The Vergecast - Inside Bill Gates' brain with Davis Guggenheim

Episode Date: October 1, 2019

This week on our Vergecast interview series, editor-in-chief of The Verge Nilay Patel chats with filmmaker Davis Guggenheim on his new documentary “Inside Bill’s Brain: Decoding Bill Gates” on N...etflix. Davis talks about how he got Bill Gates to participate in the film, the structure for the documentary, the most surprising thing he’s learned about Bill, and more. We are conducting an audience survey to better serve you. It takes no more than five minutes, and it really helps out the show. Please take our survey here: theverge.com/survey  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:59 dropping May 14th. Tap in with us. Hey everybody, it's Seonoff in The Vergecast. On this week's interview episode, I talked to Davis Guggenheim, who just directed the Netflix documentary Inside Bill's Brain. It's a three-hour documentary
Starting point is 00:01:12 about Bill Gates. He had two years of access to Gates. Guggenheim directed an inconvenient truth. He directed It Gets Loud, which is a documentary about rock guitarist, which I love so much. But for Inside Bill's Brain, he had just total access
Starting point is 00:01:25 to Bill and Melinda Gates for about two years. It's a really deep look It Gates' personal history, his relationship, his family. It also has a really interesting structure, so we got into that. This was a really fun conversation with a great filmmaker about how he does what he does and what he learned about Bill Gates. Check it out, Davis Guggenheim on the Vergecast. Davis Guggenheim, welcome to the Vergecast.
Starting point is 00:01:46 It's really nice to be here. Nice to meet you, Eli. Yeah, so I want to talk about Inside Bill's Brain, which is a documentary you just made for Netflix. But first, can I tell you that you made It Might Get Loud, which is one of my favorite documentaries of all time, because I just love, people like using their tools and that is just a bunch of wild guitar players using their tools. Thank you. It was really fun to make. Did you notice any like, did Jack White and Bill Gates have any similarities as you, like? Let me think about that. Because at Michael Ladd was, it was Bono. I'm sorry, it was the edge, Jack White and who was a third person? Jimmy Page. Jimmy Page. Tell me if there's
Starting point is 00:02:23 any similarities between those three and Bill Gates. Jack White, I would say, well actually all three, I would say extreme focus. All three of them, but especially Edge, you could go. I'd be filming with Edge, and if we stopped to move a lighter, a camera, he would just sort of start working and start working on his guitar or fiddling with gear. And you could just let four hours pass, and his head wouldn't come up. If you give him a free second, Edge would just go right in and start doing what he does. Same thing with Bill.
Starting point is 00:02:54 We were shooting in Hood Canal, and we were in this little, the think cabin that's in episode two. We said, hey, we need five minutes to move a light, and he walked outside and just opened the book he was reading and just read standing up with one foot on his knee. So standing on one foot, reading a book, meaning if you give him a free second, he wants to engage his brain again. And I would say that, you know, other than that, lifestyle is very different from Jimmy Page and Bill Gates, for sure. I can imagine. Not a lot of scarves in the, in the documentary that I watched with Gwit Gates. And not a lot of worship of the occult either.
Starting point is 00:03:32 That's great. So Inside Bill's Brain, three-part documentary on Netflix, I just watched it this week. Tell me how this project got started because you got a lot of access to Gates. And it's obviously on Netflix. It's an unusual structure, this, you know, three, one-hour episodes. Tell me how it came together. So I was making the film Waiting for Superman, and we were almost done, but it felt like it was missing a voice. And waiting for Superman was about public education.
Starting point is 00:03:58 It's like, how does the sort of failure of our public schools affect business? And what better a thing to talk about someone who's in Silicon Valley, or at least the business of Silicon Valley, he's up, obviously up in Seattle. But what does that do to growing the best business in America? How do you find talented, educated people? And how does it, how does failure of our schools of some of our schools, I should say, many do really well? But how does that affect our growing economy in the tech business? So I went up in interview Bill and he was so great and so surprising that I was like, wait a minute, this person needs to be reconsidered.
