The Bulwark Podcast - Mark Cuban: Character Is Destiny
Episode Date: June 20, 2025What if it had been a Harris-Cuban ticket in 2024? Well, it turns out the billionaire entrepreneur had been seriously considered for the VP slot—and we can all dream of a potentially different outco...me in the election. Meanwhile, the current guy in the Oval Office is failing spectacularly at the number one job of a president: to reduce the stress of the American people, and to communicate trust and hope. Plus, the Dems need to market their policies better, why much of the business community capitulates to Trump, a debate over AI, is Thiel trying to undermine the dollar, meme coins are the scum of the earth, Bluesky needs to let people fight—and the joy of shooting hoops with the kids. Mark Cuban joins Tim Miller for the weekend pod. show notes Mark's website The Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drug Company Tim's playlist
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Hello and welcome to the Bullwerge Podcast.
I'm your host, Tim Miller.
Delighted to finally welcome an entrepreneur and investor, film producer, former owner
of the Dallas Mavericks, Boo.
He just wrapped the final season of Shark Tank.
It's Mark Cuban.
How you doing, man?
Good, Tim.
How are you doing?
I'm doing pretty well, you know, with the obvious caveats applying.
The nuggets aren't in the finals tonight.
Well, I guess we're taping this on Thursday.
So the finals might be over by the time people hear this tomorrow afternoon.
And, uh, you know, the world has gone mad, but my life's good.
How about you?
You know, same, right?
I mean, the Mavs aren't in the finals.
Nothing else would matter, right?
What else matters?
You got the number one pick.
All right.
I've got so much on a book your brain on in limited time.
So we'll just try to move through it all.
I guess since we're doing the Never Trumper podcast, I just, I kind of
want to start with the Trump report card from you.
I mean, you were, you were for Kamala and for Hillary, but you try to be a
straight shooter, which I appreciate, you know, you'll, you'll give them a,
you'll give them something.
I don't like to hand it to them.
You know what I mean?
Like I'm reluctant, I'm reluctant to be, it's like that old drill meme.
Uh, I'm issuing a correction.
You don't got to hand it to the terror group.
ISIL.
I feel that way about Trump, but, but how about, how about you?
How, what kind of report card would you give them right now, just across economy, foreign affairs, et cetera?
Well, so when I was campaigning for Kamala, we said we were going to shut down the border
effectively, right? And we talked about how the new plans from Biden had reduced the numbers
so that they were lower than Trump in his final month, et cetera. He's done it. He's
shut down the border, you know?
And so he deserves credit for that.
He said he was going to change the conversation on DEI.
I don't think he understands what DEI is.
And so I don't know how much he's actually changed
other than a lot of copypasta and search and replace.
And obviously there's been times when, you know,
there's been economic impact
where programs have had to be shut
down, but I think generally across the country, I don't think he's had dramatic changes on
corporations, but he's done what he said he's going to do.
So that's two.
Yeah.
No Harvey Milk on the boat anymore.
Sorry, Harvey.
Yeah.
And so third, I say deportations.
He's done it wrong, but he's done it. I think we get confused a little
bit on deportations because he puts everything on tape and he makes everything an event,
which amplifies it. But at least the last numbers I saw, he wasn't deporting as many
people as Joe Biden.
I think that's changing a little bit the last couple of weeks.
Well, I think he's tried to make it seem like it's changed, right? And he's certainly done
a lot of high profile attempts at deportations, for sure. But then he walked it back. I mean,
where the greatest numbers were, you know, farm hands, you know, working in service industry.
The deportation thing is very important to me. So I just like, part of that is because
Joe Biden gets credit for like, he didn't shut down the border the first three years,
right? So the people, some people are coming across the border,
then they're getting turned right back around.
So that's a one.
Right, of course.
You know, that counts as a one.
No, I understand the counting thing, right?
And so that number, right?
So now Trump has fewer, but he's doing more of like
the raids of like random businesses
and people that have worked here a long time.
So no, look, when I was out there for Kamala
and I talked to businesses, and I would say,
do you want somebody walking in the door,
asking you for all your I-9s, and then going in and then taking those phone numbers and showing up at people's
homes and we're going to have Elian Gonzalez day in and day out. So he said he was going
to do that and he's done it. I don't say that I'm agreeing with it, but he's doing it. Right.
And I think he's made a lot of mistakes in his approach, et cetera. But then again, he walked it back and the numbers show at least prior to that,
that he wasn't even hitting Biden numbers,
which obviously freaks Stephen Miller out a lot. So that's three.
Number four is what he's done on crypto and with the SEC.
And I'll separate those two, right? Crypto put aside his grift, right?
That's ridiculous. The Trump mean coin, like literally,
when that Trump mean coin came out, I
emailed the CEO and the people I knew at Coinbase and said, I was embarrassed
to be a customer of Coinbase because they were trading it.
He's allowed to do a mean coin, more power to them, right?
The sponsor of the military parade, you mean Coinbase?
Yeah, those guys.
The official sponsor of the military parade.
Yeah.
You know, you got to kiss up to the audience of one.
But that said, I am a fan of crypto and I think there is utility for it.
But how Trump has done it with the meme coin is ridiculous.
That's up for A, I guess.
For B is the SEC.
The SEC was a mess.
And you know, I truly believe Gary Gensler cost comma of the election, but that's a different
conversation.
But just generally, the way the SEC has historically done business, and look, they came after me
for insider trading.
I beat them in about three hours in a trial, literally in the time it took for lunch.
That was it.
But their whole spiel has been, you litigate to regulate, meaning you don't tell anybody
what the rules are, but if they believe you broke the rules, then they're going to sue you anyway, which is wrong.
And this guy who's, and Kamala, when I was out campaigning with her and with talking
to Doug about it too, Kamala is a smart lawyer and we had this conversation.
You need bright line rules in the SEC so people know what they can and can't do when it comes
to starting or running any business.
Bright line rules, I think, will reduce the number of infractions and lawsuits because
people know what they can't do.
The new approach, that's what they're doing.
So those are his wins, in my point.
All right.
Let's hear about the negatives.
Where do you give them some Ls?
Oh my God.
Just no leadership, no ability to make a decision, still listens to the last person he talked to, is
excluded from the big boy conversations.
I mean, the list is long.
Economics.
How about your wheelhouse?
I mean, he doesn't understand tariffs, but you know.
I just look at it whole picture.
I know what you're doing is he's putting together this bill on the hill that's going to raise
interest.
I think this is like, appreciate it.
