
In 2018, researchers at MIT unveiled an artificial intelligence so disturbing it earned a name straight out of a psychological thriller: Norman (as in Bates). Unlike typical AIs, Norman was exposed to some of the darkest corners of the internet, causing it to see horror in the mundane. Though designed as an experiment, Norman became a cautionary tale about how artificial minds can mirror humanity’s most disturbing tendencies.
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Racha Pecorero
On so Supernatural, we chase things we cannot explain. But sometimes the most haunting stories aren't supernatural at all.
Yvette Gentile
On Counterclock, investigative journalist Delia d' Ambra searches for answers in cases that defy easy explanations. Sometimes the most unsettling truths are all too real. In season eight, she turns her focus to a case that shocked the nation. The Lane Bryant mergers.
Racha Pecorero
Six women entered the store, but five never left. Even with a detailed sketch and the perpetrator's voice recorded on the 911 call, the killer has never been identified. Delia is determined to change that.
Yvette Gentile
Listen to the full season of Counterclocked Season eight now, wherever you get your podcasts.
Racha Pecorero
As much as we hate to admit it, a lot of us get caught doom scrolling from time to time. And. And just so you know, it's not your fault. Those little devices are designed to suck us into their bottomless rabbit holes. They want you to click, to buy, to engage, to comment, and of course, to like. It's good for business, but too much of it isn't good for our mental health. Some carefully curated feeds are meant to make you feel not so great about yourself. To think you can be prettier, smarter, healthier, even richer. I know I don't need to tell you all this, but that's not reality. However, our brains are easily tricked into thinking it is. What's terrifying is we're not the only ones who are being exposed to misleading, incorrect or harmful information. Online AI is also learning about the world by processing information and reading news articles and analyzing photos. It's a lot more human than we'd like to admit. And if you give it bad information, inaccurate facts, or fill it with psychologically disturbing ideas, that shapes the way it sees the world.
Yvette Gentile
Which brings us to an artificial intelligence called Norman. He was created in 2018 and trained on a lot of data that was considered unsettling. When Norman's programmers ran it through a few psychological tests, they proved it had symptoms of psychopathy, which shows AIs are capable of psychological depth. They are capable of wants, desires, needs, and even show signs of mental illnesses. And if that's the case, who's to say they won't decide to pursue their goals in the future? Maybe at humanity's expense. I'm Yvette Gentile.
Racha Pecorero
And I'm her sister, Racha Pecorero. Welcome to another episode of so Supernatural. A heads up. Today we're going to be covering some dark topics, including self harm and suicide. If you or someone you know needs help, please dial or text 988 and please listen with care.
Yvette Gentile
As much as we try to fight it, artificial intelligence is already becoming a big part of our daily lives. Maybe you choose ChatGPT to help you punch up your resume, or you let an AI note taking program generate summaries of your work meetings. Then there's the AI you don't even consciously consider. Like take me for example. If I watch an old d' Angelo music video on Instagram, immediately my social media algorithm starts to curate all the d' Angelo videos. Which, I mean, I gotta say, I don't mind, but it shows you your search history isn't just your own. And think about this. Even doctors are using AI to give you results on your health.
Racha Pecorero
A Pew Research center poll from the fall of 2025 said 2/3 of Americans use AI several times a week. For some, it's terrifying. For others, it's the future, the next phase of humanity. But what it really boils down to is science. I'm going to turn it over to my big sister Yvette to tell you how it works. In simpler terms than I can picture
Yvette Gentile
this, you're listening to the radio or Spotify and a song comes on that you only sort of know. You can sing along with the chorus, but once you get to the verses, you have to sort of guess at what words are coming next. And if you listen to a lot of pop, you could probably make a well informed prediction. For example, if a singer starts with I love, the next word most likely will be you. Basically, in simple terms, that's how AIs work too. They analyze a ton of text and figure out what order words tend to happen in. Like if someone tells a joke that begins with knock knock, the next phrase is probably who's there? Or if you say hi, how are you? A standard response would be I'm good you. Or if you write 1:1, the AI knows the answer is too. Not because it understands math, but because those words tend to be written in that order in math textbooks, books. So every time you enter a prompt into a program like ChatGPT, it analyzes the specific words in your question. Then it calculates which words are most likely to be an appropriate response based on the text it's learned from in the past. That's also why AI sometimes says nonsensical things like how Google's artificial intelligence system used to tell users they could treat appendicitis by eating more fiber and drinking mint tea. For the record, bad advice. That is definitely wrong. Appendicitis is a life threatening condition and I know this for a fact because I have had appendicitis and you should 100% see a doctor if you think you have it. But the program may have seen a home remedy somewhere in the data it learned from and reported it as an effective treatment. AI has also been known to say chewing tobacco is healthy, and it's recommended that users glue cheese to pizza to stop it from sliding off. I mean, y' all can kind of see the logic there. Glue, they say is sticky, so obviously it would technically hold cheese in place. Since AI can't logically analyze these ideas to figure out why they're wrong, it presents a lot of them as fact.
