Behind the Bastards - Part Four: How Peter Thiel Became the Gravedigger of Democracy
Episode Date: November 7, 2024Robert and Noah conclude the story of Peter Thiel, who just might get the corporate god king he's dreamed about. Â See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
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Oh, welcome back to Behind the Podcast, a bastard with Robert Evans and Noah Schacht.
Noah, how are you doing?
Good question mark.
Good question mark.
How good can one feel in part four of the Peter Thiel saga?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like, how can one feel great there?
Yeah.
I don't know.
Great question, Noah.
Contributing writer at Rolling Stone,
contributing editor at Wired.
Wow, you did it.
You did that so seamlessly.
I did it last time too.
Unbelievable.
Proud of you.
Yeah, so I think we should,
I wanna start here by saying,
there's yet another post on one of the subreddits
accusing now Garrison and me both
of sounding like we always have a nasal infection.
Sometimes where a crime took place
leads you to answer why the crime happened
in the first
place.
Hi, I'm Sloane Glass, host of the new True Crime podcast, American Homicide.
In this series, we'll examine some of the country's most infamous and mysterious murders
and learn how the location of the crime becomes a character in the story. Listen to American Homicide on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, Beau.
Hey, Matt.
Can you believe we have yet another
very special episode coming up?
This one is very close to my heart.
We'll be joined by friend,
the star of the upcoming Wicked film,
the one and only Ariana Grande.
We'll be here in the studio with us.
We hope this episode of Lost Culture gives you so much joy.
The episode is dropping this Wednesday, my birthday, November 6.
And of course, please go see Wicked when it comes out.
November 22nd. Don't miss it.
Listen to Lost Culture East us on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
My name is Brandon Kyle Goodman. I'm a black, gay, non-binary author, TV writer, actor, and I'm messy.
But not in the way you think.
Messy as in I'm human and flawed.
I'm on a mission to destroy shame around sex.
And the only way to do that is to talk about sex.
So that's what we'll do on my brand new podcast, Tell Me Something Messy. Join me
on Tell Me Something Messy with brand new episodes every Thursday on the iHeartRadio
app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
It's been 30 years since the horror began.
9-1-1, what's your emergency?
He said he was gonna kill me!
In the 1990s, the tourist town of Domino Beach became the hunting ground of a monster.
We thought the murders had ended.
But what if we were wrong?
Come back to Domino Beach.
I'll be waiting for you.
Listen to The Murder Beach, I'll be waiting for you. Listen to the murder years season 2 on the I heart radio
app Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm going deep undercover hard to visualize you with her to
expose the secret world of professional shoplifting so you
can make a $1000 a day shoplifting yeah, and I end up outside the mansion of the shoplifting
Queen herself
Do you think we should go listen to Queen of the Con season 6 the California girls on the I heart radio app or wherever?
You get your podcasts
Action and like I'm sorry those of you who don't have a low grade sinus infection every year,
but the rest of us have allergies.
Yeah, Robert's allergic to grass.
Come on.
Yeah, the world is poisoned to me.
I don't know what to tell you.
Like I have eczema.
I'm allergic to my own fucking skin.
Get off his back.
Get off my back.
Unbelievable.
It's amazing you're still here.
Thank you.
Thank you, Noah.
It's only my're still here. Thank you. Thank you, Noah. It's only my relentless toughness.
Robert and I are allergic to so many things.
Yeah, Jesus Christ, people.
Imagine being really like this is, I'm the person who has most been victimized by the
internet because of how mean people are to me about my nose.
I'm the main victim of cancel culture, you know?
Are you in a bubble currently?
Yes, I live in a bubble.
Yeah, I have to like tase anyone who tries to get closer
than 10 feet from me
because I'm just a fragile little flower boy.
So I noted last episode that Peter was simpatico with the Bush administration when it came
to surveillance.
His only real issue with them is that they weren't mean enough to Muslims.
In 2007 though, he gained another issue with the Bush administration, which was that, if
you guys can remember back this far, right at the end of his last term in office, W announced massive support
for a new immigration reform package,
which today, unfortunately,
we would call like hopelessly leftist, right?
Like the George W. Bush 2007 immigration reform package
is like so much more progressive
than you could get away with now.
In part, it included a path to citizenship
for undocumented Americans. Bush's attempts to fix now, and part of it included a path to citizenship for undocumented Americans.
Bush's attempts to fix immigration as he saw it,
again, this was not seen as great by progressives
in the day, but it's just kind of more
than you could get away with now, didn't work out.
And it didn't work out because there's this massive
groundswell of rage from the right flank
of his own party, right? That is furious that
Bush is suggesting any mercy for people who had entered the country illegally.
Teal saw this movement as promising, and he credited the failure of Bush-era immigration
reform on an unprecedented internet campaign. Teal money started to flow towards anti-immigration
organizations reaching people online. One was a nonprofit called Numbers USA, which argued that the US needed to reduce the number
of immigrants allowed in every single year.
Numbers USA was founded and operated by Roy Beck, who himself had once worked for a guy
named Dr. John Tanton, who had founded other earlier anti-immigration groups.
Beck had worked for Tanton's US Inc. That's the anti-immigration
organization for a decade, and it helped Tanton organize a book. They vacation together. These
guys are very close ideologically and personally. Now once Roy starts his numbers USA foundation,
which is backed by Peter Thiel, he starts to downplay his relationship with Tanton because
John Tanton, in addition to being Roy's friend, is a white supremacist.
Here's the Southern Property Law Center writing about Tanton.
As long ago as 1988, a set of internal memoranda to the staffs of two groups he founded, the
Federation for American Immigration Reform, FAIR, and US English, were leaked and showed
Tanton warning of a coming Latin onslaught,
questioning whether Latinos were as durable as others
and worrying that Latinos were outbreeding whites.
A decade later, he told a reporter
that whites would soon develop a racial consciousness
and the result would be the war of all against all.
He hired and worked alongside Wayne Lutton,
who has held other leadership positions
in four white supremacist hate groups.
He published and endorsed a racist book on immigration and he published numerous white
supremacists. Tanton compared immigrants to bacteria that will continue growing until
the population crashes and sneered at immigrants defecating and creating garbage and looking
for jobs. There's a lot that's messed up there, you know?
Yeah.
Though Latin onslaught is the name of a sick Spanish language metal band.
It's also Latin onslaught is the term I use for that period where Emilio Estevez and Charlie
Sheen were both really starting to hit it in a big way, you know?
I believe that's half Latin onslaught.
That was the Latin onslaught.
Yeah, it's Latin enough. So I this so this is Peter Thiel is an immigrant to this country, right?
Born in Germany. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, for sure. He's an anti immigration immigrant.
Yeah, I mean, to be honest, though, like, that's the thing that people always get like flipped out by but that's like the core of the hardest anti-immigrant chunk
of the US population is immigrants
and children of immigrants, right?
Like, you know, the Cuban community in Florida
being one example, but like half of the fucking
border patrol is Latino, you know?
Like, and those guys are, yeah.
Am I right in remembering that Teal has,
like his citizenship is here and then also New Zealand.
Yes, he kind of fudged getting New Zealand citizenship. People argue that he wasn't
actually there long enough to get it, but if you have enough money, you can get the citizenship.
And like, you know, New Zealand, if you want to offer me citizenship too, I'll take it.
But it's kind of messed up that you gave it to Peter. Yeah.
Man, I could really use some New Zealand citizenship right about now.
It's kind of messed up that you gave it to Peter. Yeah.
Oh man, I could really use some New Zealand citizenship
right about now.
Yeah, fucking send us some New Zealand citizenship.
Wait, is that like if you found enough companies
that are named after Lord of the Rings?
Yes, yeah.
There's a certain, if you founded three companies
named after Lord of the Rings characters.
You get to go to New Zealand?
No, seriously, is he pro immigration to New Zealand too?
Or is he- He's probably him having a safe valve?
You know, that's I think all that it is. Right. Yeah. Yeah.
Also, how do how come all these people or some of these people
hardcore Catholic,
but also hardcore against the biggest hardcore Catholics on the planet,
a.k.a. the South and Central American populations?
That's a good question.
In part because a lot of these guys actually kind of hate
what most Catholics see as Catholicism.
Like the kind of trad Catholic,
the trad Catholic movement today, they're all converts.
They're all into aspects of like my whole family's Catholic
and like the kind of shit these people will say about like,
no, the Pope is invalid because this, this, this,
700 years ago.
It's like shit like Catholics like, no, he's the Pope.
You, you, you, you, you, you, you, like,
you listen to the Pope, you know, that's all that matters
is like, you know, it's this, it's this,
this kind of separation between what cultural Catholicism is
and like the fact that right now, the fucking in a,
I think it's in Pennsylvania,
the Republicans are going after this nunnery
because like a bunch of nuns are registered to vote there.
And they're like, none of them live there.
The nuns are talking about countersuing them.
And man, if the nuns are suing you,
no born Catholic I have ever known
would fuck with a group of nuns.
They're terrified of nuns. You don't a group of nuns. They're terrified of nuns.
You don't go against the nuns.
They're frightening people.
Yeah.
But-
Even this Jew knows that.
Yeah.
These guys are not like,
they're not Catholic in the sense that Catholics are Catholic.
They're Catholic in the sense that like people
who become fans of Warhammer 40,000
because they don't get the joke,
are fans of Warhammer 40,000.
