Pivot - Elon’s Texts, TikTok’s Wins and Fails in Europe, and Guest Gabriel Debenedetti
Episode Date: October 4, 2022So many Elon texts. Kara and Scott discuss A-listers’ conversations with Musk, and TikTok’s wins and losses in Europe. Also, Liz Truss’s reversal on tax cuts for the wealthy, and Kim Kardashian�...��s crypto trouble with the SEC. Then, we’re joined by Friend of Pivot, Gabriel Debenedetti about his new book on the relationship between Joe Biden and Barack Obama. You can find Gabriel on Twitter at @gdebenedetti, and you can buy The Long Alliance: The Imperfect Union of Joe Biden and Barack Obama here. You can listen to Kara’s new show, On with Kara Swisher, here. Send us your questions! Call 855-51-PIVOT or go to 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 and the Vox Media Podcast Network.
I'm Kara Swisher.
And I'm Scott Galloway.
So what's going on with the economy over there? Trust looks like she's shifted again. What's
happening? I need an update from London.
So effectively, they've gone back. They've decided to not change. What they had decided to do
was eliminate the top tax rate. So the idea, again, trickle down Reaganomics that if we have our most productive citizens
give them more money, it'll all trickle down to people.
And the market threw up on the idea.
And also I like this move
and I wanna applaud the prime minister.
I think a step back from the wrong direction
is a step in the right direction.
So I see a lot of Twitter activity like,
what an idiot, and oh,
that was quick. You know what? What I like about what she's done, the majority of our leaders in
the US would double down. Oh, it's inflamed the other side, I'll double down. I think it's okay
to say we screwed up. I like this move. It was a bad move, and she's undoing it. Good for her.
Right. Yeah, there's a lot of economic pain coming in the-
And the pound recovered a little bit. The market likes it.
Yeah. That's something Margaret Thatcher might not have done. Anyway, I had a lovely weekend
with Clara's third birthday. I had a lovely toddler birthday party.
Yeah. Mm-hmm. Wow.
Yeah. Yeah.
It starts to get good from here. It starts to get good.
Well, yeah. And then she's good the whole time. And then, well, it's my wedding anniversary. I
took my lovely wife out to a dinner at a beautiful restaurant, six-course meal.
You guys have been married how long?
Two years.
Two years, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
We've been together longer than that.
But yeah, wedding.
We had a little outdoor wedding during the pandemic.
So today is our actual anniversary.
Same thing as Barack Obama's and Michelle Obama's, just so you're aware.
I'm just impressed you remember your anniversary.
I couldn't tell you what my anniversary was.
Oh, no.
We had a lovely meal.
It was really very fancy.
It had a wine pairing.
It was very nice.
So I want you to wish Amanda a happy anniversary and Clara a happy birthday.
Happy anniversary, Amanda.
Thanks for jumping on that grenade.
What about Clara?
We need a Clara one.
The golden child.
Give her her due. She's three. She got a lovely present. She got a bike.
Come see Uncle Scott. Come to London., so I will say we haven't. It's not her actual birthday for a day or two, but this is when the party was. I got her a frozen
headset, headphones. She's going to love me more than ever. That's really shocking because the
cracks in the Vox research department came back and said that our two most loyal viewers are tech
bros and three-year-old girls. I also got you frozen headphones for Christmas, so I'm so excited to give them to you.
Anyway.
You know, I would wear those.
You would.
Just as a conversation starter.
They're very comely, and they'd show up well on that pate of yours, that pate.
Otherwise, I fought against people who don't like Scott Galloway this weekend.
It was stupid of me, but I can't stand them when they're just mean to you.
I don't like it.
I'm sorry.
Yeah, you know what?
I was really flattered. So what Kara's referring to is I wrote a blog post, Numeris Nimalis, on identity. And essentially,
one of the things, after writing this book, where I'm trying to identify the issues ailing America
such that we can talk about solutions, I generally think our biggest problem, what I recognize is I
think we've never been stronger geopolitically.
I think if you're an honest appraisal of where America is right now, we're somewhere good to great externally relative to our competitive set.
Food independent, energy independent, GDP, consistent GDP growth.
Everybody wants to come here.
I think what really ails us, our biggest problem is we don't like each other.
We're turning on each other.
Yeah.
we don't like each other. We're turning on each other. And we no longer believe that Americans'
greatest allies are other Americans, that if we're a horror movie, the call's coming from inside of the house. And I said, is there a way to enforce some sort of third party or
decentralized identity such that if Russian or Chinese troll farms come in and just try and
create incendiary content
that pits us against one another, could you more easily figure that out and then screen
out that shit or vile content or what have you, or promoting a cryptocurrency through
thousands of bots?
Yeah.
You just put out some ideas, some of which people disagree with, which you noted, which
you noted.
Yeah.
And what I find is similar to whenever you talk about 230 or crypto, there's an absolutist mentality where it's not, let's discuss the issue.
It's like, okay, you insanely rich shithead. Yeah, I agree. That's what pissed me off.
They kind of go after, stop, you can't respond. Like, easy for you to say a person of privilege
that doesn't live in China. It's like, okay, how do I respond to that? And Mama Bear came out swinging.
I did.
I was like, you know what?
Here's the thing.
He's an insanely rich idiot, but he's my insanely rich idiot.
There you go.
Okay, first of all.
And secondly, like, that's exactly right.
It was like, don't agree with him.
And then he's like, because Scott influences scads of companies.
I was like, why don't you write about, like, I don't know, Tim Cook or, you know,
Sunar Pichai. Everyone everywhere listens to me. I know. I'm like, why don't you write about, like, I don't know, Tim Cook or, you know, Sunder Pichai.
Everyone everywhere listens to me.
I know.
I'm like, really?
Really?
Like, come on.
Like, I wasn't saying minimizing you, but I was like, okay, first of all, you're using an insanely rich excuse, which I'm like, weak, weak.
Like, have an actual debate.
And this is a guy I respect, Mike Masnick, and he and I have argued about 230.
I tend to be on his side on this issue, too.
And then, you know, like the Jeff Jarvis's world came out and had to have their say,
patronizingly.
But it was really weird.
I was like, let's have our actual debate about this and talk about it.
No, they're not interested in that.
Well, he's usually, I find some of his analysis, but lately he's been like, Amy Klobuchar's
an idiot.
You're an idiot.
I'm like, you know what?
Actually, I'd like to have an actual debate. And I tend to be on his side on a lot of things compared to you.
Like, I disagreed with you last week because of that. But nonetheless, no one's going to do that
to Scott. But let's just bring this down. We do try to like reverse engineer to a learning here
for a younger person. That's correct. That is correct. And the learning here for me is,
if you're not, I consider myself a thought leader and I realize
how arrogant that statement is.
If you're not on a regular basis saying things that really gets a lot of pushback, then you're
not saying anything.
Right.
And the key isn't to be right or wrong.
