BroBots: AI, Technology & Being a Better Human
Jeremy Grater, Jason Haworth
Podcast
Episodes
Listen, download, subscribe
Why AI Propaganda Works—and How to Resist It
Iran has a 10-person animation team making Lego-style propaganda videos with hip hop beats that are going viral — and Jeremy, who considers himself reasonably good at detecting BS online, almost shared one before he caught himself. In this episode, Jeremy and Jason dissect how AI-powered slopaganda works: why it's engineered to exploit emotional familiarity, why YouTube is selectively banning it while leaving comparably political domestic content untouched, and what it means when even skeptical, media-literate adults are one tap away from becoming unwilling distribution nodes. If you've ever watched something that felt like news but moved like entertainment and had a nagging feeling you were being played — this conversation names what happened. Key Moments00:00 — Jeremy discovers Iranian Lego propaganda videos and almost shares them before catching himself01:30 — Jason confirms he's seen them: why YouTube's ban is inconsistent and what it actually signals02:42 — The 'slopaganda wars': how the format compresses political narrative into an irresistible two-minute package05:12 — The Daily Show comparison: why source legitimacy changes how propaganda lands, not just the content07:16 — How Lego nostalgia and great music are doing the persuasion work before the message even registers08:12 — YouTube's stated reason vs. the actual reason: 'spam and scams' as a cover for political compliance13:33 — Jason on Netanyahu, Epstein files, and why the videos' specific claims are getting suppressed15:25 — YouTube as a business making political bets, not a neutral content moderator16:21 — Jeremy on Canada's social media bans for minors — and why this episode made him understand the urgency19:01 — The media literacy takeaway: what to ask yourself before you hit share
BroBots: AI, Technology & Being a Better Human RSS Feed
