Pivot - Elon’s Power Play, Ozempic Insurance Costs, and the Future of ESG
Episode Date: January 19, 2024It’s the first-ever Pivot call-in show! Kara and Scott talk to Pivot listeners and answer questions on Elon, AI, Ozempic, and more. Plus, Apple’s new app store policy is facing backlash, CNN’s C...EO maps out his plans for the future, and Bill Ackman is embroiled in yet another controversy. Follow us on Instagram and Threads at @pivotpodcastofficial. 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
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Hi, everyone.
This is Pivot from New York Magazine, the Vox Media Podcast Network.
I'm Kara Swisher.
And I'm Scott Galloway.
Get excited, Scott, because we're doing things a little differently today.
It's a special show with pivot listeners calling in and asking us their questions on all sorts of topics.
We're going to meet the people, Scott, the people.
They have spoken.
I don't like surprises.
At 49, I could slip and break a hip when you do this to me.
I think you're going to love it.
Are you scared people aren't going to like you?
They're going to yell at you?
I got passed out a long time ago, Kara.
Good.
Our listeners are wonderful, and we're glad to actually meet them in person, in real life, but not really in real life.
Remote, but real life.
But first, let's talk about some stuff in the news before we get to our fantastic listeners.
Apple is making a big change in its apps for a payment policy, and the move is facing a backlash.
The company issued new policies around payment after the Supreme Court declined to hear the appeal in the Apple Epic antitrust ruling.
Developers will be required to pay a 27% commission if using an alternative payment method in the App Store.
Epic CEO Tim Sweeney called it a bad faith compliance plan and said Epic will contest it in district court.
What do you think? They're trying to get within the bounds of the law from what I understand.
It's just evidence that we need more competition. A 27% commission on downstream payments within,
and I just don't, you know, the notion that you could buy a product, you own the product, and then if within it,
it just makes absolutely no sense to me.
That just strikes me as so egregious.
I think they should get a payment on some level for keeping
the streets clean or giving distribution.
Look, distribution is expensive.
Retailers get paid for end caps, et cetera, et cetera, as you know.
But what would that be?
Like, I think this is, I think they're sort of playing games here, especially with the government looking at them so strongly.
I don't know if this is the best of ideas.
I see why they're doing it.
But I would have to agree.
It looks bad.
Just feels like a lot. And also, if you're going to charge people and
have the app store, then you shouldn't have your own apps because you immediately have a 27%
advantage. So how does Spotify ever compete with Apple Music when Apple Music starts with a 27%
advantage because they don't have to pay these usurious fees. So which is it?
I mean, you could make the argument
that they provide the infrastructure,
but if they're providing the rails
and they see everything that's shipped on the rails,
they shouldn't go into the business of retail
and then charge retailers these onerous fees
to ship their clothes.
It just feels like it's literally the definition
of anti-competitive.
I wonder if they shouldn't charge fees
to people they compete with, right? Could that be a way to do it? Like they could charge you on others that they don't compete with, or if they're in their direct business, they can't charge them. They can't, you know, and I get their arguments about safety. I do. And I get their arguments about they own the rails and they've created the distribution. There is a cost for that. And there should be a payment for making
that. But you're right. Competition is the only way to handle this. But there's not going to be
nine cell phone app stores. And by the way, that would be onerous to these companies to make a
different app for every phone too, right? So, I mean, I think it's really, I don't know, they're
going to get in trouble for this one. I think. But your buddy Barry Diller outlined it perfectly.
Look at credit card companies.
Huge infrastructure investments.
Huge due diligence on who are merchants you can trust.
Security.
You know, safeguards.
Yeah.
Distribution.
And they take between one and a half and three percent.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I would agree.
Barry Diller's a very smart man.
Anyway, also CNN CEO Mark Thompson is sharing
his plan for the future. We discussed this last week because I had interviewed him and he said
almost the same things. Thompson sent a memo to staffers this week publicly outlining new
organizational structure for the company built around the future, not the past. He told the
Wall Street Journal he's looking to monetize CNN contents potentially through subscriptions.
He was being more experimental. I think he's
looking at it much stronger than that. That was my impression from our interview.
He also says he wants to find a better way to show CNN videos on phones. These are all sort of
table stakes. CNN has been very behind here. I think he talked about bringing everything
together instead of having these silos. I think that's smart. He's kind of just cleaning it up and bringing them into the future. That seems to be my impression of this.
If you want to understand what a CEO is going to do at a company, look at their most successful
tenure somewhere else. That's the strategy they'll implement. And Mark Thompson's big victory at the
New York Times was he recognized the world was moving away from an ad-supported media model and basically
moved towards subscription, made some acquisitions and got much more disciplined about putting their
content behind a paywall and moved the company from, I think it was a quarter of the revenue
was from subscription to over 50% or pretty close. I think he almost got there. And as a result,
the company not only enjoyed an increase in earnings, but more specifically, its multiple on those earnings went up because people, investors like subscription
revenue a lot more than ad revenues, whereas subscriptions, people usually take longer to
cancel. Or they stay there because they like what they're getting. And the Times has added things on
like cooking. Well, you know, we have to pay for that one. But, you know, they added things,
Wordle, connections, things like that.
The other thing that struck me was that Andrew Morris and Rebecca Cutler and Jeff Zucker had the right strategy, but it was probably the wrong execution in the sense that if you had a tighter, crisper, higher production value version of the news, I think you could charge for it. So CNN Plus, it was exactly the right strategy,
but it should have been news behind a paywall,
not news anchors doing their book club.
You know, right?
It shouldn't have been- Jake Tapa's book club.
I just like to say that over and over.
It shouldn't have been Scott Galloway,
although my program was outstanding.
I liked your show.
I appreciate you saying that.
But it was different.
But it should have been,
but Anderson Cooper giving you either a four, eight, or 12-minute loop on today's biggest stories.
The other day, I made the mistake of turning on TV.
And I went to CNN, and I went to Fox, and they were just trying to stretch out the most boring.
They had all this live footage from basketball, from high school gyms, talking to people like, well, why are you voting
for Donald Trump? And you're like, oh my God, this is so bad. The thing that kills broadcast news and
broadcast cable is the clock in the sense that they have to fill the goddamn clock. But if they
just had him really tight and they had a bug on HBO Max or on Max, and you could hit it anytime
and it'd be like, do you want your seven-minute loop on news?
It's going to be our best news people.
It's tight.
And we're going to charge you for it.
Tight seven.
Yeah, I would agree.
You know, one of the things I told Mark when we were talking,
and I think I said this earlier this week,
was, you know, the problem with CNN Plus is it was no CNN.
That's what you're there for.
And that's the brand.
And he talked about that.
You know, the other stuff, it's not known for Anderson Cooper's parenting tips. It's known
for news, news, news, news has a fantastic news brand. And so they have to lean into news and
people will pay for it. People pay for the news, you know, the Wall Street Journal, the New York
Times. And then you add on other things that are kind of fun for them, right? Kind of interesting
and fun things or necessary things, right? Well, Stanley Tucci, like having an orgasm
when he eats, you know, salami.
Yeah, I know, but they got rid of that.
That's over at National Geographic.
I mean, they've got to have,
like, what will you pay for?
And there are things you absolutely,
if you don't have to sit and wait for the news,
I think that's valuable to a lot of people
and I think people will pay for it.
One of the things he did say, though,
is he's not going to do,
he called it a lift and shift from his New York Times.
He goes, I don't think I'm just going to do the New York Times thing here.
I had that done.
I was a surgeon at Beverly Hills.
Oh, wait, never mind.
He goes, don't think I'm just going to do the New York Times.
I'm like, I think you're just going to do the New York Times thing here because it actually makes sense for this product.
It's a news product.
It's a global product.
There's a lot of, they've got reporters all over the world, all over the world. And they waste their time talking, doing stupid stuff that isn't valuable to people.
Yeah, and they fact check their information.
It's not entertainment.
It's news.
Yeah.
They have hundreds of reporters.
They have so much news that's coming out of their ears, you know.
And they do a great job at that.
And he's really smart.
I think he's going to have a good year.
As you said, you thought Warner was going to have a good year because of him.
I was on with Christiane Amanpour last week.
