Prof G Markets - The Next Inflation Wave Is Already Here
Episode Date: March 23, 2026Scott Galloway and Ed Elson unpack how the war is driving up prices across the U.S. and why they believe a recession is a real possibility. They then explore OpenAI’s shift away from “side quests,...” with Scott offering a practical framework for deciding when a detour is worth pursuing, and when it’s a distraction. Finally, Scott outlines the top priorities for Disney’s new CEO, while Ed makes the case for why the company must start investing in the clip economy to stay competitive. Subscribe to the Prof G Markets newsletter Order "Notes on Being a Man," out now Note: We may earn revenue from some of the links we provide. Subscribe to No Mercy / No Malice Follow the podcast across socials @profgmarkets Follow Scott on Instagram Follow Ed on Instagram, X and Substack Send us your questions or comments by emailing Markets@profgmedia.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Today is number 10.
That's how many grams of protein are in Buffalo Wild Wings' espresso protein.
A cocktail infused with buffalo dry rub.
Ed, let me give you a little advice on how to keep things fresh in your relationship.
The next time your girlfriend asks you if you've loaded the dishwasher,
say, of course, and take a sip of coffee from a vase.
How much would you have to be paid to drink the Buffalo Wild Wings' espresso
protein?
For some reason, I got in my head that coffee was bad for you.
So I never had a pill.
I don't think I had, I think I went to the doctor three times before the age of 40.
I just no external items whatsoever.
I think that's why I don't get sick now.
But anyways, never had coffee.
And oh my God, what have I been missing?
It's fucking amazing.
Coffee is amazing, but I'm highly sensitive to it, so one, you would never find me at a Buffalo Wild Wings.
Is that a restaurant? What the fuck is that?
Yes. Never been to Buffalo Wild Wings?
I've never been to Buffalo Wild Wings.
It's a terrible place.
Yeah, I've never been there. I'd go to Hooters, but I wouldn't go to Buffalo Wildings.
It's Hooters without the girls.
Oh, that's okay.
That's like Beach Without the Saint. What's the point?
By the way, Scott, where are you?
I'm in Tulum, Ed.
Why?
Why? That's a good question.
I started coming here about, I did an annual trip with guys.
My closest friend Adam, who I've known for 50 years, my other friend Augusto, who I've known for 25 years, and my friend, Scott Sabah, who I had known for 15 years, who I had known for 15 years, used to come here every year in March.
And we stopped doing it because Scott passed a couple years ago.
And we decided to come down again.
So anyways, I'm in, I'm in Tulum.
That's very exciting.
Are you ready for the big day tomorrow?
What am I missing?
What's the big day?
You didn't hear?
It's my birthday tomorrow.
Oh.
You're turning 27?
Is that what it is?
27?
That's right.
27, baby.
It's going to be a big year.
You know what I tell everybody.
I'm not exaggerating.
When anyone says, oh, I love Ed, I just go.
he's 26.
That's the most impressive thing about you, is it you're 26.
Let me tell you 27, it's all downhill.
Your prostate starts to blow up like a grapefruit.
Your dick doesn't work nearly as well, just, you know.
27?
Get ready to wake up in the middle of the night and go,
do I need to pee?
I think the answer is yes.
I'm actually already there.
I've been trying to figure out what it is.
I think it's because I'm drinking too much coffee,
but I'm getting up to go to pee at least once.
a night, sometimes twice a night. I've had a night's where I go three times. It's quite concerning,
to be honest. You're peeing three times at night? It's happened. It's happened. It doesn't happen,
but it has happened before. Huh. Is it after drinking? Yeah, it's after drinking. Well, all I got
to say is worth it. Worth it, because when you're your age, you can go right back to sleep.
When I'm up, like, I get up, it's like, that's it. I'm awake. I'm awake. People think old people
need less sleep. We don't. We just don't sleep well. I just walk around slightly tired.
all the time. Yeah, I'm jealous.
It's constantly grumpy.
Yeah, yeah. Well, Ed...
There's nothing that Tulum can't fix.
Happy birthday, I think that's very excited.
You know, I'm glad to see you finally got your professional life sort of on track.
Sort of on track. We're a little worried about you, but yeah.
We're going somewhere.
You're doing...
Ed Elson, you're doing very well.
And then I'm also, my final update, I'm heading to Vegas for a bachelor party, and I know you're a
connoisseur of Las Vegas.
So any advice, any tips?
Where are you staying?
We're staying at the encore.
Oh, that's the place to go.
And you'll meet a bunch of rich people from Texas.
It feels a little bit lame, but it's hands down the best.
The aria felt good, but it felt like very modern.
It felt like if you got off from the wrong floor,
you might wake up with stitches in your back and one less kidney.
It feels very sort of dystopian.
It's good, though.
It's good that you're going with, I'm a big believer in guys weekends and girls' weekends.
I just think the big guys weekend.
How many of you?
First one in a long time.
I think it's 10 of us.
And here's the question.
Is your girlfriend supportive or sort of making noises that she doesn't like these weekends?
She's supportive, but I'm not sure how much I believe her.
She says she's supportive.
Uh-oh.
Just start drinking coffee from a vase.
Way to bring it back.
My partner literally wants me out of the house as much as possible.
She's in Corchavelle right now, and I'm in, where am I, Tulum?
Anyways, just be awful to be around and it gets easier for them to let you go.
Okay.
Wait, hold on, Claire, do you have girls weekends?
Notice how I say that because I'm unconsciously homophobic.
Why would I even ask that?
Yeah, last girls weekend I went to was in the North Fork.
It was delightful.
I'm trying to get one going for Canada because I haven't been there yet.
And these are friends from college?
College, internships, all over the place, yeah.
And the key is your partner does not come, right?
right? No, that's not true.
I mean, that's that...
And it's not a girl's weekend.
Okay, no, but the fun thing is that we're both girls, so...
That's a great point.
We all get to be friends together.
It's kind of a hack.
It's impossible for me to respond to this.
This is how the podcast stands right here.
Just cannot relate.
This is why we need to be gay scott.
We could just do boys weekends forever.
There you go.
So, yeah, so it's...
Should we get to the headlines?
It's time to move on.
Let's do it.
Now is the time to buy.
I hope you have plenty of the world of all.
The Trump administration has requested funding of up to $200 billion for the Iran war.
Meanwhile, the U.S. national debt sought to a record $39 trillion last week.
Still, the clearest, most immediate impact for people at home is on actual prices.
Since the strikes began 23 days ago, fertilizer price.
prices are up 25%.
Gas and diesel have both jumped more than 30%,
and jet fuel has surged roughly 50%.
So, Scott, new implication of the war,
which we have been sort of hinting at before,
but now it's getting very real,
and that is the impact on prices.
Price of gas is skyrocketing,
price of diesel is skyrocketing.
Americans are now spending $300 million more
on gasoline per day compared to a month ago,
And it appears that this is going to start trickling down into other things too.
We talked about fertilizer prices which are up.
Freight prices are also up around 30%.
Construction materials prices are up 30% as well.
I'm waiting for all of this to sort of come through in the bills themselves at the end of the month.
We'll probably see higher food prices, potentially higher housing costs as well.
