Pivot - Charlie Kirk Assassination Aftermath
Episode Date: September 12, 2025Kara and Scott break down the reactions to Charlie Kirk’s assassination in Utah. Then, mass protests in Nepal, Larry Ellison becomes the richest person in the world as Oracle stock soars, and App...le rolls out new iPhones. Plus, Jeffrey Epstein’s birthday book, and Kamala Harris says Biden’s run was fueled by “recklessness.” Watch this episode on the Pivot YouTube channel. Follow us on Instagram and Threads at @pivotpodcastofficial. Follow us on Bluesky at @pivotpod.bsky.social Follow us on TikTok at @pivotpodcast. Send us your questions by calling us at 855-51-PIVOT, or at nymag.com/pivot. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Support for the show comes from Sacks Fifth Avenue.
Sacks Fifth Avenue makes it easy to shop for your personal style.
Follow us here, and you can invest in some new arrivals that you'll want to wear again and again,
like a relaxed prodder blazer and Gucci loafers, which can take you from work to the weekend.
Shopping from Sacks feels totally customized from the in-store stylist to a visit to sacks.com
where they can show you things that fit your style and taste.
They'll even let you know when arrivals from your favorite designers are in,
or when that Brinella Cuccinelli sweater you've been eyeing is back in stock.
So, if you're like me and you need shopping to be personalized and easy, head to Sacks Fifth Avenue for the best follow rivals and style inspiration.
Support for this show comes from Robin Hood.
Wouldn't it be great to manage your portfolio on one platform?
With Robin Hood, not only can you trade individual stocks and ETFs.
You can also seamlessly buy and sell crypto at low costs.
Trade all in one place.
Get started now on Robin Hood.
Trading crypto involves significant risk.
Crypto trading is offered to.
through an account with Robin Hood Crypto LLC.
Robin Hood Crypto is licensed to engage in virtual currency business activity by the New York State Department of Financial Services.
Crypto held through Robin Hood Crypto is not FDIC in short or SIPICP protected.
Investing involves risk, including loss of principle.
Securities trading is offered through an account with Robin Hood Financial LLC, member SIPIC, a registered broker dealer.
One and SIP, and two, and SIP, and three, and SIP.
Oh, hey, I'm just Sipping Tim's All-Rour.
new protein ice latte, starting at 17 grams per medium latte, Tim's new protein lattes,
protein without all the work, at participating restaurants in Canada.
Hi, everyone. This is Pivot from New York Magazine in the Box Media Podcast Network. I'm Kara Swisher.
And I'm Scott Galloway. So today, we should start very much saying what happened yesterday in Utah
was a terrible and tragic situation. I think,
But there's been a lot of, like a lot of anger, a lot of accusations, a lot of really ugly stuff going on.
But being able to speak, even if you disagree with someone, and as you might imagine,
Scott and I have disagreed with Charlie Kirk many times, you can say what you want,
but having this happen is probably the most heinous thing that could occur in a country like the United States
where we are supposed to be able to say the most horrible things and continue to debate.
Scott?
Yeah, look, I've been thinking about this a lot,
as most people have over the last, whatever, 18 hours.
Look, he, I mean, at the end of the day,
or the beginning of the end is the following.
A 31-year-old father of two was needlessly murdered, right?
That is a tragedy, full stop.
Should not happen.
and we should be thinking about tangible actions
to make sure it happens less.
Charlie Kirk, in my view, and we said this,
and just to be honest, I won't speak for you.
In my view, said a lot of divisive, hateful things.
Absolutely.
At the same time, his format was really powerful and productive,
and that is a lot of people on the far left and the far right
going to their echo chambers in a studio somewhere behind a mic
and only listen to or respond to people who are supporting them,
he went on campus, and he would have these open mic,
you know, challenge me or debate me or prove me I'm wrong.
Prove me I'm wrong, it was called.
Yeah, prove me, and I thought that was really productive and courageous
because he was subject to a lot of TikToks and videos that made him look bad.
And a lot of times, he would make great points and show that a lot of
of young people weren't being critical thinkers about their progressive views. And a lot of times
young people would show up and say very intelligent things that counteracted in critical thinking
and showed that he was wrong. That is a productive dialogue we should have on campus.
Campuses are supposed to be, and this is one of the most upsetting things about a very upsetting thing,
university campuses are supposed to be an incredibly safe place physically, but a dangerous place
intellectually, and that is, and unfortunately, this reduces both. People, I don't know about you,
I'm rethinking some of the campus appearances I've committed to. They are supposed to be physically
safe spaces, not only for the speakers, but for the students, and I won't even get into
some of the high school stuff, but you have to appreciate, you know,
He was a great businessman at a very young age, a father of two, and his dialogue in his format, I felt, was a productive, brave dialogue, right?
This is a tragedy.
Let me get to some of the second order effects, and I want to get your thoughts, which is so disappointing that universities are becoming a place because of violence and schools.
this should be the safest places in the world for discourse.
That's just super, super upsetting.
What I find, and this is where, as progressives,
I feel a pressure to feel the other side.
I think the reaction from the far right on this is so fucking bullshit.
Every person on the far left has said something along,
I don't care if it's secretary, Clinton, vice president.
Everyone has said basically, we condemn this violence,
This is never the solution.
Our hearts and prayers go out to Charlie and his family.
The far right has had a very similar narrative for half of it.
Our thoughts and prayers go out to Charlie and his family.
And this is the fault of the radical left.
That is political violence only begets political violence.
And Trump, our commander, our divider in chief, immediately goes on,
highlights political violence against every Republican, forgetting to mention the violence against
Speaker Hamilton Pelosi's husband, against the lawmakers who were murdered in their home in
Minnesota, you know, accidentally slips past every Democrat and says political violence has to stop
and then goes on to foment political violence. Yes, I would agree. I was sort of like, what?
I was like, okay, good, yes, no political violence. And then shifting into the radical
left thing immediately was shocking, especially because there's, nobody knows they haven't caught
this.
They don't know what.
It's a guy, apparently.
What a shock.
But it's, you know, they have, they've got the gun now.
They've have videos of the person who did it.
They believe it's a college age soon.
I don't know how they know that.
But they must have videos of some sort.
So the question is, why would you immediately, without any proof, say something like that?
It's the worst. Now, let me give him one tiny little out. They were very close. And you could be very, very angry and very upset about this incredibly violent death. And unfortunately, it was all over the internet. Extraordinarily, it was an execution, really, was what happened here. And everyone saw what happened as murder. And for him to shift to that, the only thing I'd give him is, okay, he was a friend, but
This, you're also the president of the United States, right?
That's the, that was what I kept thinking is like, what in the world would possess you to immediately start with the vengeance?
Like, I don't know.
I was sort of like shocked myself.
And I'm usually never shocked by Donald Trump, but this one was sort of shocking to me.
If you go online right now onto any of these platforms and you see the stuff that's getting 70,000,000 likes, it's someone saying, that's it, it's war on the fucking radical left.
Someone who is understandably outraged and upset and like, well, okay.
do we know the radical left was responsible for this?
Are you forgetting what's happened to Democrats?
And the far left wants to feel...
Yes, they are.
The far left wants to feel empathy
and a call for taking the temperature down.
I get it.
The far right...
Let's be clear.
There's some stupid people saying stupid things online
about him.
I mean, about his death.
Not about him.
About his death.
No, it's just usually like anonymous.
Like, the right is cherry picking.
some dumb, stupid ass.
I haven't seen, I haven't seen a lot of it.
I haven't seen a lot of it.
Famous person from the left.
No.
Who has any credibility saying anything,
but our hearts go out to the family.
Violence is not the answer.
This needs to stop.
And then you have very famous,
very famous right-wing host saying,
this is it.
This is war.
And it's the radical left.
It's the, I laid this at the feet
of the radical left.
And the president has said this.
And that is, that just begets,
that just creates more violence.
And the problem is, the solution is the following.
In we have two very famous, and people should own their grief.
I get upset a lot and emotional on this podcast.
I like it when people are vulnerable,
but I heard two very famous right-wing pundits yesterday crying over this on air.
Fine.
I get it.
You may have known him personally.
You have the right to your own grief and emotions.
we don't seem to express the same grief for the people every day that are shot.
We didn't seem to be as concerned.
