Pivot - Trump Takes Office, TikTok’s Brief Shutdown, and Crypto Cronyism

Episode Date: January 22, 2025

Kara and Scott are coming to you on a Wednesday to discuss President Trump’s inauguration, and his barrage of Day 1 executive orders. Then, TikTok is back in the U.S. after briefly shutting down: wh...at happens next? Also, President Biden’s last-minute pardons, Vivek Ramaswamy’s DOGE departure, and the First Couple’s meme coin frenzy. Follow us on Instagram and Threads at @pivotpodcastofficial. Follow us on Bluesky at @pivotpod.bsky.social. Follow us on TikTok at @pivotpodcast. Send us your questions by calling us at 855-51-PIVOT, or at nymag.com/pivot. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:01:12 This situation has changed very quickly. Helping make sense of the world when it matters most. Stay in the know. Download the free CBC News app or visit cbcnews.ca. Trump declared the beginning of a quote, golden age of America. I think Zuck is hoping it's the golden shower age. I think that guy's going dirty.
Starting point is 00:01:38 Hi everyone. This is Pivot from New York magazine and the Vox Media Podcast Network. I'm Kara Swisher. And I'm Scott Calloway. Dark greetings from the USA and Hail Satan's God. The second reign of Trump has begun with a plethora of things.
Starting point is 00:01:51 We'll talk about some of these ridiculous executive orders which have no meat to the bone, as they say. But let's get right to the inauguration. I know you were drowning your sorrows in 80s music and firefighter videos. Did you watch the inauguration? No, so one of the things I would recommend any dad does with his son, because it's a lesson,
Starting point is 00:02:09 or his 15-year-old son, sort of a rite of passage in the Galway household about culture, politics, homosexuality, culture, sex, is to watch the entire eight seasons of Game of Thrones. And I believe in season five, Stannis Baratheon decides to burn his daughter, Shireen, at the stake. It is such a disturbing scene
Starting point is 00:02:32 that running through it the second time I decided for my own mental health, I'm just not gonna watch that entire episode. And for me, the inauguration was the burning of Shireen Baratheon at the stake. I thought, I just don't need to watch this. Although I will say, really my one takeaway, and stay with me here, is the most important person on the planet right now, or the person with the most potential to do real good for
Starting point is 00:02:59 the world, is Lauren Sanchez. I mean, let's be honest, the Zuck is hornier than three bald cat. Yeah, I went back and looked at that video because I thought it might've been unfair. It was not unfair. He was catching a look. If she really wanted to do the world a solid, she would seduce Mark Zuckerberg, the Zuck.
Starting point is 00:03:17 He's down for it. Oh, wow. I didn't think you'd go there, but go ahead. And then Priscilla Chan gets half the voting chairs and boom, mental wellness and trust in institutions skyrockets. I don't know, she was right there with them. She was right there with Mark at every event.
Starting point is 00:03:35 No, no, no, but she was in the overflow room because she doesn't have- No, no, she was there. She was there. She was standing next to him. She was in the rotunda? She was in the rotunda. She was in the rotunda. She was next to him.
Starting point is 00:03:46 You didn't notice her, because she was wearing pearls and a very conservative outfit, but she was right next to him. You're right, I didn't notice her. I did not notice her. You didn't, because Lauren was like, yeah, bustier.
Starting point is 00:03:57 Yeah, here we are. Hello, come meet the girl. We hate to talk about clothes, but oh my God, Melania Trump looked like a nun next to Lauren. She looked like she was headed to the Capitol to force people to give tribute of the Hunger Games. She looked so, and I love the air kiss, they clearly are very fond of each other. Oh, that, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:04:19 The hat, that was a strategic. But Lauren Sanchez is the leader we need right now. That was a strategic hat. All I looked at were leader we need right now. That was a strategic hat. All I looked at were ladies. I spent the whole time looking at the ladies there, all the different ladies. I think the fashion was off the hook, the pictures I've seen.
Starting point is 00:04:32 Well, some of it, yeah. They definitely dress, many of them. They look great. People look great. Well, some of them do. I don't like that look. It's very shiny. And all those tech leaders
Starting point is 00:04:41 and those beautiful knee pads they all had. I know. I'm surprised they weren't exhausted by the weekends. And some of them had like a, like really were trying not to smile. Like Tim Cook smiled occasionally, but was trying to have a stern look. Sundar Pichai didn't know what he was doing there.
Starting point is 00:04:57 He's like, oh, Jesus. He was next to Elon. It was the whole thing. The whole panoply was so ridiculous. And then Trump, my favorite part was Trump putting them up there right in the front. Now I know I wanted it inside because it looked better. It looked better inside. It was like actually a beautiful tableau kind of thing in a repulsive way, but it was beautiful.
Starting point is 00:05:18 So if he was on the dais outside, you wouldn't have seen them all like that and they would have been all bundled up. But instead it's like, look at the rich people I collected one after the next, like, and the lady, and the lady and stuff. So it was really, and he put them right there, right in the, right next to him, right over his shoulder. So you couldn't avoid them and moved out.
Starting point is 00:05:39 Governors moved out. Yeah, they were in the overflow room. Yes, no people that were at his rallies, no people that he cared about. It was all rich people. Money. And then he even stuck Miriam Adelson in the back, which was kind of interesting, and Dana White.
Starting point is 00:05:53 But he wanted to show, I have a trillion dollars of people right here and they're at my behest. And I own them. And it was such a, they were so played by this guy. It was, it kind of was like, kudos Trump. I've never been able to nag them like that. I've never been able, but he did. He like had them in their spot. I thought it was interesting.