And I wonder your take on this because because the first term, he did some pretty traditional Republican economics and took a
lot of credit for it and pretend like it was his magic business apprentice skills, but it was like
kind of the same policies that Mark Jebb would have done, right? This time it's different and
the environment's different because of interest rates and a bunch of other stuff globally. So,
we've got a debt busting bill that's going to increase everybody's interest rates combined
with tariffs that is going to increase everybody's costs, combined with
deportations and a culture of fear that is going to affect the workforce. You combine all that
shit together and I mean, it feels kind of status quo-y to buy it and accept it in certain industries
like right now in people's lives every day, but I think it's going to start feeling worse for people
not too long from now.
But already is starting to feel worse, right?
There's two economies in the United States right now.
There's all the small towns and cities and states, they're getting torched.
Everything that they do, you know, forgotten man, you mean, the forgotten man, exactly.
Yeah, the real people that, you know, working on farms, the
people who do beef, you know, that do cattle in Nebraska, all the states that have to balance
their budget now find themselves short because of all the Doge cuts or all the office closings
or the people that are laid off. They're all in deep shit. Like one of my fun pastimes
is to look at small town newspapers. So like I'll get the the Parkersburg Sentinel,
I forget what it's called. And I'll just go reading through it because they'll write about
the things that are impacting their local community. And I want to understand where
the impact that Doge is having, or is not having just to check my whole card. And literally,
you know, the Daughters of American Revolution Museum type thing, that money that they got
from the states, gone, right? The buildings
that housed, you know, social security or, you know, in Parkersburg, West Virginia, it's a town
of 29,000. And, you know, there's the treasury group there that has 2000 employees and I don't,
you know, at least 125 have been fired. But all these small towns, particularly red towns,
are decimated and
it's only going to get worse. And I think they're going to have the hardest time with
all the economics. And even from a terrorist perspective, you know, when something goes
up in cost and you have to ship it to a small town, it's a lot more expensive to ship it
to a small town. So they get double whammy. Whereas the blue towns that are the bigger,
more urban and consolidated cities, they're
going to get hit less. New York, LA, right? They'll have an impact there, but it's not
going to be nearly as bad as the small towns.
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wine for $39.99. I want to do a little bit of going back, unfortunately. You mentioned Kamala
a couple of times as if you were like,
you were in the room and so I'm going to start here.
We're going to do just a little gossip at first.
There was some green room gossip at MSNBC.
You ready for this?
Uh-huh.
I wouldn't tell you this, but it wasn't like pretty good.
Like somebody I kind of trust said that they asked you to send in VP vetting
papers and you said, no, the list would be too long.
Is that true?
Yeah.
It is true.
Yeah. Why didn't you consider, I mean, you ended be too long. Is that true? Yeah. It is true. Yeah.
Why didn't you consider, I mean, you ended up out there campaigning with her, advising her. Yeah. The second part of that, my response was, I'm not very good as the number two person.
And so the last thing we need is me telling Kamala, you know, the president that, no,
that's a dumb idea, right? And I'm not real good at the shaking hands and kissing babies either.
All right. Well, I don't know about that. I was talking to Pete Buttigieg a couple of
weeks ago and I was like, I want to give you a time machine. We're going to go back in
a DeLorean, like, what can we do different? So I want to ask you that same question, but
also in the context like, if it was you instead of Tim Walls, who the hell knows? I don't
know. It feels maybe different. It feels maybe different.
I mean, obviously it would have been different. My personality is completely different than Tim's.
My experiences, my backgrounds are completely different. I think I cut through the shit more
directly. I'm not a politician. And so it would have been different, but it would have been awful.
She would have fired me within six days.
It would have been better than present situation.
Yes, it's true. But you know, I really thought she was going to win either way.
Here's what I want to pick on that.
And I know you don't want the clip here.
You're like, we would have won if Mark Cuban was VP.
And I get that.
And I don't even know if I believe that, but maybe I think it would have been meaningfully
different in a way that like picking Josh Shapiro or whatever wouldn't have been meaningfully
different in a way that's kind of hard to predict.
But I was listening to you today with my man, Theo Vaughn, my fellow Louisiana podcaster.
My guy. And you did two hours with this dude to predict. But I was listening to you today with my man Theo Vaughn, my fellow Louisiana
podcaster.
My guy, yeah.
And you did two hours with this dude.
Yeah.
And I listened to all of it on 2X speed and I'm like...
What's the most crazy experience ever, because Theo at 1X speed is crazy.
Yeah, it's wild. He's like asking about porn and gay stuff and then you get into politics
and he's all over the map. But at the end of the two hours, it's still hard for me to understand why he's for Trump. There's
no real substance to this thing. He's gangster. He's gangster, baby. That's what he said, right?
Yeah. Yeah, he's vibes. He's gangster. But look, most people just want to live their life.
They want to get up in the morning with a smile and not be stressed. In my mind, the number one job of any candidate, and this is where Trump has spectacularly failed,
the number one job of any president could be to reduce the stress of the people of the
country.
Well, that's not working so far.
At least for me.
No.
Look, there's only one thing we all share, and that's our president.
Everything else is unique to us, or unique
in a thousand different ways, but the president is the one thing we all share. And having
somebody who communicates trust and hope and reduces people's stress is critical. But the
point being is relating it back to Theo, and it's not his job to think about all that shit.
They're not going to think pragmatically
about what's best for me and what's best for the country. And that's what the Democrats have to
learn. People just want to get through shit and get to the game. Like, who's going to win tonight?
Like, am I going out to get drunk? Where are my boys at tonight? Who's playing who and what's
the spread? Yeah. We're going to talk about how gay the Roman Empire was, you know? And like,
whether if you get
rich enough, you get bored with straight sex, whatever other random shitty ones talk to
you about.
Here's the thing though, and I am actually, I'm not critical of Theo.
I wish we lived in a world where every single person with a platform like thought a little
bit more deeply about policy and you know, I've had chances to meet him.
To not go to, yeah.
Yeah, I wish that, but we don't.
We live in the world we live in.
And like the thing that's actually important about that observation you just made is that
like, I came away from that thinking like, basically, he just wanted a guy that wasn't
a, like, he's not ideological.
A lot of the Democrats look at all of that and they're like, they're racist, they're
conservative, we're not gettable.
And like this dude, like, it really much came down to, he didn't want somebody that was
a politician, Trump's
vibes are a little more gangster, he doesn't like getting his finger wagged at, and like,
that might be shallow, but like, that's also gettable.
That makes them gettable.
And so that's why I'm like, if Cuban was on that ticket, they're gettable, right?
They're all gettable, right?
Look, Rogan, Theo, the Pauls, you know, the NELT boys, all that Rogan I've been on, they want to talk about
sports.
