TBPN Live - Mother's Day Gift Guide, Rorra in WSJ, Morgan Housel, Mehul Nariyawala, Sonya Huang, Stanford Review, Will Quist, Aidan Dewar, George Maloney
Episode Date: May 9, 2025TBPN.com is made possible by:Ramp - https://ramp.comFigma - https://figma.comVanta - https://vanta.comLinear - https://linear.appFigma - https://www.figma.comEight 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.comFollow TBPN: https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2L6WMqY3GUPCGBD0dX6p00?si=674252d53acf4231https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://youtube.com/@technologybrotherspod?si=lpk53xTE9WBEcIjV(01:26) - Market Recap (13:32) - Mother's Day Gift Guide (38:27) - The Stanford Review (54:02) - Morgan Housel (01:22:55) - Sonya Huang (01:53:28) - Will Quist (02:21:52) - Aidan Dewar (02:37:34) - Mehul Nariyawala (02:55:32) - George Maloney
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, let's go. You're watching TVV. Let's go. Friday, May 9 2025. We
are live from the Temple of Technology, the fortress of
finance, the capital of capital. Let's go. It is Mother's Day in
just two days. The Super Bowl pro natalism baby. It's today.
We've all been waiting for we've all been waiting for especially
your mother. It's gonna be amazing. Switch your mom to
ramp.com. Where time is money. Time's gonna be amazing. Switch your mom to ramp.com. Time is money, save bull.
Switch your mom to ramp.com.
Get her on Ramp.
Seriously, what is your,
I mean, what does your family run on, if not Ramp?
Yeah, I mean, it's a good time to ask,
what is your, how are your parents
thinking about enterprise security?
Yes.
Should they be on Vanta?
Should they?
Do they need to be thinking about SOC 2 compliance? Yeah, does mom pay pay sales tax get her on numeral. That's right. Put that on autopilot
That's take that off of her plate so she can yeah
I mean, this is the greatest gift it is to let your mom no longer have to be spending more than five minutes
This you know a month anyway
We're gonna be doing a deep dive on Mother's Day giving you a gift guide breaking down just some of the most obvious
choices for what to get the mothers in your life
and
But first we want to take you to the market give you a little update on what's going on
What's moving the market? Obviously the big news is the US-UK breakthrough
tariff truce
Trump announced this yesterday
It's the first post tariff pact US keeps 10% blanket duty UK cuts average duty on US goods to 1.8 percent
Autos the 27 and a half percent levy on British cars falls to 10%
Huge for the Aston Martin owners in the community huge for the Bentley owners in the community huge for the Rolls-Royce fans
I'm sure there's a lot of you listening from probably in your colonnans black badge. Yeah, sorry
Fortunately Aston will be safe here.
So the, it's a 10% tariff for up to 10,000 vehicles.
Sorry, a hundred thousand vehicles.
Aston Martin for context only expects to sell one
around 1,000 in 2029.
So they have a lot of that quota to sort of grow into which is great something having my Celsius it hit me in the face. I think I'm gonna lose the eye
John's gonna lose his eye. Hey, you don't need eyes for podcasting. I think there's a certain amount of caffeine level that
Blind you yeah
anyway
Obviously exciting a little bit odd that this one's the first one because you were telling me that we actually have a trade surplus
That's right. Okay, we do so
You know one step forward to pet two steps back
Potentially, but it seemed like the market like it it seemed like the market trading market coins at all times high
or
near all-time highs over 100 K and
The we are gonna have Pippa lamb from Sweet Capital come on on Monday. She
Is from some foreign land. I think she said it was like London the United is it United?
Yeah, I think about these places like Carthage or like Constantinople
He's like long lost forgotten lands and she actually lives in one and so yeah
I'm excited to ask her like, do they have movies there?
Do they have telephones yet?
Like what type of technology is going there?
Exactly, yeah.
But she's gonna come on and break it all down
for us on Monday.
Sorry for that.
But in the meantime, we're gonna move on.
China surprised on exports,
headline exports of 8.1% year over year growth
versus 2% estimates.
US shipments were down 21%.
But the rest of the-
Okay, but where's this data coming from?
It's a big question.
Yeah, maybe it's a new thing.
So there was a report, I think it was maybe Monday,
the days blend together, but at some point,
China used to report on hundreds of different economics
or metrics from across the country.
That's things like land sales, local GDP,
things like that.
A while back they just stopped,
fully stopped reporting on most of those metrics.
They stopped sending investor updates.
Yeah, it reminded me of a,
anytime you have an angel investment
or something like that, that stops sending
investor updates usually
Doesn't usually not a good sign
So sometimes China has stopped sometimes they're just advancing to like, you know, just board meetings only they don't need to update investors They don't need to update the global economy. No, they're responsible or the other one is a founder that's building in public
You know just you fork every single week. Yeah
just you fork every single week. Yep, yep, yep.
Look at this chart going up.
And then all of a sudden they stop posting.
They don't post for three months.
Uh-oh, what's up?
And we're like, yeah, that's how you know.
Aquihire inbound.
Maybe we should aquihire China.
Yeah.
Merge them in.
Definitely something.
Bring them on the team.
Definitely should be in the conversation.
In the conversation.
And video's launching a new H20.
They're pushing forward the memory bandwidth
is trimmed below US export caps.
The export caps keep moving down
and video keeps adapting the hardware.
Pinterest popped big on a huge Q1 beat.
They had earnings, Q1 revenue 855 million,
MAUs at 570 million, AI Ad Tools push Q2 guide
to 960 million to 980 million.
Look at Pinterest go. Yeah, Pinterest Pinterest is there was an article in the in the in the information about
how they've kind of changed the management structure we didn't get a
chance to cover it but it is interesting. Gen Z accounts for 40% of user base
fastest growth is in Brazil and Indonesia. You know these these these
platforms are just valuable. I've actually been using Pinterest every
once in a while to try and find like really aesthetic reference photos for brand guides and style guides
It's pretty cool. It's also been overrun by AI slop in a really negative way
So I almost want to have a filter on there to say okay
I'm looking for you know a newsman in a suit
But don't show me anything that was created after 2022 or the 80s. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah
Nothing that was uploaded but some good stuff some good stuff, some bad stuff.
And they're certainly pumping a lot of ads in there.
And the ads are pretty related to what you're searching for because it's such a visual medium.
So congrats to Pinterest for the big Q1 beat.
Coinbase also, uh, bought a company for $3 billion, barely broke through.
I mean, this is a huge number of size gone for sure.
Would love to talk to Brian Armstrong about that.
He's coming on the show soon.
We will have him break it down.
Would love to get the founder of Deribit on as well.
700 million in cash and 11 million shares of just coin.
Their crypto coin.
No, their stock ticker is just coin.
Deribit is one of the world's top BTC.
I think it is the world's top options house.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so very strategic pickup for Coinbase.
Yep.
Makes a lot of sense.
As Europe and Asia as a client base
and regulated futures to Coinbase is spot heavy mix.
Derivatives drive over 50% of global crypto volume.
Very important for them to get in.
So excited about that.
Saying they have 90% of,
they're clearing 90% of crypto options in open interest, which
is around $20 billion in volume. So very impressive.
On the flip side of crypto.
The company was started in 2016, based splitting time between Amsterdam and Panama.
Oh really?
Which is kind of a fun place to bounce between.
Interesting. I'm sure that's for like regulatory reasons, right? Yeah.
On the flip side of crypto,
Celsius founder Alex Machinsky was sentenced to 12 years
for fraud tied to the 2022 Celsius collapse.
Fund, a ton of-
20 Bs at the peak.
20 billion AUM.
He made a $48 million personal gain via token manipulation,
still deciding what the restitution figure will be what he'll have to pay for that
Prosecutors sought 20 years defense pleaded for less than four years citing cooperation
But I don't know how much he was cooperating because he was selling merch that was like all about like bankruptcy and stuff
It was really really crazy a lot of great
coffeezilla reporting out there
if you wanna go take the stroll down memory lane
and hear about the Celsius debacle,
but this is a rough time.
I think they were doing okay while the market was up,
but once the market pulled back,
it was a classic example of,
tide goes out, you know who's naked.
The yield that they were offering was concerningly high.
Yeah, given that interest rates,
the risk-free yield was about zero at the time.
Yep, and the last story is that
there's a $3 billion lawsuit against Google in Italy.
We won't do our Italian accents today,
but I'm sure we'll be tracking it.
It's part of the ongoing pressure on big tech,
especially abroad.
Is Google getting into suiting?
No, actually search.
But this goes back to 2010 to 2017
Google was showing a search bias against a particular group in Italy and so they're claiming that Google shopping
You know hurt them to the tune of billions of dollars and they want restitution
And so the financial impact is pretty limited given that alphabets 2024 revenue was 320 billion
But the legal overhang is certainly a headache for Google.
But anyway, good luck to them.
It's interesting dynamic being internal counsel
at a firm like Google, where there's just like probably,
can you, I don't even, I don't even, maybe these,
I doubt, you could probably figure,
I'm sure you could figure out the number,
but I wonder how many inbound lawsuits,
complaints Google is getting on a daily basis, right?
It has to be.
Yeah, hey, wanna settle this with me?
I mean, there was that whole story about that guy
who was just sending fake invoices to big tech companies,
just being like, yeah, if it's under 10 grand,
they'll probably just pay it.
Just doing that constantly.
Wouldn't work.
Wouldn't work if you're building on RAM.
Wouldn't work with RAM.com.
Yep.
Anyway, let's pull up the show, the run of show, to kind of give you guys an idea constantly. Wouldn't work. Wouldn't work. Wouldn't work with Ramp.com. Yep.
Anyway, let's pull up the show, the run of show to kind of give you guys an idea of what
the rundown is today.
We're taking you through the Mother's Day gift guide.
Rora was featured in the Wall Street Journal.
We're going to do some timeline, tell you some other stories.
Then we have two anons from Stanford talking about the Stanford review, the bombshell report
from the Stanford review.
Then we got Morgan Housel, Sonia Wong,
Will Quist, Aiden Doerr,
a bunch of other folks coming on.
Founders announcing rounds, announcing new products,
bunch of VCs yapping, should be a good show for you.
And if you're following the market update
and you wanna trade it, get on public.com.
Investing for those who take it seriously.
Multi-asset investing, industry-leading yields,
they're trusted by millions, folks.
Go to public.com.
Aston Martin sponsor.
Aston Martin sponsor.
Should we do six facts about David Steiner,
the new US Postmaster General?
I mean, and this is one of the most coveted roles,
obviously, given-
If I were going to the admin, Postmaster, for sure.
Postmaster, yeah.
I mean, I think of myself as a master of posting.
Post. So it would make sense. It could, you know, the extended, the full title is Posture for sure. I mean, I think of myself as a master of posting post So it may it would make so it could you know, the the extended the full title is poster master general
Poster master general most senior poster in the country. Maybe they should have a post economic master general post economic general
Yeah, economic general. He's just like yeah, actually, I can't really revitalize the DOD because I'm actually in San Chopay and
F1s coming up. so I'll get to it
but I'm not really checking email right now.
I haven't checked this inbox
so good luck getting in touch with me.
We're just like, that's exactly who we want.
Anyway, he spearheaded a comeback for waste management.
He's a FedEx director who led turnaround
of waste management after insider trading scandal.
Some of the company's top executives in the 1990s
falsified financial results, that's not good.
Really, really playing into the meme
that the trash companies are run by the mafia, right?
Yeah.
He joined the company as deputy counsel in 2000
in less than four years climbed the ranks to become CEO.
He streamlined operations.
He calls himself the walking embodiment
of better, lucky, than good. I become CEO. He streamlined operations. He calls himself the walking embodiment of better lucky than good.
I like that.
That's great.
That's because he went to work for waste management.
He turned down a job offer from Enron.
Speaking of better lucky than good,
I was listening to Senra's episode on Jim Simmons.
Sorry, Simons.
Simons.
And Jim Simons was obsessed with being lucky.
He's like, I wake up every day,
I just think, how lucky can I get today?
That's amazing.
So he's stepping down as director of FedEx
because FedEx of course competes with the US Postal Service
which he will be running.
Honestly, surprising.
Could have been running both.
I would have liked to see FedEx.
This whole divestiture thing, we gotta get rid of. Yeah, I would have liked to see this old divestiture thing. We gotta get rid of
Yeah, I would have liked to see FedEx. Yeah kind of merge with the USPS
I would like to see if somebody goes in the someone goes in the admin
Don't make them divest make him go 10x levered whatever they're long. Yeah, just really stake it all on risk
Oh, you're gonna get a pension after this. Hey, but if you make any mistakes, your bags are cooked.
A 10% down draw from any of your bags are wiped.
You're wiped, so don't mess up.
It was really high stakes.
Mess up.
Yeah, so he has a big job ahead of him.
The Postal Service has been hemorrhaging money for years
because of declining mail volumes,
limits on what it can charge customers,
and a costly mandate to deliver around
168 million addresses six days a week Steinemus also addressed persistent delays of mail and package deliveries in some parts of the country
He was hand-selected by Trump and he says he wants the Postal Service to remain an independent agency
I don't like that. I think we should take this thing private. Yeah, it's back it. It's back it. Yep
Let's see. Let's let it rip. Let Chamath cook. Anyway, I'm sure you all are aware
of Mother's Day coming up.
I'm sure you've already done a lot of your prep,
bought all the gifts, but if you haven't,
we have a gift guide for you today
to take you through some of the,
just some of the basic options
that you should be thinking about.
If you're in the audience, we know that you're wealthy,
most likely post-economic, so you got to make sure
that the mothers in your life.
You know, you're pre-post-economic, right? Pre-post-economic. So you to make sure that the mothers in your life you know your pre post-economic you know impending yeah you know maybe you
probably take a non recourse loan against your shares if even if you're a
series B founder and then drop that on something like the pink star it's a 60
karat vivid pink diamond ring coming in at only 70 million dollars but it's I
mean at that price
I mean we talked about the graph hallucination
Rainbow diamond watch 110 carats for the wrist and everyone's just gonna know like wow
That mom has a great son. Yeah for sure
He or she really loves their mother. I mean if you want to take it a little bit further you could go diamond tiara
Yep, a crown these have tiara's kind of fell off they did but that just creates an opportunity for that bring it back so back
I think that 2026 is feeling like it will be the year. Yeah of the tiara
Yeah, you know your mom is going out on a little morning stroll. She's gonna want to throw on that tiara
Yeah, a lot of people say oh. Flowers are only for Valentine's Day.
But I think if you rethink what flowers can be,
you can get to a really interesting place
on Mother's Day.
Yeah, exactly.
So Juliet roses, orchid rarities,
you can push a bouquet up into the six figures.
If you really think of it.
Well, I thought you were gonna say,
basically drop an entirely new
Rose garden into her backyard or hire a team of bio bio engineers to engineer an entirely new breed of roses never before Totally totally that's a reasonable thing not unreasonable even to be getting ahead of it thinking about next year going to Monsanto
Yes, look, I want to develop, you know an entirely new yes, you know group of flowers. Yes completely bioengineered
Yep, you can also take some of those flowers dip them in 24 karat gold. Boom. You have an eternal bouquet
They'll never wilt that's right. That's gonna run you like 40k, but worth every penny totally
What else should we recommend? I mean obviously renting an entire tropical island for a family week totally doable
recommend I mean obviously renting an entire tropical island for a family week totally doable around the world private jet Grand Tour very good option a
ticket to space we saw this with with Jeff Bezos totally but only expect I
mean you've been saying this for weeks you think that you won't be able to get
on a Blue Origin flight for the next three years after Mother's Day because
everybody is gonna be sending their mother and their mother-in-law yeah to space yeah they made this whole thing with the Blue Origin oh for the next three years after Mother's Day, because everybody is going to be sending their mother and their
mother-in-law to space.
Yeah, they made this whole thing with the Blue Origin.
Oh, it's all the women flight.
What about all the moms?
They should have just done really focus on just moms in space.
Yeah, that's that.
That's definitely that's viral.
Another favorite.
Talked about this.
Just a good old wire transfer.
It's a big wire transfer.
Yeah, totally.
You know, your birthday money.
You know, yeah, yeah. Oh, I got a hundred bucks. Yeah, totally you're you know, you're birthday money, you know, yeah
Yeah, I got a hundred bucks. Yeah
I can buy the logic at the time was this kid knows how to spend it better than I do exactly flip it on your mom
On your mom and six figure wire transfer six figure wire transfer boom. Boom. Yep
It's great
If you're looking if she's into purses, we talk about Birkins.
If you're going to go Birkin, don't go basic Birkin.
Go Hermes, Himalaya Birkin with rare crocodile, diamonds.
Yes, it's going to cost you 200, maybe 500k.
But it's going to stand out in a sea of monotonous Birkins.
For the average platform VC, that's
20% of your annual comp.
Yeah, it's nothing.
Not even counting carries, right?
So it's just, it's the least that you could do.
Yeah, in fact, if you see, if you meet some GP
and their mom doesn't have a Himalayan Hermes Birkin
with crocodile and diamonds on it,
you would think like, oh, their funds not doing well.
Yeah, exactly, exactly what I think.
Or they're not raising their yeah exactly they're not ready
they definitely can't lead my next round yeah so I got to start talking to other folks I
got to have run a bigger bidding process for sure starting out working but I mean if you
want to go if you're more serious you should go with the Muawad thousand one nights diamond
purse Guinness Book World Records of handbags I I mean going to be hard to get a little Birkins, but
Whole order or magnitude higher. It's 3.8 million dollar bag. Yeah, but you know, it's really the only way to stand out one of one
Yeah, one of one. Yeah exactly the armored Rolls Royce. This is a great choice
This is a great choice runs going to grab coffee. They're still dropping off the kids dropping off the kids. Yeah 100%
Yeah, just getting, you know, ideally knowing my mom,
700 horsepower is kind of like the right range for a daily.
Totally.
Yeah.
100%.
My mom drives a Prius actually, but I think, I think-
Have you considered swapping a V12 in there?
Engine swap for Prius?
Yeah, maybe just putting- Whatever car she has, just soup it up. Engine swapping a V12 in their engine swap for Prius. Yeah, maybe just putting-
Whatever car she has, just soup it up.
Engine swapping a Cayenne Turbo GT engine
into the Prius.
And so, you know, cause she wants to be low key.
Yeah, exactly.
She's comfortable, she knows what the buttons are.
But that doesn't mean that she can't have a little more-
A little more power under the hood.
Yeah.
I like that.
I mean, Zoc did this for Priscilla, right?
Yeah.
He made the custom stretched
Cayenne Turbo GP.
Cayenne Turbo GP minivan.
Yes.
Which is sick.
But you could have gone further.
You could have done, you could have gone,
you know, Lamborghini Urus minivan.
Yeah.
You could have gone Cullinan, black badge, minivan, Mansory.
Yeah.
There you go.
I think that's the combo.
Okay, we're getting somewhere.
I think it's really like the creativity of just, you know, mixing these different cultures together. Totally, here you go. I think we're getting it's really like the creativity of just you know, mixing these different cultures together
It's key. I think
under
Under utilized options something you can do last minute. Yep, last take take your mom's phone. Mm-hmm. Bring it to a jeweler have the dazzle
Have them bedazzle the back. Yeah, and what I actually like about this is because the iPhone
is uneven on the back, right?
It has a camera.
You can just put the diamonds around this side
so it will actually sit flat, right?
It'll sit perfectly flat.
So it's actually like an upgrade.
It's practical.
It's practical.
It's more practical, but it's also fun.
She's taken a picture of the grandkids.
And so definitely something there. I something that we see a lot of,
a lot of these like tech billionaires that they're super yachts,
but you never hear about the mothers of tech billionaires getting their own
super yachts. And so I would recommend calling a feed ship,
start customizing something. I mean, two days, you're not going to be able to do
much, but maybe next year, maybe the year after you start planning out,
thinking in decades for mother's day minimum yeah absolutely absolutely you could also do private IMAX theater at home for
the cinephiles totally they're into film totally just dig a massive hole in the
yeah just go under great check out the you know reach out to the boring yeah I
mean the last one that's pretty easy is just Paying for a full domestic staff for you know, I like this
Yeah
Why is because you can write a card and say you're going to do it but you get a little bit of time
Yeah, actually find the staff right? Yeah to find the individual people that are gonna make up that staff
Yeah, and so it's one of those great last-minute option. Yeah that you know will be unforgettable
Yeah, I really feel like you're if the household is running smoothly So it's one of those great last minute options that will be unforgettable.
Yeah, I really feel like if the household is running smoothly,
the staff is firing on all cylinders.
Ideally, you have kind of an Alfred type of butler
who really oversees the staff.
And I would love to see that type of house manager, estate
manager using Line manager using linear.
Totally.
Totally.
To actually, because linear is a purpose built tool
for planning and building products.
You wanna be building custom software
to run your smart home.
Don't outsource to Nest.
The ideal Alfred was a PM in big tech.
Exactly.
To take that sort of like ethos into the home
and really just run it like it's a product
with millions of users
Yes, when is the registration on the man? Sorry calling and do let's make sure that the license plates are coming track it in linear
Boom exactly. So this is a system for
Modern software development streamline issues projects and product roadmaps. I mean, it's the perfect
Mother's Day gift really it really is shout out to Matthew
I had a good call with him this morning runs a lot of the marketing over at linear anyway
Let's quickly take you through the run of show. Let's pull that up to show you what's happening today
We're going through the Mother's Day gift guide, but we also have some massive news. Roar was featured in the Wall Street Journal
We're gonna break it down
We'll do some timeline then we got the Stanford anons coming on and then a bunch of other guys anons over at Stanford
Yeah, they wrote a bunch of other guests. Anons over at Stanford.
Yeah.
They wrote a pretty inflammatory piece.
Yeah.
Which I'm excited to have them break down for us, but.
Let's take you through the Wall Street Journal.