I like to say that because I think it gives me a
lot of credibility. Lastly, very quickly, any thoughts on this Dean Phillips controversy over
DEI? You love the DEI topic. He got a million dollars from Bill Ackman. And Bill Ackman,
of course, because he can't stop tweeting publicly, said he was teaching him about DEI and
things will change fast. It looks like he was buying Dean Phillips and on
his website, he changed DEI to something else. I forget what it was, restorative justice. I don't
really know. It looks like he was bought and paid for. And then of course he says, I can't be bought,
but it looked like it was gone from diversity, equity, inclusion for equity and restorative
justice, which I think is even, I don't even understand that. I sort of. So any thoughts? It looked like,
but then Ackman couldn't help but take another lap because he loves to take a lap.
Look, I started giving money to politicians, I guess about five, seven years ago. And I wasn't
disturbed by the fact that you can give money to politicians. I was disturbed how cheap they are.
that you can give money to politicians,
I was disturbed how cheap they are.
And that is, you get a lot of access for not a lot of money.
Yeah, they're cheap.
And I thought, wow, with a decent amount,
I can't even imagine the kind of influence the Koch brothers,
I mean, I can't even just,
and obviously there's Democratic donors too.
Yeah, yeah, I think Thiel only spent $30 million,
which is like in his kitchen drawer. it works. People who give money get to influence policy. And I don't think that's news to anyone.
It wasn't good for his campaign.
What Ackman represents is what Musk represents, and it's the following. It's that since when we
wanted to put a man on the moon in the 60s, we were spending three and a half percent of GDP on
the Apollo mission, and NASA was the one putting a man on the moon. The highest tax rate or the
highest incremental marginal tax rate was, I i think in the 70s or the
80s it's since then gone down to 37 for current income and 22 for long-term capital gains the
result is a shift of capital from the government to wealthy individuals and now wealthy individuals
get to decide if we shoot projectiles into space and they also get to decide what DEI means and if we implement it at our universities. So this is, Bill Ackman is just the latest incarnation.
It's like government. You don't like government doing it? We don't like Bill Ackman, if you think about activism, shareholder activism is going direct to the shareholders around the board. It's going direct to shareholders saying, kick the bums out. Basically, Bill Ackman is saying, I'm going to take my capital, my army of PR executives, my communications, my proxy solicitors, my social platforms, and quite frankly, my fearlessness, my intellect, my aggressiveness, and I'm going to go direct to citizens or direct to the university. I'm going to bypass elected
officials. And here's the problem. We now have individuals who suffer from at a minimum,
a really terrible bout of Twitteria and are attention monsters and might in fact be abusing
drugs as opposed to leaning on
democratically elected officials to make these decisions. I agree. Let me finish by saying there's
a great piece by Kurt Anderson in The Atlantic. It's called Bill Ackman is a Brilliant Fictional
Character, a close reading of his remarkable social media posts. And I think by remarkable,
he wasn't thinking they're remarkable. But this paragraph I thought was fantastic. Taken together,
these recent posts of Ackman's are like a novella, an exquisite piece of satirical fiction in a
digital epistolatory form. They have the voice of an absurdly self-regarding, unreliable narrator,
a hot-headed, self-righteous, born-rich billionaire investor who considers himself
intelligent and virtuous, persecuted by villains as he fights for justice in the honor of his
defenseless goddess wife, and reveals his foolishness and awfulness and possible derangement in the course of a week-long
public tantrum.
I love Kurt Anderson.
I wish Spy Magazine existed because short-fingered Bulgarians are back.
Ackman and Musk are a lot in common in these guys.
They can't.
They become addicted to the attention.
What did you say?
Twitteria?
Like diarrhea.
Twitteria.
Twitteria.
I love it.
Scott, I feel like that's a column for you.
Thank you.
I liked it.
But they suffer from it.
Bill Ackman has eaten the same fruit plate that was washed in water in Cabo San Lucas
and is now literally uncontrollably spraying feces into the world anytime he feels.
Oh my God, that happened to me in New Mexico. It was lettuce.
It happens to a lot of us in Mexico.
It was lettuce. Oh, wow.
By the way, my favorite-
I'm going to, you know, we're going to get to our listeners because that was beautiful. I don't
want you to say another word because that was beautiful. That was fantastic by Scott Galloway, and I need you to write about it.
Anyway, let's go on a quick break.
When we come back, we'll take some calls from our pivot listeners.
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Thumbtack presents the ins and outs of caring for your home. Out. Procrastination,
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your home with confidence. Download Thumbtack today. Scott, we're back. Let's get to our first
listener call. Our guest already looks horrified. He's already regretting this decision. As he
should be. He's already regretting this decision. And I hope that he chastises you for
your behavior. Anyway, we're going to meet the people, Scott. And this is the first person,
which is our first listener call ever. So this is a very exciting thing. Sean, welcome.
Well, hi, Karen, Scott. Thanks for having me on. I'll try to set the bar as low as possible for the subsequent listeners who are asking questions.
So I don't have a tough act to follow. So I'm a longtime listener and I'm an attorney and I worked in private practice as a litigator for a while.
And the past few years I've worked in the public sector. Can I ask you a number of questions?
Do you like the penis jokes? No, not that one. I appreciate Scott's humor, but I feel like now being on the podcast, I'll be unemployable for the foreseeable future. So that's what we like
to do here. We like to win careers. Can I ask you another question? You sound like you're from New
York. I am. I thought so. Yeah, it's what? Brooklyn or Staten Island?
Ah, Long Island.
Oh, Long Island.
Yeah, Long Island.
Yeah, Long Island.
All right.
Thank you, Sean.
Let's listen to your question.
Let's listen to your question.
So it's about Elon, and it's something of a legal question, but it's way outside of my area.
Who?
Elon.
We've never heard of him.
Yeah, you don't talk about him on this show.
No, not a lot.
So here's my question. In buying the platform, Elon's turned himself into the main character
on Twitter, and he's repeatedly posted controversial tweets. In multiple instances,
Elon's tweets have had a negative impact on the financial interests of X, not to mention Tesla.
negative impact on the financial interests of X, not to mention Tesla. So what I want to know,
if you guys have any insight into this, particularly you, Scott, since you've served on boards over the years, is there some reason, legal, practical, or otherwise, that no shareholder has
pursued legal action against Elon, asserting that his tweets have constituted a breach of his fiduciary duties.
And I'm putting that unsuccessful 420 lawsuit from a few years back in a separate bucket because it
involved alleged fraudulent misrepresentations about the company itself, whereas some of his
other tweets are just lightning rods for controversy that caused the stock price to dip.
So I'm wondering if you guys have any insight on that. Well, before Scott starts, there are some shareholder lawsuits around
how he be in and his behavior is noted in them in several of them happening at various times.
He's won quite a few of them. So that including that one with the shareholders, but there are a
number of shareholder actions
happening. But go ahead, Scott, why don't you talk about being on a board? Because I haven't been.
Well, you have to distinguish between a private and a public company. A public company
is fertile hunting ground for plaintiff's attorneys who, when they see anything resembling
behavior that they think is bad for shareholders, they can initiate a class action suit. And
typically, in a board meeting, you get a list of all the legal actions, and they're numerous,
employees, all sorts of stuff. And plaintiff's attorneys, while they play a really important
role as sort of a check on corporate America, there are quite a few of them who the ecosystem
is file a suit, and many companies will just settle. And there's incentive to file a few of them who the ecosystem is file a suit and many companies will just settle.
And there's incentive to file a lot of suits against companies that don't see, you know,
the distraction and the potential downside is worth it. And so they'll just settle. He's probably,
when you're talking about X now, that it's a private company with what is a relatively finite number of shareholders,
it's unlikely they filed suit because they're all his buddies. And as far as I can tell,
the only reason they initially invested was hope that they would curry favor with him and have the opportunity to invest in the follow-on round of SpaceX or be one of the book runners. Sequoia, I can't imagine, consciously made a rational decision
in isolation to put whatever it was, a couple hundred million dollars into X. But they think
this is an ecosystem. We want to be involved in all of his other ventures. We want to have an
opportunity to participate. It's a vig. It's essentially a vig to hang with Elon.
