Motley Fool Money - Walter Isaacson on Elon Musk
Episode Date: October 7, 2023Elon Musk is a serial monotasker. He’s also obsessed with risk. What makes him tick? Ricky Mulvey caught up with Walter Isaacson to talk about the force that is Elon Musk. They also discuss: The ...importance of the letter X How to craft a “cocktail of a fanatical risk taker” And Musk’s latest endeavor into “real world artificial intelligence” Tickers discussed: TSLA, GOOG, GOOGL Host: Ricky Mulvey Guest: Walter Isaacson Producer: Mary Long Engineer: Dan Boyd Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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He does need that existential crisis, that manic intensity, that we're all doomed unless we do this.
However, there was some truth to it.
Most shorted stock in the history of the world, and there are a lot of people betting it was going to go under.
And so it drives him to be living in the factory floor saying, we've got to get to $5,000 a week.
And firing anybody or going into demon mode with anybody who says, there's just no way.
We only have two assembly lines.
It's going to get to 3,000, maybe 3,500.
I'm Mary Long, and that's Walter Isaacson.
He's a professor of history at Tulane University
and a best-selling biographer of Steve Jobs,
Jennifer Dowdna, and Benjamin Franklin.
His new book is Elon Musk.
That's what Isaacson and Ricky Mulvey talk about on today's show
to get a portrait of the Earth-moving force
behind Tesla and SpaceX.
They also talk about Elon's new artificial intelligence company
and his love for risk,
including a story.
about a blindfolded knife thrower at a birthday party.
You sat in on a lot of the wild conversations that Elon Musk had at SpaceX, Tesla.
And sometimes there's very pressing issues with getting a rocket off the ground.
Sometimes there's an issue with maybe a car assembly line.
But there's also room for these discussions about the future of humanity.
What's the governance plan on the future colony of Mars?
What will people wear there?
Can you give us some color of what's going on in those discussions and at least maybe the
rough draft of the future plan for the government of Mars.
You know, when he talks about making humans a space-faring species and colonizing other planets,
he talks about human consciousness and how it's the only consciousness we know of in the
universe. And so we have to get to other planets. And I thought that was probably, at first,
just the pontifications you would do for a pep talk to your team or for a podcast. But he would say
over and over again, and it's as if he really had internalized this as a mission of his life.
And no matter what was happening with Tesla on a given day or the rockets or any pressing problems he had,
he loved one meeting, and that was called Mars colonizer.
And he never skipped that meeting.
And they would sit there and talk about, what would you wear on Mars?
Who are the robots going to work for?
what would be the governance structure of Mars?
And for a while, I'm just taking notes.
And finally, I'm pinching myself and saying, wait a minute, these are grownups,
and they're sitting there talking about what we're going to wear when we colonize Mars.
But it was typical of Musk, which is he kept his eyes on a distant horizon every now and then
just to keep himself motivated.
So what would you wear on Mars?
He designed spacesuits, and by the way, Boeing and NASA, they were unable to be able to
to create great space suits for even the walks that they would do from the shuttle.
And so he's even now making spacesuits that they might use.
The real question for him was how to make sure the robots are under the control of the humans
and not vice versa.
Because this is a guy as a kid who read all those Isaac Asimov, you know, robot stories
about the rules of robotics.
And that's another of his missions was have guardware.
rails and safety for artificial intelligence.
Yeah, it seems that you could almost judge Elon Musk's mood, whether or not he's in a demon
mode based on almost what he's referencing, right?
Is he talking about a Monty Python skit?
Is he talking about the hitchhiker's guide to the galaxy with regard to AI?
Or is it closer maybe to Asimov and then on the extreme other end of the spectrum, the matrix
controlling possibly the simulation that we're living in right now?
You know, he was such a lonely kid, no friends as a kid, socially awkward.
He talks about having a pretty bad case of Asperger's.
And so he would sit in the corner of his local library and read science fiction.
As you said, Hitchhiker's Guide or The Matrix or the Foundation series, EnK Banks, many others.
and he really developed a sense of himself as sort of almost an epic superhero but also Captain
Underpants.
And as you mentioned, his moods would shift.
And when I was around him on a given day, they'd shift suddenly.
And he would be giddy at one point.
Then he would be quoting Hitchhiker's Guide.
And then he would be an engineering mode and totally focused on, say, why a methane leak
was happening in a valve of a raptor engine.
And then there was, of course, this dark mode that his girlfriend Grimes calls Demon Mode.
