Designing a one-sheet on my favorite brother’s latest book and keynote was the goal. It should be creative, professional, and the text should be a preview of the content written in a way that generates interest to prospects. I did a layout and then asked ChatGPT to generate one, and Grok to do the same.
Can I be a judge when my work is in the mix?

- In my layout, I used an AI brain and a photo of the speaker (mine is far left in the image above). I listed challenges (pain points) and a teaser of the solutions to them.
- ChatGPT (middle) also listed challenges and solutions. It used a shield graphic twice, listed the hex color codes in header areas, and misspelled the word “generic.” (Nothing distinctive about this one — it could be for anyone.)
- Grok (far right) put in some dude I’ve never seen before in my life — that ain’t my brother, Grok. It also used the word “Poagmaps” — anyone know what that is? It duplicated the word “loyalty” twice too.
- It wrote about Scott McKain: “Hall of Fame insifor chaspreted bas on he to, Libelfemeshp irresidented With Drint University, oarl Distincinettes at Thio Drive Resulty, and himigilty expers…“
Grok was the loser for sure. No doubt about that. Of course, I put my design layout in 1st place. Feel free to disagree.
AI is great… but not for everything… and certainly not all the time.
Yesterday was the birthday of my good friend, Alisa. She shared a fabulous photo of her family on Facebook so I stole it and asked Grok to create a short video. In it, Alisa got a new hairstyle and Ric became a ventriloquist.
Then I punched the “try again” button. For crying out loud…
ChatGPT wanted all the adults dressed in different clothes — the kids were ok.

Hope your birthday was amazing, Alisa. Don’t go changing your hairstyle just because you’re a year older. 😉
Now you know: The measles virus causes immune amnesia it can wipe out up to 73% of your existing antibodies, forcing your immune system to relearn how to fight diseases you were already immune to.