That's the kind of Catholics they are, right?
Anyway.
I feel like that was a very alien form moment again.
No, no, no, no.
Everyone understands Warhammer jokes.
Do you have some sort of endorsement deal
with Warhammer 40,000?
No, I wish I did.
I would take their money.
But Games Workshop does not give out money.
That is the last thing that company does.
Yeah, I feel like if you could score some of that Sweet Sweet Games workshop money,
you might be able to find a cure for your allergies.
I can do a whole podcast on all of the characters that are based on 19th century gay poets in
Warhammer 40,000. More than you'd think.
Go ahead.
So Go off,000. More than you'd think. Go ahead. Go off, King.
So Peter Thiel, this guy, John Tanton, is directly connected to the dude. Thiel's not backing
Tanton, but he's backing his protege, Roy Beck at Numbers USA. And that's not all. I'm going to
continue that quote from the Southern Poverty Law Center. The report revealed that over the course of some 20 years, Tanton had corresponded with
Holocaust deniers, former Klan lawyers, and leading white nationalist thinkers.
He introduced leaders of FAIR, on whose board he still sits today, to the president of the
Pioneer Fund, a racist outfit set up to encourage race betterment at a private club.
He promoted the work of an infamous anti-Semitic professor, Kevin MacDonald, to both FAIR officials
and a major donor.
At one point, pursuing his interest in eugenics, the utterly discredited science of breeding
a better human race, he tried to find out if Michigan had laws allowing forced sterilization.
His concern, Tanton wrote in a letter of inquiry, was a local pair of sisters who have nine
illegitimate children between them.
And again, Peter Thiel is putting money into all of the people adjacent to this guy, right?
Like he is backing a lot of organizations that are next to him. Like this is just,
you can see, and he's very much, Thiel is very happy when like this Bush era immigration reform
package goes down in flames because he has been, one the things he's most consistent on again, since like the 2007 eight is wanting massive restrictions and particularly non-white
immigration into the United States, which is not a libertarian stance.
Uh, and is, is really just kind of a, uh, a, a far right racist stance.
Um, while bankrolling this like weirdo neo monarchist who's trying to convince the blogosphere right
wing to abandon democracy.
Yeah.
And this is actually a writer on the same time because it's like 2008, nine that he
starts getting involved with Yarvin and it's 2008 that he first sends a million dollars
to numbers USA through an intermediary.
According to Chafkin who notes, Teal didn't comment on the report at the time, but several
sources familiar with his political activities have told me the reported donation was real.
So it doesn't look like it's a thing that's absolutely confirmed, but there's definitely
like ties between him and Roy Beck and Beck is tied to Tanton, and this is all part of this very long process of Teel backing
different explicitly racist anti-immigration organizations.
The next year, right around the time that JP Morgan started experimenting with Palantir,
Peter Teel published an article in the Cato Institute's journal with his sea-steady buddy.
This is the guy that he's backing at the sea-steady institute.
The theme of that issue was the idea of creating libertarian enclaves outside of existing states.
Thiel submitted an essay, The Education of a Libertarian, where he channeled his friend
Curtis Yarvin to write, I no longer believe freedom and democracy are compatible.
He whined that the 1920s were the last gasp of hope for liberty because Americans then
gave women the right to vote
and created the welfare state.
And these two innovations had made political victory
impossible for libertarians.
Libertarians can't win elections because women can vote
and there's welfare and we'll never get those people
to give us any votes, right?
That's why he's so angry about this shit.
Yeah, girls will vote for us.
Oh, the ladies are too mean to us, so I so angry about this shit. Yeah
To me to us so I can't play this game. Yeah, it's over. This game is stupid I find whining about this shit so fascinating because we have all seen Peter and guys like him
They've only gotten wealth and power through the system that they claim to be oppressed by
It is the only place that they have ever been
or would ever be a success.
These guys are the winners of our society.
They are elevated by a system that is designed
to produce and support them,
but they still can't help but feel like losers all the time,
no matter what they do.
And so they turn their rage against the system
that is the only reason they're special.
Don't act like a loser. Don't act like a fucking loser. Yeah, they're special. Don't act like a loser.
Don't act like a fucking loser.
There you go.
You don't act like a fucking loser.
It's just it is the most loser shit to complain that
we couldn't possibly win on an election because 51 percent of the population.
And so many girls. Yeah.
Yeah, it's like they're like, we won our D&D games and there were no girls involved in those.
Yeah, you know, win D&D, you win just by playing.
But yes, I get your point.
Peter's frustrations were amplified by a public outcry
against his complaints about women voting, right?
Like people get angry at him for saying this
and he is forced to come out and kind of backpedal
and be like, I don't wanna take away women's right to vote.
I just recognize that this is a problem, right?
And I wanna find a shortcut to avoid democracy,
cramping my style, right?
I don't wanna stop women from voting.
We have to agree this is a problem
that guys like me can't win as many elections
because of the girls.
Now, another constant teal irritant was the free press.
As we talked about last episode,
I do think his initial irritants with Valley Wag
comes from a semi understandable place.
But it took years of them reporting on his actual doings
in a manner that I think was generally responsible journalism
before Thiel acted.
Here's the shadowy inciting incident of the Gawker lawsuit.
According to Derek Thompson in an article
with the Atlantic where he interviews Ryan Holiday,
he's the guy who wrote the book on this.
In 2011, he is in Berlin and he takes a meeting with a then 26-year-old Teal Devotee, who
you might call Mr. A. The young man essentially tells Teal, I know you're obsessed with Gawker
and I have an idea to destroy them.
He says Teal should create a shell company to fund investigators and lawyers to find
causes of action against Gawker and ultimately sue it into oblivion.
He estimates that the plan will take up to five years and up to $10 million in funding,
which is prophetic.
So it's this mysterious Mr. A who nobody knows the real name of allegedly who is the guy
who like sits down with teal and is like, Hey, I think if you fight, if you just keep putting it up,
put money, you know, put it towards some people,
maybe I can help you with this.
You get that feeling this guy's kind of angling for a gig.
Like we will figure out when Gawker slips up
and we'll use that to stick the knife in them, right?
Maybe that's the lawyer or something like that.
I mean, like maybe that's like a lawyer
just trying to get money.
Maybe it's, Ryan Holliday,
again, the reporter revealed this,
describes Mr. A as a professional son.
In other words, someone who sought out
and wormed his way into the confidences of father figures
who could advance his career.
And Teal, some people will say this is in part
because he has crushes on some of these guys,
but Teal has a habit of finding generally handsome young men
and putting them into his inner circle, back.
And this is kind of how JD Vance and Blake Masters
get into his circle, right?
And I don't know how much,
I'm trying to just kind of like stay out of it,
because what matters is he's backing these people,
not whether or not he thinks they're hot,
but that is an allegation you'll hear
that's made about this, right?
And I don't know, I'm sure that's not a non-factor sometimes.
You hear about this guy who like goes out
and targets older men to try and like embolden his career
and is like, I know how you can destroy Gawker
and maybe Peter, he's frustrated, he's angry
that he can't do anything about this thing
that's hurting his business.
And then like this hot dude comes up with a plan
to kill them, right?
Maybe that's some of what's going on.
According to the version of the story told by Holliday,
Peter complained to Mr. A over their meal
that he couldn't just outright destroy Gawker.
And Mr. A said back,
Peter, if everyone thought that way,
what would the world look like, right?
If people didn't just destroy journalistic outlets,
because they could, where would we be as a society?
So if this is accurate, that is kind of a,
I don't know if it's a big if, but it is an if,
Peter, this guy is who succeeds in getting Peter
to fund this operation to find a way to kill Gawker.
And they eventually find the way to kill Gawker. And they eventually find the way to kill Gawker
in an unlikely place,
the office of a Florida DJ named Bubba the Love Sponge.
Hey.
Here we go.
Here's where Bubba the Love Sponge comes in.
Everyone's been waiting for this
since we started talking Teal, you know?
Speaking of Bubba the Love Sponge,
you know who is a love sponge?
The sponsors of this podcast.
That's right, the sponsor of this podcast.
I think that's a cum joke.
So everyone enjoy that and go over that.
Please be ads for Dick Bill.
Or just cum, yeah, one of the two.
Whenever a homicide happens,
two questions immediately come to mind.
Who did this and why?
And sometimes the answer to those questions can be found in the where.
Where the crime happened.
I'm journalist Sloane Glass, and I host the new podcast American Homicide.
Each week, we'll explore some of this country's most infamous and
mysterious murders. And you'll learn how the location of the crime became a character
in the story.
On American Homicide, we'll go coast to coast and visit places like the wide-open
New Mexico desert, the swampy Louisiana bayou, and the frozen Alaska wilderness.
And we'll learn how each region of the country holds deadly secrets.
So join me, Sloane Glass, on the new true crime podcast, American Homicide.
Listen to American Homicide on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, Beau.
Hey, Matt.
Can you believe we have yet another
very special episode coming up?
This one is very close to my heart.
We'll be joined by friend,
the star of the upcoming Wicked film,
the one and only Ariana Grande,
will be here in the studio with us.
We hope this episode of Lost Culture
gives you so much joy.
The episode is dropping this Wednesday,
my birthday, November 6th.
And of course, please go see Wicked when it comes out.
November 22nd, don't miss it.
Listen to Lost Culture East us on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
My name is Brandon Kyle Goodman.