There were two students in Colorado yesterday.
With the students in Colorado or the students who were shot and murdered while praying.
And if the left and the right are serious about this, I mean, if they're serious, it all comes down to this.
I live in the UK.
In the next year, in all of the UK, there will be approximately 30 gun deaths.
In the United States, in the next six hours,
there will be 30 gun deaths.
We don't know the motivation of the shooter.
We don't know who he is.
I'm comfortable saying he, because let's be honest,
it's always a he.
What we also know is-
The government is saying that,
just so you know, they're saying it's a man.
We also know that this person used a high-powered rifle,
and there's too many goddamn guns.
And Charlie Kirk used to say,
you have to pay a price for certain rights, and he said, look, there'll be a certain number of deaths. I buy that in theory. I'm comfortable with an increase in prevalence in crime with protection or certain search and seizure rights. And someone can't show up in my home and just say, we suspect you. So I get the concept, but it's an issue of scale. At some point, does a total fidelity to gun rights begin to come at such an unbearable cost? And this is an example of this.
And I don't hear anyone saying, well, that's not true.
I heard AOC say this.
If we're serious about this, we can talk about, we can talk about dialing down the rhetoric.
Good luck with that.
You know, Jesse Waters was already out yesterday saying, this is war, right?
Okay.
The rhetoric, good luck we're trying to get people to dial down the rhetoric with social media
that makes hundreds of billions of dollars by enraging people with their algorithms.
If we're serious, we have to reduce, we have to have sensible gun control laws.
Yep, 100%.
So just to update people as of this.
recording and that could change. The manhunt is still underway for the person, the government is
identifying as a man who shot and killed 31-year-old conservative activist Charlie Kirk at Utah Valley
University on Wednesday. Officials, as I said, said they've recovered the gun and believed was
used in the shooting in the woods nearby, a high-powered bolt action rifle. Investor is also a video,
as we said, of the suspect. They're trying to use facial recognition to identify the person.
The FBI was pretty clottish at the start that had fired the head of the
Salt Lake City office because she was a Pakistani woman, apparently. And they were, they were very
clodish. They said there were suspects in custody when there weren't. Cash Patel's not really
exactly seeming very sharp here, but we'll see. These things are very chaotic. At the same time,
the government is not supposed to feel chaotic. In terms of reactions, as you said, a lot of people
did denounce the violence and linking his words to his death. He is not to blame for his
Let's be clear. I'm sorry, people. I know you were angry at some things he said, but just then be angry at things he said. That's pretty much where it stops. Although President Trump, as we said, is blaming the radicalist rhetoric and others calling for war, one of the first things out of the gate was Elon Musk saying the left is murderous, essentially. If they won't leave us in peace, then our choice is to fight or die. That is, he is, that was possibly one of the worst. Steve Bannon and Jesse Waters.
same thing. We're not at war with them, and nor this is really irresponsible for high-profile
people. Utah's Republican governor, Spencer Cox, took a different approach. Now, it's a little
long, but I think it's well worth listening to. So let's listen to what he said.
Our nation is broken. We've had political assassinations recently in Minnesota.
We had an attempted assassination on the governor of Pennsylvania, and we had an attempted
assassination on a presidential candidate and former president of the United States and now
current president of the United States.
Nothing I say can unite us as a country.
Nothing I can say right now can fix what is broken.
Anything I can say can bring back Charlie Kirk.
Our hearts are broken.
We mourn with his wife, his children, his family, his friends.
We mourn as a nation.
If anyone in the sound of my voice celebrated even a little bit at the news of this shooting,
I would beg you to look in the mirror and to see if you can find a better angel in there somewhere.
I don't care what his politics are.
I care that he was an American.
I thought that was so eloquent and actually, really, just perfectly done.
Political speeches are so important at times like this or from leaders, political leaders.
And I thought this was just exactly the right sentiment.
And he was acknowledging the anger.
He was acknowledging the difficulties of someone disagreeing with Charlie Kirk on some of the things he said.
But he also was pointing out, we just have to get beyond this and noted he was a father with children.
And at the same time, talking about assassinations of Democrats, essentially, and trying to equalize them.
I thought it was fantastic.
I don't know what...
And I wish it had gotten more attention than...
And then it was followed by Trump,
which was so non...
It was the opposite of leadership, I thought.
Yeah, he gave what felt like a presidential speech, right?
Acknowledging...
That was...
I think he did exactly what you would expect from a leader.
So, you know, kudos to him.
And, again, the thing that really struck me
is someone who's on campus every day.
between people being, you know,
conservative voices being shouted down on campus,
between intimidating certain students
or getting in the way of their learning,
between, this is, the whole point of a university
is we put it outside the city center for a reason
such that people could say provocative, upsetting things.
And they were, they were allowed to do that.
And Charlie Kirk, I think, you know, in my view, one of the most positive things you could say about him was he was endorsing that.
And I thought what he was doing on campus, regardless of what you think of the rhetoric, was actually a positive.
I like those videos.
Yeah.
And a lot of people, a lot of people felt, I think that people who were angry at him were angry that we didn't have as strong a voices going on campus in saying and presenting a job.
different viewpoint. He was just very good at what he did. But there is something, you know,
the Australian, I think it's a newspaper magazine, kind of summarized, it said that there is a real,
we're having, culturally, we are really struggling in the U.S. and it really stains our amazing
accomplishments. And this is an example of that, that these places that are supposed to be,
places of critical thought and free speech, something like this that happens. And also
just the fact that we have normalized, there are so many, I'm not in any way saying this is less
heinous or excusing what happened here. When you're a public figure and you decide to go into
politics, I'm going to say Charlie Kirk. When you decide to run for president, the bottom line
is one out of three presidents the last 50 years have been shot at. You know there are certain
risks. If you're going to school, you don't have a choice. You don't enter into a high risk.
These are supposed to be the safest places in the world. There's been 24 shootings on college campuses.
And school and high schools and grammar schools. That's just colleges. And we're talking 40,000 people a year, 121 people every day. And I've said this over and over. The free gift with purchase coming to the UK is I no longer have these horror fantasies.
around getting up in the morning
and seeing my kids high school on CNN.
I was thinking, like, what is this idea
of what a college is?
I interviewed, you know, Jordan Klepper,
actually, his recent documentary
was about Charlie Kirk, you know,
about people, how he went there.
And it was a really interesting discussion
because in many ways, you know,
he was saying it's sort of,
the reason why he was successful
is he actually showed up and talked to them, right?
That was the thing.
Even if they, and that's why he was
able to convince them. And he goes, he goes, it was sort of
a little bit different, but not that
much different, there's people that came to campus and gave
out free hats and beers, right?
Like, hey, let's, like, whatever it happened,
whatever the marketing thing had to be. But he
really did market the ideas.
And he was, just before
he died, he was throwing out hats. He was
creating a situation. And I
would agree with you. It was, I was
always sort of, where was
a version of this for
Democrats making their case?
And again, let me say,
stuff that came out of his mouth
was so upsetting
to hear for me and many
others. I think I kind of stopped
I started ignoring a lot of the stuff
he said because I knew he was doing it to get people's
goat. But if you were a college student, that would
be, I don't want to use a trigger
because it's gotten so abused, but
it was not nice, right?
Like if you were a gay person, the things he said
or a woman or a black woman or
whatever. And
yet, you know,
there's a sort of hide park corner kind of
of idea of our world where, you know, the idea of the Hyde Park is a park in London where people
can say whatever they get on a soapbox and say whatever they want. And some of it's really
just heinous. I've been there and it's really like, what did you just say? And I think we've lost
the ability to, it's not not react because you should react and get angry. You should push back.
You should be incensed, right? I think all those things are kind of good for the development
of minds, right?
100%.
That's the whole point.
What did they just say?
But it's almost like being in a bar.
Like you don't then hit someone.
You don't then you're like, you can even call, you're an asshole when that happens.
I mean, it happens a lot, actually.
And I just, I don't know what the problem is.
And I talked about this is that I think I do think online gets it even worse.
Like it gets into people's heads in a way that,
I don't know what would cause you to do this, to, like, get on, climb yourself on a roof and shoot someone, like, in execution style.
Like, what is the, what is the jump?
