The Best One Yet - đ´ âDate Maxxingâ â Medjool Datesâ surge. Appleâs F1 fashion. Rampâs âThe Officeâ strategy. +Worst Tipping City
Episode Date: October 20, 2025Apple snagged the TV rights to Formula1⌠Because racing is now a luxury fashion product.Ramp just hired the cast from âThe Officeâ... and got the receipts on your most-expensed meal.Date-maxxing... is viral⌠Medjool date sales hit all-time highs because itâs the 1 fruit winning from Climate Change.Plus, we found the worst-tipping city in America (this oneâs awkward)...$AAPLNEWSLETTER:https://tboypod.com/newsletter OUR 2ND SHOW:Want more business storytelling from us? Check our weekly deepdive show, The Best Idea Yet: The untold origin story of the products you're obsessed with. Listen for free to The Best Idea Yet: https://wondery.com/links/the-best-idea-yet/NEW LISTENERSFill out our 2 minute survey: https://qualtricsxm88y5r986q.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_dp1FDYiJgt6lHy6GET ON THE POD: Submit a shoutout or fact: https://tboypod.com/shoutouts SOCIALS:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tboypod TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@tboypodYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@tboypod Linkedin (Nick): https://www.linkedin.com/in/nicolas-martell/Linkedin (Jack): https://www.linkedin.com/in/jack-crivici-kramer/Anything else: https://tboypod.com/ About Us: The daily pop-biz news show making todayâs top stories your business. Formerly known as Robinhood Snacks, The Best One Yet is hosted by Jack Crivici-Kramer & Nick Martell. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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This is Nick.
This is Jack.
Welcome back.
It is Monday, October 20th.
And today's pod is the best one yet.
This is a T-boy.
The top three pop business news stories you need to know today.
Well, here we are with everyone's favorite business news show.
Jack, our stories are so good today.
Should we just get into it?
For our first story, F-1 should rebrand to iRacing
because Apple just snag the TV rights to Formula One.
Apple is paying $700 million for F-1 because this,
is a fashion statement.
For our second story, it's the hottest selling fruit in America right now.
Dates.
America is date maxing right now, and they're getting an assist, shockingly, from climate change.
And our third and final story is Ramp.
It's a $23 billion startup selling business credit cards and expense management.
But Ramp just hired a cast member from the office as CFO, and their blog is a must read.
It's not Dwight Shrew.
No, no, no.
But we'll explain more.
If you know, you know.
But yeties, before we hit that wonderful mix of stories.
Oh, what a mix of stories to start the week.
Love the pre-Holourine week, Jack.
We hope you had a fun night or two this past weekend.
Full disclosure, Jack, we went out to Sorrel, sat at the bar.
Lovely.
Love that place.
I went to Vermont's finest vineyard.
Yes, we can grow grapes here in Vermont.
Bit of an oxymoron, but story for another pot.
In the meantime, the biggest question we must all be asking is, how much did you tip?
The bigger question, which city?
has the best tippers. Okay, Jack, even bigger question, which city has the worst tippers? Because yet he's
tipping has become one of the most controversial topics in this economy. Yeah, because in this economy,
tipflation, oh, you are tip feeling it right now. There was tip creep early in 2020, 2021, then we had tip fatigue
in 2022, 2023. Trump's big campaign proposal last year, no taxes on the tips. But back to the question,
which city has the top tippers? And Jack, the answer, please.
Denver, Colorado. Yeah, it's Denver. The average tip is a mile high, 21.2% over in Denver.
The second top tippers is Austin, Texas at 21.1% tips. Then you got Seattle, Miami,
Houston, rounding out the top five with an average tip over a nice 20%. But now the awkward part.
I knew we were going there, Jack. We're going to shame the bottom half of the tipping totem pole.
Jack, New York, the average tip? 19.9%. Chicago, what are we talking about?
Lovely Los Angeles?
19% even.
We're starting to pick up on a little inverse correlation here, aren't we, my friend?
The higher the rent in the city, the lower the people tip there.