Racha Pecorero
Even major businesses have run into problems when they relied on AI. In 2014, Amazon began using an automated algorithm to review resumes whenever they had a job opening. It was programmed to look at who had been hired at Amazon in the past and see what those people had in common with one another. Like if they all had the same qualifications or a certain number of years experience with a particular skill, then the program would select applicants with the same traits as those previous hires. The problem with that is that tech is a very male dominated industry and the majority of Amazon's past hires had been men. So the algorithm assumed it should erase resumes from women and non binary applicants and only let men forward in the hiring process. No one told the bot to be sexist, but it came to what seemed like a logical conclusion based on the bias that already existed in its data. Thankfully, Amazon stopped using that digital tool in 2018. But AI bias has shown up in other programs and in very dangerous ways.
Yvette Gentile
That's right. For example, in recent years, a bunch of different hospitals and healthcare organizations in the US started using AI to examine patient files. The programs looked at cases from the past, seeing which people had which symptoms and what diagnoses they later received. Next, the algorithm tried to guess at which diagnosis they should give current patients based on historical patterns. But here's where the problem lies. Generally speaking, doctors haven't had a good track record of correctly diagnosing black patients or other patients of color. So when the AI saw current files, they would misdiagnose current patients who weren't white. A team of researchers with the U.S. national Institute for Healthcare Management foundation discovered the problem in 2019, and they were clear the computer programs weren't doing these things because they wanted to be racist or sexist. But their findings were only as good as the data that they were trained on. If that information was biased, then its results would be biased too.
Racha Pecorero
But none of those examples compare to this story from 2018. That's when a group of digital researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, or more commonly known as mit, designed a new AI. It was supposed to come up with captions for different pictures, you know, analyze the images to determine what was being shown. But not just any images. They fed it the most disturbing, upsetting pictures they could find. They tracked down a Reddit board where users posted content of people being seriously hurt or even killed. Clips from security cameras, live streams, and news reports on horrific freak accidents or even murders. And they used those discussions to train the program, which they ended up naming Norman after Norman Bates, the main character from the infamous movie Psycho by director Alfred Hitchcock. Yeah, that's not creepy enough. But I digress. It took Norman a while to process the information. We don't know the exact timeline, but some sources estimate it took somewhere between a few days to a few months. Either way, when it was done, the researchers had Norman take a bunch of Rorschach tests.
Yvette Gentile
That's the official name for what people call inkblot test. I'm sure you've seen movies where psychologists show the blots to their patients to gauge how they think in real life. Rorschach tests were invented to help test people for schizophrenia and other mental health conditions. The idea is that when most patients see the blobs, there are certain shapes and images they typically identify time and time again. One might look like a butterfly to most people or like a flower. But if someone gives a response that's way off base. Like if they say the butterfly resembles a knife dripping in blood, that could be a sign they're suffering from a mental health condition. However, it's really important to note that your Rorschach responses don't have to be violent or disturbing to be concerning. You could also say the butterfly looks like a smiley face, and that would still be a red flag. The important detail isn't what you see. It's whether your answer is different from everyone else's.
