On with Kara Swisher - The Walter Isaacson-Kara Swisher Showdown
Episode Date: September 18, 2023Walter Isaacson and Kara are friends — but that doesn’t mean she’s going to go easy on him as they discuss Isaacson’s new hit biography: Elon Musk, which is causing much consternation among r...eaders and reviewers. Kara pushes Walter on whether the book equivocates or excuses too much of Elon’s bad behavior. And Walter, well, he pushes back. Questions or comments? Email us at on@voxmedia.com or find us on social media. We’re on Instagram/Threads as @karaswisher and @nayeemaraza Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi, everyone, from New York Magazine and the Vox Media Podcast Network.
This is the 738th interview Walter Isaacson has done to explain himself for that Elon Musk biography.
Just kidding.
This is On with Kara Swisher, and I'm Kara Swisher.
And I'm Naima Raza. The 738th, but surely it will be the most riveting.
Yeah, exactly. No, it actually will. I've watched quite a few of them, and they sort of ask the same questions, and he gives the same answers. So I'm very excited to talk to him because I
know him super well, and we've had a wrangling about this issue before, and we're going to have one now.
I wonder if Elon will take to X-nay Twitter to boost this one, like he did
Walter's interview with Lex Friedman.
No, no.
So Walter Isaacson is our guest today. He's the biographer known for his epic treatments of Steve
Jobs, Benjamin Franklin, Jennifer Doudna, to name a few. He's also a repeat offender on our podcast,
as you mentioned.
Yeah.
We had him on in March when you interviewed him live at the New Orleans Book Festival.
And we knew we'd have him back on, but my producer instinct was not to get him out the gate, which we could have done, but to wait to see how the cookie crumbled with this biography.
And Cara, how has the cookie crumbled?
Well, you know, there's controversy from the get-go over the Starlink error he made, which I'm surprised he made it. Elon pushed back and then he looked like he was
sucking up to Elon. It wasn't great, but it was a major factual error. It just was.
And then the reviews and coverage are from the New York Times, Washington Post,
everywhere, are not flattering. They talk about access journalism quite a bit
and about whether this is too kind to him.
I have no doubt it will sell tons and tons of copies
because people like these things.
And in other countries, too.
It's not just the States, right?
Because in China, it's selling like hotcakes, apparently.
A place where the culture hasn't shifted as much
and they will be reading this, poring over this.
How did he get that rocket up?
That should be the tagline of the book.
That's what they should have titled it.
But the book has been critiqued by all these reporters,
especially Brian Merchant's review in the LA Times,
as being too flattering of Elon Musk.
Merchant called it an Isaacson Accord,
kind of a trade between the subject and the biographer
and all of Isaacson's biographies.
But he does call him, Isaacson does
call Elon Musk mercurial, maniacal, cruel. He comes off as a boyfriend you don't want, a boss you
don't want, a dad you might not want. It's hardly glowing. No, but you can't ignore that. I mean,
that's the way he is. I just think it's larded over with a lot of praise is what it is and excuses for the behavior.
Yeah.
And I get it.
I get it.
It's really inspirational, aspirational, the stuff he's done around, especially around the car, Tesla, and around rocketry.
He pushes forward.
You know, he does things like he switches out a valve and it works better than anything else, like 10 times.
And I'm like, okay,
he's good at cutting costs. Like, okay. Or he like says, let's launch it anyway. And most of the time it works because most of the time you don't, you know, get shot in the head. But sometimes it
doesn't. I sort of was like, oh, just stop making excuses for this behavior. Yeah. I always like
reading the prologue of a biography because the author kind of tells you what to think. It's a mise en place of the
book. And he, in this one, it's, you know, it's Elon growing up in a violent home in a violent
country. He goes to this Lord of the Flies bootcamp. He's on his way to an anti-apartheid
concert. It even says he loves puppies and was willing to kind of wait his own, you know, delay
his own medical treatment to save a puppy. It'll make sense when you read it. And, you know, gets access to his father,
who is a really dark soul. And the wives and baby mamas are making excuses for him. So the
prologue kind of excuses a lot. Yeah, it does. It does. It does. And lots of people have terrible
parents. I have a terrible stepfather. I'm not out doing this. A lot of people had
lots of experiences like this. And so does it excuse it because we get a cheaper rocket or
electric car? According to Walter, yes. Yeah. What is your overall emotion that you feel
while reading this book? Boredom. Boredom. Boredom. Boredom. Yeah. I don't think it makes
him soaring. I think he is a fascinating figure.
And it's, I saw this, and then I saw this, and then I saw this.
And I get the pluses of that.
Is it boring to you because you know every detail?
Or many details?
There are new details and newsworthy details in here.
I was riveted to his Franklin biography.
I thought it was really fast.
I didn't even know.
I knew it was going to happen next, but I didn't, right right and so the in the telling it was maybe because he was dead i may have felt more
freedom i guess i don't know boredom is a big critique rocket rocket rocket oh it worked like
okay i don't know but uh but the three other important critiques i think that we want to ask
about pointing out what's missing that should have been in there so who who should he have spoken to
that he didn't speak to not enough sources a, a lot of Elon's friends. And then to that second question, he does footnote
a lot of things, but there's a lot of he said, she said, or he said, he said in this book,
and it's unclear what is fact and what is gospel. Or he's just making it up. And my instinct is
he's making it up. Elon's making it up, you're saying, not Walter. No, not Walter. I think he's
an excellent journalist. He doesn't lie. And then the third critique has making it up. Elon's making it up, you're saying, not Walter. No, not Walter. I think he's an excellent journalist.
He doesn't lie.
And then the third critique has been it's not deep enough or scrutinizing enough or skeptical enough.
So those are all, I think, fair critiques that we should ask him about.
100%.
But you're not surprised because the last time we spoke to him, you said afterwards, like, Walter is a camera.
Yeah, he's being a camera.
He talked about being silent while he was writing it, and he's talked about that.
And I think that's right.
You sit and watch, right?
You don't argue.
And you just see, see, see.
He had an unprecedented access for two years.
At some point, I want him to say what he thinks.
What if what he thinks is that he likes Elon, like the way you say you like Reid Hoffman or you like?
Then he should just say it.
Then he should say it a little more clearly.
You don't think he's saying that in the book? No.
No? Own it. Own it.
He's gotten so much critique writing this, including from fellow journalists. Do you
think that he made a mistake, Walter, in that in writing Elon's legacy, he's kind of soured his own?
No, no. This will be a bestseller. So I think he'll be just fine. I think Walter Isaacson will
be just fine. You're not worried about Walter Isaacson.
I'm not worried.
And, you know, he's had a really long and laudable career in many ways.
And so, you know, we can argue about this book.
That's all.
Let's take a quick break and we'll be back with Walter Isaacson. Fox Creative.
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So I've really been looking forward to this. I really have. I first want to say congratulations
on the book. It's getting a ton of attention and will no doubt be a bestseller for many weeks ahead or months.
But I have to say it's turned out as I expected it would when we talked in New Orleans. As you
remember, we had kind of a tough interview and we had disagreements, which is fine. Let me just be
clear. Walter and I are friends. We have disagreements, just like friends, and this is a
professional disagreement. So I just want to know, are you ready for a hardcore interview?
Because hardcore is what life is all about, apparently.
Hardcore is what Musk keeps talking about.
That's ridiculous.
He walked into that Twitter headquarters.
Everybody was psychologically nurturing and friendly.
Yes.
And he said, we got to be hardcore.
Oh, please.
I guess I can expect you're going to do that.
It's hustle porn is what I like to call it, along with entrepreneur porn and everything else. But let me read you my mini review of your Musk bio. Sad and smart son,
solely more sentimentally abusive father he abhors, except with rockets, cars, and more money.
Often right, sometimes wrong. Petty jerk always. Might be crazy in a good way, but also a bad way.
Pile, oh babies, not Steve Jobs, you're welcome. And that is my review
of your book. I read it. I sort of nodded. Yeah. And I said, okay, let me go through each and every
word. Okay. It's like, wow, maybe I should have had you write the last chapter. Yes, I should have.
So let's talk about how would you characterize the reception and reaction of the book in general?
How would you characterize it? Well, he's got so many fanboys
that think he walks on water, and he's got so many enemies that think he's truly evil. And I was kind
of surprised that most of the reviews and most of the discussion was pretty straightforward. I mean,
there were some critical reviews, like the one on The Guardian, I think you pointed
out. That was a thoughtful, legitimate criticism of the book. I haven't, now maybe because my wife
is shielding me from it or something, I haven't seen things that were massively unfair. But let
me tell you something. My daughter told me after the book
comes out, just shut off reading what is now called X. So I haven't seen what may be either
wet kisses or darts being slung at me on that. So you're not on X. You're not on X right now.
