The a16z Show - Marc Andreessen: Deep Vs. Broad Founders, AI in America, & the New Face of a16z
Episode Date: May 16, 2025Today on the a16z Podcast, we’re sharing Marc Andreessen’s recent appearance on TBPN.Marc—cofounder and general partner at a16z—joins hosts John Coogan and Jordi Hays for a wide-ranging conver...sation, recorded live at the a16z’s 2025 LP Conference in Las Vegas.They cover the rise of AI, the future of open source models, and how tech is transforming every corner of the economy—from education and defense to healthcare and housing.Marc also shares his thoughts on the evolution of venture capital, the firm’s new branding, and what it takes to build enduring companies in a rapidly changing world. Resources:Watch more from TBPN: https://www.tbpn.com/Find TBPN on X: https://x.com/tbpnFind Marc on X: https://x.com/pmarca Stay Updated: Let us know what you think: https://ratethispodcast.com/a16zFind a16z on Twitter: https://twitter.com/a16zFind a16z on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/a16zSubscribe on your favorite podcast app: https://a16z.simplecast.com/Follow our host: https://x.com/eriktorenbergPlease note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures. Stay Updated:Find a16z on YouTube: YouTubeFind a16z on XFind a16z on LinkedInListen to the a16z Show on SpotifyListen to the a16z Show on Apple PodcastsFollow our host: https://twitter.com/eriktorenberg Please note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You just close your eyes and just imagine two states of the world, one is which the entire world runs an American open source LLM.
And the other is where the entire world, including the U.S. runs on all Chinese software.
And I, you know, I don't know. For me, that's, you know, very straightforward.
In this episode of the A16Z podcast, we're sharing Mark and Dresen's recent appearance on TBPN, recorded live at A16Z's 2020-25 LP conference in Las Vegas.
Mark joins the show for a wide-ranging conversation on everything from the AI boom and open-source models to
the evolution of venture capital and the future of American dynamism. Along the way, he reveals
the thinking behind A16Z's new branding, how startups are scaling faster than ever, and what it'll
take to build enduring companies in today's market. Let's get into it. As a reminder, the content
here is for informational purposes only. Should not be taken as legal business, tax, or investment
advice, or be used to evaluate any investment or security, and is not directed at any
investors or potential investors in any A16Z fund.
Please note that A16Z and its affiliates may also maintain investments in the companies discussed
in this podcast.
For more details, including a link to our investments, please see A16Z.com forward slash disclosures.
Welcome.
How are you doing, Mark?
Hey, guys, what's happening?
What's happening?
It's been a great day.
I'm going to hit this real quick.
We have the sound effect board.
Thanks so much for joining us.
And thanks for wearing a suit.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
You look fantastic.
Yeah, special occasion.
Congratulations in the podcast.
I just want to start out by saying, I've been watching.
It's just tremendous.
Thank you so much.
You know, I have a funny story.
The moment that I realized that you were maybe paying a little bit of attention to what we were doing,
and it gave me some conviction that we were on the right track because we did a reply guy of the week to this guy, Baldo.
And it was like this inside joke.
And I was like, holy shit, Mark just followed Baldow.
Very talented guy, but, yeah.
So it's, thank you for following along, and it's been awesome talking to your whole team today.
Yeah.
Fantastic.
So let's go through some hot topics.
I want to start with, we're in the AI era.
You obviously live through the dot-com era.
There's some comparisons.
What have you learned and how is this time different?
Companies are making more money.
Valuations are high, but how are you thinking about teaching the next generation what they should learn or what
they should ignore from the people that might say, this is the dot-com boom?
to point out.
Yeah, so look, I guess I'd say, I think as Mark Twain who once said, history doesn't repeat,
but it rhymes.
And so, you know, I think people looking for like a direct compare or contrast.
Sometimes you see people like drawing charts or the stock market's going to do the same
thing or whatever.
Like, I don't think that stuff ever quite happens that way.
But, you know, it does rhyme.
And, you know, the line that John Dorr had in 1995, I remember, was that the internet is a cream
that you rub on investors to get them all excited.
So.
John Dorr said that.
That's hilarious.
Yes.
I have many, many, many, many, John.
Please, keep again.
Oh, yeah, exactly.
But, you know, so, you know, AAS like that now.
