Lemonade Stand - Is Tesla Doomed? | Ep 002 Lemonade Stand
Episode Date: March 13, 2025Are you buying or selling?This week Aiden, Atrioc, and DougDoug debate if Tesla is really worth it's valuation.Recorded March 12, 2025Audio Listeners can hear us:Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show.../0Yz44z9z3t8VQu4WRmsrs6Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/lemonade-stand/id1799868725Amazon: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/7d7e1f54-49a3-4082-81e8-f70bfe1ace63/lemonade-standiHeart: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/269-lemonade-stand-269417962/Follow usTikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@thelemonadecastInstagram - https://www.instagram.com/thelemonadecast/Twitter - https://x.com/LemonadeCastThe C-suiteAiden - https://x.com/aidencalvinAtrioc - https://x.com/AtriocDougDoug - https://x.com/DougDougFoodEdited by Aedish - https://x.com/aedisheditsNew takes on Business, Tech, and Politics. Squeezed fresh every Thursday.#lemonadestand #dougdoug #atrioc #aiden Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Amazon presents Laura versus Fruitflies.
Swarming your fruit and terrorizing your kitchen,
these little freaks multiply at a rate that would make a rabbit say, yo.
Chill.
But Laura shopped on Amazon and saved on cleaning spray, countertop wipes, and fly traps.
Hey, fruit flies, your baby boom ends here.
Save the Everyday with Amazon.
I'm not saying it's not awful.
I'm telling you that layer, you're removing.
No, no.
It looks like a video game.
And that's removal of the human element is like is real.
And I do want to be clear.
This is not running over dogs.
This is right now on a street.
I've already claimed it.
Hey, I got a question.
I asked my chat this.
If we could saw off Texas,
loaded out to the ocean,
and then float Australia in where Texas is,
first of all, would you do it?
And second of all, what do you think it would do to the character of the United States?
It would fill up the Gulf of America.
We can't have that.
We'd have to rename it to the Gulf of Australia.
We just renamed it, you know?
We'd want to go through that whole process.
I had to redo all my globes.
It was a pain.
Just really inconvenient, all things, all things considered.
But welcome back to the second episode of Lemonade Stand.
That was our cold.
Welcome.
Well, then I didn't finish.
What if you're driving through New Mexico to Florida
and then you got to hear somebody say
good night, cabah.
That's your best?
That's the word.
That's how you do a better one.
No, that's not.
We don't need that.
You're on a road trip.
I save that for the other show, you know.
I don't think, I don't think that would be,
I don't think it would even be that different.
I'm defending it now because you're making me mad.
Wouldn't it add some charm to America?
We don't have enough accents, first of all.
You're really concerned.
That's a segment.
We can do the death of regional accents.
I just feel like TikTok is ruined.
It wouldn't be that bad because you could go the entire distance on a single drive using Tesla's new full self-driving features.
Which you don't even have to put your hands on the wheel for 99% of situations.
And what a segue from the master.
Because today's topics are focusing on Tesla.
Is it doomed to fail?
Or will it come out on top?
Specifically with how it handles its self-driving technology.
And also the future of self-driving cars in general with,
both of you taking one side of the debate.
You're already doing your moderator voice.
My moderator voice. I'm clocking in.
I'm the judge.
And then I think we're also going to be talking about Pokemon Go
becoming property of the Saudi Arabian crown,
which I know we were all edge of our seat waiting for.
And lastly, public transport in America.
We're going to solve it right here on the podcast.
I think in the next two hours we'll have the whole thing sorted out.
That's what I hope for this whole show is that one by one each episode,
us three guys solve every problem in America.
And it goes up until we sell the podcast to the Saudis.
Yeah.
Yeah, I've been in talks.
I'm looking for my, I'm already looking for my way out.
Yeah.
We're a top 10 show.
This is our exit strategy.
At some point, we're IPOing and we're going Saudi.
You know, I was looking for a way out.
It's Tucker Carlson.
Yeah.
He's number 11, baby.
We knocked him out of the top 10.
And that guy's desperate.
He said, I mean, I think it's weird that Vladimir Putin hasn't reached out to do an interview here.
Because we have a bigger reach.
How do you think that works?
Do you think you just get, like, what's the KGB email domain that you get in your inbox?
Yeah.
You said you wouldn't do it in Russia.
You said if we did that interview, you literally wouldn't do it.
Dude, I'd be, I would be terrified.
Honest question.
If Vladimir Putin reached out to lemonade stand.
He would do an exclusive interview with us in Moscow.
Absolutely, yes.
Of course I would do it.
Dude, I would do it, but I'd be shit and bricks the whole time.
Because you can't, you have to go softball mode.
You don't drink the tea.
You don't drink the tea.
You don't take the free snacks.
That Tucker interview isn't even an interview.
It's Vlad doing 45 minutes on the history of Russia.
We get them on the presentation board.
And he just gives a history lesson.
is doing what he normally does, which is drawing
things on Vladimir Putin's
over like the Balkan
region. This
this used to be
ours.
The presentation will is fire.
All right. But as far as this like
debate goes, I think you guys are both
taking sides of the argument,
not necessarily the exact sides that you agree
with personally, but
you are more Tesla
doomer. This company is going to
flame out. Yeah. And you are vouching for the side of Tesla is going to make it and how they're
going to do so. Yes. And I want to be very clear to people listening. I do not. He loves Elon Musk.
I do not agree with so much of what is happening. For the sake of argument,
he's a personal. I am going to be communicating the potential upsides of Tesla and of what Elon Musk is
doing. And I know that people are going to say, oh my God, they're going to stop it there. They're going to
cut. They're going to watch the first two minutes of the show. I can't believe Doug.
personally endorsed Elon Musk on the show.
You think he should leave all those kids in the dirt.
All 14 kids?
In the dirt.
I think you should give us one of them.
We need a video editor for our shorts and the kids know what's up on TikTok.
Have you seen the clip of him walking off the stage and leaving his kid behind?
It is.
I don't, in a vacuum, like, that's, you know, I was a kid once.
I got lost in the grocery store on occasion.
But it is funny to just leave your kid in the dust
as you like walk and wave to the fans and the crowd.
I'm not sure that clip's real.
I think I heard it might have been.
It's fake.
It might be fake.
I've been got it.
It's not fake, but there's more.
God damn, I'm already apologizing.
And there it is.
You guys are literally saying something wrong.
If you continue the clip, it turns around, he goes and gets his kid and he brings him over.
No, that's what I'm saying.
And everybody's you're like, oh, Doug Smith the whole pod.
defending Elon. You guys are saying
it's not what happened. It's just literally
not what happened. Correcting the narrative
because I would like, like I said,
my parents lost me in the grocery store. You guys can do this.
You can just say wrong shit about Elon. And then
I have to look like the dick sucker who's going to
come in and be like, actually no.
Yes, sir. No.
Easy money.
Yeah, I, on the internet
opinion side, this is an easy side of the argument to be
on, but I'm going to try and go at it from a business
angle, which is that I am
not making the argument that
Elon Musk sucks.
It doesn't matter to me.
Like I mentioned, I talk about this on stream.
I'm not a big fan of Jeff Bezos either,
but I own Amazon stock, right?
What I'm saying, I'll make an argument here,
is that I think Tesla is in a really negative position
going into the future.
That I'm not confident in their ability to execute
and that they're in a more spot.
That's what I'm going for.
I like that idea of the conversation
because similarly, like I'm not a fan of Elon Musk personally,
and he's not my best friend like Doug.
Right.
You don't have posters on your wall like he does.
But I do think there's this idea that like anything he touches or is associated with is automatically bad.
But when I saw like SpaceX catch the rocket for the first time, I'm like, that is awesome.
That is so cool.
So I like to see like the version of this argument that extends way more past.
Like Elon Musk sucks and is like what is the actual financial situation behind the company right now?
because from my understanding,
it's pretty grim at the moment.
Yeah, I mean, I could jump in.
You want to go to the patented presentation wall
or do you have something?
Or do you want to kick off like your overview,
like high level argument about what's going on with Tesla
and then we can back up and talk about what's going on with self-driving?
Because ultimately, I think what underpins
almost all this conversation is self-driving cars.
That is what Tesla is betting on.
It's not really about how many model-wise they sell.
And so we'll dive into that.
I'm going to compare Waymo and Tesla.
But what's your like kind of fundamental
core argument here. I would say my fundamental
core argument is it is about how many
model-wise they sell. Okay. Okay.
Oh, you think selling cars is what
matters for a car company. Interesting.
This is a future company, okay?
Yeah, my core
argument is that, you know, as
much as we extrapolate all these different things
he's doing, the money that the company
makes is from selling cars. That's what it's for.
And they're not selling as many cars as they used
to sell. So that's a problem,
right? And the company, I mean,
I can go into my presentation. Can I, should I pull
up or what you get up there.
Yeah.
I feel like I need to show some grass and charts to get up there.
Plus I love this patented presentation wall.
Only, you think Tucker Carlson
could give a PowerPoint?
No.
He can't do it.
He can't even open PowerPoint.
Do you think Tucker Carlson can
like kind of awkwardly stand and cover
the left side of the TV for most
of the PowerPoint?
He just can't do it like that.
Can you imagine having Xi Jinping here for a guest
and we're like fumbling with power for 15 minutes, right?
I do like the idea of the this like
CCP secret service equivalent
like scoping the place for bugs
and it's just sorting through
fake lemon and lime can
sodas.
And I'm going to hide one. I'll get one in there.
I'll go real quick. All right. This is a much
longer presentation I did on my own
channel, but I want to catch you guys up on what I'm thinking about
Tesla lately. All right, here we go.
First of all, Texas. We got 44 wheels
stolen off a Tesla in the parking lot.
We got supercharges on fire
in Massachusetts. We got protesters
arrested in New York. We got protesters
arrested in Georgia. We got
paint and vandalism
in Berkeley. We got shots
fired in Oregon. We got swastikas
drawn on cars in Europe.
Okay? And three months ago, none of this
was happening. Elon Musk
$400 billion.
Richer than Moussa and John D. Rockefeller.
Richesman in human history.
Richer than every single fictional
rich person combined, according to
Forbes. Rich than Scrooge McDuck?
Much richer than Scrooge McDuck?
No.
And then in the past three months,
Tesla drops 50%, all right?
Astronomical amount to drop.
It's $800 billion of market cap lost.
That's equivalent to, I'm going to skip ahead here.
Toyota, Mazda, Subaru, Ford, Nissan, Rivian, Honda, Ferrari, Porsche, Mercedes-Benz,
Aston Martin, Hyundai, Kia, VW, GM, and BMW combined all going to zero in three months.
And then lighting $10 billion on fire on top of that.
So it's, you know, it's a significant loss.
Like, it's worth talking about.
From a business, PLV for me, it's fascinating.
because that's not normal.
That's like, that's, I think about something like Enron collapsing, that was like $20 billion.
That's nothing by comparison.
So it's a big deal.
And you could say, if I asked why people might show you this clip of Elon possibly seek
Highling, possibly Roman saluting.
And, you know, you could point to that as one political thing.
But I want to go into a deeper business context, which is that basically, sorry, skip, skip this.
Like you had the Iron Man 2 screenshot in there?
Yeah, you could point to,
him being Iron Man,
you could point to him,
cheating in Path of Exile,
you can point to all that.
But the whole point is that
regardless of what you think about
this stuff,
it's causing a reputational
problem with a certain class of consumer.
And these people used to buy a lot of EVs.
So in every country they sell in,
other than China,
Tesla's reputation score keeps falling.
For a business,
regardless of politics,
that's just bad, right?
That just means it's harder to sell cars,
especially when,
if you do the math,
and I got a little craft here,
I mean,
Aiden,
you want to guess
what the top's tens
that bought EVs voted for in this election?
We think they were blue or red?
Oh, tough call.
Tough call.
They were all blue.
I'm going to go blue on that?
They were all blue.
This is 2020 election.
I don't have the data from.
And then what do you think about the 10 states
that bought the least EVs?
I mean, they're red.
They're red.
They're red.
Yeah, you guessed it right.
They're red.
So it's like even if you're switching one consumer for the other,
in the states that are red,
they're just buying,
they don't care as much about EVs.
Their towns might not even as many chargers.
It's not.
The infrastructure's not there.
