Prof G Markets - Ask Us Anything — Scott and Ed Answer Your Questions
Episode Date: August 26, 2024Scott and Ed answer listener-submitted questions about everything from how they met to their personal relationships. They give career advice and talk about the people who inspire them. Plus, Ed discus...ses how he allocates his investments and Scott confirms the truth behind a rumor from his college days. Finally, bear witness to the moment Scott first learned Ed has a girlfriend. Order "The Algebra of Wealth," out now Subscribe to No Mercy / No Malice Follow the podcast across socials @profgpod: Instagram Threads X Reddit Follow Scott on Instagram Follow Ed on Instagram and X Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Today's number, $80. That's the cost of Costco's new emergency food bucket,
which includes freeze-dried meals that will last up to 25 years.
True story, Ed.
I remember when I shot my first turkey.
Boy, were the people at the Costco frozen food section surprised.
Little tame dad humor.
Little Costco membership retail dad humor there.
Welcome to Prop G Markets.
What is going on today, Ed? I usually introduce you as media analyst.
Have we given that shit up?
Media analyst, whatever that was?
Okay, I need to put this to rest once and for all.
Our company is called
Prof G Media. So we called me the analyst of Prof G Media. And you keep on thinking that I'm
calling myself a media analyst. I'm the analyst of Prof G. Thanks for straightening that out. By
the way, that category, that puts you in a new employment category with much lower salary and
no benefits. No more dental for you. No more dental for you. All right. So we are doing
something different today. We've got a fun one. Tell us what we're doing. Yeah, we're doing an
Ask Me Anything episode. So we'll be going through our listener questions that we received on
Instagram and on Reddit and on YouTube. Thank you to everyone who sent in questions. We'll try to
get through as many as we can. Are you ready to go, Scott? Let's light this candle. Okay, how did Scott and Ed meet?
I don't remember.
I don't remember.
You don't remember?
I remember very well.
I know it was a bathroom, but I primed to remember where.
We're off to a good start.
It was the bathroom at the RNC in Milwaukee.
Oh my God, that's my favorite stat.
Grinder crashing in Milwaukee during the RNC convention.
I just fucking love that.
Anyways, go ahead.
How did we meet?
It was about four years.
I'll preface it with this.
It was about four years ago.
I was in college and I was feeling generally pretty lost
about what I wanted to do with my life.
All of my friends were becoming bankers, all of them were becoming
consultants. And for whatever reason, I didn't want to do it. I was stewing over this for a while,
and I decided to create a list of all the people I most admire and whose careers I wanted to
replicate. And I decided I'm going to just create this list and see if I can go help any of these people. And Scott was on that list.
So at the time, I was a big fan of Pivot.
I had been for a while.
One day, I'm listening to Pivot and Karin Scott said,
please welcome Joanna Coles, who is a friend of mine
because she is the mother of my best friend and roommate
from the boarding school I went to in Massachusetts.
So I heard that. I didn't even listen to the interview. And I immediately put my phone down
and reached out to Joanna and said, can you please introduce me to Scott Galloway, which she did.
I connected with Scott over email, and then he offered to get on a phone call with me.
I think you're on a beach in Mexico at the time. Yeah. And then, and he, he offered me an internship
and the rest is history. In my mind, it was a total no brainer to reach out to you because
I think this is the learning I had already done all of the mental work ahead of time that I needed
to know that if there's an opportunity to meet Scott Galloway, I have to take it.
I think that's sort of my takeaway.
It's like, I mean, 90% of your career battle is figuring out that question.
What do I want to do?
That's the hardest part.
Once you figured that out, it's sort of autopilot.
I knew I wanted to work with you.
So yeah, that's how we met on a phone call, I guess.
Yeah, well, thanks for that.
Those were generous words.
And it made me feel nice to
hear you say that. I didn't know some of that stuff. You're obviously privileged in the sense
that you came with huge credentials coming out of Princeton, and to be fair, you knew somebody.