I'm a black, gay, non-binary author, TV writer, actor, and I'm messy.
But not in the way you think.
Messy as in I'm human and flawed.
I'm on a mission to destroy shame around sex.
And the only way to do that is to talk about sex.
So that's what we'll do on my brand new podcast, Tell Me Something Messy. Okay, let's play this messy round of smash or pass.
Okay, here it is, smash or pass, spit play.
I don't know.
I don't know how I feel about bodily fluids
being on me unless it's...
Oh!
Oh!
Because we're doing the pullout message.
We're living on the edge.
Oh my God!
I was not expecting that.
Baby, like I always say, if you know how to work that body,
that sexualness, and that heart, you're unstoppable.
Embrace your power.
That's really what we're gonna do on this show.
Join me on Tell Me Something Messy
with brand new episodes every Thursday
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
It's been 30 years since the horror began.
911, what's your emergency?
Someone, he said he was gonna kill me.
Three decades since our small beach community was terrorized by a serial killer.
Maybe, my dear Courtney, we're not done after all.
In the 1990s, the tourist town of Domino Beach became the hunting ground of a monster.
No one was safe. No one could stop it.
Police spun their wheels. Politicians spun the truth,
while fear gripped us tighter with every body that was found.
We thought it was over.
We thought the murders had ended.
But what if we were wrong?
Come back to Domino Beach, Courtney.
Come home.
I'll be waiting for you.
Listen to The Murder Years, Season 2, on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
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Pets that have gone above and beyond.
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We're back and boy, I hope we all enjoyed that ad from Hims.
Hims, I think they sell testosterone now.
Why not get involved?
Or Ozimbic, is it Ozimbic they're selling basically?
Whatever, give them some money.
Give them some money, hems.
Or don't.
Back in 2006, Hulk Hogan,
do they sponsor us, Sophie?
Have they given us money?
Come on hems, get on the bastard's train, you know?
Yeah.
Adds like that every day.
We'd shill for you.
We'd shill for you, I'll sell hems, I don't give a fuck.
Back in 2006. Give us a hems ad right now. Come on. Give me a head kill him do you enough testosterone?
Probably but you could have more it's what all the celebrities do they'll ship it to your door who gives a shit
How about give us one of those like sheepish like fuck? I have to do this house read
kind of version of him's they sometimes I
May or may not hear on podcasts.
Do you feel bad about your body?
Well, you probably should.
So get auto Zimbik, the drug that is probably fine for you.
No one really knows yet.
It's a little like vaping, try it out.
Yeah, see what happens.
Anyway, back in 2006, Hull Cogan had been depressed over the state of his marriage.
I love where the story starts,
which is, I had, again, just casually hearing it,
I had thought that it was a case of like,
he was just cheating on Bubba with Bubba's wife.
No, no, no.
Hulk comes over because he's getting a divorce,
and he's just in a dark place,
and he needs his friend, Bubba the Love Sponge.
And Bubba- The Hulkster's in a dark place.
The Hulkster's in a bad place. I really need some comfort. And Bubba the love sponge. And Bubba- The Hulkster's in a dark place. The Hulkster's in a bad place.
I really need some comfort.
And Bubba the love sponge is like,
Hulkster, you know what'll cheer you up?
Fucking my wife.
Why don't you go into my bedroom and fuck my wife?
And the Hulk said, okay,
but you're not gonna film this, are you brother?
I know you always film people who have sex in your house.
You're not gonna film the Hulk's dick, are you?
And Bubba was like, of course I'm not gonna film you.
And then of course he films the Hulk having sex
with his wife.
And he takes the recording made in his house
and he puts the recording in his desk
at the radio station where he works.
Incredible.
Like you do.
Amazing shit. Yeah, that you do. Amazing shit.
Yeah, that's incredible.
So funny.
This is such a funny case.
Like a lot of good people lost their jobs,
but this part of it's really funny.
Yeah.
Some people, yeah.
Not all good people lost their jobs,
but a lot of good people did.
So fast forward about six years.
Obama is on his way to term number dos
and Bubba gets in a conflict with a guy
who Ryan Holiday describes as,
hey, this is the funniest term in the world, rival DJ.
Nothing sadder than the words rival DJ.
Apparently-
Especially rival Florida DJ.
Yeah, rival Florida DJ.
If this is, and again, there's some debate.
I'm not saying this is absolutely what happened,
but this is probably the most,
it's certainly the most entertaining
and probably the most credible story
as to why this all happens.
If this is accurate,
the whole destruction of Gawker thing started
because Bubba the Love Sponge at a rival Florida DJ
had an argument over who was going to like
get which time slot.
And the rival DJ broke into his desk
and stole the videos to like hold him for like
them for ransom basically.
And ultimately leaked the videos to Gawker
to embarrass Bubba the love sponge.
Hulk was only ever an accidental casualty.
In this whole-
He was collateral damage.
He was collateral damage.
The poor Hulkster.
Oh, that's in the great Florida DJ world.
Yeah, in the great game of Florida DJs.
He's Afghanistan?
Wait, is the rival DJ, Mr. A, the secret hand,
maybe the rival DJ was the secret behind it all?
I'm gonna say definitely.
I'm gonna say definitely in a way
that makes iHeartMedia legally responsible, if I'm wrong.
Absolutely.
Yeah, because if there's one DJ, all radio,
all radio, iHeartMedia, boom.
Right, of course, we've gotta be tied into this.
Oh my God, Sophie.
It all connects.
Get out your Palantir crazy board.
Call the CEO, we're gonna blow this thing wide open. Yeah, Sophie. Get out your Palantir crazy board. Call the CEO.
We're going to blow this thing wide open.
Yeah.
So yeah, anyway, Gawker.
Now here is where Gawker, because I mentioned how it's questionable their choice to out
Peter but probably in a court of law defensible because of who Peter is, you know, politically
because of how influential he is.
Like you again, that's why he's why Peter doesn't sue over that.
This is something they probably could have defended.
What Gawker does next is something that is,
it still was potentially defensible.
We'll talk about Gawker makes some mistakes
in their legal representation here,
but it's deeply questionable.
This is a thing that I can say,
I'm leaning on this not being newsworthy, right?
And what's not newsworthy is they publish the video.
They don't just report on the fact
that there's a Hulk Hogan sex tape.
They publish the video under the title,
even for a minute watching Hulk Hogan have sex
in a canopy bed is not safe for work, but watch it anyway.
And that's just hard to defend in court.
You're going to have to defend that, right?
Although an incredible headline.
An incredible headline, an incredible headline.
Nobody said they were bad at headlines.
No, I mean, incredible headline.
Yeah, publishing sex tapes is probably not the greatest idea.
It's on the edge, it's on the edge, it's on the edge, yeah.
So this is something that is,
again, this is potentially defensible.
I'm not saying it's blanket not,
but it is something you were probably going to have
to defend in court, right?
You have crossed a line that is going to open you up
to some potential injury here.
Now, one reason why is that the sex that Hogan had
with Bubba the Love Sponge's wife
was not as a part of his job,
as Hulk Hogan, the public figure, right?
This is not something he did with a subordinate.
This is not something he did on company property, right?
Like this is not something you can argue
as an abuse of power on the Hulkster's part.
You know, this is a consensual non-monogamy,
I guess you could call it really,
that just happened to get filmed.
So Hulk has an argument that what happened
was a violation of his privacy.
Now, Gawker, again, I think if they had just reported
on the tape's existence, could have defended it,
making it available is a lot harder to defend.
Teal's people set legal wheels in motion.
And it's, again, it's like 2012 when this article,
when this video gets released,
so that's like six years after the sex tape was filmed.
And for a few years, the case kind of grinds forward.
And part of why it grinds forward is Gawker doesn't know
that Teal is backing Hulk Hogan.
And the Hulkster's got money,
but the Hulkster does not have
a major media company money.
And the smart play, if you are a big corporation
like Gawker, sued by a guy, even a rich guy, is delay.
Make it as expensive for them as possible, right?
You run out the clock and eventually they will not want
to keep burning cash in order to keep fighting you.
I mean, if I may, I'm not sure Gawker was ever that big
of a company.
I think it was more endless.
And I got a little bit of skin in this game.
Gawker's lawyer at the time and then their president.
Yeah, this is-
Somebody I worked with afterwards.
But I would just say at the Daily Beast where we ran the joint together for a couple of
years is like, look, I think in general, you got to err on the First Amendment errors on
the side of publishing, right?
Yeah, right.
Even creepy-ass shit.
Absolutely.
Like Hulk Hogan's dick. And so, I mean, I think what they were more pursuing
was what happens in any of these First Amendment cases where they're trying to put up their
best defenses against getting sued and those defenses take a while. And I don't think it
was... I mean, this company was never a particularly huge company. They had insurance that protected them against litigation at some points.
And they had, depending on where the case landed, whether it was in New York or Florida
or whatever, they had better defenses against law because a lot of this stuff is weirdly
state by state.
And this is an early judge shopping case.
The fact that they wind up in a Florida district with a very sympathetic judge is a big part
of what hurts them. If it had been in a different district with a very sympathetic judge is a big part of what hurts them.
If it had been in a different district,
they probably would have gone better for them.
I should note that, yeah, it's kind of like a holidays
argument as to how this went badly,
is that Gawker takes the standard strategy you would take,
which is a bad strategy if Hogan has the kind of financing
behind him that they couldn't have known he had, right?