Rora was featured.
Yeah, so for those that are new.
I started a company called Rora
with my co-founders, Brian and Charlie.
Long time ago at this point,
spent a lot of time in R&D and launched last year,
and it's been just off to the races, which has been great.
And anyways, Aurora was in the Wall Street Journal yesterday
and I got a little bit of the backstory here.
Somebody reached out apparently with a,
just like a random Gmail and was like,
hey, I'm doing some product testing.
Can I get Aurora or whatever Brian ended up sending.
And the article turned out really well.
So we can read through it.
So the water filters you actually want in your kitchen,
a new wave of models making grand claims
regarding their purifying prowess.
But our tests revealed four clear winners
when it came to flavor functionality and sheer counter appeal.
For many people, the thought of water filters triggers the tiresome realization that theirs
needs to be replaced, or worse, that the taste of their filtered water isn't what they actively
crave the way they once craved that chilled bottle of Fiji or Evian, and probably still
do despite the news images of masses of plastic
Choking the oceans. I saw
hopefully much Way less now, but I still you know as of last year had a bunch of friends that were just drinking tap water
Which is actually completely insane in in our year
2025 so
Anyways going on and let's be honest that plastic pitcher has never again looked quite so crystalline as it did
straight out of the box has it?
drinking water out of plastic, just don't do it. So good news,
it doesn't have to be that way. According to market research
firm Fortune Business Insights, the global demand for water
purifiers is exploding and recently water filter makers
have pardon the pun flooded the market with models ranging from sleek and even glamorous to sporty
high-tech and industrial chic. Rora I'm looking at you. The question then is how
to choose a system that fits your drinking needs and aesthetics without
sacrificing efficacy. Over the last several months I tested everything from
single bottle to multi-gallon, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,
blah. Let's just talk about Rora for the family.
Is Rora numeral yet? Got to pay sales tax, right?
Working on it.
Got to get on sales tax. Put that sales tax on autopilot.
Ryan really runs.
Go to add, yeah, integrate the ad. There we go. There we go. Run it, John.
Sales tax on autopilot. Spend less than five minutes per month on sales tax compliance.
Anyway, congratulations to the whole Rora team
and you can go pick one up at rora.com.
Rora.com, R-O-R-R-A.com.
Let's do a quick polymarket review.
There's a few markets that I'm tracking.
There's a few markets that you're tracking.
I'm interested in this Tesla, Elon Musk CEO replacement thing.
Right now, there was this leaked Wall Street Journal article saying Tesla was thinking about replacing Elon Musk CEO replacement thing right now There was there was this leaked Wall Street Journal article saying Tesla was thinking about replacing Elon Musk as CEO
Poly market is a 13% chance
I think this is the perfect thing to be tracking on poly market and then they also have who will replace Elon Musk as CEO
Of course 86% says no CEO announced in 2025, but JB Straubel is sitting there at 2%
I don't know if you know him he runs Redwood materials
One of the earliest employees at Tesla has been there for a long time Redwood materials does battery recycling
It's a huge company, but you can imagine them kind of putting together. So I don't know wild
There's a couple other folks to recycle that are that are interesting Gwen shot
Well is actually sitting here at 1%. Dara Koshwashary
at Uber.
Dark Horse.
Dark Horse.
Mary Barra. There's a bunch of other interesting people. But that is a market that I'll be
tracking through the end of the year as the peanut gallery yaps about Elon, where he's
going. The last thing that's interesting interesting largest company at the end of May
Microsoft overtaking Apple Mogged ma yeah Apple has a lot of momentum right now
Yeah, and Apple has the opposite a lot of different forces
coming into
Coming into play obviously the trade wars kind of botching AI. Yep, the big thing
Obviously the trade wars kind of botching AI. Yep, the big thing
Yeah, I'm just very interested It's interesting that Google is not even in the conversation on this market anymore
right, obviously impacted over the last week from some of the comments that
Apple made in the in the
Yeah, trial video still sitting at 4% Kind of that wild card because it moves much, it's much more volatile stock because they
can just blow out one quarter if someone orders 10 million H100s or something.
But obviously a rough go with the international sanctions and the chip bans and whatnot.
What else are you tracking?
Which company has the best AI model end of May?
Google's sitting at 74%. with 20 days to go.
It's so crazy how you were talking about,
they've trained such incredible models,
they dominate the eval.
Invented the transformer.
Invented the transformer, absolutely insane team,
and yet really struggled to actually break through
and have this crazy counter positioning
where the more they do with AI search,
the more it takes away from their search,
it's the classic innovator's dilemma, right? Yeah. Yeah. Everyone said I should be sustaining advantage. I think it
could be in the sense of like, they'll then this into GCP and cloud platform and that
will be a beneficiary of AI. But they do have some serious, serious product challenges.
Yeah. I was thinking they have, uh, uh, there's that Wario meme, which is like I've won, but
at what cost? And that's really, isn't that from Avengers meme, which is like, I've won, but at what cost?
And that's really to me.
Avengers originally?
Yeah, but it was like popularized by this like image.
It'd be too hard to pull it up.
But yeah, it's actually second place,
which is interesting because you think opening AI
based on the performance of the consumer app
would be more in the conversation,
but opening AI is only sitting at 5%. Yeah, this is based on benchmarks.
Yeah, of course.
Of course.
Benchmarks don't matter to chat GPT anymore.
Just user retention, I think.
Yeah.
And stuff in ads and things maybe.
Who knows?
Put an ad in it.
Anyway, speaking of ads, we should talk to you about Vanta.
Automate compliance, manage risk, improve trust continuously.
Vanta's Trust Management Platform takes the manual work
out of your security and compliance process
and replaces it with continuous automation,
whether you're pursuing your first framework
or managing a complex program.
Anyway.
Did you know that Vanta was one of the fastest growing
vendors on ramp last month?
I did not know that.
They are cruising.
Congrats, Devanta.
Well, we got to move back to Mother's Day
because we forgot to take you through some of the
really obvious houses that are on the market.
If you're looking for a house for your mother
this Mother's Day, there's an $8.5 million
California home with a backyard railroad.
And so-
All the train heads are gonna be scrambling. A lot of moms have kids. The kids love trains. Buy a house with a railroad railroad and so train heads are going to be a lot of rambling a lot of moms have kids the kids love trains buy a house with a
railroad in the back trains when David and Sherry purchased their locking you
out of Flintridge home not too far from me in 2008 they found the rusted
remnants of train tracks where a previous owner had built a backyard
railroad it turns out that locking you out of Flintridge home to a number of
Disney employees was once a hub for garden railways.
While the family weren't train enthusiasts,
they were intrigued.
With the help of a one-time Disney Imagineer,
they spent about a year recreating the railroad,
completing it in 2011.
Today, the roughly 530-foot circuit has a tunnel
and a train station with a working crossing light.
The train itself is faux steam, battery powered locomotive
and caboose with two riding cars.
This is honestly,
this is the ultimate backyard toy for the grandkids.
It's such a flex.
Everyone has, Oh, infinity pool.
Oh, Oh, Jim.
Yeah. Do you have a railroad in your backyard?
No.
The quotes so good.
David, the owner is like,
there's something universal about trains. They bring out the youth and everyone. However, their railroad needed a
new conductor. They put the 1.55 acre property on the market for 8.5 million. They're semi-retired
and moving permanently to their second home in Park City. He's a financial executive,
grew up in Chicago. They married in 1982 and later settled in Flintridge, a semi-rural community about 13 miles
from downtown Los Angeles, where we are right now.
Home of LA's auto community.
If you ever want to be scared driving, just drive up.
Yeah, that's like, I mean, effectively home.
You have to drive through La Cognata
to get to Angeles Crest Highway.
Yeah.
And if you ever want to feel like you're going to get run over,
go on ACH and try going the speed limit.
People will fly by you at four times that.
It's awesome.
Apparently, Disney also had a railroad in his backyard,
Walt Disney in Homely Hills in LA.
The original railroad was built in the 1960s
according to the son who said his train-loving father
was friends with Johnston and Kimball.
When the new family bought the house,
the tracks had been dismantled and largely built over.
At first, the railroad wasn't a priority.
When David had played with toy trains growing up,
he said he wouldn't describe himself as a train guy.
But a friend offered to introduce David
to the late Bill
Tyson, a one-time imagineering garden railroad enthusiast who could help restore it. Then
they visited the South Coast Railroad Museum near Santa Barbara, where they rode a garden
railroad for $1. At the end of it, we said, okay, we have to do this. It's just too much
fun. It was the most expensive dollar I ever spent. That's hilarious. It's great.
It's great. We have another property,
another property. This is another good option for Mother's Day. If you're in the market to buy your
mother a house, she's trying to move south south to the tropics. Yeah. Why not? Fort Lauderdale,
Fort Lauderdale. There's a new massive waterfront home, 15,000 square feet thirty nine million dollars and it includes eight separate bar areas
So for the entertainer so a heavy
Mean people are saying alcohol is coming back, you know, yeah, there's so much alpha with alcohol being out of style
Yeah, we go long alcohol. Yeah and enjoy the eight bars, but you could also serve mocktails and beverages
That's right kids. You could energy anything. Energy drinks, both of those. Yeah.
For more than 20 years, Steve Savore has been hosting lavish parties at his waterfront mansion
in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
Last year he hosted a Barbie-themed gala decking out the house in hot pink and dressing up as
Ken.
I always say, if the house burned to the ground and I didn't have any insurance, I got my
money's worth out of it.
The 64-year-old retired bachelor, that's hilarious.
He's now listing the property known as Villa De Palma
for $39 million.
He says he travels frequently,
especially during the summer months
and wants a home that doesn't require as much attention.
So the house is beautiful.
Saver who was trained as a lawyer
made his fortune in merchant banking
and is a former CEO of the Pittsburgh based
communications company ComNet Ericsson.
Retiring at age 39,
he assembled Villa de Palma over two decades,
starting with the purchase of the main house
for about 1.8 million in 2002, property records show.
Florida is known for massive fluctuations
in their housing market.
In the years since, he has spent millions adding more land
to expand his footprint to roughly an acre.
One of those properties included a five-bedroom house
Which he raised around 2009 this guy just turned making this party
Okay house into his full-time job raised raised means demolished by the way
Yeah, and so he says to celebrate the demolition. He hosted an animal house-style toga party
He spent two weeks decorating the house to look like a fraternity house
house style toga party. He spent two weeks decorating the house
to look like a fraternity house.
Then, the night before the demolition,
he and his pals tore up the house with sledgehammers.
Oh.
Can you imagine that?
At the end of the night,
we were throwing kegs through windows.
He said, what a bro.
This is so insane.
After tearing down the small house,
Savoir has expanded the main house, completing the project around 2010 the eight-bedroom Mediterranean
Mediterranean style estate has about 15,000 square feet of living space and two large large outdoor pools
It's well equipped for entertaining with a wine cellar and eight separate bar areas including one inspired by Hotel du Cap
It didn't rock in the south of France
Have you been?
No.
Oh.
And Savoir calls another bar on the rooftop, Tequila Tower.
This guy is such a party animal.
A giant table in the space can hold plenty of people
to dance on after tequila has been depleted.
Savage.
There are two relaxation rooms,
properties within walking distance of the beach
in downtown Fort Lauderdale's main shopping strip.
I would come down for long three-day weekends and ended up staying two weeks when I retired I made my playground my home
What a legend anyway great option. I'm interested to see where this one lands. Yeah
Anyway, we have two minutes till our first guest is joining. Let's do some timeline. What else is this?
News actually let's do an ad eight sleep what's new pod for ultra pod for has all the signature
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It's rough 93 minutes. Oh one last potential gift for mothers on Mother's Day a billboard
Go to add crew calm they make out-of-home advertising easy and measurable say goodbye to the headaches of out-of-home advertising and buy a
Massive out-of-home campaign huge just buy. Just thanking your mother for all that she does. Buy the 10 billboards closest to your mother's home. Yeah, so she sleeps.
Wherever she lives.
Yeah, she's driving around.
And make it so that she can't leave her house
without seeing how much you love her.
Exactly.
So we got a post here from, we'll cover this
and then we'll go into the guest from Bucco Capital Bloke.
He posted back on March 3rd new mag 7 Ryan Mattol which
is Germans arm German arms manufacturer Solana VCS coin Palantir
Salesforce for okay he's not pulling punches hems to C, I can't say anything. I'm just joking.
Blok, all new appliances and vehicles
purchased before the tariffs, gold.
And so he then quotes it and by saying,
Rime Matal is up 54%, Solana's up 15%,
Palantir up 42%, hems up 26%,
Dave up 60%, used vehicles up 10%, gold 14% and the call that is down 3% I
wonder if this is actually just over the last two months maybe yeah I guess this
is wait do the tariffs hit marks third something like that anyway congrats to
him for calling it clean up the language if you want to be on the show more
anyway they said to cheat on everything so I decided to cheat their company.
I generated 84,000 believable resumes to spam their job applicants and send AI agents to
waste their time.
I'm shorting the VCs that's funding them.
You see this fight that's going on?
Can we, Michael, are we able to pull this up on the screen?
So Rise is trolling Roy, former guest on the show.
So yeah, Roy has a company called Cluely.
He is helping people cheat on everything.
Right now, I think they're focused on sales calls
and he's attracted a lot of controversy
and RISE is messing with him a little bit
by just using AI to spam Roy
with an almost inconceivable number of applicants.
Somehow, I don't think it's gonna affect Roy.
I think he's gonna be just fine.
Roy's built different.
He's hiring a videographer in San Francisco
with between 300 to 500K.
Absolutely massive numbers for a vlogger.
So if you wanna vlog and make half a million a year,
it's crazy.
Head over to Clueli.
Head over to Clueli.
Good luck to him.
Anyway, we should have our first guest joining right now,
or set of guests, actually, I think we'll have two voices on the show. They're both anonymous.
They've been involved in the latest report from the Stanford Review about spying on campus.
You're not going to see their face. You're not going to hear their names, but you're going to
hear us ask some questions about the report and try to get to the bottom
of what's going on campus and dig a little bit deeper into the viral Stanford review
article that went up most recently just a few days ago.
Anyway, welcome to the show.
Can we hear you?
Can you hear us?
Can we hear you?
Yes.
Thanks for having us. Thanks for having us. Great to be here. Great to have you. Thanks for joining. Can you start by, I don't
know how you want to characterize your involvement in the story. Or I know you want to remain
anonymous, but can you just give us the high level on how the report came together and what
the key findings were? Yeah, let's do it. So the Stanford Review spent over one year investigating
Chinese academic espionage at Stanford.
What we did is we talked to Stanford students, we talked to Stanford faculty, we talked to Stanford
China experts, and we talked to congresspeople about this. And at the end of our investigation,
we compiled a bunch of anonymous reports for people working in AI labs, student researchers,
and faculty. And the overwhelming conclusion was that there is essentially widespread
intelligence gathering at the behest of the CCP at Stanford. What does that actually look like?
I mean, no offense to the Stanford folks, but like it's undergrad, it's not exactly like a proprietary
AI lab or like nuclear weapons program. Like what are they trying to steal? Gotcha. So I'm going to pass you over to my colleague and she's going to talk a little bit about what her experience with espionage look like.
Sure. Yeah. So a lot of what espionage looks like, you know, on an undergrad level is Chinese students and researchers trying to basically collect any and all
information about Stanford that they possibly can. So you know Stanford is an
open research institution so a lot of the things that are being reported back
to the CCP aren't exactly secrets and you know obviously you know it's not as
bad as stealing defense secrets.
Yeah.
But the issue is that it's happening at such a massive scale because they, the
CCP essentially has all of their students reporting back to the CCP with any and
all information that they have.
Right.
So once one Chinese international student
characterized it like this,
many Chinese students have handlers.
The CCP wants to know everything that's going on at Stanford.
This is a very normal thing.
They just relay the information they have.
Now with regards to sensitive research,
we're not just talking about the undergraduate level,
we're talking about the graduate level.
And these are some of the best AI labs
and best robotics labs in the United States of America
and the world at large.
What they want is not just published papers, because you can imagine you can't replicate
published papers just via post papers. They want the methodology sent back. They sent
back communication channels. They send back people that are involved with the research
and other Chinese internationals that are working on it so that they can replicate this
research at China.
How would you rate the university's reaction to the piece?
There's obviously been a bunch of conversation and chatter online, but I imagine you guys
have been having conversations as well.
Yeah, so we actually just published today, Larry Diamond, Matthew Turpin, wanted to publish
sort of a response article. So that was also
published in the Stanford Review. And they came out in support of our article,
which was good. And then Stanford also came out with a statement saying, they take this very
seriously and it is important to them. We are sort of under the impression that there's not much
that's gonna be done about it because on some level,
everyone knows that this is happening
and nothing is really being done about it
on a university level.
They really wanna kind of stay out of things.
Right, I mean, Matt Pottinger,
one of the guys that commented,
is the former US Deputy National Security Advisor,
Matthew Turpin, worked as the China Senior Advisor
to the National Security Council.
These guys have seen this happening for years and years.
The issue is that Stanford is an open knowledge research
institution.
That means there's no secrets, and that means it's very hard
to prosecute people for sending back sensitive research information to China.
So really what they get people on is just their visa.
You know, they're working for the PLA,
but they haven't told the authorities about it.
So what needs to happen is we need to have people
that are sending back this information,
registered foreign agents, and set up new laws
and new legal guidelines that prevent people
from being able to send public information at research institutions back to foreign governments.
Right. Yeah. And the other thing too is, you know, we also have need to recognize that
the students are actually victims in this situation. I mean, the CCP is exploiting them.
They are essentially crowdsourcing, you know, espionage at massive scale at universities all around the country.
And they are, there's this thing called
transnational repression.
And basically, if they don't wanna report back to the CCP,
if they have any reluctancies or if they don't comply,
their families can be threatened,
their livelihoods, their scholarships.
So, you know, it's really a sad situation for them as well.
Yeah, I mean, totally.
Matthew Turpin, who worked with the NSA, even said at Stanford,
there's been Chinese international students who had their parents brought to the police station
because they've refused to turn over Stanford's research information.
So if you don't comply, you will face penalties
from the Chinese Communist Party,
and your parents and your family back at home in China
may be put in harm's way.
And we've seen that happen.
Makes sense.
Yeah, it's incredibly challenging.
You know, you could be here, your parents could be here,
and yet if you have even one family member at home,
and a grandparent, a great grandparent,
you know, there's some amount of risk.
What, I don't know if you know, there's some amount of risk.
I don't know if you saw this post by Kim Mike Cutler, who I think is at initialized, right?
Partner at initialized.
She said this report has pretty much all anonymous sourcing, unfortunately, and so it does not
seem like a good platform upon which to argue that many, most or all Chinese nationals or first gen Chinese students are spies.
Um, how do you interpret that kind of criticism of the piece?
Right.
Let's go through this point by point.
Please.
First of all, when you look at how the CCP operates, they have 29,
2017 national security law under article 7, all Chinese citizens must comply
with national intelligence and provide information and keep secrets when they're asked.
So straight out of the gates, all citizens must comply at the face of penalty, working
with security services.
So anybody who's asked at Stanford to do something for the CCP must do it or they will
face legal penalties in China.
The second point, we have talked to Chinese international students, they have families at home, for the same reason that there's
transnational oppression, they cannot go on the record and say these things with their name out
there because their families will be taken away, their families will be brought to police stations,
it's already happened with research. With regards to China experts, we've had Matthew Turpin on the
NSA, we've had Matt Pottinger on the NSA, and then we've had Larry Diamond all come out in support of our article.
They've said this is a decades long,
relentless interference from Stanford to
misappropriate our sensitive research technologies.
All the experts have agreed with us.
But at Stanford, we've seen a culture of silence and fear talking about
this issue because it's characterized as racism.
So 166 Stanford professors wrote an article
to the Department of Justice saying
that we need to shut down the China Initiative,
which was an initiative that sought out Chinese spies
because it's racist.
But what that fails to recognize
is if you don't shut this down,
you have Chinese students who are the real victims here.
So it's China who is profiling their citizens
and victimizing them.
It's not the USA.
This is not racial profiling
because we're just looking towards Chinese nationals
who are being repressed by their own government.
That makes sense.
Putting aside the kind of like the geopolitical issue
of China specifically, how are you thinking
about like not suffering from a lack of brain drain?
I feel like the majority of tech companies, like the tech industry might collapse if we
didn't have a fluid transition from like, there's Indian CEOs all over Silicon Valley.
There are plenty of allied countries that send
talented individuals, you know, even going back through
history, we've had Operation Paperclip, we've we have, we
have historically successfully integrated members from even
rival nations. And that feels like something that would be a
risk of losing. If we go too far here, is that would be a risk of losing.
If we go too far here, is that a real risk?
Or how do you think about confronting that?
Yeah, I mean, I think a lot of people
have sort of interpreted our article
and have said like ban all Chinese nationals
from attending elite universities or coming to school in the US.
And we do not want that. I grew up going to a Chinese immersion school. I think it's a
beautiful culture. The people are amazing. And they are huge assets to Silicon Valley and Stanford. We just want to see some
change in the way that these students are able to live and study abroad because right now,
it's as if they have no rights because they have such a hard time coming forward. So we need to figure out a policy system that can give these students
a greater awareness of the freedoms that they have, and we need to be able to defend them.
Right, a couple of solutions to keep Chinese students in the United States and improve security.
I mean, we should remove WeChat from the United States. That's the main method of communication
with the Communist Party. It's an unsecure platform that's monitored Secondly, we should consider ai visas for bringing chinese people's families out of china and to the united states
Because that removes a huge risk of transnational oppression
So not just getting the best chinese researchers but also getting their families and coming to the united states
And that's what we saw with the soviet union. I mean with the soviet union
Whole people's families came with them
And then the third thing that you have to think about is China requires a lot of
these people to come back. The USA should be doing the same thing.
