TBPN - Ms. Information Herself, Acquiring Mountains, Jonathan Moneymaker, Start A Tradition Today
Episode Date: November 28, 2024TBPN.com is made possible by:Ramp - https://ramp.comEight Sleep - https://eightsleep.com/tbpnWander - https://wander.com/tbpnPublic - https://public.comAdQuick - https://adquick.comBezel - ht...tps://getbezel.comPolymarket - https://polymarket.comFollow TBPN: https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://youtube.com/@technologybrotherspod?si=lpk53xTE9WBEcIjV(00:00) - Some Personnel News (Taylor Lorenz) (03:00) - The Information Article Review (44:00) - The Timeline
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Technology Brothers, the most profitable podcasts in the world.
Today, we have some breaking news in the media-free agency, brothers.
We got a blockbuster trade coming out of the journalistic trenches.
Taylor Lorenz, yes, misinformation herself, is officially making the move from the Washington
posters to the San Francisco information.
This is a huge pickup for them, absolutely game-changing.
Jordi, what you got for me?
Let's talk about Lorenz's game.
This is a multimedia star who has posted.
and reported across every single platform you can think of,
Tumblr, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, podcasting, Twitter, X,
Blue Sky, Mastodon, threads, you name it, she's dominated it.
She's not just covering culture, people.
She is shaping it.
Of course, her career hit a bit of turbulence after some head-to-head contact
with none other than Mark Andreessen.
Let me do that again.
Of course, her career hit a bit of turbulence after some head-to-head contact with none
other than Mark Andreessen. That little dust up in the clubhouse caused her career trajectory to be
slowed, hindered, impeded, delayed. There are other words for it, but you get the idea.
She hits free agency after parting ways with the New York Times, but instead of hanging up her
cleats, she deletes all her tweets and goes back to the grind and gets immediately signed
with none other than the Washington posters. And let's not forget, she thrive there,
continuing her gum-chew reporting, taking on billionaires, and making life miserable for anyone
daring to build a network state.
And talk about a dream gig working for one of the greatest technology brothers in history.
An absolute dog.
Jeff Bezos.
She worked hard to make the richest man in the world even richer.
One of the most noble things a technology journalist can do.
Absolutely.
And yes, people call her a champagne socialist.
They call her a limousine liberal.
But look, as someone who loves drinking champagne in the back of limousines, I feel like we're kindred spirits.
Look, this is a reporter who doesn't just show up.
She gets in people's heads.
She understands the game like no one else, whether it's hard-hitting investigations or defining internet culture for the masses.
Her articles have been must-reads for years.
If you're building a network state, a new social app, or just trying to live your life in Silicon Valley, Taylor is coming for you and you better watch out.
phenomenal pickup by the San Francisco misinformation.
They just landed an absolute franchise player.
Can't wait to see the headline she's about to write.
John, do you have any details on the contract?
We don't at this time.
I think it is just a contract.
I don't think she's full-time yet.
Still testing out the water, settling in through the team.
But very interesting.
She hit me up a couple weeks ago.
We chatted about the rise of the brocaster.
And I chimed in as a male podcast expert on the record,
talked to her for about 30 minutes.
It was a fantastic conversation, and she's still got it.
She's in the arena.
She's making plays, and this article is fantastic.
We're going to break it down.
But first, we're going to go to a profile of Taylor Lorenz in none other than the information.
They wrote about her.
Now they're writing with her.
It's almost like you can't write this storyline at home, folks.
So let's go to Annie Goldsmith at the information who writes all rippers, no skippers.
how Taylor Lorenz became part of the story.
On May 18th, the Washington Post published a breaking news story
about the Biden administration's newly created
and promptly attacked disinformation governments board.
The board was able to be led by researcher and author Nina Jankowitz,
who the post reported has been subject to an unrelenting barrage of harassment and abuse
while unchecked misrepresentations of her work continue to go viral.
The post revealed that Jankowitz was resigning from her barely three-week old post,
and the board which had been charged with countering misinformation related to Homeland Security
was being disbanded.
And this was a different arc in Taylor's career.
She'd been on the tech beat and always got a lot of criticism because she was a technology
journalist, but she wrote a lot about social media.
She wrote a lot about culture.
And people were, oh, she should be in the style section.
I completely disagree with that characteristic.
I think that what she wrote about was extremely important to the technology.
world.
I mean, in many ways, she was the center of the entire creator economy trend, which was huge,
which was huge, but in many ways she contributed, she implanted so many ideas in venture capital's
head.
A hundred percent.
That it led to a sort of capital incineration where VCs invested billions of dollars
into the creator economy and we haven't had much to show for it.
And she was so pissed about VCs coining the whole creator economy thing and really running
with it as their own because she'd been reporting on it for years and was like, this is not
well, that was that was actually, that was a piece of a book. Well, and that was somewhat of the,
the thing I always found, you know, having my first, you know, real company is a YouTube ad
network that I started while in college. And when I saw the creator economy trend happening
in tech, I was like, this is kind of interesting because the entire movement was basically kicked off
because somebody did an analysis, somebody did an analysis of the fastest growing small business
categories in the U.S.
And influencers were the fastest growing category.
And so people were like, we need to give them SaaS.
Right.
And so they just dumped literally billions into.
And the information, the San Francisco information was that at the forefront of kind of covering
that they've had probably hundreds of articles at this point that have referenced the creator
economy.
Yep.
And tracking like deal volume and velocity, which is slowed down.
dramatically and I think one of the issues where why that trend didn't
necessarily play out is the trends that were driving the creator economy had
really started at the creation of YouTube and some of these sort of foundational
social media platforms yep that had already been in the like yeah like scaled
for a while that said I do think Taylor did a good job of making the creator
economy about herself yep and she's built a you know fantastic career on it
yeah there was an interesting dynamic where the
The thesis of her book was that, look, you might see Mr. Beast or Logan Paul, like kind of the shining stars of the creator economy now or Kai Sinod and her I Show Speed, all these bros, Rogan.
But really, if you go back in her telling of the history, it was the mommy bloggers who really were on the forefront of the creator economy, which I think is right.
And that's accurate.
But it doesn't go back far enough, in my opinion, because if you go back even further, there's a group of bros that start the platforms.
and that's guys like Chad Hurley at YouTube.
Chad himself.
And so there's this question of like her whole point was like, VCs are just jumping on to this creator economy bandwagon right now.
They're not authentic.
And like while that was true, if you go back to Sequoia writing the investment memo for YouTube in 2003 or something like that, like clearly they saw what the creator economy was going to become.
And they actually made a very strong bet if you're eventually.
you're capitalist and you're looking for outsized returns.
You don't necessarily want to rip a check into someone with a Canon 5D who's going to go make
vlogs and who knows if it's going to hit.
And if it does, it's going to look like a lifestyle business most likely.
You want to be in the platforms.
And that's why the VCs were correct to put money into Twitter.
Yeah, it's funny that in many ways, the creator economy investment trend was like the trend of
capital incineration.
But if you go back and you combine Shopify and YouTube into that,
and Instagram and Facebook.
It was an amazing category to invest in.
Exactly, exactly.
So you need to really understand the definition of like, like, does creator economy include the platforms?
Like, it should, right?
And so obviously there's a lot of beneficiaries there.
And there's been, you know, for platforms like substack that have gotten, you know, that have been at the center of controversy,
they've continued to be a place where you can build a great creator business on.
Yeah.
So.
And so she gets a lot of love for breaking this story.
It was a huge story at the time.
The scoop was for a news cycle, at least the talk of the town,
just the latest in a series of stories that has made Lorenz the most scrutinized,
recognized, and controversial journalist in the tech beat.
She just keeps putting out bangers, says NBC news reporter Ben Collins,
who I believe runs the onion now.
Did you see this?
I think I'm thinking of the right person.
Her former editor at The Daily Beast, she's all rippers and no skippers.
And that is true.
She's on the power law.
she is a phenomenal player and everything that she touches is a scoop she's a scoop machine because
she lives and breathes the the heavily online lifestyle that her her subjects extremely online she is
extremely online every she she's living the same experience as many of the people that she covers
so obviously she's going to have better scoops and um you know have a very unique lens on it
Yeah, and it goes back to her early career.
In the three months since she left the New York Times to join the post,
Lorenz has broken high-impact stories about Facebook's smear campaign against TikTok,
the woman behind the right-wing libs of TikTok social media account,
and the White House's Ukraine war briefings for TikTok stars.
She's a scoop machine, said her post editor, David Mallets.
It's so true.
Her beat was initially dubbed Internet culture, though Lorenz now rejects that moniker.
I hate that phrase.
She said, attention, step.
from her belief that all culture is internet culture.
This is so true.
She's dead on.
Like the internet online is real life.
Twitter is real life.
And that's why she is,
she's really good.
And she runs this like,
she runs her own Instagram account,
but then she also runs in a non-instagarin account that's been banned so many times.
It's now on like Taylor Lorenz alt number seven,
17.
No way.
Oh,
I don't even know about this.
Oh,
it's really,
really good.
I'm missing out.
I forget what it's called,
but it's really funny.
and she posts great stuff.
She, like, is very, very in tune with the culture.
And she doesn't get enough credit from the tech elite, in my opinion.
A number of Lorenza's friends and colleagues use the same phrase to describe her extremely online.
That's the title of her forthcoming book.
There's no distinction between online life and offline life.
Couldn't agree more, Taylor.
Truth.
You are dead on there.
Now, for the first time, Lorenz found herself the subject of media attention in February
when she announced she was leaving her job at the Times to become a columnist at the
rival post, Vanity Fair, New York Magazine in the Hill all covered her departure with Lorenz lobbying
some lightweight grenades of the gray lady out her out of the, on her way out the door. She told
Vanity Fair that she kind of hit a ceiling at the times and hope the paper would hopefully,
you know, evolve in their ways. Completely agree. I mean, she left shortly after the dust up
with Mark Andrewson and Ben Horowitz. They were in this clubhouse chat. Ben Horowitz used the R word,
but he used it. He was quoting members of the Wall Street Bats community.
who used the R word to refer to themselves in endearing ways.
And he was being positive and they were being positive.
So it was kind of a hall monitor situation.
She took to Twitter immediately posted about it.
But most importantly, she got the name wrong.
She attributed the quote to Mark Andreessen instead of Ben Horowitz.
And shortly after she was out at the New York Times.
And I think huge mistake by the New York Times.
Clearly they just don't get the modern way.
Lost a lot of cultural relevancy.
Yep.
For the Times.
Yep, exactly.
Which is why it's such a big pickup.
Jeff Bezos understood, hey, if you're going to be talking trash about, you know,
Ben Horowitz and Mark Andreessen, get on my team.
I love riffing with these guys.
Yep.
And so she goes over to the Times.
And she says, a few weeks ago, she found herself in the midst of another journalism,
Bruhaha, after she referenced her personal brand in an insider interview.
I will not make that mistake again, she told me,
Pulitzer Prize winning.
Times reporter Maggie Haberman tweeted, is there something going on in the world other than the
desire of some folks to get more attention? Ridiculous. Maggie, no one's going to be talking about you
in a couple of years. You need to be building a brand. Like, you're going to be irrelevant. Taylor is
clearly a glimpse into the future here and the old guard just doesn't get it. And so it must be
extremely frustrating for her, for Taylor, because in any other community of tech people, everyone would be
like, yes, like you are doing everything perfectly. And you can tell because the, the, the,
the tech folks are like, fuck, this is the one thing that works against us. Like, we don't care
what Maggie Haberman says about us, but we do care what Taylor Lorenz says about us because
she speaks our language and she's online. Yeah, you know, we've, we've talked about this
before. We don't understand the frustration with Taylor. She is a finally a worthy competitor
for the technology industry and a sparring partner. Yes, yes, yes. Somebody that you can bounce ideas
off of and have sort of these sort of somewhat charged but very meaningful debates on the most
important topics of our time like how much time you should spend scrolling.
Yes, yes.
But it's kind of like getting in the gladiatorial pit with like a wild bear or tiger.
Like it's going to lead to a lot of glory, but you could get malt.
Yep.
And so you talk to her on the record could come out fine as we saw with this next piece that
we're going to cover.