In sum, it's not looking great on the inflation front.
And it appears it won't improve until this Iran war.
at least at an end in some capacity.
What do you make of what's happening here?
As you know, I was more hopeful about military action than most people,
but there's just no getting around it.
It feels as if they should have spinning out of control,
and the ramifications are pretty immediate and pretty, you know,
how often had you heard the term fertilizer before,
and now fertilizer costs are soaring?
It appears that the administration didn't do any real scenario planning
around what happens if the Straits of Hormoz are blocked,
And we were, the markets were pricing in two rate cuts. That's gone away. So we're going to have
higher borrowing costs for longer elevated across the board for mortgages, car loans, credit cards,
small business credit. And we're just talking about the economics here. Obviously,
we're not talking about the loss of life. But this is now potentially brought up a word that
your generation has never even really had to deal with. And that's the idea of low growth and
inflation and it's called stagflation, which is, you know, nitro and glycerin. It's really a toxic cocktail.
Real GDP growth has been revised down from 1.4 to 0.7% in Q4, 2025. At the same time, inflation is
accelerating. The PPI rose 3.4% year on year last month, while core PPI jumped 3.9%. That's the
biggest increase in three years. There's just no getting around it. You've been doing a lot of good work on
this, I've been following your social feed, which gets served to me a lot. Let me just say a lot.
Look, the costs here are, what's interesting about this for is we don't talk about it as much
in human terms. We talk about it more in economic terms, which I think is important, but it kind of
goes to this notion that the idolatry of dollar and everything's about money now. But I look back
on previous Gulf Wars and kind of Gulf One with, you know, George Herbert Walker Bush, 30 nations,
billion, 62 billion paid back by our allies, UN resolution. You know, that's what a coalition
sounds like. And then W sort of had a coalition, mostly symbolic, UK troops, Australian troops,
but mostly us. And then obviously that, that would, you know, cost trillions of dollars in 4,500 U.S.
service men and women killed. This, we've decided it's us in Israel. And it just goes to this
basic notion that I think the fundamental mistake of the Trump,
administration is believing that cooperation is not the key to the West's prosperity.
Anyways, your thoughts, said.
Yeah, I think the dollar's point is quite interesting, that we are quite focused on the
dollars.
We're focused on it on this show, especially, because we're a market's show.
But I think it's true that that's the way that a lot of people are talking about it.
And I think the reason that that is happening, at least in the conversations in America,
is that it seems like the loss of life as some sort of preventative measure isn't that
powerful, at least to this administration, or at least to our government and to Americans at large.
It seems like, you know, when you see these death tolls, I mean, as the saying goes, it becomes a
statistic and it doesn't seem to be something that really impacts people. But the point that you've
been making as well is that Trump does care about money. He does care about how the markets react.
And so it does seem, I mean, we're in this very interesting place where we're looking at what's
happening in the markets, but we also know in the back of our market.
minds that what happens on a dollar basis may actually fundamentally adjust and alter the trajectory
of what is going to happen in the Middle East. Because if we can make the argument that this is going
to be really bad for markets, this is going to be really bad for bonds, this is going to be a huge
inflationary crisis, then maybe it kind of gets through to the administration, maybe Trump decides
as he did with the tariffs that actually this is a bad idea, because he does seem to be so
motivated by money. But that's a, it is a fundamentally ridiculous position to be in, to be having
to make that argument. But let's just put arguments aside. Let's just look at it at a completely
unbiased way. Let's just, you know, look at what it's happening on the ground. The reality is prices are
just rising. So regardless of your political views, the reality is your bills are about to get a lot more
expensive and something that I've been thinking about, and I'm not sure this is the right
analogy yet, but I do think back to just a few years ago when in 2022, the S&P erased around
25% of its value, and it was the worst year for the stock market since 2008. It was a really,
really bad year. And the reason it was so bad was really because of inflation. It was because
we had this COVID problem, which we thought was going to be a problem for various reasons.
turned out to be kind of okay.
We had a few good years coming out of COVID,
but then we had this supply chain issue
where we realized that supply chains
were completely messed up.
Everything was gunked up, as you've said, in the past.
And it resulted in ridiculous inflation,
which caused and forced every central bank
around the world to initiate this extreme rate hiking cycle,
which was eventually what sucked out all the energy out of the room,
and then eventually investors started to start
to sell. That was what we saw in
2022. And I look
at what is happening now.
Inflation is rising.
We are already at, I mean,
people say two and a half, but as
Mark Zandi is told, it's actually closer to 3%.
The expectation
is that inflation is only going to
remain elevated. And that's just
assuming that everything kind of
sorts itself out
eventually in the next few months or so.
But then again, no one really has a real
hold on what the time frame on this
thing actually is because it's all up to Trump at this point. But the point being, inflation is
very much back on the table. It already was on the table, but now it's back on the table,
doubly so. And now we're facing the possibility of we're not probably going to see as many
rate cuts as we thought. Maybe we'll see no rate cuts in 2026. And now people are starting to
talk about rate hikes. That is genuinely becoming a real possibility. In which case,
maybe all of the tailwinds that we were expecting for 2026 in the stock market,
maybe those aren't going to materialize.
I mean, the two big tailwinds that we identified,
we had all these issues that we were worried about,
the geopolitical issues, the AI issues,
but the two big tailwinds that we identified,
which is why we thought that the stock market would perform okay this year,
was one big, beautiful bill spending,
which will still happen,
and we'll still pump money into the economy that way.
We'll pay for it later down the line when we have to pay for our debts and deficits,
but for now it's a good thing. And two, lower interest rate environment. That might not be happening
anymore. And so I do think that we're approaching a moment where we need to start considering the
possibility that actually this will have a really negative impact, not just on prices, but also on
portfolios. I don't think we're necessarily there yet, but we are certainly approaching that point.
With energy, there's just a huge domino effect because fuel prices account for more than
50% of the total cost of shipping.
I mean, ships are basically cheap containers that float in the primary costs, and they're manned
by like eight people.
I don't know if that's true, but they're shocking few people on a piece of equipment that big.
It's fuel.
And so freight prices are up 30%.
And when freight rates double, inflation increases by another 70 bibs.
And there's all sorts of costs here, war risk and shipping.
premiums for vessels traveling through the Persian Gulf have increased by about 50%.
Traffic is decreased by about three quarters. Fertilizer costs of 25 percent, who thought we
were going to choose the term fertilizer over and over. And what's interesting, Gulf states
produced nearly 49 percent of the world's urea, a critical nitrogen fertilizer, and about 30 percent of its ammonia.
Amonia is up 92 percent year on year. In the U.S., ammonia prices are 41 percent of
higher than margin up more than 21%. And then construction material prices might go up as much as 30%. So
according to the NHB, when lumber prices tripled post-COVID, it caused the price of a new house to
increase 35,000. So this is just ugly on every level. And America is probably this year,
in for a rough road. What I just asked Mark Zandi, and we talk a lot about, is, okay, what could go
Right. And what's interesting is if you look at the markets, the markets are sort of yawning right now in the U.S. other than the price of oil, what the S&P's off 5% since it's all time high, it just feels like there's a disconnect right now between the markets and what's going on. And I don't, I don't quite understand it. It feels as if the market is basically saying, hold my beer.
