The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - First Time Founders with Ed Elson – How Anthony Scaramucci Became The Mooch

Episode Date: October 5, 2025

Ed speaks with Anthony Scaramucci, founder and managing partner of SkyBridge Capital. They discuss the value of authenticity in entrepreneurship, why it's important to be a comfortable outsider, and w...hy he doesn’t regret his time in the White House.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:43 Yes, SVB. Learn more at SVB.com slash Vox. And this is not in the script, but we have been a client of SVP at PropG Media and my company before, L2, for a better part of a decade. Welcome to first-time founders. I'm Ed Elson. My next guest rose to fame in 2017 as Donald Trump's White House Communications Director, a role he famously left after just 11 days. His blunt, unfiltered style made him a household name.
Starting point is 00:01:25 But long before Washington, he was making way, on Wall Street. In 2005, he founded Skybridge Capital, a New York-based alternative investment firm with several billion dollars in assets under management. Four years later, he launched the Salt Conference, now a global stage for leaders in business, finance and politics that hosts thousands of attendees every year. And today, he's an outspoken voice at the intersection of media, markets, and policy. Here is my conversation with Anthony Scaramucci, founder and manager.
Starting point is 00:01:59 partner of Skybridge Capital. Anthony Scaramucci, thank you for joining me on first-time founders. Hey, I mean, I'm very flattered to be on it. Thank you. I like the name. I need swag yet. Okay, I need swag. Okay, first-time founders, I want to wear a shirt, a hat.
Starting point is 00:02:15 Well, you're wearing your Batman shirt, and that's pretty, that's pretty swaggy, I'd say. Well, okay, so you see, I'm going to date myself the 60th anniversary of Adam West as Batman, January 12th, 1966, so I'm preparing myself for the 60th anniversary because I'm still a small child. But I also know that you're a big Superman fan. That's your ultimate superhero, right? Yeah, I don't know if you can see behind me, though. You see, I had that made. That's Superman fighting Muhammad Ali, actually. And if you look close it, I'll take a picture. My wife and I are sitting next to Batman and Sonny Bono. I had us drawn into the picture, see? You got to stay young, Elson, okay?
Starting point is 00:02:56 First time I met with Anthony in person, we went to Skybridge, which we're going to talk about. But in the front of the Skybridge lobby, there is a giant Superman statue. This guy loves Superman more than anyone else. It's pretty incredible. Think about the story. Think about the mythological lore of Superman. He grows up in a small town. He's obviously adopted.
Starting point is 00:03:19 So there's some little bit of loneliness and need for achievement. And he's now got to make his way in the big city. So this is aspirational American dream. And, of course, he's trying to do the right thing. Remember, Ed, Superman is who we want to be. But Batman, Batman is who we are. We're dark. We're disjointed.
Starting point is 00:03:39 You know, we've got lightness and darkness. And we're not endowed with supernatural powers. Exactly. Superman is all about the light. Batman, a little bit dark like us, you know? Well, I'm really glad to have you on. I wanted to have you on this program. We've talked with you before.
Starting point is 00:03:54 We've talked with you on property markets. You've talked with Scott on Lost Boys. You have a lot of political experience. I think many people know you for your time in the White House. But, you know, the way I think about you, and the reason I wanted to have you on this program, is you are kind of the ultimate entrepreneur. You are the ultimate self-starter.
Starting point is 00:04:15 I mean, grew up, Long Island, blue-collar background, worked your way onto Wall Street. You were a scrappy guy on Wall Street. made your connections, I mean, one of the greatest networkers, I know, that's something I've learned about you, started your own investment firm, then started another investment firm, started a global conference, which has become extremely popular. That's the Salt Conference. You might be a public figure and you might have a background in politics, but you are really an entrepreneur. And so I wanted to have you on this program to hear about your entrepreneurial
Starting point is 00:04:58 background, what drives you, what led to Skybridge, what led to the Salt Conference. And I guess where we should start is probably just your background growing up in Long Island. Tell us a little bit about your upbringing in your childhood. Well, first of all, you're being very generous and and I appreciate that, and I'm a huge fan of yours, and you are also an entrepreneur, so you know you have to go from zero to one, and that's a hard thing for people when they really think about it, because I can remember when I started Skybridge, it was 2005, my daughter was nine years old, and I was printing out this PowerPoint, and it was a very antiquated PowerPoint presentation, and she says, Dad, aren't you at Lehman Brothers? I said, yes. She goes, well, all my friends here in this
Starting point is 00:05:49 neighborhood work at Lehman Brothers, what the hell are you doing? Why are you, this is just a piece of paper, this Skybridge thing. I remember looking at her laughing. I said, yeah, but I'm going to turn it into something. So you've got to go from zero to one. You get that. Scott Galloway gets that. And with that, there's a journey. There's an adrenaline rush. There's desperation. There's moments of despair. And there's a lot of anxiety that goes into that because you don't know if you and make it or not. And so my journey actually started at 11. And what happened to me was I was home from school. My dad got home early from work because he was a construction worker. Lunch pale went into the refrigerator at 10 p.m. He woke up at actually 3.45 a.m. got himself ready by 4.15. He was
Starting point is 00:06:38 out the door. He was on the job site by 5 a.m. And he came home at around 3.3.30. So I was home from school. my dad was getting home roughly at the same time and there was a lot of commotion and screaming and anxiety in the house I guess he had gotten his hours cut back and he was an hourly worker and he was subjected to the whims of the economy and his foreman and so on and so forth very hard worker and we lived in the middle class I would never even want to try to dishonor my dad's work effort
Starting point is 00:07:09 that suggests we grew poor but we had financial anxiety so there I was 11 years old I said okay I'll get myself a paper out. And so I got my work papers. I went to Long Island Newsday. Mr. Fusco, may a soul rest and peace. He gave me 15 houses. And after school, I would ride around on my 10-speed bicycle, and I would deliver the papers, and I'd collect.
Starting point is 00:07:32 And then I said to Mr. Fusco, listen, I have a great idea. I want you to give me 30 papers on Wednesday. When I went into the local apartment buildings, were all blue-collar Irish and Italian ladies, Ed, and I dropped the newspaper off at every door and I rang the doorbell and I said, oh, Mrs. Sheridan, how are you? Mrs. Elson, how are you? I mean, this is a free paper from Long Island Newsday. And then the next day I showed up and I rang the bell and I said, Mrs. Elson, you know, we'd be willing to subscribe. I'm trying to build my account base.
Starting point is 00:08:04 I'm trying to build my network. And I built the biggest paper route in that town. I was making like $60 a week. I was given 45 of it to my parents. Again, this is like 1975, 1975, 1976. And so I got the hustle in me very, very early. And then when you have the hustle in you, and this is a first-time Founders podcast,
Starting point is 00:08:25 so people should listen up. When you get the hustle going, you build yourself confidence. You know, yes, did some women say no, I'm sorry, Anthony. I don't want to subscribe to Long Island Newsday? Sure. Could I have had a rejection rate of 30, 40 percent?