Starting point is 00:06:14 The only point of light that brought a smile to my face was there's a rumor that this guy named J.D. Vance is vice president. Yeah, I heard. And he did show up. Trump looked like he was gonna fall asleep when they were swearing Vance in. But there's an image of Vice President Vance's daughter
Starting point is 00:06:30 wearing all these band-aids on her fingers. It's really adorable. Do you remember band-aids for kids? They were bluey band-aids actually, I clock that. That's a flex. That's a mom flex. I mean, they ignored him completely. And interestingly, we'll get to the people getting out of jail,
Starting point is 00:06:45 but Vance said they wouldn't let out violent criminals than they have. Well, he doesn't know what's going on. I mean, Musk is the one and we'll get to Musk in a second. But President Trump declared the beginning of a quote, golden age of America, even though we're kind of in the golden age of America after taking the oath of office on money calling his inauguration liberation day. I think Zuck is hoping it's the golden shower age. I think that guy's going dirty. That guy's going dirty. All right. He said he was saved by God to make America great, again, referencing last summer's assassination attempt.
Starting point is 00:07:17 But God decided to kill that fireman. I'm sorry, go ahead. You're right. It's all such bullshit. He made a series of announcements about his inaugural dress, including one that made Hillary Clinton visibly laugh. She was there. I love that Hillary just said, you know, she's like, I know a lot of people are like, they shouldn't have gone, but I'm like, I'm down with her being right there. I'm down with Mike Pence being there.
Starting point is 00:07:37 Like, you tried, you tried, dude, and you didn't succeed. So let's listen to Trump. A short time from now, we are going to be changing the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America. And we will restore the name of a great president, William McKinley, to Mount McKinley, where it should be and where it belongs.
Starting point is 00:08:04 It's so ridiculous. It's so fucking ridiculous. So laughable and stupid. And I ran into, of all people in the CNN green room, Elizabeth Warren and I thought she'd be all, you know, have her dander up. And she's like, that was so freaking laughable. Like what in the world? Like so dumb. He also said that we're going to expand.
Starting point is 00:08:24 He says his manifest destiny thing, but not just on this planet, but let's listen to that. The United States will once again consider itself a growing nation, one that increases our wealth, expands our territory, builds our cities, raises our expectations, and carries our flag into new and beautiful horizons.
Starting point is 00:08:47 And we will pursue our manifest destiny into the stars, launching American astronauts to plant the stars and stripes on the planet Mars. Okay, not exactly JFK. But Matt, this is what Musk has been after the whole time. It just, the penny kind of dropped and I went back and listened to a couple interviews I had done with him many years ago, 2016-18. His need to get to Mars seems to have been his goal here in a lot of ways. It's not money necessarily with this guy, but it is this whole Mars thing. What did you think of these Gulf of America
Starting point is 00:09:26 and Mars situation? Well, first off, the notion that America will again be the most prosperous, most admired, most powerful nation in the world, well, good news boss, it already is. It's all of those things. It is, that's right. And the naming stuff is sort of,
Starting point is 00:09:40 I mean, it's just kind of ridiculous. The Gulf of Cheaper Eggs is just kind of ridiculous. The Gulf of cheaper eggs. It's just, it's just sort of, it's just sort of dumb. Right. And the thing that really struck out to me and I would imagine. So first off, this guy's full Putin. Did you notice we're going to expand new horizons for our flag? So what we're invading Canada. I don't, where are we going?
Starting point is 00:10:02 And by the way, anti-war Mr. Anti-war wants to take on other countries. Yeah, we want out of bad wars, but we're becoming imperialists. And I'm down with Canada becoming the 51st state because that means Democrats win everything. That's correct, yep. So I don't, I thought that was really unusual,
Starting point is 00:10:17 but I get the sense that he really has decided that Russia is the role model, both in terms of kleptocracy and expansionary vision. On the whole, I thought the stuff I've seen, I think Republicans do optics better than we do. I thought- Oh, absolutely. I thought the aesthetics, the fashion,
Starting point is 00:10:38 they get famous rich people up front and they're hot wives, and if they're hotter, give them a better seat. I think they just understand that shit better than Democrats. Though I have to say, a lot of people who are at the parties felt it was a lot of cheap tricks. A lot of people had to go, they just had to go a lot. I think it was made for TV.
Starting point is 00:10:58 Yeah, exactly. That's what I mean. People who are there was like it was joyless and cheap tricks, and these were Republicans. They were like, this is gross and not cool. It wasn't cool, someone said to a friend of mine. What was interesting was the visuals, a hundred, it was all for visuals. I did find his speech petty and small-minded as he is. He's still, he's in a perpetual campaign. This guy who's never running for anything again. He just can't get out of the campaign mode and get into the governing mode ever. And now Elon Musk, of course, is getting to go to Mars and we hope he goes first. We're very excited for his travels
Starting point is 00:11:34 there, never to come back, because you can't come back, by the way, just so you know. He told me that. But he gave a speech at the Capitol One arena where they did the, they usually have this inaugural parade that goes by the White House. They canceled that and again for spectacle's sake, that's leaving aside Billy Ray Cyrus at one of the things, it was quite a spectacle. So let's hear Elon's speech. You know there are elections that, elections that come and go, some elections are you know important some are not, but this one, this one really mattered. And I just want to say thank you for making it happen. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:12:18 You know, at the noise at the end there, that's Elon thumping his chest and doing what appeared to be a fascist Nazi style salute. Some people are calling it a Roman salute, but a Roman salute was a Nazi salute. Some people saying he was doing his heart goes out to you. That's not how you do it. It was weird. Some people are blaming it on him having Asperger's.
Starting point is 00:12:38 I'm sure in the sound of music, Rolf was just showing his heart went out to the Bontrop family when he did that signal. But it was stupid. I don't know what to say. It's like, oh, we're going to be on the incoming of a flood of this kind of bullshit. Given he's in the public eye so much,
Starting point is 00:13:01 he should be very careful about his signals that he does. I think a lot of people are letting him off because of the flood of other things that happened. I don't know if you had any thoughts. Like I'm like you, I'm not a huge fan of Elon Musk, but I actually think he did a decent job. I thought he looked good. I thought he seemed enthusiastic. He captured the audience.