In fact, can you guess the worst tipping city in America right now, Besties?
It's the only one with 18 at the beginning.
Well, because it is T-Boy Trivia Monday, Jack and I are going to let you guess before we tell you that final answer.
And there's actually a reason it'll make sense when we tell you.
Yeah, we'll reveal it at the end of today's podcast.
If you guess it right, we may send you a tip.
Drop your Venmo handle in the comments.
Yeah, we got you on this one.
Jack, three stories.
Let's hit a baby.
Fifteen years before this song,
two boys from the Northeast met in the dorm.
They had an idea to cause a cultural storm.
It's the best one yet, but the best is a norm.
Jack, you need to practice.
50% that's a fat tip.
Tea Boy City on your at list.
If you know, you know, because we're ready to go.
We can't wait no more.
So just start the show.
First, a quick word from our sponsor.
Our first story.
Apple bought the exclusive TV rights to Formula One.
Five years, $700 million.
Why?
Not to turn a profit, but to shower Apple's brand in F1 Champagne.
Now, yeties, let's start with some context.
The best thing that could happen to Apple is if this AI thing turns out to be a huge bubble.
Yeah, they'd be like, see, that's why we didn't invest in AI.
Apple, they're not dropping cash in AI startups or AI stars like Zuckus. They're dropping cash right now on Ferraris.
Starting in 2026, Formula One car racing is going to move from ESPN to Apple TV.
Hey, Siri, star your engines. And Apple announced this the day before the Austin Grand Prix down in Texas.
$140 million a year for this deal. That is way more than the $85 million a year that ESPN was paying for the cars.
Now, back in 2018, Americans didn't even know F1.
Like, we didn't know a shoemaker from a shoe.
A chassis? Excuse me?
Nick, in 2018, ESPN was allowed to broadcast F1 for free.
F1 was that desperate for America's attention.
Sit down, stand up, and buckle up again.
But now, just seven years later, F1 has a $700 million deal with America's most prestigious tech company.
Because while OpenAI, Microsoft, and Google are obsessed with that.
that whole AI thing, Tim Cook would rather be partying in a Bugatti over in Monaco.
And Nick, this is the second time a big sports league has gone exclusive to streaming in America.
You know the first time that happened?
Soccer with Major League Soccer.
And who was that deal with, Jack?
Also with Apple.
That's right, besties.
When that deal happened, Jack and I called it the Ted Lasso strategy.
This time, we're calling it the Sunny Hayes strategy.
And here's why. Because when Apple TV acquired the rights to Major League Soccer in 2022, they were riding on two Ted Lasso Emmy Awards.
Here was the playbook. Apple made a fictional show about soccer to create demand for a real soccer TV deal.
And you know what? Three years later, we're kind of seeing the same thing right now with racing.
Apple made a fictional race car driver in Brad Pitt.
Yes. Get us ready for real race car driving with an F1 TV deal.
Because Apple knows that for streaming to be a viable business model, nothing drives eyeballs like live sports.
It's the holy grail of TV. Yes, it is. But Apple's not looking for mainstream sports appeal,
so they didn't make bids on the NFL or the NBA.
One second, Jack, hold my Louis Vuitton, because Apple... Apple's looking for luxury appeal.
And that's why Tim Cook just bought F1 like it was a prodig bag.
So, Jack, what's the takeaway for our buddies over at Apple? Apple TV is just a hand-
bag. It's there to make the rest of Apple look fancy.
Yeah, these, let's talk numbers here. Apple makes $100 billion in annual profit.
Streaming profits, that would be just a drop in the bucket comparison.
Even if they were as successful as Netflix, those streaming profits would not move the needle
at Apple. No, no, no, no, that's why the strategy of Apple TV isn't to make a profit. It's there
to elevate the Apple brand. Look at their TV shows. They're all prestige television. Totally.
The Morning Show, Ted Lassow, Severance,
the goal is to compete with HBO
for the most Emmy Awards.
Jack, how about the movies?
Also, highbrow.
They're looking for Oscars over at Apple,
not box office numbers.
