TBPN - Artemis II, Jamie Dimon’s “American Dream,” Snap’s Crucible Moment | Diet TBPN

Episode Date: April 2, 2026

Diet TBPN delivers the best of today’s TBPN episode in 30 minutes. TBPN is a live tech talk show hosted by John Coogan and Jordi Hays, streaming weekdays 11–2 PT on X and YouTube, with ea...ch episode posted to podcast platforms right after.Described by The New York Times as “Silicon Valley’s newest obsession,” the show has recently featured Mark Zuckerberg, Sam Altman, Mark Cuban, and Satya Nadella.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

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Starting point is 00:00:00 We got to kick it off with this video from NASA administrator and more importantly, former TVPN guest Jared Isaacman. He says, tomorrow we launch at sunset tonight Artemis 2 waits on the pad, ready to carry astronauts, potentially farther than any humans have traveled in more than half a century, the next era of exploration. And we have the countdown here right next to John. Yes. So it is about four hours and 20 something minutes until the launch starts. You know, they might delay by a few minutes. Who knows, they might scratch entirely. But if things go to plan the official NASA stream, it's up now.
Starting point is 00:00:36 But stay with us. And then once we wrap in about three hours, head over there and watch NASA take you through the final stage of the Artemis II launch. But let's play NASA administrator Jared Isaacsman's video. Because it's very exciting. This is what I live for as a young child and what I live for today. 50 years. You know, a lot of people have been going back and forth,
Starting point is 00:01:08 SpaceX versus SLS. I think it's more rockets, the better. More space launch capacity, the better. I want 10 of these companies. I want them all to be successful. Apostructure us says, you can hate SLS for being obsolete, massively late, and over budget.
Starting point is 00:01:26 I certainly do, but you gotta concede. It looks incredible. And I couldn't agree more. Importantly, some people were joking around. saying the space shuttle is launching today. They're not using the space shuttle because they're going farther than they normally go with the space shuttle. And the space shuttle was decommissioned.
Starting point is 00:01:43 So then the astronauts will be in a pod on top, a capsule mode. Exactly. Blake Scholl shares, I'm genuinely excited to see America headed back to the moon, back around the moon. But Artemis is a moon dog. That's a good wombo. That's a really good wombo. Wombos are the new meta. We'll be breaking it down soon.
Starting point is 00:02:01 You don't even need to Lorain it. You don't. It's just plainly. Yeah, it's obvious. Lorraine is lore and explained. Yeah. Yeah. Remember that Apollo did not result in durable progress in space.
Starting point is 00:02:11 It marked a literal high point from half a century. The cost of space access remained prohibitively high until we had a rebirth of space entrepreneurship. Thank you for showing the way. SpaceX. Apollo was history's greatest tech demo, the moon landing. This is inspiring. It shows the triumph of ingenuity, science, and reason. But also Apollo led to half a century of stasis and regression.
Starting point is 00:02:32 Yeah, complacent. It was fundamentally uneconomic, contributed to creation of a cost-insensitive space agency and supply base, all more concerned with perpetuating their own existence, more concerned with make, work, jobs, than accelerating human progress. Now we're going back to the mood, essentially the same way we did in 1969. Again, uneconomically, again, with central planning. A disposable rocket, no answer to how we create a self-sustaining lunar economy. Again, we're taking communist approaches in competition with the communists.
Starting point is 00:03:01 Communism didn't work for the Russians, and it won't work for America. Either, the sooner we can get done with this moon doggle, the better. There's also reason to be optimistic. This time around, there's a nascent commercially led vision for the moon. Lunar hotels, mass drivers, data centers in space, helium-3, the commercial programs that gave SpaceX an early assist show a different and better path forward. This is where the better future lies, and this is where America should be focused.
Starting point is 00:03:25 America should take the moon, and we should take it the same way we took the American West. Let's encourage and protect lunar value creation. How about a homestead act for the moon? Most important, let's stop dumping money. And more importantly, the time of our engineers and scientists on glory project that will never lead to a better future. It is indeed time for another space race. Last time we fought communism with communism, this time, let's remember what made America great. This time, let's fight communism with capitalism.