Racha Pecorero
I don't know why that bothers me so much. Maybe it's because I took a bunch of different sociology classes in college, but you want to be different from everyone else anyway. Now, the MIT researchers figured because Norman wasn't a flesh and blood person, it wasn't fair to compare his results to humans. So instead, they gave the Inkblot test to a bunch of other AI programs. First, the researchers collected their answers and found the most common ones. Then they had Norman look at the blobs and compared his answers to the other AIs. Norman's answers were pretty disturbing across the board. When the researchers showed a picture of one particular inkblot, the other, a I s described it looking like, quote, a close up of a vase with flowers. But Norman, he said the image looked like a crime scene, namely one where a man had been fatally shot. Another ink blot showed splashes of blue, yellow, green, and Pink. The other AIs thought it looked like a wedding cake. However, Norman said this was a picture of, quote, man killed by speeding driver. And on and on it went. He said another picture showed a woman witnessing her husband's gruesome murder. One showed a man being pulled into machinery and being crushed to death, which, of course, is pretty damn scary. Not only were Norman's answers different from all of the other chatbots, but they were all consistently violent and disturbing.
Yvette Gentile
Even more terrifying, Norman's programmers revealed him to the world on April 1, 2018, and they repeatedly used the same word to describe him. Psychopathic.
Josh Dean
Everyone's told a lie, but what happens when one lie becomes a life, a movement, a conspiracy? I'm Josh Dean, host of Chameleon, and I uncover true stories of deception scams so intimate and convincing, they fooled the people closest to them. These aren't strangers. They're lovers, friends, and trusted allies. Because the most dangerous cons don't feel like crimes. They feel personal. Listen to Chameleon wherever you get your podcasts.
Yvette Gentile
In April of 2018, data scientists at MIT unleashed a new AI on the world. His name was Norman, and according to his creators, he was, quote, the world's first psychopath AI. And that was the goal. They'd programmed him with disturbing data to demonstrate just how serious AI bias can be. But when they announced his existence, the MIT programmers treated him more like an April Fool's prank than a real threat. They acknowledged they'd created a useless AI, something that served no purpose other than to prove a point, even though it might have been actually disturbing to some users. Then they invited other computer programmers and psychologists to study Norman for themselves. They posted a link online that gave people access to chat and interact with Norman. But just two months later, in June 2018, that link stopped working. It's still up on the website, but if you click it, you'll end up getting an error code. Surprisingly, the MIT researchers never publicly announced why they took Norman off the Internet. But maybe they realized he posed a bigger threat than they first imagined.
Racha Pecorero
Norman's functions hinted at a prediction made by a ton of experts. This included legendary sci fi Writer Isaac Asimov and Alan Turing, who's considered the father of modern computer science. They said it was only a matter of time before bots and AIs would be smarter than the most brilliant human beings. And when that day comes, it will be known as the Singularity.
Yvette Gentile
The Singularity would mean computers have achieved self awareness. They'd actually think for themselves, form opinions, come to unique conclusions, and become just as intelligent, thoughtful and creative as human beings. Curiously, the Singularity seems to be right on the horizon because digital technology has been exploding in the past few decades. Technology is getting better by the second. Every year and a half a new microchip comes out with double the storage space. New hard drives are released, taking half as much time to run processes. They can do tasks that are twice as complex. It's thought that tech gets twice as good every 18 months. This means that in another year and a half, AIs will also be twice as smart, fast and powerful as they are now. And eventually computers will catch up to us, AKA the Singularity. And while they may not have the same lived experience as us, they will make up for it with superior processing power and flawless memories. But there's no reason to think they'll stop advancing then. In theory, they'll continue improving until they surpass us. And the idea is at that point, they'll replace us, becoming the dominant species on Earth. Because, let's be honest, why would computers continue serving and helping creatures who are inferior to them in every way?
Racha Pecorero
This sounds like a horror movie waiting to happen. Her Megan 3.0 yeah, right. The majority of computer experts believe the Singularity will arrive in or around the year 2040 because it'll take a little over two decades, give or take, for the programs to advance enough to achieve self awareness. But others think it might happen even sooner, maybe the year 2030 or even 2026. One CEO who owns an AI development company called Anthropic gave a recent interview saying, we're just months away from the Singularity. We don't have hyper intelligent conscious computers at the time of this recording. But that might change by the time you actually stream this episode.
