TBPN - OpenAI drops GPT-5.4, Iran War fallout, The Mansion Section | Diet TBPN

Episode Date: March 7, 2026

Diet TBPN delivers the best of today’s TBPN episode in 30 minutes. TBPN is a live tech talk show hosted by John Coogan and Jordi Hays, streaming weekdays 11–2 PT on X and YouTube, with ea...ch episode posted to podcast platforms right after.Described by The New York Times as “Silicon Valley’s newest obsession,” the show has recently featured Mark Zuckerberg, Sam Altman, Mark Cuban, and Satya Nadella.TBPN is made possible by:Ramp - https://Ramp.comAppLovin - https://axon.aiCisco - https://www.cisco.comCognition - https://cognition.aiConsole - https://console.comCrowdStrike - https://crowdstrike.comElevenLabs - https://elevenlabs.ioFigma - https://figma.comFin - https://fin.aiGemini - https://gemini.google.comGraphite - https://graphite.comGusto - https://gusto.com/tbpnKalshi - https://kalshi.comLabelbox - https://labelbox.comLambda - https://lambda.aiLinear - https://linear.appMongoDB - https://mongodb.comNYSE - https://nyse.comOkta - https://www.okta.comPhantom - https://phantom.com/cashPlaid - https://plaid.comPublic - https://public.comRailway - https://railway.comRestream - https://restream.ioSentry - https://sentry.ioShopify - https://shopify.com/tbpnTurbopuffer - https://turbopuffer.comVanta - https://vanta.comVibe - https://vibe.coFollow TBPN: https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2L6WMqY3GUPCGBD0dX6p00?si=674252d53acf4231https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://www.youtube.com/@TBPNLive

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:01 We're talking about GPT 5.4. We're talking about the price of oil. Tyler Cowan chimed in. He said, yes, the new models are very, very good. He's satisfied with 5.4. Many people are. Justin says we've been testing 5.4 for a week. It feels like a great mix of opus and codex fast conversational. Great instruction following. However, it seems to lack a bit of the eagerness of opus and precision of codex. So I was in Codex desktop today. here's a blurb, trying to get, you know, fun prompts and stuff going. 5.4 is available. You can run it at extra high. It's not 5.4 dash codex is not available.
Starting point is 00:00:43 I still only have 5.3 codex. And then... Well, they just combined. They basically... They combine everything. And then Spark is still on 5.3. It finally happened. My personal move 37 or more.
Starting point is 00:00:55 I am deeply impressed. The solution is very nice, clean, and feels almost human while testing new models in the last few weeks. What's your purpose? Personal move 37. Smellivision, I've talked about this. I'm waiting for Smellivision. No, what, so move 37 for those who aren't familiar, is Lisa Dahl playing DeepMind in Go,
Starting point is 00:01:15 and DeepMind dropped Move 37. It was very uncharacteristic. It had never, that strategy was not something that many Go Masters would have recommended. It seemed like a blunder, and it was so dramatic. We had Move 37 integrated into the first Technology Brothers launch video. Yes, yes, a little Easter.
Starting point is 00:01:34 This is when Liseadol would go to smoke. No, no. Oh, no. No, that happened before. He was so stressed out that he couldn't bring himself to go smoke. So basically, what happened was throughout the go matches, Lisa Dahl would get up and go outside and have a smoke break. And in the documentary, it sort of looks like he's,
Starting point is 00:01:53 the story gets apocryfully told as he was so stressed out by the craziness of this move, watching machine intelligence emerge this incredible move 37 that he couldn't understand that he had to step up step away go smoke a cigarette reset and then come back to the game that's not actually what happened he he was processed it was confused it was kind of like oh that was weird and then keeps playing and then that move 37 winds up being essential to the victory of the computer over the go master the human go master but we as we like to tell it he was so shocked by move 37 that he couldn't even bring himself to smoke cigarettes.
Starting point is 00:02:31 That's how you know. Bartow says, I felt this coming, but it's an eerie feeling to see an algorithm solve a task. One has curated for about 20 years, but at least I have gained a tool that understands my idea on par with the top experts in the field. I am now working on a completely new level. My singularity has just happened, and there's life on the other side off to infinity. Bartos is a top-tier mathematician. He just said his personal move 37 happened.
