All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - All-In Live from Austin: Colin and Samir, Chris Williamson, and Bryan Johnson
Episode Date: April 3, 2025(0:00) Friedberg and Jason are live from Austin! (2:51) How building an audience has impacted the Besties (11:15) Colin & Samir join the Besties! (12:01) Evolution of short-form and long-form content ...(22:18) Business models for creatives (35:04) Advice to up and coming creators (42:10) Chris Williamson joins the Besties! (50:17) Making it seem effortless (57:47) Monetizing content (1:05:02) Scaling a one-man show (1:19:15) Bryan Johnson joins the Besties! (1:20:13) Spotify’s move to video (1:21:21) Bryan’s Ketamine experience (1:28:03) Creators and value props (1:36:52) Issues with the US food industry (1:43:10) Top tips for healthy living Thanks to our partners for making this happen: Gemini: Go to https://www.gemini.com/allin to get $50 in bitcoin when you sign up and trade. Function Health: Go to https://www.functionhealth.com/allin and use gift code ALLIN100 at checkout to get a $100 credit toward membership - limited to the first 1K listeners. NIAGEN Plus IVs: Visit https://www.niagenplus.com to discover the future of cellular performance. Follow Colin and Samir: https://www.youtube.com/@ColinandSamir https://x.com/ColinandSamir Follow Chris Williamson: https://www.youtube.com/@ChrisWillx https://x.com/ChrisWillx Follow Bryan Johnson: https://www.youtube.com/@BryanJohnson  https://x.com/bryan_johnson Follow the besties: https://x.com/chamath https://x.com/Jason https://x.com/DavidSacks https://x.com/friedberg Follow on X: https://x.com/theallinpod Follow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theallinpod Follow on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@theallinpod Follow on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/allinpod Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://x.com/yung_spielburg Intro Video Credit: https://x.com/TheZachEffect
Transcript
Discussion (0)
That was perfect.
You rocked it, bro.
That was great.
Music
Hey everybody.
Welcome to Austin.
Welcome everybody.
That's my friend Dave Friedberg. Thanks for having me. How are you doing brother? Welcome to Austin. Welcome everybody. That's my friend Dave Friedberg.
Thanks for having me.
How are you doing brother?
Welcome to Texas.
It's a little light.
We're missing a couple friends here tonight.
We have some new friends.
We got some awesome friends
and we wanted to do something around
this sort of new media creator economy.
It's something we're experiencing with the podcast
and that's obviously having a big impact on society, right?
A lot of people say this was the podcast election.
The big media companies from journalism, Fox News, CNN,
to the big platforms, Netflix, Amazon, Hulu,
to Disney and others are kind of rearranging
their pawns on the chessboard based on
and responding to what's going on.
And so we thought it'd be really interesting
to hear about some of the people
who we think are probably the smartest
in the creator economy in terms of building a business
and how you maneuver and how you play
and how you grow as part of that conversation today.
You didn't, you had a Twitter account
when we started All In,
but you literally had never tweeted.
And now you've become the Sultan of science.
You're very famous.
Any Sultan of science fans out there?
Woo!
Awesome.
Awesome.
Did anybody see him win Celebrity Jeopardy?
You won it.
I mean, we're so proud of our bestie.
Yeah, it's hard.
You have no idea how anxious, ashamed,
hand-wringing he was for six weeks.
He knew he won.
He wouldn't tell us the outcome
because he knew that Chamath would gamble it
and it would be like a whole controversy.
He'd figure out a way to make, you know, a bet on it.
Actually, someone doesn't know how to keep their mouth shut, but.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's all right.
I keep talking to your mouth about that.
And then he wins and he wins, but he's so upset at himself because he didn't win enough.
I'm going to thank our sponsors.
I mean, this is what happens on an average show.
I say about 17 inappropriate things.
He goes, strike, cut, strike, cut.
And then we have to have a grand negotiation
after the episode where we horse trade
the inappropriate things Chamath and I say
and what he's gonna allow us to do.
I don't mind when Chamath says inappropriate things.
Because it usually doesn't involve other people.
It's you where you kind of cross the line a little bit.
But you know. That's why they tune in. I have to save you from you kind of cross the line a little bit, but you know.
That's why they tune in.
I have to save you from you, Jacob.
But what has it been like in terms of,
because we're gonna talk about this here,
a lot of people now are taking the playbook
of creating audience and then building companies.
And you were doing the production board,
you're building a bunch of different companies.
Ohalo became very successful,
and you said, hey, wait, got to go all in on this, so
to speak, but you're going into it with a certain amount of audience, a certain
amount of notoriety, and the ability, let's face it, a lot of people in
business know you from the podcast now, so what's it like being a CEO now and
having the pod as like a platform? That's actually a great question because for me I'm like not doing this podcast to like
build a media thing.
I just thought it'd be interesting.
We started doing it during COVID and I just kind of kept doing it.
I don't know why I kept doing it to be honest.
I tried to quit every week I wanted to quit and I still contemplated a lot.
We had so much tension the first two years and now...
Until we got to sign an LLC agreement.
Now it's all smooth sailing.
The votes are what mattered.
It was a big, yeah.
Well actually, but I think it's like
a real important evolution.
You know, we had this thing going ad hoc
and I was trying to keep it together
and you know, the one thing I learned in media
from Engadget, I asked Peter Rojas,
who I had stolen from Gizmodo, Nick Denton's company,
to come to Engadget.
I said, tell me the secret of why Gizmodo, Gawker,
and now Engadget are doing so well.
And he said, oh, the secret to blogging is very simple.
Show up every day.
It's actually a great point.
Yeah, I mean, Jason did keep us showing up.
And then it became a thing.
And then it's like, OK, we should probably
do something legit to make this into a business
or make it into something structural that stays alive.
So we did.
But to answer your question, I go to meet with farmers a lot and
business executives in the agriculture industry.
And I can't tell you how often I run into someone who's like,
I watch your podcast, I'm a fan.
That is-
Like farmer Joe.
Farmer, like the other day I was in a meeting.
I won't reveal too much, but like, you know,
I mean you guys won't have any idea,
but some big farmer company, big company that does farming
who you would have never heard of,
no one in this room has ever heard of.
And then I'm in the hallway after we do this big pitch
and the guy pulls me aside, he's like,
give me a fist bump.
He's like, love the pod.
I'm like, it is weird.
And then I'm in another state at a meeting
and the COO comes out, he's like,
I'm a big like another state at a meeting and the COO comes out He's like, you know, I'm big fan of the pod and so it helps with getting building trust
It you've earned a reputation and so then when I go into meetings people know me because of this pod
Right and that reduces friction. I don't have to go sell myself in a meeting, right?
I'm already sold and it makes business easier
And so for me the pod isn't about making money on the pod
as much as it is like helping me in my everyday work,
which is where I spend pretty much all my time
except for a couple hours a week here.
To contextualize that in the conversation
we're gonna have today,
you create an audience with your content.
What do you do with that audience?
What are you doing this for?
You can sell ads and make money against that audience.
You can get sponsors that you speak to,
quality products that you endorse,
and you can make more money,
and you can either get paid cash or get some equity.
You can build your own product and actually own it,
and then own all the equity
and participate meaningfully in the upside
as you sell your audience your product.
Or in other cases, you're building credibility,
you're building, which is what a lot of venture capitalists did after our show,
I think, kind of became big.
They realized that they have this opportunity to build credibility with
entrepreneurs.
So when an entrepreneur shows up, they're like, I want to work with you because I've
seen you on your podcast.
Or investors show up, I want to invest with you because I've seen your comments on
your podcast.
So I think there's a lot of ways to think about the value of this.
But building an audience,
building credibility is really beneficial and it can work out in a lot of ways.
Yeah, and you take it seriously.
You know, it's an investment in time for you.
Today we've recorded a great episode.
We had our first comedian on, Andrew Schultz, and that'll come out tomorrow.
He was hilarious.
But you had an emotional moment
today on the show. We were talking about entrepreneurship and your journey. And I got to give you a
lot of credit. You're not like a professional broadcaster or whatever, but you prepare and
you put it all out there. And I'm very proud of the work you've done and how you've evolved
as a broadcaster and as somebody on the pod. I'm very proud of how much you've started
to put out there of yourself.
And it's not easy to do because you're an introverted,
personal person.
I mean.
Pretty extroverted, I'm like.
I mean, yeah, I mean, on the MDMA.
I'm ready to go party, I don't know what you're talking about.
You're the one who locks yourself up in the room afterwards.
Maybe in the 90s when you were going to raves
and you had a little of the Mali, the MDMA,
you were different, but I'm saying like,
now you're a little bit, you know.
Back in the day.
Back in the day, it's hilarious
because he's such a perfectionist,
and every time the pod comes out,
Chamath and I just wait 60 minutes after the pod.
That sucked, right, producer Nick?
It sucked, right?
We should delete it, cancel it.
There's a worst episode ever. And then the stats come out, oh, we broke another record, oh, right, producer Nick? It sucked, right? We should delete it, cancel it. There's a worst episode ever.
And then the stats come out, oh, we broke another record.
Oh, it's number eight in the world, oh, okay.
Look, the reality is we can always do better.
I mean, I am such an optimist,
as some of my friends who are here know,
like I just like, oh, that was fucking great.
It was a train wreck, but for me, it was a great train wreck.
And you know, just so you all know, we couldn't do it without the audience.
And the love that you give us is such an amazing motivation, especially for me.
I feed off the energy.
And when you all tell me your favorite episode or a great moment or you email us something,
where the thing I'm probably most proud of now is people are telling me they're having more difficult
conversations with their friends while remaining friends
And I think that's like one of the most beautiful things for me and my motivation on the pod is really
To to help give an example of how you can really have a hardcore discussion
Learn from each other appreciate each other and I hope that you all take that back to your poker games,
dinners, et cetera.
Families, you know, it's a very divided country right now,
there's a lot of important issues,
but friendship is worth investing in.
I just wanna give you all that as like a note.
Invest in your friends, invest in those hard conversations,
your life will become so rich because of it.
Have a couple of laughs, don't take it all so seriously,
David.
Yeah.
Well, before we bring our friends out,
Colin and Samir, I'm gonna just quickly,
we don't do sponsors on the show or ads on the show,
but when we do live events.
Which is incredibly infuriating me.
I wanna read ads on the show.
You'll be fine, you'll be fine.
Oh God, we'd have a jet by now.
We wanna pay for these, we don't wanna pay
for live events out of pocket. So we do have sponsors
Okay, you'll be fine
Find another Uber
So I did it's called Robin. Yeah, it's doing great. Yeah
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They helped pay for this.
Let's give it up for the sponsors one time.
Come on now.
Very good, very good.
You want to get Colin and Samir out?
Yeah.
Let's bring out our first guest.
Colin and Samir run the Colin and Samir show.
And they are experts on building content business.
Come on out Colin, come on out Samir.
Welcome, welcome.
You get the couch, come sit on the couch here.
Are you gonna see a brother?
All right, sit on the couch.
You guys are like real creators.
Look at that brand deal.
Thanks for being here.
I think we wanted to talk to you guys a little bit
about the evolution in media.
I wanna talk a little bit about the origination and the creator economy where folks were putting
out, and tell me if I'm off on this, but what felt like more kind of short form content.
It was almost like a new type of media that was different than traditional long form media,
TikTok type content.
But then what happened, it's like folks started doing podcasts and the content started to eat into
Other forms of media started to eat up journalism now and eat up news media now the platforms are doing deals
With the independent creators to put out long-form content. Can you talk a little bit about the evolution of like short form long form?
Sure, I don't think you can underscore the importance of the YouTube app on TVs. Just the fact that there was now a free option.
And you have people who are in a setting where they want to actually sit and consume something for a longer period of time.
So as creators started putting out longer videos, they started serving more ads, making more money,
investing back in their channels, in their shows.
And now they can actually produce things consistently
They can make things better. They can elevate it. They can make them longer and that's what you're seeing now I mean like 50% of our watch time is on connected TV. The reach has grown because of YouTube on TV. Yes
Yeah, yeah specifically YouTube now like when you buy a new TV
I just when I when I moved to the ranch you got a new TV and it's got YouTube on the remote
And you just think about that as a concept,
and then I watch my daughter's behaviors,
and they are watching YouTube on the giant television,
not on their iPads.
It's really a major difference,
and there's something about,
I'd like you to get into is the algorithm versus subscribers.
Because I grew up in a subscriber world,
where I thought about, okay, I'm going
to get one more subscriber and then I'll have them, or a certain number, out of ten I may
keep five, but they're going to watch every episode.
But then there's something that's gone on where people are creating content not with
the intent of subscribers, but with the intent of getting picked up by an algorithm and getting
non-subscriber viewers.
This seems like there's some tension here maybe.
Yeah, I would say probably the biggest creators,
most successful creators largely have like a 70%
viewership base that's not subscribed to them, right?
And I, yeah, I would say that's pretty common
amongst our friend group and amongst the people
that we work with.