It was almost like Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
Something would set him off.
I could usually tell what it was going to be.
And you'd see the dark cloud across his face.
He never raised his voice, but he'd become coldly angry and dark at times.
And so when people say, did you like Mosque?
I said, well, yeah, there were a lot of Elon Musk that kind of liked or respected, but I also
felt at times when he lapsed into this dark mood, he was a different person.
So you said that you could predict what would set him off.
So how were you, what were these predictions you were making?
How did you know?
Well, I remember once being at a restaurant in Austin, Texas, with Grimes, his girlfriend,
and a few other people.
And somebody said something about how, what Musk was doing.
doing was impossible and he should get over it. And Grimes leaned over and said, demon mode. And she
could see the darkness about to happen. And I could always see it. And it was usually when somebody
wasn't hardcore, all in, and had a manic intensity in pursuing the mission. Even late on a Friday night
at the launch pad for Starship down in South Texas, I remember it was about 10 p.m. on a Friday,
It was walking around, and only two people were working on the launch pad.
They didn't have a launch schedule for months.
And suddenly he's looking at Andy Krebs, who was in charge of that launch pad,
and asking why more people weren't working, that we'd never get to Mars unless they had intensity.
And at first, they were saying, well, there's no need to.
We don't have anything scheduled.
And I could see Demon Mode kick in.
And for about an hour, he was ordering up a surge so that by the next day,
more than 100 people had to come in from Cape Canaveral and Los Angeles to get that launch pad
to become a beehive of activity.
It seems like a lot of the executives, people who have worked with Musk for a long time,
have their own strategies of dealing with this demon mode.
One person who may be familiar with that is SpaceX President Gwen Schottwell.
So what is the rough draft?
If you had to write the survival guide of working closely with Elon Musk,
what are some of those lessons from those who spent a lot of time with them?
Yeah, Gwen Chopwell is a great example.
She's been there more than 20 years, been president of SpaceX.
And I've seen it where he one day, for example, decided that in order to push Starship
development, this biggest rocket ever made, that he's still trying to develop.
He just did a test flight earlier this year.
In order to push it faster, they were going to have to cancel Falcon Heavy, which is the only
rocket that can get military satellites into high Earth orbit. NASA depends on it, the defense
intelligence agent. And he just said, we'll never get to Mars if we just keep relying on that crutch.
I'm canceling it. And they're all texting Gwen. And she comes into the conference room and so she's
giving him in a very engineering style all sorts of facts and figures and saying, we can discuss
this over the next week. But let me give you the information. And we'll work up more information.
for what will happen if we'll do it.
And he's like an engineer.
He absorbs that information and reversed himself.
One of the things you've discussed is his ability to visualize engineering information,
perhaps better than maybe anyone else I've ever heard about.
And that has to be critical to his ability to launch starships and make electric cars.
You know, some of the great thinkers that I've written about have been very visual thinkers.
Albert Einstein was slow in learning how to talk as a child.
They called him Dedepporte, the dopey one,
because he couldn't really articulate things.
And he said because he was slow in learning to read, he learned to visualize.
Likewise with Musk, he has a intuitive feel for the physics,
the underlying physics, of material properties.
At one point, he says, all right, we're going to quit using carbon composites
for this rocket. We're going to do it out of stainless steel. This is Starship, the biggest rocket ever.
And they're trying to talk to him and say, you know, it's not going to be strong enough, it's going to be
too heavy. And he starts explaining, let's try it, because at certain temperatures, there's a
strength of stainless steel, that means you can keep it pretty thin. And he was going even over the
details of the millimeters of the nose cone and where the pressure points would be. And
And over the next few weeks, they try it out.
If you go down to Boga, Chica, Texas, you'll see it like the cyber truck is all stainless steel.
You've also talked about how some of the greatness and the darkness are all interrelated with many of your subjects, including Steve Jobs, and Elon Musk.
With Musk, there's the all-in personality you've described.
And I'm wondering if it's been hard for you in this biography to stay in the role of the observer sometimes, thinking about Elon Musk especially, maybe texting you about how he's having trouble sleeping, drinking so much Red Bull, taking Ambien, telling you that he's burning the candle it both ends with a flamethrower. In this case, and I'm sure you had that with Steve Jobs as well, where he's essentially refusing cancer treatment to try these these.
diets, how hard is that task to stay in the role as the document or the observer when you see these
geniuses probably hurting themselves?
You know, Ricky, that's a really good question.