But I haven't gone. I don't go through the notifications anymore.
Well, it's mixed, I would say, and a lot focused on you.
Have you heard from Elon about the book?
No.
A couple of text messages, I mean, a couple of postings he did on X.
I think I, I know I either read or saw where he said that he hadn't read the book
and jokingly said Walter told him not to read it,
which, of course, has some virtue of truth, because I said, man, I want to be by, you know,
right along with you. I want you to be totally transparent. Let me in every meeting. But you
have no control over this book, and I don't want you to read it in advance.
Right. So no private exchanges. I know you were with him a few days ago with Lex
Friedman, right? I did the Lex podcast and afterwards we were together and somewhat oddly,
he didn't talk about the book. I didn't talk about the book. You know, it was...
So you ended cordially. You have ended... I guess, you know, there's, Elon Musk is not an emotionally connective,
nurturing or whatever person. So it was a little bit, just very professional as it's always been.
It hasn't been like he either hugs me or slugs me. Not yet. Have you heard from other sources
like Errol Musk, his father? Yeah. What has he had to say?
I think he sent me pictures of the kids when they were young looking fit. And he said,
how could anybody think that I treated them badly or psychologically badly? That said,
I've had many communications with him over there because he is somewhat of a Darth Vader, I guess, in the book.
And he's sent me many pictures over the years, and I tried in the book to allow him to have his say, even though Kimball Musk, Elon Musk, Tosca Musk, May Musk obviously say that he was very psychologically dark at times.
Absolutely.
We'll get to that a little bit more in the mess.
But first, I've got to go to the news, actually, the factual accuracy about Elon's decisions about Starlink in the Ukraine in September 22.
In the book, you detail, it was an inactricacy, actually, you detail upon discovering the Ukrainian military was planning attack on Crimea using drones powered by Starlink.
Elon, quote, secretly told his engineers to turn off coverage within 100 kilometers of the Crimean coast.
Elon denied this, saying there was no coverage to turn in.
Instead, he said, quote, he refused to act upon a request from Ukraine,
presumably to reopen the Starlink access.
And let me just tell you a story, because I've tried to be as transparent as I can.
It was one evening, and he told me, I mean, that they were launching the secret attack, a drone attack,
drone submarines using Starlink, and he was not going to allow it. He was not allowing it to
happen, that the subs are going to wash ashore because, you know, he wasn't going to allow them
to use Starlink. I made a mistake thinking he made that decision that night. In fact, what he did that night was he just reaffirmed that decision.
As you've seen in the book, there are all these text messages, got to turn it on, and he was saying no.
So I should have said it, and I now say instead of he turned it off, he reaffirmed the decision to have it geofenced.
And I do think, I'm not trying to be too defensive because I'm trying to be real open about this.
I don't think it really changes it that that night he gets to decide whether or not Ukraine
gets to attack Crimea and who put this power in his hands.
Right.
And if you read the rest of it, because it's all text messages. It's not just Crimea, the 100 kilometer geofencing
there, which he reaffirmed as opposed to started that night. But he's actually changing in the
Donbass, in eastern Ukraine. Yes, that's right. And Fedorov is saying things like, this is my
home village. My parents are there. You can't tell me that's an offensive thing when we go there. So it's larger.
And I wanted to make very clear, you know, OK, the geo fencing had been in place.
And the decision that night was to deny the Ukrainian request.
But it gave them a lot of power.
Yes, it certainly did.
It obviously required a correction because it was a Washington Post excerpt.
And you have said you've made a mistake here.
You went online to tweet a correction or clarification. They asked Elon to
enable it for their drone sub attack for the Russian fleet. Muskin did not enable it because
he thought probably correctly it would cause a major war. I get the need for the correction,
but did you have to add probably correctly? It seemed that that really. Yeah, I don't know.
I mean, first of all, one point that I was trying to make, which is why it was so dramatic at the time,
is the Ukrainians did not know it was geofenced.
They did not know that there was a policy in place saying 100 kilometers, your subs are going to go out.
So that's why they thought that this had just happened that night.
What Musk told me, and he's apocalyptic, as you know.
He believes that everything is either the end of the world
or the greatest success for humanity.
And so he believed that had there been a Pearl Harbor-like sneak attack
that sunk the Russian fleet in Crimea,
that that would have led, he said, to a nuclear war.
I did not believe that, and that's why I didn't put in, probably correctly, a nuclear war.
I just said it was going to lead to major—
All right, but why would you say probably correctly?
Because it was a major war.
They invaded their country. Well, it was was a major war. They invaded their country.
Well, it was definitely a major war. Russia invaded Ukraine. The question is whether then all of NATO and it becomes a much wider war with perhaps tactical nuclear weapons.
I do, you know, have got a lot of interest in the Ukraine war and I support Ukraine. Right. I do know that there is a Russian laws and doctrine that attack on the homeland, you
know, will lead to a certain type of response, including, I don't want to.
Which they've done elsewhere and it hasn't led to nuclear war.
Right.
Right. I think had the entire Russian fleet in Sevastopol been sunk by a, whatever you call it, sneak attack, Pearl Harbor-like attack, that that would have escalated things.
All right, let me get a better question.
What does it reveal about his power and tensions?
And why is he in this position of which he is entirely unqualified?
It's just guessing, Walter.
Come on.
Like, he doesn't have it.
Why is he in the position to turn off?
And what does it reveal about his power?
DOD should be making these mistakes or non-mistakes.
I mean, I don't give him advice.
But that night, I said, like any normal person, have you talked to General Mark Milley, the head of Joint Chiefs?
Have you talked to Jake Sullivan, National Security?
And he goes, yeah.
And they ended up talking.
Now, he has said, and I don't know this because he didn't tell me, but he's said it subsequently in the past few days, that had they made a request for him to turn on Starlink, he would have done something.
I don't know.
I'm just telling you that this is his mindset about the power she has.
But I thought it was weird that he had this much power.
And so what he does after talking to them, and I think, but you may push back at me,
it was the right decision, which is, all right, I'm going to make a deal.
SpaceX is going to make a deal with the U.S. Defense Department and its intelligence agencies, and we are going to
outright sell a certain number of Starlinks to the Defense Department, to the CIA, and we're even
going to create a military version of it, which I don't know exactly the difference, except for that
it's more sharply focused, and call it StarShield, and the U.S. government gets to decide how it's done.
Well, that's actually the right outcome.
Yes. Yes, presumably.
It's another issue of why the Defense Department found itself in this really uncomfortable situation.
Now, let me go there, if you don't mind.
Sure, please do.
Because you asked, how did we get in this position?
And this is not a defense of Elon trying to bestride the world. But why is it
that when Russia invades Ukraine, Viasat doesn't work? These are just denial of service attacks
the Russians are doing. The U.S. military, Ukrainian military has no communication.
There's only one set of communication satellites that withstand the attacks by the Russians. And so one reason he's
in this position- Or maybe they didn't attack it, but go ahead. If I want to- Oh, I think, no, no.
As far as he told me, and once again, you can say, he said, we had hundreds and hundreds of
attempted attacks from the Russians, but Starlink didn't go down. Russians were trying, of course they were trying to take it down.
I mean, they were trying to knock it out
and they didn't.
So this is not a defense of him
bestriding the world.
But what the hell is NASA doing?
What the hell is the defense agent?
Why can't Viasat?
Why can't Boeing?
The solution to this is other people
should be able to make,
Jeff Bezos and,
you know, Amazon, they've not got any of their satellites in orbit. So he's in this position.
And by the way, U.S. intelligence satellites, the ones the CIA and the intelligence put up
into high Earth orbit, the only way they can get into high Earth orbit is the Falcon.
Yes, I'm aware.
And SpaceX.
NASA can't launch them.
Boeing can't launch them.
So if you want to fix it, you've got to have competing companies.
And you also have to understand, for better or worse, how did Musk end up being the only person who's got 5,000 satellites, got rockets that can take things into high Earth orbit,
rockets that can reland and reuse themselves.
That's what the book is about, too.
And I know that seems like I'm praising him,
but it is true.
Boeing, I'm sure it's run by really nice people,
but Boeing can't get astronauts into orbit.
I think one of the things I am finding missing,
even though you say it,
it's not quite as explicit as I expected, which is it doesn't grapple with all the different kinds of power in the hands
of one, unelected, unaccountable, and I'd go so far as to say unstable in many ways, individual.
We're seeing it writ large constantly on Twitter, even if it might be performance art. Rowan Farrow's
New York article did grapple directly with this as a matter of consequence for our national security and democracy.
Did you feel you should have leaned into this more?
I think you're right that I do say it in the book.
And I think you can say it's a valid criticism.
I don't lean into it more and say it much more vibrantly.
But I do.