They don't care as much.
And so it's not a one-to-one trade to piss off one group for the other.
If you're an EV car selling company.
So, you know, I got this poll here.
55% Republicans say there's no chance at all they'd ever buy an EV in the next decade.
That's a tough market to sell into.
That's a hard pivot.
If you sell cars.
All right?
Second thing, we're possibly entering a recession.
And late car payments right now, this article's from like three days ago, have hit the highest level
since they started recording the data.
So people are just are not making their car payments,
especially subprime,
which makes it a weird time for Tesla
to be offering 0% down, 0% APR loans.
It's like 2006 for housing.
They're just doing a bunch of this like car giveaway
that I think will be problematic
if people can't pay their bills.
So from a business side,
all this stuff makes me nervous
about investing in Tesla, right?
Then I looked at the top 10 countries they sell in.
It's down 76% in Germany,
down 63% in France,
down 70% in Canada,
down 81% in Australia, down 38 in Norway, 44 in Sweden.
It's going to come up later, so I'm going to interject.
This is recent. This is like last two-ish months, right?
This is correct.
So I was actually going to ask that a version of that question because my understanding
was relative to the rest of the EV market, they were already starting to trend down
because of the basically quality EVs offered by other companies.
So is this accelerating from that?
And it sounds like yes.
Yeah, there's also an argument.
So which we'll talk about later,
there's also an argument,
Tesla,
the Model Y is their biggest selling car by far.
That's like almost all of Tesla's sales.
It's one of the best selling cars in the world.
Right now they're doing a refresh
and they're releasing a new version of it
in like a month or two.
So in the last two months,
Tesla has been pitching the thing of,
we are releasing a newer,
better version of Model Y extremely soon.
So that could justify,
and who knows exactly how much,
some amount of people no longer wanting to buy
the main car that Tesla's selling, right?
100%.
Like you wouldn't buy the PS5 if the PS6 is coming out
in two months for the same price.
100%. And it's also worth saying, like if your Q1 sales
are down from Q4, well Q4 is the end of the year.
People make big purchases, Christmas time.
Yeah.
Of course they're going to be down.
But this is a pretty, this is not a normal amount of drop.
And they're down year over year too.
So they're down over January of last year.
They're down. They're just down.
So, you know, outside of the UK,
9 out of 10 of these countries, it's down.
Right?
So that's a bad look in general.
And I think it's because, listen,
in China, nobody cares about must politics.
They don't care.
They actually think he's the coolest tech guy.
They still think he's Tony Stark.
There's not a lot of like anti-elon sentiment pumping on Waybo.
No.
On Billy, Billy, he's still based.
Okay, they have no problem.
They're living the Iron Man two dreams still.
They still think he's Iron Man.
But the problem is, you know,
there's other Iron Man's now in China.
which is mainly this company, BYD, builds your dreams,
who is offering Tesla-like cars for way less
that are built for the Chinese market.
So they have just massively outstripped Tesla sales recently,
and because they're made in China,
they're built by a Chinese company
that knows what Chinese consumers want.
They're just getting out-competed.
So that's like another pressure on Tesla
that makes me scared again to be an investor.
Quick thing.
Yeah.
I was curious, have either of you written in one of those?
A B-D, no, have you?
In a B-Y-D model?
No.
I did.
When I went to Mexico recently.
and a ton of the ubers are B-YDs.
And I was in a pretty like base, cheap model.
Okay.
Very nice car.
It was like, it was super functional.
I asked the guy, I use Google Translate to talk to my Uber driver.
I know.
I know.
I love talking to Uber drivers.
But, and he was talking about how much he loves the car and how good and like
useful it's been for specifically his job.
and the inside of the car was awesome.
Like, I mean, a lot of, like, new cars are nice, right?
But I was like, I was pretty impressed.
And it was my first time ever riding in one.
I was considering driving down to Mexico,
buying a Chinese EV and smuggling it back in the United States
to not pay the tariff.
And then I looked up at what happened to me.
The fine is astronomical and I could get jail time for smuggling.
That's worth it.
Do it for the pod, dude.
Research.
I really thought it would be like a minor slab on the risk.
You expense the jail fine.
The lawyer and the...
It's a company expense.
I actually, this is, I looked into,
there's a model of car called the,
I don't know if Perry could pull this up.
It's called the Renault Twizzy.
Okay.
And it's a really, really tiny, like street electric vehicle
that I saw in Paris.
This is European.
And it costs like 15K.
Yeah, Renault is like a French car manufacturer.
And I, uh, what,
I looked so hard to see how you could import one of these.
Like,
even if you have to pay,
fees and stuff, but it's not, you can't make it street legal in the U.S. So there's no real way of doing it.
Only Europeans would call a car a Twizzy. Yeah, the Twizzie. It's no shame. Dude, it's like
basically a golf cart. It's so, it's so funny. This is it. Oh, wow. Yeah, no, that's cool.
But we, yeah, I just, uh, I was looking at the same thing. Like, what it would it cost to, like,
import one of these cars that we don't have. But, uh, yeah, but. All right. So just a very quick math here.
This is my simple, dumb business major brain.
There's a thing called PE ratio,
basically what a company's worth about
about what it actually makes in earnings.
A company like Ford or most car companies,
between five and 10.
Pretty normal for a stable, mature business.
So this means like what their total market value
is five to 10 times what they make in a year?
That's right.
So it's basically an idea for an investor
of like how quickly you'll get your money back in a way.
And it's based on,
if it's a really high number,
that means you actually expect the amount they make to go up rapidly
because your number's going to wait 20 years.
Yeah.
So a company like Apple might be 35 times because it's a high growth tech company, right?
So they have a people expect the revenue to keep rising.
And all that makes sense because they make $96 billion in profit a year.
They're just a cash generating geyser.
Profit.
This is after all expenses.
I'm being told to stand closer to.
I'm getting so heated about Apple.
I love how much money they make.
Google makes $100 billion in profit.
Microsoft makes a,
88 bill. Meta makes 62 bill up 39%. Amazon makes 59 bill up 94%. Invita has a P.E. of 60 something,
which is incredibly high, but they're up 144% making 72 billion pure clean cash profit.
Can you guess what Tesla's profit was last year?
I'll say, I mean, I'm guessing it's very low. I'll say something like $2 billion. Low relative to these companies.
You're ruining my reveal because that's way too low.
No, it's $7 billion.
You got to look shocked to be like, I don't know, $50 billion?
And you set them up.
You set them up for the big.
It's the magnificent seven, Aden.
They're all seven companies are considered the big tech companies.
All of them generate $50 billion plus in profits except for Tesla, which makes $7 billion, a 50% decline.
So their profits are way lower and they're declining.
So why are they worth $1.5 trillion the way these other companies are?
that's my big question. And so now they're only down to 7 to 22 billion. But if you do their
PE ratio today, it's still 101. So they're still implying a level of growth that I think is not
there. So. And that's saying that the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the market thinks that
Tesla is worth 100 times what they're making in a year right now. That's right. Okay.
That's right. And again, what they're making, you know, it's seven billion, but like two billion
of that was like Bitcoin going up. They hold some Bitcoin. So their actual profits are like closer
of four. And that's just not enough to be worth 720, to be worth more than all of those car
companies listed earlier. So that's my, my core thesis is like, there's so much hopium
built into this. And so, you know, if you do the math with a normal PE ratio of like an
Apple, they're worth about 84 bill based on what they make and based on being value like a normal
tech company. So the rest of that is all this hype of what we're going to talk about later.
It's self-driving. It's optimist robots. It's robotaxies. It's a possible new $25,000 car.
all that stuff is what is like being hopiumed in to this massive valuation.
And I don't believe it or I don't believe all of it.
You know, maybe it's like some of it might come to vision,
but I don't believe those are going to come out to make billions in pure clean profit
the way Apple launching a new iPad or earbuds will do.
That's my core business thesis here is like I just, I'm not buying it.
And I got to say, Elon Musk perhaps in the past has been less than truth.
full, right? I don't actually, I don't have it in here.
But he's, he's occasionally over
promised. I think even his biggest fans. He's blown past
a couple deadlines. He's on that.
Okay, to be fair, he's on that once or twice
every year.
So that's why I get,
you know, if I'm an investing BOB, I get a little
nervous. Thanks got a little sidetracked
when they made the flamethrower, dude. I don't know
speaking of sidetracked, every dot on this chart
is a tweet. You'll notice
after 2022, it gets blown.
red. He's tweeting thousands of times a month. And, you know, he's got 14 kids. He's got 10 businesses or
whatever. It's like, as a Tesla investor, are you really getting his full attention and value as a CEO of a
$744 billion company? So here's a quote from Elon. I'll just end on this where we get into our
discussion. He said, when looking at our actual, this is from 2020. And it's kind of like a small
interview. I don't think you knew this would go so big. But when looking at our actual profitability,
it's very low. Investors are giving us a lot of credit for,
future profits, but if at any point they conclude that's not going to happen, our stock will get
crushed like a souffle under a sledgehammer.
That's what I'm saying.
If at any point everybody has the same thought that I do, which is this not going to happen,
this stock is worth so much less than it's currently being valued.
And he's also got one more quote.
And this is going to lead to what we're talking about.
This quote is important for me and for my point.
But the overwhelming focus is solving full self-driving.
So, yeah.
And that's essential.
And like, that's really the difference between Tesla being worth a lot of money and being worth basically zero.
Yeah.
So.
So that's our argument.
Is it worth a lot of money or is it worth basically zero?
And I think I can sit back down on that's basically the main thing I want to say.
Yeah.
And that is ultimately the crux of why anybody would think that it's worth a hundred times what it's making is that bet, which is full self-driving.
should I drive into some full self driving?
Yeah.
I can I go to a disclaimer.
I'm not a tech guy.
And I can tell.
I have many times been impressed by the tech.
Tesla's rolled out.
Tesla and Elon has rolled out.
SpaceX has impressed me with the rocket grab.
Starlink has impressed me in some countries
where you can get insane internet.
I've been impressed by Tesla.
Not super recently.
I feel like there's been a lot more EV innovation elsewhere.
But like Tesla's impressed me of the hell when they came out.
So, you know, there's products there and I believe in them.
But just this is my business case of like I would be so scared to put money into this company.
It's basically what I'm saying.
Yeah.
Okay.
Okay.
To talk about whether Tesla is basically making a gigantic gamble on self-driving.
And if it lands, they become insanely valuable.
And if it doesn't, they are completely screwed.
Like Elon just said.
So let's step back first.
And there's basically two competing tech perspectives on how to do self-driving cars,
which are going to dramatically affect whether or not Tesla succeeds at this giant gamble.
So I'm going to start with a very obscure, forced analogy that probably won't land.
Okay, imagine you have two brothers who are brilliant chefs, okay?
And they come up with a souffle recipe, a lemon souffle recipe, the Aetriac and Aidan brothers.
We've done a suflay.
Now, this is flas.
These are very hard to make, right?
Extraordinarily difficult.
Not for us.
Not for you guys.
This is breathing.
And by the way, you guys...
My Renault Twizzie, I drove huge.
I drive in my Gulf Guard to work.
I drive my Twizzie to work. I spend 14 hours making souplis.
And one of the weird things is both these guys are German.
The accent makes no sense.
My accent was getting like vampire.
I like rolled my arm.
Okay, so you guys, you come up with this out in Romania.
You come up with a suplea recipe.
And this is incredibly complex, but you think if you can get this out to the
masses, it will be like game-changing for food, right? Everybody's going to love it. And so you guys
have two competing ideologies for how you want to distribute to the market. You, Aden, are like,
this is super hard to make. I'm going to go to our local fine dining restaurant, Gusto's. Okay? And these
guys, they're Michelin-starred, every single person, every cook, they've gone to culinary school
right there, the best of the best. It's really expensive and it's slow to make anything, but these guys
will get it done, right? And you go to them and they're like, we'll make your souffle. Over time,
maybe we even make a second gusto. And then a third. Each,
year we can kind of expand a little bit. Okay. So you're thinking, okay, yeah, slow, steady,
careful, the top of the top, right? You, it, York, you hit up McDonald's. Dirtier.
A little grime here. You hit up McDonald's, the headquarters of McDonald's, which is in Romania.