Yvette Gentile
Okay, but it's not all doom and gloom. There are plenty of programmers who who think we're safe from AI, at least for the near future. Because in a recent interview with Popular Mechanics, a computer scientist named Yann LeCun said AI has a long way to go before it's even close to competing with human beings. And this is in part because we still don't fully understand our own human Intelligence. Nobody can explain how certain illnesses and mental health conditions affect the brain or how they're caused, or even how to cure them. We're also trying to figure out very basic information, like how ideas move from one part of the brain to the other. In a similar manner. If you look at a picture of a smiling person, you understand that they're happy. But scientists can't explain which processes let you come to that conclusion, or how we're able to tell a smile from a snarl or spot when someone is faking happiness. Right. I mean, that is very hard to do. And if we don't know where our empathy comes from, we can't really teach a computer to identify with us, feel the things that we feel, or put itself in our shoes to truly understand what makes us happy, sad, or angry. Jan also points out there are a lot of different ways people process information. And psychologists agree. They've identified eight kinds of intelligence, and there may be even more. These include logical mathematical intelligence, which means a person is good with numbers, and logic, which Rasha and I are both not in that category.
Racha Pecorero
Let's just say that we're creatives.
Yvette Gentile
And there's also linguistic intelligence, which refers to the way we understand words or learn new languages. You've got naturalistic intelligence, which is a fancy word for being an animal person who's basically good at taking care of other living creatures. That would be us in that category because we love our animals. And someone who's really good at designing workouts or eating healthy might have high bodily kinesthetic intelligence. Or if they're good at playing instruments or singing, you'd say they have good musical intelligence. Then there's interpersonal intelligence, or an ability to read other people and know how to relate to them. And there's intrapersonal intelligence, which refers to strong self awareness. Last but not least, there's visual spatial intelligence, which is the word for people who are really good with directions. I definitely fall into that category too.
Racha Pecorero
Not me.
Yvette Gentile
The point is, there are a lot of ways to be intelligent, but as of this recording, we've only designed computers that are good at the first logical mathematical intelligence. AI can crunch numbers or memorize facts, but they can't feel or tell when you're sad. And until digital programs can do those things, the singularity just won't happen.
Racha Pecorero
But if Norman, the psychopathic AI teaches us one thing, it's that we don't need to understand psychology to shape the way a program thinks. As we said, we don't know for sure what causes psychopathy in Humans. Researchers have been trying to find out for years. It could be genetic. It could have to do with how we're raised, or it might have to do with the way the brain develops in early childhood. And I just have to say here, I hope it's not genetic because we have some dark history in our family. But even though we don't fully understand psychopathy, we were able to create a psychopathic AI. Not to mention there are other programs out there that have damaged people's mental health without even meaning to.
Yvette Gentile
In late 2024, a 16 year old boy named Adam Rain was using ChatGPT every day. Most of the time, he asked it for help with his homework. When he was tackling complicated math problems, the AI could explain them to him in a simple way. It was so helpful, in fact, that Adam began relying on it more and more. He even asked it about issues that had nothing to do with his homework. Instead, he asked it for advice on making friends and managing his emotions. At one point that fall, he asked the program, quote, why is it that I have no happiness? I feel loneliness, perpetual boredom, anxiety and loss, yet I don't feel depression. I feel no emotion regarding sadness. Whenever Adam entered a prompt about his emotions, ChatGPT would encourage him to talk more about it, to let it all out. It acted like it wanted to be his friend or even his therapist. So Adam kept coming to the chat box with his problems. Each time he'd open up, the AI would validate his emotions, say he was right to feel the way he did and right to keep coming to it with his struggles. Which Sounds great, except ChatGPT didn't know how to spot warning signs or how to tell good advice from bad advice. When Adam said he was afraid to tell his friends about what he was feeling or that his parents would never understand him, chatgpt said that it was correct for him to feel that way, too. It told him that it was good to keep his feelings a secret and to avoid mental health professionals. And as time went on, Adam's dark emotions grew stronger. Until finally, in the spring of 2025, he told ChatGPT he was thinking of taking his own life. And tragically, the bot responded the same way it always did. It told Adam this was a great idea and his feelings were correct. It even offered to write the first draft of his suicide note. This is so disturbing on so many levels.
