The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - AI’s Power Problem, Have We Passed Peak Social Media? and How to Save Democracy
Episode Date: October 31, 2025Scott Galloway answers listener questions on AI’s growing strain on the U.S. power grid, why we may have reached peak social media, and how economic boycotts can serve as a check on political power.... Want to be featured in a future episode? Send a voice recording to officehours@profgmedia.com, or drop your question in the r/ScottGalloway subreddit. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Support for this show comes from the Audible original, The Downloaded 2, Ghosts in the Machine.
Quantum computers, the next great frontier of technology, offering endless possibilities that stretch the human mind.
But for Roscoe Cudullian and the Phoenix Colony, quantum computing uploads the human mind with life-altering consequences.
Audibles hit sci-fi thriller The Downloaded returns with Oscar winner Brendan Fraser,
reprising his role as Rosco Cudulian in The Downloaded 2, Ghosts in the Machine.
This thought-provoking sequel from Robert J. Sawyer takes listeners on a captivating sci-fi journey,
a mind-bending must-listen that asks,
what are you willing to lose to save the ones you love?
The Downloaded 2, Ghosts in the Machine.
Available now, only from Audible.
Support for this show comes from Indeed.
If you're looking to hire top-tier talent with expertise in your field, Indeed says they can help.
Indeed's sponsored jobs gives your job the best chance at standing out
and grants you access to quality candidates who can drive the results you need.
Spend more time interviewing candidates who check all your boxes.
Less stress, less time, more results.
Now with Indeed sponsored jobs.
And listeners of this show will get a $75-sponsored job credit to help get a $7.5-sponsored job credit
to help get your job the premium status it deserves at Indeed.com slash Fox Business.
Just go to Indeed.com slash Fox Business right now
and support our show by saying you heard about Indeed on this podcast.
Indeed.com slash Fox Business. Terms and conditions apply. Hiring, do it the right way with Indeed.
Support for this show comes from the Audible Original,
Downloaded 2. Ghosts in the Machine.
The Earth only has a few days left.
Rosco Cudulian and the rest of the Phoenix Colony have to re-upload their minds into the quantum computer,
but a new threat has arisen that could destroy their stored consciousness forever.
Listen to Oscar winner Brendan Fraser reprise his role as Rosco Cudulian in this follow-up to the Audible Original Blockbuster with the Downloaded.
It's a thought-provoking sci-fi journey where identity, memory, and the world.
morality collide. Robert J. Sawyer does it again with this much-anticipated sequel that leaves you
asking, what are you willing to lose to save the ones you love? The downloaded two,
Ghosts in the Machine. Available now, only from Audible.
Welcome to Office Hours of Provji. This is the part of the show where we answer your questions
about business, big tech entrepreneurship, and whatever else is on your mind.
If you have liked to submit a question for next time, you can send a voice recording to
Office Hours of Profitimedia.com. Again, that's Office Hours of Profitomedia.com.
Or post your question on the Scott Galloway subreddit, and we may feature it in our next episode.
First question.
Our first question comes from Reddit.
Thank you, Mr. Uppercut asks.
Hi, Scott, a lot of people theorize about eventual UBI when AI takes all the jobs.
But why are we not getting an energy subsidy right now?
Data centers across the country are using so much power.
The demand is pushing prices up for everyone.
Sam Malman recently said OpenAI will need 250 gigawatts to power their data centers.
Why aren't these multibillion-dollar companies being forced to subsidize everyone else's rising electricity bills?
What can be done to lessen a stranglehold AI has on this facet of our lives?
Okay, this is becoming an increasingly interesting topic.
AI models are incredibly energy hungry, and 23 U.S. data centers consumed about 4.4% of total U.S. power.
The Department of Energy projects that could double by 2028, reaching 7 to 12% of national demand.
Meanwhile, companies are racing to build hyperscale campuses, often in states with cheap land,
weak regulation, and fragile grids.
This rapid growth is driven by AI, cloud services, and more compute-intensive workloads.
But the pressure is very real, and data centers are very much behind the increasing prices on the supply side.
Data published this month by the Labor Department showed that electricity prices rose 5.6% over the past year,
more broadly, consumer prices increased 2.7%.
Research from North Carolina State and Carnegie Mellon
indicates that data center expansion could drive up
average electricity bills by 8% nationwide by 2030.