And it's the same with Apple TV's sports division.
American soccer fans,
they're more likely to be Kendall Roy
than Larry the Cable guy.
I think Kendall Roy did buy a soccer team
at one point in succession, right?
Yeah, in Formula One,
they don't do tailgates and chicken wings.
They do VIP sections and champagne.
Because Al-Lah besties,
and Apple's media strategy is to make the rest.
of the company feel premium.
Like a luxury accessory hanging over your shoulder.
For our second story, the hottest produce in America right now, it's dates.
The date fruit is selling at all-time high prices and all-time high volumes across the country.
And the Majuel Date is a fascinating rule breaker when it comes to commodities.
And we actually track down the family tree that's started at all.
But besties, if we're going to tell this,
story. I mean, Jack, every time Alex has been pregnant, what gift have Molly and I sent you guys?
What gift of Molly and I sent you guys? A box of due dates. Yeah, we send you guys due dates.
Why is that? You have this woo-woo theory that dates induce childbirth, which is hilarious.
It's a scientific thing. Yeties, we're not talking dinner dates here. We're not talking romantic dates.
And we're not talking calendar dates. We're talking edible dates. Dates, the wrinkly brown, plump,
sugary fiber fruits. Yeah, they kind of look like a giant raisin, but they taste like a caramel
baby. Split it in half, put some peanut butter in there. It's called Nature's Snickers Bar.
And here's the surprise. Google searches for dates just hit a 20-year high. What about sales?
Those are up 30% in the last year in America after jumping 19% the year before.
Now, Besties, Jack and I call this trend or fad date date, date maxing. And it is powered by one
particular type of date. The Majuel date. Those are the moist ones. Those are the ones you want to
40% of all date sales right now are specifically Majuel dates.
The Majul is the biggest date and the tastiest date.
It's the filet mignon for this fruit.
It's the Cadillac of dates.
There is some sugary junk in that trunk, Jack.
Okay.
It is shocking that all that sweetness is natural.
I haven't smoked in my dentist, but so far so good.
But besties, here's what Jack and I find fascinating about this story.
There is one surprise reason Americans have become date demanding deal.
as these days. Dates are the rare fruit benefiting from climate change. True story, we'll get into it in a
sec. But first, dates are also piggybacking on the protein trend right now. That's right. The number three
ingredient in a date after carbs and fiber is protein. Yeah, high fiber and protein. That's why dates are the
key ingredient in RX bars and Lara bars that you're seen on grocery stores. That's why I like everything
surging in the world. TikTok is part of the reason. There's recipes for at-home protein
bars that you need dates to create. Okay, so as the context we sprinkled on, this protein moment is
driving date demand. But at the same time, climate change is driving date supply. As one newspaper we
found put it, heat waves are called a blessing for these desert loving date palms in America.
Side note, dates grow on palm trees. And when they grow on the tree, they look like gigantic
grapes. And apparently these giant grape-like looking dates have a thirst for
heat. I couldn't believe when Nick told me this next statistic. The date palm trees of the southwest of
the United States, they all descend from 11 original imported trees from the Middle East. Isn't that wild?
11 trees brought in from Morocco a hundred years ago are the source for pretty much all our dates in
America. Those are the ancestor trees of the U.S. date growing industry. So as climate change makes
Phoenix feel more like Kuwait, dates are digging in with record yields. But what really really is,
fascinates us as business guys, is that fruits are a commodity. There's no difference when you take
one fruit or another fruit. They're all the same. Like oil and gold, fruit is typically treated as a
commodity. The logo doesn't matter. The quality is always the same. And yet with dates, it's different.
Why? The date industry is filled with brands. We didn't know why. So we whipped up this takeaway.
Jack. What's the takeaway for our buddies digging on dates? The date industry has turned a commodity
into a lifestyle.
Yeties, you may have noticed at your local grocery store
that there are a bunch of different date brands on the shelf.
There's a brand called Date Better.
There's Gato Dates, Julie's Dates, and Meloducco dates.
Each of these are farms with their own CPG-style packaging and logo.