They want to talk about girls.
They want to talk about getting fucked up.
They want to talk about gambling, right?
They don't want to talk about politics.
99% of people in this country do not want to talk about politics on a day to day basis.
And in fact, they're trying to get away from it.
So if you're going to try to connect to them, you've got to connect to them on a human level. You can't talk ideologies.
You can't ask for ideological purity. You can't extrapolate every single piece of shit
that happens and say, now this is going to happen all the time everywhere. That's not
how most people think.
Yeah. And this is the part that makes me want to pull my hair out about them though. Because
when you get to the policy, it's like, most of them are for like Bernie healthcare
stuff, totally vibing with your cost plus drugs reform stuff, which we'll talk about,
against the Iran war that Trump might be getting us into right now.
Right?
And so like on policy stuff, like on immigration stuff, they're pretty reasonable.
What does that mean?
It means we don't know how to sell. Well, I told this to Kamala, I told it to Tim, I told it to the people around Kamala.
Our problem isn't our policies.
Our problem is how do we sell them, right?
How do we make people feel comfortable with what we believe so that they will at least
absorb it and understand that there's, you know, that there's something in it for them.
It's just like our lives that we live on a day-to-day basis.
The things that we eat, the things that we,
how we look at our health have all changed.
They changed and over time, these things have been
communicated and sold to us in different ways
and we've evolved.
The Democrats have not evolved.
Republicans have evolved.
There is no more Republican
Party.
It's the Trump family business.
And Trump has always been a salesperson.
And Trump understands that if you make people feel envious of some other group, and then
in turn you shit on that other group that they're envious of, you can sell them pretty
much anything.
Okay.
So there's another group of people you hang with that I do have a little more contempt
for than the Theos of the world and that's the rich guys.
I don't hang with motherfucking rich guys.
You don't?
Okay.
Well, whatever.
You know, rich guys better than me.
I don't get to talk to rich guys.
You talk to rich guys sometimes, at least if you don't hang with them.
You at least, you know, you at least hear from them.
Like a lot of what you guys do, you know, in an investing class and all that is
it's risk assessment,
right?
There's risk assessment as a central part of this.
And I just for the life of me can still not wrap my head around the failed risk assessment
from these guys.
On Trump versus Biden slash Trump.
Okay, I'll explain it exactly.
So even when I was out there trying to talk about cost plus drugs and I went to the White House and
I met with Ron Klain a little bit for a few minutes and then I wanted to meet with Biden,
he wouldn't meet with me. I wouldn't say he wouldn't, he couldn't. Maybe he just couldn't.
Yeah.
Put me aside. Maybe I don't rank, right?
That's crazy.
But every single business person that I've spoken to said the same thing,
business person that I've spoken to said the same thing, that they wanted to get time with Biden and couldn't do it.
And whether it was about AI, whether it was about crypto, whether it was about other businesses,
even Elon, when they were talking about EVs, he couldn't get in the room.
So their first initial response is, this guy doesn't like us.
So then the question comes, Biden or Kamala versus Trump, right?
The response as it applies to Trump because I was like, I know this guy, right?
I did a podcast with Vivek where I said Vivek this guy underpaid invoices. Would you ever underpay invoices?
No, this guy ripped people off.
Vivek might, but okay, that's neither of them.
I may not agree with him policy-wise, but he's not like that.
But in any event, I use the example because that's when not long after the trials in New
York were happening and Michael Cohen was talking about how Trump underpaid invoices
and he was proud of Michael when he did the same thing.
I'm like, I thought when Michael said that shit, maybe, you know, when he'd have his, you know, little standup press conference after the each day's hearing that he would say,
of course I paid everybody. No, right? All these guys, all these business guys,
I would say character is destiny. Character is destiny. This is what you're going to get.
And they're like, they would always go back to his first term, but he didn't do any of these
things in the first term. He didn't do this, this, this, this, and this. And we have no reason to expect
that he would change dramatically and do anything differently than the first term. Obviously,
that was wrong, but that was their logic.
That was not satisfying to me. It might be true, but it wasn't satisfying. It's like,
oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, okay. Oh, oh, Biden won't meet with me. Oh, I'm a master of the internet. Okay, well let me give you another perspective.
Biden won't meet with me.
Trump's a moron.
If Trump walked into any of those guys' boardrooms 10 years ago and was like,
will you give me $50 million?
He would have been laughed out of.
Mark Andresen would have laughed him out of the office.
But let's take it one step further, right?
So let's talk about them showing up at the inauguration and giving all that money.
Why?
Right.
And I'm going to tell you exactly why.
We are in a zero sum game with artificial intelligence.
These companies, these five, six, seven companies are spending 60 to a hundred billion dollars
a year so that they could potentially win AI.
You know who had no interest in talking about that or dealing with that?
Joe Biden.
I tried to get Omelette more pushing that and she's dead, but by that time it was already too
late. They were already all in. And so if you're in a position, Tim, where you just spent 60 to 100
billion dollars and the requirement so that one guy with one pen can't fuck you over and end that 60 to 100 billion dollars is you have to kiss the ring
If the Democratic Party said you know what we've got this asshole
Republican he'll switch if Tim Miller goes and kisses the ring and shows up at you know, you're doing it
You know, it's a zero-sum. Well, I'm not doing it. I've got a great life at my home in New Orleans
I hear you most people are doing a little studio No, but you know what I'm saying though, right?
Because it is a zero sum game for them.
I want to get to the, I think next is literally the next thing on my list, but I just want
to push back on one more element of it.
Okay.
I don't agree with it or endorse it, but I get it in the period between him winning and
inauguration day.
Again, that last two months though, it's just like you look at this guy, I mean, forget
going into Andreessen Horowitz. If he showed up on Shark Tank for a crossover episode.
Oh, it'd be over.
It'd be over.
It's just like, this is ridiculous.
Like the downside risk, the tail risk of giving him, and imagine when he's 82.
But what are you going to do?
How do you change it?
Okay, they could have done what you did.
How do you change it?
I guess this is my question.
Why is it just, I literally would say this to Nicole Wallace would be off air, and I'd
be like, why is it Liz Cheney and Mark Cuban and you and me? Like where
is everybody else? Why didn't they do anything?
I don't need anything from them. You know, I mean, they literally have hundreds of billions
of dollars at risk. The future of their companies that they've spent their entire lives building
is at risk. That's why.
All right. You're kinder to them than I am, which is nice. That's a good instinct.
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This is another thing you're more optimistic about than me.
There's an alarming AI story I want to get to, but I just, I want you to do a bull pitch for me on AI first before I get to the alarming stuff.