You're not a NEPO hire, but you knew someone who I'm friends with, and some people, because of the
income of the household they grew up with with don't have access to friends who know
people in positions to hire them. I remember growing up thinking like all my friends when
they were applying to college, like, oh, my dad's friend is on the board of advisors for the
University of Wisconsin. And I'm like, my mom doesn't know anybody. Like we have no contacts.
But anyways, the lesson here is that, or the
lesson for me in my approach to hiring, so Joanna Coles called me and said, I have someone you have
to hire. And I take Joanna very seriously. She's super smart. She's built companies herself. She's
one of the few people from the magazine industry, for those of you who don't know Joanna Coles,
she was the chief content or creative officer for Hearst. And editor-in-chief of Cosmo, too.
Yeah, editor-in-chief of Cosmo, which at one point was the kind of biggest magazine in the world.
And she's just a very impressive woman. She's now, I think, the co-owner of The Daily Beast.
She's taken that over, which is, in my opinion, going to be like pushing a rock up a hill. But
best of luck to you, Joanna. But she called me and said, in no uncertain terms,
I have someone you have to hire. And that's the way I hire. If somebody I trust who I think is
really smart is willing to put, not their reputation, but put their full-throated endorsement
behind someone, I'll hire them. Because here's the thing, interviews for me are not worthless,
but they're almost worthless. The best interview I've ever had was with someone at L2. She came in
and she just blew my socks off. I'm like, this person is so smart, so composed, has such presence,
and everyone else is like, okay, fine, let's hire her. Two days after she started, she went on disability.
And she refused to tell us what was wrong with her because that would be an invasion of her privacy.
But she used to show up to the parties.
And it took us like nine months to figure out a way to fire her.
Like just went on disability and wouldn't even tell us why she was on disability.
But was well enough to show up for any social thing we had.
That was the best interview I've ever had.
I don't remember doing the phone call with you, but I don't need to remember because
I was going to hire you because someone I trust and respect said, I have to hire you.
She said, this kid is so impressive.
She said, he's friends with my, he's good friends with my son.
We hang out with him.
We've, I don't know if this was true, vacationed with you.
And he's just such an impressive young man.
You have to hire him.
So I knew I was hiring you when I got off the phone with Joanna.
I can't tell if that reflects well on me or well on Joanna.
Well, you've been a fucking disaster.
So I call her and tell her, you know, she owes me.
I'm like, you owe me.
Yeah, 100%.
No, that's reference hires
is I think the big learning here. Moving on to a question for you, Scott, could you address the
rumors that you were in fact Joe Bruin, the UCLA mascot during your time at UCLA? So that is 100%
true. This guy named Brady Connell, who was the president of my fraternity, was the Bruin bear and
came up to me and said, you should be the Bruin Bear. And I'm like, what are you talking about? And he said, the mascot at the football games is this giant bear in a Disney costume. And so I said, oh, okay. And so I tried out and I became the Bruin Bear at UCLA in 1983. I was a freshman and I traveled with the football team. I tried out for the
football team and ended up dancing around on the sidelines in a fucking costume.
And it was an interesting experience. I traveled with the football team for a season
and me and the other bear would get ridiculously fucking high and stay out past the curfew.
Can you believe it? I remember we went to the Fiesta Bowl in Arizona and we were playing
against Miami. And so me and Harry Hirschman, the other bear, we went out and as you do when
you're 19 in Arizona and we got ridiculously fucked up at a Mexican restaurant, ended up back
at our hotel with a couple of women. And we just like partied like four in the morning.
And then the next morning I got a call from like the Dean of spirit squad or whatever she was
doing. And she came to our room with another guy, I guess for, I don't know, gravitas and said,
I'm putting you on a plane home. You have violated NC2A athletic rules. You were not in bed by 10.
And I'm like, let me get this. I don't have to march around in a 140-degree fucking costume, wildly hungover, and you're pretending that's a punishment?