I'll say it right now.
But I do, I'll say it right now, I think an unelected official having control over the only communication satellite and deciding on that night whether to enable or, you know, disenable or not enable, as I got right in the book, both the attack on the Crimea and also in the Donbass, I don't think it should be in the hands of one unelected person.
And I'll say it even further.
An unelected person who's mercurial, has a global, you know, epic sense.
And I say it, and if you want to, and your criticism I know is, I should say it more loudly and say it more often.
Someday I'm going to write a book called Burn Book, and I'm going to say everything really loudly.
Well, I'm going to be really loud. But is he unqualified? Do you think he's unqualified to make these decisions? I think, yeah, I think I'm unqualified. I think that anybody... Now,
who thought that somebody of your and my generation would say, we should leave this to the CIA, you know, and not, you know, I grew up worrying about that. But now I think, no, the U.S. government,
its intelligence agencies have the intelligence, meaning the information, to make decisions like
this. It shouldn't be me. It shouldn't be Jeff Bezos. It shouldn't be Elon Musk. And I'll put
Elon Musk even more in that category because he's more mercurial.
And of course, in Byrne's book, he would use a tougher word than that.
Well, yes.
Than most people.
Well, we'll get to that.
All right.
One theory was offered by that LA Times review by Brian Merchant, this kind of idle framing
of Elon Musk, which happens.
He describes there may be a, quote, tacit pact between the author and subject in the
Isaacson Great man biography.
The author will unearth unflattering personal anecdotes and share stories about the subject's capacity to be cruel.
In exchange, the subject's greatness will be treated as an assumption or raison d'etre for the book itself in honor of Isaacson's habit of using pithy, memorable phrases to describe a phenomenon.
We might call it the Isaacson Accord.
Is there an Isaacson Accord?
I didn't read all that. I didn't read it, but there's some merit there.
That made me laugh.
I can't remember the, I'm not sure I want to dub it that, but we'll call it the Accord.
I haven't seen that. But yeah, you read the first part, which is that I share and recount or tell a lot of stories that show the dark side and how
bad he is. And then I think the commentary is that I also then show that he is an important,
influential, consequential, larger-than-life person. I think I cop a plea to that, meaning I hope, I show over and over again, the lack of
empathy, the jerkiness. There's a word that begins with A that I'm sure is in Bern's book that I
actually use in my book many times. He called me an asshole. He called you one? Oh, sure. Yeah.
In an email. Okay. But I do talk about him being not only mercurial, but at times just, you know,
going from weird personality to weird personality. And I think there are enough tales, probably more
than enough, that show the difficulty, the assholicness, or whatever the adjective is, in the book.
And yeah, as you say, the essay you quote says, in return, we talk about he has an epic impact.
It's a deal you make to get that access.
I mean, I think it's over access journalism.
But I do think he's had an incredibly large impact as well.
So I don't know exactly the nuances of what that commentary is.
But yes, it's true that I wouldn't be writing about Elon Musk had he not been the only person who can get astronauts into the space station.
Sure, but let me ask you the accusation of access journalism.
Listen, I've been subject to it.
I'm going to, you know, this and that.
But in this unique way, is this the danger of access journalism,
that you, one, start to like the person or get more sympathetic?
Well, no, I don't go around liking Musk.
Here's a question of access journalism.
You got to keep in mind every moment of the day and every paragraph that you
write, that you're writing for the reader, not the subject. And you got to sometimes hold yourself
back because you're not caring what you're going to say after the book comes out or what is,
you know, you're going to feel about it. And I do that, but it's hard. I mean, you've got to work at that.
If you read the book, there, as you said, there are enough stories that show the dark side, the mercurial side, the problematic side, the way he treats people.
And I don't try to excuse it.
And, yeah, when you have access, that can be a problem.
But I learned that when I first worked at the Times-Picayune and then Sunday Times of London.
I used to think if you got – you had to get close.
And sometimes journalists these days don't do that as well, meaning just sit and listen and just watch and make sure you can be up close. But I learned from the late Harry Evans, who is my editor in London,
that you can have access, as he did, to the top realms of power,
but then you could put out the story as you saw it.
I've watched some of the great, quote, access journalists,
people only I can remember, like Hugh Sidey and even Ben Bradley.
Certainly was accused of that.
And then watched the Woodward and Bernsteins.
And you try to make sure you're going to be a little bit more like Woodward and Bernstein,
which is get people to talk, but try to keep the reader in mind.
Although he's been accused of recently access journalism by,
you can see who he likes and who he talked to in a lot of his books.
But I want to get through your reflections on the process in a minute.
We're going to jump into the book. Walk me through your framing. You set it all
up. It was interesting when I read the beginning in your prologue with Elon's upbringing and
obviously chronological start to the biography. You continue to reference it constantly in the
book, this childhood in South Africa, bullying, violence. Why did you start with this? Because
it started to feel by the end of the book like an excuse.
And I kept thinking, I had a bad stepfather.
I don't do these things.
So many people have that.
And a lot of people have bad childhood.
Bad childhood.
And they probably have a few demons in their head.
Not these kind of demons.
No, but why did you start with this?
At the very beginning, I talked to his mother, May Musk.
And she says,
here's the issue for your book. The danger for Elon is that he becomes his father.
And I talked to Kimball Musk. He's a drama addict. He's addicted to Storm, and it comes
from this deep, violent childhood. I don't know that it seems like it excuses him because it shows this inability
to just sit back and savor success, that he is addicted to having dramatic confrontations and
even, I don't know whether it's Grimes or Tallulah Riley, it's in the book, you know,
second wife or his on-and-again, off-again girlfriend,
who says from his childhood, he associates love with drama and sometimes, you know, harshness.
So you feel like it's explaining it. Did it make you, spending time with Errol helps you understand this? Obviously, I try to meet everybody's parents because I think ultimately it all boils, it sometimes boils down to that quite easily.
Can I quote Obama?
I'm sorry to interrupt you on that.
Go ahead. No, please.
It is true.
One of the things every biographer knows is it's all about the parents.
And Obama has at the beginning of his memoirs, I think every successful man is either trying to live up to the expectations of his father or live down the sins of his father. And in my case, it's both. I think whether it's Nixon
opening his memoirs with a sentence I'm not sure he understood the meaning of, it was a simple
sentence, which is, I was born in a house my father built, or Bill Clinton's opening sentence,
a lot of powerful people who have demons in their head.
It goes back to Rosebud.
Yeah, but does it make you more sympathetic?
I mean, I do know his mother, too, who can be a handful, let me just say.
And so can you.
Yes, I can.
I get it.
But it does feel like it's a bit of an excuse.
You use the word man-child in the book.
I have used the word adult-toddler to describe
Elon. I do grok that childhood defines us. I absolutely do. I think it's critically important.
But do you worry this framing of Elon as a child absolves him of the accountability he deserves
as a 52-year-old man? Well, A, it doesn't absolve him. So let me make that clear. And I think it's
clear in the book with many anecdotes that you, but this me make that clear. And I think it's clear in the book with many
anecdotes that you, but this is a complicated thing. And I think you and I talked about in
New Orleans back when we were eating crawfish and drinking whiskey, which was when you understand a
person, in other words, you try hard to understand, does that morph into a gray area where you're trying to justify?
And I kind of try to understand the demons that dance around in his head.
Does that justify him being an asshole to people?
I hope I can say no, no, no, no, no.
But part of the job of a biographer is to say,
I want you to understand where all this is coming from.
Yes, I get it.
But you also allow everyone else to say it as if it's the only thing.
And every time I read one of them saying, oh, but it's his demons, whether it was Grimes or whatever, I'm like, get him to get therapy for fuck's sake.
You know, he doesn't go to therapy.
No, really?
You're kidding.
You're kidding.
He doesn't go to therapy.
Well, these people continually make excuses.
And one of the issues I have is they're all paid by him. But one of the things that I also wondered
about is fact-checking these stories. I know from my own family, everyone's family, everyone has a
different point of view of what happened. There was a kid that punched Elon. And Errol tells you
that the kid whose father had just died, and I believe of suicide. Elon told him he was stupid,
and Elon and his brother dispute that
and say the kid ended up in juvie.
Talk about your sourcing,
and do you think the brother of your subject
is a credible second source, for example?
Because I have heard Elon call people stupid
over and over and over again,
and I can imagine if someone's father just died,
there might be something happening there.
But that's populated by his side. I think you've recounted what I did in the book, again. And I can imagine if someone's father just died, there might be something happening there,
but that's populated by his side. I think you've recounted what I did in the book,
you know, accurately, which is I tell the story as Elon saw it. Then I talked to Errol. And in that case, I have to lay it out for the reader. Errol says, no, no, he called the boy stupid. You know, of course I took the side of the boy, and here's why.