I'm a greedy brother. You're trying to bring her souffle to McAfee. Yeah. Yeah, you got to the money is.
You get the combo of the McAfee and the suflay. I don't want to drive a twice American car.
I want a nice Ford. F-150. F-150 in the streets of Paris. Okay. And McDonald's has 41
thousand stores around the world. And they're pitched to you as this. Hey, no offense to anybody
works at McDonald's. We're not the greatest cooks of all time. We don't necessarily know exactly
how to make the souffle. Might take us a little bit of time to figure it out. It might take us a long
time to figure it out. But we're pretty sure we can do it. And if we do, boom, 40,000 restaurants
around the entire world are serving you suflay. Okay. Which approach would you guys take? Which do you
think is a smarter approach to getting your suflay out into the world? Well,
I would ask a question.
I would say,
does my souffle
have a chance
of killing people
if you go from?
You know what?
That's a good point.
Is there a little bit of poison
in the...
Yes,
there's some E. coli
that is sprinkled in.
Yeah,
the ice cream machine
that makes the souffle
can break a lot.
Okay.
I'd go McDonald's,
maybe make that money.
I made a guess
of which approach you guys
would take.
Was that correct?
You're correct.
I would go
the gustoes route.
I would go,
we go the perfectionist route for sure.
Okay, so why?
On a high-level business, what's your thinking?
I think if you, from my perspective,
if you sacrifice the quality of the product,
especially early on,
the bad press that you potentially get
about that product is so damaging.
Like, people's ability to value it down the line
is so shaped by that first year,
first couple years of the product being made poorly.
And that makes it infinitely harder to standardize it later or introduce it as something positive to people later.
So that's the main reason why I think I would.
I have a follow-up question that's maybe related.
Would you get into a Tesla full self-driving vehicle right now and trust it to take you across Los Angeles?
And Tesla's telling you it's really good.
They just updated it.
But there's been a lot of problems with full self-driving in the past.
But they're telling you it's good now.
And I'm just going off of just that update from them and no other context.
Let's say, you know, you've researched a bit, but you don't have a ton of context.
The point is really how much reputational damage is there going to be when you're deciding whether to get in that car?
I guess I'm going against myself because I would get in the car and try it out.
I would.
That was the wrong answer.
You die.
You get hit by a cyber truck.
Wait, I die right now.
How ironic.
You die.
You die.
I win and McDonald's making money.
This is great.
Wait, so is this the way it played out?
Is this to say that it actually is this bad right now?
No, no, no.
It's to say that there is a fundamental divide when designing a self-driving car about
whether you want to make a system that has the minimal amount of tech necessary to work
and get the job done and basically try to get your cars out there cheaply and efficiently
to the masses and eventually get it working like a McDonald's would or if you go really
slow and steady. And that is like the fundamental divide that is happening between cars. And specifically
with tech, it's between LIDAR versus just vision. So, uh, all EVs that are trying to do self-driving
have vision, which is cameras. When you say vision, it's, it's cameras. So think of like a human
being. We have two cameras in our eyes, kind of. Um, that's how we drive, right? We don't be. And these are
my cameras. And that's why you, uh, you sometimes wear, uh, eye camera shades like this.
So all of the vehicles have cameras.
And when you buy Tesla, like right now, it's like eight cameras, right?
That are all around the car and can see all of around it.
Now, that can get you a lot of information.
But as you guys know, if you've ever looked directly into the sun, it's actually hard to see.
Sharpenes the peepers.
Well, if you do it often enough, you kind of strengthen.
Right.
Yeah.
Right. Yeah, you train.
Or if it's incredibly foggy or there's whatever conditions that make it hard to see,
there are obvious downsides with driving, right, that make driving difficult, maybe a blizzard or
a hurricane or whatever is going on. So LiDAR is light detection and ranging. It is literally
shooting laser beams out of the car and those laser beams hit the stuff around the car and
then bounce back. And from that it can make a 3D map. It's actually up behind us right now. That's what
it looks like. Holy. And this is what a Waymo, which is the most successful, like fully autonomous car
right now is doing. If you've seen self-driving cars anywhere, it's in a couple cities in the U.S.
it is literally acting like a bat
and there's that spinning
kind of like siren looking thing
at the top
that's a LIDAR system
so it's spinning around
and literally shooting lasers
at everything around it
and in ridiculous amount of definition
you get this like 3D world around
it looks like the matrix
you know when Neo like sees the matrix
and it's all like green things
like all green lines and everything
that's what it looks like with LIDAR
and you might think
that's badass right
you should do that
not only should you do that
it has nothing to do with light really
right you can do this in complete darkness
and since you're
shooting laser beams everywhere.
And fog and in...
Doesn't need light. Yeah.
And then on top of that, there's a third thing you can add in, which is radar.
And if you look at the imaging here, not nearly as defined as LIDAR.
Radar is, you know, what you hear about in, you know, planes and whatever else, which is that this is...
A little red dot is your puppy getting run over.
These are all...
It's not so bad when you see it like that, though.
It's not as visceral.
This test footage is done.
They basically drive a Waymo through a dog park.
And each of these dots...
This is the email you're getting from Waymo and the kill your talking.
It's like it's not.
It wasn't that bad.
It's not that bad.
It's like,
did you ever look at those like WikiLeaks videos that came out that,
uh,
Chelsea Manning leaked?
And it's like the videos of them killing civilians in the helicopter.
And it,
but hold on.
Why did you see that so casually?
No.
Because,
you guys want to watch those videos of people killing civilians.
No,
dude.
No,
the video is casual.
It looks like,
I'm not kidding.
It looks exactly like,
I watched LeBron highlights.
You know what you,
I'm not.
casually look at it's not a daily thing.
I don't scroll through mass murder, dude.
Briefly to come out of this
is like what you're saying is true.
What you're saying is kind of true.
There's like these leaked videos that came out
that Chelsea Bannon like leaked to WikiLeaks
and they came out and it, a video from helicopter
of like civilians getting shot by the U.S. military
and the video like looks exactly like
when you call in like an AC 130 in modern warfare too.
Like it's like, I don't, I'm not saying it's
not awful. I'm telling you that layer.
You're removing, no, no, it looks like a video game and that's removal of the human element is like, is real.
That like, when you see something like damage like that, it's like, I've seen.
Does remove you from the consequence of what, what is happening.
Not super related to this.
And I do want to be clear.
This is not running over dogs.
This is radar on a street.
I've already claimed it.
It's already been claimed.
No, if you're just saying if it did run over dogs, it would feel less bad.
It wouldn't be as bad because you're not seeing the puppy's face.
You wouldn't see the puppy's face.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Anyway, so...
That's your argument for radar in cars.
It's doing...
Okay, it's doing both of these things?
Okay, okay, so here's the core thing.
With radar, quickly, the benefit...
LIDAR is this really cool version, right?
You can see everything around you
looks super futuristic.
Yeah.
Crazy powerful.
Radar, way less so.
And this is older tech, right?
This is shooting microwaves,
or radio waves, sorry,
they're slower, so you're not getting as much definition,
but they can go through certain types of,
let's say, fog and whatever else.
So you're basically of two physical different wavelengths.
and they allow to, they can kind of cover each other's gaps, right?
LiDAR might have some gaps, radar can cover that.
And then vision, which is cameras, that can see everything around you, again, like eyeballs, right?
Like you would imagine.
So there are three different sensors, types of sensors that you can put into a self-driving car
that will help you to learn what's around you, right?
And so what Waymo, which is the current leader in the U.S. has done, is they are making their cars
with cameras all over, just like a Tesla.
And also there's a LiDAR system.
There's that thing at the top and on the sides.
They have LIDAR.
So it is shooting lasers everywhere while they're driving.
And they have radar.
They have three different systems,
which are overlapping and basically covering each other
to make sure absolutely everything is covered.
And all three of these combined together in a Waymo
to give it a ton of information of everything that's around it
in any condition.
That is their approach.
They think this is the Gusto approach.
We're going to go slow, careful.
So the way this manifests, and I think Doug might have a similar story,
it's I used one of these for the first time,
like a week and a half ago.
Yeah, yeah.
And super,
I was excited to just try it out.
And we pulled up to the, you know,
get in the car,
pull up to the first intersection.
And somebody crosses in front of us.
And on the screen in the Waymo,
you can see the like digital person walking across.
Yeah.
And it's like even their finger and like hand movements.
You can see their whole,
every movement captured on the screen.
Yeah,
you can kind of see it here in this lighter thing.
Like it's ridiculously detailed.
And this again,
you could be in pitch blackness.
and it would see this.
And it kind of blew my mind
because we were on the way to a party that night.
And while we were driving on this street,
a homeless guy,
a homeless guy stepped out into the street
in front of the car with his bike.
He just walked out and the car slammed
and got out of the way.
And I saw this happen and I was like,
I genuinely don't know if I would have been able to do that.
As a human, if I was driving the car.
and it was a weirdly
uncomfortably good
demonstration of like
they planned that
way to get homeless people
to go to gas plants
he's looking at his watch
and he's like
timing his way out
on the street
and they had to go through
a lot of homeless people
to get to the point
that lot of got run over
I'm honest with you
but that's part of the
that's the nature of progress
baby
that's the business
yeah
it's like I said last week
you got to destroy
some jobs
schemes
that's not what he said
that's not what he said
folks
we got enough
comments.
So I, yeah, this, that, that more manufactured and like meticulous approach,
I guess I feel, or I felt more confident about trying the Waymo than I would try
to Tesla.
Yes.
However, I think as someone who's generally interested in both of these things, I'd be
willing to try the Tesla self-driving stuff as well.
So your reaction is probably everybody's reaction, which is Waymo and the other major
autonomous driving vehicles.
So Waymo for people who don't know, these cars are,
they do not have a driver. There's no
driver in them and they're going around Los Angeles,
I believe Phoenix, I wrote it down,
in San Francisco right now.
So they're in three cities. They're expanding rapidly.
The other big one that's going on is Baidu,
which is a Chinese company.
They're also doing this with driverless cars
in five different major Chinese cities.
So there's two like major leaders right now
that are currently deployed doing this stuff.
And then Tesla is the other,
big player in the space.
Tesla, though, does not have these systems, right?
They do not have LiDAR, they do not have radar.
They don't have this extra layer of knowledge
and information that a Waymo has.
Just cameras. Just cameras.
And so,
Elon Musk
has said the following. LIDAR is a fool's errand
and anyone relying on LiDAR is doomed.
Pauses.
Dumed. Expensive sensors are
unnecessary. It's like having a whole
bunch of expensive appendixes.
Well, that settles it.
That way, and there it is from the genius.
And there's no business reason he might want to cut costs on safety.
So, all right, so you probably are thinking, you know, hearing this and going like,
why would you not just add the extra stuff?
Like, okay.
So can I, could I predict the answer here?
Yeah, yeah.
I would love to.
I would love to hear what you think.
I do have a thought is in Waymo, for Waymo's business model or the way the company is playing
out right now, I'd guess.
that spending a lot of money to maximize the performance of each car is more acceptable
in the context of the business because you don't need to sell the cars to owners.
They're basically taxis that are used by a bunch of people all the time on the street
in the same way that you could, that people just use like bikes for rent on the street.
So you can spend a lot of money on one car because of how often it's going to get used by a bunch
of different people.
But Elon and Tesla have to take a different approach
because they have to make the cars affordable to individual consumers.
Basically, yes.
And get value out of all the millions of cars that have already sold.
Right.
Oh, right.
Yeah.
So there's two big arguments here.
So again, the obvious response to this is like,
holy shit, I'm not going to get in a car if it doesn't have LIDAR,
if it doesn't have these extra sensors.
Like, why on earth would I ever get into a Tesla and let it drive me somewhere?
If Waymo has more information, more sensors,
To give you a sense of numbers,
a recent Tesla has eight cameras on it.
A Waymo has 29 sensors across these things, right?
So it's not just different types.
It's also just more of them.
And you can see it.
When you look at a Waymo car,
there's just more stuff on it.
It does look insane.
It looks insane.
It looks wild.
Whereas a Tesla looks like a car, right?
And so why would Tesla do this?
There's a couple main arguments.
One is, like what you said, it's expensive.
LIDAR is very, very expensive.
