How the hell is Faraday Future still in business? They’ve only sold 16 cars since 2023. That’s only 16 more new cars than my cat, Tomato, has sold in the same time period, and I’m 99% certain he doesn’t even own a car company. I don’t even think he has money. And yet somehow the company is still getting funding and putting on huge events like the one our own David Tracy went to the other day, where they introduced their new car, the FX Super One, a Chinese market Great Wall van with a big dumb color LCD slapped over the grille.
Faraday Future made a big deal out of how they have given the FX Super One something they call the “EAI F.A.C.E. (Embodied Artificial Intelligence Front AI Communication Ecosystem) System” and even if you try to ignore the way “Ecosystem System” sounds – which, by the way, you can’t – it’s all so deeply and unrelentingly cloying and inane I can’t get it out of my head.


A message needs to be sent to automakers all over the globe about this sort of thing, and that message is stop, stop right now, knock it off, stop, don’t do this, stop, stop, stop.
Listen to this idiotic pile of inanimate crap claim it has emotions and a soul and you will love it:
Who is asking for this? Nobody, that’s who. Nobody wants their car to have some kind of half-assed “personality” that they need to interact with. Have any of the people involved with this product met people? Can you think of literally anyone in your life who has told you that what they’re really missing in their lives is the opportunity to stand in front of their car and chat meaninglessly to some silly algorithm? Nobody wants this.
And it’s not even original! We’ve known that nobody wants this sort of bullshit for years now, because misguided carmakers have been making concept cars that incorporate these very same idiotic ideas, and they’ve usually been better-realized than the Faraday Future screen-tacked-on-someone-else’s-van approach.
Remember back in 2023, when BMW introduced Dee, its virtual personality whatever? I’m going to ask you to watch this video, but I’m also going to apologize up front, because it’s really cloying and pandering and richly, luxuriantly stupid:
This is the same shit that Faraday is showing with their FX Super One, except I suppose it’s a bit more resilient if you accidentally tap the front of the car while parking. But it still has all of the usual hallmarks of Stupid Car AI Tech (SCAT): lots of useless screen displays, lots of useless back-and-forth chatter with the driver, claims of emotion and soul, and so on.
All of this crap really seemed to start back in 2017, when carmakers like Toyota and Honda showed off “emotional” AI cars with external-facing displays and other modern frippery:
Here’s Toyota’s Concept-i specifically, which really leaned into integrated external displays:
External displays simply aren’t a new idea, nor are they something people actually want. I can’t stress this enough: there are plenty of things people want from new cars – efficiency, clever packaging, comfort, economy, performance, cars that aren’t cripplingly expensive to repair, cars that age well, reliability, and so many other things – none of which have anything at all to do with talking to some gimmicky AI “personality” in your car.
If people actually want some sort of AI companion/partner/whatever, they already have AI assistants in their phones that follow them around all day. People who use those are about the most receptive possible people to systems like these. Would they want to deal with another, separate AI system for their car, or would they rather just interact with their existing phone-based AI buddy while in their car?
What, exactly, do the designers of these car-personalities see themselves as actually doing? They don’t make using the car easier. And, when we’re alone, people usually have plenty going on in their heads and don’t want or need to have discussions with their car. You want to keep thinking about your own, well, everything, the actual people in your life, the work you’re doing, the concepts you’re interested in, and none of this is made better by discussing it with the machine you use to get around.
Your toaster doesn’t greet you and ask how your day is, because if it did, you’d probably fling it down some stairs. Cars are very different than toasters, but there’s a similar dynamic at play: you don’t have to fucking socialize with it.
Now, I get that cars are not rational, and we anthropomorphize them all the time. I do this nonstop; my own cars have all sorts of emotional resonance to me, and I feel like they have personalities, but it’s a very different sort of thing than slapping some AI personality simulator onto the car. My old Beetle or little Pao or my new Citroën 2CV all feel like very distinct and different personalities to me, but those personalities are really just how my own personality reacts to the design and engineering of the car, and the result of effects of time spent with the car, and how I perceive and react to the way the car looks and smells and sounds and behaves. These cars have personalities, but those personalities are constructs built out of pieces of my own consciousness that I lend to these otherwise inanimate machines.
The emotional bond between cars and people is very real, and it does not require lines of computer code. In fact, an AI attempt at “personality” is inherently doomed to be creepy, as it’s a sort of uncanny valley of emotion. It’s a pastiche, which deliberately leaves no room for your actual, human, real emotions to take residence within the car, and the result is something forced and artificial.
