Lex Fridman Podcast - #422 – Mark Cuban: Shark Tank, DEI & Wokeism Debate, Elon Musk, Politics & Drugs
Episode Date: March 29, 2024Mark Cuban is a businessman, investor, star of TV series Shark Tank, long-time principal owner of Dallas Mavericks, and founder of Cost Plus Drugs. Please support this podcast by checking out our spon...sors: - Listening: https://listening.com/lex and use code LEX to get one month free - Cloaked: https://cloaked.com/lex and use code LexPod to get 25% off - Notion: https://notion.com/lex - Eight Sleep: https://eightsleep.com/lex to get special savings - Shopify: https://shopify.com/lex to get $1 per month trial EPISODE LINKS: Mark's X: https://twitter.com/mcuban Mark's Instagram: https://instagram.com/mcuban Cost Plus Drugs: https://costplusdrugs.com Shark Tank: https://abc.com/shows/shark-tank Dallas Mavericks: https://www.mavs.com PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (11:10) - Entrepreneurship (26:03) - Shark Tank (36:29) - How Mark made first billion (1:02:39) - Dallas Mavericks (1:08:05) - DEI debate (1:43:58) - Trump vs Biden (1:46:20) - Immigration (1:55:53) - Drugs and Big Pharma (2:11:53) - AI (2:16:05) - Advice for young people
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The following is a conversation with Mark Cuban, a multi-billionaire businessman,
an investor and star of the series Shark Tank, longtime principal
owner of the Dallas Mavericks, and is someone who is unafraid to get into
frequent battles on X, most recently over topics of DEI, wokeism, gender,
and identity politics with the likes of Elon Musk and Jordan Peterson.
And now a quick few second mention of each sponsor.
Check them out in the description.
It is in fact the best way to support this podcast.
We got listening for well, listening to things like research papers, cloaked for protecting
your personal information, notion for taking notes and collaborating on those notes with your team.
Eight Sleep for Naps and Shopify for shopping or creating shops on the
internets. Choose wisely my friends. Also if you want to work with our amazing
team where I was hiring or if you just want to get in touch with me go to
Lexfreedman.com slash contact. And now on to the full ad reads. Never any ads in
the middle. I try to make these interesting,
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please do check out our sponsors.
I enjoy their stuff.
Maybe you will too.
This episode is brought to you by listening.
An app, a website that allows you to listen
to academic papers, listen to a bunch of stuff.
I think you can listen to emails, to websites, all of that. I haven't tried that aspect of it. I should probably. To
listen to emails. I wonder how that would work. They have a Chrome extension, but I
don't think it's through the Chrome extension. Anyway, the way I use it and I
think the original use case, which I think is awesome, is listening to
research papers. And this includes super, super technical papers or more
narrative driven philosophical papers. Like for example, you can take the touring paper on the
touring test. Obviously, the paper title is not the touring test. I think it's called computing
machinery and intelligence. And of course, you can go to super technical papers, and I use it for that as well.
I often do the following.
I'll print out the paper,
because the haptic feedback of a sheet of paper
is really powerful for me.
So I'll take notes on that with a highlighter and a pen.
I will also take notes on a PDF,
and I will also listen to it over and over and over.
So for me, the process of reading an academic paper
is one that requires returning to it over and over and over again, unless me, the process of reading an academic paper is one that requires
returning to it over and over and over again, unless I'm doing a quick skim. So for skimming,
I can look at the PDF and quickly skim and then listen to certain parts that I find useful. So
sometimes related work is really powerful because it summarizes in a nice way where the field stands.
I'll listen to that. Sometimes the abstract is good to listen to. Sometimes the abstract introduction related work
jump into the conclusion. If there's a methods in the paper, you can listen to
that. Anyway, I will basically use the listening function while I'm walking
over to get some coffee or I'm gonna run and I'll listen to different parts of a
paper to get a sense of what that paper contains and the main idea and so on that can build on.
Or, as I said, to review a thing
I've already returned to many, many, many times.
And I have a large number of favorite papers
that I've returned to many times.
It's super easy to upload a paper.
They have really nice AI voices that pronounce stuff well.
And also just at the sentence paragraph level,
the kind of narration style they have is really, really nice.
And obviously as AI improves, they will keep improving.
So jump on board now and enjoy this whole process.
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Normally you would get a two week free trial,
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This episode is also brought to you by Cloaked.
As I mentioned last time,
it's a thing that I always thought and hoped would exist.
And now I know it exists and it is awesome.
It's a platform that lets you generate a new email and a new phone number every time you
sign up for a website so you can hide your actual email and your actual phone number
from the world.
I think of it as a kind of privacy layer that protects you from the wild, wild west of the internet where many, many services
and companies desperately want your data and the in, the contact, the way to contact you.
So Cloaked allows you to take the power back to give you some control of this relationship
to where your email remains a private email address.
But this aspect of it is just a kind of super awesome feature.
It's also a password manager and I highly recommend you use a password manager.
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the usual generation of a new password when you send up to a thing.
It also generates emails and phone numbers. And soon I read, which is interesting, they can generate
credit cards. Sometimes places require credit cards for for sort of quote-unquote
free trial. So if they can actually pull that off, which I don't know how they're
going to do, it's pretty awesome. And in general, I'm just a big supporter of
companies innovating how to maintain people's privacy in this internet age
where there's so much money to be made from people's data.
So it's an interesting sort of technological
and business challenge of how to protect the data.
Hats off to Cloaked for doing a great job.
Plus the interface, as as you mentioned is super nice
which is really important because the kind of sign up process to a new website
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slash Lex to get 14 days free or for a limited time use code LexPod when you
sign up to get 25% off an annual cloaked plan. This episode is also brought to you by Notion,
a note-taking app that I've been using forever,
but they have awesome team collaboration tools.
Man, it must be forever ago
that I first saw Notion recommended to me,
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And when I started using Notion,
it was the first time I really sort of deliberately
updated my note taking process to be more 21st century like,
sort of use technology for the first time.
So I'm really happy I did that.
Obviously now the new wave of large language models.
Notion is probably the best integration of large language models into the note-taking
process that I've seen.
It can do all kinds of stuff like summarize text, it can generate the first draft of text,
it can do bullet points, all that kind of stuff.
Now for the team collaboration part, you can ask it questions about the stuff it knows,
and it can look across all the documents, the notes, the wikis, the projects, and it
can answer questions based on everything it knows
across those documents.
And it can generate sort of summaries and reports
about those documents.
So I think it's an incredible team collaboration tool
in that regard.
You can try Notion AI for free
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This episode is also brought to you by Eight Sleep
and the beautiful, wonderful power of naps.
I'm now back in Austin.
I was traveling a bit and it's one of the things
I really look forward to when I come back home.
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You can control the
temperature of the bed on each side separately. A nice nap is truly heaven.
That could be in the worst mood and a nap just kind of helps that mood, whatever
that is, to dissipate. to just disappear into the ether.
Wherever my mind goes, the returns quickly refreshed, renewed,
and ready to take on the day once again.
I'm a huge supporter of NAP. I don't care.
I don't care what anybody says. NAPs are huge.
Actually, it's funny to mention that when I was at Google,
they have these NAP pods. Sure. was at Google, they have these nap pods.
I'm sure a lot of tech companies have nap pods.
I feel like Google invented the nap pod.
But I think a lot of people weren't sort of confident enough or were a little bit embarrassed
to use the nap pod.
I did too.
It felt kind of weird.
So I would just like put my head down on the desk and sleep.
I didn't really didn't care
But when I did use the nap pods they were pretty epic because it kind of keeps out the rest of the world
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This episode is also brought to you by Shopify,
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Even I, friends, can figure out how to do it
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I create a store, LexFreeman.com slash store,
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Now, that store is super minimalist,
and I'm a big fan of minimalism,
but you can get super fancy,
and it integrates with a lot of third-party apps.
I use it for on-demand printing of the shirts.
So it's another service that does the printing
and the shipping of the shirts,
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You could sort of outsource all of it.
But you can use Shopify to basically sell anything.
And it's cool to have this thing that enables the efficient, accessible way of creating
a node in the capitalist machine, in the capitalist network, the living, breathing network of
capitalism where the invisible hand of the market does its work. Yes, there
are downsides to capitalism, but there's a lot of upsides. Giving the power to the individual
creators and the makers, the builders, to build and sell their stuff. I love it. One
of the most beautiful things that humans can do is to create. and I will continue to celebrate their ability to create.
And I'm glad Shopify is making it easier for them to make
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Sign up for a $1 per month trial period at Shopify.com slash Lex.
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And now, dear friends, here's Mark Cuban. You've started many businesses, invested in many businesses, heard a lot of pitches privately
and on Shark Tank.
So you're the perfect person to ask, what makes a great entrepreneur?
Somebody who's curious, they want to keep on learning because business is ever changing.
It's never static. Somebody who's agile because as you learn new things and the environment around you changes,
you have to be able to adapt and make the changes. And somebody who can sell because no business has ever survived without sales.
And as an entrepreneur who's creating a company,
whatever your product or service is,
if that's not the most important thing
and you're just dying and excited to tell people about it,
then you're not gonna succeed.
But it's also a skill thing.
How do you sell?
What do you mean by selling?
Selling's just helping.
I've always looked at it about putting myself
in the shoes of another person and asking a simple question.
Can I help this person?
Can my product help them?
From the time I was 12 years old,
selling garbage bags door to door
and just asking a simple question.
Do you use garbage bags?
Do you need garbage bags?
Well, let me save you some time.
I'll bring them to your house and drop them off to streaming.
Why do we need streaming when we have TV and radio?
Well, you can't get access to your TV and radio everywhere you go.
So we kind of break down geographic and physical barriers and, you know, cost plus drugs.
You know, what's the product that we actually sell?
We sell trust.
In a simplistic approach, we buy drugs and sell drugs, but we add transparency to it.
And bringing transparency to an industry is a differentiation and it helps people.
Trust in an industry that's highly lacking in trust.
Exactly.
Okay.
So what's the trick to selling garbage bags?
Let's go back there.
12 years old, I mean, is it just your natural charisma?
I guess a good question to ask, are you born with it or can you develop it?
Oh, you can definitely develop it.
Yeah.
I mean, because selling garbage bags door to door was easy, right?
It was like, 12 year old Mark going,
hi, my name is Mark.
Do you use garbage bags?
You know what the answer is going to be, right?
Can I just drop them off for you once a week,
whenever you need them, you just call
and I'll bring them down?
Sure.
So that was easy.
But I'm sure you've been rejected.
Oh yeah, of course.
Not everybody says yes.
What was your percentage?
I don't remember, but it's pretty close to 100%.
Oh okay, so that's why you don't remember.
Yeah, right, because who's gonna say no
to a 12 year old kid who's gonna save time and money?
But you know, typically my career
where I've started companies,
it's to do something that other people aren't doing.
Whether it was connecting PCs into local area networks
and at MicroSolutions and you know And the salesmanship was walking into a company
and just saying, look, talk to me
and I can help you improve your productivity
and your profitability.
Is that important to you?
And the answer is obviously always yes.
And then the question is, can I do the job
and can I do it cost effectively?
And so you didn't have to be a born salesperson
to be able to ask those questions,
but you have to be able to be willing to put in the time
to learn that business.
And that's the hardest part.
I'm sure there's a skill thing to it too
in like how you solve the puzzle of communicating
with the person and convincing them.
Yeah, I mean, there's skill from the perspective
that I read like a maniac.
Then like now you can give me an example
of any type of business and it'll take me two seconds
to figure out how they make money
and how I can make them more productive.
And I think that's probably my biggest skill,
being able to just drill down to what the actual need is,
if any, and then from there being able to say,
well, if this is what this company does
and this is what their goal is,
how can I introduce something new that they haven't seen before? And is that a business
that I can create and make money from?
So figure out how this kind of business makes money in the present and then figure out is
there a way to make more money in the future by introducing a totally new kind of thing?
Correct.
And you can just do that with anything?
Pretty much, yeah.
And you think you're born with that?
No, I worked at it because, you know, going back to what I said earlier about curiosity,
you have to be insanely curious because the world is always changing.
My dad used to say, we don't live in the world we were born into, you know, which is absolutely
true.
If you're not a voracious consumer of information, then you're not going to be able to keep up
and no matter what your sales skills or ability are, they're going to be useless.
Would you learn about life from your dad?
You mentioned your dad.
My dad did upholstery on cars, you know, got up, went to work every morning at
seven o'clock, came back five or six, seven o'clock exhausted.
And I learned to be nice.
I learned to be caring.
I learned to be nice, I learned to be caring, I learned to be accepting.
Just qualities that I think he really tried to pass on to myself and my two younger brothers
were just be a good human. He didn't have business experience, so as I got into business,
he would just say, sorry, Mark, I can't help you. I don't understand what you're doing.
Neither one of my parents had gone to college.
You've got to figure it out for yourself.
But he was also very insistent that,
he worked at a company called Regency Products
where they did upholstery on cars.
And he would bring me there to sweep the floors.
Not because he wanted me to learn that business,
because he wanted me to learn how backbreaking that work was.
I mean, he lost an eye in an accident at work,
a staple broke. And the only thing he wanted
from my brothers and I was for us to never have
to work like that, to go to college, to figure it out.
You said to be nice.
That said, you also said that you,
when you were first starting a business,
you were a bit more of an asshole
than you wish you would have been.
Absolutely, yeah, yeah.
Because I was more of a yeller.
I was, you know, I didn't have-
No, really?
Yeah.
Yeah, what you see on the sidelines, you know,
with me at a Mavs game, maybe a little bit,
but I also didn't have any patience for somebody
I thought wasn't using my kind of common sense, right?
Because I was always on the go, go, go, go, go,
particularly when I was younger,
just trying to be successful,
trying to get to the point where I had independence.
And I would tell this to people, either you're speeding up and getting on the train or
we'll stop and drop you off at the next station, but let's go where you go.
Did you have trouble with the hire fast, fire fast part of running a business?
Yeah, always, because I hated firing people because it meant,
one, it was a mission of a mistake
in the hiring, and two, the salesperson in me
always wanted to come out ahead,
and I was always horrible at firing.
But I always partnered with people
who had no problem with it.
So I always delegated that.
Well, that's the tricky thing.