Starting point is 00:13:22 I think the hand gesture was unfortunate, but I would give him the benefit of the doubt. I don't think... Except the Nazis were getting let out of jail. That's the only... I don't give him the benefit of doubt. I assume you want to. You're connecting the two that he's... I don't know what he's doing.
Starting point is 00:13:36 I just think if you're in a position of that much power and that much influence and you're in the public eye, you should try not to do things that could be construed that way. I just think that... I agree with you, but I don't think it's fair that much influence and you're in the public eye, you should try not to do things that could be construed that way. I just think that- I agree with you, but I don't think it's fair to conflate what he did with anything supporting
Starting point is 00:13:51 the Third Reich. I don't, I think that's a bridge too far. I think that's unfair to him. Which is, I think what he might've wanted to happen. Honestly, he loves to troll people in some way to get people. See, he's expecting us all to go, oh, how dare he?
Starting point is 00:14:07 I think as usual, it was sloppy and obnoxious, is what it was at the very least. I think he knew exactly what he was doing. And to attribute it, it was interesting when everyone's like, he is autistic or is on the spectrum. A lot of people on the spectrum are like, I've never done a Nazi type salute kind of things. And yeah, but I mean, okay, again.
Starting point is 00:14:26 I agree. I'm not going crazy. I think he got caught up in the moment and made like to the moon. I just- He did it twice. Let's just be clear. He did it twice.
Starting point is 00:14:36 And if you watch it, it's weird. It's as weird as can be. I'm not, look, there's nothing to be done with this guy. He's gonna continue to try to troll us and try to do all kinds of things that sort of like tickle liberals' outrage. This is his thing. This is what he's going to do till the end of his life. And he likes to do it. He likes to make memes. I think he absolutely knew what he was doing. I don't think he cares. I don't necessarily think I don't know what he is.
Starting point is 00:15:05 I don't know why he did it. But I thought it was badly done at the moment, definitely. I think you have to be careful about signals and things like that. But I agree, I'm not going to, I'm moving on. Like whatever, Elon, it was weird. In addition, as I said, they all had prime seats. Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, Tim Cook, Sundar Pichai, better seats than cabinet nominees who were behind them, I believe. What's incredible is the other notable attendees too.
Starting point is 00:15:33 Joe Rogan, Rupert Murdoch was there. I didn't see him there. I don't know where they put him. LVMH CEO Bernard Arnall, TikTok CEO Sho Chu, really full of business people more than anybody else. And even Miriam Adelson, a big donor of his, was shoved, even though a business person, shoved in the back, which was interesting. I don't know. It was quite something and it was definitely made for TV.
Starting point is 00:15:59 Trump quickly got to work on Monday evening, issuing sweeping pardons to over 1,500 of the January 6 rioters. He was thought to have not, JD Vance said he wasn't going to let off people who had violent things, but that's exactly what he did. He let out very violent people who had beaten up cops very clearly, people who had gotten 20 years to life, people who are obviously there to cause mayhem, but he let them off too. One woman who was just inside and got, it was a
Starting point is 00:16:26 non-violent protester, wouldn't take the thing. She said, I committed a crime. I thought that was pretty honorable of her. But he let off some very dangerous people. I know a lot of people that worked on those cases and they are terrified now that these people are out and emboldened. They essentially said Trump now has his own private militia at his behest. I think that was pretty upsetting. I don't know what you thought about that. That one to me was the most seriously disturbing of all the many executive orders. Yeah, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:16:59 There's a few trying to revoke birthright citizenship, trying to override the 14th Amendment, that feels, you know, some of it, I can understand declaring a national emergency of the border. Declaring a national energy emergency is just dumb. Gas on an inflation-adjusted basis is cheaper than it was 50 years ago. We are the largest oil producer in the world. Biden issued a ton of drilling permits. So that's nothing but just a false narrative. And it goes back to the notion we were talking about, America will be the strongest, most respected. We're there. Unfortunately, Biden was unable to communicate that effectively. Correct.
Starting point is 00:17:36 Some of the stuff that, you know, this expansionary visionary stuff seemed very strange to me, felt like we're colonialists again. What do you think of this strategy of flooding the zone with shit? Now, I know all presidents do this. They put out executive orders. These are just one outlandish idea after the next. Most of them have no force of law. Most of them are just press releases, as they said, on better letterhead.
Starting point is 00:17:58 But it is this flooding the zone with shit to get Democrats completely flummoxed. How dare he, how dare he, how dare he, oh, how dare he do that? They should just not respond. Most of this, I think a lot of it was throwing red meat at sort of populist symbolic. I do think it was a baller move to have a ton of executive actions as he was on the dais.
Starting point is 00:18:23 It kind of visually represents leadership. You know, some of the stuff immediately said, I promise these things, I'm making do on these promises day one, even if they don't hold or even if they- I tried, I tried. I think he's being, one of the more generous things I think you could say
Starting point is 00:18:42 about Trump's tenure the first time around was that he proved to be more of a pragmatist than an ideologue. And I do think he could have had an executive action around tariffs right away, but he didn't do that. He's obviously using it as a negotiating tactic, which again is a pragmatist. Some of this is just, you know, some of the, okay,
Starting point is 00:19:03 the people who got out of prison are not'm not comfortable with it. It's awful I'm almost like just give it to him so we can stop fucking talking about it and having museum Exhibits where Marjorie Taylor Greene goes into like a zoo and holds the hands and praise. I get the move-along idea I get it. It's just some of these people are dangerous criminals. That's that you know, he talks about that's that's a fair point He talks about dangerous criminals on the street. He just let out some, I, there is a point to moving along. Washington let off the people who did the whiskey rebellion. He did it, right?
Starting point is 00:19:35 People who had, that happens over and over again. You just say, that was wrong, let's move on. In the case of, he could have picked out a few, and even JD Vance said so, that were dangerous and beat up cops. Yeah. The violent criminals, the proud boys, the oath keepers. Right. The ones that beat up cops. Had guilty to sedition. Jail you go. Yeah. There's stuff around, you know, there's only two genders. There's male and there's female.
