 This 10th year of Daily Tech News show is made possible by you, the listener, thanks to every single one of you, including Tony Glass, Philip Lass, Daniel Dorado, and everybody welcome our brand new patron, Mark! On this episode of DTNS, who should decide the rules on AI? Is Google Maps the new Yelp? And Teja Custody reviews the AI features of the Pixel 8 Pro. This is the Daily Tech News for Friday, October 27th, 2023 in Los Angeles. I'm Tom Merritt. And from Studio Secret Bunker, I'm Sarah Lane. John, the top tech stories from Cleveland. I am Len Peralta. And I'm the show's producer, Roger J. Joining us is YouTuber and host of AI Named This Show and the Talk Techie To Me podcast, Teja Custody, welcome back! Hello, everybody. Thanks for having me again. Thank you for being here. Is this the first time we've been on? Have you been on? Yeah, that's right, because you've been on with Sarah, but I wasn't around for those. So this is awesome. I thought it was me, but now I see you're not avoiding me. I thought you were like, which day is Tom off? Turns out you and Tom are going to get along well. I think so. I think we'll be just fine. There is no bad blood between us. Let's start with the quick hits. I don't have any Taylor Swift jokes to make about this next story, but two days after California suspended GM owned Cruze's license to test autonomous cars without safety drivers, Cruze announced it has paused all operations that don't include a safety driver at all. Cruze had been operating services without safety drivers in Austin, Houston, Miami, and also Phoenix. In a post on X, the company said it will take time to examine its processes, systems and tools, and reflect on how we can better operate in a way that will earn public trust. Cruze also said it will continue with supervised autonomous vehicle operations, which means that a human safety operator will be behind the wheel. Huawei's launch of the Mate 60 Pro, powered by an advanced chip and 5G connectivity, has propelled the company to the head of the pack when it comes to smartphone sales in China, seeing a 37% year on your increase and getting a 12.9% market share in the quarter, up from 9.1% in the same period last year. That's all according to the numbers from counterpoint research. Honor, which is now a separate company from Huawei, rose 3%. Everybody else fell, Vivo, Apple and Apple all declined in China. Revenue for Huawei rose 1% on the years, not a lot, but hey, it rose. That's 1% up. Amazon had great earnings in its Q3 with revenue up 13%, beating expectations. Its cloud business, AWS also did well, but fell just short of expectations in that realm. The difference was made up by ads. While Amazon has plans for ads in retail, as you might expect, both at Amazon.com and in its grocery stores, the big ad revenue generator this past quarter was football. And we're talking American football, Amazon has an exclusive Thursday night football for the first time this season and viewership rose 25% as a result because people want to watch football games. That helped ad revenue jump 26%. Amazon also has plans to bring ads to prime video as well. So expect Amazon to become a big ad business along with Alphabet and Meta. Shutterstock announced a set of tools that will let you modify real photos from its library of images using generative algorithms. They had held off on allowing this. Now they are. The image editor is still in beta, but you can generate alternate versions of stock or generated images as well as expand their backgrounds. Tools like Magic Brush will let you tweak images by brushing over an area and describing what you want to add or replace like put in grass there. A smart resizing feature will automatically change an image's shape to match your required dimensions and it's being rolled out along with an AI powered background removal tool. Now, if you're wondering how the artists get paid, Shutterstock will pay any artist if their images are licensed after editing. However, you generate or edit an image, you don't get to put that up for licensing. So if that's confusing, you get paid if someone uses AI to modify your art, but you can't use AI to make art and then get paid for it. Dutch students from the Eindhoven University of Technology in the Netherlands built an off-road solar car which has successfully gone 1,000 kilometers in rugged desert terrain in North Africa. This is positive news for the broader rollout of solar powered EVs and areas with limited charging infrastructure. The students started in Tangier, which is in Morocco, driving a two-seated car they call Stella Terra and made it to the Sahara three days later. The car uses solar panels on its sloping roof to charge electric batteries and when not in use, the solar panels can be extended to maximize charging while doubling as a shade cover. Kind of looks like a pop-up camper. Yeah, it does. Yeah. All right, let's talk about AI for once. Yeah, AI, who's heard of that? So the UN created a 39-member advisory board to act as a bridge between various UN efforts for the international governance of AI. The UN said that the body will be tasked with, quote, building a global scientific consensus on risks and challenges helping harness AI for the sustainable development goals and strengthening international cooperation on AI governance, end