Morning Brew Daily - Welcome Generation Beta & The Heated Battle Over H-1B Tech Visas
Episode Date: January 2, 2025Episode 488: Neal and Toby ring in the new year, along with the dawn of a new generation for babies born from 2025 and on. Welcome in ‘Generation Beta.’ Then, a public dispute is in full display o...ver legal immigration of high skilled workers within the republican party, including Elon Musk. Also, the start of a new year also means the start of artworks entering the public domain. Meanwhile, victims from the Bernie Madoff ponzi scheme get their final payouts and the stock market finishes 2024 with a bang. Lastly, a preview into what’s coming in 2025 in the year ahead. Subscribe to Morning Brew Daily for more of the news you need to start your day. Share the show with a friend, and leave us a review on your favorite podcast app. Listen to Morning Brew Daily Here: https://link.chtbl.com/MBD Watch Morning Brew Daily Here: https://www.youtube.com/@MorningBrewDailyShow Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Good morning Brew Daily Show.
I'm Neil Fryman.
And I'm Toby Howell.
Today, what you need to know about the MAGA versus Doge Civil War over H-1B tech visas.
Then get ready to feel old.
The start of 2025 also marks the dawn of Generation Beta.
It's Thursday, January 2nd.
Let's ride.
Good morning.
We are so back.
Hope you all had a relaxing holiday break and are ready to hit the ground running in 2020.
The U.S. enters the new year on edge after at least 15 people were killed in New Orleans
early yesterday morning when a man drove a white pickup through a crowd on Bourbon Street in the heart
of the French quarter. The suspect was killed by police and we know he's a U.S.-born
citizen from Texas who flew an ISIS flag on the back of his truck. Authorities are calling
this a terrorist attack and believe he's not the only person responsible. The FBI said it's
investigating all leads that will allow them to find his associates. New Orleans was
full of people, not only for New Year's, but because college football's Sugar Bowl was in town.
That game between Georgia and Notre Dame was supposed to take place yesterday evening, but has been
rescheduled for today out of security concerns.
Separately, a few hours later, a Tesla cyber truck filled with fuel canisters and firework mortars
exploded while parked outside of the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas, killing his driver
and injuring seven others.
As of right now, authorities are treating the two as isolated incidents, but President
Joe Biden said in his statement that law enforcement is investigating whether there's any
possible connection with the attack in New Orleans. One thread that does connect the two is that both
drivers rented their vehicles off the car rental app, Turo, sort of like this Airbnb
platform for sharing cars, though officials called it a, quote, coincidence.
The investigation into both these incidents is ongoing and will keep you updated as more
information rolls in. Now on to the business news. 2025 isn't just the year where you're finally
going to lock in. It also marks the dawn of humanity's newest generation, Gen Beta. Yep,
while you're out there contending with lower back pain and the egg-nog burps, babies born to your peers
in the new year and onwards to 2039 are kicking off a brand new generational cohort.
Gen Beta will be the second generation after Alpha to have never written a one or a nine in the
date section of a test since they're born entirely within the 21st century, and many of the
you is born within the 14-year time frame will live to see the 22nd century.
Now, obviously, it's hard to predict what's in store for this generation.
One thing is for certain, that is Generation Beta will be big.
Mark McRindle, the demographer who coined the name Generation Alpha,
predicts that Gen Beta will make up 16% of the global population by 2035 to reach 2.1 billion
members.
Gen Beta also enters a world of rapid technological change.
If Gen Alpha has been dubbed iPad Kids who grew up in front of screens,
Gen Beta is likely to be similarly influenced by the rise of AI in virtual worlds.
Neil, it is 2025.
The dawn of a new generation.
What is in store for beta?
Well, one thing is they may think of Googling as something that we think of as using a rotary phone,
just completely ancient thanks to the rise of generative AI
and all of those search capabilities that they're allowing.
They probably won't have to learn how to drive because of autonomous vehicles.
Waymo has been expanding into multiple cities now.