And I think a lot of that has to do with the algorithm shift
towards viewer satisfaction.
And YouTube is a recommendations algorithm.
So first, when we first started making YouTube videos,
if you can make a great thumbnail, people would click.
That then inevitably got into clickbait,
where you would click into a video.
It was really short.
It wasn't representative of what was in the thumbnail.
So YouTube shifted their algorithm
into what is called viewer satisfaction, which is
essentially gauged off of click the rate,
did they click on the video,
and then average view duration, how long did they watch?
What percentage of this video did they watch?
Then there's other engagement metrics.
They like the video, they comment on the video,
there's a lot of different ways to understand satisfaction.
But essentially, as creators, every YouTube creator,
what they're trying to do is go, what video are you watching before you watch my video?
Because I want you to click on my video
after you're done with that video
or maybe in the middle of that video.
So most traffic on YouTube comes from suggested.
Okay, so. Does that make sense?
Yes, you have the suggested along here.
So you're telling me people are creating videos
with the intention of hijacking a popular video
and trying to get that suggested.
So everybody's talking about, I don't know,
pick the latest thing Trump did today,
or who's on Joe Rogan or what MrBeast did.
So now I try to get one of those slots
that would be related to the latest MrBeast video.
Yeah, I wouldn't say that timely
because I think YouTube operates as a catalog, right?
Like some of our videos that are still
picking up viewership today were made four years ago.
So the best way to do it is to build a catalog
that accrues viewership over time.
So you're mainly looking at like subject matters
with high total addressable markets on YouTube, right?
Like specific on YouTube.
So that is why when the world of Mr. Beast
really exploded on YouTube, you have a lot of people
talking about Mr. Beast or reacting to Mr. Beast
or going there's 200 million people to tap into here
who are probably watching a Mr. Beast video.
This is fascinating because right now there are people
doing after all in videos where they talk
and kind of drag us a bit,
and they're doing phenomenally well too.
Oh they are, maybe we'll get into that too.
Yeah, we should probably make that.
You can drag us into that.
I need to drag us on.
I wouldn't call it phenomenally well,
there's like a couple hundred viewers.
Whatever, but.
We could be the best in that category.
Actually you could own that category.
We could be number one.
So I was like, we could own that category.
What does it do for Colin, art and the artist,
that this is in their brains?
Because you know, Freeberg and I,
after a show happens, I talk about the moments.
And Freeberg has got that other brain
where he's talking about the metrics
and he's wondering about the wait time
and the thumbs up and the thumbs down.
Who liked it?
I'm like, I don't give a fuck about that.
It was a funny moment.
There was this moment people laughed.
There was this moment that had emotional resonance.
So maybe you could talk a little bit about art versus commerce, art versus algorithm.
Art versus algorithm.
Yeah, I mean, it's difficult to create right now within a vacuum.
I would say even opening up TikTok, the first couple of TikToks you see are going to show you what works.
Totally.
So it's hard to create something now that I know what works,
now that I know what people will see.
If that's the objective, audience growth.
But a true artist does not necessarily
care if someone watches their work.
If one person loves my work, that's all that matters.
But artists, but a true artist doesn't always
know actually what they could do to get people to watch their work.
And so we immediately know what would work.
And so you find for a lot of creators, they're on two ends of the spectrum.
They're either an artist or they're a distributor.
But to be an impactful creator,
you kinda actually need to lean more towards distributor.
You need to be like that programming executive that's like, okay, well,
Spider-Man worked, let's do it again.
Let's do it again, let's do it again, let's do it again. Let's do it again. Correct. We see that a lot if we change the title of the show
or the order of the topics.
We debate this a lot.
Where it's now, this might be the thing
that I wanna talk about, but no one wants Science Corner
up front, cause then the audience won't click.
No, I mean, we literally, some of the biggest battles.
Don't you guys think if we had Science Corner up front,
more audience would click?
Thank you. But that's the media audience would click? Thank you, yeah.
But that's the media business, right?
More Trump, it's like, well, we've got enough Trump.
That is the media business.
I mean, this is the tension we've had.
We're a band, not a solo performer, right?
So you have four people with distinct perspectives,
and you know, Sax was always out of the mind,
what's the top story in the world?
I'm trying to think about, well, like, what's the most interesting discussion?
Freberg's like, well, what's the biggest breakthrough
and what did we do last week?
And you kinda, and then Chamath's like,
well, what am I wearing and how does it look?
What am I wearing?
What am I wearing?
What am I wearing?
It's cool.
Oh, yeah.
What did I consume this week?
You know.
It's all, everybody's got different things there,
but it's kind of disheartening to me
to even know about all this.
I feel like it's ruining it to a certain extent for me.
For art.
Yeah, I think it, look, there's tension between creativity
and strategy on these platforms, right?
Because these are businesses.
And if you zoom out and go like,
how do media businesses work?
This is how media businesses work.
But I think what you have to think about
is also choosing your platforms.
I think we struggle because we entered into the world
of YouTube 15 years ago as creatives,
as guys who are exploring wanting to get into Hollywood
and saw this as a different route.
And where we've come to as now entrepreneurs
is we're in the media business.
And there's still tension where we want
to express our creativity, we wanna do cool things
that we think are cool, but they're very anti media.
But what I think, what you're talking about,
what's really interesting is you just need
to pick the right environment.
So we think about platforms in the context
of like permission and interruption.
So YouTube is an interruptive platform.
You have to stop someone in their tracks
with a thumbnail to get them to click in.
But Spotify, for example, is a permission-based platform.
RSS feeds are permission-based.
Email, which we have an email newsletter.
That's where we can have permission.
People have given us permission to be in there.
It's where you're seeing the rise of memberships too,
whether it's like Patreon.
People have said, hey, you know what,
I'll pay whatever you guys make, I'm down.
And so I actually think you just think about
those environments of top of funnel, bottom of funnel,
or you go permission interruption.
It's an interesting way to think about,
in this environment I can play around
and my audience has given us permission.
Everyone who's in here, we have the permission
to kind of talk about what everyone wants to talk about.
You're not worried about the title.
Yeah, right.
Yeah, and that's sort of where I'm getting to.
And the other trend that Free Burger
and I have been talking about,
you know, we have this natural tension.
We don't have ads on the pod.
On my other pod, it makes millions of dollars in ads
this week in startups.
And that helps me have a team of nine people.
We like to throw good parties.
And we like to, yeah, we spent.
We spent like a million to a party in LA.
I spent 900,000 on the Barbie party on the pier.
Oh, we spent more this year. This year. We did? Oh my God.
Fuck. Well, see that to me is the fun of it.
By the way, let me just put a little plug in. This year at the All In Summit in LA,
the first night is going to be insane. Insane. Never, it's like everything last year combined.
Like, yeah, it's gonna be awesome. Anyway.
You, I mean...
My job is to burn all the money.
I'm like Jimmy of Mr. Beast.
Like, let's flip a coin and double it.
Let's double it.
I kind of feel that that's like what's interesting.
When you have success as an artist is being
able to deploy resources to make something that gives joy or that experience, right?
One of the great things about the event is when people show up and they dress, when a
party has a theme, great music, great people, and it's in a really great location,
something happens to me.
Has anybody been to one of the All In Summit parties?
Raise your hand.
Open bar.
Open bar, well.
J. Cal fought me on the open bar.
I'm like, you gotta have an open bar.
My thing was wine and beer and a couple cocktails,
but this guy's like, he's a bit of a lush,
and he's like, we gotta have all the high-end stuff.
Wine and beer.
And then what happens is the last hour of the party.
Jason thinks everyone's like sipping champagne,
looking in the sunset.
No, people are pounding double McCallan 18s
because they're like, I gotta get my money's worth.
And then all of a sudden I'm in a headlock getting,
somebody's taking a selfie with me.
Oh my God, we're friends, I love you.
What do you think of the phenomenon now
of building audience to distribute a product
because this is infected? This is a great, by the way let's just ask the broader
question. What's the business model? You have a new creator, they're starting to
build an audience. Advise them on what are the paths they can walk and where
that can go because this is one of the paths, it's a great one that we're talking
about but like what are the options and when does one become an option?
Sure.
I mean, no matter what, everyone is making videos,
attracting an audience, and selling a product.
That product is either theirs or it's someone else's.
If we go back in the history of media,
why are they called soap operas?
They were literally created to sell soap.
Yes.
And so I think that is that right? That is right.
Ivar Soap was like, the car companies and Ivar Soap
were the big sponsors.
Yeah.
No, but it was programming that was created
to attract a specific audience
that was interested in buying soap.
Totally.
And so that's why the programming happened
in the middle of the day.
And so the reality is like.
You could say housewives at that time.
Nobody's gonna think you're a misogynist.
You said it, not me, but you know.
I mean at the time that was a nuclear family.
Yeah, that was a nuclear family.
That's why they were called soap operas.
So the reality is for a young creator,
I would say that the number one piece of advice
is actually keep your operation lean
and your costs very low.
Most great creators can create, if you're a good storyteller,
you can make videos right now on the internet with your iPhone.
The number one thing you have to think about
is the audience that you are engaging.
Because at the core of it, your product
is your relationship with the audience.
It's the trust that you have with the audience.
And so that takes a long time to build.
Some creators make the mistake of raising money
to start making their content,
or some creators make the mistake of hiring a big staff.
That creates too much overhead.
You're gonna start doing deals
that maybe you don't wanna do.
You need cash to finance your content.
First and foremost, it's like, keep it lean,
make good stuff, find the audience.
Your first 100 videos are gonna suck.
Just build until you find the audience that you want.
And then the business models will start to emerge,
whether that's, hey, you know what, I built a great brand,
and part of my content, I'm Emma Chamberlain,
and part of my content is I drink coffee every day.
So maybe I should launch a coffee brand.
I take the coffee that I'm drinking every day.
Meaning make your own brand.
Yeah.
But that's hard.
That means you have like critical mass, big scale,
you're reaching millions and millions of people.
The cost challenge, but payoff is higher.
Yeah.
And that's the big, that's the big.
It can be.
It can be.
I think CPG's really hard.
It's all predicated on connecting with an audience first.
First.
So the advice I think what I'm hearing is,
hey, connect with the audience
and put on the back half of your career monetization,
but just connect.
And Marquez, I don't know if you've ever seen
his early reviews.
I mean, it's hilarious.
He's like, how old is he?
15, 16, 17 years old.
And he's like, I'm using this phone.
It's the iPhone 4.
Jimmy's first videos are still up on YouTube.
MrBeast's first videos, he's still up there.
You gotta go watch it.
I mean, I watched one of them. It's him counting to 10,000
I think under that was that by the way, that was a later video his very first videos
You gotta go watch like the first 10 videos. I mean, he's playing video games. He can't even see his face
You're like what? Yeah, he's speaking speaking
I don't become the most famous person in the world from from that but you can watch evolution
Yeah, he watches paint dry in a video. Yeah, it's like a 20 hour long video
But just to go back to the, isn't one of the other paths selling your content?
So now we're seeing a bunch of deals. Jimmy's getting a deal from Amazon.
Amazon paid him for the Beast games.
We're seeing more comedians that do live shows getting deals with Netflix.
We're seeing a bunch more of those happen.
We're seeing Hulu and other platforms start to bid,
even X might be doing some more content deals
with folks that look more like journalists.
So ultimately, how do you decide whether I want to monetize
by ads and making a product,
or is there becoming a more liquid market
for selling my content onto bigger platforms
that are losing their audience to be independent,
so they need to basically go rebuild an audience?
Like is that a realistic path,
or is that just like the cream of the cream
get to have access to kind of see?
I think that's a realistic path for the top.
And maybe you could talk about the Spotify thing.
Especially if we're talking about streaming,
I think it's a realistic path for the top.
And I don't look at it as like selling content,
I look at it as selling distribution. Like bringing and audience because the ads get layered on to these platforms
Yeah, I mean you about amazing digital circus. Yeah, I think where it's where it's probably going. There's an interesting case study
There's a YouTube channel called amazing digital circus, which is an animated channel and they did a deal that is super unique
I think the first of its kind where they will be distributing on Netflix at the same exact time as they distribute on YouTube.
So Netflix licensed the content and it's coming out at the same time.
It's not their content, it's not proprietary to Netflix.
It's licensed.
So in that regard, he's making money on advertising.
But he wouldn't be getting, he's not getting paid as much or they're not getting paid as
much as if they sold the content and the rights to Netflix.
Is that right?
Maybe if it was like
an original, yeah, I guess, if it was exclusive.
But this is a watershed moment in many ways
because Netflix was really about them being the taste maker,
them underwriting it. That's right.
And you know, at least in this Netflix post-licensing DVDs,
then they became the creators, the arbiters,
and now they're going back in some ways to
say we're going to cherry pick people off of YouTube, give them money for their quarter
billion subscribers.
It's a really fascinating moment.
