TBPN Live - Peptide Debate Recap, John Ternus Rumors Swirl, OpenAI Nonprofit to Spend $1B | Diet TBPN
Episode Date: March 24, 2026Diet TBPN delivers the best of today’s TBPN episode in 30 minutes. TBPN is a live tech talk show hosted by John Coogan and Jordi Hays, streaming weekdays 11–2 PT on X and YouTube, with ea...ch episode posted to podcast platforms right after.Described by The New York Times as “Silicon Valley’s newest obsession,” the show has recently featured Mark Zuckerberg, Sam Altman, Mark Cuban, and Satya Nadella.TBPN is made possible by:Ramp - https://Ramp.comAppLovin - https://axon.aiCisco - https://www.cisco.comCognition - https://cognition.aiConsole - https://console.comCrowdStrike - https://crowdstrike.comElevenLabs - https://elevenlabs.ioFigma - https://figma.comFin - https://fin.aiGemini - https://gemini.google.comGraphite - https://graphite.comGusto - https://gusto.com/tbpnKalshi - https://kalshi.comLabelbox - https://labelbox.comLambda - https://lambda.aiLinear - https://linear.appMongoDB - https://mongodb.comNYSE - https://nyse.comOkta - https://www.okta.comPhantom - https://phantom.com/cashPlaid - https://plaid.comPublic - https://public.comRailway - https://railway.comRestream - https://restream.ioSentry - https://sentry.ioShopify - https://shopify.com/tbpnTurbopuffer - https://turbopuffer.comVanta - https://vanta.comVibe - https://vibe.coFollow TBPN: https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2L6WMqY3GUPCGBD0dX6p00?si=674252d53acf4231https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://www.youtube.com/@TBPNLive
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Do you know how I got here today? I drove through the Hollywood Hills, drove through the San Fernando Valley, because we're covering Hill and Valley today. But we're doing it from the TBPN Ultram. We have a whole bunch of meetings.
It doesn't like it. Anyway, what do you think about this, Jordie? We have to recap some things. There's been a whole bunch of news. We had the great peptide debate of 2026.
Brandon Grell on our team wrote about this in the newsletter today, TBPN.com. You can go subscribe.
Who do you think won? I was talking to a lot of people. Very interesting. You had sketched.
I wasn't even really aware that there was a peptide debate going on.
We talked to some other folks on the show about peptides and how there was a debate rating.
And I was aware of the meme, like the Chinese peptides in Silicon Valley, all of that stuff.
But I wasn't aware of like that the debate it was boiling to a particular point and that there were a lot of people that were discussing it.
So it was great timing.
So thank you for organizing that and thank you to our guests, Max and Martin, who took the time to come and talk to us.
And I thought did a really good job of being simultaneously,
entertaining and also very cordial.
Like they weren't actually going at each other's throats.
They were scoring points, but I don't think that either of them crossed any lines.
There was some discussion over like, should we have done more fact checking?
I genuinely think that the chat is good for fact checking.
Or the experts.
Yeah, it's kind of like your view.
But I don't know.
There was a bunch of people that made very fair points.
Yeah.
pointing out, you know, a study here or a patent here.
Yeah.
And it would have been great if we got to a conclusion yesterday.
And it was like, yeah, this is all bad and it should all be banned or, you know, they're all good or or figured it out.
But that's where we started.
We started with like, yeah, everyone there agrees that GLP ones that are owned by pharmaceutical companies are probably net beneficial, blah, blah, blah.
And then the really far out stuff that hasn't been studied that's made in, you know, a basement is probably.
risky. And we actually had a good friend of the show, Sum It Up, Creatine Cycle, Atlas, of course,
said, the peptide debate is as follows. Against. I would be worried about unknown unknowns.
Pro, while there isn't much human data, the anecdotal evidence is pretty strong. Against.
Antiquets are not enough for me. Pro, fair. It is for me. Against. Okay, fair. And I think
that's a good, I think that's a good point. And truthfully, you know, people can make their own
decisions here. I do think interjecting with a ton of fact checking during the debate would
be disruptive. I'm not a fan of that. I sort of just like having one person, like the guest,
the debater, fact check the other person. Because if they know the fact and the other person
who they're debating against drops something that's not factual, that's their opportunity
to come in and say, no, that's not accurate.
Throw that canister whatever, yeah.
Yeah. Throw it. Throw the flashbang. Throw the smoke grenade.
But I do, so I like leaving some of the fact checking up to them and then just trying to re-center the debate as a moderator.
