
AI-Curious with Jeff Wilser The “Talk With Einstein” AI Rule You Should Follow, w/ New Yorker Cartoonist Victor Varnado
Is AI making creators more powerful… or more replaceable? And if you start with a blank page for a living, there’s an even sharper question underneath it: should AI write for you… or write with you?
In this episode of AI-Curious, we sit down with Victor Varnado—a New Yorker cartoonist, comedian, actor, and creative technologist—to explore a grounded, practical philosophy for using AI without becoming a passenger.
Victor draws a sharp line between generative AI (press a button, get “a masterpiece”) and what he’s more interested in: transformative AI—tools that take messy raw material (notes, transcripts, half-ideas) and turn it into something structured enough to revise. We also talk about how taste becomes a real moat in an AI-saturated world, why “vibe coding” can go sideways fast when you don’t understand the domain, and how Victor’s accessibility-first mindset shapes everything he builds.
Along the way, Victor breaks down his tools—including Magic Bookifier and the Writing Coach—designed to get writers from zero to first draft faster through guided questions and structured interviews. He frames the goal with a concept he calls cognitive discourse: using AI like a thinking partner that makes you sharper, not a crutch that makes you lazier. His metaphor is perfect: do you talk with Einstein and get smarter… or do you just hand Einstein your homework?
We wrap by looking at Victor’s newest effort, BrightWrite, which aims to bring structured, supportive AI into education—especially for students facing cognitive or creative barriers. Victor also shares discount/freebie codes for listeners who want to try his tools, and we’ll include the specifics in the show notes and links.
Topics we cover:
- Victor’s multi-hyphenate path: comedy, New Yorker cartoons, production, and tech
- Why “transformative AI” is more useful than one-click generative output
- The Writing Coach approach: structured interviews that turn your ideas into drafts
- “Cognitive discourse” vs. “cognitive offload” (and the Einstein metaphor)
- Why taste may be the creative moat in an AI-heavy world
- The risks of “vibe coding” outside your expertise
- BrightWrite and the promise (and limits) of accessibility-first AI in education
- Practical ways to use AI for writing, revision, and everyday communication
Guest: Victor Varnado
Tools mentioned: Magic Bookifier, Writing Coach, BrightWrite
