TBPN Live - Apple’s New CEO John Ternus, Ferrari’s First EV | Diet TBPN
Episode Date: April 22, 2026Diet 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
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Massive, massive news. Tim Cook to step down at Apple. This broke yesterday.
Germinator had the scoop, of course. He's coming on the show later today, but it's on the cover of the Wall Street Journal today.
Heavily predicted, often debated. It's a time to reflect on Tim Cook's legacy and what's up next for John Ternus, the longtime insider.
We just say incredibly well executed, incredibly smooth. They sort of telegraphed it. It wasn't a surprise.
Yes. Yes. It was already fully priced in. Yes.
I personally was hoping that the market would give Tim Cook a 21% salute.
Yes.
Where when the news went out, it just immediately nukes 21%.
Massive red candle.
Let everyone know this is, we don't like this.
We love him.
It's a sign of respect.
We will miss him dearly.
Of course, rebound immediately.
Yes.
But I think that's something that the market collectively should try to do for great see.
Yes.
For sure.
Chartology is really the key thing.
It's 21% salute.
still nearly a $4 trillion company.
They're doing fine and they're cooking.
So let's go through a little bit of the review of the news
and some of the previous discussions
that we've had around Tim Cook and John Ternis
because we're going to be learning a lot more about John Ternis
and he's probably going to do a lot more content,
a lot more media, a lot more interviews,
and we will be hearing from him at keynote events
for probably over a decade, maybe two decades.
We will see.
So in January, Bloomberg reporter Mark German,
who's coming on the show later today,
predicted that John Turnus would succeed Tim Cook as Apple's next CEO.
Let's just pull up this clip.
Let's give some credit to the Germanator.
He didn't predict it on our show first.
I think he scooped it and posted it.
I know, I know, but this was back in January.
I dropped the clip.
Everyone else in the Apple executive team, late 50s through their mid-60s,
turning 66 this year in the case of Tim Cook.
Your Apple's board, you like continuity, you like an insider,
you like people who know what they're doing have been there for a while they know where the bodies are buried
okay these guys are all have hundreds of millions of dollars if not more pause i love mark german so
he's the best he's truly the best and he's coming on at 50 he's the only one who is if let's say
tim cook hangs out another three to five years you're not going to point another CEO who's
65 70 years old he's the only guy apple they get fast
majority of the revenue from hardware. He's the hardware guy. Yep. Have they screwed up any hardware
since he's been in charge? No. He's a steady hand. He knows what he's doing. He's really the
only choice. You know, there was this New York Times report a few weeks ago, basically saying that
could be Greg Jawswiak, could be Eddie Q, could be Deirdre O'Brien, could be Craig Federee. It's for
sure not going to be Craig. It's not going to be Dierdra. It's not going to be Eddie. It's not
going to be Jaws. The only category that makes sense is an operations person.
because you look at the current CEO, Tim, obviously, comes out of the ops world.
You look at the guy who would have been CEO if Tim Cook didn't stay so long.
I'm not saying he shouldn't have stayed so long he's done.
Obviously, a fantastic job for shareholders and employees and what have you.
It would have been Jeff Williams.
He was the COO.
So Saabee Khan, he was named CEO a few months ago,
but he's really been in that job for the last half a decade, I would say.
So anyways, it'll be Ternis or Saabee or someone completely out of left field.
I don't think this is imminent.
So we'll see what ultimately happens,
but all signs are turning towards Ternus.
Everyone has an opinion that Ternus is going to be the next CEO fine.
I've been shouting this from rooftops the last two years.
But no one has given evidence, like, what is this based on, right?
Has there ever been a baton handoff?
Is he getting more responsibility?
Do they have a big baton?
You know what, you have white smoke coming out of the smoke.
Sure.
Well, actually, no smoke.
Very environment.
They have a big scoop, maybe?
So.
Is that the end of the club?
You know, maybe out of the far.
Do they have a comically large baton?
Like, like we have our scoop?
Yeah.
Oh, Mark German, the scoopinator.
He's a scoop doggy dog.
Scoop athlete.
The scoop, the scoop is on fire.
