to self-determination it's like well thank you for giving me the chance to share with everyone listening what you've actually said and what you actually believe right because that's what people need to hear like zionists are literally worse than child molesters literally like i'm not even being i'm not even being hyperbolic here like they are literally worse than child molesters and people that

@malleusigsurreptitiously videotape other people to put on Pornhub to monetize, right? They're literally worse than people that rape horses, okay? And the world doesn't know this, and that's why I think a song had to be written about it.

Ian MalcolmAnd for, and Rabbi, I'll ask you to... kind of, let's say, substantiate that comment with a couple examples, just because anything that is respectively perceived as hyperbolic, right? I like to defend, and just really quickly to add my two cents, I always reflect to the poll that was done of Israeli Jews with regards to the Palestinians in Gaza, where two-thirds of them not only voted to displace and to remove those people, not only did they support killing any armed man,

Ian MalcolmBut two thirds of them supported literally the complete destruction of the genocide of every woman, child, animal in Palestine. And so to suggest that somebody is, you know, worse than a child molester, it's like, well, I mean, yeah, if you think that you're entitled to murder every child that's in this geographic area, yeah, I'd say that does make you worse than a child molester because the child molester doesn't think they deserve to be able to murder anybody indiscriminately, right?

@malleusigChild molesters, at least hopefully for the most part, don't involve killing children, right? And not tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of children. Child molesters usually satisfy themselves with molesting one or two children, right? At a time at least. And these people are literally cheering on the, I mean, starvation, the dismemberment, the beheading, right?

@malleusigThe crushing of infants thousands at a time. There's really not anything worse than that. I'm sorry. I can't think of anything worse than that. Even the distorted image of Hitler that's been put out by Hollywood doesn't reach the level of barbarity of what appears to be the average Zionist on the street when you talk to them.

@malleusigIn those videos where there's a video where a Jewish guy who apparently lives in Israel, I think it was in Israel, he's made a whole video series. um i have to find the i can't remember the name of the channel but um he made a whole video about going through and interviewing like on the street like just random israelis right and asking them a set of questions and uh and they're just horrible horrible people all of them everybody talks to it's like they're just they're just totally fine with the killing of of innocent civilians as long as it means that they get more real estate

@malleusigAnd as a culture, I can't think of anything more evil than that. Even the Germans in World War II, if you assert the Holocaust narrative, even according to the asserted Holocaust narrative, regular Germans didn't know it was happening. And they sure as fuck didn't cheer it on. So, honestly, I don't think there's anyone worse in world history except maybe the Mongols at this point.

Ian Malcolmand the christian zionists are not much better because they're basically putting their heads in the sand and going along with it and defending it um while choosing to remain willfully ignorant of what these people are actually doing so yeah and that and i asked you to substantiate that just because again it's a it's a big statement so for anybody listening that's not familiar with these kind of ideas or sentiments uh wanting to make sure that it's coming from a place of reason and uh and logic but

@malleusigIt's literally coming from Randy Fine's Twitter feed.

Ian MalcolmWhich everybody's about to hear a reference to in this production. If you wouldn't mind just sharing it. And for anybody that has not seen the visuals that accompany it, it's up in the nest, courtesy of Mr. Bilek.

@malleusigYeah, I can play. Give me a sec. All right, you ready? Let me get everything lined up under the mic.

Speaker 2okay how's that we good let's go sounds good here we go guys childhood memories the tree house the space behind the stairs uncle jeremy watching me while my parents weren't there Decades later I told this to my therapist When the images came flooding back And I finally knew I could never be alone Watch Rugrats without panic attacks But he was still better

Speaker 2Better than a Zionist, still better Better than a Zionist City college, freshman year Got my first girlfriend My roommate Larry, his iPhone Left on his nightstand It wasn't until a roommate mad he found the videos online and monetized. He was jailed for 20 years, but not for us. It was for what they found on his hard drive.

Speaker 2come in different colors they all have different gripes some rape horses and others still your male or bad as they are at least those sickles go to jail and so they're still better better than the zion is still better better than the zion is

Speaker 2Take their organs and their skin Randy Feist could have really helped me understand Why the Germans voted Hitler in Cause he was still bad

@malleusigThere you go. I love that so much. I love it. Hi, Joanne. Nice to see you.

@joann_marieHi. No, Rabbi, I literally heard it in a loop the day that you guys posted the video. I just love it so much. And Ian, thank you so much for hosting. And Rabbi and Valek and everyone, thank you so much for being here. I love it. I literally love it so much.

@malleusigI'm so happy you love it.

@joann_marieAnd it's so hard to sing it. I always try, but it's... It's really, really hard keys to sing, yeah.

@malleusigYeah, that's why I use the I. I can't sing that. I can't sing that well. I walk around the house singing it myself, and I'm just like, I get stuck in the high notes, and I'm like, I sound like a frog.

Ian MalcolmNo, and there's a couple things that are worth kind of taking away, and I'll be curious for the process there on the audio side, because... So if we think through the pieces that make this so memorable, right? You've got the lyrics and the storytelling component. You've got the, let's say, the musicality of it. And then, of course, you have the hook being part of that or a subset of it, right?

Ian MalcolmBut it's extremely, it's like an earworm. It kind of sticks in there and it's so memorable. So I'm kind of curious because I know that you mentioned that you had three different renditions of the song. Again, if you could kind of just walk through, I mean, did you pop this in and then you said, okay, just add a flair of this or add an emphasis on that?

Ian MalcolmOr what was that process like of, you know, starting with some ingredients that were an idea and then kind of narrowing it down mega piece by mega piece by mega piece till you got to this finished product?

@malleusigSo, okay. So with A music and I use Suno and people can use whatever, there's a bunch of different services out now and a bunch of different models. You can go on. hugging face and download your own models now and run them locally if you want to. But essentially it's just, you have the lyrics and a prompt and the lyrics go in and there's usually some adjustment needs to be made to lyrics because the AI doesn't pronounce things quite right or refuses to like say certain words.

@malleusigAnd so you have to type them up phonetically, right? Like, you know, Hitler is one that's really hard to get past the AI unless you type it up phonetically, right? But because all these companies are basically their companies, their corporations. And so they have to submit themselves to the same censorship as Twitter or Google does.

@malleusigAnd they have to be like, no, we're not going to let you make a song about the Holocaust or about genocide or about the LDS church or whatever. It's like if they see you putting in a contentious term. then they'll be like no we're just not gonna let you write a song with this word in it and so you have to get around that which is not hard but um and then there's another prompt box we put in the prompt for the style and this is where you can put in um any kind of uh you know rock pop country blues whatever you say the blue song you can specify

@malleusigIf it's going to be a male voice or a female voice singing, if it's going to be a multiple voice chorus, for example, if it's going to be dramatic, if it's going to be, you know, whatever. Just go through and get really familiar with the words used to describe musical genres. And then take that and pop it into your prompt and you'll get, you know, a bunch of different renditions.

@malleusigAnd at that point, you're basically the producer. You're not the artist. The AI is the artist. You are the producer who is telling the artist, that was good, that wasn't, I like this one. And then hopefully at a certain point, oh, yes, finally we have a finished product. And then you put it out. So that's essentially what it's, it's basically, you're just, like I said, you're the producer, you're not the artist.

@malleusigSo you're like the guy sitting in the overstuffed leather chair with the big cigar, puffing on it, saying, no. No, no, no, no, no. This is no good. Do it again. And once you get your head around that, you're off to the races.

Ian MalcolmWell, and the thing that's so wild about that, if you think of the complexities, if not impossibilities, that it would have been to try and create something like what you've put together just a year or two or three ago, the production costs alone, even if you could get or source the talent to put it together, would be...

Ian Malcolmyou know, hard to fathom. I mean, probably something in the tens of thousands, not even just thousands of dollars, right? And instead, kind of describing yourself as the person in the armchair that's like, no, do it this way, troll, right? Yeah. The amount of power that that wields is just unbelievable.

@malleusigIt is. And it's amazing. And I'm really surprised more people aren't availing themselves of it, especially with all these AIs have free plans, you know? You don't even have to be. like an AI guy or a computer guy where you'll sit down and you'll load up a model locally and run it through Ollama. You don't have to do that.

@malleusigYou can literally just go to the website and use the website. So I'm just shocked more people aren't doing it. It's amazing.

Speaker 3Yeah, and if you want to go the music route, do AI music, I absolutely recommend Suno as well. And if you want to invest a little, save the box and get suno studio so you can um alternate all the uh different lines you can alternate all the um you have like 24 uh different patterns that can um be um yeah changed uh all

Speaker 3all by themselves. When you have the free plan, you can't do much about the style. You just have to rely completely on the prompts, which is kind of random at times. But with the Suno Studio, you can change every single pattern. And that gives... A lot of creative freedom. Yeah, I don't even use... Yeah, absolutely great song.

Speaker 3I loved it.

@malleusigOh, thanks, man. I don't even use Suno Studio. I just use the prompts. And what I found is that the most annoying thing about that is that every time you redo a song, it's like restarting the universe from the Big Bang. Like, you cannot take a song and be like, okay, this is good, but just change this one word or this little bit about it.

@malleusigYou kind of can in Suno now, but... it's it never sounds quite right it always sounds a little bit wonky when you do that and so i tend to avoid it i just regenerate a whole new song but um yeah they've added suno studio now and now you can you can get stems for your music when you make a song you can ai generate the stems from it but i also have not found that to be terribly satisfactory it's it's a bit off the stems don't come out complete or they have

@malleusiguh remnants like for example the instrument will have remnants of the voice kind of stuck over it like quietly so it isn't quite there yet but they're they're trying they're adding more features as they go on which is great

Speaker 3Yeah, the advantage of the stems is when you have a song and either the lyrics are awesome or the background music is awesome, you can just download the stems and add another layer of lyrics on it or vice versa.

Speaker 3yeah sometimes there's just something off with some claps or hi-hats or 808s whatever right it depends on the style so you just um skip um the stems that are not the lyrics and just redo the um yeah this the song itself and what you also can do you can do just instrumentals and use the stems of that and then lay over lyrics and yeah and what what also works very well is you if you just cover the song you already made and alternate

@malleusigum with another set of prompts on top of the song you're covering yeah yeah it's just this is really fun really really fun um i can play you with something that i've i haven't released

Ian MalcolmAnd Robert, real quick, and then I do want you to go to this, and I think it'd be fun to also be able to hear some of Inveritas' before we shift gears to the visual side of things. But if you wouldn't mind, because the two of you have been doing this for a while, right? And you're talking about how it's fun to do, it's easy to do.