The key is to catalyze a conversation that might result in productive dialogue that shapes
and reshapes better solutions.
Right.
And I get it wrong all the time.
And by the way, I just didn't have the energy to go
on last night and respond. What I would say is I wouldn't get back in his face. I'd say, boss,
post where I got it wrong in the studies and I'll retweet it. I want to get to a better solution.
I realize I don't have a monopoly on the truth here, but there has to be some,
it's worth thinking about right now because thereed. Because there are too many people.
I mean, you saw what happened with the Women's March, how bad actors got in there and basically
ruined a woman's career and started reshaping people's view of the Women's March.
There's got to be a technical solution or new incentives to screen that stuff out.
There's got to be a way to stop.
I would agree.
It's a complex topic.
But nonetheless, you're a rich guy who's flying around like some like it was it was so insane. Like, I was like, that's, you've lost me
on this one. Anyway, I defended you and I think you should have. And I don't always agree with
you, by the way, FYI. I don't always agree with me. I know, exactly. Sometimes I write shit and
I'm like, well, I don't know about this. I was actually, I was doing some of it from the three
year old party. I was like, fuck you. Oh, would you like a cupcake? That's why you were angry.
Now I understand why you came in so hot.
No, no, no.
I was just annoyed by that.
I was super annoyed.
Because we try to get to comedy here, which is really good.
Anyway, there's a lot going on.
Also, Amazon is facing lawmakers led by Senator Elizabeth Warren want the FTC to block the
company's acquisition of iRobot, which was interesting.
Warren says the company's code shouldn't be allowed to just buy their way out of competing. And Amazon spokesperson
said of the letter request, the letter contains a number of falsehoods and is broadly inaccurate,
which of course they don't point to anything. But we talked about this. I don't know if the FTC will
do this because it's quite a competitive arena. Again, Amazon's being very canny in what it's
buying. MGM, tough, kind of competitive in the entertainment business, tough in the robot, well, vacuum business, I guess, what they're doing there.
Home presence, I don't know what to call it.
This is a master class.
I like Senator Warren.
Do I like Senator Warren?
I think she's fighting the good fight.
But I think she's more right than effective.
And I just don't think this is where
they should be focusing their energy
in terms of the antitrust case to go after.
And what's gonna happen is
she's gonna spend her political capital
railing against Amazon
because they're big and powerful.
And that's not what antitrust is about.
You're allowed to be big and powerful.
Does this make the market less competitive?
And I don't know much about home appliances, but my
nascent knowledge of the home appliance market is there's no monopoly that's emerged,
that there's Dyson, there's Hoover, there's a lot of them. And this is where she decides to put her
wood. There's only one drone one. I don't even know of another one. Maybe there's some from China.
This is a very specific kind of vacuum cleaner. There's Swiffer Picker Upper?
I don't know. I know, but there's not that many drone ones. There's not that many drone. I don't even know of another one. Maybe there's some from China. This is a very specific kind of- There's Swiffer Picker Upper? I don't know.
I know, but there's not that many drone ones.
There's not that many drone.
I don't know quite why this is the one there.
Speaking of other legal issues,
Kim Kardashian is settling a charge
for promoting a crypto called Ethereum Max
without disclosing that it was an ad.
Kardashian was paid $250,000 for the post.
Incredible.
As part of the settlement,
she's agreed to pay $1.26 million
and not promote any cryptocurrencies for three years. First shot across the bow on this one.
There's a lot of celebrities sucked into this. I think this is foreplay to what will be a much
bigger set of fines and investigations around people who are not transparent around their
intentions when they go on media to try and pump the value of something.
And her, what's different here is my understanding
is she didn't disclose that she had a position here
or that she was getting paid.
Right.
But I think this is the tip of the iceberg.
And I think what we're gonna stare down
when we do the analysis, especially around SPACs,
and we had all of these individuals going on media platforms
and using their massive Twitter followings to essentially pump and then dump. I think that
there's going to be some sort of regulation, and I think it'll be warranted, that says, all right,
if you own over X percent of a company and you're on CNBC making a compelling argument and then
using your Twitter followership to promote it and go after anyone who dares
question you. And at the same time, you are selling like there's no tomorrow, that people
should have transparency into that. What I think the rub here is that we're going to find out so
many people made hundreds of millions or even billions as others lost money. And that is the
Adam Newman effect. Should you get a commission on other people's losses?
And it's always the same algorithm.
I have a big Twitter following, I'm very charismatic,
media loves me on because I say provocative things.
I make it such that I'm not on the board of the company
so I can sell stock without making disclosures.
No, she's a paid celebrity spokesmodel, essentially.
This is different because she should disclose that, right?
But I think this is a bridge to a broader conversation around how do we ensure people understand not only your incentives but your actions when they're on CNBC pumping a stock and that afternoon selling it.
This is interesting.
Gary Gensler said Ms. Kardashian's case serves as a reminder to celebrities and others that the law requires them to disclose to the public when and how they're paid to promote investing in securities.
There's lots of Floyd Merriweather was involved, and there's lots of celebrities. Now, this is
interesting. Her attorney said Ms. Kardashian fully cooperated with the SEC from the very
beginning. She remains willing to do whatever she can do to assist the SEC in this manner.
She wanted to get this matter behind her to avoid a protracted dispute. The agreement she reached
with the SEC allows her to do that
so she can move forward with many different business pursuits.
That also includes she just co-founded a consumer-focused private equity firm
with a former Carlyle Group partner, and they're looking to do a debut firm.
She's doing a lot of stuff, actually.
And so, yeah, I agree.
I mean, they have gotten into trouble for versions of this before,
but there's a lot more here.
There's a lot more here.
And I agree, in the SPACs area, you've been very vocal on this issue.
But you said this.
It's easy to stereotype Kim Kardashian because of her physical appearance and just how hot she is.
I think she's actually a pretty savvy businesswoman.
Yeah, she's new to get out of this.
But she handled it well.
She knew she was wrong.
She didn't double down.
She didn't appeal it.
She said, she basically said,
"'You're right, I'm wrong.
Here's the fine.
I apologize.
Let's all move on."
That she didn't have to admit wrongdoing.
Yeah.
She acknowledged the issue and she's paying it.
She's not, I think it was poor judgment.
I mean, it goes back to the trust thing. Everybody fucks up.
The key is you don't necessarily need to double down.
The SEC, the population, everybody loves to forgive.
Admit you were wrong.
Pay the fine.
Move on.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And they can make a case of or just scare other people.
And there'll be a lot more.
You'll see a lot more of this.
It's very easy for the SEC to do these, by the way.
They can make some money and settle very quickly with most people. All right, let's get to our first big story.
tech A-listers like Jack Dorsey and Joe Lonsdale, in which they discussed the Twitter deal.