I'll tell you what I tell every kid. I wish I was 16 because the tools that AI provide any 13, 14,
15, 16, 20, 25, 30 year old kid to go out and start a business are amazing. That it's like having every professor, every library,
every mentor, every consultant available
at your fingertips to go out and do whatever it is you want.
If you didn't graduate from high school,
if you never even sniffed a community college,
if you're willing to spend time with all these new AI tools
that are changing by the minute,
because you have the time and the interest to do it, you are going to have the most
significant job advantage, competitive advantage, entrepreneurial advantage. This is such a unique
time in history when it comes to enabling young kids to do unique things. We've never seen
anything like it. And if you believe in Gen A and Gen Z and what they're able to do for the future, put aside, you know, our age, my age, right? If
you believe in them and what they're able to do, I think it's just going to be incredible.
Pete Slauson I do believe in them. I worry though about just even the widening gap that we have now.
Like, look, I got a seven-year-old. I hear you, man. Like a 16-year-old who's a, who's a somebody that's a self-starter, who's curious,
who's interesting and I'm the best time in the world, right? A 16-year-old who's lonely,
who doesn't know what to do with themselves.
Now you got somebody to talk to.
Yeah, okay, Mark, that's very concerning. That's not a real conversation. It is, okay, but-
That's not a real human, though.
But, so, having access to a therapist on a marginal smartphone-
Not a real therapist.
Some of the research now in terms of how kids are- look, there are risks, right?
There's been a kid who killed himself, right?
There's been kids who get too connected to it.
So it's pick your poison.
Do you want a kid who's isolated
with nobody to talk to at all, with no access to therapy?
Now that's a different problem and a different issue
we might be able to solve in another way
by getting them support or having the tool.
I maybe want them at the pool.
I want them at the local pool.
I want them at the community pool instead.
Well, that's a whole different thing.
Can I pick option three?
No, option three is going to chat GPT or perplexity and said, I need a workout program
and I need a social program. So the point being that we have a lot of problems, social
problems, a lot of social problems across the entire spectrum of people, every city,
every demographic, right? No ifs, ands, or buts about it. Now we can talk about
what are the paths we can take to solve those problems. And all the ones that don't involve AI
are incredibly expensive, incredibly people intensive, and really difficult to implement
in any political environment. But on the other hand, what we're talking about are the frailties of AI that's relatively new. And so can we get accomplished therapists, accomplished psychologists, accomplished sociologists
to produce models that are trusted because they define the models? I think the misperception that
we have is that there's going to be this one big AI model. That's not going to be the case. Those
people who are spending the 60
to 100 billion dollars a year, they all have to compete and each of those is not going
away. But more importantly, there are going to be millions of models. There are going
to be millions of things and apps where you can say the therapist you wish you could have
gone to, like this was the perfect therapist for you or your child,
that therapist will have a model.
And that model will have the guardrails that you'd want that they would use in a face-to-face
conversation.
And if hopefully there's a reasonable price, then you can have a telehealth moment where
they talk to them.
AI will make that better, not worse.
Okay.
There's a key word that you had in their guardrails.
Cause I do want to talk about this because I would have, if we had we done
this, I know it's sort of been a dream for me in 2007, so I would have been a
pig in shit and not had the balls to push back on you, but at 2007, I would
agree with you, I don't like, because I was like South by Southwest kid, very
excited about all these new social apps.
And you know, I've got 18 years of experience now.
And all the cool stuff about the social web that I was promised, we got some of them-
Totally different though.
Totally different.
But, okay, but part of that was because, you know, there wasn't a lot of smart regulation.
These boomers on the Hill did let these guys kind of do whatever they wanted.
And now you're telling me, well, what the AI gazillionaires, the wannabe trillionaires
that are doing this AI, what they want right now is a president who won't fuck, who won't
do anything, who won't put any limits on them, any regulation.
That concerns me a lot, given our experience in the last little round.
Right.
And that's fair, but the question becomes, who are we competing with?
What are the options available to us?
And so unlike most technologies historically, the US has just dominated.
But now countries are starting to realize France, the UK, China in particular, are realizing
that, look, this is a race that might end up creating some level of economic and military
dominance and we have to win the AI race. that might end up, you know, creating some level of economic and military dominance.
And we have to win the AI race and they're not going to have any guardrails.
And so will there be some level of collateral damage?
Yes.
What it is, I don't know.
Will that, could it be worse than we ever expected?
Yes.
I'm not gonna lie, right?
But what's even worse is where we know there are no guard
rules and nobody will attempt to create guard rules in other countries.
And I'd rather have somebody who's living domiciled here, pays taxes here, whatever,
has a business base here, where you can go after somebody when they've done some AI that
we don't think is acceptable at any level.
If you just adopt it before anybody gets to innovate,
we're not good at determining where innovation will lead to,
and that's the catch-22.
Now, going to social media,
where the algorithms have gone and
the dominance by all these people who are rich,
the good news is from AI is,
it's so much easier to create competitive
applications and have different levels of communications. I think people are going to
use social media less. And I think a lot of this is just starting.
But in retrospect, we should have regulated the algorithms. Like you should have had a
system where like you had to opt in to getting information.
So I'll tell you an argument I got on Twitter, right? This was years ago. I said we needed
to use real names.
Yeah.
I've always been for that too.
But here was the argument against it and maybe you really think, right?
Whistleblower.
Yeah.
All that stuff.
Yeah.
And so you pick your poison.
And so, but now when you, you know, with Elon owning Twitter and, you know,
Metta with Zuckerberg and it's all self-enrichment and all that.
The question becomes, what alternatives can you create?
The good news is we may not have to create alternatives
because AI, if you've seen all the AI-generated videos
that are popping up, they will dominate social media
because everybody's trying to arbitrage the economics
and make money from it. And so it's gonna be really tough to knowrage the economics and make money from it.
And so it's going to be really tough to know what's real and what's not real.
And you may not need real people to create entertainment, which means that, no, don't do that
because that, in my mind, I think it's going to force more face-to-face communications.
I did this.
I just love that in your pro pitch, it's like, it's going to be hard to tell what's real and what's not real. And that's in the positive pitch.
But that is positive in some respects, right?
Because it ends up being kind of syllable, it's not the right term, but it's become so
easy to overwhelm, to flood the zone, if you will, with stuff that isn't real.
People are going to want stuff that is real.
And we'll want more face-to-face communications in business as well.
When you get all these fake voices calling you as a sales bitch, it's like,
if you're the company that has a salesperson at least knocks on your door,
or shows up face to face, you're going to appreciate that.