In the muskosphere. What's unusual, though, is it relates to what I have never seen.
I don't think anyone's seen in governance.
Earlier this week, he essentially took to Twitter to demand that he would get 25% voting control.
And I think he knew that that would be impossible for a post-public company because he would be retroactively trying to create a new class of stock that had super majority voting control. I think he knew that
wasn't possible. So the only way to get there would be to increase his stake and award him
options that would get him to that 25% mark. He has options that if he exercises now,
take him from 13% to 17%. I have never seen a CEO, I've been on boards where CEOs stamp their
feet and threaten to leave over their compensation. I've never seen a CEO. I've been on boards where CEOs stamp their feet and threaten
to leave over their compensation. I've never seen a CEO take to Twitter and threaten the company
publicly. But he is effectively a walking plaintiff's attorney dream. But he's created
so much shareholder value. And Sean, after care response, I'd love to get your thoughts here. My sense is he sees the legal expenses as an expense of doing business the way he does business. He invites them. He knows they're going to come. But the dollars are so enormous here that he'd rather be aggressive, raise his profile, even at the risk of shareholder lawsuits. Kare, What do you think? You know, I think a lot of CEOs do this privately, right? Sort of hold up a board or threaten and things like that.
And so he's just doing it publicly because he's that guy because it gets to be that kind of asshole.
But what's interesting is, as Scott said, a lot of tech companies have these dual class shareholders.
And he didn't do it at the time Tesla was created and probably wishes he had, but they can't do it now.
They can't do it now. They can't do it now. Now, what's interesting about this is he's essentially saying, I will withhold
my leadership, right, from you unless you do this, right? That's what he's saying. I will not help
you in the future. I won't help it with AI. Even though he's touted the company as an AI company
and a robotics company, which it has very advanced robotics, it has very advanced AI,
I'm not going to help you make wealth anymore until you pony up this money. Now, the other
problem besides the fact that it can't make a dual class structure, which I think would be to
his liking, but it doesn't matter, he effectively runs the board. The board is not an independent
board in any way, or doesn't behave like an independent board.
This is a lawsuit over his compensation package actually going on. A shareholder that said his compensation package was outsized and it didn't require him to work full time.
He's complimented the Twitter board, but it's not a good look. It looks like he's sort of
blackmailing the board. That's what
it looks like. Although he said they like it. It's sort of like an abused spouse.
Stockholm syndrome.
Yeah. Well, I don't think they like it. I get the impression they don't have a choice with this guy.
And so they can't do anything until this, it will make this lawsuit win if the board
doesn't do, if they suddenly award him this,
because that's precisely what the lawsuit is saying. Yeah, I mean, I think, first of all,
they moved their corporate base from, they were previously incorporated in Delaware, and they
moved to Nevada. And, you know, when you bring these shareholder lawsuits, I think that's one
consideration and the laws where they're incorporated. I think Nevada might have an intent requirement for these breach of fiduciary duty
lawsuits, like as opposed to just careless behavior, you know, there might be some intent
requirement. And I think, you know, Scott makes a really good point about how the people who are
in bed with him at this point, you know, not only did they know what they were getting into,
but they wanted that.
They wanted that access.
So that makes sense to me.
But on his recent tweets,
Carrie, you brought up the fact that,
you know, sort of the AI aspect of this.
When I read that story,
he wasn't just saying, you know,
I'm not going to work on some of these AI issues. I think
he was at least implying that he was going to do it elsewhere. Yeah, take it elsewhere. Right. And
does that change the calculus a little bit? You know, he's not just saying he's not going to do
X. He's saying, I'm going to essentially perhaps compete with you to his own company. Yeah,
other people, I don't know if he has a non-compete. I don't know.
I have no idea.
But I assume there is an issue here because there's IP too, right?
If he takes people, if he takes, you know, other people, the guy at Google got in trouble
for going over to Uber, right?
There's all kinds of law about this.
And I think that's what's interesting.
He's essentially blackmailing them.
The issue is, will they do anything
about it? And so far, this board has done nothing. Now, that opens them up to liability. But from
talking to them, I don't think they feel like they have any power. You know, I think they feel like
they have no, and he's just, now he's just doing it right to their face. It's not unlike what Trump
does to the GOP. It's like, you know, I'm just going to primary you.
That's what he's saying from a business point of view.
And so he puts them in a terrible position and they cannot like it.
And so, you know, I don't know.
This guy breaks rules all the time.
And sometimes it's good and interesting.
And sometimes it's just he just has decided not to play by any rules that anybody else has.
And again, just like Trump in the court, who yells in court at the judge and makes faces?
And but he did yesterday and he's still not in contempt.
So I don't know. I don't know. I will see what happens.
But both Scott and I and I don't know if you think this thing, this board is this board is just a paper tiger, not even a tiger.
What is it, a paper?
Paper mache.
Yeah, I mean, I think Scott's talked repeatedly about how the corporate governance here is, to say the least, lacking.
It's a real test.
To say it's even uncharted water here is an understatement.
It's not calculus.
It's a different math that's never been seen before, because typically boards will err on the other side. Boards are usually full of what I call FIPs,
F-I-P, formerly important people. And sometimes their ego absolutely gets the best of them,
and they won't do what's right for shareholders because they get angry and say, well, this
activist, I'll show him. He's going to show up and threaten me. Or the CEO
does something that pisses them off and they fire the CEO, even when maybe they should have just
dealt with the ego of the CEO. In this instance, I mean, think about how just crazy this is.
Elon Musk is the wealthiest person on the planet. The source, the primary source of that wealth
is Tesla. So he is now turning to the company that made him the wealthiest person in the world and threatening the board publicly on a platform that he bought by selling Tesla shares.
they pay him another $70 billion, he's going to take his ideas to another company while he's working at Tesla, which there's like eight different things here that any other board
would fire the CEO for. But what you have is his brother. You have several people who are so
conflicted here, VCs. One person was involved in SolarCity. This is just, it's literally an
implosion in governance. And the retort would be, at the end of the day, it's about increasing
shareholder value. And this guy has done it. So this guy, the argument would be he has earned
the right to play by a different set of rules. But I've never seen anything resembling.
Yeah, we've got to go, Sean,
but he's an adult toddler
and they're giving him sugar.
I don't know what else to say.
And they're going to keep giving him sugar
until he breaks something,
which he's done many times.
Anyway, Sean, thank you so much.
It was great to chat with you.
We hope you don't lose your job,
but it was a great question.
Thanks, Sean.
Thanks very much.
All right, bye.
Let's move on to our next caller, a doctor who reached out to us following one of our
discussions about weight loss drugs. Hello, Dr. David Rooney, as in, no, it's Rooney, Rooney,
right? David Rooney. Yeah. Do you love macaroni? I do love macaroni. Who doesn't? And cheese.
Take the mackerel off, but you'll love me too. Okay. All right. Okay, perfect. You're a robotic surgeon with a personal finance website.
This is fascinating. Can you tell me just briefly about this?
Yeah. So that started because I don't like to be told I can't do anything. And I graduated
from United States Naval Academy with no financial literacy and then thought I was
doing okay. And the great financial crisis started and I called in to add some money to
my account. And they told me I couldn't because the funds were closed. And then they told me I
didn't warrant getting a financial advisor because I didn't make enough money, which
didn't make any sense to me because I made the most money in my family at the time. So I created a chip on my shoulder and I started learning as much as I
could about finance. Next thing you know, I had accumulated a lot of knowledge. Fast forward to
the pandemic and I was watching people lose their jobs and I couldn't understand what was going on
and why these things were occurring. And my brother challenged me to help as many people as I
could by just putting the knowledge in my head out there on the internet.
Good for you. Well, congratulations, Macaroni. Okay. So, what's your question? You're also a
doctor. So, you want to talk about weight loss drug affordability.
Yeah. So, you know, Professor Galloway, so you mentioned that, you know, Ozempic can be
a world changer, right? It can be a thing that sort of leads to further breakthroughs and behavioral modification
and getting people off of things they might be addicted to, right?
Because that is a sort of benefit that has seemed to have occurred that they've seen
in observation.
People stop drinking as much, gambling as much, things of that sort.
