TBPN Live - Blue Origin's Historic Landing, Valve Unveils Steam Machine Console, 2wai Reactions | Everett Randle, Adam Faze
Episode Date: November 14, 2025(02:07) - Blue Origin Lands New Glenn Rocket (15:58) - Valve Unveils Steam Machine Console (25:38) - 𝕏 Timeline Reactions (30:17) - Cantor Group Posts Record Year (50:24) - Will Manidi...s: "In The Flow" (01:02:47) - 𝕏 Timeline Reactions (01:25:49) - 2WAI Reactions (01:31:07) - Everett Randle is a venture capitalist and writer best known for his sharp essays on startup strategy, founder psychology, and the dynamics of elite tech ecosystems. He previously worked at Founders Fund and is widely read for articulating the unwritten rules and cultural patterns of Silicon Valley. (02:31:56) - Adam Faze, CEO of Gymnasium, a digital television studio producing short-form unscripted series for platforms like TikTok and Instagram, discusses his journey from traditional Hollywood to founding Gymnasium, emphasizing the shift towards digital content consumption. He highlights the success of shows like "Keep the Meter Running," which became a viral hit in New York City, illustrating the potential of high-quality, short-form content on social media platforms. Faze also touches on the evolving media landscape, noting that platforms like TikTok have become the new television, and discusses the role of artificial intelligence in empowering individual creators to produce blockbuster-level content independently. TBPN.com is made possible by: Ramp - https://ramp.comFigma - https://figma.comVanta - https://vanta.comLinear - https://linear.appEight Sleep - https://eightsleep.com/tbpnWander - https://wander.com/tbpnPublic - https://public.comAdQuick - https://adquick.comBezel - https://getbezel.com Numeral - https://www.numeralhq.comPolymarket - https://polymarket.comAttio - https://attio.com/tbpnFin - https://fin.ai/tbpnGraphite - https://graphite.devRestream - https://restream.ioProfound - https://tryprofound.comJulius AI - https://julius.aiturbopuffer - https://turbopuffer.comfal - https://fal.aiPrivy - https://www.privy.ioCognition - https://cognition.aiGemini - https://gemini.google.comFollow 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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You're watching TVPN!
Orange mode! It is, uh, we're cozy maxing. It is Friday, November 14th, 2025.
We are live from the TBPN Ultradome, the Temple of Technology, the Fortures of Finance, the Capital of Capital.
It's raining in Los Angeles. It's raining in Hollywood. And so we're cozy maxing. We're in extremely orange lighting. We have put the fire on, uh, maybe a little bit too orange, honestly. The clips are going to look a little bit crazy from today. Uh, we might, we might switch back at some point. But that says we need the white
suits today for sure. We didn't do white suits today. The market opened down two percent. It was a
disaster. No, we're back up. We're back up. The whole market's up. We need to put the word up. The NASDAQ's up. Okay. And over the last
six months, the NASDAQ is up 20 percent. Wow. Would you look at that? Would you look at that?
Yeah. In bigger news, but but lifted lifted. In bigger news and more important news.
Ramp. Time is money. Save both. Easy to use corporate cards, bill pay accounting a whole lot more.
all in one place. Yes, Jordy?
Today is National Pickle Day.
Pickle Day. You heard it.
Not Pickle Ball Day. National Pickle Day.
Laud Gill broke the news this morning.
Yes.
And that could explain...
I like that he's into tracking national days.
That could explain the volatility.
That could. That could.
There's basically a day every day.
Like every day is some special day.
There's like probably National Podcasters Day.
You know, there's a...
Because they've extended it.
It's, you know, father's day, mother's day.
Then there's grandparents' day.
Then there's aunts and uncles day.
And people just went crazy with the days.
A lot of marketing firms figured out that you needed a day to have an excuse.
So there's like donut day.
National Eat a donut day or whatever.
According to Google's AI overview, tomorrow is National Philanthropy Day.
And then it is also celebrated as National Recycling Day, National Drummer Day,
on Sox Day.
So we got days for days.
It's also a restream day.
You can sign up for re-stream today, one live stream, 30-plus destinations, multi-stream and reach your audience wherever they are.
Blue Origin, massive landing yesterday. Let's watch the video.
Pull it up. Sawyer Merritt has breaking it down. Jeff Bezos's rocket company. Blue Origin has just successfully landed.
Let's play the clip. This is New Glenn, the rocket booster. Oh, no.
on a barge in the middle of the ocean
25 years after its founding look at that
becoming the, it's only the second company in history
to land a rocket booster after SpaceX.
What a moment, remarkable.
Insane.
In some ways, it should be expected.
It's been a decade since SpaceX did exactly this.
This is a wild video.
This is like, I mean, I'm always, I'm always amazed by the fact that they can keep the cameras even rolling or live streaming at all during these crazy moments where there's fire all over the camera, for example.
But they did it.
The smoke clears, I believe, on this video at some point.
And you see the rocket booster sitting there on the drone ship standing.
It did not crash.
It did not blow up after they brought it back successfully.
it's an orbital class rocket.
Very exciting.
I was thinking about the implications of this.
It's interesting.
It's like on the one hand, like, yeah, you're 10 years behind SpaceX.
Like, SpaceX did this exact thing, 2015.
2015, it's been a decade.
On the other hand, it's like China hasn't done it.
And they've obviously wanted to.
And so that's really cool that America has two companies that are doing it.
And they're now in competition.
And so when we were talking to the folks about the data centers.
some of the spacefaring empire.
Yeah, there's been this question about like,
will the launch costs come down
or will Elon just eat 100% of the margin himself
with SpaceX? Because he's done all this work.
Well, now there's maybe going to be a little bit more pressure.
We're seeing that from Firefly.
We're seeing that from Blue Origin.
Like stuff seems to be working.
I think a lot of people wrote off Blue Origin
like Virgin Galactic.
It was just like billionaire side project.
SpaceX was the serious one.
I think there's still, you know,
there's still a decade behind.
But it is just crazy that he's been able to keep it going for so long, making a lot of progress.
And I was just laughing to myself about this idea that in any other industry, if a founder came to you and was like, yeah, we're a decade behind the leading company in the category, but we're staying with it for another decade.
You'd be like, what?
Like, you're a decade behind?
Like, you know, you're at GPT1 level and they're at GPT5 level.
You're going to pivot in that case, right?
We're just trying to get to GPT2 level.
Yeah.
Wait, by the time you're at GPT2, they're going to be a GPT six.
Seven.
Six or seven.
But it is just a different industry.
It moves a lot slower.
And Bezos has just built a crazy company.
I mean, they've never, like, they've never really done a, like, a major financing that's
been from a headline firm.
They're just kind of, it feels like it's all funded by Bezos.
There might be something else going on.
There's, there's some rumors of, like, small secondary transactions here and there,
but there's really no, like, you know, logo, Blue Origin logo on Tier 1 Fund.
You just won't see that.
That's just not a thing.
And what's interesting is that it's a massive company.
So over 10,000 people work there.
It's been 25-year project, as I mentioned.
But also, you know, it's not, it's like the idea of hiring 10,000 people and rocket scientists, like not cheap people, you know, imagine.
I mean, some of them are probably, you know, relatively, you know, relatively.
new grads, but there are some serious salaries to bear. And then just funding that off your own
personal balance sheet for 25 years is crazy. But Bezos has like 250 billion. SpaceX has raised
to date like 12 billion. And so even if you just assume that Bezos is burning the exact same
amount of money, even twice as much money, that's 10% of his net worth. It's just a doable like check
to write, which is crazy. Yeah, it's almost the equivalent of, you know, somebody working in big
tech, setting up a cafe that loses some money, but they get a lot of enjoyment out of it,
so they keep it going, even though it's not, it may never be like a rational economic
activity. But in this case, I mean, if, you know, the implications are that you could end up
in a situation where there's a duopoly in launch. Yeah, I mean, SpaceX is what? Multiple
hundreds of billions. And, you know, Blue Origin seems to have somewhat of a similar capability at
some point. Like, you know, what's the fair market value of blue origin? Is it a billion? Is it
10 billion? Is it 50 billion? Like, if it was a public company, just like, you know, and you're
just comping it to SpaceX for whatever reason, whether or not that that math makes a ton of sense.
Like, you could imagine it trading in the billions for sure. Like, you could imagine trading in the
high tens of billions.
So obviously we don't know that much about like the financials, how profitable this
stuff is.
It's a very, you know, kind of behind the scenes company.
Virgin Galactic is sitting at a $200 million valuation.
Yeah.
In the public markets.
I know that they spacked.
I thought that they had despapped.
It's sitting at in, it peaked at, let's see here.
It peaked in, oh, it had, it was all over the place.
It peaked at $1,218 a share in 2019,
and it's now sitting at $3.61.
I think it was one of the first Chimoth Spacks, right?
I think it was one of the first ones.
And they had a very different approach.
Virgin Galactic was like doing the spaceplane thing
where we would take off from the ground
off of like a traditional landing strip
and then just fly higher and higher and higher.
I don't believe Virgin Galactic ever made
serious progress towards
like a reusable rocket
like what Blue Origin's done
and I watched an interview a walk
a walk and talk tour of
the Blue Origin facility with everyday astronaut
and Jeff Bezos and
it just seems like he's he loves it
like he's just doing it for the love of the game it doesn't matter
if it's going to take 10% of his net worth
like he's so happy
watching a space man
yeah no watching him look at this
massive rocket with the welding points
and he knows what type of weld
they used for what pieces of the rocket like it's clearly just one of the most entertaining
things you can buy is just a rocket factory that builds rockets and does cool stuff it's like so
exciting it's so thrilling uh it's it's got to be way more thrilling than like sports betting for
example because you're you're you're kind of there's a lot it is a gamble right you put all the
money into the rocket the rocket either explodes or goes up and comes back down it's got to be
thrilling. It's got to be a dopamine machine, so he's having fun. Yeah. The other interesting thing is that
because they don't do this like regular tender offers that SpaceX does, there's a lot of
employees on Reddit who are kind of like, hey, like my stock options are kind of worthless. Like I
don't know how to exercise these. I've been at this company for a very long time. And if I was at
SpaceX, I'd probably be cashing out a lot and like retiring very comfortably. But since I'm at Blue Origin,
I don't really have the same level of liquidity.
And you could imagine Bezos running a tender offer process that mirrors SpaceX's just
by himself.
He just personally takes out a billion dollars of cash, which he has, and buys a billion
dollars of stock from the employees like what happens to SpaceX when there's a billion
dollar tender offer, but that comes from other investors.
It could just come from him, but it doesn't feel like that's happening, at least from
the couple Reddit threads that I read.
So it's weird because it feels like the, like, SpaceX has this another unfair advantage of employees who go there and think, oh, wow, I'm getting paid, you know, a couple hundred K a year, but it could be millions if we really deliver.
So we got to go to the extra of mine.
Not just that, but I will have a consistent opportunity to get liquidity.
Totally, totally, totally.
Versus, you know, some of the people that sounds like the people that you found that were at Blue Origin for a long time are probably sitting there, you know,
basically saying to themselves, if I had joined SpaceX in a worse role.
Some of them literally said that exact thing.
Yeah.
It literally said that exact thing.
And I'm sure those people had an opportunity to go to SpaceX, too.
Yeah, some of them, I'm sure.
Now, the other interesting thing is like, it is fine to just be like, yeah, like we just pay you cash.
We pay you a lot of cash.
We pay you, you know, higher than market cash.
And so people do need to, you know, make their own decisions.
The employees can make the decisions either way.
But it's just interesting that Blue Origins, like it feels like they're somewhat fighting with one arm tied behind their back.
They're also way behind on the actual progress of the reusable rocket.
They're clearly, you know, like they don't have an answer to Starship.
Starship is four times the capability of this new Glenn rocket that just landed.
So they're behind in many ways, but they're still ahead of China and they're still number two.
And number two in this category has got to be thrilling.
It's got to be exciting.
And I think it might actually be a decent business.
I don't know.
I'd love to dig into it more.
Probably more thrilling than owning a Formula One team.
Maybe.
Yeah.
And Beza, I'm, you know.
I mean, he also, like, sent his, he sent his wife and her friends to space.
Like, that's something that, like, you really can't buy otherwise.
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Delian was very excited about this.
He said,
damn, Blue Origin just landed New Glen Rocket on their second flight officially
become the second company ever to do it after SpaceX did it a decade ago.
Incredible moment for the commercial space industry.
The orbital economy has got to be excited about this.
More competition means potentially more just cheaper prices on payloads to orbit.
So exciting.
exciting stuff and yeah we'll be interesting to see um i also saw that uh project cupier which was
amazon's starlink competitor i believe is rebranding to amazon leo leo i like that yeah some people
were really upset about the rebrand i thought it was kind of cool but they are definitely going to
be getting into the uh space internet uh um bezos just posted a close-up picture of the rocket
oh let's pull it up putting it in well
we pull that up, let me tell you about cognition, the makers of Devin, the AI software engineer,
crush your backlog with your personal AI engineering team. There's also an article in Peraspora
just dropped the Dan Golden spoke in front of U.S. space leaders on a subject that's been
weighing on him. He's bored by space. By that, he's bored with low Earth orbit. SpaceX solved
cheap launch and still the only
the entire commercial space economy
is largely one thing. Communications
along with some imaginary
wow look at that
so this is taking off
wow look at that
it's crazy it took so long to get this
photo up
they should have
I guess this take
look at that wow stunning
yeah one of the reasons
why Blue Origin has
like I talked to somebody who worked at Blue Origin
and he was telling me that
one of the reasons
that Blue Origin moved a little bit slower
than SpaceX is that
they leaned a little bit
harder on the exquisite system
going really big and
Elon had this idea of like
let's try and make a whole bunch of small things
that we bundle together so if you look at the number
of engines and the bottom of that I think it has
like six engines
seven engines
and if you look at the bottom of like Starship
you'll see like what 30 engines or something
I think 33 engines
And so Elon has been bigger, at least on, hey, let's make modular pieces of equipment that can be moved around with maybe not a huge crane.
Maybe you can just put it in the back of a truck.
Maybe to work on this engine, you can do it in, you know, one normal room instead of a massive warehouse.
And so the size of the individual pieces of Starship, it adds up to a massive rocket, but each of the pieces can be worked on individually.
when you start working on these really, really big systems,
any small change, like, cascades through the rest.
What are you laughing at?
I'm laughing at Gabe.
Gabe's fining me for not wearing a suit.
I told you, dude.
I told you.
John's very against it, too.
I'm very against it.
But I just love this puffer too much.
Okay.
Enjoy.
Enjoy.
Well, Dan Golden is upset about this.
He wants asteroid mining.
He wants, he says no wealth being extracted from the solar system.
That's like it sounds intentionally written to inflame and none being brought back to Earth.
Where are my asteroid minds? Dan Golden writes, I guess I'm the economist. Very interesting.
We're all asking the same thing, Dan.
Yes, yes, yes. So the steam machine. Is this what you want to move on to?
Let's pull it up. Okay, let's pull up the video. Let me tell you about Figma. Think bigger,
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Steam machine is going to be huge, says Josh Constine. So many Mac users wish they could
play PC games, but they don't want expensive, complex PCs for a fraction of the price
and headache. They'll be able to play PC, PlayStation, Xbox, and indie games on the Steam
Machine. Now, the Steam Machine was actually part of the launch. There were actually three
things that they launched. A launch video was very cool. They launched a controller, a box,
like an actual computer, the Steam machine, and then a VR headset. So,
So we should see, what's interesting is that we don't know pricing yet.
There's a few other things.
They call it the steam frame.
Valve is saying that it's going to be cheaper than the $1,000 valve index, which is their
previous VR headset.
And I think it should be close to Vision Pro.
Not quite in terms of the display.
it seems like the display per eye
might be closer
to just beyond the meta Quest 3S,
which Tyler, of course, was demoing.
And you said that with the Quest 3S,
you couldn't quite use it for work.
It was a little screen door effect.
It was a little pixelated.
Yeah, I would not want to be reading a lot.
Yeah, yeah.
But the Applevision Pro felt like it was at that level
or almost at that level.
But they do a bunch of interesting things.
with the steam frame.
So if you get the steam machine,
it's designed obviously
at the level of specs
that allow you to run VR games off of it.
You can run VR games directly on the headset,
but then they have a Wi-Fi dongle
that you can put on this Steam machine
that will stream the VR game
to your headset using 6G.
I think that's it, a 6G Wi-Fi router.
So 6G is, I think it's like a different patch of the broadband spectrum or the Wi-Fi spectrum
that's like less cluttered than when you go into your, you know, like 2G networks on your Wi-Fi
and you see the different, like there can be a lot of clutter, especially if you're in an apartment building.
So Chabeevi says, now make this for on-prem LLMs, and that's, I think, more or less what
Sip for Satoshi is building.
building a brain for your desk.
Yeah.
Very cool.
Tiny box also from George Hots is similar.
And I believe Nvidia launched something that is a computer that's designed for basically on-prem LLMs,
a very high-end graphics card sort of wrapped in a package that can be delivered to the actual office.
Yeah, scene says Steam has won.
There's no reason to get an Xbox.
There's no reason to get an Apple VR headset.
They all run on Linux.
It's the ultimate computer.
Yeah. We should pull up the actual Steam official hardware announcement trailer because I think that it's a unique way to actually announce something. And I liked just the way they did it. Just watch this, Jordy, and listen to the transitions between it. It's a couple minutes. So we might need to sort of skip through it.
Hey, everyone. This is Steam Deck. Steam Deck is our powerful, portable.
So this is the product that's already out. And this has been on the market for a couple years.
sold i think very well no one really knows because valve is such a quiet company they're not
publicly traded we're excited to talk about the future of steam deck but not today because this
isn't a video about the future of steam deck this is a video about the future of steam hardware
today we're announcing three new members of the steam hardware lineup all connect you with
powerful pc gaming all are optimized for gaming with steam and all are shipping in early 2026 let's start
with this one.
Yeah, I think it's cool how they,
they start with something that's familiar
and then they like bring you into the next thing.
Well, the reason it's important is because it's a product
that has shipped that people like.
Yeah.
So it's sort of like reestablishes them.
Hardware gets, like people have so little trust
in a lot of new hardware products.
Totally.
And then also there's this interesting factor of they,
the the steam deck is is loved, but also they're doing some rebranding here.
Like the previous VR headset is the Valve Index, not the Steam Index.
And as you'll see later in the video, they're renaming the product from Valve VR headset, Valve Index, to Steam Frame.
And so they're leaning more on this, like, Steam as their unified hardware brand, even though the company
is Valve, and it feels like they're trying to create more unification across the brand.
So putting it all together in one.
I think this would be a good, the main...
Controller?
No, the main computer.
Do you think it'll be good for, like, a sim racing rig?
I think it would probably run...
I think all of this would run sim racing extremely well.
The only thing is that you would still need to add the peripherals for correct, like,
yeah, yeah, yeah.
Control and, like, pedals.
and steering wheel, all that stuff.
But listen to this part.
Steam machine.
Here, go back like 10 seconds,
because this transition, I think, is really well done.
The new steam controller works with any device running steam or steam length.
Whether it's a PC, Mac, handheld, smartphone, steam deck, or the new steam machine.
Oh, this is the new steam machine.
I like that.
It's, like, very, like, cute and quirky.
It has, like, I don't know, just, like, funny aesthetics.
But they, they, that's the first time.
that they introduce the name of the product the next the next product and then they do it again
like a minute or two later and I just think it's like it it has this like sort of like friendly
quirky like aesthetic that fits with the video games but it's it doesn't feel like it's from
anywhere particular it feels original I don't know what do you think about the black cube the black
cube I think it's fine I mean it's it looks like it fits in a media console where it's
going to live next to a PS5.
I actually think that that's probably
better than the PS5
is such an awkward shape.
Like it's really like long
and big. I don't know. I think that this
is probably a better just
like you can fit
that on more
on more desks and in more
closets and in more little media cabinets.
I wouldn't have gone anywhere.
I wouldn't have done anything differently.
With a low latency, wireless connectivity
of the steam controller puck built right in.
and it's great for streaming your games.
