A Bit of Optimism - Spite Is The Greatest Motivator with Watch Duty founder John Mills
Episode Date: January 21, 2025When the wildfires struck Los Angeles, turmoil quickly consumed the city. People were desperate for clear, reliable information—unsure of evacuation routes or how to track the fires as they spread i...n a history-making wind storm. Then, we found Watch Duty. This intuitive app became our lifeline. The visionary behind the app is John Mills, a seasoned tech entrepreneur who created Watch Duty out of necessity after his own community in Northern California was repeatedly threatened by deadly wildfires. But John didn’t just build an app—he reimagined how business and philanthropy can intersect to solve real-world problems.Watch Duty is a not-for-profit initiative that harnesses the power of technology and human talent, relying on volunteers to gather critical data from fire scanners and reporters to save lives. Despite its explosive growth, John has no plans to sell the app, because for him, the value isn’t in making money—it’s in using his skills to help others. In a world where many focus on getting rich, John is challenging us to rethink how we can use our talents to serve the greater good.This...is A Bit of Optimism.For more on John and his work, check out:Watch Duty
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's crazy, I'm counting one, two, three, four, five, six.
Just in my eye shot I can see six aircraft battling the flames.
When the wildfires erupted in Los Angeles on January 7, 2025, people were frantic.
We didn't know where to get information.
We didn't know if or when we had to evacuate.
At the beginning, we got information through sort of an informal whisper network.
Did you hear what we'd say to each other?
Then we found Watch Duty.
This one magical, elegant app told us everything we needed to know.
And it was up to date and it was accurate.
And we all had it.
We checked it constantly.
It was a lifeline, literally.
Evacuation orders, fire perimeters, and wind directions,
all of it faster and clearer than any government site
or news outlet.
And we owe it all to tech entrepreneur, John Mills.
John coded WatchDuty himself to help his community And we owe it all to tech entrepreneur John Mills.
John coded WatchDuty himself to help his community
after a series of deadly fires came close
to destroying his own home in Northern California.
Today, the app serves millions of people.
It operates in multiple states
and relies on scores of trained volunteers
who gather data from radio scanners
and other sources
to get the information out.
The app has skyrocketed in popularity, and John has no intention of selling it, because
the value, as he explains it, is bigger than any paycheck.
We live in a world where too many put themselves before others.
So how can we be more like John Mills?
How can we inspire more people to serve those who serve others?
I think John may have the answer.
This is a bit of optimism.
John, thank you so, so much for doing this.
I know that your life has been extremely busy. John, thank you so, so much for doing this.
I know that your life has been extremely busy.
How did you find yourself in this position where all of us in Los Angeles were glued
to your app more than anything else?
Why you and how do you find yourself here now?
Why me?
Well, they say that luck is the intersection of opportunity and preparedness, and I have the unique opportunity to be able to do this with my life and dedicate my life to this work.
I've been through a couple pretty close calls here on my ranch. Fires come very close to me. One was a 50,000 acre fire that ended about a quarter mile from my property. Another one was a quarter mile away. And the other direction, that was another fire that I wasn't alerted about. The helicopters were how I
knew there was a fire, not because anybody told me.
So the world is burning outside of your home and you find out about it because you see
a fire helicopter fly over you.
Yeah, that's how you get alerted. Yeah.
Yeah, that's a good motivation to try and want to do something. Or at least, okay, but
hold on, hold on. That's a motivation for a lot of people to complain. That's a motivation for a lot of people to get angry. That's a motivation for a lot of people to
yell at their mayor or congressman or whoever. You then went and built an app to give yourself
the information you needed. I don't know, it felt like it would be more fun, you know?
You're an engineer, right? I'm an engineer and a product person, yes.
I'm trying to understand how you found yourself in the situation.
This is what the authorities, what the governments, what the local government's
supposed to provide. Aren't they supposed to provide us the information we need to
stay safe and know what's going on?
You would think so.
That's what I mean by why you. Like, it shouldn't have to be you.
That is correct. My friends are joking.
I just had an article about me and the Hollywood Reporter.
And I said I've built in the set of spite.
And they sent me the episode of Larry David, who makes the spite story.
So spite is like the coffee guy next door.
You know, I mean, spite's a powerful motivator.