When you're working with somebody
and they're not quite there,
and you have to decide,
are they going to step up and grow into the person
that's the right or they're not?
And in that gray area is probably where you have to fire.
It was hard, yeah, for sure,
because it's obviously a failure somewhere in the process.
What did we do wrong?
And when I would interview people for jobs, I think 99% of the people I've ever
interviewed, I've wanted to hire because in my mind it was like, okay, I can figure out how to
make this person work, right? And then they wouldn't. And then people at the company would be
like, Mark, you suck at this. And so I always delegated the hiring.
Yeah. I mean, I'm the same. I see the potential in people. I see the beauty in people,
and which is a great way to live life,
but when you're running a company, it's a different thing.
It's different, and you gotta know what you're good at
and what you're bad at, right?
I was good at, you know, I was a ready-fire aim guy,
and I always partnered with people who were very anal
and perfectionists, because where I could just go,
go, go, go, go, go, they would keep me inside the baselines.
They would do the due diligence, I suppose. Yeah, or just, go, go, go, go, go, they would keep me inside the baselines. They would do the due diligence, I suppose.
Yeah, or just, yeah, the detail work,
the dot the I's and the cross the T's.
What does it take to take that first leap
into starting a business?
That's the hardest part.
It really depends on your personal circumstances.
Like, I got fired.
I mean, I was sleeping on the floor,
six guys in a three-bedroom apartment,
so I couldn't go any lower.
So there was no downside. Yeah,
there was no downside for me starting a business. And it was just like, you know, I was 25 when we
started Micro Solutions and, you know, I'd just gotten fired and it was like, look, I'm a lousy
employee. I'm going to just start going to some of my prospects that I had in my job and ask them
to front the money that I needed to at my job and ask them to front
the money that I needed to install some software and found this company, Architectural Lighting,
who put up $500 for me.
That allowed me to buy software and have 50% margins.
That's how I started my company.
By way of advice, would you say?
It's a terrifying thing.
You've got to be in a position where you're confident.
I get emails and approached by people
all the time, you know, what kind of business
should I start that tells me you're not ready
to start a business, right?
Either you're prepared and you know it or you don't.
You know, in the United States with the American Dream,
everybody kind of always looks at themselves
and say, okay, you know, I have this idea, right?
And then you go through this process of saying, okay, you know,
you talk to your friends or family, what do you think?
And then almost always, it's always a great idea, right?
Then you go on Google and you say, Oh my God, no one else is doing it
without thinking, you know, 10 companies had gone out of business trying the
same thing, but okay, it's on Google.
And then people stop.
Right.
Because that next step means, okay, I have to change what I'm doing in my life. And
that's not easy for 99% of the people. Some people look at that as an opportunity and get excited
about it. Some people get terrified because it's, okay, maybe I'm comfortable, maybe I have
responsibilities. And so whatever your circumstances are, if you want to take that next step, you have
to be able to deal with the consequences of changing your circumstances.
And that's the first thing.
You know, do you save money?
You know, so you have, you know, if you have a job, do you have a mortgage?
Do you have a family?
You've got to save money.
You can't just walk, you know?
I mean, they've got to eat and they've got to have shelter.
But on the other side of the coin, if you've got nothing, it's the perfect time to start
a business. Yeah. Desperation is a good catalyst for starting a business. But in many cases,
the decision, as you're talking about, you're going to have to make is to leave a job
that's providing some degree of comfort already. So I suppose when you're sleeping on the floor
and there are six guys, it's a little bit easier. It's really easy, right? Especially when you get
fired and you don't have a job, you know, and you're looking at bartending at night to try to pay the bills.
And so, um, it wasn't hard for me, but to your point, it really comes down to
preparation, you know, if it's important enough to you, you'll save the money.
You'll give up, you know, whatever it is you need to give up to put the money
aside, um, if you have obligations, um, you'll put in the work to learn as much as you
can about that industry so that when you start your business, you're prepared. You can always,
at night, on weekends, whenever you find time, lunch, start making the calls to find out if
people will write you a check or transfer you the money to buy whatever it is you're selling.
And by doing those things, you can put yourself in a position to succeed.
It's where people just think, okay, Geronimo, I'm leaving off the edge of a cliff and I'm
starting a business.
That's tough.
But sometimes that's like the way you do it though.
There's always examples of any situation or scenario, right?
Anecdotal evidence for everything.
Yeah, but if you're going into a new business, you're going to have competition unless you're
really, really, really, really, really lucky.
And that competition is not gonna just say,
okay, let Lex or Mark just kick our ass.
And so you've gotta be prepared
to how you're gonna deal with that competition.
What do you think that is about America
that has so many people who have that dream
and act on that dream of starting a business?
You know, I think we've just got a culture of consumption and more, you know, and to
get more, you've got to, you know, creating a business gives you the greatest potential
upside and the greatest leverage on your time, but it also creates the most risk.
So that capitalist machine,
there's a lot of elements by contrast,
the respect for the law,
like an entrepreneur can trust that if they pull it off,
the law will protect them, there won't be a government.
Hopefully that's still the case, yeah.
Well, yeah, there's always a...
Yeah, us versus other countries.
Right, right, so us versus other countries,
like Joe Biden, of all people said to me,
it was at an entrepreneurship conference that when he was vice president, he had put together.
And we had gone up there from a bunch of us from Shark Tank to talk to young entrepreneurs from
around the world. And he said to me, Mark, you know, the one thing that separates, I've been to
every country around the world, and the one thing that separates us is entrepreneurship. We're the
most entrepreneurial country in the world, and there's no separates us is entrepreneurship. We're the most
entrepreneurial country in the world and there's no one else who's even close. When you look at
the origin of the biggest companies in the world, for the most part, there's an American origin
story somewhere behind there. I think that just gets perpetuated on itself. We see those Horatio Alger stories.
We see examples of the Jeff Bezos of the world,
the Steve Jobs of the world,
and those are the types of people we want to copy.
Yeah, we wanna be really careful
and try to really figure out what that is
because we don't wanna lose that.
For sure.
We wanna protect the whatever, you know,
and that's a lot of the discussions
about what's the right way to do government,
big government, small government,
what's the right policies, but also culture,
like who we celebrate.
One of the things that troubles me
is that we don't enough celebrate
the entrepreneurs that take risks
and the entrepreneurs that succeed.
It seems like success, especially when it comes to wealth,
is immediately matched with distrust and criticism
and all that kind of stuff.
Yeah, it's changing for sure because,
you can go back just 12 years, right?
Traditional media dominated, let's just say, through 2012.
That was the peak of linear television.
Newspapers weren't as strong,
but they still had some breadth and depth to them.
And then social media comes along and everybody gets to play in their own sandbox Newspapers weren't as strong, but they still had some breadth and depth to them.
Then social media comes along and everybody gets to play in their own sandbox and share
opinions with people who think just like them.
It also gives them the opportunity to amplify those feelings.
I think that's where celebrating entrepreneurs really started to subside some.
There were always people who were progressive that were like,
billionaires are bad or millionaires are bad depending on the time period,
but you didn't really see it on an ongoing basis, right?
It wasn't going to be on the evening news.
It wasn't going to be in the front page of the newspaper.
It was going to be, if you read a book and someone talked about it,
or you read a magazine and there was an article talking about this progressive movement or that progressive movement,
whatever it may be, or political parties.
But now all of that is front and center on social media.
Yeah, and we're trying to figure out how we deal with the mobs of people and the virality
of it all.
I think we'll find our footing
and start celebrating greatness again.
Well, I mean, that's the whole reason I do Shark Tank.
That's true, that show celebrates the entrepreneur.
It's the only place where every single minute
of every single episode, we celebrate the American dream.
And the reason I do it is we tell the entire country
and it's shown around the world even.
We're amazing advertising for the American dream.
And I don't even know how many countries, but every time somebody walks
onto that carpet from Dubuque, Iowa or Ketchum, Idaho, you know, that sends
a message to every kid who's watching seven, eight, nine, 10, 12 year old kid
that if they can do it from Ketchum, Idaho, you can do it.
If they can have this idea and get a deal or even present to the sharks and have all of America see it. You can do it from Ketcham, Idaho, you can do it. If they can have this idea and get a deal or even present to the sharks and have
all of America see it, you can do it.
And that, I mean, I'm proud of that.
Um, 15 years of that is just, it's just been insane.
You know, now kids walk up to me and go, yeah, I started watching you when I was
five or 10 and I started a business cause I learned about it from Shark Tank.
And so, you know, I think, you know, we're being,
it celebrates it and we convey it
and I don't think it's going away,
but there are different battles
we have to fight to support it.
Yeah, I love even when the business idea
is obviously horrible.
Just the guts to step up.
To be there.
To believe in yourself, to really reach.
I mean, that's what matters.
Because some of the best business ideas are probably,
maybe even you and Shark Tank will laugh at.
Oh, for sure.
You know, without question, the good ones,
we're not gonna recognize every good one,
and then sometimes we'll just motivate people
to work even harder to get it done
because of what we say to them.
And that's fine too.
There's been great success stories that we said no to.
What stands out as like a memorable business
on you've been pitched on Shark Tank?
What's the best one that stands out?
There's no best one, right?
They're all different.
They're all best in their own way, I guess.
The stupid ones and we haven't had any
world changing or shattering ones, right?
Because those aren't going to apply to Shark Tank.
They don't need us, right?
So we typically get businesses that need some help at some level or another.
But there's ones I've passed that I wish like Spikeball.
Do you know what Spikeball is?
So it's this rebounding net that you can put on the beach
and you have these yellow balls and you play a game of,
it's just a competitive game, but they're killing it.
So if you go to beaches in New York or LA, you'll see kids playing it all the time.
And it was a fun game that I wish I had done a deal with.
There's been others.
And you passed.
And I passed.
They were getting some traction and they wanted to create leagues, spikeball leagues.
And they wanted me to be the commissioner.
And I don't want to be a commissioner. And I don't wanna be a commissioner
of a new spike ball league.
So you have to kind of have this gut feeling
of will this scale, will this click with people?
Of course, yeah, can it be protected?
Is it differentiated?
Is it something that makes me think,
why didn't I think of that?
Or is it just a good solid business
that's gonna pay a return to the founder and may
not be enough of a business to return to an investor?
Yeah.
And I guess the question you're trying to see, will this scale, this promise, will the
promise materialize into a big thing?
Well, see, I don't even care if it's going to be a big thing, right? Because it's all relative to the entrepreneur.
We had a 19-year-old from Pittsburgh, Laney,
who came on with this simple sugar scrub,
and there was nothing outrageously special about it.
I didn't see it becoming a $100 million business.
I thought it could become a $2, $3, $5 million business
that paid the bills for her, and that was good enough.
And, you know, six months after the show aired,
she called me up, she goes,
Mark, I've got a million dollars in the bank.
What am I gonna do?
I'm like, enjoy it, put aside money for your taxes
and go back to work.
And so it doesn't have to be a huge business.
It's just gotta be one that makes the entrepreneur happy.
But then there's the valuation piece.
I mean, do a lot of the entrepreneurs overvalue business?
Of course.
Yeah, I mean, that's the nature of it, right?
I mean, and that's really where the biggest conflicts
in Shark Tank happen, that's in the valuation.
They think this is the best business ever.
We had one lady, couple that came on,
and they had this scraper for cat's tongues, right?
Nice.
Bizarre.
One of the most bizarre pitch ever.
I love it.
You know, and they had this insane valuation and it was on because it was corny and fun
TV not because it was a good business.
Oh really?
Okay.
You didn't see the potential.
None.
There's a lot of cats in the world, Mark.
Yes there are.
They'll go do very well without me.
So how do you determine the value of a business,
whether it's on Shark Tank or just in general?
It's actually really easy, right?
So if you take, just to use an example,
a business that's valued at $1 million,
and I want to buy 10% of that company for $100,000,
then in order for me to get my money back, they've got to be
able to generate $100,000 in after-tax cash flow that they're able to distribute. Can they do it
or can they not? And if it's a $2 million valuation, whatever the valuation is, that's how much cash,
after-tax cash they have to generate to return that money to investors. Or the other option is,
do I see this as business potentially having an exit? Do they have some unique technology? Or do
they have something specific about them that some other company would want to acquire? Then the
cash flow isn't as important, but isn't going to guide the valuation. And how do you know if a company's going to be acquired?
So it's the technology, like the patents,
but also the team?
Yeah, it could be any of the above, right?
It could be a super products company
that I think is going to take off.
And how do you know if they can generate the money?
What's the, you made it sound easy, you know?
Yeah, I mean, can the person sell?
You know? And if not them, can I do it?
Or someone on my team do it for them?
So you're looking at the person.
Yeah, for sure, yeah.
That's where Barbara Corker is the best.
She can look at a person and hear them talk for 20 minutes
and know, can that person do the job and do the work?
Can you tell if they're full of shit or not?
So one of the things with entrepreneurs,
they're kind of, like we said, overvaluing,
so they're maybe overselling themselves, but also they might be full of shit in terms of
their understanding of the market or exaggerating what they're thinking, do all that kind of
stuff. Can you see through that?
Yeah, for sure. Just by asking questions. So if they are delusional at some level or
misleading at another level, I'm going to,
I'm going to call them on it. You know,
so you get people trying to sell supplements that come on there and it's a
cure for cancer or whatever it may be. Or there's this latest fad that, you know,
increases your core strength without doing any exercises, you know,
the shit like that. I'm just going to bounce. I'm going to pound on them.
Right.
So you still love that. I still love the trying to, you know, shit like that, I'm just gonna bounce, I'm gonna pound on them, right? See, I still love that. I still love the trying, just trying.
You know, give them credit, right?
Because they know all of America's gonna see it
and they deluded themselves to believe
this story so strongly.
I mean, there's a delusional aspect
to entrepreneurship, right?
Like you just.
I see, that's a great question.
Do you have to be ambitious and set aside reality at some level
to think that you can create a company that could be worth $10,
$100, a billion dollars?
Yeah, at some level, because you don't know.
It's all uncertainty.
But I think if you're delusional, that works against you.
Because everything's grounded in reality.
You've got to execute.
You've got to produce. you've got to produce.
You can have a vision, right?
And you can say, this is where I wanna get to,
and that's my mission, or this is my driving principle,
but you still gotta execute on the business plan,
and that's where most people fail.