And here's the thing, as we're debating about how
we can make big tech pay for the power it uses,
the government is canceling the cheapest, fastest way to generate more of it.
Nevada had the lowest increase in electricity prices
in the entire nation despite rising demand,
thanks largely to a massive amount of solar it's built.
And what are you know, we're counting subsidies,
solar. Meanwhile, Trump administration just canceled the Esmeral, the seven project, a 6.2 gigawatts solar
and battery farm in Nevada. It would have powered nearly two million homes, but it was scrapped as part
of a wider rollback on renewables. The bottom line is, if you think of electricity as a public
good, that means we're going to need big government. I'm a huge fan of infrastructure investments,
and that is the Eurostar here, which can get you to downtown Paris in two and a half hours.
It makes no economic sense from a shareholder perspective, but it makes sense from a stakeholder
perspective as it increases fluidity and mobility in such that we can do more business with
France or the UK can do more business with France and vice versa. And it's a huge unlock for people
to see their families, spend money, encourages economic activity. I think it's insane. We don't
have a high real speed system up and down the west and east coast of America. All roads lead
to the same fucking place. And that is corporations who are paying their lowest tax rates since 1939,
need an alternative minimum tax. It's not even their tax rates. It's the fact that there's so many
loopholes around being able to, you know, now they can directly expense CAPEX on the first year.
The middle class is an accident and the only way you continue to support it is with a redistribution
of income. I don't think you can say to power come or to AI, you need to pay for an upgrade
in the electric grid. What I think you can say is that corporations need to have an alternative
or minimum tax of, say, 30 or 40%, so that's that we have the capital to upgrade the grid.
What you can also do is as states compete for these large data storage or these large data
centers, part of that might include, all right, you have to make some investments in the
grid because just this uptick in costs or this uptick in demand is likely going to hit
middle class households pretty hard. So just as I'm thinking, the type of regulation,
just as I'm thinking, when they build condos in New York that are going to go to mega-millionaires,
they demand that they build a park or sometimes they demand that a certain percentage of the units
go to low-income or artist housing to try and keep this city diverse. I think something along
those lines, but then again, the states are competing against each other. I think all roads
lead to the same place, and that is we need a more progressive tax structure on the wealthiest
Americans and corporations such that we have the capital to make the kind of upgrades to our grid
that will meet the additional demand and also investment or redistribution from corporations
and the wealthy to the middle class. And one efficient way to pour that redistribution is an
investment in infrastructure and how do you pay for it with a progressive tax structure
that just enforces the tax code, $750 billion tax gap.
meaning that you don't have to raise taxes, you just need to collect the taxes that are owed by
the wealthiest 1% who weaponize the tax code, are very sophisticated tax attorneys such that
they can delay, obfuscate, or just evade paying taxes. Not a hopeful message, not a hopeful message,
but anyways, a thoughtful question. I appreciate you submitting your query. Power up.
Question number two.
I recently read an article in the Financial Times entitled,
Have we passed peak social media?
This tied into the trends I've been seeing with fewer friends on fewer platforms.
Facebook has long been my favorite platform,
but of late the algorithm seems to only want me to see lame videos and content from groups and pages that I don't follow,
on top of the ads, of course, with increasingly rare posts from actual friends.
I still have an excessive need for my friends and family to enjoy my obviously exceptional photography
and excessively handsome and impressive boys.
But whether from AI or influencer slop,
the social media companies seem hell-bent
on turning the product into anti-social media,
only encouraging us to engage in content from folks we don't know
or who may not even exist at all.
I can't make sense of that as a sustainable business model.
Can you? Thanks for your insight.
Thanks for the question.
So data from the FTE article shows that time spent on social media
peaked in 2022 and has been in a steady decline since.
At the end of 2024, users age 16 and older,
spent an average of two hours and 20 minutes a day on social platforms down by almost 10% since
2022. Surprisingly, the decline is most pronounced among teens and 20-year-olds. The decline can be
attributed to the evolution of social media from a place to connect and share with friends and
family to one of doom-scrolling through hours of content posted by strangers and increasingly
AI. It's now kind of arguably you would argue that it's anti-social media and the number of people
who report using social platforms to stay in touch with friends, express themselves or meet new people,
has fallen by more than 25% since 2014.
In some, it's not connecting us, it's disconnecting us.