Starting point is 00:04:34 Because to give you the backstory, I got a Macintosh in 1984. I was a first person in my dorm at Brown to get one. I think there was like 10 had arrived at Brown. And everyone in my floor huddled around this magical computer. So I was a Mac, I was an Apple guy. And, you know, I always thought Steve Jobs is cool. And Microsoft was like for the business people. And, you know, I sort of held Bill Gates in my mind in arm's length.
Starting point is 00:04:59 I was like, he's, yeah, it's just business guy. And maybe he's a monopolist, maybe he's not. But, you know, I like, I like Mac. And so when I finally met him, I was like, wow, there's something he's doing right now that needs to be understood. He has really changed his public image. And I kind of want to get into that part of it. Because the way inside Bill's brain is structured, literally inside of every episode, it's almost like a thriller of, like, the project that the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is doing, whether that, toilets or nuclear energy or vaccinations, then there's like the history, which I think is what
Starting point is 00:05:30 most people kind of assume you're going to get, right? We're going to tell the story Bill Gates from start to now. But there's this like thriller component of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation happening inside of it. How did you decide to like make that structure go? I started filming and I actually got lost and was like, I don't know how to make this, you know, because a lot of the work they're doing is super complex. And also not necessarily dramatically, it's not just out of water and the story tells itself, right?
Starting point is 00:05:59 And so I was experimenting with this kind of way of cutting back and forth between his biography and the work that he's doing. And the first time it worked was when I, and it's in episode two, I think, is when he's trying to figure out why cases of polio keep popping up all over Nigeria and Afghanistan and Pakistan and why past efforts had failed. and how he used sort of his brain, how do you delve inside his brain, to sort of like crack that? Because people have been trying for years, they thought they were getting close, and then it doesn't work.
Starting point is 00:06:34 And what I thought I'd do is show Bill in the early days in high school cracking the class schedule. It's sort of a famous story where his private school asked Bill a sophomore. I think they ask him when he's a sophomore, and then he does it in his junior or senior year. But they say, hey, you're good at this computer thing. there's a famous, there's a terminal in a school, there's only one terminal in any school
Starting point is 00:06:56 in the state of Washington, you say, hey, you're good at this coding thing. Can you code the class schedule at Lakeside? And so he and Paul Allen stay up all night and figure out how, you know, because his Lakeside had merged with a girls school. So they had all these different classrooms, different campuses, and Bill and Paul used sort of their brains and their sort of algorithms to crack that in the same way he cracks the algorithm or tries to crack the algorithm for eradicating polio. He did things like digital mapping and predictive analysis on where cases of polio would show up. So the storytelling, the whole storytelling for all three episodes follows that one example where we cut back and forth between something, some way in which his brain
Starting point is 00:07:39 worked or something revealed in his character in his historical story with what he's doing now, to reveal how his brain works and how, you know, how he solves problems. So you obviously got all this access to Bill, to Melinda. You got a bunch of archival footage, I guess you would call it, of them when they were young, when they were dating. There's video of Bill hugging his kids when they're babies, which, like, broke me. Like, you don't ever see that side of him. How did you go about getting access to Bill for the project? It's kind of the condition that I make for any movie.
Starting point is 00:08:12 When I flew to England to meet Jimmy Page and talk him in. into doing it might get loud. I was like, if we're going to do this, you got to open up to me. I want to ask any question I want to ask. I want to put everything on the table because that's, you know, that's what, if you're going to do a movie, if you're going to go make, make that effort, you got to open yourself up. And the same thing I did with Bill. And I have to say, if all the people I've ever made a movie about, he was the most open and the least concerned about, oh, you know, don't go there, don't get this right. I mean, I went, I went right into, you know, the depositions for the antitrust case.
Starting point is 00:08:45 You know, there's pretty harsh stuff in there about how the world sees him. And I put all, even if you go and watch the trailer of it, the trailer and the opening of the series is, is this guy a good guy? Is this guy a bad guy? You know, one voice calls him the devil.