To your phone, tablet, laptop, Steam Deck, or Steamframe.
Oh, yep.
This is Steamframe.
See, they do it again.
And then they tell you, okay, we got a new VR headset.
And it's such a funny way to introduce, like, a new VR headset.
Like, this is the first time they talk about this VR headset.
...generation VR hardware.
Stream all your Steam games, VR and non-VR alike,
in this comfortable, lightweight, wireless VR headset.
Steamframe uses camera-based tracking, so getting
into your games is as easy as slipping on the headset and waking it up.
So this is a shift. You used to have to mount cameras around your, like, gaming area, basically,
and then it would track you with those cameras. Now it's all done on the headset. This is the same
way the Apple Vision Pro works. This is the same way the MetaQuest 3 works. This is not like new,
but it is, it is new for Valve. Steamframe also pairs seamlessly with the new Steam
controller, a great companion for playing non-VR games in the headset. To make sure streaming
is smooth and stable no matter what.
Steamframe includes a wireless adapter
that lets you stream your game
from your PC to your headset
over a fast and dedicated
Wi-Fi 6 connection.
And the game is streamed to your frame
optimized for VR
using new technology
that allows for the highest resolution
streaming exactly where your eyes are looking.
And Steamframe is a PC
running Steam OS. In addition to
streaming, you can install and play.
So where you're looking in the VR headset,
that actually gets streamed
you in higher resolution than the rest of whatever else is in the headset.
Whoa.
Because your eyes can, you know, like you're looking at me right now.
I'm in full resolution.
This is blurry.
So we will send you a blurry rendering over here.
And this has been done in VR at the local level before, but they've figured out how to do it,
like, in the latency loop with, like, actually streaming.
So they call it like foviated streaming as opposed to foviated rendering, kind of the,
the next generation of this.
And so you should be able to play
like very high fidelity VR games
and stream them from this device.
And all of that just keeps weight
and heat off your face,
which is exciting.
Tyler, any reaction?
What would you pay for this?
I think we should get the whole suite.
I love it.
Let's play it on the fireplace.
You know?
Put it up there.
Former addict over here.
So of course he wants the whole package.
Well, no, realistically,
we're going to get this thing.
We're going to get this.
We're going to get the 1X
and then we're going to get that new Google model
to play it for me and I'll come in and I'll be like how'd you do this weekend buddy did you crush
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Michael Saler is maybe not going down with the ship
This is the most insane.
It's the most insane thing that a public company CEO has ever put up.
It looks like a chat.
He looks like an absolute chat.
Yes, he's by himself in a rowboat.
You know, it looks like there's a bunch of people on the ship.
He's not worried about them.
He's worried about getting as far away from it as he can.
Yes, yes.
The ship is going down.
The ship is going down.
He's looking like an absolute chat.
Jez says, brother, you were supposed to go down with the ship.
So I just think, you know, this was posted.
This was posted like, you know, very early in the morning this morning.
It's possible.
He just was playing around on...
Okay, no, no, no.
He did not do this.
This is from an account called Atlas Holdled,
instead of Atlas Shrugged, Atlas Hoddled with the orange square icon.
Bitcoiner, Atlas Hoddle.
describes themselves
as a bitcoiner
and AI artist
He posted this from his own account
No, no, no, no.
He took the image
from Atlas...
Okay, okay, you're saying
he didn't make it.
He didn't make it.
But he liked it.
He liked it.
And he thought it was a good idea
to post.
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
And so Atlas Hautele
wakes up every day
and refers to themselves
as a chronicler of Michael Saylor.
Like, they're clearly
like a super fan.
Like they create fan fiction,
fan content.
This was something
that Atlas Hoddled
generated. And then Michael
Sailor took it and was like, I got to post
this today. That's a great idea. When the stocks down
like 50% or whatever. Yeah, it's down
52% in the last six months. Yes.
And he thought, yeah, this is a great idea.
And so the reaction has not been
good because, as
Jez put it, brother, you are supposed to
go down with the ship. Like, he's the
captain of the ship. Why is he not on the ship?
It's such a crazy image.
Michael Mirafloor says, so you're
abandoning a sinking ship when you're
supposed to be the captain.
It's such,
it's such,
such a funny situation.
Let me tell you about
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You want to read this from valuations?
Valuation says, God, I love markets.
Where else do you get an objective answer
to whether you're a genius or a total effing
moron in real time?
Master is down 50%
since this was published. And this is a quote
from Sailor, the captain, sailor himself, he says,
unless you do the requisite 100 plus hours
of studying Bitcoin on top of 100 plus hours
of micro strategy, you should not enter this trade,
he said, because it is a very sophisticated trade
that 99.99% of Wall Street doesn't even understand.
And yeah, the problem with 99.99% of Wall Street,
not understanding your business model,
trade is that they might not buy and that might drive the price down, right? Isn't that
yes. If institutional investors don't understand it, maybe they don't feel confident.
So obviously people are dunking on this because the stock has traded down 50% since this
was published. I do think that there is something that's nice about posting something like
this. Like if you are running a meme stock or you're running a company that has a lot of retail
attention, it's very nice to actually go to the community and say, hey, like, you should
really study for 100 hours, study the asset that we're investing in, and study this
company, you should make an educated decision. It is a little bit of just like do your own
research, although obviously there's a little bit of read on this, which is like, it's just like,
I'm saying that I'm doing something so complicated when really I'm just hoddling Bitcoin.
like by my own admission.
But I do think that there's something somewhat responsible about saying,
hey, do the research.
I don't know.
I want to give a little bit of credit for that.
Yeah.
Anyway, where to next?
To Julius, the AI data analyst.
Connect your data and ask questions in plain English.
And get insights in seconds.
No coding required.
They have a very funny campaign up around.
San Francisco right now.
I won't spoil it for you.
But there's a number of fantastic billboards.
Yes, yes.
Cantor Fitzgerald, now controlled by the son of Howard Lutnik,
is having its best year ever, says Joe Wisenthall.
Congratulations to Brandon Lutnik.
One unusual item might appear on Cantor Fitzgerald's year-end expense receipts,
quote, I just left the floor and told someone I'm happy to buy them a cot
because they need to come in on Sunday and not leave until Friday.
Joe Sage Kelly, 53, co-CE CEO of Cantor Investment Bank, as he sat down for an interview at his New York office,
climbing Wall Street's league tables, jumping out in front of the cryptocurrency boom and returning to SPAC-fueled deal-making,
the private New York financial boutique is having its busiest and most successful year on record.
Cantor is now controlled by Brandon and Kyle Letnik, the sons of Howard Lettnick,
who joined Donald Trump's administration as Commerce Secretary earlier this year.
The firm is on track to post revenue in 2025 of upwards of two.
2.5 billion, an all-time high, and a jump of more than a quarter on last year. According to people
familiar with the matter, when you have... How do they do it? How do they do it, John? How do they do it?
A lot of grinding. I've met Brandon. Um, uh, and a lot of, uh, I mean, it feels like Cantor's been
early to a bunch of like sort of risk, more risk on investments than, uh, other, even pre
administration. They were early to the stable coin thing, I believe, early to a bunch of crypto stuff.
just a little bit more risk on relative to the other investment banks.
And so have done very well.
And then, of course, now even further entrenched in D.C., further entrenched in Wall Street.
Yeah, that would certainly help give confidence around some bets that maybe other firms would find a bit riskier.
Yeah.
I mean, there's a little bit of like this year, a lot of, there's a lot of certainty that came to crypto.
but building that consensus around like, okay, the certainty is actually going to come.
There is certainty that certainty will arrive.
That took a big leap.
And you can see that if you know the administration very closely, you could assess that.
Whereas people have been waiting around for certainty on tariffs, and that's taken a little bit longer.
But the certainty on the crypto stuff has certainly moved a lot faster.
The executives bristle at suggestions that their new connections in Washington are contributing to that success.
Instead, they say Cantor has grown with a lean team and is reaping the benefits of years of preparation for booms in sectors that more established banks have kept at arm's length.
Its 250 dealmakers are set to post revenue north of $1 billion at $4 million per banker.
That's about double the rate at the firms on Wall Street.
Huh.
That's like, Cantor has broke a war.
Way lower than AI researchers.
they're like completely broke
compared to AI researchers
like by a thousand X
they're making like a thousand times less money
than... No, that's talking about the earnings
that individual...
So as a group, they'll make a billion dollars.
Yeah, so they could have just been one...
They could have picked the best guy that they had
and spent all day training...
Yeah, so the bankers are making
four million on average. Of course, there's
also like the overhead of the firm. That's not profit. That's revenue.
versus at some of the labs you might be making $400 million per research.
So really pick the wrong industry to go into, and our heart goes out to them.
Canter has brokered more U.S. IPOs by volume this year than any other firm
in his fifth in all U.S. equity offerings after overtaking stalwarts, including Barclays and Citigroup,
it's seen a boom in trading largely from clients outside the U.S.
and is on track to acquire hedge fund O'Connor from UBS Group
by the end of the year, a deal that's facing a last-minute hitch
after the unit was hit by losses related to bankrupt auto parts supplier
First Brands Group.
First Brands is really all over the place.
Really wreaking havoc.
Much of Cantor's revenue haul comes from a surge in crypto dealmaking,
including fundraising for multi-billion dollar treasury companies which hold and trade
digital assets, but also from
the firm's early push into covering now
booming sectors, including rare earth minerals,
quantum computing robotics, and data centers.
Wow. They went along the boom
and they're making
it rain. The rainmakers are making.
Kelly says, I promise you, we're not getting anything
handed to us. It's easy for our competitors
to say that because they're not here living and breathing
what we do every single
day.
Anyways,
very impressive.
So should we move over to
Let's Alfred Lynn
Has hit the timeline
He says the latest on Outlier's Path
Our Sequoia
This is Our Sequoia
It has always been our...
Is Outlier a product?
Outliers Path?
I think that might be a blog.
Oh, wait, okay, sorry.
Outliers Path
Welcome to Outliers Path.
Having spent more than...
So this is, I think this is Alfred Lynn's
personal blog.
Through this collection of posts
on Outlier's Path,
I hope to provide you with a provocation
to get better at getting better and prove your critics wrong.
Okay, yes, so this is, this is, this is the name of his personal blog.
Okay, cool.
A.B. in the chat, legendary chat stars, says, I interned for Cantor last summer.
Great experience.
Oh, nice.
Very cool. Very cool.
Alfred says, this is our Sequoia.
It has always been our Sequoia.
It has always been our Arachus, our Dune.
No, he says, it was never done, Don's Sequoia.
nor Michaels, Dougs, gyms, or roloffs from the very beginning when Don chose to build a partnership
and name it after the longest living tree on earth.
Sequoia was meant to endure not through individuals but through us, the collective strength,
integrity, and vision of the partnership.
And just as it was not theirs alone, it will not be Pat and Alfred Sequoia.
It will always be our Sequoia.
We are responsible for something enduring, privileged to stand on the foundation built by those
who came before us and responsible for making it stronger for those who will come after.
Together, we have the opportunity to do our life's work, to make a dent in the universe, to leave our fingerprints on the partnership, and to shape Sequoia into the place we want it to be for the future.
Principles guide us, M-Dash, anchored in purpose and mission.
Beyond that, we want to trust and empower one another.
Our purpose and mission remain to help the daring build legendary companies for any Gen Z in the audience.
Yeah, how would you translate that for a Gen Z?
Our purpose and mission remain to help those with motion develop ORA.
The markets.
ORA farm, the industry.
Our guiding principles are...
Is any of this like an update?
Is anything that this like a very clear change to the strategy?
I think that this was just their first, like, you know, really public statement as the new coast.
Yes, but what is changing here?
Like, like, we already have the news.
that there are now two stewards,
are they going to be focusing more on AI companies
or less on AI companies?
Or are they more on growth stage
or less on growth stage?
Is there a change to the strategy?
No, I think this is just reminding people
what the firm-wide strategy is, right?
They've gone through, this has been probably
the roughest year on record for Sequoia
in terms of like comms, right?
just going through the
Sean,
like Sean McGuire
being in the headlines constantly.
It's not the kind of, you know,
coverage that does not
break through in tech.
I don't think it's affected their brand
with founders and internally
in the industry very much.
But, no,
I think this is just a good statement.
I mean, I guess here is the answer
to that question about like,
what is this a response to?
And Alfred says,
some people have asked if we will continue,
to make new investments
and lead the investment team,
the answer is an unequivocal, yes.
We will source and lead new investments
and we will remain co-leads
of the early and growth teams.
And so they're open for business.
They're doing deals.
They want to actually be investing.
And the big question.
I would imagine that, like,
the leader at most firms
is actually doing deals.
But they usually have a different
flavor to them, a different shape.
Like, you know, when I think about like, like, Mark
Andreessen and Andreessen Horowitz, like, he's
clearly like the, you know,
the leader of the firm, to a degree
that, you know, if you're coming
in for your seed pitch, like, you're probably not
DMing him first, right? He's not
the first stop on the fundraising tour.
But when Elon
is raising money to take Twitter private,
like, yeah, he is texting with
Mark. And that money does come out of
Andreessen's coffers. Yeah. And so
and if they are aggressively,
trying to win a deal that Mark might send the founder and out directly. Exactly. And so,
and so when I look at Alfred, I would say, oh, well, if, you know, Tony from DoorDash is working on a new
from DoorDash is working on a new project or starting a new company or, you know, heavily investing
in a friend's company. Like, yeah, that probably goes straight to him. But no, he's probably not.
It's down 23% in the last month.
It's now do-dash.
But yeah, I mean, he's probably not going to be, like, you know, sitting there taking notes at YC Demo Day, although.
Here's a big question with this post.
Yes.
Was it AI-Gener?
Alfred says at the end, this is not just a partnership.
It is a living, M-Dash.
It is a living, breathing legacy.
Hmm.
I don't know.
So, like, it reads to me, honestly, it reads to me like, yes, yes, the blog post went through chat
GPT and got a pass.
It got a pass.
It got a passed.
I would say that, Alfred, if that happened, if that happened, please do yourself a favor, go
to chat GPT and go to your settings and in personalization, put custom instructions and say,
never use m-dashes.
But maybe this is just a way to publicly support a portfolio company, OpenAI.
That's true. That's true.
And then also, also, the thing that's really triggering, Jordy, more than the MDASH is, I believe, is what's called antithetical parallelism or contrastive construction.
That's, it's not this, it's that.
For years, that's been a fine phrase.
But for some reason, in the reinforcement learning pipeline for this is actually the number one way that I detect AI generated comments on social media, more than the MDash is.
The contrastative instruction.
I'll be reading something that looks like a thought, you know, like some random social post
and comment in there.
Yeah.
It's not this.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's not the, it's not the, it's not the, the username that triggers me.
It's the contrastive construction.
So yes.
Yeah.
Yes.
You should be able to like at least edit this out because I just find it annoying at this point.
Like I've just seen it so many times that I'm just like, I need a different flavor of, of, of,
text. And so
you can do this. For a long
time, you could put this in your chat GPT
personalization. And it wouldn't work.
It just didn't do anything.
And I complained about it on the show.
And Sam Oatman announced that
I think they fixed it. And I think that
if you want less M dashes,
Sam Altman says that
removing M dashes.
So he says, this is 14 hours ago.
This is the biggest scoop possible.
He's a small but happy win.
If you tell ChatGPT not to use
m-dashes in your custom instructions, it finally does what it's supposed to do.
Somebody, a screenshot was going viral yesterday of a newspaper.
And at the end of the article, it said, if you want, I can also create an even snappier
front page style version with punchy one-line stats and old infographic ready layout.
What?
Preferable for maximum reader impact.
Do you want me to do that next?
So yeah, that actually hit.
You printed that by accident?
That's awesome.
I love it.
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Speaking of generated video, we got to watch the cat. We got to watch the cat.
Pull it up. We hate, oh, I hate AI slop. I'm Jordi. I hate AI video. Sore is bad. Sor is bad. Wrong. Look at this video.
Go home. It's remarkable.
The cat is playing the piano.
What did I say about the noise?
It's the middle of the night.
And someone comes outside and takes it away.
There's something about the nature of the video.
Bagpipes?
That's good.
I like the bagpipes fun.
There's something about keeping the video intentionally low res because it's a doorbell cam
where it doesn't trigger the uncanny valley because the doorbell cam always looks bad.
Whereas if this was trying to look like,
4K footage, it would not look as good.
We got to get that instrument.
That's a good instrument.
I like that.
It's funny because they clearly created some sort of template,
the did you redo.
But it does get extremely repetitive
because she always comes outside
and says knock it off again and again.
And so, like,
seeing this just once is enough for me.
The symbols is pretty funny.
Physics on those symbols
not quite right, though.
You know, there's work to be done here.
The gong.
I do like the cat hitting the gong is great.
The gong looks exactly like our gong, honestly.
So it turns out.
What is that?
Okay.
I'm into it.
How many of you?
Switzerland reaches agreement with the U.S. to cut tariff to 15%.
The deal would reduce an extraordinarily high tariff rate at 39% that had threatened to crippled.
Swiss exports. We all know what those exports are. The United States and Switzerland said on Friday that
they had reached an agreement to lower a punishing 39% tariff on Swiss goods, a change that
will help to reduce the cost of exporting Swiss pharmaceuticals, gold, watches, and chocolate
to the United States. The deal came after a meeting between U.S. and Swiss government officials
on Thursday, and an unusual visit by a group of high-level Swiss executives to President Trump
in the Oval Office last week.
The Trump admin put a 39% tariff on Swiss exports in August,
blindsiding a longtime ally in delivering a sharp blow to Switzerland's economy
by significantly raising the cost of the country's exports,
the United States of drugs, dairy products, gold, and watches.
The tariff was one of the highest rates set for any country,
which administration officials said was in response to a substantial trade deficit
the United States had with Switzerland.
I wonder why we would have a
large trade deficit with Switzerland.
The 15% tariff will now be the same as the tariff.
The United States charges on goods from the European Union,
which reached a trade deal in July.
So as part of this,
there's going to be roughly two Swiss companies
committed to making $200 billion in investments
in the United States by 2028.
And the United States also agreed to cap tariffs.
I didn't know Switzerland had a sense.
semiconductor industry.
I have no idea.
That's fascinating.
Capping those as well.
Well, they do have some AI researchers over there who are like poached for meta, right?
Yeah.
I think Lucas Byer was over there.
There was an open AI team set up over there.
Yeah, it's interesting that I haven't heard of an open AI team in many of the other
European countries.
It seems like Switzerland was like a uniquely like special place for it.
I think most of the, I mean, there's a lot of AI going on at, I never had to say
London.
ETH Zurich.
Yeah, yeah.
There's that university that's like very, it's like, it's like the premier European
Ethereum, Zurich.
Yeah.
It's not right.
No.
It is different though, right?
Yeah, yeah, no.
ETH, I should look up what it stands like.
But there's a lot of AI like research going on there.
That's cool.
Situation room says Potech to open factory in Wisconsin.
That would be hilarious.
Wisconsin made Potech.
Have you been monitoring the GPD 5.1 launch?
Like, has it been going well?
It feels like it's been, like, kind of quiet, but it's...
People seem to generally like it.
I don't know.
I mean, they didn't release benchmarks, so a lot of the, like, technical people aren't, like, super concerned.
I mean, I saw some charts that kind of showed that it's more that they're just pushing the model router, like, further to the edges.
So it can reason for even longer if it needs to, and it can reason for even less time if it just can come up with the answer more quickly.
And so all of that feels like better cost optimization instead of just hitting everything with a hammer.
Not everything needs 20 minutes of thinking.
Some things need 30 minutes, though, and some things needs one minute of thinking.
I tested it using GT3RS bench where I was trying to have.
You were going agentic commerce mode, though, which is a little.
little bit early.
I'm just using 5.1.
Did you use agent mode?
No.
No.
Okay.
Yeah.
I think if you do agent mode, it would.
So to say exactly what happened, because it's an interesting failure case.
I just said, find me at Gt3RS, green 992 in the U.S.
That's currently listed for sale.
Yes.
