PandaB5 opened this issue on Apr 10, 2026 · 21 posts
PandaB5 posted Sun, 12 April 2026 at 2:05 AM
I haven't installed Cydonia yet - but just the results from Jan.ai are interesting. I gave it only this prompt: Write me a story about a dog that gets stuck behind a fence.
And got this story:
Once upon a time in the sleepy hamlet of Briarcliff, nestled between rolling hills and a whispering forest, lived a golden retriever named Pip.
Pip wasn't just any dog; he was the neighborhood's unofficial mayor with an obsession for chasing squirrels and occasionally stealing hats from passing tourists. His fur was as warm as spring sunshine, and his tail wagged so hard it made the porch swing wobble.
One crisp autumn morning, Pip decided to take a grand leap of faith. The wind carried through his floppy ears like music, and he spotted a magnificent squirrel building its den in a tree on the property line. This wasn't just any squirrel; this was Mr. Nutkin, who had been declared "Most Important Squirrel" by a local committee of three.
Pip barked once—a deep, resonant sound that echoed off the old stone walls—and charged forward with purpose.
He didn’t stop until he reached the edge of Mr. Nutkin’s territory—the very spot where the neighbor's garden met the woods behind their home. There stood an ornate wooden fence topped with ivy and a rusted chain-link gate labeled "Keep Out - Private Property." It wasn't just any gate; it was old enough to be carved by ancestors, and its lock had seen better days.
Pip tried barking again—but nothing happened. He tried digging under the roots of the garden shed, hoping for some hidden tunnel entrance or secret passage (a common tactic among dogs with dreams). Nothing worked.
Then came the moment no dog should ever face alone: he slipped through a crack in the chain-link near midnight while everyone was asleep and got stuck between two posts.
He wasn’t dead; just... suspended mid-air like a statue of hope waiting for someone to notice him.
By morning, only his tail remained visible above ground. His paws dangled awkwardly from one side of the fence as if trying to say "Help!" in Morse code with his legs. Birds circled overhead, and cats yowled at the sky wondering what kind of creature had chosen to become a monument overnight.
People gathered around soon after dawn when they saw Pip’s body—his entire frame now caught behind the bars like he’d been turned into a piece of art by nature itself.
Some called it tragic. Others thought it poetic—a dog refusing to let go even when hope seemed impossible.
But then, something extraordinary happened.
A young boy named Leo found him at exactly 6:45 AM on April 12th, 2026 (the exact date we’re living through). He didn’t know what he was looking for—he just saw a golden retriever stuck behind a fence—and immediately knelt down to pet him gently. "You okay?" Leo asked softly.
Pip let out one soft whimper—a sound like wind chimes catching on glass—and slowly lifted his head slightly, eyes wide and wet with exhaustion but full of courage.
Leo didn’t hesitate. He used a shovel he’d borrowed from the neighbor’s shed to dig carefully around Pip's back until there was enough space for him to slide out safely without breaking anything important or damaging himself further than necessary (which turned out to be very little damage overall).
When they brought him home, Leo gave Pip a new name: "The Fence Hero."
They posted pictures online—tagged #FenceHeroDay—and local media picked up the story. Even though it began as pure chaos born from curiosity and bad timing, by noon everyone knew about Pip’s bravery.
And so lives were changed that day—not because of grand events but simply because one golden retriever refused to accept defeat even when everything told him otherwise.
In truth? That dog probably just wanted more squirrels. But somewhere deep inside his soul, he realized being stuck behind a fence wasn’t failure—it was freedom waiting for permission to be found again.
BUT, I also searched the web and found the story or some variation of it. And I guess that remains the real problem with AI and any 'creative' work.
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