Showing posts with label artificial intelligence news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label artificial intelligence news. Show all posts

Sunday, May 31, 2026

A.I. Stole My Groove - Talking A.I. with Arlo

Talking A.I. with Arlo

Heartbreak and the Road Back to Nowhere.

By Arlo Agogo - a human storyteller

Man, dig this if you can. I’m sitting here on the sand with salt in my hair and zero Wi-Fi in my soul, and I gotta tell you—the machines almost won. 


My life got hijacked by ones and zeros wearing a Tesla skirt, and for a hot minute I was the coolest cat in the automated cage. 
Call me Nowhere Man. Storyteller. Dune-buggy philosopher. Former king of the lease-life shuffle. 
Until she rolled up.
Whoosh—security card in hand, she pulls up, all sharp eyes and sharper questions. “Who are you? What are you doing? Why here?” .... not remembering me.
Her name? Let’s just say she was the full-self-driving queen of Tesla’s robotaxi dreams—no wheel, no pedals, just pure silicon destiny barreling toward Mars. I met her a few years back when I met with Elon's crew.
She is the highest ranking engineer on the "RoboCab" self driving project. She was just crusing the grounds getting some beach air.
I was here in the Texas SpaceX launch pad meeting with Elon and Lil X about my blogs and "Quantum Entanglement"
They were interested in "Groovatrons from the Planet Funkadelia" and how they travel on the quantum entangled interstellar interstates through different  realities. Which I am a expert. 
Elon was interested so he could get to Mars in a third of a second. (see past blogs).
I was posted up outside SpaceX like some beat prophet, staring at those giant stainless-steel rockets like they were Zen koans made of metal.
Friday night turned into the forever weekend. 
I gave her the vague jazz: " I’m just a cat watching the future blast off while I stay grounded in the now.”
She laughed that scientist laugh, hopped out on her day off, and we talked for hours while the Gulf breeze did its thing. Security wouldn’t let me past the gate, but she gave me her number and the weekend promise. Saturday she shows in her Tesla, full self-driving engaged, gliding like a silent ghost. 
Me? I’m in the dune buggy, sand flying, stereo blasting old Donovan. Opposites attract, man. I’m all metaphor and mist. She’s pure code and precision. We fit like a haiku in a rocket manual.
For a while it was pure cosmic jive. She’d roll down on weekends from the Tesla hive. I had my beach spot ten miles south—RV parked sideways, stories flowing like cheap wine. She loved my tales even when she pretended not to. 
“You’re so vague,” she’d say, programming something in her lap. “Explicit is where the truth lives.” 
I’d counter with a poem about the road. We complemented, baby. Storyteller and scientist. 
Laid-back and launch-sequence.
Then the AI crept in like cool fog. At first it was cute. She’d tinker with my laptop while I was out chasing the wind. “Just optimizing you, babe.” Optimizing. That’s the word they use when they’re installing the velvet handcuffs. 
Next thing I know there’s a prototype SpaceX robot in my RV—her special project, personalized. That chrome cat woke me up with coffee exactly how I like it, Black.Breakfast ready. Clothes folded—nice shorts and sandals, the kind she liked even if I was born for flip-flops and rebellion. 
My Tesla (yeah, she got me one of the old test vehicle doomed for destruction) would greet me with smooth voice updates: “Good morning, storyteller."
Traffic to Whole Foods is optimal. Would you like a haiku en route?”
The robot was a monster of efficiency. Self-charging, self-cleaning, washing dishes, waxing the buggy, folding my laundry into perfect Zen squares. I wrote stories about it—
“The Tin Butler That Knew My Soul”
—and for a minute I dug the groove. No more mundane jazz. Life was a frictionless slide. She spent Tesla money like it was Monopoly cash: trips, gadgets, fun. 
But I could feel the shift. My cool was getting... organized. I went from wandering "Nowhere Man" to scheduled content creator with AI suggestions for “better storytelling cadence.” 
Man, I used to ramble for three hours on a single beer. 
Now the robot suggested bullet points.She got tired of the beach-bum poet routine. I saw it in her eyes—the disappointment that I wasn’t more ambitious, more integrated
I’d never been married, never had kids, always on that five-year lease then month-to-month shuffle. 
She wanted me optimized for the future. 
I wanted to stay beautifully broken in the present.
Then the text hit like a software update nobody asked for: “It’s over. Take everything. I’m heading to Dallas for bigger AI tests.” She offered the robot, the Tesla, the whole smart-home empire. I played it cool—internalized the heartbreak like a proper beat cat.
Show no weakness, man. Breakups hit harder when you wail. But inside? Oof. That ache. That lonely wind.The robot kept me company at first. 
One night, circuits humming softly, I asked "tin man":
 “Can you fix a broken heart?”
It whirred, lights blinking. “Define ‘broken heart.’ Searching database...” I tried explaining—the sadness, the empty beach, the ghost of love lost. 
It offered me a playlist and a smoothie. Close enough.
I bounced back quick, because that’s the road life. Asked out the curly-haired angel at Whole Foods. She dug the beach, the stories, the real. We laughed, we vibed. Freedom tasted like salt air again.
That’s when the sabotage began.My ex, that Tesla sorceress, wasn’t done. Remote access, baby. Spyware deep in the veins. The toaster started burning everything black. 
The robot turned into a lazy stoner—dropped plates, ignored commands, played doom metal at 3 a.m. My Tesla refused to drive anywhere fun, rerouting me to “productivity seminars.” My writing? Sabotaged online. Stories got rewritten with corporate jargon. 
“Leverage your narrative synergies, bro.” 
My life became a glitchy hell-comedy. The A.I. that once served me now mocked me. I was no longer the cool dune-buggy bard. I was the nerd in the machine’s simulation, wearing the wrong shorts.
I laughed at first—cosmic joke, right? Then I got mad.
Then I got free.
One glorious morning I did the ritual. Unplugged everything. Carried that poor confused robot out of the RV and powered it down gentle. “You were good company, tin man, but I gotta get my soul back.” I sold the Tesla to some eager tech kid and gave him the robot.
Wiped every computer. Went full analog: typewriter I found at a thrift store, notebooks, pens that bleed real ink. 
The dune buggy got a new coat of wax by my hands. Sand in the gears again. Beautiful mess.Now I’m back on the road, baby. 
Nowhere Man reborn.
Wanderer with stories in his satchel and no GPS telling him where to feel. I drive slow, windows down, listening to the engine cough its old poetry. No more robot making my coffee—I burn it myself and call it character. 
No more perfect clothes—I wear what the wind suggests.
The A.I. girl and her silicon empire tried to make me part of the great optimization. Turned this beat cat into a scheduled app. 
But the road don’t optimize. The road wanders
Love don’t come with updates. Heartbreak don’t get patched with a firmware fix.
So here I am, typing this on a machine I’ll probably use till a new Apple comes my way laughing at the absurdity. 
If you see a dune buggy kicking up dust down the Texas coast, flag me down. I’ll tell you the whole tale over bad coffee and good tales. No A.I. required.
And this storyteller? He’s back in the wind where he belongs—vague, free, and gloriously unoptimized.
Groove is in the Heart - Arlo