You know, look, the AI, sorry, the internet went through, you know,
went through phases.
People actually forget, but there was like, you know,
there were like these, even the phases, like, on the way up from, you know,
95 to 2000.
You know, there were these phases of, like, skepticism and panic.
You know, it looked like the whole thing was going to fall apart in 98.
And then, you know, in 2001, you know, after the dot-com crash, you know,
all the big companies just completely wrote the internet off and they just said,
you know, thank God that's over.
And then the internet itself just kept growing, right?
And then, you know, by 2005, it was back to, you know, back to where it had been before.
And we, you know, the rest was what was history.
And so, you know, people kind of go, people are kind of bipolar on these things.
They kind of get overly excited.
They get overly depressed.
You know, I just always thought then and I think now the substance matters, you know,
the substance overwhelmingly matters.
And so, you know, is, is the technology great?
Are the products great? Are people using them?
And, you know, AI is like off to the races so far.
It's just like unprecedented rate of growth of actual use.
Yeah.
Right.
And you see that in all the numbers.
And then, you know, look, the businesses, I, you know, I just talked to another
conversation yesterday with like, you know, a company that's raised seed money,
they're already over 10 million error with this incredible, you know.
Like it's just, and, you know, there's like a lot of those.
Like, you know, they're all over the place.
And so, you know, the things that are working, the products are fantastic.
You know, the users are getting tremendous value out of them.
and as you know, the base technology is moving really fast,
so I feel really good about it.
Yeah, I mean, it can move faster because we have the Internet.
Like, these apps can get to hundreds of millions of daily active users
because there's hundreds of millions of people.
There's billions of people on the Internet.
Very interesting.
Not to linger on the dot-com stuff too much,
but I'd love to know a little bit of a history lesson around the way the browser wars played out.
And is there anything you can learn from that that applies to the open source
versus closed-sourced AI debate.
You've been very opinionated on that.
I'd love to know, kind of,
are there any previous eras of tech
that you're mapping to when you think about
open-source AI?
Yeah, so, you know, a lot of the browser wars,
you know, there was kind of a big company,
kind of big company thing,
and, you know, I think that's repeating itself.
And, you know, I think one of the ways to think
about what's happening right now
was open AI is kind of growing up to become Google,
and Google's kind of, you know, reinventing itself
to be open AI.
And so, you know, there's like a similar thing there.
And, you know, then, you look, Microsoft and Apple
and Google control the operating systems, you know, for end-user devices,
and they all have, you know, AI strategies in Amazon as well.
So, you know, a lot of those issues are going to come back up.
You know, two of these big companies are actually on federal trial right now, you know,
in big FDC cases in Washington, D.C., actually in the same courtroom.
And so, you know, many of those issues will repeat or, you know, will be intense.
You know, the open source thing in tech has always been the wild card.
I think it's always been an incredibly positive wildcard.
You know, I've always been, you know, enthusiastic supporter of it.
my original work was all open source.
And so, you know, the real thing that happened to open source is, you know, operating systems, you know,
basically Unix won and then, you know, specifically Linux one, you know, for everything on,
the back end.
And I, you know, like, you know, I remember, like in the 1990s, there was like a furious
operating system war.
And there were these companies that were making huge amounts of money on server operating systems,
you know, companies like Sun and many others.
And then, you know, Linux just like commoditize that entire thing.
Yeah.
You know, I think it's plausible, you know, we'll see, but it, look, it's plausible that open
source AI may just be the standard.
Like it, you know, and whether, whether that derives out of, you know, deep see or, you know,
any of the other new things that are coming out, you know, we'll see.
But like, I think that's entirely feasible.
And, you know, I think that would be, obviously, you know, there are companies that would
have to adjust to that if it happens.
But the other side is if kind of the world had AI for free, I think that would be a pretty
magical result also.
Yeah, totally.
I mean, shifting to the geopolitics of all this, is it important not just that there's an
open source champion, but that there's an American open source champion or a Western
open source LLM.
Yeah, I believe so.
And I believe so for two reasons.
One is just actually cultural reasons,
which is just, you know,
open weights is great, but like the open weights, like they're baked, right?
Like the training is in the weights,
and you can't really undo that.