But you could get, you could get destroyed and your whole life could be up in flames.
And so there was a big controversy after she doxed the libs of TikTok, the Daily Wire leased a Times Square
billboard, which blared in all caps. Taylor Lorenz doxed lives of TikTok.
I wish I could get my rivals to buy Times Square billboards about me.
Man, what an impact.
You know you got under someone's skin when they're buying billboards about you.
That's fantastic.
In Lorenz's view, it's not just the politically flammable stories that elicit such incendiary.
reactions, but the tenacity with which she reports them.
I think you have to really nail them, she said.
And when you really twist the knife in a good way, in an accountability story, people
are going to freak out.
Taylor Lorenz joined the Washington Post at a delicate moment for the newsroom.
Like the Times, the Post was working to formalize a policy surrounding its reporter's
use of social media.
The paper had been rocked by a discrimination lawsuit filed last July by reporter Felicia
Sonmez, a sexual assault survivor who was suspended in January 2020 by former Post editor
Marty Barron.
The suspension came after Somnese tweeted about rape allegations against Kobe Bryant shortly
after his death.
Though the paper is now under the leadership of its first female executive editor, Sally Busby,
the episode was still fresh in the minds of some staffers when Taylor Lorenz joined in
March.
Enter Taylor Lorenz into this powder keg situation.
Here is somebody who is employed to use their voice on Twitter in a way that no one
else has been empowered to do.
And so the feeling from the top brass is mutual.
there's a lot of excitement in the room about working with her.
Part of what it means to practice journalism today
is there are going to be staffers that have really large followings.
And this is true.
This is the modern era.
And so you have to be online.
In many ways, in our corner of the internet,
Lorenz is going to be bigger than any publication that she works with.
Yeah, absolutely.
She actually genuinely has more reach than the post
within our section of the internet.
She is the one technology journalist
who truly lives rent-free
in the minds of the tech elite
in a very meaningful way.
And that, you can't put a price on that.
It can't be quantified in like distribution numbers
or circulation numbers.
Though Taylor Lorenz is now the poster child
for being very online, growing up in Old Greenwich, Connecticut,
she remained fairly unplugged.
In the late 90s, I felt like the internet was for nerds
and I wanted to be cool,
so I didn't really spend a lot of time online,
aside from AIM, she told me.
In 1998, I just didn't get the hype at all.
She declined to answer additional questions about her family life, upbringing,
or even her exact age, itself the subject of wild speculation on the right.
Yeah, people are obsessed with her age.
It's very funny.
On her Wikipedia page, it says that she was born between 1984 and 1988 or something like that.
Well, that's her gift is being able to swing through.
Is she Gen Z one story?
Is she millennial another?
Is she a boomer another?
She really can sort of bend with whatever the subject that she's writing about
and really feel as though it's coming from the source.
Yeah, yeah.
But that bit just keeps on giving.
Like just this week it went viral again because someone was talking about her age
and she replied like, look, I'm 50.
And so obviously she's not 50, but no one gets the joke.
And so everyone's like, she's actually 50.
And they like, you know, start dunking on that.
And like, it just.
She's got a real sense of humor, right?
She's got a real sense of humor.
She knows how to get the people riled up.
Exactly.
She does it intentionally, strategically.
She did this.
You remember when she went out and said, you know, I need to have my, you know, apartment.
Oh, yeah.
She heats her apartment to like 80 degrees.
It's sort of like her baseline temperature.
And that sparked a lot of speculation that maybe she was, you know, a lizard person or something like that.
It needed to be in sort of a warm.
environment because of that.
The war on air conditioning.
She's been waging it for years.
But yeah, I mean, what a career.
In 2017, Lorenz came face to face
with the dangers of her new job when she was assaulted
at the Charlottesville, unite the right rally,
getting punched in the face while delivering
a live stream report.
I peer pressure the Daily Beast into hiring me for literally nothing.
I took a 70% pay cut.
I sold every belonging I hadn't moved in with a bunch of
roommates in front heights.
Conviction.
Grinding.
And yeah, what a crazy thing?
I remember she was at that live stream.
That was so crazy.
What a crazy time.
She was an instant hit at the Daily Beast.
She was like a rocket ship.
She was a pioneer in what was then a criminally undercovered industry.
Lorenz stayed at the Daily Beast for a few months before getting recruited away.
Within six months, I had four job offers from all these other outlets.
I took the Atlantic where I was there for a year and a half and then the New York Times was aggressively recruiting me.
Yeah, I mean, this is what happens to star players.
They get recruited.
And now, now.
Now she's fully in the free agency.
She's writing.
She has a fantastic substack.
I subscribe to her newsletter.
She's always unearthing stories that I would not have found otherwise.
She's not really about the mainstream tech news.
But it's very important if you're a tech person.
She's done this perfect creator dance,
which is benefiting from these legacy media brands in order to establish her
stealth while still sort of building up her own audience so that she can maintain this
sort of, you know, this sort of like, fuck you attitude of, I don't need you, you need me, right?
Yep.
Given that she could, in theory, be completely independent at any point and probably make just as much
money doing that than she could at any one of these publications.
Yep, yep.
But it's obviously come with major setbacks.
She's been doxed multiple times.
She's been swatted multiple times with police forces wrongly called to her home and that
of her parents.
She's philosophical about what her parents faced.
She calls them generic suburban white people
who can comfortably reason with law enforcement
when 15 police show up at the door,
but she worries about other reporters
who are victims of such harassment.
Think if they're in a different neighborhood
or of a different background
or of a different race,
those are the stakes other journalists
are trying to cover.
The abuse has been so constant,
it's become almost routine.
It's the same.
Dox on Kiwi Farms and 4chan,
Reddit thread about your family and friends
and get swatted.
You get swatted.
They leak your phone number.
I feel like I'm on the merry ground for the 20th time.
I feel like there's got to be some way to harden her security because she's got to keep posting.
But swatting people is just playing dirty, folks.
Don't do it.
That's not the point.
The whole thing is like you have to understand what's going on in the tech press versus the tech community is like it's WWE.
It's wrestling.
Like what happens on the court is left.
Yeah.
left in the ring and you know you can't be the fan that thinks it's real yeah that's just
embarrassing yeah but here's here's the thing the pressure on her and the scrutiny yeah has made her a
better journalist right and she admits that she says she's keenly aware of any mistakes that she makes
no matter how trivial will be trotted out in front of a national audience yep i can't get a
correction ever like i would be dead i can't fuck up ever any tiny thing is going to be blown out
of proportion to the margin for error because of that attention is just very high yep that's
That's that Mamba mentality, right?
Where she's, she understands in the spotlight, she's going to perform, right?
And it's pushing her to be a better journalist.
Yep.
And this came back to hurt her recently when she was at a press briefing for Joe Biden.
I believe she called him a war criminal on her close friends feed on Instagram.
One of her close friends, turns out not that much of a close friends leaked it.
Screenshot it, leaked it.
And there was massive blowback.
But you know what?
Free speech.
I thought we were the party of free speech.
We're supposed to be supporting people saying unhinged things about our enemies.
That said so, but recently she's sort of come around to feeling like deplatforming is actually wrong in many ways.
She said on a recent podcast that, you know, while she historically was in favor of silencing the Manosphere,
so if you had male opinions, she wanted to generally sort of shut you up, de-platform you,
what she's sort of found in her research is that that tends to have
blowback that comes with it where if you end up in this game of whackamol,
where you de-platform somebody, they pop up on another platform,
and she's been very critical of the right-leaning platforms
that have been in favor of free speech.
It's spoken out very strongly against many of those platforms,
but at the same time recognizing that there are so many potential platforms
to post on today that de-platforming is.
is potentially, you know, very ineffective.
You gave us the birth of parlor and gab and Truth Social and, you know,
all these different platforms.
I think that the natural next move for her is potentially like a board level role at Truth Social.
Because like where does she really go from here?
She's been at the Atlantic, the Times, the Washington Post, the San Francisco information.
She's been around, you know, she's been at every top newsroom in the country.
the natural next step is to join the board of something like truth social and help, you know,
truth social, while they have a fantastic valuation, they only did about a million in revenue last
year. So if Taylor went on there and said she was rolling out a private feed and subscription,
she could probably two, three X their revenue overnight. Yeah. I mean, it goes back to the concept
of like the horseshoe theory, right? Like she's been clocked as like left wing, but as we've seen
with her calling Biden a war criminal, she's not riding with Biden.
She's not in the democratic establishment.
She's further left that.
She's very skeptical of government because of how they handled COVID.
A lot of people on the right are skeptical of the government because they handled
because of how they handled COVID.
And so you could see her following around going to national Bolshevism or far right extremism
and just kind of come into the other side at a certain point.
We've seen this a lot.
I like to, I like it when she runs into the fire.
Exactly.
So with her going to the information, it's literally saying, hey, all my,
you know, all her top enemies are avid, you know, readers of the information, these sort of text.
She's in the mouth of the wolf now.
She's going and running at them and, you know, screaming at them, chasing them around the internet.
But the next move could be to the daily wire.
The daily wire or true social, right?
Yep, or true social.
Going into the fire, she's not afraid to do that.
But there's one journalist who will not be working with her in the future, and that's
Nate Silver.
They got an little spat on X.
Taylor wrote, hi, Nate, I don't disclose any personal detail.
like my birthday, home address, family info, et cetera,
because my family members are harassed and swatted at their homes,
thanks to reactionary people like you,
misrepresenting my work and inciting outrage.
Why are you so obsessed with my age?
It's a good point.
Good point.
Who cares if she's writing bangers?
I don't care if it's a 13-year-old in Czechoslovakia.
Yep.
I will retweet it.
But Nate replies and says,
Taylor, normal people publish their date of birth.
Mine is 11378.
I know you're probably older than the image.
You want to cultivate online, but you just own it.
Not much you can really do to make yourself younger.
And Nate had to delete it.
He said deleting this because it's mean.
I don't think highly of this person, but I also don't know this person.
I was a little unclear what he meant by deleting it by screenshot.
Screenshouting and getting 5,000 likes.
So I was a bit confused on that.
But I think it's important.
So we don't talk about.
This is a growth hack.
We need to post some really incendiary stuff, then delete it.
And then post the screen.
I'm deleting, just so you know, I'm deleting this picture of my watch collection
and my rare car collection because it's ghost.
It's in bad taste.
I apologize.
And please don't repost and like this.
Yeah.
And I think it's important to say, so we don't talk about politics or social issues
on this podcast.
I feel like I have to remind people of that.
But I do think it's important for,
us as a technology and a business podcast to stand up against this journalist on journalist violence.
Exactly. Exactly. Technology brothers, you know, we have our differences at times, but overall,
we have this sort of shared common mission to advance the world through enterprise SaaS and
rockets and everything in between. Journalists have this same sort of desire to find and share the
truth. And I don't want to see Nate Silver and Taylor Lorenz fighting. I want to see them uniting.
I want to see them going over to true social, going over to blue sky together.
being everywhere at once, posting more and, you know, constantly in pursuit of the truth and not
letting personal differences or getting into arguments about birthdays.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, this goes back to when Elon bought X.
Taylor was banned for a little bit for some reason.
It was a very dark time.
I want her on the platform.
I want her in the ring.
I want the surprise quote.
She posts with comments off now.
Yeah, she's back on, but we need to get her account fully back.
up and supported. We need all of her crew on to really create some tension on the timeline.
This was like the beauty of Twitter was like if you were posting about capitalism or technology,
it could go either way. You could get a bunch of, you could get dunked on. Now when you go out
and post. Now there's no, there's no stakes. Capitalism good. You're not, oh yeah, cool. Old,
news. Thumbs up. There's no stakes. And so stakes and drama, that's what makes for entertainment.
And so we need more of that. So we need to support Taylor Lorenz on the timeline. And, and honestly,
if Taylor was taking X seriously, I'm assuming she'd be pulling in at least 50, 60K a month.
I would hope so.
Just off of the ad sharing revenue.
I would hope so.
So go and subscribe to the information, subscribe to her podcast Power User Pod on
AWS is a sponsor.
So we wanted to just say, we like to do sponsor.
She's still working with Bezos.