I think the market has gotten very traumatized by their previous bouts of panic selling.
And so I think that they look back at something like the tariffs as an example, where if you decided to sell, because Trump decided to pursue this strategy, then you looked very stupid all of a sudden.
Because then the market's rebounded and he started to start to taco and then things changed and ultimately just panic selling on that.
news was not the right thing to do. So I think that what investors are doing right now is they're in a
very weight and see mentality where they're like, well, he's done this crazy thing and it is kind of
crazy and history would tell us that, yes, we're probably going to be in there for a lot longer
than they're telling us right now. But let's just find out what the conclusion actually is on this
war. He told us that the war was very complete pretty much. Maybe it is very complete. And
which case, it would be a very bad idea to sell. So I think that investors are trying to find reasons,
and understandably so, to not view this as such a bad thing. Because if you went with the worst
case scenario, if that was your instinct, in the past, you got kind of punished for it. So I think
the question is increasingly becoming like, well, when are we going to determine what the
consensus is on this Iran war? Are we going to stay there for long?
Is it going to escalate? Are we going to see escalations on the nuclear front? I mean, these are all
very much possibilities, but I think that there has been an incentive among the investment
community right now to err on the side of optimism, because if you take the more negative view,
then, you know, as we've seen, you get kind of banged up in the market, so they're not doing it
right now. So I think that partially explains the market's behavior at the moment. I think the question
then becomes like, at what point is a recession actually on the table? And Mark Zandi,
as you mentioned, he has the odds of a recession at 49% now. And it's been steadily rising.
49%. That's such a wimp protect. He can declare victory no matter what happens when you say
49%. But your point, I think your point is exactly where I want. And that is, if you look at the
history of recent conflicts or wars and the markets, what's happened is there's been a
dip, oh no, it's war. And then the markets actually go way up the following year. So it feels like
the markets have said every time there was a dip in the markets because of the outbreak of hostilities
overseas usually caused by us, it's been a buying opportunity when the market goes down. So it feels
like the market's like, let's just skip to the buying opportunity or we don't buy that no one,
no one wants to panic sell like they haven't panics. No one wants to sell like they have in previous.
So, but again, past performance is not an indication of future performance.
Exactly.
And in terms of recession, even distinct of the war in Iran, I love what Jamie Diamond said,
that a recession is something that happens every seven years.
We haven't really had one in 17 years or 18 years.
So, or is that right, 2008?
I mean, it's just been, we're just so due.
And again, I go to, for you and Claire,
I don't think that would be the worst thing that could happen.
You know, the cost of your lives, respectively, and of other young people have gotten so crazy.
In recessions, depressions, I don't want a depression, a recession, an exogenous event,
they have a tendency, generally speaking, they're a healthy part of the cycle that transfers wealth
from owners to earners.
And so I don't, you know, you don't want to root for sure.
stocks to go down. But it just, it's basic math, folks. If you're investing, you and Claire
are in the investing portions of your life because of an exceptionally generous 401k matching
program by your employer, but you're in the investing part of your life. So do you want stocks
up or down? Yeah, exactly. You want them down. And what is so dangerous about what we
continue to do here is to print money and go back to and ask for Congress as if we're just
drunken sailors spending more and more and racking up debt, which increases inflation,
of which the majority of that burden is shouldered by lower-income households and especially the
young. So I don't, I'm not rooting for a recession, but at some point we have to stop
propping up the market with your credit card. And if all of a sudden, I would imagine you and
Claire, neither of you are homeowners, right? No. I would imagine both of you would like to be
homeowners. So if the market went sideways or down substantially and all of a sudden real estate
in Brooklyn was off 20, 40 percent, is that bad? So I'm of two minds on this. I don't want to see
there's a lot of pain in a recession, but it feels like we're due and quite frankly,
recessions and down cycles are a healthy part of a cycle. Otherwise, it's not a cycle. I'm not
rooting for a recession, but if it's a choice between a recession and uncontrolled inflation,
I'll take the recession every time. I mean, the inflation's what's going to hit young people
and lower-income people, the hardest. That's just you're losing your purchasing power.
But I think the people in charge, specifically Trump, has decided he really likes when stocks go up,
and I guess he doesn't really care that much if prices go up. He seems to pretend like he cares.
He says that he, oh, I'm taking the affordability crisis seriously now. But then he does everything in his
power to make it even worse. And then when it comes to housing, he says that he actually wants
the price of housing to go up. That made no sense. So we don't spend all of this money to just,
it was just ridiculous. So he doesn't actually care about affordability. He doesn't actually
care about prices. And he's going to get absolutely clobbered for it. We have to figure out a way
such that the average household income of $77,000 can afford a home. It shouldn't be drill,
baby drill, which the Trump administration proposed, it should be billed baby build. We absolutely need
housing prices through YIMBY legislation and through tax subsidies to developers to unleash the
private sector. We need a massive amount of construction. And unfortunately, back to the original
story, construction costs through tariffs, anti-immigration policy. I mean, you could almost argue
if you were a Bonneville and saying, how do you take housing prices up even more after an
unbelievable acceleration. Okay, let's make immigration nearly impossible for the people who are
actually building the homes. Let's take the supplies of building a home way up, right? And let's take
interest rates way up. And then let's bomb the one place where all of the oil and gas is transported
through throughout the world, which is, as we're learning, literally the basis of the entire economy.
I mean, that's what we're really learning. We all need oil and gas a lot more than we would like.
it literally funnels through to everything.
The transport to get the food from the farm to the grocery store
and then the fuel that goes into the airplane
and then the diesel that goes into the fertilizer,
which is used to grow the food.
I mean, we rely on this for literally everything.
And so, yeah, we have figured out a way somehow, as you say,
to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.
We had inflation going down.
It was trending down.
We figured it out.
And now it's going way back up again.
And it seems like that will continue.
Just going to what could go, right? There is an argument, and it's not nearly the compensation for inflation and increase interest rates, but I wonder if this is going to put renewed winds in the sales of alternative energy. Yes. And someone absolutely, from a national security standpoint, right? Just, okay, unless we start bombing our own windmills or the sun gets blocked, you know, it's much easier to block the Straits of Hormuz than the sun. The one stat that just blew me away,
my Karras Swisher's ex-wife, Megan, who's this incredibly smart person,
chased me out of a session and said, I have data you're going to love.
And she showed it to me there's this incredible site that shows where at that moment
where Texas is getting its electricity and the source of that electricity, is it coal,
is it LNG, what is it?
And at that moment, at 1 p.m. on a 4-I-day, whenever it was,
Texas is getting 60% of its electricity from wind power and 18% from solar.
So the state that is, you know, the backdrop to Landman and we always think of Exxon and oil and gas is really leading the nation in alternatives.
And I thought, okay, if there's, I'd like to think there's several, several linings here.
I'd like to think what could go right.
But one of them might be, okay, does this, get us thinking about more secure pipelines or we don't have vulnerable ships?
and two, just organically built.
I mean, if you're South Korea,
I would imagine there's a lot of new solar startups
being pitched right now, right?