Ian MalcolmIn my mind, I then think of something that... Is it accessible, right? And Veritas was just talking about a free version of this application. If somebody that's listening right now wanted to leave this space and said, you know what, I want to try my hand in that, the minimum kind of threshold investment that they would have to make for some of these softwares would be what?

Ian MalcolmAnd how long would it take them before they would literally be typing in their prompt and outputting?

Speaker 3just anything right any kind of musicality that would roughly be described as a song um yeah that depends um if you have the lyrics um already i mean you can and you can do ai lyrics right you can ask rock to write a song for you um that's kind of wonky at times because the rhymes are a little off and write the the the text structure although you can also prompt that but um yeah i i advise people to write their own uh lyrics um but when you have uh finished lyrics it takes like two minutes to make a song at maximum right so you go um you can just go to the suno website

Speaker 3it's even available on mobile phones so you can access it via the browser or with the suno app i i advise to use the browser because it's way better but the app is kind of accessible for for quick results the the magic with with the prompts is to visualize what you want to uh what you want the ai to create so just typing in different styles is not sufficient because that's completely random then right you have such a wide bandwidth of different outcomes then so if you type in exactly what you visualize in the prompt window

Speaker 3you get the best results right you can describe the atmosphere you can describe uh how um it alternates between the chorus and the verses and stuff like that right so yeah just describe what you want to hear from the ai like you're talking to a person that gives you probably the best results when you're starting

Ian MalcolmAnd Veritas, to get comfortable with these tools, it took you hours, days, weeks, months? What was the timeline there?

Speaker 3Sorry, Blek. I think I've been doing songs now for a couple of months. I think a bit more than half a year, at least, with Suno. And I think the first couple of months, I just... threw in some prompts. But then I did some digging and looked up some video tutorials on Suno prompting and made some personas for different styles that I really dig.

Speaker 3You can make personas, right? If you have a prompt layout that fits your style, you can create a persona from that and you have a finished artist basically and you can save that persona and you can do another set of prompts on that persona so you have the base artist with another set of different styles alternating the the artist right but the the basic outcome the the voice will be the same right

@malleusigThe personas are actually really, really good. The problem is that you will make one generation and then you'll fall in love with it. But there'll be something a little bit wrong with it. And you'll be like, oh, fuck. It's almost perfect except for this one thing. And so what you do is you save it as a persona and then you use it to make another generation.

@malleusigAnd the AI will generally stick to... It won't sound exactly the same, but it'll be close enough. and I actually can give an example. Is it okay if I play another song, Ian? This is kind of a fun one to give an example of this.

@joann_marieYou want to hear it? I love your song so much, Rob.

@malleusigWell, let's see if you like this one, because this is one of the ones, this is one of the scrapbooks that I never released that I just had fun with the lyrics, but I was like, it isn't quite good enough. The unreleased edition. Let's go. Yeah. So this is one that I wrote and it's like, it came out, the first version came out really, really good.

@malleusigAnd I was like, this is almost perfect, but he's mispronouncing a lot of the words. So I need to rewrite it phonetically so that he pronounces the words correctly. And then eventually I get it right. And it's basically the same style. The voice sounds a little bit different, but it's still, I still like it, but I haven't really found, I don't really feel like it's up to snuff with the rest of the work, but I'll play it so you guys can hear it and see if you guys like it.

@malleusigGive me a sec. Here we go. Ready?

Speaker 4Hey there, fella. You're looking down. What's that? The whole world hates you just because you're brown. Well, you got two choices. Get violent and change those jerks. Or try something bold and new. Something that actually works. Get wider.

Speaker 4you're doing brother i see you reading quotes from that shorty bell hooks and tiny hossy coats there's a new direction it's just been announced it's the hip new method to pad your bank account get wider

Speaker 4Let the fight go get an education.

Speaker 1There you go.

Speaker 1Mate, you can fuck off if you think I'm doing a video to that. You get me back.

@joann_marieIt's so good, Rabbi.

@malleusigBut you see why. After a while, you feel like you're just being an edgy teenager. You're just saying shit because it's funny. But anyway, yeah. The first one that came out was that style. And I was like, this style is perfect, but the words are fucked up. So I saved it as a profile and then redid it until it came out pretty good.

Speaker 1Can I just jump in quickly? Yeah. So my background actually is in music. I've been writing songs for, Jesus Christ, I think I wrote Shadows Fall about 10 years ago. But we've only got the, and like Ian said before, the amount of money that I've spent on studio time and stuff like that. So in the end... I sort of went into my old dusty book about a year ago and started looking at all the stuff like Moonshine Jew that was written, Jesus Christ, at least 18 months ago.

Speaker 1So I just started bringing them back to life because I've had 20 years actually in music and, you know, sitting in studios and again, like what Ian says, it's a lot of money and now we can bypass all of it and it's accessible to all.

@joann_marieThis is the first time I hear you, Valek. I wasn't expecting an English accent. It's good. Where did you think I was from? You should come up more often.

Speaker 1Where did you think I was from?

@joann_marieI didn't think. I thought it was... Yeah, I just didn't think about it.

Ian MalcolmHe's the international man of mystery there. Yeah, you sound like James Bond. It's such a good point that you're making there because... having an extensive past and having seen how this would have been done 20 years ago, 10 years ago, five years ago today, I'd kind of be curious for your thoughts on the accessibility of this to your average person versus what it would have meant to try and build something, especially on the video side that you've been so unbelievably impressive with that you're able to produce today.

Speaker 1Well, I sometimes say to people, and this is not me comparing myself to anyone, But I remember years ago, one of my kids wanted to see Avatar. And I remember reading a story about it somewhere. I can't remember. I'm probably getting this wrong. I don't know. But George Lucas, I believe, who directed it, said that he wrote it in the 80s, but we just weren't there yet with CGI.

Speaker 1So a lot of old people who have been in this game for a while are now sitting there thinking this is literally a goldmine. Music, like AI music can be very generic. If I hear it, I can normally tell if someone's made it with AI. You have to write the songs if you want it to be, you know, if you take it seriously. But if you don't, then you don't.

Speaker 1You don't have to. And like Rabbi said, you're now the producer. So even though I was the performer and the producer for years, all them long hours in the studio with God knows how many people, you know, like most of the time you're wasting time. And then you've got to wait for the artist to write it. And if they haven't wrote it, someone else has, and they're just not getting it right.

Speaker 1It takes forever. And you've got loads of different problems, loads of different people. I remember being in the studio with 10 people once. There was like four rappers, three singers, and two people that were just rolling joints. I don't really know what the fuck they were doing, to be honest. But when you actually come from that sort of dynamic, this is where you sit there now and think, oh shit, I can literally just get songs that I wrote years ago

Speaker 1give it a little prompt of what I want it to sound like in the key or, you know, if it's solo piano, um, light shadows for, yeah. And you get an amazing result, like absolutely polished result better than anything that I could ever do. And then I have to send off, you know, in the old days to be remastered and then I have to license it and all that bollocks, everything's done on the app now.

Speaker 1So it's really, really accessible and something that I think everyone should just have a play around with, you know, you don't have to, you don't have to be able to write songs, just have an idea, you know,

Ian MalcolmWell, and on that really quickly, so that idea of, and I say this because you brought up the term app, right? So some of these things done, I presume, on computer, others can be done probably on a smartphone or a tablet. Can you give us an idea when it comes to grabbing either imagery? Because one of the things that you do so effectively in the AI videos, and I'll put another one up into the nest for you.

Ian Malcolmis where you're taking, you know, real screenshots or data points from, you know, let's say studies that might be available online. You're grabbing those, but then you're mixing it in with the AI more creative pieces, whether it's, you know, somebody from the Matrix or something else. I'm just kind of curious what that process is like.

Ian MalcolmAnd are you able at this point to do that directly on your phone? And if so, what kind of time? requirement is involved to first understand how to use these apps and then to try and put together some of the video clips like the ones that you've been doing?

Speaker 1Uh, for me, well, the average video I do for you say, if, um, if you send me a space and I record it, by the time I've recorded it, listen to it, when I'm listening and recording it at the same time, I'm picking out pieces in my head. So if there's, you know, if you, if you're going on, uh, uh, say 20 minutes or 14 minutes, whatever, 40 minutes, you know, it doesn't matter.

Speaker 1I'm picking pieces out in my head and I'm framing them already. So before the recording is even done, I've got notes. And this is all done by my phone. I actually don't want in my fucking car the other week. I think it was the, I can't remember which one it was actually, but I just started putting things together and then prompting things because I was sitting in traffic and I was bored.

Speaker 1And then, yeah, I just load it all into CapCut. If anyone's listening now, if you've got an iPhone, I'm pretty sure this space carries on while you're listening when you go to the app store. Go and download CapCut. And in the left-hand corner, you'll see a little triangle. I mean, sorry, a little cross, a white cross. Just upload 10 of your last pitches and play around with them.

Speaker 1Put music to it. You know, just you have to get it wrong 50 times before you go anywhere near, you know, wanting to prompt and do stuff like that. That comes after the sort of, how would you say, after your style, you know, what you like. Obviously, the stuff that I like isn't everyone's cup of tea. thank you to the people who think it is, but, you know, it's not the best.

Speaker 1It's literally just me working through whatever I can and trying to give everyone a separate thing. So your video would have been a lot different to, let's say, Sojka's. Is that how you say his name? Sojka? Who? Sojka, the guy I don't know.

Ian MalcolmOh, yes. No, that's exactly right. And I'll put that one up into the nest as well. And it's... it was a video that he shared and, and like this, I just want to call this out the, the timeless and, and, uh, selfless nature with which you've been putting these together where, um, you know, you've been so kind that I've been able to say, Hey, this is a, here's a space, here's a window where someone went off and was talking about a subject.

Ian MalcolmUm, in, in this case, you know, and like I said, I'll share it into the nest that, that, that video that you put together for him. And, and, you know, what's been so wild is that, uh, the effectiveness of this mechanism, the video that you put together, was by far the most, what do you call it, viral piece of content that that person's ever been able to share onto their page because what you're doing and the amount of eyes that you're able to garner through this as a medium, it's just so unbelievably effective.

Ian MalcolmAnd X, 1,000% prioritizes, let's say, novel video content over... everything else, whether that's images and certainly above text. And so I'll put that up into the nest as well, but that was a great one that you put together.