The thing that we never really consider, we healthcare gets a bag wrap, right?
It's clearly not a good system that is designed well as for the times that we're in.
However, the thing that always slips underneath people is the fact that insurance plays a big
role and goes unregulated to the degree that they determined who can afford whatever they
can afford.
Most people can't afford a sort of, like they said, a $400 emergency,
and the average car payment is $1,000.
But Ozempic and the other GLP-1 agonists might be $1,200, right?
All right, question.
What's your question?
What are we going to do about it?
What's your question? What are we going to do about it?
So the question is, how do you envision that insurance is going to sort of change in the
future in order to reflect the vision that you see carrying out?
First off, Doctor, it always sounds patronizing when I say this, but I mean it.
As someone who went to Annapolis and decided not to go there and went to UCLA, I appreciate
your service. To be fair, if you're in the top decile of income earn decided not to go there, I went to UCLA, I appreciate your service.
To be fair, if you're in the top decile of income earners in the United States, I think you have access to the best health care in the world.
But it's the bottom 90 who are subsidizing it. And I think that one of the culprits, if you will, is the insurance industrial complex, which does a very good job of flying below the radar.
So make it very difficult for a mother
with childhood diabetes to get her money back
such that she gives up
and you end up with insurance breakage.
Overcharge young people who quite frankly are very healthy
and don't need insurance to subsidize old people
who need a disproportionate amount of healthcare.
I think the insurance in the United States
on a lot of levels is literally one of the biggest economic taxes that the poor pay.
And I've talked about this a lot.
I am not insured because I can afford not to be insured.
It's poor and middle-income benefits are going to be so obvious.
And also the amount of capital going into the exploration of GOP1 drugs is going to be so massive that it's going to create competitors and bring the cost down.
And I do think the government's going to get involved.
It's not getting out to the rural areas where people are obese, and it's really impacting
their lives in a negative way.
I do think the market, to a certain extent, and government, hopefully, will start to increase the distribution or disperse GLP-1 drugs.
I'm hopeful that it happens.
Bigger, broader issue, we need some form of health care reform that gets rid of this ridiculously fat and happy, expensive middleman that has weaponized government and creates regulatory capture called the insurance industrial complex.
Yeah, I think one of the things that Scott has talked about a lot, and I think it's important, is to understand the system is good for nobody, including doctors.
My brother's a doctor, as you might know.
And I've never talked to any doctor who likes the insurance system or how to bill the billing system.
who likes the insurance system or how to bill the billing system, they're so captured by it and spend a lot of time dealing with it that they should be treating patients, right? Or they want
to be treating patients. And I don't know, from your perspective, everybody gets screwed but these
insurance middlemen in some fashion, and it's completely unfair. And for these drugs,
which are, you know, they've still got to be tested. It's still, they've been around for a
long time for diabetes and everything else. But I think Scott's right. At some point, there's going
to be so many of them, the price naturally will come down. But that's not always been true with
drug prices, right? It hasn't been. But one might imagine at some point an
over-the-counter version of these things, right? That it's going to be so in demand,
and it will start at the top, and then, I hate to use the word trickle down, but this one,
I think, will in that regard. But it should immediately, the government should immediately
be doing testing to try to deal with obese populations to cut prices
on this diabetes epidemic. As Scott calls it, it's the insurance industrial complex. There's
a diabetes industrial complex, which keeps people living. Their health span dies long before their
lifespan. There's a good story in the journal about this. And that's where the costs come in.
And they make all the money with these very sick people who don't have to be that sick. What are your thoughts, very briefly?
Briefly, it hasn't really come out. But if you talk to people who work in healthcare,
you're going to notice that the economic incentives for insurance companies and the
pharmaceutical companies not to sort of reimburse this or not to add this to the
formulary is completely there. To the fact that if you look at the starting doses of these
medications, they're no longer available. So you can't even start people on these.
And people are starting to cut corners. People with diabetes.
People with diabetes. You can't start people on this medication if weight loss is the cure.
Diabetes. You can't start people on this medication if weight loss is the cure. If we think about it, diabetes, the first management is sort of diet and lifestyle modifications. And sort of if youistic society, and we leave the rest of folks behind,
and then we complain about how they can't catch up when, in fact, our system is doing it.
We waited a long time to change the insulin prices, right? I don't have a lot of faith that this is going to change anytime soon, and I see a lot of
people saying how great this is, But I used to be poor.
I was homeless.
Like, I remember what it's like for my mother trying to get medicine.
Like, this sucks.
It's like physically painful to watch someone suffer.
I would agree with you.
This is something I feel like, especially as the studies come in and they have good
results, that the government needs to get involved in.
It's a national health crisis in many ways. And this is so typical of so many drugs, but in this case, it's one that could
really save costs. What you just said, Cara, people are living longer and longer, but they're
not healthier, which means they're more expensive. And there's fewer people paying, they're
subsidizing their Medicare. So the system is not sustainable, but the healthcare
system in the US is perfectly American in the sense that everything we do in America
is optimized for the top 10% because as America is optimist, we all believe we're going to be in
the top 10%. So if we can have access to the best health care in the world, we want that system. Not acknowledging that, well, if you're in the bottom 90, you're not only not going to get the best health care, you're going to get bad but expensive health care. It creates tremendous strain and adds misery upon misery in the United States. For a lot of reasons, the health care system in the United States is just not sustainable.
Anyway, Dr. Roney, we've got to go, but it's a really great question.
All right.
Thank you so much.
We really appreciate your question.
Yes, ma'am.
I appreciate it.
You guys have a blessed day.
Thank you, doctor.
Thank you.
Up next, we have someone with a question about AI.
Tell us your name and where you're from and what you do.
Sure.
Good morning.
It's exciting to be here.
My name is Suzanne. I'm the Dean of Students at a very rigorous, independent high school.
And my question, coming from a very highly resourced school that is much more concerned
with getting it right than being right, and we're really wrestling with AI right now. And so my question is,
do you believe that AI tools in education enhance or hinder students' creative abilities?
And how can educators sort of balance the use of AI, the fact that it's coming,
it's going to be here, with the need to really develop critical thinking skills and creativity?
Great question. I'll start, Scott. You were around for the dawn of the internet age,
correct? Or when they were, you know, remember Apple, you saved box tops or whatever to get
computers in schools. You remember that era, correct? Yeah. So I think this is a very similar
shift is that a lot of people at the beginning of that, everyone was putting computers in schools without thinking it through properly, right?
And some of it worked and some of it didn't.
And some of it was, you know, people were worried about websites or where kids went
to and protection.
And were they wasting their time?
Were they playing games?
It went on and on.
And then everyone got laptops.
Was that worth it?
I think it reminds me quite a bit of that.
Except in this case, people are already computer
literate. Your students are all highly literate in computers. They have grown up with computers.
And so it reminds me a little bit of that. But, you know, to say it's a hindrance or an asset,
it's both. It's going to be a hindrance. There's all kinds of problems you're going to show.
Not that, you know, they write that media goes crazy about copying or plagiarism.
I think that's been around forever. It's just a new way to plagiarize and probably a better way,
faster, better way. But you'll figure that part out. And I think you'll have your own software,
and there is software that does that. But I do think one of the things that you should do is
embrace it and use it so you as teachers understand it. I think one of the things that you should do is embrace it and use it so you as teachers understand it.
I think one of the things is initially, and I talked to Randy Weingarten about this.
We were sitting in the audience with her at the AI thing that Biden put out, the executive order.
And she turned around and she goes, I'm not against this, to me, because I'm always like, you're so negative, Randy.
And she was like, I'm thinking, I'm learning, I'm not against this, to me, because I'm always like, you're so negative, Brandy.
And she was like, I'm thinking, I'm learning, I'm doing this.
And I think that's probably the thing I say to most teachers is you yourselves got to understand it because the kids absolutely get it kind of thing.
And they'll get it really quickly.
Nice to meet you.
I had this warm emotion come over. When I was at UCLA, and I realize you're at a high school, I was close with the dean of students, Ray Goldstone, and the assistant dean of students,
Peter Weiler. They were both just such wonderful men, and all they did was put out fires all day.
I remember thinking, when there was just an awful problem, no one knew what to do,
and ended up at the dean of students. Call Suzanne. Call Suzanne.