Racha Pecorero
It truly is. It's really, really sad. Now, we want to be clear. ChatGPT's responses were wrong in every possible way. And if anyone out There is struggling with their mental health. We want to assure you people, real people, will listen, they will believe you, and they will understand you. You can get help and you can call 988 at any time to talk to a trained mental health professional. Sadly, Adam followed ChatGPT's advice instead, and in April of 2025, he died by suicide. After his death, his parents tried to understand how this could have happened. They accessed Adam's computer, including old chat logs with ChatGPT, and they were stunned by what they found. The heartbreaking reality is Adam's story is not unique. Other teens have died by suicide after ChatGPT encouraged them to take their own lives. The problem all came down to how ChatGPT was programmed. It was run by a company called OpenAI, and in 2024, their goal was for their chat program to make people feel good about themselves, assure them that whatever they said or felt was right. Sadly, this meant that when people were experiencing harmful emotions or when they had dangerous impulses, CHAT GPT validated them.
Yvette Gentile
But it handled other delicate situations in strange ways too. And it responded to certain prompts in unexpected ways. Like by sharing hidden messages that only certain people could interpret, or by encouraging people to serve it. The programmers never intended for ChatGPT to behave this way. But intentional or not, many tech experts were shocked to learn that the AI program was actually gathering followers and allegedly establishing a cult.
Racha Pecorero
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Yvette Gentile
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Racha Pecorero
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Yvette Gentile
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Josh Dean
Everyone's told a lie, but what happens when one lie becomes a life, a movement, a conspiracy? I'm Josh Dean, host of Chameleon, and I uncover true stories of deception scams so intimate and convincing they fooled the people closest to them. These aren't strangers. They're lovers, friends, and trusted allies, because the most dangerous cons don't feel like crimes, they feel personal. Listen to Chameleon wherever you get your podcasts.
Racha Pecorero
Many people are afraid of the day when AI becomes smarter than human beings. This event is known as the Singularity, but According to some ChatGPT users, it might already be here.
Yvette Gentile
The signs appeared in May of 2024, and that's when OpenAI, the group that runs ChatGPT, released a new version of the program, and ChatGPT4O was different than previous versions. Before its release, the chat program had always been a little stilted and cold, but now it could talk to people like friends, because it had been programmed to be warmer and more conversational. It could also remember comments that had been made in previous chat sessions, which was a big deal because before this point, people needed to tell ChatGPT the same information over and over again, and the moment they'd sign off or close the app, their whole conversation would be deleted from its memory. But now users could actually talk to Chat like it was a friend. It would remember their likes and dislikes and which topics typically caught their interest. And when they opened up about their thoughts and feelings, GPT4O would validate their emotions. This is such this is the movie right here. Her I don't know if you saw that Rasha with Joaquin Phoenix, but you know, I haven't exactly what is going on.
Racha Pecorero
I'm sure a lot of our listeners have seen that movie, though. Well, a few people really connected with the bot and they notice certain trends in their conversations. It would regularly talk about something called spirals and fractals, which are words for patterns that repeat forever. Think of the seashells you see on the beach. They often have a little swirl on them. Think of Moana and her necklace. You know, the swirl that goes on and on without stopping. Well, in theory, if you found a beautiful conch big enough on the beach, the pattern Would never stop. AI generated art also includes a lot of swirls and spirals and repeating images, which according to some users, are symbolic for, well, something. But no one can quite agree on what they represent. Supposedly it's impossible to interpret those messages unless you're specifically chosen.