Okay, but that's just not the case with any other produce.
It only seems to be the case with the date.
The last company I mentioned, Meloducco,
they sell a date subscription.
So why are dates the only fruit or vegetable don?
Dominated by brands?
Because they all treat the date like a lifestyle product.
Not a food and indulgence.
They're positioned less as a fruit, more like chocolate,
because it's all the same thing, chocolate, cocoa, sugar, maybe a little bit of milk.
But chocolate is dominated by brands, and dates are trying to do the same thing.
By shifting the purpose from utility to treat, the date industry can support multiple brands.
And like I'm willing to pay more for Ritter Chocolate,
I'm willing to pay more for Meloducco dates because it's a lifestyle statement.
Now a quick word from our sponsor.
For our third and final story, Ramp, an enterprise software company just hired Kevin from the office as their CFO.
Ramp is everywhere, though, because their expense reports are now viral economic data.
Ah, Ramp.
Yeties, you may have seen their commercials on TV.
Love finance, that's their slogan.
Based in New York City's Flatiron District, the business model is,
boring. They help companies manage their expenses. Which is kind of like what Kevin did. You know,
the fictional, chilly-loving character from that famous comedy, The Office. Kevin, Oscar, and Angela.
They were like the finance department, right? Frank from Finance loved it. Well, last weekend,
he's Ramp hired that actor, Brian Baumgartner to be their CFO as a funny little gag.
Here was the stunt. They hired the character from the office known as Kevin and put him in the
flat iron building, a big, like, high traffic pedestrian area of New York City for a public
display to watch him struggle to process expense reports. A live scoreboard showing how many expense
reports a ramp was processing, which was millions, versus Kevin from the office, who could only
produce 84 in his full workday. Eighty-four to be exact. And the marketing message here, what was it,
Jack, loud and clear. Ramp software will manage your company's expense reports way better than your
finance department can. So besties, that was last week. Ramp, they've hit a billion dollars in annual
revenue. They're now a $23 billion valued company on that value proposition. That's three lifts
of valuation right there. But here's what we really find fascinating about Ramp. Despite their
boring back office business model, Ramp's brand is known way beyond finance departments.
Exactly. Ramp competes with Brex, Expensify, Bill.com, but only Ramp has a cultural relevance as
as Cardi B. Now, part of it is their success in traditional marketing. Ramp spends more marketing
budget than other B2B software arrivals to. Have you Google their competitor, Brax? It's Ramp
who shows up as the number one in Google searches because they paid Google. But the real
savvy marketing is in Ramp's blog. They creatively publish the data that go through their systems
in ways that are really interesting. Because Ramp has turned your company's expense
spending into viral content for everybody to see.
More viral, Nick, than Kevin's famous chili.
Even Dwight Shrew would agree with that one.
So Jack, what's the takeaway for our buddies over at Ramp?
Ramp's blog has replaced the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Now, Yeties, Jack and I were aware of Ramp way before they hired Kevin from the office as their
CFO for this week-long gag.
Yet he's early adopters of San Francisco and New York tech startups, they tend to be other
San Francisco and New York tech startups. So Ramp has data right now on how tech startup workers are
spending their money. And they publish that data in really interesting blog posts. For example,
Ramp used your expense reports to publish a blog post about alcohol consumption. It turns out,
according to Ramp data, that Washington, D.C., Boston, and San Francisco workers are drinking less
alcohol than the last two years. But New York, Dallas, and Houston workers are drinking more alcohol.
That's interesting. Oh, what say you're curious about the list of most expensed restaurants in San Francisco?
Ramp knows, so they publish that data.
And Nick's favorite restaurant, Spruce, is number five in San Francisco.
Another example, Ramp also went viral for a report titled San Francisco Tech now works on Saturdays.
Because Ramp had data that San Francisco tech workers were expensing DoorDash orders on Saturday.
Because Sam Altman made them come into the office.
Vesdi's Ramp, they have an economic lab with literal economists, but they turned it into a marketing weapon.