And I give, and you know what?
I, you know, Musk once said to me, in any situation like a police and a perpetrator,
you have three stories, one side, the other, and the truth.
I sometimes have to say to the reader, here's what Kimball says. Here's what
Elon says. Errol says it differently. Did you call this kid? Did you call this kid?
Or call the juvenile detention center? That was, you know, 45 years ago and I was not able or
I don't know whether the kid's still around.
But you're right.
On things like that, you try.
Look, I talked to, what is it, 150 people.
Like every time he did something, and you move on.
I mean, if I move on a second, he does this over and over again.
He said he learned to punch people in the nose,
and I show him punching people in the nose.
So when it happens to, say, John McNeil,
when it happens to Martin Eberhardt, co-founder of Tesla, John McNeil, former president of Tesla, when it happens, I mean, I can go through.
You did go back to that.
I go back. The only reason is because he hangs a lot on that he was bullied.
And then if you didn't talk to the kid or the juvenile detention center, why put it in there if you can't confirm either one of their.
Well, first of all, all sides, even Errol
says he was beaten up. He was in the hospital. Yes, I get that. His face got smashed. I get it.
The only question is, should you take the side of the guy who smashed his face? Or explain it,
or explain that part. Oh, explain it. I did. And I said that, according to Errol,
Musk called him stupid. And you know what? You're right. Musk
does it. So does Bill Gates. So does Bezos. They use the word stupid a lot. And so it's understandable
there. And there is no doubt that all of this bullying and getting beaten up happens. There's
nobody who says, I mean, Errol said, oh, but I gave him a great
childhood. But yeah, at this Veld school, this wilderness camp, of course, people sat on you
and they beat you up. That's the way we were in South Africa. I wouldn't have put it in if I
couldn't confirm it. I wouldn't have. Well, wait, wait, wait. I don't want to fight too much. But
nobody denied that the whole incident happened. And I'll let Errol say, almost confirming what Elon says,
Elon says, I had to stand there and my father berated me and took the bully's side.
And Errol said, yeah, he had to stand there.
I berated him.
I took the guy who beat him up's side.
Yes, he did.
So I think everybody has the same story there.
Should the dad have taken the side of the guy who beat him up,
even if Elon called the guy stupid? Yep, I get it. It does give Elon sympathy from the beginning.
But I want to do a lightning round of things that were not in the book, actually, and understand
why they were admitted. It seems like you didn't speak to Elon's daughter, Vivian Jenna Wilson,
who is trans. Yeah, I tried. and I don't want to go too much
into it, but communications through family members, and so there are quotes from her,
and what she said, and the messages even on Christmas, and...
Why didn't you want to go into it, given he has posted several what I would characterize as
anti-trans statements? Oh, yeah. No, I do go into all that. I'm just not sure I want to tell you who gave me
her text messages. Okay. Did you try to reach out to her directly? Yeah. I asked people,
can I get to her? And you couldn't? Couldn't. Okay. Brian Merchant pointed out there was also
a quote, not a single mention of the sweeping allegations of racial discrimination at Tesla's
flagship Fremont factory that resulted in juries finding Tesla liable for millions in damages.
Workers of color said they were called the N-word and saw South Swastika's paint in the bathroom.
There was a lot of sexual harassment allegations at Tesla.
Why not go into this more?
Yeah, I think that's valid.
There are lawsuits against it.
I probably could have gone more into that.
It was not something that anybody accused Musk specifically or personally or anything.
It was just things that happened at the Fremont factory.
And I'll cop a plea, except for that there was really no Musk involvement.
If I'd been writing a book about Tesla, it would have been more important.
Okay.
Well, I think the DNA of every company is the DNA of its founder,
but he's not.
He's got seven companies, too.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah.
All right.
Use of drugs seems to be missing,
which has been written a lot about recently.
You mentioned he smoked weed on Joe Rogan's podcast,
but there's been multiple reports on the effects of ketamine and Ambien.
He's even talked about Ambien use.
And perhaps more seem nowhere to be found.
Well, I think there's some stuff, and you and I talked about it.
Yes, yeah, we did.
You had stronger evidence than on the better or worse.
I had just heard from people.
I wished someone would report it.
And then the journal finally did.
The journal finally did.
Yeah, the journal did some stuff.
I have in the book about drugs and prescription drugs and Ambien and everything else.
drugs and Ambien and everything else. Ketamine, he says, is an effective treatment for depression.
Yes. And it's prescribed. So he does prescription, whether it be ketamine, prescription,
serotonin uptake inhibitors. I have him talking about maybe being bipolar, but not being diagnosed. He has said this about himself.
Right, right.
And so that's all in the book.
And he does, well, let's say self-medicate,
but with prescriptions.
Is it being used in a clinical setting for him?
By a real doctor, not I want some ketamine,
I'm going to prescribe it myself.
You can be a judge of real doctors,
but there are people who have doctors who prescribe
it. He has... Michael Jackson had a doctor that didn't turn out very well. Yeah, yeah. Look,
one thing I will say is because of SpaceX clearances, security clearances, ever since Ever since the Joe Rogan thing, where he spoke dope on the podcast, he is subject to random drug tests for illegal drugs.
Right.
Now, that doesn't mean it would pick up ketamine, nor would it say, hey, that doctor who prescribed it, was that sort of a charlatan doctor you just found and paid?
Right.
Or is that a real doctor?
Right, right.
Did you ever, you never went to raves with him or the stuff he likes to go to?
You never, I don't mean to say party.
But, you know, he likes to go to raves.
I don't, yeah, okay.
You didn't socialize with him, correct?
I had to keep a bit of a line.
And I watched some people around him and some people who worked with him
who kind of crossed the line a bit and late at night
would think, okay, I'm his party pal. And I had to make some judgments. There are times I went
out to dinner with him, but I didn't want to pretend to be some pal who partied with him.
And if I crossed that line and started going to late night parties, but let me
say something else. Yeah. Walter Isaacson at a rave is not something I want to see. No, it wouldn't
be a pretty sight. I mean, you know, I mean, look, I got gray hair. Yeah. I'll take you to jazz fest.
I'll take you to me. But look, I've been a reporter a whole lot. And you always hear these stories of, oh, somebody, not Musk,
went to Jeffrey Epstein's Island or had wild sex orgies with whole lots of drugs
and he spent all night having sex orgies.
You know, you ask me how do I put in the fact that both his father and he say
he was beaten up by a bully and they have different opinions on whether he deserved it.
You can't throw in that somebody said somebody somebody said, I want to, you know.
I'm wondering if you discussed it directly with him, use of drugs.
Yeah, he actually talks about that he's not as much of a party person.
You know, he goes down to Cabo and he doesn't like it and he flies back.
I suspect, because I've asked him about it, but, you know, he may be spinning me, that he's far less of a party animal than people say.
But maybe that's projecting because I'm not as much of a party animal as some of your friends.
There's a lot more talk of it lately.
That's why.
One of the other ones was Jennifer Sallet raised in your review in New York Times when Elon was rambling on to you about the, quote, my woke mind virus is his way in the way of his ambitions for multi-planetary civilization.
She says, quote, it would have been nice if Isaacson had pushed back to answer the basic question, what on earth does any of it even mean?
Look, people, you say the woke mind virus and people say, what do you mean by that?
They're not trying to explain it, but, you say the woke mind virus, and people say, what do you mean by that? And I try to explain it, but, you know, progressive.
I know that wokeness is one of those subjects that means you say the word, everybody scatters all over the place.
I think I make it pretty clear in the book what had gotten him upset.
And I also make it pretty clear I think it's a weird apocalyptic thing for him to be worrying about.
Yeah, okay.
Another one is from Vox's Constance Grady.
She writes, he goes through women, Isaacson chronicles four major romantic relations of Musk's adult life with a shamelessly misogynistic binary.
All of Musk's girlfriends in this book are either devils or angels, and accordingly, they bring out the devil or angel in Musk's uncontrollable nature.
You had written, he developed a fervor that cloaked his goofiness and a goofiness that cloaked his fervor. I think you were harder on Amber Heard, and I don't know Amber Heard.
I think you tweeted that out. I think I saw that.
Yeah, but go ahead.
Amber Heard, I talked to quite a bit in her sides in the book. She, look, I'm not an expert on this,
but in the periphery of my vision, I kind of follow the Johnny Depp, Amber Heard thing.
We're talking about people that are excitable.
I don't know what you want to say.
They are.
So that whole situation with Johnny Depp, you can see that she's dramatic.
with Donnie Depp, you can see that she's dramatic.
Now, Musk talks about her in the book as playing wonderful things.
Role-playing as his favorite, whatever, video game character.
And I have scenes of her picking flowers by the side of the road and hiding in the Tesla factory to surprise him on his birthday.