But I don't know. Should we do more of these? Let us know. It seemed like a lot of people had a lot of fun with it and were entertained.
It's hard to come up with, you know, if we were going to try and do this weekly.
It would be very hard to come up with like 52 really hot topics that everyone cares about.
And there are two opposing experts who are willing to hash it out and be entertaining.
on a live show, probably not going to happen all that much. But when the time is right, I think
there's an opportunity for us to do another debate. Someone was saying we should do an accelerationist
versus decelerationist debate. I think Beth Jzos was proposing that. I think that would be
sort of interesting. I think I could maybe sit in the middle of that and have some interesting
discussions there. Kind of like 60 miles per hour stay under the speed limit. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes.
Well, on that vector, I am an extreme accelerationist.
Leading up to the debate yesterday, we had several guests on the show discussed peptides.
In February, Andrew Huberman, came on and predicted that RETA, essentially a more aggressive of ZemPEC,
would become a trillion-dollar drug.
That same day, we had longevity entrepreneur Brian Johnson on the show.
He encouraged people thinking about taking peptides to be cautious because we don't know
what the negative effects of these drugs are.
And last week, Maximus CEO Cameron Maximus, which I don't think is his real name,
is his last name, Maximus?
No, it's not.
It's, it's, it can't.
But I mean, I'd like to think of him as Dr. Cameron Maximus.
That is his name on X.
Oh, okay, okay.
That makes sense.
But he argued that there's no real reason to be taking RETA,
not FDA approved, only available in the gray market.
When they could be taking, when people who are, you know, in the market or,
or, you know, their doctor recommends something, they could be taking terseptide,
which is essentially has the same benefits, can be bought legally, and it's FDA approved.
So yesterday, Scarelli argued, Martin Screlly argued, that the current peptide craze is more psychology-driven than science-driven and is essentially a passing fad among Silicon Valley elites who aren't really expert trusters.
In his view, there is no rational reason to experiment with compounds like RETA when proven regulated drugs like OZempik already exists.
He thinks gray markets should be shut down entirely.
And there was a big debate over how feasible is it to actually try and shut down the gray markets.
Gray markets have existed in a whole bunch of other categories.
I'm very familiar with the gray market for illegal flavored vaporizers
because they have been the bane of the legitimate industry, the nicotine industries.
It's been the bane of their existence.
Martin argued that the FDA's rigorous approval process exists for a reason.
Now, we had Max arguing the peptide bull case.
He argued that he doesn't believe all peptides are safe and effective,
but that a subset of them likely have real therapeutic value.
He said that since people are already using peptides,
a regulated white market would reduce harm
compared to the current gray market.
Lots to debate there.
We'll let you make your own decisions.
You can go listen to the full debate
and you can see where you weigh in.
Not having Tyler Cosgarov in the TBPN Ultrudeome
is it's a death now for our clapping during the ad read strategy.
We need to get some soundboard going.
We need to show these supporters,
sponsors some love because we're we're fighting two men down right now maybe three men down where
we're we're on our last leg over here in the tbp and ultra-apple is in a completely different situation
they have their era parent john turnus the nice guy potentially taking the reins maybe this
year maybe next year it could happen any day now tim cook doesn't want to talk about retirement
but john turnus is emerging as his most likely successor this is from friend of the show
Mark German in Bloomberg, go subscribe.
This is an interesting profile of John Turnus
from March 22nd to 2026, just two days ago.
This was published.
And it tells an interesting story of John Turner
and I think Gurman does a great job of going deeper
than some of the other reporting that had like one quote
from an employee that left Apple a decade ago
and was sort of vague and that person doesn't have like any sort of profile
and it was very hard to read into who is John Turnus as a person.
I think we're getting a clearer picture
now. Let's read through some of this and then I want you to cosplay as John Turnus and let me know,
would you do things differently? Do you agree with his management style? Because this might be the
management style of all of Apple soon. The company's chief operating officer recently retired.
The CFO and general counsel took smaller roles as a way to prepare for their own retirements.
And in a single week in December, its heads of artificial intelligence, user interfaces and
environmental initiatives all announced their departures. While part of the exodus was related to Apple
Apple's Inc. well-documented struggles in AI.
It also reflected a logical transition
at a company that turns 50 on April 1st.
Apple's stock made everyone at the top of its org chart
fabulously wealthy and many are entering the stage of life
that often inspires people to prioritize family
spending some time, finally spending some time
with their families instead of the next generation of iPhones.