Joe Rogan, as we've talked about before, and even Gayle King were in the mix. Among the revelation,
Matthias Doppner of Axel Springer wanted to be Twitter's CEO. Elon pitched Oprah as a potential board member. By the way, that's been pitched before by Jack Dorsey. He said that he shouldn't
be anyone's boss. He also was in a discussion with Brett Taylor about bots. And that was,
to me, the more important thing.
Some of this stuff is just kind of fun and games of them talking. But two weeks before he signed
the merger agreement, he wrote to Brett Taylor, purging fake users will make the numbers look
terrible. So restructuring should be done as a private company. And so I think it puts him
in a very bad position in this court case. He's got to settle and figure out this $11 billion
difference between what he agreed to pay for it and what Twitter's worth right now. He's got
this, some of these texts are, as I said, silly. The others are very significant, I think.
Well, I think you've zeroed in on it. And that is, this is celebrity porn,
and it has some, it's illuminating about rich people in society, but the substance
is exactly what you said, that he knew about the bots.
He was planning to address the bots.
It was a key component of why he was drawn to the platform was he somehow was shocked by the number of bots,
that he knew about it and that his interest in this thing waned when he came off his
manic episode and realized he was paying $45 billion for something worth probably $18 billion.
I mean, I'm curious to get your take. And when I read these texts, at first I thought,
should I be reading the texts of other people commenting? I'm like, well, it's part of a case.
It's a legal case. Sure.
Yeah, a few things really struck me. The first is just income inequality. And I know that sounds
classist, but Larry Ellison offering a billion dollars on a deal he hasn't looked at over text,
it's like- Well, Sam Bankman Freed also wanted to give money,
five billion. He'll come and fly out there and then it'll be a handshake.
And give you $5 or $10 billion?
Yeah.
It's just like, I mean, Kara, who hasn't had a friend offer him a billion dollars over text?
Would you fly here and give me money, Scott?
I mean, really.
So, I just want to bring this back to me.
In late, I think it was 99 or 2000, my company Red Envelope was struggling and we had to raise more money.
And Sequoia came in and smelled blood and said, okay, let's wash out the founders and do a rights offering.
And I didn't have any money to defend my position in the company.
And my friends Greg and Cindy Shove, I'll always remember this.
I was really stressed out.
I was going through a divorce.
I was broke and I was about to get washed out of a company I'd started.
You know, kind of the classic, the Silicon Valley story you don't hear about in Fast Company.
And I was just so stressed and disappointed on a number of personal and professional things going on in my life.
And my friends Greg and Cindy Shove called me from the car and they said, hey, we were just talking about you.
And they said, could you use a million dollars?
What?
Can you imagine that?
I mean, they're good friends.
Yeah.
But they called me and said, could you use a million dollars? And you know what I said? What? Can you imagine that? I mean, they're good friends. Yeah. But they called me
and said, could you use a million dollars? And you know what I said? What? Yes. And they wired
me the money. No agreement. This is a rich guy's thing. This is a rich guy's story. And I paid
them back. I paid them back with interest. But I remember thinking that was the most crazy,
generous thing. Yeah. And they have taught me. I've tried to pay it forward on a regular basis, and now I'm virtue signaling.
I call and offer people money when I get the sense they're stressed about money.
Oh, that's interesting.
I'm very stressed about money.
At the time.
Nice try.
Nice try.
Clara needs a new pair of shoes.
That's right.
Anniversary gift.
See, the key is you've got to forget the anniversary.
I got a beautiful gift.
And I thought that was the most, and it was, extraordinary thing that had ever happened to me on a friendship money level.
This is Larry Ellison offering a thousand times that.
Although he was sort of pushing him off, like, I'll get to you, like that kind of thing.
That's how little it mattered to him.
Yeah, I mean, these people, you want to talk about playing on a different level. So the
first thing is, and I don't know what to do about it. And I realized I'm coming, this is class
warfare, but I'm like, Jesus Christ, these people really have this much money. Yeah. Well, they all
want a piece of Twitter. They all want a piece of, they were like, I'd like to get a good idea,
like a piece of Twitter. I could see that going through their little brain because they can't own,
they can buy almost anything else.
This they can't buy.
So that would be-
The second thing is the Achilles heel
of every really famous wealthy person
is they become so entrenched in their own bubble
and they have so many people around them
telling them they're amazing,
they just lose touch.
And the sycophantry here is so overwhelming. Just how, I mean,
it's just like, let's just give everyone a moment to take his dick out of your mouth. I mean,
it's just like, my God. Yeah, there was a lot of it. There was a lot of that. But again,
it doesn't matter. The one to Brett Taylor, I think I wrote him, whoa, want to do an interview.
I think that's what I wrote. I mean, I didn't text them. I think I emailed them. Away from all of this and the Oprah on the board. Again, Jack Dorsey,
many years ago, wanted to bring Oprah. Many times have they thought about Oprah on the board of
Twitter when they were looking for a lady. But she's not getting near this. Let's just say Oprah
is a little smarter. The most interesting story is about my stalker in those texts.
Jason Kalkanis. Well, they're very close friends, just so you know.
Okay, he's a close friend. Two or three months ago, Matt Levine wrote that Jason was out there
marketing access to the Twitter deal and saying that I can get you into the Twitter deal. And he
was going to take a fee for it and then 10% of the upside. And then, and I'm like, that sounds
desperate. We even sat on the show. I said, that sounds kind of desperate that Elon has to get Jason Kalkanis, who deals in pretty small checks to raise money for a $45 billion deal.
Here are the texts, must to Kalkanis. What's going on with you marketing an SPV to randos?
This is not okay. Not randos. I have the largest angel syndicate. That's how I invest. We've done
250 plus deals. And then he goes on to say,
Morgan Stanley and Jared think you are using our friendship not in a good way.
This makes it seem like I'm desperate. Please stop. So, Jason was out there marketing access
to a security that he did not have permission to market.
Right.
To me, that is-
Well, I think that was good for Elon, though.
I mean, in that case, I was like, good on Elon for doing that.
I think these texts, on the whole, actually reflect fairly well on Elon.
I would agree.
I would agree. Who they reflect poorly on is his.
All his hangers-on are in Friends and who are trying to get in on him.
Then Jason goes on to say, I'll die for the sword for you.
I'll jump on any grenade.
Yeah, they say that all the time.
He comes across like a man-whore who gets caught stealing his watch and then drops to his knees hoping if he fellates him, he'll forget about the watch he's just tried to steal.
Too much?
Yes, a little bit.
That's how he talks.
But in any case, I think what he's got to wonder is like who's his friends and who's not his friends.
And I think that's hard when you're that rich.
It doesn't matter.
No matter what you do.
I've said this to so many of these billionaires. I'm like,
I'm your best friend because I don't care, that kind of thing. I just want the interview,
of course. Anyway, one of the things that he does was he openly sparred with Parag Agrawal.
Oh, yeah.