You said that.
Yeah, she was a love—I was so hungover.
I think I had to—I'm not exaggerating.
I think I had to excuse myself from this dressing down in this meeting to go throw up in the bathroom.
I'm like, I'm not throwing a football.
I don't need to be—no one sees me. I'm in a hot
box. I'm in this costume. I'm in Arizona. I'm going to be in a fur line costume making dumb
poses. It's going to be, it's literally going to be 140 degrees in there. And you're acting as if
that's a punishment. And her only comeback was you're going to have to pay for your own flight home. And I'm like, well, okay. And so it ended up that was all bullshit. And they're like,
fuck you, get in the costume and get to the Fiesta Bowl. But yeah, I did that. I was Joe
Bruin for a season of the Mighty Bruins when we went to the Fiesta Bowl. Not something I talk a
lot about, although I used to try and get girls up to my room in the fraternity to see the costume. I'd be
like, I'm the Bruin Bearer. You want to see the costume? Didn't work a lot. Yeah. Yeah. It's
something to talk about. It is something to talk about. Yeah. So yes, true. I was the Bruin Bearer
in 1983. Wow. I did not know that. I feel like I know every dumb factoid about you. I did not know
that. So next one, Ed, what does your portfolio look like?
So my portfolio is very simple.
It's all ETFs.
So S&P 500 and then some wider baskets too.
Russell 1000 growth, Russell 1000 value.
Very simple, plain portfolio.
I don't think about it.
I basically don't touch it.
The reason I don't think about it is because I'm at a point in my career where worrying about
stocks is basically just a waste of time. The highest ROI investment I can make is just being
really, really good at my job. So to me, that means spending my time developing writing skills,
developing speaking skills, understanding markets, meeting people, reading obsessively. That's what I spend my time
doing. So, you know, I don't really pay that much attention to the portfolio. I take, if you want
some more detail, I take 5% of my income and put it in my 401k. Luckily for me, Scott offers a 5% contribution match. So in effect, that's 10% of my income
that's being invested to build an asset base. I plan to start cranking that number up over time,
but I live in New York and I spend a fortune on rent and on food and alcohol and experiences, all of these things that I want to
spend money on. So for me, 5% makes a right amount of sense right now. But I think the idea is that,
you know, once I start making really, really highly meaningful income, that's when I'll start
being a little more strategic and a little bit more bold with my investments. Maybe I'll look
at real estate, maybe venture, maybe private equity.
Those are all things I'm thinking about.
But at this stage,
just a plain passive ETF portfolio,
that's what makes the most sense for me.
I mean, I'm just sitting here thinking,
I mean this sincerely,
you're so much smarter than I was at your age.
You're investing in the right places.
You're taking a disciplined approach.
Even if you're,
you know, you're going to be remarkably successful,
but on the op chance you're not,
as long as you continue to figure out a way
to get 10% of your earnings into these ETFs,
when you're my age, regardless of whether you're a baller or not
and what you've achieved or not achieved economically,
you're going to be fine.
And I did not realize that when I was your age.
Who are your inspirations in and out of the business world? Well, it sounds, it sounds
pat, but I get a lot of inspiration from work. Um, I love surrounding myself with
super intelligent, creative young people. I get a lot of inspiration from you guys. I,
same thing happened at L2. I've always been pretty good at surrounding myself with
young, smart people that have a different lens on the world. I get a lot of inspiration from the
people I work with. I have a few people in my life that I've tried to get to know a lot about,
and they provide me with inspiration. I admire Muhammad Ali's courage.
I feel like I've heard you say that you also admire,
like, I found this interesting, how poetic he was. Is that right?
Well, the key to success is storytelling. And this was a guy who decided he was going to say,
I am so pretty. And he would do poetry at pre-boxing hearings or whatever you call them. And he was just not afraid, very principled,
decided that his principles around not going to Vietnam were not an opinion, it was a principle,
and refused to go. And they stripped him of his medals, they basically impoverished him.