Starting point is 00:20:01 I almost see that as just unimportant, but mean. Yeah. It's like, it's just okay, you're just something, you're just waving the middle finger at a group of people, fine, have at it, be who you are. I don't think that's going to have much effect. I found this was mostly, you know, kind of like most of these things were sort of, where's the beef or what actual impact on the ground is this going to have? I agree. I thought it showed weakness actually.
Starting point is 00:20:29 I was like, there's too many of them. There's too many ones and all of them are kind of empty. It was sort of performative. I thought he should have been much more strategic and stronger. I thought they were all, I think they all showed, you know how Mark is like, Mark Zuckerberg is like, I'm grilling meat. I'm shooting buffaloes. I'm fine. It's that's what it was like.
Starting point is 00:20:46 I was like, you're not a man because you have to performatively man at us. There is one though, just real quick. There's one I actually thought was good. The singular one I thought was good was reclassifying federal employees, making them easier to fire. I don't see any reason why federal employees
Starting point is 00:21:00 shouldn't be subject to the same standards and anxiety that the private sector is. Okay, but he's using it to put loyalty. But yes, yes, I see your point. And a return to work mandate is kind of a quiet firing, but just in terms of actual data, this notion, this trope that the right likes to circulate that the government state or what do you call it, the social state, what's the term they use? Deep state. Not the deep state, the government state
Starting point is 00:21:25 or the welfare state, whatever it is, that the government's too big. Government, the percentage of employees that represented by government employees has toggled between 14 and 17% for the last 15 years. It's at 14.2% right now. And the majority of those employees are state and local governments.
Starting point is 00:21:41 So actually employment amongst government employees is at a bit of a low right now. So the notion that it's just our deficit and our spending has exploded because the far right and the far left come together to agree on reckless spending and deficits and interest in entitlements. But the notion somehow that the employment base has ballooned, it just isn't accurate. Yeah. Yeah, I know. It's just their way to attack people and try to scare them. And that's why I don't like it. It's not done to make things better.
Starting point is 00:22:07 It's done to terrify, which is stupid. All right, let's go on a quick break. When we come back, we discuss what is exactly going on with TikTok after Trump's latest move and talk about the meme comes from Delta Airlines. In 2025, Delta Airlines turns 100 years old. That's a century of changing the way we fly, a century of making the world more accessible by transforming global travel.
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Starting point is 00:25:10 Scott, we're back. President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Monday to delay enforcing the TikTok ban for 75 days, though it's unclear if that order will hold water legally. Most people think not. This follows TikTok briefly shutting itself down in the U.S. for about 14 hours over the weekend ahead of the ban going into effect, which was just a performative piece of bullshit on behalf of the TikTok executives. As he signed the order, Trump attempted to explain the new plan where the US would run TikTok as a 50-50 joint venture with its current owners. It's inexplicable, but let's listen.
Starting point is 00:25:52 The US should be entitled to get half of TikTok. And congratulations, TikTok has a good partner. And that would be worth, you know, it could be $500 billion or something. It's crazy, The numbers are crazy. But it's worthless if I don't, if the president doesn't sign, then it's worthless. If the president does sign, it's worth maybe a trillion dollars. So I think, like a joint venture, I think we would have a joint venture with the people from TikTok.
Starting point is 00:26:23 We'll see what happens. I mean, that's one of many ideas. You know, I don't mind ideas here, but this is, this is, this EO is just pointless. It just is. He's just, he's, he doesn't have very many options because there's line, by the way, people like Tom Cotton and others are like, you're not going around this law Apple. And guess what? Right now you cannot download TikTok and other bite dance apps on the Apple Store or the Google Store. These people have good lawyers. They understand that Trump is all lather. He can't do that.
Starting point is 00:26:52 Now, he gave some assurance to, I guess, Akamai and Amazon and Oracle, but they are liable, very liable right now for billions and billions of dollars if they don't comply with the law. So the only thing Trump can really do is pass a new law. That could happen, which is not going to happen. He could try to get some deal done with the Chinese. There's no reason the Chinese need to do this.
Starting point is 00:27:19 I don't care what he threatens them with. And he doesn't have many options. He just doesn't. As a president, he doesn't have a lot of options except for following the law. He doesn't have to follow the law. You can order the Justice Department not to follow the law. But as you can see, as I said, Scott, they'll pick the Supreme Court and the Congress over Donald Trump in this situation. And so you can't download TikTok right now. But talk about this 50-50 joint venture. I don't even understand.
Starting point is 00:27:47 The American public owns it? I don't know. Maybe give every American a share in TikTok. That would be great, whatever. So this isn't unusual. The government owning a stake in what was a private company has happened all the time. And there's a word that describes it perfectly.
Starting point is 00:28:02 It's socialism. Communism. Socialism is the government owns the means of production. Whether it's the UK government deciding it's a good idea to invest in an innovative car company called DeLorean, whether it's Obama who fell under a lot of criticism for making low-interest loans to Solyndra.
Starting point is 00:28:20 This is- And Tesla, by the way. This is pure socialism. This is the government picking winners and losers. The notion that the government, we kind of wanted the basics, tenants or pillars of American capitalism that has proven to be right,
Starting point is 00:28:36 is the government is not good at picking winners and losers. That when we have full body contact violence, in terms of competition with an operating system of rules, that produces unicorns and prosperity and hopefully attacks them at a good rate and we can reinvest in our Navy and seniors, et cetera. But the notion that the president could decide which companies were going to be
Starting point is 00:28:53 JVs with and which ones were not. In addition, this goes to a much larger point here. And that is, are we a serious people? We had a law passed by 79 senators, 350 congresspeople, one of the most bipartisan unanimous laws of our elected representatives in recent history. They can't agree on lunch and they agreed on this, but go ahead. Signed into law, we gave them six months to divest, and then when it comes, you know what we do? We blink. We say,
Starting point is 00:29:23 oh, we're going to extend it. by the way, on a dime's notice, TikTok, which legally has to listen to the CCP, was able to inspire, rally, and motivate tens of millions of people to talk about the TikTok ban, voice their opposition. And I'm going to go out on a limb here and assume that the good folks at TikTok decided to tweak the algorithm
Starting point is 00:29:48 and elevate all of that content, such that 170 million Americans were all of a sudden inundated with a certain viewpoint, right? Then resulted in political pressure that resulted in presidential action. What happened on Saturday and Sunday is exactly the reason the singing is to be banned. What is the next issue that the CCP slash TikTok
Starting point is 00:30:16 can decide to inspire, rally, and motivate tens of millions of Americans to put, to exert pressure on our elected representatives. And the notion that somehow China now, we gave them six months, here's a law, our elected representatives, we passed it, and you know what they said? Hold my fucking beer. You are not a serious people. And we now think that they're going to come to the table.