I mean, really, I do it out of love.
But also it's just that I'm disdain for like this lack of
good technology in the government, right?
They still call it IT, right?
It's kind of like a derogatory term, like the guy who fixes your printer, you know what
I mean?
Rather than actual like serious infrastructure that has held up the internet or held up cell
towers, like this is critical infrastructure that must exist.
And so I just knew they weren't
going to do it. And I could just complain on the internet, but that would have been boring.
Yeah. And I think people have to understand that the LA fires, this is not your first rodeo.
WatchDuty is already, dare I say, an essential app in a lot of other places. Is that fair?
Yeah. We started in just Lake Sonoma, Napa counties where I live in Sonoma about 2021
is when I first launched it. And since then, I mean, I'm going to one in every two or three
phones in most counties in Northern California already who experienced fire, right? We have mass
adoption throughout these areas. And there's been some pretty fast moving wind drip and fires and
everybody knows. And unfortunately, we didn't have enough adoption in LA until now.
And why does yours work? Putting the tech aside that the tech works. Why does it work?
Because you're basically consolidating information that comes from a lot of other places that
is fairly accurate and fairly up to date.
That's actually the easy part, right? So as a technologist, the challenge isn't to go
and just scrape all these government websites and to make a beautiful product and package, et cetera.
People know how to do that, right?
Silicon Valley is very good at getting your attention and keeping it, making sure you
do scroll endlessly and then buy a bunch of random stuff that you don't need, right?
It's very good at that.
But the magic is actually in the people.
And what I mean by the people are these radio operators and reporters who are listening to fire scanners constantly.
So those folks in real time are hearing everything and disseminated that information across the application via push notifications.
So that newsfeed is coming from human beings who are spending their days and nights hearing the fire ground.
And that's what the magic actually is. There's nothing else to it.
Anyone could have done what I did. the fire ground. And that's what the magic actually is. There's nothing else to it. Anyone
could have done what I did. The hard part was to find these people who were bound by
their own sheer will and the desire to help people. And so that was the really key insight
here. That's the data that's missing.
It begs two questions. A, tech is obsessed with AI, and AI seems to be the answer to
absolutely everything. And yet you chose to go human.
Why human and not automation?
Well, in my opinion, AI is unable to do this job right now. It's just not there yet. That
might be a reality in the future. But we do use some AI and we use that to help do signals
to noise processing, right? So we do have a lot of AI that are scraping and scanning
government websites that are trying to interpret
random things and they feed that information into Slack
where the human beings were able to see it and interpret it.
So to answer your question shortly,
I don't think it's ready yet.
And then finally, like, even if it was ready,
I would be concerned about mistakes being made.
And I just don't like that idea right now.
It's life and safety. You know, this isn't like a silly chat bot helping you write a paper or something, right?
This is like, do I run east or west when I leave my house or not? It's a little bit too dangerous in my opinion.
Yeah, it's a little bit like autopilot, right? Which is I think every single one of us is fine with computers helping pilots fly the plane.
But at the end of the day, we like the idea that there's two pilots sitting there evaluating
the automation.
We trust people sometimes more than we trust computers, which I think is a good thing.
And so Silicon Valley very much is about a business model, an IPO, giving everybody equity
to get people to work hard, to get to that, quote unquote, liquidity event that everybody's obsessed with.
And yet you are a not-for-profit who,
the people who work with you so hard are volunteers.
What was it about starting a not-for-profit
versus the traditional Silicon Valley route?
And then how did you get the people to sign up?
So we do have some paid staff, obviously,
like any nonprofit does.
We had zero for the first 18 months. It was just a bunch of volunteers. So let's have some paid staff, obviously, like any nonprofit does, we had zero for the first 18
months. It was just a bunch of volunteers. So let's start there. Right. So these radio operators
were already doing this job on Facebook and Twitter, right. The first really big mega fire was
the Valley fire, I think 2015 or so. And then we had the tubs in 2017 and paradise was either 18 or
19, I believe. And so we've had these series of events that have driven these radio reporters
to start putting this information out
on Facebook and Twitter.
And they were doing this for free anyway, right?
Some had, you know-
Just concerned citizens.
Correct.
And again, some were ex-enacted retired firefighters
and all different types of people.