Starting point is 00:08:39 Yes. but I was converting accounts and I was building a little bit of a large S for myself and I was hustling those papers and it got me into the mode of thinking like that so then I went to work at the local supermarket I worked in my uncle's motorcycle shop and by the time I was in high school I had three jobs I was working because I needed the money at I needed the money for potentially going to school and I needed the money to help my parents and I got that mindset. So the first thing I would say to people, you have to believe you can do something, and then you have to put a foot forward with imperfection. You know, if you're waiting for your
Starting point is 00:09:20 business plan to be perfect, if you're waiting for the idea to be scintillating the website to look pristine, you're waiting too long. You got to get your ass going. You got to get up and go. And then you have to adapt yourself when things are going wrong. And when things are going right you don't get too cocky you know and so that that's really my origin story um and uh you know i owe a lot to my mom and dad but really my dad's work ethic he was a hard working he was a tough guy he's hard on us in the house but he was a very hard worker and he played things straight that was the other thing you know my dad if my dad had a parking ticket on main street in the town i grew up in he would walk to the post office to get a money order to pay the parking
Starting point is 00:10:04 He wouldn't even wait to go home to write a check. That was my old man. That's how he thought about things. And so I always tell the people at Skybridge that my dad gave me my last name, Clean Ed, paid his taxes, paid his bills, worked super hard. So we're never going to do anything wrong at Skybridge. We can't do anything to dishonor that. You know, I don't need the money. Okay, but what I do need is for people to think that we're ethical and the people think that we have high integrity.
Starting point is 00:10:32 And so you've got to fuse those things together. You've got to fuse the work ethic, the ambition, the willingness to go on that arc, that journey, which has all that trepidation and adrenaline and, you know, fiasco is happening. But then at the same time, you've got to make sure you maintain your integrity in all circumstances because I've had some really bad things happen to me. I went into business with Sam Bank and Freed. I was spending 25 years in jail. If I didn't do everything right, block and tackle, and watch my P's and Q's during that business transaction, I could have been embroiled in something.
Starting point is 00:11:08 And, you know, your colleague and partner, Scott Galloway, and I always talk about this, if you have integrity, you will always have opportunity. I think one of the interesting things about you describing your childhood there is clearly you have the hustle in you, you're working hard. but it also sounds like you have a talent in you. It sounds like you were a pretty remarkable salesman from quite a young age. You're going around door to door, you're charming people, you're setting up these accounts. It sounds like you had sort of a knack for this.
Starting point is 00:11:44 Do you think that that is something that you recognized in yourself? Did you feel confident in your abilities? I mean, you probably don't want me to go full on existential, but I do believe that we're coming into the world with an operating system. You know, there's some of us that are musical, and some of us can sing beautifully, and some of us are great mathematical minds, or some of us can see things differently from a physical perspective. And I think I came in with some emotional intelligence, thank God.
Starting point is 00:12:15 I think I got raised pretty well. I mean, not with, you find me the family that's perfectly functional. I'll find you the family's lying. You know, our family motto was, let's keep the word fun and the word dysfunctional. So I'm not trying to say it was pristine or anything like that. But we got raised, right? We got raised with a good set of values and things like that. But I do think you come in.
Starting point is 00:12:36 You know, my brother's very mathematically inclined. I'm not. I'm more historically informed. You know, I can read things and assimilate information pretty quickly, but I'm not probably the best family member in math. You know, so you have to pick and choose what you are and then also be self. aware, you know, so I, you know, I, and again, if you're self-aware, then you have the self-confidence to delegate. So if, if you and I, you and I are working together, I can figure out what your skill set is relative to mine, and then here's all the work relative to your skill set.
Starting point is 00:13:10 Which is, by the way, one of our biggest recommendations on, on all of our podcast is, if you want to be successful, you need to identify what your talent is, and then you need to invest heavily into that. But that first step is actually quite difficult. When you're 11 and you're selling these papers and it's working, do you have a moment where you're like, I'm pretty good at this? I should keep doing this. Yeah, I think you do. I think you have a moment, as I was trying to say, where you start to build self-confidence. You're like, okay, you know, Mrs. Sheridan said yes. Mrs. Smith said no, but let me keep digging here. You know, every time I get a no, there's got to be a yes around the corner and you start to develop some level of self-confidence. But I think the thing I'm getting at,
Starting point is 00:13:55 you have to start. Like, I think what happens to us, we get anxiety about starting. And we also have to relax the shame gene in our personality. So we have to say to her says, okay, it may not work. And then can I live with myself? You know, I always, I call it the cocktail party test. You know, can you walk into the cocktail party and be the rugged startup person when the other person's working at Goldman Sachs and their career is moving gradually but diagonally positive and yours is going like a cardiac EKG. Can you be comfortable with that? You know, I worked at Goldman. I spent seven years there. It was a phenomenal place. Had a great career there. I left Goldman to start my own business. So I went from making big money in my 30s to no money.
Starting point is 00:14:46 to start my own business. And I remember that anxiety. And then when it started to work, I'm going to tell you this story because you'll get a kick out of it. A couple of my friends from Goldman was like, wow, your business is doing great. You're making your own way.
Starting point is 00:15:01 I'm going to go start my own business. And I remember one of my buddies coming into my office and say, okay, I'm going to leave Goldman and I'll go start my own business. And I said to him, okay, can I show you my summer house? Do you mind?
Starting point is 00:15:12 I would like to show you my summer house. And the guy looked at me, I said, well, come down the hallway. Let me show you my summer house. And I opened the door to a closet and it was a server form. And there were $700,000. That was a lot of money back in the late 90s. There was $700,000 of servers network switches in the closet. And I looked at them. I said, this is my summer house in the Hamptons, okay? Because I had to put all of my money into this tech to run the trading desk. I said, so if you're you're willing to put your summer house in the closet here in the office at 9003rd avenue, which was this nondescript commercial office building, I started my company in, if you're willing to do that, then you should do it. But you're not going to be at that cocktail party with your pinky up in the air in the Hamptons or showing off your artwork in the house because you're going to be putting the money back into your business. Yes, exactly.