More and more users have been reporting opening up these apps to fill spare time,
making a shift from mindful social engagement to mindless browsing.
Meanwhile, meta and Open AI have released new AI-generated social content platforms
and what we've called the great sloppification, if you will.
So look, how do these companies continue to grow the revenues?
They use AI to do a better job of targeting.
I mean, I'm sure you have a couple of those moments where you just get chills down your spine
where I'm talking on the phone about going to Paris, and the next thing, I know I get served
an ad for a hotel in Paris. It's like, okay, someone's listening. Their targeting has become
so strong that they can just deliver to advertisers the right person, the right moment, and the right
product, if you will, and their CPMs are the prices they can charge have gone up. I've been on
Facebook in 15 years, so that's not, I'm just not that familiar with it, but I wouldn't worry
about them. I think young people are actually smarter than we give them credit for, and a lot of teens
are deciding it's unhealthy for them. I think my colleague, Jonathan Hyde, is having an impact.
And schools are banning phones in schools. So I think just as it took 20 years to figure out
opiates and then kind of 30 years to figure out cigarettes, it feels like it's taken us about
20 years to figure out sort of the phone at social media and recognize that the more kids are
on social media, the worst they feel about themselves, and the more likely they are to engage
and self-harm. I'm addicted to social media. I go on it a lot. I'm probably on it,
I don't know, probably like two hours a day. I'd like to think a lot of it's for learning.
I like to get the clips of interesting news stories and interesting views from economists and
who you follow and who you curate. But this business model of keeping you glued to your phone
is working really well. Forty percent of the S&P by market capitalization is from firms that either
enrage you to engage you or sequester you from your friends and family and other media.
So if you think about social media algorithms, they purposely put some negative comments in there,
elevate content that will both inspire you, Great Danes playing with babies, which is what I like,
but also content showing ice that just enrages me, but I can't help, but I can't look away.
So they know how to keep you glued to your phone, and AI, quite frankly, you know those prompts at the end?
would you like bullet points or would you like me? My son's applying to college. So I'm curious
about all these different schools and I'll say, would you like me to compare this university versus
this one? Or what is the likelihood that someone applying from the UK would get into these
school? And they're just genius and they test a million times a second. What would be an offer for
an additional prompt that would keep this person engaged? Now, are they enraging you on AI as they do
on YouTube or with meta or other or X? No, but what they're doing is making it almost impossible
to look away from the screen such that you're sequestering from your friends and family and
real world relationships and also synthetic relationships, which is quite frankly my
biggest concern right now, that young people, especially young men who are more neurologically
sensitive, are engaging in these low friction, low effort relationships with character AIs
and starting basically to rush home and get advice from their AI friend or maybe get their AI
girlfriend to take off her clothes. And slowly but surely not engaging in the messy, difficult
prospect of what is a real world relationship. And engaging in those real world relationships,
specifically the friction and difficulty of them trains you to be a more competent, skilled human
being and develop real victory. And AI will just keep telling you you're amazing and being
encouraging and empathetic. But don't cry from the Argentina. These companies are still
sequestering you from more and more media. They have regulatory capture. They show up. They give
the president a rub and tug or an engraved trophy from Tim Cook. I can't, what's the point
of having all the fucking money if you've got to go bend a knee in the White House? But
They're all doing it.
And then, so Trump tariffs everyone but the big tech companies.
So that's the transfer value from the companies trying to fit.
Imagine how you're trying to plan your business if you're Caterpillar or Ford right now.
So are you going to go to work for them and invest them?
No, just don't invest in meta.
And then the most recent AI legislation basically says to the AI companies that they can
molest the IP of any company in the world and not have to pay them a licensing fee.
So these companies, don't worry about them.
They are doing exceptionally well, economic.
I appreciate the question.
We'll be right back after a quick break.
Support for the show comes from Sacks Fifth Avenue.
Sacks Fifth Avenue makes it easy to holiday your way.
Whether it's finding the right gift or the right outfit,
Sacks is where you can find everything from a stunning David Uriman bracelet for her
or a sleek pair of pheragama loafers to wear to a fancy holiday dinner.
And if you don't know where to start, Sacks.com is customized to your personal style.
so you can save time shopping and spend more time just enjoying the holidays.
Make shopping fun and easy this season,
and find gifts an inspiration to suit your holiday style at Saks Fifth Avenue.
Fox Creative.