quote. UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres noted, for developing economies, AI offers the possibility of leapfrogging outdated technologies and bringing services directly to people. Now, the first meeting is Friday, October 27th. The goal is to bring another recommendation by next summer at which point the UN should hold a summit for the future. So who's on it, Tom? Yeah, it's an interesting makeup of the 39 people. It's not 39 countries. There are academics from Trinidad and Tobago, Russia, Saudi Arabia, the UK, Japan, Netherlands, Senegal, Finland. Those are professors South Africa, China. There's only a few government officials. They are from Brazil, United Arab Emirates, Spain, Israel, Germany, Egypt, South Korea, Singapore, Kenya, and Mexico. Couple NGO representatives in there, one from the US, one from Pakistan, Argentina, India, and Estonia. And then the company representatives are interesting as well. There's one from Mozilla, but it's a Mozilla employee from Ethiopia. The Microsoft representative is from New Zealand. Sony's is from Japan. Google's is from Zimbabwe. OpenAI's representative is from Albania and Huggingface, which makes a stable diffusion model that's open source, has a representative from India. So a very global group from various stakeholders, government NGOs, companies themselves, trying to work as a bridge to bring all these regulation efforts together. But even so, Teja, are these the right people to decide the future of AI? Is anyone the right person to decide the future of AI? I mean, better than you and me. I certainly agreed. Right, baseline. Hey, don't tell yourself short. No, she was just saying me and her, Sarah, you're still in there. Sarah, you could make this list. We should actually put you on this list. No, I'm not in Tobago, folks. You know, we've been talking on the lecture. I just have a podcast about AI. I don't know enough to be on a governing body to regulate it. So I think it's like you're saying a very interesting mix. I noticed there's some people even in like the health space that have been included on this list, which I find interesting. And maybe they can attest to some things that we wouldn't even think about when it comes to disinformation and misinformation with AI. So I think it's an interesting mix. It's hard to say who's really, who really are the right people to regulate this because it's like anything we talk about in tech, it moves so fast, faster than we even have any regulations in place. So I feel like we're already behind. So it's kind of like, however many people, smarter people than us, we can get in the same room talking about this and putting some regulation in place, the better, I think. I have to see what regulations they put in place. Oh, yeah. And that's the key, right? Because a lot of people look at this and say, it's the UN. Nobody's going to do what they say, no matter what they say, because the UN can't force you to pass a law despite what some people tend to want to try to imply. So the biggest criticism could be that this is toothless. But like you said, I think they have a very credible group here from multiple disciplines. When you brought up healthcare, I immediately thought of like, oh right, emphasizing that there are certainly AI tools that can help doctors and there should be rules about how they're used and when they're disclosed to patients. But I liked that Secretary Guterres was saying these things can help a lot of countries jump into the present, like jump their development ahead. And I think that's an important thing not to lose here is yes, there are fears we should guard against. There are bad consequences we should guard against, but we shouldn't let that hold back the good that they can do. And in the sense of maybe they don't set regulation, but maybe they help affect the conversation. I think this is probably good. Yeah, it's needed, especially when you think of it in terms of, so I know we think about things here in North America, and even on a broader scale, it's, we have to weigh those risks with the good that comes from it. So just because something is risky doesn't necessarily mean we shouldn't be doing it. And also, yeah, and also, you know, everyone on this council and how we're thinking of AI, at least in North America is much different than say, how China is thinking of AI. And just because we're scared of something doesn't mean we can't do it. We cannot be last to the race. We have to be able to get regulations in place and allow other countries to also do this safely, securely, maybe privately if it comes to health data and the like. But we have to be thinking about how certain other maybe nefarious places in the world, if you want to say, are going to be using these type of AI tools. And we need to be prepared to be, to combat that, quite frankly. So hopefully they're talking about that too. I think the one, oh, go ahead, sir. Oh, well, I was going to say, you know, a lot of, you know, Mozilla in Ethiopia, Microsoft in New Zealand, Sony in Japan. Well, Sony in Japan, maybe kind of makes sense. Google and Zimbabwe. There, you know, there were a lot of things out of the story where I was like, huh, yeah, I mean, I sitting here in California don't necessarily think about how Ethiopians are using Mozilla, but, but they do. And, and, you know, all of this that makes the AI conversation