Initially, it costs tens of thousands, is the estimate,
to put LiDAR into a car. That is completely undoable when you're talking about selling a car to an
average consumer, right? It is going down in price. Waymo is like working to really, really drop it down,
but traditionally it's been very expensive. And then the other, so that's the kind of obvious one.
And the other is a more high-level idea about how you focus your business, which is like,
okay, it's great to have three complex systems, LiDAR cameras and radar in a Waymo. But now your team
of engineers who have to solve this unbelievably hard problem of self-driving with all the different
conditions that can happen and to do it at a level with such an obscene amount of security
and safety and redundancy because the instant you do hit that dog you're probably in a lot
of shit um even if you do show them that radar footage and aiden laughs like you're in trouble
i don't even see the dog it's just a dog you're a court witness they only share the radar footage
like guys it's not bad um and so the idea here
is you should focus your team on one thing, right? Instead of having your team be split into the
LIDAR team, which has to make the hardware and the software for lighter, and the camera team,
which makes the hardware and software and the radar team, and then a team that brings all that
together, and the computing becomes more complex. Each of these cars comes with a built-in computer,
which is running all of this really complex AI processing. The idea is Waymo has a arguably,
that's the thinking, a bigger and more complex problem to solve, and they are more spread out.
what Tesla's theory is
is that human beings
do not have lasers in our eyeballs.
We don't shoot radar beams.
Speaking for myself,
we don't shoot beams.
Our entire road system
is based around human beings
looking with eyeballs.
And the thinking is,
if you do a really good job
of making software
that can just navigate roads well
with cameras like a human,
and in fact, Tesla's have more cameras
than we have eyeballs.
They have more information, right?
Drew, and the roads
are built for this,
they should, in theory, be able to make a car
that is just as good as humans.
And if they can do that with way less cost
and way less complexity, they're making
a better product for people that can scale
way better. And then the real moonshot
thing, the real thing of, oh my God, if we pull
this off, we win, is the fact
that right now, they have
four million cars out
in the world. They have 400,000
with the full self-driving hardware.
the instant it's ready, like a McDonald's, can deploy it to every single one of their cars
and instantly become the dominant player.
By comparison, Waymo has 750 total cars.
They're the big, cool leader.
Oh, my God, Waymo, 750 in their entire history.
And so if Tesla pulls us off, if they focus all of their resources on this one thing and say,
hey, we're going to do what is arguably a harder problem because we have less information
on our cars.
We don't have LIDAR, we don't have radar, but we have the same amount of info that a human being would have.
If we get this right, the amount of payoff is absolutely astronomical because instantly we are the dominant player around the globe.
All right.
You got a question?
This is even arguing for against Tesla as a business right now.
This is simply, this is the argument of self-driving, and we have two very different competing ideologies here.
Most self-driving car companies are using LIDAR and radar.
Yeah.
Tesla is basically the only one that's like, we're going.
without it. And actually, an important quote, Waymo CEO said in 2021, for us, Tesla is not a competitor
at all. We manufacture a completely autonomous driving system. Tesla is an automaker that is developing
a really good driver assistance system. So Waymo is like, look, the only way you're going to get this
right is to do it our way. You do it slow. You do it with a lot of sensors. You do this really, really,
really carefully. The Gusto's approach. The Gusto's approach. Which, you know, much like Gusto's,
every Waymo actually has a little rat
that drives the car under the hood.
He's on your head and it pulls your hair.
He's the one guiding the laser beams at the top.
That's what the siren on the top of the Waymo has a lot.
There's actually 29 rats in every Waymo car.
No, the fuel's really affordable.
It's only what you have to feed to the rats.
I think this
I'm going off of everything you've just told me right now,
pretty much, right? It sounds like the Waymo CEO is correct to me. Like, these are essentially
two different products. That's what it feels like. And in order for like a regulatory body to
sign off on full autonomous driving, I have a hard time imagining that Tesla's approach will be
okay, like as a public service. Right. It feels like right now that Tesla's approach
will never get you past. Which CEO has a lot of influence in the government?
And that gets to our point later.
You are teasing a wonderful factor of this conversation that we'll get to later.
And he's two steps ahead.
In sense, like, regulation would make it hard for Tesla's to get this stuff out onto the market.
I don't want to be really involved in the government.
What if the government really liked you?
What if the government was really, really on board with you?
This is a strong, I'm beginning to see the direction that this is moving in.
Right.
Because this is where it stands, ignoring that huge factor, I would say, it's hard for me to imagine Tesla's system progressing past me still having to sit in the driver's seat.
Right.
It's like it will be a really, really good system that still involves me being at the wheel and, at least on paper, having to stay, like, awake.
Right.
I, so, yeah, segue into the next part.
All I want to say is you mention that we have only eyes.
And these have only cameras.
Yes.
And we make it work.
Yeah.
And it's going to be just as good as us.
The problem is, I don't know if you know this, humans occasionally make accidents.
We do.
Occasionally die driving cars.
Speak for yourself, but yes.
I've still a few people.
Vehicle manslaughter.
So if,
I didn't know that I needed glasses until two months ago.
And I couldn't read signs.
And I,
you look down and saw 14 dogs.
This is the other, I think you're about to get into what, what was the number
one point in my mind is better than humans is not enough. Exactly. And it, it, I think an amazing
example with this is recently, and I don't agree with like cuts to the FFA and like, uh, these
these aircraft accidents that have been happening, right? There's been a bunch of high profile,
a bunch of high profile aircraft accidents and, uh, and then issues with, let me play devil's
ab game. Issues with like Boeing the year before.
plane stay up.
I like when they don't crash.
But even with all of this,
think about how bad the press is
about like air travel right now.
No,
or like Boeing.
You could tell me,
hey,
Boeing has 99% of the planes stay up.
For most people,
that's not good enough.
And that's the thing.
It's way more than that.
It's still with everything
that's happened in the last
two or three years,
it is still the safest form
of transportation by a huge margin.
Out of everything.
But think about how damaging
that presses. And that's what it's like with when it's technology and a company behind it and the way
these stories like proliferate, being better than humans is not enough. It needs to be basically
zero risk at all. And I feel like the only way you can get to that point is by taking this
Ustos approach. Yeah, that's where I'm at. I just think they're opening themselves up to accidents
that will already tarnish a brand that's in trouble with a lot of people. And then,
you know, one thing I want to mention, one of the things Waymo's been running into is that this is a driverless car.
You can get in, get out of it.
People don't take care of it the way they would their own car.
People are often leaving a mess or vandalizing it or leaving problems.
Tesels are getting vandalized right now when they're driverless robotaxies.
I think the brand issue is core to everything and only going to get worse if they have any accidents at all.
If they become even considered as walking death traps,
I don't see how they can make a mass market profitable business out of that.
And then that doesn't even count the legal part of it.
Now, again, I agree.
It was smart of Elon Musk to get in with the government
because that gives you regulatory access to like make these things the legal right to go on roads.
But doesn't cover you for the lawsuit if somebody gets in an accident, it's in trouble.
Who's at fault with a driving car in that situation?
Is it you for the, as the car owner?
Is it Tesla?
who's getting these big mass market lawsuits
if five accidents happen, if 10 accidents happen?
These things are like big problems
that are not addressed.
I don't think solved
and I don't think
have a good answer for
in a dream profitable future
where they're making trillions of dollars off of these.
That's my...
You want to dive into full-on Tesla
because now we can analyze Tesla
and it's worth to cap off this conversation
because we've basically just been talking about
the two approaches to self-driving cars, right?
How do I open to?
tabs. There we go. So last year,
like that quote I gave
from the Waymo CEO is basically like, these are
two different products. You guys are making cars
where you can take your hands off on the freeway
on a Tesla and it's really nice. And it
currently can do that and people do that all the time.
And Waymo is saying, hey, this is a car
where you don't even need a driver. I do always say
one thing. And that is that
the Waymo CEO's, I guess, right for
right now. But the truth is
this happens in business all the time.
The products can be different
in whatever ways their companies say they are.
But they solve the same problem for the consumer.
So in consumer, it doesn't matter.
They're a transportation solution.
I'm trying to get from point A to point B consistently.
Whether I'm using Waymo or whether Tesla, the market share is going to one or the other.
Like, at the end of the day, I'm going to pick one.
Or other things altogether.
Yeah, I'm just saying it's like that problem has to be solved and someone's going to solve it.
And they have their own solutions, make them different, but doesn't matter to me.
I'm a consumer.
I just want all my shit.
So Tesla's stated goal here is to become like Waymo, where these are driverless cars.
So last year they did this Wii robot presentation.
It was very flashy, not really a lot of actual details in kind of typical Elon Musk fashion.
They showed their Optimus robot, which we'll probably talk about a little bit.
A big thing that they talked out was the cyber cab, right?
Which is their this.
It's their driverless version of their Tesla, right?
So they are very explicitly saying, we are going to be a competitor.
We are not just going to be a car that assists a driver and you have to be there.
We are going to be a driverless vehicle just like Waymo.
We're going to be good enough.
and it's happening in 2026.
This has no driver seat, right?
Correct.
Yeah, there is no ability to drive this thing.
There was a cat in that just now.
That was strange.
So they are very explicitly making that play.
I don't think others are necessarily
like BYD has driving assistance.
BID is massive Chinese car manufacturer.
They have driving assistance.
I don't think they're proposing
that they're going to be fully driverless anytime soon.
But this is at least the intention.
And so now we can talk about this a little more
about whether it seems,
at all. I can kick this off by saying, so one argument, and again, I'm not, disclaimer,
I don't think Tesla is going to succeed for sure. I'm going to give arguments for why they,
why they have a real shot. I don't think it's a giant shot, but it is real. So one of the biggest
arguments, by far, is that, like Andre Carpathie, who's a very renowned AI scientist who
led Tesla AI and self-driving for a number of years, his thinking is basically, this is
not a hardware problem, it's a software problem.
It feels good to have these cool laser beams
shooting everywhere, but ultimately what is
really, really, really difficult about self-driving
is the obscene amount of
difficulty knowing every single edge case,
handling the situations when other people show up. I mean, it's this
infinite amount of possibilities. I think conveniently,
and maybe Waymo, you know, the Waymo spokesman is in my brain
again, and they set up this situation too,
although maybe reflect poorly on them, is
there's a film being shot in my neighborhood right now.
And the other, and Waymo's come through all the time.
And on the film set, I actually think, coincidentally, they were filming a car commercial.
They have police officers that, like, block off the road with, like, safety cones for portions of time that the filming is happening.
Right, right.
And I watched a couple cars, like, get stopped by the police officer.
And then he's, like, come on through.
And he's, like, standing out in the middle of the road next to, like, one safety cone.
Waymo comes up to him while I'm, like, drinking my coffee and I'm just watching this unfold.
Waymo blows past the police officer.
Just doesn't slow down.
Much like the homeless man in my experience,
it just drove out of the way and kept going
and then drove through the film set.
So as far as like edge cases go,
it's like that's the one with the LIDAR technology, right?
And like has way more information available to it
than the Tesla does.
And it's still making mistakes like that.
Right.
Have you seen?
I saw a video.
I don't know what city this was in,
but Vandals.
wanted to basically strip a Waymo.
And they took, I don't know if it was chalk or whatever,
but they just drew white lines and a circle around it
so it looked like street signs.
It couldn't move.
Yeah.
It would freeze in place because there's a white circle around it.
And then they could just do it out.
It would just well move.
I thought that's crazy.
I mean, that would be such a sick heist movie in the future.
Just stopping all the cars.
But that's an,
these are examples of like weird, edge.
cases that like the human driver just figures out. Right. And there's an unfathomable amount of these.
And if you think about different weather conditions, different cities, the fact that when you drive,
it's not just you doing your own thing. It's based on everything that happens around you and the literal
infinite possibilities. If you think about it like that, getting a LIDAR system on your car that can
make a 3D projected map, that's very cool. But that is, that does not solve the problem of the infinity
scenarios you need to be able to handle in order for somebody to truly feel like it's safe.
to feel like this is truly not causing a problem.
So really, this is not about having all the sensors.
It's about knowing what to do with the information you have.
And if Tesla's argument is, we have 99% of the information we need,
it doesn't matter if you have that 1% more of like, yeah, cool,
in a fogging situation, we can see that there is a dog that's on the other side of the road
to the right, right?
What's more important is that matter to the dog.