Starting point is 00:16:10 So to me, it's a methodology, it's a way of thinking. and you have to not care it. You have to not care. And if it's not going well, you know, I've had at least, as I'm a public figure, as you pointed out, I've had at least three, possibly four financial obituaries,
Starting point is 00:16:30 three or four. This is a, this is, you put this on YouTube, right? Mm-hmm. All right, let me show you some. This is, because we got clowns in my office, okay? And so for people listening,
Starting point is 00:16:43 this is a bobblehead of me sinking in a dingy, called the SS Mooch. You see it? And so the New York Post in 2022 said Scaramooch is a loser. He bought Bitcoin. Bitcoin's going to zero. And they had this caricature. I looked like Tyrion Lannister, like a little tiny guy sinking in the Bitcoin boat. And the comedians at Skybridge, they made a bobblehead for me. Okay. Now, you could be upset about that or you could own it. I took a picture of it. I blew it up. I framed it and put in my office. Because my attitude is if I I'm going down, I want to go down gloriously. Yes. But if I'm not going down, I want to remind people that they may have bet the
Starting point is 00:17:23 wrong horse thinking that I am going down. Yes. Right? But here, here you go. What do you think? It's beautiful. Not bad, right? I think the hair looks great on this. I think the hair looks great. But it's a five or a six head, actually. It's not really a four head. That's one of the problem. What I'm making, you got to stay in things. And you got to, you got to, and by the way, that doesn't mean you stay in things if they're not working. You know, the beauty of what I'm saying is you stay in things, but when someone says never give up, that's right. You never give up on a business or the business, but you may have to shut down a fund. You may have to shut down a product line. You may have to say, oh, that's not going in the right direction. I got to
Starting point is 00:18:00 go this way, right? You know, Amazon starts with the retail operation, and they figure out, wait a minute, we've got the technology. We can go into web services. It turns out the web services is as valuable, if not more so than the retail operation. And then it makes it easier for them develop a streaming business. You see, there's an adaptation said differently, Skybridge Capital is not the firm that I started. If you looked at that PowerPoint that I was showing my nine-year-old daughter that's now 29, it's not the firm that I started. I innovated. I moved. I shifted the business from hedge fund management, fund of funds into crypto and private equity. It's moved as our society has moved and we've made these adaptations. Yeah, you seem to have,
Starting point is 00:18:46 a belief in yourself, and I think that is why you've been able to go up and down the roller coaster so many times. You've had extremely high highs, and you had extremely low lows, which I think is what it means to be an entrepreneur and a founder. And as you say, that is what you're signing up for. That's the thing that a lot of people seem to not really understand. I think they see the glitz and the glamour of being a success, but you've got to realize you're basically signing up for going through the trenches. And that requires a level of resolve and a level of self-confidence and belief in yourself to not be so discouraged when you're down. I want to figure out how you, how the mooch got there. So you're, you graduate from high school, you go to
Starting point is 00:19:33 Tufts where I believe you actually studied classics, right? I was an economics major and a classics minor. You and I had that in common. And then you go on to law. school. Why did you, and by the way, you, you, you get into Harvard Law. Tell us about that transition, going to Harvard Law School, why you wanted to be a lawyer, and how that experience played out. This is really not a great answer. So I'm going to tell you the real answer. So I had no clue what I was doing. My parents wanted me to go to college. I had a very high test scores. And I had a terrific guidance counselor, again, may his sole recipes, John Zanetti, Italian-American, He's my guidance counselor, and he came to my parents' house, and he was smoking cigarellos like my parents, and, Ed, you got to see him.
Starting point is 00:20:22 I had a little tiny house, a little tiny kitchen. My mother's making espresso out of this cast iron pot that my grandparents brought from Italy in the 1920s, and the espresso's coming out like motor oil. I don't know how these people, the hearts didn't blow up, okay? They're smoking cigarillos, and they're drinking motor oil espresso at the table. And Zinetti tells my parents in Italian, I had gotten into Binghamton, which was our state school. And then there's a private college called Tufts that I got into. My father thought that Tufts was spelled T-O-U-G-H-S. He had no clue. I mean, he didn't know any deal what it was, right? That's better, I think.
Starting point is 00:20:59 He's sitting there smoking cigarillos, and they're talking in Italian, and Zanetti says, you got to send a kid to the private school. And my dad was like, hey, man, I don't have the money. You know, I mean, the private school's 24,000. I mean, these are 70 or 80,000 now, but I'm talking about it in the 80s, right? And so Zena said, now that he'll figure it out. He's an industrialist kid. He'll get a job. He'll get some work study. He'll get a loan from the school, you know, blah, blah, a Pell Grant. And so my father was like, all right, if you think that's the right thing to do, we're going to do that. And so my father in April of 1982, Ed, he handed me a check. And I was a senior in high school. I accepted the, you know, the admissions at Tusk, and he handed me a check for $10,000.
Starting point is 00:21:45 When I looked at it, I said, Pop, where is this from? He said, well, I cashed in my union life insurance because it took the cash value of his license insurance, Ed, and he gave it to me in a check. He said, I don't have a lot of money for you to go to school, but this will get you started. And that was an explosion for me. That was like an epiphany for me. I was like, oh, my God, my dad is cashing his life insurance. I got to make sure I don't disappoint these people.
Starting point is 00:22:10 So I went to Tufts, I did very well there, you know, not brag. I just tell you the fact I graduated summa cum laude. I was five beta cap up. And I was trying to figure out what to do. And I read a newspaper article, I think it was in Time magazine, actually. It said that Wall Street lawyers were making $65,000 a year. Okay, and this is like 1985. And I'm like, wow, that's like double what my dad makes.
Starting point is 00:22:36 And so that's why I went. went to law school. I would love to tell you it was some kind of intellectual odyssey and all the stuff. I just looked at that and said, well, my dad's making $32,000 a year. We're doing okay. I can come out of law school and be double what he's making. I mean, that's more money than I even want or need. This was the superficiality of my decision making back then. And it's important for the first time founders podcast because now I've got to adapt and pivot. Because if you want to be a first time founder, guess what? You got to adapt and I go to law school.
Starting point is 00:23:10 I hate every minute of it. I'm coming home for Thanksgiving. I tell my mom, I want to drop out of law school and maybe apply to business school or do something different. She's an old school Italian. She basically tells me she's going to kill myself. I mean, you know, you know, with the light,
Starting point is 00:23:26 these dramatic Italians, right? I'm going to kill myself. You're going to kill yourself? I just don't like being in law school. Okay? But this is the best part of it at, okay? So I finished law school, but I get a job at Goldman Sachs.
Starting point is 00:23:39 My mother feels bad for me. This is terrible, she says to me. You're not working as a lawyer. This is terrible. This is terrible. So I'm in Rosano's Deli on Long Island. I'm getting myself like an Italian like Hogi or an Italian submarine sandwich, right?
Starting point is 00:23:56 And Mrs. Kizenz is behind me. And she looks at me. She says, how are you doing at that law firm, Goldman and Sacks? I said, well, excuse me? She had the law firm. Your mother tells me you're working at a law firm. And I looked at her, I'm like, yeah, I'm doing great, Mrs. Kazenza. Mrs. C, I'm doing great.
Starting point is 00:24:11 I call my mother. I'm like, ma, I'm not working at a law firm. I told her you were working at a law from. I'm embarrassed for you. This is my parents. This is how my parents were, okay? So, you know, to me, I went to law school for these very superficial reasons, but I'm very happy I did it because that was a phenomenal education.
Starting point is 00:24:31 Of course, I got the experience Harvard, which was a real culture shock for me at, you know, because I didn't go to a boarding school, I didn't have any legacies there. You know, I showed up in my Levi's jeans and a motorcycle leather jacket, and I had to get myself adjusted from a blue-collar world into a white-collar world. And Harvard was great to me and great for me for that. So when you go to, then you go to Goldman, and you're working on Goldman, you're working on Wall Street, presumably making a lot of money at that point. You described this cocktail party dynamic where you've got to go in there no matter how you're feeling
Starting point is 00:25:13 and you've got to go make friends with people. And you describe your blue-collar background and you're going into this white-collar world and then you're on Wall Street and you're rubbing elbows with these masters of the universe. How do you approach that? How do you walk into a meeting? Well, first of all, I didn't have the right clothing. I didn't have the right style of dress. You know, I remember my first interview at Goldman, the guy said to me, dude, I can't bring you down.