And it found me one.
Yes.
That was on cars and bids.
Yes.
That sold over two years ago.
Well, cars and bids, clearly, Doug DeMiro's site.
cool cars from the modern era.
We love cars and bids.
We love Doug DeMiro, but that is
frustrating because it already sold.
But I think with agent mode, it would have
actually opened the
website and clicked around a little
bit more. I'm not exactly
sure how to trigger that, but
maybe you just need to chat
with it more. Maybe you need to be clearer about your prompt.
You might have needed to do 3.5
pro, or what is it,
5.0 pro, I guess,
now. Yeah, five.
Yeah, five pro.
I mean, it feels like we're back in the era of like.
Running the same prompt, agent mode right now.
Okay.
We'll see how it does.
We'll come back to it.
And is there a difference between agent mode on 5.1 and agent mode on 5.
Pro?
I don't know anymore.
I don't know.
It's getting, they did such a good job of like narrowing it down and like unconfusing it.
And then now they're like, let's put a little bit more confusion in.
Let's just add a little bit back.
The fact that it says 5.1 is like crazy to me.
It's like, you did such a good.
cans behind behind tyler yeah what you got you got red bulls back yeah i got no you got you got
yeah uh taylor is it all called it pallets of fridge sticks
yeah there's some deep your background is actually hilarious we should we should move the
we should move the refrigerator uh to the other side so we can see the refrigerator because the refrigerator's
lit lit up so if you slide to the right yeah you can see the fridge there we go it's cool uh so we should
flip that around, or maybe just move the camera. But anyway, you might have noticed
Jordy's wearing the puffer jacket. That's because we are sponsored by TurboPuffer, search
every byte, serverless vector and full tech search, build from first principles. Look at those
logos. Fast, 10x cheaper and extremely scalable. Wilmanitis took to the timeline to say,
in the flow, in quotes, he says, the essential question for the modern allocator, the deal guy
or the venture capitalist is, do you want to be in the flow?
Size of checks, size of fund, personal economics, character of deal, character of behavior, lifestyle,
and every other single question is downstream of whether or not you are in the flow or not.
Let me explain.
Is this...
Tyler, do you think this has something to do with having motion?
It seems related.
I mean, Will is kind of like unk status.
I don't know if he would...
Whoa.
Shots fired.
Shots fire.
Call him an unk.
Like, what do he, I mean, is this because you believe it's, I, I thought he was very young.
I thought he was a teal fellow just a few years ago.
No one knows how old he is.
Is there a theory that he could be unk?
He's certainly wise beyond his ears.
No, but I'm saying this is like the equivalent of having motion.
So I agree with you.
Okay, okay.
But like, I don't think he would be one to use that kind of, that vernacular.
The parlance, yeah.
Let me explain.
Think of the flow as the world's greatest nightclub.
It's open 24-7, many of the coolest and richest guys.
are there. Guys seem to get rich just by dint of hanging around and the lights never turn on. It's a party
that never ends inside the flow. The only decision you have to make is to keep partying. Sure,
people get hurt inside the flow. Sometimes guys buy tables they can't afford or get addicted to habits
they can't maintain. When this happens, the flow gently returned them to pedestrian life and the party
continues. No one ever seems to notice. When you're inside the flow, the only thing you notice is the guys at
higher rungs dangling over a seemingly endless set of 10x markups and lifestyle expenses to
exhaust your newly found carry. Inside the flow, we don't fly commercial. Mark Rowan is
constantly calling and we have houses on Gin Lane. The flow gives us, gives to those who give
to it. There's nothing wrong with being in the flow. Many great investors live their lives
entirely inside of it and have beautiful economics, families, and even return capital.
to incredible endowments inside the flow.
But very few people make the conscious decision
to realize that life is possible outside the flow,
that you can get rich, build great companies,
generate excess returns by being far, far, far outside the flow.
But you can only have one foot in.
But you can't only have one foot in.
If you're going to enter the flow, you must do it entirely.
No one gets rich hunting for value on Madison Avenue.
If you're in the business of buying marquee assets,
you need to systemically order your life around paying marquee prices across asset classes.
You can neatly order firms into in the flow and out of the flow firms.
In the flow tend to have softer J curves because they're able to quickly make deals consensus
and achieve markups through other friends at the party.
Firms outside the flow tend to be a bit slower, have much more profound J curves,
but can achieve incredible returns if they persevere.
Many of the social oddities of allocators are actually social oddities of being in the flow.
My friend Kyle Tucker names the main one below.
Going guy for guy at every social occasion.
Explain.
I can't believe what he said at the Apollo AGM in Lake Cuomo.
Ari Emanuel introduced me to the Pope.
I just bought ramp forwards at 500x from Bill Ackman's dog walker.
this is if you if you find yourself with a strong distaste for this lifestyle that's okay there's a rich life possible outside of the flow
but you need to make the consensus decision day in and day out to either be in the flow or fission
oh conscious uh to either be in the flow or far outside the flow only gives to those who give their all to it
what a great piece of writing that's funny nasim talib said the opposite of success is in failure it's name-dropping the bed of
procrusties.
And somebody, you know, Antonia says, in my experience, during booms, most get flow curious, then
pull back, then the pullback comes and people become contrarian and look down their noses
at flow folks without even the self-awareness to refer to their dabblings as a phase
from when I was younger.
And Wilhelmina says, you are describing being half in, half out of the flow.
This will kill you.
The flow takes from those who attempt to take from it.
without giving their all in return.
The flow only gives to those who give their all.
It reads like a plot of a horror film.
It's fantastic.
Thinner, or like the substance.
Write a novel, Will.
Please.
Yeah, what a way with words.
Do you think this is inspired by that conference he went to that was more outside of the flow, potentially?
I think so.
I think that might be a little bit.
of what's going on.
Main Street.
You see, I mean, we talk about this with David Sennar a lot,
who's coming on the show in just a few hours.
Wait.
Wait, what?
Is he?
Do we, were you not supposed to say that?
Sorry.
I think he's coming on?
He said, he was, he was scheduled.
Okay.
And then we took him off the schedule because he had to travel for the day.
Then he had some plane issues.
And he said, save the 2PM spot.
And then now he's on another.
Okay, well, we'll get him back on the show soon, but if you're listening to the show,
you obviously know who David Senra is, the creator of the founder's podcast and the host of David
Senra with David Senra. But David is someone who has observed folks inside the flow and
outside the flow and really sees both sides of it, I think. And that's one of his unique,
unique strengths is that he is not entirely captured by the flow. And because, and maybe, maybe Will's
point would hold in the capital allocator world. You have to be in the flow or out of the flow.
You can't be half in. But, but it certainly does not hold true for what David does, which is,
you know, storytelling and understanding the history of great, the world's greatest
entrepreneurs. The flow, I think, would be summed up by, are you Dan?
dancing in Manhattan, right?
It's a very, very Manhattan thing.
In Manhattan, but also in Sandhill Road, I think.
It's similar.
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studio slash build.
Will says friends that have done well in the flow
seem to share these traits.
Oh my God.
This is such a law post again.
No, he had to follow it up.
He had to follow it up.
He said spend 100% of net cash on rent expenses, so they constantly feel pressure.
Oh, okay.
Love that.
Zegna, Sneakers, ABC Cardigans.
Okay.
I felt very direct.
We'll educate you.
Yes.
Low first marriage success rates, high second marriage success.
Okay, okay.
Lots of flights, constant two, three city rotation.
Couldn't be us.
Spend 99% of their time talking about deals that make up less than 5% have deployed.
Okay.
Office either in Soho or Nine West.
Oh, so he's really calling out his Manhattanite friends, his neighbors.
Now, here's where he contradicts himself.
Oh, no, maybe not.
He says constantly holding large amounts of cash.
Only physically, like, a couple grand.
You're a notorious tipper.
You're a notorious cash tipper.
So you fit into this piece.
We should...
Very low laptop usage, constant cell phone usage.
Okay.
Can't make it through an hour without taking a call.
we had a workout with one of these guys this morning we felt really we felt really bad this this guy we
showed up to the gym for a workout and had breakfast with him and he he he had to step away for
three calls he was he was on the grind like by the time we had finished our first coffee of the
morning he'd had four calls it was crazy yeah uh you know i guess that could be there we had one call
before the show because we're like we're so we're in our own flow our flow is not the flow
it's it's the tbpn flow uh we spend like no time talking to other people except on the show uh so
it's a very very different lifestyle i think from like what he's describing but i've seen this
and and uh i mean this would again just work as a novel or a movie where we're watching the birth
of a modern bred east and alice i know you haven't seen american psycho but it's a fantastic film
you should check it out sometime it's also an interesting book uh and and and and and the the the
Patrick Bateman of the 90s is, you know, this would be a great foundational portrait of an individual who could be stylized in the, in a Brett East Dallas style, which would be very, very interesting.
Let's continue reading.
But first, let me tell you about profound.
Get your brand mentioned in chat.
You reach millions of consumers who are using AI to discover new products and brands.
So where were we?
They have a lot of cash.
They're in Soho, Nine West.
Lunch guys, more so than dinner guys.
never breakfast guys lacrosse or hockey in high school not rowing okay that's tyler wait which one did
you do cross guy i played lacrosse guy right here zoom calls not sell calls okay i can see that uh friends
that have done out done well out of the flow i can't tell if it do you want to be in the flow or outside
the flow i guess the whole point of this is that you either want to be all the way in maximizing it
flow maxing or you want to be rejecting it entirely you just don't want to be let's get into the out
of flow zone okay let's be in the middle of nowhere jackson park city discover
like properties but still on a resort multiple dogs mostly more dogs than kids
usually low trust kind of cagey to pin down and get a meeting with once they
trust you you can't get rid of them okay uh almost universally happily married rowing in high
school not cross their hockey I like how specific low meeting count lots of depth I think I know
the two people he's describing here I'm not going to docks them but yeah phone calls not
zooms.
Yeah.
Denim shirts are
full-suiting.
Does one begin
with a T?
Yes.
Okay.
Seems to have
unspeakable
amount of money.
Does one begin
with a J?
What?
Does one begin with a J?
Yeah.
Okay.
Always funding
some cultural project
movie,
magazine, etc.
That's on the brink of failing.
Okay, so I will say
both of these
are friends of the show.
First one,
first one has not been
on the show.
Second one has been.
That's the only
The only...
Okay. Wait, wait, wait.
Okay, yeah.
We can go more into it.
This is hilarious stuff.
I feel like both these guys have been on the show.
We've clearly had many specimens who fit into both.
And I think Will's point is that there are multiple ways to make a buck.
And there are just different archetypes within the world of capital allocation,
within the world of being a deals guy.
I think this is interesting.
It's like we're peeling back the onion.
we're going a layer deeper on the deals guy archetype,
which has been, you know, been workshopped by Will and Jeremy Gaffon
over the last few weeks, so they're having fun.
Are you guys more in the flow or out of the flow, do you think?
I don't think we qualify for either because we are not deals guys.
We are not capital allocators.
I think step one of even deciding if you're in or out of the flow is the first line
of Will's original post.
The essential question for the modern allocator, the deal guy, the venture capitalist.
I'm not a deals guy.
I'm not an allocator.
I'm not a venture capitalist.
So it's an irrelevant question.
It's like,
are you more of a center or power forward?
It's like, I'm a podcaster.
That doesn't even apply.
And so you can only be in the flow
or out of the flow
if you are at least in the game,
the game of capital allocation.
And it's a funny time to reflect.
Anyway, let's move on to linear.
Linear is a purpose-built tool
for planning and building products.
Meet the system for modern software.
for development, streamline issues, projects, and product roadmaps.
Just in, the stock market is an extreme fear, and the ball is being thrown at, is that Kobe?
Yes, that's Kobe, John.
Unfazed.
He's unfazed.
Completely unfazed.
Scookes is unfazed.
We checked in with our retail correspondent.
He was shook at 6.30 in the morning or something.
What was it, 5.30 in the morning?
He woke up, and he was looking at the pre-market report, seeing red, very, very.
nervous. No, no, it was 30 seconds after the opening when the stocks dived. He is monitoring
the situation much more than we are. I watch the public market moves on the order of like
weeks, you know, or even, you know, oh, there's a big day. It's on the cover of the Wall Street
Journal. I'll throw on the white suit. I am not monitoring it hour to hour.
You pretty much track the market based on the color of the suit. Totally. Because I really do think in more of
like months and years and longer time horizons than days.
Yes, I think it's centuries, actually.
Thinking.
This new options-esque platform called Euphoria has been going viral.
Ben Eiffurt says, honestly, this is so cute and fun.
I'm not even mad.
I love gambling.
This is so gamified.
I don't think it presents as investing or democratization of derivatives or whatever.
It's entertainment.
And look at this.
What is this?
Hiler, are you playing this?
Should I get on this?
Well, I mean, Jordy, should we talk about, like,
one of our most degenerate ideas ever?
I mean, at this point, like, it's just going to...
Yeah, the zero-minute option.
Yeah.
I mean, at this point, like, somebody's just going to build it.
At least we'll be on record for joking about it.
So, two years ago, shortly after Jordy and I met,
we were introduced by Wilmanitis,
we are kicking around ideas.
ideas was a nicotine pouch for finance bros called Excel. We actually wound up launching that.
You might have seen that. We've talked about that on the show. The other thing that we kicked
around was, so if you've been tracking options trading, you can now buy zero-day options. These are
options that expire after one day. So you're only betting on the movement of the stock over the
course of one day. And my idea, or our idea, was what if you made it more D-Gen?
What if you made it zero-minute options?
And you got it down to something on the order of how long it takes to pull a slot machine
and then watch the slots tick over.
So you would be democratizing high-frequency trading, for example,
and you would be placing a bet.
The UI was effectively you buy $1 of this out-of-the-money option.
In 90% of the time, you lose the dollar like you do when you're playing slots
or you lose the penny.
But, you know, one-tenth of the time, you 10x your money.
And that's the nature.
And basically, you can derive the exact same probabilities that exist in a
in a literal slot machine.
You can derive those exact same probabilities from the financial markets with
particular derivative instruments.
Like mathematically, you can recreate a slot machine that acts with the exact same
probabilities using derivatives using zero minute options we'd have terrible founder market fit on
that one because i don't horrible horrible but it was fun talking about but it's but it's hilarious
it's one of those things the the the real problem is that like it is just a this is just a market
entry tool you're going to become like sort of a meme and then you have to go build the rest
of the financial institution and then you're up against coin base and robin hood and public and
a whole bunch of other serious competitors who have way more infrastructure and so uh
Like the cute little game can be a good marketing tool to launch your company, but there's a lot more that you have to do.
But it can still be profitable, and hopefully you're doing it in a way that isn't just totally to D-Gen gambling because...
Good luck.
Yeah, it's a little bit of D-Gen-on-D-Gend combat out there.
But you know what's not degenerate, numeral.com.
Sales tax and autopilot.
Spend less than five minutes per month on sales tax compliance.
Go get, build an honest product, start a woodworking shop, make a chair, sell it on Shopify.
Sell mahogany online.
Sell the official wood of business online.
Simp for Satoshi says the AI bubble has already popped.
Yes, I said this too.
I said this too.
Three weeks ago, the stock traded down 2%.
The bubble popped.
Now we're back to be inflating.
Yeah, exactly.
I agree with it.
says the information, however, is yet to propagate evenly, and he's sharing a quote from
Scott McNeely, CEO of Sun Microsystems in 2002. The quote, at 10 times revenue to give
you a 10-year payback, I have to pay you 100% of revenues for 10 years straight in dividends.
That assumes I can get that by my shareholders. That assumes I have zero cost of goods sold,
which is very hard for a computer company. That assumes zero expenses, which is really hard
with 39,000 employees. That assumes I pay no taxes, which is very hard. And that assumes
you have to pay no taxes on your dividends, which is kind of illegal. And that assumes with zero
R&D for the next 10 years, I can maintain the current revenue run rate. Now, having done that,
would any of you like to buy my stock at $64? You realize how ridiculous those basic assumptions
are. You don't need any transparency. You don't need any footnotes. What were you thinking?
What was Sun Microsystems trading for in 2000?
And then what were they trading for in 2002?
Because this reads like he's apologizing for a massive sell-off in the stock.
That is pretty crazy.
Yeah, what a wild.
I like bone here.
Bone GVD says, if you're in AI, pivot to finance and go short.
It's ridiculous.
Badminton is.
live streaming in China, and you can adjust whatever angle you want. This is very cool. So they
film it with a whole bunch of different cameras, and then you can pick the angle. Imagine being
able to pick your own angle while watching TBPN live. That would be something special. Maybe we
should steal this back from the Chinese. This seems like some awesome innovation. Now, Tyler, you don't
think this is gauzy and splatting, right? Gossian splatt. No, I mean, it's not smooth.
I think this is just a bunch of cameras.
It looks like a bunch of cameras, yeah.
But you could do this with Yasun's sliding.
Yeah.
I think that'll be the next iteration, the next version, but we're pretty far away from
like real time on that, right?
Real one knows that the shuttlecock is the fastest moving object that's been
recorded in sports.
Really?
It goes hundreds of miles an hour.
Hundreds?
Yes.
No way.
I mean, it's like faster than a golf ball, faster than a bowler ball.
Yes.
It's faster than a football.
It's faster than...
That's crazy.
Hundreds of miles and out.
Let me confirm golf ball.
I'll put you in the truth zone there.
What about rifle shooting?
Does it go faster than a gun?
You've seen those at the Olympics
where they're shooting the pistols, right?
It can't possibly go faster than a gun
than a bullet from a rifle in a pentathlon.
No way.
I got you dead to rights on this.
Okay, so this is AI overviews.
It's probably hallucinating,
and it says...
This actually, you might have found
really incredible insight uh okay hole in the reasoning okay uh no a bullet is not faster than a badminton
shuttlecock no let's go i guess but so they're talking about bird uh keep looking okay badminton shuttlecock
speed during badminton uh game uh how fast does that go i want miles per hour hopefully and then
i want to know how fast an f1 car goes and how fast a a bullet out of one of one
of those pistols goes at the uh at the olympics because we all know that iconic image of
the woman uh no and the turkish guy at the olympics and the guy with all the gear uh
a i i is is is is false is convinced anyone have any real numbers anyone have any real
numbers uh okay like a top speed for a shuttle clock is like 300 miles an hour and how much is a
bullet coming out of one of those guns. 2,000 miles an hour. Wow. So off by an order
magnitude, Jordy. In the true zone, it's okay. We'll clip it in a way that makes it sound,
we won't clip, we won't include the correction. We'll just clip you saying. This is some of the
best AI generated content out. It's going to go mega. No, a bullet is not faster than a badminton
shuttlecock. A badminton shuttlecock is the fastest moving object in sports, while bullets can
travel at over 2,000 miles an hour.
Wow.
Let's give it up for digital guys.
We didn't create digital God.
Digital guys.
This is something like your boy would say.
This is something your guy would say.
Alad Gill is doubling his fun target to nearly 3 billion.
Congratulations to Elad Gill.
Let's ring the gong.
First gong of the day.
Ryan says AI told me that John's gonged is faster than a bullet.
I believe that.
Let's go over to the, we have a new segment of the show.
We have different press releases that have been coming through.
Let's see.
Oh, yes.
Okay, we got the mic.
We got the PTZ camera.
Are you guys tracking me?
Where are we doing?
Are we tracking me?
Who's tracking me?
Oh, it's this one.
It's this camera.
Okay, so first, let's see.
Cursor at 29.3 billion.
We had Spencer on the show yesterday to talk about it.
They raised $2.3 billion in its third funding round this year.
Third in the year.
It used to raise money every 12 to 18 months.
Now, it's every three months.
Maryland Governor Wes Moore announces landmark AI partnership to transform state service delivery.
What was going on here?
West Moore announced a landmark partnership with Anthropic and Percepta, a general catalyst transformation company,
to harness AI in tackling child.
poverty, expanding housing access. So they're going to ask Claude to build houses, I guess,
something like that. Anthropic will provide Claude to workers across Maryland state agencies
and lend technical support to help design, deploy AI-powered initiatives. One example includes a new
Claude-powered virtual assistant that will help residents apply for benefits, update information,
and track applications. What do you think, Jordi?