And so are you being trained by, you know,
a company or an organization or a set of people
with American or Western values?
Are you being trained, you know, by, you know,
a company with Chinese values?
And look, you know, there's issues on both sides.
You know, the American train models have their issues.
They have their weirdnesses.
You know, but the Chinese train models, you know, look, they, like, score really well.
You know, they literally, in the Chinese benchmarks, they literally have, like,
line items for, like, Marxism, right?
Right.
And, you know, Deep Seek is like 100 out of 100 on Marxism, right?
And so.
It's here for Deep Sea.
Really knocked out of the park.
Good night.
Congratulations.
Yeah, exactly.
It's fantastic, right?
And so it's like, all right, so these are going to be, you know, this is going to be the technology
that's going to intermediate the legal system, right?
The courts, the education system, the medical.
the medical system.
Like, you know, how, you know, you want your kids, you know, if you guys have kids,
like, do you want your kids to, you know, your kids are going to be learning from these
things their whole lives?
And, you know, do they have, you know, do they fundamentally have Western values?
Or do they have, you know, sort of, you know, CCP values, I think is really critical.
And then the other thing, just, I would say, just close your eyes and just imagine two
states of the world.
One is which the entire world runs an American open source, LOM.
And the other is where the entire world, including the U.S. runs on all Chinese software.
And I, you know, I don't know, for me, that's a, you know, very straightforward.
It's a very important topic and a very straightforward answer.
Yeah, I mean, in the American Dynamism context, is it kind of mission accomplished there?
Or are there new territories that you're looking to expand into with the broader American dynamism thesis?
We talked to D.U. about energy and whatnot.
But what is exciting about you outside of artificial intelligence on the national interest investing side?
Yeah.
So, look, it made tremendous progress.
I'm super proud of that team.
And in this new political environment,
the new administration has embraced it,
but also a lot of Democrats,
they're actually quite excited about it also.
And our event that we hold has lots of people
from both parties.
So I think there's a, you know,
there's this unified view now,
I think, in the American,
at least in the political world of like,
all right, it's time, you know,
it's time for the U.S. to step up on a lot of these things.
It's time for the U.S. to build more.
It's time for the U.S. to reinvent energy.
It's time for nuclear.
You know, it's time for, you know,
infrastructure, you know, housing, like all these things.
And so, you know, I think there's a lot of momentum.
I think we're at the very beginning of it.
You know, like, one of the ways to think about what we're doing American dynamism is we're going after all the sectors of GDP that are, like, really big and not yet basically affected by tech.
And so education, health care, housing, defense, law, you know, just to pick five, you know, those are giant important slices of the economy that largely have not been transformed by technology in the last 50 years.
You know, the U.S. Defense Department spends, you know, coming up on a trillion dollars, very little of that money is going to technologies and companies that have been invented.
frankly in the last 20 years.
You know, most military hardware in the Department of Defense is, you know, the F-16 is from the
1970s, right?
Like the U.S. plane that does a high-altitude photography, the high-altitude spy plane, it's still
the U-2.
Yeah.
Which is, it's just like literally a 70-year-old plane.
So, like, there's just like enormous changes, you know, that really have to happen.
And I think everybody kind of in the system knows that, but it's hard to get there.
And I think, you know, a big part of that is, you know, these new companies, you know, that we,
that we try to support, you know, you know, they need to share.
show up and make their case. But, you know, the entrepreneurs are fantastic. And then, you know,
we see more receptivity coming from the system than we ever have. Talk about the kind of position,
the position that the firm is in today in many ways. It feels like you and Ben and the team had
somewhat of a crystal ball to see how the private markets were evolving, companies staying
private longer, AI being this massive platform shift that's going to upend, you know, every industry.
and then now the sort of political environment
that enables industries
to kind of get a second or third life.
Did you just get lucky, or did you see a lot of this coming?
I mean, I think we got a few things right.
We got a bunch of stuff wrong.
You know, we buried those ideas back behind the shed.
So, you know, we made a bunch of mistakes along the way
or changed a bunch of things.
But, you know, we got a few big things right.
You know, I think the things I think we got right.
You know, the venture ecosystem,
you guys know, is just evolved enormous.
in a very positive way.
And the kind of old model of having a sort of a bunch of mid-sized firms,
they kind of sit on Sandhill Road and wait for the founders to come in.