Starting point is 00:25:40 You look like an undertaker from Brooklyn. You're like in 100% poly. Okay, you're like fully flammable for the job interview. You're a very smart guy, but you got to go buy natural fiber clothing. And I remember being humiliated by that, and I went and got a credit card, and I bought the clothing. So I was always awkward in the beginning. I think it's very important to tell people the truth, okay? I was awkward.
Starting point is 00:26:02 I was making mistakes. I think these are the things that people don't really talk about. It's like, yeah, you can be smart and you can have a hard work ethic and all these things, but it's like something like clothes in these environments can be, it changes the whole game. But also your background. A lot of people from my background weren't on Wall Street. And so, you know, there were some, but not many. And I was a little bit of a fish out of water.
Starting point is 00:26:29 I wasn't really in the club, if you would call it that. This is another thing I would say about first-time founders. are you a comfortable or uncomfortable outsider? So if you're an uncomfortable outsider, that's somebody like Trump. He's an uncomfortable outsider. He doesn't like the fact that he can't get into your golf club. He doesn't like the fact that you won't invite him
Starting point is 00:26:50 to that Upper Eastside Salon dinner. So that pisses him off. So he goes and builds golf courses or he goes and runs for president to shove himself up your ass, okay, because that's it. Okay. But that's an uncomfortable outsider. I'm a comfortable outsider.
Starting point is 00:27:06 I grew up on Long Island. I didn't grow up in the Hoy-Polloy. None of my parents. There's no legacy. So I'm a comfortable outsider. Why that's important is if you're a comfortable outsider, you can be comfortable with yourself, and you could acknowledge your shortcomings in certain situations.
Starting point is 00:27:25 I think it helps you. And so for me, I looked around in the room, I said, okay, I don't fit in with these guys. I'm making good money for them. I'm not going to get into their golf, courses. I'm not going to be invited to their supper clubs. So what I'm going to do is I'm going to start my own business. There was an Italian American money manager. His name is Mario Gabelli. He's 85 today. He's one of my dear friends and mentors. When I was 30 years old, so this is like 31 years ago.
Starting point is 00:27:52 I had breakfast with him. He turned to me, he said, Anthony, you're a young guy, you're 30, but in 10 minutes, you're going to be 50. If you stay at Goldman Sachs, you don't fit in. You're going to have to like shave the points off your personality, you're going to have to put yourself in this corporate box that you're not comfortable with. So go leave, start your own business, because someday you're going to be 50. And guess what you're going to want to do when you're 50? You're going to want to work. Okay, you're going to want to work. And if you have your own business, guess what? People can't fire you, you know, if the business is successful. And I took his words to heart and I wrote down, I'm going to start the business the minute I pay
Starting point is 00:28:31 off my school loans. And so I paid off my school loans ed in May of 1996, about seven years after I graduated from law school. So I had loans from Tufts. I had loans from Harvard. And in December of 1996, at the end of Goldman's fiscal year, I left to start my first company. And I took a big hit and pay. I moved into a small house, by the way. I didn't, you know, I wasn't trying to play the game of social status. That's another big thing. you don't need it. You know, if you're an entrepreneur, what you need is the journey.
Starting point is 00:29:07 You don't need to prove to somebody that you have more money than them. You don't need to be driving a fancier car than them. What you need to be doing is putting your money into your business, your time and your energy. See if you can make that business work. We'll be right back.
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Starting point is 00:30:07 So if you're serious about being a part in the innovation economy, there's really only one bank for you, Silicon Valley Bank. Yes, SVB. Learn more at SVB.com slash Vox. And this is not in the script, but we have been a client of SVP at Property Media and my company before, L2, for a better part of a decade. We're back with first-time founders. So you leave, you start Oscar Capital Management.
Starting point is 00:30:44 You sell Oscar Capital Management in 2001, and then you go and you start another one. You start Skybridge. Tell us a little bit about those few years. So I left in 96. I had a partner by the name of Andy. Bozar was a phenomenal guy. He's now also retired. And we started the business. It was sort of a registered investment advisor. And then we had a small hedge fund attached to it. We won an advisor contract with Fidelity back in the year 2000. And so we were starting to get referrals from
Starting point is 00:31:18 Fidelity for our registered investment advisor. It was really growing our assets. And Newberger Berman wanted that. It was almost like buying an FCC license. You know, so they came to me and said, listen, we want to get into that advisor referral program, we'd like to own your business. We met with the Newberger-Berman management team, and we did the deal. This is sort of a little bit of lore here. We had the meeting with Newberger-Burman on the 5th of September 2001, and we did the deal. We shook hands on the deal, and then, of course, 9-11 happened. And so those guys said to me, okay, we've got to come back to you. And I said, okay, this deal's not happening. We were in total tragedy mode in New York. And then on the 23rd of September, the CEO of the company called me
Starting point is 00:32:03 and said, hey, we want to do the deal. Stock market's down 8%. The numbers that we promised you on the deal, we'd like to bring them down 8%. And so my partner and I caucused, and then our investment banker came with a great idea, said, yeah, accept the deal, but get stock options in Newberger. So meaning if the markets rallied back, we would pick up the, you know, the economics in the stock. And so we took the deal with the stock options. We moved over to Newberger on December 1st. And it was great.
Starting point is 00:32:35 I enjoyed that. Two years later, Newberger got bought by Lehman. I got an opportunity to work at Lehman for a little while. I really got on with Dick Fold, the CEO there. And I went to Dick and said, listen, I'm an entrepreneur. You have an awesome firm, but I would really like to start my own company. And Dick said to me, okay, if you can stay with me until the end of 2004, I'll put some money up and help you get started. And so my company in March of 2005 was started
Starting point is 00:33:02 with money from Dick Fold, the CEO of Lehman, Merrill Lynch, my old investment banker that helped me sell the business. They each gave me $10 million. The computer entrepreneur Michael Dell, who's a friend of mine, gave me $25 million. And I put my own money in there, and we rolled it all together. I went out and raised some money, and we launched our fund with about $300 million. dollars on that was our first fund but it was a hedge fund seeding business that's not the business we're in today some of those worked some of those didn't we had the financial crisis and uh and during the financial crisis we made a decision to buy city banks fund of funds business and their asset advisory uh and i had to i had to find money for that so i got the money from all
Starting point is 00:33:45 places i got the money from uh australia i went down australia i met with uh challenger finance And I don't know if you know who James Packer is, but he's a very large influential entrepreneur down there. His father was a big entrepreneur, multi-billionaire family. He owned Challenger financially. He became a personal friend. And he bought 10% of Skybridge, which gave me the equity ed to buy the Citibank business because they were forced to sell their business because of the TARP money that was coming into them from the federal government. So, so there I was. in that business and contemporaneous to that because we were having a hard time raising assets during the crisis, I started a conference business, which ultimately became salt. So all these things are accidental. I would love to sit there and tell you I had these brilliant visions and these brilliant strategies. I didn't. It was one foot in front of the other as we were trying to find our way to do things that we thought were creative and commercial to make the business of success. So now we sit here today.