Starting point is 00:30:41 They're expressing interest in working with Trump. The glitz is going to be done by, what they're going to do is the, I call it the Elon faint. They're going to get it into the hands of someone they like who can, they can manipulate or, or that there's, it's going to be fake. They're still going to be there and it's still going to be if, you know, the two people I trust on this whole thing. One is Tom fucking Cotton. I think he's speaking some truth about the dangers of China and manipulation of the United States. And AOC, which who did a fantastic thing on, I think it was Blue Sky, where she's like,
Starting point is 00:31:13 look, I didn't see any substantive, any kind of substantive manipulation here. I'd happy to do this if they would show it to us, right? Both of them are like, this is all, we all look like fucking idiots. Both of them said the same thing. Like you either put up or shut up, you either follow the law, if you're gonna pass this law, pass another one. Like that's what they can do.
Starting point is 00:31:34 And Trump, they'll do something behind the scenes, but it will result in much less security, much less privacy, when they should have gone back and done a broader law about all these companies. All of them, and have a thing in there saying, foreign adversaries can't own this much of a big media property. That's all they had to do.
Starting point is 00:31:55 And they wouldn't do that because they get all their bank from those, switch to photo of all those rich people, tech people on the dais. This is all fake. Now, let me just say one person wrote a piece, Kevin Roos wrote a piece, what if no one misses TikTok?
Starting point is 00:32:11 So he was like, there isn't that much anger as you think. The only people I feel for is the creators who are making money on this platform. And I do love entrepreneurs doing that. They can go somewhere else. They'll go to YouTube or wherever they can go to do things. And I'm sorry about that. The economics are really interesting because I have a 14 year old son, the
Starting point is 00:32:33 average 14 year old American boy spends 17 hours a week on TikTok. So if you take out sleep, basically without TikTok, you're getting an entire day back for a 14 year old boy. Now, unfortunately, he's not gonna use that to study or play the piano or hang out with his dad. He's likely, the calculation is about 10 or 15% goes to Snap, 20% to YouTube and 70% to meta platforms. So there's $23 billion kind of up in advertising revenue
Starting point is 00:33:02 for grabs here, about 15 or 13 of it, we go to Facebook, 10 times revenues, 130 billion. You're looking at essentially, Mark Zuckerberg is about to get $20 billion wealthier personally with a banning of TikTok. But I think all of this goes to a different issue. And that is one, if a Chinese owned or or CCP-influenced company can exert massive political pressure, I don't need to see evidence of whether or not it's a security threat. I agree.
Starting point is 00:33:34 That's where I part with... That's like, okay. I think she's making a good point, is that they voted too quickly and didn't do a broader one. Really, that was her biggest beef, is that it just was jammed through. Nobody got to really think about it and nobody did a broader one. And I agree with her on that. The American word and American laws no longer have veracity. It's like, okay, we can buy off their politicians.
Starting point is 00:33:57 We can invest, make people wealthier. It's now a kleptocracy. And when they say something, do they mean it? I don't know. Well, they do mean it? I don't know. Well, they do mean it because Apple and Google are not following this thing. That's where I look at. These lawyers are like, no fucking way we're going to expose ourselves to this.
Starting point is 00:34:14 To me, the fact that you can't download it says everything to me. Trump has no power here in this thing. And he will do some jazz hands deal with his pals, but they've got to get Congress to and the Supreme Court to approve it. And I think in this case, the two other branches of government are prevailing in this case. Let's get to some very, very quick headlines. I do want to talk about that meme point, but first President Biden's last hours. He pardoned his family members, Dr. Fauci, members of Congress who served on the January 6th committee, General Mark Milley. I didn't mind the last parts of those, the family members kind of really wasn't a great thing. I thought it set a terrible precedent.
Starting point is 00:34:52 In a statement, Biden did say the pardons should not be mistaken as an admission of guilt, but that's exactly what it'll be mistaken as. I mean, any quick thoughts on that? 06.00 It's a race to the bottom. 06.00 Yeah. 06.00 And that is when you're worried your family members or someone who you may not agree with their policies but did their level best as head of the National Institute of Health or the CDC, it could come under
Starting point is 00:35:14 political prosecution or just by virtue of somebody doing their job. It's a race to the bottom. We've become that nation now and you're just going to see all sorts of abuse of the powers of the presidency. Because I don't blame them at all. That's exactly how I feel. I was like, God,
Starting point is 00:35:38 did he really have to do this? Being the stand-up guy hasn't worked for him. I guess he thought, well, fuck it. And he did it right before, right? He did it. John Sirot was so joking about it. Did he auto pardon? Because he was sitting in the room when it was announced,
Starting point is 00:35:54 when it was done. No one wants to disarm unilaterally. Well, speaking of disarming, the Department of Government Efficiencies first cut ended up being Vivek Ramaswamy. You're fired. Ramaswamy was reportedly parting ways with Doge to launch a campaign for governor of Ohio, which he's not gonna win.
Starting point is 00:36:09 He's not running for two years. He got fired by Elon Musk. Yeah, exactly. No, totally. The news came just hours after Ramaswamy posted a photo with Elon on X, the caption, a new dawn. There's tons of reporting that they didn't like this guy, essentially, and Elon didn't like him.