Yesterday evening, Mark was the one with the scoop.
Tim Cook will assume the role of
Apple's executive chairman and John Turneris will take the reins of the company. Mark
followed up with a scoop with internal memos from both Cook and Ternis announcing the transition.
I don't. I mean, I understand, I don't know, maybe I don't understand what it's like to be
65, but I was always optimistic that the Warren Buffett, 65 to 95 would be the new trend and that
people would just say, you know what? Tim Cook's healthy. He's going, he's going. Everything to date was a
warm up. Yeah. It's time to go on the actual run.
That's, I would, I mean, I totally understand.
He's like, I got another Niel's X.
I got another 10x to me.
I'm going to, I'm taking us to 40 trillion.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I mean, uh, maybe Warren Buffett's in a different world because he's more of an investor.
Maybe doesn't need to travel as much.
Doesn't need to be in the arena, shaking hands, kissing babies, doing product launches, you know,
being in D.C., getting wrangled into things.
Like, Buffett can be more like hands off and just sort of read the news.
reviewed the financials and delegate.
Step in with some liquidity.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's more, it's a more hands-off role.
I mean, I imagine that the role of CEO of Apple is incredibly demanding, but I liked the
idea of just locking in and being like, oh, yeah, I'm 65.
Everyone expects me to step down, but I got another 30 years in me.
But, you know, he chose a different path and he is retiring or stepping into the executive chairman
role. Ben Thompson published Tim Cook's impeccable timing, which eulogizes Cook's impressive
accomplishments as the head of Apple. Ben Thompson kicks it off with an interesting thing. He says,
it's the nature of business that the eulogy for a chief executive doesn't happen when they die,
but when they retire, or in the case of Apple CEO, Tim Cook, announced that they will step up to the
role of executive chairman on September 1st. One morbid exception is when the CEO does die on the job
quits because they're dying. But the truth of the matter is that where any honest recounting of
Cook's incredibly successful tenure as Apple's CEO, particularly from a financial perspective,
has to begin with the numbers. And he that says that the numbers are extraordinary. Cook became
CEO of Apple on August 24th, 2011. And in the intervening 15 years, revenue has increased 303%.
Profits surged 354%. And the value of Apple has gone from a mere
$297 billion to over $4 trillion, a staggering 1,251% increase.
And there was some chatter back and forth on the timeline over whether Tim Cook had simply
put Apple on cruise control and lucked out as many big names in tech also saw 10 to 40x increases
in their market caps. This is from Brandon Gorell's newsletter at TVPN.com. You can sign up today.
But this interpretation ignores the fact that many of the biggest public tech companies in
1980 when Apple IPOed are no longer even close to the top of the pack anymore. And Brandon cites
Xerox, Motorola, Texas Instruments, IBM, and HP, which all fell by the wayside over the past 30
years. Well, Apple built the biggest consumer hardware company on the planet and thrived in the
public market. And I was doing some digging on this as well. I pulled up, you know, it's easy to
look at like, well, zoom back to the Mag 7. All of the Mag 7 have done fantastically well.
over the past 15 years during Tim Cook's tenure.
Did he do anything special?
Is he in a different category in some way?
And maybe not when you look at,
when you look backwards from the current MAG 7,
but if you go back to 2011 when Tim Cook took the reins
and you look at what were the biggest tech companies there,
then and how have they performed,
it does look like outperformance,
because Apple was at 370,
77 billion. That was, you know, big, huge, the biggest company at the time. Then Microsoft at 218.
Yeah, what their peers were at the time where he took the helm. And to be clear, Apple, Microsoft,
Google, and Amazon were clearly there. Fang was the term at the time. Facebook, Amazon, Apple,
Netflix, Google. For some reason, Microsoft didn't make the cut in that, in that acronym. That has since
changed, of course. But there were a lot of companies that did.
go on as significant of runs. You have IBM, Oracle, Intel, Cisco, Qualcomm, and HP, all that were in the top 10.
They were sort of the Mag 10 of 2011, and now they are not in the Mag 7, although many of them have
done very well. This was our take from a long time. We like to harp on the failure of Apple
intelligence and how Siri is ineffective sometimes, and the FaceTime interface is odd, and the new
iPhone's app is hard to use, but where it matters.