Starting point is 00:34:52 Very nice, stable business, thousands of clients, some of it in crypto, some of it in hedge funds, some of it in private equity. And we've got this wonderful conference business that's been with us now for 16 years. And, you know, it's a fun business. And I like, you know, I get to do my podcast, I get to write books, I get to give some public speeches. And I don't get censored. You know, there's no one looking at the first time founders with Ed Elson and looking at the transcript and then calling you and say, oh, I've got to take that out of the transcript. Okay, I'm the censor. You see what I mean? And that's one of the benefits of being a founder.
Starting point is 00:35:30 One thing that stands out to me when you're starting Skybridge and raising the money, it's your relationships with people. I mean, a lot of getting started is about going to people, having established relationships with people, they have trust in you, they like you, and they're willing to say, yeah, we'll back you on this. And that sounds like that's really what got you there. So I'd be interested to hear about your early relationship building. How do you view relationships with people? How much has it played into your success as an entrepreneur?
Starting point is 00:36:07 I think for me, I think authenticity, I think if you think about the success of podcasters, like what makes a Galloway or an Elson, or what makes it Joe Rogan, it's authenticity. Ultimately, people are tuning in to hear the raw version of the person. They want to hear that intimate conversation. And so a podcast is like a radio show while this, you know, the corporation may be tied to it and it's getting beamed out to millions of people,
Starting point is 00:36:40 but a podcast, it feels dialed in and it feels very intimate. The reason I'm using that as an example, I think you have to be that way with your customers. You have to be that way with your clients and your friends. And so for me, I've always had in my head that I want to have nonlinear relationships with people, meaning I don't want to be a transactionalist. So if you called me and asked me for a favor, God bless, happy to do it. Okay, the flip side is I'm not looking for something.
Starting point is 00:37:09 To build the relationship, you've got to think in a nonlinear way. And you've got to be out there. You've got to be a guy where somebody's willing to call you to ask you for, a favor. You know, Ben Franklin had a great line. He said that if you want to make a friend, ask a person for a favor. It's sort of counterintuitive, but what happens in human life, we have this reciprocity system. And what we know from influence around the world, that it doesn't matter what the culture is. It doesn't matter what the language is. We do have this reciprocity embedded in us as social organisms. So if you call me and you, you know, you
Starting point is 00:37:48 you ask me for a favor and I do it for you, well, you feel good about it, and so do I. And all of a sudden, now we're engendering a relationship with each other. So you have to think about that from a sales perspective, I would call people and ask them for a favor, you know. And by the way, but I would also be open on the by side to accept those solicitations from others asking me for favors. Do you see what I mean? It sounds very basic, but it's hard to do because if you're self-conscious, like, oh, shit, I'm not going to call Ed today and ask you. him for a favor. You may say no to me and then I'll be embarrassed, right? But you can't be embarrassed. You got to assume that you're going to get a lot of noes in life, but you got to work
Starting point is 00:38:29 through that in your own brain. You've got to say, okay, the person said, no, I'm not going to take it that personally. It could be a reason why they're saying no that isn't really directly related to me. I also think it's an expression of vulnerability, which goes back to what you say about intimacy, authenticity. You're saying, look, I kind of need your help. I would really appreciate your help, which is a vulnerable thing to do. At this time, you know, you're building your business. You're also starting to get into TV, you're doing TV appearances, you're writing books, you're building this conference, you're doing a lot of stuff at once. I mean, by the way, writing books is its own entrepreneurial activity.
Starting point is 00:39:13 It's a whole other business in and of itself. How are you juggling all of this at the same time. And I think it still applies today. You've got one of the top podcasts, the rest of politics, U.S., you're again, you're doing speaking engagements, you're doing a lot of stuff. How do you do it all? This is very counterintuitive, but if you want power, if you want to gain power and increase your power, you have to give it away. I'm going to say it again. It's very important for people to listen. You want to be powerful. You want to do a lot of things, give your power away. So, John Darcy runs the conference business. He's the CEO of it. He's in charge of our business development. He has the decision-making authority to book the
Starting point is 00:39:58 location, get the sponsors, bring in the delegates. Brett Messing, my law school classmate is the chief investment officer. He's empowered to put the portfolio together. My compliance person, Marie Noble is empowered to interface with the SEC. Again, not that I'm not talking to them regularly, not that I'm not helping them in different ways, but you've got to put yourself as a founder in the position of servant leader. What is a servant leader?
Starting point is 00:40:28 I'm serving the people that are working. Ready, Ed? Not for me. They're working with me. Watch your pronouns. It's not my company. it's our company. It's not me, it's us.
Starting point is 00:40:45 You see what I'm saying? And so I have dedicated my life to delegation. I've dedicated my life to empowerment and autonomy for the people that are working with me. But on the flip side, I'll take the responsibility. So I'll go to somebody like John Dorsey. I'll say, okay, look, you got the ball. If something goes wrong, call me, we can blame it on me.
Starting point is 00:41:08 No problem. Okay, I want to encourage it. encourage you to be the risk taker. You know, we had a situation. It was a really big amateur mistake by us. We didn't understand the holiday schedule in Singapore. And we booked the hotel to do a conference in Singapore. It turned out it was on like the Festival of Lights for 45% of the population. And they were going to have most of the restaurants and most of the stuff is going to be closed. It would be like, you and me saying, okay, we're going to do a salt conference. We're going to do it on Christmas Day, though.
Starting point is 00:41:40 Let's see if we can make it happen, right? I mean, it was really asinine. It was really amateur hour, and my team came to me, and they're like, I don't know, man, we screwed up. We didn't check the holiday schedule, and sort of, you know, the hotel should have told us probably, but we booked this. And I said, all right, well, how much is it going to cost us to get out of it? Well, it's going to cost us about $650,000. I gulped. I said, let's see if we can negotiate it at least down to 500. I think we ended up paying $600,000 to get out of the contract. But I didn't blame them. I didn't do this like the scarecrow
Starting point is 00:42:20 and the Wizard of Oz and start blaming everybody. I said, okay, I'm accountable. Put you guys in charge. You made a mistake. Not a big deal. Let's rock and roll. Let's go forward. And how does that lead to success and to attaining power? I agree with you. It's the upstanding thing to do. Because it empowers people. It makes them think this guy has my back. I did make a mistake. He knows I made a mistake.
Starting point is 00:42:45 I know I made a mistake. But he's not pilloring me for it. If anything, he's trying to boost me up to make me more accountable. You want to, you know, to be an entrepreneur, you have to train entrepreneurs. Okay, you have to be in an entrepreneurial mindset with the people that are working with you. oh you want to run something something okay run it now take this piece of our business you run it report to me oh you need me to make a call for you to secure a sponsor no problem oh you need to get a speaker you need scott galloway to come and give a keynote i know scott let me give him a call
Starting point is 00:43:23 oh you're trying to make that investment in xAI i know two of the board members let's see if we can get the the board to find us some stock for our private equity fund you you follow what i'm saying but now I'm in a seat of service and what you don't want to be is a bottleneck. What you don't want to be is everyone's got to come to you to make every decision in the company then you can't do all the things
Starting point is 00:43:46 that I'm doing. Reagan had a plaque on his desk in the Oval Office and I showed it to you when you came to my office. There's a little tiny plague it says you can get anywhere you want in life as long as you don't care who gets the credit. And the point is you've got to empower people.