It's kind of all over, all over the board.
So they were already doing a nonprofit, right?
Like some of them had, you know,
co-file links to buy them $5 cup of coffee, but they were
doing this because it's a hobby, right?
Why do Wikipedia do this for free, right?
Why are there Redditors who are avid geeks about keeping their subreddit community organized
and clean?
It's in their hearts to do this.
And so taking that idea, of course they want to do a nonprofit. It's in their heart to do this. And so taking that idea, like, of course they want to do
a nonprofit. It's in their heart to do it that way. And so for me, like on a very personal
level, I understand why they do that. I feel their pain. This shouldn't be for sale. This
can't stop, right? Maybe one day the government will do it and we'll stop. A nonprofit's job should be to
finish its job and delete itself. That would be ideal, right? The program finishes running and
then it gets deleted. But unfortunately, we're in a growing industry, as my friends like to remind me.
Yeah. Yeah. What can we do for you? What does Watch Duty need? What do you need from us?
How can we help? How do we support you? Well, the community is supporting us.
I mean, it's amazing to get, you know, such amounts of
funding as a short period of time.
And obviously donations are super important to keep our
operation running.
It's hard to ask because right now the relief efforts are
going to take, you know, almost a decade.
I mean, we still have towns around me that have not been
rebuilt. And so part of it is challenging for me to ask for anything else rather than give money to
direct relief because Watch Duty is a capital efficient business. We will continue to operate
and not stop. We are in the business of bits, not atoms, right? Computers are cheap to operate,
but rebuilding 12,000 homes and restoring lives that are lost is just not
possible. I think the best thing to do is give money to direct relief efforts like directrelief.org
and others who are on the ground helping. This is why I love you. I ask you how do we help you
and you ask us to give to other people. I mean, that's what I do, right? John, seriously, man,
you bring me to tears. You bring me to tears. You're gonna make me cry. I've had a fucking hard week, man. You okay? I'm exhausted.
Yeah, I'll be all right. I've had a couple hard ones, but you know, it's,
it'll be all right eventually. What happened? I mean, you just have some days, you're just so proud of what you're doing and then you're
just in the shower fucking crying because people is running for their lives.
It's tough because I'm looking out my window and behind me is my forest and it's going
to be overrun with fire again.
It's not my turn right now, but it's going to be my turn again. And
so it's just the cycle of life. I just come to grips with it.
You know, one of the weirdest experiences I had in this, all of this is two incredibly
weird things that happened to me. One was as the evacuation zones got closer to us,
and we got very lucky, the wind changed direction, but they were creeping? And I, even though they didn't reach us,
we didn't get to yellow, we were one zone away from yellow, I sort of, you start preparing.
And I walked around my house and I started saying thank you to my stuff, you know? Like, I went
through this crazy gratitude, like one of my favorite paintings in the world that I've owned
for years, hanging on my wall, it's too big for me to put in a car.
And I look at it and I said, thank you. Thank you so much for
for the joy. I'm gonna cry.
I just
I went through this crazy gratitude practice.
You know, the and it was the just the, it's
whether the stuff survived or didn't. I didn't have fear that
I got that I was going to lose it. I got to say thank you. You
know, you hear this from people who, who lose loved ones. And
they say, I'm glad I was by their side to say goodbye. You know,
they had cancer, we knew it was going to happen. I'm glad I was by their side. And there was
some shit I didn't give a shit about. You know, I walked around, I'm like, I don't care about
that. I don't care much about cost, I care nothing about that. So that was one crazy
experience. And I realized I don't need a lot of stuff, which was a beautiful
thing to come to terms with.
And the second thing, which is just a strange experience, which is watching
your app, watching the winds.
And I remember the winds change direction and I thought, God, thank you.
I'm so grateful.
And in the same moment, fully aware
that somebody's watching the app going, oh no,
and to have to reconcile that my good fortune
is somebody else's ill fortune.
And by the way, nobody wants their house to burn down
to save somebody else's house that doesn't exist.
And just the paradox that there's no winners in this,
that my happiness and relief and sigh
is somebody else's increased blood pressure and fear.
The world is unfair.
It is unfair and that's what fire teaches you, man.
It takes from everybody equally and it's not fair.
