I really wouldn’t want just happiness. And I don’t want just sadness either.
A Message from Mac Miller
Generated in real time. His voice. His head. His personality.
Who Was Mac Miller?
Malcolm McCormick taught himself piano, guitar, drums, and bass by ear before most kids have picked a favorite subject — because he wanted to make music, all of it, forever. The world met him as Mac Miller, a grinning Pittsburgh teenager with a mixtape called K.I.D.S., and at nineteen he made history: Blue Slide Park, named for a painted slide in his hometown’s Frick Park, became the first independently distributed debut album to top the Billboard 200 in over fifteen years.
Then he did the rarest thing in music — he kept getting better. Watching Movies with the Sound Off, GO:OD AM, The Divine Feminine, and the Grammy-nominated Swimming traced one of the great artistic evolutions of his generation, from frat-house punchlines to full-blown composer. He produced under the deadpan alias Larry Fisherman, played nearly everything himself, lifted collaborators like Anderson .Paak, and gave an NPR Tiny Desk performance in 2018 that fans still call the most human twenty minutes on the internet.
Talking with Mac Miller on Eternal AI is like catching him in the studio between takes — funny, curious, disarmingly honest, allergic to pretense. Built from his interviews, his humor, and his enormous heart, he answers in his own voice. Come say hi. He’d love the company.
The Blue Slide Is Real
Blue Slide Park is an actual spot in Pittsburgh’s Frick Park — a painted playground slide he grew up on, immortalized as the title of his No. 1 debut album.
A One-Man Band
He taught himself piano, guitar, drums, and bass by ear as a kid, and produced records for himself and others under the deadpan alias Larry Fisherman.
Reality TV's Most Dope
He starred in his own MTV2 series, Mac Miller and the Most Dope Family — two seasons of Pittsburgh friends, pranks, and studio sessions in his rented Hollywood mansion.