Thumbs up, thumb, done.
I mean, honestly, like, if there's, is there a better, like, the DMV website,
Nostoriously is bad if you can have an AI agent and use it instead.
That's probably an upgrade.
Congrats to them.
What else we got?
Team shares, a tech-enabled, what are they up to you?
Aquirer of high-quality, small and medium enterprises is listing on the NASDAQ via Live Oak V combination,
$126 million pipe led by accounts, advised by T-Rowe Price.
I like how nobody wants to say SPAC anymore.
They just say all the words around it.
Team shares acquisition based.
Is that what this is?
Team shares programmatically acquires companies with half a million to five million of EBITDA from retiring owners,
integrates them with the team shares platform, and helps employees earn company stock.
This is a slow, slow ventures company.
That's right.
That's right.
What else we got?
YC startup multi-factor launches the first password manager built for the AI era.
That's going to be tough competition, right?
Because OnePassword is extremely sticky and potent, like, he's not asleep at the wheel.
We've had the CEO on the show.
The OnePassword team partner with Browser Base and is obviously trying to be, you know, the OnePassword for the AI era.
But there are some other folks.
Why are you laughing?
I'm laughing because Gabe, I think, is looking at the Happy Dad in the corner.
Yeah, which of course we have here because we love John from a happy day.
Yeah, John Cheney.
We support our friends.
So this is, let's read this, Multi-Factor, Ycombinator fall 2025.
So we might have interviewed this company, founded by a former CIA agent.
That's pretty cool.
Oh, let's go.
And a former NASA scientist.
Wow.
What a team.
Today announced the launch of its first-of-the-kind password manager that allows both humans
and AI agents to access online accounts securely
without ever exposing underlying credentials,
a public demonstration of its proprietary security technology.
The company will temporarily make its actual corporate bank account
accessible to the public starting on November 12th
through a read-only checkpoint link containing $1 million in business funds.
That's a cool stunt.
I wonder what their go-to-market will be fully.
I wonder whether they'll wind up going more enterprise.
and then down into the individuals
or like what OnePassword did,
they got a bunch of consumers on,
and eventually people started using it in business
like we do.
We started using it personally
and then eventually for business.
Introducing SuperMe, the AI Native Professional Network,
they're going up against LinkedIn, I guess.
The business, the best practices of building companies
are unevenly distributed.
Every great company has pockets of excellence
and its own blind spots, the knowledge behind,
They're not saying an AI Native professional network.
What else is in here?
There's a big stack here.
Beehive is taking aim at substack,
Squarespace, and something else.
It's, there's a notification pop-up that says,
would you like to, would you like notifications?
Look at these, dude.
It's like, oh yeah, like here's our press release, but like,
you know, you can't read, I guess Patreon.
It's probably Patreon.
There we go.
Okay, we, a sweeping product release of 10 new tools,
spans website creation, podcasting, digital product sales, and analytics.
Congrats to Beehive.
Triple Gleaze.
Triple Glees.
Beehive is no longer just a newsletter platform.
On Thursday, the company released a sweeping slate of 10 new products at its winter
release event, repositioning itself as creator content operating system.
According to co-founder and chief executive, Tyler Dank, Beehive's been on a tear.
I know a bunch of people that love it.
We're obviously on substack.
Go to TBPN.com.
Sign up for our substack.
There's been, we've talked to some people that have used both.
They're both cool.
Probably some reasons to use beehive, some reasons to use beehive and some reasons to use substack.
Kind of just depends on your use case.
And then the last one is Air Jewel Technologies, announces third quarter results and provides business updates.
This is a tech platform that unleashes the power of water from air.
Interesting. Air Jewel is addressing emerging opportunities driven by powerful macro trends that are fundamentally reshaping global water and energy markets. That is...
Let's give it up for global water markets. Pulling water from air. You know what I was laughing about? I was thinking, you know, Bezos has spent something like, what, $25, $10 billion on Blue Origin. And there's so many billionaires that have just wasted like hundreds of billions of dollars when they could, like, trying to.
to do world hunger when they could have been building rockets.
Like, we need to, we need to, you know, really, really shame the, the billionaires who are
wasting money on something that's just nonsense instead of, like, building rockets.
They've got to build rockets.
That's what I've got to do.
You've seen that?
Wait, who said that?
There's constantly a wave.
I'm joking about the constant wave of like, Elon could cure world hunger.
Well, there's a bunch of billionaires that have been trying to cure world hunger.
They spent $100 billion on it.
they could have been building rockets.
Anyway, bin.a.
The number one AI, the number one AI agent for customer service.
Number one in performance benchmarks, number one in competitive bakeoffs, number one
ranking on G2.
Elon's public service is making a car that costs less than a gym membership.
It's really going to be like a $50 car.
Oh, where did we land on the roadster?
So the new roadster, we talked about this in the show.
Elon went on Rogan and he said,
maybe it'll be a flying car and he and he specifically said the demo will be shocking like the demo
will be amazing and so I was trying to debate with geordy and Tyler this morning what what will
the demo be like what will it actually be like I don't think anyone assumes that you will just be
at the demo hop in the roadster and be like take me from l.A. to san francisco and it just flies you there
like that seems unbelievable even as a demo but what will the demo be
And there's been a couple different examples of this.
Do we ever find the video of the jumping Chinese car?
This is such a crazy video.
Jumping.
Oh, yeah, let's pull it up.
Chinese car.
Yeah, this one.
The B-Y-D-Yang-U-9, the supercar that jumps obstacles.
There's a video here.
Let me try and put this in the timeline.
Let's see if I can send this in.
So there's that.
And then what was the other one?
The Mibok GLS bounces, right?
This is bouncing mode.
Yeah, the GLS 600.
GLS 600.
And that's technically to help you get out of sand, I think?
Of course, of course.
Yeah, that's what, it's not just for the influencers to like flex on each other.
When you're doing a little fundraising out, out in the Middle East, and you get stuck in some sand and your Mibok.
Yeah.
And there's, and there's also the, the Mercedes G-wagon, the electric G-wagon.
The G650 with EQ technology, I believe it's called something like that.
And it does a tank turn.
And so the, let's watch this.
Yeah, look.
Okay, so that is technically a flying car, all four wheels off the ground.
I would call this the minimum viable flying car.
And so I'm expecting the Tesla Roadster to be able to do something slightly above this, right?
But the question's like, how much above this?
Like, will there be a rocket engine on there?
Will there be fans on there?
I was kicking around the idea that they would put a fan on it.
Somehow, maybe it would pop out a bunch of fans,
and the fans could suction the car to the road so it could go from zero to 60 faster.
Maybe you could reverse those fans and actually hover the car a little bit or elevate the car.
But I want a firm prediction from you, Jordy, on what you think the amazing flying car Tesla demo might be.
Like, what do you think it actually might be?
Because he's going to demo something, and he's probably not going to be just a car that flies you from San Francisco to New York, right?
Like, that would be truly, like, mind-blowing.
I love your theory.
I think it would be very cool if the fans could create some amount of thrust.
But I find it hard to believe that it would actually be able to lift one of these cars.
They're very, very, very heavy because of the battery.
So I'm going with something closer to the ability to do something like this jump like we're seeing with this U-9.
Okay.
So I have a little bit of – I had GPT-5 kind of crunch some of the physics numbers on this.
So suction fans with good skirts could plausibly improve a plaids, like a plaid Tesla, like a Tesla Model S plaid, zero to 60.
If it was going to do 2.4 seconds, 0 to 60, it could go down to 1.6 or 1.8 seconds.
So the pressure needed is only a few kilopascal scales over a 3 to 5 meter area.
And so it's potentially possible that you could use fans to create more downforce.
And fans, I believe, were actually banned from F1 because there was a moment where creating artificial downforce with fans was.
And I think there are some supercars that have fans that create more down force and suction
the car to the ground so you get more traction.
So that is a feature that could be there.
The question is, if you reverse the fans for Lyft, you need a lot more rotor area and near
megawatt power to hover a two-ton sedan.
Even if you could supply it, the battery would give only a few minutes before thermal or energy
limits intervene.
And so I feel like when we're talking about demo, there's a world.
where the demo is like, yeah, it uses half the battery and it's just a party trick,
but it does lift the car off the ground for two feet or something like that. Tyler, what do you
think? Do you have any firm claims on like what the flying car demo might actually be?
Yeah, I mean, I don't see like actual wings coming out. That seems like overly ambitious.
Yeah. I have a little faith. Because there is a world where it's like the roadster event
is actually just like a straight up like
just a helicopter. Like they just launch
a helicopter and then it's like yeah it flies
it's a flying car but it's mostly a helicopter.
Yeah my idea was
some kind of glider or parachute comes out
and then so you can kind of drive off a cliff
and then you kind of glide.
I like the gliding idea.
That would be extremely high stakes.
Like you know when you see a ramp on the road
and then you hit it and then you kind of glide down.
2.6 says I don't think we're getting flying cars
I personally love being stuck in traffic.
Uh, there is an incentive for Elon to get people stuck in traffic.
They're more likely to become best friends with Grock.
Oh.
And so the more time they're in traffic, the more time they're talking with GROC.
Okay, okay.
There's somewhat of a flywheel there.
Yeah.
Um, I don't know.
Anyway, we, we, we, we, I want to react to this, uh, this, what if the, what if the, what if the, what if the loved ones we've lost could be part of our future, uh, this.
I've never actually seen a more hated line.
It was sort of controversial.
Let's dig into it.
First, let me tell you about Adio,
customer relationship magic.
Adio is the AI Native CRM that builds and grows your company to the next level.
And so,
Hip City Reg, who's been on the show.
Yeah, let's play the video first.
Let's play the video first.
And then we'll go into the reactions.
Baby Charlie.
See?
Oh, honey.
That's wonderful.
Kicking like crazy.
He's listening.
Put your hand on your tummy and hum to him.
You used to love that.
Hmm.
To why.
I feel like he stands saying in there.
Oh, what?
Mom, would you tell Charlie that bedtime story you always used to tell me?
Once upon a time, there was a baby unicorn who didn't know he knew how to fly.
This baby unicorn was like your mom because she didn't know that she knew how to fly,
but she knew how to do all kinds of fabulous things.
Hi, Grandma.
Hey, Charlie.
How was school today?
Pretty good rhodo there.
I mean, this crazy shot in basketball.
I don't really care that much about basketball.
What about the crush?
I like that this video presumes that we'll have see-through phones, too.
Like, maybe we should build that first.
That seems like a really profitable business if you can create a see-through phone.
You've loved that.
You would have loved this moment.
You can call any time.
I mean, it does feel like it's, I mean, it's shot maybe by the people that did black hair.
It literally seems like they hired the same team.
Wait, so is she alive in the real world?
Oh, no, they're scanning her before.
Oh, that's crazy.
I am.
I'm absolutely, I'm your mother after all.
I mean, they're thinking, okay, the retention on this product.
You got to get it.
You got to get it before your loved ones.
pass away. You've got to be harvesting
the training data. And then
at any point in the future, if you churn,
they delete your
loved ones forever.
Does this guy pivot? His banner
says the climate reality
project. I think
Kaelim Worthy is a former
Disney star. Oh, interesting.
Canadian actor.
He's known for his roles as
Des Wade on the Disney Channel
series, Austin and Alley.
Well, then he might have access
Oh, he's worked with Netflix,
so he might be connected to the Black Mirror folks.
Reggie James says digital necromancy
to capitalize on the grief of the vulnerable.
Straight to jail, do not pass go.
Do not collect $200.
Okay, so do you want this?
Would you ever use this?
I think I'm not in the market.
I don't think this is for me.
I think I think this would have I feel like I know too much about AI like I would just I would know that this is this is AI generated and so it wouldn't it wouldn't like fool me I need to I would think I need to yeah A B says they delete the S3 bucket if you don't make the payment super dark I think this is one of those things that would actually have quite a lot of demand because a lot of people are just going to process this and say I'm really
fearful of my loved ones passing. I don't know. I think this is. I just think you also
find it hard to believe how many people are best friends. Just chat with me. Yeah, yeah, I do.
I do find it hard to believe. And there are millions of them. Good question. So you think that you think
this is. And it's tough because I mean, I miss my grandparents. Potentially. I want my,
I wish that my grandparents were around to spend more time with my kids. There's stories. They've told me.
There's songs. They've sang.
there's all these incredible moments
that I will never relive
and I wish I could experience those moments.
That being said, am I going to be a customer of this?
No.
It does feel incredibly dark,
but I think there will be a surprising amount of demand of this.
There's been a couple,
there was a YC company that was
something much, I think,
more heartwarming than this,
which was a service that you'd purchase and then they would email or do like a phone call
with your parents essentially to collect information about them and put it together into
kind of like the life story and it would just tell that for you.
But it was all real.
It was just like you might not have the time to go and record like a podcast with your parents.
But if they help, the company would just help facilitate it basically.
I don't know.
Do you think Open AI would launch a competitor to this?
I don't know if they want another PR crisis.
Yeah, I don't know.
I mean, if this gets big,
it would not be much of a PR crisis
to launch a competitor.
Yeah.
I think if it's established,
if it becomes a normal thing.
They'll launch a version of it.
Yeah.
Well, let me tell you about public.com investing
for those that take it seriously.
We got multi-ass investing.
Industry leading yields,
and they're trusted by millions.
We have Ev Randall in the studio.
The new is tearing up the timeline.
to his general partner at Benchmark.
Welcome.
Thanks so much for coming by.
Thanks for having me.
Oh, you picked you.
You selected the Matayina, the podcast in a can.
That is Andrew Huberman's work.
We're big fans of it here.
He's on a tear.
And you've been on a tear.
Introduce yourself again.
What's the latest news?
How do you describe yourself these days?
Gentlemen, great to see you both.
First time in the Ultrodome.
It's as incredible as I imagine it to be.
Thank you.
So, yeah, I'm Ev Randall.
I'm the newest partner, or the newest general partner.
General partner.
Don't forget that first word.
Don't add to sell yourself.
Go out of sell yourself.
Congratulations.
Thank you.
The big G.
That's amazing.
At benchmark.
Yes.
How did it come together?
It was really, it was a pretty unique recruitment process.
It was one that was initiated actually by Chathen.
And we actually, he just reached out to grab dinner a few months back.
and a lot of it was just pure vibes and relationship building.
So this is a tip for GPs at other firms.
Don't let your partners get dinner with anyone at other firms
because they're out of there.
So it's, you know, like, yeah, had dinner.
And, you know, like investors will do this oftentimes with each other.
It's like, you're all looking at similar things,
looking at similar spaces, doing a bunch of research.
Frenemones.
For enemies.
Yeah, it's like you're all in this competition,
but you're also, you know, you can be of immense value.
to each other. We're all marking each other's stuff up. He said, it's been quiet on the timeline
for benchmark. We'd love to bring someone to the team that could be a little bit more controversial,
spice things up. No, no, but what did he actually say about like the problems that he wanted
to solve that benchmark that you could bring the table? And more so what was like the pitch,
the hard. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, I think that the pitch, because it wasn't really like,
hey, we need to, we need to solve all these problems, but it was just, I think like a pitch around
alignment about what the partners at benchmark really like doing. And, and, and,
And he was like, hey, like, we are a group of people that really love to get involved with very, very few companies every year.
Each one of the general partners, they're investing one to two investments per year and gets really, really involved and tends to get involved relatively early in the company's life sector.
And, like, break that down a little bit deeper because you could be, like, I could have a VC that's like, oh, yeah, you're the only investment I made this year.
But I call them and they're like, sorry, I'm on 45 back-to-back, like, pitch calls, because I could have.
I got to find that one really good one versus someone who's like, no, I'm actually like
in the office regularly. Yeah, I take other pitches. So like is there a material difference in
the day to day actually spending time with companies or is it really just highly selective and
then you're still doing like a ton of outbound and inbound and just hearing pitches constantly?
And it's more, we're more just saying like the cream of the crop is like the picking.
Yeah. Yeah. I think the rate limiter in the bottleneck is definitely the picking. Yeah.
Like you're still meeting tons and tons of people. Sure. You can still learn.
even if you're not investing in a company
or you don't partner with the company,
there's so much that you can learn
from every single founder,
every single company that is building something.
And so even though we only partner with a few,
we're still meeting a ton.
We're meeting a ton of co-investters,
we're meeting a ton of founders,
we're meeting a ton of awesome operators.
So still immense amount of relationship building and networking.
We just end up only partnering with a few of them.
Yeah.
How are you feeling about entering a new role,
new firm for you at this moment,
in the market. It feels like
where there's
a lot of froth, a lot of people have already made
their bets on the different foundation labs.
Where do you see
opportunity to kind of like
make your mark with the new team?
Yeah. It's really,
really interesting because it's
like almost
like life cycle of a
market like selection.
Like on the timeline of like
there was a lot of great investors
that just ended up starting their checkwriting
career in 2021.
Yes.
And they did a lot of investments in 2021 because it was a relatively frothy period in the market.
And to no faults of their own, really, a lot of them ended up having like a pretty
rough initial track record.
So it's always something that you're thinking about is like, what part of the market cycle
am I joining this firm in and what am I, you know, writing checks into?
Because if you started in 2023, that was an amazing time to write checks.
Everything was, you know, whether you're at the growth stage or the early stage, there's a lot
of like the companies that are now these like stalwart AI leaders starting and picking up steam,
but then you also had a bunch of growth stage companies that were relatively cheap on like a
multiple basis. And so 2023 was an amazing time. 2021 was an awful time to start. I think that
the scary thing a little bit is that like I don't think any of us know or have any idea if this
is 2021. It's definitely not 2023. It feels a little bit like 2021. But I think, you know,
if you ask somebody if it's, is it 97, is it 99? Is it 2001? No one really knows. And
I think you have to be, you have to keep that in the back of your mind.
It's 91. We got another decade.
91.
91. Everyone's afraid to say it.
Everyone's like, it's 98.
It's 99.
The bubble popped.
The bubble popped last week.
Yeah, it did.
And now we're back.
Actually, this morning.
At the open, it popped and now we're back.
Yeah.
It's over.
It's over.
Well, I was at dinner with somebody the other day, and they said something that I thought was really
smart, which was that they're like, the main reason I'm scared right now is that the only time that I've
seen everything work was also in 2020.
Like the issue about 2021 wasn't that people were doing big investments into companies that were bad.
The issue was that everything was absolutely ripping.
And was that just because of the pull forward in e-commerce due to the shift and like, you know, like, I remember a palli-term time, stop spending all the money on T&E.
Everything in Fintech looked amazing.
Yeah, yeah.
Or if you think like, like, think about, I mean, obviously depends on the category, but think about like e-com, like e-commerce enablement or commerce enablement.
There was like a whole crop of startups that came up.
And it just so turns out that when we're all locked into our houses.
Everyone's just, yes, yes, yes.
And just like, oh, you just live on line.
Not to mention as the capital starts flowing and then it flows into one company,
and then that company goes and buys a bunch of software,
and they're probably using, like, even a recruiting platform looks like,
hey, this could be a billion dollar business because every company is like,
we need to hire as many people as possible.
Yes.
It's very recursive.
It's very kind of like, we're getting big words early.
Big words early.
You know, it's all interwoven.
One shot.
Obviously, you're starting to see that a little bit with, like, the AI trade this year.
Yeah.
And there was, like, I did this presentation a couple of months ago for this group of CIO's chief information officers at large companies.
And I was doing some research on macro.
And I was like, oh, my God, of the top 20 year-to-date return stocks in the S&P 500, so of the S&P 500, of the 500 companies, which 20 have had the best year-to-date returns, 18 of them were related to the AI trade.
Yes.
It wasn't, you know, and not just like, you know, Micron and NVIDIA, but like G.E.
Vernova and like Blume Energy and like all of these things about like the supply chain
of AI.
And that scared me because I was like, oh my God, like the U.S. economy, like the pensions of our parents
are writing on the AI trade and are basically writing on, you know, each, yeah, one, one, one, one, one
superhuman man that is, you know, signing up all these, all these, all these huge deals.