We give them credit on Gen Moji.
Stop.
No, where it matters is, did they navigate tariffs?
Did they navigate supply chain?
Did they navigate the transition to Apple Silicon,
delivering a great product consistently that doesn't break?
Like, we have ordered so many Apple devices throughout building TBPN,
and there was a time when you would get a new consumer product,
it would just be, oh, it's a bad one. I got a bad one. And I got to take it back. And that's never
happened. The quality control is flawless. And navigating a very, very difficult chip export act
from Biden in 2022, all the way to the Trump tariffs, to different political swings back and forth
and back and forth. And Tim Cook has just done a great job of like keeping the wheels on the train
going down the track. And I think that should be celebrated, even though the sexy new
AI features are...
He's bound to be under-appreciated because he wasn't the visionary that Steve was,
but he also never, I don't think he ever wanted to be seen in that way.
But the consistent operational excellence over almost two decades is almost unprecedented at this scale.
Yeah, just the way you put it, right?
The same experience that I had getting a new...
Apple computer as like a teenager I have today. It is actually almost remarkable how similar
the experience is. You open this wonderful box. You get a great device. It works for a long time.
And you still get that today. So the consistency, yeah, I think he will just get more,
when people kind of process the run over time, he will just get more and more respect.
Yeah. And a lot of the other computer manufacturers have had to go into bloatware and pre-installed
software and Apple's been very good at holding the line there. They've of course ramped up their
services business, integrated advertising in places that were somewhat unexpected since that was
always how they were counter positioned against Google. But they've done it in a way that hasn't been
that annoying. I feel like I don't see that many people complaining about ads in the app store.
People see the ads and they're like, wow, this company is bidding on the keyword for their direct
competitor. That is, you know, extremely competitive behavior. The same thing.
happens on Google, didn't expect to see it in the Apple ecosystem. Of course, it's going to happen.
The-
McGough in the chat says, not a single product recall under Tim Cook. Is that possible?
Wow. I think that is incorrect. What did the recall?
Says they recalled a 15-inch MacBook Pro in 2019. The AC wall plug adapter in 2016 and 2019.
Battery gate service program. They've had some back and forth. But, you know, a very, very
successful run. The other two things that the chat was mentioning was the Apple car and the failure of that program.
Maybe a little bit, they bit off too much more than they could chew. I think, you know, looking at
what's happened in China with every phone manufacturer launching a car that's extremely impressive,
I would have loved to see Apple execute there. And I think that would have been very good for the American
technology industry, the electric vehicle industry, a variety of different American.
industrial efforts, but it was not to be, unfortunately.
And then there's the Applevision Pro, which I think a lot of people, you know, look at the
churn rates, look at the retention rates, and they just see it as an underwhelming product.
I still like it, but I'm in the minority, and I acknowledge that fully.
I do think that they made the right decision to turn it into a home cinema, a home theater.
Like, they understood that there was not enough of a video game library, a VR game library,
plug into in any meaningful way.
And so they made the decision.
I think one of the lead staff members on the Apple Vision Pro
project was from the Dolby Cinema team,
which had done Dolby Vision and some of the actual theater
buildouts.
And so they were able to bring that experience
and understand what actually makes for a great movie
watching experience in a premiere cinema.
And how can we recreate as much of that as possible in VR?
Still, obviously didn't hit the mark fully,
because the product has not taken off by any stretch of the imagination.
But overall, it was a fun project, and I'm hoping that they continue that.
It might wind up pivoting into just camera glasses,
and they'll go up against the meta-ray bands,
which might be the more prudent business strategy.
But I still like these incredible investments in VR.
What are you laughing at?
Josh over at Semaphore says,
nobody tell the new Apple CEO that he has a streaming service.
We've got a good thing going here, lighting iPhone.
and AirPods money on fire to make great movies and shows, and we don't need that getting any
extra attention right now.
Yeah.
5,000 likes.
Yeah, it is interesting.
Turnus is about as far as you can be from the Apple TV services organization, but I don't know.