But the storm and turmoil at both sides, tell me about, this is not a matter
of dispute, that was part of the attraction. And I am telling that as part of a theme,
that this guy, even leave aside Errol Musk and say, maybe I do too much on childhood.
Part of the theme of this life is this person is attracted to drama and storm. When things are calm,
to drama and storm.
When things are calm, he surges.
He buys Twitter or whatever.
So this is true of the relationship with Amber.
Nothing hurt him more than that relationship.
And there's a scene at the end when they just have a knockdown.
Not knockdown, because we're not talking physical here,
but brutal fight in Rio de Janeiro.
And she's claiming,
you know, that it's locked up my passport. I get her side, I get his side, I get the security guard's side, I get everybody's side. And in the end, I talk about her saying she sends me pictures
of that night after they made up. There's a picture in the book, and they're kissing
on a balcony in Rio at midnight on New Year's Eve.
So I'm trying to illustrate not Amber Heard.
I'm giving hope, per se, in the benefit of the doubt.
And I think she says something like Elon loves playing with fire, and sometimes it's burned.
This is all an explanation of a guy addicted to drama and storm.
of a guy addicted to drama and storm.
Okay, so one of the things in that regard is this cruelty and asshole behavior
seems somewhat excused
because he manages somehow to replace a rocket part
with a toilet latch.
Wow, amazing.
I fully understand.
Wait, I'm not going to cop a plea to that.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, I'm going to stop you.
Go ahead.
I don't say you get to be an asshole
if you get to make a rocket latch.
Right, okay, all right. I say this is a person who's doing all these things I don't say you get to be an asshole if you get to make a rocket latch.
I say this is a person who is doing all these things,
and you have to figure out how does the fabric weave together.
And you don't think you give him a pass?
Some of his partners do.
I think it was Grimes saying, I try to stop him from being king crazy.
I was like, why is he king crazy?
Except why is he like that? Why? Why does it need a lady to help him from being king crazy. I was like, why is he king crazy? Except why is he like that?
Why?
Why does it need a lady to help him not be an asshole?
Like, that to me.
Why is he king crazy?
I mean, that's what the book is about. No, what I mean is that it abrogates his responsibility as a man.
By the way, it was Tallulah who gets credit for trying to keep him from being.
I like Tallulah.
I like Grimes a lot, too.
So you don't believe the cruelty has to be linked to his accomplishments?
No, I don't think the cruelty is justified at all.
And, you know, but with complex people, you've got to tell the complex story.
Sure.
And I don't think, and I know you and I talked about this a year ago, and so it helped me write the book,
which is don't put any sentence in that says this cruelty was in any way justifiable because he made a latch to a rocket hatch.
Thank you.
I'm going to bring in Steve Jobs here because sometimes you do seem to be arguing that their demons create the creation, I guess.
Many people have excused Elon's behavior to me like this.
Mark Benioff and I
had a long back and forth.
He basically said it's okay
because he lands rockets
on a surfboard,
except when I actually pointed out
the homophobic remark he made.
And then he's like,
oh, that's not good.
And I'm like, no, it's not.
And, you know,
I can think of many geniuses
who weren't assholes.
How far does the,
and I don't,
not necessarily just accusing you of doing this,
go to support toxic,
assholic behavior in people?
You have a quote,
I think from Grimes,
demon mode causes a lot of chaos,
but it also gets a lot of shit done.
Do you believe you have to be an asshole
to get things done?
No, and I have written many books
from Jennifer Dowd to Ben Franklin of people who are as nice and nurturing as you can be.
In fact, if you have a criticism of Benjamin Franklin, meaning John Adams does, it's that he was too ingratiating and insinuating.
In other words, he tried to be too nice and to get people to like him. What Steve Jobs once said to me, he said, people like you, I mean, he was talking about me,
who wear velvet gloves and live on the East Coast. I don't think he'd been down to New Orleans with
us knowing which coast I actually live on. He said, you're always trying to get the people in
front of you to like you, and you're always being empathetic, and you always want to be their
friends, and you never want to get them mad and you think that's being nice
well that makes that's kind of egotistic it's being nice to yourself because you're not caring
much about the enterprise i think there's some balance and i'm going to get personal here for a
moment and okay you can decide this too boring when i ran time, you remember back in those days, they were nice magazines on paper and stuff.
I knew everybody there, and I was pretty, you know, I just loved all the people I worked with.
You have a very nice reputation there.
Yeah.
And it was sweet, and we never had to fire anybody because the magazine was doing well.
And then I get moved to CNN, which is owned by the same company.
And once again, I don't want to get people mad.
I want to be known as being nice.
But you know what?
I was really bad running CNN.
It needed to be disrupted.
People needed, I won't name names, but you can think of some of the anchors and some of the people there.
I needed to have been more of a disruptor, more of an asshole than I could be.
I don't know if you need to.
But I needed actually to leave CNN.
Okay, that's exactly, I remember I told you that.
Thank you.
I've taken your advice many times in life.
That's why I'm surprised you criticized me.
No, that's okay.
This is the 90s and aughts, by the way, 90s for time and early aughts for CNN.
Your listeners don't even remember that century.
Yeah, I'm not even going to bring up what you did with Pathfinder.
You just did.
We'll be back in a minute.
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ready AI. Let's talk about Steve Jobs, because I thought you were much harder on him for much
lesser behaviors and zero crazy tweets, none of which spilled out into the public. I don't find
him anything like Steve Jobs. I don't either. And by the way, look, I thought one of your criticisms would be, because I saw you wrote about it,
that I don't apply too many judgments. I tend to have my own judgments. I weave some of them in,
but I let a reader say, okay, I've just read this story. Here's what I feel.
I tried to do that with Jobs.
I really liked Jobs.
I really respected him.
I thought he did amazing things.
I thought he parked in the handicapped space.
But that's not tweeting what you're talking about.
So most people who read the Jobs book, I mean, even last night I was at the 92nd Street.
Why?
And everybody's bringing me the Jobs book to sign.
They said, this changed my life.
This guy totally inspired me.
This is the most important book because I just wanted to be like Steve Jobs.
I fell in love with him.
So I don't think you come away from the Jobs book other than saying he gets mad at the person making the
smoothies at the whole food or he parks in the handicapped spot i think jobs is very much exalted
as a as a epoch-changing character who had his rough spots uh elon musk is at least one order of magnitude more, more in being rough,
and in some ways more in running six or seven companies doing all sorts of weird things.
If you read this book, about a third of the people who read this book will come away hating him more, and a third will come away liking him. And I think a third maybe say, all right,
that was a really weird narrative, and I'm going to have to process it.
I think actually Jobs would have abhorred Musk. Actually, I say that. I think he would have,
because of the way he behaves in public, particularly.
What do you think Jobs would have thought of Elon Musk?
I think he would have truly not liked the political and public non-niceness.
I don't think that the way he treats Andy Krebs on the rocket launch pad and yells at him,
or the way he treats Don McNeil sometimes
when he's lying on the floor of the conference room in a catatonic state.
But I think there was a spiritual quality to Steve Jobs that had a gentleness when it
came to, I don't know, public matters.
Help me here.
Yes, he was.
He was actually a very wise person.
I've been listening to a lot of our recordings and his interviews,
and he's thoughtful and doesn't say, you know, I agree.
He could be a jerk to people.
I mean, Musk is very hardcore,
and I think especially when Musk veers off to his late-night politics, I'll call it.
Because there are times when you're with Musk, even—
Very reasonable.
Today, he's like with Chuck Schumer—or yesterday, with Chuck Schumer and Chris Coons, the Democratic senator from Delaware.
And he's saying—there'll be times he would have said to me, he said to me, I really want to get a party of the center.
I want to bring people to—I think we've lost the center in this country.
Then late at night, he's drinking
Red Bull and taking Ambien,
and he's
amplifying
the fringes. You know, there's an
expression, does the drunk agree with the sober?
I think he's lying to you when he's sober.
I think the drunk is exactly
who he's become. I think that they're actually
different personalities,
and I sometimes think that one personality hardly remembers, you know, things that, especially when he gets into the Mr. Hyde mode of Jacqueline Hyde.
I get that, but he's not Mr. Hyde.
And he's not, it's like, again, I'm in the seek therapy mode of this.
Now, let me ask you this.
I'm in the seek therapy mode of this. Now, let me ask you this. You said in one interview,
you were silent in the reporting and I utterly, completely, that's exactly the way to go,
like a camera even. That's what you were trying to do. But now I want you to be a photograph.
I would like you to take a position on him. Going away from two years of spending time with this man,
what do you think of him? And let me just say, when my book, I come to conclusions about people I like.