Starting point is 00:02:55 GPT 5.4 just solved a task he has curated for 20 years. When an expert of this caliber says the singularity has just happened, we are officially in a new era of science. What is my personal move 37? I was thinking about the definition of this and sort of the level of abstraction. I feel like a lot of individual contributors are having dramatic moments with AI. Bartows with this sort of mathematics problem. It's a very different kind of problem than when you're trying to solve problems in business. It's like, how do I unlock this market?
Starting point is 00:03:29 Yeah. And then you have ideas for how to do that, but then you have to execute a strategy over a long period of time. And it just takes time to be like, hey, did this work? Sure, sure. A year, six months or two years, you know. Brendan over at Merckor says GPD 5.4 is the best model we've ever tested on Apex agents. That's Mercor's internal benchmark. It's also the first model to pass 50% mean score a year ago.
Starting point is 00:03:54 Frontier models couldn't even edit an Excel sheet and scored less than 5%. Now, in less than three months, GPD 5.4 has improved by 15.7%. ChatGVT will imminently be better than the best consulting firm, better than the best investment bank, and better than the best law firm. Bold. Bold, bold, bold. Duria says, I ran the same prompt on GPD 5.4, Highfast, and Claude Opus 46 for an eight-phase coding project for a MacOS app.
Starting point is 00:04:23 GPD 5.4 Highfast completed the first two phases in nine minutes and finished all eight phases after an hour coding while Claude Code is just starting phase two. This is crazy. My expectation is the regardless if developers are kind of like flip-flopping from model to model, I think the overall market is growing so quickly that we're still going to see growth from, we're going to see insane growth from Codex, insane growth from Claude Code, and still insane growth from, you know, the cursors of the world. I mean, I'm so excited for for the deep mind, to potentially break out at some point? Because, so right now, Google has to break out YouTube's revenue numbers
Starting point is 00:05:07 because it's an individual reporting line and like the head of YouTube. There's some SEC regulation where if the head of the division reports discrete financials to the CEO, and there's like a CEO of that unit that reports to the CEO of the entire company, you have to break that out. And this is what happened with the AWS IPO, when AWS was like, It was like, finally, the SEC demands that we publish these numbers instead of just baking them into the rest of the numbers.
Starting point is 00:05:35 We have to split them out and tell everyone how profitable that business was. Everyone else woke up. YouTube's in a similar position. But currently, AI is a cross-functional division, even though Demis is like the second most known person. I mean, he has a book written about him. He's maybe the best known person at Google right now,
Starting point is 00:05:52 up there with Sundar, clearly reports to Sundar. And Deep Mind has all of the different, financials that you would expect to see from a lab. You know, they have inference, training costs. They, like, if the SEC pushed Google to push out the detailed financial breakdowns earlier, that would give us so much clarity. I mean, Dan Primmack came on the show yesterday and was talking about, like, people will be shocked about, and they'll learn a lot about the structure of the financials of the foundation model companies.
Starting point is 00:06:21 It'll be very interesting to see Google, like, what's their benchmark and how fast are they growing? because we saw these two revenue lines where Open AI is just absolutely going vertical, so is anthropic, just like one month behind. Like they're both scaling incredibly quickly. What's Gemini doing? It's a really interesting question. It's harder to measure because they're capturing value from Gemini all over the place. Like when you go to YouTube, there's a feature there that lets you talk to Gemini,
Starting point is 00:06:49 and it doesn't directly monetize by paying for tokens. Like the YouTube team doesn't pay deep mind for those tokens, but that's clearly driving more engagement on YouTube. Same thing with search overviews. Same thing with all the different places where they vended in Gemini across the different surfaces. But just to see the actual deep mind financials, how much are they spending, how much are they making, how many subscriptions are there, how much inference demand is there, that would be fascinating. GPT 5.4 Pro funniest joke in the world. What is it? Two hunters are out in the woods when one of them collapses.
Starting point is 00:07:27 He doesn't seem to be breathing and his eyes are glazed over. The other guy whips out his phone and calls emergency services. He gasps, my friend is dead. What should I do? The operator says, calm down. First, make sure he's dead. There's a silence, then a loud gunshot. Back on the phone, the guy says, okay, now what?