Like the fact that there's so much more money behind this,
which starts to become clear later in the case.
Like it's the kind of thing people do not initially know,
Gawker doesn't initially know,
that Teal is backing them and what Holliday will argue.
And I think you're probably right,
but I don't think it's wrong that if Gawker had known
who was supporting the lawsuit,
there are probably changes they would have made
in how they pursued their defense.
Or at least how they pursued publicizing
that Teal was involved, right?
Yeah.
Like maybe you try to make that clear earlier, right?
Right, you know, Hulk Hogan sues company
that publishes dick tape is one thing.
You know, weirdo right-wing billionaire
sues media company for no particular reason,
but happens to use the sex tape as an excuse,
that's a totally different thing.
Yeah, it's a totally different thing.
And yeah, that's, and again, Holiday,
I quote him a lot because he's the guy
who like wrote the book on this case.
He is kind of more on Teal's side than I am.
And then I think most reporters are.
Although he's on Teal's side more
and a Gawker made a lot of major mistakes.
And I don't entirely agree with Holliday here
but they do make a number of mistakes, right?
There are some like issues
with the way this legal defense goes down.
But also it's one of these things where,
well, if you have Peter Thiel money
and the ability to judge shop and shit
in a way that a guy like Thiel does,
it's hard to imagine he wouldn't eventually
have gotten them on something, right?
Well, certainly you're gonna operate differently
if you know that there's a right-wing billionaire
that's built a death star.
Trying to kill you, yeah, exactly. It's trying to destroy you.
Just designed to destroy the planet.
Yeah.
Like that's a very different kind of way to operate.
And look, I think also just like growing up in the same era of media is like, I think we all,
a lot of us were like kind of self-taught and kind of like relearning the rules as we went along.
Yeah.
Right.
This was a major object lesson
and we would have all rolled a little bit differently
if we had known that there are these like, kind of like autocratic gazillionaires
that were kind of out to destroy what we were
about.
And this is the thing, this is one of the things that's so sad about this is that like
a lot of the, a lot of the issues that, you know, in terms of like we can, when we talk
about like the areas in which Gawker made mistakes, a lot of them are just due to how
young the company was, how new this whole branch of the media was and that we are all,
because I was a part of a digital media company there.
I like definitely, I was learning
and like learning by breaking a lot of the rules
of journalism early on in my career too.
Like we were trying to figure out
how these things worked in a new era
where there was suddenly both opportunity and money
in a way that journalists had not been used to for a while,
but also brand new pitfalls and threats, right?
And this is-
Well said.
I don't think it was, you know,
Gawker, if they had done things differently,
might've been able to survive,
but someone was going to go down in flames
for something like this
as a result of the different period
that we had entered into, right?
I do kind of believe that.
Maybe it wouldn't have had to be Gawker,
but it was going to be somebody
because there was just so much being tried that was new
and that hadn't been adjudicated, you know?
Like that was always good.
And it was the same thing.
I think most of us expected it was gonna come down
over like whistleblower stuff, you know,
WikiLeaks kind of shit,
as opposed to bubble the love sponge,
but it was going to happen, right?
Right.
So a big part of why the case goes against Gawker is,
there's this, one of kind of the leading moments
of this court case is that in court,
Gawker editor in chief, A.J. Delario,
in a deposition kind of jokes
that the only celebrity sex tape
he wouldn't have considered newsworthy
was one that featured a preschooler
that does not go over well in court.
It's not a great moment,
although I don't think it actually changes the,
it's just, why would you say that?
I don't know.
Anyway, I'm not gonna, he's suffered enough.
But it doesn't, this all goes very badly, right?
I mean, it goes as badly as it possibly could.
Even though the case had not initially gone super well
for Hulk, ultimately, you know,
the fact that this judge is very sympathetic,
it all goes their way.
In the case, the plaintiff is awarded $140 million
in damages.
Gawker, as you have said, was never that big
as a media company,
and this absolutely drives them into bankruptcy.
Nick Denton sold the company off
to Univision which shuttered the embattled flagship site. And that is the end of Gawker
except for it's kind of sort of back. I don't know. I don't know how we want to like it
didn't all die out. Right. But yeah, it's a and this is a scary moment. Many of the
sites still live in live on in on in one way or another.
For sure.
My old site lives on in one way or another.
Zombie.
Yeah, the zombies of our youths as writers.
Yeah.
So Teal, he gets, one of the things that happens
kind of at the tail end of this is that it becomes clear
to the people involved in the case
and the people paying attention to it
that Teal is the guy funding this.
I think it might've been Vogue I think that published, I may be getting that wrong, but
it wasn't Gawker that published the first article being like, hey, Teal's behind this.
But right as the case is ending, it comes out that Peter Teal is the guy who had backed
this, right?
And so Teal is able, there's this like backlash against him, but he's also able to kind
of go out in the open and take a victory lap. He tells the New York Times, it's less about revenge
and more about specific deterrence. I saw Gawker pioneer a unique and incredibly damaging way of
getting attention by bullying people, even when there was no connection with the public interest.
And like you back guys like JD Vance and Blake Masters whose politics is entirely dedicated
to attacking little people who have no power, right?
Destroying their lives for clout.
Like you don't believe any of this shit, Peter.
Yeah.
Now the Gawker case was the first thing to put Teal
on my radar in a big way, right?
You know, I wish I could say I was one of those guys
who from the early days of Palantir knew he was dangerous,
but it wasn't until this that I was like,
oh shit, there's this Peter Thiel guy
and he seems like a real problem, right?
It's also notable that like, it's not entirely,
I think that the surface summary of this,
which is that Gawker outed Thiel and then he destroyed them
is not entirely what happened, right?
Gawker was damaging to his business interests for years.
And so he laid out a painstaking and slow,
and funded a painstakingly slow path to taking them out,
right?
Which I think is a scarier story, you know,
just than that he was angry that they'd outed him.
And so he slapped them down.
The time that he waited, how long this took, you know,
the inevitability of it in some ways,
that like once this was set in motion, it couldn't be stopped is much more upsetting to me.
Yeah. And also it's not just his, I think it's more just like his class, you know,
that like the burgeoning tech oligarch class. Yeah.
They really were made deeply uncomfortable by a brand of journalism that was sometimes
fucked up and sometimes questioned their power.
And that threatened them a lot more than the journalism that played by the rules 100% of
the time and never threaten their power. Yeah. And this idea too that journalism has a chance at surviving now. There's suddenly
like... Because in this new media era, there was a lot of money comparatively for journalists,
not a lot of money in objective terms, but there's a lot of money coming into journalism
based on what journalists had gotten used to after the early Craigslist era had killed local newspapers.
And so there's suddenly this lifeline for reporting
and you have this explosion in sites that had started
as kind of less legitimate Gawker's early days
is no one's finest hour,
just like the earliest days of Buzzfeed, right?
You know, it was kind of a clickbait site.
And then they start this very serious,
groundbreaking news organization
that really does great work.
And it's terrifying to these guys who are like,
oh shit, maybe we're going to deal with more of this
than we ever had,
as opposed to it all being on the out and dying.
And so they kind of commit themselves to killing it.
And this is that Silicon,
Peter Thiel is the first of the Silicon elite to start flexing their muscles to destroy the independent media.
Right.
And I'd say more than just Silicon Valley. I mean, look, you know, this is now in the
era when, you know, I was running the Daily Beast and, and, and, you know, basically there
would be no major story about a rich person that didn't
come with a massive legal threat.
Yeah.
None.
Like 100% of the time, you could not write about a rich person.
I'm not talking about like their personal life.
I'm talking about, you know, any company that they're involved in.
Yeah, their business interests.
Nothing would come without a legal threat.
And so it was just a regular part of the publishing process, which was deal with legal considerations. And
often it was the very same lawyers that were connected with the Gawker case that were then
being hired by everybody else because they had learned this one trick. So yeah, that's one weird trick.
Yeah, yeah.
And so, that stuff was real.
And I don't know that it stopped us
from publishing any stories,
but it definitely stopped,
like it definitely slowed down the pace of stories for sure.
And it definitely, I know,
I definitely know of others where,
big stories got killed off
because of the legal threats for sure.
A chilling effect, right?
It has this chilling effect.
And it's one of these things where,
this is part of what's so scary about doing media, right?
Is you have to, in order to stay relevant and survive,
you have to explore things, you have to try new things.
And that also means, you know,
it doesn't necessarily mean,
I'm not saying every journalist would have published
the Bubba the Love Sponge video,
but you are going to do things that are new
and that you can't say are covered under the laws
that supported you in the past
when you're trying to adapt to changing circumstances.
And that's always gonna create opportunities
for people to destroy you
if they're scared by what you're doing.
Yeah, fair.
Yep.
Yeah, I think that gets at it,
I hope in a way that's pretty fair.
Yeah.
Speaking of destroying your enemies,
you know who my enemies aren't, Noah?
The people who advertise on this podcast.
That's right, none of them are my enemies.
None of them would ever sue journalists
for reporting on their personal business.
You know, and if they have, no, they didn't.
You didn't see that.
Deny the evidence of your eyes and ears.
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wherever books and audiobooks are sold. Learn more over at GrimAndMile.com slash Curiosities. We're back. So one of the results of the Gawker lawsuit is that Peter gets thrust in the public awareness
and gets criticized in a much bigger way after this, right?
