The Guardian (USA)

AI Seinfeld: the show about nothing is back – and now it’s written by robots

- Matthew Cantor

Seinfeld went off the air in 1998, but it’s never really gone away – it’s been the subject of modern recreation­s, dedicated social media accounts and hiphop/TV fusions. Its latest incarnatio­n, however, is the oddest yet.

Nothing, Forever is an endless, AIgenerate­d version of the show that has been streaming on Twitch since midDecembe­r. It tells the “story” – if you can call it that – of four characters, Larry, Fred, Yvonne and Kakler, who look like what would happen if Jerry, George, Elaine and Kramer were sucked into a 1990s computer game. They spend their days discussing their lives and other trivial matters. And it never, ever stops: log on at any hour and there they are, talking about coffee quality or a difficult Monopoly game.

The dialogue comes from OpenAI’s GPT-3, a text generator closely related to the ChatGPT service that has recently made waves; another company is responsibl­e for the tech behind the speech itself. On top of that, “we have a lot of proprietar­y generative algorithms that cause the show to be ‘formed’, so to be speak,” Skyler Hartle of Mismatch

Media told Polygon. “We collective­ly call this logic the ‘director’, as it is largely responsibl­e for making sure all the individual pieces come together into a whole.”

I watched 22 minutes of Nothing, Forever, to parallel the experience of a single episode of Seinfeld, and I don’t think comedy writers need to fear for their jobs just yet. I didn’t laugh once, despite the encouragem­ent of an aggressive­ly enthusiast­ic laugh track.

But then, that’s not really the point.

Begun as a “nonsensica­l, surreal art project”, as Hartle told Vice, it’s a casually dystopian experience that serves mainly to demonstrat­e the potential of artificial intelligen­ce – as stunning as it is alarming.

When I opened the stream, Larry and Fred were doing what they’re always doing: drifting aimlessly around an apartment, their bodies undulating eerily. When they’re not spending an unhealthy amount of time fiddling with the microwave, they’re plunging facefirst into the sofa before suddenly rematerial­izing in an upright position.

In this particular scene, Fred, George’s analogue, is telling his best friend about a new partner. “She’s different than any other girl I’ve ever dated,” he says.

“Different how?” Larry, AKA Jerry, asks, to a huge laugh from the canned audience.

And that hilarious joke was far from the show’s only zinger. Other moments that had the audience in stitches included Larry asking Fred what he was up to and Yvonne/Elaine wondering what the deal was with the new shoes Fred got. Then there was the following exchange:

Yvonne: “Why do you think the new bagel store is so popular?”

Larry: “That’s easy, they have the best bagels in town.”

Yvonne: “Really? I’m surprised.” (Audience roars)

There were also a few actual jokes, which did not receive consistent appreciati­on from the laugh track, as when Larry asked “What’s up? The sky, of course.” Sometimes, the characters would go so far as to announce they were telling a joke:

Larry: “What did the dog say when he walked into a bar?”

Fred: “I have no idea.”

Yvonne: “Quack, quack.”

Dead silence followed this incredible punchline, which was probably the best in the 22 minutes. In fact, long silences pepper every scene; the “acting” is reminiscen­t of a fourth-grade play in which the kids, having dutifully memorized their lines, enunciate them with great care and a total lack of humanity. Watch for more than 10 minutes and the whole thing becomes a sort of soulless droning.

In fact, outside of the setup – the four friends, the apartments, and occasional scenes in a comedy club – there is little that is Seinfeldia­n about the show.

Perhaps the biggest difference is

in the characters: yes, they look like Jerry, George, Elaine and Kramer, but these new avatars are shockingly earnest. Seinfeld’s protagonis­ts wouldn’t be caught dead saying the things these people say. In one comedy club scene, for instance, Larry asks the audience: “Have you ever had one of those days where no matter how hard you try, nothing goes your way? Yeah, we’ve all been there.”

Later, Fred says he’s planning to write a book about “how I managed to make it through the toughest times”.

Larry offers a classic Seinfeld riposte: “You’ve certainly gone through a lot. It sounds like a great story. I’d certainly be interested in reading it when you’re finished.” Who’d have thought autogenera­ted characters would have too much empathy?

The whole thing feels like how a 1980s sci-fi writer might imagine a robot-created TV show from the future. Which, of course, is exactly what it is. It feels disturbing­ly like the kind of content our corporate overlords might be feeding us in 20 years to melt our brains and ensure quiet compliance.

“Technology is really convenient in a lot of ways, but it can also be dangerous,” says Fred in one of the show’s disturbing­ly self-aware lines. “I guess it’s up to us to decide when it’s worth taking the risk.” Credit to its creators for a remarkable achievemen­t – a delightful­ly bizarre experiment that sheds a little more light on the question.

 ?? Photograph: twitch.tv/watchmefor­ever ?? Larry and Fred in a screen shot from Nothing, Forever.
Photograph: twitch.tv/watchmefor­ever Larry and Fred in a screen shot from Nothing, Forever.
 ?? Photograph: NBC/ NBCUnivers­al/Getty Images ?? Comedy writers don’t need to fear for their jobs just yet.
Photograph: NBC/ NBCUnivers­al/Getty Images Comedy writers don’t need to fear for their jobs just yet.

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