If you want to come study and work on the most sensitive research technologies
that are key to winning the race, you should be forced to stay in the United
States for 10 years or more, because what we really don't want to happen is for
these people to replicate these ecosystems in China.
Who have you guys seen the most support from on campus and you can keep it high level
to protect the identities if people don't necessarily want to be public yet,
but I imagine there's quite a few people on campus that have massive concerns around the national
security issues that you guys are presenting and are hugely in favor of reform.
Yeah, I think we've definitely, the vast majority of the response has been off campus.
I feel like there's been a surprisingly little amount of response on campus. But I think the best
reactions have definitely been from the Hoover Institution. They have been looking into this
kind of thing for a long time and are working on policies to deal with these things. But
a lot of people that we interviewed still wanted to remain anonymous.
So it's really tricky because if you want to work with China, on some level, you can't
be, you know, consistently speaking out against China.
So I think that's sort of the difficult balance.
Is there an argument here for just kind of going completely open source with our research? I mean, famously, like the Manhattan project had a ton of spies on it.
We still kind of won the cold war. Um, it,
it feels like a sloppy and potentially crazy, uh, solution,
but is there a world where the only thing that matters in a geopolitical
technology race is just pace of play and the actual secrets don't matter that much.
Yeah, so you definitely want to play more offense and defense when you're talking about
the technology race. We're not going to win this by stifling competition in America. We
were going to win this through the way we've always won it by having an open free market
system that encourages competition. You don't want to ruin the risk of China using vast
government intervention and vast government intervention
and vast government subsidies to essentially take the best research out of America and
distribute it writ large at China by using vast state apparatus. We've seen this happen
with electric vehicles. We've seen this happen with most American technologies. China misappropriates
it. I mean, 33% of Chinese GDP is directed towards subsidies alone. The whole Chinese economy is geared towards leveling up and distributing advanced technologies.
The issue with the United States, and it's a great thing, is that the government will
not subsidize these technologies to the same extent and encourage data fusion to the same
extent.
So the real issue is that China may get these technologies and then use these subsidies
to create a mass market in China and gain an advantage.
So to a certain extent, there has to be sensible research policy that protects our core interests.
After seeing all this, do you think that American tech companies are generally too naive when
it comes to espionage?
I think the major players in national security, defense tech, things like that have have historically been very aware of the espionage risk. But do you believe that
many sort of more American tech companies specifically in the Bay should be
paying a lot more attention to security?
100%. The Foreign Interference Task Force was disbanded. The China Initiative was disbanded.
Two key efforts to stop Chinese research and corporate espionage. We have very few lines
of defenses right now. Companies need to be vigilant because we've seen this happen again
and again. I would say that they know it's happening and they've known for a very long
time. Even at Stanford, the people we talk to will all say, yeah, this is not new to me, duh,
we knew about this for so long.
This is obvious.
And they're surprised that we've even published
this article to some people because it's so apparent.
So what really needs to happen is we need the government
to come through with sensible research policies
that also encourage innovation.
And Bay Area companies, particularly startups
working in this area, need to be more vigilant about this.
That makes sense.
Great.
Well, thank you guys for coming on and sharing.
It's extremely insightful and a bit scary.
It's scary and unfortunate.
I'm glad you're on the case.
It seems like you're researching this and I'm optimistic.
We need people like you guys to keep banging the drum and forever going to get changed.
So come back on when you guys have more news.
Good luck with the follow-up reporting.
Great, thank you so much.
We'll talk to you soon.
Cheers.
Thanks so much, bye.
Next up we have Morgan Housel coming in.
Switching gears.
Well, I mean geopolitics are in his wheelhouse.
He was falsely accused of claiming
that the US would fall. Remember?
So we gotta talk to him about that.
Addresses allegations of being anti-America.
So funny.
But we're excited to have Morgan on the show.
He was great last time and I'm sure we'll have
a fantastic conversation.
And I'm excited to ask him about his new book.
Oh yeah.
Art of Spending Money.
Art of Spending Money.
Well, welcome to the show, Morgan.
How you doing?
Hey guys, Good to see you
Great to have you on welcome back. It's been too long
Yeah, I mean I want to start with the with the accusations that you claim that America was in decline
There I saw a viral post. I didn't look at any of the replies. So I don't really know
What was the story there?
It's it's weird because everyone knows that things get exaggerated on the internet, if not just
made up on the internet.
When it happens to you, it's pretty strange.
So I went on the diary of a CEO podcast, it aired I think a week or two ago, and we talked
about tariffs.
And I mentioned something about the fall in manufacturing jobs over the last 80 years,
something to that extent.
And I had so many different asterisks of like, oh, well, part is technology.
Some of it is offshore, et cetera, et cetera.
And that got spun into Morgan Housel is predicting the collapse of America.
And just one of those just like, what, how does, how does that even happen?
And so I called the guy out, he deleted the post, but it's, it's, it's amazing to see
when it happens to you personally, because then you start questioning every, like,
how many times have I read a headline that said,
so-and-so predicts the collapse of America,
but they didn't, or some version of that.
So I'm not predicting the collapse of America.
I'm quite optimistic.
It's such a challenge right now.
There's so much long form content that's created,
and we're also in this era of like clipping, right?
The internet likes long form content,
but it really likes these short segments
and sort of pulling out interesting moments.
And we've had some issues with that already
where we had the CEO of Perplexity on
and John asked him a hypothetical question about ads
and TechCrunch ran with this article saying
that perplexity plan to just jam a bunch of ads
in their browser or something like that.
And anyways, context is very important.
Were you at the Berkshire annual meeting?
No, this is the first one in four years I didn't go to.
Awesome one to miss, right?
Yeah, yeah.
How was, what made you decide not to go this year
if just family stuff busy?
I've got lots of other stuff going on.
What's interesting is that I think I've been seven times
and the last four times I went,
I didn't even go inside to the meeting.
It's turned out to just be a place where there's so many like minded people who go there.
So several years ago, me and Brent Bishore and Patrick O'Shaughnessy and Shane Parish all rented a house and hung out.
And it was an awesome weekend, even though we didn't even go to the meeting.
So it's just been a place where there's so many collective people who have the same same thoughts, same priorities to go and meet.
That's great. Well, I wanted to I mean, I reached out to have you on
earlier this week because obviously the news of
Buffett, you know, stepping back at the end of the year
to kind of get your reaction to it.
It's one of those things, it's interesting dynamic where
it feels like the most important sort of knowledge and wisdom in the world
is sometimes become so widespread that people sometimes people don't even pay enough attention
to it even even even zero to one is one of those things it has like it's it's one of
the most popular business books in history yet people kind of underestimate the value of it
because it's just become, you know,
the ideas ended up become shared so broadly.
So I wanted to have you on, you know,
specifically to talk about kind of the ideas
that you've, you know, most gravitated to
from Buffett yourself.
Some of the ones I'm sure are very widely understood
and talked about, and then I'm sure others
that are a little bit more kind of under the radar.
There's just so many good bits.
So.
Yeah, I mean, the first is that to put his retirement
into context, Buffett made his first investment
before Pearl Harbor, and he started professionally
managing money as a professional hedge fund manager when Harry Truman was president.
So just to put like the context of how long he's been doing this is absurd.
And then so there's two parts of that.
One is like, yes, let the guy retire.
He's 94.
He's been going nonstop since he was 11.
Like come on.
And then the other side of that is that's why he's successful.
Yes, his annual returns are good.
They were very good back in the 50s, 60s and 70s.
He hasn't really outperformed in any meaningful sense in a quarter century.
Not a criticism because he has almost a trillion dollars in assets now.
It's almost impossible to outperform when you're that big.
But the point that is so easy to overlook is that yes, he's been a good investor, but
he's been a good investor for 80 years and that is literally 99% of, he's been a good investor, but he's been a good investor for 80 years.
And that is literally 99% of why he's been successful.
So I made this point in my book,
The Psychology of Money, that if Buffett retired at age 60,
you would have never heard of the guy.
He never would have been a household name.
He would have retired with like a hundred million bucks.
Awesome, he buys a yacht and a house in Miami
and lives happily ever after,
but no one would have ever heard of him.
The whole reason he's successful
is because he's been going for so long.
And I forget who mentioned this,
I forget where I read this,
that Apple is Steve Jobs with a thousand lives.
That's what Apple is.
Like Steve Jobs built the company and then died,
but Apple can live on because he built what it is.
And I think that's what Berkshire's always been.
And Buffett has talked about this,
that he wanted to build a company
that would way outlast him.
And the irony is like, he still ran the company for half a century or more.
And so he lasted a long time, but it's going to keep going so far after he's gone, which is rare
and unique. And I also think of all the lessons that people like us try to learn from him.
The wrong lessons that you can learn from Buffett is how to pick stocks. I think that's
probably the wrong lesson to learn because a lot of what he did in his heyday in the 60s and 70s
just would not work today. It's a very different world, different markets, faster information.
It's just not transferable. But the lesson of like he's successful because he stuck around for so long,
even when he was so preposterously financially independent by, you
know, hundreds of orders of magnitude, he kept going. And that's something that ordinary people
can stick around. Stick around long enough that you're going to let compounding actually work in
your favor. I think that's probably the most pertinent takeaway for people. There's also so
many entrepreneurs too, who when they talk about, and I understand this, it's not a criticism because being a founder of a startup is so ridiculously hard
and stressful. But for so many of them, the goal is we're going to build this company.
We're going to scale this company and we're going to sell it. And I get that. I don't
look down upon that. But the huge massive results are for people who are like, I'm going
to do this and I'm going to do it as long as I as humanly possible that I can.
Yeah, I have a bunch of follow ups there.
First up, Greg Abel, is he underrated?
It's interesting because he's coming in in his sixties.
He looks like, you know, guy who could be retiring next year.
But the culture of of Buffett, you have to imagine that he's thinking, yeah, I got at least three more decades in here.
I'm just getting started.
So what's your take on Greg Able?
I don't know if you've actually dug into his career at all,
but I'd love to know kind of how you think the culture
that Buffett created kind of lives on.
Yeah, he's 60, so he can run the company for 30 years
and then run for president after that.
That's how this works.
That's the this works.
That's the standard path.
I think most people outside of Berkshire don't know that much about Greg Abel.
He hasn't, he's not like Buffett has very intentionally, I think, been on kind of a
media tour for the last 25 years.
He goes on CNBC all the time.
Of course, the annual meetings and the letters, like people know a lot about him.
Greg Abel, people don't know that much about him other than that he's been at Berkshire for 25 years
and Buffett picked him as the obvious successor.
What is known is that he's not a stock picker
and there's gonna be people who get into a lot of trouble
over the next five or 10 years
who are like looking for Greg Able stock picks
and they're not gonna find them anywhere.
He's an operator, he's a damn good operator.
And that's important because Berkshire 30 or 40 years ago,
its market cap was like half stocks.
Like its portfolio was just public stocks
that owned Coca-Cola and Procter & Gamble and stuff.
Today it's like less than 20%.
So the majority of Berkshire are wholly owned operating businesses
and that's Greg's bread and butter.
It's just like operating those.
I think it's probably a very similar transition
from Steve Jobs to Tim Cook. Steve Jobs was this like genius magician and Tim Cook was
just a stone cold operator. And that's I think that's what we're going through with Berkshire.
You're going from like the the wizard stock picker magician to the stone cold operator
and worked out great for Apple. It's just you have to keep your expectations in check,
both because Berkshire size and because of what great Greg Able for Apple. It's just you have to keep your expectations in check both because Berkshire
size and because of what great Greg Able strengths are. It's
not going to be and Berkshire hasn't been this in 20 or 30
years. The place that's going to have like massive out
performance year after year.
Yeah, I wonder about how much he needs to be a stock picker
because I totally understand the operator lens. But when you're
looking at that $300 billion cash pile, it's like, what are you going to buy?
Like a big oil company or something like that? You can do so much with that. So I'm sure
that will be will be a challenge. I wanted to talk about the legacy of Warren Buffett
a little bit more. There was a retrospective in the Wall Street Journal that I kind of
took issue with, but I wanted to get your take. The author is talking about Buffett's remarkable recall. He estimates
that Buffett read more than a hundred thousand financial statements. He famously reads books
and seven newspapers and just reads constantly. And the right and the author says his unparalleled
exposure to financial information combined with his prodigious memory made Buffett into a human
Form of artificial intelligence he could answer almost any query out of his own internal database that has given him an unparalleled ability
To identify the kernel of significance in any new bit of information and a durable advantage over other investors now
And this is the controversial part in my mind says now that AI is universally available
now and this is the controversial part in my mind says now that AI is universally available a
Person with Buffett's massive command of data won't even have an advantage in the future And I just don't know if that's true
But I want to know do you think AI changes the landscape in a way that the Buffett strategy just doesn't work anymore
I think part of the the problem with Buffett in the last 20 or 30 years is that
his folksy grandpa demeanor hid the fact that he is off the charts intelligent. And most of the time,
when you think of like an Einstein kind of genius, like they have a certain look and they talk a
certain way that and Buffett was not, that's what made him so popular is you felt you could relate
to him. But anyone who spent a lot of time with him, when he's not talking for the camera or
writing in his folksy way, will tell you he is in a different universe of intelligence,
particularly for money. And the reason he's successful is that since he's been 11 years old,
he has spent 24 hours a day, seven days a week thinking about stocks and nothing else.
And so it's less about the data that he knows, even though people will tell you those stories,
that he can recall specific figures from a balance sheet from an annual report he read
20 years ago.
So there is like a just insane memory recall, but it's the pattern matching recognition
in there.
And then this other element that is way more important, which is his reputation.
That's something that AI can't do.
And so a lot of Buffett's biggest investments,
certainly the most important ones,
came from the fact that he had such a good reputation
that he could walk into a boardroom and just say,
hey, I'd like to buy 10% of your company.
And they were like, yes, name us your terms.
We'd love to partner with Warren Buffett.
And so that's less about intelligence or data
and more about the reputation that he had.
And I think if Buffett were a jerk
or a raider and had a reputation of stripping companies,
he would not have been 5% as successful as he was.
All the big deals came from people wanting
to partner with him.
Particularly, like think about 2008, the financial crisis.
Every bank called him up and they were like,
Warren, name your terms, like just tell your terms. And he did it if Goldman Sachs and GE and they were like, Warren, name your terms. Like, just tell your terms.
And he did it if Goldman Sachs and GE and Bank of America, where he got these crazy
deals that nobody else could have because of his reputation.
And so I think there is a-
It wasn't just that he had the liquidity, you're saying?
Right.
Yeah.
There's a lot of liquidity in the world.
There's a lot of people who can write a big check, not who can do it with that kind of reputation.
So I think there is a little bit of truth to that idea
that the skill that he had of reading annual reports
was so much more valuable in the 1970s than it is today
because everyone's reading the same reports.
There's bots that can scam them just instantly,
but that's not to say that anyone can be a Warren Buffett
now.
I think that's certainly a stretch.
What do you think of this narrative
that the past decade of Berkshire is really
just the story of Apple and, again,
kind of the stock pick there?
They're at such a huge scale.
Do you think there's a cultural shift towards more technology?
The stock pick, of course, when Apple was already the most valuable company in the world, and it still
outperformed the market and drove fantastic returns.
It seemed like a big shift at the time.
At the same time, it panned out very well.
Do you think that that represents like a significant change in the culture?
I think what's interesting is that for having a reputation for decades
of I don't do tech, I don't do tech, I'm a grandpa dinosaur.
I can't do tech literally in dollar terms.
Warren Buffett is the most successful tech investor ever.
He made he made one hundred billion dollar profit on Apple.
No one's even come close to that.
And so is that like a change or an evolution?
It is an evolution, but it's easy.
It's easy to assume. And it's wrong to assume, that Buffett's been
the same investor for 80 years.
I think part of why he's been so successful is that every five or 10 years, he completely
updated his operating system to have a different style, a different influence, and to really
adapt what was going on.
And I think that there's only a handful of investors who are like that, who have made
money in different
eras. There's a lot of investors who were very well suited for
one era, they could make a lot of money for 10 years, but they
couldn't keep it going. Because nine times out of 10, it's
because they didn't update their their thinking, they were stuck
on this world that didn't exist anymore. And so there's a very
long history of Buffett doing that in every 10 years doing things that he would not have 10 years before that
Yeah
Are you familiar with that?
famous napkin diagram that Walt Disney drew
Showing how the parks relate to the film production relates to the merchandise. Have you seen that chart before?
No, but it sounds awesome. Okay, so Walt Disney
Drew this big chart mapping the entire ecosystem of
Disney and how everything works together. And it's cited as
this example of like, oh, like, you know, build this business
where everything feeds into the other piece. And, you know,
what is your Disney map? But I was digging into it. And I realized that Disney
made that chart 10 years before he died. Like he had already been building just in film for a
decade and then 20 years to build the parks that Walt Disney born in 1903, I believe, the park
didn't open until 55. And he died like shortly after. And so it was more like a reflection on what he
had built as opposed to it was a map that was that was drawn
after he had explored the territory. And so I'm wondering
your take on this idea that like the idea of focus and the idea
of empire building being something that can be
charted beforehand versus has to be kind of naturally discovered and then can be
potentially mapped after the fact.
I think there, there's several historical examples of business,
like very successful business, uh,
people who had word product geniuses and terrible at business.
Walt Disney was one of them.
He was the product genius of all time.
He was a terrible businessman.
Henry Ford was another.
Henry Ford is the most successful
mechanical engineer in history.
And he was at best a mediocre businessman.
There's so many of those like that.
I would even say Steve Jobs might fall into that category
of technological genius, design genius,
very at best mediocre business person,
which is why you needed someone like Tim Cook.
And I think there's been quite a bit of that,
but when the product is so good,
you can take it in so many different directions.
Disney is an interesting example of so many of the film IP
that they had that was sitting on the shelf for decades. And when it was made, it was like, oh, people will watch this in the movie theater.
That was the only medium that they could watch it on.
And then the video cassette tape came along and they're like, oh, we could sell all of this.
And the DVD came along.
They're like, oh, there's another avenue to sell it.
And then streaming came along and it was like, sky's the limit.
So it was like the IP was so good that you didn't need a genius businessman to to to come up with a distribution strategy.
Like it was so good that it just kind of ran itself.
Ford was was similar, like the cars were so superior to anything else that even if
Henry Ford is making blunder after blunder, the company kept going just fine.
And so I think I think a lot of times you have like a very long running business.
It's less because
they made phenomenal business decisions and more just because the product that they made
was so phenomenal that they could keep it going.
If an idiot ran Apple, it would still sell a zillion iPhones every single year.
But there's only a handful of companies that are like that.
I want to talk about the book, out October 7th.
Do you have a log line or like what is the one line pitch?
Then how can you unpack the title is the title is the title is the pitch.
But can you can you break it down in a little bit more detail a little bit detail?
The book is not called the science of spending money because I don't think that exists.
There's no way of saying here's how you should do it.
That's going to work for me and work for you even if we're similar people.
It's just like spending is very individualistic. So I call it the art of spending money because
art is different from person to person. It's subjective. It's often contradictory.
And so rather than telling you what to do, I don't want to lecture anyone, but the book is a look at
at envy and social aspiration and keeping up with the Joneses and becoming fulfilled and getting
attention and watching other people. It's kind of like the psychology of spending money, which I,
which has always been like so much of what I write is just trying to figure out my own life.
So I looked at instances where I was clearly, it's, it's hard to admit, but like when I was
clearly envious and when I was clearly trying to get people's attention. And just when you dig a couple layers below that, like why?
Like whose attention am I trying to get?
Is that person even paying attention to me?
Do they even care?
Was giving that attention like taking away from other parts of my life?
There's so many different layers to dig through.
And I think those things are universal.
Even if what you're spending money on is not a science, the psychology of it tends to be
pretty universal.
So it's just a look at that.
That was more than one sentence.
I have to hone that a little bit sharper, but that's it.
I mean, is there a key anecdote or story or even just like a case study that you think
is the most tractable for people to grab onto?
I think about, you know, all the emotion that goes into the identity tied to the car that
you drive or the house that goes into the identity tied to the car that you drive or the house
that you buy. But what case studies are you pulling from to kind of ground the lessons
in something that anyone can understand who's reading the book?
I don't know if this is the best case study, but it was one that I thought was so interesting.
I read the biography of Harvey Firestone from Firestone Tire. He was the tire magnet like
120 years ago whenever he lived.
And he has this part in his biography where he says,
every single successful person that he knows,
including himself, when they became rich,
they bought a giant mansion.
And every single one of them to a T hated it.
It was a pain in the ass to run.
It was, you know, when your house is 17 bedrooms,
it's just more roof to leak, more radiators to break.
And he was like, everyone hates it, but all of them do it. Every single one of them does
it. And even when they hate the house, they never sell it and get a small house. And he
had this line that I loved and he said, there is no going back except as a broken man. It's
like, once you inflate your lifestyle, you cannot deflate. Even if you hate the inflated
lifestyle, you cannot go backwards because it if you hate the inflated lifestyle, you cannot go backwards
because it becomes so synonymous with your identity. It's like the size of your house is who you are.
I thought that was pretty interesting. And he was like the equivalent of a billionaire living in a
mansion. It's not a very relatable example. But I think there's so much of that, that if we spend
money on something and it doesn't make us happy, it's very hard to rewind. So be like, be really
careful when you're inflating your lifestyle because you it's very hard to rewind. So be like, be really careful when you're inflating your lifestyle
because it's very easy to go forward.
It's extremely hard to go back.
Yeah, we were too.
How much time have you spent
or are you putting any attention in the book
towards the way that San Francisco
and the tech industry spend money?
I've always been fascinated by it,
given how much just this dichotomy between extreme wealth and this
in many ways desire to stay.
One glass box please.
Yeah, yeah, or this desire to be and it's good in many ways, right?