Starting point is 00:03:50 There's some good points in here. I think the flip side of this is that we are in a wildly different position than 1969, in terms of the maturity of this lunar economy. the space ecosystem. We have SpaceX filed for IPO today. You're looking at a trillion dollar company. It will instantly be one of the largest companies in the world. It already is, but in the public markets when it goes out. And so you have a lot of companies and startups and venture capitalists that are fully ready to commercialize any findings that come out of this and see this as an inspirational moment. And overall, it just feels like 1969, the capital markets,
Starting point is 00:04:30 the entrepreneurship, the capitalism was not quite ready for, okay, let's take this to the next step, let's privatize this, let's build businesses around this. It was much more of a science experiment that went off into its corner and then was not immediately capitalized on. But I think this time could be different. At the same time, I do understand what he's saying. Yeah, Ryan and Hunter over Pirate Wires shared this mission in Pirate Wires. today, and they shared a quote from Jared last week saying, this time he said the goal is not flags and footprints. This time the goal is to stay. America will never again give up the moon. So generally aligned with what Blake is saying. Tyler, what's your take on this?
Starting point is 00:05:16 Yeah, I was just going to say, I think Blake is kind of underestimating the value of just like vibes. Yeah. People have been like pretty black pill on the moon. Totally. I think basically since like everything kind of stopped. Yeah. So if you can just have like a white pill, everyone's like, Sure, like maybe it's not a good idea to continually launch these to the moon. They're not economical. Yeah. But if you can just get one and say like, yeah, we actually, we can't still do this. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:37 Also, I mean, it's over budget, but as a percentage of GDP, it has to be a fraction of what we spent in 1969. So on a relative basis, it's a, it's maybe a better investment. Yeah, I do think that there's something that's just inspiring about being able to do something like this and prove that we still got it. I also like from Hunter and Ryan's post, you know, they're dropping the article. It's just moon, right? It's not the moon. Yes, yes, yes.
Starting point is 00:06:00 I like this idea. Yes, we only got one, so we can just say moon. It has its own name. You know, you don't say the California, the Texas, the Florida. You just say moon. You say, yeah, Texas, Florida. Let's watch this video of Neil Armstrong injecting just seconds before his lunar training vehicle crashed. Space cowboy.
Starting point is 00:06:17 Space cowboy, true heroism here. This is such a crazy video. I had no idea this happened. Good music, too. What is this? Interstellar? Yeah? Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:06:30 Like, how did he? No. It was not going to go. Oh, it's tipping. Okay, I would definitely know. That would be very obvious that you would want to get out of there at that point. Wow. And he gets out on the parachute. I wonder, I wonder how much of that was like planned to be, okay, we're testing the ejector seat or he just knew, okay, I got a, it was called nickname Flying Bedstead for good reason. It looked like a bed frame and it flew like one too. Yeah, flying that on earth, it's not exactly the most aerodynamic vehicle. But Colchie has a market on when will Artemis II launch?
Starting point is 00:07:06 It is soaring. We are now at 89% before April 2nd. So 89% chance it launches today, basically. 92% chance that it launches before April 4th. So Jamie Diamond's been on an absolute tear. He is hiring people. He's restating his vision for America. There's an article in the Wall Street Journal here.
Starting point is 00:07:27 He has a plan for JPMorgan to rescue the American Dream. That's a very exciting, exciting idea. Let's run through Jamie Diamond's plan for America. He's running. I think he should. Jamie Diamond thinks the American Dream is on life support and he is planning from J.P. Morgan Chase to step in. The nation's largest bank announced the American Dream Initiative on Tuesday,
Starting point is 00:07:48 a commitment from J.P. Morgan to support small businesses, homeownership, access to health care, and other economic priorities that Diamond believes are crucial for the well-being of Americans. The bank already finances all the above and says it's ready to put more. resources into the effort. Diamond, 70 years old and CEO of J.P. Morgan since 2006, has long worried about the future of the American economy and wealth inequality. More recently, he has warned that the country is sleepwalking into economic stasis, thanks to bad policies and rules that make it hard to invest in new ventures and run companies.