And sometimes I think, you know, this, you know, sort of the stew of hate speech that's available to people sits in their brain, especially online, especially as it goes viral.
What is that leap from, you know, if you said something to me offensive, Scott, I'm not going to use Kirk as an example, because he,
just died. But if you said something terrible to me, why would my first thing be to get a gun
and shoot you? Like, what happened? Where's that moment? And I think, I think a lot of the stuff
online does get people. You can see it in the notes from shooters. You can see it in the people,
the guy who shot the people in Minnesota. There's something that turns with the constant
steeping online, especially, and in videos and things like that, that creates,
that jumping off point.
I don't know what it is,
but there is a moment
where they say,
I think what I'll do is get a gun
and I think what I'll do.
And that's not a new thing.
Look, we've had that happen
throughout history.
But it seems like
just so much
of an easier leap
than it used to be.
Maybe I'm wrong.
I think it's,
but see,
I do think you can
disarticulate it down
to a few things.
And that is,
one, people are spending
more and more time online
and that does a couple things.
One, the algorithms
have connected
engagement with enragment. So if you want, if you go online, it tries to figure out if you're
conservative or progressive and then take you to the extreme and start making the other side
look bad, look evil, look dangerous. And so there's a culture of rage dividing us being fueled
by the deepest-pocketed godlike technology with paleolithic institutions to regulate them.
That's incredibly well said.
Our profit motive in the United States and 10 companies driving the entire market have a rage motive that divide us.
Maybe they didn't intend to, but that is what's going on.
Two, the social isolation of young men, and that is too many young men are going into those bubbles, getting enraged,
and they, because they're not going into work, because they're not getting as many economic opportunities,
because they're not doing as well in school, because their prefrontal cortex doesn't divide them.
develop as fast as a woman's, because they don't have as many romantic opportunities.
They're not connecting with friends. They're not connecting with work. They're not connecting
with romantic partners. They're isolating from their family. And when that happens,
when those guardrails are no longer present, they don't have the ability to see,
oh, I just met a trumper at work. And you know what? He seems like a pretty cool guy.
Or he enrages me, and I'm not going to talk to him, right? But I learn how to deal with it.
And I realize that, or my girlfriend, or my mother, or my father says, what the fuck are you doing and saying?
Stop that.
No, that's not right.
Or they start asking you questions that help illuminate that what you are thinking makes no sense.
So we have people, we have profit connected to rage.
We have the social isolation of young people who have no guardrails and start becoming increasingly.
increasingly prone to irrational behavior that if they were more social, they'd have greater
guardrails. And then the kicker is we take an enraged public and young men and men who have
no guardrails and are much more prone to irrational thoughts and behavior. And then we make
weapons of war easily accessible. Yeah, it really is. It's, you know, again, there have been
shooters over all of history, right? There's not, this is not. There's always,
someone somewhere, but it just feels like that leap is so much smaller for so many people, right?
I think I'll take a gun. I just kept thinking, what, whoever did this was like, I'm going to
take my gun, I'm going to climb up on that roof, I'm going to murder someone, and thinking it was
the right choice, you know what I mean? Like, this is your only choice. Why did you go down there
and ask him a fucking question and yell at him? Like, you know what I mean? Like, what, that to me,
it's just there's a, I don't, maybe this person's mentally ill.
Well, I don't know. One of the things that we should talk about very quickly, the offshoot of this is all these conspiracy theories around this guy's death, murder. I'm going to say it's a murder. It is like they have, what's incredible is they have all these videos. It looks like they have videos of almost everything. And that's an interesting thing in law enforcement. But now there's all these conspiracy theories of there's now a video of two guys making hand signals looking like they're telling the shooter to shoot. Then there's other people saying it's a,
you know, it's an intelligent ops from Russia, Israel, or this and that.
And then another person arguing, oh, if it was that, they wouldn't be seen on the roof,
which kind of makes sense.
If you're really good at what you do, you don't get seen, essentially.
And it just, this conspiracy stuff is, you know,
who's in whose interest is it for Charlie Kirk to be dead and move away from the Epstein files, right?
And you just sit there and you're like, what, if you were a young, I'm confused by all this stuff.
I'm like, oh, huh, and then I get, I get dragged in, and then I'm like, no, no, stop.
We don't know anything right now, right?
But if you're a young person, boy, is all this post-murder conspiracy theory is even worse to have to deal with.
I just find it very upsetting in that regard.
And I can't imagine being a young person who's not quite there on judgment on any of this stuff.
Well, and we don't have, and I'm a party to this yesterday, we don't have,
anything resembling fact-checking or anything that's measured. So, you know, it's, again,
these socially isolated young people with a profit motive around spreading conspiracy theory,
typically these types of shooters fit a tip not always, but typically they're young men who are
hoping to regain social capital with what they see as a heroic act of violence. They're, you know,
isolated and feel like people don't respect them, are looking to gain back social capital and think
they can get it because they've been convinced this person or this movement is truly demonic
and that they would be heroic in killing this person. And, oh, by the way, dad's got a sniper
rifle. I mean, I don't know if you felt this way. I felt unnaturally hit in the gut by this.
I just thought, oh, fuck, this is just so bad for everyone and everything. And I feel bad for him.
I feel bad for his family. I feel bad for the chilling on dialogue this is going to have on
university campuses. I feel that the dialogue is immediately going to go to be politicized and
blaming the radical left, which happened right away. You can see the whole road ahead. Yeah.
And, oh, I'm already seeing stuff. I'm like, you know, oh, was it a trans shooter? And I mean,
you're already seeing this shit, right? Was it an Epstein shooter? Because he backed off on the
Epstein stuff. You know what I mean? Like, and you sit there and it's like, could be anybody because
they're all fucking crazy. We don't know.
You know what I mean?
Like, you're like, oh, my God.
And I think the fact that we, one of the things I hate about this in a weird way is
we have so much information and so much is bad, right?
I have refrained from saying very much about anything online because I'm like, I don't know.
I want to wait and see who, what happens here and then figure out what to do.
Where I was gone with this is, and I merely took it down and I need to be more careful.
I saw this video of Marjorie Taylor Green, who has been, in my opinion, very courageous around all the
Epstein stuff, I saw this video of her coming outside of her office and putting up a picture
of that card, right, and putting it on her, the front of her office and then hitting her hands
together. I'm like, wow, you know, and I immediately posted it and said, you know, I have a lot of
mixed emotions looking at this. And then immediately my files were like, Scott, it's AI. I'm like,
oh, fuck. And I immediately took it down. But not before it went out to 1.2 million people. I know. I know.
I know. That's why I said, I have posted very little.
Yeah, me too.
That's Spencer Cox.
Can I ask you one more question? We have to move on.
But you said you're nervous about appearing on college campuses.
I'm not.
I'm not, but I have someone in very close to my life who knew I'm supposed to speak at a public university.
I don't have nearly the footprint and popularity of this guy, so I don't mean to sound, I don't need to create a false equivalence.
But I'm supposed to speak at a university, a big public state university, and someone very close to me is like, no.
you're not going.
Yeah.
You know, obviously this evokes an emotional reaction.
And this person has said, well, yeah, I don't give a shit.
You're not going.
And comedians who used to be the pushback here, I think a part of the anger from the left
from Charlie Kirk was, quite frankly, because he was just more effective.
We did not have an equivalent Charlie Kirk going on campus as organized, as youthful.
Quite frankly, is courageous.
He was not afraid.
He got in front of people.
Sometimes he made a great point.
Sometimes he looked stupid.
He didn't care.
He played a huge role in Trump's election.
And I think part of the venom from the left around how pissed off they were about Charlie Kirk was, quite frankly, he was just more effective than us.
Part of it.
Some of the things he said were terrible.
100%.
He did it on purpose.
Well, he did it on purpose.
Like a lot of people, he would say incendiary things to get a reaction and get more YouTube videos, even if I don't know, you know, maybe he believes this shit, maybe, hopefully he doesn't.
But anyways, the, you know, who used to be on campus doing this.
was comedians.
And now comedians won't go on campus
because they're like,
I don't need anyone shouting me down
or waving a Palestinian flag in my face
or I just don't need that shit.
And so we on the left,
I just, I remember UCLA when I was there,
everyone from Bill Murray to R.E.M.
