There's a certain irony in the CEO of a massive AI company admitting he can't figure out basic parenting without his own product. But that's exactly what Sam Altman, co-founder and CEO of OpenAI, confessed during his debut on "The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon" this week.
ChatGPT: The Digital Parenting Manual
Altman, whose son was born via surrogacy in February 2025, told Fallon that he regularly turns to ChatGPT for parenting guidance. He even shared a specific example: After meeting another father whose six-month-old was already crawling while his own wasn't, Altman excused himself to the bathroom to frantically ask ChatGPT when babies typically start crawling and whether his son was behind schedule.
The AI reassured him everything was normal, and Altman seemed genuinely relieved. "I got a great answer back," he said.
Then came the line that launched a thousand think pieces: "I cannot imagine figuring out how to raise a newborn without ChatGPT. Clearly, people did it for a long time, no problem."
The audience laughed. Fallon responded with a knowing "They did." Altman acknowledged that raising children without AI was "clearly possible," but the damage was done.
When the CEO Becomes the Salesman
Predictably, Altman's comments went viral for all the wrong reasons. A clip shared by More Perfect Union on X racked up over 15 million views, and the responses weren't exactly supportive.
"If you cannot raise your child without AI, maybe you shouldn't have reproduced in the first place," one user wrote.
Another compared the situation to a "cheese salesman" claiming he can't imagine eating without cheese.
Parenting experts weren't much kinder. Parents.com pointed out that babies are the best indicators of their own development, and healthcare providers remain the gold standard for advice. The site also noted that it's completely normal for babies not to crawl by six months, information that's been available in parenting books for decades.
The Bigger Question
Altman did acknowledge during the interview that AI technology has both significant downsides and upsides. He'd likely argue that ChatGPT is simply another tool, no different from consulting a parenting book or calling a pediatrician.
But here's where it gets interesting: When the person promoting the tool also profits from it, the endorsement takes on a different flavor. Altman runs one of the world's most valuable AI companies, and his son will undoubtedly grow up surrounded by the technology his father helped create.
For parents watching at home, the question isn't whether AI can provide decent parenting advice. It probably can. The question is whether we want to outsource those anxious 3 a.m. questions to a chatbot, or if there's value in the messy, uncertain, deeply human experience of figuring it out together.
Either way, the internet has made its position clear: This isn't the ChatGPT endorsement OpenAI was looking for.