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Goldman Sachs CEO Booed After Telling Graduates AI Song Took 10 Seconds

Tim Dillon Show · 497 - Thomas Massie, Kevin O'Leary, & The American Psyop · May 24, 2026
Goldman Sachs CEO Booed After Telling Graduates AI Song Took 10 Seconds
Tim Dillon Show
Tim Dillon Show
497 - Thomas Massie, Kevin O'Leary, & The American Psyop
"As I was preparing for this, I gave it a prompt, and here's what I said: Hey Suno, I'm at Wharton's graduation, and I'd like you to make an anthem for the MBA class of 2026. That took 10 seconds to create."
Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon faced audience disapproval at a Wharton commencement when he demonstrated an AI music app creating a graduation anthem in seconds. The incident is part of a pattern of tech executives and music industry figures being booed at graduation ceremonies when promoting AI, as graduating students with massive student debt perceive the technology as threatening their job prospects and economic security.

About this episode

Tim Dillon delivered his final UK episode with a scathing critique of American politics, artificial intelligence adoption, and the erosion of middle-class life. The episode centered on Rep. Thomas Massie's congressional defeat in Kentucky, which Dillon attributed to billionaire Miriam Adelson and other pro-Israel donors spending an unprecedented $32 million to elect Navy SEAL veteran Ed Gallerian. Dillon argued Massie lost despite running on popular positions—releasing Epstein files, prosecuting pedophiles, avoiding foreign wars—while Gallerian won advocating the opposite, demonstrating how unlimited money in politics can manufacture any reality. A Trump campaign ad calling Gallerian 'central casting' became Dillon's evidence that the candidate was selected purely for appearance rather than substance, with Trump literally admitting they were 'putting him in to fool you.' The second half examined tech executives promoting AI at college graduations and being booed by debt-laden students who recognize the technology threatens their futures. Dillon highlighted Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon demonstrating an AI song created in 10 seconds and Kevin O'Leary calling workers 'stupid' for spending $28 on lunch. He warned that AI represents not innovation but a plan to control citizens through digital currency, predictive policing, and elimination of privacy and autonomy. Dillon accused tech leaders and politicians of treating Americans as passengers in coach being fed propaganda while real decisions happen behind a 'steel door.' The episode concluded with Dillon arguing that efficiency-maximizing technology drains meaning from human life, that jobs provide essential purpose and structure, and that citizens deserve transparent conversation about AI regulation rather than being dismissed as Luddites for expressing legitimate concerns about bodily autonomy, privacy, and economic security.

Key takeaways

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