Obviously outstanding at what he did. I just thought this guy was courageous. I mean, it sounds dumb, but I think of
people like Richard Simmons, who was outwardly gay before it was cool. And I remember this one
moment I was at LaGuardia in the middle of winter, it must've been 20 degrees out. And this guy in
front of me at TSA takes off his trench coat and he's wearing a sweater, except it's not a sweater,
it's back hair. And he has like a sparkly tank top, short, short dolphin shorts, K-Swiss and athletic socks.
And the whole airport stops and TSA stops and they go, Richard, they go, Richard. And he cleared
made space around him, asked me to step back, which I did. And he stepped back and threw his arms into the air and went, hello, LaGuardia.
No way.
And the entire terminal stopped for a moment and then erupted in applause.
Wow.
And I thought, this guy is just so fucking unafraid. It's like, have you ever been in a club or at a place and somebody gets on the table and starts dancing and they're dancing as if no one's watching them? I'm like, God, I want to live my life like that. I want to be Richard Simmons. The bridge for me to get to that fearlessness is an embrace of atheism.
It just doesn't matter if you make a fool of yourself or people don't like you or you get shamed or you do something stupid or you take a risk and you have public failure.
You know, it really doesn't matter.
What matters is while you're here having an amazing life. And the only way you're going to have a truly amazing life, a life that's better than the environment you were born into and what logically the world would reward you with,
is that if you have a little bit of Richard Simmons and Muhammad Ali in you, and that is
you are willing to risk public shaming, you are willing to live out loud, and that you very early
decide what is the difference between
an opinion and a principle. I mean, I just love that Richard Simmons story. Yeah, I tend to have
a similar view on the people who inspire me. I mean, I love people who really understand humanity
and for whom you can see that understanding through their work i love comedians i mean you
know my favorite person in high school was louis ck um it's a little i mean he had his issues so
it's hard to say that now there's nothing wrong everyone deserves their heroes and i'm i think
it's important that you masturbate in front of your co-workers mean, that's a great role model.
Sorry. Sorry. Okay, if I whip this out and just have a little bit of fun.
Just FYI, that is not a part of the employee handbook here, Ed, just so you know. I'm sorry,
go ahead. Your role models. The question was inspiration. I wouldn't call him a role model,
I'd call him inspiration. Oh, he's backtracking.
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Grammarly. Enterprise ready AI. We're back with Prof G Markets. Top non-economic books everyone should read.
Do you have one?
I have a bunch, but none of them are that profound.
So the books that really moved me, I remember distinctly as a kid, my father has mild epilepsy,
which he failed to inform me or my mom, and I started having fainting spells.
And it was really traumatic at the time.
I'd be in school and I'd
see something unusual or a weird film or something, and I would not feel well and I'd get up and I'd
pass out. And it was kind of, you know, at the time it was traumatic. You know, the Galloway
kid keeps passing out. And I read this book called The Great Brain. And it was a series of books
about a kid living in, I think, I don't know,
1800s America. And there's a scene where these kids are in a lake and there's a rush of water
or in a river, and one of them drowns. And the kid, the protagonist, he says,
something happened to me that's never happened to me. And he says, I fainted and I passed out.
And I remember thinking it gave me such comfort to read that that happened
to other kids. And to kill a mockingbird, I remember thinking I'd like to be like that guy,
that Atticus Finch character. I remember thinking I would like to be quiet and strong and not
necessarily be a protector, not feel as if I have to always get in people's faces,
just be quietly strong. Books that had a huge impact
on me in high school were one, The Diary of Anne Frank and The Winds of War. I started reading
about World War II and just the amount of sacrifice that people had made that kind of
made America what it is today and the freedoms we enjoy and what happened to Jews in Europe in World War II, that had a huge impact on me. And then the other author that had a huge impact on
me was Jonathan Irving. And he used to just write these books about, that felt so real,
but these people were just so fucking strange. And they put people in the weirdest situation
about somebody gets hit in the face with a baseball
and it changes their life
or the story of a home for unwed mothers
and it provided abortions
and this love story that takes place in this context
about a wrestling coach whose mother is a...