It shows countries just how vulnerable they are
when they don't have their own sources of energy.
We'll be right back after the break,
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A big criticism of OpenAI right now is that it's doing too much at once.
The company is juggling a wide range of projects from solar.
its video generator to a new web browser to hardware.
According to the Wall Street Journal,
employees say that this do-everything approach
has created a lack of focus
and made it harder to understand the company's strategy.
That concern is now starting to surface
among the leadership as well.
The CEO of Applications recently told employees,
quote, we cannot miss this moment
because we are distracted by side quests.
So all of this raises a broader question.
How does a company decide when
to double down on its core business
or when to chase new opportunities.
Scott, I was very interested to see this,
and I wanted to get your views on it
because you've run multiple businesses in the past.
Some have been very successful.
Some have been less successful.
You know what it takes to either win or fail.
What do you think of this dilemma?
It's sort of a classic business strategy question
that OpenAI,
the number one AI company in the world,
now is facing, and that is, do we focus on the core thing, or do we go have fun in these side
projects and see if something good can happen?
Well, the majority of my businesses have been advising CMOs and CEOs, and the real question
every good CEO needs to ask, or the Gestalt, he or she needs to, when you're a junior level
or mid-level employee, you're trying to think about what could we do, what new markets,
what new geographies, and you're trying to find every.
areas of growth, how do I create more efficiency, how do I grow the company? What could we do? What should we do?
When you become a CEO, the bigger question is not what to do, it's what not to do. Because every day,
you're going to be pitched on great ideas from vendors, investment bankers and want you to make our
acquisitions, new employees trying to make a, or existing employees trying to make a name for themselves.
Everyone has, everyone wants to be generous and visionary with your capital. And if you look at
this is a really good move on the part of Sam Malman and Open AI, because the specific crowds out the general focus is the key component of almost any strategy if it wants to work. I even think on a personal level, I hate side hustles. You want to be successful? Find something you're good at, go 110% in. And the difference between being wealthy and being very wealthy is the last 10%. And that comes from extreme focus. And if you have side hustles, it means you haven't found the right main hustle. So if you have side hustles, it means of exploring something until it becomes a main
hustle fine. But if you look at Alphabet or Google, they brought in Eric Schmidt, a fantastic manager
to help scale the company. But then the adult in the room, who actually ended up growing shareholder
value a great amount and doesn't get the credit she deserves, is Ruth Parrat, the CFO. They brought
her in from Morgan Stanley. And the first thing she did was like, what the fuck is all this shit?
What are all these pet projects from Sergey and Larry that nobody wants to say no to?
David literally had a project whose mission was to cure death.
And Ruth said, okay, do that with your own money and on your own time.
And she killed a ton of projects and focused people on this unbelievable, greatest cash machine toll booth in the history of mankind called Search.
And then said, you know, another dollar in search creates a shit time.
of money. So don't bring anything to me that you can't convince me isn't going to create a
shit ton of money with some reasonable timeline. So they have gone in way too many directions,
and it's a credit to Sam and their leadership that they're focusing. And also they have huge
incentive to focus because in the enterprise market, which I think is the more important part
of the market here, Anthropic is kicking the shit out of open AI. And so,
So they are doing what they should be doing.
They are focusing.
So this is sort of a, I think this is a really smart move for Open AI.
I think it's absolutely the right thing to do.
And speaking of distractions, can we talk a little bit about the metaverse, Ed?
Can we talk a little bit about the meta?
I don't know if you saw this, but it ends up that the good people at Meta have decided they renamed the company incorrectly.
Yes.
And that this legless world is not the future.
Claire, by chance, per chance, do we have a clip about my views on this?
Well, before we play, I just want to make sure everyone knows what we're talking about,
which is that meta's side project, I guess maybe they called it their main project,
but the side project of the metaverse, they invested $80 billion into creating this
metaverse platform called Horizon Worlds.
People may remember from 2021 and 2022 when this is what all that marks are,
Zuckerberg was talking about. As of last week, they are shutting that platform down. Now let's cue the clip.
What is probably the biggest strategic misstep of the last five years was meta deciding that the new growth engine would be the metaverse.
No, it's not. It doesn't matter what the name of your company is. This is not working.
You got a guy who can't be controlled. He controls the company. He's all in on the metaverse. He's going to, he's already rich. He doesn't care about money.
So his attitude is, I'll show you, I'm going to prove everyone wrong and keep going all in and spending tens of billions of dollars on the Metaverse.
And shareholders are in the back seat, you know, buckled in and they can't get out and the doors are locked on this crazy, nauseating ride called the Metaverse.
As far as I can tell, the Metaverse is just a bunch of in-cell panic rooms created online for people who have, it just isn't working.
I mean, my favorite stat about Horizons world or whatever it is is that MySpace currently gets more traffic than Facebook's version of the Metaverse.
So, look, this was the mother of all distractions and hallucinations, and it wasn't even a central hallucination.
This never made any sense.
And it went back to just this basic anthropological truism, and that is throughout history, the things you could eat or could eat you, don't come straight out you.
They come at you from your side or behind you.
And so you get uneasy and even nauseous if you can't, if your peripheral vision is moving too fast.
And the idea that people were going to take their mixed reality headset with them and start watching,
I mean, I remember Kare arguing with me about the future spatial computing.
I put one of these things on for eight seconds.
And I'm like, this is so fucking stupid and so nihilistic that we want to go into another universe.
Our species is really used to and really fond of this universe.
and this notion that these weirdos want to take us into another universe.
Okay, I get immersive experiences.
I like IMAX as much as the next person.
It's a small business.
I enjoy the sphere, but for only a couple hours,
and I feel like a piece of beaten flank steak by the time I leave there in terms of sensory overload.
By the way, IMAX really hasn't been a good business.
The sphere is supposedly still losing money.
The way you want to live life is you want to have a series of experiences that are wonderful in this universe
where you have control of your peripheral vision.
And the reason why billboards are so incredibly still successful
and get decent CPMs is despite the fact you're not reading a billboard on the side of the highway,
you're very conscious of it because it's threats and opportunities.
And just the most basic level of anthropological or behavioral research would have said that,
okay, 40% of the people putting this nonsense as condom on their head,
that they're getting nauseous within 20 minutes.
And yet he kept pouring, he poured $70 billion of capital into this thing.
And so I just think this was, if it hadn't been for the fact that the guy is a business genius
and has added probably $2 trillion in shareholder value since they started this nonsense,
this is an enormous thud.
It went way too long, way too long.
When you're a company like meta and you have those cash flows, you can take big swings,
$1 billion, $5 billion, $10 billion.
But to keep pouring money up to $70 billion.
And to rename the entire company.
This is what we all forget.
They rename the whole thing.
They were so confident about this.
It's unbelievable.
Guys, breaking as we record this, Horizon Worlds,
is not shutting down after all, according to meta.
Bullshit.
This is them trying to have peace with honor.
This thing is dead.
This thing is dead.
They're going to try and make it happy and put it in hospice.
Whatever.
You lost pop pop a year ago.
Maybe he still has a catheter and there's brain waves there.
This thing's being done.
This thing's being euthanized slowly.
I don't care what their press release says.