I have a whole chapter of people I like, because I think you have to have that. Sam Altman,
personally like, Reid Hoffman, Brian Chesky. Specifically, do you like this person? And
what did you come away from feeling about him when you finished?
Well, a couple of points. You're right to say, I don't want to get in the way of the reader making his or her own judgments. And so sometimes I'm telling you the story, I'm quiet. You get, you know, one of the first, the first great biography I ever read was about 17 years old, T. Harry Williams on Huey Long. And it begins with an amazing, funny anecdote of Huey Long
saying, going down to, he's a Baptist from upstate Louisiana, going down to Cajun country where it's
Catholic and say, I'm talking about Sunday mornings and hitching up the horse to the wagon so he could
take his Catholic grandmother to mass. And finally, his campaign manager said, Huey, you never told us
you had a Catholic grandmother. And he says, hell, we didn't even have a horse.
He lied.
So and then but T. Harry Williams doesn't say so he was a liar or doesn't say he was a lovable rogue.
OK, you get to read these.
So I'm not trying to say to the reader, here's your conclusion.
Right. But now you've asked me a question.
The book is written, Walter. You don't need to.
You don't need to talk to Elon Musk anymore.
He's not listening to your podcast, I suspect.
I doubt it.
And no, but I'm telling you because I know you and I have had this discussion, which is how come you don't tell us your conclusions on everything.
Yes, I would like a conclusion from you.
And I don't write burn book.
I write a narrative.
Okay. Walk a narrative. Okay.
Walk a person.
All right, but what about on a personal level on this show?
On a personal level, first of all, the word like.
It's such an anodyne word.
I mean, I don't quite.
But no.
I mean, likability is not in the top 500 adjectives one uses, and I know you don't fully buy into what I'm saying here,
but there actually are different, as Grimes said,
it depends on which Elon you happen to be with.
And there are times when he really is inspiring about his missions.
Absolutely.
Yeah, okay.
And you've seen it.
You've written that.
I like SpaceX Elon. And you've seen it. You've written it. I like SpaceX, Elon.
And he's inspiring about the missions.
And the very first when he was doing that, I thought this is a type of pontification you do on pep talks for your team or on podcasts.
He doesn't really believe that we have to be multi-planetary.
And after a while, I'm going, you know what?
It may seem crazy, but he actually believes that we should be space adventurers or we should move to the era of electric vehicles.
I like, once again, to use an anodyne word.
When I'm watching him do that, when I'm watching him be really funny, when I'm watching him make a pretty major decision about how you're going to switch a line on the assembly line to, I mean, a station on the set.
I go, whoa, I'm impressed by that.
Then there'll be times when he is reaming.
I mean, I'm surprised he's letting me sit in the room,
but he's just reaming somebody out for not knowing what he calls the idiot index of a part,
which is how much the material costs versus the final product.
I'm going, man, how can you do that?
That guy, don't like that?
No, I didn't like that musk.
You know, am I supposed to tout up all the times I liked and respected and all the times
I flinched?
Yes.
Yeah, it was.
Let me give you an easier, Scott Galloway calls an idolatry of innovators that excuses
cruelty, that excuses
anti-Semitism, excuses misogyny, excuses being, quite frankly, not an ideal father, as long as
you're really fucking rich. Is it an apologist not to come to a conclusion or not? You may disagree
with me. No, I mean, I come to a lot, and I let the reader come to a lot of conclusions in this
book, which is a lot of the things. Look, you've read those Twitter chapters. What he did, the
hypocritical things of trying to ban reporters on the Washington Post after he says he's for free
speech, a lot of those things he does, I think, you're clear is not me apologizing for him.
is not me apologizing for him.
It gets back to this thing of,
okay, if you send rockets to Mars,
does that allow you to be an asshole?
And no, I don't defend being an asshole,
but he is also an interesting character.
And even Scott would say, and certainly you would,
that he's been able to recreate the internet in low earth orbit.
He's been able to make rockets that not only get satellites into orbit and humans into
orbit, unlike NASA, but they land and he can reuse them.
I go on and on.
That doesn't excuse him being a jerk, but you got to tell the whole story.
Jennifer Doudna will have more impact on the human race, and she's a lovely person.
And I loved writing that book,
and I would love you to tell your readers,
if you don't like Elon Musk, buy The Codebreaker.
Okay, all right.
No, none of this.
All right.
Okay, you won't take a position on him.
That's fine.
We're almost done.
I want this to be very quick,
so you need to answer yes or no,
or if you have one little thing to say, do it.
Do you think Elon has a point about the woke mind virus, yes or no?
I'm sorry.
I'll try.
Okay.
I think it's way overblown.
I think it's overblown.
Okay.
I think there were—do you mind me answering just in a sentence?
Sure, please.
Go ahead.
I'll be pretty crisp.
I thought he was totally wrong when he was appalled that at Twitter they had suppressed or kicked off people who said that the lockdowns are ridiculous or that it could have been a lab leak or that these things.
And then I began to think, well, maybe we should have had that debate on lockdowns and mask mandates.
Do I think the woke mind virus is a problem in some places? Is it in the top 100 problems this nation has? Probably not.
Okay. I'm sorry, that's not one word. That's okay. That's good. Do you think he should rectify how
he treated Twitter employees, in particular people like Yoel Roth, whom he made a target,
a dangerous target, or Paul Pelosi, for example, who he lied about after his attack?
Yes. Yes. Okay. I could survive with lied about after his attack? Yes.
Yes, okay.
I guess I could survive with the one-word answer there.
Yes, okay.
Yes on both counts.
Will he?
He kind of says he deleted the Pelosi tweet and said he apologized.
He did publicly, but he didn't.
He said he also told somebody he called him, but he didn't. Yeah, he did it publicly, but sort of yes, whatever.
He also told someone he called him, but he didn't.
Yeah, he did it publicly, but sort of yes, whatever.
I do think he knows that it was absolutely a really bad thing to have tweeted,
but that doesn't mean that, you know, he's apologizing.
A month later, he's doing someone else. There's a lot on Yoel in the book.
This is a truly decent person.
Indeed.
And Elon gets along very well with him for a very long time,
including defending him for, you know, being a Hillary supporter and attacking Trump. And then
Musk turns on him in a way that just still makes me flinch. And it is, I know you don't like me
going back to childhood, but it's being in that wilderness camp and just punching people in the nose unnecessarily. And yeah, the Yoel thing, if you think I'm
sugarcoating and being too nice to Elon Musk, read the whole-
I get that. I just think-
Watch on Yoel Roth, who is a good man.
I get it. I think he was a piece of shit to do that. That's what I think. And there's no excuse.
Elon was a piece of shit to do that. Do you think his fear of population decline and the need to repopulate the planet
Earth is rational? I have four kids. He has 11. I do think that the danger of overpopulation
is incorrect, that declining birth rates are a problem. Okay. Do you think we need to be a
multi-planetary civilization, Walter?
Man, that would be so cool. Yes.
Where do you think Tesla will be in five years given quickly increasing competition
from across the globe, especially in China?
I think they will have a low-priced
global car at under $25,000.
That'll be huge.
I think he will not conquer
full self-driving as quickly as he thinks.
You and I both have joked about his.
But he has just switched, as you know, from the last one of the final chapters of my book to AI machine learning.
And that has made FSD 12 particularly good.
So I think Tesla will be dominant in five years.
Yes, I mean, you look at what happened with the charging network.
Okay.
Dominant meaning I think it will.
Low margin business.
Huh?
It's a low margin business, but okay.
I know, but now GM and Ford are having to say we're going to use the Tesla supercharger network,
which gets into the Starlink thing.
It gives him more control.
Okay, but Tesla will be dominant compared to all the competitors.
I don't know what you exactly mean by dominant, but it will be—
What he is now.
Well, he's now more valuable than all other car companies combined are.
I'm going to take the other side of that bet.
I think China's going to run right over him, and then there'll be competition for everyone.
Okay, okay.
You know, the good thing about being a biographer is you get to write about what's happened.
Blaming of the ADL for the Twitter ad fall-off.
Right about what's happened.
Blaming of the ADL for the Twitter ad fall off.
And now he's meeting with Netanyahu because he needs someone to make him look like he doesn't dislike Jewish people.
What do you think of that?
Wrong.
Totally wrong. And the fall off on Twitter ads is not because of the ADL.
It's because he's made it so it's too controversial that no brand wants to be there.
So wrong.
No.
Or whatever the answer is.
What do you think of them dragging Netanyahu in to make him look good?
My sympathies for Netanyahu having to do things or whatever is not the highest on my list today.
Yeah, exactly.
Do you wish that he hadn't done the Twitter thing while you were writing the book because it took so much away from the other story?
That he hadn't done the Twitter thing while you were writing the book because it took so much away from the other story?
Well, it certainly made for a really rollicking, amazing, complex rollercoaster.