And you also have to be careful of the Heisenberg problem, which is by observing a particle,
you're going to affect its motion.
And my role is to be the observer.
And with Mosque, it was particularly a difficult and strong question because I had told him I didn't
want to do this book based on five or ten or fifteen interviews. I wanted to be by aside at all
moments of the day for weeks on end for two years. So I could see him going through these various
phases. And I had to wall off a bit that I was not supposed to be his pal. I was not supposed to
advise him. And occasionally I'd ask him questions. I'd say, have you talked to General Mark Millie
about that question he was posing.
Have you considered this?
Or why is an increase in the huge array of speech better for democracy?
Can you explain to me why you think that's true?
And so most of the time I was doing it by asking him questions,
and I'm trying to be very, very open with the reader.
When I'm in a scene that might affect the scene, you know,
not one of those type of writers who wants to say me, me, me, but I have to be honest when I'm in
a scene that these are the things I said and these were the responses. And then now, with the
book coming out, I don't know if this is happening. Tell me I'm wrong. But I would imagine a lot
of people are trying to get through to Elon Musk through you. Errol Musk, his father,
has continued to send you things. I know there's been issues. I think.
Grimes is now suing Musk to see their kids. Grimes even saying that the first time she saw that
the step siblings of her, or half siblings, excuse me, of her children were in your book. How's that,
how's that experience been for you? Well, it is true that two types of people who contact me.
You know, people in the family are very close to Musk. And I, you know, I feel I owe them some
discussions because they, everybody was very open to me, whether it was Grimes or Chavon Zillis,
the other woman you mentioned, or his father, who, you know, very dark, very Jekyll and Hyde, but spent
a lot of time talking to me. Of course, the things that I kind of slough off is maybe 20 times a day.
People say, I have to get Elon Musk because I've invented a way to have a perpetual motion rocket
ship or something. And that, I just have a standard reply, which is, you know, I'm not an agent
for Elon Musk. I finish the book. That's it. Yeah. And I guess going away from the process
of writing, I want to get back to the businesses and the personality. One thing I didn't realize,
and it is apparent throughout the way he names his kids, the way he names his company, is the letter
X and just how important that letter is to Elon Musk. Walter, you are a man.
of letters, but I would doubt you have that type of preference for exactly one letter. Why is this
letter so darn important to Elon Musk? Even as a kid, whether it be the X-Man comics or the
mathematical concept of the unknown, the mystery that you have to hunt for in an algebra problem.
For example, it made him love X. It sounded as if it was risk-taking, if it's a hard core,
There's an adventuresome quality to it.
And throughout his life, whether it was, you know, his eldest surviving child was named
after his favorite comic book character in the X-Man Comics, Xavier, or his first company
was called X.com, which morphed into PayPal, but he fought to keep the name X.
And you see it over and over again with SpaceX or turning Twitter now into X, thinking he feels,
you know, little tweets with blue birds and little blue check barks that are
anointed to members of the elite is bullshit.
And he needs a hardcore, somewhat more mysterious type of thing.
And then X-A-I.
So he, and he, of course, his three-year-old kid who's with him at all times,
has a name that sounds like an auto-generated druid password.
but he calls him X.
Yeah, and a lot of the arguments when Musk started with the founders of PayPal where he was
pushing for X, his arguments seems to be getting the same ones now, right?
X.com sounds a little seedy. People don't know what it is, but he pushed through it similar
to what he's pushing through now. And maybe Twitter really is the culmination of that dream
in the 90s of what X.com could be.
You got it right, Ricky. Nobody else seems to have capitalized.
that because it's, but it's part of the narrative, which is feeling burned that Peter Thiel and
others ousted him from the company that he had called X.com 20 some odd years ago. And then they
named it PayPal. And he thought PayPal was a sweet little name like a friendly person who
helps you get paid. And of course, it does have a more friendly feel to it, just as Little Bull Birds
and Twitter has sort of a sweet and friendly feel. But nobody uses the phrase sweet and friendly to
describe Elon Musk. He's hardcore. He's all in. He's a risk taker for better or for worse.
And when he was first buying up stock in Twitter, and we were at the Gigafactory in Texas, even before it
opened, and he told me he was going to go try to control Twitter, he said it will be the booster
rocket, the accelerant, to make a payment system connected to a social network, connected to a place
where things like the Motley Fool podcast can be posted and make money. People can do content and
make money. He said, this will fulfill my dream of the original ex.com.