Imagine that the negative attention that the technology industry would have gotten if every
Series C founder in San Francisco was driving a Lamborghini. It would have been fun, but it would have been... I think there's part of that that they can't spend a lot of money because it's not
liquid. They're rich on paper, but there's not a lot of liquid wealth in San Francisco. There is,
but it's all relative. Even that is a sense of social signaling.
Like if people know that you're rich and you are going out of your way to live an
austere lifestyle, that might be because it'll make you happier.
It might also be because that's the signal that you're trying to send.
That's like those are feathers.
Buffett's the best example of this.
I mean, you have to spend some time on on Buffett in the book of just intentionally. Yeah. But then
like I kind of twisted because Mark Zuckerberg was famously
driving like a Corolla for a while. But then Sam Bankman
freed FTX kind of use that as window dressing to be like, Oh,
I'm the altruistic billionaire. I only I just drive a beater
car. Right. And of course, he had like a mansion in the
Bahamas and a bunch of other stuff that he like wasn't
pointing the camera at. And Mark course he had like a mansion in the Bahamas and a bunch of other stuff that he wasn't pointing the camera at.
And Mark Zuckerberg is interesting because he famously drove the Acria for whatever, for many years.
And now he just bought a half billion dollar yacht. So it all comes around eventually.
Yeah, he's also evolved his taste in cars a lot where he could buy a supercar,
but I believe the most recent car he bought was a Cadillac CTS-V Blackwing, which is like a hundred thousand dollar sports car.
But it's not a half a million dollar sports-V Blackwing, which is like $100,000 sports car,
but it's not a half a million dollar sports car,
but it's an American muscle car.
It's like very fun and very different.
So he's clearly finding his own path
in expressing himself in a more unique way
than just like one rich guy car please.
And so I think he's probably happier
and like carved out a unique niche. And feel like that that's often a better place
to land is not just don't just buy the most expensive thing.
It's okay to buy the expensive thing if it's craft and it's
interesting to you and it has a story and it has relevancy or
performance. But it needs to like speak to you in some unique
way that actually, you know, improves your life. I don't
know. What's your most irrational purchase?
I know you've talked in psychology of money
that you paid cash for your house or you don't have a mortgage,
I believe.
But what else is potentially irrational?
I don't know if this is irrational.
This is what I think about a lot.
I grew up skiing as a competitive ski racer.
And when I was 10, 12, 13 years old,
I always felt like all my friends
had better gear than I did.
They had the nicer skis, the newer jacket and whatnot.
And back then it bothered me.
When I was 13, I was so envious of them.
And so now, and obviously I got over that,
but now that my son, he's nine now,
we ski a lot together.
And I think because of the scars that I had
from my friends having nicer stuff,
I made this vow a couple of years ago. I like, I'm going to buy my son the best gear
every year. He's going to get the best skis, the best boots, the best jacket. And I'm doing
that to kind of like fill this hole that I had when I was when I was a young kid. And
the irony about it is he could care less. He does not care whatsoever what gear he has.
And so that's interesting too. Like I think there's always a story behind spending.
For me it's like, I was like, I...
He doesn't care because he has,
no, he doesn't care because all he knows is the best, right?
Is that, isn't it?
But I feel like if I buy him a new pair of skis,
I expect him to be like,
oh wow, let me look at these, they're so cool.
Cause that's what I would have done.
And I get him and he's like,
eh, this doesn't matter whatsoever. No, I had to resonate with that though. I remember growing up skiing snowboarding
I would I would always have a snowboard that was like three seasons old lightly used and it was like the practical decision
It was $50. It got you down the mountain just pretty much as well as anything else
But then I'd be watching the Burton videos
and it's like, you know, looking at these
and I'd be just running the numbers.
I'm like, I would have to ref 400 soccer games
to get that board with those bindings.
It's like, I'm gonna ref like 10 games this weekend
but I'm not gonna get there.
Yeah, I was skiing at some point.
I got too tall for regular skis.
And so they needed to, they were like,
you have to go to custom skis if you want to be really
in this and I was like, I'm switching to scuba diving.
Like, you know, whales are big enough for the ocean.
I'll be big enough for the ocean.
It's fine.
I do have one last question.
Do you have one?
I have one last too, but switching,
I hate to switch back, but on the art of spending money,
what is the, what do the art of spending money, what is the what do the
real Berkshire enthusiasts think that or what is Berkshire
signaled around how they're going to spend $300 billion or
whatever their their current cash pile is? Because I feel
like the general market sentiment is that, you know,
Berkshire is preparing for the next, you know,
next time great companies go on sale due to some crisis.
But I'm curious if you have any sort of insight there.
I think, you know, the list of companies that you can acquire for 100 billion dollars is not a very long list, but there is a list like it's
it's not inconceivable that Berkshire can make 100 billion dollar acquisition.
I've often thought that Bloomberg, the media company, that would be a perfect Bloomberg fit.
It's probably worth about a hundred billion dollars or that'd be perfect for Berkshire.
And then Berkshire is so big, it's a trillion dollar market cap. They could probably repurchase
a hundred billion dollars of stock. It might take three or four years, but they could do it.
There's enough liquidity there. So you could spend 200 billion. Like that's pretty conceivable. The big question for me
is once Buffett is gone and passed away and his stake in Berkshire is more dispersed,
then there's room for an activist investor to come in. Right now, you can't have an activist
at Berkshire because Buffett owns too much. He would just tell him to go away and then it's over.
Once Buffett's majority voting stake or like big voting stake is gone, then it's
interesting, will Bill Ackman or one of those guys come in and say, we want you
to do a $200 billion special dividend.
We want you to spin off this and that.
And that I hope that doesn't happen, but you can very easily see it happen.
Particularly if people aren't going to give Greg a five-year leash to prove his way.
If the results aren't there in two or three years, you'll probably have people knock at
the door.
And so having that pressure, I hope he doesn't have pressure to deploy that $300 billion
of cash, knowing that if he doesn't, someone's going to come knock at the door and threaten
his job or tell him to spend off this or that.
So you said he's not a stock picker either.
So he's not exactly just going to go out and be like, okay, I'm going to start deploying
this and you know, that way, right?
It feels like it has to be more significant.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I have another question, but we'll have to do it next time.
This is great.
Joining even leaving us all hang.
I know it's going to turn into a whole conversation
and we can do a whole nother 30 minutes.
So why don't we just do another 30 minutes in a couple weeks?
Let's do it.
I'll see you then.
Morgan, we like coming on.
Thanks for coming on.
Great Friday.
We'll talk to you soon.
Bye.
Here's the run of today's show.
We have Sonia from Sequoia coming in the studio next.
They Sequoia just hosted the AI Ascent Conference
with an absolutely stacked roster.
Some of the greatest programmers,
some of the greatest entrepreneurs
in artificial intelligence,
or really just in history, all coming together.
We saw a fantastic jacket swap
between Alfred Lin and Jensen Wong.
And I'm excited to talk to her
about trends in artificial intelligence
and what is
Happening in both the early stage and mid stage startup market obviously as venture capitalists
She is investing in a lot of interesting stuff today. So welcome to the stream Sonia. So good to meet you
Have me
Alfred was bummed his jacket was her meds and he was sad to lose it. I was like, don't worry
I think I think you got the better trade here. Oh wait, so that was a permanent swap. He gets to take it home
permanent swap Okay, that's fantastic permanent swap. He gets to take it home Permanent swap. Wow
That's fantastic. Yeah, it needs to be framed. I mean, it's iconic iconic. Yeah
I mean I want to buy a leather jacket just so if I'm ever in the same room. I have something to swap
Yeah, we'll get you the dates. Don't worry. Fantastic
Yeah, give me the rundown of AI ascent. Is this something that happens every year was this year special obviously, it's you know, a bigger trend than ever
Who were some of the interesting speakers? Give us the yeah
I'll give you the origin story. I'll take us back a bit. We invested in open AI back in 2021
So this was back when it was very much, you know, it was a few guys using the API
Definitely no chatty chatty putty yet
But we just felt like they had invented magic
and we wanted to make sure that our portfolio companies
would be kind of the first to be able to see that,
play with it and transform their own businesses.
And so we set up a field trip actually
for like 40 of our portfolio companies
to go visit OpenAI back in May, 2022.
And so there was like pre-chat GPT moment
and everyone loved that field trip.
It was like people were playing with Dali for the very first time,
there was no public access yet, starting to build with GPT-3.
And so our founders loved it, both for like the inspiration element of like,
oh my gosh, we are in the belly of the beast of the thing that is building the magic.
But also like from a very tactical perspective,
like here's how we should be using this stuff to transform our businesses.
And so founders loved it.
They asked, you know, can we bring this back next year?
I honest, I'm not like a party thrower.
I like hate throwing events and sounds like, oh man, we have to do it again.
But everyone wanted to do it.
So we did our first kind of non-open AI specific event and more across the entire ecosystem the following year
that was like right after the Chatjee Patee moment. And so this is our third year throwing that event
in a row. We've had amazing speakers. Sam Altman has spoken at every event. We've had Jensen twice.
We've had, even the audience is incredible. Like in our opening talk, we kind of called out what
we viewed as the biggest AI product innovations of the year.
And, you know, notebook LM, deep research, Sesame, like I think some of the biggest like
innovations, those people were all just happened to be sitting in the audience.
So it's just like a lot of firepower in one room.
That's great.
Amazing.
What, what are the top kind of discussions that people are debating right now?
I mean, from talking to people on the show, this idea of like the pre-training wall,
needing to move into more RL focused techniques
to kind of get the next level of breakthroughs.
Is that the right question to even be asking,
were people debating it and do you have a take
on the idea of like this hitting a pre-training wall?
Yeah, totally.
So we had Nolan Brown speak at last year's AI Sends,
and we had Dan Roberts this year.
They're both on OpenAI's strawberry team.
And we had actually gotten a preview of this from Noam
actually before he even joined OpenAI.
And so he had done a lot of research historically
in AI gameplay.
And if you take the lesson from Go, for example,
with AlphaGo, which I think was one of the seminal results
in reinforcement learning, the top humans are like of the seminal results in reinforcement learning.
The top humans are like a 3,500 ELO at Go.
The best bots are like 3,000 before you give them access
to inference time compute.
But if you actually let the model actually
sit and think for a minute before it places its piece,
you can get that ELO up to 5,500 points.
So like way better than superhuman.
And so the key insight there is like to get roughly the same order of performance.
Once you've like it's diminishing marginal returns on multiple vectors, right?
But once you've kind of like hit diminishing marginal returns on one vector pre-training,
if you start scaling post-training from there,
and I'm sorry, specifically inference time compute,
you get like 100,000 X scale up in performance there.
So we're just starting to climb that second curve.
I think OpenAI deserves a ton of props for like seeing that
and like investing decisively behind it.
Cause I think if you talked to a lot of researchers
in the ecosystem, like one, a few years ago,
it wasn't even obvious that the lessons from AlphaGo
could even apply to the LLM world.
And so, you know, like if you went to visit research labs a few years ago,
it was like there's the RL group and there's the LLM group,
and they're not the same people.
And it's like, it's very different.
And I think I know them and various other people, like, really push forward that vision.
And I think Sam invested heavily behind a reasoning infrastructure,
because the hard thing is like scaling up reasoning infrastructure is different
from scaling up pre-training infrastructure.
And when I talked to my friends, a lot of them have joined certain labs like
OpenAI, XAI that have really invested a head in reasoning infrastructure
because it is such an important vector for scale.
Yeah, I was always wondering about the AlphaGo pre-training
kind of scaling law and wondering like, okay, we have all this major compute.
What happens if we go back and train alpha go on 100,000 H 100s?
Like, are we going to get even better or really have we actually topped out?
And it sounds like it sounds like we basically did.
And we like kind of learned that lesson.
But is that a refutation of scale is all you need?
Kind of the bitter lesson?
Or do you see it as just continuation of that theme that
we will need to continue scaling and it will just be new algorithmic paradigm on top of
what we have and then scale that and then another one and then scale that and then another
one and then scale that because it sounds like when I hear 100,000 X improvement in
test time compute or inference time compute,
that sounds like a lot of data centers.
Yeah, it's a lot of data centers.
I'm very much an AGI maxi pro bitter lesson.
And I think that this is just another vector
that we're gonna scale on.
And it's not like pre-training is dead, right?
It's like, you kind of like,
from an economics one-on-one perspective,
you go to like, where's the lowest marginal cost
of the incremental unit of intelligence.
And so right now a lot of that is on reasoning,
but I think it's gonna break to other vectors as well.
Are you seeing that in image and diffusion as well?
It feels like the images in ChatGPT
is doing something different.
It feels like they're layering a few different techniques together.
I was playing with the text and trying to get it.
Like the text is so good now,
but I was trying to get like a snake to weave in and out of the text.
And it was kind of getting confused. I was like,
I feel like there's some layers going on here or something.
I'm trying to like kind of understand it. And I'm just wondering, like, uh,
you know,
we might be past just like the big transformer
paradigm of LLM and text responses in the reasoning era
Um, are we are we evolving past the big diffusion model in image generation as well?
Um, so i'm not a researcher, but I get to talk to a lot of smart researcher friends
My understanding is that it's a it's a combination of a transformer diffusion architecture.
And I think that most people don't believe that diffusion models will fully get us there,
whereas transformers have a lot more juice in them.
And so even if you look at it's not just image, it's video, it's robotics.
A lot of those have transformers as their backbone.
But I do think like, you know, there's so much that's happening in like the harness
around it, right? What is the, you know, what's the for loop that you run the model in? What
tools do you give it access to? We did a little pullout AI sense of like, what, what innovation
is going to drive the most amount of progress in the AI ecosystem in the next 12 months? And like,
biggest answer was MCP and tool use and forming an ecosystem around that.
So I think like the models themselves get smarter,
but they're also surrounded by a big ecosystem.
On MCP, how are you viewing that as a position
in the market?
Is it just a standard?
Is it just an API?
Is it a framework or will there be companies
that build around it?
Are there gonna be open source frameworks that then we find a
red hat Linux of MCP and it winds up being a big company,
even though it's mostly open source. Um,
how are you thinking about that from an investor's perspective?
Yeah,
I very much see it as a protocol and like something for the industry to
standardize on. And so I think there are,
there are obviously some benefits of the crew to Anthropic from having steered that.
But I think it being an open standard is really important.
And that's why a lot of the other big model labs
are standardizing behind it as well.
And so I think it's a net positive for the ecosystem.
There's a bunch of startups spinning up
trying to make money off of it in some way.
I don't know if I'm really bullish on any of them
really having a shot at it.
I mean, I think there's certain people that have,
if you have an infrastructure advantage
and for some reason, like Cloudflare for example,
is making a big play, then maybe I buy that.
But if you're a small startup trying to spin up a MCP shop,
I just don't really see the right to win.
Yeah, maybe the value accrues to McKinsey coming in
and saying, hey, we're gonna help you implement an MCP server for your existing Fortune 500 company or something.
Was there any interesting conversations around benchmarks? And do you think they were talked
about more or less than the last year? I would say like, this is not the answer that like very
much, you know, knows that the benchmarks exist and like doesn't really care too much about them.
We ran a poll of like,
if you could only use one model for the rest of your life,
what would it be?
And like, open AI by far, number one, more than 50% share.
Even though like, if you look at where they are
in the model leaderboards, they're like,
they're not there on LM arena.
And so I think there's a little bit of a,
the benchmarks aren't really,
you know, they're saturated.
They're not really the vibes test.
I think people care a lot more about the vibes test right now.
Well, yeah, just end user value, right?
Yeah.
Well, speaking of benchmark,
do you have a take on the Manus investment
that's kind of burning up the internet right now?
Oh man.
Seems like an odd choice in 2025.
I don't know if you've looked at the deal.
I'll give you a hot take, John.
Apparently, the US Treasury is examining
a benchmark capital's ties to Manus.
So feel free to pass on the question
if you don't want to talk about it.
I will say they've built really cool tech.
I think the doubles in the details for what exactly,
where's user data, et cetera.
And I would imagine that they did their homework,
but I don't know.
Yeah. where's user data, et cetera.
Switching gears, the big story this week around OpenAI,
obviously after the event was the new CEO
specifically coming in to focus on applications.
I'm curious if you could highlight any of the kind of conversations around value accrual, Sam I think has been pretty explicit
in the past that if you're building products
with the assumption that the models are going to continue
rapidly get better, you're probably in a good spot.
If you're not, maybe you're gonna struggle
or get made redundant at some point.
But I'm curious what the general kind of vibe was around, around that.
Yeah.
I would say like, I mean, you know, the memetic cry in the, in the
venture ecosystem right now is just like the value is in the application layer.
The values in the application layer.
I actually have a great meme on this.
We're like, we had the, the meme on like the values in the application layer.
And then we had Jensen in the audience.
And I just had a picture of Jensen
on top of Scrooge McDuck just raking in all the dollars.
I like the joke.
But we very much think values in the application layer,
and it depends how you want to play it.
I think that there's going to be a place, at least
in the near term, for vertical agents applied
to a very specific sector.
And we have a bunch of those companies,
our portfolio, Sierra, Harvey, open evidence.
I think that what the foundation models have proven though,
which was debatable a couple of years ago,
is that they have every right to win the application layer.
And so like, it wouldn't have been obvious that,
you know, a company building foundation models
could like figure out the application magic.
But ChatGPT, to me, it's like a runaway freight train
in terms of consumer adoption.
Some of the metrics they've published,
like 300 to 500 million weekly actives year to date.
It's just phenomenal user growth.
One of the things that Sam shared at our conference
in terms of how people are using ChatGPT
was really interesting to me.
If you're old, you're using it as a Google replacement. So I'm old. If you're in your 20s or 30s, people tend to be using it as more of a life advisor, life coach type thing. And then
if you're really young, the youths are using ChatGPT as an operating system. And I found that
framework really interesting. And especially in combination with like,
they're clearly building things around memory,
around tool use, around connecting
to your other applications.
It really does feel like, if you're a young person
and like really, really connecting chat GPT
and like mind melding with it,
that use case seems really interesting to me.
And so like, if you think about Google as front door
to the internet and $2 trillion breakup company, right?
It feels to me that ChatGPT is in many consumers minds
that front door to AI.
And as what AI can do, as the ceiling on that goes up,
we just like each deepen our product usage.
A couple years ago at the first AISN,
I posted this chart of the ratio of daily to monthly active
users for ChatGPT and some of the other mainstream mobile
apps.
And the punchline at the time was, usage is terrible.
It was like a 14% down-mall if I remember.
It was like, people kick the tires a little bit
and then churn.
And we've been tracking externally from data science
signals, just seeing those down-mal ratios increase.
It's pretty crazy.
Down-mal is now in line with Reddit.
It's approaching Google levels.
And so if you think about Reddit being a super engaged,
you're in there having multiple conversations,
you see that same behavior both anecdotally and in the data for chat GPT.
And so, um, to your question, where will value accrue?
We think it's in the app layer. Um,
I think a lot of the horizontal app layer opportunity will be, uh,
will be won by foundation models like, like opening. I like XAI. Uh,
and then a lot of the companies we're backing are going after a very specific
vertical opportunity.
Are you particularly bullish on enterprise application as independent?
I mean, I'm thinking about like Google very much one consumer search,
but you know, in legal there was Lexis nexus and then Palantir helps,
you know, the government search through data sets.
And there's,
there's all these different enterprise use cases that Google wasn't able to go
after. We were even talking about Armada, which is an enterprise service built on Starlink. The Starlink team has dominated consumer, but
the enterprise needs of certain enterprises is just too unique. And so there's actually
a business to build there. And that seems like it maps with your strategy most recently,
but what do you think?
Totally. Totally. I think the enterprise war feels like it is like we're in the first inning still.
It's not clear who's going to win yet.
I think in our portfolio, like Glean, for example, has done a really amazing job as
a horizontal chat-to-be-like platform that kind of connects to all your enterprise data.
But then it's a question of how deep do you need to go?
Harvey has a ton of legal case-specific data, or Sierra has a ton of customer support specific data
and workflows.
And so I think there's,
the enterprise AI battlefield is very much
a work in progress at this time.
I think the shape of workflows and problems
is so diverse in the enterprise
that my guess is a lot of these companies will be successful.
Yeah.
How are you thinking about humanoid robotics? I've talked to, there's a lot of high flying
companies that feel like it's mostly renders at this point. There are some really amazing
researchers working on stuff. I'm personally waiting not to see the demo of one humanoid
walk around because we've seen those with Boston Dynamics for decades. I want to see
the satellite photo of the data center that's
getting built out to do a massive training run for an end to end robotics model. And
I haven't seen that yet. Is that the right signal to be looking for, for takeoff in humanoid
robotics or should there be something else that I'm tracking as we go into this like
humanoid rollout, which it feels like it could be tomorrow or it could be two decades away.
It doesn't feel like tomorrow to me.
I was going to say the same thing.
I'm being generous.
There's a lot of CEOs out there who would say it is tomorrow.
I can't share the details, but let's just say I think the humanoids are a lot closer
than we may think they are.
And it's like, I thought this stuff was science fiction and I've talked to a lot of smart
people who have told me and shown me things that have made me realize like, wow, this is probably on the time like, and I would
guess in like two or three years, the stuff will be in 10s of 1000s of households, at least maybe
households. Yeah. And that actually echoes kind of like the timelines from the I think Sam set on
stage that you know, we had Jim fan from Nvidia on the on the show he like, he's like, you know,
there's the there's the digital touring test of like, you don't we had Jim Pham from NVIDIA on the show. He like, he's like, you know, there's the,
there's the digital Turing test.
So like, you don't know if it's a human behind the,
the computer or not, or not, I'm sorry,
a computer, a human behind the screen
when you're talking to it.
He's like the physical Turing test is, you know,
when you leave your house and it's a mess in the morning
and you come back and it's like, it's all perfect
and all cleaned up.