I, you know, maybe they'll have to learn how to drive, but 16 years down the road,
we might have enough autonomous vehicles where they can just call an Uber, a self-driving Uber,
and they'll never have to learn how to drive.
They probably won't remember the first Mars landing.
That is slated for something like 2030 and 2031.
And then when we talk about the pandemic, like me and you, they'll just say, let's get you to bed, grandpa.
That'll just be something they read about in the history books.
And they could also potentially live in a post-social media world.
It's wild to think about now, but think about all of the pressure that legislators have been applying to these social media companies.
TikTok could be banned in the U.S. in less than a month.
In Australia, they're rolling out the first social media ban for kids under the age of 16.
That could be replaced by these virtual worlds that we've talked about before.
the Robloxes, the Minecrafts where kids hang out today. And then obviously there is this rise of
AI friends and AI boyfriends and girlfriends that could replace normal social interaction.
Again, this is speculation. We're speculating right now, but all these forces are coming to the
four as Generation Beta, you know, opens their eyes for the first time in this new world. So there
is a lot of things that kind of demographers look back and say the only way you can really delineate
between generations is through technological change, and it becomes more clear as you kind of progress
through time. So we'll see what actually marks the difference between generation beta and generation
alpha and Gen Z. But there's clearly a lot of forces kind of being applied to this generation.
Meanwhile, there's just been a surge in what's known as generational research and trying to figure out
what millennials, how millennials are different than Gen Z, who are different than Gen Alpha,
and how their consumption patterns change and marketers and companies are all over this.
I was watching football yesterday, and I saw a prudential ad that asked parents to open a savings
account for Generation Beta.
They explicitly used Generation Beta.
They said, you can apply now and we'll get $150 for your Generation Beta Kid.
So there is a lot of attention paid to these generational differences.
There's also a lot of criticism toward people who use these generational differences because
you are basically saying that people were born in a certain age group, in a certain 15-year span,
that's how long these generations are, are all the same because there's these certain external
factors that weigh on them and, you know, influence them in certain ways.
There's been a lot of pushback to that, a lot of criticism that generational research is kind
of a sham, and it's just, you know, basically a marketing ploy.
But, you know, brands are absolutely so key to on these differences, whether they exist or not.
And looking ahead a little bit, McRendell, who is the man behind.
naming Generation Alpha and Generation Beta.
He says that he's going to continue using Greek letters every 15 years to mark these new
generations.
So all those cool generations from the past think names like the Silent Generation, Gen X, Baby Boomers.
We're not going to have cool names like that.
We're just going down the Greek Alas.
And the betas is the worst.
I know, yeah, not the best.
I'd rather be an alpha.
A holiday dust up over immigration has put President-elect Donald Trump in a delicate
position as he tries to navigate two powerful factions within his base.
The spat is centered on H-1B visas, which allow U.S. companies to hire skilled foreign workers
in specific industries, particularly for tech jobs.
Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswami hold the stance that H-1B visas are necessary to attract
top engineering talent to the U.S. given what is in their estimation a pretty paltry domestic
supply.
However, that pro-immigration beat clashes with members of Trump's traditional base who criticized
the H-1B program for displacing American workers with cheap,
foreign talent, and favoring corporations over American labor.
To the surprise of some, Trump ended up siding with Elon and the tech faction,
coming out in support of the H-1B visa program.
So, Neil, you have these two sides of the MAGA movement fighting a sort of civil war
over the legal immigration of highly skilled workers with some very influential and important
industries at the center of it all.
Yeah, and the industry at the center of it all is big tech.
They love H-1B visas because they can bring in really smart people.
They say that there's not enough American-born programmers, software developers to fill their open spots.
The company that was the largest sponsor of H-1B visas in 2024 was Amazon with 9200.
And Google, meta, Apple, IBM all are in the top 10.
Elon Musk said that he himself was on an H-1B visa at one point.
And Tesla also approved or got approved 700.
42 H-1B petitions last year.
Other big companies that use it are these IT providers like cognizant technology solutions,
Tata Consultancy Services, and HCL America.
They're all in the top 10 as well.
