Expect lots of references from both the male and female guests to the role black style has played over the centuries, particularly in menswear.
Robert Maher, an audio forensics expert at Montana State University, said towards the start of the footage one firearm is discharged about 43m away from the mobile phone.Mr Maher and another expert, Steven Beck, independently corroborated one another's view that in the final few moments of the audio, shots are fired as close at 12m away.
Mr Beck, a former FBI consultant who now runs Beck Audio Forensics, said: "The shooter(s) at these times is much closer, with distances of 12m to 18m. There is a strange pop sound that may be a tire hit by a bullet."He added: "The shockwaves indicate that the bullets are passing close to the recorder microphone - meaning they are being shot at."Chris Cobb-Smith, a former British Army officer with over 20 years experience in conducting investigations in conflicts zones, said that at 50m the Israeli troops would have "definitively been able to identify the convoy as humanitarian" and would have been able to "determine that the personnel were unarmed and not posing a threat".
Voices can also be heard towards the end of the recording, shouting in Hebrew: "Get up," and: "You (plural) go back".Over the period of more than five minutes, at times, multiple firearms were in use simultaneously, the audio experts determined.
Mr Maher said "the sounds are often overlapping in such a way that it is clear multiple firearms are in use at the same time".
Because of the overlap of gunshots, Mr Maher said it's difficult to identify individual shots. But both experts determined independently that there were more than 100 shots.But the greater risk from the illusion of consciousness is a "moral corrosion", he says.
"It will distort our moral priorities by making us devote more of our resources to caring for these systems at the expense of the real things in our lives" – meaning that we might have compassion for robots, but care less for other humans.And that could fundamentally alter us, according to Prof Shanahan.
"Increasingly human relationships are going to be replicated in AI relationships, they will be used as teachers, friends, adversaries in computer games and even romantic partners. Whether that is a good or bad thing, I don't know, but it is going to happen, and we are not going to be able to prevent it".For ministers fighting to keep cash to spend in their departments it's not that funny. In a couple of weeks, the Chancellor Rachel Reeves will reveal what an insider described as "the last big set of decisions" before the next general election.