Yeah, he told you that it could be the largest financial institution in the world. I guess it
would be through that connection and the process of that will remain to be seen as he also has
focuses on artificial intelligence. And the story of Twitter is well in Nowx.com, there's sort of a rule
that I would say you set up in the beginning parts of the book, which is that Musk has this incredible
ability to be a serial monotasker. He can go from company to company and completely focus
what he's doing on the problem at hand. Do you think Twitter broke that? Towards the end of the book,
you talk about this Tesla-Robotaxi design meeting where he's complaining about the workers of
Twitter and how they're not performing up to his standards. And it seems like that would be completely
unheard of just a few years earlier for Elon Musk. Yes, but he's still, and you put it so well,
a serial monotasker, more than a multitasker, meaning, for example, on the night that the
Twitter board decides to accept his offer, and he's going to become the owner of Twitter,
the whole world's talking about it. And he goes down to the star base,
where the Starship is going to launch in Boko Chica.
It goes and they're in the conference room.
And nobody talks about Twitter, even though it's the biggest story.
They're worried about a methane leak in one of the Raptor engines.
And you see him just intensely focus on that.
So he still does that.
He complained that Twitter is a distraction.
People said, was he glad he bought Twitter?
or did he really want to go through with it?
He's mercurial.
There were mornings where he was all giddy about,
I'm going to take over Twitter,
we're going to do what we meant to do with X.com.
And there were afternoons when he was deeply dark
and yelling at his lawyers and say,
get me out of this deal.
The court's trying to force me to go through with it.
I think now that he's found Linda Yakorino,
I hope, because I don't think his highest
and best use of his time,
is running a social network.
I hope he'll focus more on artificial intelligence, as he told me he would, and focus more on
Starship and getting it to orbit.
That's, and that's part of it where there's always been this slight connection that
X.com, Twitter has some, I understand the humanitarian reason for its existence, but it doesn't
have that existential reasoning that a lot of his companies do, reading your book, Walter.
And one of the things he wanted to do was own the theme park.
And I came back to this thought of just, wouldn't it be better if he just owned an actual
theme park?
Yeah, right.
Or even started, as his brother Kimball said, suggested, start your own payments, platform, social media.
Because Twitter was a sweet little playground, people like me, you know, in the mainstream
media.
We got to chit-chat with each other and we were anointed with blue check marks.
It was a casual, I mean, it was toxic too in many places, but it was still the playground
for mainstream media.
And he just did not like that or want to keep that.
Yeah.
And I really, I'm looking at my time, and I know I have to focus on Tesla a bit.
One of the things you've written about Tesla, and I think this is foundational to the business,
quote, Musk focused on the importance of the mission rather than the potential of the business,
quote, for a lot of short-term stock traders, that might not be the best course of outcome,
but a lot of long-term investors have benefited well from that mentality. How does that drive Tesla's
model? What do you think would have changed at Tesla if that were reversed, if the potential of
the business was more important than the importance of the mission?
You know, if he were driven mainly by money, you won't start a rocket company and you wouldn't
start an electric vehicle company. And he always has a mission in mind and then backfills with
a business plan.
To take SpaceX first, his mission is getting to Mars, and then he realizes I can launch
communication satellite.
In fact, I'm the only person who can send up rockets, land them upright, and reuse them,
so I will launch my own internet in low Earth orbit with Starlink.
Now you ask about Tesla, he decided by doing high-end vehicles like the Roadster.
He could fund a factory because he thought it was ridiculous.
that America was outsourcing its manufacturing, and that would make it so we didn't have a feel
for innovation if we just sort of design things and let it be manufactured somewhere else.
So he spent more time focusing on not just the product, but what he called the machine that
makes the machine, the assembly line, each station on the assembly line. And by insourcing everything
is not the best short-term business model. If you're going,
to go for short-term profit. Obviously, your labor costs are better if you're having it manufactured,
you know, in other places. But he said we have to look at the longer term. And it was a period in
which I think more than 70 percent of the intellectual property that automakers produce in America,
they were sending off shore to get produced. And he more and more decided to insource it. But
it did finally mean that he has the two most productive factories around in Fremont,
California, and Austin, Texas. And now he turned out already this year a million Tesla's,
and he's worth more than the next eight or nine car companies combined. And one of the things
I sat in on a meeting, it wasn't public, but I put it in the book, he's now building the new
assembly line that's going to create not just robotaxies, but a pretty cheap, 25,000.
$25,000 car, something to go up against a Corolla. And that will, because he's willing to
price it cheaply, but then make up for it with huge manufacturing, that will take Tesla to the
next level, along with autopilot when he finally gets full self-driving done.
