TBPN Live - Altman’s Testimony, AI SPV Drama, Ebay Rejects $GME Bid | Diet TBPN

Episode Date: May 13, 2026

Diet TBPN delivers the best of today’s TBPN episode in 30 minutes. TBPN is a live tech talk show hosted by John Coogan and Jordi Hays, streaming weekdays 11–2 PT on X and YouTube, with ea...ch episode posted to podcast platforms right after.Described by The New York Times as “Silicon Valley’s newest obsession,” the show has recently featured Mark Zuckerberg, Sam Altman, Mark Cuban, and Satya Nadella.Follow TBPN: https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2L6WMqY3GUPCGBD0dX6p00?si=674252d53acf4231https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://www.youtube.com/@TBPNLive

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:01 We have a great show for you today, folks. We have a bunch of guests and a bunch of news stories to go through. Of course, the trial is ongoing. Did you say that this might be the last week of the trial? I thought it was a four-week trial, but it sounds like it might wrap up. Are they ahead of schedule? Yeah, Mike Isaac said it might end this week. I assume just because they're getting through the, like, you know, depositions, whatever faster.
Starting point is 00:00:23 Yeah, I mean, it seems like Ilya has gone, Mir has gone, deposition from Montauner, and Chavon Zillis, and then Sam's on the state. stand right now, I think. Mike Isaac is live tweeting it, so we'll run through that. Sam Altman took the stand in the Open AI versus Elon Musk trial this morning, just as a reminder, here's what's at stake per the Wall Street Journal. Musk is suing Open AI and its leaders Altman and Greg Brockman for allegedly manipulating him into giving tens of millions of dollars to a nonprofit organization, only for them to turn the AI lab into a for profit venture. Musk is also suing Microsoft, Open AI's largest investor for aiding Brockman and Altman in their alleged deception. So big turning point in the trial was last Wednesday when former OpenAI CTO Mira Muradi and former board member Helen
Starting point is 00:01:05 Toner gave testimonies about the events leading up to the November 23 failed board coup that were critical of Sam Altman's leadership style in Candor. They call it the blip where Sam was out and then back very quickly with a couple other people stepping into CEO for just a few days. But last week, OpenAI's side also began to land some punches on Musk earlier. Testimony from Chivon Zillis and Greg Brockman also had already suggested Musk was not just defending a pure nonprofit vision. He explored scenarios where Open AI might become a part of Tesla, where Altman might help lead Tesla AI,
Starting point is 00:01:41 and where Musk could retain deep control. Brockman also testified that Musk supported a for-profit conversion, if Musk could control it, including a version tied to raising money for his Mars ambitions. Yesterday, Microsoft CEO, Satya Nadella, and OpenAI co-founder, Ilya Sutskovert, took the stand. Satya largely buffed OpenAI's side defending Microsoft's partnership with the company and saying that Musk never contacted him to complain about the deal violating any agreement Musk had with OpenAI's nonprofit, despite Musk having Satya's number. Ilya testified that he spent a year compiling a 50-page document, documenting Sam's
Starting point is 00:02:20 manipulative behavior, but also said he never promised Musk that OpenAI would remain permanently non-profit. Also, it came out in the trial that Sutskiver's stake in opening eyes probably worth around $7 billion, which probably complicated how the judge and jury feel about his own motivations. So the story is, since Marotti, first, the trial became a referendum on Altman's trustworthiness, then it became a referendum on whether the 2023 board was brave or incompetent. Then Microsoft came in and tried to make it look like it was the stabilizing partner. Now Altman has to personally answer the core questions hanging over the whole. case whether open a.I's evolution was a necessary adaptation to build frontier AI or a betrayal
Starting point is 00:03:01 of the nonprofit mission. Musk says he funded. The trial is expected to conclude this week. And you can... Max Zeff pulled out a quote from Ilya. This is a meaning why OpenAI has a for-profit. And he's, I guess, yeah, was playing, I don't think intentionally playing into the mean potential, but certainly that's how it played out. Ilya said under oath, In a federal court, if there's no funding, there's no big computer. Max F. says in the running for quote of the year. If there's no funding, there's no big computer, and you need big computer if you want big AI. Sam Altman takes a stand in Musk versus OpenAI.