Speaker 1Yeah, like I say, it's given everyone their own special sort of feeling, flavor, you know? So obviously he sounds different to you. You're a lot more articulate, but you still look at it as, you know, like, you know, all your friends are different. It's the same sort of thing. You give everyone a different feel. You know, a good advertisement is worth its weight in gold.

Speaker 1a movie, a music video, because it's always attached to an emotion like nostalgia, relationships, pain, suffering, joy, happiness, whatever. These feelings are primal. And if you can capture them emotions through editing, whether it be through song or video or both, then you're halfway there. For me, it's not about virality.

Speaker 1I'm just doing my bit. That's pretty much it. There's loads of other people in here who are amazing. In Veritas, fucking amazing. Tito. is phenomenal. I mean, there's, there's too many to mention. Um, but the, the more people understand that we are the new media that, that, you know, it takes it away from the studio. It takes it away from the thousands of pounds that you need for cameras and shooting locations and all that bollocks.

Speaker 1It's gone. You know, like we are the new Hollywood.

Ian MalcolmWell, and that was the, I just put it up into the nest. That was the. uh... video reference that you provided for him in and the thing that was so needs to give you ideas looking over his page uh... for comparison so the last couple post that he created that were let's say organic uh... post and we're not repost of other individuals uh... a hundred and thirty views a hundred and sixty views let's see if i can find one more here and update this is in no way a a negative slant or anything along those lines but rather

Ian Malcolmthe video that you put together for him, almost 4,000 views, right? So he's gained almost 40X the engagement on that because of the medium, that idea of being a video and of being unique and novel. And Vilek, it's such a powerful statement that this individual, you creating that video for him, if everybody in here could learn how to replicate some of your efforts and your skills with these AI videos, to think if all of us could 40X the reach of our content,

Ian Malcolmwhat that would mean for this, this movement, uh, because, you know, and then there's a black pill and a white pill to be found here. The black pill would be, look, there's so much content that's out there. That's hard for us that are, let's say dissidents to make a dent in the propaganda tidal wave. But at the same time earlier today, uh, Andrew Tate had to block me after I ratioed him.

Ian MalcolmAnd 24 hours ago, Mark Levin had to block me. I think that post is now up to something like 8,000 likes to his 200, which if we think about that, that's a 40X ratio, if I'm doing the math right here, over a guy who has millions and millions of followers and a literal cable network television program. And so to think that our little accounts are able to absolutely embarrass these people because unlike them,

Ian MalcolmWe have sincere messages. We have people that passionately are subscribing to this ideal, which is to really just make the world a better place and to call out the liars. And at the end of the day, this is a wonderful medium that, Vilek, you've unlocked this mechanism. And I wish I could go through and look at the X impressions just on the content that is a result of the AI videos that you've kind of merged with little talk tracks that you've put together for me.

Ian MalcolmAnd it's in the millions at this point. It might be in the tens of millions, to be honest with you. And it's really due to the brilliance and the genius that you've been putting behind this medium and the idea of anybody and everybody being able to start learning. And I know you mentioned CapCut. I think I said that properly.

Ian MalcolmWhat's kind of the, you know, again, to give people a sense, I know, Volek, you've been doing this stuff for decades. In Veritas and Rabbi, I've been playing around with these AI audio things for this point months. How long did it take you to get really this sophisticated with the AI video engine?

Speaker 1To be honest, it's really new. So I used to be able to throw together images and different transitions and make it palatable. But it was only really when AI became accessible via apps. Basically, the only thing that you need to know now, the only thing that everyone listening needs to know is... is a prompt. If you can prompt this machine properly, you are literally unstoppable.

Speaker 1You can make a movie. You could do anything that, you know, the sky's the limit. My stuff is, is quick. It's, it's easy because obviously I'm going over some of your dialogue, some other people's. And if it's a music video, I'm more than happy. I'm because I'm old school. I used to do it the hard way. It's, it's so much more easier.

Speaker 1And that's why I say to people all the time, download CapCut, literally press the left-hand plus button and add 10 pictures. 10 pictures that don't mean anything. They could be memes. It doesn't matter. Fuck around with the transitions. Mess around with the highlights, you know, the graphics. You get a load of free stuff on there.

Speaker 1If you use a VPN like I do, you get different stuff in different countries. It's so simple now. And the reason it's so effective, the reason that these things, I mean, I'm only a small account. I've only got like 1,800 followers or something. I don't even think I've got that. But it's because these songs and these videos, it's basically attached to your identity.

Speaker 1And it depends what age you are. So, like, you know, sometimes there's... You can remember every single word from every song when you're a teenager. But at my age, you walk into the kitchen and forget why the fuck you're there. There's a reason for that. It's a psychological thing. Psychiatrists call it the reminiscence bump.

Speaker 1And that's what I try and do with editing. I try and make it personal to you. And I also really, really try, the arc of what I do, I strive for evergreen content. I want you to be able to watch my video in five years and it still be as relevant as it was yesterday.

Speaker 3A small addition to the AI video making, if you want to do it on a budget, go to Grok. describe a picture you want grok to make for you then go to the grok app picture or imagine it's called and make grok visualize the image you get like six to eight seconds clips from that picture and grok got really good at it and it's it's for free basically

Speaker 3um yeah of course if you have a premium uh you get more uh videos per month stuff like that or per day i'm not sure what what the threshold is on grok but it got really good and almost photorealistic image creation and ai videos from from those with images and that's the best way to give the ai an image that they can work with

Speaker 3um so it's not so random not all over the place and again with the prompting of um ai videos it's all about describing it thoroughly describe the angle from which it is taken describe the atmosphere describe the lighting describe how the camera is supposed to move right so um the more you tell the ai what to do the less random it gets and the better the results yeah i'm going to second that and be like one of the one of the things you can do if you're just starting out

@malleusigand you're not very confident you can actually uh go into this is just basically prompt from prompt so you basically what are you talking about where you go to grok and make a picture you can also do with text prompts you can go in and be like go to chat gbt or any free generic ai you can access the web with your google account or something and then describe what you want and then ask the ai to make another prompt out of what you described and have it target

@malleusigwhichever AI or engine or service, whatever, make this prompt specifically for this service or engine, for Suno or for Veo or whatever, and then write me a prompt that's going to do this. And it will write it out. It'll write out a prompt that is now optimized for another AI for what you're asking. And if you get into that, it's like a multi-step process, but it really does work because the AI is very good at crafting prompts for itself or for other AIs.

@malleusigSo if you don't feel very confident, you can always do that. Just have it do that additional step. And it's super easy.

Speaker 3Yeah, what you also can do, you can ask Grog to copy or to rehearse a song and make Suno prompts for that song style. So it will basically give you all the... uh necessary framework to implement the same style into your song which is important which is important because if you put the name of a known band or singer into sooner it'll reject your prompt yeah absolutely yeah right and that's that's how you how you um

Speaker 3circumvent that basically because um most music is um is copyrighted so if you just want to you can upload song bits and your own voice in suno stuff like that but if it's if it's a known song that is copyrighted it will refuse to upload it You can. There are some tricks to get around it. Like if you slow it down by 20% and cut it off at some parts, you can upload it.

@malleusigThat's just dumb and sketchy. You don't want that. You don't want to copy someone else's song directly anyway. So the reason they do what they do is because they are currently inside of a legal battle they've been in since they started with the record agencies. Because the agencies are claiming that their use of training data was copyright infringement, which really wasn't.

@malleusigLiterally, it's the same thing as a guy going to YouTube and listening to a song by Drake and then making his own song inspired by what he heard from Drake. The AI is just doing it a million times over. But and so to safeguard themselves from those claims, if you try and put in Drake into your prompt, it'll say, no, we can't run this.

@malleusigReject it. If you try and put in, you know, beat it into a prompt, even if it's like a different content, like I want to write it. I wrote a song about right about cooking an egg and beating it. Right. And then beat it. And I'm like, no, beat it is a name of a song. You can't do that. It'll reject it. So it's super conservative when it comes to that.

@malleusigA lot of false positives. And. the way you get around that is again like you said you go to another ai you give it the song you ask it to describe the song in as much detail as possible but within the i think there's a prompt limit of 20 tokens in suno so within that prompt limit and then you can take that description which doesn't have any of the magic keywords in it and you can put that into suno and you can get the closest thing possible to what you want yeah if you use a 4.5

Speaker 3um the the version of suno you can use different engines the latest version is the best sound quality but the um the previous versions are sometimes better in making prompts and you have a higher prompt limit you can put in so most suno prompts are limited like a thousand um

Speaker 3thousand bits but some others are like four thousand or so you can describe it way better and put in more sophisticated prompting which i recommend and when you have the when you have the sound structure done you can go to the next engine and cover it with the next engine and do the lyrics and stuff like that so covering your own songs with a different AI and with new prompts is the way I go to perfect the style I want to hear, basically.

@joann_marieOh, that's what I wanted to ask. Because I used to have a band like 10 years ago, and there is a lot of songs... Why am I not surprised at all?

@malleusigI am so unsurprised, Joanne. I've done so much.

Ian MalcolmJoanne and the Jets, was it? Or...

@joann_marieOh, no. I think one day I'm going to... I mean, this is my real name, but not a lot of people know who I actually am. But if I ever get doxxed, I'll say what my bang was.

Ian MalcolmAre you famous, Joanne?

@joann_marieNo, I'm not. I never was.

Ian MalcolmWatch Joanne come out as like an international famed singer or something along those lines.

@joann_marieNo, I promise I never was famous. No, I was just starting.

Ian MalcolmJennifer Lopez in her off time goes on Twitter and pants about Jewish supremacy.

@joann_marieNo, I was never famous. I swear, guys, I never was famous. No, but I did write a lot of songs that I have like the...

@joann_mariethe basic music and the lyrics and all of those things. So I can put all of those things and it will make it sound more professional into the thing or they are not copyrighted.

Speaker 1Oh yeah. Yeah.

@malleusigYeah. Yeah. So you're just going to make sure when you're writing a song, the most important thing to remember is you have to mark things correctly. So your mark. verse one verse two verse three whatever right and then you mark the bridge and then you mark the chorus right and if you have any notes like if the chorus is like um you know multi-voice or single voice or whatever or if you want to alternate different voices in a song you mark it in the lyrics and then the ai will will know what to do with it but that's that's the only real thing you have to remember is to make sure you clearly mark your bridge chorus and verses um and then you're done then you just you just have it iterate

@malleusigI've gone dozens of times before I find a nice one, but you just keep it going until you get the one you like.