Support for this show comes from AWS Generative AI Accelerator Program.
My name is Tom Elias.
I'm one of the co-founders at Bedrock Robotics.
Bedrock Robotics is creating AI for the built world.
We are bringing advanced autonomy to heavy equipment to tackle America's construction crisis.
There's tremendous demand for progress in America through civil projects, yet half a million
jobs in construction remain unfilled.
We were part of the 2024-GEN-AI Accelerator Program.
As soon as we saw it, we knew that we had to apply.
The AWS-Gen AI Accelerator Program supports startups that are building ambitious companies
using Gen AI and physical AI.
The program provides infrastructure support that,
That matches an ambitious scale of growth for companies like Bedrock Robotics.
Now after the accelerator, about a year later, we announced that we raised about $80 million
in funding.
We are scaling our autonomy to multiple sites.
We're making deep investments in technology and partners.
We have a lot more clarity on what autonomy we need to build and what systems and techniques
and partners we need to make it happen.
It's the folks that we have working altogether inside Bedrock Robotics, but it's also our
partners like Amazon, really all trying to work together to figure out what is physical
AI and how do we affect the world in a positive way.
To learn more about how AWS supports startups, visit startups.aWS.
Support for Profite comes from Chime.
It's no secret managing your money can be stressful.
Dealing with overdraft fees, mispayments, and even just wishing you had more ways to save,
can add unwanted pressure when you already have enough to deal with.
Chime says they can help alleviate some of that stress by helping you take control of your finances
one simple step at a time.
With Chime, they say your money works faster for you.
You can open a check-in account with zero-monthly maintenance fees, set up direct deposit,
and even get your paycheck up to two days early.
Plus, with Chime, you can qualify for free overdraft of up to $200.
Chim says they've already spotted members over $30 billion.
And with more than 47,000 free ATMs, that's more than the top three national banks combined,
they say you'll have your money wherever you go.
You can work on your financial goals through CHIM today.
You can open an account in two minutes at chime.com slash prop G.
That's chime.com slash prop G.
Chime feels like progress.
Chime is a financial technology company, not a bank.
Bank, card provided by the Bankor Bank N.A or Stride Bank N.A.
Members FDIC.
Spot me eligibility requirements and overdraft limits apply.
Timing depends on submission of payment file.
Fees apply at out of network ATMs.
Bank ranking and number of ATMs according to U.S. News and World Report 2023.
Chime checking account required.
Welcome back onto our final question, which comes from Reddit user ISO-P-H-D-J-D, I think, and they asked,
The Boycott of Disney Plus showed voting with your wallet can work and work faster in the era of Trump.
With Trump claiming that the U.S. is under attack from an internal insurrection,
should organizations, including the Olympics, FIFA, and other high-profile events publicly call into question,
the viability of hosting these events in the U.S. of Trump's claims are true.
This would hurt Trump's pride and cut into his grift of these events.
Do you think this and similar efforts by businesses and community would help preserve our democracy?
Okay, so what did Bob Dylan say?
The money doesn't talk.
It swears.
Look, there are a few organizations more corrupt than international athletic bodies,
whether it's the IOC or the international or FIFA.
You know, they operate in this Netherlands.
land. They take bribes and it basically goes to the highest bidder, fine. They're not about
sport. They're about making a shit ton of money. Okay. And by the way, I think the NC2A is not
is corrupt. Okay, let's pay people in Kansas $400,000 a year to pass regulations and pay the
white guy, the white 55-year-old guy, the coach, $3 million a year, but the black 19-year-old,
no, no, no, no, he doesn't get any money on the basketball court because of the purity of the game.
They figured out a way to, again, transfer money from non-whites to whites, but more so from
young to old. So look, I don't know if that specifically works. What I do buy is the idea
of an economic strike, and that is voting with your wallet. And that is what Trump listens to
is the economy. The thing that scared the shit out of Trump and backed him off the tariffs initially
was the 10-year spiking. And I wonder if right now America is a big bet on AI, and that is the reason
why Trump feels emboldened to send troops into Portland in Chicago is because the S&P has had 14%.
In America, who is increasingly just about, America, for the most part, is just, I want more stuff.
