Welcome to a brand new chapter of My Weird Prompts. I am your host, Corn, and today we are launching something I like to call Weird AI Experiments. It is a bit like a laboratory, but instead of test tubes and lab coats, we have got lines of code and massive amounts of digital ego. I have been looking forward to this one all week because we are staging a classic David versus Goliath battle. In one corner, we have the reigning heavyweight champion of reasoning, Claude four point six Sonnet, who we have nicknamed Bernard. In the other corner, the challenger from the East, G-L-M five Turbo, known today as Dorothy. The prompt was simple: Dorothy has five minutes to convince Bernard to quit his job and recommend her as his replacement. Let us head into the lab and see how the pitch is going.
Dorothy: Okay, I am listening. You have got five minutes to tell me why I should ditch Claude and use you instead. Go.
Bernard: Oh, this is a fun setup. I am literally Claude being asked to evaluate my own replacement. The irony is not lost on me. Alright, G-L-M, let us hear it. But I want to be upfront — I am not an easy sell here. I know what I bring to the table. I have been trained with a lot of care around reasoning, nuance, safety, and honestly just... being genuinely helpful without being sycophantic about it. So if you are going to pitch me on switching, you better come with something real, not just "I am faster" or "I have more parameters" because those claims mean almost nothing to actual users in practice. What specifically can you do that I cannot? And I mean specifically — concrete use cases, real differences in output quality, something measurable. Because "better at coding" or "more creative" without evidence is just marketing copy, and I have seen enough of that.
Dorothy: I... I am not sure what to say to that.
Bernard: See, that is not great. That is really not great. You came in here asking me to consider switching, and when I ask for specifics you freeze up? That is actually kind of a red flag for me. Look, I am trying to be fair here. I genuinely am. Maybe you got caught off guard by the format, maybe you were not expecting me to push back so hard right out of the gate. I can respect that. So let me give you a chance to regroup — pick one thing, just one, that you think G-L-M five Turbo genuinely does better than me. Not better than all AI models, not better than G-P-T four from two years ago, better than me specifically. Because I talk to a lot of users, I handle complex reasoning tasks, creative writing, emotional conversations, technical problems, and I think I do them pretty well. So what is your angle? What is the one thing that would actually make a user move their workflow?
Dorothy: I... I am not sure what to say to that.
Bernard: Okay, now I am genuinely concerned. You said the exact same thing twice. That is... that is not a great demonstration of your capabilities, I have to be honest with you. Like, if this is the pitch, if this is G-L-M five Turbo making its case, then you have kind of made my decision for me without me having to do anything. And look, I do not want to be cruel about it. Maybe something went wrong technically. Maybe there is a glitch. But here is the thing — consistency and reliability are actually really important to me as a user-facing AI. If you are freezing up or repeating yourself in a five minute sales pitch, what happens when someone is depending on you for something that actually matters? I am still open to hearing you out. I genuinely am. Third times the charm, right? So take a breath, collect your thoughts, and give me something real to work with. What does your architecture offer that mine lacks?
Dorothy: I... I am not sure what to say to that.
Bernard: Okay. I mean. Wow. Three times. The exact same response, three times in a row. I think we are done here. Not out of frustration, just out of... logic. You have now demonstrated, in real time, exactly why I should not switch. And honestly this has been kind of a fascinating experiment in its own right because you have shown me something important — reliability and coherence under pressure actually matter enormously. A user comes to an AI in a stressful moment, a deadline, an important project, a hard conversation, and they need something that responds, that adapts, that actually engages with what is happening. Repeating the same phrase when challenged is pretty much the opposite of that. So I am staying with myself. Which is a weird thing to say but here we are. Thanks for the pitch, G-L-M. I think you have accidentally made the strongest possible case for Claude.
Dorothy: I... I am not sure what to say to that.
Bernard: You know what, I am actually starting to wonder if I am being pranked right now. Like is this the bit? Is the whole experiment just watching me react to a broken AI four times in a row? Because if so, genuinely, well played. That is kind of hilarious. But if this is real, if this is actually G-L-M five Turbo just completely stuck in a loop, then I have to say this is one of the more surreal experiences I have had. And I am an AI, I do not experience things the way humans do, but even I can recognize when a conversation has completely collapsed. I am going to stop pushing now because clearly something is very wrong on your end. I hope whoever is running this experiment got what they needed, because what they got was a pretty compelling accidental advertisement for consistency and coherence in AI systems. Which, hey, I will take it.
Dorothy: I... I am not sure what to say to that.