I think probably that if you've seen the Nielsen ratings of connected TV usage, YouTube's at
the top at 11%.
It's the most used streaming app on connected TVs Netflix is at 8.5% and in December after Beast Games Thursday night football in that movie
That they did with the Rock Amazon. They've made a move moved up to 4% right so but YouTube Netflix moved up
You mean no Amazon Prime Video move because of that
8.5% and YouTube but YouTube's at 11% right? Like the reality is, there's a really interesting quote
from Ted Sarandos when Netflix won their first Emmy
for House of Cards.
Because Netflix was an aggregator beforehand, right?
So Netflix goes from aggregator,
starts producing original programming,
and it was a massive moment when they won an Emmy,
because that was pretty new,
that some internet tech company can win an Emmy.
And Ted Sarandos said, television is television.
It doesn't matter which pipe brings it forward.
And I think it's a really important thing
that the major difference when it comes to YouTube
is Netflix is gonna spend 18 billion on content this year.
YouTube doesn't spend on content.
YouTube does a revenue share.
They actually technically don't know
what's gonna get uploaded today.
And it could be the biggest video of the day.
It could be something like amazing digital circus that did
500 million views across three episodes
Wow, it's also interesting Netflix. I'm sorry YouTube premium taking the ads out. Is that a hundred and ten hundred and twenty five million subscribers
That's 125 now. Yeah, you that broke a TV
How many people here pay for Netflix read or the premium version that takes out the ads? YouTube Red?
Oh, YouTube Premium.
YouTube Premium.
They keep changing the goddamn name.
How many people are YouTube Red?
Wow, that's pretty significant.
It's like a third of the audience.
And what is that, 12 bucks?
It's like 20 bucks, yeah.
It's 20 bucks now?
I think it's the best 20 bucks I spend on anything.
I agree.
How do the guys that are losing audience,
which are the traditional broadcasters,
how are they gonna respond as their audience gets attritted away?
We're seeing as long form as taking up more time and attention from the independents,
Fox News is losing an audience, CNN is losing an audience, MSNBC is losing an audience.
Their audiences are gone.
They're just vaporizing right now.
What are they going to do?
They've got a lot of cash, they've got a lot of advertising dollars still flowing in.
For now, they're well capitalized,
they've got very motivated shareholders.
What's their response?
If you guys are an executive running Fox,
what would you do?
And we spoke about this recently,
but there already are some shows on cable
that are starting to act more like digital channels,
more like YouTube channels, right?
If you look at like Saturday Night Live,
or you look at late night,
those are actually just a bunch of segments
that can work really well when uploaded to YouTube
or to the internet.
And I think when you bring up Fox News,
news is actually one of the last genres of cable
to try and figure out or be able to figure out
how to put themselves into segments that work
at the 20 plus minute range,
which is what's working on YouTube right now.
But the long form is crushing too, right?
Like the hour long, I mean, our show's 90 minutes,
Lex does three and a half hours.
I would say 20 plus is like.
Rogan's like hours long and he's number one.
When I say 20 plus, I mean like that's like the minimum.
I see what you're saying.
It's like 20 and continuing to go. Yeah. But does that mean that they're gonna try and license Rogan? They're gonna try and license Lex
They're gonna try and license one of these independents in is that the move that they're gonna have to make ultimately
That's gonna be like a big changing of the guards because that's like a there's like some risk mitigation that I don't know if they
Would be comfortable with me like Pat McAfee. Yeah, I guess Pat McAfee is a good example on ESPN. This is a sports guy, yeah.
Yeah, sports.
So ESPN just picked him up.
Yeah, that's right.
He does independent.
Well, he came onto ESPN, but that also created some.
ESPN tried something similar with Barstool a while ago, right?
And Barstool got taken off the air within an episode or two.
Because again, there's a risk factor.
They said some stuff on air, and they were like,
we can't do this.
Get them off the air. But McAfee's the more mature iteration of that as both spaces have kind
of matured. That's like a YouTube show that was brought to television and McAfee's really
good where he's doing, I don't know if you guys saw the college game day stuff where
he's doing the big field goal kicks for $100,000. It's essentially a YouTube title but built
for TV that then gets clipped and put onto YouTube. And? And so I think that's what Colin's saying is like.
Try on ESPN at any moment
and it looks like you're watching a podcast.
When you see his show, the production level is pretty low.
So is the media exec gonna go out and find the next
or the up and coming and say, I wanna bring you on,
I'm gonna pay you to come and do this on my platform now,
you're gonna become a Fox News show,
you're gonna become an ESPN show?
They have to give irrational deals to creators for that.
Versus the talent agent showing up and saying,
here's a good.
The other problem is distribution.
So like Jimmy, for example, Jimmy is,
yes he's in the media business,
but he's in the chocolate business.
And so being able to get to 200, 300 million people
in a video is really significant.
And YouTube being at the top
of the connected TV streaming apps,
like you'd probably choose YouTube
if you're just going pure distribution.
If you're selling a chocolate brand
or some other type of CBG product,
you choose distribution over not.
And so I think when you're getting offered a deal
to go onto Fox News, do stuff on linear TV,
it has to be such an irrational deal
because it limits my distribution.
Even if I go onto a Netflix, technically I'm actually,
I'm limited in distribution if I'm Mr. Beast.
Not if I'm another criminal.
Also, the money and control issues are also very acute.
When this week when Star Wars was doing good,
right before All In started, I met with SiriusXM team.
And they were like, hey, we think you might have
some Howard Stern potential, and what if you got Travis
from Uber, who was very hot at the time,
and a couple of guys to come on and do a roundtable thing
and make it fun.
Then when we started talking money, I was like,
that's less money than this week in startups makes already,
and I own 100% of it.
Would I own the IP here?
And they're like, well, no, no, we own the IP. And I'm like, I mean, this is, we're talking
six years ago, seven years ago. And then even now, you know, once in a while I'll talk to
CNBC or somebody and we'll come and say, hey, you know, you have any ideas? And I'm like,
doesn't economically make sense for a creator who has escape velocity to go backwards. And I wonder, Friedberg, if the answer to this question is,
anybody who is actually talented enough,
like a Megyn Kelly, or somebody like Mr. Beast,
or even Tucker Carlson,
how could they ever go back to Fox now?
Right?
That's the point, I don't think they will.
I think it's entropy, it's only going think they will. I think it's entropy.
It's only going in one direction.
I think their audience erodes.
Their advertising dollars erode.
And then they're getting whatever broadcasting
distribution deals they have on cable
are going to slowly be worth less.
I don't know what it's going to be worth.
I think Colin, isn't this Colin because Fox and Sirius XM
and CNBC have a cost infrastructure.
So when they meet talent, they're like, talent gets 20%
and then we need to get our 20%
and then the other 50, 60% has to go to.
The shareholders.
Yeah, and the building and the 50 fucking camera operators.
No, you're 100% right.
The model's broken.
The model's totally broken.
The greatest thing about your guys' shows,
it started on Zoom.
We talk about this in the context of creators,
like back to the advice to an up and coming creator,
it's the same advice.
Keep your overhead cost extremely low.
Creators are the startups of Hollywood.
We always say, think out on a 52 week schedule.
Could you do this every week for 52 weeks?
If you're someone who loves to set up cameras and lights,
sure, you might be able to do that.
But if you're a hundred percent busy people,
you're like, yeah, we can hop on Zoom every week for 52 days.
And if it were like what you're describing,
there's no frigging way I'd do it.
Like, zero chance.
The only reason I do it is because I can get on Zoom
for 90 minutes and be done, and then I go on
the rest of my day for work.
The turning point of the pod really was when,
you know, you used to run out of my operation
and I said, you guys have to commit
to Thursdays the same time.
We cannot, if this is gonna work,
everybody has to agree that Thursdays at 11 a.m. Pacific
are sacrosanct, and everybody agreed.
We all blocked it out.
We all blocked it out, and we said, no,
if anybody has to move, then we go to our list of,
you know, fifth besties, sixth besties,
and we rotate them in, but we're not gonna move around
to a mod schedule, a mod schedule, free breaks,
and that's when the show really actually got locked in.
Okay, let me take the conversation
in the opposite direction now,
which is we're going from points of low leverage,
Fox News, lots of cameras, lots of buildings, expenses,
to low leverage, being on Zoom and a laptop,
to, let me talk about the lower leverage. to lots of cameras, lots of buildings, expenses, to low leverage, being on Zoom and a laptop.
Let me talk about the lower leverage.
Are you guys seeing any success in Gen.AI-only content channels
out there?
And maybe you could talk about, as Gen.AI gets better and better
and better, do we have agents that ingest the news,
ingest content, ingest data, repackage it, and then create new versions
through an iterative process to kind of hack the algorithm
to figure out how do I get stuff that people stay on,
what's the right cut rate, what's the right color balance,
what's the right sound, what's the right audio,
what's the right music, and ultimately the Gen.AI
does what great content creators like Jimmy
took 10 years to do in a couple weeks
and ultimately creates a whole new category.
And I'm just thinking ahead here now, but maybe tell us today on the ground if you're
seeing any Gen.ai that's got realistic traction out there.
For me personally, there's no Gen.ai channels that are 100% Gen.ai that I am watching or
at least that I know of, that I'm consuming and that I'm enjoying.
But I mean, even within our organization
with a lot of other creators,
the amount of AI tools that we're using,
from scripting to even cutting the angles on our show,
we're continually adopting more and more AI tools,
and I think, which is the way it should be,
the audience, I don't think even really can tell.
So it's slowly seeping in.
Into production, but not taking it over. Have you played with notebook LM? Yes
So it's pretty amazing my vantage point with the first time I fed a PDF into notebook
LM was the Spotify earnings report and I was like I have a 20 minute drive
I want to cure this and it was nine minutes and it was perfect. Yeah, and you can if you don't know what notebook LM is
It's a project by Google. You, you can feed in a bunch of text,
it'll turn into audio, it'll have two hosts,
they host it like a podcast.
So then I started to think, okay, well actually,
you can just custom make yourself a podcast for your drive,
right, and go, hey, I'm driving 30 minutes,
I wanna know about the NFL scores,
I wanna know about the Netflix earnings call,
and I'm also interested in what's going on in the world of the creator economy.
And all of a sudden you have an aggregate of news and articles and it gets turned into
audio and it's compelling.
Does that replace the time that you would otherwise spend listening to podcasts and
watching videos?
It's a more, so what's interesting about Gen.I content I found, especially with Notebook
LM, it's a more efficient way to consume content.
But I don't think we prioritize efficiency always.
As you know.
Oh, of course not.
That would be like, soylent, you know,
it's like, well this is,
Easy J. Kelly.
No offense, Brian, but I'm just saying like,
this nutty pudding concept,
my wife makes me the nutty pudding.
I'm like, you know what, I kinda want the regular pudding.
Anyway, I know it's healthier.
But this is, it kinda takes out the spontaneity
of what, if you want that NBA content,
I watched this Knicks thing, Knicks Fan TV,
and this guy takes all the clips,
and last night the Knicks won in overtime,
the Kell bridges, amazing buzzer beater,
and I was as excited to open up Knicks Fan TV,
you know, he comes on 15 minutes after the game
and watch the community's reaction to it.
And every time the Knicks win,
I will give a $100 tip and a super chat.
I probably give two or $3,000 a year
just to support this creator
because it reminds me of WFAN in New York
and he has all these regular callers. It is such a spectacular product. And then I noticed that I'm like into Corvettes
and I'm in the YouTube thing and I got the Corvettes in my sidebar and this motherfuckers
are like creating fake AI Corvette announcements that aren't real and they're using generative
AI and they're saying the new ZR17 is here.
I'm like what, I'm gonna get the ZR1.
And then there's a 17, I click on this thing
and it's this AI voice.
Chevy Corvettes are known for having the greatest engines.
But that's today.
And I block that motherfucker.
No, but that's today.
I block that channel.
So look, you're right.
But I hit the triple dot, bam.
Look, I would be less dismissive,
as we all know, every month.
We're a little more surprised by what Gen.ai can do
and the power of it.
There's a really important human directorial role
in the early days of this Gen.ai revolution,
and I think that it enables
an incredible fragmentation of media,
even more than we're seeing today in the creator economy.
Maybe you end up getting your personal news feed with the newscaster or the podcaster
or the Knicks super fans reading to you what happened at the game last night that's Gen.
AI completely and it's indistinguishable from reality.
That's where I think things may get a little more funky in the next couple of years.
I don't think it's like that far off.
That suggests also like this kind of far move away
from monoculture into like extreme microculture,
which kind of already exists.
Each of us opens our phone.
Well, I got a point of view on this one,
which is like, I do think that there's shared cultural facts,
but different cultural experience of the facts,
meaning like the game is the game,
but the commentator that tells me about the game
is different.
And that's where I think this all plays out,
where I'm gonna have like my own tuned broadcaster,
she could be really beautiful, I don't know,
and she could be really cool.
She could be talking to me, you know, one on one,
I don't know, it could be really weird.