If you don't know what's real or not, you're going to want somebody telling it
to your face so you know what's real and that you can trust it.
I just had the same conversation with a bunch of doctors an hour ago.
The number one business attribute is trust.
For any app, for any business, you have to be able to engender trust.
In an AI world- In my business.
Yeah, for sure, right?
In an AI world, it's easier to do a lot of processes, but it's going to get harder and
harder to get people to trust what you're presenting because the pedigree is uncertain.
The background is uncertain. So when you try to game all these things out and look at second,
third, fourth order, I don't think it's as bad as you think because there's so much competition.
And I think there's a positive to it, but I understand the risks.
If I convince you, if I convince you.
No, no, because here we go.
I haven't even got you to the thing that prompted this topic.
OpenAI in a press comment yesterday, they cautioned that upcoming models will carry
a higher level of risk when it comes to the creation of biological weapons, especially by those who don't really understand what
they're doing.
Yeah, that's fucked up.
That's not a great warning sign.
Yeah, I'm putting that in the-
On the cigarette pack, it's like, might get lung cancer.
Right, yeah.
On open air, it's like, maybe a random teenager will create a biological weapon.
That's a little concerning.
Yeah, it's like a cigarette pack saying, when you light this, it might have a blast
radius of two miles, right? No. Like I said, there's going to be unintended circumstances.
There's going to be collateral damage, just like there are on the internet. Remember when
the internet first started hitting, it was like, let's see if we can look up how to make
an atom bomb, right? Yeah, sure.
And, you know, and so, yes, all those things. And I would be shocked that OpenAI didn't put guardrails because it's easy to say,
bomb and da da da da da.
But it makes for a great way to sell yourself and get everybody talking about you.
Oh, interesting.
Because look at what Gemini is.
And the difference between Gemini and ChatGPT is Gemini, the guardrails are too extensive.
Right?
It's like Gemini is boring, whereas Chat GPT kisses your ass too much, right?
Right.
And so they've all made choices, but they're in a death war, death not being literally,
to see who's going to win market share.
Right now it's chat GPT, but they might be the IBM of AI models right now.
We just don't know.
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All right. I want to go back to crypto really quick. I'm so torn on this one because I agree
with your kind of passing comment earlier that it really hurt the Democrats how hostile they were to crypto
and Gensler. And I see it in my life just anecdotally with random non-political friends.
So I agree with that. And yet, crypto needs to be regulated. And this bill that they put
through Congress is not it. And I have friends that are in the crypto industry.
That's only really for stable coins.
That was only pretty much for stable coins.
Right.
So they get mad at me.
I get friends that are at Coinbase at these other, at these other platforms.
They get mad at me for my comments on this.
And I'm like, and then like, well, you know, there's some really legit Bitcoin is legit.
The X is legit.
Y is legit.
And I'm like, okay, but if you walked into Walmart and it was like three aisles were legit products and then like 27 aisles were total scams.
Okay.
But let's take what you're saying.
Go to Amazon, right?
So one of my big things that I pushed and I tried to get Kamala, but it was
too esoteric is all the knockoffs on Amazon.
Like all, a bunch of my Shark Tank companies, a bunch of Shark Tank
companies, period, this shows on Shark Tank, they're already on Amazon,
boom, in come the Chinese knockoffs.
And you probably don't know this,
but if you're a Chinese company
and you wanna sell on Amazon,
you don't have to have any nexus in the United States.
Meaning there's no paperwork you have to fill out,
you don't have to have a domestic location,
you don't have, there's no proof that you file taxes
on anything you make.
You can just come in and fuck over as many American companies as you want.
So to your point that they're, you know, even in real life products, they're scams left
and right.
And that's a whole lot more expensive than even the crypto.
Just really quick though, like I hear you and that's bad and we should have rules against
the Chinese knockoff guys.
But like the business person is getting screwed over in that case. Like the Chinese knockoff guys. But like, it's the business person that's getting screwed over in that case.
Like, in the crypto coin case, it's the consumer.
No, it's the people. No, no, no, no, no.
The consumer is getting a product.
No, it's Tim walking in and thinking he's buying Dude Wipes, one of my Shark Tank companies,
and it says, dude, E-Wipes, right?
Oh yeah, wipe with a three or whatever.
And you don't know the difference.
Okay, gotcha. All right.
Yeah, so you don't know the difference. Yeah, got it. Okay, gotcha. All right.
Yeah, so you don't know the difference.
So, because if they weren't selling anything.
I thought you were saying they were just making a cheaper knockoff brand.
No, they are.
They are.
But no, they're literally copying it.
Yeah, they're literally copying it and making a knockoff.
And they're getting, they're outselling the Shark Tank companies.
And though some of those Shark Tank big companies have gone out of business, right?
I did at least get my Chinese wipes though, whereas the people who invested in Melania
Coin just lost their
fucking ass. But it's their lottery ticket, right? I hate meme coins. I hate them. I hate them,
right? I think they're the scum of the crypto earth, right? It's a problem. I don't think they
should exist, but the people who love them look at it as a musical chairs lottery ticket that if
you know how to play the game, you can make money out of it.
But we've got rules on the lottery, man.
Steve Wynn and those guys.
I'm not arguing with you.
You can't get in the casino business.
You can't just have a lottery where everybody loses.
I hate meme coins.
That's what I just said.
But we have rules.
We got to have rules, right?
I agree, right?
I'd have no problem outlining meme points.
Now, the crypto people would hate me, right?
And they do hate me because I'm not purely libertarian on it.
But I think to evolve from the pure libertarian history of crypto to get it to where it's made more
mainstream and easy for grandma, which we've failed at miserably so far. Look, let me say
it differently. There's been things that have worked really well with crypto and things
that have failed miserably and things that should have worked well have failed miserably.
Things like smart contracts on Ethereum
to create applications that really have utility. That should have been way further ahead than it is.
And the reason it's not is because Gary Gensler made it impossible to follow the rules. Now,
that's not the same case in other countries, so a lot of companies left. But when you look at the griffs, like the mean coins, like the Melania and drunk coins,
that's just a grift.
And there's just no other way to put it.
And either you pay a whole lot of tax to grift people that there's rules, there's regulations.
I agree with you 100% there.
Do you worry about paranoid Tims coming in now?
Do you worry about the teal, like the idea that they're trying to move us off of fiat
currency altogether and the risk associated with that?
Does that worry you at all?
Yeah, there certainly is risk, right?