In his response to the employee's question,
Tim Cook, the company's 65-year-old CEO,
struck an atypically reflective
tone. When people get to a certain age, some, he said, are going to retire, letting the word
some hang out there in a way that suggested he wasn't talking about himself, drawing laughter from
the audience. It's like, some people, they can't hang. But look at Warren Buffett, 65 to 95,
most productive era of his career. Tim Cook, generational run starts now. I like the idea of
for the next 30 years. I'm still bullish Tim Cook. I mean, I love John Turnus. But I think the 30-year run
from Tim Cook going 65 to 95 would be particularly fun to watch.
Tim Cook was going to retire.
Then he started experimenting with some Chinese peps.
Oh, do you think that's what's going?
He's always looked good.
Now he's like, I actually got another few decades in me.
I hope so.
He's like, actually it's BBC 157 having a remarkable effects on me.
So he said, the thing we have to do is to make sure that Apple moves on,
reaches the next level and the next level and the next level.
And he said he spends a lot of time thinking about who's in the room in five, 10, 15 years.
I'm obsessed with this.
This is Tim Cook at his best.
This guy can't leave.
It can't leave.
He's firing me up here.
Somebody's been listening to Senra.
Yes, it's amazing.
So Cook, who's run Apple since taking over from co-founder Steve Jobs in 2011, probably doesn't expect to be in the room himself for another 15 years.
But I do.
I'm betting on him.
Well, he's given no indication of an imminent transition.
he's made it clear he wants his heir to come from within the company so he can serve as a mentor.
The central candidate is John Ternus, senior vice president for hardware engineering who oversees development of the devices that generate roughly 80% of Apple's revenue.
At 50, Ternus is also younger than many of the company's other senior leaders, meaning he could be in the top job longer.
Ternus has spent about half of his life at Apple, half of his life.
Generational run.
He cut his teeth developing computer monitors, oversawper.
product design for the original iPad and eventually took over development of the Mac, getting the
top hardware engineering role in 2021. He's overseen an expansion in Apple's product lineup, improving
quality and focusing on functional improvements around battery life, performance, and connectivity.
Earlier this month, when Apple held an event in New York to announce the MacBook Neo, a 599 laptop,
it was Ternus, not Cook, who did the big reveal.
Little trial run. The next day, Ternus also appeared on Good Morning America to talk up the device,
the type of media appearance, Cook has generally done himself.
Such public signs of confidence in Ternus have been accompanied by steady expansion of his portfolio.
Last year, he took control of a secretive unit developing robots,
including a tabletop device with a screen that swirls to focus on a speaker moving around the room.
The smart lamp.
Is this what it is?
No, it's not a smart lamp.
No, it's the iPad that on a swivel arm.
Yeah, the iPad that follows you around so that you can ask you questions and FaceTime with your friends.
I think there's a rumor.
that it can do kickflips.
I'd be super into that.
If it has a motor, you've seen those robots that are on the bikes,
and it's just a big battery pack with like a robotic arm that's attached to it.
Have you seen this?
Oh, this is amazing.
Apple comes out with a smart iPad device that's just called a bicycle for the iPad.
It's just a little bicycle.
No, no, no.
If you have a weight up here and you have a robotic arm that can hinge down,
if you pull that up really quickly,
you can actually jump up.
And so there's these crazy videos of these robot bikes,
like jumping up onto tables and stuff.
It's very fun.
Turnus has taken a bigger role in Apple's product marketing,
sometimes personally editing copy for the website
and even product event materials,
and he has become central to the company's work
to make its devices more environmentally sustainable.
Turnus has also assumed oversight
of the hardware and software design teams,
making him a key liaison
between Apple's vaunted design organization
and senior management,
meaning he's already one of the most
influential people in the company's history. He has made a mark on Apple's hardware portfolio
reversing a trend of declining product quality as the company prioritized thinness and sleekness
overperformance. He is a very meticulous engineer and a judicious executive, says Tony Blevins,
the company's chief procurement officer until 2022, who described Ternis as an outstanding and
obvious choice to succeed cook. He's a car, he's a car racing enthusiast. He's a cycling enthusiast.
I assume cycling means performance enhancing drugs?
Yeah,
Cycles?
Trend.
Trestoster?
No.
He is a bicyclist and a car racing enthusiast.
Turnus is known to take his colleagues to upstate Washington for off-road rally car racing.
Let's go.
Excellent choice, Tim, Cook.
I see why you picked him.
So bullish.