To, you know, I'm dating myself,
to Carl Icon used to show up.
And I know a lot of people are like,
I'm not going to fucking campus.
Do you hear what happened to my friend on campus?
And by the way, it happens just as much to people on the far right.
Far left, too.
Far left and right.
It happens both.
Someone's upset and they feel on campus emboldened to interrupt them, try and make them look stupid or worse.
Right?
And it's really, I mean, we're probably headed to an environment where we're going to have,
I would think at some point we might have metal detectors on campus.
I don't know.
I know. It's depressing in that regard.
How would you feel?
If you were invited to speak at a campus right now in a large crowd, two or three or three,
3,000 people outside in the square like that.
How would you feel?
Nervous.
Because nervous.
Just basic areas of disagreement that you or I might say strongly, because we're always like
making jokes and saying rude things.
I mean, we said someone had a micro dick.
I forget who it was.
You know, stuff like that.
We're always, we're always saying that.
But I was like, who, if one crazy fucking online.
incensed person with a gun shows up. Yeah, I could see it now. And before I could never see it.
Like they got mad at one little thing I said, it makes me nervous. It does. It does because it's not
because I think I don't want people to disagree with me. It's that I think some people have
something's happened to some people online and they have access to a gun. Yeah, it's nerve-wracking.
Yeah, I could see it. For a second, definitely think about it. Anyway, very quickly, I want to
about the political violence, the other side of the world in Nepal, which is really
sort of shocking in a lot of ways. The country is now under nationwide curfew after mass
protests led by teenagers and young adults turned deadly. The unrest began after the government
banned social media, but protesters also were calling out unemployment, corruption, and
inequality. It was a bigger thing than just social media, but social media set it off about
this sort of culture of elitism, and it sort of manifested itself. And the only reason I
I'm talking about it is, because what I'm hearing from lots of sources that they're about to
announce the TikTok deal. It's probably going to Larry Ellison and a bunch of investors. I noted this
online. And one of the things, of course, was it was supposed to be banned, right? And this is supposed
to be the solution to it. And I wondered, what if it did get banned? Would something like this
happen with young people? Probably not in this country. But I don't know if you have any thoughts on
what happened to Paul. It was sort of social media is what set it off. I don't think it was the
root cause, but nonetheless. I don't know that much about it other than it typically it's young
people to start revolutions because young people are more risk-aggressive and willing to go to a
square and risk getting shot. And, but, I mean, quite frankly, I'm not trying to, obviously,
loss of life is anywhere as a tragedy, but I just thought they got their Instagram. That's what,
that was the final straw. They got their Instagram taken away. It just felt like, I would not have
guessed that. I don't know anything about the Nepalese culture. I don't, but, you know, the country's not,
countries not this country use social media as everything. Like it's TV, it's, and so including
business, right? That's how they do business. It's basically like shutting down the newspapers and the
TV stations when they take away. Yeah. Yeah. So I, for people that don't understand it. And I think
this was a hugely corrupt sort of nepo economy where these people are just about had it. And then they
were like, now you can't say anything. And so, and it has a culture of free speech, this country.
Anyway, it's just interesting to watch. Yeah, but I'll bet anything.
you just summarize it.
I don't even know what happened
and I think I know what happened
and that this was the excuse
but I'll bet you anything
it's a lack of economic opportunity
for young people.
That was the kindling
and them taking away their
social media was the spark.
If you reverse engineer
almost any uprising among youth,
it's that they get pissed off
that there's a group of people
sucking oxygen out of the room from them
and that, okay, we're fed up.
We don't see a future for us
to find a family
be treated fairly
and it's a group of old people
who are aggregating too much information
or I'm sorry, too much power.
Yep, exactly.
And, you know, I often don't say this
because I do think some speech
is indeed hateful and damaging.
But the solution to a lot of this
is more speech and more dialogue.
And I think one thing that really kind of stuck
in my craw was that NMSNBC
let go of Matthew Dowd,
who said some very factual things
on the air, perhaps not good timing.
about Kirk, and he seemed to blame Kirk for his own death.
I listened to it.
I wasn't really clear if he actually said that.
What he was talking about was, you know, what we were just saying is that there's so much hate that he was essentially saying he put hate out in the world.
Don't be surprised if you get it back, which is probably not the nicest thing to say at the moment.
He said you raise the temperature like on that, you might get burned, right?
I felt like this was, when I saw his comments, I felt that MSNBC was essentially
the Democratic Party
virtue signaling
and kicking out Al Franken.
I just thought, okay, good for us, good for us.
I don't...
I don't get it.
I didn't get that.
I wrote that some people there,
and I was like, I'm sorry.
I just, like, again, this is...
Whatever you think about Charlie Burk,
he was about saying things, right?
As provocative as you want.
And I just...
I don't find that particularly provocative
and maybe we should be a little nicer, right, when someone dies?
Absolutely, but it seemed over, like, it was an overreaction in such a way.
The good news is we can trust it no matter what Fox says
and falsely accuses Democrats of being responsible, they will not get forward.
Yeah, I know that.
I was like, Jesse Waters, have you looked over at Jesse Waters?
Like, what in the, it's like, we're at war.
I'm like, I'm not at war with you, Jesse Waters.
What in the hell?
Like, what is he talking about?
And I know Bannon's just doing it to be Bannon.
I didn't get it.
When I first saw his clip, I thought there must be another clip for why he got fired.
I think that was a bullshit move.
And I love the leadership over at MSNBC.
I think they got this wrong.
Yeah, me too.
Anyway, I actually told him this too.
Anyway, let's go on a quick break.
When we come back, Larry Ellison becomes the richest person in the world as Oracle Stock soars.
Support for this show comes from Vanta.
Here are a few things that are probably essential to your company's survival in the modern world, internet access, a tax ID, a great snack pantry.
Well, here's something else that's essential, trust.
In today's fast-changing digital world, proving your company is trustworthy isn't just important for growth, it's essential.
That's why Vanta is here.
Vanta helps companies of all sizes get compliant fast and stay that way with industry-leading AI automation and continuous monitoring.
So whether you're a startup tackling your first SOC2 or ISO, 20,000,
or you're an enterprise managing vendor risk, Vanta's trust management platform makes it quicker,
easier, and more scalable. Vanta also helps you complete security questionnaires up to five times
faster so you can win bigger deals sooner. The results, according to a recent IDC study, Vanta customers
slash over $500,000 a year in costs and are three times more productive. Establishing trust
isn't optional. Vanta makes it automatic. Visit vanta.com slash pivot to sign up for a free demo
That's V-A-N-T-A.com slash pivot.
Support for the show comes from Delete Me.
More and more, nefarious actors are using the personal data trails.
We all leave online to target political rivals, civil servants, and even outspoken citizens,
just posting their opinions.
But you don't have to be a public figure to be in danger of an online attack.
In August 2025, Google even issued a warning to many Gmail users that hackers have been targeting their accounts.
Delete Me makes it easy, quick, and safe.
remove your personal data online at a time when surveillance and data breaches are common enough
to make everyone vulnerable. That is so clear. As a tech reporter, I think a lot about people's
data hygiene and how to keep it together. Privacy is one of the major issues in Congress and
others have been nothing to protect us. Even I am surprised using Delete Me how much stuff is out there
about me and much of it inaccurate. So take control of your data and keep your private life private by
signing up for Delete Me. Now at a special discount for our listeners, get 20% off your DeleteMe
plan when you go to join deleteme.com slash cara and use the promo code cara at checkout. The only way to get
20% off is to go to join delete me.com slash cara and enter the code cara at checkout. That's join
delete me.com slash cara code carra. Support for this show comes from indeed. Have you
walked into a coffee shop where there was a long line and only one barista at the counter? I mean,
obviously you feel for the person desperately trying to get your orders prepared, but you also can't
help but wonder why haven't they hired any help? The irony is,
you're heading off to do exactly what they're doing trying to run an entire business all by yourself
because you haven't hired the help you need. Thankfully, there is Indeed. With millions of job seekers
and powerful tools to help you post, screen, and interview all in one place, Indeed makes hiring
faster, easier, and smarter. Indeed's sponsored jobs helps you stand out and find top talent fast.