Because I forget the name of it, but I lost money 15 years ago with this, not a bond,
but it was RI something that said it was backed by the dollar and it would never break a dollar until it did
Right in like 2008 and this was a regulated thing
So there is that risk for stable coins the genius act was a first step, but it's not the last step
I don't think people are going to take it. You like to genius act
I thought it was a good first step just so we can start making the point that crypto can be regulated
Because it won't be the last regulation. But to your point, is Teal trying to undermine the US
dollar? I don't think so. Right? I think he knows that there's too much to lose.
Are you 100% sure?
No, I'm not. Obviously nothing about Peter Teal am I 100% sure about. Right? You know,
I've only met the guy once, but at the same time, Ben undermines the entire economy and that does
no good for anybody.
That circles me back to the Trump point, I guess.
This is my whole thing with the Trump point.
The whole time is like, he obviously was going to be bad for the economy.
To me, like it was obvious, like his stated plans were all very risky.
I agree with you, right?
I mean, all the things I said when I was out for Kamala turned out to be 100% true.
I was up, I bet it a hundred and I would tell people this. And they were like,
but he didn't do it before. He didn't do it before. Terrence, right?
It's my people. It's Mitch McConnell and Paul Ryan's fault. It's my people for jamming through
the traditional chamber of commerce, Republican agenda, and letting him brand it, honestly.
Yeah. Again, I'll say it again, character's destiny. Donald Trump is a great marketer, great salesperson.
And like a lot of salespeople that I've dealt with, he cares more about closing
the sale and saying he closed the deal than following through to make sure
the services deliver.
All right.
Cost Plus Drugs.
How would you fix the healthcare system?
Easy question.
You have two minutes.
Well, I only got two minutes.
Right. Well, first, what is Cost Plus Drugs, how would you fix the healthcare system? Easy question. You have two minutes. Oh, I only got two minutes. Right.
Well, first, what is Cost Plus Drugs?
You go to costplusdrugs.com and you put in the name of your medication.
Let's just say you have cancer and you need a matnip, right?
If this was four years ago, you'd walk into a big pharmacy and that
a matnip would cost $2,000 plus.
Now you go to costplusdrugs.com, you put it in, we show your actual cost.
What we pay for it shows up. We show you our actual cost. What we pay for shows up.
We show you our markup. It's only 15%. If you want it via mail order, we have a pharmacist review it
for $5 and $5 for shipping and handling, and that's it. And so you know exactly what it's going to
cost you for any of your medications. And we've helped millions of people and say, I don't even
know how many lives and helps all over many families. So that's part one. Part two, how do you fix healthcare?
First is transparency.
That's a big part of it.
But part two is you look for the leverage points in healthcare because that's what fucks
it all up.
When you think about healthcare, it's really simple.
You go to the doctor, the doctor either says you need something or you don't.
If you need something, then there's only two questions.
What's the cost and how do you pay for it? That's it. The problem with healthcare isn't the doctors or even don't. If you need something, then there's only two questions. What's the cost and how do you pay for it?
That's it. The problem with healthcare isn't the doctors or even the hospitals.
It's what we charge and how we ask people to pay for it. And a big part of that problem is
because of how the whole system is set up. If you think about healthcare plans, whether it's ACA, whether it's Medicare Advantage,
whether it's Medicare Part D, or for your company, right?
You've got some insurance company that's saying, look, here's the plan, we're going to change
it every year. We're going to have one plan that has a low premium, high deductible, and
another plan that has a high premium and low deductible. And young people, the people with
less money always choose the high deductible and hope they don't get sick, right? But what
they don't tell you is, one,
they set the deductible so high, given that most of America can't afford $400, there ain't no fucking
way they can afford to pay their deductible. Now, you know who loses that money when they can't
afford to pay their deductible? It's not the insurance company. It's not the company that
you're getting your insurance from. It's not the ACA plan, it's the fucking hospitals and doctors that they turned into prime lenders.
You know, the, the guys will have to take on any risks.
And so because of the plans that the insurance companies have designed where
they don't pay any tension or give a shit if the people can afford the
deductibles that they sign up for.
And the government hasn't figured out yet that we've got to guarantee it.
Like we can't do a single payer right now. What are your feelings on single payer?
No, insane. Like to the idea that we could afford that.
I like to be old. There was a Ryan, I think it was Ryan Wyden. It was an old Paul Ryan thing,
which will trigger some of the progressive listeners, but it was basically just like a
public option for like low income. It was like a Medicaid thing and it was scaled up and like the
higher you go up there. And we got that, right? We kind of got that with Medicaid.
Sort of a scaled up version of it. Yeah.
Yeah. First thing that Medicare care for all of you read like,
um, from all Jaya Pels, Congressman Jaya Pels, Medicare for all proposal.
The first thing it says is this,
this shall be run and organized by the secretary of health and human services.
Insane. So RFK jr is running it.
That's all you need to know. That's all you need to know. Right.
But here's the know, right?
But here's the thing, right?
If we introduce transparency, just say like cost plus, everything was transparent, right?
Then you could have cities, states, counties, and say, look, here's our budget.
And if we know exactly what it's going to cost, and we can use scientists that extrapolate
the data to figure out what our annual budget should be, then it could start just like Canada
started their care programs.
Because that's what Canada did, like in 1947,
one of the, you know, Ottawa, one of the provinces
just said, look, we know what it's going to cost,
we think we can cover it.
But you can't do that in the United States of America
until you're transparent about all the costs.
And if you start doing that, the two problem children
are the insurance companies and the
PBMs, because they have all the leverage, right?
The PBMs control the formularies for 250 million lives, and the insurance companies that own
the PBMs control the insurance plans for just as many lives.
And so they have all the leverage.
If you A, divorce formularies from PBMs, they lose that leverage and you don't need them
for formulas anyways.
And so it goes down to a direct cost.
And if you're transparent on that and the same thing on healthcare, if you simplify
the payment terms, all of a sudden you can get to single payer, but it's on a municipality,
county employer or whatever.
Did I do that in two minutes?
Uh, no, it was three, but that's okay.
I'm making a hard turn.
It was pretty good, man.
The healthcare is the hardest one.
You asked me like, what am I thinking about the social?
My, my honest opinion about healthcare is like, it seems like we, our current
system is the worst of both worlds.
Like a more free market system with a, with a big, a big safety net for
like catastrophic would be better.
We don't have a socialized would be better. But we don't have a free market system.
Socialized would be better.
Our system is like, it's taking the worst
of both of the combos.
I'm making a hard turn into blue sky.
Sure.
This started because you DMed me
and you're like, why aren't you on blue sky?
My response to you was like, number one, I like fighting,
as you can tell right here,
and I don't want to be in a bubble
just because I enjoy fighting.