more global, I think it's going to be messy, but it helps us in the long run. And the more conversations, the better, right? I know that the US is going to have a gathering at the White House to discuss this another one. It's not the first one. Prime Minister Sunak is trying to be the guy who's going to get China and the US in the same room to agree on things on AI. The chances are small, but you're saying there's a chance that he might be able to do it. So we'll see if that happens next week. But it is, I think, encouraging that we are talking about the consequences ahead of time. As long as we talk about them realistically and responsibly, I think it's good to do this now instead of after the fact, like we have done with so many other technological advances. All right. Let's talk about some improvements coming to Google Maps. Google announced a bunch of them. Photo first search results, where a photo from the business listing is surfaced in the icon on the map, as well as at the top of the listing. Google says it's using algorithms to choose which photos to surface. There's improved EV charging station listings, navigation getting better at lane guidance. An immersive view uses algorithms to expand the feature that let you virtually travel through the map to make it more like the real world. It lets you preview every step of a journey, including things like weather changes. If it knows it's going to rain, it'll show if you're previewing your route at what point the rain is expected to start. 50 more cities are getting lens in Maps. That lets you point your camera at what's around you, and then it'll tell you store names or street names and reviews and things like that. You can now search for less specific phrases in Google Maps. You can just type in things to do, and it will list activities and break them down by topic. It'll show you art exhibitions or cherry blossoms. Things to do is pretty general, but it'll break it down into categories of things to do for you. Whereas before, it'd be like, I don't know what to do with that. That's too general. These are all great, and the obvious question might be, does this keep Google ahead of Google Maps and such? But I'm wondering... Of Apple Maps. Is Google Maps... Oh, sorry, yeah. Google should stay ahead of itself, but Google ahead of Apple Maps. I'm wondering, is Google Maps replacing Yelp? Because I'm using Google Maps less for navigation. I use Waze for most of my navigation. I use Google Maps all the time to find out, oh, is there a Korean restaurant near me? Or where are the pet stores in this neighborhood? Stuff like that. Yeah. I'm all in on Google Maps. Apple Maps, what is that? I'm not familiar with her. But I have found in the last few months, I'm using it more like a Yelp in terms of... Kind of like an open table too, to be honest. I'm booking my restaurant reservations. I've done that a handful of times now. And at first, when that became a thing in Google Maps, I thought, well, who the heck would need to book reservations? But it just intuitively makes so much sense. If you're looking for what they've had at the bottom of their maps for God probably a couple years now, latest in your area type stuff, which would be very familiar to location based Yelp settings, that makes sense. You're finding a Korean restaurant near you. You know what? I'll just book it right here too. I don't have to open another app. I don't have to do anything. It's just happening. So I'm all in. I've always been a Google Maps girlie though, so I guess that's just me. But it's like anything that can save us a tap, we are inherently lazy people. I'm speaking for myself. Yeah. It's like anything that saves me a tap. Google Maps used to be like this was the map. I mean, there were others, but come on, you know, they sucked. Apple Maps kind of sucked at first. It's definitely gotten better. It is a very different experience, like to the point where when I'm in my car and you know, we're doing you know, Apple Maps inside the car, I don't even try to force it to go to Google Maps, which I used to do not even five years ago. But looking up on Google Maps right now, if I search for sushi, like you said, Tasia, it's like, you can reserve a table, you can order online. There are all sorts of options that all used to be kind of the Yelp thing or something that you had to do with the restaurant's domain specifically, which you can still do. But Google Maps is much more than just let's figure out how to get from point A to point B in this amount of time. There's a lot more to it and I am here for it. Yeah, I've started to actually believe it's ratings somewhat, which I used to just ignore them because it'd be like two ratings. And I didn't think about it till Tasia, you said this, but I actually book my haircuts through Google Maps because I found the barber on Google Maps and it was the same thing where I'm like, oh, I guess I can book my appointment. And so that's now I've gotten in the habit of doing that. So yeah, when they added the photo first thing here, I was like, oh yeah, no, this is what I'm using Google Maps for. It's my directory. It's the thing that replaced the yellow pages basically. Exactly. And anything, I find any app that can remove a friction point. So whatever app that might be, but Google Maps, I find dials in that, that usability for people, the