He is no longer is kind of like, oh, he's just this smart founder.
He's kind of a libertarian.
He probably has a couple of different stances.
Like, oh, this guy's like a dangerous right-wing ghoul.
Right?
Like that's really people.
And this happens, right?
May of 2000, March of 2016 is when the Gawker case,
you know, gets closed in court.
And obviously, Peter becomes like the Republican party's
biggest single funder, I think, during this period.
And it's all capped.
I think it's easy. He's at least one of them. Because of the way money works biggest single funder, I think, during this period. And it's all capped, I think it's easy,
he's at least one of them.
Because of the way money works and all of this,
it's kind of hard to say that for a statement,
but he's a major donor and he speaks at the 2016 RNC
where he endorses Donald Trump
and he makes a big deal about the fact
that I am a gay Republican,
the Republicans are welcoming now, you know,
they'll accept you, unlike these evil liberals
who aren't really tolerant.
The Republicans accept me a gay man.
And obviously, like that was the thing
the Republicans were doing at the time.
Like Trump, because the Pulse Nice Club shooting
was like a Muslim who did it,
like I can really, you know, pretend to be
defending gay people and hang up my anti-ISIS credentials.
And it works because people are,
make bad decisions a lot of the time.
It's amazing.
I mean, but it was such transparent bullshit at the time.
Oh, it was so odd.
If you paid any attention,
but most voters are like most people who listen to podcasts,
they're hearing every fourth word
while they're doing the laundry, right?
Yeah.
So they miss shit, you know?
Yeah, okay.
Yes, I mean, it was shit, you know? Yeah, okay, yes.
I mean, it was just, it was complete transparent nonsense.
I watched him give that speech at the RNC
and it was like, I felt coded in a thick layer of sick.
It was nasty.
Yeah, and it was also like, sure, dude,
the party of anti-, of, uh, anti gay, uh, policy and rhetoric for fucking
decades is all of a sudden doing just because what, because they've got a, uh, a candidate
in a wig. It's like, come on, dude, like that is just not true. And. It was just so obvious at the time.
And this is like, you know.
A couple of years after game marriage was was legalized.
Twenty fifteen, not even a couple.
It was just like a year, right?
Yeah. And Peter gets married. Yeah.
Yeah. And it's like, you know, such a major advancement. I it's just,
it's wild to me. It's wild. I don't believe any. I do not believe one single person actually
believes that stuff. I'm sorry. I don't know. It's hard to and like Peter is I think the
the caveat to all of this, we talk about these philosophers he likes and these visions he
has of the future. And it's like, maybe all he really believes in
is that Peter Thiel should always be on top, right?
Maybe that's all you actually need to know.
That said, I also think we all make up
elaborate justifications for the selfish things
we wanna do, you know, that just being a person too.
So it's not worthless to look at like,
well, how does Peter do that, right?
Because he has much more money and power than us, right?
Right.
Yeah, it's like, oh, this guy's a weirdo
with authoritarian tendencies.
I'm a weirdo with authoritarian tendencies.
We gotta get together somehow.
Let me justify this by somehow claiming
that because he's a New Yorker and he's not totally
afraid of gay people like the rest of the people up on that Republican stage, therefore
I'll go with him.
Therefore it's fine.
I think, I think Peter's probably correct in a meaningless way that I don't think Donald
Trump personally is bigoted against gay people.
Right?
I don't think he gives a fuck, but I think Donald Trump is willing to kill every gay
person in this country
for Donald Trump's power, right?
Yeah, I mean, right now he's running more.
Yeah.
Yeah, he's running more ads about
like demonizing trans people
than he is about any, every other topic combined.
That is his number one closing argument.
It's massive.
Is kill trans people.
It's crazy.
And it's, you know, this is as much as,
cause like it's come out,
Peter Thiel's not supporting the Republicans in 2024.
He's not making like public donations, right?
And the reporting around it is like, well,
it's because of how angry he is that in 2022,
they launched everything into these culture war crusades.
And like, he's really disappointed in that.
And like the focusing on gay people,
there's stories that like his now deceased boyfriend
like kind of talked him into stopping supporting Republicans
because of how crazy they were at the anti-gay stuff.
At the same time, the guys-
Yeah, but I mean his boy,
Jamie Vance is right there. Exactly.
And Blake Masters are both two of the biggest anti-gay,
like Christian fucking lifestyle crusaders out there.
And these guys are total teal creatures.
So do I believe any of that?
No backsees, man.
It's not like, if this guy's the uber genius
he likes to portray himself as,
he can't be like, oh, whoops,
how could I possibly see this coming?
You know what you're doing.
You know what you're doing.
Yeah.
So now this period after 2016,
when Peter has really gone whole hog for Trump,
people start reporting a lot more
on all of these other weird investments he's doing, right?
And they start reporting on his life extension fixation.
Now all of his life extension investments are made through,
a lot of them made through his nonprofit Breakout Labs,
which is supporting like, you know,
unconventional solutions to major problems.
And one of those major problems is extending human lifespan
and ending aging.
Now people think this is kind of quirky of Peter,
so they start looking into it and reporting on it.
And Peter starts getting asked by journalists
in interviews about this.
In one interview with the Washington Post, he explained,
"'I've always had this really strong sense
"'that death was a terrible, terrible thing.
"'I think that's somewhat unusual. "'Most people end up compartmentalizing He explained, I've always had this really strong sense that death was a terrible, terrible thing.
I think that's somewhat unusual.
Most people end up compartmentalizing and they're in some mode of denial and acceptance
about death, but they both have the result of making you very passive.
I worry the FDA is too restrictive.
Pharmaceutical companies are way too bureaucratic.
A tiny fraction of a fraction of a fraction of NIH spending goes to genuine anti-aging
research.
The whole thing gets treated like a lottery ticket. Part of the problem is that aging research
doesn't always lend itself
to being a great for-profit business,
but it's still a very important area
for philanthropic investment.
And you know, one thing Peter comes around on
is that government funding is okay
if it's supporting things like anti-aging research
that I might benefit from, right?
Like we don't need roads or schools,
but I don't want to die.
But also I love this idea that like,
well, normal people aren't scared of death.
Everyone's scared of death, Peter.
We're just not gonna babies about it.
Deal with it, man.
Fucking take it on the chin, motherfucker.
God.
Now look, you can argue,
I think there's plenty of great arguments
that like the way drugs are kind of okay
in this country is fucked up. I'm not saying there's not ways that the FDA could be better. Yeah.
Yeah. One of my favorite Peter Thiel medical stories from that era that we reported on at the
time was he was very upset with how the FDA was handling herpes drugs.
Oh, interesting.
And so he bankrolled a series of quasi-legal,
certainly sidestepping around US safety rules.
Let's just call them gray market.
Tequerious herpes?
Black market herpes tests in the Caribbean.
I think it's like St. Kitts and Nevis.
Oh man, that's fun.
That's good.
That's just good stuff.
People are getting injected with like off, you know, with like untried,
non-approved herpes drugs. Yeah. Awesome. Awesome. He's getting black market
valcyclovir for his fucking awesome. So good. Our headline at the time was a dying doctor,
Peter Thiel and a rogue herpes vaccine trial gone wrong.
Oh man. That's so funny. Oh, that rules. Peter Thiel and a rogue herpes vaccine trial gone wrong.
Oh man, that's so funny. Oh, that rules.
These are not words you want in the same sentence?
No, no, rogue herpes vaccine trial,
not an attractive series of words
to have attached to your name.
No, not attached to your anything.
And also, you definitely don't want it to all go wrong.
No, no, no, no.
Your rogue vaccine trial, you really wanna work out.
Yeah, you want that to go excellently.
Yeah, you don't wanna have made everyone
at your fucking creepy beach parties
take a bad herpes vaccine.
No.
Did he give everyone herpes?
What happened there?
I'm trying to remember.
I'm just looking through,
the name of the company was Rational Vaccines.
God, I'm heaven, oh my God. I like company was Rational Vaccines. God in heaven, oh my God.
I like that, Rational Vaccines.
Yeah, uh-huh.
So how's all the irrational ones out there?
No institutional review board or IRB
to monitor the safety of the trials.
Well, why would you need that?
No, no, no, yeah, you definitely don't
wanna have a safe,
no, no, no.
Yeah, you don't need a control group safe. I don't know. Yeah, you know, you know, control group.
What's that useful for?
Yeah.
Didn't know how or where it was manufactured,
whether it needed booster shots.
Yeah, no, this was all all the things that you would hope that they would know.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, but look, I think a lot of billionaires do, I think that that is something not completely
uncommon in the billionaire classes.
Like, I'm going to hack science or I'm going to or the science industrial complex, you know, I'm going to
really disrupt science. And what better way to do that than with the herpes? Yeah, disrupt
herpes by I guess, not hard hurting it at all. Let's see one trial recipient started
getting ringing in his ears and slurred speech.
Oh, my God. Yeah.
Let's just give everyone something worse than herpes.
Then a Colorado woman in her 40s
said she got flu like aches and numbness soon after the second shot.
Numbness, not a good thing to get after.
No, no, no.
The symptoms were followed by a, quote, excruciating 30 day outbreak of herpes.
Great.
Wow.
30 days.
That's a long time to have a herpes outbreak.
Wow.
I have new symptoms every day.
That one later told Halford, this is terrifying.