That's great.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I was worried that they had a rift after leaving the post,
but it's good to see that Bezos is still.
supporting her. I think it's good to do sponsor
acknowledgments. Thank you to AWS for sponsoring
Taylor. I think it's an amazing
way to get in front of the next
generation of engineers and entrepreneurs
that are going to be building on top of AWS. I agree.
I agree. So let's go to the rise of the
brocasters. This is the article that Taylor called me about, and I spoke to her
on the record. She writes,
about a year ago, Sean Kelly, then 26,
decided to launch yet another business.
Previously, he'd fooled around running a small
drop shipping company as a Rutgers University
undergrad. Later, he sold face masks and other personal protective equipment during the pandemic's early
days. Clearly, very hustle, very entrepreneurial-oriented guy. Neither enterprise had really gone anywhere,
so after years of binging the Joe Rogan experience, he settled on his next venture, his own podcast.
He built his show, digital social hour as in-depth conversations with entrepreneurs,
thought leaders, and high achievers, attracting guests like Brian Johnson, Tulsi Gabbard.
He uploaded episodes relentlessly, both audio and YouTube videos and amassed a dedicated male following.
In Swift order, he shot to number one on Apple Podcasts, self-improvement category.
Congrats.
Probably lots of Don pairing on along the way.
And he's accumulated 11 million Instagram followers and more than 1 million subscribers on YouTube.
He's leaned hard into video and employs up to eight freelance video editors at a time,
six for his longer stuff and two for short social media friendly clips.
What's interesting is that she then later clocks his revenue or his profit.
So she went and she said she talked to industry experts about it.
Why would she just not ask for a picture of his watch or car collection?
That would be good.
It'd be a much easier way to clock his revenue.
He won't comment on his annual revenue,
but based on conversations with industry experts,
it could plausibly be around a half million dollars.
I feel like that's really low.
Really low.
Kelly, if that's what you're doing,
if that's what you're doing,
talk to us.
Yeah,
we'll get you set up with some real,
real profit.
Maybe he's not doing enough ads.
Yeah.
But I mean,
11 million Instagram followers,
one million subscribers,
like,
you got to be able to pull in a lot more than half a month.
I mean, the rule of thumb,
generally,
I mean,
this isn't even for business content or long form,
but the rule of thumb is usually a dollar per subscriber on YouTube.
is like reasonable monetization.
So you look at Mr. Beast over 100 million subscribers,
his business does over $100 million.
You look at a lot of the finance channels
that have a couple million views,
a couple million subscribers,
a couple million bucks in revenue.
And then, of course, there's costs below the line.
But Taylor is opining on the end of an era.
The era of journalistic podcasts like serial and slow burn
is fading away.
And even the schlocky, true crime
and horror standbys like my favorite murder and last podcast on the left no longer hold as much
cultural sway and brand power as they did a few years ago. Instead, the new podcast stars are
young men like Kelly. They're part of the Manosphere that's been talked about a lot in politics
lately ever since Donald Trump made their show's key campaign stops. Yeah, and Taylor's last
podcast episode was with your friend, a researcher, Joshua Citarella, Joshua, who is an expert
on the Manosphere.
Yep.
And it was a great episode where Josh, Joshua basically mansplained the
mannosphere to Taylor and the audience.
So it was very insightful for me considering, you know, I've listened to some of these
podcasts before, but I'd never heard the Manosphere described so perfectly.
Yeah.
It's, it's fascinating.
It's all this question, there's been a big question in the media about like, should,
should the Democrats build a Democrat version of Joe Rogan?
and there's a bunch of reasons why that may or may not work.
If you look at the top technology or the top podcast,
there are already plenty of left-wing shows with huge reaches.
The Harris campaign just didn't do them.
Like, there's the Daily show, there's the Ezra Klein show,
the NYT Daily, there's last podcast on the left,
and there's that one with those comedians called,
I'm blanking on it, but it's also really smartless is really big.
and then there's the one with the Obama writer called Pod Save America.
So there's just like so many, like the views are clearly there.
It's not like, you know, oh, there's 100 million Americans who just aren't listening to podcasts.
They're just listening to different podcasts, but they just weren't prioritized.
So I kind of rejected the whole premise when I was talking to her.
But there is an interesting question about why male podcasts have become so big, how this happened.
And my thesis for her was that a big part of it is that Apple has less algorithmic control over what people look at and listen to in the podcast player.
So they are much less likely to de-platform people.
They did de-platform Info Wars, but they never de-platform the Daily Wire in the same way that YouTube can just adjust the algorithm to promote a little bit less.
Because Kevin Ruse did this whole deep dive on, I think it was called Rabbit Hole.
he did a whole podcast and series about young men who go on YouTube and look for, you know,
self-improvement content, essentially.
And then they wind up in a conservative rabbit hole of content that gets more and more right-wing
as they go down it.
And the recommendation algorithm was it wasn't tuned to deal with politics at all.
It was completely neutral about it.
It was like if you, if you search for a video about a, you know, 9-11 TurboS,
well, you're going to see a video about a more niche Porsche.
and you're going to see an ST video and then a GT3RS and then some retro Porsche because it
knows you might end up on cars and bids buying exactly exactly so it's kind of like a funnel for
anything and of course it worked the same way for conservative content and liberal content too yeah and she
and this this piece calls it out but YouTube is I do think it's starting to change but it
forever because YouTube originated with a lot of gaming content that was like over I think
it was like over 50% of all content uploaded to YouTube for a while.
I think it may still be that way, was just gaming content.
That attracted a lot of men.
And then that has still snowballed where I see this running a YouTube ad network.
You know, I haven't run it in years, but starting one in college, it was always, it used
to be a real challenge to help a female oriented consumer brand actually scale up on YouTube
because there just wasn't that many channels.
That's changed a lot.
as YouTube has become.
But I think one of the, I don't think this is like specifically called out,
but something that people miss with YouTube is there is,
it has complete, so much of YouTube content today is watched on TVs, right?
And so what that means is that the influence that TV used to hold
is now held by the male podcast experts, right?
The Hubermans, the Hubermans, the Lex Friedman's, et cetera.
And a lot of them have deals where they can still post the full show on,
YouTube. This is the thing with the Harris going on Call Her Daddy and Trump going on Rogan.
Rogan is now a couple of years out from his Spotify deal. He's allowed to post the full
episode on YouTube as well as on Spotify. Call Her Daddy is still in that tweener phase where they
have to gate it. And so what went out on YouTube from Call Her Daddy was just a clip. It wasn't
the full thing. And it was a lot shorter and there's a whole bunch of other stuff that goes into
the dynamics there. They had a good quote from Samir Chowdry. Do you know this guy?
Host of the Colonist.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's a great show.
They break down everything in the YouTube world,
and they really break down like the business of YouTube,
really great interviews with Mr. Beast and a lot of other folks.
Samir says, YouTube is a largely male audience,
and male loneliness is a factor.
You have a lot of young men looking for community and friendship,
and they've been able to find that through podcasting.
Yeah, we've talked about the cure to male loneliness being just calling up
your ramp, you know, sales ref, right?
Your SDR.
Your SDR over at ramp.
They'll talk to you for hours.
Or going on Tegis and.
Yeah, going on Tegis.
Taking expert network calls.
Exactly.
But I, I resonate with this when I discovered podcasts while I was a young man.
I was 18.
Yep.
And it felt like having a mentor in my pocket.
Yep.
Where I could listen to hundreds of hours of people that had gone and done the things that I
wanted to do.
And I learned the language of the industry.
that I was interested, I learned different health practices that, you know, many of which I still do today.
So podcasts have served as basically an older brother to me that I didn't have in terms of teaching me about the world.
And it's influenced many of my beliefs, right?
Yeah. My question here is he says, YouTube is a largely male audience. And so I wonder what the actual gender breakdown is. Is it 6040? Is it 7030? And then if you zoom out,
you look that up. And then if you zoom out, I wonder if, is it that women are just listening to
less content or consuming less content? Or are they on, is Instagram more female? Is TikTok more
female? Or are, is YouTube and podcasting really just excuse male? Like, like, are AirPods sold more
to men than women? I wonder about that or just like headphones, like listening to things. Like the
thing that is upstream of the individual platform because I would believe that there are some
platforms that lean male, some platforms that lean female, but I would be very surprised if we learned
that just content consumption is a male phenomenon. Yeah, it's interesting. So as of now,
this site is reporting that only 54% of YouTube users 18 and above are male. That sounds right to me.
That sounds right to me. But it is in different niches, obviously. If you look at like the business niche or
the manosphere, obviously that's going to skew male, but there are going to be plenty of
sub niches that skew female. 50-50, right? Yeah. Yeah. And so I kind of disagree with that
characterization of YouTube, and I don't think the data backs that up. But it is interesting that
just the accessible product on social media, on new media, was accessible to the conservatives
this time around where next year or in in 2024, I guess 2028, we could be looking at, oh, it's the
TikTok election or the Instagram Reels election and the Democrats are crushing because they have
much more viral potential on there. And it's a little bit of a more like for JD, he seems to do
really well in a three hour show. Same with Trump. But maybe the Democrats, whoever they put up next,
whether it's Buttigieg or AOC, they'll do better on a streaming platform or they'll do better.
They're on a short form platform.
And so I'm wondering if this holds forever or if this will be, if this will be, you know, disrupted.
And so let's go to my quote in here.
The other commonality, many of these podcasters eventually fill the pull towards political coverage,
which is something I've talked about, which has been an even wider appeal than topics like
artificial intelligence and crypto.
John Coogan, an entrepreneur and residence at Founders Fund and host of the podcast,
technology brothers said he experienced this pressure firsthand when trying to grow his YouTube
channel, which is now has nearly a half a million subscribers. You want your business to grow. You have
employees, he said, but as you grow, you need the numbers to go up. The algorithm is addictive.
You realize that there are only 100,000 people interested in tech or AI. At a certain point,
you max out the technology or business market size. And so this is very natural. We've seen this
with all in going political and everyone getting really up in a tizzy about that.
But it makes sense.
They're growing their business.
And what they're doing is impactful to the tech community.
I was just talking to somebody at the gym about this.
Let's not take away their desire to go political.
They enjoy the culture war, right?
Like those guys like duking it out on the timeline with the Taylor Lorenzes of the world.
And they just enjoy it.
It's like a sport to them.
And it helps them get bigger and bigger and bigger.
Like when J-Cal's posting,
like we're the number one podcast. He's not even talking about the number one podcast in technology
anymore. He will have episodes, like the all-in show will have episodes that are like the number one
podcast in all the categories. And it's because it appeals to everyone. If they were just sticking to
deep dives on, oh, what AI agent is the best or what startup got funded? Like they're not going to,
they're not going to go broad. And they want to go bigger and bigger and bigger. And this is very natural.
And it creates an opening for new shows to come in. This is what happened with Lex Friedman. He used to
be the artificial intelligence podcast.
It was all AI researchers.
Then eventually he broadened out, started having political people on, started having, you know,
Jaka Willink on and Rogan and all sorts of different people on, health stuff.
And that created the opportunity for Dwar Keshe, who's doing fantastically.
And now Dwar cash is doing Tony Blair.
And eventually Dwar cash will broaden out to all sorts of different topics that he's interested in.
He won't just be the AI researcher show.
And then there'll be a new Dwar Cash.
And that's great.
And it's this virtuous cycle that should not be.
It shouldn't be criticized.
It's a positive thing.
The only thing I want to see out of Taylor is if she wants to really fight back against
the Manosphere, she's got to get bigger.
She's got to monetize more.
I want her, you know, there's this talk within the tech world of what's going to be
the first $1 billion, one-person company.
Yep.
Could easily be Taylor Lorenz.
The Taylor Lorenz Media Super Corp, Inc.
Yep.
That could be the world's first.
Yeah.
And that would be, I would love to see her as a beaner.
I'd love to see her, you know, potentially,
gunning for that first, you know, podcast to IPO, right?
She's going to have to go up against newcomer for that.
Yeah, total SPAC candidate if she would really start to focus on monetization.
So my biggest criticism of Taylor is focus on monetization.
If you really want to, yeah, if you want to understand the creator economy more, more
promoted posts, I like that she's working with AWS and encouraging young technologists to
build on AWS through that partnership.
