While I'm sure that some people were cool on The Godfather when it came out, it was the highest-grossing film of 1972 and won Best Picture at the 1973 Oscars. That's not exactly a good example of a movie being vindicated in retrospect.
TechTakes
Big brain tech dude got yet another clueless take over at HackerNews etc? Here's the place to vent. Orange site, VC foolishness, all welcome.
This is not debate club. Unless it’s amusing debate.
For actually-good tech, you want our NotAwfulTech community
Indeed, here's Pauline Kael on The Godfather in the New Yorker:
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/1972/03/18/the-godfather-movie-review-pauline-kael
Organized crime is not a rejection of Americanism, it’s what we fear Americanism to be. It’s our nightmare of the American system. When “Americanism” was a form of cheerful bland official optimism, the gangster used to be destroyed at the end of the movie and our feelings resolved. Now the mood of the whole country has darkened, guiltily; nothing is resolved at the end of “The Godfather,” because the family business goes on.
Wow, it's nice that that doesn't feel at all relevant in this, the year 2024
My most charitable interpretation of this is that he, like a lot of people, doesn't understand AI in the slightest. He treated it like Google, asked for some of the most negative quotes from movie critics for past Coppola films and the AI hallucinated some for him.
If true it's a great example of why AI is actually worse for information retrieval than a basic vector based search engine.
yeah, I'm thinking he mistook it for a search engine
Probably because a lot of AI/LLM promotions imply that is a use case.