This is a human podcast, Dave, we don't care of the dogs here.
And in this case, right?
And obviously there are flaws to that, right?
You do have a lack of information to the degree that a Waymo does.
But really, this is going to come down to an absolutely obscene amount of AI and training and machine learning using data from cars in real world scenarios to figure out how do we make a system that can handle basically everything.
And which car company in the world has the most data when it comes to driving cars, cars that drive?
I mean Tesla, right?
Tesla by many orders of magnitude.
Because they've had cars in all their Teslas for many years.
They've had millions of cars, hundreds of thousands,
or millions of cars on the road for many years.
With the cameras.
With cameras and computers, right?
Even if you don't have the full self-driving thing,
they have cameras that are looking at every.
This has been the case for a long time for Teslas, right?
No, I mean, they've had a version of like testable self-driving available for,
I feel like almost a decade.
Right, right, an incredibly long time.
So compared to every other auto manufacturer.
The guy at our basketball pickup game was like, yeah, I turn it on and I scroll TikToks.
That's right, which is very...
Yeah, I know a bunch of people who...
There's a lot of Tesla users who just treat it like it is fully self-driving and it works the vast majority of the time.
It does work most of the time.
And so the question is, and this is why for a while I was actually really bullish on Tesla and I'm not so much now.
It's like, ultimately I think self-driving probably comes down to who.
has the most training data because you just need an unfathomably large amount of training data
and Tesla has more than everybody else by this obscene order of magnitude. It's not just that they've
had cars out for a longer time. They've had hundreds of thousands of cars out for a longer time while
Waymo has had 100, right? Like these are scales that are just not even in the same ballpark.
I'll give you a quick counterpoint. Yeah, yeah. At this point like when it took on to jump in.
My understanding is that is 100% true. They have the most real world data from the cars. Although it's not
all full self-driving data. It's not, it's like, no, but it's just literally visual info for the
process, right, to say what is this situation? Invitya had this project for companies other than Tesla
that wanted to get a self-driving because they're going to handle it for them, which is the
Nvidia Drive automotive initiative, whatever, and what they do is they recreate, they send out
these cars. A simulate, right? They simulate the entire city, and then they run digitally billions of
simulations. They run, you can set it up for as many things as you want. They could have some car,
run in front of you or there could be a guy run in front of you or they just run billions of them
so you can get more training data in 10 minutes than you can get in the real world in 10 years
that's that's the idea and I think that I don't know the success rate of that but I do know that like
I've ridden in those cars and they worked great around San Francisco and San Jose and it's like there
could be something there which ones are those is that cruise?
This is just I mean this is a Nvidia green car wait literally an Nvidia car it was just you could
do it at the office oh I see they were they were
They're selling the technology to other companies that want to have their own self-driving kind of over the air built in.
So I don't know.
I don't know if that route makes more sense, but it does seem like it could get around the idea that, okay, we don't have so many cars, but we can digitally recreate this and do more training.
Yes.
Right now, Waymo does that.
So they, you know, they tout like, oh, we have like nine million miles that have been driven by our cars.
But then they do 100 million simulated.
Right.
So they create these digital environments and have a car digitally pretend that it's in it.
and it's really a metaverse for cars,
if you think about it.
And in the metaverse...
Dude, what if the cars wake up from the Matrix and try to get...
They realize they're in a fake street.
Kia Sorrento is like Neo in the Matrix.
They realize they're in a GTA5 RP server.
And then none of it's real.
Kill me.
I do.
So I think this,
this helps me understand it a lot better,
like what these like angles of these companies are fighting for.
And something,
that I had been thinking about a lot was, I guess maybe you're more personal perspectives on
how valuable or cool you think this race to self-driving technology is, because I do think it's
cool. I'll call it the CGP gray utopia of all automatic cars driving around that communicate
with each other and there's basically never accidents is, it sounds cool.
But I think on the whole, I'm a pretty anti-car person.
Like, I think cars in general are like a blight.
You're more of a hyperloop guy.
On society, less of a hyperloop guy.
And I think I'm more like, you know, pro public transportation.
You're a public transport Sweden pill.
But even as far as cars go, like there are certain frustrating aspects of it to me is like in the U.S.
Have you ever sat down at a Ford F-150 on the open road and just let that chopper's
saying just fucking...
You know what? I have. I have Atrial.
And it's too damn big.
It's, have you guys ever looked at,
for example, like in the U.S., there's this huge,
if you look at sales of vehicles
in the U.S., there's this huge spike in
SUV sales, and truck sales.
There's a longer winded explanation behind
why that exists, especially in the U.S., but the
amount of fatalities,
like road accident fatalities, has also
spike in the past couple decades.
We're like, as the cars get bigger,
people die, so you need a bigger car to be safer.
Everybody needs to be reminded
about the prisoner's dilemma, I think.
I will be driving a tank.
That's what it's going to take.
That's going to be awesome.
Or you go super small with the Twizzler.
You can't beat the wheels.
You're right now, Twizzie making
contact with an F-150
exploding.
I think,
but that's, like, that is an example
of like these vehicles that are, I would argue, needlessly big, exists primarily because of like
loopholes and like regulations and laws that were meant to like save fuel economy.
Cars in general force a lot of things on cities and societies that I see as a net negative.
And I'm not here to say that this technology around self-driving cars is bad necessarily.
It's not that I wouldn't want this to exist.
I think there's a part of me that it's disappointed or sad that because something like a really well-built train system doesn't have the hype behind it that gets venture capital involved and pushes legislation and has the same like hype behind it that would ultimately solve these public transport needs.
In the same way that you're talking about like it's not about like,
owning my car, it's about getting from A to B and making those situations like as convenient
as possible. And a specific situation I can think of is, so when we went to the major together
in Copenhagen... You can show me, but okay. We went to the major and Copenhagen has a pretty
nice, like, train system that you can use to get around the city, which is nice. We used it a bunch.
And when we, you want to... That's the robo van. I don't know. It's going to flash bass, but...
But I don't think this, this is essentially the same thing.
It doesn't, it doesn't make any difference.
Like, this is a small difference, right?
It's like a, it's a, it's a bigger car.
It's basically an Uber XL.
Like that's, or, I mean, maybe.
I don't know how big this is.
I don't make it fit, but it's more like a bus.
I like you feel like.
Which has, has, there's a reason for that to exist.
Like, I'm not, I'm not denying that.
It's more, uh, when we left the major that night on the night of finals.
Yeah.
There's this huge stream of people coming out of the arena that they had,
just built. And we all headed towards the train station. It's a massive amount of, it's like 10,000,
15,000 people that walked to the train station. And within, you know, within 10 minutes,
it was so easy. Everybody is on the train and out. Earlier last year, I went to a Dodgers game.
Yeah. And I was leaving Dodgers Stadium. Yeah, it's insane. And I walked down to like the Uber
pickup area, like where you get Uber's taxis, whatever you can get, right? And there's this massive
backed up line of people waiting to like get in the cars. And even in the most idealistic version
of the autonomous car paradise that we're talking about, even if you take away all the inefficiencies
of movement and they can all communicate with each other, that is a drastically shittier experience
than just getting on the train and going into the city. It's even important than that. If you just look
around, like I was thinking the same thought, because when we were in Sweden, we go to the stadium,
right up to the stadium, housing, buildings, everything.
In LA, you go to Dodger Stadium,
the parking lot is as far as the I can see.
I think people don't even understand how big it.
It's one of the biggest parking lots in the world.
It's like those stretches out in all directions.
And this is kind of what I'm talking about,
is like the car requires,
especially even if you go,
even if everybody's Tesla can drive themselves all of a sudden,
the car still requires parking space
and infrastructure and things that I would argue
like functionally degrade cities and quality of life.
And it seems disappointing to me
that the amount of like effort
both like technologically and politically
is going into like making cars better
when even the best case scenario
in like the situation I described
is still shittier than the train
that you can get on in Copenhagen.
Like that is...
I think that is unfortunate.
I think the reality,
like the pragmatic version
of me recognizes that I might not be able to shift the political or maybe even like
cultural attachment to cars and like car culture in the U.S.
And I would rather see some sort of solution than none.
This is a top 10 podcast on Spotify.
Your voice here is going to change.
Trains will rise up based on the words you're saying.
Dude, we're going to get that California high speed rail all the way to.
That's Fresno.
That's so, that's part of the problem though.
Isn't it shitty that that project has to deal with so much bureaucratic mess?
I agree with you.
It is shitty.
But like it's not, I'm the anti-Tesla person here, but I don't think it's Tesla's responsibility to fix car culture.
No, I'm not saying that either.
I'm not saying that either company is responsible for fixing that.
I'm saying that as an example, it's like, you're talking about the government, like,
regulatory angle of why Tesla or like why Elon,
would want this relationship with the government so we can shift things in the direction that
benefits his car company.
There's no guy like that for trains.
There's no.
There's no.
Is there a trains guy?
We need a trains billionaire.
That'd be so sick.
And it sucks that this problem.
Respectfully.
I'm not.
Bring him out of jail.
We give him one job.
You're the train guy.
You're the conductor.
He looks like he could be the train guy.
Yeah, you're not building it.
He's not the hair of a train guy.
SBF on a global train.
tour. I don't, it's tough. I just think as someone who maybe has been lucky enough to travel a lot
and been like been to cities all over the world. Like I, I remember going to Hong Kong as like a
teenager and being like, what do you mean you can just walk everywhere and the train comes within
two minutes every moment of the day and you just get wherever you want. And it's dog shit cheap,
dude. What do you mean that that exists? And I don't have that at home. Like that is crazy to me.
Counterpoint, there's like five dogs an hour that die from the sole train system.
Five dogs?
Perry, pull that up.
What are you talking about?
I'm just trying to contribute to the conversation.
I haven't been to Seoul yet, so.
We're just making an educated guess here.
Just a good guess.
How the dogs die to the trains?
I've got to been running some numbers.
Well, the cameras on the trains are really grainy, so people don't feel very bad.
I don't mean, I'm not saying that this technological leap is not interesting to me at all.
That is not what I'm saying.
just like it feels like the, the system in place right now of like hype, venture capital,
all these things that back these sort of projects is why does it have to be directed in
this direction instead of something that is demonstrably better?
Well, I mean, the answer is hype and venture capital are going to go through things that make
money.
Of course.
The only reason you'd build a train, which doesn't really make money, it's for the benefit
as consumers, is if your tax money came together and the government is, you know,
decided it's a good idea.
Because it's never going to make as much money as...
There are privatized train systems going up in Florida with actual success.
Yeah, yeah.
So we could dive into that at some point because that's a very stark contrast to California
where our high speed rail system has been a complete fucking disaster.
Very ironic.
This story is awesome.
And I don't know if there's really enough time to talk about it.
They have a huge section of privatized rail that's becoming really successful,
like up the coast from Miami.
Yeah.
And it's super interesting.
They have a successful leg and then they're growing it more.
Yeah. So there is an example, but that's the whole point. It just requires governments, right? You can't, you can't do this if there's a bunch of legislation stopping it. You can't do it in California. Like the amount of legislation overhead is just completely obscene to get anything built, let alone a train that goes through a million different things in any company and any construction firm and any train company, any landowner can stop it with three different Sika. We're going to go on Gavin Newsom's podcast next week and we're going to get this shit. We're bringing him on. We're high ranks than him.
Yeah.
We're dogging.
He's actually number five.
I think his new podcast is number five.
I think his new podcast is number five.
Number five?
It's all on YouTube.
It's all on YouTube, but he's got us on Spotify.
So it's kind of in the vein of what
you were talking about. You showed that
there was this long quote from like Ezra Klein
where he's talking about one of his opinions
that's dramatically changed over time is about
regulation and about how regulation
realizing that
regulation is not necessarily good.
It like is also the,
bureaucratic, like, gate.
Yeah, there's more nuanced.
It's like, it's just a more nuanced topic
than more regulation, good, less regulations.
Yeah, it's not.
Yeah.
There's could be bad regulations.
They're going to be good.
Right.
And, yeah, I think that's just the thing
I think about all the time
when I see self-driving car news
and like hype about self-driving cars.