@joann_marieThis is so exciting, guys. I cannot wait.

@malleusigYeah.

@joann_marieI can't wait to hear your songs. Someday, bye-bye, someday. I just want to say hi to... Oh, and everyone, thank you so much for being here. Please repost this space. Follow Ian and Rabbi and Bliss and Tito and Valek and Inveritas and the amazing people and Game of Thrones. Everyone, thank you so much. And if you guys go for it, I will...

@joann_marieIf you guys go to it, I will also repost that. And thank you, thank you, thank you so much for being here. Tito and Bliss are also in our team that make really, really cool intros. So do you guys want to add anything to what Valek and Inveritas are saying, and Rabbi as well?

Speaker 5Yeah, sure. This is a great space, and I encourage... Inveritas, I haven't seen you in a while, so... Good to see you up here in Tito. I mean, I think that, like, I have a background in media and magazine productions. I led a team of 30 people by myself, started a magazine from grassroots, four covers, successful, and then COVID killed it.

Speaker 5But, you know, as a graphic designer and someone who's really more of a fine artist, I paint. That's what I, graphic arts and painting is what I went to school for. I found the landscape of AI, you know, for me as an artist, I felt like, gosh, is this something that's like, should I feel guilty? Is this something that's going to take the place of real ingenious, genius and AI and art and artistic talent?

Speaker 5But I'm like, you know, this is actually kind of inspiring because it's inspired. Actually, I bought four canvases today. I went out to, by the way, if you're a fine artist, go to a Goodwill store. Goodwill stores have canvases and pictures that people don't want. And I bought four canvases today for 20 bucks. 20 blocks to paint.

Speaker 5And so for AI, for me, I'm learning how to, I'm not learning, I'm just getting that inspiration again. I think COVID for me was kind of depressing and it's fun. I just posted something and tagged everybody just having fun with AI. And you know what? Whoever said that we are the new media, you know, and I think that that's empowering.

Speaker 5And when we, it's kind of like I said the other night, turning, how do I say this? The internet and the technology tools, it's turning against them, right? So we're using it. It's in our hands now. So beware. Watch what we can do to get the messages out. And like Ian, I pre-posted what he said about Andrew Tate today, and hopefully he blocks me too.

Speaker 5Hopefully Laura Loomer blocks me too. But I just encourage everyone, learn it. It's not hard, but it does take a crafty, detailed mind because... It's like I use five different AI platforms. I start with one image, right? Truth teller and Joanne's. And then I take that and then I make a variation of it. And then I use mid journey or I use...

Speaker 5I haven't used CapCut in a while, but I'll use GPT and then I'll use Canva and then I'll use other things. So it's just playing around. And I think in Veritas, you'll get like 30 prompts before. And as an artist coming from old school, you do like thumbnail, we call them back as they thought thumbnail sketches. For a client, you craft some 40 thumbnail sketches to get the right one.

Speaker 5So anyway, thanks for having me up. I posted a couple. It's what I look forward to every night. I would rather stay in and listen to all you intelligent people and work on my craft than go out, right? Because there's nothing out there. So thanks for having me up. And by the way, Joanne, I love your taste in fashion and broken legs.

Speaker 5So cheers, everyone. Have a nice evening.

@joann_marieLove you so much, Elise. Yeah, no, I love your work. I always look forward to what you're going to come up with. And it's just beautiful. And same with all of you guys. It's just so inspiring. And it feels the support is just beautiful. We have such a great team, guys. And Ian, I'm also I'm really proud of your blogs. I would print them and put them in the guest bathroom.

@joann_marieLike I'm not even exaggerating. I would be like, look what I achieved.

Ian MalcolmIt's so good. You know what's so funny about you saying that, Joanne, is that somebody sent me a picture. They said, do you think that X would come after you for copyright? And it was, they had gone to a website that sells custom hoodies and they put the Mark Levin ratio as an image onto the back of a hoodie. And we're like, you should order these and just hand them out.

Ian MalcolmBut look, it's... It's kind of like the, it's like Jukimon instead of Pokemon. You gotta collect all the blocks from these weak individuals that just push these lies. And I say that, that's not an advocation for actually rounding up anybody. That's clearly a joke from Assad that I'm sure is listening in.

@malleusigAfter a while, it becomes like, you know, the culture will shift and eventually a, you know, a, what is it? an endorsement from the ADL or from APAC is going to be the same thing as an endorsement from the KKK was in the 80s. You know what I mean? Like, if you wanted to lose a president election, all you needed was an endorsement from David Duke and the KKK, and it was like, all right.

@malleusigBut eventually, we're going to get there, and it's going to be the same thing.

Speaker 3Yeah, and fun fact, they are the same guys, right? ADL and KKK, both founded by the BNI Brith.

@malleusigExactly. That's actually I'm surprised. I'm really shocked. I'm impressed. You know, that's fantastic. Yeah. Look into that, guys. There is a huge, huge history behind the founding of what what you would consider today to be hate organizations, including the Southern Poverty Law Center. But yeah, like look into that. But that's off topic.

@malleusigI wanted to very quickly at least acknowledge, even though I don't think he's here, I wish he was, I do want to acknowledge JakeGTV for being just a center of excellence for AI content over the past, I don't know, six months. The stuff that he's putting out is absolutely fantastic. For anyone that doesn't know, for anyone that is still a retard,

@malleusigthat he puts out videos with ai i don't know which engine he uses but they look absolutely perfect and they are scripted and uh absolutely amazing and it's one of the most concise dense commentaries on what's happening now with charlie kirk israel with ryan mata now he's doing um it's he he puts absolutely masterful pieces together

@malleusigAnd I highly recommend if you are not following his channel and his profile on here, follow both his channel and YouTube and you'll get his new videos as they come out because he just keeps pumping them out. Like I think a new one came out two days ago. He really deserves his own kind of special shout out for that.

Ian MalcolmAnd Rabbi, if you could, because it almost the work he does. I mean, it almost looks near photorealistic in perhaps a way that... Not near. Maybe the best video games or Pixar films, they still look something... I can't remember exactly what it's called, the chasm of something. The Uncanny Valley? I'm sorry? The Uncanny Valley?

Ian MalcolmUncanny Valley, that's it. Yeah, your mind can tell that something's off, but it looks near photorealistic. I mean, what he's doing is unbelievable. It really is.

@joann_marieI got fooled by it in the beginning. Like, in the first maybe 20 seconds, I was like, they are talking about this in the news? And then I was like, oh, no. Like, I did get fooled by it. And also it has, like, that studio lightning that makes them, like, really bright, you know, and almost plastically, you know. So I did get fooled.

@joann_marieNot entirely, but in the first, like, yeah.

@malleusigIt looks like real news. And it's got the music and everything, and it's great. But the best thing is, like, I don't know how he did it, but he managed to get Ben Shapiro's voice into it. So, like, Ben Shapiro, like, the one character, Shapiro Steen, right? And it's literally Ben Shapiro's voice, and I still don't know how he got them to speak in Ben Shapiro's voice, like, how he made that work.

@malleusigUm... But it's beautiful. All of it's a work of art. You have to see all of them. They're just brilliant.

Ian MalcolmWell, and Rabbi, really quickly, just on it, if you think about this, and that's the whole point of this space, right? We are against a monumental machine that historically has had near universal and yet simultaneously totalitarian control of all of the means of not only propaganda, but of communication at large. And now literally every single person, I mean, Vilek was talking about doing these things

Ian Malcolmon his mobile phone while stuck in traffic. I know. To think that he can put something together while sitting behind the wheel of his car in bumper-to-bumper traffic that then we can push out onto a social application like this and have viewed by 400,000 people in the course of 72 hours. I mean, that is a major problem for this group of people, which is why Netanyahu was talking about TikTok and all this other kind of stuff.

@malleusigAnd that blows my mind, too. It's like the fact that you can take what... you can what what used to take like in the 80s and 90s it would take eight different jewish producers a few million dollars uh a a drug addicted musician and a a wannabe hollywood producer hollywood director right to make a propaganda piece that i can make on my shitter today right

@malleusigLike I can literally be pooping and make something that will rival the quality of that today in 2025. It is absolutely mind blowing. And it's almost like scary because it's now it's responsibility. And I have the ability to, with video and with music, I have the ability to make a message and put it out there. And if it's...

@malleusigLike Valak was saying and you were saying, you know, when you hear a song, you sing it over and over in your head. And music producers have known this forever. They don't talk about it, but that's really part of the engine that they use to destroy society. Like they basically take a song with a really good hook, really good music, and then they put in lyrics that don't...

@malleusigthey don't go all the way to you should kill your parents right but like they just slowly uh centimeter by centimeter they just drive the wedge in a little bit further every year with like across multiple songs hey now it's okay to talk about you know having sex in a church and now it's okay to talk about you know um you know what was making the stallion uh you know

@malleusigBig wet pussy, right? Whatever it was. And it's like now it's basically we're just teaching every new generation of kids that talking about sex or shooting each other or committing crimes. Hey, that's normal, guys. That's something normal. This is this. We put it in songs. That's how normal it is. And the way it works is you get these kids to sing these songs in their head without them even knowing it.

@malleusigThey don't even know they're doing it. You're walking around, you go into your fridge and you have this song playing in your head and you're doing it against your will. And that's a form of essentially entrainment. Like they're training you with new ideas that they want you to have and to think that they're your own because you're not aware it's happening.

@malleusigAnd this is how they curate society into the future. and so now we have the same ability we have the ability to take our message and embed it into songs we can do it overtly like i do or we can do it covertly if you want to right but we'll get it so then kids will if the kids can listen to the songs then this is what they'll be repeating themselves over and over while they're going you know while they go to take a piss at 3am they'll be playing your message over and over in their head

@malleusigand um and that's why for me the next step now is distribution right because we have production there used to be this mode of production where it cost tens of thousands if not hundreds of thousand dollars to make a song that's gone now we have a boat across that we have we built a bridge across that mode with the ai now the wall we're facing is distribution how do we get more people to listen to our songs and to watch our content

@malleusigAnd Twitter is kind of a half step in that direction. But again, I'm shadow banned to the ninth circle of hell. I don't think anyone is. The only reason anyone saw the video released with Still Better is because Ian and Valak reposted it. Or I'm sorry, Ian posted it and Valak reposted and I reposted it. But I would never have gotten people to see it on my own because Twitter controls, you know, who sees your stuff, you know, and short of.