Think about it this way: you know the Van Gogh painting of sunflowers? This one:

That object is, of course, not a vase of sunflowers. It’s paint on canvas, painted by a brilliant but disturbed man very long ago. And yet it somehow conveys the idea of sunflowers, the almost-delirious joyful exuberance of sunflowers, with all their showy yellowness, better than, say, a carefully-made bouquet of plastic sunflowers.
A bunch of quite accurate plastic sunflowers may technically resemble real sunflowers more than this painting, but they don’t have anywhere near the emotional impact. Plastic sunflowers are just artificial constructs, placeholders for the real thing that don’t really fool anyone, and no one really ever cares about.
That’s what these AI emotion-system-bullshit things are: plastic sunflowers. Your old car, the one you’ve been with for so many years and have shared so many experiences with, and that you can identify by the sound the starter motor makes when you turn the key, and with the distinctive smell you’d know a mile away, that’s the painting of sunflowers. The car may not really have a personality, but it’s sort of a vessel for some of yours.
So let’s get back to the main point here: I have rarely seen something as unwanted or idiotic as the FX Super One and its EAI F.A.C.E. system. It’s baffling and embarrassing and an abject waste of time, money, resources, and the human spirit itself. The only good thing about it is that, based on Faraday Future’s track record of getting things to market, I’ll likely never have to encounter that ill-conceived steaming pile of screen and van out in the world, because I’m skeptical any will actually get made or sold.
Carmakers, let Faraday Future’s misstep be a warning: don’t waste your time with this shit. Nobody is asking for their car to be some annoying companion who won’t fucking shut up when you’re tired and just want to go home from work and maybe listen to some music. Life is already full of phony people who try to rope you into conversations you don’t care about; no one’s car should become that.
Ever.
It is difficult for me to express how DESPERATELY I *do* want an “external display.” I have many, MANY things I wish to…communicate…to others out and about on America’s byways. Give me a “big dumb color LCD slapped over the grille” and I am QUITE confident I will find multiple ways to employ it usefully. Even better if you can add one to the rear end of my car – I OFTEN have cogent thoughts which I’d like to leave with people as they gaze upon me through their windscreens.
yes, this. trying too hard is not a good quality, especially if it’s not needed or warranted.
I wonder how all that front end sillyness will hold up after a few years of rock chips and bird strikes
From a marketing perspective it is smart choice to announce such a dumb TV-on-a-car idea and I bet that in the end you can buy the car without that TV, the TV would be a $1000 addon which nobody buys except a few companies like taxi services and what not who will use it for commercials.
I doubt any sane private person would WANT to drive around with such a (fragile) screen unless you can flip the bird to someone in front of you.
I also would see a slight rise in road rage however.
I’m not crazy about AI for the sake of AI. Neat art installation, I guess.
But I wanted to share an experience related to “the distinctive smell you’d know a mile away”. The Rodz & Bodz Movie Cars museum in Denver is closing up soon (temporarily?) and I went for the first time last weekend. As soon as you walk in the door, you’re met with the aroma of 50 old cars. Loved it!
The good news is that Faraday Future is building this thing. Well, ok, NOT building this thing.
“That’s what these AI emotion-system-bullshit things are: plastic sunflowers”
I got into this article for the savage mockery (which didn’t disappoint). However, I wasn’t expecting to pop my ears at the sudden dive into some deep analogies for the triteness of forced AI slop trying to hijack the last bit of (genuine) human connection with our cars (and, to be honest, with everything else).
You, Torch, are a fucking genius – and I use this with pride, because the algospeak hasn’t reached the Autopian, and hopefuly never will. I would say that I want to subscribe to your newsletter to hear more, but I already do, so thank you.
“Do you think, for instance, that we object to machinery? I tell you, we reverence it; we reverence it when it does its proper work, when it relieves man from ignoble and soulless labor, not when it seeks to do that which is valuable only when wrought by the hands and hearts of men. Let us have no machine-made ornament at all; it is all bad and worthless and ugly.” Oscar Wilde, Art and the Handicraftsman
But it’s a range extender hybrid. I thought that’s this websites favorite thing?
I do have a sincere hope that AI gets really, really good at one thing: going the hell away. Eventually the angel investors will realize the promised money just isn’t there and will quit funding this crap, just like every other tech trend, and we’ll be left AI doing something in some niche areas where it can turn a dollar.
Besides, if I wanted a car with a soul I’d buy a haunted car.
We have a fancy coffee/tea/infused water dispenser in the break room where I work…put in a pouch, select options on the screen, and wait for your drink. The used pouch is then whisked away into a receptacle. But what happens when that receptacle is full? The machine displays a message on its screen: “I’m feeling a little full.”