But, yeah, if I wanted to have lived an easier life, it would have been more fun to write just about batteries and cars and rockets. Mm-hmm.
Comment on his recent comments on China, which were also reflected in your book, uh,
about the Uyghurs and the need to placate China.
Yeah.
Um, he is more in the camp of let's placate China.
He has obviously both huge amounts of sales and factories there, but I'm not sure it's
just financially motivated.
I think he actually believes a confrontational stance to
China is, and I think I agree with that, I think is not a great idea. I think we got to figure out
how to have a modus vivendi with China. Interesting. I think we need to get along.
We also need to punch him in the nose. See, we have different opinion.
Hey, well, in some ways, I think we might be agreeing there, which is complete.
A real punch in the nose, actually.
Oh, I'm not sure the punch in the nose leads to a great end of the movie.
That's true. Fair point.
How do you assess the Twitter files now that he made such a big deal of, which proved pretty much a goose egg?
I think it was way overblown.
blown. And I disagreed with the premise that it showed the U.S. government forcing Twitter executives to do things, even though I do think Twitter suppressed a little bit too much the range
of speech. But what I feel is not that the government violated and tried to suppress it, but that the Twitter executives went along willingly,
day after day, banning people per request.
And I thought that was a bad act.
I mean, not a great thing that the previous Twitter management did.
And I'm kind of glad it all got exposed, but it was, as you say.
Do you think he's let too many people back on and is not moderating correctly, which is leading to the ad fall off, for example?
Well, I think the ad fall off is because it's become more controversial.
I'm not sure.
He has a thing about freedom of speech, but not freedom of reach.
That's not his.
That's an old, old.
I love when he takes credit for it, but it's not true.
Well, okay. I'll give takes credit for it, but it's not true. Well, okay.
I'll give whoever credit for it.
Years ago.
Letting more people on doesn't bother me.
What bothers me is when he amplifies the people or likes or engages with the people who engage with people who are anti-Semitic or white supremacists or whatever.
I don't think Musk is that way.
I'm not even sure you should keep Donald.
I don't think you should keep Donald Trump off.
But if there are people saying bad things, I think the big problem is he's kind of engaging with them and letting them be amplified and reach.
Letting them.
He's amplifying himself.
All right.
Having spent two years with Elon, would you let this man have access to your brain, be a Neuralink?
Would you hand him your personal animation for an everything app?
I'm not as big of a privacy.
I mean, let's leave aside it being Elon.
No, I don't want to leave aside.
Okay. I mean, let's leave aside it being Elon. No, I don't want to leave aside. Okay, on Elon.
Well, I don't think Elon's going to be sitting there saying,
here's what Walter spent money on last night.
I'm like my daughter and her generation.
I'm not as much of a privacy.
I mean, I love privacy. I just meant I'm not worried about people having some access to my data as long as I can turn it off.
All right.
Okay.
Last one.
Do you think there's ever a time Elon wasn't trying to manipulate you during the interviews?
Was that a difficult thing?
He's very persuasive.
It was pretty odd that he almost did not seem to, or at times did not even seem aware of my presence.
I know you're going to think that's weird.
But I'd be sitting there. He'd be doing things that I wouldn't do in front of my wife, I wouldn't do in front of
myself. Tell me, what? Oh, reaming people out, saying weird things, you know, just,
I worried about the Heisenberg principle that by observing things, I would affect the things. And I was
stunned. And people around him were stunned. They said, we thought if you were around,
it would affect him. But it hasn't. So you were just a fly on the wall. All right. Let me ask you,
I have only three more questions. Who does Elon really listen to? You mentioned open loop warning
when he's behaving badly, as his brother does.
Who do you consider his actual advisors who, let me just say, are not bought and paid for?
Yeah, the open-loop warning is interesting because there's an agreement amongst friends and brothers and other people that when you go really bad, and this starts in 2018, you think there's been kind of a wackiness.
No, I remember 2018. Yeah, 2018, pedo tweet, take private, smoking dope on Joe Rogan.
You know, this is, and that's when his brother, Kimball,
uses the phrase they use, which is open loop warning,
which means you don't have a feedback loop.
He's looping, yeah.
You're shooting off something and it's not an iterative feedback loop.
The people who have that ability with him
are Antonio Gracias, who's been there since the very beginning and has tried to take his phone
and put it in the hotel safe and punch in a code so he couldn't tweet at night and says,
you've got to stop doing things. Kimball, but I'll also say he doesn't have enough.
There aren't enough people to give him negative feedback, and he sometimes cuts them off.
Yes, yes, I know.
Cuts Kimball off in the book from month on end.
So, obviously, being more open to negative feedback and restraining influences would be something you would add to the mix.
You're mentioning just two people.
Where will he be in 30 years?
Well, I could not throw, I mean.
Okay, who else?
Well, a crowd that you're not particularly fond of,
that's like David Sachs.
So you think they have an influence on him?
I don't think David Sachs is in any way controlling his thing.
No, an influence.
But he talks to him a lot.
And I could, I think Ken Howery, but I also think, you know, his, well, Grimes sometimes or Chabon.
He has people around him.
But I'm agreeing with you.
Look, I got a lot of people around me who every time I go on a podcast like yours, listen to it, say, man, you shouldn't have said that.
Or for God's sake, don't.
You know, I get a lot of feedback.
I don't think that he gets as much.
No, he doesn't get very much at all.
Where do you think he'll be in 30 years when he's as old as Biden?
I'm thinking Howard Hughes.
Howard Hughes.
He keeps pushing all of his chips back in.
And there's going to be explosions, there's going to be debris that falls, just like there was in 2008 when he blows up his first three rockets.
Just like there was in 2017, 2018 when he goes to the hell that's described in the book.
I think certain things will flame out and blow up.
will flame out and blow up.
If you ask me my prediction on the first,
I think that the platform now known as X will be a payments platform.
We'll have content creators putting stuff up,
but we'll be in an environment that advertisers don't want to be in,
and it's going to be a mess.
What about him?
What about him personally?
Oh, I think he's been through these things before.
He's been through 2008. He's been through these things before he's been through 2008 he's been through 2018
he relishes storm and drama so no evolvement of this that you saw with jobs you certainly saw
maturing so no evolve yeah although when jobs came back from the liver transplant read that
chapter again it was like they thought he was going to be Mello, but he wasn't Mello, but he was still Will Musk Mello. The one word answer, no.
No. Okay. Did you ever hear him apologize to anyone for an outburst during that time
you were with him?
No. In fact, it's particularly interesting in the book because I go, I mean, you say,
do you check with other people? I circle back so many times in the book. He
reams out a guy named Andy
at Starbase, Lucas, you know, on the finance team or whatever. So I circle back. And at one point,
he promotes Andy after he's like really reamed him out. Likewise, Milan Kovac, who does autopilot
in Optimus the Robot, just reams him out. And both of them, and there are a couple
more in the book, I say, all right, did he, and I'm there, and I'm going, holy shit. And I say to
Milan, and I say to Andy, did he ever apologize? He said, both of them said, the odd thing is,
he was promoting me, he was very nice to me later, And I finally said to him, do you remember when,
and he kind of looks at me blankly as if he doesn't even quite remember it.
Oh, no. Come on, he's 52. He's a man. He's an adult. Doesn't remember it?
I think there are things he does when he gets into the zone of a dark mood in which when he comes out later, he thinks that wasn't personal.
That wasn't just me giving honest feedback.
And his mind moves to other things.
I'm not apologizing.
Okay.
I'm not saying it's good.
It's called seek therapy is what it is.
You asked me, does he ever apologize to these people?
I'm telling you, no, he doesn't.
That's happened to me.
He wrote me a bunch of mean emails and then was like, why don't we talk?
I was like, you wrote me a bunch of mean emails.
You see, okay.
And do you think that, you know, he's going to apologize?
No.
I think there's two kinds of people, people who lie, which he does quite a bit, and people
who lie to themselves, which he does almost all the time.
That's what I think. Yeah. And in the book, I think you'll see more complexity in that. Okay. All right. There's two lines I want to talk to you about. It's my
last question. It's the last line of your book where you said sometimes they're crazy ones,
but then you say crazy enough to change the world. And I'm saying, Walter, you cannot have it two ways. But you did.
Why did you end it like that?
You know, you have a good criticism that sometimes I try to have it two ways.
And I guess the plea I will cop is I actually believe that,
that he's crazy, that he's messed up.
It's a problem.
But why the hell can't Boeing have a communication system?
Why can't it get out?
What is it about him?
I mean, he is changing the world, whether you like it or not.
And you said it over and over again.