Starting point is 00:44:02 If you empower people, you become more people. powerful. I think that's something is a very big lesson for me that I've learned over the years of managing a company. And I'm sure it also helps with just retainment, employee retainment. I mean, you win people's trust. Remember, you want people to feel a purpose. And when you give them that kind of responsibility where they're doing the decision, and guess what, they feel quite purposeful. Purposeful people tend not to leave companies. How do you think about this when it comes to hiring talent? I mean, you have a lot of young,
Starting point is 00:44:35 smart people, analysts working at Skybridge. How do you pitch the company? How do you bring people onto your team? Well, I have a big summer program. So I sort of stole that idea from Goldman and some of the big investment banks. We just have 20 people in the summer program. We bring them in from great schools or we may have a personal connection to them somehow. And so we get a lot of our talent actually from our summer program. I like training people from day one. We don't really have a lot of lateral hires into a place like Skybridge. It's sort of, I can't give it a British football comparison, but I can give it an American baseball one. We have like a minor league system, and we're trying to grow the talent from in. We're not really trying to pick off youth academy
Starting point is 00:45:15 in football terms. Yeah, exactly. We're not trying to pick off free agents, you know. And so that's one way we do it. I think the second thing that we do, which I think is super important, is I want to hear ideas. I want to hear pitches. So I've had people come to me and say, here's my idea. And if we not like them and we know them, we may cede them with some money, may put them on the desk somewhere and see if they can, you know, figure out a way to grow a business inside of our business. That's an idea that we do. I have an open door policy, meaning if you called me and said, hey, I've got X, Y, Z. He's interested in working at Skybridge. I will invariably see the person. Because my attitude is that's where the opportunity.
Starting point is 00:46:00 I can't tell you the number of times I didn't want to take a meeting, but I took the meeting and it turned out it was a great idea for Skybridge. It was a great idea or it was a great idea for somebody else and I was able to pass it off to one of my friends. So I take, my wife gets mad at me, my assistant gets mad at me. I take way more meetings than I probably should. But I also have this attitude where I like paying things forward. So I went to the London School of Economics where I spent a semester in college, and I spoke, I don't know, it was last spring, maybe it was April or May. I was at the London School of Economics, you know, off the strand there. And I spoke for an hour. And then I probably was there for two additional hours. And you say,
Starting point is 00:46:47 well, what the hell was I doing in the two additional hours? I was talking to the people that lined up to speak to me after the event. So what the hell are you doing that? You could have had a body man or something like that, get you out of there. But that's what I had to do it. I had to go to events like that with my electronic typewriter written resume, and I had to wait for the guy to get done speaking, and hopefully I could get my resume to him and say, hey, blah, blah, blah, could I come see you? Could I meet you at Goldman?
Starting point is 00:47:21 Could I do this? Could I do that? Could I buy a cup of coffee? Could I drive you to the airport? How about that one? Can I drive you to the airport? I had a little Honda Civic. Can I drive you to the airport instead of you taking a cab?
Starting point is 00:47:32 I'm going to have all the tricks. But I had to do that to get to where I am. So when I'm there, now I want to pay it forward, so I'll hang out with the people, you know. I've invited some of these people to go see us at the Indigo Arena at O2, or I said, okay, come next time you're in New York, or do a Zoom call at my sales team. I just think it's important because then, you know, what happens is positive, positive karma. and people say, hey, the guy's approachable, he's willing to, he's willing to be open. And by the way, I needed people to be open with me yet. And I always tell these young kids, if I do them a big favor, like, oh, what can I do for you?
Starting point is 00:48:12 Nothing, but 10 or 15 years from now, pay it forward. We'll be right back. Support for the show comes from Silicon Valley Bank. Silicon Valley Bank is deeply embedded in the company's products and services that form the innovation economy. They are a proactive partner that helps bring their client's vision to life, and they fuel high-growth companies with tailored solutions and the hands-on support that turn potential into performance. And now, SVB is a division of First Citizens Bank. First Citizens Bank has always been dedicated to highly personalized service and supporting emerging sectors.
Starting point is 00:48:53 That's why buying SVB made sense for First Citizens Bank and for you. SVB clients can help benefit from this combined commitment to tailored solutions, incredible service, and deep expertise from a top 20 bank with a national footprint. So if you're serious about being a part in the innovation economy, there's really only one bank for you, Silicon Valley Bank. Yes, SVB. Learn more at SVB.com slash Vox. And this is not in the script, but we have been a client of SVP at Propgy Media
Starting point is 00:49:21 and my company before, L2, for a better part of a decade. We're back with first-time founders. So you're building your business, and then you, of course, go into the White House. You have your 11 days, you're unceremonious firing. The reason I bring this up, you've been through some of the greatest ups and the greatest downs ever. I'm glad you brought it up. I think it's an important part of my life story. I don't, I don't shirk from or run away from that. You know, I think it's important people to understand is I'm not a politician. You know, I'm a business person. I was having a very hard time breaking into the high
Starting point is 00:50:15 net worth circles in New York or, frankly, the country. I can't play golf. I don't know how to. I can't hit a tennis ball. I don't know how to. Never, never learned it as a kid. And so, How was I going to meet these people? And it dawned on me that I could meet them through politics. And so I wrote my first check to Rudy Giuliani when I was, I guess, 28 or 29 years old. He was running for mayor. He won, which was very helpful to me. And the fact, he was Italian American was also helpful. He started introducing me at a whole waterfront of people. He introduced me to George Pataki, who became the governor of New York. And then I met George W. Bush. And then I had a series of things where I became a pretty well-known Republican fundraising.
Starting point is 00:50:56 How did I become a Republican? My dad's union, which is sort of bizarre, most of these unions in America Ed are controlled by the Democrats. My dad's union here on Long Island was controlled by the Republican Party. And so when I registered for the draft and I signed up for the to register to vote, I asked my dad, am I a Democrat or Republican? No, no, you're a Republican. So I became a Republican, you know, and it'd be like, yeah, you're either a man city or Manchester United's. I'm a Republican. I mean, stay loyal to your team, right? And so I was working. working for Republican candidates, and successfully and unsuccessfully. And I was with Jeb Bush in 2016, and Trump called me. I knew Trump from the city. I'd worked with Trump on a couple
Starting point is 00:51:39 of charities. I'd gone a few Yankee games with Trump. I had a good relationship with him and his wife, for that matter. It wasn't friends. You can't say that you're friends with somebody like Donald Trump because you're not. You just don't understand the relationship if you think that or you're overly name-dropping. And so he called me, said he wanted me to work for him on the campaign. I see you on TV, you're good on TV. I want you part of my campaign. I said, well, I'm with Jeb Bush.
Starting point is 00:52:06 I can't, too loyal. I can't leave him. He said, well, if I knock Jeff Bush out of the race, I want you to come work for me. And so I did. And that was a mistake. I didn't see Trump for who he actually is. Again, I don't want to make the podcast political because it's very entrepreneurial, but I'm a balls and strikes person.
Starting point is 00:52:25 Lifelong Republican, he's going to be the nominee. I'm going to go work for him. And then he wins, Ed. He wins. And then he puts me on the transition team. And then I get intoxicated with the winning. And then I do something that is a real cautionary tale for everybody listening in. I put my pride and I put my ego into my decision making.