He really disrupted herpes.
You know, before it was an incredibly manageable viral
Illness that that could easily handled with medication and now people have month-long outbreaks
You did it again Peter you moved fast and you broke herpes
Sounds like they broke quite a few other things too. She's yeah
So funny. Okay. So in my August of 2016 the same month that Peter shows up at the RNC, Maya Kossoff published an article titled, Peter Thiel Wants to Inject Himself with Young
People's Blood. Now, this is not the first reporting on Peter Thiel's interest in blood,
but I think because of the title, this is one that has a big impact on how the rumors
starts to spread.
Now, the actual ultimate source of this was an article published in the same week for
Inc.
Inc. magazine by Jeff Berkovici, who put out an old interview he'd done a year before with
Teal that touched on Peter's interest in what's called parabiosis, quote, which includes the
practice of getting transfusions of blood from a younger person as a means of improving health and potentially reversing aging.
I'm looking into parabiosis stuff, which I think is really interesting.
This is where they did the young blood into older mice and they found that it had a massive
rejuvenating effect.
And so that is one that again, it's one of these very odd things where people had done
these studies in the 1950s and then it got dropped altogether.
I think a lot of these things have been strangely underexplored. Now, the reason parabiosis was underexplored
is that it doesn't really work, right? Blood transfusions are amazing medicine for the
reasons that you wouldn't think, like when people lose all their blood, right? Great
to be able to give people a blood transfusion when they have been shot and bled out. It's
not going to make you young because of course it doesn't work that way
because that's stupid.
It's stupid that it would work that way.
That's not how blood works and it's not how aging works
and you're silly for thinking it.
It's crazy, huh?
No, no.
Unfortunately, nothing can stop aging
except for apparently taking lots of HGH and testosterone.
Huh.
You know, Noah, do you have $12,000 a month?
Because I can help you out with a plan here.
Oh yeah, I've definitely got that.
His name is Vito.
He will meet you at the gym with a trash bag.
And yeah, you too could have a trash bag full of gear.
I can drain him of his blood.
Yeah, sure.
Wait, I don't care what happens to Vito.
He's a steroid dealer.
Like his life has no value.
Like we're good either way there.
So I can do both.
I could be covered.
I could be belt and suspenders.
Yeah, you can take Vito's blood.
Although Vito's blood is gonna be even more HGH
and testosterone.
I'm gonna warn you about that right now.
You're HGH- That's fucking disco.
Are you kidding me?
Your HGH gut is going to have its own gravitational pull
like the moon.
Or like Joe Rogan's HGH gut.
Oh, I know.
I know, that is really unfortunate.
Okay, so you're telling me, so Vito, take his blood.
Take his blood.
It's already been pre-HGH'd.
You don't need any more.
You literally can't fit more HGH in your blood
than Vito has in his.
And then you just sell that sack of gear
to somebody else who wants to spend 12 grand on gear.
You know?
It's a beautiful cycle.
No, I'm gonna double gear.
Dude, the next time we do this podcast,
I'm gonna be ripping this fucking laptop apart.
You're gonna be deadlifting 1,100 pounds.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Bursting your colon out as she gets, do your, yeah.
My dick is gonna be the size of a thimble.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You can read the Lord of the Rings and Braille
and the acne on your back.
Oh, it's gonna be incredible.
Take that.
Oh man.
Yeah.
So, Berkovici reported that a Teal Capital employee
who was also Peter's personal health director
had ties to Jesse Carmason, the founder of Ambrosia LLC.
And I would, if we had more time,
there's so much Peter to get into,
we would talk more about all of these different grifters.
Carmason is very funny.
Legally, I'm not calling him a grifter.
I just don't think what he was trying to do really works,
but he did provide the product that he claimed.
Ambrosia LLC was looking for volunteers over the age of 35
to receive blood transfusions from the young.
Gawker reported around this time
that they had gotten a tip.
And again, this is right after the lawsuit has concluded
that Teal spent $40,000 a quarter
to get blood transfusions from an 18-year-old.
Now, is Gawker just trying to take a shot at Peter
because of what happened?
There's not outside evidence of this, right?
Nothing's ever come forward to make it clear
that Teal definitely was taking the blood of the young, right?
In interviews, Peter has always been consistent
that he never got around to starting it, right?
He told a reporter that he hadn't quite started yet,
and he has since denied ever taking the blood of the young,
telling that Andrew Sorkin at Deal Book,
on the record, I am not a vampire,
which I have to say is something a vampire would say.
He's like, I'm a cooler Bella.
On one hand, only a vampire would say that, right?
Cause normal people don't have any reason
to deny being vampires. Yeah. Right?
I mean, that's pretty, that's still kind of rules though.
I think there's a good chance he never actually did this,
not because he wouldn't,
but just because I think it became clear pretty early on
that this didn't work. Right?
Brian Johnson, the big life extension guy,
took his son's blood for a while and I think has stopped
because it just doesn't do anything.
Peter is not, I don't think Peter would care
that people were calling him a vampire if this worked, right?
Cause he's open about, he takes HGH
as like a life extension thing, right?
Like I don't think he would hide it if he was on it.
I think maybe it just, the science was not there
in any real way and Peter's not gonna do something
like this, like it's not pleasant probably.
Like you wouldn't want to get constant blood transfusions if you weren't convinced it did
something.
Uh, speak for yourself.
Yeah.
Some of us just like blood, uh, from an article in business insider quote, Teal told Bloomberg
TV in 2014 that he was taking human growth hormone pills, also known as HGH.
Teal told Bloomberg TV that he believes HGH can help maintain muscle mass.
So that's less likely to get bone injuries
and arthritis and stuff like that as you get older.
Which is true.
I'm sure there are some problems of aging
that HGH helps you avoid, but HGH has side effects.
You can get carpal tunnel from it.
You can get muscle and joint pain.
You get an increased risk of cancer.
Research has shown that people and animals
whose natural levels of HGH are high are likely to die at a younger age than those with lower
levels of HGH. So I don't know that I would take this gamble. I think this may just be a case of
Peter wanting the cosmetic benefits of HGH. It makes you look jacked, even if you don't spend all that much time working out.
As opposed to Peter truly believes this is a life extension technology.
I think it's probably more accurate that he convinced himself it's keeping him young because
it has cosmetic benefits that he appreciates, right?
My stance and all this life extension stuff is that Peter Thiel will die one day.
And as is the case with all of us, he will probably die sooner than he expects
because that's just the way shit goes.
Sorry, Peter, I recommend making peace with it.
That's the only real way to handle this.
Now, I went back and forth with myself
over how much to cover of each of Peter's evil interests.
For example, in 2016, Peter was a mega donor
to the Republican party.
But like most people who get involved with Trump,
he soured on him quickly,
and he avoided donating
to Trump's reelection campaign in 2020
out of what he described as frustration
with Trump's personality, right?
I don't disagree with any of his policy,
but I'm angry at how much he's become the story, right?
In 2022, he got back in the electioneering saddle,
and he backed JD Vance and Blake Masters
with unprecedented donations.
He gives more money to JD Vance
than a single candidate had ever received
for a congressional seat.
In all, Peter Thiel put $35 million in 2022
into 16 federal level Republican candidates
and 12 of them win.
But the overall performance of the GOP
in those midterms is famously poor.
And it's famously poor because a big part
of their campaign rhetoric was spurred
by irrational bigotry against LGBT
and particularly T Americans.
Peter would publicly state that this frustrated him.
I think this has to do with the fact
that there's a guy he's dating at the time
who is a gay male model and who will give later interviews.
I think these are kind of, we're actually right around this point where he says that
like, yeah, I talked to him about this and like convinced him to stop, right?
Because I think these people are toxic and they're bad for us.
I didn't think he should be doing this.
This model's name was Jeff Thomas, as we'll talk about.
He's deceased now.
He would claim that I talk to people.
I don't see why Jeff would have necessarily lied about this.
Other than that, I think Jeff was getting shit for his association with Teal because
of how much more aggressive Republicans were being at gay people.
Maybe that was Jeff's reason to want to say this.
Teal is going to set out 2024, but it does, it's kind of worth noting, if you're trying
to take seriously this idea that he stopped backing Republicans because of how toxic they
were getting, he backs the most toxic of them in 2022.
I just don't know how much to take that.
I don't think I should take that very seriously.
Now, I could say more about how Teal's seasteading ambitions have metastasized to a broader quest
by some Silicon Valley elites to create an independent network state ruled by big tech
in a place like California.
I probably should, but we'll leave it with this, which is that one of the major advocates
of the network state movement is an investor named Balaji Srinivasan, who Teal suggested to Trump
should lead the FDA in 2016. Thankfully, Balaji didn't wind up leading the FDA, but this guy is
a really dangerous dude. He's taken some of these ideas, these Curtis Yarvin ideas that Teal started
to mainstream, and he's been twisting them into very dark directions.
In 2022, his book, The Network State, described a plan for tech oligarchs to make their own
countries escaping democracy at the same time.
One of his chief plots was to conquer San Francisco.
Here's a report from an article in The New Republic on Balaji's current advocacy.
What I'm currently really calling for is something like tech Zionism," he said after comparing
his movement to those started by the biblical Abraham, Jesus Christ, Joseph Smith, the founder
of Mormonism, Theodore Herzl, the spiritual founder of the state of Israel, and Lee Kuan
Yew, former authoritarian ruler of Singapore.