Like that, you know, those days are kind of over.
You have the rise of the high-scale firms like us,
but you also have the rise of all these seed and angel investors,
you know, that are really, you know, first money in
and then really working closely with founders from the very beginning.
And I think that ecosystem is healthier than ever and doing really well.
And so, you know, that's been a big change.
You know, and the ITOs, like, I don't know,
I would say we have changed on that,
which is I used to complain a lot.
Like, I used to give these interviews years ago and, you know, like early 2010s
and just complain about like the, that it was basically becoming impossible for companies to go public
and, you know, the things that had caused that to happen and what needed to change.
And then, you know, of course, nothing happened.
Like, you know, there were no reforms.
You know, there were no improvements.
If anything, everything got worse.
And so, you know, we and others adapted to that by, you know, by basically putting, you know,
putting ourselves in a position to fund companies, you know, later in their life cycle at higher,
higher, you know, bigger, larger amounts of money, you know, later at growth stages.
And, you know, it's now much more common for companies, tenders and these kind of private,
sales, even for their employees. You know, so that's been a big change.
You know, but look, maybe the best directional bet was just technology was going to keep
becoming more important. It's just like in every area of our life, the bet that, you know,
in sector X, tech is going to be more important. They're going to be big tech companies built.
They're going to really matter. That, that I think is, that's a very good bet.
I think frankly, it's hard for me to ever see that ending.
Yeah.
What are you, you know, you guys are with your LPs today, tomorrow.
What are you hoping they take away from the event?
Oh, so this is not a John Dorr quote, but I'll give you another quote when we were raising money originally.
We're going around.
We were going to raise our first fund in 2009 and, you know, the world had, you know,
completely collapsed after the financial crisis.
And we, you know, went around and we sort of briefed all the, all the, you know,
the VCs we respect it to just give them a heads up for what we're doing. And one of the GPs took
us the side of the end and said, you know, you guys have been dealing with like these, you know,
very smart public market investors. He said, you know, part of the job you're going to hate
the most is working with these LPs, you know, they're just terrible. And he said the key is
you need to treat them like mushrooms. You put them in a cardboard box. You put the lid on the cardboard box
and you put the box under the bed and you don't open it for two years.
It makes a ton of sense.
They're like, what's the markup today?
Yeah.
That was done for me lately.
That was not John.
Yeah, yeah.
And so, you know, look, the view Ben and I always had was the exact opposite of that,
you know, which is our investors are our partners, you know, and, you know, look,
that's how we want to be treated by the companies we invest in.
You know, that's how we always, you know, viewed it when we were running public companies.
Our investors are our partners, you know, they're in it with us together.
You know, they're making a big bet on us and trusting us.
And then, you know, look, correspondingly, the promise that we made to them is like, look,
we're going to try to, like, deliver, you know, excellent returns,
but in this business, it's just going to take a long time.
And, you know, you guys know this.
For any company that really succeeds, it takes, you know, 10, 20, 30 years, you know,
to really have it succeed.
And like, and along the way, like, a lot of things happen, you know,
everything from negative headlines to, you know, lawsuits, disasters, chaos,
you know, all kinds of crazy, you know, twists and turns,
changes happen along the way.
And so I just think it's, like, really important for us as a firm.
Like, we really always need to make sure that we're treating
our LPs as full partners. And so what we're trying to do is be is just really like open the
kimono all the way, show them everything, kind of expose them to everything that we're doing,
make sure they really understand it, go as deep as they want to go on the technology and on the
companies. And I, you know, this is like year 15 of this for us. And so far that, I think they would
say that that's gone well. That's great. Last question from me. Just general advice for the next
generation of entrepreneurs. Are you hoping more college, less college, more coding, less
coding, less coding. Like there's a ton of technological change right now. How can the next generation
entrepreneurs set themselves up for success.
Yeah, so there's an old Steve Martin line.
You wrote this great book on how to be a successful stand-up comedian.
It was just a short little book really well written.
And, you know, every inspired comedian in the world opened it up.
And it says Steve Martin's, you know, advice for being a great stand-up comedian.
And it was, be so good they can't ignore you.
Right?
It's like, okay.
Thank you, Mr. Martin.
You know, I'll get right on that.