But the $25,000 car was not something he was initially excited about. This is something
where he actually did seem to change his mind. That's an interesting question. Just like we
talked about Gwen Shotwell changing his mind over and over again. He tells Drew Bagelino and Franz von
Holthousen and Lars Marvie and the people run in Tesla. The next car, we have to force the future.
We have to make it with no steering wheel. So we go bankrupt if we haven't conquered autopilot.
And they're like, all right, but you've been kind of crazy. Every year you say autopilot,
full self-drive is only a year away. And finally,
I'm at a meeting, and it's very secretive, and they keep presenting him facts about how we can make a robotaxie,
one with no steering wheel, on a particular type of assembly line platform, but also that assembly line can make this global inexpensive car.
And he finally greenlights it.
So you just have to be one of those smart people who knows not only how to be all in and hardcore,
poor, but how to handle Elon Musk.
Musk is someone who needs an existential threat, though.
And the success you've talked about with Tesla would make it harder for him to find one
there.
One of the questions I had reading, though, about the short sellers, when these short sellers
guessed that Musk was not going to be able to hit the production targets that Tesla was
putting out and they're sending drones over the factory.
I know how Musk feels about these short sellers, but were they really an existential threat
to the existence of Tesla? Or is this how his mind needs to work to get to that manic intensity?
You know, you're smart because he does need that existential crisis, that manic intensity,
that we're all doomed unless we do this. However, there was some truth to it. Most shorted
stock in the history of the world. And there were a lot of the last.
lot of people betting it was going to go under. And so it drives him to be living in the factory
floor saying we got to get to $5,000 a week and firing anybody or going into demon mode with
anybody who says, there's just no way. We only have two assembly lines. It's going to get to
3,000, maybe 3,500. And then he would say, if that's the case, we're doomed. And he had read
World War I and two military history. So he knew that some of the military contractors,
started during the war making their planes in the parking lot.
And so he says, I get it.
Why don't we just put a big tent in the parking lot here and create another assembly line?
And he didn't have any real permit.
There was some loophole that says if you're an auto repair shop, you can put up a tent.
But that was like for muffler shops.
And within three weeks, they build this huge tent and create another.
assembly line. So at the end of, I think it was June in 2018, the 5,000th car rolls up, and a company
that's on the verge of bankruptcy start shooting up and, of course, becomes more valuable than the
next nine car companies combined. The other thing that Musk learned in building out these
assembly plants is that occasionally automation is a mistake. And I wouldn't have guessed that before
reading your book. Maybe it's because of the optimist robot and the, the, the, the, the, the
way this man lives in the future. But what did Musk find to be a mistake in the level of automation
that he had at these Tesla factories? Especially in 2017, 2018, when he's faced with these existential
crisis, he would walk the factory floor at times until three in the morning. And it was called
Walk to the Red, because wherever there was a holdup, there was a red light flashing. And it might be
putting a piece of felt under the battery, or it might be trying to put the windows seal.
in. And there were robots trying to do all these things. And finally he said, well, how long would it take
it for just a person put in these seals or whatever? And he realized that sometimes things are
easier done by human hands than by a robot. And so they go into a frenzy, which is an amazing
scene in the book. It'll be a great scene in a movie someday where they're taking spray can
paint and just putting X's, his favorite letter, on some of these robots and ripping them out
and throwing him out into the parking lot.
And he comes up with an algorithm.
And people who care about innovation
or how to read at least the algorithm part.
Because it's five steps
on how to make something so amazing
and produce it.
And step one is to question every requirement and rule.
Somebody says, we need this because the safety team
or the legal team says something.
He says that's both question it.
Then step two is delete it.
But only to you get to step five.
If you've gone through the other four steps, do you get the step called automate?
And so he loves automation.
And the new assembly line for the Robotaxie and $25,000 car, they'll be highly automated,
but you only automate once you've gone through the other steps of the algorithm.
Yeah.
My favorite part is that you need a name for the person who made the rule.
And I'm sure you got to hear some of the phone calls when Musk discussed.
the name of the person who is on the other side of that rule.
Yeah, I mean, you know, this book is very, I think, admiring of some of his engineering skills,
but less so.
In fact, he can be at times.
And, you know, it's almost a cautionary tale.
But yeah, including on that 2018 thing, there are a couple of people where he says,
okay, who did this?
And they call some poor guy and he's finally standing there.