How fast is indeed? In the minute I've been talking to you, 23 hires were made on Indeed,
according to Indeed data worldwide. And with Indeed sponsored jobs, there are no monthly subscriptions,
no long-term contracts, and you only pay for results.
Join the 3.5 million employers worldwide that use Indeed to hire great talent fast.
There's no need to wait any longer, speed up your hiring right now with Indeed,
and listeners to this show will get a $75-sponsored job credit to get your jobs more visibility
at Indeed.com.com slash pivot.
Just go to Indeed.com slash pivot right now and support our show by saying you heard about
Indeed on this podcast, Indeed.com slash pivot.
Terms and conditions apply.
Indeed is all you need.
Scott, we're back.
Oracle founder Larry Ellison briefly became the world's richest person this week, edging out Elon Musk.
His net worth climbed to $393 billion Wednesday after Oracle shares skyrocketed on a blockbuster earnings report up 42% at one point.
Oracle said it won several billion dollar contracts in the latest quarter, quadrupling bookings from a year before.
The company also is forecasting that revenue from its AI-powered cloud business will jump from $18 billion to $144.4.
billion by 2030. On top of all that, Open I just signed a deal to purchase $300 billion in
computing power from Oracle. And again, I am understanding he's going to get control of TikTok or
somehow be the lead person in that. And he's obviously very close to President Trump. And they
had been involved with TikTok before. Let me be fair. They were part of when the last time they
were trying to figure out what to do about TikTok. Who knows? We'll talk about that when it happens.
But, you know, this is sort of Nvidia too. I don't know. This is Oracle is now a major
AI player. What do you think about this? I think Ellison is a visionary, and he doubled down. I think
he figured out that, okay, there should be one, the most valuable company in the world,
NVIDIA, it would be okay to be the second biggest infrastructure company centered around AI.
And he made a massive investment, and it's paying off like crazy. Their cloud revenue is
projected to increase 77% to 18 billion. They expect their cloud revenue. It was their projections
that got the market excited. They projected their cloud revenue will hit $144 billion by 2030. That's a 14-fold
increase versus the $10 billion abroad in last year. It said, credibly, the CEO said, we're going to
increase our cloud revenue, 14x, in the next four years. Now, what's interesting here is a great
deal of that comes from a deal with Open AI, who will purchase $300 billion computing in for five
years. So get this. Essentially, Open AI is said, we're going to pay Oracle $60 billion a year for
compute, despite the fact we are currently open AI only making $10 billion a year. They are so
confident in their growth that they've just committed to spend $60 billion a year on compute.
Yeah, I notice that.
despite only currently making 10 billion.
So he became the richest person in the world
for a brief moment, biggest one-day gain in history, 36%.
He owns approximately 40% of Oracle.
And this is a good bridge to Apple.
What he has done is Larry's gangster move was Oracle
was becoming a mature company, very profitable,
and they were buying back shares.
When the company went public, he owned 34%.
Now he owns over 40%,
because they've used that excess cash flow to buy back shares until two years ago when he said,
uh-uh, the future's in AI, it's an arms race, I'm going to massively invest in AI.
Who did not do that, Kara? Trivia question. Apple.
100% correct for 20. One guy said, it's time to put back on our growth pants, so to speak,
and start massively investing in AI. And this was the.
gangster strategic move arguably of the last five years was an old company saying fuck it and an
old guy and an old guy in a whole company we need to start dancing again you may have gotten used to
our dividend you may have gotten used to our share buybacks uh-uh i'm going large because there's no number
two to invidia but there's going to be and now squarely oracle is has basically put their elbows out
and crashed the party and said oh no you may think we're old and dodgy or whatever
We're not. We're hip. Elephants can dance. And now, you know, I mean, this was an incredibly smart, deaf move of Larry Ellison.
I would never count him out. And also his CEO, Saffir Katz, she is really also very sharp. I mean, I think it's really interesting. I think, of course, they did also see the writing on the wall with the Trump administration, backing AI. You know, they've been very aggressive at showing up at these AI events. And you remember he showed up at that event with Sam Altman, with the president, it pissed off Elon Musk and everything else.
same time, he put a big investment into Twitter, and probably he's about to double-cross
Elon by owning TikTok, right? Or at least controlling TikTok. So this guy, just whatever it takes.
And, of course, his son, he funded the son's purchase of Paramount. And so this guy is just
very vibrant for an elderly man, I'll say. Okay, well, just in the price increase from yesterday,
I mean, 36 percent, what is that?
I don't know what they're increased.
I'm pretty sure they could buy 30 or 40 paramounts
with just the increase in Ellison's net worth yesterday.
I mean, he said to his son, go plan traffic.
Here's $5 or $7 billion.
I've just increased my, you know,
I've just increased my net worth by $100 billion, right?
So, yeah, go have fun with Paramount.
I mean, the numbers here are so staggering.
It's, I mean, let's do the math.
He's worth about $400 billion.
The stock was up 36%, went up a third, so he made $130 billion yesterday.
I know.
What did they buy Paramount for, five or seven?
Yeah, something.
Yeah, so they could go buy 20 paramounts with his increase.
His son, he could, if he has 20 kids out there, which is a possibility given what I know about Larry Ellison, he could say to all of them, go buy your own paramount with the gains.
I think it'll actually increase the chances.
And I know you think it's small ball of Paramount.
I know you do.
And I think you're right.
But I think it'll increase the chance they might buy Warner.
They might, you know, they might do something to, as you say, consolidate and milk.
And maybe you have some growth somewhere along the lines.
It gives them the heft to do so.
You're going to see some, I think, very aggressive moves from Paramount.
So, you know, we'll see.
Larry Ellison.
Well done, Larry Ellison.
There you go.
He said, I had the strangest evening with him once by myself.
I don't know him at all.
Have you had any interface with them?
Oh, yeah, I've interviewed him many times.
We had him at Code several times.
What's he like?
I have no sense of him.
Oh, he's very funny.
He's, I mean, sometimes he's awful, sometimes he's funny.
I've always, I hate to say I enjoy spending time with him, but I do.
I have to say he's really interesting because some of his views are not my views at all.
Again, someone I don't agree with who I really enjoy talking to because he's so smart.
And people will fry me for that, but I don't care.
I interviewed him
several times
at Code and All Things D
one was just about his business
and it was interesting
and then when Steve Jobs died
we talked about Steve
he was very close friends
he was his best friend I would say
and one time I said to Steve Jobs
Larry Ellison's your best friend
he's like yeah I know it's so weird
like you know they were very different
in their political outlook etc
and were very close friends
They had a very similar...
I know why you like him.
You relate to him.
He's 81 and he married a 33-year-old.
I get it.
You guys have double-dated.
He's married a lot of people.
You guys have double-dated.
I know.
I'll tell two very quick stories about arrows.
And so he was on stage.
And then when he was doing the sailing thing,
I met him over near where his sailing stuff was in the Raghad in the San Francisco Bay.
And we spent the evening just, he was talking about his kids,
which was really interesting, David and his daughter, Megan.
And, you know, he was like,
they're really actually pretty okay. And it's nothing due to me. It's with the mothers. And it was
super, super interesting. And I'll tell the, all right, I'll tell one more later on. So he had this
house in San Francisco that he threw a party at for something or other. And I went because it was
one of these stunning San Francisco Pacific Heights houses. And he didn't live in it, I don't think. I think
you just had it for parties. And, and I like looking at houses. I'm like, I like seeing what
they look like. And so whenever I go to a party, I wander around and look at things. Like, I
shouldn't. I do that. I do that at your apartment, sure. I do that a lot. And so I was,
I was wandering, wandering around, and he has, I think he has Israeli security. I think that's
what he has. He's a big supporter of Benjamin, I think Benjamin, not knew in Israel. And they
caught me upstairs. And they bring me downstairs to him. And he looked at me, he goes,
I knew it would be you. You know what I mean?
like he was wondering on, and he goes, what were you doing?
And I said, I was looking for the hooker and stripper room.
I just said a joke like that.
And he goes, oh, that's in the basement, Kara.
And it was like, I just think he's funny.
He's a funny guy.
He's all so awful.
He's definitely, I mean.
Rich.
Well, not only that.
He became the richest man on the world.
Who thought that?
Like, who saw that come?
Yeah.
Yeah, he also spends the money.
You know, he had that house.