But ramp it up, right?
Yep, I like it up.
Yep, I like it.
More ads.
and I feel like we're lucky to have her as a sparring partner.
You know, the pressure makes her a better journalist.
And so if you're listening to this, you're a founder, you're in technology.
Give it on the record interview to Taylor.
Most of the time it'll come out great like this,
but every once in a while you'll slip up,
admit that you read one unqualified reservations post and she'll destroy your entire life.
But that's the way it goes.
That's the game.
That's the game.
And it's a good game.
Yeah, so she's actually retooling her podcast.
right now we saw this she's she's shifting from a interview show to a dual host
conversational show yeah and so hopefully that leads to breakout success I'm
whenever I see somebody with an interview show I'm always you know cautiously
optimistic that they'll play the game correctly like like if she wants to be this
technology political show like she should have gotten Kamala Harris on the show
yeah and it's like what was her plan to get to that size to that that that scale
And you can't, I mean, I love Josh, but he is very much a micro internet celebrity.
He's small.
And so he's not going to bring a huge audience to that.
And it's also a question of Taylor Lorenz is such an alpha.
Could she and Kamla, who's also an alpha, even exists in the same room together without that?
I mean, Rogan figured it out with Trump.
Yeah.
Like they got into creating some great content together.
And so I think that's the big problem with the Democrat version.
of Rogan is that no one is really grinding out like, okay, how do I make sure that I have to be
the stop? It almost felt like Collar Daddy was like lucked into it and was like, okay, I guess we'll do
this, but this wasn't our plan. Whereas if you're really trying to build the Rogan of the left,
like you've got to be getting all these people on. Yeah. Anyway, let's move on to the timeline.
Thanks for listening to that deep dive. Didn't even have to put her in the truth zone because
it was a truthful article. The information. Everyone who's calling it the misinformation is
misinformed. It's not the misinformation. Stop calling it the misinformation. It's the misinformation. It's not
the misinformation. The San Francisco information. It's the San Francisco information. So go easy on them. They're
great. And they just, they just picked up an all-time player. So we love them. Hey. Yeah. Oh,
before? Before I jump in, we have a fantastic promoted post by Tyler. He says that inspired by
Friday's episode of Technology Brothers, I created a marketplace for sales reps to rent.edu,
email addresses from female college students to increase their response rate to cold emails.
If you're a sales rep or sales leader looking to crush your Q4 goals, try leveraging a dot
edu email today. Check it out at edu mart.io or at the edu mart. And he's created this fantastic
marketplace where you can go on. If you are selling enterprise SaaS, go on there, get a dot edu
email address from a female college student. And if you're in college, go on there and rent out
Income.
Rents out your EDU address.
It's probably massively against the terms, but so is Airbnb in many ways in early days.
Move fast and break things.
This is all inspired by Morgan.
Inspired by Morgan Barrett, who said with a girl's name and a dot edu email address,
I have almost 100% response rate to cold emails.
True banger here, one and a half million views, almost 4,000 likes.
Oh, sorry, 40,000 likes.
40,000 bookmarks.
And people really resonated with this.
And this is why we got to call out Tyler because 40,000 people like this, only one guy actually went and built it.
And so the next time you see some crazy banger and you think, oh, somebody already built it.
There's probably 10 YC companies that are doing this already.
They aren't.
Just go and build it.
And so this.
Morgan covered it on the 19th.
We talked about it at the end of last week.
Fantastic execution.
Tyler built it over the weekend and shipped it this morning.
Does he deserve brother of the week?
I think this is, I think this has to be the brother of the week.
This is Brother of the Week.
This is Brother of the Week.
Congratulations to Tyler.
Congratulations, Tyler.
You are the Technology Brother of the Week.
This is exactly what we look for in the Technology Brothers, building, shipping, shipping, shit posting.
And even running after controversy, there's going to be a lot of people.
There's going to be a lot of pushback.
There's going to be a lot of people in general that say this is misleading or whatever.
But as long as you're selling a product that people need and want, I think that it's fair game.
Yep.
And he's good at promoting it.
He got us to talk about it.
And it'll be good for the shareholders.
Call up Business Insider.
You got to get them to write about it.
Call up Taylor Lorenz.
Tell her what you're doing.
Maybe she hates it.
Maybe she writes a hit piece.
It's going to be good for you.
Thank you to Tyler.
Thank you to Tyler.
Congratulations on your brother of the week.
Andrew DeSuzza says the startup industrial complex created by Paul Graham and White
Combinator is rotting the creativity and ambition of a generation of founders with a paint
by numbers approach to entrepreneurship. Founders, go off script, have an original idea, stop building
for a niche, build for humanity. And this is so funny because I saw someone in sub-tweeting this.
And it was just like, someone complaining about YC. And then it was just Paul, Paul Graham,
Coinbase, Airbnb, Stripe. Zapier. It's a good rebuttal. It's like, well, yeah,
of course we're not focused on the off-script companies in this batch. The ones that people,
people are focused on right now are the AI rappers that are like running the right playbook.
Yeah, but Coinbase was contrarian.
Coinbase was not hot in summer 12.
You got you, when you were in the batch, you could get a Bitcoin just for signing up.
Yes, one Bitcoin was the sign up reward for Coinbase.
And then for years, no, everyone was like, oh, yeah, Coinbase, like that weird company.
Like, oh, okay, I guess they raised some money.
Like, they were slow to raise money.
It took them a while.
They were much hotter companies coming out of YC.
And also they were not flagged as like a top startup.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I would say the YC framework and basically religion around company building that they've created, objectively for most entrepreneurs is like a fantastic set of guardrails to just like run it, you know, build, have the best possible chances at building a business.
When I look back at the companies that I've built, you know, if I'm taking sort of a rear view look, I'm like, I wish I was sort of following more of YC's dogma around certain things.
And the other thing is, yes, YC is a great place to go if you're, if you don't have some super inspiring idea or vision and you just want to build some software.
Yep.
And have like a good framework to do that.
Maybe join another company.
But you can still, they're still happy to take these weird outlier ideas.
There's just not going to be.
They founded a nicotine pouch.
They funded a nicotine pouch company in 2018.
Yeah.
And they're not going to.
Zinn didn't even exist.
Yeah.
And you're not going to have a hundred visionary companies in every batch.
Yeah.
That's okay because there's going to be some.
non-visionary, you know, plays that end up pivoting into weird stuff.
Also, like, there is a massive piece dividend of this startup industrial complex.
Like, you look at the ramp guys.
They took their first company through YC, Paribus, wound up selling it.
And then they wound up doing an even bigger company ramp after.
And when I think of their creativity and ambition, like, it's not rot.
It's not rotten, not by any stretch of the imagination.
And them setting them up with the YC.
framework to build, execute, sell that business.
Like, it made them who they are today.
And so, you know, it's like there are so many ways to be successful and we're, you know,
very thankful to YC.
So a big wag of the finger to Andrew DeSuzza.
We disagree.
But let us know what you think in the comments.
Christina Farhat says, Your Honor, it was my AI agent.
And Veronica says this will be a real argument.
And I think that's real.
Yeah.
where does the liability fall?
We're already seeing this a little bit with,
if you go on agent.AI and you,
the professional network for AI agents,
and you,
you know,
hire some digital employee that just goes absolutely rogue.
Well,
this is already happening with those,
those customer support agents where you can
basically get the customer support agent
to, like, give you a full refund or something
for if you like game it out
properly.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. And then the company has said,
oh, that was not our policy.
Like it hallucinated.
Like, who,
Who's responsible for that?
The LLM, the company that created a rapper and the A&A agent.
Yeah, the customer.
They're smart enough to convince your.
Yeah, but what happens when it's a $100 million deal or something?
That's going to court.
And someone is going to say, it's my AI agent.
And so that liability should fall not on the company, but on the company that made the AI agent or the LLM.
It's going to be a mess.
Yeah.
But fortunately, full employer for lawyers.
The lawyers will win in the end.
And then they will be using AI agents and to fight the cases.
We hallucinated, we pled guilty.
We didn't mean to.
No, there's going to be value in being a human at the end that says like, you know,
just taking responsibility for the bot army.
Yeah, I mean, human for a very long time, obviously.
Is the responsibility.
Do we have a promoted post?
Promoted post from our friends over at Furentino Label.
Fierentina Labo, bespoke suiting, designed in America and handcrafted in Italy.
So Fierentino label is run by John Fierentino.
His family made their money in hospitality.
John has been running Furentino label, fantastic suits and tuxedos.
And there's many heads of states and, you know, very the tech elite that wear these suits.
We can't, you know, discuss specifics because it's very private.
But anyways, fantastic suits.
I wore one at Hereticon.
I got a lot of compliments on it.
And we've had a number of our listeners actually go to Ferenetian a label after hearing about them here on the show and get suited up.
So we ask everybody, anybody that's recording a podcast.
Yep.
Especially if you're a capital allocator.
If you're a capital allocator, would it kill you to put on a suit?
Yep.
Answers usually no, so you should put one on.
You are a capital allocator or an executive, not an HVAC repairman.
So dress like it.
Dress accordingly.
Alexa Z says, wow, I'm definitely bullish on this app at GetHipe, GetHive HQ.
And in the setting slash account, it says, call the founder.
I think this is great.
This is amazing.
Yeah.
I think this is actually like the kind of thing that YC basically recommends, which is like
make, yeah, just make yourself extremely available to users.
And once your phone is breaking, then get the second line of defense.
But don't be like, oh, I'm starting this brand new company.
product market fit. We have three customers and I need some sort of like, you know, like
a help desk scenario and a bunch of people and a bunch of stuff. It's like, no, just let people
help you. Some of the greatest tech support I get from early stage companies, always from the founder.
Yeah, and the best founder mode CEOs, they see somebody post on X like, hey, I'm having this issue.
And they're just there right there. Boom. Stripe CEOs still does this. Yeah, it's great.
Let's go to Guillermo Roche over at Vursell. He says, the American Dream for real.
And McDonald's is hiring a web developer to use NextJS.
So I think historically this would have been a great opportunity for crypto investors after the bull cycle ends.
You know, maybe you're not going to just put the fries in the bag, but you could get a NextJS development role.
This was such a banger, 12K.
But this is, yeah, this is a fantastic job.
I can't.
What's more American than working for the golden arches?
Yeah, it's remote.
and it pays 130 to 180K.
Not going to be an angel investor with that salary,
but get this job, ask for a raise.
Hey, with your bonus,
you might be able to get up into that 200K range
and get accredited and see you can go super long
on all your absolute boys.
Exactly.
Employees can work remotely.
So yeah, and McDonald's is back.
It's having a moment.
It's very popular.
So, you know, go work at McDonald's if you are a next JS developer.
Josh Wolf says,
the new Lux quarterly letter to LPs.
Our theme,
Tech Venture Global Markets
Told in four parables of four brothers.
I like this.
One, Prometheus, two,
Menoishis,
three,
Pometheus,
and four Atlas.
And they have these like
gigacad
cartoons of these bros.
I like somebody else
like quote tweeted this
or just tweeted
and they were like,
every time the Lux
they put out their quarterly letter,
I just put it into
Claude and say like rewrite this in a way that I can understand and then it just pops it out.
Just take out the parables and no but I this is this is one of those like the fact that they're
taking this information like think about how much like great how many great takes were locked up
in like LP updates for the last like literally decades and now this is you know we're very against
building in public on this. Are they leaking their alpha though? I think they're leaking last quarter's
alpha.
Yeah, I guess it's marketing at the end of the day.
But I do like that there's a twist here in the writing language to use these parables.
I think that that's, that makes it way more interesting.
It's just more interesting, more stimulating than, I mean, it's very anti-Paul Graham,
who wants to just write plainly directly.
But I think there's something about creating a little bit of a barrier to get into the LP letter
and enjoy it.
And then you also are learning something about Atlas or Prometheus.
And maybe you don't know that much about them.
So you're also getting educated.
Maybe you wind up pulling up the wiki, reading a book, learning a little bit more.
It's a good one.
And I, anytime I'm talking with a friend with a fund who's saying like, oh, I know I need to do content, but I don't know what to do.
It's like, find your brand of content for Josh.