ease of use. It's very intuitive. It removes a friction point for everyone. So to me, not that I would need this as a selling point, but I'm always here for a Google Maps update, you know, but it just gets better and better. It's easy for this stuff to get bloated. You know, you don't want to bloat your apps and do nonsense stuff that you don't need. And YouTube, I'm looking at you. So Google doesn't necessarily get it right all the time, but I just think they keep nailing it with this. It's great. I use it too. Like when it's telling you just, you know, you can pull up your map and just based on your location, it's going to tell you like if there's something going on in your area, not even weather related, like not traffic necessarily, but it's something that you might need to know about like an emergency or something going on. And it's like, I just like having all this in one spot. It's so nice. Yeah. Yeah. And I didn't even thought about the fact that I've started using Apple Maps for navigation sometimes, like you said, Sarah, where it just kind of comes up and the lane guidance is so good. It'll be like, go through this stoplight and then turn left from the two left lanes at the next stop. It's glad Google Maps is getting a little bit of that in there too. Mm hmm. Well, folks, we have a whole YouTube channel speaking of YouTube, youtube.com slash daily tech news show. And one of the shows I do on there is top five, breaking down five things to know usually somewhere around the world of technology. And this week it is in the heart of technology top five things you should know about risk five. Risk five is an open standard instruction set for chips. But what you actually need to know are the five things in this video is that companies are starting to use it as an alternative to arm. So you can catch that at youtube.com slash daily tech news show. Well, keeping in the conversation about Google, the company has emphasized the AI features of its new pixel eight pro flagship phone. But how well do those features work? Who is testing them out? Well, thankfully we have Teja on today who has been doing exactly this with the pixel eight pro. So Teja, what have you learned? The first thing I learned is that I matched it to my shirt. I just realized. Oh, it's blue. That is a blue. Okay, so check that one off the box. Good work. Taylor's what's your blue? Yeah, my pixel eight pro is in her 1989 TV era. But you guys, so let's just quickly go over like the photo and the video editing capability and stuff you guys know about magic eraser. That's nothing new, but they did release, they always release these really great updates to it. And the one that they updated now is it's better at rendering out rendering out the background for you so you can remove larger objects things with like more noise and it's going to remove like shadows on the object for you too. It's doing a much better job. So that's kind of like a minor thing that's important to know. Major update is something called magic editor, where now you can isolate a subject or an object in a photo, you can resize and reposition. And not only will it regenerate the background for you, but one of the examples they like to use is like there was a camping photo and there's a tent that's cut off. They move the tent into frame and it regenerates part of the tent as well. So obviously magic editor right now is very initial stages. I've tried it with some images of me. I was not cut off though, but I've tried it with images of me. I slid it myself, scaled up, moved myself. You would not know that's how good it did on the background. So they really want feedback. So if anybody's, you know, playing around with the eight pros and the eights, they want feedback on that for sure. Then they announced something called magic eraser, but for audio, which is a little bit nutty. But basically what they're doing now is cleaning up your videos. And so if you take a video and there's lots of noise in the background, maybe there's a kid screaming, maybe there's birds chirping. There's a chainsaw, something's going on. It will isolate all of this as separate tracks. So it will isolate your track, it will then isolate what it's deeming here. So like I did a few examples, one of my examples, it isolated nature, well, because there were birds that were like so loud in the video, then it had noise. So like it depends what you're doing, but it'll isolate that and then you can crank it down or up however much you want on a slider. I mean, as an audio editor at times, this is my love language. I mean, the fact that I could be like, keep the birds, lose the chainsaw, I'm in. That's pretty, that's pretty dope. You could do that as an editor yourself, but to have that, you know, off the bat is so key. Like to isolate those into their own layers for you. I mean, that's just working some magic in the background. So that was really cool. Now, something else they announced that's new to Google, so I will say it's new to Google, is Best Take. So this is for all the group photo lovers where you could never get everybody looking good in a picture. It's just not possible or like you'll have a friend who posts that one group shot and you're like, could you have not posted that? I looked terrible in that shot. Like you looked really good. I wasn't even looking at the camera. So