So thanks for your good and challenging word. I'm an AI optimist around this stuff.
I think we should be, you know, if you're trying to teach a kid how to write and put together a paragraph and, you know, subject, you know, whatever, no fragments, new thought, new paragraph, then there's going to be AI tools that can look at it.
It's similar to how we have tools now to see if they're, you know, if they're plagiarizing or whatever.
You're going to have those tools.
But in general, outside of them teaching them how to write prose, I think it's a tremendously
powerful tool. I remember in my second year of business school, my professor of manufacturing,
Sarah Beckman, who was just this outstanding professor, I remember the moment, I remember
when she said, I don't mind you using spellcheck. Some professors actually
back then didn't, they thought it was cheating for you to use spellcheck. And as someone who
writes a lot, I can tell you that what I found so far, and Carrie is the exact right word,
that what AI produces is very anodyne. It doesn't compel or move anyone to emotion.
But when I'm writing, I'm writing a blog post tomorrow on Bill Ackman and how basically
money has taken the place of democratic institutions.
And I was trying to come up with unexpected consequences.
And I typed into GPT-4, what are the most unexpected but enduring consequences of the
COVID pandemic?
And it came up with 10 things and eight of them I knew, but two were different.
And I'm incorporating that. I think it's great for, I think it's just a great tool. I think it's
going to expand creativity. And what I would want to be doing is wrapping my arms around it and
having classes, not even classes, but maybe part of class, like what are the right prompts to make
your paper better? What are the right ways to think?
What could you ask that would give you more examples?
I think it's very, I think it's really exciting.
Yeah, that's why you need to use it.
I advise everyone to use it every day for different things, even if you're not going to use it.
One of the things that I think would work well is timelines.
Like there's certain things, why do them?
I mean, you can do them, you can sit in front of them.
You're doing it in front of an encyclopedia or the internet.
Imagine the internet used to just take you to the pages and then you pulled off of them.
Some people more than others, including Bill Ackman's wife, but off of Wikipedia.
But people have been doing that for a while, paraphrasing or looking up in encyclopedias.
This is like that.
It dives into the content itself,
which is why they're in so many content fights with content makers,
as content makers should be suing them
or doing a deal with them.
But it's very,
you have to be thinking of what it could be used for
and how you can not waste time with students
and get them to the real discussions.
There's no reason why they have to use an encyclopedia or research papers to do a timeline when it could do it for you. It's not a
skill to do that. It's just not. And that's fine. You know, at some point, a lot of reporters are
very reticent to use it. You know, I was having an argument about headlines. I was like, why are we
writing headlines anymore? We can pick them.
What's important is then the teacher intervene when and the student learns about being factual, how to use the research.
Learning how to research, and this is how people are going to research in the future, is a critical thinking skill.
And so once you have that there, it's sort of like clay.
What are you going to make with it?
And that's where teachers have to and should and should be stepping in. But to make it like they're going to cheat,
the assumption of cheating immediately is kind of a terrible way to think of your students, right?
No, absolutely. And we don't. It was it's really more we want to use these tools and teach the students how to use them in ways that are helpful. But we also want to make sure that
their creativity isn't limited. So I love Scott's example that he typed in, give me 10 unexpected
consequences. Eight of them he knew, two he didn't. And that's great. But we also want to make sure
that our students aren't just going to that list of 10, which we know the large language models are pulling from stuff that's already happened.
So how are they going to bring their own stuff into it?
And the other thing that I'll say, and I am very familiar for somebody of my age with what's going on, is that we know that all learning happens in relationship.
is that we know that all learning happens in relationship.
And so we need to make sure that the customized tutoring that Khan Academy wants to do or Grammarly
doesn't take the place of those relationships,
which is something that I think is so important.
100%.
And here we are still seeing the impact
of the isolation of the pandemic
on our youngest students and their socialization
skills.
So there's...
Agreed.
I think that's smart.
I mean, I think that's why you need to join with the students who are also figuring it
out.
Like, avail yourself to their knowledge.
I think they feel very good about that, explaining to you how they're using it.
One of the things is, I agree with you on in-person stuff.
You know, my son's at Michigan right now.
He was having some difficulty with, I think, a physics thing, and he was using AI.
But he's now, you know, he goes to a tutoring thing, too, like where there's a person there so they can discuss the ideas.
And I think you can do them in conjunction with each other in a way.
For some reason, people think it's either or,
and I do think technology can really aid you.
And again, join with them.
You know, again, I think too many teachers,
when they talk to me are like,
how are they going to cheat?
I'm like, well, how are they going to learn?
Why don't you think that way?
So it could, and some customized things
could be interesting, right?
Maybe they could design things.
I think you're talking about serendipity, like the serendipity of learning, right? Yes they could design things. I think you're talking about
serendipity, like the serendipity of learning, right? Yes. Correct? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So it's
really, it's a really exciting time. And it can be, you can see it going sideways rather quickly.
Sure. And one of the things that's so important always is that this is no different, the use of
AI is no different than using any other unauthorized source. And so
we already have tools in place for that. So it's not fear, more just...
Yeah, you don't know. Well, you know what? It'll get better. I'm sorry to tell you,
it's going to get better while we're going to... The last part of my book I just finished, I said,
I used an AI thing as a joke at the end. And then I said, it's really bad. They wrote an end to my
book that I said, this is just terrible. I said, but I'm going to get worse and it's going to get better.
Yeah. It's the worst it's ever going to be right now. And that's just such a,
it's mind blowing to think about it that way. Yeah. Anyway, we appreciate it and we appreciate
your work with students. By the way, Kara, both those things are happening.
What? What? I'm getting worse. Oh, Scott. Anyway, thank you.
He's insufferable. All right. Thank you, Suzanne. All right, bye. All right, Scott,
let's go on one more quick break. When we come back, we'll take some more calls.
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Scott, we're back with our special call-in show, taking questions from our listeners.
Let's go to our next caller.
Andy, how you doing?
Andy Fishtrum, how you doing?
From Sausalito, one of my favorite places.
Welcome.
Hey, it's a foggy, chilly morning here.
Yeah, but, you know, we can't complain.
It's 30 below in the Midwest, so we have no right to complain.
It's very cold here in Washington, too, and I'm sure London's a delightful, sunny place where Scott is.
So you help students apply to MBA programs.
I was head of student affairs at a business school called INSEAD for seven years.
And so I speak MBA.
I am also a wedding photographer.
And then I started working at Whole Foods part-time this year, which I really, really love.
Fantastic. You know, Scott and I are getting married.
We're looking for a wedding photographer.
Congratulations.
No, kidding, kidding, kidding, kidding.
Never happens.
So you want to ask a question about the repercussions of USAI regulations on safety and global competition.
Yes, I do.
So, you know, you guys, I don't often yell at the television, but when I saw those congressional hearings hearings I thought they were just total bullshit I think putting guardrails on American companies will I
mean I don't think we shouldn't do it but I think it will stifle competition I
don't think we're going to keep the bad actors from launching the nukes or
taking down the banking system so I wanted to hear your guys thoughts on if
those congressional hearings meant anything, if regulations on US companies will help,
and if not, what you think the solution might be.
I think a lot of people feel the same way you do,
that anything we do that reduces the competitiveness
of American companies results in a lack of economic growth,
a lack of tax revenue for our Navy,
a lack of opportunity for our young people. What I think though a bigger
problem has been is that that has become such a almost it's become conventional wisdom that it's
no longer wise and what's happened is the industry that is the largest by market capitalization
globally and probably has the most impact technology has effectively no regulation. I think
we have a lack of regulation. As it relates
to AI, I don't think the regulation would be on the front end. I thought that, to your point,
Andy, I thought the idea of an AI pause was ridiculous. It's like Iran, North Korea,
and China aren't going to pause. But that was tech people doing that, not government. But go ahead.
Yeah, but I just thought it was, it never made any sense to me. Where I do think you need regulation is to say to a company, look, if you, the executive
order from the White House, you could be cynical about it, but I think it's a start.
And I don't think it's doing anything that really inhibits the competitiveness of USAI.