You know, I remember the first time I evacuated,
it was, I was gone for eight days, I think. And after
six days, I was just like, just burn already. I'm done. I'm just so stressed out. I'm up
all night. There was no watch duty. I'm listening to radios. I'm just like, you know what, man,
just get it over with. I was just done. I just really resigned. I resigned myself to
the outcome. It was a strange, strange feeling.
I hope the lessons are learned. And this is the shitty thing about people, right? Which
is we forget. And I remember September 11th, I lived in New York during September 11th.
And for weeks, dare I say months, but definitely weeks after September 11th, yeah, I'll say
months, New York was the most incredible city in the world. Crime disappeared. There was
nothing. There was no crime. Somebody who might have mugged me a week before was holding a door
open for me. And there was this shared hardship and we were there for each other. And you
see it now in LA, the insane outpouring of love. There's also idiots and looters and
people who are raising the rents on their houses because they're assholes, talking
about ethics over money. You know? Like nobody's saying you can't make money, but my goodness, like raising rents,
you know? Anyway. But we'll forget. And New York went back to being New York. I remember being in
the middle of it going, this is utopia, and it's going to go away because we forget. We forget.
And this is my fear, which is the people who are now struck by this
well of emotion I'm gonna live devote my life to service for how long I hope
forever but for how long you know so why I like the disaster business because I
see the best in people I have a couple friends in the industry before I got
here and I always wondered I was, how do you guys do this?
How do you, my friend is Jose Andreas, his right hand man.
Sure.
He's the one who lost his employees in Gaza twice.
His nickname is actually Dooms Daddy.
I gave him that name.
I mean, that guy has no pilot's license, has landed multiple planes, he's in tornadoes,
hurricanes, he's just, he lives it and he feels more alive at the edge of death
than anyone else had ever met in my entire life.
And he embodies this spirit, you know,
and he sees the best in it.
And now that I'm here, I understand why he does what he does
and I'm hooked, I'm an addict.
And I see it, I've spent time with the military,
with people who live these lives of service, who, as somebody
said when, you know, he described a life in service as my get rich slow plan, you know,
like everybody knows they're not doing it for the money, you know?
Like you know that when you sign up, and you don't have to be like your friend, the dooms
daddy to have that intensity.
It's a shame that they call it disaster, right?
Because the flip side of disaster is an inspiration and a joy and a fulfillment like you cannot
experience anywhere else.
There's no company, there's no liquidity event, there's no client you can win, there's no
game that you can top that will recreate the feeling of service for those who need it more than you.
Very much agree. That's what the firefighters do, man.
But my heroes, I mean, these people, they're like no one else who will do whatever is right at all costs.
And I've seen them risk their careers and their lives to for the betterment of the world, and they get paid jack shit.
And they are just above and beyond anyone else
ever worked for. So it is not a boring group of people to be around and that's just my
favorite.
I'm so enamored by who you are and what you stand for. I mean, you've had success as a
technologist, you've had success in Silicon Valley, you've lived the movie life, the trope
that a lot of technologists and startups
go through. You've done it. I've met a lot of people who, as a result of selling their business
or going public, whatever it is, they've made generational wealth. And if you ask them,
what do you do now? They say, I'm an investor. And I don't understand why people who've made
generational wealth, their goal is to now make more money.
And what I so appreciate about you is you've done that, you've made the money, and somebody says, what do you do?
And you're a philanthropist. And you may invest, but you're a philanthropist that invests, not an investor that is a philanthropist.
And I think that's really important. When I look at who you are, and what you stand for, what
goes through my mind is first of all, thank you. I mean, I use your app, you know, I checked
it like a teenager looking at TikTok, you know, and I'm grateful. But at the end of
the day, it's more the example of who you are and what you stand for, that I think is
even more important than the app. Because there's a lot of other problems that need
to be solved, that good people who can afford to do it and do know how to do these things and have already
built a business and understand infrastructure and people and all of the things, even if
they build it out of spite, we need more of you.
I mean, I'll take the compliment. Thank you. And I agree. And part of it is like, you know,
I'm an operator, right through and through. So like, I can't just sit there and invest. It doesn't make sense to me. Like, I need to build things. I want
my hands on equipment, machinery, and like, I had a choice. I could like, go get a yacht
and travel the world and hang out with billionaires, or I could go like fight the man and change the
world, right? There's nothing more thrilling than this. It's an interesting conversation,
because all of those folks who made that money, they had the attitude to get there.
