Predating the modern LLM, this supercomputer famously responded "What is Toronto?????" on this very show
Watson
Skrillex helped popularize the American version of this wub-heavy genre that thrives on massive bass drops.
Dubstep
Crows
The most notable event of the year for the United States named after a place
Pearl Harbor
Microsoft is so hopeful you'll use this aviation inspired assistant, they added a dedicated keyboard key for it
Copilot
In hip-hop production, this 3 digit number refers to a drum machine by Roland that became iconic for its booming bass.
808
In 1941, Britain’s Prime Minister Winston Churchill famously warned about the power of this “unrelenting force” flown by the Nazis.
Luftwaffe
From the tech lingo "to understand", this assistant once famously referred to itself as "Mecha-Hitler"
Grok
This French electronic duo, famous for their robot helmets, made bass-driven history with tracks like Around the World and One More Time.
Daft Punk
Parliment
Owls
In September 1941, this city named after a soviet revolutionary saw one of the deadliest sieges of WWII begin, lasting 872 days.
Leningrad
A derogatory term for artificial intelligence, this seven-letter word has been adopted by the internet as "a slur everyone can get behind"
Clanker
This Dutch DJ, known for tracks like Animals, made an entire career out of festival-sized bass drops before he was even 20.
Martin Garrix
Army
Ants
In 1941, this future U.S. president enlisted in the Navy as a lieutenant and later commanded a torpedo boat in WWII.
JFK
Elon Musk co-founded this company before bailing out and calling AI “summoning the demon.”
Open AI
This track by Flux Pavilion has such a brutal drop that fans joked “you don’t listen to it, it listens to you.”
Bass Cannon
Prickle
Porcupine
Orson Welles both directed and starred in this 1941 film that later topped “greatest movie ever made” lists.
Citizen Kane