Starting point is 00:03:40 Mike Isaac has a live blog going on X under Rat King. Let's run through some of what Mike Isaac is finding. Open AI begins questioning Altman much in the same way that the plaintiff's side had questioned Elon Musk, establishing that Altman like Musk has been enamored with AI for years and wanted to build inventive things with it. This was a very interesting tidbit from that original like that viral quote from Sam where he's like, AI will probably destroy the world. That happened in 2015 and it was an answer to a question of like, what do you think the key problems to solve are? And then the next sentence in that quote that always gets clipped out is like, and I'm starting a company, oh, it's more of a
Starting point is 00:04:19 nonprofit to work on this problem exactly. But that doesn't make it. But so they were clearly both very interested in building beneficial AI, although they ultimately butted heads. And they were also very worried about Google. Altman email from 2015, been thinking a lot whether it's possible to stop humanity from developing AI. I think the answer is almost definitely not if it's going to happen anyway. It seems like it would be good for someone other than Google to do it first.
Starting point is 00:04:48 Altman said Musk once said he would potentially pass control of open AI to his children, his death, I would love to know more about what that means, because if you fractured into like 20 different children at a certain point, like that can create a whole different dynamic of like succession, right? There's an old email that says Altman might have joined the board of Tesla as part of old AI discussions also came with a nascent threat of Musk doing this AI work inside of Tesla. It would be a shame if you didn't accept my offer sort of moves. The Tesla offer is interesting, says Mike Isaac.
Starting point is 00:05:23 Musk offers a board seat. Altman says it was something he felt was to assuage concerns that Altman would have no direction over the development of AI if it were folded into Tesla, but Altman also said it appeared to be a nascent threat. If Altman had not accepted the idea, according to him, Musk hinted that he may have done work developing AI on his own at Tesla regardless. And Mike Isaac gives some more context here, he says, this sort of talk is fairly commonplace these days on the battlefield that is Silicon Valley. Mark Zuckerberg, Meta's CEO, has in the past made overtures to companies he's interested in acquiring, though he is often more explicit about his intentions. If you don't take the deal, will come for you. Tony Soprano vibes.
Starting point is 00:06:07 Altman is criticizing stack ranking of engineers across AI lab, something Musk loves to do across his companies, apparently, and something very common across big codes like meta and Amazon. And also Microsoft is known for the stack ranking. They almost like invented it or certainly popularized it throughout the 90s and 2000s, I believe. Altman says AI engineering labs need more psychological safety. You have to be willing to let a researcher go off and try something random in the corner, very bottoms up. This is where the deep research project came from and a bunch of other AI breakthroughs came
Starting point is 00:06:40 from. Altman says there was a meeting at Tesla during the evening about folding open AI into Tesla for AI research. And then a long, long period of time with Elon, showing us memes on his phone. And apparently the court reporter asked Sam Altman to repeat memes on his phone loudly. I don't know why they didn't hear it the first time, but Rat King, Mike Isaac is laughing at this. I am going to have Sam Altman stating memes on his phone into a booming courtroom mic playing inside of my head on repeat for the week.
Starting point is 00:07:13 Memes on his phone in all caps. Getting hungry, he only had a banana this morning. Mike Isaac is suffering, his stamina points are draining. And he says, LL, email between Altman and Chavon talking about how to handle Musk and Altman telling him about a Microsoft investment. So Microsoft's going to invest. How should we tell Elon? Altman narrates the email verbatim. Hopefully it's easy.
Starting point is 00:07:36 Cross fingers emoji because you have to read it out. So really funny to hear cross fingers emoji in the court record. Allman is going through his real first postmortem of his firing. Appears to have gone through all five stages of grief multiple times over the course of five days. What are the five stages of grief? Stages of grief. Cope, seeth. Cope, seethe, mold.
Starting point is 00:07:58 Denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. Yeah, that is actually copseeth, uh, mulled, munt, something. Uh, the five day period is what is referred to internally at opening eyes the blip,
Starting point is 00:08:15 since it was a brief intermission for what it's worth. Uh, he said, Altman said, I had poured the last years of my life into this. I was watching it about to be destroyed. There was something appealing about going to work at Microsoft. I was also very angry, hurt, and upset. It felt like an incredible betrayal.
Starting point is 00:08:31 It was definitely one of the hardest times in my life. Allman finally broaches the issue of his widely rumored untrustworthiness. Clearly there were misunderstandings in a breakdown of trust, he said. But with what comes of a bit of a practiced humility in his voice, quote, I was not trying to deceive the board. I feel badly for the misunderstandings, but that was never my intent. This goes to the heart of how Musk counsel has tried to portray Altman across the entirety of the trial, a fundamentally slippery operator who says one thing to one party and something else entirely to others.