So I think in 2021, you definitely saw that where, yeah, you had all these massive impact
from ZERP, from COVID, from people being inside, from companies digitizing and buying a bunch
of software. So even things that at first principles were kind of like mediocre companies,
they looked unbelievable. And so it was hard to blame anyone for investing in these companies
because until then, tech had been so secular. Like it was not a cyclical market. Like the march
to cloud wasn't like this like up and down thing. Totally. It was like each year, the incremental
share of cloud relative to like on-prem was like nice and steady. And so when you're trained
that you're investing in a secular market that always kind of linear.
yearly goes up, you're trained to invest on, like, on good numbers because they usually
continue.
In 2021 was the first time where you really saw the cyclicality.
And I think some people think that the AI trade could also be cyclical given the actual
infrastructure build out that sometimes is, you know, built out via debt and leverage and all
these things that could end up.
When you look at what's going on in the public markets, is it fair to say that, like,
the first year of the AI trade and the boom of those 20 stocks that you mentioned was driven
by basically earning surprises.
Like, NVIDIA just being like, oh, wow, every hyperscaler bought so many more.
Like, the cash flow is going up.
The actual business is growing.
And now we are shifted into more of like the LOI economy, the forward contracts.
And so that's been a little bit more of what's moved the market.
And maybe that's why Oracle is kind of traded up so much, but then round-tripped
because people have said, oh, that's amazing.
But actually, we're going to discount that a lot more than we did on the day that
the deal was announced.
Yeah, another framing that I would use, actually, is like, usually in these cycles,
it starts with, like, the core.
Sure.
And then you start just layering on derivatives from that core.
And so it's like, okay, AI demand is, you know, maybe two orders of magnitude higher than we thought.
Yeah.
So who is the first order benefactor of that?
Yeah.
Invidia.
Like, who is, you know, the GPUs.
And then as the cycle continues to play out, it's like, okay, well, like, what's the first
derivative of that?
It's like, well, okay, like, what goes into these data centers?
like these turbines that GE-Vernova creates and like, oh, now they need to buy all these,
you know, all these like specialized things from Broadcom and then like now Micron. And so
there ends up being that. And then like there's like this cascading of these derivatives
until like the nth one is like the shit coin market and like the meme coin market. And so now it's
like, oh, wow, like these like three quantum, you know, computing companies that have zero
revenue combined for $75 billion of market cap. And you're like, wait, wait, wait, wait. And that's when
I think everyone kind of pauses and they're like, wait, wait, wait, hold on. And then. And then
And then I think it goes even further.
Screlly didn't pause.
He locked in.
Speaking of Screlly, I think that, like, there are people that are trading the quantum stocks
because of the AI boom.
Because, like, they have been told that the next thing after AI or the next big unlock
for the AI revolution will be quantum.
Meanwhile, like, like, Jensen has a bunch of skepticism.
No, no, no.
At GTC, I remember I was watching the stream.
And they had Brad reading off the teleprompter.
And he was talking about, you know, the opportunity with quantum and AI.
So this is a narrative that, that Nvidia as a company has certainly...
Chintin's been a little bit back and forth.
Okay, but as a company, that was a part of their narrative for TTC.
Yeah, but it's sort of like furthest down on the risk curve.
And that's why, you know, if we see, you know,
Nvidia selling off by like a couple percent every week,
the quantum stock trade, I see charts where it's like down 20%.
Yeah, they're like levered trades on the core, all these derivatives.
And so it's like, you know, people are like,
like, oh, Nvidia's not going up, you know, 10% a day now.
What could?
And then you go to, like, the derivative.
And it's like, well, this isn't going up so much per day now.
Well, what could next?
And you keep going.
And now you see, I think over the last month, like, so many of these stocks are down 45%.
So, like, I don't think Nvidia's down that much, but so many of these other stocks
are down 40 to 50% of the last month because they're kind of the canaries and the
coal mine are, like, the leading kind of derivative that is almost like a levered trade on
the core of what's going on.
It's been an incredibly rough week in the markets.
and now everyone is sitting saying,
please deliver Jensen.
Now, I have some confidence,
so it's Wednesday.
They have earnings after the close,
and I feel pretty good about it
because of the, you know,
Jensen, you know, smashing beers on video, right?
You don't do that a month out from earnings
if you're not feeling really good.
You belong in a pod shop.
That's like some, that's a deep cut.
For sure.
That's some deep analysis.
Jordie loves this type of analysis, the vibe.
I don't care about the numbers.
Yeah, yeah.
I have no idea what they're promising, but I just know.
Trading on vibes, that's the move.
Yeah, and then the other, I mean, the other factor here is like just the challenge of this market is you have within the same two, you know, effectively two week period where CoreWeave gets rated by semi-analysis as this sort of like only platinum tier neocloud.
Two years in the best product in the category.
And they're down 30% in the last five days, right?
30% in the last five days.
And now people are saying, yeah, maybe Nvidia ends up having to, you know, buy them.
It certainly would not go well if they were to.
What's the least AI company you've done as a deal in the last couple of years?
Gosh.
Because everything has some, I mean, even Anderall Industries, you know, it was as like AI.
And now there's obviously an AI narrative there in some ways,
but it's like definitely just a hard tech company.
Yeah, it's hard.
It's funny because like sometimes as an investor,
you're almost trying to like do some portfolio construction.
And you're like, man, it'd be really nice
if I had something that was uncorrelated with the AI trade.
Because if it all goes down, you know, 80% or whatever,
then like I'm going to need something.
I mean, it's so different in private markets
because especially if you're investing at the early stages,
like none of this stuff matters.
Like by the time the company's,
exit. You have no idea what the stock market's going to look like. You have no idea what the
macro is going to look like. And so, like, thinking about this type of stuff is usually, like,
you really should, like, if you're zooming out and thinking on like a 10-year time horizon,
should you still be ultra-long AI. Of course you should. Yeah, yeah. And so it's almost like
you kind of like pump-fick yourself into being like, maybe I should do like an anti-AI
play or something. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I think there's like some parts of cybersecurity that actually
are still not. I mean, a lot of, a lot of like, you know, a lot of like data is like,
oh, well, like, you know, you need to secure your data
to secure your AI.
So, like, a lot of even cyber has moved into AI,
but there's still some pockets of cybersecurity
that aren't yet related.
Do you think there are durable learnings
from the Palantir story of being sort of like
the forward-deployed engineer,
almost being consulting, building custom software.
It feels like with AI, there's a lot of folks
who are sort of doing that,
and it seems really exciting because you can go
and get a Fortune 500 client,
you can go ramp revenue really quickly.
There's all this question about,
like, well, is this going to look like high margin SaaS in 10 years?
But we already ran that experiment with Palantir.
And regardless of what you think of the price or earnings multiple,
like, you can tell that the margins are good and the revenues are real.
And so, like, it clearly worked out.
And, like, if you were investing in that, and, you know,
even if you were at like a, I don't know, 40 multiple,
like you'd still be doing very well based on the early investments.
And so I'm wondering if you think that that model,
if something permanently has changed in the way SaaS is,
is delivered into the enterprise,
or you think that people might be overfitting on that?
No, I think it absolutely has.
And the way that I talk about this,
I call it the legibility gap.
And what I mean by that is like,
if you get a Gmail account, it does not take very long
for you to understand how to use Gmail.
Like anyone can kind of pop on, even if you're a boomer,
and like I've used an email account before,
like this is just sort of like a slice of an email account.
I think the issue about AI is that not only
are the capabilities so new for the broad population
that could use them, they also evolve so quickly.
Like if you think about not having chat GPT three years ago
and now everything that we can do,
or especially on some of the media models,
how we had like Will Smith, like,
the grotesque version of that initial video,
and now we have like absolutely perfect Will Smith
eating spaghetti and meatballs, just the rate of evolution.
Like I, so I'm from like a rural town in Colorado
and a lot of my friends work still in my hometown
and they're like, hey, like my job.
Let's get it up for the heartland.
That's right.
right. Shout out. Shout out wins or Colorado. Nick over there went to Colorado as well. I guess
he's gone, but he's a Colorado guy too. Oh, amazing. Yeah. But, but like, they'll come to me and they'll say,
look, like my job now is like I put any work task I get, you know, they're doing some, you know,
they're an accountant or they're doing some administrative role for the company. They're like,
my job now is 90% of any work I get. I feed it through clot or chat GPT or whatever tool that I'm
using on the AI side. I turn it into my boss and then I go golf because my boss,
like still doesn't know how to use any of these things.
Whoa.
So they, like, so the business owners have no idea how to use these tools.
So the value of accrual is to like the associate.
Literally, it's like, I call it.
Yeah, I call it like synthetic UBI because it's like, you know,
because it's like they, they, like there's just this insane legibility gap where
so many businesses still have no idea what you can do.
Imagine if these tools were available during the COVID era, like the remote work.
Oh, my God.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Or it's like, yeah.
People could have 20 jobs instead of the five that they were running with COVID.
But yeah, so I think the whole FD, like the thing that the FDE position solves is the legibility gap.
Yeah, yeah.
When you're like, hey, we know that there can be a ton of value produced here.
We just don't really know how.
And we don't even really, we can't even put our arms around the evolving capabilities.
Because like maybe you implement, you know, one of these AI tools.
And in six months, it's like a brand new tool because, you know, cognition rebuilt Devin off of 4-5 Sonnet.
Yeah.
And it's like, well, if like the product is evolved.
that much every six months, you probably need someone in a post-sales capacity to continue
to educate the customer, especially if they don't live in Silicon Valley, you know, like tracking
every single new model release and they're in some random place and barely even use chat
GPD or something like that. Yeah, it makes a lot of sense. How are you thinking about your focus
in terms of stage? I mean, Bond, Founders Fund, I've thought of you as a growth guy for a long time.
Are you moving earlier stage? How is benchmark thinking about growth versus early stage? Are those
just like antiquated terms because you can do a growth deal. Was this all part of the plan to
end up at benchmark where you get you go and learn the methodologies and the approaches of everyone
how they work and then you go compete with them on every deal. Exactly. Yeah. And the final job.
Exactly. Exactly. It's like I know. I'm doing it my way. No, I mean, it's certainly being able to
see up close a lot of the grates and how they, how they do the job and the frameworks they use
has undeniably been so important for my career and my development as an investor.
I think, like, what it came down to in something that I learned over my entire career slowly,
like, again, I started in P.E.
And so, like, the idea of venture was so foreign when I was, shout out capitalism.
Like, the idea of venture was so foreign when I was first coming into the industry that I really,
like, growth was, like, felt safe.
It felt like what I was good at.
And I've just learned over the, however long I've been in the industry, that, like,
where I felt the most fulfillment, where I felt the most joy, is actually the investments
in the relationships I've built,
someone like a Sean Henry
or even like a Parker and Matt at Rippling,
where it's like you get in,
even at the early series B,
I think there's this line where like,
if you can get in and build a relationship
and be on the board with a founder,
when they're still figuring everything out,
when it's still like the primordial soup phase of a company,
there's just all this, like,
there's a deep relationship and all this context that you build,
both with a founder, with a team,
and like the underlying organization that you're working with,
that just like if you get in later,
you just like can't go back,
in time and get that same amount of relationship building and context.
So, Ripling, Ripley and SPV in the series G, you can't use Wii.
No, I still would.
I still would, but, you know, it doesn't feel as good.
Rippling, bringing up Rippling reminded me, so you were talking about this forward-deployed
model, and every startup that's doing anything in the enterprise feels like they've adopted
this, right?
And it's like part of their pitch, customers obviously like it if, like, you'll put somebody
in my office and build software that's specific to me, that sounds great. But I feel like during
when Parker released the, I think it was the Series A memo for Rippling about this concept for
a compound startup, what's the post-mortem on? Because it felt like every startup started saying,
we're doing a compound startup. We're going to build three, basically three products at once
at the same time. And it's worked very well for Rippling. But I, I, I,
it's hard for me to think of any other startups
that adopted the approach that worked for Rippling,
which like the context there was they worked,
basically, to my knowledge,
like they worked in silence for years,
and then they came out with a big offer.
And also Parker had built like seven of those products
literally before.
And so he was like, okay,
I kind of know the way I want that product to look.
He's not doing as much zero to one discovery
in each of those,
like someone who starts the point solution might.
Yeah, I mean,
I think the Rippling story
and like where,
I think where a compound startup can really, really work,
is like one, yeah, there's this fat build in the beginning
where you need to build all this platform architecture
because the whole idea is like,
you need to build some form of platform architecture
that's going to make building each point solution
that you end up bundling faster.
Like if it's just going to take the same amount of time
that it would any other startup to build each product,
then there's kind of no synergy for building the compound startup.
Like they all need to interact and be built on the same platform.
I think the other key learning from Rippling
is that a lot of the products that they were,
that they've built,
and that they sell are not like I don't want to like say commodity in like a negative like they
don't matter way but they're just not these like really it's not figma you know like it's not like
a designer that's like I'm not going to use like off brand figma I have to use figma like it's my
lifeblood it's my everything when you have like an application you know an applicant tracking
system or like a time and attendance thing or like employer reviews that there's so much value in
in the integration of data with like employer reviews being integrated into your HR suite
rather than just having like the nicest UI
or having the product that feels the best.
And so like the value of having a bundled suite
and a compound startup is really powerful
when the actual products don't have to be
the complete bleeding edge best of breed.
They can be like very good,
but they don't have to look the absolute nicest.
They don't have to have that last 10%
of like complete fine-tuned effort.
And the buyer and the user actually still gets a ton of value
actually from the integration of all those products together
and the like some of the part.
is a lot more valuable than if each product in its individuality felt a little nicer to use or something,
but wasn't integrated tightly into a single product.
Yeah, I was always wondering if someone was going to run the compound startup playbook in fintech.
It's called Revolut.
I was going to say it's called Rip.
I mean, rip is it?
No, so, sorry.
So I meant consumer in the sense that, like, you know, Robin Hood has crypto and holding base has different, has different, has different,
financial products where you can build a whole company on Coinbase and manage payments with
Coinbase. There's a whole bunch of different functionality there. But there aren't that many
companies that I've seen that have come out to market with one. On day one, you can trade stocks,
invest crypto, get a mortgage, get a car loan. This is a credit card. There's points. It's like,
it's been a little bit more focused on the consumer fintech side in America. At least from my
perspective. There's been payment, money transfer services that have gone really big. There's,
you know, a consumer credit card. Like there's that built reward, isn't that a company that does
pay with your rent? Pay with your rent. And it's like, and maybe one day that grows into,
they'll also do mortgages and then they'll also do stock trading and investing and IRAs and all
that different stuff. But it just feels like probably because of the regulatory, it's a little bit
different. But no one's really, it's also a challenge because like eventually people are going to
tie a lot of their like financial life to the like the firm that gives them a mortgage right yeah
so not being able to these companies starting out they don't have their own balance sheet right
their neobanks so they're kind of like operating on top of other banks but it's just like there are
startups that have done like new mortgage like where it wasn't there better better mortgages right
um i think that went public at one point um has done quite well and uh and and so like if that business has been
was buildable as a startup.
And then also you have a credit card startup.
Like you would think that you could build both in the same.
Right, right.
Maybe it's just too distracting.
I don't know.
Well, honestly, you should highly, highly suggest listening to Nick at Revolut Talk.
Because he basically set up his organization somewhat similar to Rippling.
And he set up all these like product pods.
And they had an initial wedge, which was basically this like FX product for people that
were traveling around Europe.
Like, you know, young people were going around Europe and you could do very.
easy effects and that was kind of like the wedge for their first cohorts but they really really
quickly focused on just how do we go as many products if their high quality as possible and now they
have tons of consumer products and b-to-be products and like they're all doing a ton of revenue like
it's kind of an unbelievable story yeah earlier this week you kicked the platform vc hornet's nest
yeah to be clear you said that andrewson horowitz is a zero right that's what you said it's a zero
I'm not even going to be fodder for another clip.
My question was, did you kick the hornet's nest to inspire yourself to grind harder?
I feel like there's immense pressure now to deliver a 5x net.
Oh, yeah, that's true.
It's true.
Because eventually, who knows, maybe the performance week comes back in 4.9, Mark Andreessen's personally going to be like dunking on you.
Yeah, he's going to fund the Opsack that that uncovers our returns.
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
He's going to pay newcomer to come to them.
No, no, I think the whole thing from this week, I think the biggest lesson, or like it shone to light for me, just like the purpose of the algorithm.
Yeah.
Like the algorithm exists to kind of, like the algorithm needs, like the algorithm is the beast.
Oh, yeah.
And the beast needs controversy.
Oh, yeah.
And it was so funny because the first day that the interview came out, like, all this happened on the second and third day.
So, like, the first day the interview comes out, you know, all my friends at all these firms were like, oh, it's great.
I thought it was, like, pretty nuanced and like moderate takes.
And, like, you know, it's good.
You were kind of pitching the benchmark strategy is unique.
And then the second day comes out, and it's, of course, like, these clips with, like,
these very, you know, kind of leading tweets and things.
And then it's like, then it's like, you know, knives out.
And you've got government officials coming after you.
The government.
And I wanted to, like, check if my passport still works.
I hope my passport still works.
No, so like, and like, again, like, I, I think if you look at any of the individual
clips or anything, like, sure, you could take things from them that I think were more
incendiary or, like, more controversial than the actual context of the conversation.
I don't like, you know,
you know, it's context.
Yeah.
But you've also, you've, you've been commenting on different fund strategies for years
playing different games, your essay, your bombshell essay about the crossover funds,
right?
Tiger, Co2.
What is your, what is your, like, what predictions did you actually make in that piece?
And then how did they play out?
Because I feel like a lot of the firms that you identified as running these strategies are
still around doing those strategies.
And it seems like they've done very well.
And so, like, people might have read your original piece as, like, a critique, but in fact, it was just the, you're just shining a spotlight on a new strategy that exists. Yeah. And runs. Is that right? Yeah. And, like, if it's, so the original piece is called playing different games. Check it out on substacks. But the actual point of the original piece, and probably what I got wrong about the original piece most specifically was I zeroed in on Tiger as the example. And I actually was like, oh, I'm bullish on Tiger because I think this is a good strategy. So I actually said like, hey, this is a great strategy. And it's going to,
continue. And the strategy being like, hey, there's like venture returns historically,
if you look like since 2000, at least of the great funds, have been awesome.
Yeah. Like every great fund that has raised, like, and by the way, the only way that you
raise really large funds is if you earned the right by having amazing returns. So all of these
brands have had really, really amazing returns. And the simple math was that you could put a lot
more money out the door, especially as we had the emergence of these companies that show like
increasing returns to scale. This is the whole kind of idea, but
behind the MAG7 is that in technology,
when you have network effects like you do
in consumer social or economies of scale
like you see with Amazon,
you just kind of keep winning at a greater and greater scale,
assuming that your TAM is big enough.
And so the whole point of the essay was like,
hey, wow, like you can,
even if you reduce your implied returns a fair amount
on your four returns,
if you just put more money out of the door,
there's just so much more like absolute dollars
to be had for all of these firms.
So I think like in the four years since that piece came out
in 2021,
I think that has been the prevailing trend in venture.
I mean, very clearly.
I don't think it's, you know, it's a very consensus thing to say
that a lot of these firms have realized that, like,
wow, there's so, and like, I think it's actually the beautiful part
about our asset class now is the menu of options
and the menu of ways that you can practice the craft of venture growth
and be extremely successful and partner with really good founders
and make money for your LPs is extremely broad.
And it's only gotten broader because a lot of these leading firms
have really expanded and increased their capital velocity
or like dollars out the door per year.
Yeah.
It feels like there's a lot of venture capital
that might actually be more like private equity
or it feels like we're sort of,
is there a factor where we're just taking an asset class
that has existed for a long time,
investing in a company that has 10 billion in revenue,
and we're calling that venture now?
Are we just renaming it or is it somehow structurally different?
I'm just looking at like,
if you're investing in Open AI right now,
is that even a venture investment?
Yeah.
I mean, like, this is always like, even if you look at playing different games,
I always say like venture growth.