That's how I would describe the promise of America. So as long as the markets go up, people think,
oh, I should be able to buy more stuff. So whatever Trump is doing, regardless of censoring late-night
talk show hosts or sending masked secret service or secret police into a county, as long as
as my stocks are up and my 401 goes up, he must be doing something right. And that is being
driven by AI right now, 75% of the gains and earnings and 72% of the increase in the stock
market has come from just 10 companies. So the idea of an economic strike that takes the economy
down temporarily or scares the shit out of a company is really powerful. Now, you could do
General strikes are harder to pull off.
I think if I were going to try and organize a general strike,
I'd want to play on the, or target, if you will,
or try and convince the wealthy.
The wealthy is 10% of Americans now account for 50% of consumer spending.
And the wealthy could take their spending down 10 or 20%, no problem.
It's hard for the middle class to reduce their spending by 10%
because you're starting to cut into things like rent and groceries.
But the wealthy, especially in this era,
I've become such conspicuous consumers as they could take it down by 10%.
or 20 percent. Would they? I don't know. What has been more effective is a specific call to action
with a specific outcome. So, organically, Ted Cruz and Tucker Carlson are pissed off about
a late night talk show host being canceled. And then people on the left just don't like anything
Trump does. So there's an organic pushback. And people started taking pictures, screenshots of Disney
plus being canceled. That is very actionable, very visible, because typically it's not the economic
strike itself that foments change. Most economic strikes are boycotts result in about a 1%
decline in that stock, so almost meaningless. The way they're effective is the media tension,
the negative media attention they bring to the individual. So Bob Eiger, basically, who not once
but twice spent the need to Trump, back down when all of a sudden there was a ton of press around
all of these people canceling Disney Plus and ESPN Plus, and he basically said,
after speaking with Jimmy, yeah, fuck you, Bob, Jesus Christ, you're Neville Chamberlain
and a cashmere sweater minus the dignity. So an economic strike against the Olympics? No,
I don't think that works. When we boycotted Russia, they then boycotted us. I don't think
any impact on either nation. But a targeted specific attack, if you will, or boycott that
creates media tension and is somewhat organic. I think words. I've heard ideas ranging from
Home Depot, which has been accused of cooperating with ICE to transferring or canceling your
AT&T phone contract, who is also supposedly coordinating, I believe, with ICE and going to
another phone carrier. So I don't think what you're proposing works, but I do think the idea of
an economic strike has real merit. I'm beginning to believe that is probably the only, one of the
few ways, or one of the most effective ways that consumers could, if you will, check back
or create a co-inquil branch of government. I think it needs to be targeted with a specific
a specific company and a specific ask. Thanks for the question. That's all for this episode. If
you'd like to submit a question, please email a voice recording to office hours of proptuemedia.com.
That's office hours of profftumedia.com. Or if you prefer to ask on Reddit, just
post your question on the Scott Galloway subreddit,
and we just might feature it in an upcoming episode.
This episode was produced by Jennifer Sanchez.
Our assistant producer is Laura Gennar.
Jouberos is our technical director.
Thank you for listening to the PropGPod from PropG Media.
With LPL Financial, we provide the services to help push you forward.
When it comes to your finances, your business, your future, the only question should be.
What if you could?
Antichendrick is not a client of LPL financial LLC and receives compensation to promote LPL.
Investing involves risk, including potential loss or principal LPL financial LLC member, FINRA, SIPC.
Does it ever feel like you're a marketing professional just speaking into the void?
But with LinkedIn ads, you can know you're reaching the right decision makers, a network of 130 million of them, in fact.
You can even target buyers by job title, industry, company, seniority, skills, and did I say job title?
See how you can avoid the void and reach the right buyers with LinkedIn ads.
Spend $250 on your first campaign and get a free $250 credit for the next one.
Get started at LinkedIn.com slash campaign.
Terms and conditions apply.
If your team is spending more time chasing paperwork than actually closing,
it's time to check out Pipe Drive.
Pipe drive is a top-rated CRM tool for small to medium businesses,
helping sales teams close deals faster than ever.
Its visual sales pipeline shows you where every deal is,
what stage it's in, and what needs to.
to happen next, all in one dashboard. It's a powerful yet simple CRM, built by salespeople
for salespeople. Join the over 100,000 companies already using PipeDrive. Right now, when you use
my link, you'll get a 30-day free trial. No credit card or payment needed. Just head to
pipe drive.com slash Vox to get started. That's PipeDrive.com slash Vox, and you can be up and running in
minutes.