Starting point is 00:09:01 Open AI's rebuttal to that line of thinking has been to depict a board of directors at OpenAI Rife with dysfunction. And as Microsoft Satina Della put it earlier in this week, directors who were operating from Amateur City. Interesting. Taking shots of the board. Okay, Sam is giving a full jury. jury Sam treatment, again, trying to bat back against Musk's picture of Altman as a serious liar. If I knew how difficult and painful this was going to be, I never would have tried, but I'm very glad I did. Opening eye is done. Cross-examination begins. Stephen Molo, lead Musk counsel, who has
Starting point is 00:09:34 the flare for dramatic will probably give us fireworks. And this is continuing. He says, oh my God, Molo, are you completely trustworthy? Altman says, I believe so. Molo says, do you always tell the truth? Wow, this is getting heavy. It's all about Musk counsel painting. Sam is a liar. Brutaltman is on the defensive, but taking more of a muted tone with some attempted humility in his voice is a very clear contrast
Starting point is 00:09:57 with how Musk appeared combative on the stand. Interesting. Cross-examination is basically Musk's lawyer, Molo, reading off a list of questions saying, hey, bro, do you remember all this messed up stuff you did? And Altman's saying, no, I don't know, not true, no? Absolute chaos. Well, you can follow along at Mike Isaac.
Starting point is 00:10:17 He has a whole thread and he's live posting. And I believe that there's a New York Times live blog as well that you can follow along with. Should we talk about SBVs? Yes, let's move over to SPVs. The special purpose vehicles are rocking the valley right now. People are raking in the dough with SPVs. But not everyone's happy about it. So, yeah, we can actually go down a little bit and pull up this post, which has since been deleted.
Starting point is 00:10:46 Oh, really? The post said a few days ago, simply brokering an anthropic secondary deal made me more money than my entire net worth from working in my 20s. This is insane. It is especially insane because this is not legal. It is insane to post. Is it not legal? Yeah. So you need a broker-dealer license to broker securities transactions.
Starting point is 00:11:10 Yeah, that's right. That's right. Well, I mean, she didn't say that she doesn't have one. She might. Very, very unlikely. It's very burdensome. Just the compliance to actually get your own broker-dealer. Even there's people that I know that just do secondary transactions, they don't even have their broker-dealer license. They work under a firm that does. They basically contract with a firm. So they're kind of like an almost like a real estate agent working under a bro-like- I'm smelling an intern challenge. Tyler. Get your broker-dealer.
Starting point is 00:11:41 Figure out a way to use AI to bring down the compliance burden. Slash goal. Throw that slash goal down. Get me a broker-de-old license. From the X-high. X-high, 5.5 codex. Yeah. And try and get your broker-de-law license in one shot. Let's see what it does. Yeah. Turns out that if you want to broker securities transactions, there's a big regulatory burden for good reason, right? We're talking about, you know, transactions that are at the scale of high-end residential real estate, in this case. Yeah. You know, if this individual was maybe getting like a 5% fee on the deal, paid in cash, who knows?
Starting point is 00:12:24 It could have been, you know. Wait, there is another take here, which is that there's the term brokering, which requires the broker-dealer license. But there is also the format where you set up an SPV, the SPV takes in money. from an investor and then buys secondary from someone who has the right to sell it, maybe an investor who is not subject to the form that we saw Anthropic put out, right? And in that case, we'll get to that. We'll get to that. But hypothetically, there are SPVs that they are not technically brokering the secondary deal,
Starting point is 00:13:00 but they are facilitating it, and they do take a fee, right, because SPVs often have fees associated with them. And that does not require a broker-dealer license, right? So it's possible. But the straightforward interpretation of the post was that they had some sort of side letter, which was like, if I can find you, yeah, I can find you a buyer. If I can find you a buyer for 100 million of your shares, you give me $5 million. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:13:25 That happens a lot, but it usually and hopefully is happening through legal channels. Yeah. dealer. So this seemingly prompted both anthropic and open the eye. I think this is what started it, right? This must be what started because that post was really louder. More specific language on their site saying, Anthropics said unauthorized anthropic stock sales and investment scams.
Starting point is 00:13:50 Yeah. And said, you know, basically saying any transfer or sale of anthropic stock or any interest in anthropic stock that has not been approved by our board of directors is void and will not be recognized on our books and records. and records. And so, yeah, typically, yeah, typically, like, these are, there's so many ways to, like, transact without informing the company, right?