So big tech for years now, ever since H-1B visas became a thing in the 90s,
have been pushing on the government to expand the cap.
The cap right now is 85,000.
They think that's not nearly enough.
They want more people to be able to come into the United States.
from India. You know, the 72% of last year's visa, H-1B visas came from India. There was a lot of
racial, racist things going on as relates to Indian people because they account for the
majority of H-1B visas. But the tech industry for a long time has been pushing for an expansion
of H-1Bs. So we'll see what happens. Yeah, proponents of the system say that this is not
meant to replace the American worker. It is just to be a stopgap. It plugs those.
gaps that the U.S. workforce cannot satisfy in these very specialized field.
One thing that is true, too, is that Elon Musk feels extremely passionately about this,
especially I called it like the tech faction of the MAGA movement.
They feel very strongly about it because they think that in order to make America
competitive on a global scale, you need to hire the best global talent as well.
So they're not saying this is not about replacing American workers.
is about elevating America as a whole,
because if you're going to recruit the best people
you need to recruit from the world,
not just America itself.
Elon Musk tweeted,
I will go to war on this issue,
the likes of which you cannot possibly comprehend.
So he clearly feels very strongly about this,
as do others in his camp.
All I got to say now is get ready
for the Popeye slasher flicks.
That's because, as of yesterday,
the one-eyed spinach-fueled sailor
became one of thousands of copyrighted works
to enter the U.S. public domain.
which allows a new generation of artists to adapt, share, and rediscover old characters, books, and music.
It's an annual tradition. Every January 1st, the copyrights for works introduced 95 years ago expire,
according to the terms of U.S. intellectual property law.
So yesterday, art from 1929 came up for grabs.
The first edition of Popeye entered the public domain, along with Tintin,
legendary books The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner and Ernest Hemingway's A Farewell to Arms, and a bunch more.
The idea of the public domain is to unleash creativity by releasing locked up stories,
and we saw this firsthand in 2024.
The box office smash hit Wicked is a prequel to L. Frank Bombs,
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz Books,
and one of the most celebrated novels of the year, James by Percival Everett,
is a retelling of Mark Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.
Toby, happy belated public domain day.
It's a great day to be someone who's itching to write a Popeye musical.
Yeah, or Popeye slasher film, as you said.
at the stop. It is interesting too because when these works hit the public domain, sometimes it's
not the work that you're imagining in your head. We made a big deal last year of Mickey Mouse
are hitting the public domain, but it was actually Steamboat Willie who appeared in those animated
short where he's whistling at the helm of a steamboat, not the white-gloved Mickey that you and I
are probably, or you're probably thinking about at home. Same thing with Popeye, the sailor. Is it the
Popeye that we know with the, you know, the gravely voice and eating spinach. And that is a little bit
up for debate because technically this is the 1929 version of Popeye. And it's not the one where he
was eating spinach. Before he started eating spinach, this is a funny one. He got his superhuman
strength from a weird source, the wiffy, the wiffle hen named Bernice. So he survived like
bullet wounds by petting Bernice, this magical hen. It was only until later that the spinach
actually got involved. So maybe it's not the
Popeye that you're thinking of, but it is still
the sailor with the with the
bulging bison. I'm not sure how often I think of
Popeye, but I definitely do conflate
him with spinach. So you mentioned
the spinach doesn't come in until 1931
in that comic, but some sleuths
at Duke University went looking
for the copyright for the
spinach version of Popeye, and
they found that it was not renewed. So
actually, Popeye spinach is in the
public domain now. So if you are
considering writing a Popeye
musical or a Popeye fan fiction or anything like that, you can legally, you know, have him
getting buff from spinach. And you mentioned that kind of jokingly that someone might make a
Pope Slash or Phil film. That has become a very normal thing as these beloved children kind of
classics hit the public domain. People immediately jump on and make a horror movie out of it.