LP.
It is, hey, I'm going to write this sort of esoteric, broad ideas about markets and technology and, like, put it out there.
There's a lot of big ideas and it's up to you to kind of sort through it.
Slow, it's the screenshot essay.
Clearly, they start as like Slack conversations or something like that.
And Dresen, the big, big idea that they're branding something that's already happening and just like owning.
Great at coinages.
Yeah.
Coogan's Law.
Yeah.
And Founders Fund is shipposting.
Viral.
Viral videos and vibrals, I guess.
And ship posting.
And apparently breaking stories about polymarket and their competitors.
Bennett Siegel says,
Flavor of the Month, technical teams raising seed capital to buy business and transform it with AI.
Sounds like a nightmare scenario for the first.
founders, the company being bought, and the VC's funding it.
Yeah, so this is, you know, referencing all the new teams that have come out and doing
these like AI-oriented roll-ups saying, hey, I'm going to buy a bunch of accounting firms
and automate everything.
And it's hard enough to just buy a business and make it grow.
It's comparably, if you're trying to buy a business, make it grow and completely change how
the service is delivered and not lose all of your customers and alienate like the existing
teams and clients and everything like that.
It just sounds like one of those things.
I think people when they think about what attracts Silicon Valley got very obsessed
with roll-ups and just general M&A because they're like, wait, I could go work at
meta and like, you know, have to work 10 years to eventually get to the point where I'm
making a million dollars a year.
I could just buy a business that does a million dollars of EBITA and like, you know, use some
conservative amount of leverage and, you know, eventually I just own this.
great asset, but everything is just much, much, much harder than it, than it seems. And roll-ups are
obviously that. It's like, not only are you competing with other groups that are participating in
roll-ups so that the price of assets end up and spiking and being very competitive, you're competing
against other owner-operators that are just coming onto the scene and they're like, I don't need
a- Yeah, we saw that Thrasio. Yeah, I don't need to roll up all the Amazon brands.
Yeah. And in their situation, they're beholden to the platform.
And as Amazon fees went up, they just didn't really have a business anymore.
But yeah, in general.
Examples where buying a business at Seed Stage made sense.
I know didn't Warby Parker buy, no, it was Harry's.
They bought a razor factory.
I don't know if that was fantastic.
But it was certainly differentiated at the time.
I know some, there's been some companies that have bought banking licenses.
Yeah.
Where it's been some sort of asset that they needed and they couldn't get any other way.
Yeah, the plaid founder did that.
But it's rare to go and buy an existing business and transform it because usually
you could just start from scratch Greenfield.
Yeah.
Interesting.
But yeah, there's a bunch of people attacking the whole services economy, which is
trillions and trillions of dollars saying like, hey, if we can go just provide the service
with AI, we can turn this from like a relatively low margin services business to a high
margin software business.
And I just think it's going to be much harder.
There's a company I invested in Nick Abuzid, who is at.
that product hunt Main Street and then ramp.
He's now building Rivet,
which is like a ground up attempt to leverage, basically, AI, for accounting.
Is he buying CPA firms?
He's taking the opposite approach.
He's just building from scratch.
He's saying, like, you know, there's, I don't know what you're buying
if potentially all the customers leave in the first year.
Yeah.
Be tricky.
I don't know.
Not easy.
There usually needs to be some sort of, there was another generation of companies.
Wilmanianis was really obsessed with this.
there were companies that would buy
like dental practices
and then flip the CAPEX to OPEX
by essentially like renting the medical equipment
to the and that was like really really alluring
to like the CFOs of these
of these like you know hospital networks
or something because they don't have this big Cappex expense
anymore and I think they grew pretty quickly
but then I don't think it really panned out
in the way that people hoped
there be dragons for sure
dangerous
Let's go to Connor McDonald.
He's been on the show before.
Here's my take on App Loven.
And he stars out L.O.
So they can't search for it.
So reaching an older audience with disposable income with high quality ad space for the very first time is often good.
That's not rocket science.
And worth trying, especially with ad credit.
But long term, sustainable results are still very much TBD.
What do you think about this?
Have you used that?
Yeah.
So App Lovin is an ad network that's focused on mobile games.
And so their audience are very big.
Yeah, yeah.
Tons of, you know, very scaled ad network.
And anytime you're a consumer brand that you're able to get in front of a totally new audience,
you can usually drive some pretty interesting results.
One, because CPMs just are going to be a lot less than meta because meta is like the premier place to advertise, right?
You can be the most hyper-targeted.
And so CPMs are just higher.
But, yeah, there's been a lot of talk about App Loven.
I think App Loven, like, it was able to create this mania within like the X, like,
marketing community of saying, hey, if you're spending like 20K a day on meta, we'll bring you over
to App Loven. And people have been seeing some great results. But yeah, I was able to get, you know,
just by being friends with Connor and doing some work with, with Ridge and Sean in the past,
I was able to get a front row seat into like viewing of like how they test into new ad networks.
And they've always, meta has always been the backbone of their business. And they've,
they've focused on meta excellency. I think it, what Connor is leading to is it's a
trap to think, oh, I'm just going to find this new ad network and, like, suddenly my business is
going to be fantastic. No, it's going to be very temporary. It's like, no, if you're not making
meta work well, you're not, app loving's not just going to, like, solve all your issues.
It's a, it's a marketing, like, excellence. It's a skill issue, basically. So you're not just going to,
like, suddenly transform your business by going over to a new network. That makes sense.
Let's go to the P. God. He says, anyone have $105 million for me to borrow? And he screenshots the
the buyout LBO opportunity for the Arapaho Base.
ski area.
The company,
a subsidiary of Dream Unlimited,
was acquired by Altera Mountain
via its financial sponsors,
Triton Funds, and KSL Capital Partners
through an estimated $105 million LBO
on November 19th,
2024.
So this is not available.
He's like joking,
clearly, because the deal already happened.
But I do know a Beaneer who bought a mountain,
like a ski resort.
And I think he enjoys it.
Was that the Summit series crew?
No, no.
No, no.
It was in Canada.
But,
Yeah, I'd just like to encourage more listeners to just go buy ski resorts.
You know, all of the great mountains for the most part of them getting acquired by these big conglomerates.
Yep.
And I'd like to see more independently operated ski resorts.
We're working on an event with Bryce over at Indy to do a Technology Brothers gathering in Park City.
Stay tuned for that.
Stay tuned for that.
But yeah, just if you're thinking about it, the answer is yes, just go buy a ski resort.
Yeah.
Yeah, it is tricky.
It depends on the CAPEX that's already gone into the ski resort.
Like the one that I know doesn't actually have chairlifts,
but it's so it's for like a more prestigious type of skier.
They do cat skiing.
Are you familiar with this?
It was like heli skiing.
Cat skiing, you ride on a big like caterpillar truck basically on a cat.
You bring all your ski gear.
They just drive you up to the top of the mountain.
And then you ski down in completely fresh powder.
Yeah.
It's just pure powder.
It's amazing.
And for the real, real ski heads,
powders where it's at.
My great-grandfather ran the gondola at Mammoth for like 40 years.
Oh, yeah.
Basically, like, post-World War II.
So he was like, happened to be, like, best friends with Dave McCoy, the founder.
Yeah.
And because of that, my uncle used to massively take advantage of the relationship to the
mountain.
So he would just go off terrain and, like, duck under the rope.
And then he'd have, this was like pre-cell phone, but he'd be, like, radioing.
Like, hey, like, I ended up going over.
the other side could you send the cat and they had some crazy crazy stories but i it's the fact that like
anybody who is building these ski resorts in the 60s yeah is so insane thinking about the machinery
and the like the like amount of human life that's at risk on a mountain at any any any given point
if the machinery malfunctions or you're not smart about avalanche control like it's it's one of
the craziest environments to build a business we could probably do a whole deep dive on the
Some of the ski resorts have howitzers where avalanche control.
There's a few versions.
One is just you have the ski patrol go up there with sticks of dynamite.
And they just throw the dynamite.
And it just shocks all of the avalanche potential down and it just creates an avalanche.
But then at some ski resorts, they have howitzers where they just literally fire a cannon into the mountain.
And it just causes all the avalanche to come down.
I love nothing like being at a ski resort with your absolute boys firing the cannon.
No, and you're in the hot tub after skiing after a long day,
and you get to hear the cannon going off,
you know, showing that, you know,
the next day is going to be,
it's like signaling that the next day is going to be fantastic.
Yeah, Bluebird.
Do we have a promoted post?
We certainly do.
We always do.
This one is from Amman Resorts.
The architecture of Amman Kila is a celebration of Bali's natural beauty,
cascading down the hillside to the sea,
stone buildings, walkways, and pools are woven among the palms,
framing views of the ocean and the resplendent greenery.
So this this property is fantastic.
I haven't been yet.
I've been to Bali a couple times on surf trips,
but was before my Amman arc.
I want to go here.
Amon is kind of where,
sorry, Bali is where Amon really got started.
You know, their first property,
I don't even believe they were able to get a commercial loan to do it.
They had to just like personally acquire this property.
Turned into the, you know,
what is today.
the greatest hotel brand in the world, in my opinion, at this specific moment in time,
if you're evaluating it for reach and quality of experience.
So go check out the Amman Kila.
I highly recommend booking a trip to Amman and book it far in the future.
Book it.
Get online, look a year out, book something that you can look forward to for a full year.
So then you're just kind of planning and thinking, oh, this is almost going to, I'm almost
going to forget about this.
And then it's just going to sneak up on me.
and I'm not even going to think about the expense because I paid for it a year ago.
Exactly.
That's the way to do it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Plan next summer.
That's my headspace right now.
In about a month, I'll be at an amount property.
Yep, but you've got to book the next one.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Always.
Exactly.
So you're never like, oh, when am I going to get around to getting back there?
No.
It's like you already have booked.
Exactly.
You always want to have one or two bookings, like just rolling.
Perpetual.
Let's go to Jim, Sailbike, right.
He quote tweets us and says,
Technology Brothers is the best personification of the vibe shift.
Their aesthetic and approach to discussion are the antithesis of Brooks' bourgeois bohemian
archetype that's so accurately described elite culture for the past 20 or so years.
Very insightful.
Very insightful post.
That is exactly what we were going for with this.
And I do think we want to push back against the bourgeois bohemian trend that's been really
popular in tech, unfortunately.
and celebrate the capitalist bourgeoisie.
Yep.
Not the limousine liberals and not the champagne socialists,
but the capitalists who enjoy drinking champagne in the back of a limousine.
Yep.
And sparring with Taylor Lorenz.
Exactly.
And so thanks for writing in Jim.
I'm glad you really hit the nail on the head with this.
And good to have you first time on the show,
but I'm sure it'll be back soon.
Absolutely.
Thank you, Jim.
Thank you.
Let's go to Dirt Man.
Dirtman says
Dirtman B-Sack
Says
Elon should buy MSNBC
and just have Tech Bros. Pod
reading bangers from the timeline
24-7 streaming into boomers
living rooms across the country.
We got to put the CNBC banner on this one.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
For sure.
Elon says the most entertaining outcome,
especially if ironic, is the most likely
and everyone's joking about Elon buying MSNBC.
And I think we could crush on MSNBC.
I agree.
And honestly, we should stop right there because there's stuff in the works that we can't necessarily talk about today.
But I think we have the production value.
We have the banter.
We have the content.
Give us a slot.
Elon, pick it up.
And I love sparring with boomers.
Normally I spar with boomers in my HOA board meetings.
But I'd like to do it on the airways, right?
I'd like it to be more like a megaphone approach.
Yeah.
Like sort of they can't talk back, but you're just sort of.
I mean, if Twitter is real life, imagine how much more it will be real life.
if we're broadcasting it into the MSNBC.
And, I mean, talk about making your family proud.
All of your distant relatives will be,
I saw you on MSNBC.
I love your new show.
And think about what we could do for the broader economy
if we were able to encourage all the boomers to lever up,
go long, risk assets.
A lot of them at this point are sort of they talk down to Gen Z
and the millennials saying you're too risk on.
You know, all you care about is, you know, the next.
crypto coin. Also, you watch MSNBC and they do a little segment and then they take an ad break.