This is the only time the machine addresses the user so directly. The proper way to respond is to remove the machine’s tray, pull out the receptacle, and empty it. And those pouches leak everywhere, so you’d better rinse and dry that receptacle before returning it to the machine. Having to deal with the remnants of the milk pouches mingling with the cucumber mint water and assorted coffee drippings is bad enough, but the overly personal message makes the whole experience that much more uncomfortable.
So no, I do not want to be addressed directly by a car (not that I think the Faraday model is actually doing anything other than running a demo mode).
LOL, we have these at work and I’m with you. AND…how long until they start showing ads on the screen? They are internet connected…
If you intentionally run over a pedestrian does it display the Green Goblin face from the truck in Maximum Overdrive?
Could I use that screen to sell advertising space, kinda like a NASCAR or something?
Just cause you’re a mensch doesn’t mean everyone else is… I agree 100% with you, but I also know that there are people who adore facial recognition and touch-control power gloveboxes and having insurance snitches installed in their cars.
Case in point- apparently the entire Chinese market loves yelling at their cars instead of using tactile controls, and any manufacturer that doesn’t include a comprehensive voice control suite will sell zero models.
Most people I know in North America absolutely hate voice controls, so different strokes for different folks.
To be fair, it’s legal to yell at many more things and people in North America than it is in China.
Perhaps North Americans simply have more outlets for their frustration.
And guns
What do you mean? we all want it, but we just want to look at it, not own it. Pimp my ride going mainstream? what could go wrong when a possum decides to faceplant in your 10k worth of useless front lcd.
Or maybe we put some animation that hypnotizes people so they freeze in awe while watching it?
I so want those two AI cars to have an inane conversation. That is something I want out of that abomination.
Torch, those yellow Hellas on Pao are NSFW content giving me a hard-on
The model for 21st century products is addiction.
They want it to be indispensable so that you have to pay for it forever. This ai stuff isn’t getting to know you for benign reasons. You can see this is what’s people are calling “chat GPT psychosis” wherin folks feed their farts into a machine and are told they smell good, they keep it up until everything smells of farts and anything that doesn’t smell like fart must be shit.
IF these things were good, they’d be dangerous. Imagine a car ai that knows you got drunk and cheated on your partner in the back seat. Does it help you hide it? Does it guide you to counseling? And who decides what the code tells it? Either way, you’re probably going to pay that subscription fee.
It’s like electric car manufacturers are only getting their ideas from Pimp My Ride.
A Faraday keeps the EV adopters away! 😉
A Faraday a day keeps jalops away
Indeed. 😉
Counter point… I would actually enjoy it if they shoved all this modern sorcery into a 1982 Trans Am and gave it a slightly nagging voice to hassle me about the dumb thing I’m about to do, which I would ignore and do anyway but it would somehow work out in the end…
Turboboost the EV!
Is FF just a large-scale money laundering/scam/tax fraud scheme or what? All of the above?
yes
MS Bob could have told them that this is a bad idea except Bob was cancelled for being a bad idea.
Clippy!
Yes that’s one of the little deviants multiple personalities.
Aside from all the forced personality nobody asked for, what happens to this guy if the vehicle is in a collision? Little X’s where the eyes should be…maybe a ring of stars around its head…follow-up question- does this thing just make faces/display random things all day? If I’m at a stoplight and one shows up behind me, will it scowl at me until we’re moving again?
I would buy one if this was the case…
Extra points for incorporating “frippery” into your rant, Jason!
AI is like dotcom all over again. Everyone is racing to develop it with the expectation that once it’s done they’ll be able to figure out how to turn it into a profitable product. A few will figure that part out and will survive but most won’t.
How much will this car cost in Flooz?
Blockchain is a more recent example too. It’s an interesting technology with very few practical application that for a while everyone was trying to incorporate. Outside of scammers using it to run unregulated financial markets, it has pretty much disappeared.
Oh I hope none do, I really do…
All the same, it is the latest point on a frustrating graph.
You know how we in the English-speaking world sometimes complain that other languages, particularly German and Japanese, have wonderful one- or two-word expressions for certain emotions or abstract concepts that capture them perfectly, e.g. “schadenfreude”? We need an all-encompassing catch-all term for the phenomenon of “car tech solutions no one asked for, desperately in search of problems no one actually has, which are crammed into our new cars whether we want them there or not.”
May I propose 2 words to replace that very descriptive but rather lengthy sentence:
Car AI
I think that is fairly spot on…