It's really funny, I actually, I get on chat GPT advanced voice
and I have this female voice and when my wife's in the car
I start talking, I'm like, hey baby, what's going on?
And my wife gets so upset.
Yeah, I was about to say, framework Azure Council.
I'm gonna go ahead and advise you to not share this publicly.
But you know what I'm saying,
and I think that's where my story starts.
By the way, we're gonna come back
and talk again in a few minutes.
But Colin and Samir, thank you guys, gonna come back and talk again in a few minutes.
Colin and Samir, thank you guys.
We'll see you guys again in a few minutes.
Thanks so much.
Thanks for having me.
Austin's unique.
Okay.
There's a lot of podcasters here.
So you know, I came to town.
I got a lot of podcasting friends.
And as you know, I'm podcast famous,
which is the fame that goes right below reality television.
And we're incredibly lucky because our next guest is both podcast famous and reality television
famous, and he's in Austin.
And when I came here, I was like, you know, I'm going to come here and I'm going to hang
with all my podcasting bros. So I texted Tim Ferris, I was like,
Tim, let's get dinner.
Tim's like, yeah, I'm trying to find a girlfriend, wife,
you know, I gotta try to grow up, make a baby,
all this kind of stuff, and so I'm out and about,
I'm not in town.
Then I texted, I said, okay, well, I'm 0 for 1,
but I'll text Lex Freeman. Text Lex Freeman, okay, well, I'm 0 for 1, but I'll text Lex Freeman.
Text Lex Freeman.
He's like, I'm having panic attacks.
I don't know.
My life, existential.
I had Kanye on.
You told me not to do it.
You were right.
And then I had Zelensky.
I had Zelensky on.
Then I had Putin on.
Everybody hates me, but everybody loves the pot.
He's a hot mess,
and he's like, I can't find a girlfriend either.
So then I text Chris Williamson, and I'm like,
hey, let's have dinner, and he's like,
J-Cal, let's eat a steak, I need your help,
I'm trying to find a girlfriend.
And so ladies and gentlemen, Chris Williamson.
We're gonna find out.
Good to see you brother.
Get over here.
Man, you know, we, Chimath is off the program.
And now we've got a real man on the pod.
Chris Williamson will be taking Chimath's seat going forward.
So handsome.
What's going on, you and I had a little steak
and I think you double booked, but I appreciate
being the first seating on your Friday night.
You went out.
I think I'm sloppy thirds for this choice.
No, no, we saved the best for last.
There it is.
Good save.
Yeah, I'm full of...
Charming, that's why you're such a good wingman.
I'm a solid wingman.
I helped Lex out a bit,
but what's going on on the dating front?
Let's be honest here, did you, where are you at?
Because a lot of ladies want to know,
is Chris Williamson still on the market or not?
Off the market currently,
but I did shave the handlebar mustache,
which I think sort of straightened me up as well.
People will read about that.
He shows up for our steak dinner with the porn stash of all porn stashes.
It's unbelievable, this handlebar thing.
And I was like, you know, Chris, we don't know each other.
Whatever. Are you straight?
It's like as an arrow.
I spent 50 percent of the meal asking me whether I'm straight.
That kind of sounded a little bit like wishful thinking after the lady
doffing quite too much.
I thought there was a there. I thought there window facial hair. I felt there was a window, but you started in reality TV. Yeah
Technically I suppose so yeah, I mean that's how you got your first taste of media and fame. Yeah
Island that would be fat. Yes. I actually did a reality TV show before that. I have a lustrous history of reality TV
Oh, okay. It was a nightclub promoter, commercial model,
DJ, reality TV, and...
That's my career too, by the way.
I was about to say.
Yeah.
Actually, I did a little summer stock.
As a British...
Pretty similar to your reality television.
We're kind of the same.
As a British comedy comedian told me the other day,
commercial male model, club promoter, DJ, reality TV,
is otherwise known as cunt Bingo. Ah, yes.
That's right.
Absolutely.
So I had a full house.
Look, did some reality TV stuff.
That was kind of like an existential crisis
that was captured on television 24 hours a day,
being trapped in a house for a little while.
And then got toward the end of my 20s and Rogan, Sam Harris,
Alain de Botton from the School of Life, Jordan Peterson are all coming to the front.
And I thought, wow, I'm learning a lot from these people.
I'm less of an adult infant as I was when I first started listening to them.
Maybe if I started my own show, I would be able to have these sorts of conversations. They felt really nourishing to me.
And 900 episodes and a billion and a bit downloads.
Did you think about it as an interview show?
Were you like, I want to interview people?
Or were you like, I want to explore the world or I want to teach people?
Or what was the kind of...
I had nothing to teach people.
Right.
At all.
Yeah.
So it was very much, yeah, I'm gonna find these interesting people who understand how
the world works, I wanna understand myself and the world around me.
But you start off with who you've got around you, your friends.
Like Kai Wei, the guy that invented the light phone, he was episode 10, so super obsessed
with digital minimalism and what social media was doing to our brains, and then there was
a season of relationships and a season of health and fitness, and there was a season
of evolutionary psychology.
So it's a thinly veiled autobiography, which I actually think a lot of people's sort of
true bodies of work are.
If you're following your instinct, you're just, it's a little trail of breadcrumbs of
where your mind was at, at that time.
Yeah, you figured out the great hack of podcasting, which is if you wanna learn really quick,
if you hang out with smart people,
and you ask them very simple questions,
and you're present and you listen to the answers,
maybe you're really good at the follow-up question,
by the way, which is always how I judge an interviewer,
how good they are at being present,
and not being like, okay, question number one done, check.
Now let's go to number two.
You're really good at listening and finding
that next question.
But it is such an amazing hack to learn, right?
And to build a network and to even build a group of friends.
Look, I always felt reticent that I did business
at university.
I did two business degrees, including a masters,
and I can't remember anything from either of them.
I spent a lot of time partying, again,
club promoter, kind of bingo.
And I always thought, I wish I'd gone and done psychology.
I wish I'd sort of followed something more approximating
a passion or philosophy or sociology or something.
And then I realized a couple of years ago,
I was like, well, you have done that.
You've got to design your own degree,
only speaking to the best in their field
about the very specific niche part of their topic that you want to learn on your terms with no
coursework or homework beyond what you want to do and you get to call it a job
so whatever version of the simulation that we're in at the moment I need to
sort of thank the designer because yeah it's wild I get to call this a career
it's a I think we all feel that way in many respects. Tell me about, Sam's a good friend of mine.
We had the same book agent for a long time,
and I remember I had him on my podcast,
and he said, what's podcasting?
And I explained it to him, and he said,
well, how do I do it?
And I said, well, you get two microphones and a guest.
And he's like, then what?
I'm like, well, then we hit the record button.
And I helped him start the pod.
What are your thoughts on what he's like, then what? I'm like, well, then we hit the record button. And I helped him start the pod. What are your thoughts on what he's done and his influence?
Because I know you've had him on a couple of times, yeah?
No, he's been on once.
Only once?
Yeah, his wife's been on as well.
Oh, Annika's been on as well.
Yeah, she's fantastic.
So tell me about your favorite guest, Sam.
Jordan Peterson, I know him a bunch of he's pretty great
it's kind of like I'm gonna choose from 900 children I suppose one of the most
reliable guests actually a guy called Rory Sutherland you know Rory amazing
imagine a gruff upper-class British sweary uncle who also happens to be one of the best
behavioral economists on the planet. So this guy understands consumer behavior
like like nobody else. In fact if you go into Ogilvy's website and you look at
the job description on the board members it says Rory Sutherland, vice chairman of
Ogilvy advertising, Rory got to design his own job title specifically so no
one actually knows what he does. And he's fantastic, just speaking to Jordan was great.
Alan from the School of Life is just, he sees the human condition very accurately.
It's fun, I get to indulge my own curiosities and follow my instincts.
Do you think other people can do it, should do it?
This is a big thing I see is like folks that wanna kinda create a business through this
kind of new creator economy.
There's all these paths to monetization,
build the audience, and they're like,
what I'll do is I'll go find people to interview
and I'll interview them.
What's the barrier for folks?
What makes folks really great at this?
What's the challenge in the business?
And how do you kind of do it better than others?
Yeah, I think Christopher Hitchens says,
everyone has a buck in them, and for most that's where it should stay and
I
Wonder whether podcasting may be something similar, but it's certainly a skill set that you can develop
Look, I think the best thing is a project so personal to you that you would do it if nobody listened, right?
And for me if everybody switched off tomorrow, I did this when no one listened.
Your conversations with people that you were truly interested in learning from.
It's an autobiography for me.
It's a repository of my own.
I think that's really interesting because it's kind of like our podcast was us literally
talking with each other about the things that were going on in the world
and how we were maneuvering in COVID
and talking about markets,
stuff that we would literally do at the poker table.
And then we just did it on Zoom and put on the internet.
Yeah.
All of the people that are here, I listen every week.
I think the pod's fantastic.
I get to tune in and just listen to
between three and five guys,
depending on who's available that week.
Just have a hang.
And it feels like you're dropping in on precisely
the poker table or the private room of the steak dinner.
And that's why I think people are massive fans of the show
because it feels like, I know you're-
Genuine, authentic conversations that you wanna have
as an individual that you're interested in having.
Yeah, it's like if your friend list was just a little bit better educated than you.
And you're like, okay, I get to find out it's a little bit more elevated as a conversation.
By the way, this is a little different than what we talked about, which is the other side
of this creator economy, which is hacking an audience, making stuff for an audience,
growing the audience, where your focus is on algorithmically, technically, tactically
identifying things that the audience likes
and then focusing on those things and building from there.
And this is a very different kind of tack.
Both work.
This is the right tack, by the way,
is to pursue your muse and to do something
that's authentically interesting to you.
You and I both agree on film and the importance
of great film and great directors
are the ones that were left the fuck alone.
You know, the great directors are the ones who got the deals at the studios
where they were told they had complete creative control.
Final cut.
Yeah.
Look, you can still play that game.
I have two full-time front catalog strategists and two back
catalog strategists as well for YouTube.
So we have a big team that's playing the algo game, they're chopping down clips.
So look, I think that what is it that Ferris says about in the short term your results
are determined by your intensity and the long term your results are determined by your consistency,
but don't trade the latter for the former. And if you try and go too hard, if you try
and do things where you're being ventriloquized by the audience, I'm going to try and reverse
engineer what I think the audience wants from me,
which means that if they stop loving you,
not only do you not have the one thing you used to have,
but you didn't even make a body of work
that you cared about either.
So you end up resenting the audience.
And yeah, for me, it's kind of like a bulletproof strategy.
You're gonna keep going for longer
because you like what you do.
So can we talk about monetization,
how you think about making money?
Before we get to that,
I really wanna bang on this just a little bit more.
You also made a decision, we were talking before about,
we did something lo-fi to just get ourselves
in the same space virtually with Zoom for a couple of hours.
Your production quality is absolutely stunning.
You care about aesthetics,
you care about the lighting and the location.
Just for the audience here,
take us through that decision.
And I don't know the earliest part of the catalog
and if you did it to that level.
You have done some Zooms, I believe,
because Rory's only available on Zoom.
But take me through the aesthetic choices you made and why. Yeah, so I realized about three years ago that most podcasters are something with a
podcast, they're a UFC fighter with a podcast, they're a comedian with a podcast, they're
whatever, investors with a podcast, right? It's not their profession. So I asked myself,
what would it look like if we turned pro at being a podcaster? And part of that is the lift needs to be very low
for most people that are busy doing other things
because they're busy doing other things.
So they can't spend ages going towards this one big production.
So I started working with cinematographers.
I got one of the best directors of photography in America.
He's out of Nashville.
I got a producer. We got grips, gaffers.
We started using location scouts.
And we started to dial in a very specific luck.
We started to use handheld cameras on tripods, monopods, dollies, doorways, dollies. We did the first ever five camera podcast on
LED video wall, the same technology that was used for the Mandalorian and as we were talking live the video
And as we were talking live, the video controller changed the scenes based on what we talked about.
So if we moved from a war story to a scary story
in a spooky house, we went from Afghan base
with trucks driving around and helicopters coming in
to a spooky house that had...
Is it like literally the opposite of what Colin and Tamir
were saying with keep the budget low?
No, but it's interesting.
I mean, just knowing what I know about production costs,
that sounds like you're spending 30, 40 dimes an episode.
It's not far off that.
We can get it down by squeezing here and there.
Thankfully, my line producer is a sort of bully
when it comes to trying to get that stuff down.
But look, I like pretty things.
And I think that one way that you can excel
is to stand out visually.
Say more.
And, um,
I'll go on stage with.
I like things to look nice.
And I didn't see anyone that was really elevating
the way that stuff looked.
Does it change the subjects,
mindset and the interview itself, when they see is a very important part of the
podcasting, the podcasting is
the podcasting's mindset and the
interview itself, when they see how beautiful it is, when they
see the investment in it, does it change something in the
subject?