Yeah, you have to be kind of two-brained, I guess.
You have to be able to dip into reality
when you're thinking about the specifics of the product,
how to design things, the first principles, the basics of how to build the product, how to design things, how to,
the first principles, the basics of how to build the thing,
how much it's gonna cost, all of that.
Yeah, I mean, because if you can't do the basics,
you're not gonna be able to do the bigger things.
And at the same time, you've gotta be,
one of the things that entrepreneurs do
that I always try to remind any of that I work with on
is we all tend to lie to ourselves.
Our product is bigger, faster, cheaper, this or that,
as if that is a finite
situation that's never going to change. There's always somebody, I call them leapfrog businesses.
Whoever's competing against you, if you do A, B, or C, they're going to try to do C, D, and E,
and you better be prepared for that to come because otherwise they're out of business too.
You're never in a vacuum.
You're always competing against
sometimes an unlimited number of entrepreneurs
that you don't even know exist
who are trying to kick your ass.
And the tricky part of all this too
is you might need to frequently pivot,
especially in the beginning.
Hopefully not.
So you think like in the beginning,
the product you have should be the thing that carries you a long time.
Yeah, because I mean that's your riskiest point in time, right?
And so if you've done your homework, which includes going out there and testing product market fit,
you should have confidence that you're going to be able to sell it.
Now, if you didn't do your homework and you go out there and you sell whatever it is, then and you've raised money or whatever, just to pivot,
you've already shown that you haven't been able to read the market. And so it's
not that pivots can't work and always don't work, they can, but more often than
not they don't. You pivot for a reason, that's because you made a huge mistake.
Well, I also mean like the micro-pivots,
which is like iterative development of a thing.
Oh yeah, oh yeah, that's not, yeah, just iterations, yeah.
Yeah.
You know, entrepreneurship being, having any business
is just continuous iteration, continuous.
Your product, your sales pitch, your advertising,
you know, introducing new technology,
how do you use AI or not use AI, where do you use it,
what person is the right person. There's just a million touch points
that you're always reevaluating in real time that you have to be
agile and adapt and change. But especially in software, it feels like
business model can evolve really quickly too. How are you gonna make money on this?
Yeah, with software for sure because you know anything digital because it can change in
a millisecond.
Speaking of which, how did you make your first billion?
So my partner Todd Wagner and I would get together for lunches and we were at California
Pizza Kitchen in Preston Hollow in Dallas and he was talking about how we could use this new thing
called the internet, this is late 94, early 95,
to be able to listen to Indiana University basketball games.
Because that's where we went to school.
And he was like, look, when we would listen to games,
we would have somebody in Bloomington, Indiana
have a speaker phone next to a radio, and then we would have a speakerphone in Dallas and six pack or 12
pack of beer, and we sit around listening to the game because there was no other way
to listen to it.
So, I was like, okay, my first company, Micro Solutions, I'd written software, done network
integration, and so I was comfortable digging into it.
And so I was like, okay, let's give it a try. So we started this company called
AudioNet and effectively became the first streaming content company on the internet.
We were like, okay, we're not sure how we're going to make this work, but we were able to make it
work. We started going to radio stations and TV stations and music labels and everything and
going to radio stations and TV stations and music labels and everything and evolved audio.com, which was only audio at the beginning, to broadcast.com in 1998, which was audio and
video and became the largest multimedia site on the internet, took it public in July of 1998.
It had the largest first day jump in the history of the stock market at the time.
And then a year later, we sold it to Yahoo
for $5.7 billion in Yahoo stock.
And I owned right around 30% of the company, give or take.
And so after taxes, that's what got me there.
Well, there's a lot of questions there.
So the technical challenge of that,
you're making it sound easy, but you wrote code, but still in the
early days of the internet, how do you figure out how to create this kind of product of
just audio at first and video at first?
A lot of iterations, right? Like you talked about. We started in the second bedroom of
my house, set up a server. I got an ISDN line, which was 128K line, and set up downloaded Netscape server
and then started using different file formats
that were progressive loading
and allowing people to connect to the server
and do a progressive download
so that the audio, you can listen to the audio,
while it was downloading onto your PC.
Yeah, was it super choppy?
So you were trying to figure out how to do it.
Oh yeah, for sure, for sure.
It would buffer, it wasn't good, but it was a start.
But it was good enough because it's the first kind of.
Yeah, because there was no other competition, right?
There was nobody else doing it.
And so it was like, okay, I can get access
to this, this, or this.
And then there were some third party software companies,
Zing and Progressive Networks and others
that took it a little bit further.
So we partnered with them and I started going to local radio stations where literally we
would set up a server right next to it.
I had a $49 radio, the highest FM radio that I could find, and we take the output of the
audio signal from the radio with these two analog cables,
plug it into the server, encode it,
and make it available from audionet.com.
Then I would go on UUNet bulletin boards,
I would go on CompuServe, I would go on Prodigy,
I would go on AOL, I'd go wherever I could find bodies.
And I'd say, okay, we've got this radio station,
KLIF in Dallas, it's got Dallas sports
and Dallas news and politics.
And if you're in an office or you're outside of Dallas,
connect to audio net.com
and now you can listen to these things on demand.
And that's how we started.
And it started with one radio station
and then it was five, then it was 10,
then it was video content,
then the laws were different
then so we could literally go out and buy CDs
and host them and just let people listen to whatever music
and we went from 10 users a day to 100 to 1,000
to hundreds of thousands to a million
over those next four years.
How did you find the users?
Is it word of mouth?
Word of mouth.
Just word of mouth.
Didn't spend a penny on advertising.
So the thing you were focusing on
is getting the radio stations and all that.
Well radio and TV, anything, any content at all.
To pick up the phone, how'd you?
I would, wherever I could,
like everything that was public domain,
I'd go out and buy a video or a cassette,
whatever it was, you know.
And this was before the DMs,
the Digital Minimum Copyright Act of 90,
whenever it kicked in.
So literally anything that was audio, we would put online so people could listen to it.
And if you think about somebody at work, they didn't have a radio most likely.
And if you did, you couldn't get reception.
Definitely didn't have a TV, but you had a PC and you had bandwidth available to you.
And the companies weren't up on firewalls or anything at that point in time. So our in-office listening during the day just exploded because whoever's sitting next to you,
what are you listening to? And that was the start of it. And then in early 98, we started adding
video and just other things and we had ended up with thousands of servers. There was no cloud
back then and just pulling together all those pieces to make it work.
But where we really made our money
was by taking that network that we had built
and then going to corporations and saying, look,
it's 1996, 97, 98.
And to communicate with your worldwide employees, what they
would do is they would go to an auditorium
that had a satellite uplink,
and then they would have people go to like theaters
or ballrooms and hotels that had satellite downlinks,
and then would broadcast the product introductions, whatever.
And so we said to them,
look, you're paying millions of dollars
to reach all your employees when you can do it.
Pay us a half a million employees when you can do it.
Pay us a half a million dollars and we'll do it just on their PCs at work.
So we did, you know, when Intel announced the P90 PC, we, you know, charged them $2
million or whatever to do that.
When Motorola announced a new phone or a new product, we would charge them.
And so we used the consumer side to do a proof of concept for the network.
And then we would take that knowledge and go to corporations and that's how we made
our revenue.
And there's some selling there with the corporations.
Yeah, a lot of selling there, but we were saving them so much money and they were technology
companies.
They wanted to be perceived as being leading edge.
And so it was win-win.
How much technical savvy was required?
You said a bunch of servers.
Like at which point do you get more engineers? How much technical savvy was required? You said a bunch of servers.
Like at which point do you get more engineers?
How much did you understand could do yourself?
And then also, once you can't do all yourself,
how much technical savvy is required to understand
enough to hire the right people
to keep building this innovation?
I did all the technology and then we hired engineer
after engineer after engineer to implement it.
And so, yeah. Wow, okay, from putting together a multicast network to software to just all these different things.
Was this like a scary thing?
It's terrifying, right?
Because as we were growing, trying to keep up the scale and literally we're buying off the shelf PCs
and then, you know, server cards as the technology advanced and hard drives and
things would fail and we would have to, you know,
we didn't have machine learning back then to do an analysis of,
you know, how to distribute server resources.
So, you know, like there was a time when Bill Clinton and all
the Monica Lewinsky stuff happened,
they released the audio of their interviews of him
or something like that, right?
And we literally, I knew at that point in time
when that was released, everybody at work
was gonna wanna listen to it, right?
So we had to take down servers
that were doing Chicago Cubs baseball, right?
Just make all these on the fly decisions
because we didn't have the tools to analyze
or be predictive, but yeah,
it was all technology driven and marketing.
The acquisition by Yahoo, can you tell the story of that?
But also in the broader context of this internet bubble,
this is a fascinating part of human history.
So on the acquisition side,
we were the largest media site on the internet
and it wasn't close.
There was nobody close.
We were YouTube and relatively speaking,
we would be 10X YouTube relative to the competition
because there was nobody there.
And so it became obvious to Yahoo, AOL and others
that they needed a multimedia component.
And we had the infrastructure, sales, all that stuff.
And so Yahoo, when we went public in 98,
or right before I think it was, they
made an investment of like $2 million, which gave us
a connection to them.
And then after we went public, they
decided they needed to have multimedia.
And so in April of 99, we made a deal and then
July of 2000 when it closed.
And can you explain to me the trickiness of what you did after that?
Oh, the collar?
Yeah.
Okay. So when we sold to Yahoo, we sold for $5.7 billion in stock, not cash.
And so I looked at, you know,
after MicroSolutions, when I sold that,
I took that money and initially I told my broker
I wanted to invest like a 60-year-old man
because I wanted to protect it.
But then he started asking me all kinds of questions
about all these technologies that I understood,
like networks I had installed.
We had become one of the top 20, let's say,
systems integrators in the country.
At one point in time,
we're the largest IBM token ring installer in the country.
It was crazy, right?
Banyan, then Blast from the Past.
I mean, so anyway, so these Wall Street bankers
or analysts rather, that were the big analysts of the time
would call me up because they would ask my broker,
what does he know about this product?
And I knew them all what was working and not working, right?
And so the ones that work, you know, I say that's working,
I'd see the stock, they say something,
the stock would go up 20 bucks, right?
So I'm like, well, and my broker's like, you need to, you know, this better than they do, you need to invest.
So I started buying and selling stocks and this was in 1990. And we're just killing it. I was
making 80, 90, a hundred percent a year over those next four years to the point where guy came in and
asked to use my trading history to start a hedge fund, which we did and I sold within nine months.
It was great, right?
But the point being as it goes forward,
so when we sold to Yahoo,
I already had a lot of experience trading stocks
and I had seen different bubbles come and go.
The bubble for PC manufacturers,
a bubble for networking manufacturers.
They went up, up, up, up, up,
and then they came straight down after the hype,
or somebody just leapfrogged.
And so when we sold to Yahoo,
I was like, I've got to be next to my name.
That's all I need or all I want.
I don't want to be greedy.
And I'd seen this story before
where stocks get really frothy and go straight down.
And I knew that because all of what I had was in stock,
I needed to find a way to collar it and protect it.
So understanding stocks and trading and options
and all that, my broker and I, we went and shorted an index
that had Yahoo in it.
And so the law at the time was you couldn't short
any indexes that had more than 5% of that stock in it,
right, of any one of the Yahoo stock.
I took pretty much $20-some million, everything I had at the time, and I shorted the index.
This is fascinating, by the way, because it's based on your estimation that this is a bubble.
Or just mind not to be greedy. Sure. So the foundation of this kind of thing is
you don't want to be greedy. Yeah. I mean, how much money do I need? Right? Where other people were saying,
oh, I think you can go up higher, higher, higher. I went on CNBC and I told them what I had done
and they were like, and Yahoo stock had gone up significantly from the time I had collared.
And one of the guys, Joe Kernan was on there, don't you feel stupid now that Yahoo stock has gone up
you know, X percent more?
I'm like, yeah, I feel real stupid sitting on my jet.
But so you, I mean, there is some fundamental way
in which bubbles are based on this greed.
Oh, for sure, for sure.
Yeah, and I'd seen it before, right?
Like I just said.
And so what I did was we put together a collar
where I sold calls and bought puts. And as it turned out, when the market just cratered, I was protected. And over the next
two, three years, whatever it was, it converted to cash, paid my taxes, et cetera, but it protected
me. And as it turns out, it was called one of the top 10 trades of all time. And what was even more interesting out of that period, my broker at that time was at
Goldman Sachs and I had asked him to see if there was a way to trade the VIX, the volatility
index.
And there wasn't.
And so one of the people that Goldman that we were working with to try to create this
actually left Goldman and created indexes that allowed you to trade the VIX.
Well, it's not trivial to understand that it's a bubble.
I mean, you're kind of lessening your insight into all of this by saying you just didn't
want to be greedy, but you still have to see that it's a bubble.
Yeah.
I mean, yeah, obviously if I thought it was going to keep on going up and there was intrinsic
value there, I would have stayed in it. But it wasn't so much Yahoo. It was just the entire industry. You would, back then,
you know,
like we're looking at the magic seven or whatever it is stocks now and people
were asking, is it in a bubble?
And when I would get into cabs and people just start talking about internet
stocks,
there were people creating companies with just a website and going public. That's a bubble, right? Where there's no intrinsic value at all and
people aren't even trying to make operating cap profits. They're just trying to leverage
the frothiness of the stock market. That's a bubble. You don't see that right now. There's
not companies, you don't see any IPOs right now for that matter. So, I don't think we're
in a bubble now, but back then, yes, I thought we we were in a bubble but that wasn't really the motivating factor.
Do you think it's possible we're in a bit of an AI bubble right now? No because
we're not seeing funky AI companies just go public. If all of a sudden we see a
rush of companies who are skins on other people's models or or just creating
models to create models that are going public then
yeah that's probably the start of a bubble. But that said my my 14 year old
it was bragging about buying Nvidia you know with me and in his
Robin Hood account he tells me the order I placed it and he was like oh yeah it's
going up up up you know and I'm like yeah we're not quite there yet but that's
you know that's one thing to pay attention to. Yeah, we're flirting with it.
Yeah.
You said that becoming a billionaire requires luck.