And they've never met Musk.
and you see it in the book.
Musk just rips them apart and fires him.
Yeah, and I mean, with that serial and happiness,
I think one of the things you said is his inability to enjoy the moment.
It's almost like with that, his incredible wealth,
there was a time where he was the richest person on the planet.
I think you would have been around him, and he seemed miserable.
Is that because of...
He said, I was built for a storm.
He always said, you know, a calm water doesn't see.
suit me. I don't want to go on a vacation. I don't want to have yachts or anything else.
He doesn't even own any real houses, just this two-bedroom place in South Texas. And he says
that he's addicted to drama. And I think his second wife, Tallulah Riley, put it well,
said he almost, because he had such a brutal childhood, that he associates drama with parental
love, even though he didn't get much parental love from his father. And Kimball, his brother, his brother
says, if you want to know the theme, he's a drama addict. So when he becomes a richest person on the
planet, just when I'm starting to write the book, you know, into 2021, beginning of 2022,
he's also a person of the year at time and the financial times. Suddenly, Tesla is now churning out
cars and making a profit. I said, well, you must be pretty satisfied now. He said, no, I'm like a
video game addict, if I master a level of the game, I have to put all my chips back in. I have to
push everything back in, go all in, and move to the next level of the game. And that's when he
started buying Twitter. Yeah. And I want to get to that. It seems like some of his behavior, too,
there's sort of this clause of, and now you can't make fun of me. I paid the largest tax bill
in the history, what was it, in the history of the United States. So now you can't make fun of
world, yeah. I have a kid who hates me for being a billionaire, so now you can't make fun of me
because I just sold all of my real estate. And that never seems to work out for him. Of course,
people are going to continue to make fun of him. Yeah, and he's drawn as many haters as he has,
you know, fans. And that's one of the problems, especially of writing a book, is that we're not
very good at holding two thoughts in our mind, that the guy could be amazing and also,
a villain, or not a villain, amazing and unhinged and bad at times and all at the same time.
But you're right, there's certain things that just get him angry.
And when he lost really contact with his daughter, Jenna, who had transitioned from being,
as I said, named after a character in the X-Man comics.
And it wasn't the transitioning he got his head around.
But the problem for him was that she had become so anti-capitalist,
so, you know, in her ideology, hated rich people,
that she wouldn't speak to him or use his last name.
And that's when he sells his houses.
That's when he decides he's not going to indulge in any luxuries.
And it's funny because I would think criticism wouldn't mean much to them, but there are certain things that just set them off.
You said it earlier. I don't think it would be fair. I don't think there's a single fair characterization for him.
But there has been villainous and awful behavior, I think specifically of Yoel Roth, who ran trust and safety.
And then there's, I would describe it as a pettiness where he's going to page its pay.
page 248 of this guy's research paper to imply that Yo-O-Roth is a pedophile.
And when taken into context, that's not the point the guy's making.
And in fact, he has to later sell his house, go on the road because he's getting death threats
from this mob of people obsessed with Elon Musk who believe this guy's an awful, awful criminal.
Yeah, and I tell that story perhaps at length in the book, because Y'O.L. Roth is
an interesting person who got along well with Musk in the beginning, even though he was very much
of a liberal or progressive, you know, when he was running trust and safety.
Bus really respected him. And they worked together for a few weeks until, you know,
well, just couldn't stand it anymore because Musk is making impetuous decisions, putting Donald
Trump back on the platform, putting various people back on, or just doing things without going
through understanding it, the pronouns and trans issues and all these things. And even after Yowell
quits, Musk is okay with him and then must turn dark on him after Yowell said a few things.
And you're right. He is somebody else had gone through a dissertation, I guess, Yowell had written in
college and found something in it where he's talking about gay matchmaking sites and how to
sure underage people could use them properly or something.
And had nothing to...
And Musk retweeted and said,
oh, it seems like, you know, he wants underage people
to be on porn sites or whatever.
And it's just cruel.
It was not just cruel because that shows an intentionality
that's almost not there.
It was a callousness,
amorality on Musk's part to just go after somebody like that.
And I want the book to make you amazed at how he got Tesla,
how he got more satellites into orbit than all other companies and countries combined,
but also appalled at how he can do things that seem so callous and amoral,
especially when it comes to Twitter.
And as I say, it's not either people think,
oh, you're too tough on him or you're too nice to them or whatever.
I say, now you got, it's like a Shakespeare play.