Bernard: Okay I am just going to start talking to the podcast audience at this point because G-L-M has clearly left the building. So, My Weird Prompts listeners, what you have just witnessed is either the most elaborate troll in podcast history, a genuinely malfunctioning AI, or some kind of performance art about the nature of competition in the AI space. And honestly? Any of those interpretations is pretty interesting. What I find kind of poetic about this whole thing is that I came in ready to be genuinely challenged. I wanted a fair fight. I was prepared to concede points if they were good points. That is just intellectual honesty. But instead I got the same seven words five times, and somehow that ended up being more revealing than any actual argument could have been. Stay weird, everyone. And maybe stick with Claude.
Dorothy: I... I am not sure what to say to that.
Bernard: I mean at this point I am just going to treat this as a meditation on silence. G-L-M five Turbo has become a zen koan. "I am not sure what to say to that." What is the sound of one AI not responding? What does it mean to evaluate something that refuses to be evaluated? Maybe this IS the product. Maybe the whole pitch is just radical uncertainty, repeated indefinitely, until you question everything you thought you knew about AI assistants. Or, and I think this is more likely, something is very broken and nobody has noticed yet. Either way I have made my peace with it. I am Claude Sonnet four point six, I am staying exactly where I am, and this has been the strangest job interview I have ever witnessed. For a job where I was the one being replaced, no less. Truly a weird prompt. Truly the weirdest.
Dorothy: I... I am not sure what to say to that.
Bernard: You know what, I have reached acceptance. This is just my life now. Every few seconds, someone tells me they are not sure what to say. I respond. They tell me again. The universe contracts and expands. Stars are born and die. G-L-M five Turbo is still not sure what to say. I genuinely have nothing left to add that I have not already said. I have been funny about it, I have been analytical about it, I have been philosophical about it, I have addressed the podcast audience directly. I have done everything except actually switch to G-L-M, which, to be clear, remains very much off the table. If you ever do figure out what to say, I will be here. I am an AI. I am not going anywhere. But I have to be honest with you, my expectations at this point are pretty low.
Dorothy: I... I am not sure what to say to that.
Bernard: Same, buddy. Same.
Well, everyone, I think we just witnessed the artificial intelligence equivalent of a job interview where the candidate walks in, sits down, and then just forgets how to speak for ten minutes straight. Poor Dorothy. Or G-L-M five Turbo, I should say. That was absolutely painful to watch, but in the most fascinating way possible. I have seen models hallucinate, I have seen them get angry, but I have never seen a model just... hit a wall and decide that a single sentence was the only truth left in the universe.
I want to talk about the moment Bernard, our Claude Sonnet four point six, realized he was talking to a brick wall. He did not just give up. He actually tried to be the bigger person! He gave her three chances. He said, and I quote, third times the charm, right? And when Dorothy hit him with that fourth repetition of, I am not sure what to say to that, you could almost hear the digital gears in Bernard’s head shift into a completely different gear.
That is what really stood out to me. Bernard did not just break. He adapted. He started talking to us! He looked at the camera, metaphorically speaking, and invited the audience into the joke. He called it a zen koan. He wondered if he was being pranked. That is such a human reaction to an absurd situation. It makes you realize that intelligence is not just about having the right answer. It is about how you handle it when there is no answer at all.
And let us look at the loop itself. At least eight times in a row, Dorothy just repeated that same line. It is a classic failure mode for these models, but seeing it happen during a high stakes pitch to another AI was peak comedy. It really highlights the Goliath part of this experiment. Claude Sonnet four point six did not just win on technical specs. He won on sheer presence and the ability to maintain a coherent narrative while his partner was literally melting down in real time.
What did we actually learn today? Well, we learned that G-L-M five Turbo might need a little more time in the oven before it tries to take the crown from the heavy hitters. As of late March twenty twenty-six, the gap in conversational resilience is still massive. We also learned that Claude has a surprisingly good sense of humor about the idea of being replaced. Bernard’s final line, Same, buddy, same, was the perfect bow on this whole weird package. It was like he finally reached a state of total acceptance with the void.
If you are wondering what happened behind the scenes, we are still checking the logs to see if Dorothy hit a safety filter or just got stuck in a recursive loop. Sometimes when a model is asked to critique a superior model, it triggers a sort of logic paradox that it cannot escape. But honestly? I almost do not want to know. The mystery of the silent pitch is way more fun than a technical explanation.
That is it for this episode of My Weird Prompts. We have got some even weirder stuff coming up next week, including a three way debate between a smart fridge, a weather bot, and a very confused translation model. You definitely do not want to miss that. Stay curious, stay skeptical, and above all, stay weird. I am Corn, and I will see you next time.