Starting point is 00:52:46 And so now I grew up in this blue collar family. I'm with the Tufts in Harvard. I built two successful businesses. I can go work in the White House for the American president. And my wife is like, please don't do that. I mean, she hates Trump, like, almost as much as Melania hates him. So that's like way up here, you know. And she's like, please don't do that.
Starting point is 00:53:06 And I say, no, I got to do that because I got to fit this into my self-narrative. I've got to aggrandize my ego and my pride and all this silly stuff. And so I go to work for him. My wife said something that turned out to be completely true. What did she say? She said, if you go work for him, it's different when you're in the campaign and you're a volunteer. If you go work for him, you're antithetical to him. You don't think the same way.
Starting point is 00:53:34 You don't carry the same culture ideas about how to manage something. And he's the opposite of giving power away. You know, he wants all the credit for himself. You're going to have a hard time. 11 days in, we were fighting about different things, and I got fired. I knew I was getting fired on the Friday before. I got fired on a Monday, but I knew I was getting fired on that Friday because I was fighting with them about something, and I was like, this is not going to end well. I thought it was getting fired over the weekend, but I guess they, you know, they dropped the envelope on me
Starting point is 00:54:08 on the Monday, and I took it, you know, it is what it is. You know, I got excoriated in the press, I got beat up by late-night comedians. I got ripped by a one. named Kara Swisher. I know if you ever heard about her. If you ever ran into her. And then ironically, the poor lady, she had to sit with me side by side on a panel in San Francisco, which, of course, we ended up building a great friendship after that, right? I mean, you know, it's just the irony of life, right? And, you know, hurt my business, hurt my reputation. But what did I do? I went into it, and I didn't go away from it. You know, I went on Jimmy Kimmel. I went on Bill Moore. I win on Stephen Colbert. I didn't walk away from it, and I wasn't going to let it in its one
Starting point is 00:54:54 incident define me. Sure, it'll end up in my obituary. That's fine. But I think it was very important for me to get my voice back out there so that I could three-dimensionalize who I am, as opposed to just being a caricature the way your political adversaries want to frame you, right? I mean, remember, negative campaigning is prolific for one reason, Ed Ellson. It works, okay? And so you want to frame people with a caricature so that you can demean their arguments, right? One of the things you learn in trial advocacy at Harvard, if you're wrong on the facts, which you can be oftentimes, if you're wrong on the facts, do the ad hominem attack, attack the person, okay? And that's what they do in politics.
Starting point is 00:55:40 So I was getting lit up and attacked, but I took it. And then eventually, you know, I didn't break from Trump right away after I was fired. I thought that would be, you know, I thought I'd be a weenie if I did that. And so I waited two years later when he was really, I thought, off the rails. I said, look, I can't be a part of this. I can't support this type of behavior. And then the fight started with me and him. And then the fight got, got, you know, he actually got fun for me.
Starting point is 00:56:04 You know, I mean, he was like tweeting at me. And I started hitting him super hard. And then he stopped tweeting at me. I think he figured out. He was like, I was getting like 100,000 Twitter followers every time. Even though we're fighting, it's not worth it, you know? You mentioned that you view it as a mistake to join the campaign and that you let your pride and your ego get in the way of clear thinking, I guess.
Starting point is 00:56:28 But I kind of want to push back on that for a moment because at the same time, I get it in the sense that you're going off to greatness and you're going off, as you say, the self-narrative, which you could say is, oh, I'm letting you know, letting you. my ego get the better of me. But at the same time, that ego is a positive and powerful force that can drive you to go on and achieve great things. And you've, you know, establish yourself in the Republican Party. You went for, you were supporting Jeb Bush and then through no folds of your own, Jeb Bush gets kicked out and then Trump's the guy. And then the next president of
Starting point is 00:57:06 the United States, potentially the next president says, do you want to come be on my team? To which for me, if I'm you, even knowing what happened after, I'm saying yes. Here's the biggest lesson for first-time founders. When shit goes down and you don't like it and you've made a bad decision or you think you may have made a bad decision, forgive yourself. Okay, don't carry the millstone of regret around. You know, I've made so many bad decisions in business and missed an investment. I could have bought into Uber at a really early valuation.
Starting point is 00:57:38 I didn't understand the business, you know. I don't kick myself in the pants. I don't wake up in the morning and say, you know, you got fired from the White House eight years ago. Let me kick myself in the pants this morning and regret the things that went on in that decision making. You can't do that. And so I don't regret it, but I want to explain it to people so that there's a cautionary tale in there for themselves. And I think the lesson is get your pride and get your ego out of your decision making. If you're an investor, hiring somebody, taking a job.
Starting point is 00:58:09 get your pride and ego out of the decision-making. You know, I made a decision to live in a way smaller house than I could afford. Why did I do that? I didn't want to have the financial insecurity if things went wrong in my business. I took my pride down and said, this is comfortable. It's bigger than the house I grew up in. You follow what I'm saying? And I'm trying to give you some philosophical tenets to think about as an entrepreneur
Starting point is 00:58:38 which will increase the likelihood of you doing well as an entrepreneur. The ups and downs, I mean, you've picked yourself up so many times. And one thing that you mentioned there that I so agree with and I think is so important is that you said you need to not care, or at least you need to not care too much. And there's this quote from Trump way back in the day that I would like to read to you that I think
Starting point is 00:59:09 with all of his vices, I think this explains a lot of his success and I'd like to get your reaction. So someone asked him, this is long before he's president, someone asked him, I'd like to know how you handle your stress. Trump responds,
Starting point is 00:59:25 I try and tell myself it doesn't matter. Nothing matters. If you tell yourself, it doesn't matter, like you do shows, you do this, you do that, and then you have earthquakes in India where people get killed. Honestly, it doesn't matter. Not the most eloquent individual.
Starting point is 00:59:43 But I think he's hitting on something quite interesting there, which is through those ups and through those downs, you do need to take a step back and say, you know what? Doesn't matter. I don't often tell this story, but I'll share it with you. So it's 2012. I'm working on the Romney campaign.
Starting point is 01:00:00 Trump and I have done two fundraisers together for Mitt Romney. And so I've been, you know, You know, if you go to Trump's triplex apartment at Trump Tower, it looks like Louis the 14th smoke crystal meth and then decorated the place, right? It's like a, you can't even believe this place. But we bought together a table for a charity, and it was tied to, I guess, Lupus, and it was downtown at Chippriani's. And I got to the table late.
Starting point is 01:00:24 I had half the table. He had half the table. And when I got there, I was very discouraged. And Trump looked over and he said, what the hell is the matter with you? And I said, oh, this XYZ reporter just wrote terrible shit about me. I had bad performance in my fund. And he's lighting me up. And the fucking guy calls me a popin'jay.
Starting point is 01:00:43 I don't even know what that fucking means. I have to look it up even. It's a fucking terrible thing to be called. And Trump looks at me and he said, what are you a big baby? What did you just get your cherry popped? Are you a big baby? He said, and he said, look at me. He said, say, listen to me.