Starting point is 00:36:23 And actually a lot of people didn't. In the meantime, moments after the swearing in district court filings alleging Doge doesn't comply with Federal Advisory Committee Act, I would agree with it. They're using signal. They're using signal. They should do that. If it's so transparent and such a good thing, why don't they do it in the full light of day? What do you think of Doge now, Scott? I know you want to cut government waste, and there's been a lot of these commissions over the years, but this seems like a ridiculous circus at this point. I mean, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:36:50 Doge is one of the lesser offensive things. I don't want to pre-hate it. I think it's important on a regular basis. They call them different names. Every president is at his own, you know, rule on efficiency or better government. It needs to happen on a regular basis because government spending is like a, I don't know,
Starting point is 00:37:05 a barnacle on a boat. They're just hard to scrub off. But they've already eliminated waste by 50% on this commission. I think it's hilarious soap opera, the idea that this guy is trying to spin the narrative that he's leaving to run for governor. The word is must. And then the governor of Ohio gave it to another guy. He wanted to be appointed for the Vance seat.
Starting point is 00:37:29 Well, that was for Senate. Now he's saying he's gonna run for governor. I know, but he wanted that seat apparently. Yeah, but supposedly the word is Musk and his team were like, this guy is all had and no cattle. What's the term he used, the Brian Williams term? Yes, all had and no cattle, yeah. Oh, you know, that he was just, couldn't find a mic
Starting point is 00:37:44 he didn't like, which, you know which you can imagine Musk and him fighting. That's like Ryan O'Neill and Farrah Fawcett, fighting for a camera. This guy, that was a good 80s reference. That was a good 80s reference. Anyways, I can't imagine the two of them, Musk is wealthier, more powerful, said, I don't like this guy, he's out.
Starting point is 00:38:01 This notion that he's doing it to run for governor in 24 months, he would have loved to stay in this high profile position. That would have been the best thing he could have done in terms of name recognition. So this is not his idea. Man down, first man down, first irritating man down. That's right, the first firing.
Starting point is 00:38:17 Actually, this is really is, this is the first firing of the Trump administration is Vivek Ramaswamy. Oh God, he's so irritating. I couldn't happen to a nicer guy. Anyway, it's sort of like, as you were saying, when Bannon and Musk were fighting, I'm rooting for the bullets.
Starting point is 00:38:34 Anyway, this is the most important story. I think Scott and I were both totally offended by this. And I think it is actually a serious problem of corruption. Trump and Melania have released their own individual crypto meme coins. Just so you know, meme coins, these kind of coins are called shit coins. There's a fart coin in case you're interested and many others like it. As of Tuesday morning, the two coins were worth $8.4 billion combined.
Starting point is 00:38:57 President Trump's reported planning an executive order to make digital assets a national priority while he promises to release one billion of his own coin in the next three years. This is just, they don't have to stay at the Trump hotel anymore. They can just bring the receipts for buying his shit coin essentially. This is really bad. Staying at the Trump hotel or playing golf there where he saw the ledger of golf officials buying stock in Donald Trump media, that was all checkers compared to this chess. Because with Donald Trump media, he has to checkers compared to this chess. Because with Donald
Starting point is 00:39:25 Trump media, he has to file with the SEC a public document saying, I'm selling shares, the price would crash. Now, the following conversation, I would speculate will or already has happened. And that is, President Trump, congratulations on your enormous victory. It's your good buddy, Vlad. And guess what we're thinking of doing? The Treasury here in Russia is thinking of investing $600 billion for a variety of reasons in cryptocurrencies, specifically the Trump coin. And my economists, wouldn't you know it, have calculated that based on the small float of a half a billion dollars, when we pulse in 600 billion rubles or 10 billion dollars, that's going to take the market cap of this thing easily to 50 or $60 billion.
Starting point is 00:40:06 And should you decide to sell 20% of your stake overnight, what do you know? And I just bring this up, you'll become one of the five wealthiest men in America. And in un- And you don't have to say- And nobody will know. And in unrelated news, President Trump, we would like you to seize arms shipments to Ukraine. I mean, this is just so-
Starting point is 00:40:24 This is bribery writ large. They have created, it's kind of a bond. This is what they thought Bitcoin would be used for, bribery, corruption, pornography. That's a great point. I'll tell you, a lot of crypto people are horrified because they were like, great, we're finally getting our legs under us
Starting point is 00:40:41 around some really important legislation and know, legislation and regulation. What if he can't get two or three Republican senators on board for a federal ban of abortion and he just calls them and says, hey, on the down low, you're old, you're leaving. I can give you $10 million in crypto to your fund or to another account you name and no one will ever know. No one will ever know. Oh, Taiwan or China, you're about to invade Taiwan. We don't need to do it covertly, just call them. Oh, Sudan, the largest,
Starting point is 00:41:15 argue humanitarian disaster globally right now. More people are dying in Sudan every day than in Ukraine or Gaza combined. What if he just calls both of them and says, it's eBay for geopolitics, whoever buys more Trump coin gets US intelligence and some of our heavy armaments and. Or Smellania, it's called Smellania, just saying. And nobody has to know, nobody, I can sell it,
Starting point is 00:41:38 I can buy it, buyers and sellers, totally opaque. This is. Grifter city. America, America has more from a platform that used to be about prosperity and making money. I think that's wonderful, such that we can tax these people and again, invest in the middle class. That's important to have that ambition. It's important to make money.