But like that remains the best advice, I think, which is just like quality, like we said,
like quality bears out, like quality shows.
And so, you know, a, you know, really excellent thinking coupled with a high degree of, you know, energy and courage, you know, team building, a great team and then a great product, you know, and a real, you know, insight into a market with customers figuring out of design, you know, not just design a product, but also design a business.
Like, that's basically, like, my view of that as an entrepreneur always, like, that's my job as an entrepreneur.
And like, if I, you know, if I put a lot of time and effort into that and very serious about it, I can hopefully do a good job.
And I think time spent improving the quality of the thing, the product and the business, is almost always better than time spent, trying to, you know, networking or, you know, publishing a presentation or, you know, trying to get positive press coverage or kind of all the external stuff.
And so it's really, it's really the quality of the thing.
And then, you know, again, my hope would be like we as a firm and others like us, like, that we really, you know, that we really recognize that and see it, you know, kind of see it when it shows up.
And I think that's the thing.
And then I think the other thing would be, look, like, AI is superpowers, right?
And like if you as a founder have access to, you know, just to, you know, say chat GPT deep research, it's just like, oh, you know, it's just like, oh my God.
Like I have a, you know, like I have a PhD level.
It used to be so hard to get information, right?
And then it's been so hard, you know, even still to figure out what to do with it.
And so to now have this tool, you know, these tools for thinking through everything and, you know, increasingly being able to do things like write code.
You know, we ought to see a generation of founders here that are just like incredibly capable.
you know, relative to, you know, to what we used to be like.
And, you know, we're starting to see those.
We're starting to see, you know, say, a handful of those.
You know, that's what I'm still waiting for, like, the real conceptual breakthroughs.
Like, I'm still waiting for the, you know, the company where it's like, you know,
it's got 1,000 employees, 99 or bots.
Like, you know, I haven't seen that yet.
And, you know, somebody's going to really figure out how to use this technology to really
not just bring a product to market, but, like, fundamentally change on companies operate.
And I think that's probably, that's probably the next big unlock.
How do you think about an individual's edge around their own proprietary knowledge?
There had been talk with Warren Buffett retiring.
He read something like 100,000 plus earnings transcripts.
He had this incredible recall.
You're often credited with having this incredible recall, and it certainly can give you an edge
in thinking through net new opportunities and decisions.
Do you think that edge remains in a world where all human knowledge is
accessible in a single query or what's your kind of mental model there?
Yeah, so I think it's going to be, I mean, look, I think there's basically like two ways to
really have a differentiated edge, like, in general, right?
There's sort of, you know, just kind of go deeper, go broad.
You know, go deep has kind of become a more and more specialized expert over time.
And, you know, look, there are domains in which that, like, you know, really matters,
you know, biotech and things like, or, you know, by the way, designing, you know,
AI, you know, working on AI foundation models.
Like, that stuff really matters.
The deeper you are, the better.
So there's, you know, certain fields where that really matters.
I think for most fields, though, now with these new tools,
I would probably bet more on basically people who are able to be broad,
which is to say, basically, can you know something about a lot of different,
you know, kind of aspects of life and how the world works?
And then you can use the tool.
You can use the AI to go deep whenever you need to.
But then your job as the human is to basically then, you know,
basically across the domains, across the disciplines.
And look, you see this.
If you talk to any of like the great CEOs, you know, you kind of see this,
which is like the really great CEO.
great tech CEOs.
They're great product people and they're great sales people and they're great marketing people
and they're great legal thinkers and they're great finance people and they're great with
investors and they're great with the press.
Right?
So it's this, it's this sort of multidisciplinary kind of approach and being able to cross domains.
And I don't know, we'll see how good the, you know, we'll see how good the AI gets at that.
Hopefully it gets good at that also.
But, you know, that's that in a lot of way.
You know, the entrepreneur has always kind of had the burden, you know, for somebody who wants
to do something serious.
Like they have to be like that, at least at some extent.
and the best entrepreneurs of the future, I think, will probably be quite skilled at like six or eight things
and then able to kind of cross and combine them.
How do you think about the responsibility of the venture industry broadly to try to influence, you know,
world, you know, outcomes in the world.