Obviously, if he is forced to buy it, Parag will not have the job. I continue to believe,
and I've been texting with people who know, you know, Ari Emanuel, like, entered the picture. That's probably a good idea to have someone who's close to Elon who will, he's very
convincing and charming. There's all these relationships, Ari, between Ari and Egan Durbin,
who's on the board of Twitter, or what, he's on the board of Twitter still. And he also was,
I think, he was very close to Ari through the WME deal. I believe he's still on the board there. He may not still be.
But he was very integral to that deal.
There's all kinds of interpersonal relationships here.
If Elon was smart, he would let people who are smarter on this stuff make the deal and get the hell out of it.
There's an $11 billion delta.
So somewhere between zero and $11 billion, there's a number that he should take and run
as fast as he can. But you bring up another key point is that in addition to trusting people
or having third parties do a deal, I used to think when I was younger, I was too smart. And
when I did an M&A deal that I would do the deal myself and I quickly learned that's really stupid.
There's a reason why investment bankers make so much money and third parties are better
representing you than you are yourself. There's another lesson here, and that is you have to have in your circle
people who are prone to disagree with you. And if you look at corporate governance history,
whether it's Theranos, whether it's Enron, the boards all had one thing in common.
They all got along too well.
They all agreed with each other on everything.
All the board meetings were super civil.
Great point.
That's what we should do.
Never questioning the CEO.
Just go along, get along.
And this guy has absolutely no guardrails.
He's got a few.
That's not true.
There's a few people around him that do.
I just hope they get some voice.
They're not texting him.
No, but I think Ari Emanuel and Egan Durbin will probably, they all want to have good relationships with him,
but I suspect they will be, Ari will be charming and also tough. And so, because he's always
looking for the angle, right? And same thing with Egan, very smart investor from Silver Lake.
I would, Elon, if you're listening, please listen to them. Just get to
a settlement here, because if not, it's going to just drag on and going to occupy your life.
I don't think it can.
I think it can. I think it can. Through these texts, I was like, oh, there's the Elon I know.
There's the Elon I know.
But play it out, Kara. Say he offers him $10 billion. The shareholders go, no, this deal,
this legal case against him that he's going to lose is worth $20 billion. And I don't think
he's going to pay that. Well, there's an $11 billion delta. So I don't know. I think everyone's
going to want to, like, if not, they're going to end up with nothing. Everyone's got to be very
clear. If they keep going at this, they're going to end up, you know, they keep fighting and
everyone's going to end up without anything.
So two other observations.
Okay.
I haven't been involved in a deal this big, but I've been in the center of like multi-hundred million dollar, even low single digit billion dollar deals.
Elon went from going on the board to deciding he was going to acquire the firm.
And when he decided he was going to acquire the firm and no longer want to be inside the tent, he put out a tweet saying, is Twitter dying?
And then Parag, I thought,
sent exactly the right email.
He said, look, boss,
you can say what you want,
but you're not helping.
I thought that was direct.
I thought that was CEO behavior.
Yeah, Parag's like that.
That's his nature too, very.
And Elon wrote back,
what have you done this week?
What have you gotten accomplished this week?
And I thought,
yeah, that was kind of an asshole move.
You don't, and most, I've dealt with corporate raiders who are very aggressive.
They maintain a certain level of decorum respect for other people.
It's not like him. He's very direct.
And Elon doesn't do that. The other big observation, I believe if you got a room of people
who make okay livings, but aren't rich, and then you got a room of millionaires together,
and I realize this doesn't sound great. I think you could immediately figure out which room were
the millionaires and which room were the people who are just doing okay. I think if you had two
rooms with millionaires and one with billionaires, you wouldn't be able to tell the difference.
And the thing that comes out here is these people are playing checkers, not chess.
They're impressive people, but the reason they're billionaires and not millionaires is mostly luck.
It's mostly not their fault.
And when you see the way they behave, the way they equip themselves, it's pretty obvious.
There's no secret sauce there other than being born at the right place in the right time.
Well, I don't know about that.
Some of the people, I was listening to an interview that I'd forgotten that Steve Jobs did with Walt Nye, and it's so smart. He was talking about making mistakes and also iterations in tech. And I'm going to send it to you because I was like, oh, my God, this guy really did have a big risk, where not to make the risk. It was so well thought out.
I think some of them are, and I think among these people, when you get him going, when
he's not in this weird celebrity bubble, he is very smart like that.
You can have a really fascinating discussion.
I think the problem is these suck-ups that these texts showed you.
You should see this all day long.
Hey, dude.
Hey, bro.
Good job.
Woo.
That kind of stuff. And sometimes, you know, he deserves a good job, like landing that rocket
on a thing. I'm sure I sent him a text that said, fucking impressive. But it's not because I wanted
anything from him. It just was. And you should acknowledge that.
The relationship between intelligence and wealth is positive. There's a correlation,
but it tops out at about 110 or 120 IQ. The difference
between intelligent people and geniuses, there's no correlation with wealth. And I think that there
are a lot of the really impressive comments you just highlighted from Steve Jobs. I can find you
a lot of people who are just so strikingly impressive and they've made a really good living.
I have never been able to discern the difference between someone who is successful and someone who is a billionaire, other than luck. Yeah, that's the problem you have with me,
right? That's the thing. I'm brilliant. Anyway, why isn't she a billionaire?
Case in point. Case in point. Anyways, they put their pants on one leg at a time. You know,
whenever I get, I don't know about you, whenever I get, occasionally I get an offer, someone will
say, my husband loves the show and is dying to meet you and wants advice and I'll donate X to a charity.
I never say no because I'm like, they're going to be disappointed.
Your husband has this vision of me that's just not reality.
Oh, don't be mean.
I meet with everybody.
I'm not being mean.
Don't be mean.
Be nice to your fans.
Be nice to your fans.
They're nice to you.
Anyway, let's go on a quick break.
We come back. We come back.
We come back.
TikTok's European numbers are out and they're huge.
And we'll speak with a friend of Pivot, Gabriel DiBenedetti, about the hidden sides of the Biden-Obama relationship.
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Scott, we're back. TikTok is tallying up some huge gains and losses in Europe and filings with the UK.
The app reported close to a billion dollars in turnover for 2021, according to Financial Times.
That's nearly six times its previous take in Europe.
On the other hand, it lost nearly $900 million.
The company says the staff compensation was the primary cause.
It's been higher than like crazy.
I spoke with TikTok COO Vanessa Pappas out getting certified by the Committee on Foreign
Investment in the US. Should TikTok go through a similar process for its European businesses? I did
ask her and she didn't answer. She was much firmer. I asked her what she would have said to Josh Hawley
if she had thought a little harder. She was talking about the reductive nature of those
things and everything else. She was pretty good in this interview, very strong. They're thriving
in Europe. They're thriving everywhere. They're losing money, certainly, but it's certainly a business on
the upswing and certainly would be able to be profitable, presumably, as long as they get these
go-aheads in these countries. What do you think? It's unprecedented. This firm, I mean, keep in
mind, okay, a billion dollars and still losing money. The year before. Years ago, click by pretty quickly.