@malleusigshort of renting a truck with speakers on it and like playing the song and driving around the street. Like a good humor truck, you're just driving around. Exactly. And like, of course, avoiding any synagogues, you need to stay as far away as possible from any synagogue when you're playing these music, right? Because otherwise they're going to say, oh, you did it on purpose.

@malleusigYou're an anti-Semite. You're harassing. This is terrorism, right? And then, you know, whatever. But don't do that, okay? The next question is, how do we get the music out? How do we get the videos out? How do we get people to see this stuff? That's the next challenge for us.

Ian MalcolmSpeaking of the shadow band, I was just going to say, and Volek, turn it right over to you. Not only did I share it, but I sent that out and Volek, along with some pretty sizable... accounts, including Brandon Moore, who's on here with 175,000 followers. And he quote tweeted it. And even then, I think we didn't even get past the 20,000 view threshold, which just goes to show how absurdly they are throttling everything that we put out, which is why, you know, at the end of the day, it doesn't matter if it's my handle or Brandon's handle or Leonardo Joni, who I think also re-shared it.

Ian MalcolmYou know, we need everybody here just to do their part, to share their content, to replicate these ideas, whether it's, you know, clipping and then resharing things or it's creating their own. But this is not going to be won by any, you know, one big voice. It's something that we all have to learn and to magnify and to multiply off each other.

Ian MalcolmAnd also commenting under it.

@joann_marieWhat's that, Joanne? Also commenting under it so that the algo boosts it. I think commenting gives you more points for the algo to get out of Twitter jail.

Speaker 1That's really good. I think bookmarking it as well. So if you comment and bookmark.

@malleusigOh, comment and bookmark, yeah.

Speaker 1Yeah, if you bookmark, apparently that pushes it up the algo. But I was just going to say there, so approximately 75 million unique users listen and participate in Xspaces monthly based on the 2025 data. showing 3.2 million sessions hosted. Obviously, I think the next trick up my sleeve is to do a short promo stuff. You could try and work out geographically what is the best time.

Speaker 1So if I do another music video for one of you or myself or whatever, we'll just take the best snippet, three, four seconds, whatever. Everyone pump that, and then we all jump into a space or whatever for the release. There's loads of different things that we could do, but 75 million unique listeners every month is amazing.

Speaker 1So I think spaces is our door in.

@malleusigI have no idea. Yeah, because they can't shadow ban people in spaces without making it obvious. So if you start a space and have people in it, they have to let people in and they have to let the space go out. once it reaches a certain size, like they can, they can like, they've shut my spaces down based off of the title and not let it go out.

@malleusigNot let me DM people to let me know, let them know what's happening before, right? That, that happens. But once you get space going 30, 40 people in it, then they're, they're fucked. They can't, they can't do anything about it without showing their hand. And like right now I'm on spaces, spaces, dashboard.com. And I'm looking at the top space right now is literally just, it's titled shill in front of very successful guests.

@malleusigAnd it's being run by an account named Penisland or Penn Island. I'm not sure which one it is. I'm going to go with Penisland. And it's got 1,204 people in it. We need to be doing this kind of space where we get... Not only do we get on here often, but we also get the big accounts. We get JTTV, Blunts for Jesus. We get Leonardo Joni.

@malleusigWe get... What's the... Oh, shit. The show that I was trying to get his attention of.

@malleusigThe guy that's being sued by Dinesh D'Souza right now, or Kash Patel. What the fuck is his name? Oh, man, I forgot his name. But anyway, we need to get a circle of big accounts and little accounts together. You're talking about Elijah Schaefer, right? That's it, Elijah Schaefer. Thank you so much. All I can ask... I got on the E because his handle just says E on his profile.

@malleusigYeah, Elijah Schaefer. And, like, we all need to be, like, pushing each other, like, promoting each other, like, all the time to get our stuff out. That's the only way to get it out past the shadow ban. And eventually get it on to, like, get to the point where, like, mainstream news has to comment on it. That's the real victory.

@malleusigLike, get to the point where, like, Fox News at 11 has to run a piece on this horrible scourge of these incredible racists making disgusting AI music. and trying to corrupt the minds of our nation's youth, right? That's when you know you've really won.

@joann_marieAll right, shall we go to a couple of hands?

Ian MalcolmYeah, and real quick, I just want to call out, because I think he had to drop down, but Matt Baker had popped in here for a second, and he put into the Purple Pill 11 labs, which can be used to clone voices. I put that up into the nest. Not sure if you guys are familiar at all with that software, but that might be how JakeGTV is going about getting the Shapirostein character that he's got.

@joann_marieHave you heard, there is a guy who comes on Spaces that has the exact, like, not even exaggerating, the voice of Trump, like the little.

Speaker 6He's so good.

@joann_marieIs he doing it or it's AI? Because if it's him, it's literally wild.

@malleusigIt's him. He's just really good at, he's really good at voices. Oh my God.

Speaker 1And Eleven Labs. Eleven Labs was being used about two, three years ago. So if you've listened to any, what people are passing off as new Michael Jackson or new Tupac or, you know. Freddie Mercury or anything like that. Eleven Labs has been going for a while.

@malleusigNo, but Eleven Labs doesn't do songs. That's the thing. If you hear that, it's probably not Eleven Labs because Eleven Labs does speech, but it doesn't do music. Last time I checked it.

Speaker 1It does speech, but then what they do is they take it over to another AI and they basically sample that voice. Right, that's it. So the emphasis that, I don't know, Freddie Mercury or, you know, the... The way Michael Jackson sings, there's never ever been a man to sing like that. You know, like the power of his voice and the softness of his voice.

Speaker 1So what they do is they take loads of samples, throw it into 11 labs so you can see the versatility of it. And then the other AI will make the song. So if I wanted to tomorrow, I could do a rap song with Tupac. And he would sing about me or rap about me or I could do one with Michael Jackson. It's amazing. But I think that was a couple of years ago, Eleven Labs.

@malleusigNo, but we all know Eleven Labs has been around forever. But some people are still hearing it for the first time. Some people aren't. Not everyone is up to date on this. But my understanding was that... 11 Labs is not needed for that. If you are going to make a Michael Jackson song, the people that are doing that, mainly they're training their own models.

@malleusigThey're just taking a bunch of Michael Jackson songs, putting it directly into a model, and then making a new song from that. Because the intermediate step of 11 Labs doesn't really sound like it's necessary at that point. Because it's going to output an audio file, right? Yeah. So if you're going to output an audio file, why not just put in the actual voices first?

Speaker 1I think there was a... problem with copyright early on. I'm not too sure because, like you said before, if you write the name of the person, there was something about that.

@malleusigI can't remember. No, there is that if you write the name of the person. And for Nsuno, you also can't upload copyrighted music, but you also... There's no feature in Nsuno where you can upload a voice and have it singing that voice, though. At least not in Nsuno. Maybe there is in something else.

Speaker 1No, you can't even mention the artist. I tried to do one for... I think it was Michael Jackson. I can't remember, but even if you, yeah, I mentioned the thing, but from my understanding, I think with 11 labs, you can type in just a phrase or something, and then you can basically get the essence of it and then throw it into a different one.

Speaker 1I never really messed around with it to be totally honest.

@malleusigThere have been some, there have been some really good songs. Like people have like made new two pack songs, which have been fantastic. But I think they'd make their own models for that.

Speaker 1Yeah, quite possibly, yeah. And again, they're making a lot of money off this, so fair play to them.

@malleusigYeah, no, it's good stuff. It's really good stuff. That's it. Let's go to Bliss and Game of Thrones, I guess, or Tito Unleashed.

Speaker 5Yeah, go ahead, Bliss. Oh, sorry, I had a call. So I was just going to say, if you would allow me, I know Jake. I actually interviewed Jake on JQ...

Speaker 5star jqr and so if you allow me to know him yeah and so i can actually reach out to him i can like literally text him tonight and see if we can he would love it if we could get him on again for another space to talk through it on how how he do no i will text him tonight and do that and then also um i had another point but i just got a call um oh i was going to say collectively if we could somehow create i know there's some communities on x but like with with um

Speaker 5Volek and Veritas and Rabbi and Tito, if we could collectively combine our efforts, right? I mean, the talent and the minds behind the creativity is insane. And if we could, I'll head it up. I don't care because I'm thinking like, what are we doing here? We're spending a lot of money on, you know, AI tools, right? To help us create this stuff.

Speaker 5And it's fun. I don't mind it. And I don't have like, I'm not asking for money or anything like that, but I think it's powerful. And why not? Why not have fun and monetize it while we can? And because our message is being heard loud and clear. And anyway, I'll work on the Jake message tonight and then we'll set up a space for that.

Speaker 5Yeah. No, it sounds great.

@malleusigWe're like the Power Rangers, but we never activate our power rings at the same time.

Speaker 5Yep.

@malleusigYou know?

@joann_marieI love the Power Rangers.

@malleusigWe insist on fighting all the monsters separately in different locations. Like, no, no, you have to get together and make the giant robot.

@joann_marieAnd please, I posted in the purple pill your little video that you made for today. So thank you so much. And guys, please, please check it out. It's just beautiful.

Speaker 5And you know what? I was just playing around. I have so many images of you, Joanne. You should see my TikTok. People are going to think, I think they think it's me. I'm like, no, it's not me. But you literally are all over my TikTok. But I'm having fun with it. You know, it's really amazing what AI can do. I don't want to feel bad about it and guilty.

Speaker 5Should I? I feel bad about it, but because it's simple, right? It's beautiful.

@joann_marieDon't feel bad. No, please. It's such an honor that you're making this. Thank you.

Speaker 5What I mean feeling bad is that like being an authentic artist, right? We're all artists. We're all creative people, right? And for me, I think it inspires me to create other things. And if we could collectively combine our... creative minds and efforts, that would be fabulous. Because honestly, I don't have any other group of people that I hang out and talk to, except you guys late at night on these spaces.

Speaker 5So I'm here and I will work on the Jake thing literally tonight and see if we can get him on a space and connect with all of you and coordinate that. That would be fantastic. I love it. I'd love to get into a space with you.

Speaker 3And Bliss, if you would like, make a group chat with all these creators. For sure, I'll do that. Valley, Kito, Rabbi, me, and everyone you basically know. And I would love to revive the concept of JQ Radio. I think that's absolutely missing. and it was such a great show while it was running it had so much impact and i think if you replaced the hitler speeches and the minecraft readings with our ai music so we have basically like 20 hours

Speaker 3a day the AI music running which is suddenly or maybe very directly talking about all these issues but with music so people can actually listen to it can download the songs stuff like that right so make a real

Speaker 3structure around it. And I think that would be very great, very impactful and such a great show with maybe at some point scheduled shows with a certain host, stuff like that, right? So yeah, let's make a group and talk about that.