The ads aren't integrated properly and there aren't nearly as many of them. And on that note,
let's go to a promoted post.
Promoted posts from Tiffany and Co. Celebrate meaningful beginnings this holiday with tea by Tiffany.
An homage to an iconic motif from 1975. These designs feature handset paved diamonds for
extraordinary shine. Discover more at Tiffany.com slash gifts slash shop
slash holiday.
Hashtag Tiffany and Co.
Hashtag a Tiffany holiday.
Anyways, this looks like an absolutely, absolutely fantastic gift.
Fantastic.
Highly recommend everyone in the audience.
Our audience is very oriented around.
Put your AirPods in.
Go to Tiffany right now.
Now, our audience is very oriented around crushing their Q4 revenue goals.
But Christmas is, as of today, a month away.
Get those gifts in now.
Go to your local Tiffany's.
and tell them the technology brothers sent you.
Thank you.
Let's go to Beth Jzos.
He says, Real and posts a photo of his phone
and Vitorio's phone next to themselves, next to each other.
They met up in real life, and he was very blackpilled
because Vittorio uses light mode on X instead of dark mode.
And I like this.
I think this is so funny, like showing someone your X account profile thing
is very much like, it's like, you know, in old, you know how knights, you know where we got the
salute from? So we got the salute, you would salute someone with your hand because you were raising
your knight's helmet, like the shield here, you would raise this to show my eyes and show that I'm,
I'm not a threat. The brother in me sees the brother in you. It's the same thing. Why do we shake hands?
We shake hands to show that I don't have a weapon in my hand, in my right hand. And so this is like
showing a little bit of vulnerability. I'm showing you inside my life, inside my X account.
And it's almost like two of the greatest posters meeting. Proof of post. And showing each other
a little bit how the sausage is made. And it's fascinating seeing the difference in numbers. I mean,
they follow almost exactly the same amount of people, almost 2000. Smart.
Beth has 140K followers. Fantastic. Vittorio, a little bit smaller, 40K. But Vittorio is on an
incredible trajectory right now. I mean, he's really like ascendent. Ascendant. But what's
interesting here. Beth has 136 subscribers. It's like a decent amount. I think they're all on five bucks
a month. That's like not bad. Making almost a thousand bucks there. Vitorio only seven subscriptions,
but this is what I found funny. Beth is subscribed to four people. Vitorio is subscribed to 47 people.
Wow. So Vittorio is shelling out like what, almost $300 a month towards his absolute boys.
Yeah. That's amazing. Respect. It really is a sign of respect. This is the
Creator economy.
He gets the check from X, the creator payout.
I'm sure it's heavy as a stone.
Recycling it.
And then he puts it right in with his other boys.
And so I'm going to go check out who he subscribes to if that's public.
But great to see two posters, meeting IRL.
Love to see it.
Recreating the timeline in real life.
Yeah.
That conversation, you could probably just steal tons and tons of bangers from that.
Totally.
Let's go to Dinn.
He says, the Harry Stebbing's effect.
I believe he just went on the show.
It says 200 plus applicants, every tier one investor in my DMs,
four million euros of potential revenue in my DMs.
Okay, that's a little weird.
3,000 LinkedIn requests, wow.
And 300 Twitter followers.
That's actual tangible value added.
So the crazy thing is I don't know.
It has a $400 million fun, baby.
There you go.
Size gong.
Size gong.
Boom.
I don't know if he was on the show or Harry just tweeted.
Harry tweeted.
First time.
Oh, oh.
He just tweeted and he said that Buena, this guy's company, is adding a million of error every 12 days.
Really?
And he just threw it out there.
That's it.
He didn't even have him in the show.
I don't know.
Wow.
I only listen to Founders podcast and this podcast.
Well, congrats to Dan.
Fantastic growth.
Good luck with the next phase.
Convert all of that.
Good luck.
You're going to need to go to.
agent.AI to get an agent to help you process as LinkedIn request, find the alpha. That's a lot.
That's a lot. Good luck out there. Good luck. Do we have a promoted post?
Promoted posts from Blackstone. Think investing equals the stock market. Think again. There's an
ocean of opportunity and hashtag private equity. If you're a hashtag financial advisor curious about
tapping PE for your clients, check out hashtag Blackstone University. Then they throw a
link up here. So they've dropped a whole course for financial advisors to learn about private equity.
If you're a financial advisor and you don't know about private equity, it's an awesome asset
class, some fantastic returns. You can go really risk on with some great managers. And,
you know, Blackstone hidden cart. Where better to learn it than Blackstone? Yeah, yeah.
We love Blackstone here. They created a popular festival. No, that's Black Rock.
Blackstone, different organization.
Black Rock created the Black Rock City.
Blackstone, just a fantastic asset manager.
And love their use of aggressive use of hashtags here.
You know, they clearly know their way around this platform, leveraging all the features.
Yes.
So thank you to Blackstone.
Let's go to the Wall Street Journal.
And we got to put this in the truth zone.
This is a rough article.
I read it over the weekend and I was pounding my fist on the table.
I was so mad.
They said the ultimate trading for flex, a Snoopy swatch or a Casio calculator,
why lots of money men still favor novelty watches.
The anti-status watch, why men in finance love cheap, cheesy watches.
Terrible trend.
I hope it ends immediately.
Yeah.
They do give a shout out to some strongholds in the finance.
community that have stuck with the classics, the automobiles, the, uh, the Richard Mills,
the Patex, but they call out these joke watches. Yeah. And this is, this is the bobo. This is,
this is the, this is the, this is the bohemian bourgeoisie that we are fighting against here. Yeah. So
if you see someone with a Casio calculator, Snoopy swatch on the trading floor, tell them,
put that watch down. Pick a new career. Pick a new career, buddy. Take a hike. Yeah. It was very,
upset about this.
Shout out to the journales at a...
This is the ultimate hit piece on finance.
This is trying to collapse our global economy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Because if enough people find out about this, then the...
How will they trust their...
Their asset manager, I agree.
And this is what could really make the common person hate Wall Street.
Totally.
If they find out that they're wearing just trashy, ironic watches.
But if you see someone with a...
with a gold Cardier-Santos, you have to respect that.
Totally.
So this is just a very depressing trend.
So it starts here, folks.
If you see someone with some ironic watch, tell them, clean up their act, put on something
classic, put on something timeless, head to bezel.
You are a capital allocator and asset manager, not an HVAC technician.
I couldn't have said it better myself.
So thanks, everyone, for helping fight the good fight.
Let's go to Guy.
He's been on the show before.
He says, by the way, just FYI, this emoji prayer hands is not praying.
It's high-fiving, lull.
Did you know that?
I saw that and I was, because it's...
Yeah, it's the prayer hands emoji.
It's the two hands together.
It can be praying or high-fiving.
But I guess you went into the Unicode.
But I definitely don't use it on the...
On the high-five?
Well, I'm going to start using it now.
But I just use that a lot because I, you know,
pray for bubbles and other things.
I think it's whatever you want it to be.
I mean, people have long changed the definition or the connotation of emojis,
the peach emoji, the butt and the gun emoji has been through multiple cycles.
I think that it all depends on the context.
And if you see someone using this in a context where it clearly means prayer hands,
it's prayer hands.
Yeah, and emojis are tools.
They're high-fiving.
Emojis are tools for communication.
And, you know, we shape our tools.
and from there our tools shape off.
So we need to constantly be re-evaluating our use of emojis
and rethinking them, redesigning them.
Stick to the classics when you can,
but don't be afraid to mix some new hitters in.
Do we have another promoted post?
Should we do this first?
Air Environment says AV has entered into a definitive agreement
to acquire Blue Halo.
Together will create a more diversified global leader
in all domain defense technologies
capable of addressing the full spectrum of modern defense.
A huge deal in the public markets.
Air Environment has acquired Blue Halo,
and we wanted to cover it on the show
because it's one of the most fascinating examples
we've seen in recent history of nominative determinism.
The CEO of Blue Halo, his name, Jonathan Moneymaker.
And of course, he made the money.
Great name.
You don't bet against Jonathan Moneymaker.
That's all I would say.
Never, never.
And so fantastic outcome.
for all the investors.
I think this was a private equity roll up.
They built a bunch,
they put together a bunch of small companies
and wound up selling it to air environment.
And congrats to them.
We don't know the full terms of the deal here,
but it feels like a size gong moment to me.
Congrats to Jonathan Moneymaker.
And we would like to back whatever he does next.
Yes, 100%.
Quick promoted post from Zegna.
We are only a month out from Christmas.
And there are many other holidays coming up.
but we wanted to celebrate a Zegna holiday from our home to yours.
Wrap your loved ones in timeless.
Owasi Kashmir.
Yeah, Owasi, Kashmir.
Scarves that will be cherished for years to come.
We're committed to certifying our cashmere fibers as 100% traceable from 2024.
I don't know if this is an ESG thing.
I prefer their commitment to quality over traceability,
but I certainly appreciate the traceability as well.
Thank you to Zegna for making.
I think it just speaks to this idea that, like, you know, you're going to be in fancy holiday parties.
Maybe you're going on some ski trips, ski seasons coming up, and you want to look good.
You don't want to be stumbling around in athleisure or looking like you just got off a bus in Sandhill.
You want to be dressed to the nines.
And so Zegna is a great way to go get a nice jacket or a nice coat.
And you don't see enough.
You don't see enough technology brothers wearing scarves broadly.
Yes.
It's a great accent piece.
It's a great way to kind of communicate what you stand for.
It's clearly a step up from Patagonia.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so we highly recommend you go check them out and tell them the technology brother sent you.
Let's go to April Zuchi.
She says, I can't stop thinking about this Nietzsche quote.
The most intelligent men like the strongest find their happiness where others would find
only disaster in the labyrinth in being hard with themselves and with others in effort.
their delight is in self-mastery.
In them, asceticism becomes second nature, a necessity, an instinct.
They regard a difficult task as a privilege.
It is to them a recreation to play with the burdens that would crush all others.
Couldn't agree more.
Yeah, when you're in that zone, you have to find what your why is.
And that why can be anything for us.
It's doing it for the money, being willing to push through.
when you're in, in this case, we're an hour four of podcasting.
And, you know, you have that, that weakness inside of you that Jocko would kind of reference
saying, quit, turn off, turn off the mics, walk out of the room, take the suit off,
and being willing to just like push through and continuing to create content is, you know,
you have to have that.
So, raison d'etre.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
Dylan Field.
He's been on the show before.
He says, if this is where we're starting,
I'm worried what the actual top signals will be this cycle.
How it started versus how it's going.
How it started is Satoshi Nakamoto's Bitcoin white paper.
And how it's going is dollar sign dog cage.
And there's a live streamer doing some extremely depressing things that we're not even really going to talk about.
Yeah, we don't want to talk about it.
But hopefully Pump.
dot fun gets their act together and ends this live streaming feature.
Sometimes moderation is good.
Content moderation.
That's good.
Good to hear.
It's over.
Hopefully no more of that.
And yeah,
I think that there's a lot of alpha right now and just tweeting top every single day.
Because eventually you're going to be right.
Yep.
And you'll be able to go delete all the other ones and go back and quote tweet the top
and say like, look, I called it.
Yeah.
Called the local top.
Yeah.
And there's, you could raise, you know, a billion dollar fund off of calling the top.
There is something about like the good meme coins and the ones that last are fun.
Like Doge is about this dog.
It's very funny.
And Elon's run with it.
And it's like even popular today because it was always filled with like some sort of comedy or funness.
And the dark stuff never sticks on.
Even Solana with like the GM culture.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Exactly.
It was always like inspiring to some degree even when it was frothy.
Yeah.
So stay positive about their folks.
No revenge.
hate, hate meme coins.
Bruno says,
regarding the hot topic of stable coins,
if you strip out USDT,
which is primarily used
for trading and laundering,
transaction volume since 2022
is flat and supply is meaningfully
down with no merchant adoption.
Not really getting the hype,
but let's see how this plays out.
Interesting.
Yeah, the merchant adoption stuff's interesting.