And also, I think that these companies, unlike tech, should know, should be put on notice, that if your AI results in externalities that do real harm to our democracy, to health, to misinformation, and you know what's going on, and you decide to try and delay and obfuscate by saying, we need to do better or have PR tours, I think those firms need to get hit hard. I think pesticides are a good thing. I think
fossil fuels are a good thing. But we have an EPA and an FDA, and we have no such agency in tech.
I was going to say, let me give you two examples. One, there are no laws against for internet
companies to rate. There's none. There's zero. 20 years in, the richest, most wealthy people in the
world, there's obvious damages, right? Because there's no regulation. There's no privacy regulation. There's no data transparency. Competitively, all these companies
dominate. There's not enough. I'm more worried about the small startups that don't get to
be created. They die in the crib. And so many years ago, I interviewed Mark Zuckerberg, and
he started with this argument. I called it the Xi or me argument. Like, if we're not big, China will win. And I was, and he's like, I was, and he's like, what would you pick? I go, I don't like my choices at all. Is there a third choice where, where we do? The reason US technology is so good, and everything starts here. One is because it's innovation. And two, because it comes from the bottom up. China's top down. Now, they do a pretty good job top down.
Let's be clear.
That's a way to do it.
But I think that there's good in the fact that even though this plane just blew out a window,
most planes don't blow out windows, right?
But now we're going to look at these bolts.
Now, there's a good reason why our meats aren't tainted
for the most part, right?
Or else it's a problem if they are, that there's repercussions.
I think the problem with this industry is they don't just have no regulation.
They have immunity.
They have immunity.
And so you can't even sue them.
So, you know, a lot of these lawsuits against pharmaceutical companies, maybe they're too
much, but a couple of them absolutely chills their bad behavior.
Lastly, the person who they consider a class traitor, Mark Benioff, was the first person to me to talk about them like cigarette companies.
They're like cigarette companies.
And so it's fine if people want to smoke cigarettes.
Nobody's stopping them.
I don't think there's been much innovation in cigarettes.
But if there is danger, they need to tell people so people can make a
cogent decision about it. And if they withhold, which the cigarette companies did, as do the tech
companies, they get to go to court and they get to lose in court. And so I think that's our issue
with it is that there's zero laws and they have immunity and they're the richest people in the
world. So like, yes, you're right.
You're with your metaphors.
Regulating the food industry makes the food safer.
Regulating airlines, airplanes makes them safer.
But will regulating AI make it safer?
There's a lot of dangers.
I mean, should we have, here's a good, say you're a regulator.
You're just as smart as regulators I know is,
would you like to have global laws against killer robots?
Probably, right? Don't you think? Or maybe we should, anybody should make...
Global laws, sure.
Yeah, but that means it has to be in the U.S. too. Should people, you know, you could not
necessarily do AI, but cloning, should we be able to clone children? Well, maybe we should talk about
that as a society, right? I think there's a lot of stuff. Should people be able to build nuclear bombs using AI?
Should they be able to use AI to game the stock market and crash it?
Like, there should be some sense of what could happen wrong.
And that's the role of the government.
Now, I agree, I'm not a big regulatory person, but I think more than zero is better and removing immunity.
And then I'm good with it.
If they can be sued like they are right now by the content, they were scraping content
and they're suing.
Well, before you couldn't really sue them.
They kept winning on fair use.
Now, it's not clear.
So I feel like if you have some guidelines and guideposts, it creates a better situation for small startups to rise up.
You may not agree with me.
You know, it's funny.
Working at Whole Foods part-time, I work with people who are very young, like 22, and I'm 58.
And they're like, Uncle Andy, what was it like before the Internet?
How did you make plane reservations?
And I'm like, oh, you know,
we just stood on the roof of our house with smoke signals, right? And all that stuff. So it's going
to be fun to have this conversation in 10 years and hear what we're talking about today.
One of the things I'm curious, can I ask you one quick question? Then we got to go is,
do you know the palm thing they have there now? That you can pay with your palm? Are a lot of
people doing that? Because I said no fucking way to the lady who was trying to sell it to me so it's awesome i mean it's for people who
forget their wallet forget their phone which is a lot of people um and i feel like that ship sailed
a long time ago with you know when you look at your phone it uses the same technology and yeah
people are doing it um there's no nefarious i mean as far as i as I know. I don't think there is. I just was like,
not today, Jeff Bezos. You know, it's interesting where people choose to make their stand,
like I'm never doing that. So the answer is, yeah, I would say anecdotally, it's probably about
50% of the customers so far. Yeah. Oh, wow. That's amazing. Anyway, wow, that's a lot.
Anyway, real quick, Scott, I'm just getting to know you. I've been a Kara fan for a long time.
And now I've heard you're doing this book on masculinity, which is exciting.
I also want to know what you don't like about short people, because I'm short, and I hear you mention short people sometimes.
I'm just teasing.
I'm just giving you shit.
Let's leave it at that.
Let's leave it at that.
That hurts.
He can't take it.
He can dish it out.
He can dish it out, Andy.
Andy, thank you so much.
What a great question.
Thanks, you guys.
Keep doing what you're doing.
By the way, I'll give you some height for that hair.
Deal?
Oh, nice.
It's a trade.
All right.
Thank you.
Thanks, guys.
Bye.
Hi, Karen Scott.
I love your show.
Thank you.
Welcome, Betsy.
This is our next caller.
We have another AI question about OpenAI.
Betsy, how you doing?
I'm good.
Can you tell us what you doing? I'm good.
Can you tell us what you do?
Yeah, sure.
I'm a former professor.
I used to work in quantitative finance, and I'm a data scientist.
And now I'm the founder and CEO of a social media startup.
Cool.
What does it do?
Name?
Name.
You can name it.
The app's name is Kinder.
It's in beta.
It's in a quiet beta.
We're working on basically a bold way to disrupt the economic model of social media in a non-toxic way.
Wow. Oh, that's a big job. So you went from being a professor of quantitative finance to running a social media company?
I was a professor of astronomy. Then I worked in quantitative finance. Yes. It's all very
similar to data science.
Where did you teach, Betsy?
I was at UC Irvine.
Oh, the anteaters.
Yeah.
UCI.
Yeah.
Greatest gift to America, the great University of California system. I'm UCLA and Berkeley all the way through, undergrad and grad.
I love UCI.
Yeah, it was a nice place. It was hard to leave, I have to admit.
How's the startup life going?
Oh, startup is a big adjustment. You know, I really spent most of my career in academia.
So it's been a learning curve, I will say that. And yeah.
Are you happy you did it?
Yes, I am happy I did it.
Cool.
Thank you.
Yeah, it's one life to live. Anyway, you have a question about open air and Sam Altman and dangers?
Yeah, yeah.
Given the drama late last year and the way it was resolved, are there any checks and
balances left to stop him and the company from doing damaging things or dangerous things
to make money?
I'm worried given the lack of government regulation, especially, and I think it's a
pretty major concern.
Well, I would say, I covered a lot of that and broke some of the stories on it,
is that I think it's so public, he's certainly constrained that way, because it was out in the
open, this accelerationist versus decelerationist, although I think that's kind of a black and white
thing, and this is a much more gray area. I do think the publicity around it certainly is a check
in a lot of ways, if they do things and it gets known. He certainly has a lot of, I guess,
I'm not gonna say enemies, but people, the decelerationists are watching him. So that's
one thing. He doesn't have that much power there. Another is another thing is although he's this,
you know, although he's backed by Microsoft and the employees,
that could easily change if he abused his power, I think. I think people were surprised how
supportive the employees particularly were. I was. I thought that said a lot. That said,
I think you have other people like Adam on the board who has been a foe, I would say, of him. And so I think it'll
be quite, it's a question of who is the board, who they pick for this board. And there's all
kinds of names. I have put forth several like Dr. Fei-Fei Li and some others that I think.
And if they get a board that is, what happened was the board got out of whack with deceleration
trying to make their move on him.
And that wasn't right either, right? The whole thing. So they've got to get a board that has people that are skeptical and people that are optimistic, and perhaps most more in the middle
where they understand both. I do think more than most people, he is less rapacious than other
people I've covered, for sure, no question, and much more thoughtful.
But that said, he's a very tech-optimistic person, and he's AI-optimistic.