And something happens, and I don't know what it is, I mean, I have some ideas, where it
stops.
And I guess what I'm trying to get at is what is it in your DNA that I that how do we replicate
you?
I mean, we both agree on two things.
We both agree that you shouldn't have to do this.
Government should be doing a better job of doing it and not you, number one.
And we both agree there needs to be more of you.
How do we raise a generation of people who, whether they achieve generational wealth or not,
that service is built into how they want to live a life and grow old?
Yeah, I mean, something that really, like like I tell people that I run a nonprofit because
I hate them.
And what I really don't understand is like, if you're a really good operator, why would
you give your money to philanthropists who don't know how to run a business?
Right?
Like some of these nonprofits that I've seen, like the homeless industrial complex in San
Francisco is like one thing that really upset me about 10
years ago when I was getting involved.
Those executive directors didn't actually know each other.
The largest ones of the largest buildings don't ever meet.
It occurred to me one night walking home after this big event that I had thrown and I put
these executive directors together and I realized they knew each other's names and didn't know
each other. I finally realized they knew each of those names and didn't know each other.
And I finally realized they're actually in competition
with one another.
They do not want to solve the problem.
And that right then and there, I was like,
first of all, I'm done.
I'm not working in the homeless industrial complex anymore
until I can come back and make a difference.
And then I realized that like,
I'm not giving money to these people.
They do not know, they were not good stewards of capital.
So as an operator or an investor, why am I going to invest in a failing business?
Show me the outcome. Where is it? I don't know where it is. So again, more spite.
But this is an important insight, which is, and I hate the term not for profit, right? That is a
tax delineation. That is an IRS delineation on a form. Of course
they should be profitable. They just measure profit differently. So if your charity exists
to rescue kittens out of trees, then I want to see that you're rescuing a lot of kittens
out of a lot of trees. That is the profit, right? And so instead of calling them not
for profit, we should call them for impact. And I want a metric to your point. You're
right, which is whether it's homelessness
or whether it's cancer, whatever it is, they're competing who will come to their gala as opposed
to working together and trying to actually cure cancer. And you're right, which is it's
the worst kind of corporate competition, which is trying to undermine each other rather than
cooperate. There is no winner in charity. It doesn't like, oh, you win cancer charity.
You're like, I think we've got it best,
which is they win when they go out of business
because we don't need them anymore.
That is the goal.
And in the fire service, I've seen the same thing.
I mean, there are a couple of community groups
that are, you know, fire wise, fire safe groups.
That's what they're called.
And some of them are at odds with each other.
And some of them even have their monthly
meetings at the same time. So you have to pick one.
It's the charity industrial complex.
It's challenging. It's challenging. I do not like it.
Okay, so let's take a step back. I'm a well intentioned person. I
have a wallet. Volunteering is one option, but not everybody
can do that. Sometimes we like to give financially.
How do I know to give to you and not to somebody else who says all the right things to me and
makes me feel pretty and invite me to the gala, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera?
You and I are having a conversation saying it's nonsense. They compete with each other. They're
not trying to solve the problem. All we're doing is telling people, don't get involved. So how do we get people to stay involved?
How do we get people to know who to volunteer for and who to give to?
I bet it's a great question. That's something that I want to set out to solve, right? There's
a couple of things going on here at Watch Duty. One of them is leaving a better blueprint
behind, right? And so something we did this year in our annual report
is it reads like a startup monthly update from a founder.
It does not read like a bunch of pretty pictures
and a bunch of nonsense and maybe some video
that is a tearjerker that gets you to open your purse.
What I did is I tore down our metrics
well beyond what the form 990 is,
which is the nonprofit reporting form.
And I really went deep.
Here's how much we spend on an office, zero.
Here's how much it costs to operate this thing.
Here's how many dollars per page view it costs.
And I really went whole hog at it
and just started to go extraordinarily transparent.
Like no one ever does.
Whether you're a public or private company,
you gotta be crazy to do what we're doing.
And we're just crazy enough to try and do that
and hopefully open the door and show people
that we are impactful and your money actually goes really far.
