You also don't have to worry about getting Teflon flu if you overheat the pan. The worst thing that can happen is that you ruin your pan, not that you poison yourself.
drosophila
If you're a turtle or a sea cucumber maybe.
IIRC during covid they did experiment with liquid oxygen exchange through the intestinal wall for patients whose lungs were so wrecked normal ventilators weren't sufficient. So you could maybe engage in some anal breathing if you were to get a super-oxygenated fluid enema, but its not something the unassisted human body can do. Or tries to do, for that matter.
The absolute epitome of non-AI slop has got to be these creepy videos that were on YouTube back in ~2017:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elsagate
Its exactly the kind of thing you'd expect would be the product of AI, but it actually came before AI. I think a lot of it was procedurally generated though, using scripts to control 3D software and editing software, so different character models could be used in the same scenes and different scenes could be strung together to make each video.
I think a similar thing happens with those shovelware Android games. There's so many that are just the same game with (incredibly poorly done) asset swaps that I think they must just make a game once and then automatically generate a thousand+ variations on it.
Sort of
Today we differentiate between the physical substance (or category of substances that are the ethers) and the alchemical concept of the aether, but look at the etymology of "ether".
The term "ethyl", as in ethyl alcohol or ethanol, similarly traces its origins back to "ether".
At the time these various "light" flammable easily evaporated substances were conflated with each other, and were thought to be this sorta mystical stuff that was the fifth element from which the 4 other ones were differentiated from. Since it was undifferentiated it was supposed to be "pure", and free of the messiness of ordinary life (space was thought to be filled with it because of the "perfect" predictable movements of the heavenly bodies). This is also where we get the word "quintessential", which literally means "fifth essence", to mean a pure, perfect, and archetypical example of something, without complications. It's also where we get the word "ethereal" to mean "otherworldly", "light", "ghostly", etc.
It's for similar reasons that we use the word "spirit" to mean both something that comes in a bottle and a disembodied soul. All sorts of alchemists from different areas and different times believed different things of course, but a lot of alchemical thought was based on the idea that everything had essences inside it which were hard to perceive or touch directly but which gave things their properties. In other words something's essence is it's spirit.
Of course what they called "spirits" or "essences" were really things like distillation products, gasses driven off by heating, and the colored flames that you get when you put some metals in fire. But that's what they thought was going on.