Starting point is 00:08:19 I am deeply frustrated by our own policies in America, he said last week, at the Hill and Valley Forum. We've become like Europe we're unable to move and change. That's strong words. J.P. Morgan hasn't been slowed, bringing in more profit than any bank in the U.S. history, in U.S. history, but it reaches across Main Street and Wall Street and does better when the whole economy is chugging along. Diamond has a habit of making big commitments. It's a big commitment, having that on. Diamond has a habit of making big commitments in tune with the zeitgeist. J.B. Morgan
Starting point is 00:08:49 announced a $1.5 trillion investment platform focused on national security and supply chains last year, just as the federal government started to invest in critical suppliers. It made a $30 billion racial equity commitment after the murder of George Floyd and a $2.5 trillion climate change plan in 2021. Now, the bank is committing to adding three million new small business customers on top of $7 million today. They want to get to $10. And it wants to lend them up to $80 billion over the next 10 years through loans and support for community-oriented banks and investment funds. The bank reported $33 billion of loans to small businesses and other customers at the end of 2025. So they want to expand significantly. It's just a
Starting point is 00:09:30 30% bump in total number of small businesses, but they want to basically triple the amount of the loan book broadly. The American Dream means you can buy a home, start a business, you can build wealth, and you can afford health care for your family. J.B. Morgan's head of corporate responsibility, Tim Berry said in an interview, we want to bring our capabilities and make that more real to families and customers. They're helming the new American Dream initiative and acknowledge that a lot of it isn't really new. J.B. Morgan has been looking to grow deeper roots in the cities and towns where it does
Starting point is 00:09:58 business rolling out specialty branches focused on community education for years. It has invested big in cities where it has found business friendly, friendly leadership, including Detroit and San Francisco. The initiative and ambitious goals are supposed to jumpstart JPMorgan bankers and employees to do more. When we think about the impact that we've had locally in a place like Detroit, we know that success can be replicated in other places. So they are opening up the pocketbook to spur small business. Very exciting. In other Jamie Diamond news, he just hired or recently hired Warren Buffett's protege. There's a profile in Barron's by Andy Surwer.
Starting point is 00:10:38 J.B. Morgan Chase, CEO, Jamie Diamond, doesn't usually make high profile outside hires for his senior executive team, preferring instead the homegrown variety. That makes Todd Combs, formerly a top investment manager at Berkshire Hathaway. Poached. and brought in to head up J.B. Morgan's Chase's new 10 billion strategic investment group, an exception, except that Holmes is hardly a bolt from the blue. I like that. That's a good turn of phrase. Having served on J.P. Morgan's boards since 2016. Okay, so he's a board member, so he clearly knows everyone already. He says, I know the company well. Combs tells Barron's in his first interview as a bank employee. I know everyone from Jamie to the operating community
Starting point is 00:11:20 and the next layer of management. I'm well aware of the balance sheet, the excess capital, and how Jamie and the team think and operate. Like the bank's other top executives, Combs, who's been CEO of Berkshire, Geico Insurance Unit, is still settling into his new office on the 47th floor of J.P. Morgan's new Manhattan headquarters. I hope you don't mind. The warm office, says Combs,
Starting point is 00:11:41 a tennis playing Florida native. I don't like the cold, he says. Combs mapped out his new gig, which began in January on a two-column chart. He sketched on a notepad. Interesting. He's old school, old school. He's not creating a second brain.
Starting point is 00:11:57 He's just ripping it on a notepad. On the left are five rows of industries such as defense, supply chain, reindustrialization. On the right are there future manifestations such as defense tech, U.S. semiconductors, respectively. The plan is to invest in everything our country has outsourced and abdicated over recent decades. We want to invest in places where the puck is going so that America can control its own future. That means deploying the group's $10 billion into middle market and large companies in U.S. defense, aerospace, health care, and energy sectors to help them grow. Recent investments include mining company perpetual resources and defense tech startup Shield AI. Combs, who reports the Diamond, will also act as a special advisor to the CEO.
Starting point is 00:12:38 Combs' endeavor is part of the security and resiliency initiative, J.P. Morgan announced in October in which the bank will commit to facilitating $1.5 trillion in investments for companies deemed critical to the national economic security and resiliency. We want to be a good partner to the government regardless of who's in charge. It's the GOP now. It can be someone else in the future. We're trying to let capitalism send the right signal. We'll look at every opportunity on its own merit. We want an impact and a return. Highly regarded as an investor, Combs is a boyish-looking, 55.