In 2023, we saw Winnie the Pooh Blood and Honey, which was this really horrible B-grade horror
movie. We saw the Mousetrap, which was a horror flick based off of Mickey Mouse, and then
Popeye, the Slayer Man, will be released in 2025. There's already a trailer out for that on
YouTube. Yeah, so we're making jokes about this, but this is actually a huge deal. As I mentioned,
some of the most blockbuster works of this year are adaptations of old works. And, you know,
there are a lot of people who criticize U.S. copyright law saying 95 years, that is intense, right?
Copyright law is meant to protect artists and incentivize creativity because you don't want to spend
years working on something only for somebody to rip it off after. But 95 years is much after
and it comes as part of a law that has Disney's fingerprints written all over it. Disney really
wants to protect its characters, particularly Mickey Mouse. So it created along with U.S.
government this copyright law that extends protections for 95 years.
But you can see how much creativity is unleashed when these works enter the public domain.
And I just want to get you a little excited about who's entering the public domain in the coming years.
So we get Goofy in 2028.
Mary Poppins and Donald Duck in 2030.
Superman in 2034.
These are not in the coming years.
These are way down the line.
Batman, but still you can get excited.
Batman in 2035.
Tom and Jerry and Bugs Bunny in 2036.
That is going to be a bigger year.
If we're still podcasting in 2036, that's going to be a big deal.
Wonder Woman, 2037.
Gen Beta is going to have a field date with those.
Up next are winners of the long weekend.
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As per tradition, we typically do winners of the weekend on a Monday,
but this Thursday is basically a Monday in disguise.
So Toby and I decided to pick two things,
whose holiday break scored a 100% on the tomato meter.
I won the pre-show mini golf round with a score of 30 under par.
so I get to go first.
My winner is the victims of Bernie Madoff
because somehow they've been made nearly whole.
The 10th and final round of payments
to people scammed by the notorious Ponzi schemer
was sent out on Monday bringing the total recovered
to 94% of estimated total losses.
Officials called it an unprecedented conclusion
to a compensation process
that will have repaid $4.3 billion to over 40,000 people
in almost 130 countries.
This final batch paid out about 131 million.
So where'd the feds scrounge up the money from?
Most, about $2.2 billion came from a settlement with the estate of Madoff investor Jeffrey Pickower,
while $1.7 billion was recovered from J.P. Morgan, which is the bank Madoff used to orchestrate his fraud.
As for Madoff, he died in prison in 2021 while serving a 150-year sentence for conducting the world's largest Ponzi scheme,
cheating investors, most of them regular people, out of $20 billion.
Yeah, I think that's the big takeaway here is that the made-off victim fund says that a lot of people incorrectly assume that the victims were these big institutions, these big pensions or these high-worth, high-net-worth individuals, which there were a lot of them that invested with Madoff.
But a lot of the MVF victims were also these small investors, relatively small investors.
And by MVF, you mean Madoff Victim Fund, which is like the fund that they created to pay out the victim.
Correct.
And those loss is averaged right around 250,000.
So, again, to some people, that is not a small victim, but again, in the grand scheme of this kind of world of high finance, that is a smaller investor.
And it did wreck a lot of havoc on people's lives.
And even though that some of these big pensions were so-called big investors, they are including charities, including schools.
So obviously, I mean, you don't need me to rehash how disrupting the Madoff, you know, Ponzi scheme was.
But just remember that some of these victims were relatively small level in investors.
And it's pretty remarkable.
is crazy that they're able to scrounge up the funds to pay these people back and
reminded me of a recent fraud, FTX, where they, the prosecutors and the people cleaning
up this mess were able to do something similar.
And we were talking before the show.
What did they, what did they were able to repay FTCS, like 98%.
So these victims, you know, are made whole eventually by through all these asset seizures
and settlement agreements.
It took 16 years in the Madoff case.
but a small bit of good news for this made-off situation.
My winner of the very long weekend is the entire stock market
because its 2024 was stronger than your last drink on New Year's Eve.
Despite a bit of a wobbly December that saw the S&P closed down 2.5%,
the Dowel slide 5%.
It was a dang good year for stocks.
The S&P 500 finished up 23%,
a strong showing right on the heels of rising 24% in 2020.