He brought us, more than any single individual, into the era of electric vehicles, in the era of space travel, in the era of internet and outer space.
travel in the era of internet now to space. So it is true that his craziness did help lead him to change the world. Maybe it hindered him. Anyway, we can argue about it. But let me say,
fast cars, rockets, women blowing things up with no repercussions whatsoever.
Would you trade places with him? Oh, God, no, no, no. Look, I had a happy childhood.
Nobody's ever going to write my biography,
but I grew up in New Orleans, a magical place,
with two parents who were the kindest people I ever knew.
I tend to be congenitally suited to being the detached observer who's a storyteller.
As you heard me say in New Orleans a year ago,
I had a mentor, Walker Percy, the great novelist.
His picture is sort of back there if you can see it.
And he said there are two types of people
coming out of Louisiana, preachers and storytellers.
Yes, I've heard you tell this story.
For heaven's sake, be a storyteller.
The world's got too many preachers.
I know I'm not a person in the arena.
I know I'm not going to send up a rocket.
Last question.
What impact does writing the Elon biography, or some people say I had geography, someone called it that to me, as some have called it.
No, no, no.
I'm just telling you.
I'm not going to let you get away with that.
Okay, all right.
I'm not going to say it.
You're right.
You're right.
You're right.
Unfair.
Unfair.
Unfair.
I think you were far too nice to him.
What impact does the Elon biography have on the Walter Isaacson legacy?
Look, if I had cared about my legacy, I would have taken a less controversial character.
There are going to be people who say, you took a totally controversial person, and as you just said, it's not hagiography, but I was too nice to him.
This ain't going to help.
And there are people who think I was too mean to him.
You know, maybe next time I do a book, I'm going to go into the Wayback Machine and do somebody who's beautiful and dead.
Yes, I was just going to suggest.
I was like, Walter, if I have one piece of advice, dead.
I'll probably do it, but I did not do this book.
I kind of stumbled into this book.
I wasn't really planning to, and it kind of happened.
I did not do this book because it would enhance my legacy.
I did it because, whoa, this is a—well, I first did it because I hadn't even thought about buying Twitter.
I said, man, the guy's shooting off rockets, doing electric cars.
I love technology.
Do the book.
shooting off rockets, doing electric cars.
I love technology.
Do the book.
I think in the end, there'll be a lot of people who say,
I was far too nice to him.
There'll be people who say, oh, you were mean and you didn't understand his greatness.
If I wanted to have a less controversial impact on my career,
there's 10,000 people I could have picked other than Elon Musk to
have written about. Howard Hughes, I hear he's dead.
Edison, Ford, Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos. Edison was an asshole. No, do not do live people.
Stop. You can't. They're not done yet. In this podcast, we've done four different
instances where you've given me advice and I've actually
taken it because I'm not open loop. I think I'll promise you, but I promise you the next one will
be somebody who's been dead for at least a century. Anyone dead, Walter, please, for the love of God.
Anyway, I really appreciate it. You've been a very good sport about this.
I do remember when your burn book comes out, I get to turn the table.
You can burn me as much as you want.
No, I get to get you on stage.
It's funny.
It's actually funny.
So it's tough, but it's very funny.
So I think you'll enjoy it.
But we'll see.
You can tell me honestly, and I will take your honest feedback completely.
And I'm fine if you don't like it.
Fine if you do.
As long as I sell books, as you know. No, here's another thing I don't believe.
I don't believe you're happy only if it sells books. I think you're going to want to make sure
that people, maybe not me, but people like me kind of say, all right, that was pretty good.
Yeah, that is correct. You got more of an ego than you have a pocketbook.
Are you kidding? Are you kidding? I have an enormous ego and I'm also,
I don't know if I'm a narcissist, but I'm an egomaniac. Anyway, Walter, thank you so much. I appreciate it.
I appreciate that he actually responded to the criticisms that were being leveled against him by various criticizers or viewers.
And he was saying, okay, I cop a plea.
You know, I should have covered the Tesla thing. But he wouldn't cop a plea to the, he landed a rocket on a surfboard argument or he replaced a rocket door with a toilet latch or whatever.
Which is a fair response.
I think he has a point of view.
I just think there is an idolatry of these people that goes so far.
And I don't buy the idea, which he does have quite heavily in his book, that demons cause this.
He did quote Grimes saying that.
I'm sorry.
I just don't think she knows what she's talking about.
I don't think that demonic behavior breeds creativity.
I just don't.
I think that is really not true.
It is just not true.
It's simply not true. Yeah. I think he tried true. It is just not true. It's simply not
true. Yeah. I think he tried to ask you if you had demons. It's like, well, stick on task. We're
talking about Elon right now. Listen, I had a terrible stepfather. I don't scream at everybody.
I don't say transphobic things. I don't attack the ADL. Like, it's just, like, come on. And lots
of people have issues with their parents. So. I think that that's it. You know, even that
conversation around that bullying story you get in the prologue, it's like going to print with that.
He's letting people kind of choose their own adventure.
Yeah.
I mean, he's obviously done a lot of sourcing and fact-checking throughout the book, but in this particular story, there's an ambivalence that lets you hold an ambivalence.
Look, they're pinning the whole thing on the old man, and maybe he was terrible, but now Elon is an adult and a man.
He's 52.
So let's get some help if this is a problem.
We couldn't get Walter to take a position on Elon one way or the other.
He noted he likes Tallulah, he likes Grimes, he said that, but he wouldn't cop to liking Elon.
He wouldn't say he liked him or he disliked him. I thought his defense of that non-position was compelling because it was, he was effectively saying it depends which
Elon is showing up, right? There's many Elons. I think that's not an excuse. Dr. Jekyll and Mr.
Hyde, you know, metaphor is ridiculous. That doesn't exist in society. You don't get to be
shitty in one part and a killer in the other. You just don't. You're, it's the whole person.
And one of the things I'm thinking about a lot is because Christiane Amanpour is 40 years at CNN. She's
great. You know, be truthful, not neutral. And that is what I feel like. I think he's been truthful,
but he's been neutral. What we tried to do in the shape of this interview is like, we kind of knew
he wasn't going to take a position on Elon, but we... I thought he might. Oh, you did. I feel like what we wanted to do was that series of questions, which is take a position
on Elon's positions, which tells you a little bit more.
And him taking even that first answer to the woke mind virus, that was a really interesting...
Yeah, he likes to equivocate.
He's correct in that we should have looked at things harder, but not in the way he...
But you can still have a point, like a little factoid of point, be a jerk about it. The way he was in
our interview was he was questioning the COVID stuff, but in a way that was cruel without
knowledge. Exactly. He was being authoritative and he was being self-interested in the case that
it was keeping his factory open was his big, you know, he may have had a point. Maybe we should
have looked at it harder, but he wasn't right. Yeah. I do think, in having read the Jobs biography and the Musk biography, I don't actually think that Walter is harder on Jobs and Musk.
I think they both come off as assholes in different ways.
I do think that, obviously, Musk's crimes are greater, and you feel that when you're reading this book.
I mean, they're listed for you.
Some are not fully delved into.
He couldn't get access to the daughter. That was interesting. But they are set up in that way. And I think
there's also a truth to the Overton window having shifted that Elon, you know, behaved in these
little ways before, and now he's behaving in these ways all the time. He has no governors now.
And his excuse for behaving that way isn't for when he does it, his dad, it's the culture.
The culture is the reason he has to be this way.
It's what happens when people become rich and unaccountable.
In the worst case, in the best case, they become responsible people.
But much of the time, this is precisely what happens.
When you get licked up and down all day, this is what happens to you.
And when you have very severe challenges with your early childhood and your mental state, this is what happens to you. And when you have very severe challenges with your early
childhood and your mental state, this is what happens to you. Well, let's see what Walter
writes next. He shouldn't write about Trump next. I think that would be bad for his career.
No Trump. No Trump, Walter. Maybe a nice person. Right. Who changed the world. There's lots of
them. There's lots of them. Anyways, we will see who he writes about next and let's go eat crawfish
and drink whiskey.
Yeah, right.
I didn't drink whiskey.
He just did.
He did.
I didn't.
But that makes for the good meeting, Kara, because then you learn things.
That's exactly right.
Can you read us out, please?
Today's show was produced by Naeem Araza, Christian Castro-Rossell,
Megan Cunane, and Megan Burney.
Special thanks to Kate Gallagher and Mary Mathis.
Fernando Arruda engineered this episode.
Our theme music is by Trackademics.
If you're already following the show,
you get a bucket of crawfish and a double shot of whiskey.
The crawfish is delicious, I have to say.
If not, it's showdown for you,
which is stuffed pig stomach.
Go wherever you listen to podcasts,
search for On with Kara Swisher and hit follow.
Thanks for listening to On with Kara Swisher
from New York Magazine,
the Vox Media Podcast Network,
and us.
We'll be back on Thursday with more.
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