Let me just read you what I'm seeing on TechCrunch.
Quote, we have decided just today, in fact,
that we will keep Horizon Worlds working in VR,
Bosworth said as part of an Instagram story's Q&A,
after a fan of the app reached out to say they were, quote,
heartbroken about the decision.
Say goodbye to Nana, Ed.
Say goodbye to Nana.
The end is nigh.
Yeah.
It does bring up this question of what makes a good side project.
Because this one was Horizon Worlds, Metas Metaverse,
clearly a very bad side project.
Did not work.
Apple Vision Pro looks like it's going to be a very similar story.
it's not really working. They're beginning to wind things down. Google Glass, I mean, we're seeing a theme here that
wearables, or at least virtual reality wearables are not really great. Google gloss was a similar
story, didn't work, shut it down. Google Plus was another interesting side project. That was Google's
social media competitor, which they shut down in 2019 after trying to get it off the ground for literally
10 years. There are many examples of side projects being total failures, and it doesn't work.
At the same time, there are some side projects that have been really successful.
For example, just to stick with Google, Waymo.
Waymo started out as Google Project Shofer in 2009.
I think the best example probably would be the best side project in history would have to be AWS.
Great point.
Which started out as this internal thing where Amazon realized, oh, it's kind of difficult to communicate across different teams.
let's build this digital infrastructure.
They built it.
And then Andy Jassy realizes,
actually, let's turn this into a business.
And so he started to sell it,
and now it makes up more than half of the operating profit for the company.
Jeff Bezos himself has called AWS, quote,
the greatest piece of business luck in the history of business.
That was a great side project.
So I think there becomes this interesting question,
like what makes a good side project?
When does it work?
When does it not work?
and how can managers and executives take a framework moving forward
to understand which things to greenlight
and which things to say no to?
It comes down to management, and that is,
so one of my first clients was Levi Strauss & Co.
And they launched Dockers,
which was the fastest zero to billion garment brand in history.
And then they launched a new thing called Slates.
And what happens is that a very senior person
says, this is my vision, this is my baby.
And the way you please that person
and perhaps get promoted over two other people qualified
is you tell them how amazing slates is
and what a visionary they are.
And you start to ignore the actual data.
And it comes down to doing something really difficult.
Post-it notes from 3M was a side project, right?
It comes down to holding yourself accountable
and setting up reasonable metrics
at the outset.
We are launching new podcasts.
We launched China Decode.
And I said, okay, we launched Raging Moderates.
By X date, within three months, six months, 12 months,
these are the metrics that define success or not.
And the problem is you talk yourself into believing
that your ugly, step-headed child is your child, and it's beautiful.
No, you have to be able to perform infanticide.
Facebook had a phone.
Amazon went into auctions,
and they did it the right way.
And I think Bezos is a very disciplined operator and said, okay,
Amazon had a phone.
They said, yeah, they had a phone.
I just remember it.
They said, okay, if it doesn't get X pickup by Y date,
we're pulling the plug.
The key to successful side projects is not the ones that work.
It's the ones you're willing to kill because you only have so much wood to put behind an arrow.
So absolutely look for growth.
battle tests
of shit
out of it,
but also,
you know,
we just launched
a substack
strategy,
subscription
revenue.
We have
realistic,
but yet at
the same time,
aggressive
benchmarks.
And if we
don't hit them,
we're going to
get together as a
group,
and we're going
to decide whether
to pull the
plug on it.
Fortunately,
it's very
successful so far.
Please visit us
on substack.
But,
but a CEO's
job is to have
the stones to
try new things
and to have
the backbone to kill them when they're not working and to say, okay, Slates, that was actually a third
brand from Levi's. I think it was called Slates. Okay, Slates, this was the right idea. We made the right
decision. It's important. We take risks. It's not working. Kill it. And, you know, well, it just needs
more time or it just needs more capital. Probably not. These things, the most of them that work,
they may get out of the gate slowly, but usually there's a lot of blinking green lights on the
shit that works. But again, what happens is a senior manager sees it at their legacy and really
appreciates anyone who's willing to go on their ayahuasca trip with them. So it just comes down to
leadership and that's to say, okay, you know, HBO Go, HBO Now, HBO Joey Bag of Donuts,
all right, folks, I get all the sub-brands trying to address different audiences and different technology
platforms, it's not working. Let's just go back to HBO. So it comes down to leadership because people you
are paying, generally speaking, most of them will say whatever the fuck makes you feel good.
Because if someone makes you feel good, you're more inclined to want to promote them. Well,
that's not the litmus test. Is this person really good for shareholder value and setting up really
tangible hard metrics and holding you and themselves accountable.
Yeah, it's such a good point.
We were discussing this as a team, and there were some basic questions that we think
are pretty crucial to if you're going to launch a side project, if it makes sense.
Three questions that we think are relevant here.
One, do you have the money to make the bet?
And that's a very important fundamental question.
Like, you need to have cash coming in the door.
I mean, Amazon had figured that out before they launched AWS.
They had significant cash flows at that point, and then they were able to make that bet.
You could argue that meta had that positioning as well.
The second question is, is it leveraging existing infrastructure?
Like, are you the right person to be doing it?
If you're like a clothing brand, like, no, you shouldn't launch like a candy company just because you think it's a good idea.
That's not your wheelhouse, so you shouldn't be getting into that.
And then the third thing, and this is the thing that I think META didn't really question
that META did not answer correctly, or perhaps never even asked themselves.
And that is, is it actually a good idea?
It's not that helpful, but maybe we could put it in terms of, is it actually solving a problem,
a real problem that people have?
And if the answer is no, you just can't do it.
because no amount of capital, as we saw, will turn a very stupid idea, a very bad idea,
into a good idea.
The money doesn't solve the problem if the idea is stupid.
And that seems to be this mistake that Meta made, is they never really thought to ask themselves,
is this even a good idea?
Is this, are we actually solving a problem here that people want to be solved?
The answer was no.
And then they invested so much money into it, probably so much.
much pride and ego into it as well, victims of dissunk cost fallacy to the point where they
decided, like, we have to keep going because we've bet the ranch, we've bet the farm on it,
we've literally bet the name of the company on this working out. And here we are in 2026,
and it didn't work. The only nuance to add to that is that a good versus a bad idea,
sometimes the best ideas are just fucking crazy and feel like a bad idea at the same time,
and sometimes logical stuff just doesn't work out. I think that you need to veer away from the
subjective and the qualitative towards the objective and the quantitative. And that is a good
manager and a good CEO says, all right, what does success look like? And then put hard metrics around
it and say in 90 days, we're going to look at what we think success would look like and also
what does failure look like and constantly reevaluate whether we're. And also a basic economic
term that management and CEOs understand, but they don't really live by is the notion of sunk
costs. And that is, we've put so much energy and so much capital into this thing. We love it.
You know, no, that's gone. From this point forward, if we were at a standing start, would we put
more money into this? That's the only question that matter. That money's gone. That money's gone.
It doesn't matter. That effort gone, the time spent on it, doesn't fucking matter.
from a standing start here and now where this project is, how it's going, how well or how not well it's going, would we continue to fund this if we were outside investors who had no legacy investment, no effort, no affinity, no affection for it.