I mean...
That was my favorite growing up weirdly
well according to god but i felt like everyone thinks they're a little bit weird i think deep
down we all think we all think we're hiding some freak and that we're maybe not all of us i feel
like i'm a weird kid and that gave me comfort that the whole world is weird that you don't need to
feel strange or shamed because you're unusual or think weird things that the whole world is
fucking weird and everyone's pretending not to be but those those books really moved me like they
really made me feel something i haven't read a non the reality is in the last five years i've
written almost as many books as i've as i've read i read a lot i read so much during the day that i
don't get relaxation from reading at night what about about you, Ed? What's changed or what's been seminal for you?
I mean, the question, what should everyone read? I personally think everyone should read The Odyssey.
I just think if you want to understand storytelling at a very fundamental level,
that is the book that you have to start with. It's basically, aside from the religious texts,
the most influential book in history. It invented this idea of the hero's journey,
which is the template for pretty much every story in our society today. The character in Odysseus
is super interesting to me and probably my favorite character. The context here,
every hero in these stories in Homer has what's known as an epithet, which is basically like the
adjective that's attached to your name. It's like being called the Incredible Hulk or whatever,
so that you have like swift-footed Achilles and earth-shaking Poseidon, all these characters.
The epithet for Odysseus, the one adjective that is used to
describe him was this word, polytropos. It's a very weird word. It means of many different ways,
which basically is saying he was anything moment to moment. He would change his nature.
Like another way you could say it's like a man of twists and turns. And it's just such a
unique, that was his superpower, basically. His superpower was the ability to read situations,
read people's emotions, and adjust his behavior to get along with people, to make things work,
depending on the context. And I just think it says a lot about humanity that,
you know, of all of these heroes with these different superpowers, you know, strength and
speed and lightning bolts, the one that we exalted most was this word palutropos, this guy who
would change his behaviors from context to context to make things work.
I like this next one.
Ed, do you plan on becoming like Scott when you're his age?
In other words, are you planning to really lean into the erectile dysfunction?
Okay, do you plan on becoming like me when you're my age?
No.
Fair enough.
Let's move on.
Well, no, actually, here's what I will say about this. Fair enough. Let's move on. making good money, I'm getting better at it, and I'm enjoying it. And I think that if you're ticking those three boxes, you're headed in the right direction. So you just got to sort of enjoy
it, see where it takes you. What I can say is that there are fundamental aspects of your life
and your career that I do want. I think that's probably the way to think about it.
The plane. So that's one of them.
You make a lot of money. And I think I have to be real with myself and recognize that money is
very important to me. I want to make a lot of money. I like nice things. I like the freedom
it gives you. That's something for sure that I want.
I also think that I like that you make money doing something that you're actually good at.
It's not like you bought a bunch of crypto and it went to a million and you just ended up rich.
You get to say that you genuinely earned that money because of your talents and your hard work. And,
you know, like I said, I love money, but I think I love it even more when I'm 100% certain that I
deserve it and it's mine. And that's a big part of it. Third thing I'll say, and this is the most
important one, in my opinion, and kind of related to the thing that you were saying about Richard Simmons, I think that you, in your career, have figured out a way to express yourself fully, I think.
And to me, this is like the number one thing you need to do in life. And I think it's actually
really surprisingly difficult to do because when I look at, I mean, I haven't been around that long,
but when I look at my life, the times I've been least happy were the moments where for whatever
reason, I felt kind of unable to express myself fully. And the times I've been most happy are
when I felt motivated and confident to express myself. And I think it's just so difficult to do
because there are just so many little things in life that can get in the way of that. I think the ability to express yourself is a luxury that you have to work hard to achieve.
And I think that you have achieved that. You're in a unique position where you're not only like
empowered to express yourself, but you're like economically incentivized to do so.