What a collection.
Balaji then revealed his shocking idea for a tech-governed city where citizens loyal
to tech companies would form a new political tribe clad in gray shirts. And if you see another gray on
the street, you do the nod. He said during a four hour talk on the moment of
Zen podcast, you're a fellow gray. The gray shirts would feature Bitcoin or
Elon or other kinds of logos. White Combinator is a good one for the city of
San Francisco in particular. Grays would also receive special ID cards, providing
access to exclusive gray controlled sectors of the city. San Francisco in particular. Grays would also receive special ID cards, providing access to exclusive Gray controlled sectors
of the city.
In addition, the Grays would make an alliance
with the police department,
funding weekly policeman's banquets to win them over.
Gray should embrace the police, okay?
All in on the police, said Schminn-Ovossin.
What does that mean?
That means, as I said, banquets.
That means every policeman's son, daughter, wife, cousin,
you know, sibling or whatever,
should get a job at a tech company in security.
In exchange for extra food and jobs, cops would pledge loyalty to the grays.
Shrina Vassan recommends asking officers a series of questions to ascertain their political
leanings.
For example, did you want to take the sign off Elon's building?
Some loser shit.
This is so fucking lame.
Some loser shit.
Absolute loser shit is stupid fucking X sign.
Incredibly funny. This is like it's like as if no Nazi ever got a blowjob.
This is what.
Yeah. They would come up with the fucking grays.
It's so it's talk about like Srinivas. We'll talk about Srinivasal sound.
Oh God.
He deserves more.
All of this, we're having to yada yada so much
just because like Peter is involved in so much.
You know, I can't, like responsibly, this is like,
I think I'm trying to just give as much of an overview
as I can here.
Also, do you think the.
Do you think the grays thing is like
some kind of aliens thing?
Like, yes, we're the Grey's, like the aliens.
I mean, I think he's recognized that it takes advantage
of kind of that symbology,
but no, I think it's not even that creative.
We're gonna have something cool on our shirts,
like a picture of Elon.
Oh, it's like a picture of fucking Elon
or a Doze, I'm sure.
My God.
We're gonna have the Y Combinator logo on,
and all the cops are gonna love us because we're gonna give them jobs. We're gonna have the Y Combinator logo on and all the cops are gonna love us
because we're gonna give them jobs.
We're gonna give the cops kids jobs.
Their fail sons will get to work at our security companies.
Yeah, that'll keep you guys safe.
Yeah.
So I'm gonna move on to talk a little bit at the end here
about Peter's war on higher education.
He started his public life by authoring a book
with David Sacks on the intellectual corruption
in American academia.
As a multi-billionaire, he launched a program to prove higher education unnecessary.
The Teal Fellowship.
The idea behind the much-balle-hued fellowship was that Peter would pick 20 students per
year and give them each $100,000 to drop out of school and do their own thing, trying to
start a business with some support from the Teal Foundation.
Basically, Peter pays for you to figure out a company
you wanna start and your association with him
makes it easy for you to get VC bucks.
In keeping with his supreme weirdness as a dude,
Teal announced the initiative
by attacking the Catholic Church, kinda.
If you get into the right college, you'll be saved.
If you don't, you're in trouble.
As I've said, colleges are as corrupt
as the Catholic Church was 500 years ago.
They're sort of charging people more and more.
It's the system of indulgences.
You have this priestly or professorial class
that doesn't do very much work.
And you basically tell people that if you get a diploma,
you're saved, otherwise you go to hell.
And like, that's such a weird way to look at it
because it's not the professors
who have made college expensive.
In part, it's like the same reason that people like you,
these VC ghouls, you know,
who are part of the administrator class
or sitting on the boards of these colleges,
want more money.
Like it's not a random Marxist professor
who has decided that college is gonna cost
$80,000 a semester.
That guy doesn't benefit from that situation, right?
Not at all, though.
Getting paid the same amount of money.
Yes, yeah.
Look, I remember when this came out
and I was like, you know what?
I can sort of get down with the idea of like,
circumvent your college portion.
I don't believe college is best for, I dropped out, right?
A lot of people benefit from not doing college,
but this going to war with college
is such a weird movement,
such a weird thing to do in this situation.
Hey, this isn't worth, college isn't worth it.
Take my money, that's worth it.
Yeah.
That I can see.
But like college is a Catholic church, I don't buy.
Yeah, I don't know.
I don't know.
Now, depending on who you ask, the program could be viewed as a success or a failure.
Because the program that comes out of this is that like Peter's going to pay 100 grand
per student if you try to drop out of college, right?
From an article on the website Education Surge, a columnist for Bloomberg who is himself a
venture capitalist, Aaron Brown recently did an analysis of the 271 people who have received a Teal fellowship
since the program began.
And it turns out 11 of them have gone on to start new companies now valued at more than
a billion dollars, making them what are called unicorns in the industry.
He sees that as a pretty remarkable record for finding unicorns.
It's not like colleges aren't trying to encourage their students to start companies through
various programs, Brown says.
None of those have been anywhere near as successful as giving these kids $100,000 and sending
them out into the world."
So that's one analysis of the program.
Max Chafkin, you won't be surprised to hear, gives a more critical summary of things.
First off, he alleges the foundation was started in part for the media attention it would get,
which would distract people from the fact that Peter's Founders Fund has lost a lot
of investors after his hedge fund fell apart.
Peter launched the fellowship with a characteristic 5,000 word essay on what happened to the future,
written by his partner at the Founders Fund, Bruce Gibney, and includes the line, we wanted
flying cars and we got 140 characters.
Thus, the fellowship was a small attempt to get the future back on track by encouraging
ambitious geniuses to take big swings and not just work for the man making fake technologies
solving fake problems.
Chafkin points out that these kinds of fake technologies were precisely where the Founders
Fund had invested its money for years.
Founders Fund had backed Facebook, a social network just like Twitter, as well as Path,
Goal and Slide, which were all social media companies.
The last one, which had been started by Teal's PayPal co-founder Max Lebchin, was known for
something called Super Poke, which allowed users to virtually slap, punch and grope their
Facebook friends and was about as far from the randy and ideal as one could imagine.
The fellowship did connect some young men with funding that wound up leading to profitable
companies, but none of them gave us the flying car or anything but more of the same overvalued
Silicon Valley bullshit.
And Schaffken argues the program did damage to some of the young people in it.
For one thing, the program tossed kids into the Bay Area with little amounted to a small
sum of money and very little social support or institutional support.
Ironically, the kinds of things that universities are decent at providing.
Quote, they showed up in California only to find out that the actual execution of the fellowship
was basically an afterthought once Teal had achieved its marketing goal. There was no
structure to speak of beyond that suggestion and the requirement that they not enroll in school or
take a full-time job. Some former fellows talked to Chavkin and made the very interesting point that the actual
benefit of the fellowship was essentially the same as what you got out of an Ivy League
school, access to powerful people and money.
The TEAL program, one fellow told, promised libertarian capitalism in a supportive community
that would reward creativity rather than Machiavellian maneuvering.
What I found was comically not that, he said.
It was college without the classes, a residential community, or studying.
In short, most of what was enriching about college.
It wasn't an attack on a credentialing system.
It was another credential."
And of course, yeah, yeah, I think that gets it right.
The greatest privilege of wealth is the ability to be taken seriously as a dilettante, right?
You don't have to know anything.
You don't have to earn your way in
to show up with a bunch of money and be a serious player.
Now, sometimes this works out.
That's what James Cameron does with deep sea exploration,
but he's a real, he becomes a legitimate expert, right?
Like no one can argue that at this point,
but James Cameron very rarely is that how it works out.
Usually it works out like this, right?
It's usually more like the dipshit
who got everybody killed in the-
Exactly, exactly. Stocked in rush.
Right, stocked in rush, yes.
Peter represents the other side of the coin
and perhaps his longest lingering danger
next to the career of JD Vance is his company Palantir.
And we're gonna close by talking some about Palantir.
In the year since JP Morgan signed on and saw their whole C-suite get spied on, Palantir
has spread over the globe.
It gained a great deal of influence after the US killed Bin Laden and some people insinuated
that Palantir's tech had helped track the terrorists down.
This appears to be untrue, but it's spread far and wide enough that you can find plenty
of critical reporting on the company that will point out its alleged connection to Bin
Laden's death.
After Trunk took office, Peter saw his most nativist dreams come true in a way that meant
big bucks for Palantir.
They made a contract with ICE and Homeland Security Investigations for $38 million.
This led to them providing software for a 2017 operation that targeted unaccompanied
children and their families trying to enter the United States.
This was the Kids in Cages scandal. And I'm going to read an excerpt from The Intercept next. I
think Ryan Grim wrote this one. Documents obtained through Freedom of Information Act litigation
provided at The Intercept show that this claim that Palantir software is strictly involved in
criminal investigations as opposed to deportations is false. The discrepancy between the private
intelligence firm's public assertion
and the reality conveyed in the newly released documents was first revealed by Mi Gente,
an advocacy organization that has closely tracked Palantir's murky role in immigration enforcement.
Far from a detached support in cross-border criminal investigations, the materials released
this week confirmed the role Palantir played in facilitating hundreds of arrests, only a small
fraction of which actually led to criminal prosecutions.
The document makes it clear that the operation which would directly target the parents and
other family members of children apprehended at the border, all with help with Palantir's
case management app.