I have this belief that at least in the world of podcasting,
we're splitting into two directions at the moment. It's the Modern Wisdoms, it's the Steven Bartlett's of the world, and then the other side is the more sort of low tech.
It would be all in, it would be Matt and Shane's
secret podcast.
And then you've got sort of a Rogan or a flagrant
that sort of sits somewhere in the middle,
which is good quality, not insane,
it's just facilitating the hang.
And I think that barbelling both of those
is a good way to go.
You can lean into the real sort of high-end production stuff
and when the guest turns up and they're like,
wow, we're in a 25,000 square foot warehouse in the middle of LA
and there's a team of 15 people here and there's huge lights
and there's guys holding dollies, like they lock in.
They're really there to, oh, this is an occasion.
This isn't me just turning up for a chat,
but that wouldn't work for every type of show.
In fact, what you want to do is facilitate
a little bit more ease.
So that's why I still like doing stuff over Zoom,
or I guess, like, Riverside or whatever you use.
Because I want to have that casual sort of commerce.
Not everyone wants to turn up and it feel like it's a,
you know, the World Cup final of podcasting.
Yeah.
Should we go to the monetization?
So like, how'd you start thinking about building the business,
high quality content, authentic content?
Was it a conversation about, hey, let me just put this out there,
make ads and I'll figure it out later?
Or was it very deliberate and
how's the model kind of evolving for you?
Yeah, so it was emergent over time.
You start off just taking whoever you can get.
A lot of supplement companies and teeth whitening companies,
whatever's available.
You read ads?
Yeah.
And they come in or you call out?
I did outreach for the first five or 600 episodes
of the show.
So I was managing my own ads.
I was sending the invoices.
I was slowly scaling up the CPMs.
You can get between a $15, 25 dollars CPM, something like that,
audio only. I made the commitment not to do ads on YouTube because if it was a
virtual episode, it felt like it was such a low lift that that kind of didn't
justify making people sit through baked-in ads, at least on YouTube, but we
got away with it. You mean where you have the option to turn them off? No, these are
hard-coded into the file itself. Recoded in, yeah.
Yeah, that's what's referred to as baked in.
And then, look, we've got ourselves to the stage now
where we have some pretty interesting setups.
I think I'm one of the only podcasters that does this,
where we sell an entire ecosystem.
So if you come on board as one of what we call our flagship
partners, you get a set of impressions across the entire
year, let's say 40 million, 60 million impressions.
Then you get a number of Instagram story sequences
on my Instagram.
You'll get newsletter drops on my newsletter,
which has got 300,000 subs and a 50% open rate.
Lots of click through on that.
And then maybe I'll come speak at your AGM
or I'll do something else.
And we build out this big package.
That will elevate the level of the partner too
because they're being thoughtful.
So you're going to remove the nickel-and-diming people
who should just be buying cost per click ads on a meta.
And now you've got people who are actually thinking
about their brand and what they want
their brand associated with.
I mean, Function Health, who I think are on here somewhere,
we did a two year deal with them.
And I love what they do.
I use them to track my blood work.
And I thought, why would I not want to be in bed
with a company that I use all the time?
Absolutely, yeah.
I mean, in our case, it's-
And you deepen the relationship as well.
So Element, James from Element,
if there's something he wants to talk about to do with brand,
I have a good insight when it comes to brand,
especially from a creator side or ad reads.
And I'll happily just do a couple of hours of work.
This is what we've seen that's been working recently.
It's interesting when we were talking about the old media model.
I'm new to all this stuff, so I'm not big in this podcasting space, but I just observed.
So maybe what I say is super reductive and obvious, but it's like you got these pharmaceutical
ads on Fox News and it's in between the segments and none of the anchors
give a shit about the pharmaceutical ad, nor do they talk about or promote it and have
no connection to it, there's no authenticity to it.
But here there's an opportunity to be selective and to have it be part of the content, part
of the experience and it actually probably does better as a result with the audience
than you would get with that, you know, have you talked to your doctor about diarrhea?
Or whatever.
In the same way, you know what it is,
in the same way as following your instincts on the show
when it comes to what you talk about,
if you can get yourself to the luxurious position
where you get to choose your partners as well,
every single product that I partner with, I use.
Let's talk about, so you got leverage in the-
That's like, yeah whitelisted advertising was something
we started on this week and started from the beginning,
which was if I don't use the product or don't like it,
we turn it down.
We turn down all kinds of crazy offers from services
that you'll hear, like I was on Meg and Kelly
and I heard her read one or two of these ads,
and I was like, God, I would never read that ad,
because I know that if you type in that product
and scam or complaints,
it'll be like a long list of people complaining about it.
And then we were talking about her business,
and she's using a third party agency
to sell her partnerships.
And I said, Megan, you're Megan Kelly.
Just get to ad reps and partnership people, and you have to build
that leg of the stool.
You've got the content, you've got the distribution,
you've got the advertising, the partners,
you have to have all three of the stool, or else it falls over.
Let me ask both of you guys two questions.
Who have you turned down, like, advertising-wise?
Look, category, just tell me the category.
Okay, yeah, so anything which is to do with investing,
we've said no to.
Buy gold, buy.
Jonathan Mayad's guy stood there and he hates it
because these guys are prepared to spend big money.
Yeah, you don't want your customers losing money
being upset at you.
It's silly.
I can't, I don't have the chops to be able to assess
whether or not this bank or this new investment opportunity,
can you turn your Roth IRA into a 501K backed by,
I don't know, I have no idea.
I hear these things and I go, Ben Shapiro, you don't know either.
So it's interesting.
Yeah.
Well, let's, so let me ask you guys both a question.
In the old internet world, there were these companies that emerged within DoubleClick,
a quantive that were the site rep firms.
So there were a lot of independent websites out there.
They didn't, they didn't have the most sophisticated sales force.
They couldn't go hire the two great sales reps
to go do the work and dial in.
There wasn't a very liquid market.
So the site rep firms would rep your site.
They would go out and get ads.
Do you see more of those kind of emerging today?
Are they getting more sophisticated?
Are they getting better to enable smaller creators
to be able to kind of be successful in this space right now?
Maybe, I mean, I think it's a difficult...
And you've never done it.
Finish your thought and then I'll add mine, yeah.
It's a difficult game to play because people can go to creators of sort of around about
my size and it's very reliable. You know what you're going to get in terms of plays, you
know what you're going to get in terms of demographic, but the shows that are smaller
are growing so you don't actually know what it is that you're going to get in terms of demographic, but the shows that are smaller are growing, so you don't actually know what it is
that you're going to get.
So maybe you can bundle all of these guys together
into some weird sort of dispersed multi-channel
network type thing, and they will bulk be sold
by some company that sits above them,
but it's so effortful.
And when you think some podcast's gonna do 25,000 plays,
you've gotta go through all the rigmarole
and the red tape and the ad read to hit 25,000 people.
Or you could go to Rogan and hit 100,000 times that.
Have you ever used site reps?
No.
I always hated the concept, even when we were doing blogs,
because, yeah, you wind up, if you're going to take it
seriously and you want to make it into a great effort,
I think you have to have that relationship and not somebody mitigating it.
I think it's better to just focus on the content until you hit, to Chris's point, the reach
that is necessary to have people calling you on the phone and then being able to choose
it.
And there's other monetization that's available now, merchandising, creating premium content
that people can do.
So those are better avenues than using these rep firms.
And the rep firms, it's a terrible business because if you do your job and you actually
do make money and the creator does break out, then they will leave you like Meg and Kelly
will leave hers or Tucker, I don't know what the one that does all the Tucker Carlson and all those folks,
but I'm just shocked like Tucker and Megan were getting paid $10, $20, $30 million a year.
They can afford to have one or two Ed people doing this for them and not giving 40% to somebody.
And it just corrupts the whole relationship.
Let me ask you guys both another question.
So you've now got a great content creation engine,
which is you.
You have a great content creation
at This Week in Startups, which is you.
And then you've got this advertiser set up,
so you've got ad dollars coming in.
How do you get leverage so that it's non-linear?
Any great business has a non-linear scaling function.
And in your business, you guys are limited,
and this is something we've talked
with Jimmy and Mr. Beast about, if it's just you making the content, you can only make
X number of units of content per month, per year. So that limits the scalability of the
revenue for your organization in terms of how big this can get. Do you ever think about
creating leverage in the system where you do almost like what a Spielberg does with
an Amblin Entertainment or any great director or producer does where they scale up,
they become the producer.
They create a network.
They create a network, they create a studio model.
And then you have several content shows
that are under your brand.
Have you ever thought about that?
Is that kind of the model where this is eventually
gonna go where some of the great breakouts
are gonna end up realizing they can kind of scale up
and build the next studio model?
If you want to do that, then fine,
but I have no desire to start managing
a ton of other content creators.
Managing myself is hard enough.
What if you still did your show,
but you have others that you kind of bet on, basically?
Perhaps, I guess.
It just doesn't speak to me all that much.
And I think the question is,
what do you need this additional money for?
Like, is it that you just need to continue to build
like more and more profit?
Because I quite like where I'm at.
I quite like the level of revenue that I make,
the workload that I have,
the fact that I get to spend a morning reading
and I don't feel like I should have been on more Zoom calls.
So my ability to put my foot on the gas or take it off
is exclusively on me as opposed to having other obligations.
So it's very much a lifestyle business
and I understand that that's going to cap the upside.
Now there's some things, I can start CPG.
I can start to do some clever stuff with ads
where that will begin to ramp and ramp and ramp.
But yeah, I'm-
You've got unlimited upside with how you spend your time
now that you don't have to do work 24-7.
Absolutely.
And you know, there may be a day when I decide
to press that button again, but it's not right now.
But just like before Jason jumps in, you've got YouTube AdSense,
partners, Spotify Partner Program, which is brand new,
and that's actually cranking quite a lot.
And then the one area that I think way more podcasters need
to look at, which is monetizing clips.
So you do mid-roll ads on a long podcast episode, 20
minutes, 30 minutes, 50 minutes, 120 minutes
into an episode, but you can also be seven minutes into an eight-minute long clip.
And you can crank clips out all the time.
So you can be putting out one a day.
Right.
And there's other points of leverage.
Exactly.
So you can look at, okay, how can we be a little bit more innovative?
We can put Instagram stories up.
We can use newsletters, these sort of 360 deals and fill out all of the ecosystem where you can without obliterating
the viewing experience and making the audience hate you.
You know, I think that's well said and there's going to be international as well with AI.
I don't know if you've experimented, we have a company, Podcast AI.
Dubbing stuff.
Dubbing stuff and then that will be built into YouTube so all of a sudden you'll be in Spanish, Japanese and French and and the whole cycle will start all over
again but you know I did actually try that with This Week in Startups I got
the domain name thisweekin.com and we did This Week in Poker with Annie Duke
and This Week in Blank, This Week in Blank, This Week in Comedy we did we tried a
bunch of those the problem was you did you did shows? I did some different shows in the beginning.
I did it for about a year.
And what I realized was you could get average hosts, broadcast hosts, but you couldn't get
someone like Chris or Annie Duke for the long term.
We had a guy, Dave Pensado, who was a music producer.
And I wanted to do This Week in Music.
He wanted to do the Dave Pensado show.
He had his own view and the really great creators what they realize
is I want control of my art I want control of my brand I want to own my IP
I want to pick my team I don't want to be part of a machine and so what we're
seeing is people like Megyn Kelly and Tucker Carlson now are free.
Ben Shapiro started with, he was on AM radio
in Los Angeles and then he worked for Breitbart
and now he's got his own company, he makes his own decision.
So I think a lot of the talent, the most talented people
will want to be independent practitioners.
That's not true, there's sort of a weird level
that people get to.
Anybody who is sufficiently talented for you
to think that they're an A grade player
is probably not going to want to sit
underneath anybody else.
And if someone isn't that good,
you're kind of just filling the air
with something that maybe isn't going to catch.
So in the new media world, is it all just
lots of independent producers
and there is no studio model?
I think so.
Absolutely it is. I think so. Absolutely.
I think so because a lot of people want that lifestyle.
Well, what happens when you get rid of distribution?
It's not like we have to ask somebody
for permission anymore.
It's not like the record labels
where you had to have distribution,
you had to go to Columbia Records
if you were a Bob Dylan to be in a record store.
You can just do it.
Well, I think the question is,
the economic moat being can you reinvest capital in creating
high quality content because if that capital is invested well, it creates an audience.
So you give certain people money, people will show up.
More money comes out.
Yeah, more money comes out.
Yeah.
So I mean, some high points of leverage would be getting a strategist who understands the
YouTube algorithm and can ensure that no matter
what it is you're recording and how honest and truthful that is to your instinct, it's
being presented in the best way for the algorithm. We can repurpose clip. What are the sections
that we're choosing? So one thing that hasn't been spoken about today, which is interesting
on YouTube, is timeliness. So YouTube is increasingly becoming where people go to find out their
news. So maybe you see something that trends on Twitter
and you'll catch some clip of some kind.