Well, one, that's kind and generous
but a couple things one and again i'm not humble i think i'm remarkably talented 49 of what you're
talking about it has come from my talent the other 51 was shit that wasn't my fault being born in
california in the 60s being born in america you know just got very very lucky and the other thing
is when you're 26 you're're exactly right. You just, you
really don't have any idea where you're going to be. It's like you have your plan and then God
laughs. And when I was 26, I was a second year in business school. I had started a brand strategy
firm in business school. 25, by the way. When I was 25, I had gone to birth. I enrolled at the
University of Texas at Austin to go to business school, and I just switched to the Haas School of Business because I'd fallen in love with someone.
And I said to her, she said, we're going to business school together.
I'm like, yeah, I'm going to UT Austin.
And she said, well, I'm going to Berkeley.
And I said, well, I'm going to Berkeley.
And I followed her to Berkeley.
And coming out of Berkeley in the 90s, I ended up in tech.
What if I'd come out of UT? Would I have
ended up in energy? I doubt I would have started an e-commerce company. I mean, I just, your life
has, your life is a function of fractions and inches and small decisions and small things that
happen outside your control and timing and missing or getting a, you know, a subway to somewhere.
So I was trying to reflect on just how fortunate I am.
You're tracking right now in terms of your currency in the marketplace,
the skills you're developing, the economic base.
The most rewarding thing that will happen to you
will be finding someone to build something with and to have kids with.
I didn't figure that out until I was in my 40s,
but that has been the most,
hands down, the most rewarding thing. By the way, this is a personal question for me.
Why did you wait so long? I loved being single. But you went off to business. I mean, it sounds
like you were down to drop everything for a partner pretty young. Yeah, but Ed, here's the thing. She was much hotter than me.
She was much, much hotter than me. No, look, I've been married before and I didn't like it.
And I was fine. When I moved to New York, I was 34. I was making good money. I was single and I really liked it. I liked being selfish. I liked doing my own thing. I liked going to St. Bart's and having brunch with fabulous people and going out and getting
shitty drunk. And I just loved it. And I didn't think I would ever, I didn't think I would ever
have kids. Really? Yeah. I didn't want kids. Why? I just couldn't stand being around them.
Have you been around kids? I think they were awful. I've always assumed I'll feel
differently about mine. You're 100% right. I'm still not interested in other people's kids.
God reaches into your soul with your kids. And by the way, it's a slow, it's not a switch,
it's a dim after you have kids. I wasn't in love with my sons right when they were born. It's
really true what they say. You kind of fall in love with them. But I wasn't planning on it, but I fell in love with someone who said, I want to
have kids. And I said, well, I'm not getting married again. And she called my bluff and said,
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and try and train you to develop some economic security like you're doing such that you can focus on your relationships and your family. Because as you get older, that's what it's all
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We're back with Profiteer Markets. Scott, what's in your wallet? What card gets used the most and why?
My Amex Black card because I'm trying to impress other people.
That's right.
Daddy throws down black.
Hello.
Hello, ladies.
I mean, literally, I pay $5,000 or maybe it's $7,500 a year for a card that has no incremental benefits other than they took a visa and spray painted it black.
Is that right? There are no other benefits? Or you probably just don't,
you can't figure out how to use the points.
I'm sure there are. I don't use them. Oh my God, the benefits are so lame. They're like
wine tasting in a hot air balloon in Napa, Sonoma. And I was like, what am I, 80 fucking years old?
I mean, it's such lame shit, and their travel agency is so bad.
It used to be good, and now you'd much rather use Expedia.
Expedia is 10 times better than what Amex offers in terms of travel services.
They have their, I don't know, I got into Amex benefits.
