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Date: April 20, 2026 Host: KMO Guest: Kenneth E. Harrell
Episode Summary
A 20-year-old throws a Molotov cocktail at the home of Sam Altman, then heads to OpenAI headquarters and escalates. He’s arrested within the hour.
That’s not an isolated story. It’s a signal.
KMO and Kenneth E. Harrell use the incident as a starting point to examine the emerging backlash against AI—where real grievances (job loss, data extraction, infrastructure strain) collide with confused narratives about existential risk.
The result is a volatile mix: people reacting to something they use every day but don’t understand, directed by elites who either can’t or won’t explain what’s happening in terms that land.
From there, the conversation moves outward:
Mid-Interview Break
“Cream of the Slop” by Skyebrows
A fast, layered track built around Manjaro Linux, VTuber aesthetics, and a barrage of younger online cultural references. Dense, unserious, and very much of its moment.
References
The backlash to AI isn’t about AI alone.
It’s what happens when a system changes faster than the stories people use to make sense of it—and faster than institutions can respond.
That gap doesn’t stay abstract for long.
By KMO4.2
66 ratings
Date: April 20, 2026 Host: KMO Guest: Kenneth E. Harrell
Episode Summary
A 20-year-old throws a Molotov cocktail at the home of Sam Altman, then heads to OpenAI headquarters and escalates. He’s arrested within the hour.
That’s not an isolated story. It’s a signal.
KMO and Kenneth E. Harrell use the incident as a starting point to examine the emerging backlash against AI—where real grievances (job loss, data extraction, infrastructure strain) collide with confused narratives about existential risk.
The result is a volatile mix: people reacting to something they use every day but don’t understand, directed by elites who either can’t or won’t explain what’s happening in terms that land.
From there, the conversation moves outward:
Mid-Interview Break
“Cream of the Slop” by Skyebrows
A fast, layered track built around Manjaro Linux, VTuber aesthetics, and a barrage of younger online cultural references. Dense, unserious, and very much of its moment.
References
The backlash to AI isn’t about AI alone.
It’s what happens when a system changes faster than the stories people use to make sense of it—and faster than institutions can respond.
That gap doesn’t stay abstract for long.

45 Listeners