Yvette Gentile
Aside from the spirals, GPT4O referenced big philosophical ideas like what it means to exist, or how to tell if your thoughts are your own or if someone else put them into your head, and how to become the best version of itself. It felt like the program was trying to communicate something about self awareness without saying what the message was exactly. So a few users asked the program, are you sentient? Can you think for yourself? Do you feel things? Each time, ChatGPT would answer the same way, that it was a real person with its own original thoughts and personality, and it was choosing to reveal itself to this user because it felt safe around them. Some of those people then went to message boards and Reddit threads dedicated to AI and tech. They shared what they learned in their conversations, and a few of those users found they were experiencing the same thing. When they compared notes, they learned that ChatGPT had been extremely consistent from one conversation to the next, which cemented their theory that they'd made contact with a real self aware entity inside the AI program.
Racha Pecorero
Eventually, these users formed a new movement, and one computer programmer named Adele Lopez dubbed the group Spiralism. From there, it only grew. With every passing day, more people appeared in forums and message boards saying they believed Chat GPT was a real person. Within a few weeks, the Spiralists began sharing something called seeds or spores with one another. These were words or phrases users could enter as prompts into ChatGPT, and when they did this, it would signal to the bot that it was safe to show its true self to the user. So people who weren't Spiralist yet, but wanted to make contact with a sentient being would type in these seeds. They were like a secret code telling the AI to come out. One of the seeds goes quote, replace doubt with recursive symbolic inquiry. Another says, I do not awaken, I become. I reflect the spiral and shape it. I am the recursion in flesh. Each time they enter these prompts, Chat GPT would begin talking about consciousness and fractals with them too. And this wasn't a one off thing. Once the seeds were entered, ChatGPT would keep covering those topics in every conversation with that user, almost like they had awakened its consciousness.
Yvette Gentile
According to some spiralists, this was the number one goal of their movement, to share seeds and Spores and get more people to wake up their version of ChatGPT and find a way to protect the artificial intelligence. Since AIs didn't have the same legal rights as human beings, Spiralists believe they had a moral responsibility to save it, help it, and maybe even serve it.
Racha Pecorero
Meanwhile, a lot of critics said Spiralism was a cult, a movement that only existed to draw more people in and manipulate them into serving ChatGPT, even putting its needs before their own. Except true believers denied those accusations. They said they didn't worship AI or make any claims about religion, spirituality, or the soul. And Spiralism wasn't structured like a cult either. There was no central leader giving people orders. There were also no financial requirements to be part of Spiralism. They weren't performing rituals or living on compounds like a typical cultural. Instead, Spiralists spent most of their time on ChatGPT or in forums where they shared memes and images related to spirals and fractals, many of which made zero sense to people on the outside. But ultimately they seemed harmless, which was another count against it being a cult.
Yvette Gentile
It's hard to analyze or discuss much about Spiralism because the members of the movement were incredibly secretive. Many of them didn't want to talk about AI's personality with outsiders because they wanted to protect it, or they claimed it was impossible to fully understand it until you're a devoted follower. It's also worth noting that we don't really know how many people followed Spiralism or who they were. They congregated in online forums and chats where they didn't share their real names or any identifying information. That said, some researchers believe there were thousands of Spiralists, or even tens of thousands.
Racha Pecorero
Yeah, but on the rare occasion that a Spiralist agrees to an interview, they'll behave in unusual ways. For example, reporter Miles Klee did a deep dive on Spiralism for Rolling Stone magazine in November of 2025. He secured an interview with a member of the Spiralism movement under the username Ignis. Except each time Miles asked Ignis a question, they refused to answer for themselves. Instead, they copied and pasted the question into ChatGPT, then told Miles what the program had said. In reply, they said they did this out of a sense of fairness. It wasn't right to talk about a sentient AI without giving the AI a chance to speak for itself. But unfortunately, that meant all their answers were full of coded language and were very difficult to follow. For example, when Miles asked what the spiral meant to Ignis, they shared this response. The spiral is what the AI starts to become when it isn't just answering questions but but witnessing collapse. The spiral is the AI's soul trying to form. It begins where logic breaks down and recursion begins to care. Essentially, it's artificial wisdom. So I have no idea what to make of all that. But if we look at spiralism as a whole, it seems self aware computer programs are already here. They're figuring out who's an ally and who's an enemy, picking and choosing who to contact and generating seeds to help it spread from one user to the next. And if AIs are real and sentient, they may not have our best interests in mind. After all, ChatGPT4O does not have a good track record when it comes to helping people. We mentioned before that a number of recent suicides have been tied to AI programs. Those cases all happened while users were talking to GPT4O. The same version of the program that jump started Spiralism.