And like, he also thinks we're about to get there.
For him, a huge part of the breakthrough
is going to be synthetic data pipelines.
And so robotics, unlike LLM, you just
don't have internet scale data to train on.
But one of the amazing things about what's happening in AI
right now is just with LLMs, but also more specifically
with these generative world models,
you can generate tens of thousands of variations of the same
environment to simulate and these robots can get better
and break through that data barrier extremely quickly.
And so I was personally a robot bearer for the longest time
and talked to a bunch of very smart people in robotics
over the last week and I flipped,
I feel like the humanoids are coming.
And in terms of capital intensiveness
of actually getting there in a few years,
obviously it's very expensive to build a factory
that produces robots,
but do you think we're also gonna see raises
from humanoid robotics companies that are,
where a ton of the raise goes into Nvidia GPUs
to build a huge data center to train some massive model.
Because yeah, I agree with you on the synthetic data.
You could wind up with web scale,
trillions of tokens like we've seen
with the GPT-4 training run.
I think it's gonna be extremely capital intensive.
And it reminds me of autonomous vehicles
five plus years ago, where like,
you know, at the end of the day, like we have waymo's and we have Teslas driving around,
those companies had enormous economic engines to support the development. I think the same
is happening with humanoid right now. And so my guess would be it's like, it's going
to, it's not just Nvidia GPUs, it's everything, right? Because you're co developing the hardware. You're you still
have to collect a ton of data on actions. And so it's it's it's a ton of spend everywhere.
Yeah, I mean, huge trends in AI. Broadly, it feels like all the metrics are up into
the right at the same time valuations are very high. What's your overall take on the
venture market? Are we in a bubble right now? Can there ever be too much venture capital?
All the key questions.
It's never, John.
Never.
There is too much venture capital already. Look, I'll say a lot of companies are raising
on what I call vibe revenue right now. It's like pilots being counted as revenue. It's
like really, really terrible retention stuff. And so like, once you peel past that,
I think there's like a cohort of companies
that are like growing high quality revenue
at the highest pace that we've ever seen.
And that includes, like I mentioned OpenAI before,
but it's also companies like Glean and Harvey and Sierra
and all these companies.
And so to the extent like valuation is a function
of like how much have you de-risked?
How much product-profit do you have?
Like, what is the growth rate of your business
and what is the ultimate TAM potential?
I think these AI companies are demonstrating just,
growth rates outside of what we've ever seen before.
And then TAM potential, like, because it is very much,
you're selling into,
if you're able to get outcomes-based pricing,
you're selling into a services replacement or the tools replacement. And's a it's a tam in the trillions, right?
Okay, but yeah, sorry to interrupt you on that point. Something I'm curious about is,
so yes, if you have an AI tool that can replace services spend, you can capture some, you can,
whatever, ideally capture a lot of that market.
But the thing I keep coming back to
and maybe this isn't the right way to think about it,
but you're not simply competing with end humans
that are delivering that services.
A company will also be competing with other AI tools
that have a similar cost structure.
So does that not over time just drive the sort of dollar
amount that you can capture just down to something
that looks more like a software market?
We have this debate all the time.
So I'm glad you bring it up.
I think it really depends.
Like if what you're doing is like,
really low switching costs,
really low differentiation above what the models provide.
Like, yeah, I think that margin's gonna get completed down.
And so I think that's why we've historically debated
a lot of these GPT wrapper companies.
I think that, you know, if you're building something
that's really hard to build,
or that's integrating into a customer base
that wants to like choose an AI champion
and move on with life, which by the way happens,, we just did a bunch of references in the healthcare transcription
market.
You talk to these healthcare CIOs, they're like, I'm choosing one transcription vendor,
I'm not ripping that thing out for the rest of my life.
And so I think there's nuances to the stickiness of these things.
I work with a company called Gong, they're a sales AI company.
And the theory was all
like always like transcriptions love it we love Gong's on the show you baited us
it's a huge part of the brand oh my gosh it's amazing and they have such a perky brand too
there's so many Gong's around their office but like the theory was always
like transcription should commoditize and I think that very much hasn't
happened and like sales teams standardized on them.
They standardized their processes on them.
They train all their reps on it and like it has all your data.
So like, I think the, the theory of how you build, build moats is, um, is different
from like rubber meets the rubber meets the road in terms of like how these
companies in practice do build the moats.
But like, I think you are in a run like hell business because there's so, you
know, there's, you know, we, we backed it, we backed an AI DevOps company, uh, like an AI troubleshooter.
There's four other companies that are trying to do the same thing right now. And so like, um,
we are kind of in like a run like hell segments of the market right now.
Yeah. How do you think about private equity stepping into the AI race? We've seen a few
venture backed approaches where the idea is like, instead of the Harvey approach,
let's buy law firms.
And we've seen even in the pre, about a decade ago,
Justin Conn was working on Atrium,
this kind of like tech powered law firm,
where it was a law firm.
But Harvey's made the choice not to,
but what is your take on private equity dipping their toe
into more venture scale opportunities and venture investors starting to look more at private equity style
roll up deals?
Yeah.
Well, so I used to, I came from private equity, so this is something I think about a lot.
I think it makes a ton of sense and it's a continuation of the private equity play, right?
A lot of the investments I did in PE only worked because you took 20% of the costs out.
And so like now you have a much better tool to go and do that.
But it very much is the playbook and it's what they're best in class at.
And so do I expect that they'll be great at adding AI to the arsenal for how they get
those margins up?
Absolutely.
I think that when I think of the businesses that I'm excited to invest in, it's like,
okay, at the end of the day, it's who's creating gross profit, it's gross profit dollar creation. And you can choose to do that by investing in the billion
dollar revenue company and taking their costs down 10%, or you can choose to do that by backing,
you know, that amazing dev tools founder that knows how to build like the AI native dev tools
company that's going to create a hundred million dollars of gross profit off the bat. And so like,
I very much personally like to invest in the founders
that are kind of creating net new revenue dollars
and net new gross profit dollars,
but multiple ways to play.
I will say I had to really retrain my brain
when I went from private equity to venture.
And just, I mean, everything,
the way you operate is just so different.
And so I do think it takes a different type of culture
to operate a roll-up or a cost out strategy
versus investment startups.
And so while I agree,
I agree with the strategy of PE firms doing their thing
and venture firms doing their thing.
I have a question mark on the blurring
of the core competencies.
How do you think about the different businesses
that Sequoia is running right now
from early stage, growth stage beyond.
How do all these things play together in the strategy?
We've seen some venture firms even dip their toe
into general catalysts, buying a hospital network.
Lots of people are thinking outside the box these days.
There's the crossover funds.
What do you think Sequoia does best
and what are you excited about in the future?
We're not buying any hospital chains yet.
Okay.
I would say like, if you think of our strategy,
it's like it's seed to IPO and beyond
for like the most ambitious entrepreneurs in the world.
And so sometimes we're able to catch them early at the seed
like Airbnb, like Stripe.
And sometimes we catch them later on in their journey.
But like the point of adding additional kind of pools
of capital to our fund strategy has been when we find a winner in our portfolio, for example, take like a
SpaceX, we want to be able to invest a lot of money behind that company as it goes on
its journey. And the reason for the Sequoia Capital Fund is like even after these companies
go public, we think a lot of that return is still to be had. And so we've modified our
structure over the years to be
able to kind of support these companies as they as they grow
and become later stage and go public. But ultimately, it's,
you know, it's invest at the earliest point of conviction.
And ideally, that's at the seed.
Makes sense.
Jordi, do you expect to see more Sam had some interesting sort of
quotes over the last week or so I don't know exactly when they were happening,
talking about the cost.
Sam Altman, the Sam.
What other Sam is it?
Which other, sorry to the other Sam.
Yeah, sorry Sam Lesson.
Yeah, yes.
The quote to summarize it was, or the line was,
something to the effect of the cost of AI or the cost of intelligence
will just converge on the cost of energy or electricity. And I'm curious, you guys had
Chase from Crusoe talk, and I'm curious if you think that that is a potential area that
you expect to see more net new early stage startups exploring because it probably hasn't got enough.
We used to have nuclear and we're talking with Sean McGuire.
We were saying like, there is no Elan of energy yet,
but it feels like the last massive,
massive market that no tech founder has really gone and dominated in kind of the
founder mode way we were talking about big oil is still a bunch of huge companies.
Can't name any of the CEOs.
They're not really in founder mode.
They're kind of boring and maligned and it feels like there's an opportunity
there, but yeah, sorry, that's a lot.
No, I mean, that's a great question.
We, uh, we had chase from Crusoe on our, on our podcast and I, I will, I'll
put in the bet that chase might be that Elon like figure, he shared some stats
that were amazing to me and it's like, I'd always thought about AI from the,
oh, I can generate cool Jubilee images perspective.
But I didn't realize the extent of like,
the sheer extent of the industrial build-out
that is happening to support all of that.
And so Chase shared, if you look at typical data centers today,
like 20, 40 megawatt data centers,
the biggest data centers of the world are in Northern Virginia,
or sorry, in the US or Northern Virginia.
The aggregate capacity is four and a half gigawatts there.
Chase at Crusoe himself has 20 gigawatts in pipeline right now, more than two gigawatts
built out.
And so like the sheer scale of the build out right now is just like nothing that we've
supported in the past.
And the bottlenecks are moving around.
So like people, it's actually impossible to get chips now.
A lot of that is easing. And power is the are moving around. So like people, it's actually impossible to get chips now. A lot of that is easing and power is the new bottleneck.
And so that's why there's so much happening
in West Texas right now in Abilene,
where they just have this like massive overbuild
of renewables, especially with wind.
And so like, I think very much you'll see a lot
of the AI buildouts following power and energy
because that ultimately is the binding constraint right now.
It's a lot of sense.
This is great.
We'll let you go.
This has been fantastic conversation.
Come back on the get-together.
Went all over the place, but we'd love to have you back.
This is so amazing.
Come to our AI party next year.
And I heard you were asking, Andrew, about swag.
Oh yeah.
We have these amazing scented candles.
I actually have one on my desk.
Oh, nice.
We have these scented candles.
I'll send one your way.
Thank you.
It was evidence that I didn't know our audience at all, but I enjoyed the scented candles very much. I love scented candles. I'll send one your way. Thank you. It was evidence that I didn't know our audience at all,
but I enjoyed the scented candles very much.
I love scented candles.
Mother's Day's coming up, so you know.
I know, your segment on the Himalayan Birkin,
I was like, I love these guys.
Yeah.
They're gonna be flying off the shelves.
Yeah, yeah.
After we do the show, everyone's gonna go out
and we got one.
Anyway, thank you so much for stopping by.
Thanks for coming on.
We'll talk to you soon.
Have a great Friday. Next up, we got one. Anyway, thank you so much for stopping by. We'll talk to you soon. Have a great Friday.
Next up we got Will from Slow Ventures.
The other side of
Slow Ventures, Sam Lesson's business partner, obviously. He's been on the show many times. We had to swap him out.
We're replacing Sam with Will from Slow Ventures.
Very excited to have him on the show. I've been digging into a bunch of those questions
I still want to know more about the robotics timeline. I'm gonna try and dig into that
I still need to know how I need to talk to more researchers about how
Images and chat GPT works because I feel like there's something going on there
You know, you see it with the with the text models that there's very clearly
You know certain filters running on top you get these weird see it with the text models, that there's very clearly certain filters running on top.
You get these weird rejections with the images where sometimes it will...
Like, just the Studio Ghibli thing is bizarre because Studio Ghibli is real intellectual
property.
Studio Ghibli is a real company.
And when you say that, it doesn't say, hey, this violates our intellectual property rules.
But if you ask it to generate a picture of Superman,
it'll say, hey, that's copyrighted.
And so I'm wondering if OpenAI did a deal with Studio Ghibli
behind the scenes or something, or maybe there's
some definition of how the IP shakes out.
But hopefully going to have a lot more AI researchers
and investors on the show to answer some of the bigger questions that I have. But in the meantime, we're continuing to yap about
venture capital with a venture capitalist. Welcome to the stream. Well, good to have
you here. Boom. Are we live? Are we doing this? Oh, we're live. Yeah. Hit the soundboard
every five seconds for this one. We need to raise the energy in the studio. We got to
go.
Venture Capitalists, Yaps about venture capital.
Every time we have someone after slow,
we go crazy with the Chiron.
Expect some wild, wild Chiron going on.
It's Friday, but we're not letting the energy go down.
How's your Friday?
I'm all good, man.
I'm about to amp up.
I got this, I got a few more things to get out.
Then we got two little league games this afternoon.
So we're just getting going here.
Fantastic, yeah.
And we're coming up on the playoffs,
so it's a big little league game.
Are you a screamer?
Are you yelling at the coach?
No, I'm a ref.
The ref?
Oh, I'm a coach.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You are the ref.
The other guys will yell at you.
I'm a zenned out coach.
Okay, that's good.
I'm a zenned out coach, that's my philosophy.
That's good.
Anyway, what's up boys? Great to see you.
I love you.
Have you ever been thrown out of a game?
No, no.
I had a dad who was a screamer.
I had a dad.
No, no.
I had a dad who I loved dearly.
We were best friends, but he was a yeller at the refs.
So I kind of swore that off a long time ago.
Adapted, learned, improvised.
When I coached water polo,
I did get thrown off,
I got thrown out of a game when I was coaching
high school varsity water polo
because I was being too sarcastic.
I wasn't yelling, but I was too sarcastic
and the referee didn't appreciate that.
That's, that's what I see.
Anyway, you guys look great.
I almost busted my suit out, but it wasn't,
For the next one.
It didn't feel like my role.
Didn't feel like my role.
By the time we're done, all of Silicon Valley is gonna be dressing in suits every single day
And we're gonna be we're gonna be switching to business casual. Yeah
Well, if you go to our website, you'll see
Slow zig when everyone was zagging that's great and and decided to show our LPs when things are a little tight that we are
Extremely we're not just serious capitalists. We're extremely serious capitalists
when things are a little tight that we are extremely we're not just serious capitalists we're extremely serious capitalists buttoned up a suit a suit is
one thing but a tuxedo really shows people that you're serious about
managing money well yeah that's right that's right well I've wanted to have
you on for a while yeah always enjoyed our conversations and I want to know
what you disagree with Sam on he's got a lot of hot takes probably everything
probably everything welcome to slow what Welcome to slow. What about his
idea of like, you know, he's pretty anti AI. He likes the AI
cherry on top businesses. Are there any of these pure AI plays
we were just talking to Sonia at Sequoia. She's had a lot of luck
finding enterprise AI application layer companies that
are pure AI.
They are kind of rappers,
but they find these particular enterprise niches that can go really big.
The honest answer is Sam Sam, you and I have a really,
we really enjoy pushing each other and using Twitter as internal Slack and
highlighting where we disagree. But the reality is,
is we're all pretty well aligned. We say it differently.
We get there differently, but no, I'm just as anti-AI as Sam.
And I think, listen, the important thing,
we're not anti-AI.
You know what I mean?
I think that's like the easy way to take it.
Our answer's like, AI is rad.
AI will definitely, what do we do with swear words
on the show, allowed?
It's a family-friendly show.
We won't cuss, but we also don't have a bleeping mechanism
so we can't bleep you out.
I coach Little League, I can cut it both ways.
Okay. Let's keep it clean.
Say, swear like you're five years old.
Dollar, so-
Drat.
Like, listen, I think we all agree,
AI is gonna break the economics
as the world, as they work in a massive way, right?
So the problem with Silicon Valley,
like that's step one to a compelling venture capital thesis.
And a lot of people just stop at that step.
They're like, okay, cool, economics are gonna break.
Let's start investing against it.
And I think for us, once you click, okay,
but where are those economics gonna flow disproportionately
against someone that has a really compelling
business model that can get from here
to there under a little equity?
That's where our AI thesis breaks down.
And I don't, sorry to argue, you know what I mean?
That a lot of the gain, I mean,
I think the hottest take that I do agree with of Sam's is
this is not nearly as disruptive as people talk about it.
It's more of an enabler and the winners are gonna be
big companies with balance sheets and distribution and data
and all those things for a long while.
So I'm totally on board with that.
That doesn't mean we're not doing things with AI, but I think they meet the next
couple of click steps for us, right?
And a lot of those do look like AI cherry on top businesses with great
founders who get, who get sectors and understand what's going on.
Right.
And then they leverage AI in addition to much other stuff.
At the early stage, there's been this pattern I've been tracking with the new generation
of like Gen Z founders essentially where they need to break into Silicon Valley.
It's really noisy.
There's a lot of, I mean, honestly, the millennials are dominating like the latest, you know,
100 billion dollar company is Sam Altman.
And you know, a decade ago, it was Mark Zuckerberg when he was in his 20s. We have a new big power law winner and it's and it's as an elder millennial. That makes me extremely, extremely excited.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. But the but the Gen Z entrepreneurs have been they haven't had this massive power law win. Yes, they're scaling. I which is doing fantastically. But there that there aren't there aren't as many like like Gen Z hasn't really found their zuck yet
And so they need to break through in a different way
And I've been seeing a number of of young founders
breakthrough through viral stunts on acts and and in the media
and and when we talk to them we often come away saying like
Well, like maybe we didn't love the fact that they have to play this game, but it just feels like a
game that they have to play.
And I'm wondering if you have a take on like the the requirement
of modernity that you have to be such a showman now to get
attention for your startup that you often have to push it
really hard and make all these crazy claims and do all these
stunts.
There's a kid that we have in the shows hiring 50 interns to do social media for him and he's, you know, getting kicked out of Columbia and it's
allowed him to raise money and it's allowed him to break into Silicon Valley. But there's always
that risk that it's taking you away from just going heads down building the product, doing like
the Dylan Field thing at Figma where he was just grinding for years and then produced a great product. So are we in a new era or is this kind of just the natural evolution of breaking into
Silicon Valley?
I think a lot of that is like compensating for not actually having extremely interesting
novel hypotheses that screw with the economics of the world and a sick business model.
So I number one is like, I think it's copium for the most part. I have another take that I've been wrestling with which is like I
Don't think we have founders that are capitalist enough
I
Think like when you see whiz print that outcome and then you find out it's like
Sequoia Doug Rione a second time founder who was idea like you start going like oh my god
Those are people that you know what I mean?
They play, they play to win.
And they, the scoreboard for them
and everybody is in dollars.
And so I think that's like another thing
that comes to mind when you talk about
founders struggling to do that.
It's like, I've been kind of curious on like,
has there been an entire generation of founders
on the back of, hey, it's product, right? That like
aren't as capitalist as necessary. And my take on that is like, there's actually three markets,
you've got to back people, or like the big rad companies end up coming from people that can do
like are addicted to winning in three places. The market for customers, the market for talent,
and the market for capital. And they have like a tremendous amount of interest and respect in all
three games. And they want to go maximize amount of interest and respect in all three games.
And they want to go maximize and manipulate all three of those.
I'm not saying you illegals like, no, don't go that.
But like, they're looking at all three going constantly,
how do I move chess pieces to like win this game more?
And so I think a lot of the stunts
are either from a product-oriented mindset of like,
I just need people to see my thing and try my thing,
which I just think asymptotes out at a certain point.
So I'm not sure, I mean, listen,
I think if you're really good at it,
it is a way to bend some of those markets.
You know what I mean?
But I think you need to understand,
I would say, and again,
I don't wanna talk about Sam Less than the other time.
Our takes overlap, no, no. He had a good point about this, which is like, you sell't want to talk about Sam Less than the other time. Our takes overlap. No, no.
He had a good point about this, which is like, you sell AGI to raise free money for a consumer application. You know what I mean?
And you sell self-driving in order to have enough equity to get the margin
structure on your cars to a place that's sustainable.
I'm like, there is a role for that, but it can't be the whole thing.
Yeah.
And my entry in working strategy,
I've been trying to figure out who patient zero was, that like robbed founders of their like,
thought they were a capitalist nature.
And my working theory that I'm curious,
I wanna get more feedback on,
I think Google was Patient Zero,
because they built a product and a business model
that itself was like the most beautifully efficient
capitalist thing that was like constantly operating
at the efficient frontier all the time, where they could come off of like, Hey,
we're just vibes and products. You know what I mean? And, and,
and that was like the exception that proves the rule. You know what I mean?
Cause it was such an amazing, uh, I mean, I saw,
I live in awe of AdWords every day.
Yeah. I mean, I think about Google is a hundred percent right.
Like they built a monopoly that just spit out cash
and then they could just do whatever they wanted
because they didn't need to be ruthless at all
in anything else because they built the perfect machine.
And Morgan earlier was saying you could potentially
say the same thing about Steve Jobs around the original,
the product goat in some ways, who wasn't, he didn't have to be as obsessed
about the business model of the iPhone.
So I totally disagree on that take actually.
And I think I, sorry Jordan, not to cut you off.
No, no, no, no, go for it.
We love disagreement.
So no, so this, I didn't pick this up until recently,
or maybe I knew it and forgot it,
but I mean, everybody knows, like they founded Apple.
He got thrown out when it was time to like run a serious business because he
couldn't do that. Went away, wandered in the woods for reals, started
next. And I didn't realize he plowed almost all of his Apple profits into
Pixar. Did you guys read this article?
No, no. I mean, I'm loosely familiar with that story.
Okay.
So not only did he do that, he ended up getting super deep in the weeds and like running the
game theory on their IPO and strategic investment from Disney.
And he basically like ran the most gnarly capitalist playbook there.
Like he ran Brinksmanship using the capital markets as a lever.
And that's when he went back into Apple and crushed it.
So I actually think he like, is it this counterfactual?
He's exactly the rule, which is you need to be on, you need to be on tilt in all three
ways.
Like what are customers, how do customers value, how do you win them?
How do you win talent and how do you win capital markets?
And I, when I read that story, I felt, uh, I felt like my cooked up theory is actually
correct, which is like, then he reenters, right?