Those back-to-back gains of over 20% was the best performance for the index since the year I was born, which was Neil?
1997.
1997.
Good job.
You know me so well.
A combination of waning inflation, interest rate cuts, and the promise of AI sent stocks flying.
However, if you missed out on a few key companies, you whiffed out on a lot of these gains.
The Magnificent Seven accounted for over 50% of the S&P 500s.
total gains this year with Nvidia coming in as the top performer in the S&P 500 once again
with a nice 179% gain. Neal, if your portfolio ended up in the red this year,
feels like you got no one to blame but yourself. Wow, that's harsh, but also true. Let's do a
winners. Let's do a Meadow Winner segment. Who were the biggest winners of the winner that was
the stock market? Well, Palantir was the S&P 500's top performing component this year. It went up over
350%. This is the AI company that has AI data analytics company that has a lot of clients in the
US government and the Pentagon, but it's expanding to have more private clients. So Palantir was a
huge winner. Some other smaller companies that did really well, sort of exemplify what's going on
in the economy. New scale power, which is a nuclear power company focused on small modular
reactors, rose 450%. And we saw a lot of big tech companies.
Invest in those small modular reactors in order to power their data centers.
Another company that did super well, App Lovin, which is a mobile app development marketing company,
shares were up more than 700% on the year. So those were a few of the outliers of overall a great
market. Let's go to the losers here. I mean, I can think of three blue chip stocks that
did really poorly and have engaged these big turnaround efforts to turn around their businesses.
is three are Boeing, Intel and Walgreens. Intel and Walgreens, both shares were both down
over 60%. Boeing, so many crises over 2024 was down 30%. So those big Dow stocks did not do well
last year. And if you're wondering why we're celebrating when really the last week of the year was
a little, was really red. A lot of kind of analysts are looking out of this and saying,
all right, where do we see this next jump coming from? Can't really see it right now. Maybe take some
chips off the board, maybe take a little profits before the year end, which was a bummer because
there's this thing called the Santa Rally, which is like post-Christmas. There is usually a little
bit of bump to end the year. Instead, we got the reverse Santa Rally, a little bit of red, but
2025, three years in a row of 20-plus gains. It has happened before in stock market history,
but it is not. Before you were born. Well before I was born, well before Generation
Beta was even conceived of. So I won't speculate as to what to happen, but it is
exceedingly rare to see three plus years of 20 plus percent.
Well, there are people whose jobs it is to speculate.
Those are Wall Street analysts.
They say on average that the S&P will rise about 10% next year.
You have a lot of competing things going on.
You have Trump's deregulatory agenda, but you also at the same time have his tariffs
and perhaps another bout of inflation.
And what really killed the stock market rally post-election was Jerome Powell getting up there
and saying that instead of four,
expected rate cuts in 2025, we're only going to have two. So interest rate cuts and the path of the
Fed are really going to drive a lot of the stock market this year. Typically, following the weekend,
we give you a preview of the week ahead. With this show coming after the longest weekend of all,
let's supersize this segment to give you a heads up about the major events of the year ahead.
And we'll start right here in January with dry January, the annual event when people
challenge themselves to lay off the booze during the first month of the new year.
Started by a UK charity in 2013, dry January is more popular than ever,
with web searches for the term in the first week of 2024,
doubling from 2023 to reach an all-time high.
But for many of you taking on the alcohol detox,
dry January may not be too difficult to pull off at all
because you're drinking less as it is.
Per capita, pure alcohol consumption in the U.S. has dropped to its lowest level since 2002.
Toby, are you doing dry January?
I am doing dry January.
Part of it is also, I have another marathon on the docket.
Those two don't really go hand in hand.
But you're right, a lot of this drop is led by the youth, the younger people.
The share of 18 to 34-year-olds who say they've never, they ever drink has fallen by 10 percentage points in the last two decades, according to Pew Research.
So this is clearly something driven from the use, from the people who used to be, you know, kind of driving alcohol consumption.
that has kind of started to change a little bit.