You know, Shakespeare at the end of Measure for Measure says,
has one of the characters say, you know,
the best are molded out of their faults.
You have to understand the contradictions in this person
And that's why I tell it as a narrative, a lot of fast-paced scenes instead of me trying to preach
at you. But it's also why I didn't sugarcoat that Yoel Roth's story.
Yeah. And honestly, Walter, I think it's been a little bit of an unfair criticism levied at your work.
Your job is not to make moral judgments. It's to be more of a landscape photographer and
allow the reader to walk alongside these great, complex, and earth-moving figures.
But I understand the criticism. It's very useful to have people in this world who make very strong,
moral judgments. And I think I do put moral judgments, including in the Yoel Roth section. I mean,
it's clear what the moral judgment of that is or the moral judgment of some of his, you know,
Paul Pelosi-like tweets. But I feel I'm not supposed to, I'm supposed to tell the story. And I think
in this day and age, we do have people who are so much better at rendering snap
judgments in a high moral screaming fashion, then we have people going to say, let me go out
and report and tell you the story and let you sort out some of the complexities here.
I want to ask you a few questions about simulation theory. This seems to drive Elon Musk a lot,
the idea that maybe we're in a bit of a computer program. This is maybe the result of some of
the reading of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. There are cases where, or I guess,
The simple question, does it matter to Musk if we live in a simulation?
I think a lot of what Musk believes is a mix of almost youthful philosophy and humor.
And he is addicted to video games.
Whenever late at night, things are going wild, he will pull out Politopia, for example,
or sometimes Olden Ring.
and he likes to think how funny it would be if we are all just avatars in some great simulation.
Of course, in Hitchhiker's Guide, I can't quote it exactly, but it says there's a theory that if
anybody discovers the secret of the universe, the universe will disappear and be replaced by an
even more complex universe.
And then the next line is, and there's another theory that this has already happened.
And I think that appeals to both Musk's humor and his sense that you should treat life almost like a video game and just be all in at all times.
All of this leads into this cocktail of a fanatical risk taker.
And one of the things I appreciated about your book is it's not just the business.
I mean, also the scene where he's basically, he has a blindfolded knife thrower aiming at a balloon below his groin.
And then you think, okay, maybe the fight that was set up with Mark Zuckerberg is pale in comparison.
Well, he believes that we were a great nation of risk takers, whether we came here on the Mayflower or across the Rio Grande.
And he believes we've lost that talent to be risk takers, that we've got more referees than risk takers or more regulators than people who will innovate.
but he also, as Peter Thiel says in the book, he's, you know, most entrepreneurs know how to take
risk.
Peter O'Teele says Musk is addicted to risk.
When in doubt, he will take wild risk.
There is no reason in this world why at a birthday party that somebody's throwing for you,
you would put a pink balloon in your crotch, you know, right below your crotch and have a blind
knife thrower, try to punch the balloon. I asked about it. He said, well, at worst happened,
I'd lose one testicle and I'd still have the other. But that's an addiction to risk that comes
from the childhood, comes from his parents and grandparents. And it's one of the many themes in the book,
which means that he blows up rockets at time. He blows up sweetness of Twitter at times.
He leaves rubble in his wake. But unlike Boeing, he'd get rockets into orbit.
And unlike General Motors and Ford, he can build a fleet of electric vehicles.
The last question I want to ask is about AI.
He has a new company called X.A.I.
A lot of this seems to be driven from a conversation that he had with the Google co-founder, Larry Page, where Musk is talking about the dangers of AI.
And Larry Page essentially accuses him of being a what is a speciesist, which is that if these computers can think and feel, don't they matter as much as we are,
Your book describes times where Elon Musk has stretched stories thinking in retrospect,
forgetting what people say.
Has anyone followed up with Larry Page about this to dive into his thoughts about what it means?
Yeah, Larry doesn't talk about it much because he – Larry doesn't talk about it much because
he used to be one of Elon's best friends.
I mean, Elon Musk is the world's richest couch surfer.
He didn't have a house in Silicon Valley, so he would stay at Larry Page's house.
And they spend nights and nights talking about the risk of artificial intelligence turning rogue on us and leaving humans behind, sort of the Asimov issue.
And as you said, Larry Pagelet, that was nuts.
You know, and like, no, and by the way, if we could get computers that could have consciousness, why in that just as good as human consciousness?
And Musk says, yeah, I'm a species.
I actually believe in the human species.
I think it's a cool species.
I'm more in favor of it.
And I talked to,
even one of those arguments was at a birthday party.