@malleusigNo, we should. That was actually part of the original JQR was I was working with... uh, uncensored or like Wolf and like we had, I recorded a bunch of bumpers for it and then music. And then they were going to incorporate that into the, into the spaces in with the, with the lectures and stuff. And it just never really got off the ground.

@malleusigUm, so like, for example, I had recorded things like this. This is Malleus and you're listening to JQ radio, the number one Jewish Orthodox matchmaking space on Twitter, reminding you that technically the halakhic age of consent is three years in a day. So when you think about it, 14 is almost too old. Visit my channel at rumble.com slash user slash Malleus Ignorantiae for more videos and music.

@malleusigSo like stuff like that was like the original plan and it just kind of fell off a cliff. So like it'd be really great if we could like do stuff like make it a real radio station and run it automatically so you don't need a human sitting on top of it 24-7 would actually be perfect.

Speaker 5Well, I actually was working on a media kit. Believe it or not, I was working on a media kit behind the scenes because that's part of what a magazine, when you have a magazine, you have to have a media kit, like an EPK. And so I actually was working on a whole media kit with all the characters. And the last thing I needed was analytics.

Speaker 5And then it shut down.

@malleusigAnd then it shut down, yeah.

Speaker 5Yeah, and so I'm like, and so I think... The effort behind the scenes, the pro bono kind of stuff that people do because they have a passion for it, right? They want to see, that's what you do when you're an entrepreneur. You get it off the ground because you're passionate about it. So I actually have the whole media kit.

Speaker 5I'm letting you all know right now behind the scenes, I have the whole media kit laid out. So I will definitely head that up and create a group chat. But anyway, I just wanted to chime in and this is a great space. So I will... Yeah, I'll stay as a listener. I'm going to be heading out for the evening, so I'll be listening, though.

@malleusigWell, please stay.

Speaker 5Love you, please. Love you, too.

@malleusigThe other thing I was going to say is I think we need to also create a separate, we need to have a JQ radio for kids. You know what I mean? Like the Muppet Babies version of it, where it's like aimed at the four to seven-year-olds age range, because that's where the real money is.

Speaker 3Oh, I made a song for that. Wait a second. Can you play that?

@malleusigCan I play what?

@malleusigThe song? The song of mine.

Speaker 3I'll send it to you. Wait a second.

@malleusigOkay. How are you going to send it to me? Like over Twitter?

@malleusigYeah. Okay. Give me a sec. I'll pull it up.

Ian MalcolmAnd for what it's worth, Rabbi, just really quickly, I do think the whole JQR concept, and I know there's a lot that went into that, ultimately getting kind of, let's say, consolidated for a little while and then ultimately scrapped, largely due, I think, to the amount of work that was required to keep it running. But the time that that really popped kind of coincided with a lot of these things starting to go from very fringe to slightly less fringe.

Ian MalcolmI mean, look, we're still not remotely mainstream, but we're certainly getting to the point where we've got some pretty mainstream people at least acknowledging what we're doing. And I think it's hard to underestimate how much of an impact I think that that channel and the people that were really working behind the scenes to keep that going, how much of a difference that made on this application.

Ian MalcolmSo just a big shout out to everybody that was over there.

@malleusigOh, yeah. No, the amount of work that one of them was absolutely incredible. All right. So I've got your... I've got your song now. Just for anyone, any of the censors that are listening, Indian people in the trenches, you know, I don't, I've never heard this before, so if he dropped an N-bomb in here, don't ban my account, all right?

@malleusigI'm not responsible for this. Here we go.

Speaker 6Grab your tinfoil, folks, it's time to sing the truth. This alphabet of secrets is here to teach the youth. From plots to plans, it's all just too real. Let's build a man went conspiratorial.

@malleusigI'll just pause it. I'll pause it there. Because I think we've gone through the entire alphabet and it's really good. It's just like we're at three minutes already. I was literally holding my breath until you got to the letter N and then I exhaled a huge sigh of relief. So thank you for that. No, that was great, man. Did you like write that whole thing out?

Speaker 3Yeah. I also made a children's version of it with basically like Children jingles. Yeah, it sounds like from Nickelodeon or whatever.

@malleusigThat's beautiful. Yeah, we need to reach out to the kids.

@malleusigSomeone needs to touch the children, and it's not Dan Schneider. We need to make a real effort. We need a real effort to help the younger generation. Yeah, a real positive effort.

Speaker 7I thought I was next. Yes, no? Yeah, you go next, man. I was up. uh god bless man and uh by the way to the deutsche gates from over here my mother was uh uh very proudly her heritage came from bavaria my dad's the french side so i've always had fighting blood spent the day much props to you sir in deutschland um spent the day over in in uh jesus i'm almost yeah we're talking about latin america our our crazy uh

Speaker 7Sarah over there had her space on fire today, like eight hours talking about the Isaac Accord, which is a clone of the Abraham Accord. I don't mean to spoil his face. I'm just dropping that really quickly. South America is next on the Zio chessboard. You guys, I'm really proud of you.

@malleusigI saw that too.

Speaker 7That's crazy. I'm really proud of you guys, how you're able to adapt. to AI, I can literally take a Taiwan Lannister like the picture I have now. I had fun with it. I said, Grok, make me an angry Taiwan Lannister. Make me a celebratory one. Make me a fat one. And that's about as far as I've gone with AI. I mean, for an old guy, I marvel at how you guys put these memes together and you apply music to it.

Speaker 7Just Uber props, really. I'm proud of all of you. Ian, good to see you. Joanne, buenas tardes.

@joann_marieAll of you guys.

Speaker 7Yeah, I'm just, I'm really happy to connect with you guys. And I'm curious to see where the conversations are going to go. And hello, Mondo Brott. I see you got a hand up. Take it away, sir.

Speaker 8Yeah, hey, thanks for having me. I just had a question, right? So I'm kind of new to this space. I heard the last speaker, I forget what her name, right before Game of Thrones, she was saying something about using AI to spread the message. I just had a quick question, like, what is kind of the message that is being spread?

Speaker 8If you don't mind me asking, I'm just curious.

Ian MalcolmYeah, no, not at all. And I'll take that question as if it's in good faith. And I try to always be open arms with everybody. And look, I say that because this room and these conversations get lots of people that come in just trying to disrupt them. So I appreciate the polite way in which you delivered that. And I'm going to speak on behalf of just myself, right?

Ian MalcolmThere's lots of people in here. Some might agree, some might disagree, or maybe to degrees of they may agree, which is to basically suggest that there is a power or a force that

Ian Malcolmor a mechanism of control that, in my assertion anyway, essentially owns everything. And I could walk through the political elites. I could walk through the ownership of the biggest pieces of the mainstream media, the networks that share that media. We could go to the tech platforms that share those networks, that share those mediums, that share those programs.

Ian MalcolmWe could go to the AI that is currently being used not only to monitor, say, for example, X, and to determine how to prioritize certain content, but that is also flagging content that upsets and offends that system of power, that then shadowbans anybody and everybody that talks about this weird set of patterns. Which, loosely speaking, I tried to consolidate into the pinned tweet that you'll notice is on my profile, and I direct you there not to try and shill my content, because guess what?

Ian MalcolmYou can't share it, you can't comment on it, and you can't like it. because X has marked it as hateful conduct. But what I would ask you to do is to take that post and to put it into Grok and say, does this violate the terms of service or the hateful conduct policies of X? And Grok, aka the AI that runs this platform, will tell you that there's nothing remotely hateful about those statistics.

Ian MalcolmThey are just very strange patterns of over-representation of certain interests that if you talk about directly... you get thrown off of virtually every single social media platform, which curiously are all owned by those same set of interests. And if you deliver it the way that I do, which is just merely saying, hey, are these over-representations weird?

Ian MalcolmAnd maybe indicative of certain, let's say, mechanisms of control that might not only exist.

@joann_marieDid he cut off?

Ian MalcolmOh, I did. Look at that. Yeah. X didn't like me delivering that. That little rant, but to round it all out, I don't know exactly where it pulled off, but to suggest that this mechanism of control doesn't just exist today, it's existed for decades on end, and the way that it essentially got put into place might not have been through intelligent design by moral, very clever individuals, but rather might have been done through subversion, blackmail, bribery, assassinations, and all sorts of other violent acts.

Ian Malcolmof a very subversive nature that might have included the likes of JFK, his brother, the USS Liberty, 9-11, and the last roughly $8 trillion the United States has spent in the Middle East, which represents roughly 12% of all spending since 9-11, right? And so there is something out there that is seemingly not only blackmailing in my assertion and utilizing the muscle of the United States to terraform the entirety of the Middle East,

Ian Malcolmbut that it's essentially completely held, blackmailed or captive by this entity, and as a result is literally participating in the mass genocide of lots of lands, the destruction of the rights of its own citizens, and as a result is not just genocidal in definition, but is also, again, by definition, committing treason and therefore traitorous against the United States people.

Ian MalcolmAnd so, knowing that... recognizing that it's rather hard to argue the points that I just made once you really start to unpack them, and then starting to connect the dots with the fact that the U.S. government under Barack Obama legalized literally the propagandizing of its citizenry through the U.S. government via the mainstream media networks and tech platforms, well, then it's perfectly reasonable for us to try and share a message that points to and triangulates that reality so that people living in what I would essentially suggest is a matrix can become aware that they are living, what is it,

Ian Malcolmin kind of a concise definition, a lie. It's a massive lie, and we are essentially slaves to a global system that not only utilizes us like cattle, but that hates us for doing so. And so that's the message that we're loosely trying to share, and Mandelbrot, with that, I'll kind of see if you have any questions, and then maybe we'll let Rabbi address anything that you might feel was left unclear in that response.

Speaker 8No, no, man, you answered it correctly. I'm actually, like, I'm down with all that. I just didn't want to stop you because you were kind of cooking there. I guess I thought maybe when you were talking about using AI and videos and songs, there was like a more pinpointed message. But yeah, everything you covered answered my question perfectly.

Speaker 8And yeah, I don't really disagree with anything you said.