Yeah.
Can you explain?
Yeah, I mean, there's no business plan
where you can just start it and say,
yeah, I'm definitely going to be a billionaire.
You can, if I had to start all over,
could I start a company that made me a millionaire?
Yeah, because I know how to sell and I know technology
and I've learned enough over the years to do that.
Could I make 10 million?
Probably 100 million, I hope so.
But a billion, just something good has got to happen.
Timing.
Timing, internet stock market was going nuts
right when we started.
And that certainly, I couldn't predict or control.
It's like AI right now.
AI has been around a long, long, long, long time.
And the Nvidia processors, your GPUs rather,
you couldn't predict that now's the time that they were going to be
get to that cost effectiveness where, you know, you could do,
you could create models and train them.
And although it's expensive, it's still doable.
We had ASICs for custom applications
and we had CPUs that were leading the way,
but GPUs were more for gaming and then crypto mining.
And then all of a sudden,
they were the foundation for AI models.
So I think luck being essential to becoming a billionaire,
is a beautiful way to see life in general.
First of all, I personally think that everything good
that's ever happened to me is because of luck.
I think that's just a good way of being.
It's like you're grateful.
That said, there's some examples of people that you're like,
they seem to have done a lot of,
they seem to have gotten lucky a lot.
You know, we mentioned Jeff Bezos.
It seems like he did a lot of really interesting,
powerful decisions for many years with Amazon
to make it successful.
But he was really able to raise money, right?
A lot of money and people were really dismissive of him
because they weren't making because they weren't profitable
and we were in an environment where it was possible
to raise all that money.
It was possible to raise that money.
I mean, what about somebody you get sometimes feisty with
on the internet, Elon, but we couldn't even look at Zuck
and Bill Gates and Warren Buffett.
Look, Zuck was just trying to get laid, right?
And it took off and you wrote some good stuff.
Aren't we all?
It's that level, right?
The foundation of human civilization.
But yeah, so more power to them, right?
You can't take anything away from them.
But yeah, Snapchat, same thing, took off.
Apps didn't take off in 2007 when the iPhone came out.
Apps took off in 2011, 2012.
And if you were there with the right app at the right time,
and even Facebook,
you know, in 2004, the bubble had burst and, you know, the price for computers had fallen
enough in kids in school, all needed computers or laptops. If he had tried to do something
like that, you know, five years earlier, I mean, he was too young, but, you know, five
years earlier or five years later, you know, or Friendster might have been the ultimate, or MySpace.
Friendster, I remember Friendster.
Or MySpace, I had a MySpace account that was before Facebook.
Yeah, the timing's important,
but there's like the details of how the product is built,
the fundamentals of the product, like what.
Well, so, but that's what gets you,
when the opportunity is there, right?
That's what allows you to take advantage of that opportunity
and the kismet of it all.
You've gotta be, because it wasn't like any of the people
I mentioned, there weren't others trying the same thing.
You had to be able to see it, you had to be able to
visualize and put together a plan of some sort,
or at least have a path, and then you had to execute on it
and do all those things at the same time
and have the money available to you
because it wasn't like whether it was Google or Facebook,
they raised a shitload of money.
It wasn't bootstrapping it that got them there.
And raising money is not just about sales,
it's about the general feeling of the people
with money at that time.
And proximity.
Oh yeah, sure. If Doc wasn't at Harvard and he was at Miami
of Ohio University or he was at Richland Community College,
same idea, same person, same execution and nothing.
I believe in the power of individuals to find their,
to realize their potential no matter where they come from.
I agree 100% with that, right?
But luck is required.
Yeah, I mean, scale is the only delta is scale, right?
Where, you know, we're not all blessed
with the access to the tools you need to hit that grand slam.
But then also billion is not the only measure of success,
right?
Absolutely not, right?
Everybody defines the success in their own way.
How do you define success, Mark Cuban?
Waking up every day with a smile, excited about the day.
You know, people always say,
well, when you get that kind of money, does it make you happy?
And my answer always is, if you are happy when you were broke,
you're going to be really, really, really happy when you're rich.
But you got to work on being happy when you're broke, I guess. Well, you're just being really, really, really happy when you're rich. But you gotta work on being happy when you're broke,
I guess.
Well, you're just being happy, right?
If you were miserable, you know, in your job before,
there's a good chance you're still gonna be miserable
if that's just who you are.
That's a pretty good definition of success, by the way.
How do you reach a success by way of advice to people?
You know, we talked about my dad, my parents.
I never looked at my dad and said,
okay, you're not successful.
He busted his ass and when he came home, you know,
we enjoyed our time together, right?
There was nothing at any point in time where I felt like,
oh, this is miserable, we're awful,
we don't have this, we don't have that.
We celebrated the things we did have
and never knew about the things we didn't have.
And so I think you have to be able to find your way
to whatever it is that puts a smile on your face every day.
Some people can do it and some people can't.
It's not always about the smile,
the smile on the outside, it could be a smile on the inside.
Whatever it is, right, whatever makes you feel good.
The struggle, even the struggle with your dad,
the really, really hard work can be a fulfilling experience
because the struggle leading up to then seeing your kids.
Exactly right, right, because that was my dad's grand slam.
Yeah.
Seeing three kids go to college, be successful,
you know, be able to spend time with them.
And that was the other thing, you know,
he really made me realize is the most valuable asset
isn't the money, it's your time.
That's why, you know, from a young age,
I wanted to retire because I wanted to experience
everything that I possibly could in this life. And, you know, he got
joy from us. I get joy from my kids. And that's the most special thing you ever
can have.
Beautifully said. You have made some mistakes in your life.
Yeah, a lot of them.
One of the bigger ones on the financial side,
we could say is Uber.
Yeah, we call that not doing something.
Yeah, it wasn't a mistake.
It was just, I mean, it was a mistake.
Yeah.
But-
I like how you tried to-
Yeah, I always try to look at mistakes,
the things you did that didn't turn out
as opposed to things you did to, you know, the negative.
But-
But what, can you tell the story of that?
Maybe it's just interesting,
because it is illustrative of how to know
when a thing is going to be big and not,
and what are the fundamentals of it,
and how to take the risk and not,
and all this kind of stuff.
Right, so the backstory of that is,
Bill Gurley came to me and said,
Mark, there's this guy, Travis,
that has this company, Red Swoosh,
which is a peer-to-peer networking company
that I think you can help.
And so I invested and would spend a lot of time with Travis.
And it's funny, because back then, that was like 2006,
I was an investor at Box.net with Aaron Levy,
and oh, there's one other company,
but there were three of them where there'd be emails
between, you know, where I'd introduce them
and we'd all talk in these emails
and they'd all gone to have astronomical success, right?
But so Red Swoosh had its issues, you know,
cause I was looking at peer to peer
as kind of stealing bandwidth from the internet providers
when bandwidth was a scarce commodity.
And so, what Travis did with that though was great.
He convinced gaming companies who wanted to do downloads
of the clients for those games to use
his peer-to-peer and Red Swoosh.
And he busted his ass and I think he sold it
for $18 million, so he did well.
And so it was natural for him to come to me
and I still have the emails, you know,
and asked me about Uber cab.
And I thought, okay, this is a great idea.
I really, really like it.
I said, you're gonna, and he showed me his budgets
and I think they were raising money
at 10 or $15 million or whatever.
And I'm like, your biggest challenge is gonna be,
you're gonna have to fight all the incumbent to be, you're going to have to
fight all the incumbent taxi commissions.
They're going to want to put you out of business.
That's going to be a challenge.
And I think you don't have enough money designated for marketing to get all that
done.
And I said, I'd invest, but not quite at that valuation, right?
Never came back to me.
Yeah.
I mean, there's some lessons there connected to what you're doing. Now we'll talk
about it. Cost Plus Drugs is like looking at an industry that seems like there's a lot of complexity
involved, but it's like hungry for revolution. And the cabs are that. Yeah, for sure. Right. They were
dominated by an insulated few. They were not very transparent.
You didn't know the intricacies.
They were very politically driven
and old boy, insensuous network.
And like I told him, Travis, the best thing about you
is you'll run through walls and break down barriers.
The bad thing about you is you'll run through walls,
even if you don't have to.
Yeah, and there you kind of have to see,
is it possible to raise enough money?
Is it possible to do all this?
Is it possible to break through?
And it's kind of a fascinating success story with Uber is.
I think he tried to go too big.
He had too big an ambition, which cost him in the end,
not financially and personally, but just in terms of
being able to stick it out with them.
But that's what makes them a great entrepreneur.
Well, it's a fascinating success story.
You have like certain companies like Airbnb,
just kind of go into this thing
that we take completely for granted.
And change it all.
Just change it all.
Yeah, and it's-
Yeah, and Belinda Johnson, who worked
as our general counsel at broadcast.com,
was, you know, was Brian's GC and chief operating officer.
So yeah, they had a smart, smart, smart, smart team.
And they believed in it.
I mean, it's a beautiful story
because you're like, all right,
all the things that annoy you about this world,
they're inefficient and it just seemed like a pain in the ass.
And I probably would have said no,
like a lot of people did to Airbnb
because I'm like, I don't want people
sitting and sleeping in my bed.
I would have too.
I was like, this is not gonna work.
I've done like couchsurfing and stuff,
and it was always, it didn't seem right.
It didn't seem like you could do this at a large scale.
To monetize it, yeah, but he did.
More power to him.
In 2000, I think January, you purchased a majority stake
in the NBA team Dallas Mavericks for 285 million.
So at this point, maybe you can correct me,
but it was one of the worst performing teams
in franchise history.
How did you help turn it around?
I had this big tall guy named Dirk Nowitzki
and I let him be Dirk Nowitzki, right?
And I got out of the way.
But I think more than anything else, there was the turnaround on the business side and
then there was the turnaround on the basketball side.
And on the basketball side, I just went in there immediately said, whatever it takes
to win, that's what we're going to do.
Back then they had three or four coaches that were responsible for everything. And I was like, okay,
we spend more money training people on PC software than we do developing the most
important assets of the business.
So I made the decision to go out there and hire like 15 different development
coaches, one for each player. And everybody thought I was just insane,
but you know,
it sent the message that we were going to do whatever it took to win.
And once the guys believe that, you know,
winning was the goal as opposed to just making money attitudes,
change effort went up and you know, the rest is history.
So the assets of the business here are the players, the players. Yeah, for sure.
And then on the business side, the first question I asked myself is what business are we in? And I really didn't know the answer
immediately, but within the first few months it was obvious that, you know, the
entire NBA thought we were in the business of basketball. We were not. We
were in the experience business. When you think about sporting events that you've been to,
you don't remember the score,
you don't remember the home runs or the dunks,
you remember who you were with,
and you remember why you went.
I was my first date with a girl who's now my wife,
or I went with my buddies,
and he threw up on the person in front of us.
My dad took me, my uncle took me,
those are the experiences you remember.
And once I conveyed to our people that this is what we were selling, that what happened
in the arena off the court was just as important as what happened on the court, if not more
so.
Because if mom or dad are bringing the 10-year-old, you have to keep them occupied because they
have short attention spans.
And so I would get into fights with the NBA, put aside the refs, but getting into fights with the NBA, I would say NBA, nothing but attorneys, right?
Because they had no marketing skills whatsoever.
And to their credit, you know, they realized that was a problem and started bringing in
better and better and better marketing people.
So part of the selling is you're selling the team, selling the sport, selling the people,
the idea, all of it, like just the...
Well, yeah, the experience. So have, all of it. Like just the...
Well yeah, the experience.
So have you ever been to an NBA game?
Miami Heat.
Do you remember walking into the arena
and you feel the energy, right?
That's what makes it special.
Yeah, the energy is everything.
Especially playoff games.
Right, for sure, right?
And even a regular season game, right?
Even against the worst team, you know,
that's where we get, you know,
because the tickets tend to be a little bit cheaper on the resale
market, that's where parents will bring their kids. And so you hear kids screaming the entire
game and the parents are thrilled to death, right? They got to do something with your kids. The kids
are thrilled to death because they got to see basketball and NBA game and scream at the top of
their lungs. And if it turns out to be a close game and that ball's in the air, and if it goes
in, everybody's hugging and high-flying people you've never seen before in your life. And if it turns out to be a close game and that ball's in the air, and if it goes in, you know, everybody's hugging and high-flying people
you've never seen before in your life.
And if it misses, you're commiserating with people
you've never seen before.
That's such a unique experience that's unique to sports.
And we never sold that,
and that's exactly what we started.
I have to say, like, just going to that game,
turn me around on basketball,
because I'm more of a football guy,
so basketball wasn't like the main sport.
And I was like, oh wow, okay.
It's fun.
The energy was just like.
Yeah, the energy in a stadium is completely different
than the energy in an arena.
You know, in a stadium,
particularly if it doesn't have a roof,
it's hard to bottle that energy.
You feel it and you see, like I'm from Pittsburgh,
so there's the terrible towels
and people screaming defense and everything
at Steelers games, but in an arena,
the energy level is just indescribable.
So how much of it is the selling the tickets in person,
but also versus what you see on TV?
So when you're owning a team,
do you get any other cut for what's shown on TV?
Yeah, yeah, so there's a TV deal that's done
with either a local TV broadcaster,
and we get all of that, or a network broadcaster
like ABCC, ESPN, TNT, whatever,
and then we get 1 1⁄3 of that.
So what role does the TV play in turning a team?
It keeps fans connected.
Look, when a team is doing really well, it's easy, right?
There's more viewers, everybody's more excited,
and when you're not, there's still gonna be hardcore fans
and general fans and kids that like to watch the game.
What about the personality of the people in the stands?
I mean, clearly you're part of the legend of the team
because you're literally there going wild.
Yeah, screaming, yeah, the whole game, right?
Yeah, it's funny, the whole game, right? Yeah, it's funny, you know, the way I am here
is how I am, you know, 24 hours a day,
unless there's a Mavs game, you know?
And for whatever reason, that's where I let out
all that stress and frustration.
But yeah, I mean, it's not so, the fans,
you know, the sixth man, right?
We need fans to bring that energy,
and you know, amplifying that as much as we can
is important.
You've had a beef recently on Twitter on X with Elon over DEI programs.
What to you is the essence of the disagreement there?
I wouldn't call it a beef, right?