His love of motorsports, notwithstanding, Ternis like Cook, is risk-averse and reluctant to, as one person close to him puts it,
upset the apple cart.
That's a good pun.
As one long time executive says, if you think Tim's, Tim Cook is doing a good job, then you'll think John Turnis is doing a good job too.
That also feels like an underhanded.
It's maybe a dig.
I have been a staunch defender of Tim Cook.
Did well on the supply chain.
Did well on the tariffs.
Did well negotiating.
All sorts of tough things.
Wound up with a great partnership with Gemini.
Like, wound up in, like, always looks bad as you're like investigating one.
feature on a one month timeline, but when you zoom out over a decade, incredible amount of
value created, incredible performance, and very few weaknesses in the business, from my perspective.
But you can take the other side of that because I know you're frustrated by every app that
they release lately.
Who knows?
Not just the apps.
Not just the operating system itself.
Also, I mean, the new material is rough.
Like, I drop this phone a lot and it's very scratched.
Despite his reputation for personable management, so he's known as a very nice manager,
nice guy, he's the nice guy at Apple.
Turnus has at times broken with that style in ways that raised eyebrows internally.
Late in the lead-up to the release of the Vision Pro headset, my favorite Apple device ever,
unironically, for instance, engineers uncovered a flaw that threatened one of the device's
marquee features.
It's the ability to stream...
Well, you're not the average user, John.
You use your device.
I'm power user.
The average user doesn't use this thing.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm like five standard deviations above on the usage.
So the ability to stream ultra low latency audio from the headset to AirPods.
This apparently was a capability central to Apple's pitch of a seamless experience for immersive video and gaming.
So you just bought this $3,500 face computer.
And $3,500 was the headline price.
And they're telling you. And they're telling you to...
When I bought one, it was close to $5 grand.
I just think it's so funny that they ship this, you know, a $3,000 to $5,000.
Yes.
you know, computer for your head that's super heavy, and they're like, and you're going to need to grab some AirPods.
Yeah. It was clearly important to Apple. Apple's always pride in itself on device integration, hardware integration, and they are great at that.
Like, you put in the AirPods and you switch over to a YouTube video on your on your MacBook, and it just plays right there.
You switch over to your phone, you take a call, it switches right back.
Like the connectivity with their Bluetooth strategy and their, you know, their wireless strategy has always been,
fantastic, but apparently it wasn't going well with the development of the Vision Pro headset.
So the ability to stream ultra low latency audio from the headset to AirPods.
This was a capability central to Apple's pitch of a seamless experience for immersive video and gaming.
The problem stemmed from a missing wireless frequency in the then-newest AirPods Pro.
The only practical fix was to ship a revised version of the earbuds, which the company did at the end of 2023.
It was sort of a weird move, probably cost them some extra money to do.
It was a mistake that was caused by a particular hardware engineer on this team.
When they launched the Apple Vision Pro in February of 2024, that meant that anyone who wanted
this feature, they just paid $3,500.
They had to spend another $250 on new AirPods that added the ultra-low latency support and not
much else.
And so this was a debacle.
And the debacle reverberated through multiple teams, including hardware, software, testing,
and the Vision Pro group.
People involved, said Ternus alienated some people on staff
by focusing initially on finding out whom to blame.
Who did it?
In the aftermath, a senior AirPods executive was reassigned.
And I'm laughing because I, so I asked Jordy this morning,
I said, okay, I gave him like the overall broad strokes of what happened.
And what was your first recommendation for?
Shut down both products.
Shut down both product lines.
Just shut down both products.
And then I would have focused on coming out with a pair of wired headsets made of wood using horse hair for the actual connectivity.
Yeah, yeah.
And then no wires at all.
Yeah.
And then sort of like with a leather.
Certainly no plastics, no macroplastics or microplastics.
Yeah, it's probably creating some like some type of like tallow to make, to make them work comfortable.
You don't want the wood.
So you get splinters in your ears.
So you would lubricate your ear canal with beef towel.
Just go back to basics.
Introducing AirPod, caveman.
Cave man.
Yeah, that's where I would have started.
This issue comes down to, from my understanding,
this senior executive who is responsible, it was the AirPod, right?
Yeah.
He did not process that the Applevision Pro was coming out,
and they were selling against this feature.
And Apple, yeah, and Apple, yeah, and, and,
And Apple, the thing that I think they still do really well, to this day, even though, you know, almost all their other software on the iPhone is a total disaster, is connectivity between the devices and syncing them and things like that.