Starting point is 00:14:16 A common one would be, you know, futures contract, basically selling the right to the right to the investment and the future performance. Yeah, and so I think the futures, the economic exposure, enthusiasts or the futures, contracts, teams would say that, well, we didn't, there was no sale of the stock. We didn't transfer the stock. And it's not a direct interest in the stock. And so it doesn't need
Starting point is 00:14:48 to be approved by the board of directors. And the board of directors would say, absolutely not. That doesn't count. You think you found a workaround and it doesn't count in this world. But that is going to be, you know, Yeah, so the funny thing is there's there's these sort of digital asset equivalents. Some of them put out comments. Basically meme stocks around that are trying to track overall interest or the overall valuation of these companies. They sold off, which is funny because I don't believe they're actually tied to any real underlying equity.
Starting point is 00:15:20 And even in the case that they were like saying that they were tied, it was typically like it had one to five percent of the fund in Anthropic or Open Air or SpaceX. And they were like already well disconnected from the fundamental as the book value. Yeah. So I'm trying to think through how this plays out. And overall, I think the reaction from the internet was being more dramatic than maybe is necessary. because already, like, if you're, let's say, an early investor in Anthropic and you at some point sold your shares, you didn't go to the board and get permission, but you structured some deal to sell your shares. You get your shares back.
Starting point is 00:16:05 That is, so, so wait, waiting. Well, waiting for that. On one hand, neither party, if you bought the shares or you sold the shares, neither party is that incentivized to go to Anthropic board and be like, hey, I'm really sorry. like we did this, it was against. Because on one hand, like, there's probably some scenario where the investor or the anthropic employee could get their shares, like, voided or reclaimed in some scenario. So they don't necessarily want to do that. The investor is like, well, I bought these shares and now they're worth a lot more.
Starting point is 00:16:40 So let's just, like, be chill and let this play out. And we'll all forget about it, right? But there is a scenario where the seller tries to then make the case of, oh, actually, I'll just give you the money back. because now the stock is appreciated so massively. Sure, sure, sure. There might be a weird, but what ends up happening is like, there's sort of this like legal tension, right?
Starting point is 00:17:03 Tension between both these parties, and then there could be some incentive. Again, the person that bought the shares of the lower valuation wants to just let it ride. Yeah. But then somebody might be like, well, I kind of would happily ride up another 20x or something like that. But then if this starts going, once it goes into like an actual complaint,
Starting point is 00:17:23 or a lawsuit, then it becomes public. And then you have this third party in there, which is anthropic, which is like, going to just be like, hey, like, you guys have been messing around. Like, this isn't cool. This is against, you know, multiple sort of agreements and terms. So anyway, it's going to be very messy, right? So there's already been. These blog posts are not new rules.
Starting point is 00:17:48 It's merely they are publicizing rules that are probably already in the stock documents. Yeah, because if you invested earlier, you're an employee, you should know all this, which isn't a surprise, right? Well, it's possible that very early investors don't have transfer restrictions for some reason. I don't think so. It's pretty standard. No, you always set this up as a company because imagine you have an early angel investor and your company does well and they just sell it to somebody who you don't like.
Starting point is 00:18:15 Like, part of the reason to be private is you can control who. I just mean like every deal is unique and every deal gets negotiated points and there might be of some point when some investor and employee was like, I'm not joining unless you give me this. And they're like, okay, yeah, we'll pay you less, but we'll give you this. There's always like horse trading, like double trigger, single trigger.
Starting point is 00:18:33 Yeah, but it would be, it would be like maybe 1% of the stock. I agree with you. Yeah. Who knows how many transactions there's actually been? I don't know. There could be like, when you actually look down through all the trees of SPVs and SPVs, a lot. A lot.
Starting point is 00:18:47 There could be, what, what? A lot. A lot. 10, over 20,000. It's not, it's not like taxi cab driver telling you about the SPV that they got into yet, but it's like close to it. I mean, there was the story of the guy who was like selling his house for Anthropic Secondary, right? Like there's a lot of examples of this. Oh, that's bad too. Imagine, imagine the, the, like, record updates.