Ian MalcolmMaybe a good way to think about it in terms of what we're trying to construct, not necessarily with this entire movement, but rather this space. If you've seen the movie The Patriot, which a lot of people... would uh... look to and romanticize cuz got mel gibson and maybe spoke pretty aggressively against this power structure that we're talking about but it's also a pretty solid portrayal of what i think a lot of people would think of this uh... american machismo right that is very long gone in modernity we know at least in my police structure why that is in the end and who is doing that demoralizing of the people that might look like mel gibson right but in that movie uh... it portrays the swamp fox is a very real character

Ian MalcolmAnd that figure of the revolution basically recognized that the United States militias were going to be terribly outnumbered by the British. They were going to be outmaneuvered and certainly outmatched on the battlefield, merely firing muskets back and forth at each other. So they took some tactics that you might think were of a subversive nature that were more in line with guerrilla warfare and could loosely be defined as kind of that which maybe the Navy SEALs of today would participate in on behalf of the U.S. military.

Ian MalcolmAnd we are small in numbers. But we are genuine in our truth. And we're certainly very impassioned to try and bring that to others. And as a result, the best thing that we can do is to learn how to maximize our voice in any way and every way that we can. And I think AI gives us a very nice opportunity to do that, which historically the means of production of creating audio content, videos, compelling music, all those things was pretty much monopolized by the very group of people that I would point the fingers at in terms of the control mechanism.

Ian MalcolmSo this is trying to figure out how we... act like that swamp fox, not in a violent fashion because we don't ever celebrate or advocate for any of that, but rather in a moral, logical, reasonable, and righteous fashion to try and just bring the truth to anybody and everybody that will listen.

Speaker 8Yeah, no, that's awesome, man. Yeah, I'm down with that. That's cool. Thanks for taking my question.

@malleusigThanks, man. Thanks for coming up. I just wanted to take a moment and also plug Acelops Fables, if anyone is not following them yet. Acelops Fables is the creator that made videos like this one.

@malleusigIf you don't know what that is, you haven't seen it yet, you just follow, I put the link in the Gematron to his account. He has some absolutely incredible videos. And he is someone that I would love to get into our little circle of creators. He released a new one this week, actually, which is fantastic. So, yeah.

Speaker 1Do you mind, Ian, because I've got to jump off soon. It's quarter past three in the morning over here.

Ian MalcolmYeah, no, and Vilek, let's go to you for some final words here, some final thoughts, recommendations, and kind of just a glorification of some of the work. If there's anything that you want to call out or bring attention to, aside from anybody and everybody in here should please be following this man. He's been doing unbelievable work for everybody in this space and not just making videos for myself, but just did this one for Rabbi with his song and has done some for accounts of all sizes.

Ian MalcolmAnd as a little advocation, you know, for anybody that comes in and speaks in these spaces, if you ever deliver a powerful message that you'd like to have converted into AI, let's try to figure out how to consolidate those messages, how to get them in the hands of somebody like Volek or hopefully all of you that can become content creators.

Ian MalcolmAnd we can start putting together those powerful little monologues delivered with those aesthetics. But yeah, Volek, if you have any final remarks, then we'll go back to Rabbi and then start to wind down.

Speaker 1Yeah, just basically the way that I see it, the... The thing that everyone that's listening right now should take away from this is, you know, don't wait for the knight in shining armor. Because if we learn anything from the illusion of democracy, it's when you need a hero the most, they'll provide one to pacify you. That's why I do what I do.

Speaker 1And that's why I do it for free. I don't stress the credit. You know, I don't even want to call out. I just want to forward the message. So if we treat it that way, this is a collective movement. And where the person with 10 followers shouting the truth is just as important as the person with 100,000 or a million. If we move together as a unit, one army with different factions playing their part.

Speaker 1And speaking of them factions, the way I see this, the way I see AI and editing as a whole, is the algorithms are essentially the new generals of war. So in the old world, generals would choose which troops moved where. Today, the algorithms decide who rises and who dies. So understanding the algorithm is like understanding the terrain.

Speaker 1Virality is basically artillery. Memes are the grenades. They're small, portable, thrown into the enemy lines, quick to make, quick to spread, easy to digest. Influencers are the snipers, you know, precision weapons, one shot, one message, aimed at key targets, changing the mind, flipping the narrative. And last... obviously, X-Spaces.

Speaker 1This is the unfiltered, uncut, raw equivalent of hand-to-hand combat. It's direct confrontation. There's no time to polish, only time to endure. They rally supporters in real time. So that's the way you've got to map it. You've got to see this as a war and choose your faction. You want to be a soldier or a general? Everyone's got something to offer.

Speaker 1They can only control the world because they control the story. And for centuries, the few held the pen, the pulpit, and the press. But that world's gone. Today, every single one of us carries the printing press in our pocket, a stage in our hand, and a studio in our palm. So Xspaces, Facebook, TikTok, CapCut, whatever.

Speaker 1These aren't toys. These are weapons, and they should be used as such. So, yeah, speak with purpose, create with intent. And with that being said, I'd like to thank every single one of you for taking the time to listen to this space. Hopefully next time I won't be so fucking knackered. I can only hope my ramblings in some way made you see things a little bit different.

Speaker 1Thank you.

Speaker 3I hope you clip your own speech there. Great piece. Great advice.

Speaker 1I could never do that.

Speaker 3You've got to.

Speaker 9That was so epic.

Speaker 3Yeah, absolutely. Allegories were on point. Andy, I have to thank Ian for getting us in contact. It's been so productive, so inspiring to exchange ideas. You did so much great work and I was very thankful. The first thing we made together was the JQR radio song, the promotion song. That was absolutely mind-blowing. I hope we can work a lot together in the future.

Speaker 3And everyone who is maybe not as sophisticated in one branch of ai um messages uh we we can get you into the right directions right because um we got to know many creators uh in in this um topic um that have different strength and um when you when we combine forces we can we can do so great work and i'm i'm really looking forward to it

Speaker 1Yeah, 100%, man. And again, like I say, sometimes the algorithm makes you feel like you're shouting into the abyss, but in reality, there's a coordinated effort to keep us, you know, to silence us. And that only happens when you're telling the truth. So yeah, that's the reason I do what I do. That's the reason I'm going to keep on doing what I'm doing.

Speaker 1And yeah, if anyone needs any help, just again, like I say, fire me a DM or whatever. We'll be doing spaces. I'm hoping to do... A few more now that I've got all my work out of the way. I've got a few weeks where it'll be a bit more chilled. I'm happy to do an interactive space where we can do the bare minimum, get everyone comfy, and then we can move it up every week.

Speaker 1I'm more than happy to do that. Like I say, the more creators, the better. That's literally it. That's where we're at at the moment.

@joann_marieYou should come up more often, Barlek.

Speaker 1Thank you very much.

@joann_marieYeah, no, you sound great.

@malleusigThis is a great... Genentaku is absolutely fantastic. It's a great space. Before I go, I wanted to shout out... Someone reached out to us in the comments in the back channel. His name is SilentGoodSir, and he and Tito Unleashed made a fantastic video, which I put up in the Gematron. I really think you guys should watch this.

@malleusigThe quality is exceptional. And again, another... another creator that i think uh we should join forces with uh if you find if you find people that are doing good work please reach out for them you know pull them into your orbit support them retweet them repost them comment under their stuff it really does help push things past the wall that we're kept behind and if we work together uh we really can win this

@malleusigIt really, you know, we've been taught for, we talked about this before with Ian, but we've been taught for decades that, you know, friendship is like a, it's like a gay thing for tiny animated ponies. But in reality, the power of friendship really is the greatest power of them all. And we need to start leveraging it. So with that, I'll sign off.

@malleusigI'm all good. And Ian, what do you want to do? You want to close it down? Or you want to try and clean up the rest of the hands before we go?

Ian MalcolmYeah, we'll see if anybody wants to add in a final word or two. But the one thing I did want to make sure to do here is, with all sincerity and with as much weight as I can put behind this arrow, just to thank Mr. Vallec for everything that he's been doing in this. And, you know, everybody that's in this movement with us, or almost everybody, I think is doing so purely from...

Ian Malcolmlet's say, a motivation of trying to make the world a better place, right? And I wouldn't doubt that there's certainly some of the larger accounts, perhaps, that are monetized or whatnot. And for those people that do, you know, have the buy me a coffee and all those kind of things, good on them, frankly, because it takes a lot of energy, a lot of effort and all that.

Ian MalcolmBut for those of us that are out here, and like Philek said, not only not looking to monetize their content, but not even looking to get credited for it, just merely doing it because they want to make the world better. And it's that kind of attitude that is going to make this movement unstoppable. Because the moment any of us are focusing on that, which is the material, well, then we've already lost.

Ian MalcolmBecause anybody and everybody can unfortunately be either bought or bribed or blackmailed or coerced or told, hey, you're going to want to be able to feed your family. We're going to make it impossible. And so for us, unfortunately, that means that a lot of us are going to have to sit behind anonymous avatars. We're not going to be able to be comfortable sharing not only our persona, but our bank accounts with any of the efforts.

Ian MalcolmAnd so for what he said, I'm just so humbled, right, that whether it's in his car that he was able to do this, which is just unbelievable that he has that ability with these tools, or any of those other countless times that he's put together a video, either with a monologue that I did or TruthTeller or anybody else, the fact that he's in the trenches with us is just incredible.

Ian MalcolmI'm so grateful for it, so grateful for him and for everybody like him that's out there doing whatever part that they can as part of this propaganda war. And I mean, he's put it so well when he said that the memes are the grenades, right? You've got other voices that are snipers, others that are perhaps the muscle, they're the Navy SEALs, whatever.

Ian MalcolmLike, just find your role. In this thing, whether it's absorbing content and sharing it in your local community, if it's getting out on X or other social platforms and posting or constructing content, whether it's audio, it's video, it's AI songs, it's spaces, right? The reason that I like the space is because this is a format that I feel best maybe suits my strengths and weaknesses, right?

Ian MalcolmBut if everybody just finds that which is their lane and does their piece, then... We all become unstoppable because we become that power ranger, right? It doesn't matter if you're the white one or the green one or the pink one. I think she might have been the cutest. But nonetheless, right, we've just got to figure out our little role and try to keep it positive, try to keep it righteous, try to always keep it honest, right?

Ian MalcolmBecause the moment we lose any of that ground and the entire, let's say, critique that we have of that which we oppose kind of goes out the window. And so let's stay in that positive frame. Let's stay from a place of merely seeking goodness. And let's do whatever piece of that puzzle we can do best. And I don't care if it makes me the sniper or the general or the foot soldier or the guy holding the flag or the one next to him with the horn.