So they still do that well.
And so to come out with this and in just a blatant sort of unforced error didn't communicate properly with the other teams for the AirPods, which are just designed to sync perfectly with all the other.
It would be like if one of the cameras was blurry or something like that.
It's like, well, the iPhone, like, yeah, it's not, you know, dominating AI crazy features yet,
but like everyone counts on the iPhone for having a good set of cameras.
Like, they're always good.
And so if you mess up something that is the basis of the strategy, that is risky.
You know, is he a nice guy or is he too hard?
Ternis looks at mistakes as systemic problems that could be solved with better leadership
instead of by putting the onus on the engineer.
Someone said who worked for him and this person adds,
Ternus is a nice guy.
It's a throwback to the Steve Jobs era.
Like Steve Jobs would have said,
hey, I demanded this.
Like you made a mistake.
Like heads must roll.
And that was a bit of the company culture,
at least in the lore.
And who knows how true that is.
But this doesn't seem like it goes too far
into like ruthless business behavior.
But that's sort of where the discussion is around Ternus.
It's like, is he pure nice guy?
Does he have a harder edge? I don't know.
I think Ternus didn't go hard enough.
Didn't go hard enough.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Should have got after him personally.
We were featured in the world's 50 most innovative companies, the definitive guide to the future of business.
We're up there with 2B, Google, Walmart, BYD.
These are some big companies.
Ramp got a nod.
And TBPN got a nod right next to Ramp.
And they sent us a very nice letter.
And we are sitting here with a nice little mural of a bunch of our guests.
Who do we get?
We got Brian Armstrong.
Okay. And tell me who we got beat out.
We were the number two media company.
We were the number two most innovative media company.
We got beat out by a CDN.
Matthew Prince over at Cloudflare.
Smoked us.
Smoked us.
We didn't stand a chance.
Just look at the scale of Cloudflare.
They distribute so much media.
That's what it's a content delivery network.
They deliver content.
We try and deliver content.
We deliver three hours a day.
They deliver probably billions of hours a second.
I can't even imagine the scale of that business.
It's everywhere. But Matthew Prince is a very innovative leader and I completely agree with the ranking that he should be
We're coming for you next year Matthew. It's on.
Producers at CNBC wake up in the morning to look at the public markets in order to plan the day's lineup
John Coogan and Jordy Hayes co-hosts at TBPN a daily talk show devoted to the business of technology
Wake up and look at what's trending on X. That's true and then they gab. That's us quote says Hayes we cover something like 50 to a hundred topics rapid fire five days a week in bespoke suits
The duo riff on the news for three interrupted hours, accompanied by a revolving cast of venture investors, startup founders, and the occasional single-name elite like Zuck.
On Good Days, the live stream draws more than 130,000 simultaneous viewers.
Millions more watch the highlighted clips and listen to the podcast.
We basically leverage the algorithm.
How Hayes says of TBPN's programming strategy, love them or hate them, they do a really good job of sorting what people are interested in.
Anyway, you can go check it out.
As a boy, I subscribe to the print edition of Fast Company.
and always looked forward to getting it in the physical mailbox at home.
Unwell, Alex Cooper's network is 23.
So how she must be media, she must be higher than us.
What's the category though?
Oh, I don't know.
Because if Cloudflare is a media company,
then Unwell might be.
It might be a CDN.
Who knows?
Let's see, Unwell was ranked.
Oh, Unwell is in the advertising and marketing category,
but not media news.
Cloudflare is media news.
And we are second behind Cloudflare.
That is interesting.
I would say Unwell beat us fair and square.
All I have to say is in the words of the Canadian Olympic team, John, Silver shines just as bright.
We've been on a bit of a silver tear lately.
We're the second highest ranked technology show on Spotify.
Thank you to everyone who's been subscribing and leaving us five-star reviews over there.
And yeah, thank you to Team Canada for pioneering.
making it a little bit more pioneering cope as a strategy as a marketing strategy opening eyes new
nonprofit foundation announces plans to spend one billion this year and has appointed open ai co-founder
wage and jacob of coefficient giving to leadership positions still searching for an executive director
sam says i will help discover new science such as cures for diseases which is perhaps the most
important way to increase quality of life long term i will also present new threats to society
that we have to address. No company can sufficiently mitigate these on their own. We will need a
society-wide response to things like novel biothrots, a massive and fast change to the economy,
extremely capable models, causing complex emergent effects across society and more. So it's great
that this has gotten set up. I know you can imagine just how much has gone into it. I would love to
see them. I mean, they have a lot of money here. They're going to be donating a lot of money. I think
it's going to be the best funded nonprofit in the history of humanity. That's
very exciting. I would love just a little carve out for developing like consumer apps or consumer
technology. I mean, they've had so much success spinning things out. It's funded the nonprofit
so effectively. Why not keep it going? Yeah, why change horses in the middle of a stream? If it ain't
broke, don't fix it, right? In other news, Andrew Bosworth is taking over supervision of the company's
efforts to become AI native. That's exciting. He's going to be overseeing META's for Work initiative
that was previously led by another exec.