The document continues to instruct that if sufficient information on parents or family
members is obtained while investigating an unaccompanied child, a collateral case would
be sent to the affected team for action.
The instructions make it clear that enabled inquiries could result in charges against
a child's family.
Teams will be available immediately to conduct database checks and contact a suspected sponsor
parent or family members to identify, interview, and if applicable, seek charges against the
individual and administratively arrest the subjects and anybody encountered during the inquiry who is out of status."
The Palantir-aided campaign to hunt down and arrest family members of children who crossed
the border alone was touted by the Trump administration's top immigration hardliners as a necessary
measure to deter asylum seekers from making the journey north.
According to figures ICE provided at the Intercept on Monday, the 2017 initiative led to 443
arrests, including 35 criminal arrests.
Prosecutions, however, were much more difficult to come by, with ICE acknowledging that the
campaign led to just 38 prosecutions related to alien smuggling or reentry of removed aliens.
Karp, the avowed neo-Marxist, had initially expressed frustration at his company being
involved in government overreach.
In 2013, he told Forbes, I didn't sign up for the government to know when I smoke a
joint or have an affair.
But in the wake of reporting on his company's involvement in ICE, when some employees at
Palantir pushed to divest themselves from working with ICE, Karp pushed to renew a $42
million ICE contract
and attacked workers at Google
and other Silicon Valley companies
that had protested contracts
with the military and law enforcement.
In the first couple years after Trump took office,
Palantir acquired contracts
potentially worth hundreds of millions of dollars,
more than the total revenue they'd received
from the US government during Obama's entire second term.
Palantir has, at varying points, explored deals with the Saudis, and in January, Karp
flew to Israel to express solidarity with the Israeli government and, one presumes,
make the case for why the IDF should buy his company's products.
At the moment, Palantir's technology is also heavily used in Ukraine, whereby some accounts
it plays a major role in targeting decisions.
Now, I am hesitant to rely on a lot of reporting that basically acts as advertisements for
Palantir's technology, but there is some evidence that their algorithmic analysis has been useful
in allowing Ukraine to more efficiently target and expend munitions on the battlefield.
It is not really possible for me to analyze how effective Palantir's technology is here,
in part because information siloing in a war
with this kind of stuff is so effective.
I do worry about how much a lot of the reporting
on the efficacy of Palantir in Ukraine,
how much of it sounds like an ad,
and I'm always very questionable about early reports
that military and intelligence products
are game-changingly effective, right?
Because a lot of the time that winds up being overblown,
right?
I can't say that it is, I don't know.
This is something that will be adjudicated
in the march of time, right?
This is still going on.
There was an article today from Reuters.
Did you read that one?
No, no, I mean, no, nothing today.
Yeah, there was an article that came out today
that Palatir was dumped by their Norwegian
investor over their work with Israel.
Oh, that's interesting.
We should probably talk more about that.
This is all coming out.
CARP recently visited Israel earlier at the start of this year to kind of make overtures
directly to the Israeli government.
Israel, most of their AI targeting that's gotten so rightly covered
is not through Palantir, but Palantir clearly wants to be in that business with Israel.
They're seeing what's going on in Gaza and this is a place where we can make a lot of
money.
It's just a case where I think they kind of got beaten to the punch on some of this stuff.
When it comes to what they've been doing in Ukraine, Palantir has played a big role in
turning the war in Ukraine into what Center for Security and Emerging Technology analyst
Rita Konev described as an AI war lab.
It's possible that their technology has been helpful to Ukraine, but even in the most defensible
use of Palantir's tech, there are troubling questions.
From a write up by CSET, national security officials and experts caution that these new
tools may end up in the hands
of adversaries.
Rita Koneyev raised significant concerns about the long-term implications of the deployment
of advanced technology in Ukraine.
She stated, the prospects for proliferation are crazy.
She also posed critical questions about the future implications.
Most companies operating in Ukraine right now said they align with US national security
goals, but what happens when they don't?
What happens the day after?
Right?
And what happens with governments who are engaged in stuff that's a lot more questionable
than what Ukraine is doing?
Like what we're talking about with them shopping around Israel.
There's a lot of unknown questions about how this is going to work out.
I hope this is like a ground level overview
of what Palantir does of why you should, you know,
be paying attention to them.
Nobody should take this as the final word
on everything Palantir gets up to that's too big
for even four parts of a podcast.
But I think we've laid the groundwork.
And I think Noah, that's where we're gonna have
to roll out for the day.
Yeah.
Wow.
You know, usually these behind the bastards series, they end on such a positive note. Yeah. Wow. You know, usually these behind the bastards series, they end on such a positive note.
Yeah.
When the guy's still alive, it's a bummer.
Yeah.
I'll say a little-
In this one, it's more like the AI machine is coming to kill you, which seems not as
positive.
Peter's going to help build the AI death machine that gets you targeted because you were once
friends with a guy who looked up the wrong thing on the internet.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I should note that in April of last year, Peter's quote unquote boyfriend, you know,
he's married, but I think just kind of had probably probably was a consensual sort of
sleeping around thing.
There was this male model, Jeff Thomas that he had been seeing.
He put him up in a $13 million mansion. He bought him a sports car. Thomas is the guy who claims he
talked Peter out of supporting the Republicans in 2023. It's kind of unclear what was going on with
them. Teal has always been famous for throwing these very lavish, very decadent parties, right?
Very much at odds with the whole religious conservative image that he had. There's definitely some texts and stuff that have come out about like the parties
that he would plan with this guy. There's some evidence they had a fight or maybe he
had a fight, Peter had a fight with his husband. It may have been that Jeff got angry at him
over his support of the right and that like that's part of why he pulled away from Teal
because he like moved out of the house. I just don't know who was on what side of this,
but in 2023, Jeff committed suicide and we do not know why.
We don't know what happened here.
I'm bringing this up just because people are gonna be like,
why aren't you talking about this?
But like, there's really not enough for me to say
what happened here, right?
But it is like a thing that you'll run into with Peter. I didn't
want to just leave it out because that would seem like a weird hole to have in the story
too. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's cool stuff. It's also, it's part worth noting for like the
ethics of Palantir, that when Peter was interviewed about like how Israel has been using AI in
a lot of their
targeting those resulted in heavy, massive civilian casualties. His basic statement was
like, I don't think it's worth criticizing them on this. You have to assume they know
their business, right? Which like, man, a lot of innocent people have died as a result
of this AI targeting shit. And I think that tells you where Peter sees the ethics in his industry, right? Doesn't really matter, you know?
Anyway, sorry to yada yada so much there,
but like, how do you cover all of this in four episodes?
We're already over time.
So thank you, Noah.
I appreciate you sitting here with us for this.
Thank you.
I think?
Do I thank you? Am I thanking you? I haven't thought. I never
do. I never will. Yeah. Okay. But thank you Noah. Yeah. And people. People can follow
you on the internet by your at your game. Yeah Noah Shackman. S HH.A., C.H.T.M.N.
Okay, goodbye!
Bye!
Hello, Joy Mungoos!
Behind the Bastards is a production of Cool Zone Media.
For more from Cool Zone Media, visit our website, CoolZoneMedia.com.
Or check us out on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Behind the Bastards is now available on YouTube.
New episodes every Wednesday and Friday.
Subscribe to our channel, youtube.com slash at Behind the Bastards.
Sometimes where a crime took place leads you to answer why the crime happened in the first place.
Hi, I'm Sloane Glass, host of the new True Crime podcast, American Homicide.
In this series, we'll examine some of the country's most infamous and mysterious murders
and learn how the location of the crime becomes a character in the story.
of the crime becomes a character in the story.
Listen to American Homicide on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, Beau.
Hey, Matt.
Can you believe we have yet another
very special episode coming up?
This one is very close to my heart.
We'll be joined by friend,
the star of the upcoming
Wicked film, the one and only Ariana Grande,
will be here in the studio with us.
We hope this episode of Lost Culture gives you so much joy.
The episode is dropping this Wednesday,
my birthday, November 6th.
And of course, please go see Wicked when it comes out.
November 22nd, don't miss it.
Listen to Lost Culture East us on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
My name is Brandon Kyle Goodman.
I'm a black, gay, non-binary author, TV writer, actor, and I'm messy.
But not in the way you think.
Messy as in I'm human and flawed.
I'm on a mission to destroy shame around sex.
And the only way to do that is to talk about sex.
So that's what we'll do on my brand new podcast, Tell Me Something Messy.
Join me on Tell Me Something Messy with brand new episodes every Thursday on the iHeart
Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
It's been 30 years since the horror began.
9-1-1, what's your emergency?
He said he was gonna kill me!
In the 1990s, the tourist town of Domino Beach became the hunting ground of a monster.
We thought the murders had ended.
But what if we were wrong?
Come back to Domino Beach. I'll be waiting for you.
Listen to The Murder Years, Season 2. Come back to Domino Beach. I'll be waiting for you.
Listen to the Murder Years Season 2 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
I'm going deep undercover.
It's hard to visualize you with hair.
To expose the secret world of professional shoplifting. So you can make $1,000 a day
shoplifting.
Yeah.
And I end up outside the mansion of the shoplifting queen herself.
I hear the cops. Dude, I think we should go.
Listen to Queen of the Con Season 6, The California Girls, on the iHeartRadio app or wherever
you get your podcasts.