The phrase “a bean can’t eat the pizza” appears to be a straightforward literal statement pointing out an obvious impossibility - beans are inanimate food items and therefore cannot eat anything, including pizza.
This type of statement might be used to:
Illustrate absurdity or logical impossibility - highlighting something that makes no sense
Demonstrate category errors - mixing up different types of things (inanimate objects vs. living beings capable of eating)
Serve as an example in logic or philosophy - showing statements that are obviously false or meaningless
Make a point about unrealistic expectations - similar to saying “you can’t squeeze blood from a stone”
Without additional context, it’s hard to know if this phrase has a specific cultural reference, is part of a joke, or appears in a particular work. If you encountered this in a specific context (like a book, conversation, or meme), that would help clarify its intended meaning.
Is there a particular situation where you heard or saw this phrase?
Alas.
Oh but it does work in AI mode. Wow, how does AI mode make the AI dumber?
I don’t know but I love the fact that even AI is calling EA out on it’s bullshit!
Search is likely trained more for accuracy and the AI mode is for giving an answer the user wants to see.
This is basically what I got too.
handled gracefully with Claude:
Yeah, my tests all say its a nonsense phrase and does not even try.
I did
“Birch mangos consume Greedy Foxes” meaning
“Flying jabronis kick small pouches” meaning
Did you try them in “AI mode”? I got better results that way. By which I mean worse results.
Yeah, but it also was on mobile. I tried in Firefox and Chrome.