now what you will do is just take multiple photos. Like manually, it doesn't do this in the background, but you take multiple photos of your group shot. Then when you go in to edit the image, it will automatically pull like facial expressions for you of sometimes every person in the photo or just sometimes what it can pull, what it can discern from the like images, but it'll put them as little icons underneath your picture and you just tap on the icon. So like you'd be tapping on your little face underneath the picture and you go, oh, here's like whatever, six or seven other options. I like this face on me better. And it face swaps your own face, but it looks incredible. Like it doesn't look janky. Like you're like, well, that was a bad Photoshop job. It just looks like you're like, oh no, I was smiling and looking at the camera. It's awesome. Here's why I say this is new to Google. It is new to Google, but it's not technically a new feature because I'm pretty sure it was like Nokia that had this about 10 years ago, but it just didn't go anywhere. And I feel like the software just really wasn't as good. Obviously it wasn't as smooth. I remember that. Yeah. This is very, very, very dialed in. Guys, I've done it on a bunch. I even made the camera work extra hard and did it in like night sight. Incredible. Like I can't even tell you. It's probably one of my favorite things now because it's a lot of people were thinking this was going to be creepy though ahead of time, you know, and it seems like one of those people's well where I was like, oh, I don't know. Now we're just screwing around with this stuff too much. But I had to remind myself, all these tools exist. They just were sort of prosumer tools. Exactly. And so now it's like, I look at it as not as creepy as much as it just wants to give you your best take, you guys. So you did look okay in one of the photos, just not that photo. You really looked like that. Exactly. It's not morphing and editing. It does a really nice job of just, even if there's like a slight angle, like that's where Sarah, I feel like when you watch it happen, it gets a bit creepy when it's like your head's like this and then all of a sudden it's like, oh, I'm, it's cocked to the right. And you're like, well, but it looks very natural. Like nobody would know that that edit actually happened. So there's also stuff coming soon. They're going to be doing feature jobs in, I think, December. All of this stuff, by the way, happens like in your editing settings on device, there is something coming in December that's going to be off device. It's going to send to the cloud and it's a video boost. So they're bringing not just video boosts for regular videos, but they're also going to be bringing Night Sight to video. Google's Night Sight, I think it's been really, really good for the past few years. So this is supposed to be dropping in December. This and something like a video boost where it's going to give you like that more kind of color, true to color imagery and video. What I'm understanding is that's going to take your video, send it to the cloud to process, and then drop it back down into your Google, into a different folder, I think, in Google Photos. So we'll have to wait and see exactly how those work in December. Then there's also zoom enhance coming soon. So like, do you guys remember like all the CSI, we're like looking at security and they're like, zoom enhance. And it's like, okay, like, Oh, look at his pinky finger. Wow. We know exactly. Exactly. So now they're bringing literal zoom enhance to the Pixel 8 Pro. We don't know exactly this is going to also drop in December or be a different feature drop. But they just showed a really small example of taking a photo of the Golden Gate Bridge and then zooming in and it then kind of regenerates each pixel into what it thinks it, it's supposed to be. So it's, it is using a lot of AI in the background to recreate the original pixels, but in better focus, if that makes sense. So those are all the kind of photo and video editing goodness gracious in a nutshell. Very good. Very good. And of course you've got more on your YouTube channel. If people want to find out more of what you thought, go check out Tejas YouTube channel as well. Yeah, there's a lot there and including some other generative AI stuff too. So it's a lot to pack in. Well, keeping with the Google theme on the show, if you happen to find a restaurant called Thai food near me, what would you think? You might see it on the street and say, well, it's physically near me, but there's a little bit more to it. Telly Jirapaphanon at one of the four owners of an actual restaurant in New York called Thai food near me says Google search is exactly why they named it that he says everywhere I go, I'm craving Thai food. I have to search Thai food near me all the time. The restaurant is optimized for the kind of searches that diners use to find places nearby, not necessarily for the person walking past it on the street or getting a recommendation from a friend. You might find it that way, but Thai food near me is pretty specific. He says, when you have a million restaurants close by, you will be in the bottom of rankings if it's a random name. But when we use Thai food near me, people started knowing us. Now in the Verge article about this, they talked to Danny Sullivan