It's like, dude, this,
the best outcome of this situation
compared to what I've experienced
in other countries and cities still sucks.
and I think that is
disappointing. All right, so Aiden's not
going to be buying the self-driving dream
but... Let me make an argument
for some of the benefits. So first off, I agree
with you. Obviously, we're
unique podcasts in that we have three white men
giving opinions, but what does differentiate
us is that I also like going to
Japan. And so
when I go to, when I go to Tokyo,
like the train system, anybody who goes.
That's our hook.
One white guy who like...
Anybody who like...
Anybody goes to Tokyo, right?
You immediately are like, holy shit, this is the greatest train system in the entire world.
Oh my God, I want to live here.
Bring us back to our country.
Right, right.
And so I'm fully the same boat, to be clear.
I would much prefer that.
In a world that I think happens in the next 10 to 20 years, at least in the United States,
some benefits of self-driving cars.
So one, I mean, first off, is just reducing deaths.
So there are 42,000 people die a year in the U.S.
from car accidents.
And then 13.5,000 of those are DUIs and 12,000.
and 12,000 are speeding related.
So, like, it's not just 42,000 people die unnecessarily a year.
It's, yeah.
It's also a lot of those are human negligence, like the majority of them, right?
And then every year around the world, 1.2 million people die a year from car accidents.
That is obscene and tragic.
And then you have, like, it's like six million accidents a year in the U.S.
There's $340 billion in damages.
I don't think it's like the biggest driver for these types of technologies.
But it is a big deal of, like, we are going to solve so much death and destruction and damage
because once you stop human beings,
insane that we put a bunch of humans.
Fewer sleepy drivers,
few drunk drivers.
Checking their messages.
Like, I think of myself as like a smart,
responsible person,
and I'm an idiot when I try,
I check my phone and I change the music
and I'm tired and I'm not paying attention.
I'm like,
it's just so, we put people into death vehicles
and like shoot them around the roads.
It's insane.
And we'll stop so much of that.
Another is climate change.
I think there's various studies
and things to show that like electrification
of vehicles broadly will decrease carbon,
footprint. It makes driving more efficient. It requires less energy, all that type of stuff.
And then the economic argument is...
Wait, wait. There's more selfish reason, too. I used to commute an hour each way to
Nvidia. Listen, I think, I don't know the math, but the amount of human misery.
Yes. Created, extrapolated across all people for all these commutes, it's got to be some...
If you could get an extra hour of sleep in your car, you know what I'm saying?
It's incredible. Relax. I think that would literally make the world happier. Yes. Because I, it, a
100%, 100%.
There's just misery from that.
100%. If the only option, if you told me that somehow like public transportation solutions
are just never going to be possible in the U.S., 100% because of we're existing in a hypothetical
situation, and this is the only way forward, it's like, of course, of course.
This has so many benefits.
And I agree with all of these things.
Every point that you've said so far is also something that gets better with people's
increased access to public transportation.
Yes.
No, you're right.
I mean, I'm in the same boat.
I don't see any path forward.
There has to be such a massive change.
Because it's like, it's not just, oh, we're building trains in L.A.
It's like the whole infrastructure of L.A.
is built for cars.
So I don't see a way in our lifetimes that that gets reversed personally.
This comes around to a topic that I wanted to talk a little bit about, like public
transportation in the U.S., but specifically street cars.
And I don't want to, I want to enter this conversation with the idea that I do not think
street cars solve a lot of the problems that exist.
now, especially because they exist
on the street.
Street cars like 1930s
to...
I'm talking to not even
earlier than that.
I couldn't believe how far back
this goes.
It was further back than I thought.
That's the solution?
Street cars?
No, no, no.
I just said, hold on.
I literally just said
street cars aren't the solution.
America street cars are solution.
I said, are not.
Are not the solution.
Are you most like solutions?
I was supposed to listen to you and like respond.
The, the, no.
No, no.
No, actual, what is a street car?
I thought you were just talking about cars on a
street. Oh no. So like, uh, like those like trolley things. Yeah, like trolleys, basically. So the way the, if you go
back, if we go back in time, come back in time with me, back into, dude, back into the mid-1800s,
big cities in the U.S. started laying out rail, uh, and had these trolleys to get around. I saw a
documentary about that called Raddad Red Dead Redemption 2. It was in, uh, it was in San Deney. Yeah.
And they, and these things started off by getting pulled by, uh, horses. And then by the end of the
1800s, they started to electrify these systems.
And that's where it all went wrong, is what you're saying.
And then they made it electric.
I got you, Aid.
We go back to the horses.
But in cities like Los Angeles at the time, at the end of the 1800s, early 1900s,
Los Angeles actually had the largest tramway system in the world, like the most amount
of track.
And what ended up happening was these systems.
got phased out as the automobile just became very, very popular in the U.S.
But ultimately, it's like if you look at pictures or stories from this period of time,
this was a huge like infrastructural change in cities.
Going from the period or like the decades where this was like the dominant mode of public
transportation in a lot of cities to the period of time where cars were like more favored.
And I do, I think maybe not like politically or bureaucratically, but the idea that you can't make like quick, like large scale changes around public transportation, I don't really think it's true because it's even happened within the scope of our own country's history.
There's been huge pivots and changes with the way public transportation works in the U.S.
This being an example where in essentially the span of like a couple decades, these like these like,
street car systems disappeared.
What's your ideal?
You want street cars back?
You want trains back?
You want horses carrying trains?
I think the reality is I don't really care about street cars.
I think as far as like space and efficiency goes even,
you can make an argument that the like robo autonomous like buses
basically accomplish the goal fine.
I think the issue with buses as solutions in public transportation is that buses
exist in the traffic that exists already.
You don't solve traffic by like making buses
because they just have to compete with all the cars around.
You want one more lane.
Famously,
famously, if you just build one more lane, freeze it all.
I see.
That's the cool.
That's my solution too.
I was going to say if we just added a single more lane here in LA.
Maybe even like two lanes.
Two lanes is solid right up.
I was going to say Rickshaws.
Just a bunch of Rickshaws.
But carried by a horse.
new invention, you know? We go back. We go back. We get the horses, their jobs back. We'll call it a
chariot. We'll have it pull a train. The just, I just want to push back on the idea that fundamental
shifts in like public transportation infrastructure or travel infrastructure in general can happen in
quicker times than we think. And I think a lot of the reason we think it's not possible is because
the way we've done things has existed for so long. And in the U.S. specifically, it's,
feels like there's a lot of red tape to do any space.
If you build a public transportation network in L.A.
And it makes my house in the suburbs less valuable.
I will kill you with a gun.
In Minecraft.
And that's part of the problem.
You know, there's the nimbie angle to it.
There's so many things like that where I think Elon Musk is even tied into this.
I don't know the exact details.
So please correct me if I'm wrong.
But if I recall when he was really,
hyping up the Hyperloop stuff. It was part of a campaign that pushed back against the money and funding behind public transport efforts in California.
And pushing back or killing those efforts is important to like companies he's made.
And, you know, more broadly, we use Hyperloop every day now.
We can go.
We can look at more infamous cases of billionaires with oil money like the Koch brothers, lobbying at the local level to stop public transport.
projects because if public transportation succeeds in a bunch of major cities, my oil empire
will start to, start to crumble a little bit. It's not, and I, like I said, I'm pragmatic.
I understand, I actually think that car culture in the U.S. is like borderline, like, it's not in the
constitution, but it's like borderline gun culture in the U.S. The idea of having your car
hitting the open road, having the great American road trip, like, the, I, the,
All of these things are so embedded in the idea of American lifestyle.
And I think it's why people get so, like, so defensive of, like,
we're going to take away your gas cars.
It's like, it's almost the same level of vitriol reaction as when you talk about taking
away guns.
It's, it is a very similar, it is more culturally embedded in America.
And I'm not here to say I can overturn that.
I don't think I can.
That's why I want to leave.
That's, like, I'm not saying it's,
It's just disappointing to me that these things are not looked at as like the better,
more idealistic solutions and that they're possible because even within our own history,
they are.
That's a good point.
That's a good point.
I wish.
I feel like there need to be some massive political change to do that.
But, you know, if we can't even build housing, it's like, you know, I think it just gets into this horrific morass of lack of building in the United States.
Yeah.
And you're talking about like what my idealistic world is.
It's like it has so many intertwining threads with that issue as well, right?
So many aspects of like housing and building.
Yeah.
To dramatically oversimplify things.
The previous generation, the boomers for, you know, in the 70s like built a massive
amount of stuff in our country.
And now they have frozen it in amber and said nobody should build anything.
And now everybody else is fucked except them, which is very impressive.
Well, it makes the value go up.
That's worth it.
Right.
No, obviously it's self-incentivizing, right?
It makes sense.
once you own a car, everything incentivizes you to stop public development, to stop housing
development to stop your car, your home goes up, your area remains more valuable, everything is
incentivizing you to not do that. And they built out the whole country and then just stopped it.
And I could see something happening, but it would need like a genuine political revolution
of some kind and a strategic streetcar reserve. And then every, and then every few years we vote
on, uh, we vote on adding another lane. You know what they don't tell you about the lane?
thing, what?
Is that if you add enough lanes, you actually do solve it.
Well, yeah.
That's it.
Yes.
It's the guy with the diamonds.
We're actually almost there.
It's so funny.
It's like adding another lane doesn't solve traffic.
But theoretically, if you have like 50 lanes, it does solve traffic.
Of course.
It's, nobody ever talks about that.
That would actually be so sick.
A 50 lane highway, you could just go wherever.
Just all.
Because of course, it'll, it'll, it'll have.
in Dallas first, you know? And the whole city of Dallas is just gone. It's just a hundred
lanes side by side. The only way you could justify a 50 lane highway is if the city was 50 times
bigger, at which point the traffic is back. It doesn't fix it. It does not fix it.
Dude. Imagine forgetting your exit and having to merge over 50. 50 lanes. Dude, zoning out.
Just, whoa, just fucking hard wheeling over 50 lanes. That'd actually be so fired. God, that would be tired.
God, I've no longer trained.
You sold me.
We're 50 lane.
Perfect transit.
Where do we land?
The end of this whole debate is that we should add more lanes.
More lanes.
More lanes.
More lanes.
More horses.
We've done it.
We said we'd solve it by the end of the episode.
Oh, we're going to number eight for sure this week.
This is how government actually works.
They call it a day.
Just a back pat.
Everyone back pat one more lane.
Where do we land on Tesla?
You need to mention the robots.
Maybe we should.
Are you going to put money in Tesla stock right now?
Where are we?
So, look, I can give a few more counterpoints to why Tesla has some potential legs to it,
why it has a real shot.
And we can go back to that.
Yeah.
So actually, it's a good segue.
So the thinking, the reason that Tesla might, in quotes, be worth a hundred times what they're currently making a year,
which is, again, insane valuation.
I'm not saying I agree with this.
But one such thing is if they hit driverless cars, if they manage to do this, their fleet instantly
becomes obscenely valuable, right?
If every person has a car that can drive them and they don't even need to,
need to be in the car. That is incredibly valuable. The amount of cars they can sell go up.
But every car itself becomes much more valuable because then people can use it and send it out
into the world to do jobs for them like an Uber. I was going to say as soon as you do that,
the people can sell the car. Tesla could buy them back and use them for a service like this.
So the way to think about it is, and this is explicitly what Elon has stated. This is what Elon has stated.
And he's never lied. No trains. I put it up money to do.
I'm not buying it in cash because I'm a normal person with a normal job.
I put my money down.
I loan it.
I send it out to do a job.
It comes back damaged.
Yeah,
I mean,
there would need to,
so that we're going to have to solve that.
You know what I'm saying?
You've created all these problems for me as a regular person.
I'm not going to,
I don't want to be a taxi owner.
I don't own a taxi business.
Right, and not everybody will.
But if the pitch to a huge,
to most people who own cars is,
hey,
normally we think about car ownership as you drop 20, 30,
$40,000,
on a car and then it immediately depreciates in value
and for the rest of its ownership.
or you buy a $20,000 car
and it is going to actually generate money for you
over the lifetime of the car.
You don't have to do that,
but every day while you're asleep or while you're at work,
you can send it out, it's generating $100 bucks on the meantime.
And it's just doing this for you every single day.
We used to think about having to own 6 million DVDs in our house or whatever.
Now we rent it from a service because it's become that distributed and cheap.