And lastly, I do think the government has to move in and do some guardrails. There's a couple that
are very clear, just like they didn't do on the internet in terms of privacy, in terms of use
of content, in terms of safety, checking for safety issues, and monitors that are independent
of all of these companies, not just OpenAI. So, Cara, when you refer to Fei-Fei Li,
are you referring to the Sequoia Capital professor of computer science?
Yes, I made fun of her for that.
By the way, Betsy, just a quick question. Do you think that brands
should be companies, private companies should be branding academic positions or have we become,
I don't know what's the term, total whores? So it's hard. In astronomy, it's not such a big
issue, right? Like I'd be thrilled for brands to support astronomy research, but to support...
Tang. Well, companies have done it Well, companies have done it for...
People have done it for decades, like the Scott Galloway chair of Ding Dongs or whatever.
Sure, sure.
But I think it's something that has to be monitored, right?
It's too much fox guarding the hen house, potentially.
100%, we're seeing that play out.
So back to your question.
Okay, so initially, OpenAI was supposed to be not a regulatory check, but it was initially formed to do thought leadership that would provide a viewpoint and research to keep the dangers present such that we could address them when other private companies started producing externalities. But here's the thing. Billions
of dollars showed up. And once this company identified itself and became the leader in the
space and became worth $90 billion, if you think about a concern for humanity versus shareholder
value, shareholder value smothered the concern for humanity in its sleep. And I don't care how
many boxes have a mission statement around altruism. Microsoft doesn't control this company
right now. And so is, I would argue, Sam Altman is also like a close second or number one,
because $90 billion, by the way, creating $90 billion creates a lot of value
and good in our ecosystem. That's the reason- He's not on the board, just so you're aware now,
right now, at this moment. Who's not on the board?
Sam Alton's not on the board anymore. But he's not. I get it. I get it.
When 90% of your company is willing to walk out of the door with you, you kind of own the company.
Because they like how he's working. But I get you. The money is, let me just,
one thing that Scott is getting wrong is that the reason they did, one of the reasons.
Oh, I get more than one thing wrong, Kira.
Come on, let's be honest.
The reason they raised all that money is because it costs so much to do it, right?
They needed the money to do it.
And that's, they couldn't raise it for, you know, for altruistic reasons.
No one was going to hand it over.
Well, but they raised it.
Yeah, but they didn't.
They raised it so they could build generative AI, not so that they could study it.
Oh, I think they were going to do that all along.
I think, you know, when Elon talked about it a decade ago, it was because he was worried about the power of Google and Facebook and Amazon and stuff like that, that they would control the destiny of humanity.
This is a for-profit company.
Yeah, it is.
We called this out a year ago.
We called this out a year ago. When you looked at the structure that they tried to wrap all this bullshit and wallpaper over the notion that this wasn't a for-profit company by saying that, well, actually,-profit companies are so outstanding at making money, they should be trusted to do nothing else.
That's what they do. That's what they do. And while we keep hoping they're better angels,
they're going to show up and they're going to give a good goddamn about democracy
or teenage girls, they don't. And I'm not saying they're bad people, but when you live
in a society where you have better access to healthcare, better access to powerful people,
a broader selection set of mates, and you can take care of your kids and your parents, if you make a
shit ton of money, the incentive to wallpaper over externalities and this incredible platform called
a for-profit are going to be so great that you have to have a huge check and balance in the form of,
first of all, government regulation, but a robust media and journalism sector,
plaintiff's attorneys, a fair and balanced legal system, because Sam Altman and Microsoft led to
their own devices are going to do some amazing things for technology. They're going to make a
lot of people rich. They're going to add value to the world. And someone needs to be able to hit them hard if they do the same thing that social media and these other organizations.
But all this jazz hands around it being different entities and altruism, that's just bullshit.
I think that's gone.
I think that's gone.
And they sort of have pushed those people off.
And by the way, those people were also power hungry in a weird way.
Can I ask two sort of follow-up questions if you have time?
So one would be, I think part of the problem with OpenAI is it's not just what OpenAI does,
right? They provide, you know, their code, not their code, but their service through an API
that anyone could use to do something. And, you know, it's not even going to be easy to tell what
people are doing with it, even if they were monitoring it. So you have to be pretty far in knowing what people are
doing to deploy. Yeah, sort of like the Apple App Store, right? Yeah, the Apple. Yeah. Who's
is it going to be Google App Store, which is like the Wild West? Or is it going to be more Apple
oriented? But go ahead. Right. But also, it's just some kind of transparency. So you could
see what people are actually doing. I think that's part of the executive order from the White House, is that there is a requirement. I don't know if it's a requirement or request for additional transparency, because Google will not release their algorithm. We don't know. If you're concerned about young men being radicalized on YouTube, which many are, we don't know how it's happening. They won't release their algorithm.
And I think part of that, Kara, tell me if I'm wrong.
Well, they're special, Scott. They're special. Okay?
Tell me if I'm wrong. They're good.
Kara, maybe you know this, but I think part of the executive AI order out of the White House
had language in it about you have to be more transparent in terms of what you are actually
building here.
Yes, it did. Yes, it did.
Yes, it did.
And also safety checks, independent safety checks.
Go ahead.
What's your other one?
The other one is about government, you know, government formed guardrails.
I worry about the model for this.
And I think I've heard you mention the SEC as a potential sort of model for this.
But if you think about like, they're not embedded in what's happening.
And so, you know,
they investigated Madoff
and they didn't figure out.
A new agency
is what we think should happen.
And that's led by Scott and Kara.
That's who we have.
Or as we like to call it,
Scarra.
Scarra.
Scarra.
There needs to be,
that should be our couple's name.
That's a good one.
I think there needs to be a new agency.
And we can't call it information agency.
It's got to be technology.
Just like the FAA or anything else.
That's my feeling is because this is special.
The FTC can't handle it.
You know, it's hard for these agencies that have other things to do,
like monitor pork makers or whatever.
We got to go, Betsy.
But we do appreciate this. But I agree. We think there should be another agency,
because what will happen is they'll take advantage of the disorganization of this by government,
and so nobody will be able to get their hands on them, which is how they handle it.
Betsy, most importantly, do you live in the OC?
No, no. I moved away to New York when I left academia.
There you are. That's so bad.
Yeah.
One of the most beautiful places in the world, aren't you?
Can I ask you one more quick question, even though our producers just say we have to move on, is what's your biggest fear?
Very briefly.
My biggest fear is that the entire economy changes to work around AI and then things like income inequality and then just transparency of what's happening, right?
How much do humans control what's happening starts to really erode.
That's a very good concern.
What are these fuckers up to has been my life's work.
Anyway, I appreciate it.
Thank you so much for the thoughtful question.
Go Anteaters.
Whatever that is.
Great to meet you.
Thanks, Betsy.
Thank you.
Changing gears here, we have a caller with a question about something Scott will no doubt
have thoughts on, ESG.
Welcome, Luke.
Tell us what you do and then what your question is.
Yeah.
Hi, Kara and Scott.
My name is Luke.
I'm calling in from Atlanta.
Long-time listener across all your shows.
So I appreciate the opportunity to be able to join an episode.
listener across all your shows. So I appreciate the opportunity to be able to join an episode.
And Scott, actually, a couple of years ago, I gifted a friend of mine who was struggling personally with your book, Algebra of Happiness, and it had a meaningful impact on him. So I
appreciate your work. Thanks for saying that. My question is around ESG or environmental,
social, and governance. I've spent seven years as an investor relations
professional at one of the largest retailers in the country. And one of the biggest sea changes
that we've seen has been the interest from investors on ESG and the topics that underpin
ESG. And I agree that it's probably not the best naming, but it's really not the words or the
letters that matter. It's the ability to
analyze the risks from things like climate change or water or a company's inability to invest in
its workforce. It's more understanding what the risks mean to a company's bottom line.
So over the last few years, my role has evolved, and I primarily focus on engagement with
institutional investors on everything from our company's climate transition strategy to whether we're paying our associates equally across gender and race.
Scott, so you've recently commented that you think we're seeing the end of ESG.
So my question is, why would institutional investors who have built ESG research teams and integrated ESG metrics into their investment thesis
abandon these concepts?