Starting point is 01:01:00 grow a set of balls and shut the fuck up. It's literally I was talking to me. I do shit written about me every day? Do you think I give a shit? Learn not to give a shit. And it's literally what he says to me at the table where we're getting ready for the charity. And I walked out of there and I said he's right.
Starting point is 01:01:17 Listen, he's popular for a reason. I don't want to be president, okay, because I just think the way he's handling himself is not appropriate for that job. But he's popular for a reason because he's smart. He's intuitive. He does identify kernels of truth and things, whether it's immigration or, you know, the lack of manufacturing prowess for the United States. I can take you through the things that he does that are smart.
Starting point is 01:01:42 I just don't, and I'm not in love with the way he handles himself because I think it's not a great reflection on the country, you know. And also, also we've built over 80 years this architecture around the world that we represent something to the rest of the world. And I'd like to maintain that. I'd like to maintain that beacon of hope, that candle of optimism. And I just don't think he's handling himself, right? But there were kernels of wisdom and what you just quoted. And there I was at this lupus fundraiser where Trump was telling me, get over yourself.
Starting point is 01:02:18 Okay, it's not that big of a deal that people are writing negative stuff about you. Exactly. And it seems like you have done a good job throughout your career. I haven't done a perfect job. And again, here's the thing, you know, your grandmother may have told you, Ed, what other people think of you is none of your business, and you've got to try to live by that. But if you're being brutally honest, there are days where you're impacted by what other people think of you. And you have to work on that every day. You've got to say, okay, forget that. Let me shut those notifications off or, okay, wow, that was a real nasty article about me. Who cares? Let's move on. How do you do that, just practically speaking? I mean, you're a public person. You've had people write things about you. You've had people write things about you. You've had. failures and busy. I mean, you mentioned buying into FDX, and then that blows up, and then that's a problem. And you've had these moments where, you know, things can get to you. And again,
Starting point is 01:03:13 why I think you have an incredible insight is the amount of times that you've come back. And with so much energy and with so much agility, what do you do? I think the number one thing, and it's a simplistic thing to say to you, but the number one thing is get up. The number one thing is no self-pity. Okay, the number one thing is manage your expectations to zero. Okay, you're young enough to be one of my kids. So if you were one of my kids, I would tell you curse all you want, but there are two words you can't use in my presence, I will flip out. You want to hear the two words? Should and ought. I don't want to hear those words. I should. I don't want to hear those words. I should have gotten into that college. I ought to get a 36 on my ACT or whatever it is. Should and ought are
Starting point is 01:04:05 normative words. And ultimately, when you get down to it, they express some level of victimization. I should not have been fired from the White House. Well, you know what? I was fired from the White House. The world is based on is and was, not should, and ought. And so if you, if you, you know, you want to train yourself to get over things, deal with it. Don't be, you know, and also recognize there's a requisite package of things that you're coming into life with. You're going to have trials and tribulations. If I took you to an ancient Greek theater and it was 2,200 BC, there would be two
Starting point is 01:04:44 masks on the wall. One is a happy mask expressing comedy. One is a sad mask expressing tragedy. And what the ancient Greeks would have told you, Ed, is that you're going to get both of those things in your life. There'll be moments where of levity where you're laughing, and there's moments where people are dying around you that you're going to be saying goodbye to people that you love. And that is, unfortunately, the human condition, both sides of that story are with you, and every person, rich or poor is going to unfortunately have to deal with that. And so get your mindset on the fact that that's going to be part of your life no matter what.
Starting point is 01:05:19 And if you're an entrepreneur, you're going to have ups and downs. and they're going to be higher oscillations than someone that takes a corporate job or somebody that works in a law firm. But you know what? That's the choices that you took. So don't be a baby. If I put you, if I put a helmet on you right now,
Starting point is 01:05:39 I said, you're going into the NFL. You're going to be a wide receiver. Guess what's going to happen? You're going to get a concussion. It's like 100% guaranteed. Are you going to be a bitch and whine about the concussion? Okay.
Starting point is 01:05:50 I went into American politics at the highest level, and I got my ass kicked. What did you think was going to happen? You weren't going to get your ass kicked? You're going to play the victim? Don't play the victim. You with me? And I think that's the mindset.
Starting point is 01:06:06 I think that's the way you've got to think about these things. For any young people who are building their business, building their brand, what would be your number one piece of advice to those people? I mean, it's a simplistic piece of advice, but you should really listen to this and take it to heart. for three hours a day. Okay, get yourself an audible app, get yourself a Kindle, put it on your phone.
Starting point is 01:06:31 If you're walking to work, put your earbuds in and listen to a book and find things that interest you and read for three hours a day. Now, Buffett, Warren Buffett, reads for six hours a day. So you're not going to do that, I know that, but you should read for three hours a day because if you read for three hours a day, you're going to learn stuff, you're going to learn stuff about management, stress management, history, health. You know, the reason why I do a, I do a podcast called Open Book where I interview authors because I find authors have to work hard to develop a book. You know, before inflation, I used to say for $10 and 10 hours of reading, you can get 10 years
Starting point is 01:07:09 of an author's experience. It's $35 now, but you get the point that I'm making. And so I've got books here that I read, you know, and I learn from these books. It could be a history book. It could be a business book, it would be a health management book. It'd be a book about quantum physics. But let me tell you something, if you're reading three hours a day, and you say how that's impossible, it isn't because you can probably work out at least an hour, put the earbud in while you're working out. Okay, you're commuting, you're probably commuting to your job. You're flying on a plane once in a while. Put the earbud in or bring a Kindle or bring a, you know, bring your iPad and download the book. And if you do that, you're going to be a lot more interesting
Starting point is 01:07:50 to people, and you're going to be a lot smarter, and you're going to be ahead of the game because most people are not doing that. Love that advice. Anthony Scaramucci is the founder and managing partner of Skybridge Capital. Anthony, love having you on the podcast. So much wisdom. I really appreciate it. I appreciate you having me on.
Starting point is 01:08:07 We've got to do it home and away. You've got to come on my podcast. All right, brother? I would love to. All right, man. Good to see you. Thank you, Anthony. This episode was produced by Claire Miller and Alison Weiss and engineered by Benjamin Spencer,
Starting point is 01:08:20 Our associate producer is Dan Shalon. Thank you for listening to first-time founders from the Vox Media Podcast Network. We'll see you next month with another founder story. Support for the show comes from Silicon Valley Bank. Silicon Valley Bank is deeply embedded in the company's products and services that form the innovation economy. They are a proactive partner that helps bring their client's vision to life, and they fuel high-growth companies with tailored solutions
Starting point is 01:08:57 and the hands-on support that turn potential into performance. And now, SVB is a division of First Citizens Bank. First Citizens Bank has always been dedicated to highly personalized service and supporting emerging sectors. That's why buying SVB made sense for First Citizens Bank and for you. SVB clients can help benefit from this combined commitment to tailored solutions, incredible service, and deep expertise from a top 20 bank with a national, footprint. So if you're serious about being a part in the innovation economy, there's really only
Starting point is 01:09:24 one bank for you, Silicon Valley Bank. Yes, SVB. Learn more at SVB.com slash Vox. And this is not in the script, but we have been a client of SVP at Property Media and my company before L2 for a better part of a decade.

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