If cars are self-driving and working everywhere,
I don't want to spend $30,000 to own it and then lease it out to people to make money back.
I'm just going to use it at the cheap cost when I need to use it.
Sure. So, so if it's that distributed.
Right, right. So I think the argument, I think the argument here is if they pull this off,
they have millions of owners of Teslas who can suddenly start adding their thing to the fleet.
And it's this incredible value add as a consumer if they want to do it.
Obviously, for the person who doesn't want a guy shitting in their car that you don't need to do it.
But enough people will, right?
And I will shit in your car.
And I will, I will do it, right?
And it comes back covered in dogs.
He's shit in his waymo this week.
Yeah. Um, help Tesla stop.
Right in the time.
Right in the comments.
When do you think I shit my pants during this episode?
Um, and so, but, so even if they, even if they don't, like, even if every single person
who owns a Tesla doesn't use it in this way, they are going to produce these, like,
cyber cabs, right?
Which are meant to be ubers, these things, which are meant to be, this is going to go out into
the world and just be,
an Uber for everybody.
So really the idea is
if they pull it off,
giant if,
they just also got Uber,
right?
If they take over
the entire,
what is the name of that
industry,
like self industry?
Uber Lyft.
Ride sharing?
Ride sharing.
If they can,
if they pull this off,
take all of ride sharing
immediately.
Uber has a valuation
of $150 billion.
Lift about $40.
Right.
So 150 plus 40.
Right.
That's 900.
$600 billion.
Even if they had entire Uber, entire Lyft,
plus their current valuation,
realistic valuation of like 84,
they're not even close to what they're worth now.
Okay, one more argument.
Two more.
I have a dark question at the end of this.
Okay.
I'll keep it somewhat concise.
The other two points.
One is Optimus.
So they have this robot,
if we pull it up here.
They have this humanoid robot
that they supposedly are going to release.
He says like every year it's going to come out.
Who knows if it'll ever come out?
If it does, then that is going to be this unbelievable amount of units that they can sell
because every company, every home could have these helping out.
Now, you might be like, ah, that's pie in the sky.
Anybody can make a robot.
And that's probably correct.
But part of what, for example, Andre Carpathie has said, who did the Tesla, who led the Tesla
AI stuff, is, again, it comes back to this data.
If they have, Tesla has the amount of data that can fill an ocean and Waymo and everybody else
has a swimming pool of data, right?
The scale is that different.
What Andre said is that there's actually a lot of translation from car vision processing over to robotics processing.
That it's actually very similar of how you manage self-driving and process all that visual information to having a physical robot that's moving through your house.
I don't know enough about robotics to know if that's true.
It's probably oversimplifying things.
But in theory, that gives them this massive advantage, again, over the Boston Dynamics who make this funny prototype that they show once a year.
these guys actually have an insane amount of data to work off of.
How much by paying for that today?
How much are they shown that makes me trust
that's coming out relatively soon?
We'll work. We'll sell to consumers.
We'll make a profit. You know what I'm saying?
Editor, cut this from the episode. I don't believe that the robot thing will work.
This seems way too optimistic.
Optimistic, if you will.
Hey, I'm moving over.
Get over here. Get over here.
Yeah.
Yeah. Okay. And then last thing, and then we can like, you know, we conclude the whole argument is battery storage. So it's easy to think of Tesla just as a car company, but they do a ton of work with batteries. So their growth, actually, I have an article here. The growth that they've had with batteries is insane. Yeah, yeah, I've seen a little bit about this. So you can, you can see this. They've had 2024 figures represent a 214% leap in storage deployment. So Tesla's, Tesla is leading the market globally in selling.
batteries and power packs and storage solutions, and this is only going to grow. A little bit
like the guy who sold pans to the gold miners and the gold rush, like all the other EVs
don't have this kind of power management system and technology and deployment, right? So in theory,
just in the same way that Tesla's superchargers are the de facto chargers across the nation,
right? They can also be, and quite possibly will, yeah, okay, if Ford comes in and releases an amazing
EV, that's great, but they're almost certainly going to be using Tesla's batteries, their system,
their charging network. And that is almost going to be as valuable or more valuable because
the amount of energy that is going to be needed and used. And even within AI, like battery technology,
this is going to become a massive industry, is and is going to keep growing. Estimates that it's
going to grow like, I don't know, like 900 percent or something crazy. I forget the exact number
over the next like eight years. But batteries storage, the idea that in the future as we unlock more
types of energy generation, that there's systems that are, like, we're selling energy to each other
that people, again, like the Tesla thing, you can have solar panels in your house and you sell the
extra energy onto the market, and this becomes a real value ad for people with Tesla taking a piece
of every single thing. It's another one of those, like, if this lands and they can deploy it to
everybody and get there, crazy valuable. A massive if, though. And that is the argument for why
Tesla might be worth a hundred times what it makes a need. I appreciate you giving it to me, and I like
hearing it and again, I don't know, right? I don't know. Can I admit something? Yeah. This is not a joke.
Ten minutes before we recorded this, I sold half of my Tesla stock. I bought a bunch.
I love the vet of the whole episode led after that. I bought a lot a few years ago because of the
full self-driving thing and I am now not nearly as confident that they're going to succeed in.
Literally looking into all this made me sell my Tesla stock. That's funny. I think there's an argument for
all this, but I
wouldn't go all in on it.
You would have killed it in Model UN, dude.
Can I
set this up? So you're not the only one.
This might be a ticket sort of a pull up, but
you
yeah, here it is.
You're not the only one
doing what you just did.
So is Elon
Musk's
it's all the executives, right? CFO.
Here, I think I got it right.
And then Elon is selling.
I mean, a big sense.
That's he always sell.
I saw the price is like, plummet.
Love the stock.
Yeah.
So, okay, the stock was ridiculously highly valued.
Just for, for, for recap of people, people are saying Tesla's crashing.
Just to give a sense of it.
Tesla was obscenely highly valued, what, like, let's say six months ago.
Then they became double obscenely valued.
And now they're back to obscenely overvalued.
That's right.
We're still talking right now after the crash.
They are obscenely overvalued.
You got the Tesla chair selling.
You got the CFO selling.
You got Kimball Musk.
telling, I did this thing where I looked at Nvidia insider sales. They've got, you know,
1.4 million buys, 2.8 million sales. Most companies will have more sales than buys insider
because people get paid in stock and they went off. Yeah. Tesla is zero buys. There's not a single
Tesla insider buying shares. Everyone is selling. What's the time range on that? This is like
three months and 12 months? For over three months, nobody bought. Now, I think a regular level employee
doesn't get included, but anyone who's like senior level employee gets counted for this and nobody
bought over three months or 12 months. They're only selling. So I think they also understand how much
hopium is baked into the stock price that that's my argument. Yeah, like what I've been describing
is all these moonshots of like if they pull off full self-driving with just vision, that's crazy.
Unbelievable achievement opens up so much. If they, the batteries keep growing at the rate. If
Optimus robots are what they're talking about. And then if all of those things land,
maybe it's worth its current valuation. Like that's crazy. You know, like, I don't,
I don't get why it's 100x right now.
And then particularly a few years ago, the argument I made earlier of they have so much more data than everybody else gives them an obscenely huge advantage when it comes to training the AIs and the systems that are going to achieve full self-driving.
I still think that's true.
But that advantage is diminishing so rapidly that I don't know, like right now with what's going on in China.
Not even in China.
I was not even in American China.
China's deployment is so large of EVs that that exact data advantage that they've had.
for a while, that is rapidly going away
and they do not seem like they're right
on the verge of full self-driving. So if they
take another three years to get there and it's this
oh my god incredible thing, they did it without
LIDAR, that's amazing. China
has the same stuff. So, I don't know.
So B-YD, you know how Tesla for FSD
full-sled driving, you have to pay, I think it's
8, 10 grand on top of your car.
B-YD rolled it out for free to
every make and model, even the old ones, their own
version, and it's built
exclusively for China, so they've planned for certain Chinese
things. Like, for example, that China has all
these bus and bike lanes with different lines that Tesla can't adapt to with their current method.
So this guy, they rolled out FSD and Tesla recently February this year.
This guy in China tries it.
He immediately gets seven tickets in the first ride because it keeps veering into these camera-checked
bus lanes and out and he gets a ticket.
Get a ticket.
This is fall fixable.
What I'm saying is like BYD is building for their consumer.
They know what they have to do.
Yeah.
Bicycle path.
No, no, no, no.
You know, he's nervous.
And so, you know, again, that makes me worry about their ability to compete in the second biggest market.
Or actually, probably the biggest market.
Right, right.
It's like, I don't see how they win in China for a variety of reasons.
And then around the world, like the Chinese EVs are going to catch up so hard.
It's like what you said with Mexico, you know, if China can come in and offer a cheaper EV.
Dude, if there wasn't a tariff, I mean, people would be buying them here.
Yeah, yeah.
And so, like, really the Chinese EV manufacturers, that's what's making.
me go, like, I don't, I don't see the advantage anymore to the same degree. I still think it's
incredibly, like, Tesla has amazing products. Everybody I know who has one loves it. It's great
cars, like the full self-driving stuff is incredible, but like I'm not seeing this advantage that'll
let them exclusively hit this point of technology before everybody else. And it could happen. It'd
be dope if it did. And then the last thing I want to say, because we didn't talk about it much because
I don't think it's important or a little bit of discussion. I don't want to make it too political.
But like there is a part of it where I'm just, I personally, I think a lot of people are souring
on the brand because of Elon Musk's personal antics.
So the point where if there was a comparable thing from someone else or even a slightly
worse thing, I might pick that.
Like I want to buy an EV soon.
I'm not going to buy Tesla probably because of this reason.
And I think that alone makes it a harder sell as a business when you're, you know what I'm
saying?
Like,
I would be scared to be a Bud Light investor during their controversy because the sales went
down, whether or not I agree or disagree.
It's like, you know what I'm saying?
So that's a big part of it for me too.
is like I just feel like there's so much risk baked in, so I don't want to do it.
Speaking of things that have possibly controversial brands,
Pokemon Go, sweet, safe, loved.
What we've all been waiting for.
Wait, no, no, that is not a good enough segue.
Segway is from, you need to find a connection.
You're ending the conversation.
You've got to go from Elon Musk, tarnishing the Tesla brand into Saudi and Pokemon in an organic way.
Elon Musk needed buyers for a new venture where he was buying Tesla.
He needed money to borrow for loans.
Where did he go?
The Saudi Royal Wealth Fund.
They are the biggest purchaser other than Elon Musk of the Twitter buyout.
They're also buying something new lately.
Pokemon Go!
That was great.
That was really good.
I'm moving to your side.
That was amazing.
Pokemon Go, Niantic, is being sold to the Saudi foreign wealth fund for three-point,
actually being sold to a gaming company owned by a Saudi World War II for $3.5 billion.
What are your thoughts on that gentleman?
The sports watching continues.
Just buying the next major esport.
Dude,
I think it's so funny.
I mean,
my first reaction was why?
Because,
like,
is Pokemon Go?
Is it just really successful and profitable?
And they probably buy it up.
Oh,
here's also,
I got a little background.
So Saudi Royal Well Fund,
they buy everything.
You guys,
I mean,
they've spent money on sports teams
on,
everything,
Eastport, everything.
They've done tons of purchases.
So is this like, real quick,
is this like a government entity
that buys all this stuff?
Yes.
And it's, okay,
so it's public,
or not public,
but it's government,
but it's government.
It's public money.
It's like they have this extra money from oil.
Yeah,
I mean, they bought ESL,
the company used to work for.
Right, and I'm like,
and I don't really know what's going on there.
I just know all,
my friends who work in esports
are now like,
yeah,
I got this offer to go work in Qatar
for the World Series.
I'm like,
okay,
that's cool.
But it's all in,
It's all in the Middle East now.
They're making moves, dude.
They body a cell.
They killed Jamal Khashoggi.
They fucking keep it real over there.
They shot him and they walked to me in.
They said,
just good business.
They have all this extra oil money,
and they want to invest it in things that are like,
future buzzwords, basically,
whether it's EVs, whether it's e-sports,
whatever.
They want to have flashy, cool things that are,
so when the oil money runs out,
they've got all this business.
That's the idea.