So I think that's step one.
That's almost an after fact though, right?
Like you wanna have more money come in
and then show what you're doing is impactful.
But the obvious one is the reason I'm on this podcast, right?
You and everyone and their mother and Paris Hilton
are all talking about watch duty on TikTok, right? And Instagram. And so taking from Silicon
Valley, that's what we call product market fit, right? Product led growth and product market fit.
We delivered an incredible product and still deliver incredible product every day that people
are constantly talking about. And so there's a couple of things that play here
that really hit home.
And when you're hitting someone's a million brain
of like, this is life and safety,
it becomes very relevant and top of mind for you.
And I think there's a confluence of events here
that are allowing us to do what we're do.
You know, the podcast is called A Bit of Optimism.
I brought you on here to inspire and to share who you are and the goodness that you're doing.
But you know, you're making me angry.
And I now am filled with spite.
As you say, spite is a wonderful motivator, because I'm literally going through a list
of people who are incredibly smart. They're engineers,
they're marketers, they're brilliant leaders, and they did it for their companies. They
had brilliant market fit, they solved a problem, they became the gem in whatever industry they're
in. They made their money and they're not doing what you're doing. And I'm angry. I'm so spiteful right now that very
talented people and you said it right, which is well-intentioned people go into not-for-profit.
They're full of why and they lack how, right? Lots of desire to do good, a lot of good intention,
and it breaks down and politics show up and they just they don't have the product stuff.
And then on the business side, you have a lot of product ingenuity.
You have a lot of how, sometimes lacking the why.
You're doing the thing that is the way a business and a charity should both work.
So I'm just very angry.
So thank you very much for that.
You're welcome.
I talked to a friend who lost his house in the fires.
It's all gone.
There's the initial shock and then there's
a little bit of denial and I think the bigger shock is still to come. He lived in the palisades.
And he was saying that he's worked really hard to accumulate a lot, which is how he
could afford a house in the palisades. Losing it all, as traumatic as it has been, it makes
him realize that he has to change his life. He realizes he
now needs to say yes to being on the committees and he needs to say yes to being on the boards
and he needs to take his incredible talent that helped him achieve what he's achieved
and redirect it. And I think that's wonderful. The thing that upsets me is why does it take
trauma and loss for us to want to devote our lives to service?
If you go back to World War II, for example, right, there were more cases of young men
who killed themselves because they didn't get drafted than those who did. What happened
to our society after the greatest generation? We went from greatest to boomer XYZ and Alpha.
There's not even a description of our
generations anymore. If you didn't get shipped after war, you bought a war bond to support the
war effort. If you couldn't afford a war bond, you planted a war garden, which did practically
nothing, but it made you feel like you were part of it and everybody was grateful that you were
committing some sort of time and energy for the effort, even if it was just ceremonial.
What happened to a society where our instinct is not to give, our instinct is to take, our
instinct is to become investors, not philanthropists?
Yeah, I mean, I noticed it too, obviously.
And this country has definitely lost solidarity with our neighbors.
I think that consumerism is a big part of it. We started to
understand marketing and psychology really well after the second world war and started to sell
consumerism and really use the things that we learned during war to, unfortunately, sell goods
and services really. And then of course, you know, bedroom community neighborhoods moving out of city
centers. And I think that was kind of painful.
And I, and then I think the death nail for it really is how the internet has become a
dirty place at times.
You know, I think it's just like, I'm skipping ahead many generations here, but I think it
was all just inevitability.
And then it becomes so easy to reach people through their phones and have them doom scrolling
and then have them be angry and then respond to people and fight on the internet.
And it's just, it's just divisive. So I wish I knew I've just, I've seen it too. them doom-scrolling and then have them be angry and then respond to people and fight on the internet.
And it's just, it's just divisive.
So I wish I knew I've just, I've seen it too.
And I wish I had a better answer.
I think we all wish we had an answer, right?
What do you think?
It's an interesting insight how we took the skills we learned from war.
We took these skills that we had to learn like fast manufacturing, which wasn't a thing
until the war and the brilliance of the assembly lines.
