Dr. Coltan Scrivner
π€ SpeakerVoice Profile Active
This person's voice can be automatically recognized across podcast episodes using AI voice matching.
Appearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
It might, right?
I mean, the more that we engage with a certain kind of...
I'll say something that's, you know, something that is mimicking a social interaction.
I don't know that it's certainly a social interaction of some kind, but if you're conversing with AI a lot and you get used to
the way that it responds to you and the way that it's kind of sycophantic as well.
It sort of kisses up to you and tells you that everything you do is brilliant.
That maybe breeds a certain kind of behavior in individuals that isn't really conducive to cooperation with actual humans in the real world, because real humans don't always operate like that.
And so you could grow
you know frustrated with them for not operating how now you are used to operating yeah when you have a conversation uh is there a is there a criminal that you are fascinated by someone's mind that you really think about a lot when you're just lying in bed at night ed kemper is a really interesting one to me so he was a really tall like six foot nine guy who did he committed a lot of really brutal awful crimes against women i you know uh like very very gruesome violence against women
But he was reasonably intelligent.
I mean, you know, I would say smarter than the certainly smarter than the average college student, probably smarter, as smart as the average college professor is smarter and very reflective and narcissistic.
And so he liked to he liked to feel like he was helping.
So if you've ever seen Mindhunter or read the book or know anything about their cases.
they spoke with Ed Kemper a lot because he gave them information into the mind of a killer by reflecting on his own crimes.
And so he's very self-reflective as well.
It's unclear how honest he was being about all of that, because again, if he's, you know,
high in narcissism he's you know probably inflating he was smart enough to probably fool some some people into uh thinking certain things um but he was interesting to me because he was he was fairly intelligent and at least in interviews with profilers and other people very fairly even keeled
Um, and I've always found that fascinating.
The, the other guy I think that came to mind would be, uh, Richard Kuklinski.
He was a mafia hit man.