And so they've been buying games.
gaming company is one thing. They bought the company that made Monopoly Go. And it turns out that
made a mean, I don't know if you guys know Monopoly Go. It's not like Monopoly at all. It just looks
like Monopoly, but it's like the greatest money extractor game of all time. Like it just, it's got all
the loop boxes and puzzles and everything. And they've been printing. That game is like one of the most
profitable games ever. Yeah, I worked in mobile games at EA, which is a beloved category.
Mobile games. Oh, carefully. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Uh, yeah. Yeah. Uh, so.
So as the resident Elon Musk fan, I worked at EA on mobile games.
You know, I'm so glad you're on this pod.
You're like the, you're like the Winston and Overwatch for the comments.
Yeah, yeah.
I literally was there when it was voted worst company in America.
All right.
And in the article for that, they said it's mostly because of Doug.
It's bad for Ralph.
One guy.
No, not like not a joke.
And obviously I left.
But so like mid-range, this is a decade ago.
Mid-range mobile games make like a million a day.
If you're talking like- Isn't it crazy?
That's mid-range.
You're talking about clash of plans.
You're talking about tens of millions.
A day?
And then, well, that's when they do a big drop.
Like, for example, Fortnite, you can make 50 to 150 million on a new skin.
Yeah.
Like when Fortnite was at his peak.
So the numbers that you can get off micro-transactions in mobile games are genuinely obscene.
And they cost a little to make, you know what I'm saying?
You know what I'm saying?
Buying digital items and video games.
You all.
So many CSGO knives.
It's crazy.
Your grandchildren will starve.
You're a rich podcaster and your grandchildren will starve.
Because if your investment...
Grandchildren can sell them to the Saudis.
Look at it.
Look at the butterfly knife.
It spins.
It's blue.
It's pretty blue.
It's almost fully blue.
I'm with Aiden on this.
I didn't...
Dude, I did not...
I mean, I understood that mobile gaming in general is like the biggest chunk of the
gaming market revenue-wise.
That is still wild...
to hear. I think the idea of, I was thinking earlier about what you first brought up the topic
of people, like the line in Saudi Arabia finally gets built and you're playing Pokemon going
the line. And you're just you and your friends walking down one fucking long hallway,
catch your Pokemon. You never turn left or right. You don't know the line is at five.
Is that if somebody's like, oh, guys, there's a Charzard and it's at the end of the line. Like,
there's only one. You got to go to the other end of the line. 500 miles. It's,
Straight shot.
It's just, yeah, I think the passing headline makes you think
is my initial reaction.
It's like, why would you, why would you do this?
But there's a larger cohesive strategy, surely,
around this amount of money being spent.
That's what I'd like to think.
I don't wildly speculate.
I think sometimes it feels like, you know, the rate at which
my familiarity with e-sports in particular
makes me feel a little doubtful of like my own take
in the sense that it feels.
feels like they've overpaid for a lot of things.
Like, you don't have to bring this level of spending to e-sports.
It is highly irrational, yes.
Get a lot of the hold that they wanted in the industry.
And to a degree, I can kind of, it feels like flexing on like a geopolitical scale.
Yeah, it just feels like, is this worth $3.5 billion?
Pokemon goes down from its peak.
The people that are using it said if they changed micro transactions, I'm gone.
No, the people always say that you don't know.
But like, if they try to make it...
Pokemon fans are not leaving.
I'm sorry.
No, they've been abused for decades.
Or they're not,
keep on.
They're not going to go away.
Yeah, I don't know.
I don't know what it'll mean,
but there's definitely a lot of pushback
and like anger and fear
from the community of like...
From the Pokemon Gogh community.
Because they don't want to change anything.
They want everything to be,
they do it all the time.
They've been doing it for years and years and years.
Yeah.
They're worried about change.
What they said in the article
was that they're focusing basically on AI
and I need to look more into it.
We can do this in the future.
One thing I'd want to talk about.
Speculate.
Speculate.
Pogue on.
A.I. Well, okay, I will speculate based on what I've read about AI gaming. So there's a push from
some major companies, Microsoft being the biggest recently who announced they have this new
AI generative game that is trained on one of their games and they're going to start using the
Microsoft library to work on generative AI video games. I think this is incredibly far off
in the future. I don't have a lot of faith that that would ever. I'm pretty pro-A-I and I have a very,
very hard time seeing any of that ever manifesting in a way that people want to play or buy at all.
That is at least an explicit push.
So in theory, what these guys are doing is saying,
we're dropping their traditional video games.
And they said this in the article.
Like they are focusing more on AI tech and AI games.
So they're like,
Pokemon Go, that's great.
That's old news.
That's human beings making things that other humans being enjoy.
We're going to make a bunch of AI shitty game slop that nobody enjoys.
And if you believe that,
that's what they think is the future and or at least, you know,
the big moonshot opportunity.
And that's what they're going for.
I'm actually curious because in a weird,
in a weird change of pace
on the yard bonus episode
this week,
which you listen to
on Patreon.com,
so you are.
Are we still?
No.
Enron hats with it.
We,
no,
we talked about
something a little more serious.
We talked about
vibe coding.
Yeah,
and the way people are making.
You four talked about
vibe coding.
Three of us.
Ludwig was gone.
Three non-coderes
talked about vibe code.
Well,
we were,
can you give me like a one-cented summary?
I would love to hear
What kind of breakthroughs you guys came to?
I don't know if...
What did slime have to say about vibe coding?
What did the...
I think it would be...
It was actually a huge chunk of the episode.
It would be unfair of me to characterize...
You just have to go to the Patreon.
I want to ask you what you guys think of it
because I had not heard of this until...
I think Nick brought it up,
this idea of vibe coding
where you use chat chippy T to spit out code
that you don't know how to write
and you build a game like that.
And then you just...
iterate on the game by using chat GPT prompts.
And apparently these games are starting,
you know,
you could turn around a project in a relatively short period of time.
And then people are launching these games on like mobile
and then filling them with advertisements and then making money.
And it's like a,
and it's a trend.
And I thought this was really interesting because my two reactions were on one hand.
I was like,
oh man,
this really like cheapens this art form and makes it,
this feels a little like soulless.
And then on the other hand,
I was like,
well,
if you can provide a tool to people
to create their ideas
without being inhibited
by being unable to learn how to code
for whatever reason
do, you know,
what is good and bad about this?
And that's basically what we talked about
for like 20, 30 minutes.
That phone call just bumped us down to number 10.
Fuck.
Tucker's carving his way back in, brother.
It was Tucker, if you can believe it.
He knew what he was doing.
So I was wanted your,
because I feel like it's in the vein
of this conversation of like something like
AI just pumping out video games automatically.
This is sort of similar to that.
It's like still a prompt, still a human idea,
but somebody sitting at a computer
and making games in a very different way
and potentially sacrificing some of what they have in their mind
because they aren't able to meticulously edit
and understand the code.
Yeah. Here, can I get the Telestrator?
Yeah.
You can kick it off.
I mean, look, my answer to this is I'm not a coder,
so I haven't tried vibe coding.
I don't know the difference.
and with it.
But my understanding is that the games that have been made so far are pretty slop.
Yeah.
One of them I know made it.
It was like an MMO flying game.
This guy,
Pierre made,
I don't know,
but he has a big audience.
Dude,
he made it,
it made a lot of money.
It was making like 100K a week or something.
It was like printing money.
And it was like,
I tried it.
It was really sloppy.
But it was like,
you know,
a kid could play.
You're playing in a movie.
So there could be potential there.
Right now,
as a gamer,
I see such a drastic.
gulf between. I mean, it just has, there's so many issues in edge cases that come up that you
don't get fixed that I think it's kind of crap.
During the segment where we were recording, Zipper tried to make a game using ChatGBT,
and he successfully made a tiny game where you control a profile picture of me that eats
hamburgers, which were yellow dots. And every time you fed it a hamburger, the score went up by
million. And so within the span of us having the conversation, that was crafted.
Yes.
That's what they made redded redemption, too. It's the same. Yes, sir. Yeah, so vibe coding.
This was coined recently by Andre Carpathie, actually, who was the leader of Tesla.
And so basically it's what you're saying. It's just letting AI do all the coding. And that's
been the slow transition that everybody's going through over the past two years since
Chatsbyte came out. So for people who are not programmers, every programmer now,
Asterisk, almost every single programmer is using AI extensively. And it's so unbelievably helpful for so many tasks. And that doesn't mean that the entire project is done by AI. It means that you are figuring out the outline. You're deciding what things to do. And then you say, okay, now that this is defined, AI, can you do this for me? So you are building the structure you're thinking through what it is. But then you're directing the AI like you would a junior engineer at a software company. And you're saying, okay, now go through the logistics of making this work. And you still then, like a senior engineer, would review what they're doing.
because there's going to be problems, there's going to be lots of issues.
You have to review things.
It doesn't always work.
But that's the idea and it saves a lot of time.
I do this all the time.
With vibe coding, it's getting to a point now where you do not need to ever code or review code.
So that ratio of like, oh, it's helping you as an assistant with all these things is becoming
like 100% as opposed to, you know, it's 50% of the code or something like that.
So with regards to games specifically, so I guess to summarize that AI is getting good enough to do this now.
And it's improving rapidly every few weeks.
There's a new model which is even better programming.
So this is very much a thing that is happening.
So I think that what Microsoft is largely arguing for is the idea that an AI itself is basically going to generate the game, right, that you were playing.
So it's AI's directing AIs to make things.
And a whole bunch of just AI is basically doing it all.
And that's the thinking is, you know, they can go release this into the wild and then people are just playing these infinitely generated AI games.
Vibe coding is more of a human who is then directing AI.
right. So with vibe coding, like you as a human in the case that you were talking about are still directing
what the app or game is, right? With Zippers case, like he's deciding the design of the game. The AI isn't doing that.
He wants me to eat the cheeseburger. He wants you to eat the cheeseburger. And so this is where I think a lot of
AI development is going to go and why I'm generally optimistic about it. I think there's a lot of examples like,
I have people in my life, point crow and failboat. I love them. Horrible at programming. Just truly awful.
And both of them have started to really add cool, sophisticated stuff into their streams that use programming because AI helps them do it.
And so I think this case of like humans directing AIs to do their ideas, they are the creative director and the AI does the grunt work.
That's where it's largely going to work.
And if a guy comes up with a cool, weird mobile game that people are like, oh, this is dumb.
This shouldn't be making that much.
Well, that's what we thought about Flappy Bird, right?
Oh, I totally agree.
I mean, you don't get to decide what's worth it or not.
People just decided by playing it.
Whatever's fun, they'll play.
And this is, again, a huge conversation,
and we'll dive into it in the future.
But the core distinction being like fully AI generated stuff
where no human is involved versus you are a creative director
and AI is a tool just like Photoshop or like OBS or like playing a video game,
right?
And you are directing what is happening.
That I think is good and legitimate.
I definitely, I want to dive into this a little more and some of the questions around it.
in a future episode.
But that's the end of episode two of Lemonade Stan.
I think something we all liked about the last episode that we're hoping for is we got a ton
of thoughts from people in the comments about pretty much every topic that we discussed,
which I really,
really liked.
The plan in the future,
I think if you have anything to add to a topic that we're talking about,
if you have a correction about something that we're talking about,
these long-winded explanations or comments that people are giving are really,
really great and we want to make sure that we include good feedback into the show in a way in the
future. So I think we haven't quite figured out the exact way we want to segment it into the show yet,
but keep providing that because follow-ups and including your guys's like conversations in the show
somehow going forward is something that we all really want. I'm going to read every single comment
about Doug wanting to take your jobs. Wow. Yeah. Over the top of any.
You know, it's all going to be like, you want to take our jobs and give them to Elon Musk.
Yeah, no, the comment quality has been like really good.
I don't know how to like respond to all of them.
I've seen so many thoughtful comments.
That is stuff where we're like we are reading and then I think meaningfully want to actually incorporate into what we're doing in some way.
Unless you're commenting on Spotify, in which case, honestly, I didn't know that existed a week ago and I'm not really reading those very often.
You know, feel free to get involved there still.
Yeah.
Get involved.
Awesome.
Thank you for watching.
See you guys next week.
Wait, wait.
Here's the part where
Aitchuk finishes the lemon from last week.
No, not eating another lemon.
Cut!