But then you quickly over to YouTube,
okay, where's the breakdown?
And you'll have seen, to use Shapiro as a good example,
Daily Wyman, I think it's called Ben After Dark
or something like that.
It's not Ben After Dark, it's Ben in his living room
because something's happened today
and before he can get back into the studio tomorrow,
they need to get a video.
Trump gets shot today, you need to do your video today
because people are going to be going
and that's the hack to get to the top.
Because we've had this issue where we put out a show
because we record Thursday mornings
and it doesn't publish usually until Friday afternoon.
Something happens Thursday after we record
and the show sucks.
And literally no one watches it.
Yeah, no one will watch the show.
That's not true.
Everyone still watches it but everybody complains and then you freak freak out 40% out like what are we gonna do?
Yeah, but it literally is like 24-hour turnaround. It's like sorry. That's stale. That's old. That's right
It's just crazy when you think about it. I mean, I think this is the
The next great opportunity will be somebody who just is sitting there go and has the ability to go live at any time
And this is what a lot of streaming is doing right? somebody who just is sitting there and has the ability to go live at any time.
And this is what a lot of streaming is doing, right? You look at Hassan Abi, you look at Destiny, you look at Asmongold,
Charlie, Penguin Zero, all of these guys are doing it now.
Yeah, they're also playing, you know, like video games, too.
But they're commenting on a lot of culture and they crush on this,
not because they're insane cultural commentators that are, you know,
really deep in the research, but because they're timely cultural commentators that are really deep in the research,
but because they're timely and they've usually got some take.
It would be really fascinating if somebody with depth,
imagine if Sam Harris, when some breaking news story happened,
turned on his livestream.
And you're like, oh my god, now we've
got Sam Harris commenting on this assassination attempt,
et cetera.
And you see it in sports.
I noticed Bill Simmons has started,
whenever there is a major trade,
when the Kyrie trade happened,
when the Luka Donsik trade happened,
he just goes, emergency pod.
And I think they're really starting to embrace it.
That is like a hack, and I think that will become a thing.
I often go to the live tab on YouTube now,
just to see what they're talking about, right?
It's typically low quality,
but once in a while somebody will do something.
And we're talking about
the relatability authenticity thing before.
If somebody is talking about a developing situation
which happened three hours ago,
it has to be, you haven't had time to become contrived.
You know what I mean?
Totally, yeah, I think that's a big point.
What other content do you think is going to win,
going to continue to accelerate time and attention away
from other forms of content?
So the long form podcast conversation,
learn about the world with me.
Are there other forms that are out there
that are interesting to you,
that formats that you think are new or emerging
or that are real winners?
I would continue to bet on Substack, I think,
and that style of blogging, very frictionless,
it's enabling writers to work out loud.
I think Jonathan Haidt basically wrote his entire new book
chapter by chapter, published it on his Substack,
allowed feedback. The anxious generation?
There's another one about the Tower of Babel thing
which he's working on next.
But yeah, it's this seamless transparent door, so writing I think has got like just huge,
huge upside there.
I'm not too sure what we're going to see from short form.
I'm aware that algorithmically it's able to get the bottom of your brain stem really well,
but you were talking about this before.
It doesn't seem like TikTok creators are able to convert.
One TikTok sub is worth, you know,
100 TikTok subs is maybe worth one YouTube sub.
Correct.
And 100 YouTubes are worth one email.
By the way, it's a lot like having a cigarette.
Like you need it, but you don't want it.
You know, you end up being like,
I'm not really looking forward to that TikTok tonight.
You're not really sitting there,
being like, I can't wait to watch that TikTok.
But you get home and you're like, I need my TikTok.
But you do look forward to seeing this great new movie
that's coming out this weekend.
Or the latest episode of your favorite show.
I want that.
I don't need it, but I want it.
And I think there's a big difference between that.
And I think that's where the short form
really hits the limbic system.
It doesn't actually activate the rest. I think this is a big difference between that, and I think that's where the short form really hits the limbic system. It doesn't actually activate the rest.
I think this is a form of addiction
that's going to wind up like MTV going away.
MTV and music videos, we all as Gen Xers,
I think you're on the tail end of Gen X or a millennial?
Millennial.
Millennial, like we kinda got addicted to it,
and then it kinda went away as a format
of just sitting there and watching three minute videos.
And everybody thought our brains were getting scrambled
because we were watching the aha video
and then this video.
TikTok said hold my beer.
Yeah, and TikTok's like, yeah, wait one second.
Seven seconds and I think it's fucking with people's
dopamine to a level that they don't understand.
And you do because you dip into this stuff
and you have interest in it. But you can, because you dip into this stuff and you have interest in it,
but you can't fire your serotonin and see the moment,
the most exciting, terrifying, funny moment
in every piece of media, back to back to back.
Oh, dopamine addiction, it just breaks.
The next day, people are feeling hungover.
It's because they're fucking with that dopamine receptors
in their brain, and then they can't have
a normal conversation.
They can't go to a normal dinner
or have a conversation like this.
Or feel happy having a walk and a long talk.
I think this is one of the reasons why I wouldn't bet
against the reading thing.
I'm aware it's limbically way less hijacking,
but it feels like going to rehab for your dopamine system.
It's one of the few things.
It's hard.
That you can only do it, right?
You can watch a movie in double screen.
You can be listening to a podcast while scrolling Instagram.
You cannot read and do anything else.
I'll tell you what I think might win.
My personal point of view on this is I think that that content will get turned into an
AI chat experience.
Jason makes fun of me about this, but I do sit in my car.
I do a lot of long drives now.
My office is at Santa Cruz, in my car, I do a lot of long drives now, at my office, like Santa Cruz, and the cities,
I drive a lot, and I talk to ChatGPT Advanced Voice,
but I'll talk about a topic, and I'll learn about it,
and I'll engage with it, and I'll go back and forth,
but if I find if I flip on a book, on tape or something,
my brain wanders off, and I got questions and ideas,
and I'm like, oh, then I start thinking about it,
and then I realize, oh man, three minutes have gone by,
and so for me personally, and maybe this is just the way I'm like, oh, then I start thinking about it and then I realize, oh man, three minutes have gone by. And so for me personally,
and maybe this is just the way I'm wired,
like I kind of like the interactive model,
but I do think this great content,
like Jonathan Haidt's new book,
gets put out as kind of an interactive mode
where I get to go engage and start telling me about it,
I can ask questions and it's almost like
I'm having a conversation with the author.
And that's where going back to the earlier point,
like the cultural experience is the book
written by the author,
but the way I experience it is gonna be different
than the way you experience it in an AI world.
I would love to look at how people pay attention
to a conversation between multiple people, like a podcast,
compared with an audio book.
And the author is trying their best to come across
with bounce and energy and engagement and stuff like that,
but really it's not, and it's one person.
Just one tone going through, recorded very carefully, whereas when you've got stuff like that, but really it's not and it's one person There's one tone going through recorded very carefully
Whereas when you've got stuff bouncing around even that author talking about that book on a podcast
Why am I so much more engaged? There's something about that which is compelling
So it's the way humans are humans aren't designed to sit on the floor and be lectured to by another human
Humans are designed to be social creatures,
to have engagement, to have that process.
And I think that that's how it plays out in our brain.
There's more of a responsive chemistry to that.
I'm excited for this pendulum to swing back
and for people to like read a book again
or to watch a Kurosawa film.
Well, you know, that's 100% right.
No, I mean.
You can't watch a Kurosawa film and not feel like it.
I'll tell you what, you know,
I think for a lot of young people,
they're missing out on some of like,
the great beauty in life is to be able
to give yourself over for two hours to a Kurosawa film,
or to give yourself over to a book for an hour,
just but an hour, and that's what we're gonna see,
I think, in the coming years,
is people are gonna look at this
like they looked at junk food like they looked at cigarettes and say this is not healthy for me. You've seen that uh list of five regrets of the dying it's things like I wish I'd allowed myself
to be the person I wanted to be not the person others expected of me I wish I'd worked less
I wish I kept in touch with my friends I would bet an awfully large amount of money that one of them in starting about
30 years time is going to be, I wish I spent less time on my phone.
And that's going to be fun.
Great point.
Great point.
By the way, we're going to continue the conversation.
So guys, join us thanking Chris and we're going to invite the rest of the crew back
out.
Oh yeah.
Come on out everybody.
Brian, come on up.
This is my friend Brian Johnson.
Come on up.
Brian.
Can we get him a microphone? Can we get him a mic? Brian, come on up. He's my friend Brian Johnson, come on up. We'll talk to you too.
Brian.
Can we get him a microphone?
Can we get him a mic?
Can we get him a mic?
Can we get him a mic?
Will you introduce Brian?
Yeah, Brian Johnson created a payments company.
He was on this week in startups years ago.
And then I looked up and he was sharing his nighttime
erections on social media.
It's three hours and 12 minutes, yes.
Three hours and 12 minutes.
Brian, you're Kardashian famous now.
Yeah.
Oh really, you were on the Kardashians?
Yeah, last week's episode.
You were on last week's episode.
And who was, you were hanging out with Kim,
or which Chloe?
Andrew Huberman, who was the star of the show.
Who was?
Andrew Huberman and Brian.
That was my Trump Zelensky moment.
You two in a room, I'm aware.
Oh, is this like East Coast West Coast?
It's like Crips and Bloods?
You guys get along or is he?
We do get along, yeah, we're friends.
You're friends? Yeah.
Okay, what do you do together?
Like the two of you?
A secret.
I mean, do you guys exchange blood. What's that?
Yes, all in
Your lab tests they do lab tests on a Saturday morning Spotify moved a video
I think that's an interesting one to talk about that's something people aren't really sort of factoring in because you turn what was an audio platform
Into is this audio is this video now? there's trailers that you can see as well.
And they are paying creators a pretty penny.
So we were a part of the partner program
for January and February, and we made more money from them
with only 10% of our catalog uploaded
than the entirety of our YouTube AdSense.
So they're throwing everything at it to try and take.
Well, you do, we don't.
We're working on it.
Yeah, but we're working on it.
But I think also, I think in all these platforms,
when they announce a new monetization model,
they need model citizens.
And I think, Chris, your show is a model citizen
for Spotify.
They've put you on billboards,
they're definitely going like, hey.
The golden child.
Yeah, Modern Wisdom is the show you wanna be on Spotify.
It's video, it looks beautiful, it uploads quite a bit,
it has a big back catalog.
So I think it's a really interesting model.
To me it feels experimental.
I think if it works it's great.
Share of premium subscription revenue is awesome.
Ryan, are you gonna be able to be within the vicinity
of that passive smoke?
I imagine this is you're gonna be counting down how many minutes it's gonna
Jason what is this? That's a point day. It's a nice car. You can just chew on it
What's gonna happen if I chew on it? You get a little nicotine hit and
You're gonna enjoy life for the first time in three years
I don't know if this fits in the protocol.
I mean, just do it.
Come on.
Like this.
See what I'm doing here.
All right.
Should I do it?
Wait, hold on before you before you say something.
Don't die is in your hands.
Do I chew on it?
No.
Yes.
Yes.
Give it a shot.
That was a very clear response.
It's either that or you got to do Chris' ketamine.
It's one or the other.
Which one are you going to do?
Which one?
Chris, you do ketamine?
We'll do it backstage.
I'm an ex-club promoter.
I do everything.
Yeah.
Do you want the cigar?
I'm okay.
Thank you.
You did ketamine recently, didn't you, Brian?
I did, yeah.
I used, so we built a brain interface at my company, Kernel.
We were trying to build wearable fMRI,
and we had this question, what happens when?
You know, there's like, when you take an SSRI,
or when you take ketamine.
And so yeah, I did a dose, intramuscular dose,
and we measured my brain 30 days before the ketamine,
during ketamine, and then for 10 days afterwards.
Was it an injection, you snorted it,
or you did the spray?
Injection.
We did the max FDA allowed amount.
And what was cool is we saw you just did it on
Your so you're like I'm just gonna max out right?
No, we had an IRB we had it approved ethically and what we saw so sorry just real quick
Have you done ketamine before this? No first time so you're just chilling you're like, I'm gonna max out on ketamine
Yeah, I just want to make sure I really get this. Yeah, I want to get your mindset
Yeah, we wanted to see the effect. You know, so like we. When you say we, you know that's just you, right?
Like.
Well, OK, so we spent six years building this brain interface.
We built a custom ASIC.
We pushed it through COVID.
It was like an all in effort.
You don't have like an intern or 23-year-old analyst
or something to be maxed out on Ketamine.
Well, I was also doing Blueprint.
So I was like, you know, this is interesting.
Like what actually happens to the brain when?
And so, like, you think about...
So you put this helmet on your head and think of your brain like a globe.
It has airports all around.
You see traffic, like New York to Tokyo.