I was sort of laughing, you know, less than a month ago, a lot of investors were clearly shifting capital out of the U.S.
and just, you know, yolowing into French bonds and things like that.
venture capitalists obviously didn't do that, right?
But at the same time, there was a high-profile story of a venture capital firm,
you know, investing in a Chinese AI company that we won't mention here.
And it got me thinking around there, you know, if you're operating a hedge fund,
you can go invest wherever you want without a ton of scrutiny, right?
People don't look at that as, you know, finance, if you move assets into some, you know, Chinese market.
It's less of a, yeah, it doesn't feel like you're, you're better.
against your own team in the same way. So I'm curious how you think of the generalized kind of
responsibility of venture capitalists, especially as the sort of AUM has scaled dramatically.
Yeah, it's like actually bend the arrow of progress. Yeah. Yeah, look, the big thing I think I would say
is like we always, we always thought and aspired that we were building things that matter
and that we're going to have an impact on the world. And for a long time, you know,
we were trying to convince people that we were doing that. And they never quite took us seriously.
because it's like, you know, it's like, all right, databases, routers, like, okay, nice, you know, nice guys.
I don't even know what those things are.
You know, even personal computers, like, a thing on my desk, I write letters on it, you know, whatever.
Like, just like tech was never, like, relevant to politics, really.
You know, and all this, I'm talking about, like, between the modern era, 1950s, call it through, like, the 2000s.
And so, you know, and look, you know, generally speaking, like our press coverage was, you know, generally people were like, wow, startups are exciting.
And, you know, when companies succeed, it's great.
And then in the last 10 or 15 years, you know, like if questions like yours, you know,
have started to come up and then, you know, correspondingly just, as you know, like just enormous
amounts of kind of criticism attacks, you know, kind of indictments of, you know, people with all
kinds of points of view on the industry.
I would say, you know, in the beginning, that kind of irritated me because I had gotten
used to the environment where either nobody cared about us or people just had nice things
about us.
What I came to realize is, we're the dog that caught the bus.
Like, we actually now are building things that matter.
Yeah.
Right.
And so, you know, tech now interfaces direct.
you know, when Elon goes into the car market, like, you know, the repercussions of that,
you know, to your point, like on many countries are just gigantic.
And there's, you know, a thousand examples like that that we could give.
And, you know, AI probably being the biggest of all.
And so, you know, look, it worked.
Like the stuff that we do now, the companies that we fund, they really matter.
They really have, you know, really big implications for society and for policy and politics and geopolitics.
And so mainly, I think the responsibility is on us as a firm, as well as, you know, our companies.
Like, we need to go explain ourselves.
you know, we need to go be present in the policy debates.
As you know, like we have a, you know, we have a huge push now into policy and politics
that I never imagined we would have.
By the way, it's something I got wrong.
I never thought we would have that.
And then it became very clear that we need that, you know, kind of for this reason.
So, look, I just think that's part and parcel of like of it working.
Like, we're going to have to do that.
And then the geopolitics, you know, the China thing, I think is probably the most intense
version of that.
You know, maybe that's when we got right.
We just never really did anything in China for a bunch of reasons.
You know, look, and by the way, we'll see.
you know, this is a fluid situation, and you guys,
it's been publicly reported that there, you know, talks underway with China,
so the relationship with China could be better or worse, you know, in six months.
I think that's what everyone wants, yeah.
Yeah, I mean, everyone wants, like, cooperation in general.
Yeah, like, look, it's possible.
Look, I mean, I'll give you my favorite,
and here's my favorite story.
So in 20, I think it was like 2011,
at the time the Obama administration was trying to reestablish,
was trying to reestablish a relationship with Russia.
And there was a famous moment where the Secretary of State, who was this woman named Hillary Clinton,
I don't know, whatever happened to her.
I hear rumors that she then went on to, I don't know, did something in politics.
But she was the Secretary of State, and there's this famous photo where she was on stage with Sergei Lavrov,
who was the Foreign Minister of Russia, her counterpart.
And she brought like a big plastic red button, which was the reset button, right, to reset, you know, warm relations with Russia.
And then what happened was Medvedev, who was the Reset, the Reset Airhorn.
Yeah, exactly.
And then Medvedev, who was the Russian, he was Putin's number two, actually came to Silicon Valley.