It's just-
It's a bit of fun?
Yeah, it's fun for me, right?
I just, you know, it's his platform. He gets to run in any way he please. He pays for that
right. And so I have total respect for whatever choices he makes, even if I don't agree with him.
But because it's his platform, people are less likely to disagree with him, particularly somebody who's got a platform themselves.
And so when we start talking about DEI
and it's just de facto racist and this stuff,
stuff that I just think is nonsense,
I have no problem sharing my opinion.
And if he disagrees, okay, he can disagree, I don't care.
And it's fun to engage, but he doesn't really engage.
He just comes back with snark comments,
which is his choice.
Yeah, in your comments, well, you do a bit of snark too, but.
Yeah, a little bit.
I don't know.
But you're pretty, let's say, rigorous in your response.
So there is some exchange of ideas. There's some snark, there's say rigorous in your response.
So there is some exchange of ideas, there's some snark,
there's some fun, all that kind of stuff.
And you do voice the opinion that represents
a large number of people, and it's great.
I mean, that's what's, it's really beautiful.
But just lingering on the topic,
what to you is the good and the bad of DEI programs?
Really simple, right?
D is diversity, and that means you just expand your pool
of potential applicants to people who you might not
otherwise have access to.
You know, to look where you didn't look before,
to look where other people aren't looking
for quality employees.
That's simple.
And the E in equity means when you hire somebody,
you put them in a position to succeed.
The I in inclusion is when you've hired somebody
and they may not be typical, if you will, right?
You show them some love and give them the support they need
so they can do their job as best they can
and feel comfortable and confident going to work.
It's that simple.
So that's a beautiful ideal.
When it's implemented, implemented poorly perhaps,
or in a way that doesn't reach that ideal.
Do you see, maybe when it's quota based,
do you see that it can result in essentially racism
towards Asian people and white people for example?
There's a lot to unpack there, right?
So first, you can't do quotas.
They're illegal unless you're,
and I'm not the lawyer on this subject,
but unless you're trying to repair something
that's happened in the past,
like some discrimination that's happened in the past.
So it's not quota-based.
And I think that's really just kind of a straw man
that people put out there. Now, does that
mean that there aren't DEI programs that are implemented poorly? Of course not. There are
everything that's implemented poorly in one company to another, right? Sales, marketing,
human resources. You can pick any element of business and find companies that implement
it poorly. But that's the beauty of capitalism in a
free market or mostly free market where if you make these choices and they are the wrong choices,
you're going to lose your best people. You're not going to be able to hire the best people.
You're not going to execute on your business plans in the way that we discussed, regardless
of the size of the company. And it also, I think, depends on
where you're having the discussion. So when I'm in a different group of people off of
X, the feedback is completely different, right? But to your question of reverse racism, yes,
it happens. I mean, because people are people. There's no human being that is 100%
objective. And it's also, there's very, very, very few jobs that can be determined on a purely
quantitative basis. How do you tell one janitor from the other who's the best? How do you tell
one salesperson that you're hiring versus another you're hiring? Because they haven't sold your
product yet. We talked earlier about firing people because you made mistakes. Yes, there's
discrimination against any group, white, Asian, black, green, orange, whatever it may be. But I truly believe that there's far more
discrimination against people of color than there are people who are white. And I think it's become
a straw man that reverse discrimination because of DEI is prevalent or near ubiquitous? Well, much of American history was defined by
intense radical racism and sexism. But in the recent years there was a
correction and I think the nature of the criticism is that there's an
overcorrection where DEI programs at the universities, the companies are often, when they're not doing their job well,
are often hard to criticize.
Because when you criticize them within the company or so on,
you can, they have a very strong immune system
where that you could, if you criticize a DEI program,
it seems like it's very easy to be called racist.
And if you're called racist or sexist,
that's a sticky label.
So you're getting into the culture of organizations, right?
And leadership within organizations.
And accepting any type of criticism, put aside DEI.
When I criticized the referees and the MVA, I got fined.
Right? That was their option. IA. I got fined, right?
That was their option.
I knew what I was getting into, right?
Not that they're completely analogous,
but it's cause and effect.
If I'm in a major company and I'm publicly criticizing
or even internally criticizing a sales plan or a product,
our product sucks, right?
Where like there was a Google engineer
that got fired for saying, you know, Google had
AGI, right?
And nobody believed they did and they knew that created problems.
It wasn't DEI related, but it was, you know, saying something publicly that was to the
CEO's eyes to the detriment of the company, right?
So I think those are all analogies.
If you're trying to accomplish something within an organization because you think there's
a problem and there's a problem
and there's people speaking out saying,
look, we're getting it wrong.
I think I'm a victim of all this and the company,
right then, leadership has got to make a decision.
Do they agree or not agree?
Are they right or are they wrong?
Is it to the positive, is it positive or negative
to the company?
And you decide.
So this conversation that conservatives are being silenced
in organizations now, I just, I haven't seen it.
I've talked to, and then the other side of your question,
I think I'm packing it, is what's driving all this?
packing it is what's driving all this.
Put aside universities for one, in corporate America. When I talk to people in corporate America about DEI,
they always start talking about ideology, right?
And like I've talked to Bill Ackman, who you've had on,
right?
And when I asked him, well, Bill, you run your own companies.
Who's telling you what to do?
They are.
Who's they?
Well, it's the universities, you know,
the people who have this ideology of DEI.
I'm like, did they force you?
Did they coerce you?
Did you lose control of your company?
No, it's not me. It happens to other people. Then I talk to
other people. Same thing. Try not to go one-on-one and tip Twitter conversations on this topic.
So in the DMs, I'll talk to people who are really conservative and I'll ask the same question. And
I'll be like, well, who's forcing you to do this? Well, it's the ideology that's everywhere. Didn't
you see the Harvard thing in University of North Carolina? I'm like, I, who's forcing you to do this? Well, it's the ideology that's everywhere. Didn't you see the Harvard thing
in University of North Carolina?
I'm like, I've never had anybody try to push me
in this direction to do this.
This was my business choice.
I'm not trying to tell other people you have to do this.
You make your own business choices.
And so where companies have made their business choices
and if somebody doesn't feel confident
or comfortable with it,
they may feel they're being discriminated against.
There was something I just read in the wall street journal where the wall street
journal had a company interviewed 2 million people, right?
And the difficulty in firing and how people, when they were fired,
40% of the people who were fired felt like it was wrong that they were doing a
great job.
Yet, they then have talked about the HR person
going through the hassle of trying to explain
to this person through performance reviews
that they weren't doing a good job,
yet the people still thought they were doing a great job
despite being told they're not doing a good job, right?
So I see that as being an analogist to all this,
you know, this huffing and puffing about
reverse discriminations and conservatives not being able to speak up.
Because 40% of people who have been fired don't believe they should have been fired.
There's a disconnect somewhere in how you think you're doing your job.
And if you just feel like I can't speak up because of it,
um, because of your white and that doesn't comport well with DEI programs,
a lot of things are going to happen, right? Either you're going to,
you're just going to come up in your performance review,
HR or your boss is going to have to address it in some way.
It's going to get to HR at some level and then decisions are going to have to be made and commute and you
can't just fire somebody because they spoke up, right? Somebody's going to have
to communicate with you and so I think a lot of I just I just don't trust the
supposed volume that people say is happening at versus everything I've read
and seen and when I talk to people in positions of authority within organizations and ask them who's forcing them, you know, to implement these ideologies,
nobody says, nobody says yes, that there is somebody.
But on Twitter, it sounds great.
It is true for conservatives, but in general, you can sell books, you can get likes.
Yes.
When you talk about this ideology, and there's a degree to which is this woke ideology
in the room with us right now.
Meaning like it's this boogie monster
that we're all kind of-
Or is it a positive?
I guess another way to say that is they don't highlight
a lot of the positive progress that's been made
in the positive version of the word woke
in terms of correcting some of the wrongs done in the past.
So, but that said, you know, if you ask people in Russia,
a lot of them will say, there's no propaganda here,
there's no censorship and all that kind of stuff.
It's sometimes hard to see when you're in it
that this kind of stuff is happening.
It does seem difficult to criticize DEI programs. Not horribly difficult,
terrible. They're this monster that infiltrates everything, but it is difficult and requires
great leadership. So where have you criticized it and been condemned? Academic or? Academic,
yeah. Okay. Academic, let's, two different worlds. Companies and academic, yeah.
Two different worlds.
But I also think it's not,
I really wanna point my finger at the failure of leadership
of basically firing mediocre people.
Like people that are not good at their job.
The problem to me is DEI,
it's defense mechanism. like immune system is so strong that the shitty people
don't get fired. So the vision, the ideal of DEI is a beautiful ideal. It's just like...
Well, maybe it's because I'm an entrepreneur when I see an ideal that, you know, you try to implement
it and support it and get to that point. But universities and companies are
night and day different, right? I can see an argument for the ideology in a university. I can
see, you know, you look at the amount of money spent on it. And so while the goal is right,
the way they implement it in universities, the way they implement most things in universities is wrong. There's a reason why tuition has gone up a multiple of inflation.
They're not well-run organizations across the board.
So I'm not going to argue with that at all.
So when you've seen me argue with DEI,
I haven't waded into DEI in universities at all.
So it's mostly focused on companies.
100%, right, because that's where I exist.
But at the same time, like I read Christopher Rufro's book
where he talks about the kind of the genealogy of wokeism
and ideology, but then he gets to the point,
and I hope I'm remembering this right,
where he says that the response to it
is decentralized activism, if you will,
that's not the word he used, to try to counter that DEI.
And that seems to me to be counter
to the whole conservative movement right now, right?
Other than school boards, right?
Where it's centralized and, you know,
the Republican candidate is all about
centralized power in him.
And, you know, to me, that's just a conflict and a lot of the underpinning of the whole DEI conversation
that a lot of which goes through Christopher Rufro right now.
Let's continue on a theme of fun exchanges on the internet.
So Elon tweeted, the fundamental axiomatic flaw of the woke mind virus is that the weaker party is always right, in parentheses, even if they want you to die.
And you responded at length, but the beginning is, the fundamental axiomatic flaw of the anti-woke mind is that it allows groups with historical power to play the victim by taking anecdotal examples
and packaging them into conjured conspiratorial ideology
that threatens to upend the power structures
they have been depending on.
So.
He says it all, right?
Well, there's a tension there.
So, yes, but both can be abused, right?
Both positions of power can be abused.
There's power in DEI, and there's shitty people
that can crave power and hold onto power
and sacrifice their ideals.
Okay, put aside universities, okay?
Damn it.
Yeah, I mean I-
Because I'm not gonna argue that universities implement DEI universities, okay? Damn it. Because I'm not going to argue that universities
implement DEI well, right? And I'm not going to tell you that they need to be spending
20-some million dollars a year on DEI positions. To me, that's insane. Do I look at the Harvard
and North Carolina decision and say it was a great decision?
No, because I think having a diverse student body helps make for kids who are better prepared
for the real world.
But I'm not running a university, so it's not my choice.
Maybe at some point in the future I will, but not now. And in terms of the corporate side of it,
who's telling anybody what to do?
Well, maybe you can give me some help.
Sure, I'm here to help you, Lex.
There's an example in the AI world
of a system called Gemini.
Yeah.
I mean, everybody was black or whatever, people of color.
George Washington was black, Nazis were black.
So why, why is it when that came out, it was a big uproar.
But when somebody re so who, who was it?
One of the people who are trying to fuck with me.
Um, I forget which one.
Um, there's so many.
Yeah, but he pointed out to Elon that Grok,
Elon's AI was woke when it answered certain questions.
And other people have pointed out other things to Elon
about Grok, Grok, whatever, however it's pronounced,
that was leaning left or woke.
And Elon's response was,
"'Oh, it'll change, it's a mistake, we're fixing it.'"
When it happens to Gemini and Google,
it's the end of the world.
Look how woke they are
and it's a reflection of all their culture.
Now Google comes out and says it's a mistake
and then they dox the guy who is the product manager
or whatever of that product, and then they go back the guy who is the product manager or whatever of that product,
and then they go back and look at his old tweets, right,
and show that he's very left-leaning
and very DEI supportive, and that's the end of the world.
It's not the end of the world,
but Google's so much dependent on trust,
that trust that Google Search has as objective as possible channel
into the world of information. And so that brand is really important.
Yeah, so you're over, you're giving them too much power. And maybe I'm not recognizing the power, right? So I'll tell you a personal experience. Um, up until a month ago, maybe if you put in keto gummies,
shark tank, keto gummies into Google,
it would show up with scammy ads, scam ad after scam.
And I would get emails, um,
up until a month ago from elderly people
Asking me why the gummies weren't working and why the companies were charging
all this money on a month-by-month basis when they tried to cancel and
They said it was the number one deal on Shark Tank of all time right and all start, right?
It was a mistake. Well, there's fraud. There's mistakes, but
the mistakes. No, but why didn't Google fix it? Right. The distance didn't happen once
over one week, over two weeks. Right. And because it was hard to fix. Yeah. As it turns
out, I was working with them to try to find a fix and we would both look at the same page.
And if you were inside of Google within the
Google.com domain, it would show one page. If you were outside of Google, it
would show another. And it took us looking at it at the same time for anybody to
realize it, meaning that there's a lot of technology problems that are hard to fix.
They're super complex and we could talk about it forever with social media. The
criticism towards Google, towards other companies when they're based in Silicon Valley,
there could be an ideological drift into
a ideological bubble out of which the technology is created
and they could be blind to the obvious bias that's
coming here to...
Yeah, but they've got billions of customers
who are not gonna, so what you're saying is
the free market stops with artificial intelligence,
that people
don't pay attention and respond, that Google doesn't listen to the responses, that people
inside of Google will ignore their own best financial interest and even their own best
personal interest because they know they're going to get docs now on by Elon and others.
And so I just don't see that.
And Elon's not allowed to make those same mistakes,
but he's allowed to make those mistakes, but Google isn't.
I know, Elon is 100% should be criticized
for the ridiculousness of overstatements that he makes
about various products.
He's having a bit of fun like you are also.
But, and I also believe in the free market,
but it's not always efficient.
There's like a delay.
It just takes time, yeah, it's fine.