Starting point is 00:13:08 He helped return GEICO, which was burdened with outdated technology and bloated cost to profitability. Berkshire Watchers thought he might play a role in the company's post-Waron Buffett era, either overseeing its multi-billion-dollar investment portfolio or its massive insurance operations. or he could have been up for other high-profile jobs. But why this one? It's a unique opportunity with both Jamie and the institution and the mission of the job. Combs says, this is critical to the future of the country.
Starting point is 00:13:33 You want to find things in life that are big and important that are worth doing and doable. Combs has an anti-bucket list for his new role. I had about 10 or 12 things that I didn't want. The anti-bucket list is sort of underrated. Your anti-bucket list is just never go skydiving. I don't want that to happen. Never buy a super car.
Starting point is 00:13:55 Never visit 30 countries. Become supercarless. It's just the dumbest thing. Why is no one talking about Snapchat? Explain. Ironic capital came out. Save it snap now. With a well-executed activist campaign.
Starting point is 00:14:13 It does feel like there's a big opportunity with AI, better targeting. Like, I'm receptive to this pitch, but I want to hear it from, I know that this is an activist, an activist shareholder. This could be very, very confrontational. Yes, they come out with a website, save snap now.com. We land on the website. They hit you with Snap Snap back to reality. Yep. So taking a fun approach here. They say Snap has the potential to be a great company and a double AI winner through meaningfully improved operating efficiency and monetization. Irenic has outlined six steps to 7X SNAP's share price to $26 per share. They put together a presentation as well as a letter.
Starting point is 00:14:57 I'll kind of read through some of the highlights. They say it's SNAP's crucible moment. AI creates a dual-pronged opportunity for significant cost cuts and accelerated product development. So they go into cost improvements, monetization, governance on the cost side. They want to spin or shut down specs. I'm sure Evan is not. It's sort of like already happening, right? The spin is seemingly in the works.
Starting point is 00:15:19 There were some leaks over the last six months around that. So I would expect that to happen. They want to rationalize cost. AI can and should replace many existing roles. Now, remember, the constant criticism of Snap has been the stock-based comp. If you actually look at it, from the kind of rough math we were doing, like every 10 years, they're basically giving the entire company to the team. And so investors, long-term investors, have been very frustrated by that.
Starting point is 00:15:49 And it always has been weird because I understand that, like, back in the day when they were competing directly with Twitter and meta and Instagram and Reddit and all these different upstart, high-growth, social networking companies, I believe the talent war thesis, it makes sense that they would have to probably pay top dollar. But you have to imagine that as the business has stabilized, there are people that would come in to, the organization that would be happy to just have a salary and just do the work because it's better than working at another company. It's not necessarily like the AI talent war or that, you know, the social media talent war that I'm sure happened, you know, back 10 years ago. It's a different time. So maybe different structure. Save Snap Now is recommending a thousand-person Rift to get fit and competitive and to empower your highest performers.
Starting point is 00:16:42 If you're Evan reading, empower your highest performers, you're probably thinking like, oh, geez, I never thought of it. But again, they do have 5,261 employees as of late 2025. So this would represent roughly a 20% RIF, not block level cuts, but more in line with what we're seeing at Oracle, meta, some other tech companies that are going through a transformation. On monetization, the recommendation is to improve monetization. which I think is a good idea for any business. But they say AI will massively accelerate product development
Starting point is 00:17:15 and enhance advertising monetization tools. Again, everyone by this point should be well aware that Meta has done a fantastic job in leveraging AI ML to just make a better and better and better ads product. And they say product-led improvements across users, advertisers and subscriptions to break out of SNAP's monetization ceiling. And then they say deploy AI properly, monetize SNAP's proprietary AI data sets, and then concentrate AI partnerships on clear winners like Gemini, OpenAI, and Anthropic. Again, Snap partnered with perplexity.