Some of the beneficiaries from this has been the cannabis industry,
as people indulge in jive January, cannabis shop operators anecdotally say,
they usually come in looking for, you know, a boost in edibles
or those drinkable cannabis products as well.
So it definitely is a vibe shift.
So obviously, 2024 was one of the biggest dry January's on record.
Let's see if 2025 a similar growth trajectory.
You only have to look a few weeks out for two other major.
events on January 19th, TikTok will be banned in the U.S. if it isn't saved by the Supreme Court,
which will hear arguments on the case about a week before. Then the next day, January 20th is
inauguration day. Donald Trump will be sworn in as the next president of the United States.
Over break, he urged the Supreme Court to hold off on a ban so he could have time to strike a deal
that allows it to survive in the country. It's been interesting, Neil, though. I have seen some
internet culture writers, Jules Turpac being one of them, that are saying a lot of TikTok users would
actually be bummed out if it wasn't banned in the country. They're saying that deep down people
want it washed from their culture. They're tired of feeling like their brains literally rotting
away. We spoke about brain rot in our year-end recap. People are just tired of that feeling. So there is
this weird undercurrent of people saying, you know what, just get it off my phone, giving my
screen time back a little bit. I don't know how big of a faction that is or if it's more just an
online thing, but it is interesting to see that groundwell support for the band as we kind of come up
against that deadline. Skipping ahead to the fall, which is when the biggest
entertainment event of the year is slated to take place. Can you guess what it is? If you said
Grand Theft Auto 6, you are correct. The video game, a decade in the making, will almost
certainly be the biggest entertainment launch of 2025, with projections that it'll bring in
$3 billion in its first year and $1 billion in pre-orders before it even comes out.
Toby, this property has broken more records than Mondo DuPlanus. The previous edition,
which came out in 2013 is the best-selling entertainment products of all time.
And the trailer for GTA-6 is the most viewed video game reveal ever,
with more than 225 million views on YouTube since it was released December 2020.
There's this joke that we got X before we got GTA-6 playing on the fact that it's been
12 years between releases.
Now you will not be able to make that joke anymore, so you've got to find a new stick.
I do think this is going to be gigantic.
All the way back in 2013, Grand Theft Auto 5 did 800 million in global sales on its first day.
I think it's going to be even bigger now because of just all that hype that we spoke about.
The biggest film release of the year won't happen until December when the third installment of James Cameron's Avatar saga hits theaters.
It won't be GTA 6 big, but it'll still be pretty massive.
The first and second Avatar films both grossed over $2 billion globally,
putting them among the top five highest grossing movies of all time.
And the wild part is there are two.
more avatars after this next one. That is hard to wrap my mind around. You know what? I'm just
going to say it though. I'm tired of people saying that avatars is this empty franchise with no
cultural impact. I mean, I enjoyed the last film. Way of Water was great. The first Avatar is great as
well. I think this next one is great. I'm tired pretending that I don't like Avatar. I think it's a
great series. Okay, let's wrap it up there. Thanks so much for spending your morning with us and have
a wonderful Thursday. Wow, tomorrow is Friday. We really earn this weekend coming up. For any
questions, comments, or feedback, send an email to Morning Brew Daily at Morningbrew.com.
If your New Year's resolution is to have smarter conversations with the people around you,
well, I can think of nothing better than to share Morning Brew Daily with your friends and
family. So when you talk to them, they'll be just as up to date as you are on current events.
If you don't like that idea, here's Toby with another sharing idea.
It's a pretty similar idea. I just want you to share the podcast with someone who's looking
for a new news podcast to start the year, new year, new podcast. It seems easy.
easy enough. Let's make 2025 the MBDist year ever. The gang is all back, so let's roll the credits.
Emily Milliron is our executive producer. Raymond Loo is our producer. Olivia Graham is our
associate producer. Yuchinawa Ogu is our technical director. Billy Minino is on audio. Hair and makeup
is in the public domain, so feel free to adapt and reuse this jokes to your liking.
Devin Emery is our chief content officer and our shows of production of Morning Brew.
Great. So, Danielle, let's run it back tomorrow.
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