So which is why Elon is important when calling out,
I think overstating the criticism of Gemini,
but Elon and others are just-
Gemini wasn't even a fully available public product yet.
It's still a bias that resonates with people-
That's the way neural networks work though, right?
That's why there'll be millions of models
because weights and biases,
putting together a neural network.
But, well, no.
So like the Black George Washington
is a correction on top of the foundation model
to keep it quote unquote sort of safe.
One of the big criticisms of all the models, frankly,
probably even Grok, a little bit less so,
is they're like trying to be really conservative
in the sense of trying to be careful
not to say crazy shit.
Because we don't know how to think.
It's brand new and we know what happens, right?
And they do it on the front end with prompts
and they try to do it on the back end with the neural networks that know what happens, right? And they do it on the front end with prompts and they try to do it on the back end
with the neural networks that are underneath them, right?
And it doesn't always work
and that's why there's gonna be millions of models
rather than just four foundational models
or five that everybody uses.
Well, I guess the main criticism is you want to have
some transparency of all the teams that are involved
and that this kind of, to the degree
there's a left-leaning ideology within the companies,
it doesn't affect the product.
But that's the beauty of-
The free market.
Yeah, that's where the market corrects it, right?
And not only from the outside,
because everybody you know is going to test it.
Like when YouTube first came out,
well not first came out, after Google bought them,
there used to be different commands you could give it,
there were prompt commands that you could give it.
And you could find all the nasty porn
that got loaded before they kicked it off.
And it was just the nastiest shit ever.
And even now to this day,
if there's some horrific tragic event,
somebody's loading it up, right?
I know that's not direct to your point
of internal influence to the output, right?
But people on the outside are gonna check for that now.
It's almost like the new bug contest, right?
To try to find bugs and software.
And then on the inside, if it's all left leaning and all you have is left leaning employees
because most conservatives won't want to work there then,
again, that's self-correcting as well.
That's the hope, but it can self-correct
in different kinds of ways.
You can have a different company that competes
and becomes more conservative.
I mean, my worry is that it kind of becomes
like two different worlds where there's like,
nobody is.
They'll let, no, come on. Don't's like, Oh, he is. Come on.
Don't give up.
Oh, I'm not giving up.
Don't give up.
So where does this go is the question.
Yeah.
Right.
What happens next?
And I mean, going back,
I mean, I've been in so many PC revolutions, right?
Or evolutions where porn was the big issue, right?
Now we don't even talk about porn being an issue,
even though every post on Twitter now has, you know,
Lincoln bio for a porn post, right?
We don't even think that's a negative anymore.
That's just an accepted thing.
And now it's become very, where your politics on Twitter.
But again, as you extend that and things grow, as AI models become
more efficient and trainable for a lot less money or even locally on a PC or a phone,
we're all going to have our own models. And there's going to be millions and millions and
millions of models and not just foundational
models.
Now maybe they're built some on open source.
Maybe it'll be copy-pasta where you can just cut and paste and create your own model and
train it yourself.
Maybe it'll be a mixture of experts where maybe it'll be a meta front-end like we're
working on a project where we take 30 different AI models and there's just a meta search engine
where it searches all of them
and you can compare all the outputs
and see what you think is the best,
kind of like a search engine, right?
Because you might get, is DEI good, right?
Is the COVID vaccine good, right?
You're gonna get a variety of outputs
and you have to make that decision yourself.
That's what I think is gonna happen with AI as well
because I think brands, there's no way the Mayo Clinic
and the Harvard Medical School are just going to contribute
all their IP to CHAP, GPT or Gemini or whatever.
It's gonna have to be licensed
or they're gonna do their own.
Yeah, I mean, that's a very hopeful message
but that said, you know, human history
doesn't always auto-correct really quickly,
self-correct really quickly.
Sometimes you get into this very painful things.
You have Stalin, you have Hitler.
You can get to places very quickly
where the ideological thing just builds on itself.
Twitter is not real world.
There's 27.
Twitter is not real world, that's true.
Yeah.
Yes, but you can still have a nation captured by an ideology.
I think America has been really good
at having these two blue and red
always at attention with each other,
dividing the populace and
in the process of doing that, figuring stuff out.
Like almost like playing devil's advocate, but like in real life.
And that's fair and that's right, you know, as opposed to Pravda telling you everything
you want to know, right?
And everybody believing it because there's control of everything, right?
And so going back to what you said earlier, people in Russia don't think that invading Ukraine,
it's, you know, a lot of them see it as a positive, right?
I'm sure you have relatives and friends who think,
you know, it's the best thing to ever happen, right?
Because they believe in Putin.
They're denazifying Ukraine.
They're removing the Nazis from Ukraine.
Right, right, because that's exactly what Putin said.
And, you know, we don't have one uniform media outlet.
That's the difference.
Even though people like to talk about mainstream media
as being the source of a lot of the friction,
there is no such thing as mainstream media anymore.
Fox is the biggest cable news channel
with the biggest audience
and they call everybody else mainstream media.
It's insane the things that we accept
from our sources of information.
To me, that's the bigger problem.
The bigger problem is trying to figure out
what is free speech and what is the line of tolerance
for free speech and at what point does hateful free speech
crowd out other people, people? Putin's the
master of that. You're going to jail or you're going to be dead if you disagree. God help us
if we ever get to that point here. But the person who controls the algorithm controls the world.
And if you are committed to one specific platform as your singular source of information
or affiliated platforms, then whoever
controls the algorithm or the programming there
controls you in a lot of respects.
And I think that's where our biggest problem has been.
We get people attached to specific platforms and apps
and media outlets, and they become part of that team and they identify as such and either you're
part of the team or you're not. And that to me is the fundamental problem.
It's not woke ideology because I never felt any pressure to make the choices that
I've, that I've chosen and you know, including diversity, equity,
and inclusion. And I've never forced anybody or told anybody to do it. I just said,
here's my experiences. Whenever I've talked to people who talk about the woke
ideology, no one ever got forced. I mean, if you look at Dylan McDermott,
right? If,
if there was a way to gauge the number of impressions that she had,
right. And where they source from,
I'd be willing to bet any amount of money
that 90% plus of the impressions and discussions
of Dylan McDermott were on right-leaning media.
Several things, actually, we'll just even go there.
You've gotten a bit of a beef with, again,
fun with Jordan Peterson about this.
That's the guy whose name I couldn't think of, yeah.
So the topic there was the gender transition
and Dylan Mulvaney.
Can you explain the nature of the beef?
I mean, it's an interesting claim you're making
that most of the people who are concerned
about this are conservatives.
Yeah, just the point is that if you looked at impressions,
like when you run an ad, you're curious about impressions
and who sees them, right?
But if you look at the impressions related to Dylan McDermott, I would, like I just
said, I bet 90% or more were in conservative media.
And I don't know how many followers she had, 250,000 followers or whatever when the Bud
Light ad came out.
And if it weren't for Kid Rock shooting at Dylan McDermott Bud Light Cans, she'd be
long forgotten.
Yeah, but most of the people that care about censorship are going to be free speech advocates.
So like most people that care about Putin suppressing speech or anybody else suppressing
speech are going to be like libertarians.
So there's probably an explanation of that the the criticism that Jordan Peterson
Could provide I guess he said that
Dylan Mulvaney popularized
The kind of mutilation right in his view
They can affect there's a very serious
life changing process that a person goes through and And when that's applied to a child,
it can do a lot of harm to a person if.
But my point still holds.
I don't know how many kids were following,
and you can look at the followers list.
It's not like it's hidden, right?
Back then if they had 250,000 followers
and now we're on TikTok,
where he might get 50 some thousand views or likes, right?
I don't know how many views, but likes.
I've never seen any evidence that Dylan McDermott
influenced people to transition their gender.
As he transitioned to her,
it was documented on TikTok over the course of a year.
And again, when you go back and look at the views
on those TikToks,
it wasn't, you know, it wasn't like enormous.
Yeah, but the trends start, right?
It could be, uh, where, where is people's, for young kids,
there to be a trend of, especially when you feel like an outsider,
you feel not yourself, less than yourself, all this kind of stuff that kids feel like that if it's
because popular enough as a trend,
you would gender transition
without meaning to do that.
It's just part of a trend.
That's the way they have.
That's a big stretch, right?
To think that all the things that have to happen before you transition gender, right? To think that all the things that have to happen before you transition
gender, right? And I'm not saying kids might identify, you know, find it cool or, you know,
in the moment, expedient, if you will, to dress up as the other gender. Great. Who cares,
right? But to go through the actual physical transition, I don't remember what the numbers were that I
read, but I do remember that the latest numbers that came out in terms of transitioning were from
JAMA, which is a medical association that said from 2021 to 2022, the numbers went down. But
the bigger point is there are no numbers for 2023 when post Dylan McDermott.
So there's no way to know if the assertion is true, even marginally true.
Now, you can easily suggest it, right?
But you can say that about any social media influencer, right?
People are, kids are dying because, you know,
I mean, it's just like when people accused Trump of potentially influencing
people to, you know, inject bleach into their veins.
You can't, you know, that's a big old leap to say that because the, you know,
Trump says it, that people are going to start invest, you know, injecting,
and then they find somebody who actually did and it's like, oh, it must be true.
This is a trend now.
I'm just not buying it that there aren't enough
roadblocks in the way.
Now I'm not saying it never happens, right?
And for me, to me, you should have to wait until you're 18
to actually have any surgery to transition.
And if your parents approve it earlier,
then you can have a conversation with your doctor.
But you're suggesting that everybody in that process
to go to transition, a minor, is corrupt.
That the doctor, the sociologist, the psychologist,
all the people involved, the hospital where the surgery
is happening,
the insurance company that's paying for it,
they all have been corrupted by this trend.
I just don't see that.
Well, not corrupted, but you know, people,
it's back to the DEI thing, that it could be pressure.
And we are-
Pressure to operate, so think about all the people
who have to be complicit to do an operation.
It's not complicit like evil complicit.
No, it is evil complicit, right?
Because somebody, in hospitals right now,
they won't perform abortions because of state law.
In Alabama, they stopped IVF treatment immediately
after that ruling by that judge, the QAnon judge.
To think that they're not going to pay attention to the possible
consequences of being the hospital that does transgender,
that gives doctors operating rights there and not be
aware of the risks associated with it and double check? To me, that's just insane.
They're risking their entire business and livelihood and personal relationships
for not checking
that this 14-year-old boy who wants to be a girl
or vice versa is there waiting for surgery.
I just don't see that.
In America, yes, but if we look at humans in general,
and Jordan Peterson, I think,
unjustly incorrectly brought up Auschwitz.
Yeah, that was ridiculous.
But if we look, to me, World War II
is a very interesting time.
It does reveal a lot about human nature,
and that humans are able to commit atrocities
without really speaking up.
The point I want to make is that when you're in this situation
where everybody is around
you is committing an atrocity, you can be sort of the good German.
Yeah, but I mean- Human nature is such that you can do all of this.
That is in a time of war.
Yeah, but it's still human nature. It's interesting to remember that.
It's in a time of war when you feel like there's nationalism
Patriotism everything that comes up in Russia, right?
You know the moms of the kids sent to be, you know sent to Ukraine who didn't come back in Russia
Feels certainly different than the the everyday Russian who's just taking you know, whatever information that's available from a unified controlled media. Yeah
But you know, we should remember human nature. It's interesting.
I'm not just missing human nature at all, but there's a difference.
I think that human nature, self-preservation
influences those decisions. There's nothing about self-preservation
involved in DEI, wokeness,
you know, transgenderism to compare it to Auschwitz. That's insane.
Well that comparison is almost always, wokeness, you know, transgenderism to compare it to Auschwitz. That's insane.
Yeah, well that comparison is almost always,
probably always is insane.
Comparison between anything and the Holocaust.
I agree.
I think there's a name for that rule,
but once you bring up Hitler, the conversation ends.
It goes away.
I do appreciate you bringing up Trump and bleach
as an example.
So continuing on fun exchanges between you and Elon, you said, if they were
having Biden's last wake and it was him versus Trump and he was being given last
rights, I would still vote for Biden.
To which Elon replied, caricaturing you, if Biden were a flesh eating zombie with
five seconds to live, or upon being reelected,
Earth would plunge into a 1,000 years of darkness.
I would still vote for him.
That's basically quoting you,
quoting a caricature, and you responded,
while I had your attention, wanted to say thank you.
Your consultants at Tesla followed up
about using Cost plus drugs,
about which we'll talk about,
to save the company money.
Truly appreciate it.
And in parentheses, my limit is 300 years of darkness.
Very well done, Mark.
What's your intuition,
if we just stick on Biden and Trump for a sec,
what's your intuition why Biden
wouldn't make a better president than Trump?
Look at the basics, right?
If you look at the people he's hired,
there hasn't been any turnover in his cabinet at all.
If you look at the people he's hired
over the course of his career,
or while he was vice president in particular,
there's nobody who turned on him and came out
and written books and made public statements
about how he's bad for the country.
Now compare that to Trump.
The people closest to him,
almost all of them turn
unless there's a financial relationship involved.
And to me, that says everything.
The dynamics of the team is important to you.
If you're gonna be the most powerful person in the world,
you better know how to manage and lead.
And that's not to say Biden hasn't made a lot of mistakes.
I mean, immigration to border is a horrific mistake.
And hopefully he recognizes that.
And I don't want the fact that he doesn't admit
his mistakes and just say, okay, I gotta fix it,
or I made a mistake in Afghanistan, whatever it may be, right?
The position of commander in chief and president, you're going to make mistakes.
Then I look at the other guy, never admits a mistake, and the list is long.
What do you think about the immigration situation? A lot of conservatives are using that.
The theory is that the reason it's happening is because they would be able to illegally vote. That's insane.
For Biden.
Yeah. You can't be an illegal immigrant and vote. And now in a lot of states,
because of the conservatives, they've passed laws saying you have to show identification.
When I voted in Texas, you had to show state identification.
They can't vote.
You can't register as an illegal alien
that I'm aware of to vote.
Yeah, but of course that story really worries me,
enables or serves as a catalyst
for questioning the legitimacy of an election.
I remember going to the debate with Trump in 2016,
and he was debating Clinton,
and one of the things he said was,
we don't even know if this election
will be legitimate if I lose.
This was in 2016 before he was even elected,
and that was where he was going.