They grew 500%. This firm is growing much faster revenue-wise. Revenues, users, daily active users
are all growing faster than Google or Facebook did at a similar point in those companies' history.
Facebook did at a similar point in those companies' history. So, if you just take a straight line out,
this company should be, if it can maintain this trajectory, it should be one of the three or four most valuable companies in the world in five to 10 years. Yeah, I agree with you. I think it's
really interesting. I think that they, I think they're going to be a little more aggressive on
the attacks, like you saying they should be banned. A very impressive executive from Google,
was a former Google executive, worked at YouTube,
really does know this creator economy very well.
Perfect choice for them in lots of ways.
Well, how did she surprise you?
I'm curious, what was your takeaway
after speaking to her about all this?
She was quite forthright about their efforts.
And I thought she could have done the Facebook thing,
and she didn't.
Very canny person, I think.
I think she answered pretty much every question.
And there were a lot of tough ones in there about the banning.
Does she want to spin?
It seems to me that'd be the answer.
No, they do not.
That's not where they're going.
It's going to be owned by ByteDance.
I think that's not where they're going.
I think, of course, she didn't answer the IPO question because, of course, she'll do very well and others.
She was a little lighter on who's really running it and who has the things.
But she said they don't have control of it in U.S. decisions in China. That said, she had a better answer about the Chinese
Communist Party members, as we talked about. You know, Apple probably has a few. She can't ask
them that. It'd be silly not to say they aren't there because there's lots of people in China.
I thought she answered well. I think they will pass the U.S. rules that
they need to with adequate protections. And I don't know what will happen after that. She'd
seem to push off an IPO or a spinoff right now. But let me ask you, you know, I think you sort
of have an inside track or view into a lot of different parties around this issue. Do you think ByteDance ever gets public in its current form without severe, does this happen? Did you ask her about that,
supposedly, the deal they're working on with Biden? I've heard rumors there.
Yes. Yeah, yeah, yeah. No, she said they're working on it and it's going to come soon.
She was very clear. She's like, they're going to have a deal where it's going to be safe.
The information is safe, she said, and it will be very clear and transparent, safe.
No, she didn't pretend there weren't issues on TikTok, and it's the friendly. She goes,
we are trying to be the friendly entertainment brand, and we're going to get all kinds of the
same crap that ends up on Twitter or Facebook we're going to get, and we have to move towards
getting rid of it. She very clearly understood the worries and was not acting like it was stupid, any of it. And of
course, that's what you should do. So there you go. It's an impressive woman. She is. She was
very impressive. One of the things that she did note that a lot of the ownership is foreign. I
brought up the issue, there's a branch of ByteDance, the ByteDance tech that the government
official sits on the board. This is one of the divisions, separate division of it. And she made the also salient point that a lot of ByteDance and this company is owned by U.S. owners. There's all kinds of U.S. owners of this thing. Do you at the Code. I think they're smart, thoughtful people.
If they sign off on something, I would just be prone to say I think they've done the homework.
And also, when you're on Code, on stage, or you're on Bill Maher, and this is one of the many things I need to work on, I'm prone to being provocative to get attention.
You are, yeah. But lots of people said the same thing at Code, not just you. and this is one of the many things I need to work on. I'm prone to being provocative to get attention.
You are, yeah.
I don't- But lots of people said the same thing at Code,
not just you, but go ahead.
I know, but what I'm increasingly uncomfortable with
is the idea of using the terms ban and media
in the same sentence.
Yeah, you've said that.
It's a bit of a shift, yeah.
And I think that there's gotta be some sunlight
in between here.
But I still go back to the notion that you're going to have to separate the product and the ownership, but the ownership has a direct influence over or the CCP has influence over it.
Or could.
I can't get over how powerful this thing is.
Anyway, let's bring in our friend of Pivot.
Give it. Gabriel DiBenedetti is a national correspondent for New York Magazine and the author of The Long Alliance, the Imperfect Union of Joe Biden and Barack Obama, which looks at the
often misunderstood relationship between the two presidents. Welcome, Gabriel.
It's great to be here. Thanks for having me.
So what do we get wrong about the Obama-Biden relationship? Because people tend to have their
thoughts about it. We think of it as warm and friendly. They did all those videos,
getting ice creams, things like that. Can you talk about it? I was having a discussion
with someone about vice presidents, including Vice President Harris. I'm like, they never really
get along. They're there to replace them. But what are your thoughts?
Yeah, I think you're sort of touching on the
central tension here. The public perception of this relationship is that it's a bromance. That's
what people have called it for a long time. That's partially true. It's definitely true,
as I've come to see it, that it's the closest relationship between a president and vice
president or president and former president, you know, in modern history. But that's a really low
bar. And the reality here is that they are friends, which is
unusual, but it's a political relationship before anything else. And it has been for over 20 years
now. These are two men whose relationship has fluctuated wildly, often behind the scenes in
ways that are not known to the public, and who see the world very differently at times, whose
perceptions of ways that you make change are very different. And even to this day, it's not as if Biden is calling Obama that often for advice. They still do talk, but it's much more
like therapy than it is, you know, what should I do on this bill or who should I be calling on this?
So, you know, they're vastly different men as we've come to see by their times as president.
And that has borne out over, you know, their 20 years of knowing each other now. So for me,
the reason that I decided to write this was basically, you know, when Biden won, so many people were saying,
this is going to be the third term of Obama, or at least the tone of the coverage was
Obama's back, baby. You know, the last four years didn't happen. As we've seen now for two years,
that's clearly not the case. No, they're not at all the same. I'm just curious. And then Scott
will have a question is, you know, Bush and Cheney certainly had a close relation, but that was more like master and submissive sound, it felt like.
Sure, but by the end of their time together, they really didn't have much of a relationship.
And, you know, if you look back, Gore and Clinton, obviously, same sort of idea.
They did not have a good relationship by the end.
You know, the only other one that you can kind of compare this to in terms of president and former president, not president and VP, is the Bushes. But of course, they had a very complicated
relationship too. And obviously, they're father and son. So different to start here. But there's,
like you alluded to at the beginning, the fact of the Biden and Obama relationship being
this one that we sort of hold up in the public consciousness as what it's supposed to be,
it's really sort of been unfortunate for the for the harris vice presidency because so many people
say well why aren't they so close well the expectation was never that they were going to
be best friends until the obama and biden years but we can talk more about that yeah isn't it a
relationship that's set up to fail because you what you have is two adversaries that you choose
your vp not because it's someone you're going to get along with. You choose your VP because it's someone who's shown the ability. I mean, I think Vice President
Harris, as Vice President, she got on the debate stage because she's incredibly impressive,
or at least her resume. But the reason she was chosen as Vice President was she really went
after Biden and was effective. I mean, doesn't the relationship just start from a position of failure? Well, these two certainly didn't have a relationship that
started. It wasn't even that it was a failure from the beginning. It was like a non-entity,
this relationship. They knew each other in the Senate, obviously, but they just didn't have any
reason to really care about each other for the longest time, even though they worked together
on Biden's Foreign Relations Committee. So it took a really long time. And, you know, when Obama essentially decided he did want Biden to be the one to be his vice president,
first off, Biden didn't really want to be considered partially, you know, artifice.
