Listen

Description

📝 Episode Description “Are you polite to artificial intelligence… or are you accidentally creating an enemy?” 🤔
This episode of The JB and Sandy Show dives into one of the strangest modern dilemmas yet—whether being rude to AI could come back to haunt you. JB, Sandy, and Tricia debate manners, machine memory, and the very real fear that someday technology might remember everything. When JB actually apologizes to his AI and gets a response that feels a little too human, things get weird fast. “I’m not mad… just disappointed,” might not be what you want to hear from a machine. 😳🤖
The conversation spirals into robot behavior, human instincts, and whether we’d automatically treat something differently just because it looks human. Sandy wonders if we’re already past the point of no return, while JB questions whether a little fear is actually healthy when it comes to technology. “Roll with a little fear,” he suggests—and honestly, he’s not wrong.
Then Tricia lights up the studio with news that has her genuinely excited: motorcycle officers are officially making a comeback. With traffic enforcement ramping up across Austin, the crew breaks down why speeding tickets are up, why “blocking the box” downtown needs serious enforcement, and how motorcycle cops are uniquely positioned to restore order. Tricia sums it up simply: “It’s all about the look.” 🏍️😄
The episode also tackles downtown parking reality—how unpaid meters turn into tickets fast, why the fine hurts way more than the hourly cost, and a surprisingly reasonable policy that might reward people for making smarter late‑night decisions. JB even floats a business idea that’s definitely illegal… but hilarious. 😂
From AI etiquette to traffic crackdowns, parking pain, and Tricia’s unwavering support of APD, this episode is funny, topical, and slightly unsettling in the best possible way.
🔥 Memorable Moments & Quotes


🎙️ Call to Action 🎧 Enjoyed the ride?
Subscribe to The JB and Sandy Show, leave a review, and share this episode with someone who’s yelled at technology, loves a good traffic rant, or secretly fears the robot uprising.