Starting point is 00:17:53 It seemed like Snap got a fantastic deal out of that. It was something like a $400 million deal, if I remember correctly. Some of it was stock in perplexity. Yeah. But there was a huge cash component. Yeah. And unclear if the other companies mentioned Gemini Open AI or Anthropic would have been able to match
Starting point is 00:18:14 that how aggressive perplexity was getting. And so it's possible. Snap's logic was, hey, we can do this deal with perplexity. And then it's native in our app. It's easy enough to swap it out at a later date. It's like basically take the cash while we can get it. Yeah, I saw this post from Sean Frank that somewhat relates. He was talking about one of our sponsors, App Levin,
Starting point is 00:18:34 which I will tell you about in a second, but he said, In less than 12 months, I've spent 2,800,000, 872,000 of my own money, profitably on App Lovin. I don't own the stock. I don't trade the stock. This is the net amount that left my bank account. And he shares a couple other points, and he says he's spending $17,000. So $2.8 million on App Loven, clearly like a scalable, large platform, spent $17,000 on Pinterest,
Starting point is 00:18:58 266,000 on Reddit. You have to imagine that meta ads are up there. But the question is, like, for a lot of advertisers, Snap has not. become this like, oh, sure, maybe you don't get, maybe it's not going to be your number one platform, but it's like in the marketing mix very regularly. And I think a lot of that should start working. Even if the pool isn't super deep, even if you don't have 99% of your customers there, maybe only 20% of your customers are there. But even if they're there, you should be able find them. And AI can help that. And so I would expect that if this works, you'd see like really
Starting point is 00:19:33 solid data from Ridge saying like, oh yeah, we're spending on Snap. Yeah, and they've been experimenting with SNAP as far back as 2018. I'm sure. When I was hanging out with Sean and Connor back then, they were getting results on SNAP, but there was a ceiling. Yeah. So then finally, they want to, on the governance side, commit to investing in safety and capital return, use newfound cash and profitability to further invest in privacy, safety, and parental controls,
Starting point is 00:19:57 and allocate new cash flow, generation to capital return and demonstrate conviction in SNAP's creation. Yeah, it's interesting on the parental control. and safety side. I think Snap has been able to stay out of the, at least, Lanier's target. Oh, they ended up settled. Yeah, they settled before it went to trial. Oh, okay. Meta and Google fought it. Interesting. And so, yeah, I'm not exactly sure what that, what that means, but I think that they've been trying to sort of like step back from all of that. Yeah. And then on the corporate government side, giving shareholders a vote can unlock a multiple re-rate through broader index illusion. Oh, interesting.
Starting point is 00:20:31 Yeah. And enabling one vote per class they share still preserves Snap as a found. under-controlled companies. I think it probably has like 10x voting power or something like that. Well, the market's reacting really positively to this. And I think Evan Spiegel has shared some statements that sort of mirror this, actually. It seems like there's maybe a little bit more reception than you might expect. The stock's up 14 percent. One day after publishing this piece, says Bose Weinstein.
Starting point is 00:20:59 Adam is a rock star in the making. So Smart, definitely worth a follow. And that's Eretic Cap. Carried note, interest gave some. feedback on Irenic, he said, a few critiques feedback. Daily opens are not equal to time spent on app. App Loven and meta, clearly have higher time spent on app, but therefore parity on monetization is flawed.
Starting point is 00:21:18 Arguing that Snapchat can hit targeting levels of meta is farciful. The amount of data that meta has on me versus Snapchat is astronomically different. I guess I'm open to being proven wrong since you compare it to App Loven, who IMO has always used other targeting sources. Sure. Three proprietary data slide is a one-time flash and a pan moment. Some companies are selling deranged amount of data, but that's not lasting MRR, ARR monetization, although it is fair to call them out on it.
Starting point is 00:21:43 I like the monetization per user slide. I think my feedback around SNAP's ability to monetize relative to those peers' stands. Literally, screen time is much lower and you don't have data for targeting the way peers do. Calling out the founder's net worth growth was either God-tier, petty, or brilliant, or some combination of fun presentation. I think a TBPN slide or quote made it into one of these presentations. It was on the slide. AI should be an accelerant for Snap's core ads business.