Starting point is 00:41:56 It's a wonderful thing. But we also were a platform for civil rights, for rule of law, for electing a group of people that had laws that for rule of law, for electing a group of people that had laws that recognized conflicts of interest such that they could think with some level of patriotism about preventing a tragedy that comments long-term and do what was right
Starting point is 00:42:14 for all Americans. And then we could project those values overseas and try and advance women's rights, try and advance democracy, try and do away with honor killings and do away with child marriage and child, child, we could project our, now all of that has been crowded into a tiny little box and America's essentially becoming a platform for how do you make the jump to light speed
Starting point is 00:42:37 and it's a hunger games and if you make money, you have a remarkable life and you get to sit up front with your hot wife, but everybody else, unless you have money, sorry folks. You're not on stage. This really has gone. Then they run media, they run everything. They have a lock. The meme coin, his coin is
Starting point is 00:42:56 literally the democratization of kleptocracy. This is the thing people must pay attention to and do as much reporting on as possible is this bribery system that they've put into place. And it's again. It may have already happened. We don't even know. We don't even know.
Starting point is 00:43:09 We don't even know. We don't even know. And of course, they've now captured the IRS, so there's not going to be any investigation by the SEC. They've captured the SEC. There's no way to, it's up to reporters who they're putting the pressure on to be silenced, right? A lot of people are definitely pulling back.
Starting point is 00:43:24 I mean, a lot of the coverage was like, look at the pageantry of normalcy of power. They didn't mention felon once, they did mention the insurrection several times. Isn't it ironic? This is where the insurrection happened and they're sitting there, right? They're all sitting there as if nothing happened. They did mention that, but for the most part,
Starting point is 00:43:44 everyone's going to be pulling back. They are. They're absolutely going to be pulling back, and you're not going to see it. And that is what Russia is. Russia is a broken, hollowed out state full of people, haves and have nots, of really making nothing, no innovation. And instead, just that tableau of the tech people up there should tell you every single thing you need to know about this particular,
Starting point is 00:44:11 what's about to happen. Hopefully, there'll be pushback. We'll talk about that in another, in the next episode. Like, what is the actual pushback? What is the way to control it? Because they do have their hands on the AI, they have their hands on crypto, they've got their hands on media. Which by the way, they revoked that executive order.
Starting point is 00:44:26 That was one of the executive orders they undid. They did, yeah. With Biden's AI. Biden's AI, which was quite a good, fair one, I thought. They just don't want any business. I would, this crypto thing is really bad. It's like, it's just, as you said, Scott, democratized corruption.
Starting point is 00:44:44 All right, one more quick break. We'll be back for wins and fails. Okay, Scott, let's hear some wins and fails. I think I'll go first. Um, on yesterday, someone who I really had a high regard for, Cecile Richards, who I recently interviewed in June died of, Cecile Richards, who I recently interviewed in June, died of brain cancer. She had suffered from it.
Starting point is 00:45:08 She used to be around Planned Parenthood. She did an amazing job. She's the daughter of Ann Richards, who was the legendary Texas governor. Just an amazing woman, just devoted to public service, devoted to helping women, very articulate, moved Planned Parenthood forward, you know, in terms of healthcare. Everyone always focuses on the abortion part of it, but it was a, it's a very important healthcare system for a lot of people. Just a tireless fighter and a decent person. Never was, I know the left has a reputation being scoldy or anything like that. She just was
Starting point is 00:45:41 dignified. She fought. She was strong. The fact that she died on this day, let's remind you, it's MLK's day too, and it is his day period, not just two, was really sad. And she was an inspiring figure to me and many other people. And so her life was a win. I would contrast that to the demented interview that Andreessen did with the New York Times, where all manner of inaccuracies, but mostly a poor, broken man who had something happen to him in his childhood,
Starting point is 00:46:18 which is unclear, just as taking it out on the rest of us. What a ridiculous victim mentality he has. It's so sad. And please read it because you can see the problems I've had with him over the many years is never his fault. It's always someone else's fault. Someone's getting in his way. And he has to use inaccurate historical and other references to make his points. And just comparing the two of them, I just couldn't think of a bigger contrast. Someone who is dignified and a real contributor to society and this guy, who certainly has contributed but just can't bring
Starting point is 00:46:55 everybody else with him in the journey of his life. There you go. My win is, I just think you got to give it to the guy. I think my win is Trump. I think his got to give it to the guy. I think this is, my win is Trump. I think his, just trying to call balls and strikes. I think this is arguably the most iconic, remarkable political comeback in history. And I hate to acknowledge it,
Starting point is 00:47:16 but the guy left under the cloud of an insurrection. And since then he's been a convicted felon and yet he managed to exploit weaknesses. And there were many in the Democratic Party who were seen as totally out of touch with real world issues that affected Americans. And he legitimately won the presidency back. I think it's bad for America. I did not vote for the man, but I just think you got to give them their due.
Starting point is 00:47:39 I think they ran a masterful campaign. And to say we'd be sitting here four years after this mob invaded the Capitol, I just I think it's remarkable. It's the most remarkable political comeback in history. And so that's my sort of, I don't know, awkward or uncomfortable win. My fail is, again, we are not a serious people. We're in the World Health Organization, we're out. We're in the Iran nuclear deal, we're out. We're in the Paris Accords, we're out. We're in, we're out again.
Starting point is 00:48:10 We're banning TikTok, bipartisan legislation, signed into law. Oh, just kidding, we wanna do a deal. Our ability for our enemies and our allies to take us seriously around anything has been so dramatically diminished. No, you can, if you do this, if you don't cooperate with our enemies, we have your back. Do they take us seriously when we say that? No, you can turn over information to protect
Starting point is 00:48:39 American service people if you give us information on the Taliban's movements and we will make sure that you are safe and we get you out. Will they take us seriously now? No, you should not invade Taiwan. We will reciprocate. We will defend Taiwan as an ally, and we will defend them. Do they take us seriously at our word? We are not a serious people. And the lack, the back and forth, the lack of consistency, the lack of respect and regard for established treaties,
Starting point is 00:49:07 precedents of the previous president is hurting us. We are no longer a nation. We're a platform for making money and dividing the spoils amongst an increasingly few number of people, such that they can take their third wife or second wife or whatever it is to the inauguration. And whoever's richest gets to sit at the front as First Lady Melania asks for someone to give tribute.