He's been with...
Trusted General.
Yeah, he's been there for so long.
Yeah, this is AI for work is their internal initiatives.
These are going to be, I think, like internal products
that help the company operate more efficiently.
This, you know, signals a shift,
a deprioritization of the Metaverse,
which has been obviously, you know, in the works
in different ways for quite a while.
but Dreamer is joining Meta superintelligence labs.
David Singleton shared, excited to announce that his founder,
his co-founders and the entire team over at Dreamer are joining Meta.
The last few months have been extraordinary.
We built Dreamer, put the beta in the world just a month ago,
and saw magic come to life for real people.
Since then, thousands of people have used Dreamer
to build personal intelligence software with our sidekick
in the world's newest and most popular programming language, English.
They're building and sharing agents to manage.
email calendar, to-does, create learning tools for their kids, learn new languages, plan trips
with friends, become better cooks, help them with work, achieve their health goals, or simply to
creatively express themselves. All sorts of surprising and unique personal needs. These are agents as
unique as the people building them because they're built exactly. Each person wants them to meet.
We've captured some of our favorites. Yeah, people are building timers, receipt scanners,
citation assistant. This is great if you're using Chatchibati to do your homework.
You can build a little citation assistant.
are building personal financial apps. Yeah, I'm curious again with with any of these sort of
meta MSL acquisitions, you know, you have to wonder is this can you read into their product
direction at all with the acquisition? Are they is meta going to be making is meta AI going to have
the ability to make your own agents that is still to be seen? Most people think like aqua higher
rolled into Manus rolled into other products. At the same time there is an interesting like
diffusion in consumer question that's going on.
that I think might be a little bit underrated,
just the question of what will adoption and retention be like
when you don't have to buy a MacBook or a Mac Mini,
when you don't have to get any API keys at all,
versus it's an app on your phone,
versus it's in chat, GPT, or it's in Instagram,
bundling those things together, actually.
We never really got firm data on how much Lama's being used.
I really want to build an agent that can predict
which videos, funny videos that I would send to you,
just have it do it automatically.
Because I think our feeds are pretty synced up right now.
Sometimes John will send me a video.
And then 10 minutes later, I'll send him the same video,
but I didn't see that he sent it.
Then you look at it.
Let's go over to the Chinese billionaire who says America's EV market is doomed
without him.
Not a problem because we're building V8s and V12s over here.
Baby, we're going back.
We're going back.
No.
This is serious.
Bad timing for all of this.
Bad timing for our desires to get the Tesla Roadster to have a naturally aspirated V-12.
Well, maybe good timing.
Given energy prices.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's rough.
Anyway, Robin Zang of Cattel, C-A-T-L, can't build a factory in America,
but Tesla, Ford, and GM rely on its technology.
Inside a headquarters that shaped like a giant battery cell, you got to give it to them.
That's design.
That's what we need to be seeing from our tech leaders.
Apple did it well with the UFO campus.
I want to see more headquarters that are shaped like the product that you sell.
The billionaire who runs the world's largest battery company is confident that Americans will come calling eventually.
I got a great pose from Gary Tan.
We can cap the show off with.
He says,
I guess the amazing thing that my haters don't understand is you have no idea how much I eat your hate for breakfast.
I am uniquely a person who is driven by all the energy.
you give me in particular.
Love it.
Love it.
Prime agent says,
I like funny G-Stack Barry,
Gary better than Eminem, Gary.
And we'll end the show with a note
from Naval.
He says,
a lot of software is about to get a lot better
right before it becomes unnecessary.
Hmm.
Interesting.
What does he mean by this?
Who knows?
Who knows?
But it's provocative.
Sign up for our newsletter at TBPN.com,
and we will see you tomorrow at 11 a.m.
Sharp.
Throw us and flashbangs.
We love you.
Get ready.
Tomorrow.
Goodbye.