And number two, bubbles, like bubbles are feel toxic
and like the types of fighting that happen in bubbles is not the type I like. And like
people are nitpicking me all the time and I'd rather be going across, you know, ideological
perspectives.
Yeah, for sure.
And like, that's my issue with it. Two months later, it's taken us a while to make this
happen. You skied it. Basically my critique of blue skies. So where are you at? You welcome aboard, but where are you at on it right now? What's the solution?
I'm disappointed, right? It didn't have to be that way. They took the path of not trying to
bring in new users that have different viewpoints. They knew that they had a big base in users that
wanted ideological purity. They knew it, right? I've talked to them and they started to bring in
a couple verticals, like the NBA has got a great vertical.
EconSky is really good.
Book Talk, or BookSky rather is really good, right?
But they made no effort to go bring in other people.
It's not too late, I actually just wanted
to kick them in the ass, right?
Because it's disappointing to your point,
I wanna fight with the people
who disagree with me and I want to have in depth conversations to see if I can change
their minds or they can change mine.
I don't want to have smarmy vice president, JD Vance going on just to be a dick about
it really.
I did, I did though. Why not? He set himself up.
You liked that?
I love that. Yes.
He's really smarmy about it though, right?
So much. So much.
But it doesn't just like, I know, it just doesn't like, it's like, it's like,
it wasn't a real attempt to engage though.
No, of course not. Yeah, of course. And I even quote tweeted him and quote squeaded him and said,
you're lying, right? When he talked about pharmacies paying for, I forget what it was.
I just quote tweeted him and said, you know, you're lying, right?
I don't believe you.
And that's fine.
I want that opportunity no matter what the platform, because you know, if you do it on
Twitter, you're just, your replies are just going to get destroyed for a month.
All right.
We're going to close with rapid fire MBA, but just first I have to do it.
So I'm not going to ask you the obvious question, like, I know that you're going to duck it.
I know you're going to duck it.
Yeah, I'm not going to do it. It had nothing to do with it.
I know you're going to duck it.
Yeah, I had nothing to do with it.
Out of the two obvious questions.
But before I get to either of them, it's like, so what percent chance are you going to run
for president?
I know you're not going to say you're going to.
Is it zero?
It's not zero.
It's zero.
It's 2%.
It's zero.
Zero point zero.
No.
My family, my wife repeats that because there was the Bloomberg article that just came out
and asked the question and she, someone sent it to her and then she saw it.
She's like, no, what was the dumb and dumber thing?
You're not even going to like, be like, you're saying there's a chance.
You know, one in a hundred thousand.
There's a chance.
No, nothing.
Okay.
So I'll say it's not a hundred percent zero.
If all of a sudden Trump was on the ballot for a third time.
Okay.
Right.
Maybe that would do it.
What if it's this kid?
What if it's JD and Don Jr.?
That's not enough to get you off the couch?
No.
All right.
Here's why I think you're lying to me.
I think you're an honest person, but you showed up at the dorkiest Never Trumper conference
in DC where the Proud Boys came and protested us, made it kind of interesting.
I love the principals first guys, they are great, but I'm like, only someone who at least
thinks they might run for president would show up to this.
No, that wasn't it at all. It was the exact opposite. It was like, these people have no
idea how to sell, they have no idea how to convince people who don't agree with them.
It's easy to convince people in the church, right? Praise the Lord, we all agree.
It's hard to convince people that the reason you'd like to go to Twitter, because it's more fun,
but it's harder, right? You have to find a path in order to do it. That's why I do these things.
I've done it for the Mod Squad and all these other groups, right? Because you've got to be
able to tell them you can't just because Trump, you can't just say no to everything Trump does.
That is not an approach, right?
Maybe it's the stop clock is right twice a day, but you've got to be able to say, okay,
he was right on this, he was right on this.
And you can't call people who support Trump a cult.
You know, they're just-
Well, sometimes the truth is the truth.
No, but let's talk about that, right?
So like one of my buddies, when Trump first ran, I was like telling him,
cause I've known Trump for 25 years and I'm like, Dan, you know, guys in the
mid fifties, like why that, that, that, that, that, that, that, let me tell you
something, Mark, I've been voting for politicians my entire life and you know
what they've done for me, nothing.
You know, the definition of insanity, not really true.
Well, his mind, that's all that matters, right?
It's all that matters in the mind of the voter, right?
So has he come around this?
Has Trump done nothing for him now?
No, no, but let's talk about that.
It seems like he's in a cult then.
No, let's talk about it.
He hasn't come around yet.
It's been nine years.
What has Trump done for him?
You're a white guy in New Orleans, right?
So just a random white guy in New Orleans.
You think that because of DEI, you or your brother, your uncle, your friend didn't get
that promoted. I get it. Right your brother, your uncle, your friend didn't get that promotion.
I get it. Right? Yeah, sure. I get it. So he said he was going to do something about DEI.
In your mind, he did it. You have a cousin that works construction, right? He thinks that he's
not getting higher paid jobs. His co-worker's getting deported right now.
Yeah. Right. But he's thinking coming into all this, right? He's thinking,
I'm not, you know, these guys are on the corner and I'm not getting that work because these immigrants, right? So I want the border closed.
Did Trump do it? Yeah. Now I want those guys deported. So maybe my wages might be a shittier
job, but my wages are going up because of it. Did Trump do it? Yeah. So now tariffs,
it's going to cost you more money. Yeah, maybe. But you know what? Those first three things
that were important to me, bam, bam, bam, Trump got it right. And so I'm going to cost you more money. Yeah, maybe. But you know what? Those first three things that were important to me, bam, bam, bam, Trump got it right. And so I'm going to give
him the benefit of the doubt on the forest.
I mean, Mark, that sounds like a cult to me because it's like Barack, you could just be
like Barack Obama got you out of the Iraq war. Is that, are you not happy about that?
We got, you know, what, do you have a nephew that's gay? We got gay marriage now, Joe,
you got a tax cut from George W. Bush. You could do this spin for anybody.
Of course, of course, but this is the here and now.
That also is the difference between the Democrats and the Republicans.
The Democrats always extrapolate some anecdotal scenarios and say, see, he's done it this
number of times, so he's going to do it all the time.
I don't think Trump voters think that way.
Trump voters look at it and say, this is me, this is now, this is what's affecting my life in a simple way. Right? The Iraq war,
maybe I had some family there and they're out now, that's great. Maybe we had the great financial
mess and Obama helped fix it. Yeah, but that was, I don't remember back that far. Particularly,
if I'm 70 years old, the average age of the Foxbrew or 75, the average age, I'm not hearing any
of that shit from Fox, right?