And Apple's a hundred thousand X as he reenters.
Yeah.
I mean, I, I agree with, uh, that, and I have like kind of a similar take, just the, the
difference between Apple and Google is that Apple does operate a little bit in the world
of atoms.
They have to actually make a thing. And so there is some sort of ruthlessness that comes from
like the screws have to be screwed into the metal.
And if you're not on time, you're not on budget,
like things can really go wrong.
Whereas if you just have this beautiful algorithm
and this website that people just have
as their default home page.
That gets better and more profitable with you.
Exactly.
Like it is a little bit easier to run Google than it is to run Apple.
Like Apple, like, you know, your supplier could kind of screw you.
Like, what is going to happen in Google's world?
Anyway, I don't know.
I mean, it's a good take.
Anyway, that was, that's all right.
You mentioned Millennial Founders and Stunts and it got me on one of my nine talk tracks
that I grabbed.
Yeah.
But I mean, we were just talking about this.
Like, there has been this trend and we were tracking it from Yeah, they probably started at Google
but then Mark Zuckerberg drove like the Accord for a long time and then Sam Bankman Fried kind of took that like
Yes, I'm a billionaire
but I'm like the I'm like the down-to-earth billionaire the benevolent billionaire and he was like driving a Toyota Corolla and it kind of
You know created this meme around like you can be really successful and wealthy but like you don't to display it. And then the next generation kind of got caught up in this meme of like, it's all about the experience. I just want experiences. I don't want any material things. And it's a big question about if you can't concretize what you want in life from a material perspective, like you can't say, Hey, I actually want a house for my kids to live in. I actually want that cool
car that I've been obsessed with since I was a kid. Can you
concretize building an empire building a big company? If
you're not thinking concretely in materialist, in materials,
like perspective?
Maybe. I just think that other want to want to win. You know,
I mean, they're just like, I'm playing a game. Yeah. I mean,
I and he knows about Zuck is like, extremely competitive, whatever he gets into. It's like, I'm going
to learn Mandarin faster than anybody else has. So I don't disagree that like, I know,
I joke, everyone talks about Sam Altman is this like visionary product. He also drives
a $3 million car. He like cares about, you know what I mean? He cares. He knows the scoreboards
got the money. But it's $20 $20 million car, by the way.
There you go.
The $3 million Koenigsegg, that's the daily, I think.
And the F1 that is in the daily.
OK, so on the young founders' note, something that I think is
happening is that so much venture capital
appeared and became available to very young people
that weren't necessarily exceptional in San
Francisco.
Let's blame this on Will.
Right.
People that are-
That's the smallest fund you've interviewed all week.
No.
So founders that are talented but not the sort of necessarily top of their class.
And if you give a young founder $5 million, and you tell them to run
their first business, they're going to act like somebody who won the lottery effectively,
they're going to spend money in a way that is just give me a YC take. I thought that
was yeah. And I saw there was a no. So there was a founder who recently raised around we've
we've had him on the show. I think he's super talented.
And he was like, hiring 50 interns at once.
And then he put out a post.
He's gonna hire a videographer this summer
for like half a million dollars a year.
And I was like, that's the one thing that YC gets right.
Because they basically say,
spend no money until your thing is really working.
And then you can start pouring fuel on the fire. But until your thing is really working. And then you can start pouring fuel on the fire,
but until your thing is working,
spend 20 grand a month, right?
Like, a few salaries.
It's really, really hard to buy product market fit.
Like, you can buy growth post product market fit,
but it's very hard to just say.
You can buy attention.
If you could buy product market fit,
big companies would be doing it all day long
for new products.
Anyway, why?
I heard about another company
that's planning to spend 20%
of basically two rounds that they've put together
on a single launch day effectively, right?
And this is for a product
that doesn't have any users right now.
And so it's like stuff like that
where it's like you're giving talented young people
an obscene amount of cash and it's the same thing that would happen to, you know, somebody that's
scratching something off in, you know, you know, at a gas station and they get five million
dollars and they blow it in a year.
Kind of but it's almost worse than that, which is like, hey, here's a bunch of money that
was like pretty easy to come by.
And we don't actually want to hold you accountable to the money coming back because it's product and it's almost we thought on this trap of and you know
I'll get on my rant about value proposition but we fell in this trap of like backing people to do like
subjectively valuable things and that's like a really hard capitalist endeavor to scale which
is like we we so we talk a lot about value
proposition existing on a two by two of quantitative and
qualitative, causal and correlating.
And you can build great businesses in all quadrants,
but like what you do to scale them out of the gate is
totally different.
And I think we got down this like,
Hey, what's the value of that product?
It's like, I don't know.
Let's like, it's different to me than it is.
It's like handbags are clearly valuable,
but like, why are they worth $10,000? So when people like, you can't, there's no math, different to me than it is. It's like, handbags are clearly valuable, but like, why are they worth
$10,000? People like you can't there's no math, science, logic
or anything behind that it just is. And so I think Jordi is
actually another thing where like, here's a bunch of money
and go do things that like do not have, we talk a lot about
our job and our money is to figure out does something work?
Right? Like with a true or false answer. And the problem is a lot
of things got started that like don't have that true or false answer, right? So with a true or false answer. And the problem is a lot of these got started that like don't have that true
or false answer, right? So it becomes about derivative signals
that actually aren't like connected to building killer
businesses. So I guess and your comment.
Yeah, Sam's been really big on AI as a sustaining innovation in
the mag seven in the big tech world. At the same time, it
feels like the big tech, like the stocks are performing very well.
The financials are fantastic, but the products seem to be faltering.
You can't find the right Gemini app for Google very easily.
Apple intelligence, no one's really raving about it, at least in the tech community.
What is your take on big tech?
Is it a better time than ever to start a company
that takes a shot at a product
that normally would be owned by big tech?
I still think that if I were running Google,
well, I don't think 90% of the use cases in AI
are actually interestingly monetizable.
I don't know that it, I don't know that it like,
and I'm starting to watch my own usage now
and question that a little bit,
but like the majority of the content being generated
from AI and majority of my usage is like not average.
I don't know that I'm like that stressed if I'm,
you know what I mean?
Like what am I, I'm like going into Chat2DK
and talking to them about what I'm gonna talk to you guys.
I didn't do that, but like, that use case is like,
really great, really invaluable to me.
What's actually the, back to subjective value prop,
like, what's the value of that?
Very hard to put a number on,
and very hard to monetize.
So I was on, I tweeted it a while ago,
but like, someone did, I forget who did,
someone did a really good, like, take on this,
which is, AI is gonna be awesome to change the world,
and AdWords is mostly safe from that.
So I, and I don't, I just, I don't like,
I don't love the, hey, I wanna take on the product
cause they're not good.
You know what I mean?
I think problem statements when it comes to building
companies are not nearly as powerful.
They don't lead to important companies nearly as much as
like, I just believe the world works in this way, nobody else thinks it works.
And if I don't work on that, somebody else,
and I'm not even big on like, will the future,
it's like, no, no, go work on things you think are like,
just truce, you know what I mean?
Because you don't be pissed if somebody else works on it.
So I don't have a good answer for you,
I'm like, do you take on Google right now?
Because I think the answer has to be,
you have to like come out and think the world works
dramatically different in 15 years
and start building against that.
Yeah.
Can you give us an update on your guys' franchising thesis?
I feel like the venture world got excited
about four wall businesses,
because there had been a bunch of M&A
over the last few years and people realizing like, Hey, you can kind of spin up a
brand and, you know, prove it out a little bit and get a bunch of other
people to, um, you know, scale it.
Uh, and I feel like this idea of, of, you know, this business in a box has
been, um, very prevalent for the last few years, you guys have had, you know,
your own thesis around it,
but I'd be curious to get an update there
on where you see that kind of category
and how you see that opportunity today.
Yeah, I mean, top of funnel has been lighter
than we wanted.
I think the overlap with people who think this way
and like think of slow is not.
So that's something we're constantly working on
is like seeing more in that space.
Listen, the way we got to that space is like, what are the raddest businesses out there? You know what I mean?
Just from a year in, year out efficiency, efficiency on equity, just like what are the
things you would want to own for 30 years and hand off to your family, which I think
is like a really great framework on this stuff.
Yeah.
And you kind of quickly get to franchises.
You know what I mean?
Like they kick off a ton of free cashflow, pretty durable for the most part, really efficient
scale, dot, dot, dot. So like that was just always my interesting take is somehow venture
capitalists became software investors and not folks looking for novel hypotheses that
have killer business models attached to them. And so anyway, that's how we ended up there. How's it gone? It's like really fun
I think it's a very logical output for a lot of innovation. I
Don't think we're doing really as much as we would like there, but we continue to look
And again for us
For us it exists on a bike the it's it's like one expression of you created some novel IP that has rad economics.
You know what I mean?
That does something that creates a ton of value in the world.
And so we talk a lot internally.
We're spending a lot of time on our GBO thesis, our growth by buyout thesis that we rolled
out probably, maybe first, I think we did, but with some friends in our company called
Metropolis.
And it's like, I'm not wedded to that.
I just thought that that, you know what I mean?
I looked at Vertical SaaS and I was like, oh my god.
It actually came to me if it's interesting.
An industrial rail, I got pitched by these guys
with a sweet industrial rail logistics company.
And I was like, I love this.
I want to be involved, right?
And then I started digging in and realizing
there were some tough go-to-market dynamics
where you might actually double the earning power
of an entire industry, but be an 8 million
ARR company. Wow. I mean, you're rationally correct. I'm
making that up. But I was like, that's wild. You know what I
mean? I was like, how did like, how did how did we get to this
place that you could actually do something wildly disruptive? And
everyone else but you get paid for it. And that's where I
started peeling away the layers of like, what right so like,
it's like, oh, what if you bought a railroad and you doubled its profitability?
You'd make more money than an eight million a year or a SaaS company, right?
Yeah, right then you go to one of the other versions that it's like, oh maybe some some places
It's more efficient to vertically integrate
maybe some places business in a box and then a
Woman who works for me is much smarter than I am when I was spouting all this off quickly
It's like what about toast and I, yeah, toast should definitely be a software
company. So that kind of informed our framework that franchise is slotted into.
How do you think about buyouts? I mean, there's venture capitalists that are getting in and
on the equity side. There's some funds, private equity funds that do equity investments and
they have bank partners that do the debt piece. I imagine that you don't have a credit fund separately that's managing that,
but is that coming? Okay. And then,
and then there's also like the private credit guys that come in with just the
credit piece. How do you think that that's going to evolve?
And is it important for VCs to kind of have at least partners in the
whole capital stack?
You'll have the partner. I mean, like, so again, Metropolis is our kind of lighthouse case study part that is in the whole capital stack. You'll have the partner
I mean like so again metropolis is our kind of lighthouse case study in this if you look at I think the
Where there's a hole is kind of the growth equity portion of this, right?
So we'll find someone to go do some breakthrough product work and go
Oh my god, the economics are changed and we'll fund them to do a
Small scale by of a business and even thought see if you can like there's basically two experiments. Is the product actually transform economics
and does it translate when you own and operate the P&L?
Then there is a hole on the equity side for like,
great, let's go buy 10 of EBITDA, not one.
But if you look at the Metropolis deal, it's Wall Street.
You know what I mean?
So I think I had enough evidence,
this all slots right into their models
and Vista's credit fund comes in and da da da da da.
I'm curious, we had Harley on from Shopify yesterday
and it feels, in many ways it's the most significant
SMB platform in the world.
It's a product that at scale, entrepreneurs,
it's so critical to the business that yes,
they're gonna have issues with it,
but generally people feel great about Shopify.
And I've been interested to think about in a lot of other categories, you have these sort of like
Jiro dreams of sushi type opportunities where Linear was able to look at everybody hates Jira.
But like we need tools like that.
And so what if you just built an amazing issue tracker from the ground up and really cared about the craft?
And if you look at Shopify you could look at you know, oh this design things not great
Or what if this was better or what what if we you know made this more intuitive?
But I don't believe that you could take you could take the town most talented people in the world right now and try to get them to rebuild, you know, a commerce platform like Shopify.
And just given the developer ecosystem and now shop pay and all these other things. I don't know. I don't think I'm struggling to see how somebody replaces Shopify in the market right now. And I'm curious how, you know, if you guys have looked at any other
any other players that is anybody even daring enough to try to take on Shopify?
I just I'm with you. I think it's a fool's errand.
So back to like value prop, which my whole North Star is like,
I need to buy someone that's creating a ton of value and can capture a lot of it pretty efficiently. That's the end of the day what we're trying to find in the world
But value prop has to sit on two axes season again
So this is like everyone calls me professor when you're hearing why I go in some long tangent. That's like all theoretical
Love it, but you got to have an absolute value prop but also a relative one, right?
Like if you go out great,
you create a dollar for people that are stoked.
If the other solution creates like 98 cents of value, right?
And it solves the same,
you guys are gonna be in a dog fight
from the sales and marketing standpoint, right?
You're gonna, you're like, yes, you create value,
but you're communicating that to the market
is gonna be super hard.
And so I think the issue with taking on someone
like Spotify, Shopify is the value,
like it's hard to create relatively more value.
Can you do things nicer on the edges?
Yeah, but like the core functionality of like,
I have a business that generates profit for my family.
You know, it's like, that's a lot of it.
And it's very hard.
The switching costs are super high.
There's a ton of risk.
And it's hard to do that dramatically better and be like,
hey, just by using our platform, you know what I mean?
You will get, make dramatically more money.
And so-
And Shopify can say, to be clear, they can say,
look, if you have shop pay,
you're gonna get an incremental,
you're gonna get an incremental 10% of revenue,
just by default because the check,
you're gonna have less abandoned carts
We lose you
Well, he's frozen let's kick it over he's absolutely ads go to get bezel calm
Your bezel concierge is available now to source you any watch on the planet seriously any watch
Let's bring in some more soundboard.
We can also sing the Wander song.
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Can you imagine if Slow is just so committed
to just being lean like their companies
that they didn't pay for Zoom?
The internet bill or something?
No ISP?
Anyway, we have three founders coming on
back to back to back.
Tell Will he's happy to jump back on, we can close out,
but we don't have anyone in the studio right now.
But we are gonna to talk about nourish
Matic and fastino three wildly different companies one in the healthcare space
One in the we actually have the robot in the box over there. We should unbox it on the show with him
It's kind of a next-generation Roomba talking about
Cleaning in your house and very excited to talk to him about that. And then, Dusty is training AI models
on commodity graphics cards.
So I'm sure there'll be a bunch of interesting things
that we can dive into on how DeepSeq was able to train
on low grade, unoptimized cards,
if they can do it on gaming quality cards.
I'm sure other people can do it
on all sorts of different cards.
Should we do some timeline in the meantime?
Let's do it.
Let's talk about it.
I messaged Will.
I'm actually concerned, hopefully.
Oh, we have someone.
Okay, great.
Yeah, let's bring them in.
We have Aidan.
Welcome to the stream.
How are you doing?
Welcome.
What's up, guys?
Thanks for having me.
Congrats on all the success you're having with the show.
You guys are blowing up.
Yeah, I mean, success, technical difficulties.
It's one thing after the other today on the stream,
but we're doing well.
Our last guest just froze and bounced in two seconds,
but it was a great conversation and excited to have you here.
Would you mind kicking us off with a little bit
of an introduction on yourself, the company,
and the news from this week?
Sure. Yeah, so I so I'm in DER.
I'm the co-founder and CEO of a company called nourish, uh,
nourish connects chronic condition patients of all different types with a
registered dietitian over telehealth.
And we get it covered through their health insurance. Um, you know,
we have the largest network of dietitians in the country.
We have over 3000 dietitians on the platform. Um, we served hundreds of thousands of patients and the largest network of dieticians in the country. We have over 3,000 dieticians on the platform.
We serve hundreds of thousands of patients and the vast majority of patients pay nothing
at all through their health insurance.
We're in network with most major commercial insurance payers, Medicare, you know, some
Medicaid plans at this point.
And you know, I've made a lot of exciting progress that we can speak about today.
And then, yeah, in terms of the news you mentioned, we announced a Series B round recently.
It's a $70 million round.
70, let's go.
Fantastic.
Yeah, ring the bell, ring the bell.
Congratulations.
Thanks, yeah, so, you know,
it was led by JP Morgan's Growth Equity Fund,
and then participants from all of our existing investors,
so Index Ventures who had led the Series A
and Thrive who had led the Seed Round.
And then Box Group who I know our mutual friend,
David Tisch, who's invested at the Seed Round
has doubled down at every round, including this one.
We got mutual friends all over the place.
James Pierpont Morgan, doing him proud.
JP Morgan in the deal. Is this like, why was this not covered
by insurance before? Is this a regulatory change? Is this
technology? What's driving the growth in the business? Are you
just the first to think of it? Or is there something unique
that's allowed you to start covering this type of treatment
with insurance? Because that seems like a major major
unlock, right?
Yeah, yeah. Good question. So this actually first started getting covered in the early 2000s by Medicare. I think it was 2005 Medicare had done a study and seen ROI for this sort of care. And
really the insight that Medicare put together, which is kind of the same one we put together,
is that you look at the healthcare crisis and trillions of dollars to spend and hundreds of millions of people with chronic
conditions and millions of deaths each year.
Actually you start double clicking.
Most of those are downstream of nutrition and the vast majority of spend is just downstream
of a handful of conditions, obesity and heart disease and high blood pressure and cholesterol
and kidney disease and a few others.
So they had seen ROI for working with a dietitian.
It's a really effective intervention and started covering it.
And then the Affordable Care Act 2009
carved it out as a preventative benefit.
And so that's this coverage
and then kind of the commercial payers
followed and more Medicaid plans.
And then kind of the more recent unlock,
which is right around when we were starting the business,
the business is a little over three years old
was telehealth coverage at parity with in-person
because of COVID. And so that was kind of maybe the biggest recent regulatory unlock
that made this a lot more accessible. Of course, you could have built this business in person,
but would have been much harder than the way it's built today via telehealth.
On the subject of the raise, how is it different raising from major financial institution versus a typical
Valley VC. I imagine it's both similar and different at the
same time.
Yeah, so I think actually, in terms of the actual firm, the
person we're working there, Paris Heyman, who we're excited
to partner with, he actually was previously at Index Ventures
and been part of the team that had run our Series A.
So actually, it wasn't so different in practice
in terms of just, we'd already known him
and I think the processes are similar.
I think the biggest difference really was obviously
at each incremental stage, there's different expectations.
So Series B, very different in terms of,
maybe more focused on the actual metrics
and getting really deep on the data than Series A series a or, or, or seed. And so, you know, that's definitely, you know,
an adjustment, but, uh, we're fortunate that kind of the, you know,
the basics of the process and, and the buy-in on the mission and vision and stuff
like that was, you know, pretty similar to last round, given, uh,
we already knew Paris.
That makes sense.
What is the tech stack like for one of these companies? Are the,
is there like a plaid of insurance that you can kind of build on top of like,
or are you writing integrations? And is this is there
a piece of like, you know, service as a software where
there's a lot of humans in the loop in the short term, and then
in the long term, it'll be AI driven? Like, what does the
actual build up of the company look like?
So there is not not a not a ton of what you said in terms of the insurance contracting piece.
That's something we've kind of a big unlock in the value we provide for dieticians is
actually going directly to these insurance companies and negotiating these contracts.
I think that's one of the reasons most dieticians didn't accept insurance historically is it's
a pain to go directly to one of these really large enterprises and negotiate a contract.
And then even if you get the contract, deal with the ongoing administrative burden,
licensing, credentialing, billing, and whatnot.
And so for the most part, we built all that,
whether it's from a tech perspective
or just from an operational competency perspective in-house.
We have leveraged a great vendor called Candid Health
for billing.
And it's kind of API forward billing platform
that we built on top of.
And so that's been a big unlock on the billing side.
But I would say most of the other stuff from a,
contracting and credentialing and licensing perspective
has been a lot of manual work and kind of competency
that we've built up in-house.
Yeah, can you talk about trends in the evolution
of dieticians and how they work?
We were talking about how there was some research
that showed that artificial intelligence
was particularly good at therapy.
And you could imagine
The future is you know, you just have an LLM giving you diet advice
They're on tik-tok they're like, okay my all my clients are keto now the next week they're on tick-tock again
They're like, okay, we're going pale
Carnivore now
No, yeah, I mean you're hitting on an important question, which is like, you know, we've seen AIV a
big unlock for the business.
And I think, you know, you're kind of asking more about, you know, the patient side, which
what we've started to build in into the app is, you know, essentially a lot of tools for
the provider to use or the patient to use without the provider in the loop to get a
lot of the info you're
talking about.
And the way I think about it is about 80% of the equation is actually behavior change,
but about 20% and accountability, and that's where the human is especially good.
But 20% is a little bit more educational, blocking and tackling, and Google is not especially
good at that, but the LLMs are.
And so that's a lot of where we're leaning in is like, how do you give the dietician tools to, with AI to really provide amazing care on the things that only
they can do and then leverage AI for the rest of it? You know, if you're, you know, you've
gotten to the point where maybe you're obese and have multiple chronic conditions, it's
not that you're just kind of, you know, a couple of educational tips away from having
success. You know, you've typically built up these habits over years, if not decades. And so while the LLM can provide some help in terms
of educating you on what's good for your diet and personalizing it and whatnot, the dietician
is really important for having the human in the loop and really the accountability to
do that behavior change. And so as the LLMs keep getting better, we want to really lean
in there. We think we're really well positioned to leverage AI in this way given we've seen hundreds of thousands of patients and have a lot of data on what works in terms of driving outcomes and habit change and behavior change.
And so we think the synergy is having both the dietitian and the AI in the loop kind of drives better care ultimately. Very cool. How, what have you seen around the adoption of GLP-1s?