But the reality was he didn't think he'd be a very good number two.
He'd been in the Senate for 36 years.
You know, why would he want to, for the first time in his life, be someone's second in command?
He thought he could be secretary of state, which is a much better job in terms of autonomy, at least.
But then, you know, when it came time for them to actually have their first conversation about this, Obama said to Biden, I need you to just promise me that this is the capstone of your career.
That's the only way this is going to work.
And Biden's response was, oh, not the tombstone.
The joke being, OK, this is the end of the career, obviously.
But they never really hashed that out in a serious way.
And in fact, if you look at the New York Times story from the morning after Biden was chosen, one of the final lines says something to the effect of, you know, it's really convenient for Obama that he's not going to have to worry about Biden's political posturing because obviously Biden is going to be too old to run for president after their eight years together.
You know, at the time, that was conventional wisdom.
That's certainly what Obama thought.
Almost immediately, though, their differing views of politics, it's true that
they agreed over the long term on a lot of policy points, but they definitely disagreed a lot over
their eight years together in terms of how to actually achieve those goals.
So, Gabriel, what's the actual state of the relationship today? And how helpful can he be
to Biden-Obama in 2024? Obama's sort of been wandering around doing podcast deals and being a friendly guy, but not particularly political, I would say.
Yeah, he's doing a little bit more than he expected to be doing at this point in his post-presidency.
But that's a Trump thing, not a Biden thing, obviously, a reaction to the Trump years.
There's a few different answers to this.
The short version of what the relationship is like now, you know, Obama took a long time to get involved with Biden 2020, but he eventually did and was very useful to him. At this point, they're sort of talking every few weeks or so, but it's very informal. Unlike any other call that Biden has, except for a family member, no one else is on the call when he does these calls. So it's very hard to get a read out of what they are, because they are personal conversations. but it's much more gut checks. It's like I said, someone once referred to it to me as
political therapy. He's not saying, what should I do in Afghanistan? What should I do with this bill?
And Obama has said that he's going to be as useful as Biden wants him to be. And he's not
offering advice unprompted. He is trying to live his own life. He's got his own projects. He's
trying to be a postman. He used to joke, or even before he became president, that the best job in the world wasn't president,
it's the ex-president. So he's been thinking about this for a long time, what he would do
as a post-president. But the question of 2024 is a really delicate one for both of them.
And the midterms, too, because I assume he's got more of a draw for the midterms
than Biden does, correct?
No doubt. And he's going to be out there.
He's already said that he's going to be out there campaigning for folks.
He's endorsed some people.
He's cutting ads.
You know, same as always with him in the midterms.
Same thing he did in 2018.
Except that this time he's talked a little bit more about to people who are, you know,
trying to figure out what his presence is going to look like.
He's talked about more what it would look like for him to have more of a presence when
it comes to talking about the future of the democracy issues. He talks about disinformation a lot. And one thing I think we're
going to see him do is campaign for, cut ads for, endorse even secretary of state candidates in the
midterms, you know, all the way down the ballot to that, because those are the people who are
administering the elections in 24. But when it comes to the question of whether Biden should
run in 24, you know, they actually have not discussed it. There's been some reporting to
the contrary, but they haven't discussed it. And one of the reasons is Biden doesn't really
think it's a question. He thinks he's going to run again. But the more probably important
politically question is presidential elections are difficult for them to talk about because the
first time they had to have this discussion for real was 2016. And that's when Obama essentially
pushed Clinton to run over Biden. Now, Biden obviously
had the personal mitigating circumstances. His son was very ill and then passed away.
But Biden saw very clearly that Obama also had made a political calculus, which he did,
which was, I don't think that Biden is the right person to succeed me in this moment.
He didn't think he was the future of the party or of the country. And then in 2020,
it took a really long time for Obama to get on board with Biden as well. And at one point, they had a conversation,
and Obama's version of dissuading Biden in 2020 was essentially to say, I mean, this is late 2018,
he said, you know, Joe, you really don't have to do this. Then Biden essentially said to him,
sorry, Trump's the president, I think I have a good chance.
Yeah, Obama, bad calculation by Obama, in my estimation.
And of course, Obama at this time was talking to every other person on earth who wanted to run for president because he had said that he was willing to.
So, you know, Biden took a lot of this stuff pretty personally, even though he tried really hard not to.
So, which is all a long way of saying it's not shouldn't be that surprising that they're not talking about 2024.
Because if you're Biden, you know, the public image might be that they're best friends and they're advising each other on everything. But clearly not, right? It's
not as if he would go to Obama as a first port of call for, should I be doing this again?
Yeah. As someone who is a Beto fan, Scott, what do you think about this?
So I'm curious, Gabriel, whenever you really get to know a relationship between two presidents,
it's going to yield insight about the individual presidents. Is there one or two things you can tell us about President Obama
or President Biden that would surprise us or that surprised you?
Sure. I think one of the things about Biden that has surprised me is he is a lot like the public
image that he has tried to portray for himself. And what I mean by that is he is someone who genuinely does do things like read Irish poetry and think of himself in these historical terms
at this point. And it took him a really long time to do that. He's someone who is, and this is a
related point, very self-conscious. He's been very wary of how other people view him his whole
career and has been, in you know very self-conscious
about not having an ivy league education for for one thing he talks about that all the time behind
the scenes still um but at the same time you know now he has been thinking a lot about what am i in
history he doesn't like to say that out loud because he understands how it sounds but that
is really how he how he is and with obama i think people might not, because of the public perception of how his
post-presidency has been, people might not understand this, but I think he has been changing
a lot in his post-presidency as he thinks about what he represented. He obviously still thinks
that he was a very successful president, but I think that he now sees himself on this continuum
of history much more precariously than he did before, because, of
course, the Trump experience has, you know, thrown into some serious questions what the, you know,
what the Obama legacy will ultimately be, especially if Trump comes back. But Obama remains this sort
of like singularly self-confident figure in American politics. And that really comes through,
even as they discuss, even in their, you in their private conversations over the course of their relationship.
And even in the earliest days, you know, I tell the story in the book, but the first time they ever met one on one or ever sat down was when Obama wanted to join the Foreign Relations Committee as a brand new senator, 99th in seniority.
Biden invites him over to his office and essentially says, sure, yeah, you know, come on over.