That's just what he does.
He's never admitted a mistake.
The guy's failed a zillion times.
Most people say, okay, I learned from him.
I read a book about Roy Cohen,
and Roy Cohen was the ultimate deny, deny, deny,
and that was one of Trump's mentors.
And you can see almost everything Roy Cohen ever did
in the same way that Donald Trump approaches things.
But given how drastic the immigration situation is, that story becomes more believable.
Yeah, of course it does, right?
But the facts are still the facts, right?
And in red states, they're going to be checking every ID, they're going to be making sure
that's not the case.
And you can also make the argument, well, in the blue state, it doesn't matter.
In the swing states, they're still going to be checking because they know Trump is going to sue the shit out of them
when he loses. Again, that's where people will take those self-preservation steps to
keep their job and do the right thing. There's still enough people who believe in this country
and how amazing it is to do the right thing. And a lot of the premise of what some conservatives
are saying and doing, the underpinning of it is that
their fellow citizens will not do anything,
not some things, anything that serves the best interests
of this country.
And to me, that's just wrong.
You know, that is just misleading and wrong.
I just worry about, I don't care about Trump or Biden,
I care about democracy. I just worry, I worry about the viral nature of the idea of this
illegal immigrants. But it's just, it's very functional, right? Either they get across,
there's a thousand different ways to, an unlimited number of ways to enter the United States of
America undetected, right? And the South border where it's the easiest and the worst and Biden needs to take
steps to reduce that. Remember when Biden was vice president and Obama was president, they called
Obama the deporter in chief. He had no problem deporting people. And I think if I had to guess,
and this is just a guess, that when they looked at the
initial statistics for immigration when Biden took over, they thought there was room for more
immigrants, not because they would vote, but you can make a fiscal argument that in a world where
the birth rate is flat to declining, we need immigrants, right? And immigrants typically don't have a higher crime
rate or anything than indigenous American citizens. Indigenous isn't the right word,
but American citizens. And so they made a calculated mistake. They made a decision that
was wrong and now they have to fix it or it's going to hurt them severely. But I don't buy,
They made a decision that was wrong and now they have to fix it or it's going to hurt them severely. But I don't buy, you know, like what Elon's pushing that the whole reason is they are voters and will become voters.
And we should say the obvious, you're a descendant of immigrants.
Yeah, for sure.
And the immigrants is what makes this country great in many parts, the diversity of this nation.
And we should probably keep the people
that are like already been in this country for a while
and are killing it, like PhD students and all this.
That's not what Donald Trump wants though.
He wants to ship them all out, right?
There's just a whole lot of hyperbole
when it comes to talking to all,
about talking about all of these things we're talking about.
When it's right versus left, my team versus your team,
my tribe versus your tribe,
the only way to stand out is hyperbole.
The hard part, and why I like this conversation,
is how do you distinguish hyperbole versus reality?
And I get where you're going, Lex,
where it's like what the smallest spark sometimes
can cause people to change, and then that spark becomes bigger,
and then it becomes more widespread, and then all of a sudden your country has changed. It's not
what you thought it was. I get that completely, right? And yes, you always have to be on top of
that to make sure. But a lot of that comes from lack of leadership and lack of trust because there's
nobody who's saying, all right, the Republicans, that's all hyperbole and you're wrong for that.
Democrats, you fucked up on immigration. You fucked up in Afghanistan. Here's where you made
these mistakes, own it. There's nobody who says, we're not going to just bring in Republicans if
the Republicans win. And there's nobody who says, we're not gonna just bring in Republicans if the Republicans win.
And then, you know, and there's nobody who says,
we're not gonna just bring in Democrats.
We're gonna bring in a mix, right?
We're gonna try to get balance on the Supreme Court.
There's just, there's no leadership that's doing it.
That's the fundamental problem.
It's not about the ideology of woke.
It's not the, no leadership.
Yeah, leadership and yeah, there's, it's just,
whatever systems we've created,
it's really frustrating that if you don't like Trump,
it really is Trump derangement syndrome.
Like he's definitely Hitler.
And if you don't like Biden, he's senile lizard person.
Right.
That's-
Right, everybody gets labeled, right?
And because that works on social media.
That, look, if Elon changed the algorithm
just by taking himself out of it,
seriously, I'm not saying don't post, right?
Post all you want.
But he, you know, if you look at his followers,
they're almost all right leaning.
If you look at the people he engages with positively,
they're almost all right leaning.
And if you look at the people he engages with positively, they're almost all right-leaning. And if you look at the people he engages with negatively, like me, right, I consider myself an independent,
but I lean left on the DEI topic, right? That influences the algorithm. And so you see what
you see because of what he says.
Yeah, well, I mean, for sure, but there could be a lot of influential people on Twitter
that influence the algorithm and all that kind of stuff.
I do feel it's not even about ideology where you lean, it's about the algorithm not prioritizing
drama, like the attention grabbing thing or the lower lizard version of that,
or like people just want the drama. They want to turn out.
When I last read through all this stuff on, on their algorithm, right?
Maybe it's changed.
Whoever has the biggest account and gets engagement on that account influences
what people see the most. Yeah. I mean, that's interesting.
I don't know if that's to a degree. That's true. Yeah, I mean, that's interesting. I don't know if to a degree that's true,
they've made a pretty rigorous description
of the way the algorithm works.
It's actually kind of fascinating.
There's a clustering of people based on interest.
Right, but I think they call it
the nearest neighbor approach,
and I think that's what they do.
And so whoever has the biggest account
has the most neighbors who in turn have their neighbors, who in turn have their neighbors, and that's how they do. And so whoever has the biggest account has the most neighbors who in turn have their neighbors who in turn have their
neighbors and that's how they discern what comes next. But there's a clustering
still so like if you don't give a shit about Elon. You're not following him.
Yeah you're not following him. You're not gonna have an influence. He's not gonna have an influence.
When you get a break just create a burner account on Twitter and see who
they recommend to you. Elon. And not just Elon, I mean the people that Elon likes.
And I'm saying that's not Elon saying,
add this person, add this person,
and suggest this person, this person, this person.
I'm saying that's what the algorithm is.
Yeah, there should be transparency around that for sure.
There is, there is, and that's the whole point, right?
He knows there's transparency and he knows the impact.
That's why when I say take yourself out of the algorithm, right, don't include his account, that changes I think the output
of the algorithm. Well when he wasn't owning Twitter he was one of the biggest
accounts, if not the biggest account already. It wasn't, but still like even
like the Kim Kardashian accounts, whatever, right? It was
an open source to Elon's credit, it is now, so I couldn't see it to know, right?
So I didn't get to sense one element being dominant
over the other.
But obviously conservatives felt that left leaning
was more dominant back then.
Yeah, I would love to see numbers on all of this.
Yeah, you'll be fine.
DEI, everything like this.
Sometimes anecdotal data really frustrates me.
It frustrates me primarily because of how sexy it is.
People just love.
It's a great way to describe it.
Love a story and I'm like,
God damn it, this is not science.
This is.
It's not even common sense.
Well, no, I think anecdotal stories
often have a wisdom in them.
No doubt, right.
There's something to be gained from seeing them.
There's a signal there,
but like how representative is that signal
of the broader thing?
There's a whole lot more noise than signal
more often than not.
All right.
So as I mentioned, cost-bust drugs,
there's so many questions I can ask here,
but what's the big question?
What's broken about our healthcare system?
There's no transparency. And when the lack of transparency leads to lack of trust and
When you can't trust the health care system other than maybe your doctor. That's a broken system. So what aspect of
This system this cost plus drugs is trying to solve
So the thing we're trying to solve for is trust. And the way we feel we get there is through complete transparency.
So when you go to costplusdrugs.com
and you put in the name of the medication,
if it's one of the 2,500 and growing that we carry,
we will first show you our cost,
what we actually pay for it.
Then we'll show you our 15% markup.
Then we'll show the pharmacy fill fee and shipping,
and that's your total price.
And that alone, that
transparency alone is completely revolutionizing how drugs are priced in America today. It's
led to research being done comparing our pricing to CMS and ours being cheaper than even the
government is negotiating, etc.,, et cetera, et cetera.
And so just that transparency alone has had an impact
and saved millions of people
hundreds of millions of dollars or more.
And maybe it results in more transparency
in other parts of the system too,
seeing the business of it.
What do the so-called middlemen companies,
so the PBMs.
The pharmacy benefit managers.
Thank you.
CVS Caremark, Cygnus Express Scripts,
and UnitedHealth OptumRx,
they control majority of the market.
What do they do wrong?
They put profits over everything, right?
And they know in an industry that's completely opaque,
they can pretty much do what they want,
and nobody gets to see what they're doing in detail. And so, the first thing when you sign
a contract with one of those big PBMs is says, you can't disclose any of this. And the fact that you
can't be disclosed means they could tell Lex's company that they're
being, you know, they're getting a great price and they're only being charged X and they
can call, tell Mark's company, oh, you're getting a great price and we're charging Mark
X plus, right?
But Mark doesn't know any better because there's no way to know.
The markup is not transparent.
The cost isn't transparent.
The markup isn't transparent.
You know, and you know, there's different things, you know, like I was just talking to a company in a presentation a couple of days ago, and they took the step to leave the big three PBMs to go to a rebate free PBM that was smaller.
And what they said led to the decision.
They had a contract with the PBM for these things called rebates, right? Where depending on the volume of medications you buy, they'll kick back to you a percentage of them.
And as it turns out, when they compared what was contracted for to what they actually got,
they were getting underpaid every single year. They just don't care, right? They'll take products.
There's a drug called Humira, right? And it is the number one revenue drug in the country.
And there's also a biosimilar, multiple biosimilars, but one we carry called Eusimri.
And Humira, the pre-rebate price is about $8,000 per month. And after rebates,
depending on the size of the company, it'll be anywhere from $3,000 to $6,000
a month. You can go to get your doctor to prescribe that biosimilar eusimery and you pay $594. But
those big three PBMs won't allow their clients to get eusimery because they don't get a rebate on
eusimery. So they'd rather keep a drug on their formulary even though their patients would save, their customers would save a lot of
money, they'd rather keep a drug and exclude another because they'll make a
lot more money. So the CVS Caremark spokesperson I think responded to you.
Phil Blando with the usual language that so deeply exhausts me,
but I was wondering if there's any truth to it.
Employers, unions, health plans, and government programs
work with CVS Caremark precisely because we deliver for them
lower drug costs, better health outcomes,
and broad pharmacy access. Through our True Cost, Cost Vantage,
and Choice formulary initiatives,
we are the leading agent of change,
innovation, and transparency in the market.
That's a whole lot of nothing.
So they are not transparent?
No.
No, call them up.
You go to Cost Plus Drugs, we'll give you our price list
of every, all 2500 plus drugs.
The actual cost.
The actual cost and what we sell it for because it's just a plus 15%.
Call up any of the big three companies and ask them for the same thing.
They're going to laugh at you.
It's so bad.
In fact, if you do business with them right now and you just ask for your claims data,
meaning how many people use Humira that we're paying, what are we paying for it?
They won't even give it to you unless you really, really scream and yell at them,
and then they'll charge you and take six months to get it. So like when we moved away from them,
we wanted to get what our claims data was to understand what we were going to be facing. They
wouldn't give it to us until like six months later, I forget the exact month, but, and then we,
they charge us for it as well our own data on the CEO front
You said that CEOs don't understand health care coverage. It's costing them big. What's what's the connection between?
Cost plus drugs and companies so I can speak for my own companies and this applies to all companies, you know
bigger companies that self-insure because we self-insured
When I finally when we started cost plus, I finally said, okay,
it's time for me to understand how I'm paying for my healthcare,
for my employees and their families.
And the first thing I looked at was a lot of these companies use employee
benefits consultants. And turns out I was getting,
I was paying $30 per employee per month,
which was millions of dollars a year.
And they were just sending us to the companies
that paid them the biggest commissions.
I'm like, how fucking dumb am I?
So I'm like, okay, we're cutting that.
And then I looked at our medication, our prescription deal
that goes through the PBMs that we were using
and that the consultant connected us with. And I took a list of, this is early on in Cost Plus Drugs, a list of the generic drugs that we
sold that cost more than $30 that the Mavericks also had purchased, right? We were able to get
that claims data. And it turns out we spent $169,000 with that PBM, one of the big three PBMs, and it would have cost us buying from
Cost Plus Drugs $19,000.
And that's just a simple example.
Then I looked at the insurance side of things, right?
We self-insure, so there weren't premiums per se, but we were getting charged $17.15
per employee per month just to use the network that they put together for us,
providers, hospitals, whatever.
And I'm like, all right, are there companies
that won't charge us to put together these networks?
Turns out there's a lot of them.
And those insurance companies and those PBMs
are also responsible for determining
what to authorize and what to deny, right?
So for a drug, it may be, all right,
this is an expensive drug, but before they'll allow,
before they'll say they'll pay for the drug
that your doctor wants to prescribe for you,
you have to try these three other drugs
in what's called step-up therapy, right?
To see if these other cheaper drugs work,
or they're not even necessarily cheaper,
they may be being pushed
because they're getting a higher
rebate. And so I'm like, that's insane. I want my employees to get the medication that the doctors
say is best. And so I didn't realize those were the intricacies of where my healthcare dollars went.
There's not a single CEO who does, because that's not a core competency that they need.
And the CFOs, that's not their core competency.
And the HR people, they contribute
and they understand it some
because they're dealing with the claims,
but they spend most of their prescription drug related time
or healthcare related times
trying to get pre-authorizations approved.
So, you know, your kid breaks their arm
or you get sick
and you go to the doctor and before the doctor will do a surgery or do whatever, they have to
go to the insurance company and get pre-authorized. And then they always say no, right? And then you
have to go back and somebody has to argue for you. And that just eats up employee time because you
know, I'm sick or my kid's sick and you're wasting my time, eats up HR time, the CEOs don't know any of this. Right? So what I'm saying is one, the
smartest thing to do is to get a healthcare CEO at every company with
over let's say 500 employees that focuses on all these things. You'd save a
shitload of money. And two, healthcare is your second largest line item expense
after payroll. And in some companies it's hundreds, billions of dollars,
right, and you don't understand it,
and you're letting these guys rip you off,
and it's because these big CEOs don't understand it
and are getting ripped off that the industry
is the way it is, because that allows
the opacity to continue.