I do like venture slash growth.
Sure, sure, sure.
Because, like, you know, I think most people would call it growth
or, like, not just call it venture capital itself.
I think the structural change that we have seen,
and a lot of people actually have gripes with this.
Like, you can be on one position of this or another.
But I think there is some validity to the idea
that some people complain about,
which is if you look at what's happened,
where the structural change has happened
is that companies just, like, don't IPO.
maybe ever anymore,
but they certainly IPO way, way, way later
in their life cycle than they used to.
And so the complaint that some people have is like,
this is essentially stealing returns
that people were able to get in the public markets
because if you're IPOing only when you reach a $200 billion
valuation instead of a $10 billion evaluation,
which used to be the norm 10 years ago
or even 15 years ago or whenever it was,
that's a 20x that the public market investors don't get
that is now fully in the hands of private market.
Shopify's a great example.
I think they went out of it.
at like $4 billion or something like tiny.
For sure.
It's like that, you know,
or like, one question I have is like,
do you think that the partner at a platform VC
that's like a non-founder partner,
maybe early mid-30s,
do you think that's the most dangerous job adventure?
Because I feel like there's this pressure to deploy
and build a track record,
yet at the same time, like you're on the chopping block
if you deploy and a bunch of bad bets
and we see a correction,
and there needs to be, like, somebody needs to get fired for it.
Yeah.
Like, in some ways, it feels like a benchmark earlier stage,
you're somewhat insulated from the kind of downstream chaos
where you can make a bet.
It can get marked up a lot.
But even if it trades down during a correction,
you're still up massively on your winners.
Yeah, I mean, to be fair, like,
I don't think it's unique to platform firms at all.
Like, if I don't make great investments, I'm also screwed.
Like, at the end of the day,
you need to build a really good portfolio
and, like, no one is spared the results.
of, like, not investing in great companies.
I think, like, where that becomes somewhat true, and again, everything is so dependent
on the firm, and every firm's culture is so different, that's actually one of the things
that I think people don't understand really about venture growth is, like, every firm
the way they do things, the variance is way higher than, I think, maybe any other asset class
where, like, the work and the, like, how you do things is relatively similar.
But I think where that can happen in a platform firm is where just, like, the supply and
demand of things you're able to be the point person on is, is, uh, is like negatively inclined
towards you. What I mean by that is like, there's like, I don't know, maybe a hundred good
companies that exists at like whatever stage, um, uh, like each maybe stage. There's like,
you know, maybe 50 great early companies, 50 great growth stage companies. If you have, uh, you know,
20 partners, uh, you know, the math is just like, okay, like if you're 50, if you have like 20 growth
or, let's say 25 growth partners since I'm bad at math, uh, and you have 50 good growth
companies. That means there's like two good companies per partner. And maybe like the senior
senior partners get like 10 instead of two. And so there's just this, there's this reality where
it's like there's some efficiency frontier where you're trying to be able to be the relationship
builder and the point person and the board member for really great companies. But when you have a ton
of people within an organization, it just becomes mathematically harder to just have like shots on
goal enough. You're not going to win every single deal either. And so it's like, okay, how many
am I covering and how many can I win, like that just starts to diminish.
It's also, it's not a perfect framework because, again, like, it's also not like a solo.
It's not golf.
It's not a solo sport.
Like, it is a team sport.
And so I think a lot of these places that have good cultures, they're more focused on, like,
okay, how do we win as a team?
Multiple people can work a company.
Multiple people can be on the board or one person's a board observer or whatever.
So it's not necessarily mutually exclusive, but I do think some people at those firms do feel
those impacts for sure.
Are you AGI-Pilled?
Uh, wow.
Like, what's your, what's your, like, how have you processed that question?
How have you engaged with the, the discourse around, uh, everything from, uh, just how powerful
the models will be in one, five, 20 years?
Yeah.
Uh, what that means for your investing thesis, um, versus even just like the fast takeoff,
AI doom.
Has that stuff ever rattled you?
Have you always just been, I'll wait and
until it shows up in a spreadsheet.
I don't know.
You seem like a pretty even keeled, like, quantitative person
who's not getting lost at some yay rationalist party
and going off into sci-fi land.
Yeah, I mean, I am definitely of the belief.
Well, one, I think AGI has become, like, a near useless term.
Sure.
I mean, it's almost like agents at this point.
Like, both of these things are so nebulous.
Yeah.
And, like, the product marketing around them has been so brutal
that, like, they've just lost all their meaning.
Yep.
So I think actually when people...
And quickly, agents didn't.
exist as a marketing term two years ago.
And now it's already played out.
That just shows you the cycle of these things in 2025.
But I think that like, so like AG, like when you say, like what you just said, I think
is actually probably referring to like ASI, like artificial superintelligence.
Like I think that the bottleneck and the rate limiter for AGI, which is like artificial general
intelligence, which maybe you could define as like, when do we have, you know, an AI that
can do what like a reasonable adult can do in any given situation is fully dependent on
how quickly we can distill the technology through the economy.
Yeah.
And I think like, and this is like Tyler Cowan talks about this.
It's actually more about the inference than the pre-training.
Well, not even about inference and pre-training.
It's literally just like about the FDE.
Oh, sure, just actually telling someone to use it.
Yeah, like deploying it into the economy.
Like, it just takes a really long time.
And no matter how fast these growth curves are, there's just a ton of the economy.
It's notable that you gave the example of somebody, you know, at a, let's say, like, some company where they're doing,
their job with Claude, but their boss doesn't know that because they just want to be able to
do their job quickly and go golf. And then that person gets presented with a better solution.
They get a pitch on, hey, we can actually like replace your whole team. And they're thinking
like, well, there's a chance I could maybe golf more. There's also a chance that I could lose
my job. And so I think there's going to be this interesting tension where the people that are the people
The associate, he uses so many M-Dashes.
He's amazing.
He's also getting really good at golf randomly.
It's also a scratch golfer now.
Every time I go out with him on the week, it seems like he's been practicing a ton.
No, no, that makes it tons sense.
What about the, just the stakes geopolitically?
Because there's been this critique of benchmark of like, oh, maybe you guys are a little
bit more open to investing in companies that are indexed to China somehow.
This is not new.
Excel has investments in China.
there's a whole bunch of different stuff.
It can go both ways.
But it feels very predicated on
if you think AI is a super
nuclear weapons level technology,
then it's harder to rationalize.
If you think it's more like an Excel sheet
and auto-complete,
maybe there's a little bit more of a deal to be done
even with a near-peer competitor.
Yeah, like the fine line I'd place on that
is that we certainly, like,
I think all of us,
certainly within benchmark,
but I think everyone in the industry
wants Western AI to win.
And we do think it's a bit of a race,
and we want nothing more than Western and U.S. AI to win.
That does not mean that Chinese citizens
or people that were born in China
or people that at some point in their lives
have been in China cannot contribute to
and be a huge factor in building Western AI.
If you look at the, there's, you know,
that tweet that had like the poach list
for the meta ASI team.
It was like 15 of the 20 were Chinese citizens
or at some point or were born in China or whatever.
it was. But there was incredible kind of Chinese representation on the meta team. And so again,
like the investments we've made have been in companies that are in Singapore or in the United
States. And just like if there's people that were born in China or Chinese citizens working on
AI that they want to build and help the world in a Western context with our values, in our
value system and distribute it globally, not just within China or whatever, and not even building in
China, then of course we want to support those teams. And I think there's an immense amount of
AI talent in China and would behoove us to have them building for Western allies for the United
States and making sure that we win the AI race rather than scaring them off and pushing them to
only work for China and for the CCP. Yeah, makes sense. Are you thinking, has your, has your
thinking on open source AI updated at all? I've kind of gone back and forth. John Ludig, a friend of
has written about this, saying that, you know, the scale of the effort and the capital
intensivity to really have significant progress on the model side means that open source
AI might struggle. At the same time, a few weeks ago, we saw Brian Chesky say that Airbnb's
been using open source models and seeing a lot of great results there. And so there's obviously
different use cases for each, but how are you thinking the market will play out? How are you
thinking of how do you make money as a for-profit company in open source? Are we looking to
Red Hat as an example? GitLab. What do you like in that category if you like it at all?
Yeah. No, it's a great question. I think there's like two angles that I would take for this.
One on frontier capabilities versus like where open sources, let's say for like general models.
I use something that I call the mom test, which I refer to my mom. And I always joke that like
there hasn't been a query on chat GPT that my mom has made that like GPT like 3.5 couldn't handle.
sure. So I think there's like an increasing amount of queries and there's an increasing amount of
inference. You're going to get a lot of hate for this from the moms. From the mom? No, okay. I'm talking about
my mom. Because there are some moms in the chat. There's some moms that are watching right now. This is
the most controversial thing you've said, I'll show. You can take shots. Don't get me clipped,
man. Yeah, the mom community. Mom will say, actually, actually I'm puppeteering 25 Claude code instances
right now to run this family and you better show some respect. Okay. So the Randall, the Randall mom
test. And I think there's like an
amount of queries as Frontier Intelligence continues to get pushed.
Yes.
There's just an increasing amount of queries, an increasing amount of inference that you just
don't need the frontier capabilities for anymore.
Some of this stuff you could even cash.
Yes.
Because if I had asked for like, just give me the high level history of benchmark.
Like it could just serve that up on a database.
You don't need five one for that.
You don't even need that.
It's like, yeah, you could do a Google search.
So there's, so there's that piece, which I think that like increasing amount of
like there's always going to be places that are important for frontier.
And that exists within businesses too.
Yes.
Because there are certain things where it's like,
We just need to scan every transaction for fraud, and we're not actually doing a deep research report on it.
We're just saying, hey, does this have, like, bad words in it?
And for a large language model, you can just use the 3.5 level model.
And then actually, in other modalities besides, like, code, or, I mean, code, there's actually some great open source models now.
But, like, in generative media, especially, the open source ecosystem is extremely vibrant.
Sure.
There's a ton of amazing open source models.
And I think the open source models probably have way, way more.
tokens in like token volume, then close source models.
And the way that you actually make money on this,
there's an amazing company called FAL that is a generative media,
give it up.
Are you sponsored by them?
Are you sponsored by FAL?
Yeah, we did the...
Shout out Burkai and Gorcombe.
We love legends.
Batwan, all the guys there, but they're an inference cloud
for generative media.
Sure.
And so they're like a distribution mechanism for open source model providers
to get video developed, like generative media developers to use models.
And then for the developers, it's like the one-stop
you get like a single place where you can drag and drop any time a new model comes out.
And so it's almost like, you know, like this destination point that they then monetize
via providing the inference for the models.
And so I think like when you have all this open source, there's still a ton of money to be made
via inference, via kind of like reselling GPUs, if you want to call it that, and all the stuff
that you can provide in terms of like inference optimization on top of that, even if you're not
just providing like a LLM output via an API like you would with a closed source model.
How are the portfolio companies that you work with?
with how do they think about competing with Open AI?
I think the question of like,
what if Open AI does this is coming up a lot.
We've seen, we had Mikey from Suno on.
They've grown tremendously.
There's been talks that OpenAI will get into music generation.
So that's kind of a conversation.
I don't feel, I don't think Suno will be very threatened by that.
And generally, it feels like Open AI is already at the scale,
and is operating like Google does
where they're going to launch a lot of products
that don't work and that's kind of okay
and so if they copy you it doesn't mean you're dead
but it's a real threat
what are those conversations like
and how do you think the CEOs view that
as a competitive threat?
Yeah I think it's like it's incredible
for these startups to have like this bar.
It's almost like having it's like the lock-in bar
and it's like if you're not gonna like
If you're not going to, like, exceed the lock-in bar, which is, like, whatever the labs can produce when you're probably not even their number one priority, then, like, maybe you should pack it up and, like, and just, like, and call it a day, because, like, that's the, like, that's the bar.
Like, you need to exceed it.
And so I think, I don't, like, people had this concern about so many different companies.
Like, people had this concern about 11 labs at one point when, like, opening I was coming out with all these voice products and people are like, oh, my God, what does this mean for 11 labs?
And now they're, like, they're doing, they're accelerating.
They're doing better than they ever have before.
So I think that like...
I think people really miss, like, the taste element.
When we were talking to Maddie from 11 Labs, we noticed that, uh, even though Mid Journey
has been on a very different path, there's something about what David, how David
holds runs that company at Mid Journey, the way he thinks about training the model, that it just
looks, it doesn't, it's not that it looks like, there's no benchmark.
It doesn't necessarily look better.
It just looks more like David Holes's vision for what good looks like.
And it's like, I feel like when I see mid-year-old.
journey image, no matter who prompted it, I'm seeing the art of David Holes.
And I feel like there's something about that in the texture of the voices from 11
Labs and the flavor of text that comes out of Open AI. And there's a little bit of like
the people talk about this with like the flavor of code from Claude, for example.
And the vibes can come out of the organization in a way that it's hard to just say,
okay, we have good vibes and images. Let's copy paste that all over the place.
Yeah. It's just the culture doesn't necessarily shift.
100%.
And I think most of the times that I've heard a pitch from somebody around, like, well, like, this, you know, this part of this, like, this model or like this modality is rapidly commoditizing, if a founder and a team is able to build a high taste product in a market that's big enough where you can have ACVs and, like, prices that are high enough per customer to, like, build and be able to distribute the product, all of those companies are doing tremendously well.
There's not been a single company, I think, that, like, died because of the labs.
It's because you didn't build a high taste product.
that could be distributed to a white audience.
Also, it feels like we're probably not in the,
like, the era of like getting steamrolled by AWS was like,
well, yeah, I want my hard drives right next to my CPUs.
And I don't know that people are right now saying,
like, I need my voice model right next to my, you know,
agent model.
They're like, no, actually, I'm okay with a little bit of latency
because the whole thing is slow, basically.
It's all, you know, a couple seconds lag,
sometimes 10 minutes of lag.
And so maybe there's not so much.
I want to talk about the neoclouds and these interesting deals that are going on because benchmark where you're at in terms of the scale of the firm feels not necessarily set up to do some sort of company that's going to wind up being super capital intensive.
But then at the same time, you've done fireworks. You've done fireworks. Founder gave one of the most iconic lines of this month. He said a lot of companies out there are going to be scaling into bankruptcy.
see. But then also the private equity background, bond, I feel like you're maybe better equipped
to understand how private credit will interface with a founder. You're somebody that would make
sense to have on the board potentially. But how are you thinking about these new companies
where it's not just R&D spend, it's not just burn for salaries, there's something else going
on in the almost financial engineering of building and winning a category? Yeah, 100%. Yeah, I think
like our role at benchmark, and we've done investments like we've obviously invested very, very early
in fireworks. We have some robotics investments that we're incredibly excited about that will be
very capital intensive. I think one of the pitches that we can give to founders is there's
like there's nothing more scarce than a benchmark A in today's market, and therefore there's
no higher signal. We have another sponsor, Numeril, who on their website, they had benchmark series
A, and every time we did the ad read,
we just say, Benchmark Series A.
Every time.
So you know, you know the mantra.
Oh, we do, really.
So, like, part of our value prop in our job is, like, downstream capital should not be
more cheap for anyone else than someone that is partnered with us.
And I do think we put an immense amount of effort into helping companies understand
and helping downstream investors understand the business equation of these more complex
companies.
Yeah.
Like, a company that did this extremely well, actually, in the public,
markets, a firm when it went public, a lot of the sales side analysts that were covering
a firm, I think just didn't really know how to, like, handle the company and didn't really
know how to, like, model out the actual business equation of the company.
So they actually did, like, I think it was called the Financial Modeling Day.
And they, like, walked through, like, a 30 slide deck that you can actually still find on
their investor relation site of, like, this is our business equation, this is what we optimize
around, and this is how we grow and produce value for shareholders.
and it was just like extremely clear, extremely legible.
And I think it really helped the investor community
and the analyst community better understand the business.
And it's like one, ideally the founders also have some sense
of their business equation because they're building their businesses.
But it's also something that hopefully that myself
or any of the other of the partners here
can also help both sharpen the thinking of the founders,
but especially the downstream investors that want to know
that there's a strong business equation that they're investing behind.
Emil Michael was getting into it with you earlier this week,
feels like the the TK era has sort of continued.
Two different government officials coming from.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's crazy.
Yeah, you really got that.
So the whole, TK was way, obviously, you know, 10 years before.
Can you just apologize for it?
No, no, no, no, no.
Can you take full responsibility?
No, that's not what I'm saying.
I wanted to understand, like, you know, when that comes up, when you're in process with
founders, like, what is the, like, what are those conversations like from your side and
how is the firm approaching kind of those concerns from founders?
about actions that the firm took a decade ago.
Yeah, that's good.
Yeah, I mean, amazing question.
And I think our response every single time,
whether or not it comes up,
and I think it, I mean, it's week four,
so I actually don't know how rarely it comes up,
but it's really come up so far in my time of benchmark,
is talk to the founders we work with today
or that any of the partners within the firm have worked with.
Yeah.
And see, like, benchmark, like, I am 25% of benchmark.
Yeah.
Jathan is 25%.
Eric is 25%.
Peter is 25%.
Benchmark is not some corporation that has, like, rules and bylaws.
Like, the firm is us.
And so talk to as many founders as you want of people that we have worked with
and see if our references are better than any other investors.
And our bet is that, and one that has proved to be true,
I think more often, way more often than not,
is that you will not find a better reference firm
from the founders that we work with as individuals.
It's all our benchmark.
I was, you know, I think I was in,
high school or maybe I was in college, you know, like dancing to young, like, what was, uh,
I was doing private equity deals and getting hammered on the weekend. Yeah. I was doing,
I was doing like a private equity case study during, during that. So I'm like, like, I literally,
I can't speak. Yeah, yeah, yeah. No, but I think, I think, I think being able to like,
focus it in and be like, the firm is the four of us. Yeah. And so go as deep as you want on any of our
track record. Yeah. I know the founders you work with. There really was. That's the song.
the college anthem. That's great.
What about, you know, you've been on a, on a meteoric rise,
principal, then partner, now general partner.
What do you think it takes to get to general, to steward?
Oh, to senior, to senior steward.
Do you think it's in the cars for you?
I actually did have a, I, if you are at Sequoia as senior steward next year,
I am going to blow, it's going to be insane.
I wouldn't put it past you.
How, how, does, does Gurley still play a steward-esque role?
How, how involved, I'm assuming a bunch of his money is still in, in, in the funds.
Yeah, a few things on this.
One, like, there is, I think this is a common misnomer just because some people, like
Bill, obviously, extremely famous for his blog, he's, he's very, like, outward-facing.
Podcast, too.
Podcast, I mean, it's not like he really sailed off in the, in the sunset.
He's got some great takes on BG2.
Totally.
But there is, like, there is no sense of.
stewardship. There's no... Interesting. That does not exist in the slightest. There is no senior partner
and like there's nothing like that, both in the actual economics, obviously, but actually
just in like the culture and the way that we do business. Like it is completely, like there is
no sense of that. I think that's a common misnomer because some people are a little bit more
public or like hourly facing or more famous. That is not how the firm operates. But it's true that
like the retired partners that are no longer active GPs play an unbelievably active role.
In a lot of our active investments now, in a lot of the capital for the funds comes from both the current GPs and the previous GPs.
So they feel extremely bought into the continued successive benchmark.
They also just, like, it was such a huge part of their identities for so long that, you know, it's like I, yeah, I now regularly talk with Bill, with Matt Culler, with all these people that were so instrumental.
Yeah, are you rushing up on the sports?
Bill's Florida Gators.
Yeah, well, state school pride between myself and saying myself.
That's great.
But yeah, so they're super involved.
They help us with companies that we're looking at,
with companies that we already work with,
and I think that's a really unique part of the partnership.
Yeah, yeah.
What have you learned from Bill Gurley?
Have you learned anything yet?
Has he updated anything?
Obviously, you go from Bond, Mary Meeker,
one way of thinking about the world to Founders Fund, PT,
wildly different way thinking about the world,
but you probably take lessons from both, I imagine.