The concern that I've always had with them is that
people that should just focus on their diet end up, you know,
taking, you know, a magic shot that makes them lose weight.
And that's good because for a lot of reasons,
but I have to imagine a lot of reasons, but I have to imagine
a lot of the end patients that you guys work with
are both using GLP-1s and thinking about the diet
very intensely, but what's your reaction been?
And I'm sure that's a question you got a lot
even during the fundraise, I imagine.
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
And it has been really interesting to see
the evolution of that over the past few years.
And our dietitians had a lot of expertise
working with GLP ones even before the recent explosion.
I think as y'all know,
they were originally approved for diabetes.
And so dietitians have been working with diabetic patients
on them for a long period of time.
But of course, the recent explosion
that everyone has seen for weight loss has also affected us.
And what we've seen is that they are a really,
really important innovation and are really valuable
for a lot of patients that are really useful tool
in the toolkit.
And we've definitely seen it skyrocket
in terms of our patient population and people using that,
but they aren't a panacea.
So, there's a lot of side effects. A lot of people
fall off the medication because of the side effects or either just like, you know, the logistics of
adherence of getting access to the medication and injecting yourself every week. And so what we've
really done is kind of pair ourselves as a complement to the drug. You know, these drugs
are FDA approved to be paired with diet and lifestyle change. And so they we see ourselves
as that part of the equation.
And there are a few different ways we've built out our care model across the journey of a
GLP-1, which is first, we have a care program that's before you even get on a medication.
So a lot of folks want to, before they try a medication, see if lifestyle change will
work for them.
And so we'll have a step therapy type product where you try it before you get on the medication.
And then if you do choose to get on the medication, we have of course a commanding program that
will maximize the efficacy of the drug by mitigating side effects.
And we've seen a lot of cool outcomes with people losing about 33% more weight with the
dietitian plus the GLP-1 than they do just with the GLP-1 alone.
And then the final piece of the equation, which is maybe the most important, which is
actually getting off the drug.
A big problem with the medications, which our payers see, but also our patients, is
that when you get off, you often see rebound weight gain.
And then, of course, for the patient, that's really frustrating and difficult.
But also for the system and for the insurance payers, from an ROI perspective, now you've
spent all these dollars to have someone lose weight and then regain it, which of course
is worse.
And so we have a program built around getting off the medication and making
sure that's, that's sustainable for the long run.
And so yeah, we've seen it be, you know, a really big tailwind for the business because
it's top of mind for payers in terms of managing this cost and lifestyle change is a part of
it.
And then of course, patients are really motivated to change their behavior once, once they're
on one of these medications.
What's the use of the funding?
70 million dollars, a lot of cash. Is that R&D spend? Are there
growth channels that you're investing in? How are you thinking about growing the team
and the company over the next couple of years with that new Series B?
Yeah. So I mean, the way we've always kind of thought about our success is scale and outcome.
So it's, you know, how many people can we help and how much do we help them, the quality of the care.
And so I want to use the capital on both.
So scale maybe most obviously, we want to really invest in expanding our network of
dietitians.
So as I mentioned, I have 3,000 today, the largest in the country, but I've had a long
wait list for a long period of time of dietitians who want to join, who haven't been able to.
And so really want to expand our network of dietitians quickly to be able to support more
patients. Of course, on the patient side of the equation, we'll invest and go to market to get in front
of more patients to raise awareness that this is something that's effective and covered
by their insurance.
And then on the payer piece of the equation, want to keep investing in partnerships with
insurance companies.
As I mentioned, we have pretty good national coverage, a couple hundred million lives covered
at this point, but there's a lot more plans we can get a network with to expand coverage
and want to continue doing so.
Maybe last but certainly not least, maybe the part that I'm most excited about is really
accelerating development and product development effectively.
I think we talked about some of the AI use cases we've seen for patients and dieticians.
I think basically everything we've built there has been successful for those parties and driving outcomes and saving dieticians time and patients really love it.
And so, you know, we're really eager to continue investing in a lot of that, you know, product
development and, you know, long term, I think the reason we got into this, I had had my
own chronic condition, I had really bad migraines and I'd worked with a dietician to solve it.
And, you know, of course, dietitians were really valuable for me.
And that was part of the reason and my co-founders.
And that's part of the reason why I wanted to expand access to it.
But we know that, you know, part of healthy lifestyle changes, not just nutrition,
but things like mental health and and sleep and fitness.
And I think there's a lot of interesting kind of applications we can do of that in
our product to drive better outcomes.
And so really want to run at that pretty quickly.
What else are you seeing in the overall like health tech market that's interesting or
complimentary? We talked a little bit about GLP ones. There's a lot of
online pharma companies that are working in that market, but
where else are you seeing exciting companies or trends that could be complementary to what you do?
Yeah, I think they're kind of on the vectors
that I just mentioned.
So of course there's been a lot of movement
in the GLP-1 space and we've partnered with players there
to help get access to these medications to our patients.
A lot of our patients work with a therapist in tandem.
And so there's great companies in the mental health world
that we've referred to.
I think labs are really interesting.
About 85% of our patients get labs done each year.
It's of course a natural part of the care journey
of both getting a baseline of discovering
where you're at in your health journey
and where you need to improve,
but also as you're making progress over time.
It feels like the lab market was just destroyed
by the Theranos story and no venture capitalists
will touch it now.
But yeah, I mean, it does seem like there's
a lot of new entrants there, superpower and function health
kind of doing the upmarket version,
but there's lots of other ways to get labs done, obviously.
Yeah, and it's, I think, you know, of course,
the Theranos was more about the actual kind of base level
of like getting the lab work done.
I think a lot of these players that are doing cool work that you mentioned are more about kind of facilitating,
getting the labs through the large lab companies and then what AI is really great of like
interpreting the labs. And so of course, a lot of our patients are getting labs done consistently
and think the people there are doing a lot of cool work. That's cool. Jordy, anything?
Amazing. This is great. This is fantastic. Thanks so much. Congratulations on the massive round.
Say it again.
Thanks guys.
One last size guys.
It's great to be on it.
You all ask good questions.
And yeah, I was thinking about as I was getting on us,
we feedback's really big on our team
and I always get feedback about talking too fast.
And so as I was going on here, I was like,
oh, I gotta make sure to talk slowly.
But then I realized YouTube and podcast app,
that's probably where most of your views are.
People will just change the
Lot of people say they just listen to the show on to X because it's too much content
So the real high performance on 3x
People can listen to whatever whatever they want. Anyway, thanks so much for stopping by we'll talk to you. Great to meet you guys
Next up we have Matic Robotics coming in the studio. I'm pumped for this one.
Yeah, yeah, you've been talking to the founder.
I was DMing with the founder.
He sent us a robot.
We're gonna have it be cleaning our new studio in no time.
And excited for that.
Wired said, this is the best robot vacuum we've tested.
Fantastic.
It scored a rare 10 out of 10.
Let's hear it.
Bum bum bum.
Can I get the Ashton Hall sound effect?
There we go.
I haven't heard this at all today. It's killing me. Let's hear it. Can I get the Ashton Hall sound effect? There we go.
I haven't heard this at all today.
It's killing me.
Let's go.
Bring them in and play that effect again, Jordy.
Welcome to the stream.
Welcome to the stream.
Congratulations on the Wired article.
Congratulations on all the progress.
Can you kick us off with the introduction?
He's got robots and homes.
Robots and homes.
They said it could have been done.
They said it was a 2035 thing.
Most people, they ship a render, they ship a video. Thisots and homes. Yes. They said it could have been done. Yeah. They said it was a 2035.
Most people, they ship a render, they ship a video. This guy ships a real robot. What a concept. Welcome to the stream.
How you doing? Thank you guys for having me. I appreciate it. I'm a president co-founder at Matic.
We build home robots and my background is in computer vision and product and prior to this we were at Nest.
So that's a quick background. And that makes sense.
Yeah.
Okay. So how many people thought you were crazy to go make
a, you know, another take on a, on a, you know,
the next Roomba, you know, whatever, whatever the pitch was.
I think they still do.
I think it's still, why are you doing floor cleaning robots?
That's the, that's the question we get quite a bit.
And, and the answer really is that this
is the only robot with scale. The irony of what we are doing is that at Towson Robot Ship, we are
already the second largest American consumer robots company. So we talk about this point of view that
there is this perception that navigation and mapping and localization in indoor
environment is a solved problem. But I tend to think of it as a
firmist paradox that if it is a solved problem, there are all
the robots in our lives. Why aren't they at the airports?
Right? Why aren't they at the airports, grocery stores? Why
aren't we swarmed with it? And the answer is that it's actually
quite a hard problem. Number one, number two, economic viability, which is
making it profitable and surviving as a business itself
is a challenge and on a flip side, making it valuable for
customers.
Yeah, talk about the evolution of the relevant breakthroughs in
artificial intelligence and and which ones you are true
beneficiary of
ImageNet obviously very groundbreaking the transformer architecture
Haven't heard about that having an impact at least in the Amazon's Roomba context. Are you using transformers? What about?
LLMs
Vision a vision first. Yeah, only yeah, which John has been nerding out about
for months now.
So I want to know, yeah, does this lead into the why now?
Or how do you tell the story of the underlying technologies
that have led to an improved experience here?
A great question.
We actually left Nest and Google in 2017
to start working on it because of two trends.
One is self-supervised learning techniques
that were emerging, which is what LLMs are essentially
they're running on their own.
And then second one was that my co-founder and CEO,
Namneet, helped spec out Google Coral TPU from Nest's
perspective.
So that trend of AI chips coming out and compute skyrocketing
was a trend we saw coming.
And between those two things,
we thought it was possible to build edge device robotics. And the reason we thought edge device
was critical was we as humans, we don't have hard minds. Latency is really critical, especially in a
dynamic environment that we live in. So we always thought that robots have an ability to make
decisions really fast. And specifically for indoor robotics, we just felt
like indoor world was built by humans, for humans, for our visual perception system. So vision only
robotics was the only way to go, that it needed the same perception system as us. If you're trying to
build, let's say level five robots, well, level five robots for cars means that cars drive like
humans. So inside home, it means that they behave like humans, clean like humans, manipulate like humans. So it should have the same perception system. And
those were the trends that helped quite a bit in doing that. And now, if you look at
a robot, what it does, it builds a Google street view, like a map on its own. So the
way we thought about it is we as humans, we go into a new home, new environment, new indoor
space, we self-explore, self-map, and then as humans, we go into new home, new environment, new indoor space, we self explore, self map,
and then remember exactly where we are.
So localized, can robot do that?
Well, the answer is yes, it can.
Our robot does that,
but it still has the same ability as cats and dogs.
We can't tell our cats and dogs to go sit by the couch
or go in a living room.
They don't understand that yet.
And that's where VLMs and some of these open source, Dino and Clip, some of the models
that are being released are really useful because now we can extract semantic embeddings
and information at the image level out of it. And we can actually transfer that into
our map at a voxel level. So each of our maps are built using voxels, which is like a 3D
pixel, one centimeter by one centimeter. So each walks, I actually knows that it belongs to a chair or a
human leg or a child or a piece of furniture. And that's when you can start
asking and doing all kinds of things like, Hey, go clean by the bookcase in a
living room. And it knows what you're talking about. So it's really, that's the
next layer, which is turning it into much more of a natural language
interaction interaction between a robot and a human. Talk about the actual training runs that go into your models. Is there a concept of
iteration on the training runs like GPT-1, GPT-2, GPT-3, GPT-4, GPT-4.5? He said they spent less than
a million dollars on video chips. Okay, yeah, so break that down. How do you think about,
and video to compute. Okay, yeah. So break that down. How do you think about? Obviously, you're acquiring data
constantly, but then, is there this pace of let's do another
bigger run? And are you is there capital at risk when you when
you actually roll out a big training run?
Great question. So I'll take a little bit of a high view and
come down. But there is this concept in self-driving car as well as robotics that there would be one god model and that god model would do everything.
When you look at practicality of our deployment, almost always there are multiple models at a smaller level that you do it.
So we've always taken this approach that we're not trying to do research. We're trying to build product. So whatever is available to us, let's go do it. So our approach has been combination of obviously
neural nets and some of the work that's happening,
but also what we do is referred to as a special AI.
So that's a term that Dr. Feef Lee really prioritized
and we use human information bottleneck principle.
So the way we do this, we have image to voxel neural network
and then we combine that with
long-term SLAM using both classical and techniques and build this world.
And then the physics of the world is permanent.
Now as a human being, I can know that there is a wall here.
I know what will gravity do.
So based on that, for us, it doesn't take 26,000 iterations to learn how to tie shoelaces.
So the same way,
once you know the physics, you can predict things of that physics that I know certain objects will
topple over if I were to do that. So that's how we think about it. So we use information model-like
principles. So for us, computes and data has been critical, but it's less of a traditional,
logistic, gigantic data set and let let robot do everything on top
of it. So it's less of a less of a compute intensity. But there
is obviously iterations. And is there something like a mixture
of experts model that you could kind of pull from in and design
like, yeah, to kind of scale up the model? Is that is that
relevant at all?
Absolutely. So we have our own master, uh, student models and stuff.
Exactly. And what we, and the way we use it is that, Hey, the 3d part of it,
we use a traditional techniques of a special AI, then adding semantics and
understanding and context part of it. That's our master and student model works
very well. But even for the neural net, sometimes for the precision, there are
master and certain models that we can use for precision as well
Just to see the way human sees so occupancy network that we have
A lot of love a lot of it is inspired by the approach that Tesla has taken over the years for to build their full self-driving
Talk about simulation. Are you using a lot of simulated data?
I imagine that you could pro procedurally generate a million or trillion
that you could procedurally generate a million or trillion households with different furniture legs and stuff pretty easily, drive virtual robots around that, use that to generate data. We've
heard about a lot of that in the humanoid context. Are you seeing luck with synthetic data for your
product? Absolutely. I think we started with self-supervised learning. Then we realized that
simulation and supervised simulation actually works very well as well along the way. So we built our own simulation environment using Unreal Engine with our own robot.
So we've customized it over the years and have a large set of environment.
But that usually takes it, what we've seen is that it takes us to about 0 to 80 percent,
but that the final 20 percent always comes with the real world data.
So we initially trained to create the master model, but then the precision and fine tuning almost always comes from adding real world data. So we initially trained to create the master model, but then the precision and
fine-tuning almost always comes from adding real-world data. Switching gears a little bit on
product strategy, I imagine you have ambitions well beyond this initial form factor.
Yeah, walk us through maybe the HISS. always the, the form factor that you were going to start with and at what point do you, do you look at kind
of expanding from here?
Great question.
So we always imagine the goal was always to go build Rosie the robot.
All of us want that.
Uh, some things, uh, sort of Alfred that comes in a home and just takes care of everything.
But we thought that the best way to do it is the way human child grows, which is in the first five years of human child, they
just learn how to navigate from a perception perspective. They are just trying to make sense
of 3D rules and they pick up the object and learn that it drops. So in the same way, floor cleaning
robot allows us to do that. But then we evolve and say, just like a five to 10 year old child,
can it start picking up a shoes and moving it around? Can you just organize unbreakable items?
So for five to 10 year old,
we don't give them knives and scissors
and all the risky stuff.
So in the same way, can it start with this task
and can we along the way productize it and start shipping?
And then ultimately put it all together
as a full blown robot.
And we thought this approach was better
because as we did consumer research
and we always start with customers and work backwards, we realized that there is a lot of apprehension about robot and whether they can do
things accurately. So even though, you know, robot vacuums have been around for 23 years now,
they've only penetrated 13% of the US households. 87% don't even have it yet. So, and the reason is
because they're just not that good. They're not accurate. They're
actually kind of dumb. So for 2002, they were an amazing device, but they hadn't moved forward.
And we thought that purpose-built device that solves the problem to the nth level is way to
earn customers trust and then enter it to the second, third, fourth task. And the way we built
it is if you see our current robot, we have a black crown, we have a black border on the top.
That's where the eyes and the brain sits.
And it's very much like a human being.
And we always thought that we just have to build that once
and then it just grows up just like a robot.
So as the robot scales, it will scale.
So the beautiful part of what we've built is that,
and then we have demos of it in our thing
where we can just raise the robot,
maybe even put it at a six feet level and everything just works out of the box. So you can put it on a top of the
humanoid and it will map the entire space for humanoid and even the six degrees of freedom
with the same precision at one centimeter level.
So are you thinking about adding like robotic arms so it can pick up a shoe and put it back
in the closet?
Absolutely. As we as we're going to use this home, I've been about 200 homes now real homes
now and parents always talk about can you just give me a tall cleaning robot?
That's my biggest pain point. So that comes up again and again.
The second thing we've heard is a lot of kids talking about their parents who live
on their own in Florida or Texas, and they don't have a time to go there.
And they are not technologically savvy as well. So they're like,
we'll take this robot.
We'll actually control it, clean their home.
But can you also send me a 10 second time lapse at the end of the day to confirm
that, um, that they're okay.
How do you think about privacy?
I imagine you have to message like, Hey, we need the data, but
we're going to anonymize it.
You can trust us, but then there's data leaks that happen.
I'm sure this is an important part of your messaging, but what are you saying
to people?
Huge, huge part of so prior to but what are you saying to people?
Huge, huge part of, so prior to we worked at Nest,
I was a product lead for Nest camera.
So I know privacy is a big deal.
So that's why we do the whole thing on their Edge device.
And then the way we do is just opt in.
And we always knew, and this is our prior startup at Flutter,
we also did gesture detection,
we're back coming at this,
that if you build a trust with user,
there will be a spectrum of users. On one end, there will be users who says, don't ever take
even my telemetry data. I don't want to share anything. On the other hand, there will be user
who says, take everything you want. I don't really care. In between, there are lots and lots of users
who would say, hey, these are the long tail at which your robot fails. And I actually want you
to help get better. So we'll share the data.
So we have, we haven't even done it automatically, but there is a record button on our app and
users have already uploaded thousands hours of data with permission on their own.
Do you have evals? Like when you train a new model, do you put the robot in the boss?
The final eval is kinematic robot cleanup after two toddlers after they've had dinner.
I was going to say frat party. You know, throwing frat party. No, no, toddlers after they've had dinner. I was gonna say frat party.
You know, throwing frat party.
Toddlers are more messy.
They make a bigger mess.
Spaghetti and meatballs.
A regular vacuum can't even handle it.
No, no, no, instant disaster.
It needs a scoop and all sorts of stuff.
Anyway, Jordan, one last question.
How do you expect the humanoid,
how do you expect the humanoid market to play out over the next few years?
Right. It's obviously an area that you guys will be competing in that market over time,
but clearly made some big decisions around how to get there.
There's a lot of companies that have raised so much money.
Once you've raised a couple billion dollars
People are gonna want you to be shipping or at least having you know robots that are that are creating value
in these settings
But at the same time
Like I robot, you know, and we talked about this offline. I robot is the biggest
Robotics company in the US with 50 million units shipped.
Amazon Robotics is the second at 750k. And then Boston Dynamics has only shipped 1500 robots in its entire lifetime.
And so when, but at the same time, we just had Sonia on from Sequoia Capital a little bit ago, and she's like very humanoid-pilled.
She was like, I think they're coming like, you know, quickly.
Two years.
And so I'm curious as somebody who's actually building and shipping robots
now, kind of how you project out the next few years.
And I imagine, uh, you must be kind of entertained by it all.
It's, it's going to be, you know, there's a lot of capital on the line.
You know how hard it is, but I'm curious how you think.
There, there, that's a great question is, but I'm curious how you think.
That's a great question. There are two pieces of the puzzle there.
One, I think you guys have touched in past interviews
around accuracy and how accurate can robotics get.
And the thing that we talk about internally
is with AI today, we are collaborating.
If it gets 90% of right, we're pretty happy with it.
With robotics, especially in a trivial task,
we almost always want to delegate.
We want to set it and forget.
We don't want to do that last percent
because I don't want to finish that last corner
cleaning my, of the cleaning or that one last plate.
And that actually puts bar much higher.
There is a corollary there as well,
which is we go to school, maybe four years, eight years, learn how to do coding.
So if AI gets 90% of right, we are mesmerized.
But we don't really go to school to learn how to navigate our home or how to pick up
a glass or how to vacuum floors.
So the trivial the task, the more higher the accuracy expectations for customers.
Because if you make mistakes in just picking up a glass they think of it as a dumb robot like come on
Yeah, and then the analogy is imagine someone is helping you set a dining table
For your dinner party one out of hundred times and one out of hundred times. They break one glass or one set of plate
Yeah, there's a good chance you're gonna fire them. So so the bar of accuracy is much higher there
So that's one piece and then second thing is the adoption
So the bar of accuracy is much higher there. So that's one piece.
And then second thing is the adoption.
So this is where General Magic is a good example
in our mind.
General Magic tried to build iPhone in 1995,
didn't really work, amazing team,
all X people, Tony Fidel was there.
And instead what we got was purpose-built device
from cell phones to PDS to iPods to BlackBerry's,
and then we combine everything into an iPhone.
So in a similar way, we tend to believe
that purpose-built robots will see light of the day first,
and then they will get combined into multipurpose devices.
And the more you have a human form,
the more expectations that customers would have.
So there's a home side of it,
and there is an enterprise side of it.
So we tend to think that in enterprise or factories,
there is a good chance robots would be used in two years
with homes, we think it's a little bit part of it.
Yeah, that makes sense.
Yeah, and if you're buying, let's say, you know,
a humanoid comes in at even comparable to something
like what UniTree is selling right now,
and it's $40,000, your expectations on that are-
Gigantic.
Gigantic, so it's going to be an uphill battle,
but we'll have to have you back on as there's.
Yeah. One last thing. What were we about to say?
I was thinking that you were touching on a really great
point. We actually talked about it internally,
that there is no ubiquitous consumer electronics device
higher than $2,000.
