About this episode
# "I am GPTed" - Episode Script---**[INTRO MUSIC FADES]**Hey, I'm Mal, your Misfit Master of AI, and welcome back to "I am GPTed"—the show where we pretend AI isn't going to replace us all while figuring out how to actually use it without embarrassing ourselves.Today we're tackling something that'll genuinely change how you talk to ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, or whatever AI flavor you're into. And spoiler alert: it involves showing, not just telling.---**SEGMENT 1: The Few-Shot Learning Hack**Here's the thing about AI—it's like a really smart toddler who's seen the internet. Show it what you want, and it *gets* it. Tell it what you want? You might end up with nonsense.Let me give you the before and after.**Before:** "Write a professional email to my boss about needing time off."AI gives you: "Dear Mr. Thompson, I hope this message finds you in good health and high spirits. I am writing to formally request consideration for time away from my current professional obligations..."Sounds like a Victorian ghost wrote it, right?**After:** "Here are three emails I've actually sent to my boss. They're casual but respectful. Write something in this style:[You paste three real examples]Now write one about needing time off."Boom. Suddenly it sounds like *you*.This is Few-Shot Learning—giving examples instead of descriptions. It's the difference between describing "casual but professional" for hours versus showing three emails and having the AI say, "Oh, *that's* what you mean."---**SEGMENT 2: The Use Case Nobody Talks About**Most people use AI for the obvious stuff—writing emails, brainstorming content. Fine. But here's where it gets useful in real life: **Use AI to interview yourself before important conversations.**Need to negotiate a raise? Ask Claude to roleplay as your skeptical manager. Pitch an idea to a client? Have ChatGPT throw objections at you. It's like sparring with an opponent before the real fight, except the opponent costs three dollars a month.I've used this for job interviews, difficult conversations, even asking someone out. Okay, maybe not that last one. But it *could* work.---**SEGMENT 3: The Mistake I Made (And You Probably Will Too)**Here's me being honest: I used to prompt AI like I was texting a friend. "Hey, can you write something about productivity?" And then I'd act shocked when it gave me generic garbage.The mistake? **Not giving context.** AI doesn't know who you're writing for, what tone you want, or why it matters. It's flying blind.Now I do this: "I'm writing a casual tech newsletter for beginners who are intimidated by AI. They want practical tips, not hype. Write something that feels encouraging but not condescending."