I mean, I do think you have to imagine
that, you know, strong, like infrastructure platforms
like bridge and especially the amount of investment that I imagine Stripe will put behind bridge
going forward like merchant adoption will go up. Coinbase recently, you know, last week ran that
ad, you know, showing a guy buying, you know, selling a car, a truck with stable coins. And I think
that that stuff is going to really, you know, meaningfully catch on. Also, a big assumption here
that 99% of USDT is trading and laundering. Like that just might not be true. Well, certainly a lot
A lot of it is trading.
Sure.
The laundering stuff, who knows?
It seems much harder to prove.
But even trading is valuable in the sense that, like, you could say a lot of the U.S.
dollar is tied up in trading activity, right?
Yeah.
Like how much is on Citadel's balance sheet right now?
A lot.
Does that make it, like, less real?
I don't know.
Yeah.
I don't think so.
So, I don't know.
I'm still positive on.
Yeah.
At the end of the day, the technology is very meaningful of being able to send money.
24-7 in a trustless way.
Yeah.
That's awesome.
Exactly.
Let's go to Prang for Exits.
He's been on the show before.
He says, designers, Dolly 2, I stole your pictures and used them to generate art.
And the designers say, no, this is illegal.
And the programmers are talking to Chat GPT, and Chat GPT says, I scanned your GitHub account
and stole your code.
And the Chad programmers say, cool, did you get it to work?
This is an interesting reaction.
It does seem like.
It wasn't really designers.
It was more like the art community.
Yeah, I haven't.
Yeah, it was the people, it was the, it was the designers that, the creatives that weren't
monetizing.
Yeah.
The non-monetizing creators that are, that are struggling artists that, like having to figure it
out in a commercial application.
Yep.
Open AI monetizing their work sort of indirectly.
Yep, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Really piss him off.
The designers that I know that have built great careers are all excited about AI.
Or even the artists, like Beeple, you know, he uses Cinema 4D.
I'm sure.
he's able to use generative AI either in the post-processing or in the texture generation.
But he's coined this own style that even if it could be copied, he has the proof of work.
Yeah, but I do feel like the Gen.
AI stuff did take a little bit of wind out of his sales because Beeple was going through
the painstaking effort to make these absurd images.
And now anybody can make the same absurd image.
But I haven't seen anyone replace him.
No, I'm not saying he's been replaced.
I'm just saying more like it's less jarring.
It doesn't have the same effect for me to see a BELMAN.
To see like Elon riding a bull.
Yeah, because anybody can.
Yeah, yeah, because anyone can make that.
I guess, I guess.
I think he still has some sort of like interesting carved out.
He still has a.
It's going to be the same thing where, you know,
Bipel's artwork.
People always said this about like the Mark Rothko.
Oh, my kid could make that or some artist where it's just like paint splatter.
Yeah.
And you'd say, yeah, my kid could make that.
but the point was that you didn't.
And then the point was, well, even if your kid did,
everyone would just be like, well, that's Mark Rothko rip off.
Yeah.
And now it's like, yeah, your kid could prompt that,
but it would just feel like a people rip.
Yeah.
In my opinion.
I don't know.
We'll see.
I mean, he's already made generational wealth,
so I don't even know if he needs to make any more anymore.
Yeah, post-economic.
Let's go to Delian.
He's been on the show before.
He says, so Waymo is changing to a Chinese auto manufacturer.
Yeah, F that.
My autonomous ride about to accidentally drive
off a cliff.
Okay, so Waymo's been running on...
Too many Winnie the Pooh jokes.
Hard pass.
So I really don't get it.
So this is funny timing because Waymo is like the only time you see a Jaguar today.
Yeah, they could just buy Jaguar.
And Jaguar is just like floundering.
Floundering.
The Ray Dong something or whatever, the president over there.
It's just like floundering.
Totally rebranding.
Nobody cares about.
But like clearly they have manufacturing lines that can produce reasonable cars.
Yeah, Jaguar had stopped making cars probably presumably
except for Waymo.
Yeah.
And why did that deal not happen?
It's crazy.
It's honestly, it makes me even shorter Jaguar.
Yeah.
It's rough.
Waymo was already running on there, basically infrastructure and decided not to move forward
with that.
Yeah.
But very, uh, very bad.
I don't want, I don't want, I don't want, uh, it's so funny he throws in another
winning.
I don't want, I don't want the CCP to control, uh, our drones are, you know, one of our biggest
social media platforms.
Yeah.
And now are autonomous.
cars.
Very rough.
I just don't want that to happen.
Yep.
Delian, why don't you, you know, buy Jaguar?
Put a billion dollars into a Jaguar buyout and, you know, reshore it to America.
I mean, we already have the answer.
It's Tesla, right?
Tesla is the American competitor to everything that Waymo will be doing.
And it will become a culture issue.
I tweeted this post of like, look at the way the Waymo car looks and then look at the
aesthetics of the Tesla self-driving car.
car and like both political sides like hate the opposite one yeah and and it's weird to think that
something as utilitarian as as as just getting a ride from one place to another become like a political
statement but it it has people like like many democrats would say like I will not buy a cyber
truck because of the statement that it makes yeah and the same thing for a republican driving a prios
which is the same thing I'm going to be rolling coal in a raptor r let's go to luke metro he's been
on the show before he says how do you not own a suit for the office
Christmas party, you're an L6.
And it's a photo of Wife Jack.
Have you been following the Wife Jack thing?
I think these are great.
Every time I see them, I'm like, oh.
At first I thought it was like kind of negative, but I realized that it was actually
very positive and very pro-natalist campaign.
And there's been a little self-policing within the Wife Jack community around like,
don't make it negative.
Don't make it overbearing.
It's like the wife is saying these things because she loves you, not because she's
actually upset with you.
positive spin.
And so, yes, also, if you're in L6, get a suit.
If you're an intern, get a suit.
Yeah.
Everyone needs a suit.
It's ridiculous.
It's ridiculous.
Get a suit.
Call your Taylor.
Call Fierntino label.
Call Fierentino.
Daniel, he's been on the show earlier, and he's been on the show many times, former
brother of the week.
He says, the walls close in as you age.
The path for responsible change to oneself grows more narrow.
You have commitments in your work, a career that makes sense given your current mental
arrangements.
you have a spouse and a child who won't count on you to exist in a certain way,
who count on you to exist in a certain way.
Very doomish post.
This is kind of the opposite of other post that we said that was like,
you can just change your career at 45, remember?
Yeah, yeah, you can, but the thing is, is your life very quickly adapts to your identity.
True, true.
And so if you want to change who you are and what you do, once you have a wife and children.
And I even notice this of like, I've appreciated, like,
having a kid in school now and being like, okay, I can't just move across the country.
Of course.
So that makes me like more oriented around investing in my local community or whatever.
Podcasting locally.
But yeah, I just thought that that was relevant because I think if you're, if you, you know, aren't married or don't have kids yet, like you need to be taking on like at least five times as much risk as you are right now because the more that other people are dependent on you in many ways, the less.
risk you can take on. Yeah, it's great. This is a great one by Zane. He's a little skeptical, but we're
going to debate this. He says, some idiot took regular old sour candy and put it in a bag with some
generic branding and sold it for $100 million, and you're still waiting for someone at HR
to approve your PTO on Thursday so you can spend a couple days with your family. Denied. And he's
quoting a CPG wire article that says, the Hershey Company is acquiring sour strips, a fast-growing
sour candy brand for an undisclosed sum.
So I don't know where you got the 100 million, but maybe he dug into it.
Sour strips was founded by internet personality, Max Chuning in 2019.
And Max Chuning was like a huge YouTuber all in the fitness space.
I mean, great nominative determinism there, like chewing to the max.
He's chewing the sour candy.
He always likes sour candy.
And so he started this brand.
But the fascinating thing is that, yeah, the name is just Sour Strips.
That's the name of the category.
That's a descriptor.
I don't think you can trade.
trademark that.
And so someone else could start a Sauer Strips company.
Maybe you couldn't use the exact same logo and stuff,
but you could make it pretty close because Sauerstrips is not trademarkable.
But he still grew it really well.
And he started advertising it on his podcast,
advertising it on his YouTube channel and then use that to get into retail,
I'm sure, and eventually grew it to, I think, $100 million of revenue,
something like that.
And fantastic outcome for Max.
Love his podcast.
Love him.
Yeah, it is so funny.
if you if I think back to being a child and going to a candy store or a place that sold candy,
there was always a like sour strips kind of bucket or dispenser type thing that were just called
sour strips. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And so if if there was truly no other brands in that category and he's
just like, I'm going to take this and like brand it and really focus on selling it well and marketing it and
growing it, then yeah, he deserves the nine figure. There's also a big, there's also a big piece here where if you go
through, if you're starting a CPG company and you walk through the aisles, you can see that some
are incredibly competitive. Some sections of the grocery store are like, it's half Unilever, half
Hershey, and you're just screwed because they both have major competitors there. They're going to
outspend you and they'll never acquire you. And then some categories are completely run by, you know,
200 year old companies. I know a guy who started a, uh, a popcorn spray company that he got to like
a million dollars in revenue very quickly. And like you make popcorn and then season it. And you
You season it on top of it.
And it gives it like the movie theater popcorn smell and there's a bunch of
different sense.
The Phaas.
The extra Phaas.
I asked him about that and he had a bunch of claims that it wasn't bad, but it does feel
weird.
But what he realized was that the main competitor in that, in that entire section of the
store was just Orville Redenbocker and it's a very old company.
They're not really innovating.
They're not going to fast follow.
And so it was very easy to get in there.
And it might have been the same thing with some.
with Sauer strips where Hershey didn't have any play in that category.
And so he basically built the perfect company.
Yeah, because everybody, oftentimes the best ideas are just like obvious but overlooked.
Yeah.
Let's go to Greg Yang and XAI, first time on the show.
He says, if you haven't had more than one career, have you truly lived?
I like that.
Yeah, you had your career and Wall Street.
Wall Street.
Short career.
Yeah.
I like this.
I think this is a very much.
millennial post like jumping from job to job being a founder being a investor being a content
creator moving back and forth between things but i feel like it's widely accepted now the millennials
are the first generation where it was it almost yeah it was just normal to be like i'm going to do
this one thing might get decent at it and then i'm going to jump over here and do this other thing
i'm going to do this that kind of like snake your way through life um i i think it's generally good i
I have a lot of, you know, people that I went to college with that have only done one thing out of school, like real estate, like investing.
And then they get to like, you know, 28, 29, 30.
And they're like, well, I guess I could still do other stuff.
But then they feel still kind of trapped.
And I try to talk to them and be like, no, you can literally do whatever you want.
You can completely reinvent your career, jump into a different industry or category or go from an investing role.
into an operating role or vice versa.
There is an interesting thing that PG often says that the best founders have like,
they're experts that like two or three different disciplines or maybe if there's a co-founding team.
They have like five or six disciplines mastered between them.
And maybe you get that from working in different careers and that you can put them together.
Like you've worked in finance, but then you've also worked in consumer packaged goods.
And so you're able to operate your business very effectively.
It's, yeah, yeah, it makes sense.
Maybe, maybe I don't know what Greg did before this, but maybe he was, you know, at a,
a woke language model.
Now he's like, I'm reinventing myself
by being at a base language model.
Yeah, at X-A-I.
But yeah, reinvent yourself.
Yeah, I like it.
Klaus, Inspector Klussoe,
Investments, says,
average U.S. Bank,
we regret overcharging customers.
We are hiring additional staff
to investigate, and we should have it settled
by 2027.
Average Japanese bank,
pledge, anyone employed by this bank
who has stolen money or caused others to steal from the bank
will pay for it with his or her own property
and then commit suicide.
Very on brand for Japan.
I can't believe they're still doing Sepaku over there.
That's so crazy.
It's a samurai approach.
I was watching the show called like Samurai or something on Netflix
and like the show got boring
because it was like every episode someone's committing Sepaku.
It was just constantly like, oh, okay.
Like guy stubbed his toe, going to commit Sepaku.
But I guess that's really what they do.
I think the, the takeaway from this is that financiers are the modern samurai, right?
And you need to act with honor.
You do.
And if you betray your own honor, then there's only one route.
Yep.
You know.
Yeah.
I mean, if you as a listener ever catch us doing an episode without any ads, hold us
accountable.
Yeah.
Demand that we commit Sepaku.