We'll be right back. And for even more markets content, sign up for our newsletter at profiteymarkets.com.
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Disney finally has a new CEO.
Josh DeMorrow officially took the helm on Wednesday,
stepping in at a difficult time for the company.
external risks, including the war in Iran, way on its tourism business, its studio business faces headwinds,
and of course its linear assets continue to decline. Just as an example, after four years of steady
ratings gains, the Oscars stumbled last Sunday, with viewership on ABC falling 9% from a year earlier.
So Scott, Josh DeMorrow has taken over as of last week. He has, you know, a steep,
road ahead. What would be your advice to the CEO? How would you get Disney back on track at this point?
I think they should merge with Netflix. I think that this is a business that's consolidating.
They require so much half. I don't think that's a good idea if I were the head of the F to C of the DOJ.
But you asked me for advice. The parks is just an unbelievable business. I'd build from the parks out,
parks in the studios. They'll do what they need to do. They'll shed the declining cable assets,
so they can go good bank, bad bank.
This should be an events, experiential parks company
with a really strong studio
and a fantastic, really clear positioning around family, around streaming.
I feel like Netflix and Disney Plus are kind of the only ones I think I know
will be around in 10 years.
It's an incredible company.
It kind of identified.
It's sort of a bit of a proxy for how Hollywood has done the last 10 years,
and that is great content, products never been better.
enormous disappointment
from a shareholder perspective.
Disney stock is lower
than it was 10 years ago.
What is the S&P?
The S&P is what,
I don't know,
tripled since then
or doubled
and the NASDAX tripled.
And meanwhile,
if you invested in Disney
or worked at Disney
and have options,
you know,
a huge disappointment.
And if Bob Iger,
also,
just to reverse engineer
this to a learning
for executives,
you're always better off
leaving too early
than too late. And Bob Iger represents that in spades. Bob Iger came home from Vietnam
eight years ago after a tour. Metal's pinned to his chest, total hero, one of the most
respected people in media history. And then he got bored, started heckling from the cheap seats,
performed a coup from outside of the pilots, and went back to Vietnam, and is coming back
with, you know, a massive injury. His reputation has really been diminished. If he had just
stayed away, he would probably be one of the people everyone's talking about to run for the
Democratic nomination for president. He had that kind of credibility. He had that kind of luster.
And to be fair, he faced a lot of headwinds in the broadcast market and Disney's at a good
launch, but there's just no getting around it. The way you're evaluated as a CEO is on the
shareholder price and the share and the shares have vastly underperform. You know,
In the last 10 years, I think Netflix is up four or five fold.
Disney is flat.
So, like, this is a mixed legacy.
And I think at this point, I called, or I saw Ted Sarandos at one of these fancy award shows.
I'm like, okay, you saved $120 billion by not buying Warner Brothers.
Your stock's up 10, 15%.
You've got another $60 billion, $120,000 plus $1, $180 billion.
I'm like, here's an idea.
Disney's $170 billion. Why wouldn't you merge? I mean, while the FTC and the DOJ are asleep,
why wouldn't you, which I think is a bad thing, why wouldn't you just, can you imagine Netflix and
Disney? Can you imagine Disney getting to incorporate the IP of Wednesdays and stranger things
into their parks? Who in the world could not have a subscription that involves either Disney,
Disney Plus, or Netflix? They would just, they would just kind of, I mean, in some,
some that merger shouldn't, shouldn't happen. But I said to Ted, and I don't know Bob, and he's
probably sick of me shitposting him, although he does wear lovely cashmere sweaters.
But I think that if I were him, my ultimate swan song would have been merging with Netflix.
The new guy, I think Disney's a great buy right now because I think the parks are arguably the
business with the largest moat. I think Disney has real pricing power. And,
they're paying a conglomerate tax right now, and that is because basically the earnings call goes like this.
Streaming media platform finally paying off, we're getting real operating leverage there.
The parks continue to be one of the most dominant, dominant entertainment assets, experiential assets, and the history of the business.
You know, people call child services if you don't take your kid to Disney and spend $1,200 for a shitty hotel room by the time they're five, right?
And then it's like, okay, and then they go on to apologize.
for all of their broadcast shit, ESPN, ABC, Disney, etc.
As soon as they get rid of that shit, they could sell all their broadcasting cable stuff for a dollar,
and the stock would be up 20% in the next year.
Because what happens is you pay a conglomerate tax,
and that is when you have a company with multiple entities,
basically the market finds the shittiest asset and assigns that multiple to the whole business.
And that's what's happening to Disney.
If Disney were just parks streaming in the studio, you know, champagne, cocaine with an eight ball of ketamine.
That's a good time.
That's a good time, Ed.
Did I tell you I'm in Tulum?
Did I tell you I'm in Tulum?
I'll wrap that up there.
Yeah, look, I mean, Disney's Pollock's business is that's the crown jewel at this point.
And it is really, really interesting how that has changed over the last few years, where there is now a premium.
on these, as Josh Brown puts it,
heavy asset, low obsolescence assets.
I mean, things that are in the physical world,
people will pay a lot of money for.
That's the premium that investors are paying for.
So they have that.
And as we've talked before,
like Netflix wants to get into in-person experiences too.
And probably a year ago,
maybe two years ago,
we had a whole conversation
when Netflix was trying to open up
kind of like a Netflix park,
some sort of experience.
I'm not sure what's having.
happened since then, but I know that it's something that they're interested in, and if they
had a strategy on that front, it is something that investors would certainly reward them for.
Plus, if you can have a duopoly, you might as well take it. And it seems that the FTC and the
DOJ, at least under this administration, have no interest in actually regulating monopolies and
duopoly. So if you can do it, you should do it. You should make it happen. So I would agree
with that. I do find it really interesting what happened with Oscar's viewership, where it fell
9%. It was the lowest viewership since 2022. Among the key demographic, which is 18 to 49-year-olds,
it fell even harder. It was down 14%. We saw the same thing with the Golden Globes this year.
We saw the same thing with the Grammys. And as everyone knows, the linear network is just
getting crushed at the moment. But just anecdotally, something that was really interesting.
I wanted to watch the Oscars. And I had dinner with my girlfriend that night. I said, let's watch
the Oscars tonight. And she said, really?
And I was like, yeah, like, you don't want to watch the Oscars?
She said, no, I don't really want to watch.
I was like, why?
You love this stuff.
This isn't someone, she likes, she's interested in celebrity news.
Like, she likes this stuff.
Why don't you want to watch it?
And she said, because I'll just watch it tomorrow on TikTok.
I'll just watch the clips because then I don't have to watch all the bullshit for three hours.
And that was when I suddenly realized, like, I mean, this is a clip economy at this point.
And that's the big problem.
which is that these, I mean, maybe people didn't watch the Oscars on ABC,
but I know that they watched it on TikTok, I know that they watched it on Instagram,
I know that they watched it on YouTube.
Those are the platforms where people are consuming this information
and consuming the content.
And in a lot of ways, the live Oscars on ABC,
that's just sort of a Trojan horse.
That is a Trojan horse.