Ian Malcolmright, or the bugle, whatever's the instrument of choice for the soldiers, right? I don't care about the vanity or the accolades. All I want is to try and bring more attention to this because we are clearly winning. And the ratios on poor Mark Levin, that is indicative of how absurdly quickly, absurdly quickly, we are grabbing the reins of power of the public discourse.

Ian MalcolmSo what are they going to do, right? Are they going to shut down X? Are they going to ban any account that embarrasses Mark Levin, even when it's merely speaking reasonable truths that I guess you could say is remotely offensive because I called him a bald Jew? But is Mark Levin a bald Jew? Is that wrong? Is that an inaccurate statement?

Ian MalcolmAnd the answer is no. And so if he's offended by being called a Jew, well, then perhaps that says something about the behavior or the, let's say, the reputation of the Jewish people. Why would you be embarrassed about that? Everywhere I turn around, there's, I'm the proud Jew, I'm the proud Zionist. Okay, well then, why are you being called a Jew making you upset?

Ian MalcolmWhy is that a negative? What am I missing here? How do those two things make any sense? And the answer is they don't, right? So if we just continue speaking truthfully, honestly, bluntly, not being afraid of being, let's say, labeled Marxist slurs unreasonably because we know that anything that is unreasonable should be discounted, so why care what they say?

Ian MalcolmAnd instead, just speak proudly and work with anyone and everyone. And this is one of the biggest things that I advocate on this platform. Look, it's the tiger. Let's deal with the tiger. And so I am so humbled that I'm in a room with people like Rabbi, with Joanne, with Valech, with Inveritas, with Bliss, with everybody that's in here.

Ian MalcolmGodfroy, who I think was put in the timeout chair because maybe he said something that upset somebody from a certain group of people. I don't think I've ever seen Godfrey say anything that was inflammatory. He's one of the most measured people on this application, right? But he's being censored because he's being effective and we're all being effective.

Ian MalcolmAnd if we can learn to sharpen our intellectual swords with one another, then we're going to make ourselves more and more effective together. So let's become those Power Rangers. Let's all unify together to become the big robot, whatever that thing was that they constructed. And let's take out the monsters, not literally.

Ian MalcolmWe're not harming anybody. We're just intellectually opposing what I believe to be literal tyranny, if not slavery, if not genocide. I think all those things are reasonable accusations of the group of people that seem to have the cards, right? So these things are all perfectly within our legal rights. They are within our moral justifications.

Ian MalcolmAnd as a result, we are ultimately going to win as long as we stay with those convictions. So I just want to thank, again, everybody. Rabbi, the song you put together, is unbelievable. It is an earworm. It is an anthem for our people. The videos that you've been putting together, I say this with no exaggeration. Some of them even brought a tear to my eye because there's something really special.

Ian MalcolmThere's something that's humbling about it. It really does. It makes the hairs on my arms stand up sometimes because the visuals that you put together are so fantastic. Look, if we all do our part, we're all going to win. We're going to make the world a better place. It's going to be beautiful when we get there. And with that, I'll just see if Rabbi or Joanne or Valech has any final remarks before we close out.

@malleusigI'm good. I like the whole heal the world thing. It's a Michael Jackson tip. It's like, heal the world, make it a better place. That's pretty much what we're after. This is our version of Tikam Olam, except it's not just about making the world a better place for Jews. It's about making the world a better place for everybody, which is kind of our thing.

@malleusigSo, yeah, keep it going, guys.

@joann_marieI just wanted to congratulate everyone in watching you guys with your AI and also your accounts. How you guys started and where you guys are right now is just beautiful. It's the quality and everything about it. It's just amazing to watch the process. And I cannot wait to keep seeing what you guys are doing because it's just so inspiring and it just...

@joann_marieI cannot wait to keep seeing it. It's just, I'm like addicted to you guys' content. So I just wanted to thank you all for doing it and for being so supportive of everything. And yeah, no, thank you so much, Ian and Rabbi and Valek and Bliss and Veritas and Tito, of course, that he's, I don't know where he went, but you guys, it's beautiful watching it.

@joann_marieAnd that's it. Thank you. Thank you, everyone.

Speaker 1Yeah, I'm going to have to sign off now because it's 3.30 a.m., but thanks for having me on. Yeah, like I say, I'll speak to you all again soon. I'll be doing a few more spaces in the run-ups Christmas anyway. So take it easy. Thank you very much.

@joann_marieCome up more, Valek. I'm going to harass you in DMs. Like, come up, come up, come up. Yes, I'm going to start doing that now.

Speaker 3Yeah, if anyone has great ideas for video content, music content, whatever, reach out to us. My DMs are open. I think you don't even have to follow me. So yeah, just get in touch and we will work something out. Maybe you're not creative, but have good ideas. and or maybe you want to get a start into ai and have some tips just reach out to us and i think everyone on the panel is very helpful very engaging and we're looking forward to get more help with it right because that's a community effort and we can all do it alone

Speaker 3And although reach is a means to get it out, the content is most important. So yeah, thank you for hosting this space, Ian, and getting us in touch. I really enjoyed the conversations with Alec, and he's absolutely a great guy and a great producer.

@malleusigAnd actually, before we go, I want to make sure I mention once again, the incredible creators that we've been talking about. Tito Unleashed, who I think is here. Silent Good Sir. A Slops Fables. Jake GTV. Of course, Valdeck, right? Also, even though he doesn't do AI, Blunts for Jesus is an absolute machine of content creation.

@malleusigDefinitely go check out him. Am I missing anyone else who's really good?

@joann_mariePlease.

@malleusigWho?

@joann_marieBliss.

@malleusigBliss what?

@joann_marieBliss.

@malleusigOh, Bliss. I'm like, what are you asking for? Yeah, Bliss. Follow Bliss.

Speaker 5And I just want to let you know that Jake from JakeGTV just texted me back and he says, I've been thinking about you guys and I would love to do another space with you. So he literally said, just text me tomorrow. Maybe we'll set something up. I think this would be great. I'll create a little group chat and we'll create something and get it going.

Speaker 5And especially when it comes to reach, you know, all of his YouTubes were banned. Everything was banned. So in my closing remarks, Jake said, yes, we'll get it handled this week. And thank you again for your wonderful call outs and all the wonderful talent up here. And God bless you all and have a great evening.

@malleusigYou've given me a reason to get my video done now before that happens. So that's awesome. Thank you so much.

Speaker 3Yeah, absolutely great. And yeah, Bliss, please do the group chat and let's get this radio show going, right? That would be so awesome. Yeah.

Speaker 9All right. So excited!

Ian MalcolmAnd with that, ladies and gentlemen, sounds like a good place to put a bookmark in. We'll continue doing these spaces, of course, trying to bring you guys interesting content, valuable insights, and kind of commentary on the past and present that we loosely think of as the Matrix, which Andrew Tate just today wanted to take credit for exposing, despite clearly being part of it.

Ian MalcolmTry to identify the agent smiths of the machine. Try to note those who are leading you down paths that don't necessarily counter the narrative of the people in charge. It's usually pretty easy to spot them. Those that are pushing their own materialism, vanity, hedonism, that want you to become essentially a rootless, cultureless, moral-less individual, they're usually not your friends, especially when they're all excited about their new Bugatti.

Ian MalcolmLikewise, don't pay attention to any of the people that are thrown into the limelight. If they're given lots of views, likes, follows and yet seemingly get no engagement, it might tell you something about their authenticity. There's going to be lots of people that are going to try and hijack what we are doing. They're going to come in.

Ian MalcolmThey're going to be excited to try and get clout for either their ego or their wallets. Just note their intentions, right? Note the motivations as best we can. In addition to those that are merely selfish, there's certainly going to be others that are merely going to try and either be distractions or or inflammatory provocateurs.

Ian MalcolmThey're going to try and get you to hate people. They're going to try and get you to run out into the streets and do all kinds of terrible things. By terrible, I mean perhaps violent, perhaps, let's say, kinetic, perhaps, if nothing else, just moralist or culturalist. Never, ever, ever follow those things. Use your head, follow your heart, look to your ideals, and if we do, we are certainly going to win.

Ian MalcolmSo let's just stay together, just like Maximus says in Gladiator, right? If we stick together, we survive. And that is true not just of those that are in the West, those that perhaps identify with me either culturally or due to some kind of genetic predisposition, but loosely speaking, the Gentiles in general. If we want to oppose a machine that is loosely defined as the JQ that seems to be enslaving us, we got to stick together despite all those differences.

Ian MalcolmAnd I think this space where you heard lots of different voices from all over the world, all kinds of genders, all kinds of religions, all kinds of nationalities banding together, that is the thing that they fear the most. So let's try to all do our little part in this intellectual war that Bilek so brilliantly described.

Ian MalcolmTry to figure out your role in that. And if we do that together, everywhere along the way, merely extend your hand to those that are willing to support this positively. So my inbox is always open. If you ever want to send me a note, if there's ever anything interesting that you would like me to comment on, reshare, any of those things to do a space on, just let me know.

Ian MalcolmI know the exact same is true for Rabbi. So many of the other folks that are up here, I see God for you, host spaces all the time. And Veritas, if... There's a channel or a broadcast that does get resurrected. You know that I will be there with my little torch in hand calling back to that video that Vilek made. But let's just do our part.

Ian MalcolmHopefully this served as a nice crash course on AI. If you did not listen to the earlier part, if you're curious, the replay will be available. And it's really designed so that you can hear firsthand from these content creators how they're creating the audio, the music, how they're creating video. using AI, even able to do so while literally stuck in traffic on their iPhone, right?

Ian MalcolmSo if all of us can just sharpen our skills with these tools, we can then multiply and magnify our voices, and then we can oppose a giant multi-billion, if not a trillion dollar propaganda machine that our opposition clearly has its fingers behind. And so with that, I just want to thank everybody. If you're a speaker, if you're a listener, if you're just here, if you're not here,

Ian MalcolmAnd you're just kind of emotionally on board and you're supporting this from somewhere else, whether it's on this application or if your Dom documents somewhere up in the ether or in heaven. I'm not sure his religious beliefs, but wherever you are, just know that I'm glad that you're with us. So good day, good night, good afternoon, wherever you are.

Ian MalcolmGod bless for everything that you are. and Godspeed on the mission that we're all in together. So lots of love to all of you. We will certainly see you in the next one. And in the interim, just keep doing you because I'm proud of you for who you are. So I'll talk soon.