Kennen Frost sold his previous company Skio for $105 million in cash.
EP16: Nobody's seen AI UGC work, world models & AI agents go desktop
A founder spent $12M on a domain, hit $5M ARR in 30 days, then walked back his entire AI pitch — renaming his product from "AI ad maker" to "human ad maker" because AI UGC simply doesn't work yet.
God Mode Podcast
EP16: Nobody's seen AI UGC work, world models & AI agents go desktop
A founder spent $12M on a domain, hit $5M ARR in 30 days, then walked back his entire AI pitch — renaming his product from "AI ad maker" to "human ad maker" because AI UGC simply doesn't work yet.
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This episode
Cast
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Founder of Icon.com who previously sold Skio for $105M and spent $12M on the icon.com domain.
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AI researcher and World Labs CEO who published a taxonomy of world models on Substack in June 2026, cited by the hosts as the next frontier beyond LLMs.
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AI ad platform founded by Kennen Frost that pivoted from 'AI ad maker' to 'human ad maker' after going dark in March 2026.
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Social media and advertising platform discussed extensively in the context of Meta ads, CPM rates, Facebook pixel retargeting, and lookalike audiences.
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AI company behind Claude, discussed in the context of the AI bubble, potential IPO, and its conservative approach to agentic use cases.
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AI company behind ChatGPT and Codex, discussed for its lack of support for autonomous cloud-hosted agent use cases versus Hermes.
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Venture capital firm that signal-boosted Fei-Fei Li's world models taxonomy and is discussed as doubling down on the thesis that AGI requires more than LLMs.
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Discussed as an example of a major AI spender cutting back, and for integrating Copilot AI into Windows, OneDrive, SharePoint, and Teams.
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AI research company that released the Hermes agent desktop app, enabling model-agnostic AI agent use from a consumer-friendly interface.
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AI voice provider noted as sounding 'too professional' — a quality Ben sees as a limitation when trying to emulate casual or contextual human speech.
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Kennen Frost's previous company, sold for $105 million in cash before he founded Icon.
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Cited as an early example of a major company publicly questioning its AI ROI and cutting AI spend, catalysing broader industry doubt.
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Nous Research's self-improving AI agent that launched a desktop app allowing users to swap backend models freely.
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Anthropic's AI model, discussed in the context of Claude Opus 4.8's task coverage, Claude Code, and the Hermes agent using it as a backend.
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Short-form video platform discussed as a primary channel for organic UGC distribution and top-of-funnel audience building before Meta retargeting.
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AI-native code editor compared visually to Hermes, Codex, and Claude Code in a live demo showing how similar all AI desktop agent UIs have become.
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AI music generator cited as a good example of the freemium model, offering older model outputs free while gating commercial use behind a paid tier.
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The location where two of the three hosts are meeting in person for this episode, described as an ideal small-market test environment for ad experiments.
This episode
Claims & Sources
Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.
Kennen Frost spent approximately $12 million to acquire the domain icon.com.
Icon claimed to go from zero to $5 million ARR within a 30-day period after launch.
Icon's website relaunch changed just one phrase — from 'AI ad maker' to 'human ad maker' — with everything else essentially the same.
Fei-Fei Li published a functional taxonomy of world models on her Substack on June 3, 2026.
World models learn the statistical structure of space and time, whereas language models only learn the statistical structure of text.
Claude Opus 4.8 can complete 70 to 80 percent of the tasks that most people in a desk job perform.
An organic UGC campaign can achieve a CPM of approximately $1, versus $20–30 CPM for paid Meta ads in premium US markets.
Ben pays UGC creators a base fee plus a $400–600 bonus when a video reaches one million views.
Generating AI video currently costs approximately one dollar per minute using current LLM-based approaches.
A new open-sourced voice model achieved 110 milliseconds of response latency, below the ~200ms threshold for natural conversation.
Meta's built-in AI audience suggestions are outperforming Lookalike Audience targeting, according to media buyers at a recent coffee meetup.