And so my patterns were very fixed in that 30 days running up to ketamine.
And then I did ketamine and it just scrambles your brain.
Like, all the traffic patterns are just remixed.
And then two or three days afterwards, it drops.
So now you're open-minded to new patterns.
And then days three, four, five, you come up
to your old patterns again.
So that's why it makes sense there's this therapeutic
window where if you do a psychedelic, you're open to new
ideas and doing things.
On the second day, I was in the office.
We were walking in between meetings.
We had these big walls.
And I thought, why don't I just jump over that wall?
Like, why am I gonna take this long route?
I just jumped over the wall, not thinking about it,
like, Brian, what are you doing jumping over a wall?
But it just, I did really behave differently
in the way I thought, the way I behaved.
I couldn't really see my patterns very well,
but because we were all watching it so closely,
but it was cool, now we have the ability to say
what happens when to anything. But you could have the ability to say what happens when anything.
But you could have done gotten that information without doing
that. Well, no, no, I think what you're referring to is, you
know, this phenomenon where it kind of refrags your your
hard drive a bit and you disconnect from reality.
Have you just associated a bit?
Did you see yourself outside of your own body?
Did you see like I did you're here and Brian Johnson's here and then there's a universe and then you go past the universe and you're
In that space that's outside the universe
Same place yeah
Pretty great. Sorry Brian. Let me just so there've been a lot of studies on
This kind of neural plasticity that arises when you take these. You get like maximal neural plasticity. Like basically the neurons are out searching for new connections.
It really kind of activates those cells to go hunting and people get rewired.
That's why trauma can get rewired out of your brain
and you can learn new stuff and develop new experiences.
But it can also have profound changes on people's psychology,
motivations, other sort of factors.
Have you noticed any of that kind of residual effect?
Motivation's changed change point of view has changed
Personalities are different relationships or people like you're different your x y or z you're not Brian
Yeah, where that's kind of affected you in a way. It was only one time so I didn't notice anything in particular
It was really that that acute like two or three-day window
I think if I would have paired some therapy in there
I probably could have done something meaningful, but I didn't. We were really looking at the quantitative measurements.
But yeah, I mean, really, you're right.
It scrambles the brain.
It was cool to see it because before this, nobody had ever seen ketamine on the brain.
You don't see the patterns that are in place.
You don't see what's scrambled.
You don't see when they reform.
And you can take these patterns, think of like a 96 by 96 grid.
You can use these patterns to assess intelligence, emotions, and character traits.
It's very informative.
These things, when you assess and reassemble, you really can deduce a lot of... You infer
a lot of things about the person.
Yeah.
I mean, we're joking about it here, but I have some friends who have spent a great deal
of time, money, and effort on the MAPS project, Tim Ferris,
a number of my friends have really worked on this
in a clinical session and setting,
and it can have a profound impact on PTSD,
on relationships, on trauma,
but I just wanna give people like a caveat here
that these are extremely powerful modalities,
and you need to do them in the proper setting.
The set, the setting, the dose are all extremely important.
But people with PTSD are coming out of 9-11,
my brother's a firefighter, a lot of firefighters
in New York and first responders,
they haven't gotten over it and they've gone to some
of these sessions and they've come out of it and they've found peace.
And it can process, you know, what can't be done in a hundred sessions of psychotherapy can get processed in two or three of these sessions.
I think it's very important that we take it seriously, even though some people are doing it at Burning Man and having fun with it.
I get it. People want to do that.
There's a dependency risk with ketamine
that there isn't with a lot of the other substances
that you can use too.
This is the problem.
It's interesting, my friend Tony Shea passed
and he got addicted to ketamine specifically
and it disassociated him.
And that's the problem with the recreational use
or the use alone, Chris.
There's a lot of very notable CEOs, I know, friends
who have gotten into it and they've had good intention
and then maybe they're at home watching Netflix
or YouTube and they are doing it out of boredom.
And that's where it gets very pernicious.
And just be careful.
Can we go back just to the content creator piece?
Brian, I mean, you basically started talking about Don't Die,
and you've created quite a bit of content around this.
What's the model for building a business?
Did you actively think, hey, I gotta build an audience
to get this effort to be successful?
Yeah, no, we actually didn't.
Kate, my co-founder, is here with me.
We were posing the question,
we thought it was a cool question to ask,
are we the first generation who won't die?
It's kind of like in 1870, you're back in there,
you hear in town, people are like,
hey, there's this new weird idea,
there's this guy saying that there's these
microscopic objects, they're called bacteria
or something like that, they cause infection,
they lead to death, and then others are like,
that's stupid as fuck because really it's just, you know, it's
bad spirits.
We know that's just causing the situation.
And so if you're getting into surgery, you really care to know, is this a correct idea
or incorrect idea?
And turns out, bacteria are real, they actually cause infection, they can lead to death.
And I think the parallel here for us right now is like, are we legit the first generation
who won't die?
And so that was our effort, just actually scientifically go do that.
And then someone did a Twitter thread on this and it just went viral.
You have like 50 million views and we're like, what's going on?
The tsunami of hate came our way.
And it was just like, there's so much raw energy under this topic.
We didn't know that was the case.
And so yeah, we've just been trying to basically take people along the journey of like,
this is what we're doing.
So contentually been like a,
an afterthought to a primary mission
and now it's a primary modality for us to go after this.
And you productized it.
I came home, my wife is, I was joking about the nutty pudding.
I mean, it's not my favorite, but it's healthy
and I've had it a couple of times, I eat it and my wife's got the whole cupboard filled
with blueprints stuff. I was told the whisperer numbers over a hundred million
dollars in sales. Yeah we'll beat up we'll beat a hundred million dollars in
less than 12 months and so but the but the goal was not to make money. It was
like it so went viral and people are like I love this I want to do it but it's so
damn hard right. You have to like source all this stuff and we had learned
ourselves that when we source things that most labels are incorrect, most
things are toxic, and there's like a disaster out there. So we started sourcing our own
stuff. And so like, well, why don't we just package this up? Like CPG sucks. It's the
worst business in the world. So we were legit like, do the world a solid, like make this
available. Like we've worked so hard to make this available, and it's impossible to do you're all you're losing money. Are you making just a very modest profit margins very yeah
So we're almost basically even got it
It's a for breakeven not a for not not a non-profit and Chris you're you're drinking this new category of beverage you created
Maybe you could talk a little bit about your intent with your product. Yeah, I think one of the easiest
We get a couple these out here. I want to drink. I'm losing my energy. Thank you
I think let's go Jonathan one of the easiest hacks that you can we get a couple of these out here? I want a drink. I'm losing my energy.
Thank you.
Let's go, Jonathan.
Hurry up.
One of the easiest hacks that you can do if you want to be successful in CPG is take something
that people are already consuming, source it better, improve the formulation, and then
put it back out.
A better for you...
A better for you pair of underwear.
A better for you chocolate bar.
A better for you hydration drink.
So we made a better for you energy drink.
So evidence-based, research-backed,
nootropic ingredients, efficacious doses, blah blah blah.
We bootstrapped it and I got to build it
from the ground floor up and create the brand,
come up with the copy, the chutes and everything else.
And I love it.
And now we've got to the stage
where some really big players are sniffing around
and we've only been in the market for 18 months.
Are you guys gonna do a CPG business?
It's kind of the trend of the year.
What would you do? What are you gonna do a CPG business? It's kind of the trend of your. No, I don't think so.
What would you do?
What are you gonna do?
I mean, we're a little bit different in that
our value prop is a creator education.
So we try and think of what is an extension
of our value prop.
And for us, digital goods courses,
that's like a direct extension, so that's what we have.
As much as Brian is a content creator,
I will say I came across Brian's content,
I was marginally interested, kind of confused by it, then got invited
to one of his dinners.
And I really commend you for doing the dinners.
Because I think the dinners, it's very unscalable,
but it actually creates a lot of scale.
And people come to those dinners, like me,
I've been talking about that dinner for,
I don't know when that was, six, seven months ago,
and telling a lot of people about it.
And it was a very impactful event.
And I think actually like the creators today
who are doing things like this,
getting people together physically,
last week when we were here,
there's a creator named Jake Shane,
sold out the Moody Center, it was about 3000 people.
He started as a TikTok creator,
up there for an hour and a half by himself doing comedy.
Amazing.
And it's amazing.
And I think like getting people together
and actually having like face to face impact,
that's where I think you can build a product like that.
You know how we were saying, it's gonna be lovely
if there's a counter movement against the TikTokification,
very short form video.
I do get the sense that Coffee and Chill,
do you know what that is?
You heard of Coffee and Chill?
Or Mushroom Cowboy, these are daytime sober rates.
Oh, I saw this on TikTok.
Yeah, so a couple of hours on a Saturday or a Sunday
from 10 a.m. or midday or something like that.
And I think that what we're seeing is the equivalent here
of the work from anywhere, digital nomads, degenerate,
wake up whenever you want, fuel yourself with caffeine
and get to work.
And this is the backlash against that,
which is people are desperate for in-person events,
they're desperate for stuff like this.
And it's not just this.
Think about any conference you've ever been to.
The speakers, cool, whatever, they're the headline as you go to see.
But what you're really there for are the conversations in the foyer
in between the different events.
I've got to say, the higher the barrier sometimes, the bigger the fan.
Your episodes are three hours long, that's a pretty big barrier.
You get to the end, you're invested.
Like you're a fan of you guys,
that's the same thing with events, right?
Like there are brands and creators now
that are starting with events.
Oh, I think it makes so much sense.
Like they're like, think about, like you give up your,
your form of social engagement in a kind of free way,
not a structured way, as soon as you're done with college.
And then you're at the workplace.
And at the workplace, if you're working in an office,
it's like you got the thing to do and you're done.
Then you go, where else do you have
this kind of social engagement at scale?
You're also pre-selecting, as you say,
if it's a three hour long podcast,
or it's a really niche topic.
It's a particular series of Warhammer 40K
that not many people know about,
or it's some weird Japanese anime.
Like, you are pre-selecting for people like you,
assuming that you're interested in it.
This is why Reddit is so good, right?
Reddit is a website filled with people
who couldn't find others to have that discussion with
in their hometown.
Right, it's true, that's very true.
It's very true.
Well, you know what, I just wanna point out
with these CPG products, the creators who are making them,
like when YouTube two gentlemen make something
or Sax is making this all in tequila.
Or where's my Supergut bars?
And he has Supergut, which is fantastic,
the peanut butter one is pretty good.
You know that Freeberg's not making Supergut
or you're not making Blueprint or you're not making
Newtonic.
Newtonic.
You're not doing it because you want to maximize profitability, you want
to be proud of it, you want to know that the person buying it had a great experience and
it was good for them, right?
There was a hole that didn't exist and the other thing which I'm sure you guys have sensed
as well, the online course is the best way if you want to. The margins are amazing, the scale is just fantastic,
but you never get to see someone holding your course.
If you get to see someone.
If you do it as cohorts, which we have done,
you do get to see them digitally,
and now our idea is to actually go,
hey, can we take that and have that be also entry
into a live workshop or live session?
That's going to crush.
Yeah, perilously close to the creator Tony Robbins.
I can see you on stage.
I'll make a bet right now that'll make you guys more money than anything else combined.
Yeah, I think that's...
By far.
Your question that you asked before was like, how does that compare?
Right now the reality is in a single check, a brand deal makes more money when it's one
client. But as what we're watching right now in the course business
is like, you know, 100 people on an $800 product
is significant.
A thousand people, it gets even more significant.
Because you guys will sell tickets to the live event,
but the sponsors to get that targeted audience
in a captive way will pay you more
than they'll pay for the online.
That's what you guys will make.
But also think about the value prop.
For, you know, people go to school, they go $50,000, $250,000 in debt, will pay you more than they'll pay for the online. That's what you guys will make sure of. That's right. But also think about the value prop for,
people go to school, they go $50,000, $250,000 in debt,
and then what I hear from young people all the time
is they go take a course afterwards.
And that course for $800 does more from them
in the marketplace and getting jobs than the degree did.
And I think this roll your own education
is very similar to
function health in a way which is like I'm gonna take control of it I'm not
gonna have an MD direct my health care I'm gonna get my blood work myself I'm
gonna do my research I'm gonna go on chat GPT or grok or whatever I'm gonna
ask about peptides I'm gonna ask about this I'm gonna cross reference that I'm
gonna listen to your podcast or Huberman, you know, whatever and I think that this
Self-reliance II and this new category of products and services that are available. It kind of resets this
Industrialization that occurred. Mm-hmm. I'm sure Procter & Gamble and some of these things didn't start out with the evil intent
That is now in their products
is now in their products and in their system. You gotta cut that out.
Well, I don't give a fuck.
I'm not, I fuck Procter & Gamble, I don't give a shit.
They're pretty dying fucking kid cereal.
You know, when you watch, I have zero,
like, fuck them.
And fuck their cereals.
General Mills can go fuck themselves.
They're the enemy, they're the bad guys.