He had that house that looks he imported it from Japan.
Well, why wouldn't you?
Yeah.
He's a very stylish billionaire.
He was always the original billionaire.
Anyway.
You know why he spends that kind of money and married a 33-year-old?
All right.
Why?
Because he can.
Ah, ha, ha.
Anyway, we'll see what happens.
We'll watch for that TikTok thing.
Also, obviously, you just talked about Apple.
It rolled out its newest iPhones this week, including the iPhone Air,
which Tim Cook is calling a game changer.
I do not agree with this.
It's the thinnest phone ever, about a third slimmer than current models,
though there are trade-offs in battery life.
Apple also unveiled a new watch models as well as AirPods
that can translate foreign languages.
That was pretty cool.
Meanwhile, AI barely came up with the event,
a big shift from last year when Apple intelligence took center stage.
Let me say, this iPhone with the bump on the back,
I saw it.
I ran into Eddie Q at this morning show event,
and he showed it to me, and I was like,
it has a bump on the back.
It's a big bump.
It wobbles.
Like, it's skinny, but then it has this big bump,
which people are making,
they're making a people
are talking about it online a lot
there's also
it doesn't
I don't want to buy it
I have to say
I don't know why
maybe I'll buy the 17
but the skinny one
is not attractive
because it has the bump
I don't know what to say
anyway
do you think it's a game changer
from what you saw
I'm just sitting here thinking
am I allowed to be crude
the day after a murder
yes go ahead
whatever I mean
okay the announcement
what cook called
a game changer
I would call a hand job
in an Advil. It was like, yeah, all right. I don't. Fine. Yeah. Was anyone begging for a thinner
phone? I don't. If it was without, if it was a thinner phone with with capabilities and
out the bump, sure. Why not? The most exciting thing and it's available on other platforms is
real-time language translation for the AirPods. I think the AirPods are the most underrated
tech product of the last 10 years. I think essentially they're not even a tech product of the most
ubiquitous expensive high margin piece of jewelry in history. People are now roaming around full
time with a pair of earrings called an AirPods that cost $300 and probably $110. I ordered them last
night. I just leave men now. They're just everywhere. What this signals, though, and where they will
get scrutiny per our most recent conversation is that over the last decade, essentially Jobs is
jobs is a builder. He did not believe in share buybacks. He wanted to amass a huge cash hoard. And
in such that they were durable and enduring, and if they wanted to, they could take big swings,
either acquisitions or go very deep after certain product development. Tim Cook is an operator.
And by the way, you've got to give it to Tim Cook. He's taking the company from $300 billion to
$3 trillion. The question is, have those $700 or $800 billion in share buybacks to date,
they have bought back approximately 40% of their outstanding shares, meaning over a 25-year period
they're effectively taking the company private. The question is, when you have these meh product,
announcements, have they gotten to a point where they, quite frankly, should be a little bit more
aggressive, a little bit more promiscuous, and be spending some of that unbelievable cash generation
and taking more big swings? Because yesterday, there were no big swings. There was nothing that
compelling. And this is the difference. It's easy to play Monday morning quarterback, but let's do it.
The difference between what Ellison did was a couple years ago, he said, oh my God, AI is a once-in-a-lifetime
generational tech innovation. I am shifting from being a share buyback company to an R&D company,
and I'm going to take a massive swing here. And the stock was up 38% yesterday. Apple has basically
said we are a mature company. And the problem with Apple being a mature company is that
its stock right now does not trade as if it's a mature company. It trades as if it's a growth
company at a P.E. of 33. So where there will be a lot of second guessing as I'm doing now,
Tim Cook, quite frankly, not keeping up with his peers because he's decided we're going to go into kind of a rest home. We're going to continue. Icon started this by putting pressure on them for share buybacks and a dividend. They did both. And unfortunately, they aren't taking the big swings they used to under the jobs tenure. Yeah, this phone, I'm like, no, like no. I mean, I'll wait for the fold phone. I'm interested in the fold phone. That's for sure. It kind of becomes an iPad. I'm going to look at that, but it's going to be heavy. Like,
I just don't see a compelling need to change my phone with these things.
And I like changing phones, by the way.
We'll see where it goes.
One of the funnier ones was people made, social media,
it was also joking about eye-need pads for Tim Cook,
referring to last week's events.
Well, here's a stat.
Over the last decade, Apple has spent $500 billion more on share buybacks than on R&D.
That's crazy.
And what do you know?
Their products are feeling kind of meh.
Meh.
I have to say, some people think the bump on the iPhone is precinct.
staging some glasses, some sort of glasses thing that's happening next. So it's sort of a signal.
What's in there, apparently, would work quite elegantly, apparently, with glasses. But we'll
see. We'll see. Let's see some products that really wow us to him. I have to say, this didn't.
Next up, let's talk about very quickly President Trump's contributions to Jeffrey Epstein's 50th
birthday book. Obviously, the murder of Charlie Cook has sort of pushed that off, but it was getting
a lot of attention. As previously reported, there was a letter from Trump to Epstein featuring a
cryptic conversation within a hand-drawn woman's body. I would say a teenage
girl's body is what it look like. There was also a photo of oversized check appearing to be
signed by DJ Trump with a notes, Epstein saying, showed early talents with money and women
and had sold a fully depreciated woman to Trump for $22,000. President Trump is calling
it a dead issue when asked. You know, I think probably this Charlie Kirk situation is going
to push it out of the headlines, but at the same time, I still think this
Epstein thing has staying power.
They're really, Thomas Massey looks like he has the numbers to force a release.
And in fact, Kirk, before he sort of went backwards a little bit, had said there should be,
I was watching a speech where he said it should be full and full release of unredacted release to the public.
So I don't know what you thought.
I thought it just Trump pretended he didn't draw and then they showed him drawings.
He said this birthday book didn't exist.
It exists.
didn't write a letter. It looks like he wrote a letter. I think the idea that it's fake is kind of
ridiculous. Way back then, someone knew he was going to be president and decided to do a fake thing.
This seems ridiculous. I think he did it, and he should just say he was sorry, and you won't do
that, and they're doubling down on hoax and whatever. I still think it's very damaging to him.
This remains damaging. What does you think? Well, the question is, is there a red line?
We knew he was a rich kid. Okay, that's a reason not to like him. We knew he was not a very good
businessman. We knew who took companies bankrupt. We knew he didn't pay subcontractors.
We knew that he was accused of sexual assault. We know he's an insurrectionist. I mean,
is, and now there seems to be evidence everywhere that he was at a minimum cohorting with a known
and convicted pedophile. And the notion that this is a forgery is like, well, okay, you mean
somebody 21 years ago broke into the Epstein estate and decided to frame the president who at that time
was a Democrat, thinking when he's president, this will embarrass him.
I mean, it's just like the logic, the math ain't mathing here.
And I liked what Representative Moskowitz, I think, said in one of the congressional hearings said,
why don't you guys, this is outrageous.
Why don't we, let's move to bring in forgery experts and have them opine on this.
I mean, the whole thing is just sort of like, at what point are we going to find?
find out the guy is literally the dark lord i mean what gets look at the things every time you
suspected of something uh we find out it's true and it doesn't seem to matter the question is is this
is this the you know is this a red line and i am convinced that i'm going on the times of london radio
tonight i'm convinced the only reason he's supposed to come to the uk i typed into a i last night
name, if I were a president trying to keep Epstein out of the news, please name actions and
policies that would push Epstein out of the news cycle every 48 hours. And it gave me a playbook
for everything he's doing, some of which he's already done, some of which I think he's
going to do. But he's coming over here to talk about free speech, which I think is ridiculous.
But anything that pushes Epstein out of the news cycle is what he's doing. But I don't know.
I don't have a, I think this is, it feels like this is the one thing that is sticking to the guy.
Because he was a friend of his.
Like, I don't, what I don't get.
Now, look, I have no idea what happened.
I don't have any idea if he's guilty of anything.
But why not just say, oh, I was such bad judgment.
I'm so sorry.
Profane, stupid, locker room talk.
Gross, that was dumb.
Lockroom talk.
Yeah, that worked last time.
And I shouldn't have written this.
And it was before anybody really knew.
And I didn't know.
I wasn't paying attention, and just say,
oh, I'm so sorry, that was so dumb.