Starting point is 00:07:47 I've heard this. I've heard this before. This is good knowledge retrieval. This is not unique thinking. What do you think? So I just tried this on my own. It gave the same exact answer. Yes, yes, yes.
Starting point is 00:07:56 So I think usually when you ask, like, tell me a joke, it actually gives you, like, kind of random answers, right? Because it has, like, the memory and stuff. Yep. But it's interesting that this, it gives the same joke every time. Interesting. We got a big miss in jobs. The US loses 92,000 jobs in February.
Starting point is 00:08:13 Unemployment rises to 4.4%. Economists had expected 55,000 jobs to be added, and for the unemployment rate to hold steady at 5. 4.3. Not good at all. I guess if you look back, the economy has just been a shedding job since April of 2025 if you factor in the revisions down. Yeah. Apparently there's a strike in the health care industry, so health care employment decreased. And then health care in information and federal government continue to trend down. Probably something related to the Trump administration, you know, reducing the. the size of the government. Last two months were revised down by 69,000. Not all the data was terrible. U6 fell as the number of people who said they had part-time jobs but wanted full-time
Starting point is 00:09:03 ones actually declined. So stock futures are lower but not a ton of reaction to the number itself. Portos, as I've noticed, some of my tech friends have lost jobs. Some jobs are becoming super easy. Some jobs had parts that were a pain and now those parts are super easy. Some people leaned into AI to stay relevant, still wonder if it will replace them entirely. Well, we will continue to track it. Brinth is not close to $90. This prediction, the $100 barrel predicted on last Sunday as the Iran war broke out is closer and closer to coming true. Crude is up 11.5% today. Yeah. Not good. It's very interesting how how it affects the economy or the various markets. So the interesting question is how will the
Starting point is 00:09:57 American oil drillers react? They were, at least in the journal earlier this week, sort of reflecting on the fact that if this is a short-lived engagement, then they might not want to spin up a bunch of new capacity. But if it's ongoing and price of oil is continuing to rise, then obviously that creates an economic incentive to drill more. And so we will We will see where the outputs go, where the reserves get tapped, all of that. Will the Iran war affect investment from Gulf State, neighboring Gulf State investment groups into American venture capital funds? We've seen as venture capital has boomed and the fundraisers have gotten into the tens of billions, the high billions for many firms, the Middle East has been a source of strong LP demand for venture capital stakes. So with instability in Iran, you might just see folks change focus with new demands for defense
Starting point is 00:10:57 investing, military buildup investing. You might see less dollars flow out of the Gulf into American venture capital firms. This should mostly be unaffected because the folks who actually work at the Gulf State investment funds who write the checks into American venture capital firms, they don't live in the Middle East. They live in New York. they meet with other venture capital investor relations folks in New York, and they say, hey, how's your fun performance? Okay, we're allocating this. A big part of why they're investing in
Starting point is 00:11:26 American technology, in venture capital, in frontier technology in America specifically is because they want to diversify away from the Gulf. They want to diversify away from the geopolitical risk, and they want to diversify away from oil. Exactly. Think about if you have a job, let's say you have a big tech job, you're doing quite well, you're doing some angel investing, and then you lose your job, and then you have to get a much worse job. Are you going to keep angel investing at the same pace? You might be like, hey, I'll kind of have this kind of disconnect, less cash flow. I don't want to be outlaying as much cash now.