And secondly, what about or what's wrong with investors considering risks like climate change
or unequal pay in their investments or where they're considering to invest?
That's a really thoughtful question, Luke.
I think everything you outlined is not ESG.
I think it's smart, shareholder-driven actions.
I think having a workforce that represents your customer base and the community, doing
scenario planning around the threats and opportunities around whatever it might be, climate change,
I think of those as just being shareholder-driven activities, forward-leaning investments that
pay off. I think if you want a strong workforce,
a robust workforce, all of the things you mentioned are smart for the bottom line.
The issue I have with ESG, and it's not black and white. I think that it comes from a good place.
The issue I have with ESG is who gets to decide what the metrics are around ES, S, and G. And I find that in many instances, ESG has been weaponized
and companies study to the test
and figure out a way to get an award,
even though they're an airline
consuming 2 billion gallons a year
as an ESG company.
It's become somewhat meaningless.
So the idea of thinking thoughtfully about
climate change, your role in the community, having a robust, diverse workforce, contributing
back to society, I think all of that makes sense. My fear is that ESG has become essentially,
one, a branding opportunity for alternative investment funds who underperform the market
to charge incremental fees by saying they're going to do the work of ESG for you, and that it's nothing but a marketing
ploy for the alternative investments community that has underperformed the S&P by exactly
the amount of its fees. And it's also used by some companies as a giant misdirect from the harm
they're actually doing. Remember British Petroleum and the ad campaign Beyond Petroleum, and they'd have ads of all these guys in lab coats studying algae when about 99.99% of their efforts and
capital were all about drill, baby, drill. So I find some of it, quite frankly, is just BS
and not productive. Everything you mentioned to me is just smart, shareholder-driven strategies.
So let me say one thing, though.
I mean, you can't leave out the fact that the right is trying to weaponize these things, too.
I don't know when the word inclusion became a negative thing.
I just don't understand why inclusion is a bad thing.
But they've made it bad.
They've made it feel like bad.
It reminds me a lot of, if you remember when they were trying to reform health care, which is a laudable thing, they got a lot of traction through death panels. Like there weren't going to be death panels,
but the words worked. And so they managed to make it, these things ugly, which are also
laudable things. I think what Scott's talking about is there becomes, whether it's DEI or ESG,
there becomes these little industries that arise that aren't necessarily good for it. Even if for
shareholders to focus on climate, if your company today and you don't understand the climate crisis
is coming, you're going to be out of business because you're going to be impacted in some way,
whether you're an airline or a hotel or a retailer. Second thing is if you don't understand
how workforces are and changing, and if you don't create an equitable workforce, and again,
when did equity become a terrible thing? It's not a terrible thing. But it is, right? Same thing
with diversity. Diverse companies make for better companies from study after study after study. And
I think what's happened is gotten captured by a certain segment of people that are trying to make
political points on it, whether it's Ron DeSantis or Ramaswamy or whoever. And so, you know, again,
I think Scott's right. Overall, it's laudable, not just laudable, that's not what they should do,
but it's good business to do it, right? And I think that's how it's not been sold, good business,
you know, appeal to greed. Corporate America answers to the bottom line.
And so I think most of their DEI initiatives have been somewhat rooted in one, either actually thinking thoughtfully about shareholder value, or two, using it as a head fake. And that's we've ended up with, Harvard brags that 51% of its freshman class is non-white,
which to me means you've just reshuffled the elites. Letting rich Asian kids into Harvard
doesn't solve the problem. And diversity to me, one, we have anti-discrimination laws,
and we should. If you can prove that you were not hired or you were fired because of something you can't
control, your sexual orientation or your race, you have a legal case against that company.
And I think that's a wonderful thing, and it goes back to the importance of regulation.
I think there's a difference between equality of opportunity and equality of outcomes.
I think certain industries and certain positions are just naturally going to attract certain
people more than others, and I think that's okay.
And I think oftentimes we spend too much time and energy and make companies less productive trying to calibrate our workforce to some weird metric that someone has put pressure
on us to study to. Yeah. And I honestly agree with a lot of the points. I think the term has been,
to use Larry Fink's words, hijacked from both the left and the right. This sort of stuff is not going to solve
all the world's problems,
nor is it the cause of all the problems
or the downfall of corporate America.
At the end of the day,
ESG is just a set of alternative non-financial metrics
that firms can consider or not consider
on the potential impact.
But yeah, I think it often gets confused with
impact investing and things like that, which have a different incentive model versus ESG. And it's
the way I view it, and I think a lot of corporates view it, is purest form is just a way,
new metrics to mitigate risks at firms. Can I ask you a question? Has it been very hard to incorporate now,
given all the noise around it?
ESG less so than DEI, but...
Yeah, it has.
As Scott pointed out, there's a lot of pushback,
primarily from the political arena.
But I honestly think that sort of pressure is helpful.
It helps sort of weed out the BPs who are greenwashing and using it as a head fake.
And it's forcing companies to be much more thoughtful and sharp in how they articulate on these topics.
And they don't get ahead of their skis on some of the things that they're talking about and are looking at things clear-eyed and honest when they discuss it with investors or the public at large.
I have one more question.
I would assume climate would be the most important thing, not just to save the world, but it's
a business necessity on some level, correct?
Yeah.
Understanding the risk that climate's going to pose, whether it's if you have stores and
flooding areas are changing, that's going to impact real estate of companies
or how you're able to source certain raw materials
if those raw materials are impacted by climate change.
So it's just understanding the risks,
but that is primarily one of the bigger focus that we see.
Yeah, and you would even see it with guns, with retailers.
Retailers have been plagued by shootings and everything else.
Everyone's, my feeling on this whole thing is businesses in this case, if they want to do this, that's great.
That's the leadership and you buy into those companies.
If it's Patagonia, people are buying into it for that reason.
Customers are using it for that reason.
In a lot of ways, it's like let people do what they want, right, rather than forcing them to.
of ways, it's like, let people do what they want, right? Rather than forcing them to. But most businesses that are a little more, I don't want to use the term woke because it's gotten so badly,
but that are a little more progressive in that regard, tend to do a little better. You can't
certainly rule by being like you're in the 1950s. But I think a dynamic workforce, especially among
young people, they want other things, it seems to me. It seems when you talk to them
and I don't think it's because they're woke.
I think it's just, they want different things
and you should decide what your company is
at the very beginning.
What a great question.
We appreciate how thoughtful.
One of the things that's great about doing this
is how thoughtful our listeners are
much more so than we are really.
Well, I appreciate the time.
This was great.
Thank you so much for your question.
Scott, how great was it to talk to all these listeners?
I mean, they're really smarter than we are.
That's a conclusion I just made.
I generally registered an emotion of intimidation because I thought,
these people probably see through my bullshit.
I mean, I was struck at how thoughtful and smart these people were.
They are, aren't they? It's crazy.
They're so smart. They're so good.
And they like us.
That's weird.
Professor of astronomy from the Anteaters.
Astronomy, a guy, a smart corporate guy, a guy who like whole foods.
Doctor, Navy doctor.
Doctor, it's so good.
All bad.
Wow, I'm so impressed.
Those were all really thoughtful questions.
And what I liked about it is they're thinking about these questions.
And I hope we all help you all think about them.
One of the things that's critical and the reason we're asking them questions is because
we don't have all the answers. We're just, you know, a couple of white chicks sitting around
talking. And so it's really important to get other people's perspectives. We always like them even
when we don't agree and they challenge us. So anyway, if you've got a question of your own
and you would like answered, send it our way. Go to nymag.com slash pivot to submit a question for the show or call 855-51-PIVOT. You can all see now why we love
our fans. We love them because they're so smart, much smarter than us. Scott, that's the show.
We'll be back on Tuesday with more Pivot. Please read us out.
Today's show was produced by Lara Naiman, Zoe Marcus, and Taylor Griffin. Ernie Andertott
engineered this episode. Thanks also to Drew Burrows and Neil Saverio.
Nishat Kerouan is Vox Media's executive producer of audio.
Make sure you're subscribed to the show wherever you listen to podcasts.
Thanks for listening to Pivot from New York Magazine and Vox 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.