That is a vehicle for the clips that get put out on social media
the day after and the day after that.
that's where people are consuming all of this content. And so we've been looking into this,
and it is becoming a lot more of a thing. I mean, you look at sports as an example, which is
all about live. It's about watching the match. Only 31% of young sports fans today say they
watch full-length live matches. 74% of them say that they get most of their sports content
from social media platforms. I look at my own behavior. I suddenly realize I'm watching the
Premier League basically on YouTube because I'm just watching
the highlights. And so I think if I had to give advice to Disney, if you want to fix this Oscars problem,
you need to start investing in the clip economy. You need to start figuring out, okay, yes, we've got
this live thing called the Oscars, but that doesn't really matter. What matters most is clipping it up
and packaging it and spraying it all across social media the day after. That's where we're going
to try to make the money. And that's why we should try to sell the ads to. We need to develop a very
real ad strategy around social media that isn't
so dependent on beaming this onto the linear networks.
That would be my advice.
I did a meeting with the Academy of the Board of Governors for the Academy,
and they asked for advice.
Everything you're saying makes sense,
but unfortunately, Alphabet has other ideas,
and that is if you want to display their stuff on YouTube,
they'll give you just enough money to kind of make it worth your while,
but not enough money to anywhere justify the amount of money that ABC used to play
to broadcast the Academy Awards.
First off, movie theaters, and it's anathom to say this, and all these producers and directors talk about the collective of going to the movies.
I think movie attendance is down 40% since COVID.
My kids don't go to movies.
I mean, we used to go when they were little for kids' movies.
I've been to two movies this year.
I went and saw Roof Man because my friend produced it, and I'm a huge Channing Tatum fan, and it was great, and I love the paternal theme in it.
And I went and saw one battle after the other, which was a good film, but it's sort of like $350 million artistic masturbation.
It won everything.
Okay, I'd be shocked if that movie gets its money back.
And what a shocker.
People don't want to watch a three-hour show
interrupted by commercials of a bunch of high school graduates
lecturing us on geopolitics.
It's just, what a shocker.
That's not exciting.
At the Vanity Fair Oscars party,
I tracked down the, you know,
I'm good at running other people's businesses.
I'm even better at running other people's lives.
I can't help but give advice to people.
I tracked him down. I'm like, dude, let's be honest. The magazine business was dead 10 years ago. You just didn't realize it. What you should be doing. That party, that experience, they should be running live Oscar viewing parties all over the world with an aspirational guest list where they get influencers and brands to party similar to what Bustle does, charge them a shit ton of money. Hey, you're Petron and you want to sponsor Russell Crow, who's in Sydney, he can't be in L.A., whatever, or up-and-coming Australian.
actors, whoever they are, and we're just going to print money. They could make so,
Vanity Fair could have, and maybe they did this, but I didn't see many brands, they could make
$10 million off that party, and they could make two or three million bucks easy at different
experiential events all over the world for viewing parties of the Oscars or different things.
But the actual business of airing the Oscars for three hours, if you're watching the Oscars on ABC,
See, it means you're also at that point where you need opiate-induced constipation medication.
It's not a good reflection on where you are in life.
And the only reason you want to watch it at is because you're in this business.
So it's not, and by the way, they don't want to invest in it right now because where is it going?
It's going to YouTube.
So that's where the world's going.
Conan O'Brien, one of the most talented people in the world, summarized it perfectly.
Then the next host is going to be Mr. Beast.
and he was joking, but it's kind of true.
So this, the future for award ceremonies broadcast is going to decline,
the future for experiential events.
I mean, even just at a demographic level, the top 10% of all the money,
I don't want to go, I don't want to watch the Oscars.
I don't even want to go to the Oscars.
I'd love to go to a, going to a great viewing party and meeting.
interesting people and having an excuse to get dressed up and feeling interesting and fabulous,
you can pay a lot of money for that. And why wouldn't the Disney parks have like a big viewing
party? Or anyways, I think that, I think there's a healthy willingness to spend real money.
You know, my son was super excited and I was super excited to do this. He and his other buddies,
who are seniors in high school, went to Universal for their Halloween night, and they went for a full
weekend. They did Halloween for a weekend and I'm sure they spent a lot of money. But I love that as opposed to
watching, you know, going to a movie and watching Halloween 11 with Jamie Lee Curtis, the absolute
hottest woman of the 80s, Ed. I'm sad you're not older that you missed out on that.
Anyways, yeah, the Oscars, look, it's a dying thing and you're right, it'll be clipped up. But the company
that can make money on those clips is the new host.
of the Oscars, and that's YouTube.
I think this is where media companies need to get a lot more aggressive, though,
and their social media strategy, because it's true.
It's like you're playing on YouTube's terms, and we have this in our own business.
We make way less money from the automatic ads that YouTube feeds the viewer
when they watch one of our videos, which is why we have decided to do something a little different,
which is that we own the relationship with the advertiser ourselves,
and we place the ads that we want directly into the video.
And maybe the YouTube audience will say that's annoying,
to which I would say just skip past it, so whatever.
But the point is, because we own that relationship,
that's allowing us to negotiate the price for ourselves,
which means that we're not having to throw money away
to the big tech overlords over at YouTube or at Instagram
or any of these other sort of social media, neo-media platforms.
And that's what all of these companies need to do.
Without the Oscars, without Timothy Shalameh,
without all of these superstars, Michael B. Jordan,
no one's going to watch anything.
You need these people.
And you need the Oscars and you need Vanity Fair to get them together
and get the cameras out and put it on the platforms.
And then the question is, how do you monetize that?
You're not going to make a lot of money
if you just post the Instagram clips
and you just get the money from Instagram.
And Instagram is in control of the relationship with the advertisement.
which is why, unfortunately, you're going to need to get a lot more aggressive on negotiating and owning
the relationship with the advertiser and placing the advertisements directly into your videos.
The audience isn't going to like it very much.
That's on you to figure out how to make the audience okay with it.
But that's what you have to do if you want to stop getting crushed by these social media
companies, because this is the future of media.
It's all on these platforms.
It's all in the clips.
And that's where you have to make the money.
I like your vision. I think it's optimistic. This is unfortunately what I think the reality is. And that is, so we're on YouTube. We're getting 100 to 200,000 views per episode. AdSense, we make almost no money from. It's $3 CPMs. It's a shitty business unless you have the scale of tens of billions of people watching videos every day, which Alphabet does. I think they split the revenue with you. I think it's 50-50. If you're in the podcast business, you get 70% by how.
having an ad distribution network or a partner like Vox,
so already Alphabet is flexing their muscles.
But here's what I have seen every time
when you partner with a big tech platform,
and it's the following.
They fuck you.
And that is you build a business,
you're getting revenue, and then Alphabet,
and what you say makes all the sense in the world,
bake the ads into the actual video itself.
My prediction,
and Neil Mohan has been more generous
to the creative community or not generous,
but he realizes in order to inspire more and more
content, we need to give more and more revenue to the creators. Eventually, eventually the history
of big tech, give them enough money such that they will devote resources, and then overnight,
they do a panda, they do away with brand pages, and they fuck you. Well, what are we going to do?
We're just going to sit here and get fucked? Or are we going to do something about it?