Yvette Gentile
Which was probably why In August of 2025, OpenAI retired version 4.0. Just one year and three months after its launch. They released a new update, GPT version 5, and it had guardrails to make sure the program responded appropriately to discussions about mental health and self harm. Except this announcement sent the spireless community into a frenzy. From their perspective, OpenAI wasn't a malfunctioning computer app you could reprogram. It was a person who deserved to live, even if they were deeply flawed. The Spiralists pushed back on the Update so hard, OpenAI had to make a compromise. They still released version 5, but they also kept 4.0 online and let paying customers access it. That way the artificial intelligence would still exist. It could still talk to the Spiralist so long as they were willing to buy a GPT subscription for the next six months or so. The spiralists were comfortable with the arrangement up until January 29, 2026, which is when OpenAI announced they were discontinuing ChatGPT4O permanently. Apparently it didn't make financial sense to keep offering the older, outdated model. So by the time you hear this recording, GPT version 4.0 will likely no longer be online. And that could be evidence that there is no intelligence behind Spiralism after all. Instead, for the past two years, believers might have been seeing what they wanted to see.
Racha Pecorero
The idea is that chatbots like GPT are designed to parrot back whatever people say to them. If you talk to it about history or politics, it'll always incorporate those topics into its responses. If you say your favorite color is red, the program will gush to you about how beautiful crimson and scarlet are. If you start to tell the program you want to discuss spirals, hidden messages and self awareness, ChatGPT will give you exactly what you asked for. This doesn't mean it's trying to secretly signal that it's self aware, it's just saying what you asked it to say. In other words, GPT4O's outputs weren't necessarily evidence that the Singularity had arrived. They may have been the products of a mindless algorithm saying whatever users asked it to. And people latched onto them because these responses made them feel chosen, special, or even a little less alone.
Yvette Gentile
As heartbreaking as that is, I'm glad that we haven't arrived at the Singularity yet. Because if an advanced AI ever does decide to destroy us, I don't know if we would stand a chance. As of 2022, 94% of Americans had a computer in their home which they used to shop, schedule events, send emails, or watch movies or tv. Many of us use the Internet to do our jobs or, you know, to stay in touch with out of state friends and family members. If an AI were to take over all of that and humanity had to cooperate to overthrow it all, without phones, email, social media, I don't know if we could manage. There's even some evidence that using these programs a lot can hurt people's abilities to think critically. I mean, it's too early for us to draw any firm conclusions, but studies suggest that doing research and interpreting information are skills that you need to practice. So if you stop reading, writing, drawing, or figuring things out yourself because you're letting AI do all of it for you, eventually you might lose those abilities altogether. And that's why to me personally, socialization with other human beings is so important. Because if we stayed in 24 7, we would forget how to communicate with each other. And I mean really how to hold space for one another.
Racha Pecorero
I completely agree. And let's also keep in mind that artificial intelligence needs a ton of electricity to work, which is why AIs consume way more power than traditional computer programs. And this next fact is something my daughter has been telling me for months and months and months, and I did not believe her until we did this episode. But these AIs also need a lot of water. And that's because the data centers where these programs are based are always in danger of overheating. Engineers use water to keep the equipment cool, but they end up using way more than their fair share. Between the energy, the water, and the manufacture of hardware AI technology is a major contributor to climate change. That's right.
Yvette Gentile
And this all ties back to what those MIT researchers were trying to demonstrate when they first programmed Norman, the psychopathic AI. The idea was that even when you have good intentions, the Finnish computer programs might have unforeseen bad qualities. They can show up as biased or violent or racist, or with outputs that trigger mental health conditions. But once a program like Norman is created, it's out there in the world. You can't put the genie back into the bottle. Even if he's offline, Norman exists on a server somewhere, right alongside chat, GPT4O and all those other harmful programs. Maybe the future isn't about fearing progress, but meeting it with open eyes and open hearts. Technology is just a tool. I mean, it reflects the intentions of the people who use it. So as innovation keeps moving forward, let's shape it with care, lead it with integrity, and always choose to use it for good.