Starting point is 00:11:59 And I think that that's like ultimately, you know, if the source of the cash flow gets disrupted, in this case being oil production, then you're much less likely to continue to allocate at the same pace. So the Financial Times has a story this late yesterday. Gulf states could review overseas investments to ease financial strains caused by Iran war. Three leading Middle East economies consider options as U.S. Israeli campaign against Tehran continues. Pressure on the Gulf states' budget could cause them to review their overseas investments and future commitments as they consider options to ease the financial strained caused by the war. A Gulf official said it could have an impact on anything from investment pledges to foreign states or
Starting point is 00:12:41 companies, sports, sponsorships, contracts with businesses and investors, or sales of holdings. The officials said three of the four big Gulf economies, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait, and Qatar had jointly discussed the strains being put on their budget. A number of Gulf countries have begun an internal review to determine whether force majeure clauses can be invoked in current contracts while also reviewing current and future investment commitments in order to alleviate some of the anticipated economic strain from the current war, especially if the war and related expenses continue at the same pace. They added that the move was a precautionary measure that was the result of the budget strains these countries are facing due to reduced income from energy due to the slowdown and output or the inability to ship
Starting point is 00:13:26 and from the tourism and aviation sectors in addition to the increase in defense spending. So a bunch of different factors combining. An advisor to a Gulf government said the prospect of an investment review by the, wealthy states had caught the White House's attention. They managed some of the world's largest and most active sovereign wealth funds in Saudi Arabia, the UAE, in Qatar last year pledged to invest hundreds of billions of dollars in the U.S. after President Donald Trump visited the region. They are also big backers of sporting events around the world and have all been investing heavily domestically to develop their nations and diversify their economies. Any move that affects
Starting point is 00:14:01 investments in the U.S. or other Western states may raise the pressure on Trump to seek a diplomatic strategy to bring the war to an end. In other news, Wisenthal is studying Texas man camps with everything from catered food to golf simulators that are springing up in order to lure workers out to construct data centers. They're building man camps. It is a bull market in man camps. AI man camps offer golf free stakes to lure workers in Texas. This Tyler could get on board with we should build a man camp here. We should. We kind of we kind of do. I mean we talked about we talked about getting racing simulators and then we ultimately backed off just
Starting point is 00:14:40 because when you're at the office, you should probably be working. I've tried it before. And, like, games in the office, it's always just weird because, like, there's all these little interactions where I'm like, oh, I'm sort of waiting on you to do something. You're waiting on me to do something. If you just see me, like, are you racing there? You're going to be like, can't you, like, you know, fix this? Or there's always something else to do.
Starting point is 00:15:03 And so it's much better just to do, like, proper off-sites, proper hands. That is being extremely disappointed right now. Companies are competing for workers to build data centers and are finding that a motel room with sluggish Wi-Fi isn't much of a draw. Try free stakes and golf simulators. As data center development has exploded with the rise of AI, competition for water and power supplies is pushing construction further into rural areas that often lack the housing and infrastructure to support the hundreds or thousands of temporary workers
Starting point is 00:15:33 needed to build hulking warehouses of computer servers. That's forcing developers to increasingly lean, on a stopgap solution that was popularized during the shale oil boom of the 2010, sprawling temporary villages known as man camps. These temporary housing villages can vary from wood frame two-story apartment buildings to containerize modular homes or trailer parks supplied with electricity and water. But to lure in-demand electricians, welders, and pipe fitters, developers are going the extra mile and offering game rooms, rib-eyes, and shuttle rides to work. It's effectively a backdoor for a share of what Bloomberg intelligence estimates is 700 billion of projects in the planning stage
Starting point is 00:16:12 and another 160 billion already underway throughout the U.S. It's the largest, most actionable pipeline I've seen. It's an additional lure for tradespeople already enjoying significant pay hikes with some data center electricians making more than 150,000 a year. Not bad at all. Anyway, let's move on. Is it that time? I think it's time for the mansion section.
Starting point is 00:16:35 An ex-Marvel CEO lists his home in a secretive California community. I know you got a soft spot for these secretive communities, Jordy. We're going to pull this one up. So homes in this enclave, the Smoked Tree Ranch in Palm Springs, they usually trade between family and friends. But Eric Ellen Bogan is testing the open market. At Smoketree Ranch in Palm Springs, homes usually trade quietly between family members and friends, but for former Marvel Enterprises CEO, Eric Ellen Bogan. And I got to know,
Starting point is 00:17:12 is Marvel Enterprises? Is that Marvel Entertainment? Or is that a different company? It seems like it's Marvel Entertainment. Anyway, Eric Ellen Bogan clearly has done very well. He purchased the oldest poem. Yeah, it's now called Marvel Entertainment. It used to be called Marvel Enterprises. Amazing. So he purchased this house at Smoke Tree in 2021 for $3.95 million. Now it's hit in the market. They were giving it away. million is bucking the trend by listing the house publicly. Quote, we felt strongly that offering the property on the open market would provide the greatest
Starting point is 00:17:44 opportunity to identify the right architectural steward. I love when people go to sell their houses and then they have a bunch of strings attached, you know? We talked to the guy, or we read the story about the singer from Kiss, the rock band. And he was like, I don't want to sell to anyone who drinks alcohol. Which is crazy. It was the house like the most like, like,
Starting point is 00:18:06 It was the most like crazy over the top, bachelor pad. Yeah, yeah, it was total party house in the Hollywood Hills. And Kiss is a rock band. Like they definitely had the wildest times or, I mean, at least that was like the aesthetic. I don't know if they were, maybe they were straight edge the whole time. But this house at Smoketree Ranch sits at the foot of the San Jacinto Mountains. It has a near mythical status in Palm Springs.