We could churn out tanks and boats and planes like nobody's business. You're right, we learned these skills in
war and then we applied them after that. At the end of the war, they all looked at Joseph Goebbels,
this brilliant propagandist for the Nazis. They were so impressed by his ability for
propaganda to move populations to do things that they wanted, that the regime wanted.
Edward Bernays saw what Joseph Goebbels did and was so impressed.
And he takes this thing that was called propaganda and he saw an opportunity,
couldn't call it propaganda.
So he renamed propaganda, public relations.
But I guess the question that I grapple with is what happened to the ethical
underpinnings?
We see a drug company that has a patent and an essential drug raise
the price of that drug 1000%, 1500% because it helps them surpass their financial goals.
Disgusting. And when we drag their CEOs in front of Congress to testify, they all say
the same thing, which is we followed the law. We didn't break the law, which is true. None
of them broke the law. That is not illegal, but it is horribly unethical. Then the law is a lower standard than ethics. And I'm just curious, you know, it definitely
changed where ethics were a thing. I mean, chivalry was a thing where your word was vital.
And like this thing about ethics and chivalry, your word and honor, these words, they're gone.
Now it's just show me the metric. And if the metric is good, I'll do it.
If it's not, I won't.
Yeah, I think everyone is waiting for the hammer to drop, right,
on WatchTutti being a nonprofit.
I get that question all the time.
And I just like, I just look at them, I'm like, that's just so boring.
Yeah.
We've heard that story before.
Who wants to hear that again?
Like, that's not what I want to leave behind.
It just seems like we're in a generation of like, if you can, it means you should.
And I just don't, I don't like it.
Like again, your point, like my word matters to me, you know, and I don't know why it's gone.
Again, I'm hoping we can find more examples of work like this.
And I leave a legacy behind of other people who want to do this.
And I give a roadmap and ways to do this easier because,
man, the amount of people who want me to either convert or take their money or whine, you're a B
Corp, you can still do this. And I'm like, this is not what's interesting to me. And they can't
understand what is wrong with me. Did I have some sort of dramatization? I just can't get over it.
I don't need the money because I'm so filthy rich. That's just not the case. I put a million dollars of my own money into this company. Because I just wanted to prove to myself it worked and now that it worked, it's making money. I'm finally taking a paycheck again as of January 1st. Not much, but whatever, man. Money will come and go. This is a once in a generation thing. I really want to lead other people to this path and hopefully, again, leave the world
a better place than we found it.
Amen.
Tell me an early specific childhood memory.
I'm just very curious about you.
Well, I mean, when I was really young, I was building with my father, which was always
really fun for me.
He's a woodworker.
Actually, he's an IBM executive,
but he had a wood shop and he grew up that way.
His father was World War II.
He went to war in, you know, 17 or something.
Lied about his age and went to the Pacific Theater.
Became an engineer.
It's in my blood to build, right?
We're builders.
And so I was, you know, helping him restore
anything that I could.
I really just loved spending time doing that
and in creating things out of nothing.
I took that into computers as well
because there are times where he wouldn't want to help me
or I was too young to use a power tool.
So I would start hacking on computers.
And so that's kind of how I got into this.
Is there a specific one that stands out,
a specific project you worked on with your dad,
something that really stands out?
I remember one.
My favorite class in middle school, I think, was called technology.
It's really a woodworking class, mostly.
And we had to build little air-powered robots.
So it's like a little robot arm that has a bunch of syringes with air lines going to
them.
You can articulate the arms back and forth.
And so I remember my dad helping me do this.
And of course, I won because my dad built a lot of the damn thing. But it was super fun to like, get to like, make wood and things move,
you know, because wood doesn't really move if it does is breaking usually. So it was fun to like,
kind of build little toys and robotics and things like that. And when the science fairs and whatever,
I just feel like it's cheating. But anyway, whatever, I learned how to make really cool
stuff with my father.
What do you think it is about that memory
of all the fun things and all the things
you built with your dad?
What do you think it is about that one that stands out
that you want to talk about it right now?
Man, how did these questions were coming?
I don't know how to answer that one.
I just...
Oh, you thought I was gonna ask you the same questions
as all the other TV shows.
No, I did not, thank God.
Again, I think I said it before,
what was fun for me was like re-imagining wood
in a different way, right?
Wood is not supposed to move,
and it was fun to be able to use these things
to like prototype a moving object.