And if I'm going to an SEC school, if I'm going to LSU, right, I'm not hearing any of
that shit, right?
I'm hearing, you know, Alda, you know, he could fix the EI, he, you know, took care
of immigration, deporting the guys who were keeping my buddies, because
I don't want to go to my buddies who don't want to go to college now.
And so the point being is you have to recognize that's the reality.
Like we did the shark tank thing and I went to LSU, Noah's Auburn.
And it was like, oh my God, they were hating on me.
Like they were like hating on me because of all the Trump stuff.
You could handle it. You handled it.
I don't give a shit, right? But it's, you know, it was just interesting to know.
And so I really, really think that if the,
if the Democrats are going to understand why Republicans haven't just turned on
Trump, like it makes so much sense to us that he should,
you have to realize that he's batting 750 for most,
particularly for white guys
under the age of 50, right, or 55,
he's doing exactly what he said.
Unless you realize that,
you have no way to change their mind.
All right, have your wife call me,
because I hear you on that.
To Rabbit Fire NBA,
you realize that you leaving the Mavs
caused a butterfly, it flapped its wings.
Think about all the people you hurt.
Everyone in Dallas, every Lakers hater, every tanking team that wanted a Cooper flag,
the Buss family is gone now. Jay Moore is a billionaire now because of you.
Think about all of the impacts of that decision. Do you ever reflect on that? How insane is what
happened? I am one powerful motherfucker.
That was insane.
You should have stayed.
It was crazy.
You should have either stayed or been Kamala's vice president.
In hindsight, I would have done it a lot differently, but it is what it is.
Okay.
I got to do nuggets.
I'm going to leave.
We're in a pickle, man.
I feel like we're like, on the one hand, we took Oklahoma City to seven.
We're one player away from being NBA champions right now.
On the other hand, they got the camp, they got no camp space.
They're stuck with all these.
What do you do?
And we don't have a GM.
Well, A, isn't it insane?
We don't have a GM and B, if you became the GM, what will we do?
Help save the nuggets.
Well, first of all, your former GM was Calvin Booth, who hit one of the biggest shots in
Mavericks history.
Second, why are you a Nuggets fan?
I'm from Denver.
I grew up in Denver.
Oh, okay.
I thought you were from Louisiana.
Yeah, no, I live in Louisiana now.
I grew up in Denver.
Okay.
Okay.
So the challenge for all teams right now is we're transitioning from the old CBA to this
new CBA with the second apron, which isn't a hard tap, but it's pretty damn close.
And so teams have to all adapt.
The bad news is the good teams, it's going to be really
hard to keep your good players.
The good news is the bad teams are going to get better a lot faster because
you're going to be able to get players for less and still stay
under that second threshold.
So I think for the nuggets, they're going to have to draft really,
really well. They're going to have to keep Russell Westbrook and they need one more score.
You know, they need another score. Michael Porter, Jr. for two quarters for a dollar.
It was tough. He hurt his shoulder, man. You can't put it on Michael. MPJ.
No, I'm not putting it on me. I'm just looking at our options. All right. I mean,
Jokic is the best player in the NBA, right? Then we got a small window.
Yeah, it's not close.
Not close.
Yeah. And you have a long window because it's not like he's super athletic.
So he'll be able to be really good until he's 35, 36 and he's only 30.
It's so beautiful watching him. It's unbelievable.
Oh, he's so amazing to watch. Unreal.
It's really been a joy of my life over this horrific political decade.
You know what? Basketball is that, right? Ball is... Do you still hoop at all? I try. I'm not. You know what, basketball is that, right?
Ball is, do you still hoop at all?
I try, I'm not, you know, I never was that good.
I was always the nerd.
I was the play by play guy for GW's college basketball team.
So I was always more sidelines.
Yeah, but I do love it.
But still, but that's not even the point.
You don't have to be good, right?
Just the feel of getting out there just solves all the world's problems.
I get out there with my daughter a couple of times a week, we go down to the park and
it's awesome.
My son is 15 now and now he's taller than me, he could finally beat me one on one.
And it's the worst part of life ever because he talks shit.
Like he'll have a ball, even if he doesn't have a ball, he'll like do a spin move.
Oh my God, he's just killing me.
But I'm going to embrace it now because I'm still talking shit to my seven year old making
her cry after I win in horse, you know?
And I enjoy that.
It's good.
It's a good life lesson.
All right.
I'm not letting you win in horse.
But tell me if I'm wrong, tell me if I'm wrong.
Going out into the backyard of gym, wherever,
and just making some shots
and watching the ball go through the hoop.
As good as it gets.
You're not wrong.
Mark Cuban, I really appreciate you taking all the time, man.
I really am.
It was fun, Jim.
I really enjoyed it. All right. Come back another time. Everybody else really appreciate you taking all the time, man. I really am. It was fun, Jim. I really enjoyed it.
All right. Come back another time. Everybody else, we'll see you back here on Monday. Peace. Sippin' on Texas, got no whiskey It's never getting money n****s with me
Never getting money n****s with me
Sippin' on Texas, got no whiskey
Sippin' on Texas, got no whiskey
41 shots, got no whiskey
Whole bunch of chickens in the city
On my rich hood, niggas feel
Pull out a banana, get the feeling
15, Vic Carter on the wing
17, 5, 4 wing
Every time my fucking phone ring
Asians in, China speak Chinese
Bad bitches in the Ville, please
Hundred racks on my Jane's knees
How cheap?
On six
Forty thousand wrist
Quavo took your bitch
Sliding in that seat
It's number game money n****s with me
Number game money n****s with me For sure, woo Now begin mining n****s with me
For sure, woo
Sippin' on Texas, don't know when skips
Laying money, sippin' on Texas, don't know when skips
Woo
Now begin mining n****s with me
For sure, woo
Now begin mining n****s with me
For sure, woo
Sippin' on Texas, don't know when skips
Money, sippin' on Texas, don't know when Sippin' on Texas, don't know when
Trappin' out of a mansion, choppers in a bando
Smokers scrone, doin' donuts in a limbo
11th grader in a lunch line with a bankroll
I fucked your bitch from the back with all my chains on
And my shades on, Then I sent her home
Cartier, Frange, Master Presidential Rollin'
I drink Pimenta Zene, cuz it taste good with what I'm smokin'
I told your bitch take off her shoes, before she jump in my car
Gettin' head count money, that my favorite part
A million dollars worth of cars in the front yard
I keep real niggas with me everywhere I go Twenty forms back to back in a row The Borg Podcast is produced by Katy Cooper with Audio Engineering and Editing by Jason
Brown.