Starting point is 00:22:10 So Zuck had said, he said, we're also working on merging LLMs with the recommendation systems that power Facebook, Instagram threads, and our ad system. Our world-class recommendation systems are already driving meaningful growth across our apps and ads business, but we think that the current systems are primitive compared to what will be possible soon. Evans said, our smart campaign solution suite, including smart targeting and smart budget, uses AI to identify incremental high-value audiences and dynamically allocate spend across objectives, reducing the need for manual setup and ongoing optimization. In our interview, they highlighted Evan saying,
Starting point is 00:22:41 as you look at glasses in the near term, I wouldn't expect AI to be a major accelerant. Closing this out, Irenica clearly thinks that he says specifically, Snap is a special asset. He thinks it has a ton of potential. He's overall positive. He just thinks like he really wants them to get in the game. And I think that honestly, a lot of people have felt the same way over the years,
Starting point is 00:23:03 but have just ultimately been frustrated because some of these things that seem somewhat straightforward just haven't been done. Okay. I got to go back to the moon. We're going back to the moon. I'm going back to the moon because Artemis 2 is launching in three hours and 52 minutes and four, three, two, one seconds. Brany Gorell wrote the op-ed today in the TBPN newsletter about some of the technology that they're using to document the trip. And it's a very different take, very live streamer coded of us. We only care about the camera equipment that's on board. Obviously, there's a lot more that goes into it, but it's a fascinating deep type. So today, the NASA Artemis II mission will launch, sending the Orion spacecraft carrying a four astronaut crew on a high-energy, free return trajectory to get to the moon and back in about 10 days. It's longer than the Artemis 1 mission, which I was six days.
Starting point is 00:23:52 And you imagine the stress when you're just being sent straight out into space and you know there's a big turn coming up, and it's pretty important that you actually make. Yeah, you can't be like texting and like miss the off-ramp. If you miss the off-ramp, you're going to Saturn. It's over for you. Orion will enter a 24-hour, highly elliptical orbit with an apogee, 44,000 miles above the surface of the Earth. For context, the ISS orbits at 200 to 280 miles in altitude, so way, way higher, 100 times higher, 200 times higher. During the first day, the crew will test critical life support and communication systems.
Starting point is 00:24:27 After reaching its apogee, Orion will essentially fall backward towards our planet. this will cause the craft to start picking up massive speed. You'll see that the path is a little fishy. And I think a lot of the tinfoil hat crowd are going to be suspicious about the path that the rocket will be taking because it's fishy. It's fishy if you scroll down. Don't you think that's fishy? That's a fishy orbit.
Starting point is 00:24:49 That's just a fishy orbit. I don't know. I don't want to be too conspiratorial about this stuff. It does look like a fish. It's a fishy orbit. As it approaches its perigy, for those who are just listening on audio, it literally looks like a fish. As it processes as it is perigy or the lowest point in its Earth orbit, the crew will conduct a systems review, wake up the main engine system,
Starting point is 00:25:08 organize the cabin to make sure radiation shielding bags and water supplies are positioned to access shelter in case of a solar flare, put on their survival suits and strap in. They're locking in. After the burn, the crew will take more than four days to reach the moon. The craft just coasts there. The lunar flyby where it will orbit the moon at a maximum altitude of 6,000 miles, and minimum altitude of 60 to 70 miles from the surface of the moon
Starting point is 00:25:30 is expected to happen Monday, April 6th. It will probably end up being the farthest humans have ever traveled from Earth due to the high altitude at which they'll orbit the moon. And remember, we still don't know if this is like Apple, another elaborate April Fool's joke. We could get to the countdown here, and Jared Isaacman could say April Fool's.
Starting point is 00:25:48 NASA is essentially aiming for a Netflix-quality live stream on the flyby, and this is what the video creators, the content creators, the live streamers, this is what we care about. It will feature 4K UHD video streams, that beam back to Earth with a three-second latency and some additional latency from encoding in terrestrial distribution using a frontier laser communication terminal
Starting point is 00:26:08 that can transmit data at 260 megs a second. The stream will probably be compressed to 1080P for live video, but it will be saved in 4K. The craft has 28 dedicated cameras on board. Externally mounted and astronaut handheld, externally mounted cameras will be on the tip of each of Orion's four X-shaped solar arrays, and they can rotate, which will allow them to take selfies of Orion,
Starting point is 00:26:29 with the earth or the moon in the background. We got selfie sticks in space. Selfie sticks in space. This is sci-fi now. It's still almost unfathomable, unfathomable the amount of risk that these astronauts are taking on. Yeah. And my thoughts are with them. For sure.