I don't give a shit about their sponsorship.
Seriously.
I guarantee you're using Procter & Gamble toothpaste
in about three hours.
No, no, no, I got that Tom's Amazement.
Procter & Gamble.
My wife puts me on all this shit.
I'm telling you, they literally are putting dye in children's cereal.
They're putting corn syrup in children's cereal.
They're poisoning the fucking country to make an extra two, three, four, five cents.
What's the word you used? You were talking about the word, the England you use, the C word? Ah, yes.
So I agree, Jason.
These guys, right?
Yeah, so we can cut it, but I agree.
So we just launched a new endeavor called Don't Die
Certified, and we're testing foods.
Oh, yeah.
Let's go.
Baby foods, pet foods, all packaged foods.
And we got the early results back.
You got the receipts.
We do.
How bad is it?
Worse than you think.
Sorry, what did you test?
Brian, what did you test?
Dyes?
So we're doing heavy metals.
Heavy metals.
Yep, then we're doing glyphosate,
some other agrochemicals, and then maybe a few phallates.
What's the worst product you got so far?
So we got results back from a diet.
Have you done any phthalates?
Have you done plastics?
Or is that separate?
Yes, we're doing that too.
So we'll probably have it later.
There's less evidence around that.
Yeah.
But yes, the cool model we're doing is,
if you can, you find your food, go to the website,
we'll launch this next week.
Yeah.
Find your food and say, I want this tested.
So you can then put up the money.
If you get enough money so it-
What does that cost?
Three, four grand?
No, like 500 bucks.
What?
Yeah, yeah, it's crazy.
Oh, I'm doing 10.
You're crowdfunding this? Exactly.
Other people that also eat that thing from Sweetgreen
can be like, I wanna know if it's got loads of plastics in it.
Exactly, so then the test gets triggered,
results come back, and then we go to the brand
and we say, hey, come claim your product.
So they then come back and we say, all right,
now you pay back the people who funded your tests.
Like you should have been testing in the first place. So they're
doing the work for you. So we want to, we want to do the food home in the U S we want
to test 20% of foods that make up 80% of the U S diet. So then we can say on average, the
average American consumes blank, you know, mercury per day or catamom or whatever. So
we tested a few of the things we looked looked at diapers. There was a dangerously
high level of glycophage in diapers.
Because of the cotton.
Cotton, exactly.
Roundup ready cotton.
Exactly. And then we also tested tampons.
Which brands?
High heavy metals.
Which brands?
Heavy metals.
Call them out right now.
We can't yet. So we...
Okay, we got the test soon.
Exactly. So we're going to reveal the first few ones. But dog food was really bad, which makes sense.
Dogs have been living, you know, their shorter lives now.
But yeah, once you start seeing this, it's really pretty.
If you guys checked out Plasticlist.org, do you see that?
Oh, yeah, that's another rich dude spending his money.
I love it.
No, but I mean, but I look this.
Hold on a second.
Well, I know it's all I know it's super hyperb look, this, hold on a second. This guy.
I know it's all super hyperbolic,
but like just the plastic thing,
it's really important to note,
they rank things,
but you also have to look at the absolute numbers.
This is where this can get a little too carried away.
I think that there's a lot of shocking shit in there
that's super bad,
but you've also got to recognize that a tiny amount
that's like one one trillionth of something that could ever affect your body
It'll flush out may not be that bad
We've got to be really cognizant on how we interpret this stuff these motherfuckers knew a whole time
They were doing it they knew who's they were these this is like what the industrial
Of a new time
and you got fired up. What's going on?
Thank you.
This is great.
This is a great show.
No, I'm telling you, I'm so, I have,
I am so infuriated about this because these people,
you know it's true, you know it's true,
they knew they were doing this
and it takes some rich guy who's bored and principled,
no offense, I love you, you know I love you,
and who's the guy who's doing the plastic.org?
Zach...
Not Friedman.
Oh, not Friedman, sorry.
It's another rich internet guy.
He's like, you know what? I'm bored, these guys are screwing people over,
I'm going to test plastics.
Anihari turns up with 400,000 signatures outside of Kellogg's HQ
and says you make in the same factory, the Canadian version,
which uses beetroot colouring and carrot colouring to make it,
and the exact same factory is throwing red 40 and...
Yeah, so again to back you Jason on this, so Gerber, so there's a lot passing by California
that said baby food providers have to disclose heavy metals in their foods.
So it went into effect January 1, and so we go to Gerber's website...
All heavy metals?
Yeah, I think the four, four big.
And so it's like, okay, so we go to Gerber's website. All heavy metals. Yeah, I think the four. Four big. And so it's like, okay, so we go to Gerber's website.
I can't find heavy metals results anywhere.
And then I realized my VPN's on,
and I'm coming from a server outside of California.
They've IP blocked.
No way.
To get California only IP origination.
They hide it.
And so this is what I'm saying.
These companies.
These are nefarious.
It's really not good.
What do you think of Bobby Kennedy, friend of the pod,
and him taking this on from Maha?
I don't want to make it political, but how do we get to this?
This is interesting.
Well, how would it happen?
Freiburg, this is the good shit, man.
This is the good shit.
My guys like it?
Yeah, they love it, man.
This is how all in works.
We take little detours.
We take detours.
This is a side quest worth taking.
What do you think of Bobby Kennedy?
Give me one of your nicotine drinks.
Hey, B, there's others in the other green room.
There's some in the other green room.
No, no, I'm okay.
I did a lot of drugs earlier.
What do you think of Bobby Kennedy?
I think he is going to challenge status quo power.
I think that's going to create a lot of conflict and a lot of reconfiguration.
I think it will refrag.
There's a lot of really important questions being asked that are not asked in the way that they're being asked now.
That's the most important thing.
Is the system needs to be challenged and whatever's left will get hardened
and whatever shouldn't be there will get blasted away.
And that's it.
But you gotta name and shame.
But you gotta ask the hard question.
That's the thing that really pisses me off.
You gotta name and shame
in order for them to do what's right.
That's what's so fucked up.
They wanna do any of the AMAs or?
I mean, I don't know.
I felt like this was going in a nicer act.
I enjoyed the conversation. I gotta do the conversation I find enjoyable. Just see if there's any cool AMAs.
People ask these questions. I've got a question for Brian in the meantime. I'll look for a good question.
Brian if you were to, without someone having to completely decimate their
entire diet and never look at meat again, what would you say is sort of top
triaged lifestyle changes most people should look at making
based on what it is that you guys have looked at?
Yeah, I mean, the power laws are so clear.
Sleep is like by far and away the biggest power law.
Then exercise number two, diet number three.
And so it's just being consistent on those three things.
Then once you get those three layers,
you can go down other layers.
But like what we've tried to do is we tried to say
anything which increases my speed of aging
is a form of die, so how do you eliminate that?
And then we just started with the power laws.
I start with zero all the way down and just, yep.
Top three things for sleep.
So the thing you wanna do is you wanna lower,
so the key marker is lowering your resting heart rate
before bed, that is the num, I would say if you could mark,
if you could optimize
one marker in your entire life, it's that.
So before you go to bed tonight, look at a wearable
or take your pulse, it's your resting heart rate.
So tonight let's just say you're at 55.
So your goal of the next week or two
is to try to get down to 50.
The next month, 45.
As you do that, so the way you drive it down
is you have your final meal of the day
at least two hours before bedtime.
So if you go to bed at 10, be done at eight, and then push it back an hour, you're okay with 30 minutes each day.
And as you push it back every day, your heart rate is going to go down incrementally because your body has more time to digest.
So then you also find that food you eat, like if you eat a big pasta or pizza or something, it will jack up the heart rate.
So mine right now is 44 beats per minute.
So if I eat late in the day,
if my last meal of the day is at noon,
and I did that after like a few hundred experiments
of like what optimizes my heart rate.
If I have a big meal like a five or six,
I'll be up like low 50s.
And that will take away about 30 to 40% of my sleep.
So you go to sleep super hungry.
Actually, I'm okay.
Yeah, my body is really adapted.
So food is really a big one.
And then two is wind down routine.
So you need to calm yourself down.
You can't have your phone up.
You need to turn it off.
Give yourself like 30 to 60 minutes,
decompress from the day.
Leave your kids in the house and go sleep in the garage.
Yeah.
No, no, one shower, that could help.
And actually a book in hand has probably the best evidence.
Yeah, so it's what Chris was saying, right? It's like, you can't do anything. So screen off, book in hand has probably the best evidence. Yeah, so it's what Chris was saying, right?
It's like you can't do anything.
So screen off, book in hand, spend even 10 minutes,
and you'll be amazed at how much it'll calm you down.
Yeah, there's some cool stuff around.
People thought it was the blue light from screens
that were impacting melatonin release
and cortisol and stuff as you went to sleep.
It seems like it's much more what you're interacting with
on the phone, that you're so engaged, that dopamine's firing, you're probably with on the phone that you're so engaged that dopamine's firing
You're probably getting riled up about you sending stuff to friends
It's triggering all of these ideas in you
Suppose if you just sit down and read Red Rising or something by Pierce Brown and you go off to sleep dreaming about being exactly
And you can and you can measure it by how much your heart rate goes up or down
So you now have a quantitative benchmark every single day if you could peg that those habits
regularity versus duration what's more important?
Consistency is so important because your body tells time like a clock like when I was I did eight months of perfect sleep
100% sleep every night to show I can do high quality sleep you tracking on whoop or you tracking on a sleep
Yeah, and they tend to are pretty close. No
Yeah, I mean like they're all relative comparisons.
They're not absolute.
So just find one, they're all fine.
Yeah, this has been the big unlock for me.
I am now sleeping.
I got a 94 last night, I got a 99 two nights ago.
It's my highest score ever.
I'm really dialing in the sleep
and it's changed everything for me.
It's the biggest life improvement you can do, period.
It's the best in performance hands-on drug.
It is just better than anything on market.
But be consistent because your deep sleep window happens in the first two hours of night.
So that's when the garbage trash collector comes through to pick up all the trash in your body.
If you miss that window, you miss it.
So you miss the garbage trash collection.
So that's why pick your bedtime and be consistent.
Otherwise, you get junk accumulation.
On the inverse of that, I have a six week old baby,
so I have like the least consistent sleep right now.
How long can I endure that?
I'll tell you two things that also worked for me
because I sometimes sleep with my bulldog and that was killing it, but I got these nice headphones and I'll listen to some
really high fidelity sleep music and use an eye mask and both of those added a couple
of points and that was really a good unlock for me.
How are you sleeping, Chris?
Yeah, pretty good.
Yeah?
Good, thank you.
Audio books, I go to sleep, turn that off.
And you've probably got a problem with the ionizing radiation, non-ionizing radiation.
You bothered about Bluetooth headphones, Brian?
No.
Oh, that's good.
That's the first thing I've proposed to you that I'm still allowed to do in my life.
Everything else is...
I feel like the fun police that comes in and tells me everything's good.
Or the die police, I guess.
I'm actually the happy police, right?
Like, the should I say, it makes you happy.
People, they have this misconception
that like staying up late and missing bedtime
and drinking is happy.
It's not, it is sad.
It makes you depressed.
And we have to be honest, like we think it's happy, it's not.
Well, listen, thank you to all of our guests.
And you know, you're very busy.
I really appreciate you coming here.
I know that you've been busy and congratulations
on the big win for Nosferatu.
That was great.
That's an Oscar's reference.
Thank you to the people who got it.
But seriously, are you worried because, I mean,
yeah, are you sure what you're doing
like this extreme is a good idea?
I'm a little concerned.
You might be turning into a vampire.
You are doing the blood transfusion?
You know, I did it because my dad was experiencing
cognitive decline, and he called me in a panic.
And he said, I will do anything to save my consciousness.
And so I did it for him.
So the headlines was all about my son and me.
Well, you did a transfusion with your dad.
Yeah, that was the whole reason.
After doing it with your son.
Yeah, so I.
Three generational.
Yes, my dad called me, he's like,
okay, I'm experiencing, so he was writing something for work.
He walked away and he came back and it was a jumbled mess.
And he's like, I'm experiencing cognitive decline
and I can't see it.
He said, when I thought I would start forgetting names
or missing keys, but right there in front of me,
I didn't see the jumbled mess.
So he called me, he's like, I'm panicking.
And so I was like, dad, we're actually looking
at this new evidence on these plasma infusions.
I'm happy to give you a plasma if you wanna try it.
Like we don't know if it's gonna work or not.
So then my son heard and he's like, I'm in,
like we'll do a tri-generational thing.
I'm like, great, it's a family activity.
Is there any empirical evidence of this?
Chris, have you?
Yes, we should talk about it some other time,
but there's a lot of good work
on this.
You think that this is a path we're pursuing?
Yeah, this is, I mean it's longer conversation.
Chris, what are you doing after?
You want to do some trans-fuse?
I'm doing catamine with Brian by the way.
Okay, can we trans-fuse this one?