Starting point is 00:18:28 Dating to the early 1900s, the ranch has long drawn some of America's wealthiest families, including Walt Disney. and the Ford family of the Ford Motor Company, in case you weren't sure what the Ford family was, known for its Wild West feel. The community has dirt roads and unassuming homes, many of which still belong to the families that built them.
Starting point is 00:18:48 Ellen Bogan's home built in the 1930s has been owned by the Gilmore Pharmaceutical Family for more than 90 years before he bought it. Let's give it up to the big pharma. Ellen Bogan worked to have the home successfully designated as a historical landmark. It sits on 1.8 acres. It's roughly 5,000.
Starting point is 00:19:04 square feet surrounds a central courtyard with a large pool. Are you like in this house, John? I'm not a desert guy. I'm a forest guy. I know you're a beach guy. I like the forest. I consider myself a bit of a desert guy. You like the desert?
Starting point is 00:19:18 But I'm not feeling this house at all. You're not feeling this house? Not one bit. Not one bit. Not one bit. How much would you pay for it? What's the fair price? I don't think it's fair for me to price it because I really don't, I really don't like
Starting point is 00:19:34 You really don't like it. I don't think I'm the kind of steward they're looking for. Oh, you would change this into a 20-story apartment complex immediately? In general, I like ranch-style houses, single-story. I like this layout around the pool, this courtyard. I like homes that kind of face in, right, towards kind of like a shared communal space, but I'm not loving anything. Unpack it.
Starting point is 00:20:02 Like, what don't you like about it? I mean, the textures, the colors. Okay. It doesn't appear to be, I like a classic, the classic kind of, I like a home that is classic structurally. Yeah, yeah. But this looks like nothing has been, like this feels like living in kind of like a Hollywood set, right? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:27 Not like a home that's been. I feel like the materials are a little mixed in some of these cases, like the hard wood cabinets combined with like sort of the furry chairs. Like the materials aren't aren't feeling pure west. Yeah, like what's going on in this kitchen? This kitchen is a disaster. Pull up this kitchen. This kitchen.
Starting point is 00:20:43 What's going on here? Look at these like. It's coming up. It's coming up. So that's not too bad. The overstuffed chairs, those are coming up. Okay, this, this is absolutely brutal. This, this.
Starting point is 00:20:52 Look at the furry chairs. What's going on here? In the hard wood with the wood and the wooden ceiling. Those chairs with the wood on wood on wood on wood. Yeah. Is absolutely. Dan Ratliff says it looks like a grandparents house. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:21:04 The pictures make it look mid. They're like, oh, we got to find the right person to steward this house. It's like, okay, grandpa, let's put you to bed. That tile is criminal. Yeah, the chat is not. Yeah, Ryan says full gut at minimum. Yeah, yeah. Full gut.
Starting point is 00:21:22 I agree. I agree. Brutal. Okay, well, why don't we leave Palm Springs? We'll head over to Manhattan. I just got to say the audacity. to be like, yeah, we need to put this on the open market to find the right steward.
Starting point is 00:21:35 And it's like, oh, I don't know how, I don't know if you've been stewarding that well. Yeah, yeah. So is your read on it that, like, everyone from the community was like, yeah, we'll love to take this off your hands and, like, completely renovate it. And they're like, we got to find a crazy person that likes this particular style. And so they got to spread their, they got to spread the aperture.