We'll talk. And obviously Biden's going to let him on the committee because he can see that he's a rising star, even if he's not so sure about him. And at
the end of this quick conversation, Biden says, well, I got to go to Wilmington, you got to go to
Chicago, but this was good. Let's go, let's sit down and have a proper dinner sometime and get
to know each other. And Biden says, you know, we can just get this, I know a cheap place,
cheap Italian place here on Capitol Hill. It'll be great. And Obama, and Biden told a version of
the story, one of his books, but he didn't tell the whole story. Obama sort of rears back up and
says, wait a minute, you know, what do you mean cheap Italian place? We can go somewhere nice.
I can afford it because Obama is, of course, thinking, well, for one thing, Obama has money
for the first time in his life because Random House is going to reprint his book. But he's
also thinking, who is this old school guy, this older white senator who thinks he can talk down
to me and thinks I need to, you know, eat at some cheap place? And he says, I can afford it. And
Biden, meanwhile, is taken aback then and says, well, who does this guy think he is? I can't
afford it. You know, I'm the poorest senator. So they walk away from that first meeting,
both thinking this other guy is so presumptuous. And they, of course, didn't set that dinner date.
It took them a long time to really truly understand each other. Yeah, he didn't mean it that way.
Of course not. No, anyone knowing. And Obama is certainly self-confident,
and I don't mean that in a positive way. Having interviewed him several times,
it's one of his failings, I think, in a lot of ways. So you've also written about Florida's
governor's race. How will the Hurricane Ian response affect that race, especially DeSantis
has seen us working with Biden on the recovery?
He's been as complimentary as he can be.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, I think that, you know, it's obviously hard to figure out what the political end of this is going to be.
Usually governors who govern through disasters see some political upside for that, especially when they work with the president.
They have to.
They have to.
It doesn't always work that way. You know, Charlie Crist knows well that, you know, he was a Republican governor back in the day,
and he hugged Obama when Obama came down to Florida to talk about economic relief. And that
was, of course, the end of Charlie Crist's career as a Republican. So he understands well that there
is some danger here. But, you know, DeSantis doesn't seem to be getting a lot of blowback
in terms of working with the federal government, though, of course, you know, we I think a lot remains to be seen in terms of what the pure level of devastation is and, you know, what the amount of federal help is needed, because he has, of course, not loved these headlines, obviously, about how he had voted against federal aid in previous circumstances.
Too bad. That's what he did.
So you think Biden's in? In your view, Biden is running again.
My view is that in Biden's view, Biden is running again. I think a lot could change. And I think
that people sort of underestimate when he says, you know, my expectation is that I'm going to run
again, except I know that history can intervene. You know, he is a man who knows a lot about
tragedy and a lot about mortality and has thought, thinks about that all the time. And so I genuinely
think that, you know, things could change. His health could take a turn. His family could go against it. But right now,
he's certainly operating as if it's a go. And by the way, in 2020, he knew that it was a go long
before he said it publicly, even though he takes forever to make these decisions. His staff had to
tell him, stop talking about this so openly because you're going to trigger the FEC rules and we're
going to have to file your candidacy,
you know, according to the laws.
And the same thing has happened now.
He knows that he cannot say I'm running.
He just has to say, I'm expecting to run.
No, he's 100%.
And by the way, much more successful legislatively.
I mean, obviously Obamacare was very important,
but if you weigh them one-to-one,
I think Biden has had the more successful presidency
at this point.
And that's a big part of their relationship these days.
You can imagine they talk about that. Yeah, but Obama has more style apparently successful presidency at this point. And that's a big part of their relationship these days. You can imagine they talk about that.
Yeah, but Obama has more style, apparently.
I like Dark Brandon.
I think that's also part of him.
I don't know.
You and Joe both.
Yeah, but he's like that.
He's like that, I suspect.
Totally.
Yeah, that's all real.
Quite genuine.
Anyway, the book is The Long Alliance,
The Imperfect Union of Joe Biden and Barack Obama.
Fascinating.
It's going to be really interesting.
Gabriel DiBenedetti, thank you so much. Thanks, Gabriel. Thank you both.
All right. So I think we're like Biden, Obama. Which one would be Biden? Which one would be
Obama? You're Obama. I'm Obama? I'm shocked. I was shocked that you didn't, for the first time,
I always learned more about you. I would have thought you would, you like Obama less than I
would have thought. A lot less.
Yeah.
Isn't that interesting?
And what?
Yeah, I've said that.
Can you say more?
What is it that you think he deserves more scrutiny around?
The success of legislation.
I think he, a lot of style.
I think his post-presidency compared to like a Jimmy Carter, he has so much power and he's sort of hanging out with celebrities, right?
He's on David Geffen's boat, yeah.
Yeah, right? And that's kind of disappointing. And I have to say, when I interviewed him, he didn't like pushback. And Biden, never that way. Very comfortable with pushback,
very comfortable with debate. And just a more genuine, I think he doesn't get the credit he
gets. That's why I backed him way back when. I was like, this guy can win one, and this guy can get things done.
And I do think that's the case.
I think making fun of his age, I get it.
I get it.
And Obama's handsome, tall, smooth.
But Obama reminded me a lot of tech people I covered.
I know it sounds crazy.
Oh, that hurts.
I was like, yeah.
Don't say that about my hero.
Don't say that about my hero. Don't say that.
That's wrong.
Listen, historically, such an important, historically.
I just think when the assessments come, I think Biden has had a more successful presidency
thus far under very difficult circumstances.
And Obama could have done a lot more.
That's my feeling.
I was not as big a fan of him as others. That's interesting. Yeah. Mm-hmm. on him every crazy stuff all the time. And he's handling it with a lot of decorum, including the attack on the Capitol. There's lots of ways he could have. I always look at people's choices.
Anyway, but I hope Obama's enjoying his yacht going. All right, Scott, one more quick break.
We'll be back for wins and fails.
Okay, Scott, let's hear some wins and fails.
I'm going to go first.
That Bella Hadid spray-on dress, loved it.
Loved it.
Yeah.
Oh, fast.
I didn't know where it was going.
And I was like, what is happening here?
And then when the person, my favorite part was the person who then cut it after they sprayed it on.
And then it was a dress.
And, of course, like someone said, I'd look like a bag of cats if you put that on me.
But it was – I loved it.
It was so techie and interesting.
It was cool.
Loved it.
It made me like clothes.
You know what I mean?
Like, oh, here we are.
We're making some clothes.
And I thought that was kind of cool.
I don't know.
That was cool.
That was my win.
You go for your win, and I'll think of a fail. I don't know. That was my win. You go for your win,
and I'll think of a fail. Well, you foreshadowed my win. My win is James Earl Carter Jr.,
better known as President Carter, who turned 98 this past week. Such a good man. This is someone
who served his country after graduating from the Naval Academy, served on several submarines,
and then after the death of his father, took over a failing peanut farm and turned it into a thriving business. He, as president, he was a dark horse.