It's just not something you normally would do.
And I like mixing materials,
which I do now a lot in my life,
software, hardware, machines, cars, computers.
I like the part of the matrix where the little kid is bending the spoon,
you know, and he looks at Neo and he's like, you have to remember there is no spoon,
right? None of this is real and you can bend reality, you know? And so like these moments
allowed me to realize I'm limited by my own beliefs, right? And so I think that's what
really got me to think bigger.
I think that theme has repeated.
You are inspiring us to reimagine.
You're inspiring us to reimagine how to apply our brains to solve problems.
You're asking us to reimagine how a charity works.
You'll pay them real world salaries because you can.
There's just no shareholder to extract profit for.
And you're asking us to reimagine what a charity looks like.
You don't have to have these four impact companies that have IPOs, but rather just keep building
charities that pay really well and solve real problems.
You're asking us to reimagine what a metric is, how to define profit.
You're asking us to reimagine what it means to live a life worth living.
If we follow your route, we're cheating.
We're beating cancer.
We're overcoming these challenges. Like we win because we're cheating because we're using our talents
in a different way. You've definitely given me a lot to think about about how business,
charity, all of this stuff.
Yeah, I really like this idea of like human potential. There's like something so incredible
about when you give people the conduit to do something, right, that they're kind of already doing,
like you can really harness that to be extraordinarily, like dangerously kinetic.
And that's what we've done with all this potential energy from all these people.
And speaking of World War II, a story that I've been obsessed with since I was a kid is how we broke the Enigma.
We weren't able to crack the German cryptographic machine, which was called the Enigma for quite some time. And so the way that we got it was actually, again, same thing,
idle human potential. And so we put out crossword puzzles in all the allied newspapers and said,
if you can break this puzzle, please email this to Bletchley Park outside of London in
England. And a bunch of people were able to break these things repeatedly.
One of them, her name was Joan Clark,
who became the first cryptographer.
But we used all these people's,
like this mass crowd of intelligence
and found the brightest people.
And without her, we would never have,
well, maybe never have defeated them, right?
And it was a pretty incredible endeavor of the human condition and potential energy becoming very kinetic.
And to your point about sort of how we reimagine, we reimagine how we can recruit, which is
we put in the regular newspaper, these impossible crossword puzzles, and if you could solve
it, we wanted to talk to you. We didn't hold mass interviews and then try and take this test, take this personality
test and we'll assess if you're, you know, it's, it's, it was reimagining even how to
hire.
That's right.
It didn't take convincing, right?
Here's money, do this job.
It's like, I'm going to do this anyway.
This is who I am.
I'm going to do the crossword puzzle anyway.
I love a problem.
I'm bored of the problems of the
newspaper. Give me a more difficult problem because I like this stuff because it's fun.
Put all those people in a room and see what happens. Here we go. And that's how we did it.
Right. And this is no different. We've done similar things before. It's just not how we think about,
to your point, hiring and creating things. It always seems like specialized people
who have degrees in whatever.
I mean, we just proved that a lot of experts
did not know what they were doing, right?
Very, very drastically.
Go hire people who break codes.
And that's what we do.
Because they bring old thinking in old ways.
That's right.
And what people who have that natural ability,
what they do is they bring
new thinking, new ways, and they are unrestrained. They are unrestrained in their imagination.
This theme keeps coming up, which is reimagining. Let us raise a toast and let us raise a glass
to those who serve others. And that true fulfillment in life, all of these people
looking for joy and purpose, as you have learned, there is no greater
joy and no greater sense of life purpose than to be in service to those who serve others.
Absolutely. Cheers to them.
All right, my friend. Be safe, be well, and let me know how I can serve you.
I appreciate that.
Thanks a lot.
Thank you much, man.
Thanks a lot. Thank you very much, man.
If you enjoyed this podcast and would like to hear more, please subscribe wherever you
like to listen to podcasts.
And if you'd like even more optimism, check out my website, simonsonic.com, for classes,
videos, and more.
Until then, take care of yourself, take care of each other.
A Bit of Optimism is a production of The Optimism Company.
It's produced and edited by Lindsey Garbenius,
David Jha, and Devin Johnson.
Our executive producers are Henrietta Conrad
and Greg Rudershan.