Have you learned anything from Bill either in the last,
four weeks. I know it hasn't been that long, but even just from reading his work and
listening to him. Yeah, I feel like Bill was the first venture capitalist I ever learned anything
from because when I was like interviewing to get into the business, I was always reading above
the crowd. Sure. I was always reading his blog. He had such pragmatic, instructive blog posts,
like all revenues not created equal. He had all these great things about network effects and
marketplaces. And like when you're looking for buzzwords to say in an interview and you're like
22 and you have no idea what you're talking about, they were an absolute gold mine. And so I felt
like I've been learning from him for...
Let's give it up for buzzwords.
Shout out buzzwords.
A fantastic way to advance your career.
Useful buzzwords.
I'm not saying that as a drug story.
No, no.
But like, for me, they're gold.
The quality of revenue thing is so real.
We go to YC. Demodea and they...
Evergreen.
They've had to like reinstate like, okay, what's contracted ARR versus ARR?
What's...
How fuzzy is this?
There was something on the timeline earlier this week.
Someone was saying that they went to go interview at a company.
They said that, you know, the real revenue was like one-sixth of what...
what the founders had said.
And that's, you know, eno-frothy market, those, the temptation to lie gets even further
or embellish.
So I think, like, the biggest learning, I think, that people can take from Bill is, like,
he just keeps it real.
Like, it doesn't matter what the market is.
It doesn't matter if it's that market, down market.
Like, he cares about the real.
Like, he cares about, like, what is the business quality when you actually dig in?
It's not about, you know, eyeballs.
It's not about vanity metrics.
It's like, what does this business look like and what is it going to look like over the next 10 years?
And it's not like he hasn't taken immense amount.
of risks like he invested in much of marketplaces before they had flipped network effects but he just
knows how to like drill down and kind of figure out what is fluff and fake versus what's real
how are you guys thinking about consumer social i feel like as long as i've been uh in and around
the venture world when there's a hot series a consumer company benchmark is is at least on it
paying attention. It just feels, and then I can say personally, I've experienced immense pain
investing in consumer social. It doesn't matter if a company has a million users. They can go from
zero to a million users in 48 hours, and you can invest right there, and then it'll be right off
the next week. So it's extremely painful, but I'm curious about how the partnership is thinking
about it today. Is it, obviously, you guys are a generalist fund, but is it still, is there anybody
specifically on the partnership that
cares a lot about backing
the next breakout consumer
consumer software company.
Yeah, no, 100%.
And again, it's such a deep part of the firm's history
that I think all of us are itching.
It's the highest status
like winner, right?
Because it's like, you know, if you back Snapchat
and then you have half a billion users out there
that are like, yeah, use and love Snapchat every day.
it just hits harder than backing, like, even the next data bricks
because people are probably using...
It becomes a cultural...
It's like a cultural touchstone in a trophy, yeah.
I think so the toughest thing about consumer social,
why it's been really, really hard,
is that back in the day when consumer social was starting,
it was actually about consumer social.
Like, social networking was actually social networking.
Every single social networking platform
has turned into an algorithmic short-form video platform
because that is the most addictive...
a form factor of content that someone can consume.
And eventually you just have this profit motive
that means that you optimize for the amount of time spent
on an app per user per day.
And so they just crowd out the currency of these companies.
One is obviously users, but then the amount of time spent
interacting with the product or interfacing with the product, typically.
And when you have these extremely addicting algorithmic
short form video platforms, you just kind of squeeze
out the seconds in the day. It's like so hard to like how could you get someone to spend 30 minutes
a day on your app versus versus any others? Like the challenge is just so much harder than it used
to be when when people still weren't spending that much time on their phones and now we all
spend all day on our phones. So I think that the bar and the challenge is actually much, much, much
higher. But I do think that, I mean, one, we do have a new breakout, which is chat GPT,
which is unbelievable. So that's amazing. Yeah, I'm talking about the next, you know,
like the next year, basically. Like, who's really itching? So we, um, obviously I'm not going to
say the company because we just signed this, but we actually did just sign a consumer social
series A. And so, there we go. You can, you can stay on the lookout for that, for that, get the
gong for it. I was, I was looking for an excuse to do the gong. Yeah, for the, for the anonymous
series I that we can't. Boom. Solid first hit. First of net. Thank you. Last, last question I have.
That was a big gong for. I hit the shit out of that. Little, little pop quiz. I'm not going to tell you
who wrote this, but I want you to guess whether or not this was written with him.
AI. This is not just a partnership. It is a living, breathing, legacy. This is Alfred Lynn this
morning, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Jordan's, you got to be better than that? You don't have to
answer. It's a student of the game. Well, but that doesn't answer the question whether it was
written to AI or not. Yeah, we don't know. Do you think it was? Do you think it was?
I only skimmed it. But I mean, I think I think most people are at a foot, at a point where they
might let Chachiti do like a run through at the end and it might have inserted this,
It's called contrastive parallelism.
It's not this, it's that.
I'm not a fan of that particular construction,
but it's something that ChatGPT
just kind of sneaks in everywhere.
But who knows?
It can be a tell.
But, yeah, if you kind of got to rip
some of the stuff out because if AI starts
doing M-Dash is too much,
even if you love using the M-Dash, you just kind of lose it
because otherwise people will be like AI, yeah, yeah.
Totally. Last thing, predict, last last question.
do you think that it felt like this year
just the flood of deals
meant that there was less seasonality in venture, right?
There were companies that were raising,
those companies that have raised like three, four rounds this year,
which meant that like they were raising during winter,
like winter kind of holiday time.
They were raising during August.
I mean, yeah, talent wars were during summer.
Like Zuck was like having dinner with people in mid, middle of summer,
opening out, tried to take a week off
and he got a ton of people poach.
Yeah. But it feels like going into, I could see people taking a bit more of a breather this, this, this kind of like holiday season, but I'm curious, any kind of predictions around that front.
I think we've moved to not having season.
Like, I think the seasonality thing, at least for now,
is that any time you're in a hot market,
you're just going to have people working around the clock.
Because, again, it's almost like the return to office thing.
If you're like a sales rep in like 2022,
it's like, how do you want to differentiate?
Well, if one guy's just doing Zoom meetings
and you're willing to fly to the prospect's office,
that's a huge edge.
So I think that's the issue now,
especially in a hot market where things get marked up
and sequential rounds happen very quickly.
You just end up having, like, that, like, you know,
Christmas is now the opportunity for someone to go preempt something.
I do think that most of the good teams kind of realize that even if you can get a deal done,
December 24th, also, like, it's probably just going to be better if it's done when everyone,
there is just like a level of energy that happens in the fall, that happens in the spring,
that happens in the peak deal times.
There's like, wow, the VC, you know, gave me a call to try and close the deal, like,
from the operating room when his first kid was born, and I'm like, yeah, dude sounds kind of like a psycho.
I don't know if I actually want to work with that guy.
I think I'm good if you just, like, waited a day.
Or the founders is like, yeah, I raised my round while my wife was giving birth.
I'm like a savage.
I don't know if we actually want that.
That might just be, you can go a little bit too far and kind of turn people off.
But that is fascinating.
Thank you so much for time.
Of course, guys.
Thank you so much.
I want to give a shout out to my wife, Kaelin.
Shout out to my six-month-old, Theo.
Let's go.
And my Bernie's Mount Dog, Daisy.
Six-month-old.
I love you guys.
imagine imagine being a baby and you come on to this earth and you're like wait my dad's a GP at
benchmark I hit the jackpot I hit the jackpot Papa's a GP at benchmarks I just spawned into
generational wealth post-economic on day one let's go let's go let's bring in our next guest we have
Adam phase CEO of gymnasium while he's hopping on let me tell you about eight sleep
Come, get a pod five.
Welcome to the show.
I will also tell you about adquick.com,
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Adam, Faze.
Adam, let's settle this.
I've never asked you this because I was kind of always embarrassed to ask you this.
I already know where we're going.
Yeah, I just think for the audience.
Are you in a phase clan?
Yeah, no, I think it is your real last name.
It is real last name.
They did try to sue me.
No way.
The original name of Gymnasium was Faze World.
Okay.
And they do own the trademark for the word Faze.
Okay, wow.
So we are...
What is the origin of the name?
Faze is such a cool last name.
Okay, so I've never actually really said this story before.
My dad is from Iran.
His real last name is Amir Faze.
And then when he moved to America, he changed his last name to Faze.
So I was born with the last name Faze.
Okay.
But it technically, my middle name is Amir.
So it kind of still was Amier Fais.
Oh, interesting.
Fays, Hayes.
Ellis Island.
And there's exactly what happened.
Yeah, but there's a term for when that happens.
Like, I believe I was probably a Mick Coogan at some point, and they took off the Mick.
They just simplified it.
That's fascinating.
Well, for those who don't know anything beyond this, can you introduce the company, kind of how you position yourself?
100%.
I mean, I run a company called Gymnasium.
It is a short form unscripted studio that primarily lives on TikTok and Instagram.
So we make shows that are these organic viral shows that would have been on TV 20 years ago,
instead live on these platforms of young people.
Neo-Trad media.
No.
No traditional.
Neo-Trad media.
I really got to say, I think you guys are single-handedly bringing Hollywood back.
We're trying to.
This city has been lacking in the media department.
Have you ever lived in L.A.?
Born and raised.
Oh, really?
I lived in L.A. for 24 years.
Oh, no way.
To move to New York four years ago.
You went to high school here?
I went to Loyola High School downtown.
No way.
I went to Polly.
No way.
You grew up in it.
I didn't know that.
I grew up here.
Oh, wow.
Wow.
Yeah.
I played with some loyal guys on the rugby team,
The Cougars, I'm sure we could play.
Who do you know?
I went to a camera question.
Most of your shows are in New York.
Almost entirely New York based.
Actually, until recently.
So we just launched a new show this week called Girl Room,
where we investigated the most disgusting
girls' bedrooms in L.A.
That we could find.
And we ended up renovating them.
You're just exposing.
You're exposing.
I truly, I can still smell some of the bedrooms that I was in.
But we're actually here shooting a different show this week
in Boyle Heights, where I just came from.
So walk me through what actually producing a show looks like.
Do you hold the camera?
Did you ever hold the camera?
100%.
Used to almost always hold the camera and did edit a few shows.
But now what does the team affect?
Well, to kind of back up, and I grew up in L.A. being obsessed with Hollywood.
All I ever wanted to do was make movies and TV shows.
And spent, didn't go to college, spent about eight years working up the ladder in traditional Hollywood for studios and production companies.
And it's basically, I mean, during COVID, I, all of a sudden, we have a fly on the set.
We have a fly on the set.
Sorry.
During COVID, I just got deeply addicted to TikTok, like so many of the people.
Honestly, stopped watching TV.
Okay.
And so there was a part of me that just felt like this feels like the future.
At the same time, working at a studio where, like, spending five years trying to make a movie that, like, Brentwood would love,
didn't really feel that culturally irrelevant.
So Zoom out for me a little bit and show me the difference between why what you're doing lives on TikTok and not those crazy, like, the Quibi, the new era.
Quibby, like the vertical, it's vertical short form.
Yes.
There's a couple Chinese apps.
You know what I'm talking about.
Real shorts.
Oh, you're talking about like the scripted short form things that exist.
100%.
Like, is that where your stuff goes in five years or are you permanently separate?
The real goal of this was like, let's just go where the people are.
I was watching TikTok.
I was watching Reel's content.
And I'm like, I want to make shows in the place where people actually are.
And so we've only ever produced things that are unscripted.
It really started three years ago now working with a guy named Kareem who hosts Subway
takes.
You've ever seen that show now.
Yeah, no way.
We did a show called Keep the Meter Running,
where he would, like, hail a taxi in New York,
and he would tell the driver,
take me to your favorite place
and keep the meter running
when we'll spend the day with each other.
That's cool. That show I held the camera on.
Okay, awesome.
And so it would be me, a friend in Kareem,
and we'd actually just hail a cab in the street in New York
and get in with them and just spend the day with them.
That show kind of changed everything for us
because, you know, Kareem was someone
I had my eye on them for a while,
of just someone who I thought was super talented
and I wanted to hang out with more.
And I asked him if you had any ideas for a TikTok show.
And this was like the fifth idea he pitched.
And it was so obvious of like, I want to know where that taxi driver goes.
And so we spent three hours with this first taxi driver we ever shot with.
And I can remember thinking, like, how the hell are we going to put this in a two-minute video clip?
We had never posted anything on TikTok ever before.
We spend a week that the episode is like perfect in our eyes.
We put on an account that has zero followers.
And as a result, we're like, we're not going to even check the views because it's a brand new account.
The next day, Kareem goes into his bodega across the street and someone taps him on the shoulder.
and it's like, I love your show.
No way.
He's like, what do you, my show?
And he looks at his phone and it had 1.2 million views.
Wow.
And I think the cooler thing was, of those 1.2 million views, 99% were in New York City.
No way.
So as he was trying to walk around the city that day, people started tapping them on the shoulder, being like, hey, I love your show.
Hey, can I get a, can I buy you a beer, can take a photo with you?
How are the outdoor?
That show now has like 400 million views and has, I think, about 800,000 followers across
TikTok and Instagram.
And it's grown Kareem's own career into becoming like the,
the mayor of New York City.
Totally.
So I think from that point on, it was just clear of like, hey, this is a place where people
actually want to watch serialized content, and what are the types of stories that we want
to go make?
How do you think about monetizing something like that?
It feels so hard to stop and do a mid-roll ad.
It's impossible.
And it also feels like, if you're like, oh, I'll just do a separate promoted post, TikTok's
like, we know what you're doing.
That one's going to get 10 views.
And then when you're back to normal programming, we'll give you a 10 million views.
Because they know what's good and what's-proven.
I mean, this is the problem with short-form media.
The reality is these platforms do not have an incentive to pay you.
One, because they know the benefit that you get by being viral on these platforms.
But also, like, their excuse is like, hey, you're scrolling eight videos for every one ad you see.
How would we know how to pay that person?
It's like, you know, you know everything.
Exactly.
You know the data.
You're going to be fine.
So, you know, we figured this out on our show, Boy Room, which was like the early version of Girl Room,
and it was, you know, really disgusting men's bedrooms.
Who has grosser bedrooms?
So the difference, we really did find the difference here.
Guys have disgusting bedrooms.
Girls are just hoarding.
They're hoarding so much shit that they refuse to get rid of.
So that's the big difference between the two shows.
But on that show, it was so viral so quickly.
The top comment in every episode was a girl saying, I can fix him.
You can't.
The second comment was always, you should fix their rooms.
And so we started quickly getting in touch with Amazon
and a bunch of other companies figuring out, like,
how could we turn this into a renovation form?
Sure, sure, sure.
Ended up making an amazing partnership with Amazon.
Cool.
We did an entire renovation season of the show, still on TikTok and Instagram.
And out of that partnership, birthed this brand new show, Girl Room, which is actually
co-owned by Amazon.
And also, Amazon in that in that world doesn't feel forced.
At all.
It's like very logical that if you're doing a renovation.
Of course.
You know, we would never be able to do a renovation show without the help of Amazon.
And so I think what's really cool here is, like, through this partnership with Amazon,
I think what we've realized is like the views and attention that we get on these platforms,
organically is something that every Fortune 500 company desperately is trying to figure out.
And so what we really started doing is having this conversation with brands is like,
you're a media company, whether you realize it or not.
And if you were to think of yourself as a TV channel, what are the types of shows that you
would program on that channel?
And so we're starting to work with brands on creating original shows on these platforms
that kind of live in the universe of their brand.
Is there very little competition?
Because it feels like the legacy businesses that obviously there's, well,
No, so there's, like, the feeds are deeply competitive.
Sure.
I'm saying, like, people that are trying to do this, like, highly produced unscripted content,
that's not just an iPhone.
Yep.
That's not an individual creator doing, like, a day in the life or doing that.
Like, it feels like they're, like, it feels like they're, because the traditional, like,
unscripted TV businesses, they're so in this mindset of, like, okay, I, like, create a concept
and I pitch it and maybe I make a pilot or I'm an established, you know, studio,
and I can just, like, go and get the budget just off of belief.
leaf alone, they're still in this mindset of, like, I need to sell this whole show to a network.
And I think that could create an environment where you're kind of in this lane with a model
that's very disruptive being like, I'm not going to go to the network at all.
I'm just going to go straight to the feed and be able to turn out a super high volume of content,
I'm sure, with great margins too, and just kind of like sidestep the whole industry.
I mean, there's a few things here.
One, I think what's been really cool is, like, New York has become, like, the capital
of this new era of media.
I think LA was the center of influencer for so long,
like never forget the TikTok houses in 2020.
I think that slowly started shifting
with like the Washington parkification of TikTok content
and all of a sudden now all these short form content
studio started bubbling up.
You know, I think for those of us
that have been in New York for a few years,
there is a bit of an industry now
where we all know each other,
we're all pretty close with each other.
What I will say though is like on the flip side,
I think especially like being in LA right now,
this is an industry of people that still refuse
to accept that, like, the internet has become television.
Oh, interesting.
And you have so many talented storytellers, an entire generation of storytellers,
who were out there trying to pitch their show to Netflix,
instead of realizing, like, hey, how can I go make this myself?
And I think the crazy thing is, like, we have so many examples of success now.
Yeah.
And it's like a mat, in what world would TBPN be this successful if you guys were on CNN?
Yeah, or starting there.
I mean, it's weird because in Silicon Valley, we, like, you would be so crazy if you
were like, I have an idea for a new technology, let me go try and pitch it to Amazon Web Services.
You'd be like, no, I build the first version, I raise a little money, I build it, I build it.
And then eventually they come and try and buy me.
And that's like the DNA of Silicon Valley.
And yet Hollywood just is still in the process of like adapting to that of just like, yeah,
just go do it yourself.
Like the cameras are available.
You can make stuff with an iPhone.
And I think what's so hard is like we haven't had startup DNA in this city ever.
I mean, you know, with Hollywood.
We did it in 1920.
Of course, exactly, and that was the original moment.
But from that point on, we had a hundred-year-long industry where it's like, this is how projects get made.
Just calcify, calcify, calcify.
And I think as a result, we built an industry around the way that things worked, and it's really hard to all of a sudden accept, like, hey, the rules could not be more different now.
It might never go back to that.
They will never go back to that in first place.
So I think what's cool, though, is like, I really do believe that any talent we've ever worked with would have been a television star 20 years ago.
I think any show we made and are continuing to make would have been a TV show 20 years ago.
How much, yeah, how much inspiration do you, I think, like, when I think about TVPN, we've had maybe a hundred or so people, like, kind of launch, like, some, like, show that is inspired in some way by what we're doing, even though what we're doing just looks like normal television, uh, and it's been around for 50 years. Uh, do you look back at some of these, like, old unscripted shows and be like, okay, we want to do a dating show in that format. We want to do a home renovation.
show and that like you want to do a cooking like cooking i feel like i've i've pitched uh we've pitched
like tbpn for cooking somebody it wouldn't look anything like tvpn but it'd just be like a daily
cooking show yeah that kind of like has the aesthetics of like a legacy television show uh but it's
like built for the social platforms yeah a hundred percent i mean i think what i try to tell everyone
is like instagram ticot x youtube are television at this point and so as a result the entire
history of television is up for grabs to recreate on these platforms
And so I think it's really interesting to think about, like, what are the shows that spoke to you when you were younger and figuring out, like, what is the newer version of making that today?
But I think the big difference is there is the format side, which, like, boy room and girl room are formats.
But I think the real opportunity that exists here is, like, certain star creators out there have the ability to grow multi-hundred million-dollar businesses fueled by content.
And I think these are people that need programming help because they themselves are a TV channel at this point and they need operating help.
And I think that really is where we're going to see things start to go
and not just be a landscape.
Like Mr. Bees is the only one that's figured this out.
How do you think about platform exclusivity,
the aesthetics of the different platforms?
Because I think from the outside,
a lot of people would assume that Instagram Reels,
YouTube shorts, and TikTok are feature complete identical platforms.
It's vertical video.
And yet content that does well on one doesn't do well on the other.
But are we going to see?