Starting point is 00:49:34 This is, we have fallen so far, so fast. And I'm also, quite frankly, a lot of blame resides with traditional Democrats for providing just an opening here for being this, in my opinion, out of touch with regular Americans' real issues. Anyways, my fail is that we are so inconsistent around our policies, even our laws we don't want to enforce, and we are blinking left and right. We are not a serious people. Yeah, I think there has to be a different kind
Starting point is 00:50:08 of political leader among the Democrats that is really either just, I don't know, cause then they would you do the tit for tat thing. You do what Biden did with the pardons. You lower yourself. And that's right. Race to the bottom. You have to kind of lower yourself.
Starting point is 00:50:21 You have to, it does have like, speaking of Roman salutes, it has an end of Roman Empire vibe to it. It definitely does. Never been more powerful, never been more prosperous overall, not for everybody. Carl Marx, capitalism collapsing on itself. Yeah, it's really, it's a disappointment because we have so much,
Starting point is 00:50:40 but the panoply of those tech people, I cannot believe, that's what I can't believe having covered these people. And I wrote in 2016 that they were sheeple. Boy, are they sheeple. Boy, was that a good call. But let's be even-handed here. Are you really disappointed in Tim Cook?
Starting point is 00:50:55 Absolutely. I'm really disappointed in Tim Cook. I know why he did it. I get it, I get it. But he didn't, Satchin Adela wasn't there. He didn't have to be there. Maybe he did, maybe he did, maybe I, there's all kinds of behind the scenes things happening
Starting point is 00:51:09 that I don't know, we're not privy to. I'd like it to be in front of the scenes. I'd like an explanation. I think it's probably just shareholder thing. Sam Altman was there. There were lots of people there that didn't want to be there, that's for sure. And I told you, I got a text from someone saying,
Starting point is 00:51:26 I hate myself more than I think you hate me right now for being here. And I was like, I doubt it. I doubt it. I see why you are, but doesn't mean I hate you less than you hate yourself. But I mean, there is a point where you have to say, and not be, the thing that the Democrats do is they do this sort of huffy indignance about it. How dare they? You know, this kind of stuff. Just like don't show up like Michelle Obama.
Starting point is 00:51:50 That's what you do. Like, like Mother Pence didn't show up too, by the way. I bet they were like throwing back shots like at a bar together, like fuck that guy. You have to create a whole new narrative and story about America for people that gives them hope and gives them, makes them feel like it's fair and not that panoply of bullshit with those people. And they looked good, but it did look like the Hunger Games, Scott.
Starting point is 00:52:17 I think you're right, 100%. Anyway, on that happy note- Not Sanchez. Lauren Sanchez, we need you. We need you. I would rather her be president. Like, I don't know, she's very smart. I think she's smart. I think she's an impressive woman.
Starting point is 00:52:29 She is smart, I've met her, she's smart. I think she could do a lot more with her indulgence, but here she is. I don't know, I think she's doing pretty well. All right, whatever, okay. I don't know, I think she's doing pretty well. She's an adjacent, brilliant person, but she should be in the center of things.
Starting point is 00:52:43 Like more Mackenzie Bezos, I'm sorry. Sorry, Lauren, but I think she's running circles around you in the end. Historically, she's running circles around you. 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. By the way, if you want to see more Lauren Sanchez,
Starting point is 00:53:03 go check out her thread, Scott. She really put him up. She put up a lot of photos you might like of herself. Oh yeah, I'll send them to you. That's all I need is Kara Swisher sending me nude photos. It's not, well, it's almost nude, but it's go, just go watch it. It's very performative and very,
Starting point is 00:53:20 I'm going to keep my words to myself. It's unusual to look at, but she does it all the time. Anyway, good for you, good for you, Lauren, if you want to do that. I'm in to keep my words to myself. It's unusual to look at, but she does it all the time. Anyway, good for you. Good for you, Lauren, if you want to do that. I'm in favor of that. I'm going to send her a Trump coin. Okay, all right. Elsewhere in the Karen Scott universe,
Starting point is 00:53:33 I recently spoke with Yonder CEO, Graham Dugoni, for On with Kara Swisher. You'll like this, Scott. Yonder's the company behind those patches getting used at concerts and in schools to lock away phones. It's a physical manifestation of the problem we have with these things. I really like this product and this guy was fantastic. Graham explained to me why it's so important for kids to be separated from their phones
Starting point is 00:53:54 in schools. What's really important for young people in education, I think, is mostly developing critical thinking faculties. Absolutely. And so when you think about the type of assignments they're getting, the tools at the disposal, I think the risk is that young kids are becoming information retrieval machines. And that's not critical thinking. And no matter where we think we're going as a society. I love that idea. Information retrieval systems. Yeah. Without that, we're not going anywhere fast. And that's not necessarily a native faculty.
Starting point is 00:54:21 It's a muscle that has to be flexed. Anyway, so great. He was so interesting. I thought you would like him a lot, Scott. I kept thinking of you throughout the show. In any case, Yonder, Jonathan Haight loves Yonder, for example. You have to really just get these things out of your hands because they're so addictive, they're addiction machines. And so I love this business.
Starting point is 00:54:40 It's pretty simple and he's doing a bunch of other things around getting your phones out of your hands for just a short time of the day at least. Okay, Scott, that's the show. We'll be back on Friday for more. Would you please read us out? Today's show is produced by Lara Ney, Manzoey Marcus, and Taylor Griffin. Ernie and her Todd engineered this episode. Thanks also to Drew Burroughs, Miss Severio, and Dan Shulon. Nishat Kherwaz, Vox Media's executive producer of audio. Make sure you subscribe to the show wherever you listen to podcasts.
Starting point is 00:55:07 Thanks for listening to Pivot from New York Magazine and Vox Media. You can subscribe to the magazine at mynymag.com slash pod. We'll be back later this week for another breakdown of all things tech and business care. Have a great week. Delta believes that every journey should be as unique as you are, so they're leveraging digital tools to put you and your preferences at the center of every trip. Delta is evolving the in-flight entertainment experience with new partnerships, features
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