Like, that's what Gates did.
That's what, like, everyone who's been there had Clinton said it.
And it doesn't, I mean, it sort of sticks to them, but not like this.
This is, I know he's president, but just the drawing was so, like,
I absolutely think he grew.
I looked at it and I was like, yes.
When I first saw it, everything about it supposedly being pubic hair,
supposed to be an underage girl.
I didn't even get it.
I looked at it.
I'm like, and the thing,
the creepiest thing about it is,
he clearly hired creatives.
He organized resources
to put this thing together.
It wasn't like a stupid note
between friends
where you,
an error in judgment.
He gathered creative professionals around
and said,
this is what I want.
This is what I'm thinking.
Yeah.
And then they came back
with a subtle image,
of a pre-pubescent girl, and your signature will be pubic hairs, and he went, bingo.
That's exactly what I'm trying to get across. Now, now, laminate it, frame it. Wait, what about this?
What kind of paper should we use? You could tell that there was real thought that went into this.
I agree. Scott sent me a similar thing for my birthday, everybody, just so you know.
I agree. Anyway, it's going to stick to you, Donald Trump, no matter what happens. It's going to be on your, it's going to be on your record no matter what you do. All right, Scott, let's go on a quick break. When we come back, we'll talk about Kamala Harris's sizzling upcoming book, which is sort of getting lost here with all the news.
Support for the show comes from hymns. When it comes to your money, your goals, and your future, it's important to have options, the freedom to choose.
But when it comes to your health care, it too often feels overly prescriptive.
One-size-fits-all treatments, preset dosages, zero flexibility.
It's like trying to budget a fixed expense with no alternatives.
But now there's another way, with Hymns and Hers.
Hems and Hers is reimagining health care with you in mind.
They offer access to personalized care for weight loss, hair loss, sexual health, and mental health.
Because your goals, your biology, and your lifestyle are anything but average.
No membership fees, no surprise fees, just transparent pricing and real care that you can access from anywhere.
Feel like your best self, thanks to quality, convenient care through HIMS and hers.
Start your free online visit today at HIMS.com slash pivot.
That's HIMS.com slash pivot to find your personalized treatment options.
Not available everywhere.
Prescription products require provider consultations.
See website for full details, important safety information, and restrictions.
Support for the show comes from Upwork.
Hiring shouldn't be a hassle, nor should it be a train on your budget.
That's why there's Upwork. Upwork is your one-stop shop to find hire and pay top freelance talent, saving you time and keeping costs in check all in one place. Companies at every stage turn to Upwork to get things done and find more flexibility. You can staff key projects and initiatives by accessing a global marketplace filled with top talent and IT, web development, AI, design, admin support, marketing, and more. Posting a job on Upwork is super simple and there's no cost to join. You can browse freelancer profiles, get help drafting a job post, or even book a consultation. From that,
there, you connect with freelancers they get you, and you can hire them to help you move your work
forward. Upwork makes the entire process easier and more affordable with industry low fees.
Post a job today and hire tomorrow with Upwork.
Visit upwork.com right now and post your job for free.
That's upwork.com to post your job for free and connect with top talent ready to help your business grow.
That's upw-o-R-K.com.
Upwork.com.
As a founder, you're moving fast towards product market fit, your next round, or your first big enterprise deal.
But with AI accelerating how quickly startups build and ship, security expectations are also coming in faster, and those expectations are higher than ever.
Getting security and compliance right can unlock growth or stall it if you wait too long.
Vanta is a trust management platform that helps businesses automate security and compliance across more than 35 frameworks like SOC2,
207-001, HIPAA, and more.
With deep integrations in automated workforce built for fast-moving teams, Vanta gets you audit-ready fast
and keeps you secure with continuous monitoring as your models, infrastructure, and customers evolve.
That's why fast-growing startups like Langchane, Ryder, and Cursor have all trusted Vanta to build a scalable compliance foundation from the start.
Go to vanta.com slash Fox to save $1,000 today through the Vanta for startups program.
and join over 10,000 ambitious companies already scaling with Vanta.
That's V-A-N-T-A.com slash Vox to save $1,000 for a limited time.
Scott, we're back with more news, an excerpt from former Vice President Kamala Harris's upcoming book,
107 days, was published in the Atlantic, and it is spicy in it.
Harris says recklessness allowed President Biden to make the decision to run again. She also said
the decision should not have been left to an individual's ego. The former vice president also
said the president staff fueled negative stories about her performance and often refuse to
defend her. That is true. I saw that in real time, you know. What do you think? I mean,
I'm going to interview her just so you know at a live event in Washington in a couple,
two weeks, I think. I'm excited to talk to her. This book was also written
with the help of a very good author, who's also a friend of mine, Geraldine Brooks, who is also a Pulitzer Prize winner and everything else.
She's sort of going the Agassie route by hiring a really great writer.
So thoughts, she really went there.
I did not think she would, but there she did.
Well, okay.
Thanks, Captain, obvious.
I feel the same way about Vice President Harris as I feel about all these Republicans who grow testicles after they leave office.
Yeah.
We don't need you to decide it's reckless now.
Had you demonstrated the leadership capabilities we hope from a president, you should have walked in and said, I don't think you should run again.
And I'm not going to support you to run again.
Maybe you don't annoy me.
Fine.
But I have an obligation duty to the country and you should not be president.
This is fucking ridiculous.
And she's soft up close and personal.
But instead, like a lot of people around him, she decided to whistle, you know, whistle past a graveyard.
She does talk about it in the thing.
It's like, I think there is when you're in those.
situations, everyone's like, well, it's up to Jill and Joe, right? You know what I mean? Like,
even if, same thing with Trump, if there's something, and no one will do anything. Like,
those, those environments create overly cautious, very reticent people saying it's up to him.
Like, even, you know, Newsom did it. They all did it. Newsom also did it. So did, like, all the Democratic.
Also, someone who probably deserves more credit was Representative Dean Phillips, who very early said
I'm running because I don't think President Biden is fit to run again.
And he got pretty swiftly pilloried and swept away.
He didn't get a lot of traction.
But he does deserve some credit for coming out early.
I'd like to roll with that dude.
Representative Phillips?
You met him.
We met him at the DNC.
He came over to us.
He came on my pot and came out.
I actually seemed like a nice man.
Look, if two podcasters can say a year and a half before, he's too fucking old,
the vice president and the people around him
should have enough fidelity to the White House
or Democratic ideals to realize
it's time for pop-op to get a gold watch and retire.
I know. I know, but you can imagine that environment.
Everyone engaged in it.
You remember the emails we were getting.
Sign up. You don't understand the assignment.
I was like, oh, my goodness, you don't think the world sees this?
Well, we need to stop Trump.
I'm like, not like this. This isn't going to stop Trump.
he's going to fall over dead and then we're fucked, you know what I mean?
Like, yeah, I don't, look, I don't, I think the vice president, I've said this before,
I think the vice president, given a UK-style election format in an American environment,
she was shortchanged.
And President Biden, Supreme Court Justice or Justice, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Senator Feinstein,
have stained their legacy because they let their narcissism outweigh what,
was right for the country. Full stop. And for her also, quite frankly, you can't blame an 80-year-old
because he's 80 and his family, which can't see clearly, because that's their dad and their
husband. But the people around him, Secretary Blinken, Vice President Harris, they all should
have sat him down. And finally, to his credit, I think it was Senator Schumer and Speaker Emeritus
Pelosi. By the way, he didn't exit voluntary.
Talking to Pelosi, but I think it's Pelosi who did it.
Because she went in there and said, I'm really sorry.
We're both old.
We both need to go home.
And if you don't announce you're getting out of the race, every three days I'm going to have someone a Democrat announced or not supporting you.
He didn't want to leave.
This was not his decision.
Supposedly he's going through all this rumination and contemplation.
But all his rumination and contemplation isn't about how badly he fucked the country.
It's about, it's about could I have won if I'd stayed in?
The narcissism here of these folks.
And again, it goes back to what we were talking about before with a shooter.
People need guardrails.
What I mean by guardrails is people who have the balls and the credibility to sit in front of you and go, no, you're wrong.
You have to stop this.
You have to stop this.
You're not thinking.
You're not thinking clearly.
I have no doubt that none of them did that, including her.