They have their late checkout thing, which occasionally I use, or free room upgrade, but I think you get that with a Platinum card. It is literally pure signaling. That is all it is. It is pure signaling, and I will do it until I'm dead. I will bury me with my Centurion card. I love that thing. There's some crazy stats. There used to be, I remember this a while ago, there were 10,000 black cards in America, and 5,000 of them were in Manhattan. I thought that was hilarious.
Makes sense. Let's get another question here. Scott, you've had some personal beef with Elon
Musk. Could you explain what happened?
Oh, no, I don't have beef with him. I don't know him. We just report on him a lot. He's said a
couple of things about me online, which I think were mean, but no. I've probably been more hostile
towards him than he's
towards me because I don't think he thinks about me a whole lot. If you're going to talk about
technology and society, you're going to talk about Elon Musk. He is probably one of the defining,
if not the defining character of our age. And there's some things I really admire about him.
I think his brain, his fearlessness, his innovation, his understanding of technology, his embrace of just massive risk, doubling down after he sold PayPal to try and build a rocket and a car company.
It's basically like every eight-year-old's fantasy, like I want to build a rocket and a car company.
I think he's just an inspiration on a lot of levels.
And then there's some things about him that trigger me.
I think being critical of other people's parenting is sort of off limits. But when he puts this out
there and tweets about it and puts this out there for personal consumption, I think he's inviting
review. He said to Jordan Peterson talking about the woke mind virus that he lost his son to the
woke mind virus and that his daughter went through transition, that the way he describes
it is that his son is dead. And it is so rattling for a father to hear another father describe their
child that way. And when I think about how many young men look up to this guy and that the model
he's portraying is so antithetical to the notion of what it means to
be a man. In my view, there are some basics about being a real man. And the first is that you move
to protection. You don't need to understand gay people. You don't need to understand
whoever it is, what's going on. The moment someone is threatened, your first instinct as a man should be to protect. And that ground zero of that is your family. And to ever say that, regardless of what you
might feel about kids going through transition, but to say that publicly, that your child is
dead to you, I just find that that is such a terrible role model, just such an awful example for young men.
And so I have this really conflicted view of the guy. And I don't know, I used to think he was
going to be a net positive for society, but I worry that we're training an entire generation
of young men to be coarse, to abuse your power, to not pay people the severance you own them, to spread conspiracy
theories that someone might be gay such that they have to move their home, to spread conspiracy
theory about a gay love triangle of the speaker's husband who's assaulted. I mean, it's so homophobic,
it's so transphobic, it's just like the last role model that young men should be looking with him. And I didn't want to
meet with him. And I said, maybe as an excuse, I said, maybe sometime we'll all get together for
drinks or something. But I just find him, it's like you were talking about the classics. I feel
like it's a Greek tragedy. I mean, just think about this, Ed. He's a man who has, I think,
12 kids now, and he doesn't live with any of them,
and he lives with a loaded gun next to his bed. I don't know. He probably lives rent-free in my brain much more than he should, but no, that's about it. Enough about Musk. Ed, what is your
relationship like with your parents and your siblings? Well, my relationship with my parents
and my siblings are pretty good, but they're very different. My parents are not together, and I think pretty much every kid has is,
I know a lot of people talk about this,
but the idea that your parents are people too,
I think that was a big one for me.
And learning how to get along with them at a very human level.
Yeah, I've had an interesting thought with my parents recently, or in the past few years,
where, you know, I was thinking, I really want to understand my parents, and I want to get to
know them at like a very personal level. And the only way that I can do that fully is by
being able to be vulnerable with them them and they also need to be vulnerable
with me. I think as a parent, that's probably very difficult to do because your instinct is
to protect your child, I would assume, and you don't really want to show your child the vulnerable
side of yourself because you don't want to fuck them up for whatever reason. But I realized that it's
just something that I want to know about my parents. Like I want to know what are the biggest
mistakes that they made? You know, what things do they wish they'd done differently? What are they
embarrassed about? What are they insecure about? Just that I have some notes, you know, moving
forward. And anyway, I sort of said this to my parents, but I also said,
but I recognize it's probably difficult for you. So what I'm going to try to do, and I've been
trying to do this in general, is signal as best as I can to you that I'm fine. I'm never going to,
I'll ask for your advice on things, but I'm never going to come running to you in like a crisis and be like, you need to help me.