Yeah, could we see a flip where TikTok says,
we want this as an exclusive show or Instagram.
Like, will that ever...
Are they already basically doing that
in the sense that some content will do better on one platform than another
just because the audience or the algorithm or the feature set there?
But will it go farther to the point where you could build a whole show
and it's every episode's going viral on TikTok
and they're all flopping on Instagram for some weird unknown reasons?
I mean, we've had that experience.
We have certain shows that have totally flopped on TikTok and Instagram
and are the most viral thing we've ever made on YouTube.
and most often it's the other way around.
But I think it goes back to like,
what is the reason that someone is opening that app
in the first place?
If I'm opening Instagram,
it's to check my DMs,
it's check my notifications,
maybe see something from a friend,
and then I'll get stuck in reels
and dooms scroll for three hours.
TikTok, I am going on basically to watch television.
In fact, I don't want to see what my friends are posting
because I don't think they know how to make TikToks.
And I'm going on being like,
hey, show me like what's the television sheet today.
And so as a result, like,
you're willing to watch longer content.
It's not about sending,
something to your group chat that's like a degenerate meme. And I think it really is the closest
thing to like short form television. YouTube shorts, I think either you're 13 or 70. I don't
really know who else uses YouTube shorts in between that. But I think like, you know,
this show is a really great example of that. It does feel like this show was originally designed
for X. I would imagine that it quickly becomes a YouTube show, though, just as it turns into
more of a television. Do you think there's, do you think there's anything that we should
extrapolate from the expansion of short form from it was six seconds on Vine and it was about
one minute for a while. Now I think it's three minutes on most of the platforms. You can do up to
60 minutes on TikTok. 60 minutes on TikTok. Are we going to see the meta of 30 minutes is just the
right amount of time? Because that's where TV landed and that's kind of where YouTube landed,
right? Like Mr. Bees, it used to be eight minutes, then it was 12, then it became 20 and then 20 plus ads
it's kind of 30 and you're in the 20 and 30.
And then you see video SAS go up to 40.
Right.
And, you know,
I mean, look, I think the one thing you have to remember
a short-from content is, like,
part of the reason for its success is that, like,
dopamine rush that it gives you.
And so, like, you are kind of addicted to this scroll
and wanting to be punched with, like,
some new hit of energy.
So I think there is a limit.
But you can do that in the end of some extent.
Totally.
But I think it's like there is a modern blackjack dealer.
And at the end of the day, at the end of the day,
I mean, anything that's a long-form video,
I'm watching as, like, two,
X on these platforms because like, look, I might want to watch eight minutes of a rug cleaning video on TikTok, but like going to watch it in two X speed.
But I do think that like...
You watch eight-minute rug cleaning videos on TikTok at 2x speed.
At 4 in the morning, you get hooked.
The rug cleaning, they're already spent up, right?
They're already spent up.
They're already, I think, on 4X.
They're on like 4X or 10x.
You just want to see the lines get cleaner and cleaner the whole time.
Do you think...
Hold on, we got to stay on this.
Do you feel like you...
Let's check your screen time.
Let's check the screen time.
Just those videos.
No, look, in general, I will say I think there are like a lot of problems with
short-from content to begin with.
Like, I don't think this is a good thing to be giving children.
and then expecting them to, like, enter the world in a normal state.
But at the same time, like, I would actually defend, like, a subway interview series
as something that is a little bit more vegetables than the rug cleaning candy.
This is my whole thing.
I think knowing that these platforms are the sole source of, like, information entertainment
for an entire generation of kids, we have a moral responsibility to flood as much good shit as possible on these apps.
I think at the same time, we do have to start.
It really does.
There is another way.
By the way, I also think if you're just putting a.
smile on someone's face, you're making their day better.
It is funny. There was a moment in time, maybe it was like five, 10 years where people had
this like righteous, like, they would make this sort of like righteous statement, I don't
watch television. And then if you actually piece together, it was like, I don't watch
television, but I get entertained in these sort of like short bursts that collectively add up
to four hours a day, but I would never watch television. Yeah, I don't even own a TV. I just pay
$2,000 for a new phone every 12 months. Yeah. He's hooked up. But I do think that's a
thing. It's like it is time to start sounding the alarm bells a little bit of like what goes
behind the scenes on these platforms because like I don't know if this is the best thing for young
people to have. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Do you think there's an opportunity to recreate some elements
of vice? I think it feels like they they were making video content that in my view I feel like
doesn't get made as much anymore. It's by the way some of the best content still on YouTube
two days. And I and I think it's interesting because like the views continue to go up like year after
a year. I will say what I'm not as bullish on these days is a faceless media company. I think
Vice was sort of that last try of what happens to build an actual media company in the internet.
I think a Shane Smith type would 100% be successful and maybe could have some people underneath
them. But I think like TBPN for instance is not a faceless brand. It's not CNBC. You guys are
TBPN. And I think like that is kind of how anything's going to grow going for.
Andrew Callahan.
Like, Channel 5 is Andrew Callahan, right?
And if it was truly just like, oh, it's just, the Channel 5 is a faceless aesthetic for fun.
And I think, like, A-24 might be the last faceless media company.
Like, they have created a brand of prestige.
I don't know how easy that is to do going forward.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Where do you think live streaming goes from here?
Lives the future.
And I think, you know, most of the people that we're talking about in culture right now, you guys included, are live streamers, whether it's like I show speed or Kai Sinai.
or on a completely other end of the spectrum, Nick Fuentes.
There's a reason why we're talking about these people.
And I think it's because you're giving a daily amount of content that can be clippable
and hack the algorithm of every single platform that exists.
And so I think we are in this sort of post-platform state
where you might have your preferred platform that you use,
but it all kind of has the same content at this point.
And so people are larger than any one app if you do this correctly.
And I think Live is like the real spot where that kind of comes to fruition.
Are you working on any live shows?
Definitely have live shows in the works.
I mean, had like the huge honor of working with Isha Speed,
on his Speed Does America tour, which he was live for 35 days straight.
He filmed himself sleeping for 34 nights in a row.
Whoa.
And I didn't know he didn't.
I assumed he was going offline.
Oh, no, no, no, no.
He did not turn off the camera for 35 days.
Isn't there a real risk of going crazy?
I think it's all he knows, because he's only 20 years old.
He's been doing this for like four years, which is crazy.
Yeah.
Someone had a great point when we were filming,
which was like he turned our world into the Truman show
because it's not like he's on some set.
Like the set is the city that we live in.
What's really interesting about I ShowSpeed is
I think people see the viral clips,
but if you open up a stream and just click to a random moment
and you actually understand how he's interacting with chat,
how he's like killing time and filling dead air.
I think he talks to chat in a way that I've never seen anybody on Earth.
I mean, he knows who chat is.
And when he says, I love you, chat, you're like, he actually loves chat.
He's talking to that young 13-year-old kid or 50-year-old guy that, like, for some reason, is watching this.
People don't understand with the streamers how high skill ceiling talking to chat is.
Ludwig was talking about if he had to start over, could he be successful in the modern era as a streamer?
And his first bullet point was, I'm good at talking to chat.
And so that's a skill that I could immediately cash in on.
But then, of course, you have to figure out, like, how do you get your first viewer?
And so he does a bunch of stunts, and he ran this experiment and somewhat successfully.
But mostly, it was just interesting to hear someone talk about, you know, the nature of live with chat is so different than TV.
Bloomberg has a chat room, but they never talked to chat on Bloomberg TV, you know?
And I was thinking about how funny that would be because every, all the...
A lot of legacy media, they turn off chat places.
Oh, yeah, yeah, even on YouTube, of course.
They'll turn off comments.
But I'm not even talking about that.
I'm talking about right now, like, there are multi-billionaire hedge funds that have Bloomberg on
and Bloomberg chat going on their Bloomberg terminal.
Yeah.
And yet the person who's talking to them, they don't connect whatsoever.
They don't connect.
They don't connect, which is so fascinating.
But, like, this is what I explain to everyone of, like, why I think live is the future.
Yeah.
There was a moment on the speed tour where he was in Cincinnati.
He's having lunch.
There's, like, a glass door at the front or a glass window at this restaurant.
And, of course, like, anywhere he goes, there's a crowd of thousands of kids that are outside trying to go see this kid.
speed goes to the window at one point
just to get a better look of the crowd.
And there's one kid
front and center.
This kid is so excited to see speed
that he bashes his head
through the glass window.
Like World War Z zombie shit.
And I think like that is the answer
of like this medium is so powerful
that it's somehow making this like 12 year old kid
into a zombie because of the connection
that he feels with speed.
That is live.
That's not like uploading a TikTok thing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it's weird.
There's a very like, yeah,
just so many interesting.
how do you you're behind the camera you're creating shows and different concepts and
and through that you're creating inevitably creating stars and future superstars how do you think
about like partnering with talent in the short term and the long term that i feel like one of
the big challenges that uh when you look at at creator modern creator led media companies
you have bar stool dave portnoy he created other shows
stars, they end up going and going independent or going and doing other deals. Alex Cooper then
was a barstool creator left. Then, like, you know, created Alex Earle to some degree. Then
Alex Earle leaves and the cycle sort of like continues. And I think that's like probably that
maybe like one of the number one challenges for gymnasium is like how do you, it's hard enough
to create the star and then how do you kind of partner for the long term? I mean, this is,
This is something that, like, honestly, I evolved my own perspective on.
I think for a long time I tried to figure out, like, how could we hold on to that star?
And I think where I've completely changed my opinion is, like, the creators have the power.
And even if they didn't start as a creator, but now they are, they hold the cards.
And I think all you can hope to be is the best partner to them, but it is for them.
They are the ones that are in control.
And so I think where we've really shifted with Gymnasium is, like, gymnasium at this point is very much a television studio for brands to make themselves into TV networks.
It's like we can turn brands into creators.
But I think there is another completely different angle that will exist.
Yeah, because theoretically you can retain the brand longer.
And if you're creating a diversity of creators or talent that work effectively for the brand,
then you're not entirely indexed to one superstar.
And we even saw Night Media lost like Mr. Beast, right?
But think about this.
If you are Skittles and you're building the Skittles digital network of shows,
and by the way, as a result of that, you've given three new kids.
a platform that are now going to go be famous,
their story will always start with they got famous
for being on like, this Skittles Network.
They might be your best brand ambassador you ever have.
I think that's like a blessing
if someone worried it would become a star for something like that.
So I think it makes a lot more sense
on the brand side of things,
but I think like the real future of this industry
is helping creators turn into massive, massive stars.
Do you feel threatened at all by AI?
I feel from my point of view
in understanding your business,
I think humans are going to want to watch unscripted shows from real people.
I don't know if it's going to hit the same to be like watching Boy Room.
And it's like, yeah, we generated this crazy AI room.
It's super dirty.
Yeah.
And here's this AI person who made the room dirty.
Yeah.
And it's like there's something about it being real.
Even if it's distinguishable, people will do the investigative journalism to be like,
oh, boy room is now AI generated.
We caught them.
And that will destroy it.
It'll be like cheating in chess.
Totally.
I imagine.
I mean, look, I think the benefit is, like, we're young and run a startup and an industry
that's kind of being created every single day.
And so for us, I think, we're always looking to see, like, what tool is coming out
and see if we can use it and help us make our own shit better.
But I think the reality is, like, when anyone's ever said, hey, like, in the future,
people are going to watch an entire new season of succession by generating it.
It's like, at the same time that you say that, the NFL has never had a bigger audience.
And I think, like, we humans have an innate desire to watch the same thing at the same time
and be part of a cultural moment.
What's interesting about that is, like, yeah, NFL has bigger audience than ever,
but also there's more people playing Madden and watching effectively virtual football every year as well.
But they're watching a human playing it.
I wasn't even talking about that.
I mean, they're playing it.
Like, they are generating it themselves.
When they're playing it, you're watching the screen while you play.
Then there's also people watching it on Twitch, which I think is what you're mentioning
or watching the video game version, watching someone else play.
And then there's watching real people play.
And so all three markets were good to invest in oddly.
It wasn't one, one defeated all of the others.
What about VR?
Is there anything interesting in your world in VR?
I mean, look, it's cool.
I've never seen a reason why we're at that place in time yet where anyone's going to care to go and put these goggles on.
I think, like, you know, I think the new medic glasses look really cool.
I'm excited to try them, but I think we're still a few years away from that.
I just have this thesis that if you went like all in on VR today and you just waited, waited, waited, you could be like, you could be the Jake Paul.
I mean, look, there's a lot of people that have been doing that.
I think these are also a lot of people that raised a shit ton of money 10 years ago.
And, like, Sundance even had a part of their festivals for VR films back then.
Like, you know, unfortunately, I think that is also where you risk sounding like someone who's just chasing the thing that people are talking about.
It's like, first you're running a VR company, now you're running a crypto company.
You don't want to always chase those things.
I think for me, it's like just really what do I want to watch?
What are the things that we can go make that are like fun to be a part of?
Have you had a bunch of acquisition interests?
Definitely been interesting conversations.
I think, you know, it's less about the IP itself.
I think it's like an acquit hire thing.
Yeah.
If you're like, hey, we need a play here, bad.
This seems like somebody even killed on TikTok.
I mean, by the way, I do think, like, that creator side of, like, building stars
is where these studios can have a big impact because it does take millions of dollars
if you want to go do this career.
And so that's not something that, like, even we could do on our own.
I'm just saying, like, hey, we're going to go build this star creator.
It does take money.
And the one thing the studios have is, like, decades of relationships in the licensing world
and in the merch world and live events world that would honestly be really helpful to tap into.
Have you thought about trying to launch a new startup with a show?
Are you doing that at all?
I think that's always been some of the thought behind any new show.
It's like, how big could this get?
What are the things that can kind of come out of this?
And I think you've seen a lot of, you know, tech companies now have realized
the importance of media and doing it the other way around.
But I think, like, that's the most interesting thing on Earth.
Yeah.
Yeah, because you could partner with Amazon on a show,
or you could partner with some consumer brand that's like,
we'll give you 15% of our company if you can get us 200 million views
and kind of take us from zero to one.
And I think that's the really interesting side about where gymnasium is going.
It is more than anything, a sort of, you know, creative consultancy for the first time.
Like, we can really help you build your brand in terms of taking over,
or like cultural dominance through the type of media you have.
You haven't raised money either.
We raised a very small, we raised a 750K around three years ago.
Oh, wow.
And it was with a lot of just like classic industry players like Jeremy Zimmer.
He was the CEO of UTA and Matthew Siegel at attention and some really interesting people.
But haven't raised $75 million and then you're like, oh, suddenly we need 300 shows.
No, it's like, what's the point?
I mean, it's, we're not at that time where you would even want to stake a bet in terms of raising that much money.
yeah that makes a lot of sense well it's very pragmatic thank you so much for it's super fun
happy to be here wanted to wait till i can come in person wait we got to ring the gong
for the how many views how many views do you think you're going to do this year um
oh it depends if you include the speed tour i think we're already at like two billion plus
let's go two billion you know we'll see we're count it congratulations thank you so much
second. Before we move on, let me tell you about getbezzle.com. Your bezel concierge is
available to now to source you. Any watch on the planet? Seriously, any watch. Vass on
X's just tried Gemini 3.0. It's over. Very, very funny post. I think even if we are
working on getting access. We're going to getting access. What do you think? It seems that
Warren Buffett also tried Gemini 3, Berkshire, Long Google. Long Google right now. Yeah, they just
They just bought.
No way.
Wow.
Did they buy it?
What kind of size?
I think 4.3 billion?
Let's go.
Come on.
I love this.
You can do more than that.
Toss in $100 billion.
I mean, it just goes to show you that like the AI, even if it's like a bubble, like it is, there is no systemic, there is no systemic, like chaos all over the place.
Like there will be pockets of things that are overvalued, pockets of things that are undervalued opportunities all over the place.
Let's pull up this video.
You know, you have Google trading at, what, 20X or something?
Let's pull up this video of somebody breaking through the glass.
Yeah, 28.
Yeah, let's watch the speed video.
And then let's also tell you about wander.
Find your happy place.
Book a wander with inspiring views.
Hotel great a many, dreamy beds, top tier cleaning.
I'm in my happy place.
I'm in a wander.
It's a vacation home, but better.
Also, I didn't give everyone an update on what my eight sleep score actually was.
I, of course, am sleeping on my eight sleep.
I got an 85 so I'm doing pretty well I'd like a sound effect do you even have access to the old sound effects I feel like we might have over rotated towards the night vision goggles turning on and we no longer have access to the classics the horse the Ashton hall sound effect are any of those still on the board jordy or have they all been replaced with oh it's still there
thank goodness I thought we lost touch and I thought we only had night vision goggles which I do enjoy um is there any other news that we need
need to talk through. Should we go through some mansion section? We missed the entire mansion
section. We had so much to talk about today. Pull it up. Which one do you want to do? Where should we
start? With the mansion section? Donald Trump's home, his childhood home. This is a big
deal. He's hitting the market. This is a big deal. It's in Queens. You could buy this because
you love the guy. You could buy it because you hate the guy. You want to tear it down and build
something else. We got this video first. Play this video. I need to see this. Yeah, let's play
this this is speed on the speed tours america tour uh what is going on here and someone is about to jump
through the glass he's whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa that is crazy he actually bonked his head on the glass
and uh and broke the glass and that seems like that's like out of mcdonalds or something
it's at a real restaurant that probably doesn't buy the cheapest glass like i don't
know that's pretty crazy um it's funny to use his head he's got his hands such a great actor went
for the heads i i wonder i wonder if he'll ever uh transition to like you know being in movies
because oh i'm sure i'm sure he could it's fantastic be in any number of movies at this point
anyway eight month renovation donald trump's childhood home is hitting the market in jamaica
estates, the house is selling for $2.3 million.
You know, let's see what else is here.
A charming Tudor-style house in Queens, New York.
He lived there in his earliest years of his life.
Decades later, the latest in a string of owners is hoping the home's connection to Trump
will help turn a healthy profit.
So in 2008, it sold for $7802,000.
2016, 1.3.
2017, 2.14.
2025. It's somehow sold for 800,000, and now it's back up at two point being listed at 2.3.
What happened? Something odd. Very, very bizarre. Anyway, there's another story in here. Before
building their retirement home, they had to relocate 174 legless lizards. That is a bizarre headline.
A pair of retirees needed to remove protected slow worms from the property before they could
break ground on their
$3.2 million dollar
So I was hoping
this one isn't hitting the market yet
but I could see
PG's napping this one up.
I was going to say PG is going to get it.
This house looks
absolutely lovely.
You love it.
Has a little pond.
You can swim.
Even though you,
even though they had to relocate
they had to painstake,
they had to spend weeks
painstakingly capturing and relocating
almost 200 of the creatures
slow worms,
a legally protected reptile.
They're not worms.
They're harmless, legless lizards.
What a bizarre world.
But no, catching slow worms
was not something we'd ever had to do before.
It was actually very hard work.
But strangely, I enjoyed doing it.
They did it themselves.
Wow.
We'll do it ourselves.
Can you imagine trying to catch
170 lizards?
Oh, my God.
That'd be gross.
I don't know.
I don't like snakes.
These sound like snakes.
They don't have an image, thank you.
of what the snakes look like, but I'm not into it at all. But I'm very happy for these folks
out in the English countryside who rescued a hundred. These are snakes. These are some of the
sketchiest looking things ever. They're like massive worms. I don't like these at all. This is a
terrible selection. I had you, I had you select the mansion section stories. I selected it because
the home looks incredible. Yeah, the home's nice. I'm glad that it's worm free. I would be moving to
Ireland. I don't like snakes.
It's only 40 miles southwest of central London, which means that it probably takes like
three, four minutes in an Aston Martin Falky.
Is there any other news that we missed today? I think we have it mostly covered. I think we can
say goodbye. Have a great weekend. We will see you on Monday. And thank you for tuning and
leave us five stars on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
and subscribe to the TBPN substack, tbPN.com.
Thank you so much for tuning in. Have a great weekend.
Have a fantastic weekend. Goodbye.
We love you. We'll see you Monday.