And so what should I ask her?
Give me a question for her.
In 10 years, if someone could say to you in 10 years, you can be a Supreme Court justice or be drafted to run for president again, doors one or two, what would you rather do?
Oh, good one. I like that. That's a good one. And also, quite frankly, did you really let down the country by not have, oh, God, I'd, I'll be there in your ear like a producer with Anderson Cooper.
Yeah, you'd also never ask her. I have a guts to ask her. You'd be like, oh, okay. Oh, no, you're much nicer in person than me.
You're much nicer in person than me. No, but on stage, I'll ask her. You know I'll ask her.
Well, you can get away with it. Everyone's like, oh, that's her. There goes that Kara. There goes that Kara. That is Sassy Kara.
Uh, uh, once again.
And isn't she charming?
But, yeah, I think it's, I think the whole establishment did it.
But I do like that she wrote it anyway.
I'm kind of like, good, just tell us what happened.
And then we don't do it again.
All right, she didn't have to do this and she did it.
So we'll see if she's running again.
I know, but I'm telling you she didn't have to do it this way.
Which probably means she wants to be drafted to be president again.
They all write books.
They get a big, everyone needs to make a living.
She got two or three million dollars advance to write a book.
and she wants to make it interesting so people read it.
And, okay, wow, what a revelation that it was reckless.
Okay, no shit.
No shit.
And now that doesn't help Vice President Harris.
Scott's review.
No shit, Sherlock.
No shit.
No shit.
Really?
Really?
Really.
It wasn't the right move for him to stay as long as he did?
It was reckless.
Wow.
Anyway, one more quick break.
We'll be back for predictions.
Hello, Daisy speaking.
Hello, Daisy.
This is Phoebe Judge from the IRS.
Oh, bless, that does sound serious.
I wouldn't want to end up in any sort of trouble.
This September on Criminal, we've been thinking a lot about scams.
Over the next couple of weeks, we're releasing episodes about a surprising way to stop scammers.
The people you didn't know were on the same.
the other end of the line, and we have a special bonus episode on Criminal Plus with
tips to protect yourself. Listen to Criminal wherever you get your podcasts, and sign up for
criminal plus at this iscriminal.com slash plus.
More and more students are going to college in the south. The numbers of kids from
the north heading south has increased, I think, 88% over about a decade. What's behind the shift?
Maybe it's football.
People look at it as a sport, and it is, but it's a huge commercial for the university.
Who doesn't want to go to a school where everybody's screaming and yelling and full of school spirit?
Maybe it's Greek life.
The southern schools have become sort of like the Olympics of sorority rush.
Or maybe it's something else entirely.
They're significantly cheaper than private schools, even when you figure in merit aid.
Find out why America is shifting.
on the latest episode of Explain It to Me.
New episodes, Sundays, wherever you get your podcasts.
What is up, people of the internet?
My name is Marquez Brownlee, aka MKBHD.
And some of the biggest smartphones of the year are about to launch,
including the brand new iPhone 17s around the corner,
with a model you've never seen before.
So on the waveform podcast, myself and co-hosts, Andrew Manginelli,
and David Amel, gather the biggest tech news of each week
and then discuss at length everything we're excited about
and sometimes things we're not so excited about.
So this time of year, we'd like to call smartphone season.
So if you're interested in hearing all the latest releases
from Apple and Samsung and Google and others,
be sure to check out the Wayform podcast on Spotify, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever we listen. See you there.
Okay, Scott, let's hear a prediction.
Well, it's the boring stuff that moves the needle, but...
We have become kind of the master.
We are the messy of own goals.
And for those you don't know,
Lionel Messi, greatest football player
in the history of the game.
And the most recent one barely got any coverage.
But earlier or last week, I think it was, okay.
On September 4th,
the Hyundai Motor Group met a plan in America
was rated by ICE.
About 475 people were detained, including 300 South Koreans who were here on a B1 visa, visitor visa, which don't normally authorize certain types of manual long-term work, but they're used all the time for the type of work they were doing.
And legal representations argue that many workers' contracts had the required specification.
So it's up for debate whether they had the right visa or not.
And they're saying that Homeland Security, Georgia State Patrol, that actions followed a warrant
an investigation into an unlawful employment practices at the plant.
So what happened?
These people who were incarcerated, South Korea immediately chartered a plane, has brought them
all back to South Korea.
And by the way, this factory is part of a, you know, this was going to be a $7.5 billion
factory.
This is exactly what the president claimed he was going to do, bring manufacturing and greater
investment into America. South Korea is a fantastic ally. What if we, what if Germany said,
you know, the US, you're just cleaning up with an AI. We need some of your great American companies
to invest in Germany. And we opened an invidia plant there. And we had people over there under
what looks to be a legal visa. And then German police raided it, incarcerated our engineers.
How would we respond? So this is how, this is how South Korea is going to respond. LG, Samsung,
Hyundai, they're going to substantially curtail any plans for capital investment in the United
States. This was not only stupid, but it's basically going to set us back economically.
So this was again, yet again, another own goal. And then my other one is Russian drones.
Russia is, everybody says, you know, Trump was fond of saying, oh, Russia would have never done
this if I was president. Russia is poking Trump in the eye right now. First, a cyber attack
on an EU plane with an EU minister, fine, that's a test.
And most recently, they have flown attack drones into Polish airspace
and to see how we or the EU respond.
And I'm not going to get in, my prediction isn't a geopolitical prediction.
My prediction is a following.
The best stocks for the second half of the year or the last quarter of the year are going
to be European defense stocks because Russia sending attack drones into Poland,
By the way, Poland is protected by Article 5 of NATO, meaning if they're attacked, all 32 member nations of NATO are attacked. What does this mean? Russia is contemplating or toying with military action against NATO. So what is the economic implication of that? You're about to see Poland has already increased its percentage of GDP going to defense spending. By the way, Poland is an economic miracle. He's going to go to defense. Oh, my gosh, you're going to see an increase.
in defense spending coming out of the EU nations, and they're going to say, you know what,
we're not spending it on Northrop Grumman. We're not going to spend it on Androo. We're not going to
spend it on Boeing. We're going to spend it on European defense companies. And guess what?
There aren't that many of them. So the publicly traded, the 10 or 15 publicly traded European
defense stocks are about to see the mother of all capital inflows. So the best performing stocks
for the last quarter of the year are about to be European defense stocks because of these
drones that Putin sent into Polish airspace.
Yeah. Wow. You're going geopolitical investing. That's really good. I love it.
We want to hear from you. Send us your questions about business tech or whatever's on your mind. Go to
NYMag.com slash pivot to submit a question for the show or call 85551 Pivot. Elsewhere in the
Kara and Scott University this week, Profite Market, Scott spoke with Justin Wolfer's. I love
Justin. Professor of Public Policy and Economics at the University of Michigan. Let's listen to a clip.
that AI is the most interesting technology of my lifetime, and we may be on the cusp of one of the great
technological revolutions. I also might be wrong. That's fine too. That debate is arguably
the most interesting and most important economic debate, how to regulate AI, what role it will play in
our lives, how to cushion people for its impact, how to turbocharge it so that we get everything
we want out of it, may be the most important economic debate of our lifetimes, and instead we're
sitting around talking about tariffs.
Oh, fascinating.
Fascinating.
You interviewed Russell Crowe.
That's great.
I am Maximus.
He's coming out with a new movie
where he plays, I think, Guring,
Herman Guring, during the Nuremberg trials.
It looks amazing with Rami Mollick.
Oh, it looks so good.
Okay, that's the show.
Thanks for listening to Pivot,
and be sure to like and subscribe
to our YouTube channel.
We'll be back next week.
Scott, read us out.
Today's show is produced by Lara Neiman,
and Zohannier-Gryffin and Kate Gallagher.
Ernie Ernie are Todd introduced this episode.
Jim Mackle, edit the video.
Thanks also to Gibralos, Ms. Severo, and Dan Shalon.
Ashad Kuraz, Vox Media, is executive producer of podcast.
Make sure to follow Pivot on your favorite podcast platform.
Thank you for listening to Pivot from New York Magazine and Box Media.
You can subscribe to the magazine at nymag.com slash pod.
We'll be back next week for another breakdown of all things tech.
And business care, have a great weekend.