Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
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Well, first up, we have your digital life hack. And after that, I'm going to play a call for my weekend national radio show. One of the greatest AI tools to come out is Google's Notebook LM. Here's why you should use it. I'm Kim Commando for The Current. It's my five-star rated newsletter read by almost a million folks like you. Sign up for free right now at GetKim.com.
Sometimes you don't have time to read a 40-page quarterly report, but you might have time to listen to it. What Notebook LM does is transform any text you give to it, say a news article or a PDF, into a podcast. Its two AI hosts actually debate the notes, make jokes, and use analogies to explain complex topics for you to listen to.
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in minutes you'll have a custom podcast you can download and listen to on the go it's the ultimate cheat code to looking like you're the smartest person in the room while you were just cleaning the house it's 2026 you have to be tech smart that's why you need my free newsletter sign up at getkim.com next up a call for my weekend show the kim commando show enjoy uh david in beautiful burbank california hi there david
Hey, Kim. How you doing? I really need some help with some of this YouTube stuff or Facebook. Right now, I'm currently assisting a super mega actress star.
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Chapter 2: How does AI technology impact learning and information retention?
So you say, David, she's a super mega star. How big was she?
Well, when the Beatles first came to America in 1963 or 64 or something like that, I believe it's 64, they asked her if she wanted to be in A Hard Day's Night. And she said no because they were a bunch of nobodies. And Paul McCartney and John Lennon really wanted her to be on there. And I don't feel comfortable about mentioning her name, but she's a TV star, a record star.
She's had hits back in the day. She did the TV.
Chapter 3: What is Notebook LM and how does it work?
I don't want to say anything else, but she played with everybody from college you know, she danced with Gene Kelly. Wow. She was with Van Crosby, and later on, she was, you know, quite the rebel back in the day. But right now, it's just like, I know people who are from that era, and you see their stuff on these programs and stuff, and they're not getting any kind of royalties or nothing.
You know, it just seems like another friend I know, he's 85, and he was on Bonanza and Rawhide and stuff like that, and And I remember that in 2012, there was the SAG people. I think the gentleman, I don't want to mention his name, but it was Bruce Dow. It's allegedly that he, you know, embezzled like $5 or $10 million from SAG or something like that.
But anyway, my question is, how can she, you know, get any kind of royalties or something like that from these? Because a lot of people, the movie that was put on there, they got $1.5 million in royalties. 1.5 million views. And I guess when a lot of people seem to be, you know, I'm capitalizing on, on her, her likeness and she works so hard to get. Yeah, for sure.
She's got, she's got such of a big signature trade name.
Chapter 4: What are the benefits of using Notebook LM for busy professionals?
She's really proud of her name. And, and she's just like, you know, But it's just like, I don't know if there's anything you could do about it or not.
It's tough. It's tough.
Chapter 5: What features make Notebook LM stand out among AI tools?
Because I can tell you that we have takedown notices of my stuff, and I'm not nearly what I'm sure. The Beatles have never asked me to sing with them. As a matter of fact, the Beach Boys, I did have an audition with the Beach Boys once, and Bruce Johnson looked at me and said, you know what, you should just stay on the radio. I'm like, okay, not a problem.
If the movie's being monetized and there are ads on the inside, she can contact the copyright owner, which is probably the studio or the network.
It was MGM, yeah.
And so that's when the companies will issue takedown notices, and sometimes the studios or the networks will claim the advertising revenue and then distribute the royalties.
Chapter 6: How does Notebook LM enhance content engagement?
So if they're collecting money, then obviously she deserves a piece of that action. Does she have any of her own original content, interviews, anything like that?
Well, unfortunately, she doesn't have any rights to any of this stuff back, you know, in the. she's mostly known for the sixties and seventies. And she, she sang a lot of other people's music and, and, and, and stuff like that. She, that's the bad thing about it.
She, she doesn't have any rights to it, but she, she made, she, she made a lot of money when she was doing her stuff, like, you know, several, probably millions. But now it's like, I don't think to tell you the truth, I don't know why anyone would be an actor, actress anymore, because they just, they just,
Chapter 7: How can you create a podcast from a PDF or article using Notebook LM?
they kind of just throw you away in Hollywood. And now that when you get older, they, you know, they just kind of, you just get little checks, those little checks that are like, you know, a dollar, two dollars, you know, five dollars. And, you know, this is, of course, you know, from the 60s or 70s.
Well, you know, that's 50, 40, 50 years ago. You know, it's not legal for anybody to do what they're doing. As I mentioned, the movie studio, the production company probably still owns the copyright to that. Now, what you can do is that you can file a copyright complaint at YouTube and then you can select unauthorized use of my image. And then there's also, is she still a SAG-AFTRA member?
She's retired, but she does have a pension coming in from that. Okay, good.
Because the residuals department there can probably lend a hand. So there's no slam dunk solution to this. It's not like she can just call up YouTube and say... Hi, I was an A-list actress in the 60s and 70s and I'm not anymore and people are still making money off of me and I want the money. It's because she doesn't own the copyright.
And that's why what I was trying to get to is if she was that big and that renowned and there are people on YouTube that still love her, obviously.
She does have 200, like almost 200,000 followers. And I mean, it's not that big comparison to our people, but, but, you know, she's over 80 and she's like, you know, some of the people that knew her then they've passed away too, you know, stuff like that. But she, she was super huge. I mean, I don't want to mention her name, but she, she, you know, she was big.
See, I'd love to know who she is. Why don't we have her on the show? Tell her, ask her if she wants to come on the show.
Okay. I'll see.
Ask her if she wants to come on the show. We can talk about her YouTube channel, what she's doing right now, the infringement and some ideas. And, you know, my whole idea is that if she did have any original content, then she could be posting that. She'd be making money off of that.
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