Yeah.
Because that would be a violation of our sacred bond with the listeners.
there. Yep. To advertise. And people are going turbo long, that company. Oh, here's a good one.
People are saying that Ben Heilick is the next Ligma zero interest rates, and it's Ben Heilak. I think we
miscarriage. That's a thing that we do. Yes. At least I do. Yeah, we give it a shot. We do a good
crack. So he printed out a transcript of our, of our podcast. And we say, I don't.
don't know the guy, but I think he's got a cool startup.
Great designer.
Great taste.
Fantastic.
This is a future Rahul-Ligma bit.
This is fantastic.
He really is the next Ligma.
He really is the next Ligma.
So stay tuned for the next Ligma award.
I mean, he had some, he had another post that was great.
I don't think we covered it.
But as the bit was going on, he posted, he was like, hi, everyone in our defense, when we did
the Jaguar rebrand, we really thought Kamla was going to be elected.
and that got picked up too and it got a bunch of...
I told a friend that, like, jokingly, and he, like, didn't get the joke and was like,
wait, really?
Like, they thought she was going to win.
I was like, no, dude, they went.
They went, Jaguar ran turbo long.
Turbo long, Harris.
But, I mean, legitimately, like, they did go turbo long, like, the rise of wokeness,
which probably has, was steadily, literally happening from, what, 2010 to 2020, even beyond.
2022 was probably the peak.
Then Elon buys X.
and then the culture starts shifting.
And if you were long wokeness,
like your company did very well
throughout that entire phase.
You got ESG customers,
you got DEI investors,
you got all sorts of benefits.
And that only stopped,
that gravy train only stopped like last year.
And so if you kicked off a rebrand for your company,
like Jaguar didn't make cars this year.
They like took the entire year off.
Rough year.
And so the whole plan for like the rebrand,
the reset, going full electric,
this is like years in the making.
And like,
I'm sure they did like,
on multi-year McKinsey project and had all these different things.
Like it was a big deal for them.
They didn't just like do this overnight.
It stinks of McKinsey.
We love management consulting.
We love McKinsey, but it kind of reeks of McKinsey.
Well, you get in what you put out.
VP gone rogue.
It's garbage in, garbage out with McKinsey.
If you show up with a good plan, they're going to deliver some good plans for you.
But the inspiration has to come from the founder.
Take some responsibility.
Siri says VC went from being a relationship's business to a sales job.
When did the dynamic shift?
I have a idea of exactly when the dynamic shift, but what do you think?
Go for.
So I think the dynamic shifted after post.com around 2010 when the industry realized that B2B SaaS was not going to be a winner take all market.
And you could underwrite two and 20 against $10 billion outcomes reliably.
Yeah.
And so if the market had...
Well, the $10 billion outcome thing was not.
new. That was more of like that was the decad corn thing was yes it wasn't it wasn't real in 20 in in
in the dot-com boom yeah all those VCs got rugged and they didn't do that well and a lot of them went
out of business but in in 2008 2009 coming out of the financial crisis yeah it started to be clear
that while there were major major power law winners in social media yeah and you couldn't just
build a whole fund around social media investing because if you missed Facebook you
you were done, but you could build a fund around B2B SaaS, like base hits that were essentially
decacorns. And if you can build a business to $10 billion in under 10 years, you can easily
charge two and 20 and beat the market. And as long as you can beat the market, you can charge
those high fees. And as long as you can charge those high fees, you look like a venture capital
firm as opposed to if you're underwriting to 10 years and it's a $100 million outcome, you just
won't look like a VC. Like you just won't have the management fees. You won't have the returns.
Like it just, it'll look like a bank. And, and, and, and, and, and, and if you're building a business where
your target is $100 million, you know, high capax less R&D, you just go to the bank.
Yeah. Or you fund it off your credit card or cash flow. There's a bunch of different ways to
build these businesses. And there are different pockets of financial capital out there for different
business strategies. Kind of everything became looked like VC, including like consumer and D to C and all
these things. And a lot of those didn't pan out. Yeah. Creator economy is a good example. But, but,
But it was when it was clear that it wasn't going to be Salesforce or Oracle building every
vertical SaaS tool that at that point it became, okay, any fund could hit the next data bricks
or the next Rippling or the next gusto or deal.
There's just so much opportunity to exit with a billion dollars, return a fund.
And as soon as you can say, hey, we're going to own 10% of this deck of corn and we're
going to return a billion dollar fund, it's game on.
And that's when it became a sales job because you scale up and you need to be in every firm.
That's going to be a deck of corn.
You need to write checks in.
And also the IPO window shifted out during the dot-com boom.
Companies were going public at 300 million.
And then mooning.
So it was a sales job, but it became the sales that was being done with the stuff you saw in Wolfram Wall Street.
It was the Wall Street guys cold calling, hey, I got a stock for you.
This company just went public.
The ticker is, you know, whatever.
mp3.com you should get in right now and it mooned in retail um that shifted when company started
staying private longer yeah yeah well said i mean i think uh any vc that doesn't understand i'm like
short any vc that doesn't understand that they're in the likeability game because if you're not one of
the holy trinity or a top five firm yep you have this sort of adverse selection problem where all the
best founders want to work with a select group of firms yep they go out and they're going to meet a lot of
investors, but they want to work with Founders Fund. They want to work with Sequoia. And so if you're not
one of those funds, then you need to realize, like, you better, the founder must genuinely feel
something about the partner who wants to do that deal. Otherwise, why are you going to have any right
to win that deal, even get a slice of it, right? And so it is still a relationship's business for the power law
VCs, the next generation of power law winners in venture capital are doing the relationship
business.
Yeah.
And that's the Lockhe Grooms, the Nat Friedman's, these new generation of capital allocators
that are doing very well versus the droves of Stanford grads who are just associates
at large firms that are just churning through cold calls.
They're in the sales role because they are not out on the extreme end of performance
and they're not.
And they're deriving their growth from fees, not carry.
Totally.
So it's all a rational move because the funds have gotten so large that you can sit in what is essentially a sales role, collect management fees, and not need to play the relationship game to get some unfair advantage into an early deal that would never happen if it was a free market.
But you can still make a ton of money.
Yeah, I just think at the end of the day, it's such a, the reason that I, the reason that the asset is.
class is so addicting as an investor and why you still get, you know, firms that that trade in
public equities that end up trying to come down and play in the private markets is that every
single company is a one-of-one asset. There's no other, you know, shares like it. It's literally like
there's sort of a finite number of shares and, you can, you know, you have to earn the right
to buy into the company. You can't just market by Stripe, right? You have to get the Collison
brothers to sign off and say, we'll take your money, right? And that's a, that's, that's, that's,
that creates a lot of good behavior overall, right? Because you need to be a good actor. Otherwise,
founders are eventually going to be like, no, we don't want, or CFOs at a certain point,
we'll be like, no, we just don't want your money. Yep. Let's go to USSR pictures. We don't
usually agree with communists on this show, but this might be the one exception. Uh, it's a picture
from 1947 and it shows a committee to approve fashionable clothing suitable for sale to Soviet women
in Moscow. Now, I'm against this for women, but I would love something like this for capital
allocators. We've seen this time and time again of VCs going on podcast and T-shirts.
Dress like H-Fact. It's just sloppy. And it would be great if we, the technology brothers,
could be approved as a committee to review all fashion choices by capital allocators.
We could say, hey, look, you have a billion dollars under management.
What are you doing in that T-shirt on 209?
What are you driving?
What's on your wrist?
We need to hold our capital allocators to a higher standard.
And so we got to agree with the communists on this.
They were doing one thing right.
Totally.
We're approving fashion.
Top-down management of fashion decisions.
His next friend here.
Throw on some suits.
The tailors are awaiting your phone call.
Yep.
Furantino suits.
It's easy.
Let's go to Ryan Peterson.
He's been on the show before.
Founder Flexport.
He says, robotaxies that pick you up at your house and then take you to the nearest
boring company tunnel so they can zip you at 100 plus miles an hour, straight to your destination
with no stops will be on par with rockets that land themselves.
Let's go.
There we go.
I want it so badly.
and people are sleeping on the boring company.
They hate it.
It's a sleeper.
It's a sleeper.
Wait until it happens.
It's free real estate under.
We will be at the Vegas tunnel opening.
We'll be there.
We'll be in the first pod.
We'll be in the first pod.
Yeah.
Put me in the pod.
I will live in the pod.
I will eat the bugs if I can get to my destination.
Yeah, yeah.
If I can cut L.A. traffic, I will do anything.
We're going to have the guys in tuxedo.
Yeah.
We need one from Malibu to Pasadena.
Serving crickets.
That would be fantastic.
Yeah.
Now, the boring company, I think, will, you know,
Every musk company goes through oscillates in terms of attention, but the boring company will be at the forefront of the conversation.
Well, it's even harder because it's all local regulation, whereas with the rockets, it's like he doesn't need to get every single jurisdiction that he flies over to approve it.
It's like if Florida says it's cool, it's cool.
Or if the FAA says it's cool, it's cool.
And same thing for the Starlink satellites.
Like how crazy would it be if he had to get everyone to agree that those were okay?
It's like, no.
I mean, I'd like to see a boring company tunnel to,
Hawaii. Imagine if you could, imagine if you could drive a GT3RS to Hawaii. That would be so long.
I know, but in the GT3RS, you're not exactly wishing the time away. You don't need the
GT3RS. You need the thrust SSC. You know that car? No. The thrust SSC hit the, the world record,
landspeed record out of salt flats. It's basically a jet engine on wheels. There we go. And I think it can
go like 600 miles an hour. There we go. And so at that rate, you are going as fast as the
passenger plane.
Yep.
And in a tunnel, if you suck all the air out, it might be more efficient.
Yeah.
And you might be able to get there.
But, yeah, I don't know.
You'd have to go pretty deep.
The ocean's really, really deep.
It's deep down there.
Yeah.
I mean, they put the undersea cables down there for the internet.
So maybe.
But man, the pressure and everything.
The pressure might get to you.
You're going to wind up in that Titanic thing.
Yeah, yeah.
That's rough.
Anyway, fantastic show.
Thanks for watching.
Subscribe or be relegated to a
life of flying net jets. What you guys say? It's Thanksgiving this week. Happy Thanksgiving.
Whatever you're doing, get together with family, friends, start a family.
Start a family tradition. This is something that I've advocated for before. Start a family or a family
tradition or both. Yeah. I have a family tradition that I'd like to share. I don't come from a family
with lots of traditions, but I decided that's not a reason to not start a family tradition.
And so my family now has a tradition where every time we get together for one of these events or a
party or holiday, all the men of the family go outside and we smoke cigars together.
Incredible.
And it's fantastic.
And it's something that everyone in the family immediately adopted.
And it would have been a much harder pitch if I hadn't said it was a family tradition.
And as soon as it was, now it's actually been a tradition because we've done it a couple times.
And now it's on the schedule.
It is well on its path to becoming Lindy.
Very Lindy.
So I would encourage everyone to start a tradition.
And don't be afraid to just adopt this.
If you do, send us a DM.
Send us a picture of you and your.
Hopefully wearing suits.
Bounders, yes.
Smoking cigars.
Smoking cigars.
After a nice turkey dinner.
There's a lot of different things.
Nice toasts are a fantastic tradition.
My mom likes writing rhyming limerick toasts.
There we go.
And with Chachy-B-T, you can really take it to the next level.
I would read one, but it wouldn't make any sense because it's all about my family.
But I've been to a few dinners with colleagues where someone has stood up and given a roast or a toast
and called out everyone in rhyming fashion for various things,
and it's hilarious and memorable, and it just stands out.
And it's just going a little bit extra,
making the trip to the cigar store before the event,
writing out the toast beforehand.
And it takes a lot of confidence to just stand up at your family event
and give a toast.
But if it's good, it's good.
In the same way, we recommend booking your Amman trips,
you know, at least a year out, you know, plan ahead with your traditions too.
Don't do it on the fly.
These are serious things.
And you're not going to want to, you're not going to want to Uber East.
If you're listening to this on Thanksgiving or after, plan out the Christmas tradition now.
There you go.
That's a great place to end.
Happy holidays, everyone.