And the Secretary of State's office called all around to Silicon Valley saying, please, you guys, roll out the red carpet to Russia.
There are new friends, like, do everything with them, do whatever they want.
You know, please go invest in Russian companies.
Russia's building this new Silicon Valley, see what you can do to support them.
And so it was like, you know, like, it was just like a love fest.
And then, you know, fast forward four years later and, you know, Putin became, you know, Putler, as they say.
And, you know, just, you know, and then, you know, Russia date and like everything that follows.
And so, look, I would just say part of being citizens, I think, is, you know, we're just going to have to navigate through shifting geopolitics.
Our view, and quite honestly, like, our view is just we're going to put ourselves squarely on the side of the United States.
Our, we, I should say, our foreign policy is the United States foreign policy.
If they, you know, if they don't want us to do things in China, they don't.
By the way, if they come to us and they say we should do more, like, we'll look at it at that point.
But, you know, we're trying to be good citizens among everything else.
Yeah, that makes sense.
Talk about the evolution of the A16Z brand.
you guys came out with a new logo and website.
And as always, you're good at getting the attention of the internet.
I was a fan of this.
Yeah, we talked about it on the show.
We liked it.
Yeah, I think it's something that's different and will age very well.
But I wasn't exactly sure, like, what are you trying to say with it?
What are the references?
And even what was the process?
Like, did you pick the color?
I don't know.
Are you in that conversation?
I wouldn't know more about the brand.
Yeah.
So, first of all, you know, I know we got some Twitter controversy on it.
and I just want to thank Kanye West
for drowning that outcome entirely.
Yeah.
Like I don't think we're at the moment.
So, yeah, so that worked out well.
So anyway.
So, yeah, look, so we have this incredible designer, Greg Trousdell.
He's got a team.
They did a fantastic job.
I did.
I worked closely with them on it.
I have no design skills, but I provided a lot of input.
You know, I think the big thing about it is
What is intended to sort of reflect is, like, an embrace of what I think is a broad set of cultural changes that are happening right now.
You know, frankly, you guys are a part of as well, which is this, what I would describe is that, I don't know, 15-year era of, I don't know, like cultural almost shrinkage, everything getting, you know,
you see in the design world was like everything getting like ultra-clean, minimalistic and culturally, everybody getting like very cautious and careful about what they say.
And, you know, with all this kind of censorship and speech control.
and then, you know, this whole thing of everybody needs to feel bad about everything all the time
and everybody needs to feel bad about the country and bad about their, you know, ancestors and bad about this
and, you know, everybody's just miserable all the time.
Like, I just think, like, that whole thing got kind of as, you know, I don't know,
you may call it like puritan, you know, neopuritanism or something.
Totally.
Like, that thing kind of crested in, I don't know, 2012 or 2022.
And, you know, basically in the last three years, I think there's this like renewed sense of energy,
enthusiasm, ambition, you know, achievement.
dynamism.
But like, you know, and again, it's like literally, yeah, we should have nuclear energy.
Yeah, we should have rockets going to Mars.
You know, yeah, we should have these things.
And, you know, that it's good to succeed.
It's good to build businesses.
It's good, it's good to make new things in the world.
You know, and yeah, we should have the thousand, you know, yard tall, you know, shining
colossus on Elcatraz Island.
Yeah, yeah, I was going to ask, my only request is to like make it, make it real.
You know, like, make it the statue of liberty of the West Coast.
Yeah, I'm imagining a massive instantiation of that coin in the office and maybe physical versions.
Not the coin.
Oh, yeah, the actual figure.
True, yeah.
Yeah, we need a monument.
You know, she has a name.
She has a name.
She has a name.
No, what's the name?
Technomedes.
Techno Medes.
I love it.
That's fantastic.
Amazing.
That's great.
All right.
Well, Techno Medes, buy a plot of land, somewhere visible from the golden gate and just, you know, build it.
The mile high, please.
Mile high.
Make it happen.
100%.
Thank you so much for joining.
Thank you for coming on.
Really enjoyed it.
Have fun with the team and LPs.
Cheers.
We'll talk you soon.
Thanks for listening to the A16Z podcast.
If you enjoyed the episode, let us know by leaving a review at rate thispodcast.com slash a 16Z.
We've got more great conversations coming your way.
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