Starting point is 00:26:47 For sure. The Kit Kat Heist. This is the story you all have been waiting for. Kit Katz, the candy bars, were stolen and in massive quantity. The Walser Journal has a story of how the company reads. acted, how they turned a massive Kit Kat heist into Crisis PR gold. We've seen this before. People were talking about Tucker Carlson having his nicotine pouch shipment stolen and how it sounded like the plot of a new Fast and Furious or Zoomer Fast and Furious movie. Well, something similar happened
Starting point is 00:27:19 to Kit Kat and they took advantage of it and made the best out of it. So Kit Kat, of course, is owned by Nestle. But let's dig into what the Wall Street Journal had to say. Just how much are 12 metric tons of stolen Kit Kat bars worth. A lot of promotional gold, it turns out, says the Wall Street Journal. It was the brazen chocolate heist herd around the social media world. Oddly? This is the first time I'm hearing. I don't know how I missed this.
Starting point is 00:27:43 Had you heard of this before? Yes. You had? Yeah, I've seen this. I literally found out about this in the Wall Street Journal. I don't know why. Over the weekend, Nestle confirmed that thieves had swiped 413,000 units of Kit Katz. somewhere along their way from a factory in central Italy to Poland.
Starting point is 00:28:02 Both chocolate bars and the truck carrying them remain missing, though no one was hurt in the theft, it said. With the Swiss company lost in chocolate, though, it gained back in a public relations coup, as did multiple other companies quick to hop on the meme bandwagon. We've always encouraged people to have a break with KitKat, but it seems thieves have taken the message too literally and made a break with more than 12 metric tons of our chocolate.
Starting point is 00:28:26 The company said in a statement, a spokesman. I don't get it. You have to, they would have had to steal the truck, too? Yeah, they stole the truck. They stole the truck. I mean, it sounds like Fast and the Furies. It sounds like they stuck it up. And you said, get out of the truck.
Starting point is 00:28:40 You got to call a cab. The truck is missing. They took the truck. They took the truck. Wow, they took everything. Taking their cue from Nestle, other companies soon joined in with some social media spoofing. We would like to share our thoughts and condolences with Kit Kat following their sad news. the account for Domino's Pizza in the UK posted Monday morning.
Starting point is 00:28:59 Then it added on a completely unrelated note, we're pleased to announce that we'll be selling a new Kit Kat pizza. It's very silly. Charlotte FC, the Major League Soccer Club in North Carolina, jumped on the same riff a couple of hours later. On an unrelated note, we are happy to share that we will be offering roughly 413,000. I don't know about you, John, but I love when large corporations can just jump in on the fun. It's extremely millennial.
Starting point is 00:29:22 This is like, this is my culture is not your costume. If you're not a millennial and you're the one posting this, like, stop. Only a millennial has the right to post jokingly as a corporate account. The discount airline Ryanair, meanwhile, simply posted a cartoon of photo of one of its planes with a face in the jet's mouth are five bitten off Kit Kat bars. Not long ago, most companies would have said little leaving it to law enforcement authorities to disclose such a potentially embarrassing revelation. Now any bad news is good news as long as a corporate brand can turn it into a viral meme. What do you think about this take? It's a masterclass in public relations. I agree with your intuition that this is not that funny. This is sort of just like corporate cringe. It's a little
Starting point is 00:30:07 rough. I'm not getting belly laughs out of this, but just in terms of corporate calm strategy, this feels like the best of all possible worlds. Yeah, I agree with that. I think it's like a reasonable thing. Am I entertained? No. Do I think that it was worth doing? Yes. Does it make me want a KitKat? No. Also no. Yeah, but I was not thinking about KitKat, so now I'm thinking about KitKat. Yes.
Starting point is 00:30:31 And I'm thinking about that. I just think I think I've never really, I've never really had a KitKat and thought, oh, that was so good. Yeah. And so now I'm just remembering why I don't care about it. Elon filed for an IPO on April Fool's Day. And apparently they filed last night, so off by just a little bit according to my life. They filed last. Love Love. But yeah, on pace for June, on, on pace for the kind of June listing. June listing, okay. Leave us five stars on Apple Podcasts and Spotify, sign up for a newsletter at TBPN.com.
Starting point is 00:31:06 And we will see you tomorrow at 11am. Can't wait. Pacific. Goodbye.

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