Starting point is 00:19:12 Like, like, you'll be able to look at the deed or whatever. Yeah. Oh, who's the new owner? Oh, you work, you're an early. Like, so that transaction, that whole transaction. action doesn't really work. Oh yeah, and that's like extremely public. Yeah, yeah. That's way more complicated, yeah. Well, let's break you down for the Frog and Toad fans, the children in the audience, because Frankie over at Paradigm put it in terms, even a child could explain, potentially a four or five year old. So if you're familiar with just Frog and Toad, you don't know
Starting point is 00:19:40 anything about all the buzzwords we've been dropping for the last five minutes. You can think about it this way. Frog and Toad, the loved children's book, Frog put the shares of Anthropic or open AI in an SPV. He said now we can transfer these shares freely But Anthropic can still exercise its transfer restrictions said toad That is true said frog the frog and toad it's a great one Ankur says if anthropic deems all secondary sales of anthropic stock should be voided does that mean the original buyer retains financial interest even after selling it away lawsuit territory? Yeah, there's gonna be a messy thing people in talking about unwinding as a a a spasex triple a or SPV
Starting point is 00:20:22 for a long time. Yeah, that's going to be a billion dollar. That's going to be almost a billion dollar industry. Yeah, we need to get the macrum clip up again. It goes viral every time we talk about SPVs. What does Mike Isaac say? He says, yeah, look all the privcoes draft this language to scare employees who don't know better from trading on secondary markets and from buyers seeking those shares.
Starting point is 00:20:44 And yet, SPVs find a way. Funny to see the saber rattling and Twitter accounts doing hyperbolic posts, though. and so it'll be interesting to see like how far does the legal implications, how far do they actually go? Well, over at a different AI lab, Miramarotti, who was just, was Mira on the stand? She was actually testifying in person or was she just video deposition. When I saw her, which was last Wednesday, it was just deposition. I don't believe she actually has testified in the trial yet. It was Chavon that was on the stand.
Starting point is 00:21:17 Correct. Got it. Okay. Well, Mira is cooking over at thinking. Machines Lab, TML launch interaction models with a delightfully concise YouTube video that we should play so that we can watch this. Miram Rati says on X, today we are sharing our work on interaction models, a new class of model trained from scratch to handle real-time interaction natively instead of gluing it onto a turn-based one. Let's play the video. Hey, I need your help with something today.
Starting point is 00:21:48 You ready? Absolutely, I'm ready. What's up? Yeah, so we're giving an announcement today, and I've got two of my friends coming to help. Every time one of them enters the frame, I need you to say, friend. Look at those speakers. Got it. Absolutely insane setup, audio file. Cool. So we've got a new system for full duplex audio and video, which means that you can stream input into it in real time,
Starting point is 00:22:14 and it can respond to you even while you're speaking to it simultaneously. How does that sound? Sounds like a solid setup. Full duplex with real-time interaction is super useful. It seems faster than the original voice mode, which was lamented by the viral Instagram reel producers. Can you translate to English in real time for my friend and for audience? Absolutely, I'll translate as you go.
Starting point is 00:22:49 Today we're taking a look at our preview model. I saw. or I heard about a version of this in China that's a mask that you wear that translates everything you say out of a speaker on the front. And I was hearing this and I was just like, why is this not in America? This seems so sick. Like we hear about the AirPods, but then you, so the example was a mom in China teaching her kids English.
Starting point is 00:23:14 And so she basically wants to be talking to them in English constantly, but she doesn't know enough English to teach them, but she wants them to learn. And so she will, I think, wear... Put on the mask. No, it's literally a Bain mask. It looks exactly like a Bain mask. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:23:31 You merely adopted English. She was born in it or born in the AI translation minds. So she wears this Bain mask that does the live translation out to her kids. Her kids speak back to her in English. Smart headphones translate back. Have like metal that wraps around. I don't know. I couldn't find it.
Starting point is 00:23:50 I was listening to it on a podcast, so I didn't have any. visuals, but we got to find this thing and get a pair in America because in theory, we could do the whole show speaking Chinese to each other, and the audience would hear Chinese, but we would be hearing English that we talk to each other. Wow. Isn't that cool? Powerful. So I would be hearing English on a massive delay, probably, but I would be speaking Chinese as it comes
Starting point is 00:24:15 out of my Bain mask. And it was just a whole story, the whole thrust of the New York Times Daily was, uh, like the optimism of AI, optimism in China around AI. Just tons and tons of examples of, you know, everyday people being like, oh, yeah, like, AI is amazing. I'm teaching my kids English. They're going to have a great life. And like, I would not be able to do this before.