I talked to a filmmaker in Hollywood, a very successful filmmaker like years and years ago
before Apple TV was really ramping up.
And he was saying that Apple's brand is so prestigious that it's sort of antithetical to
of the Hollywood mindset, which is much more VC risk on,
you're going to have flops.
Like every movie studio understands that it is impossible
to predict the perfect success
and have the level of polish that comes from these slight iterations
to apples.
Yeah, Bill different, for sure.
And so it's a different culture,
because if you have apples, Apple hasn't,
I mean, they've had like flops,
but even the flops, like they still feel like very on
brand they don't have like a silly movie that is just like bad and running that risk was always a
was always a problem but i feel like apple navigated it really really well especially with the f1
project and has done has done really well with the content side and they have held a brand standard
that feels like almost at the level of hb oh pretty quickly uh whereas some of the other streaming
services have kind of gone more scatter shot more reality tv more uh you know sort of silly projects that
might entertain viewers, but don't fully, they don't create a cohesive brand idea of like,
what am I getting when I open that particular app on the Apple TV?
Mark German said on TVPN in January that Ternus really viewed, really is viewed as the
ultimate hardware guy at Apple, Ralph Winkler at the Wall Street Journal published an article yesterday,
detailing Ternus's pedigree with physical products, quote,
if Jobs is a product visionary and cook a supply chain guru,
Ternus is a hardware savant who exists somewhere in the middle.
Ternus, who has a background in mechanical engineering,
has been working at Apple for 25 years.
And most recently led hardware engineering of all of Apple's products.
He played a crucial role in the development of Apple AirPods, obviously a massive success.
And he redesigned Apple's computers to use company design chips instead of Intel's,
a massive move that extended battery life and improved performance.
So Ternus is...
And set them up very well for AI.
AI.
Yeah.
Turnus is taking over Apple at a time when the company has largely sat on the sidelines of the
AI race, going so far as to outsource the technology powering Siri to Google's Gemini.
Turnus will have to somehow manage this dynamic.
Ben Thompson wrote about it in November of 2025.
Apple's plans are a bit like the alcoholic who admits they have a drinking problem, but promises
to limit their intake to social occasions, namely how exactly does Apple plan on replacing Gemini
with its own models when, one, Google has more talent.
Two, Google spends far more on infrastructure.
And three, Gemini will be continually increasing from the current level.
A number of people have talked about, you know,
what are the challenges that Ternus is inheriting on supply chain, right?
Kind of like, you know, stuck in China in a big way.
That presents a pretty meaningful, you know, risk to the business.
And then sort of like overall dependency on Google,
especially on some of these key products.
And we will close out on this.
I need your reaction.
John, Ferrari's first electric car is priced at the low price of $650,000.
An absolute steel.
They're giving them away at that price.
It's electric, right?
So you don't have to deal with gasoline?
You don't have to deal.
Yeah, you save a lot on gas.
You don't have to deal with all the noise that comes out of a V-12.
Yeah, no noise and you save on gas.
Yeah.
Oh, well, yeah, I mean, if you're saving on gas,
and you're driving, I mean, if oil keeps spiking and gasoline goes to a thousand dollars a gallon
and you're filling up every week, you could easily be spending millions of dollars a year on gasoline
in a normal car. So there's potential cost savings here. So it's sort of a more you buy,
the more you save situation, I think, Ferrari Luce. There's really going to be a, like,
what kind of Ferrari client are you moment? No, I think it'll be a status. The depreciation.
The depreciation, you see someone with this, you will know.
You know they can eat 300 grand of depreciation.
And you know that they are high on the list for the F90.
Like they are working their way up, buying in now.
And when the F90 comes out in a decade, they're getting a call.
Yeah.
They're getting a call for sure.
Yeah, very interested to see how this does in the market.
And the good thing is if you are excited about the Luchet, but you're not excited about paying $650,000, you will have an opportunity to buy them for far less.
and that very, very quickly.
Probably.
Probably.
But thank you for hanging out with us today.
It's been an honor and a privilege to be here with you.
We hope you have a wonderful afternoon.
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