Starting point is 00:21:52 I think you guys are being too hard. I think if you just add, like, two or three more floors. Oh, yeah. You go vertically. Yeah. I think it could be pretty sick. Yeah. I would also dig down.
Starting point is 00:22:01 A bill basement, man cave, you know, racing simulators. Okay, well, let's head over to New York because Catherine Clark at the Wall Street Journal got a coveted invitation to see New York's most secretive condo project. This is A.D. Clarkson. The sales, they're over $1 billion now. With minimal marketing, little press until now, little coverage until we discuss it on TBPN. In a sun-filled room, stone-froaring. This is breaking news, folks. This is breaking news. With stone flooring and a plush, creamy white rug, my winter coat is whisked away, and a sparkling water is thrust into my hand. For much of the past year, an invitation to come here has been one of the most coveted tickets in New York City. But I'm not at a hot new bar or restaurant. I'm on the far west side of Manhattan at the tucked-away sales gallery for a new condominium. The developers of 80 Clarkson Street, a pair of under-construction towers at the edge of the edge of,
Starting point is 00:23:00 of the West Village have kept details about the project secret. The units aren't listed on sites like Zillow or in Street Easy. Access to the sales office by the Hudson River is by appointment only, and appointments were initially scarce. Many prospective buyers tried to call in favors to get a look. Counterintuitive, though it may seem, the secrecy surrounding A.D. Clarkson appears to have been an extremely effective sales tool. In less than a year, more than $1 billion worth of condos have gone into contract on the project amounting to more than half of its 112 residences. Ayer recently signed a contract to pay $129 million for a residence at A.D. Clarkson. If it closes, the transaction will set a record for downtown Manhattan,
Starting point is 00:23:39 shattering the previous high watermark of 60 million. They're going twice as expensive as the previous high watermark. A roughly 7,400 square foot apartment is asking 75 million, and they also found a buyer. So give me a little bit of a review on this style. Are you feeling this? Do you think you could settle into an apartment if it looked like this and had 7,000 square feet to walk around and was in New York City? In terms of styling, in terms of aesthetics, in terms of vibes, what you got for us, Jordy?
Starting point is 00:24:08 What do you think? I think it's not really my style, but in general, I think it's, I think it's in general. You can grate your teeth. It's some mixture of, of classic New York. Well, let's get you. Interior styling brought into the modern era. The golden ticket. I think it's nice.
Starting point is 00:24:33 At 80 Clarkson, the two under construction towers sit adjacent to the West Side Highway on the Hudson River. The project's neighbors are Google and Pier 40, the former Marine Terminal, that now serves as parking and sports facility with a trapeze school. You're in the trapeze. I'm sold. You're sold? Walking distance to trapeze lessons. Walking distance.
Starting point is 00:24:53 Maybe you've got to do trapeze. I don't know. Despite all the cloak and dagger, the gallery itself is subdued. and stayed, there's no dimming of lights, no ultra-dramatic video, no stirring music. Instead, the space is classic and dignified, with a sales team pointing out details such as the motor court, which they say was inspired by a Roman piazza. It is an experience that channels the Zekendorf's reputation for a certain brand of Manhattan real estate, discreet, restrained, and priced at the very top of the market.
Starting point is 00:25:19 Sions of one of New York City's real estate's most storied dynasties, David Lynch's Quirky Los Angeles compound sells for 13 million. Okay, explain David Lynch. Who wants to explain David Lynch? Any of you guys now? He's the goat. He's the goat. He created Twin Peaks and the film Mulholl and Drive. Mulholl and Drive is fantastic.
Starting point is 00:25:41 Eraserhead? Eraserhead is probably my favorite movie, yeah. Really? I haven't seen eraser. It's like, yeah. Jordi, it's like, he's like, I don't know, very, I actually have no idea how to describe. Like, kind of surreal, like very art-house. Explain him as like a big tech CEO. He's like all the CEO's favorite CEO.
Starting point is 00:25:58 That's how I would explain it. All the big directors, it's his favorite director. Okay, okay. Your favorite director's favorite director. What if you have no favorite director? How many jumps to get from Sasha Baron Cohen to David Lynch? Probably not that many. He probably has respect for him.