at Google who said he doubts that this is what helped them. He's like, Google uses a lot more than just the name to surface stuff. And when the author of this story, Miyasato did searches, they said, yeah, this didn't always pop up at the top even though I was nearby to it. So I suspect that one of the things that helped it maybe as much or more so than SEO is everyone thinking this is a funny and clever name and telling their friends about it and sharing pictures on Instagram. I saw Ron Richards post about this like a few days ago. And it's not the only one. There's others around the country that Miyam mentions in the Verge article as well that are doing this. We were talking in our pre-show meeting like, who does this? I do this constantly. I was looking for sushi when we were talking about Google Maps. Yeah, just a few minutes ago. It's like sushi near me. I'm always like, maybe that's not the one I'm going to choose. But I want to know like what's close. So Thai food near me just starts to become part of the vernacular, I think. And that's where these restaurants might, I don't know, get some customers. Yeah, even if it's not from search, the fact that someone's going to look at that and just go like, okay, have you seen this? Because everybody knows that like doing in Google search, the such and such near me, everybody knows what that means. Yeah, it's like if the restaurant was called like Thai food down the hall, you'd be like, I don't know. But I don't get it. Less appetizing. There's probably a story behind it. But like Thai food near me, you're like, well, that makes sense. Yeah. And I'm here. Let's do this. All right. Well, we have given Len Peralta lots of things to possibly draw today. Len, what have you chosen to illustrate for us? Well, keeping with the Google theme and AI as well. I've been doing the show for a decade now. I've been on the show for a decade. And every once in a while, I'll do these ads, fake ads. And I think this one is probably my favorite headline I've ever written for the Pixel Pro, your new iPhone. I think it's pretty cool. Exactly. So the name of this one is called Call Google. Because, hey, man, I think that's a pretty good headline, man. Anyway, this image actually was created. I was playing around with Photoshop Generator of AI. It was created with Generator of AI. So I was just playing around with it. I want to do something a little bit different. If you are interested in getting this, well, if you're a Patreon of mine, you get it immediately, patreon.com forward slash Len. You back it at the DTNS lover level. Or you can just get it at my online store, LenPeraltaStore.com. And also you can order maybe a holiday card for me this year, because I'm doing them. So Len, 10 years ago, in your wildest dreams, would you have thought you would be using AI to create art for the show? No. And no, and I don't think I'm going to be doing it all the time, but I was playing around with it today because I thought it was it was interesting to see how it worked. So. Well, Len, good stuff as always. Teja Custodi, thank you so much for being with us today. You are not an AI replica as of yet. As we know. Not that I know of. Yeah, the year is young. But let folks know where they can keep up with your work. I'm at Teja Custodi on all the things. So head on over to YouTube, find my YouTube channel there, at Teja Custodi. And also check out one of my many podcasts, which I do with friend of the show, Tristan Jutra, called AI Named This Show. It's happening every Friday. And as you can imagine, there's a lot to talk about. Yeah, there's no shortage of stuff. Patrons, stick around for the extended show, Good Day Internet. If you are somebody who supports us at patreon.com slash DTNSE, get more show. And on Fridays, we like to lean back and have a little fun. It's time again for the great GDI debates. Join us as we tackle some of the most controversial topics of all time. But just a reminder, you can catch our show. DTNSE is live Monday through Friday 4 p.m. Eastern, 200 UTC. And you can find out more at dailytechnewshow.com slash live. We hope you all have a wonderful weekend. We're back on Monday with IAZ ActiR joining us. Talk to you then. This week's episodes of Daily Tech News Show were created by the following people, host producer and writer Tom Merritt, host producer and writer Sarah Lane, executive producer and booker Roger Chang, producer, writer and co-host Rob Dunwood, video producer and twitch producer Joe Koontz, technical producer Anthony Lemos, Spanish language host writer and producer Dan Campos, science correspondent Dr. Nicky Ackermans, social media producer and moderator Zoe Detterding, our mods Beatmaster, W. Scottus1, BioCow, Captain Kipper, Steve Guadarrama, Paul Reese, Matthew J. Stevens, aka Gadget Virtuoso and J.D. Galloway, modern video hosting by Dan Christensen, music and art provided by Martin Bell, Dan Looters, Mustafa A, A-Cast and Len Peralta. Live art performed by Len Peralta. A-Cast ad support from Tatiana Matias, Patreon support from Tom McNeil. Contributors for this week's shows included Justin Robert Young and Scott Johnson. Our guests this week were Annalie Newitz, Trisha Hershberger and Teja Custodi. And thanks to all the patrons who make the show possible. This show is part of the Frog Pants Network. Get more at Frogpants.com.