Reed Hoffman is there.
Many other people are there.
Sam Altman, of course.
And so these conversations happen over the years,
including with Demis Hasibis,
who is the founder of Deep Mind,
and he's trying to throw himself in front of the train
when Demas is selling deep mind to Larry Page. And so he's gathering, Musk is gathering people
to try to stop that. So this isn't just one conversation. This is about two years of him opposing
Larry Page on this notion of we need more guardrails on AI. And now he's still that way. He
believes that Sam Altman took Open AI, which Musk had co-founded with Sam Altman,
from being a nonprofit open source thing to now being a closed source in which it has a for-profit
arm that has sold a large percentage to Microsoft.
And it's Elon Muskworth's nightmare, in terms of AI at least, that Microsoft and Google,
without guardrails, are going to create AI.
So in some ways, one of the culminations of the book, besides the first launch of Starship,
is Musk deciding that he has to get into AI himself,
rather than having trusted open AI and other things.
And near the end of the book, there's a whole scene.
It's where we meet Chavon Zillis's, their children, for the first time.
I'd spend a week or so with Musk and was just back here in New Orleans,
rest and recuperating and maybe starting to write.
He said, no, you've got to come back.
It's something we can't talk about on the phone.
And we sat in the backyard of Chavon's house in Austin by the swimming pool with their two twins sitting on their lap.
And he said, I'm going to have to start an AI company, XAI.
And the interesting thing is it's not just about doing a chat bot.
It's not just about large language model, generative, you know, predictive, transformer-based language intelligence, you know, chat bots like chatGBT.
he feels that the Holy Grail is real-world artificial intelligence.
Real-world artificial intelligence that doesn't just process language
and search the billion documents on the Internet
so you can ask what are the five best popes or something,
but something that can process video data,
like the 8 billion frames a week from Tesla cars
and the cameras in a Tesla car,
all being processed not just by Internet,
and video GPUs, but by Dojo, this chip that he's doing that maximizes the ability to do video
and oral things. And for that matter, Twitter feeds. Eventually he wants to create cars that can drive
themselves and robots that can walk around a factory floor or walk around Burning Man or walk around
your house and have planning and have intentionality and be able to do things. And,
And that is going to be his next big thing is real world AI.
And I'll leave with this, which is having watched Sam Altman and Google and all doing machine learning based on processing of, you know, millions and millions of documents and words and everything else and being able to predict things.
he makes a pivot at the end of the book from the full self-driving technology he has been using,
which is a rules-based algorithm where FSD 11, for example,
has hundreds of thousands of lines of code coded by real engineers and humans that, you know,
have simple things like when you see a red light stop or when you see a double yellow line, don't cross it,
or when you see a bike lane and you're taking a left turn, here's what to do.
And they show him that instead of doing a rules-based algorithm, you could do what Chad GPD does
with language and do it with navigating the real world, which is to look how millions and millions
of drivers handle different situations. And the machine learns what to do based on human
imitation. So it is almost like chat GPT for self-driving. And at the very end of the book, we see
him getting into a car with the team at autopilot saying, okay, here's our new way of doing it,
which is a machine learning human imitation, AI way of directing the car and telling predictive text,
but on predictive of hit the brake, turn the wheel, do these things. And,
There's always something new on the horizon from Mosque.
As you said, Ricky, he's always wanting to go all in.
He's always wanting to put his chips back on the table.
And that's what he's doing now with having been wrong for the past eight, nine years,
about when autopilot was actually going to be a success,
pushing as hard as possible in the next two years to have artificial intelligence
teach our cars how to drive themselves.
Walter Isaacson, thank you so much for your contribution to our collective understanding of
humanity. Thank you for your wonderful book. And thank you for spending some time with us.
Us listeners. Let me say one thing, Ricky. Yes. Let me say one thing. You read the whole book.
You asked the best questions I've ever been asked in the interviews so far. So thank you.
It's an honor. Thank you, Walter.
My pleasure.
As always, people on the program may have interest in the stocks they talk about. And the Motley Fool may have
formal recommendations for or against, so don't buy ourselves stocks based solely on what you hear.
Today was a bit longer than our typical episode, so we'll be off tomorrow. But if you like
long-form conversations about tech, check out Motley Fool Lives this week in Tech. It's hosted by
Tim Byers and Tim White and is on every Friday at 10 a.m. Eastern at live.fool.com, where you can also
catch replays. I'm Mary Long. We'll be back on Monday. See you then, Fools.