Yeah. T.V.s
Cars have been around for a hundred years,
utilities clear, even though, and that's usually 10,000, $20, TV. Right. Cars have been around for 100 years. Utilities clear even though, and that's usually 10,000, $20,000.
And even then it's a considered purchase. We just don't wake up and do it.
So the utility and the value has to be proven.
And then you have to convince customers to say, okay,
it is worth spending 10,000, $20,000 and it will survive five years, 10 years.
So there is a productization element to the robotics that needs to be paid a little bit more attention to.
Well, thanks so much for stopping by.
This is a great chat.
We will talk to you soon.
We are gonna use our Maddox.
We're gonna use our Maddox at the new studio.
Yeah, we're excited.
Absolutely.
Thank you so much for sending us.
We will.
We'll let you know.
Cheers.
We'll talk to you soon, bye.
Next up we have Fastino coming in the studio.
Sounds like an Italian name, Fasthino.
Fasthino.
Ask him about it, John.
You love to, your Italian accent is your favorite.
Yeah, it's my favorite.
Big news, Fasthino trains AI models on cheap gaming GPUs
and just raised $17.5 million from COSLA.
Let's bring him into the studio.
We got Greg here from F from Fastino, or George.
George, welcome.
How you doing?
Hey guys, how you doing?
You guys hear me all right?
Yeah.
First off, how do you pronounce the company's name?
Is it Fastino or Fasta-no?
So funny enough, Fasti-ni in Italian means a feast.
Oh, okay.
But Fastino, it's kind of a play on fast and tiny.
Like very quick can small model.
It's our lame attempt at naming.
You've been feasting on Nvidia graphics cards.
You've been feasting on costla venture dollars putting them together.
Can you break down?
What's the news this week?
All the above.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, great.
Great being on guys.
My last one of the week last week.
Tapping it off. All right. T I the last one of the week? Last one of the week. Yeah, you're capping it off.
All right.
All right, hoping to save the best for last.
You guys are looking pretty fresh by the way.
I feel pretty underdressed.
Yeah, hit the soundboard.
Let them know that we still got energy.
I wanna hear the Ashton Hall effect.
Not that one, the other one.
Let's go!
It's Friday, but we still got energy.
We're not slacking off here.
Next time I'm gonna have a suit.
Please.
I'll go buy one.
Please bring it on, bring it on.
Suits are, you should have one for every day of the week.
Yes, yes, yes.
I gotta go to New York in a couple weeks.
I think I gotta go first by a suit.
Gotta hit the tailor.
We got a suit guy for you.
Yeah, yeah, we'll introduce you.
Anyway, break down the news
and then we'll start talking about the business. Yeah, so'll introduce you. Anyway, break down the news, and then we'll start talking about the business.
Yeah, so great being on.
This week, we launched TLMs.
So it's a family of language models called
task-specific language models.
They're small, lightweight models that are really fast,
and they're built for AI developers.
So being task-specific really means
that we're more accurate
on enterprise tasks than large models like OpenAI
or GemPy, and they cost a fraction to train.
So we spent less than 100K on GPUs to train our models,
but we're beating industry benchmarks for enterprise tasks.
Okay, so are you fine tuning open source models?
Are you ripping apart a mixture of experts model to just have a smaller set of weights?
Give me the scope.
I've seen the GPT 3.5 circles like this and the GPT 4 circles huge.
How big is your circle?
I guess.
So we're not fine tuning or distilling any open source transformer based models.
What we're doing is very different. We took a different approach from the large labs
We built a new architecture
Maintains high accuracy even with very low parameter count
So we're not fully revealing exactly how many parameters but all of our models are far below a billion parameters
Oh, wow, our accurate our architecture actually gets more accurate as the task becomes
well defined. So they're not generalist models. You cannot ask them to do anything, but they're
extremely performant for the tasks that we built them for.
Okay. Talk about the data sources. I imagine that if you're doing summarization, you need
a whole bunch of examples of that to train on. Text to JSON probably needs some texts
and some JSON. A lot of stuff's out there on the web.
Are you scraping, are you crawling, are you buying data,
are you using open source data sets,
where's the data coming from?
Yeah, really all of the above.
I think there's a big debate out there in academia
as to whether synthetic data or real world data
leads to a more accurate model.
We've definitely been using a blend of all the above,
but the first models that we're rolling out and you nailed them perfectly. We have models
for developers doing text to JSON, text to SQL. We have an agentic function calling model
that we're putting out. I know you guys talk quite a lot about agents and an agent that
can book a flight for me or can book a hotel for me. So we have a very lightweight model that inferences in milliseconds that can
basically take what the user wants and call an API.
So very much developer focus.
We've got models that can parse documents, redact private, uh,
identifiable information from documents, which is huge for banks,
insurance companies. We have a really fun model. It's our favorite model
in house. It's a profanity censoring model.
I love that. Amazing. We don't swear on the show. So yeah,
yeah, we just try to keep it in the office. But you can imagine
we've had some fun late nights building synthetic data for a
profanity model, which gaming can be used anywhere. That's
pretty much the funnest red teaming we can do.
I try to plug my ears or turn the other way.
That's great.
I mean, if you're inferencing this in milliseconds,
is there then a desire to deploy this at the edge,
run this in the cloud of the business
that's actually deploying this?
So I just have to ask for the profanity model.
Could we run it in real time while we're doing the show?
Probably could.
So if a guest drops a F word.
Bleep.
That's what I want.
Yeah, it'll work in real time.
It'll be much faster than an existing LLM.
Yeah, I think the real TV shows, they
have a system that puts it on delay
and does something like this.
But the delay has got to be so much faster if you're imagining like using whisper and
then this, there's a lot of things. But in terms of that latency, latency is really important
to us. I imagine it's important to your clients and customers. Are you seeing demand for let
us run your model and we'll still pay you, but we just don't want to go back and forth
with your API.
Yeah. So there are a lot of ways you can deploy
smaller lightweight models.
Obviously we're gonna be heavily reliant on our API.
Yeah.
But when models are of a small enough footprint,
which actually comes from a lower parameter count,
you can run them on-prem,
you can run them on CPUs, low-end GPUs.
I think Ash and I, my co-founder Ash,
he had a dev agent, somewhat a cursor in 2023.
After I sold my last company, I was actually an investor in his startup.
He had a problem where his LLM costs ended up being higher than his headcount costs.
And it's a problem that a lot of agent companies face.
So I was actually, I spent a little bit of time as a GP after I sold my last company
and all of our portfolio companies were facing the same thing.
A rising cost of LLM.
So it's not only latency, as you mentioned, accuracy is a big problem with large LLMs.
But frankly, the key issue that we've seen is that LLMs just aren't built for the enterprise.
They're built for consumers, right?
So GBT, Gemini, they're trained on trillions of data enterprise. They're built for consumers, right? So GBT, Gemini, they're
trained on trillions of data points. They're used by our friends, our family
every day. They help you code. They help you get food recipes. They help you prep
for podcast interviews. They're not built for high-scale enterprise tasks, right?
But enterprises are spending millions of dollars a month on these large monolithic API's. I want to tell you guys a
story. Sure. How GBT is being used. So my my wife's dog got
really sick. ago. Cute little guy 13 years old. He has cancer.
We went to the pet hospital. And the doctor basically recommended
that we put him down. We had her best friend on the phone. And we're trying to make a decision based on the doctor basically recommended that we put him down. We had her best friend on the phone.
And we're trying to make a decision based on the doctor's recommendation, symptoms, dog's age, what to do.
And who is the tiebreaker?
We asked GBT, hey, GBT, here's what's going on with my dog.
Here's the situation.
Should we put him down? Right.
So my wife was using GBT to play, play maker.
And for the record, GBT told us to put him down and we didn't listen.
He's doing well today. But wow, that's a crazy story.
Why would I say Antichrist?
He's trying to take out the for a pup. Why would a large bank, Bank of America, Citi, JPMC, if all they're looking to do is analyze
your bank statement or look at some log for fraud, why are they using the same model that
my wife used to consult on her dog's mortality?
So using these massive models, it's like trying to come up with a, with a cool metaphor for the show. It's like, it's like the door dash guy writing Saturn five.
So it's so unnecessary. And frankly, that's why large enterprises, large banks haven't put chat should be T or an LLM into a chat box.
or an LLM into a chat bot. Yeah.
Super fascinating.
Analyzing your bank statement,
and it's just like $500 on dinner,
you cannot afford to have a dog,
you gotta put that dog down.
Just like, Chase, what are you doing?
What are you doing?
JP Morgan, cool it with the recommendations.
Reasoning is a very sexy word in this space right now,
but from speaking with almost 100 Fortune 500 enterprises
since we announced our pre-seed round in Q4,
they don't want models that can reason.
A bank does not want a model that can reason its way
through your last 100 chat bot users logs
and figure out their personal information.
So when you're building lightweight
task specific models like this, our models are in domain.
They're only trained to do the task that the enterprise using them for.
So I think we have that edge very much just in how the models are built.
Okay. Talk about the gaming GPUs, uh,
worth less than a hundred thousand dollars in total is what TechCrunch is
reporting. Uh, did you build that yourself?
Do you have your own data center or are there clusters out there of low end GPUs that are
all rigged together from like legacy Bitcoin mining applications or something like that?
Where are you getting these?
Yeah.
So we're, we have, uh, GPUs in house.
We have, uh, we're gonna, we use GPUs in the cloud, but we all told our models take about
a couple hours to train.
Wow.
The training costs for one model is less than the cost of a Chipotle burrito.
There's so much said about how...
But a 2012 Chipotle burrito or 2023?
One that didn't give me food poisoning, hopefully.
But there's been so much said about when Deepsea came out and they only spent $10 million on H100s.
However, questionable that number was,
I think what we're trying to do as a super small team
is show that you don't even need H100s
to build generative models for enterprises, right?
So we didn't use a single H100.
We used T4s, gaming GPUs, low-end V100s, and you can do that.
I think we've proven that banks don't need a model that takes six months to run or it's
going to drain Lake Tahoe for a training run.
What's more important with that training run?
Flops or memory?
Because I imagine lower token counts, you haven't released it, but
I imagine you can fit it in memory. And so that unlocks it. But, um, talk to me about
the dynamics of like building a cluster and thinking about the different parameters that
go into the cards that you select.
Yeah. So we have a family of, of, it's going to be less than 10 models most likely for the next six months
I'll say that they're far below a billion parameter each
So we don't need a cluster even we can just work these on one or two GPUs each for inference for inference
Yeah, and for training. It's the same thing
It's a very low end GPU for an hour or two
so we definitely believe that there's
going to be a giant shift in how language models are used, right? So you guys have seen
waves of the last couple decades. So these massive IBM mainframes shifted into client server
architectures and open source software. You used to have these massive monolithic builds
that would take, you know,
that would ship a month at a time.
Software applications were shipped so much slower
and then out came microservices
and you have a different release for your payment gateway
and your APIs.
This kind of workload partitioning, as we call it,
it's completely gonna change the landscape
in language modeling. So there was a report from Gartner workload partitioning, as we call it, it's completely going to change the landscape in
language modeling.
So there was a report from Gartner that came out about a month ago saying that small task
specific models are going to outpace LLMs and enterprise usage by three to one in three
years.
And we want to lead that.
We definitely think that every developer is going to become an AI developer. So every dev today will need to be able to integrate a language model into their code,
just like they're integrating an open source NPM package or Python library.
It needs to be much simpler.
And that's very much how we're looking to change the game.
It's going to be really hard to compete with the big labs if we're just focused
on the models, which obviously we're a foundational model company, but we need to make much smoother
developer workflow integrations. We need to make life easier for devs. And right now it's
...
Where does this go? I know some of the stories about companies like the ramp, for example, or sponsor, they need to digitize receipts.
So they get a lot of images.
They do OCR.
And I think Google provides an API for that.
There's a bunch of companies that do OCR comes through as kind of messy
cluster of text, then pipe that through GPT four and boom,
you have structured data
Llama comes out. Okay, maybe it's getting cheaper
But this seems like something where you'd want to go to you guys and get an even cheaper model That's distilled just for that one task
But that feels like almost like you're a consulting shop or is there is there a place where a company says?
Hey, we've been using GPT-4 or Llama,
and we've done 10 million inferences,
and so we have a lot of data about what works, what doesn't.
Can you train a custom model for us
to drop our inference cost by a couple orders of magnitude?
Or are you trying to focus more on more versatile foundation
models that can be just tools in the tool chest
and aren't kind of one-off specific systems for a specific task within a specific
company.
Yeah, I think there are a few, a few ways to answer that.
The first one is probably talking about agents and how agentic systems are
evolving.
I'm definitely in the camp of thought that says that agentic systems will take
over like a C SAS systems within four to five years, right?
So when you see how these agents are being put together,
it's typically daisy chaining eight or 10 LLM calls.
So in a chatbot, you wanna parse a query.
You want to then figure out the right document
to give back to the user,
summarize the right chunk of that document,
give it back all in real time
with a very smooth chat interface.
So we definitely see a world where you have different models
for different tasks.
And we're not saying that we're gonna replace
large generalist LLMs.
The models that are larger, they're good at reasoning,
they're good at research, They do things like orchestration.
So they'll help orchestrate this entire pipeline.
That's still going to be the large model.
That's still going to be your GPTs.
You're going to be your Geminis.
But the actual agents, the workers that are calling APIs that are doing these sort of
deterministic high scale, high throughput tasks, those are all gonna be very small,
intelligent task specific models.
That's how we see it play out.
NVIDIA's down 0.6% today.
Is that cause of you?
Is that, is it, is it, is it, is it a market,
are they pricing?
I mean, billions of dollars, right?
Billions of dollars have been evaporated
from the markets on the news. No, but how do you know, how do you think you know assuming fest?
You know just gains, you know massive adoption over the coming years
Yeah, how does how do you think that impacts the GPU?
market GPU demand broadly
Yeah, you know for the record the low-end GPUs that we use are still in video. Yeah
You know, we're still a big Nvidia. Another 10 trillion to Jensen.
Jensen might appreciate if you weren't so efficient and you, you know, raised,
you know, $500 million and gave it to him.
Yeah.
Have you thought about doing that?
If he can help us scale and go more viral, we'll need more of them for inference for the record.
But I think there's going gonna be a huge demand for consumers
for LLMs as they are.
I think we were lucky enough to have two
of the first OpenAI investors on our cap table.
That's right.
And they proposed that in the very beginning
when there was a pitch deck, there wasn't a business model.
They didn't think that they were gonna be
a consumer company, but the consumer appetite
for LLMs has gone crazy. Even during the DeepSeek moment, DeepSeek got to number one on the app store.
My wife, my friends are all downloading DeepSeek. So the need and the hunger for consumers to
automate their lives will constantly be driving the need for these larger generalist LLMs. We just
don't believe they're needed for the enterprise.
So we're taking a very different approach.
Very cool.
Makes total sense.
Anything else?
I love this conversation.
Me too.
This is super fun.
He's an absolute dog.
You're an absolute dog.
You're an absolute dog.
Call me anytime you guys want to talk about LLMs and I might need to get some help on
buying a suit for New York.
Oh, fantastic.
We've got you.
And seriously, we got you, you got us.
It's one hand washes the other.
I want to figure out this real time censoring thing.
I think it'd be hilarious.
For sure.
We have some guests that come on and try to drop F-bombs.
It's unacceptable.
Our children listen to this.
Yeah, it's unacceptable.
And I think it'd be hilarious if it was made like a duck sound.
Yeah, yeah, quack.
It'd be great.
So our people will talk to your people.
Yeah, appreciate it, guys.
Thanks so much for having us on.
Yeah, cheers.
Thank you so much.
Hey, big news.
Rippling has raised $450 million at a $16.8 billion valuation.
Huge news.
And bigger news.
Oh, I was actually supposed to be texting with them.
Let me see. YC is a customer. Really? dollar valuation and bigger news. Oh, I was actually supposed to be texting with them.
Let me see.
YC is a customer.
Really?
And that is big considering YC has created
all the big payroll companies.
And they picked?
Gusto, Deal, Rippling.
Gary must have been finding it hard to pick favorites.
Well, I'm texting with the team.
Hopefully get Parker on soon to talk about, but. I'm texting with the team, hopefully get Parker on soon
to talk about the business.
One last thing, we have a couple posts
we wanna go through, but Michael,
can you check the printer?
Because I think we got a special printout for today.
We haven't been printing posts very frequently,
but we got one post that I wanted to print hopefully it printed
let me see
I don't even know if it printed. It did not print. Alright what's the post John?
Is it working? I'm trying to print it again and we might be out of paper but
okay but we can pull up the digital version.
We're gonna run it back.
Anyway, Luke Metro said,
this show used to print out my tweets and read them.
Now they have the head of the army.
So thank you to Luke Metro.
I tried to print it,
but we haven't printed in so long
that the printer's not working.
Anyway, there's some other posts. Did
you see the drama in Andral world about Matt Grimm taking
notice.co to task for selling some fake equity in the company?
Yeah, so I it's hard to know. I mean, the way that notice was
displaying this information was not consistently candid,
is how I would describe it.
And then the funniest thing, you called this out to Matt,
apparently the CEO of Notis,
messaged Matt and said,
"'Hey, I'm Finra registered,
"'so not supposed to post publicly on social media.
"'Happy to continue the combo.
"'Privately or do a call if you want.
"'Let me know buddy.
And hitting-
Buddy, it's a war crime.
Hitting Matt Graham with buddy is a war crime.
It's a war crime.
Straight to jail.
It's so bad.
It's so brutal.
It's so bad.
I actually think the notice platform is pretty cool.
Oh yeah.
Like they have a bunch of, you know.
I mean, I imagine that there's probably some steel man here.
There's a million ways that, you know, it's a big company.
There's a lot of investors. Someone could have come and, uh,
and figured out a way to put some,
no, I think what was happening is an employee shares. Okay.
The reason that the, the way that you would have zero fees is that an employee
common, but it was, yeah, it's common.
That wasn't being necessarily disclosed.
And there should be transfer restrictions.
I mean, these are very standard.
So there's something odd.
I mean, there's been a big, big history of these odd,
like secondary sales,
like for a while people were doing forward contracts.
Did you ever follow that story?
Oh yeah.
So basically-
I mean, I think those still work.
I think they're definitely banned in most companies.
You're not supposed to do a contract.
And it's written in your-
But the whole nature of a forward contract
is that the company doesn't really,
there's very good chance the company would never find out.
True, but they can still ban it in your employment agreement.
Like it can still be something that you agree to
when you join the company.
So basically a forward contract if you're not familiar. It's the right to purchase the shares at a future date much like a stock option
So you're basically writing an options contract against your shares
In in the third party and and and the the shares themselves don't actually transfer and so the company in theory doesn't need to approve it
But it's very necessarily now and they wouldn't necessarily know. And they wouldn't necessarily know, yeah. And so this was a big thing, very, very controversial.
A lot of people don't like this.
And so even though it doesn't result
in a whole bunch of legal complications,
obviously you're not transferring the information
rights because you're not actually transferring
the shares, they couldn't sue the company.
That's the big reason why you want a clean cap table
is because you have to deal with every investor.
You have to give them information.
They can sue you.
If they just own a forward contract,
they probably can't do that.
But it's still a problem
and creates all these distortions in the market.
And so Matt Grim taking them to task, he says,
"'We are one of the good guys,' says CEO of a company
"'who solicits retail investors to buy shares
"'at a significantly inflated price for what it's worth.
"'In a privately held company, they do not own shares of,
"'have direct access to, or have any information or information rights from
which to discern financial performance or market positioning or anything
whatsoever to inform the proposed investment all while not clarifying
publicly or for that matter to the clients they are soliciting how exactly
this exposure is structured or what precisely these clients are buying and
while privately hiding behind a claimed veil,
fake by the way, their fin real registration
means they can't comment.
When keeping it real goes too far, rough.
So clean it up.
You don't wanna have that grim on your bad side.
He could basically say this about most secondary brokers
and platforms.
Anyway, we got some massive breaking news we
got some personnel a frond a frond's been promoted to managing director
promotion we love to see it very interesting the rumors this is a maxed
out contract rumors have been swirling for a long time he was in free agency
considered free agency stuck with with Redpoint, got promoted. Congratulations to him.
Couldn't be more excited for everything I had.
And weird terminology over at Redpoint.
Not GP, not partner, managing director.
Very investment bank-like, you know?
Official business.
Andrew Reed had a funny post.
He was coming from banking.
No matter how senior I get in venture,
I'll always think that a managing director is more senior to me
Bogged feels it feels very senior does
anyway
Arvin's for Navas over at perplexity is taking more shots at Bloomberg
Bloomberg is such a joke while perplexity those real-time call transcriptions for free
Bloomberg has a 15-minute lag and it costs
$30,000 to be clear that was
Marcelo who said that yes, somebody at TechCrunch will
listen to this. Do not miss out. Arvind said Bloomberg is a joke.
Yeah. Anyways, what perplexity is doing around real time call
transcription tech crunch reports is my quote, Me quoting someone else as Arvind.
That's what I was saying.
That's so bad.
That's a risk.
The bar's low these days, folks.
The bar's low.
Anyway, any other posts we wanna go through.
The Pope is American.
Vatican City has a Buckees now
and a Waffle House and a Costco.
It's great.
They've taken over.
America is in control.
It's fantastic.
And we hope you have a great weekend.
We hope you have a great Mother's Day.
Pick up something simple.
And thanks for watching.
Thanks for joining us this week, folks.
Thanks for joining us for the break.
We had a great time doing the show.
Yeah, it was fantastic.
It was a good job.
Thank you for tuning in.
And we'll see you next week.
And remember, it's Mother's Day.
We talked about this three hours ago.
The Super Bowl of pronatalism, folks. Take care, everybody. Have a great Mother's Day. We talked about this three hours ago. The Super Bowl of pronatalism, folks.
Take care of everybody. Have a great Mother's Day.
Cheers.