There was a candidate who was a dark horse. He started the Department of Education,
the Department of Energy, was critical in SALT II talks, obviously had to deal with
stagflation, was kind of dealt a bad hand. And then the October surprise, the failed mission
to rescue the hostages in Iran. He will go down or has gone down as an average to less than average successful president.
But he is by far the most successful ex-president we've ever had.
The moment he left office, he began building homes via Habitat for Humanity.
And at the age of 98, has been married to his wife, Rosalyn, for 76 years.
She's fantastic.
Yeah, I think you can't underestimate how many wonderful Americans America produces,
and this is one of them. And I like the fact that he's been given the gift of so much praise and
what I call overdue recognition. I love the fact that he's gotten to share his life with
the same person for three quarters of a century. I think he's a fantastic role model for young men.
Talk about a great post-presidency. Now, that guy had lots of troubles as president,
and it's hard to... The Reagan train was charming and fantastic, and I voted for Reagan, I mean,
the first time over Jimmy Carter. And I have to say, this guy has shown us the way to behave as an ex-president.
I think he's had the most stellar. I mean, it's cute with George Bush painting, but honestly,
and this guy has done stuff, has done stuff and used his podium in a way that is super
moving and effective. I agree with you. I agree. So, my fail is the distinctive
weddings or the pivot to the metaverse. I think it's important that we remember that
meta continues to be a menace to our society and not take responsibility. This week in the UK,
a coroner found that harmful online content likely to have contributed to Molly Russell,
a 14-year-old, to her death.
And he put in quotes, and this is unusual for a coroner who they try to be very careful
whenever they stray outside of trying to lay responsibility around the death of somebody.
He said that harmful online content likely to have contributed to Molly's death in a more than minimal way. And the father
has decided to sue the company and basically saying that they're monetizing misery.
Monetizing misery, what a line.
Right? You know, there's so much, there's this cultural and so much attention around
this notion that has no evidence. There's no factual basis as someone who's the
father of kids who spent the majority of their school age years at a school in Florida, as someone
who served on the board of their kid's school. I have never seen any evidence, nor is there any
peer-reviewed evidence, that teachers are institutionally or systemically trying to pull
the gay or the heterosexual tendencies of children out of them in school. I have never
seen that. And I think it's a culture war meant to rouse people, play to their worst instincts.
But something that is true is that when algorithms from meta, when a kid who shows no signs of mental
illness, when a kid who is thriving at school starts getting bullied online and starts
contemplating suicide and then begins, the algorithms recognize this, and no joke,
Meta and Pinterest also begin serving her images of nooses, pills, and razors.
So, what these organizations are doing, and there's proof here, is they're pulling out of girls
So what these organizations are doing, and there's proof here, is they're pulling out of girls suicide.
To normalize suicide, we speak so much about NASDAQ and all this bullshit.
Like, what's the point here?
Like, what's the point of any of this?
Scott, I know how you feel.
You know, you have sons, I have a daughter. I think about it all the time, all the time now,
as she grows up.
And I think your feelings about it should be,
like most parents, are very emotional.
And it requires that level
of emotion, you know, the feelings you're having, because it really does matter. And I think at some
point, you know, these companies have got to understand they're not completely to blame.
Certainly there's all kinds of societal pressures on girls and women and things like that, but
this has taken it to a level that's really very clearly problematic.
And this case in Britain was really interesting.
I think there should be more like it.
Let's have it out in court is how you do it.
Let's make the bastards pay.
Yeah, and what I want to say is my emotion
and my thoughts and prayers don't mean fuck all.
I hope people Google Molly Russell and get involved
and advocate for holding these companies responsible.
These are problems that can be fixed.
There is no way the brightest minds in the world couldn't figure out that this was a young girl and couldn't figure out that she was beginning to become comfortable with suicidal content.
They could have figured that out, and they could have intervened.
They could have figured that out, and they could have intervened.
If you have a kid in any organization
that starts talking about suicide,
whether it's a mass shooter and they start drawing images,
people intervene.
And these companies absolutely have the technology
and the ability to intervene.
Unfortunately, it would reduce their profits,
it would be expensive, and I don't doubt it would be hard.
It is overdue.
Exxon lied to us, RJR lied to us, the Sacklers lied to us, and the people in Meta
are lying to us. We should absolutely hold these firms accountable.
I think what we have to do is see it in court. Let's see it in court. Let's see it. If they say
no, let's have a little court time to have some proof and go through it. But it should completely
be scrutinized. And I think it's an important
point you're making here completely. My fail, I don't know if it's a fail yet, but I do think
we should talk about it on Thursdays. The Supreme Court is taking up two cases around Section 230.
They involve terrorist content, but it could challenge broad immunities as has happened
before. But it's the first time it's gone to the Supreme Court. So much of this stuff is going to
be going to the Supreme Court, by the way, and a lot of it is, a lot of these cases, but it's the first time it's gone to the Supreme Court. So much of this stuff is going to be going to the Supreme Court, by the way, and a lot of it is, a lot of these cases, because it's
about our society as a whole, which is worrisome given this particular Supreme Court. But they're
going to decide whether social media companies can be sued for hosting and recommending terrorist
content. Even though it's not the same, it's not that different. It's similar, right? What can they
be sued for? And so we'll see where that goes.
I am worried about this particular Supreme Court, but I think it might free them up even more and we'll get in Citizens United kind of thing, you know, in the interests of free speech kind of
thing. So it's a very complex case, but we absolutely have to be thinking harder about
how we manage these very important communications things. And Scott, it's very appropriate for you to be upset by that.
There you go.
There you go.
Clara is three.
She's three.
She's three.
She's three.
How's Saul doing?
Oh, good.
Jolly as ever.
Eating everything in sight.
Just fantastic.
He's a fantastic kid.
He's really great.
They're all great.
Alex is great.
He approved of shoes I was wearing recently, so that was a big thing.
And he's being very sweet, but it's because he's got a nice girlfriend, I think.
He's in a better mood.
And Louie's coming down this weekend, and I'm so excited to see him.
We're going apple picking.
We're such a straight family.
It's crazy.
So, yeah, we're picking apples.
I'm going to make some applesauce for you. We'll send it to you in Britain. Really,
we won't, but still. I really am very touched by the way you feel about this.
Anyway, 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 855-51-PIVOT.
Scott, that's the show. We'll be back on Friday for more. There's
always going to be plenty to talk about, maybe even a settlement like we talked about with Elon.
Who knows?
Who knows? Please read us out.
Today's show is produced by Lara Naiman, Evan Engel, and Taylor Griffin,
Ernie Indridot, engineer of this episode. Thanks also to Drew Burrows and Neil Saverio.
Make sure you subscribe to the show wherever you listen to podcasts. Thanks for listening
to Pivot from New York Magazine and Vox Media. We'll be back later this week for another breakdown of all
things tech and business. Applesauce.