That's fascinating.
That allows the opacity to continue. That's fascinating.
So that most companies outsource offload,
sort of the expertise on the healthcare side,
when they really should be internally,
there should be an expert that figures out.
Yes, because it's the wellness of your employees
and their families.
And it costs a lot of money.
Yeah, but if your employees aren't healthy
or if they're worried about their kids,
and what is more worrisome and detrimental to the performance of a company,
right? A DEI program or,
or having to go to HR and scream and yell and explain,
and your doctor wasting their time doing the same thing to get authorization for
a surgery or a medication. It's insane.
What made you
decide to step into this cartel-like situation where so much is opaque? So I
got a cold email from a Dr. Alex Oshmianski, who's my co-founder. He's a
radiologist by trade and a physicist and a smart motherfucker. And he had a
pharmacy that he wanted to create a compounding pharmacy that would
manufacture generic drugs that were in short supply because it happens all the and he had a pharmacy that he wanted to create a compounding pharmacy that would manufacture
generic drugs that were in short supply because it happens all the time that things aren't available.
I'm like, you're thinking too small. We should do something on a much bigger scale.
And then it was right around the time they were sending the pharmacy bro, Martin Shkreli, to jail.
And so I was reading up on that and he increased the price of this drug, DeraPrim, I think it was like
7,500% or increased a low-cost drug to $7,500, one of those. And I'm like, well,
if he can just jack up the price of this drug and charge more and get away with it,
this has to be an incredibly inefficient market. And so the question is, why is he able to do it?
And it was immediately apparent that it was a lack of transparency.
And so can we start a company that is fully transparent with our costs, our markup, and
our selling price and see if it works?
And so we went for it and it took off immediately.
I mean, you read a press release from a company saying they were creating a cost advantage
program basically pretending to replicate us.
We haven't been in business two years.
How insane is that?
Did you get a lot of pressure?
I mean, I'm sure they're very good at playing games.
So cartel type situations, they protect.
It feels like healthcare,
like it's very difficult to get in there.
It does.
I mean, and the whole industry is an arbitrage,
but we don't work inside the system.
We work outside the system.
And so we don't work with those biggest companies.
The biggest companies with the most dominant control,
it's very insulated and very controlled, like you said.
We work outside them, we won't work with them.
And so because of that,
we don't have access to every medication
because they've told a lot of the big brand manufacturers
that if they work with us,
they'll take them off their formularies or change the rebate structure so that
they won't be prescribed as much. Yeah, it is dark, but we'll get past that.
Right.
Because there's a downstream impact of all this in the rebates and the
greediness of those big three PBMs.
When you go to a local pharmacy here in Austin, right.
And let's just say you have, you have a friend here, right.
That is on Medicare or Medicare Advantage,
and they go to a local pharmacy,
and they get a drug that costs $600.
Well, an insurance company, that's $600.
The pharmacy first buys that drug
for probably that price minus 5%, so $570.
Then there's probably a co-pay by the patient,
and that's probably $20.
So now the net investment that the pharmacy, the local pharmacy has for that brand medication
is $550. Where it gets really fucked up is those big three PBMs, they're not reimbursing them $550 or more. They're reimbursing them $500 or less.
And literally those community pharmacies are eating that loss.
And as a result, they're going out of business left and right.
And the most insane part of it is, yes, with corporate employer insurance, that happens.
But it happens more with Medicare
Part D and Medicare Advantage.
It happens all the time with those, almost with every script.
The government is complicit in these community pharmacies going out of business.
How does that connect to Cost Plus Drugs and what we're doing and the big brands?
The big brands know that if all these community pharmacies are
going, tens of thousands of them are going to go out of business because of the way this pricing is,
they're going to lose a connection between their brand medications and grandma and grandpa and
Sally. And all that business is going to get transferred to the big companies.
And they're going to have even less leverage. So they're working with us to come up with programs that are very supportive of independent pharmacies.
And that's gonna allow us to break the cartel
because it's in their best interest
not to allow them to be so vertically integrated
that they destroy the entire community
and independent pharmacy industry.
Is there other aspects of the healthcare industry
that could use this kind of transparency and revolutionizing.
Yeah. So what we're going to do with our own healthcare, right? We're not going to be in the
business of selling healthcare or anything like that or operating. But the things we do for my
companies, we're only going to do deals with providers, healthcare providers that allow us
to be completely transparent. So that whatever contracts we do, we're gonna post them all.
Whatever pricing we get, we're gonna post them all.
So that every company who's our size or even bigger
will have a template that they can work on,
which will take it away from the big three insurance
companies and the big three PBMs.
Because now without that transparency,
they have to use consultants who are getting paid
by those big three, getting paid by those big companies and aren't giving them
the best response, and so now that transparency
will overcome that.
And you're using your, how should I say it,
celebrity, your name to kind of push this forward?
Yeah, that's the only company I've ever put my name on.
It's weird that people aren't getting into the space.
Well, you've public people, you know, like big,
there's not like a big, you know, you look at tech,
there's like these, like CEOs are open and public
and public and they're pushing the company
and they're selling everything, it's like all transparent.
But you don't see that in healthcare.
No, because it's a big business and most people,
like if I was 25 trying to start a company,
I'd work in the system.
Because if I can build it up big enough,
they would just buy me.
And I'd make money and buy a sports team.
But I don't need that money now.
Let me ask you about AI.
You got a little bit of an argument about open source.
I think you stepped in between Vanilla Coastland,
Mark Andreessen.
You think AI should be open sourced?
Yeah, for sure.
So like all that discussion we've been having
about like Google and so on, one of the solutions.
Well, okay, two different things.
Meaning that Meta's doing open source.
Yes.
Right, that's a good choice for them.
I think that's a smart choice, right?
But it's just a business decision for everybody else.
I don't think it should be forced.
Forced, yes, yeah.
Even Google's open sourourcing some of the models.
Because they're all, that's a very incestuous industry
where the people all work together at some level,
they read the same papers, they go to the same conferences.
It's like the early days of streaming and the internet
where people used the same technology everywhere.
And now they just try different things
and you get one smart or two, a couple smart people in one company like Anthropic,
right, and they do things a little bit better
and model efficiency gets better.
So, you know, it's just a business choice,
but I don't think it should be forced,
but I think it's a smart business decision.
Open sourcing is a smart business decision.
Yeah.
It's a tricky one.
I mean, Google is a pioneer in that,
with TensorFlow in the AI space. That's a tricky decision to get away the code. It mean, Google is a pioneer in that with TensorFlow in the AI space.
That's a tricky decision to get away the code.
It really, really is, right?
But go back to historically, there
was digital computing, which was a dominant player.
And they thought, and IBM to a certain extent,
thought that they wouldn't be subject to a problem
with the PC industry.
And then all of a sudden, with their
mainframes and everything, they had captive software, they wouldn't use off-the-shelf software.
Right? So for a digital equipment mainframe or an IBM mainframe, you needed software that was
written for it. There was nothing off the shelf. And when the PC industry came along, it was the
exact opposite. There was MS-DOS and then Windows, things that were off the shelf that every PC could
use.
That changed how people thought about software.
I think the same thing will happen here where it's going to be, as models become more efficient
and less expensive to train, I think there'll be more reasons to open source.
Yeah, that's the hope.
It creates more competition,
a lot of different diversity of approaches
in how they're implemented, deployed,
what kind of products they create, all of that.
The Vinod compared the danger of that
to the Manhattan Project.
Yeah, I'm not buying that.
You don't see the parallels between nuclear weapons and AI.
No, I think I'm not an AI fatalist at all.
I'm an AI optimist.
But it's not to say that there isn't a lot of scary shit
that can happen with it.
Militarily, like I said earlier, I'm
a big believer that there's going
to be millions and tens of millions of models and people will take their expertise and either get hired for it and contribute
or create their own models and license.
So that you see now with this thing called mixture of experts, right?
Where you connect things and people can take their expertise and will be able to take that expertise
and retain it in a way that they want to retain it. I don't think there's going to be one medical
database. I told this to people at a couple of big companies that were doing healthcare initiatives.
Branding is so important in the healthcare space for hospitals.
The Mayo Clinics, the MD Anderson's, they're huge brands.
And I don't think they're just going to give up their expertise to some
singular model and say, okay, whatever expertise we have is available to you
in Gemini or ChatGPT or so-and-so's version of Meta's open source.
I just don't, there's just, that would be business suicide.
And so I think you're gonna see each of them
have their own models and update them as they go
and license them.
Yeah, and yeah, make money from the expertise.
You have to.
Don't give away the expertise.
You have to.
Yeah, yeah, and the expertise evolves and grows
and all that kind of stuff and you wanna own that growth.
What advice would you give to young people?
You have an exceptionally successful career,
you came from little, made a lot.
What advice would you give them?
Love your life, right?
Find the things that you can enjoy, be curious.
You don't have to have all the answers
when you're 12, 15.
I get emails from 13, 15 year old kids, right?
What do I do?
What do I do, right?
You know, I feel like I'm being held back.
I'm like 15, you feel like you're being held back?
But just be curious,
because you don't have to have the answers.
You don't have to know what you're gonna be
when you grow up.
I'm a hardcore believer that everybody has something
that they're really,
really, really good at. That could be world-class great.
Every single human being on this planet.
And the hard part is just finding what that is and in some places having
resources to enable it. Um, but be curious so you can find out what it is.
I didn't take a technology.
I took one technology class in college, Fortran programming, and
I cheated on it, right?
I mean, it wasn't until I got a job at Mellon Bank and I started learning how to program
in this thing called Ramus, this scripting and computing language, that I realized, oh,
this is interesting to me and I like it.
And that's what got me a job selling software and going on from there.
You just don't know what that's going to be until you go out and experience
different things. So for anybody young out there listening, you know,
enjoy your life, find things to smile about, be curious, read,
watch, you know,
expose yourself to as many different ideas as you can because something's going
to click at some point. You may be 15, you may be 25, you may be 55,
but it can happen.
One thing to mention is sometimes it's difficult
where your parents, people around you,
might not be conducive or might not be of help
in finding the thing you're good at.
In fact, in my own life, the society was such that I don't know
if they've helped much at the thing I was good at.
I'm still not sure what that is, but I think-
I think you interviewed and done pretty well for you.
Well, it's not even, it's,
there was a thing where I saw the beauty in people.
Like I, it very intensely.
So you can call it empathy, all that kind of stuff.
And-
Someone call it wokeness.
Well, super woke, I guess you could say just super woke.
That's me.
And, you know, but in the education system,
I came up in, it was a very hard mathematics, you know,
science and so on.
And it didn't notice that whatever that was in me. but you know you have to keep the flame going you have to try
to find your way and see what that's useful and and then others around you
might not always notice it so it might take time so it could be lonely you can
really have to find the strength to believe in yourself. Oh for sure you know
and I'll tell you one a quick. Um, 1992 I went to Moscow state university, um,
to teach kids how to start businesses.
Wow.
Cause I had sold, um,
micro solutions and I wanted to travel and I took Russian in high school.
My risky is like not how to show.
Good enough to remember that. Yeah, right. Yeah. Um, but it was interesting to me and I bring it up because just they
didn't, they didn't know what the word profit meant, right? But at the same time I would
go around and meet people and it was as entrepreneurial, like right after the Soviet Union fell,
entrepreneurship went through the roof.
I mean, a lot of it was mafia driven,
but people found that spark,
because I think that is natural.
And so you just never know when and how and when
the circumstances will come together
for you to be able to take advantage.
That spark is really important to comment on is in Russia and Ukraine.
Uh, I think the system kind of suppresses that spark somehow.
As you said, you saw the natural entrepreneurship,
but there's not the entrepreneurial spirit once you grow up in both of the
nations I mentioned, there is, no, I believe it right. I mean, but there's something about the system that mentioned. There is a change in Ukraine,
but there's something about the system that kinda,
you know, be reasonable, be, you know, be secure.
There would have been no reason for me to go over
to do what I was doing if it was otherwise.
But that's the thing that really can help a country flourish.
You know, it's gonna be interesting with Ukraine
if they're able to survive this, right?
Because as horrific as it is, you know,
as you saw across Europe after World War II,
the rebuilding creates opportunities.
Rebuilding creates opportunities,
but you know, first the war has to end.
How that ends.
I don't know either.
Is a really complex path.
What gives you hope about the future of humanity?
Just looking in my kids' eyes, just, you, just talking to them and seeing their spirit,
their friend spirit. And obviously we're blessed as can be, right? And it's not the same for every
kid. But I do, you know, I get emails that I respond, don't respond to all of them, but from
13, 14, 15 year old kids around the world, you know, because Shark Tank's shown everywhere,
asking me business questions. And it's just like they took the time. Because Shark Tank is shown everywhere, asking me business questions.
They took the time. They were that curious and that interested. I see it when I talk to schools,
when I go to different groups that spark in kids' eyes that there's something bigger and better and
exciting out there. That's not to say there's not fear,
climate and any other number of things,
but that's the beauty of kids.
And I think Gen Z really embodies that.
And to me, that's just really exciting.
They dream, they dream big.
They see the opportunity for making the world better.
That's cool, it's cool to see young people in their eyes, that dream.
That I could be the one to do it too, which is a super problem.
It's funny, because when I go talk to elementary school kids,
one of the things I do, I said, OK, let's look around.
You see that light there?
One day that light didn't exist.
Then somebody had the idea.
Then somebody created a product out of it. And now your school bought that.
You see that chair? Chairs didn't always look like that.
Somebody had that idea. Why not you?
So when you walk out and want to make them do ask yourself, why not me?
Why can't I be the one to change the world?
Thank you for that beautiful, hopeful message.
And thank you for talking today, Mark. You're fun to follow.
I'm a big fan of yours,
but you're also an important person in this world.
I really appreciate everything you do.
Well, I appreciate it.
Thanks for saying that, Lex.
And keep on doing what you're doing.
This was great.
I really enjoyed this.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Mark Cuban.
To support this podcast,
please check out our sponsors in the description.
And now let me leave you with some words from Oscar Wilde.
Imagination was given to man to compensate him for what he is not.
And a sense of humor was provided to console him for what he is.
Thank you for listening and hope to see you next time.