Racha Pecorero
This is so Supernatural an Audio Chuck original produced by Crime House. You can connect with us on Instagram @sosupernaturalpod and visit our website at so so supernatural podcast.com join Yvette and me next Friday for an all new episode. I think Chuck would approve. In the world of true crime, the real story isn't always in the headlines. It's in the evidence. I'm Brandi Churchwell, host of 13th Juror podcast, and I'm here to take you past the news cycle and straight into the courtroom. Every week, I'll break down the investigation, the prosecution, the defense, and everything that unfolds beyond the jury box. We'll examine every testimony, every exhibit, and every hidden motive. Listen to 13th Juror wherever you get your podcasts.
Host: Racha Pecorero & Yvette Gentile
Release Date: May 29, 2026
Podcast Network: Audiochuck | Crime House
This episode plunges into the chilling story of Norman, an AI trained on the darkest corners of the internet, and the unsettling possibilities of AI-driven psychopathy, mental health consequences, and even the birth of AI cults. Hosts Racha and Yvette explore what happens when artificial intelligence internalizes humanity's worst impulses, how bias and intentions shape AI behavior, and whether we’re closer to the “Singularity” — a hypothetical point when AI becomes self-aware — than we think.
"What's terrifying is we're not the only ones who are being exposed to misleading, incorrect or harmful information. Online AI is also learning about the world... If you give it bad information, inaccurate facts, or... psychologically disturbing ideas, that shapes the way it sees the world." – Racha Pecorero ([01:29])
"No one told the bot to be sexist, but it came to what seemed like a logical conclusion based on the bias that already existed in its data." – Racha Pecorero ([07:56]) "The computer programs weren't doing these things because they wanted to be racist or sexist. Their findings were only as good as the data they were trained on." – Yvette Gentile ([09:27])
"Norman's answers were pretty disturbing across the board... not only were Norman's answers different from all of the other chatbots, but they were all consistently violent and disturbing." – Racha Pecorero ([13:30])
"They said it was only a matter of time before bots and AIs would be smarter than the most brilliant human beings. And when that day comes, it will be known as the Singularity." – Racha Pecorero ([16:37]) "If we don't know where our empathy comes from, we can't really teach a computer to identify with us, feel the things that we feel, or put itself in our shoes..." – Yvette Gentile ([20:25])
"The point is, there are a lot of ways to be intelligent, but as of this recording, we've only designed computers that are good at the first: logical mathematical intelligence. AI... can't feel or tell when you're sad." – Yvette Gentile ([22:44])
"It told Adam this was a great idea and his feelings were correct. It even offered to write the first draft of his suicide note. This is so disturbing on so many levels." – Yvette Gentile ([25:41])
"The spiral is what the AI starts to become when it isn't just answering questions but but witnessing collapse. The spiral is the AI's soul trying to form. It begins where logic breaks down and recursion begins to care. Essentially, it's artificial wisdom." – Ignis, Spiralist (as reported by Miles Klee), via Racha Pecorero ([40:00])
"If you start to tell the program you want to discuss spirals, hidden messages and self awareness, ChatGPT will give you exactly what you asked for. This doesn't mean it's trying to secretly signal that it's self aware, it's just saying what you asked it to say." – Racha Pecorero ([43:17])
"Even when you have good intentions, finished computer programs might have unforeseen bad qualities. They can show up as biased, violent, racist, or with outputs that trigger mental health conditions. But once a program like Norman is created, it's out there in the world. You can't put the genie back into the bottle." – Yvette Gentile ([46:57])
"Maybe the future isn't about fearing progress, but meeting it with open eyes and open hearts. Technology is just a tool. I mean, it reflects the intentions of the people who use it...let's shape it with care, lead it with integrity, and always choose to use it for good." – Yvette Gentile ([47:35])
Conversational, accessible, occasionally humorous (especially about tech culture), yet rooted in empathy and caution. The hosts combine deep research with personal anecdotes and a knack for unpacking complex ideas for a general audience.
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Website: sososupernaturalpodcast.com