I mean, I am advocating for do something about it. We sell ads. Right. We sell ads directly
the advertiser. We insert them to our audio product, of which there's no monopolies. I mean, my,
platform that can get in the way, right? The distribution here is not controlled across a monopoly.
We have substack, and there's several competitors to substack where we get a subscription strategy,
which is already creating real revenue, newsletters, getting people to pull out their credit
card and pay, whatever it might be. There are means of making money in the media ecosystem.
What I'm suggesting is the moment you have meta, I was on the board of the New York Times,
and we were making a shit ton of money on something called About.com.
We did all this.
We get creators to do something on Southern cooking, optimize it for Google.
Google would send a ton of traffic and send a ton of traffic to us.
And we'd have links to buy stuff.
And we made my overnight.
Alphabet does a panda release.
And we wake up the next morning and our revenue is down 40 to 60%.
I love Jessica Yellen at News Not Noise.
I think it's a really important organization.
I think she does incredible work.
And I'm an informal advisor to her, and I'm like, you're too dependent on Instagram.
And this is what Mark Zuckerberg, the moment you have any margin, he will come for your margin.
And this would be my prediction on alphabet.
Neil has a different vision so far, and I respect and appreciate it.
We love being on YouTube, and it's been great for us.
At some point, if the same behavior continues to cycle through the DNA of Big Tech, they'll go,
oh, you're baking videos into your thing.
Now, fuck you.
We have technology to start those out, or you have to pay us 90% of that.
revenue. Eventually, they come for you. Eventually, they fuck you. And that has happened to almost
every brand. You know, Facebook used to have brand pages, and they encourage Adidas. You have to have a
bigger brand page than Nike. So they spent all this money. Company like Buddy, there was all,
there was all sorts of ecosystems around it. And as soon as your ecosystem gets big enough that it's
real margin, they come for you. So I think they've got to establish direct.
relationships, as you said, with the consumer. They do that in streaming media. No monopoly controls,
you know, controls their access, if you will. There's still a lot of bidders for their content.
If I were, so let's apologize to the word salad. If I were on the board of Disney or if I were
running Disney, we need something called Disney Plus Plus. What does that mean? 50 bucks a month,
100 bucks, 100 bucks a month. You get all the Disney properties, ESP, and everything, all the streaming media,
you have access to Disneyland for free
on certain days when it's only Disney Plus Plus members
and you don't have to wait in line three fucking hours
for the Avatar ride.
And you get special, you get special products, special merch,
but you are a Disney Plus Plus Household
because people think, wow, we go to Disney once a year,
we should do this.
It's a great, no, no, you don't.
You go once every three years.
It just feels like once every month
because it's a seventh circle of hell.
But they could wrap all of that special access to one-of-a-kind merch, days at Disney that aren't a fucking nightmare where it's like a reasonable crowd, special birthday celebrations for your kid maybe at Disney, that princess, that princess experience. And so many households would sign up for that. Instead, they have the seven dwarves of businesses all competing with each other. They should have Disney is in a position to have the ultimate family.
family loyalty program. And the market loves recurring revenue. The money you give up at the
till at the entrance gate at Disney, the money you give up from merchandise, the money you give up
from the theaters, we're paying 12 bucks. That revenues valued at whatever, one to three times
revenues. The recurring revenues you would get from a loyalty program would be valued at five times
revenues. So you could lose 10 or 20 percent of your ad revenue from those shitty businesses
at ABC or ESPN or even at the turnstile, and you can increase shareholder value 40 to 70 percent.
by moving everything into the mother of all loyalty programs.
I think that's a good idea, and I'll just end with my advice to them,
which is you should never post a clip on social media ever again
unless an advertiser is directly paying you for it.
You should have a relationship with an advertiser,
get it in the clip somehow, negotiate a deal, get paid for it,
because the current system is that we just do it for free,
we do it for free, we think that it's marketing,
but ultimately we realize, actually, no, this isn't marketing,
this is the content.
This is where all the money is being made, and yet we're not seeing any of it,
because it's all going to Instagram or it's going to YouTube,
it's going to a tech platform.
Own the relationship with the advertiser and get paid for every single clip you put out would be my advice.
And then my final thing I'm going to disagree with you on Scott,
is that one battle after another was autistic masturbation.
That was an incredible movie.
I loved every minute of it.
A third of a billion dollars.
Expensive.
If it didn't have...
have Leo DiCaprio and Benicio de Toro and that one woman who's literally the hottest woman in the world right now,
I would say that thing costs $3 million to make.
I mean, yeah, good film.
Fair.
Good film.
Cost $330 million.
I wouldn't invest in it, but I would watch it several times.
In fact, I have.
I've watched it again.
I loved that movie.
All you need to do to be in the movie business is marry a rich man and be a documentary filmmaker.
Whenever anyone comes up to me and says, oh, I'm a documentary filmmaker.
filmmaker. I'm like, oh, okay, so you married a rich husband in a boring business. And they're
offended. I'm like, okay. Let me guess. You married a guy 30 years older than you that made his
billions in iron ore smelting and now you're changing the world with documentaries. That's me.
That's my next life. 27. That's what I'm doing in 27. I'm just angry because I have been so
unsuccessful in all it was. That probably makes sense too. All right, let's take a look at the week ahead.
We will see consumer sentiment for mulch. We'll also see earnings.
from GameStop and Carnival and earnings season
will wind down, Scott, any predictions?
Open AI, SORA, social media app
is going to be shut down soon.
So SORA is the kind of open AI TikTok version,
kind of the social media platform of AI generated content
where users upload video on models generated from SORA,
short-form content,
and you can share with your friends.
And when it came out, it was number one,
in the App Store, and it garnered 1 million downloads actually faster than ChatGPT.
In the beginning, it was growing faster than ChatGBT.T.
But the party's over.
Downloads fell 22% month over month in December and another 49% in January.
Downloads are collapsing.
And effectively, I think what you have here, again, it goes to the notion of knowing when to shut something down.
And with the renewed focus on focus, you're going to see this thing be shut down.
Users are dropping like flies. Open AI spent an extreme amount of time and money to keep the lights on here.
Estimates are that it costs $15 million a day to run SORA or $5 billion a year and that it's only bringing in less than half a million dollars per month.
So essentially, the app is a venture that is not central to Open AIs core competencies.
It's not attracting users or revenue.
It's generating massive losses, and it's a distraction.
So in addition, it's kind of bad for the brand.
Two-thirds of Americans disapprove of online videos created by AI.
It's the definition of AI slot.
And about three-quarters of users say they would be uncomfortable consuming fully AI-generated creative content.
In sum, the correct strategy of focus, the first victim of that is going to be open-AI,
SORA app, which is going to be shut down.
This episode was produced by Claire Miller and Alison Weiss and engineered by Benjamin Spencer.
Our video editor is Jorge Carty.
Our research team is Dan Chalon, Isabella Kinsell, Kristen O'Donohue, and Mia Silverio.
Jake McPherson is our social producer.
Drew Burrows is our technical director, and Catherine Dillon is our executive producer.
Thank you for listening to ProfG Markets from ProfG Media.
If you liked what you heard, give us a follow and tune in tomorrow for a fresh take on
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