I'm drowning.
Like you need to figure something out for me because what I want to do is get to a point where I can interact with you as a peer and where you feel that you can express things you're concerned about without this feeling that you're kind of, you know,
placing undeserved burden on your child. And I want you to understand that I'm strong enough and I'm capable enough to hear what you have to say and be empathetic towards it.
I think it's great you're thinking that way, especially at your age. That's a lot more
self-actualized than I was at your age. But just a couple of things.
As a parent, like you said, you kind of said,
I would be scared to come to them in a crisis.
Like what I find is I really want my kids to know
if they ever get in trouble, if the bills get too much,
if they have their heart broken, that they can come home,
that I am their hammock safety net,
like no judgment, anything goes wrong, I should be your first call. And I think they want to know
that. I think, I mean, you're impressive enough where I don't think they're going to have trouble
treating as your peer, but I think especially dads really want, as a dad, I really want my kids to come to advice.
I think one of the most, I don't want to call it disappointing, but frustrating things for me is, and I realize it's natural, is I'm not exaggerating.
I'll get 30 or 40 emails today from young men looking for advice.
My kids never ask me for advice.
And it's sort of like I wish they would.
I wish at some point they would say, Dad, you know, occasionally they ask me for stuff, but not really.
Well, they're super young.
I mean, they're about to be 14 and 17.
But so just let me put it this way.
Don't in any way think that you are coming to your parents for advice or comfort is a burden.
It's what they want.
It's what makes them feel important and close to you. And also just try and make a habit of calling your mom as often as possible just to say hi and check in.
I think moms need that more than anything.
But the way you're thinking is the right way.
Realizing their life here or their time here is finite and making an effort to get to know them.
Okay, something more fun.
You're a young, single.
I'm actually not single anymore.
What? Ed Elson? I thought we were close. Actually, it's not true. I don't want to be close,
but I thought I would have known that. Okay. The fans want to know, are you willing to go
public with this relationship? What does that mean? Yeah.
How did you meet? Who is it? How long
have you been dating? So clearly she has poor vision and poor judgment. What happened? How did
Ed Elson find someone? I've known her for a really long time. We went to college together. We were
very good friends and it was very sort of random. And we kind of, at one point realized that we really liked each other.
Um, which was interesting having been friends for a really long time.
So how long have you guys been dating quotes, quote unquote,
three months when I say
Ed's got a girlfriend.
This is very exciting.
Our producer has a girlfriend.
You have a girlfriend.
This is very, everyone's this is, this is good.
Everyone's hooking up.
I'm glad.
I've got a kind of sappy last question here.
Scott, are you proud of Ed?
Am I proud of Ed?
Proud.
No, proud's the wrong word.
I'm not proud of Ed.
Look, Ed, you're a nice kid to have on this because I think you're going to be a good role model for other young men.
I think you acquit yourself well.
I think you're reserved.
I think you're kind.
I think you're smart.
You work hard.
You give good financial advice.
I think you're a good role model for young men.
I can be somewhat of a role model by boasting about my success.
You're going to be a more effective role model, though, because they're going to relate to you.
They're going to see how you're behaving and the mistakes you make and the victories you have.
So when we were doing this podcast, I thought it was really important to have
a young person. And I think it's nice. I think you're setting a good example for other young men.
This episode was produced by Claire Miller and engineered by Benjamin Spencer.
Our associate producer is Alison Weiss.
Our executive producer is Catherine Dillon.
Mia Silverio is our research lead and Drew Burrows is our technical director.
Thank you for listening to Prof G Markets from the Vox Media Podcast Network.
We'll be back with a fresh take on markets on Thursday. Lifetimes
You held me
In kind
Reunion
As the world turns
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