Luca's locally-targeted Reels are reaching approximately 30% of Malta's population organically.
All five major AI desktop agent apps — Claude Code, Cursor, Codex, Antigravity, and Hermes — have nearly identical user interfaces.
Cluely, which started as a cheating tool, now derives a significant portion of its revenue from operating as a UGC agency.
Three founders debate whether AI is delivering real value, anchored by Icon.com's dramatic pivot from "AI ad maker" to "human ad maker." The conversation covers why AI UGC still can't replace human creators, a practical media-buying playbook contrasting $1 vs $30 CPM strategies, Fei-Fei Li's framework for world models as the next frontier beyond LLMs, the AI bubble and looming IPO risk, and the new wave of desktop AI agent apps. The single biggest takeaway: human UGC at $1 CPM crushes paid Meta ads at $30 CPM — and no AI platform has closed that gap yet.
2 minute taster
Look closer
Four months in, all three hosts accidentally wore white shirts — then spent an hour arguing about whether AI actually works. Topics include Icon.com's pivot from AI ad maker to human ad maker, a deep dive on whether AI UGC actually works, a media-buying playbook, Fei-Fei Li's world models, the AI bubble, and AI agents going desktop.
- UGC
- User-Generated Content — short videos made by real people (rather than brands) that are used as authentic-feeling advertisements, typically on TikTok or Instagram Reels.
- CPM
- Cost Per Mille — the price an advertiser pays per 1,000 ad impressions; a key metric for comparing the efficiency of paid vs organic distribution.
- Facebook Pixel
- A snippet of Meta tracking code placed on a website that cookies visitors and reports back to Meta, enabling retargeting and lookalike audience creation.
- Pixel seasoning
- The practice of accumulating enough user data on a Meta pixel (typically ~1,000 events) before it becomes statistically useful for retargeting and lookalike audience generation.
- Lookalike audience
- A Meta advertising feature that analyses the profile of your existing pixel audience and finds new users with similar demographic and behavioural characteristics.
- LLM
- Large Language Model — an AI system trained on massive text corpora to predict and generate text; examples include GPT-4 and Claude. Used broadly as a synonym for 'current-generation AI'.
- World model
- An AI system that learns the statistical structure of physical space and time — not just text — enabling it to simulate physics, geometry, and actions; proposed as the next step beyond LLMs.
- AGI
- Artificial General Intelligence — a hypothetical AI system capable of performing any intellectual task a human can do, often used as the long-term goal of AI research.
- ARR
- Annual Recurring Revenue — a measure of predictable yearly revenue from subscriptions; a key SaaS growth metric.
- VPS
- Virtual Private Server — a cloud-hosted virtual machine that stays always-on, allowing AI agents to run autonomously without needing the user's local computer to be active.
- qPCR
- Quantitative Polymerase Chain Reaction — a lab technique for measuring gene expression levels; mentioned by Luca in the context of his stem cell research background.
- IDE / ADE
- Integrated Development Environment / AI Development Environment — software tools that combine a code editor, terminal, and AI agent interface; examples include Cursor, Codex, and Claude Code.
- Retargeting
- Serving ads specifically to users who have previously visited your website or interacted with your content, using pixel or cookie data to re-engage warm prospects.
- Open source
- Software whose source code or model weights are publicly released, allowing anyone to inspect, modify, or run it; increasingly used as a top-of-funnel strategy by AI companies.
- AI slop
- Colloquial term for AI-generated content or design that is formulaic, recognisably machine-made, and low on originality; the podcast discusses visual AI slop patterns like purple gradients and misplaced 'live' badges.
- Vibe coding
- The practice of building software almost entirely through natural-language prompts to AI tools, with minimal manual coding; associated with rapid prototyping and characteristic visual design patterns.
- Two-sided marketplace
- A platform business model that connects two distinct user groups — e.g. brands and creators — and derives value from facilitating transactions between them.
- Latency
- The delay between a user's input and a system's response; in the context of AI voice models, sub-200ms latency is considered the threshold for natural-feeling conversation.