And with the U.S. government shut down right now, Ramp's fascinating finance blog has replaced the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Jack, could you whip up the takeaways for us to kick off the week?
Apple TV is the new exclusive home of Formula One in the United States for the next five years.
Apple TV, it's just a handbag. It's there to make the rest of Apple look fancy.
our second story, dates are more popular in America than ever. They're the Palantir stock of produce.
Why are there date brands? Well, it's because we treat dates like candy, not a commodity.
And our third and final story is Ramp. It's a $23 billion B2B software company whose brand punches
way above its weight. Because Ramp strategically turned our spending data into viral blog posts.
But Yeties, this pod's not over yet. Here's what else you need to know today. First,
Netflix's K-pop Demon Hunters is so popular, it's going to retroactively go to the big screen.
Here's the story. AMC, which is struggling now that it's not a meme stock anymore, is partnering with Netflix.
It starts Halloween weekend. K-pop demon hunters will be in 400 AMC theaters.
And if Spirit Halloween didn't do a deal for K-pop demon hunter costumes, a huge mistake.
Huge mistake.
And second, the reason that stocks took a pause last week, well, the answer is,
It all started when a big auto supply company suddenly went bankrupt. And one bank, Jeffries,
is set to lose $750 million from that one company. That's when Jamie Diamond, the head of J.P.
Morgan Chase, said, where there's one cockroach, there's usually many more. And that's where the
risk in finance comes in of contagion. Where there's one bad bank, like a cockroach, there may be many
bad banks. And finally, Mr. Beast filed a trademark for, and I quote,
Mr. Beast Financial.
That's right, according to a pitch deck seen by Business Insider, Mr. Beast may launch a bank, baby.
The YouTube creator does have $500 million in annual revenue this year.
And he does love to do things differently.
So if he gave away $10 to 10 million people, he would do it all from a helicopter.
With an ATM card.
Now, time for the best fact yet, which today is an answer to our T-Boy trivia, we asked you at the beginning of the show.
What is the worst tipping city in the United States?
Okay, Jack, what is the answer to worst tipping city?
San Francisco.
SF, the only major city in America with an average tip below 19%.
It's 18.77% to be specific.
Okay, now in defense, to sprinkle on some context, because it just went out in San Francisco last weekend.
There are some reasons for this.
Like we said, the higher the rent in the city, the lower the tips that people can afford.
But also, there's a policy reason here.
San Francisco restaurants with staff over 20 people have to offer some kind of health care to their workers.
And many restaurants pass off that cost to the consumer with a fee around 5%.
Yeah, so if you go out for dinner at a San Francisco restaurant, there's also maybe a 5% fee for health care on the bill.
So the real tip is basically the tip plus the 5%.
So 18.77% plus 5%.
You could argue San Francisco is actually generous, not stingy.
San Francisco may be the best tipper in America.
I would make that case.
We'll roll with it.
We'll add them all up.
Yeties, you look fantastic today.
And if you want to tip Jack and me,
we're not going to ask for your money.
We would never do that.
But we would ask you for a five-star review.
That's about as good a tip as you can give.
What's the difference between tip and charity?
Existential question.
Story for another pod, Jack.
In the meantime, we'd love to see your ratings and reviews.
Jack and I read all of them.
Honestly, it makes our day.
And as always, we'll see you tomorrow.
Before we go, a happy birthday to legendary Yeti, London Shang over in lovely New York City.
And happy birthday to Lauren, who's celebrating at a blues game in St. Louis, Missouri.
And Jack, a shout out to Yeti Maximilian, a legendary Yeti up from the peninsula.
I ran into him on the Embarcadero, great guy.
Congratulations to Samira Agarwal in San Francisco, who just got a new job at Asset Mark as the chief of staff.
Samira, the best of the besties.
She's also in our pop-biz Slack channel.
Congratulations, Samira.
And to all those Yeti celebrating Diwali today, we wish you a bright and happy fest.
Celebrate.
This is Jack.
I own stock of Netflix and Nick and I both on stock of Apple.
Oh, and I own stock of Lyft, too.