Starting point is 00:24:38 And now I can just do this. And there's like so many examples of that. And it's the exact opposite. It says the moment, Jordy gets a live translation button. It's over. Yeah. We're not that far away from me being able to press a button, actually. Wait, really?
Starting point is 00:24:49 Yeah. You're serious? I guess. Oh, yeah. For that mask, I would actually be very surprised if that's, like, real or at least if the audio sounds very good. No, because, like, you can just look at, like, okay, what are the best, like, real-time translation models? What are they, like, API prices? They're, like, not super cheap.
Starting point is 00:25:04 So you can't do it locally, which means it's somehow in the cloud, right? And just, like, even the best models are, there's still some delay, and they're just basically now getting to a point where it, like, sounds like a real person and not, like, super computer, like, utilize. It has a clanker dialect. Yeah, maybe, but just like getting the latency down is like extremely difficult because people have been working on this for, I mean, just like Google translate. You don't think you can do it on device at all? What if you basically make a phone? At some point you can, but I think it's still like very old. Phone ASIC for this one model. You take the Lama 3 version of it. You bake it down. The huge battery pack. You're wearing a whole jet pack full of batteries to power the H-100 in the back. It's on device inference, but they didn't say how big the suit is. You have to wear the connects for the mask. Yeah, you have to trail a whole rack. It's like the Nathan for you.
Starting point is 00:25:53 No, it's like the Nathan for you, the Chili suit. Yeah, but it's an NVL 72 that you're just like dragging behind you like a washing machine. Anyway, GameStop is going to need to level up if they want to successfully take over eBay because eBay has rejected GameStop's $55 billion takeover bid. The online marketplace, that's eBay, called the cash and stock proposal, quote, neither credible nor a trap. The New York Times has a story here. The online marketplace rejected the proposal. This news should surprise no one, since the odds it would accept GameStop's brash offer were infinitesimally remote. There is another media deal going on right now.
Starting point is 00:26:36 Byron Allen is buying BuzzFeed investing $120 million in the digital media company and will become the CEO. This is a very interesting story because I don't know how familiar you are or the audience is with Byron Allen, but he had a fascinating career where he was originally, he jumped straight into late night talk show host. He became a late night talk show host and then eventually had this very interesting business where he would buy... Zero to Yap. Basically. He would buy the rights to broadcast on TV in certain slots, in certain hours and then he would independently go sell advertising against the programming that he would put together. And so the money would flow from the advertiser to him and then he would pay to air his
Starting point is 00:27:32 content on traditional TV. Interesting. He was on the hook for the air time basically, but any difference. But he was paying for the airtime. And then he eventually bought the weather channel and a number of other sort of traditional over the, over the air TV stations and sort of grew. He's also will be taking over the time slot from, I believe, Stephen Colbert, post that changeover with a show called, what is it, comics unleashed? It's a roundtable conversation. It's sort of just a podcast with a bunch of comics.
Starting point is 00:28:08 Allen Family Digital, a company associated with Mr. Allen, will pay $120,000. $20 million for 52% stake. And this is a huge jump from where BuzzFeed was trading. I think BuzzFeed was trading around like 40 to 80 million market cap or something. So it's like almost a three-ax premium. And we can get into the share price in a minute. But yeah, I'm sure there will be more developments on what happens with BuzzFeed. Yeah, I'm so curious what the plan is. I don't think it's a good brand at this point. Certainly has name recognition. But I don't know anybody that wakes up in the morning and says, yeah, I got to know what BuzzFeed is talking about today. Granted, there's probably a lot of people. And Byron is a media tycoon. So now, that's why
Starting point is 00:28:53 I'm curious. Like, what is, what's the play here? No, I think you see an opportunity. If you, if you had $120 million to just build a new media property, you wonder, hey, what could you actually do. So is there some massive audience that's still sneakily more engaged? Maybe he sees a pivot to prediction markets. Oh, I don't know. I don't know. Let's open the cover of BuzzFeed today. Let's check it out. BuzzFeed.com 50. Why would you put that thing in writing photos that prove people are the worst? That's the number one trending article in BuzzFeed. 41 celebs people used to love and now can't even stand to look at. 22, they really go, they love the listicle,
Starting point is 00:29:40 and they're getting longer. I was joking about five key reasons. That would be, I would never make the cut of modern BuzzFeed. 22 stories about boy moms and their sons that will make you cringe into oblivion.

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