Starting point is 00:26:12 A quirky Los Angeles compound that was the longtime home of the late filmmaker, David Lynch, has sold for $13 million, about six months after hitting the market. Lynch died in 2025. He was known for the surreal films television shows, including the TV series Twin Peaks and the 2001 film Mulholling Drive. Is this such a fascinating home? From the outside from the street, it's like somewhat brutalist. Yeah. And then the inside, it's like very mid-century. And then he has a workshop on the estate
Starting point is 00:26:41 designed for some of the properties metal work himself. This is a fascinating building. So the compound has seven buildings spanning 11,000 square feet in total with 10 bedrooms. The centerpiece of the estate is a pink 1960s house that was designed by the architect Lloyd Wright, the son of Frank Lloyd Wright. In a statement, two of Lynch's children said the property was a place of deep meaning in their father's life and the lives of those who lived and worked there. It holds a lot of history for our family and we're grateful to see it pass to someone who's interested in caring for it and preserving what made it special. Lynch viewed his living space as an extension of his creative life, the Lloyd Wright House, affects my whole life to live inside it. He said, in
Starting point is 00:27:24 a 1997 interview. What do you think about this house? Would you live here? Do you like this house? Do you like this style? I do like it. I just think, I think that needs about, I don't know, an architectural purist
Starting point is 00:27:38 might hate me for this, but it needs a lot of investment. You have to tear it down. No, no, no, no, no, no. This is also, I like... I don't think it's mentioned in the article, but this is the location of Lost Highway, which is another of his movies.
Starting point is 00:27:50 Wow, Ballinor over there. I had no idea. I don't know Lost Highway at all. Right, before we jump in there, the team is sharing, how many jumps to get me from the host, Tyler at TBPN, to David Lynch? And so Tyler Cosgrove. Yes. Works with John Coogan at TBPN.
Starting point is 00:28:07 Okay. John Coogan has interviewed Mark Zuckerberg. Mark Zuckerberg was portrayed by Jesse Eisenberg in the film Social Network. Jesse Eisenberg co-starred with Laura Dern in Resistance, and Laura Dern starred in Wild at Heart, direct. by David Lynch. Five degrees of separation. There we go. Let's make some phone calls. Giro Ticket says, when you ask some high elves at Rivendell, if they want to join you in your quest to Aribor, they hit you with the light of Valenor stare. 2.8,000 likes people like the
Starting point is 00:28:40 photo. Very silly. See, he says, mildly surprised to learn that director-level staff and anthropic have human EAs. Hmm. How did they learn that? How did he learn that? Was that in like the most recent Dario news? This is from March 6th today. I mean he runs an AI finance tool. Oh, so maybe he's interacting with them. All right, we got a new Xbox. What's going on here? We have breaking news as of three days ago. We didn't really get to it. Project Helix is the next generation of the Xbox console. What do we know about it? Nothing. Nothing. Zonada. We see a logo reveal. Is this just a working title? I don't know.
Starting point is 00:29:23 Will this be delayed? The PS6 is supposedly delayed. The Switch 2 is maybe going up in price. Tech layoff tracker. What's going on? What's going on? Hearing from multiple sources inside Oracle that the company is planning, thousands of job cuts,
Starting point is 00:29:38 potentially 20 to 30,000 rolls across the board. This was surprising to me because I didn't realize that Oracle had a head count around 170,000 people. There's a lot. going on at Oracle. It's a very old company. A lot of sales reps. I had a friend who worked as Oracle sales rep. Love the job. Great lifestyle. You know, going around selling software, selling data centers, selling all sorts of stuff. This is to free up $8 to $10 billion in cash flow, all the fund massive AI data center expansion. U.S. banks are pulling back from financing,
Starting point is 00:30:12 borrowing costs of rising fast. CDS spreads. The cuts would be the largest in years, bigger than the $10,000 they did in late 2025. They are also eyeing asset sales, like the CERner Healthcare Unit. It's tied to AI commitments. Anyways, so still rumors at this point, but wouldn't be super surprising. Anyway, leave us five stars on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Subscribe to our newsletter at TBPN.com, and we will see you on Monday. Weekend of your life. I love you. That's all, folks. Good.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.