Starting point is 00:09:01 I really wanted to say, I want to put it all on the table and say, you know, let's put everything on the table and let's consider this man. Did they, did Bill get any edit control? Did they get to say they didn't want anything in there? No. What I do is for every movie, when I get a cut that I like, I'll go and show it to people. So I show to Jimmy Page or Edge or anyone else or Bono or Malala, just because I want to make sure that I didn't miss something or I didn't miscategorize something. And often, in every case, you sort of they say, oh, well, you know, there's another piece of that story that didn't tell you. And usually it gets better. But nothing was, I didn't take anything out that I didn't want to put in.
Starting point is 00:09:39 So there's this sequence, you're talking about the antitrust. piece. There's a sequence where you ask him if he was arrogant in the antitrust deposition. I thought this was great. This is a heavy topic now. We actually talk about it on this podcast all the time. Are these companies too powerful? Should they get broken up? Microsoft was arguably the first. The current president of Microsoft, Brad Smith, he just wrote a book about basically asking the government to regulate tech companies. It's very interesting. But Bill Gates was the first. As you note in the documentary, he stepped back from the operations of Microsoft to handle the trial. Right.
Starting point is 00:10:16 He gave this famously bad deposition. Yes. And you asked him if he's arrogant. And he was like, well, look, when you're a 20-year-old billionaire, sometimes when you were getting that answer, did you sense that he was, that he was shading? Or was he just telling you what he thought? He was absolutely shading. I think you watch, which was fun about watching the movie and we put the full answer in
Starting point is 00:10:37 is that he didn't want to say he was arrogant. The fun thing about making a movie is one of my great teachers taught me this about storytelling is that, you know, that the filmmaker's job is two plus two. The audience's job is four. That sounds like a really pretentious film school way of saying it. But the idea is, I ask if he was arrogant. He gives an answer. It's up to you in the audience to say and decide whether he's arrogant or not. So I like to leave, put that in there and let the audience decide for himself or herself. Do you think that arrogance, however he wants to think of it, is an asset to him in his current work? That's a good question. That's a really good question. I'd have to let him answer that. I mean, I think intense focus, I think being very certain. I think maybe with a touch of arrogance gets to this place where you're cutting through a lot of bullshit. So let me qualify this answer by this is my answer, not his answer. But I do think that effective people in the world have to cut through bullshit. They have to cut through group think.
Starting point is 00:11:39 in their own group, in their own company. They have to cut through how the bureaucratic nature of a big company slows things down. So if arrogance, you know, if like 5% or 12% arrogance and certainty and bullheadedness is effective, I wouldn't mind that. I think sometimes a director of documentaries has to be bullheaded and arrogant sometimes. But then you have to sort of, you know, put guardrails on yourself. You have to sort of have, you know, a fuse on that so that you don't go too far. And I think clearly you see footage there from the early days of Microsoft.
Starting point is 00:12:11 Bill clearly went too far. Yeah. I mean, that's actually the one piece of documentary that I don't know how interesting it would be to everybody. I kind of understand why it wouldn't be there, but it's very interesting to me is Microsoft was a ruthless company with Gates at the helm. And you wave at it a few times, right? They buy their competitors or they crush them. Obviously, Netscape and the antitrust trials there. But there was lots and lots of other stuff they did to run.
Starting point is 00:12:37 ruthlessly destroy their competitors along the way. And that was all Bill. Was there a moment where you're like, I need to focus on that stuff more or say, I just need to say it once and move on? There's other stuff that's more important. Yeah, I mean, the focus of the series is really not about that. I put enough in there to acknowledge it and say this happened. But it wasn't an expose of the tactics of Microsoft in this period of time. And so just like the movie doesn't get into all the details of the antitrust case. It doesn't get into all the details of why Bill thinks that they were maligned, nor does it get into all the details of why people think Microsoft is wrong. That wasn't the focus of the series. The focus of the series is a character study
Starting point is 00:13:17 of a guy. And what is he doing with his life? I thought the most interesting part of the entire thing is when you were alone with him during his think week. And he's alone in the house and he's reading books. And over time, you see the Diet Coke cans pilot. Like, again, I have spent time with Bill Gates, he's actually been on this show before. I've never, like, seen the richest man in the world open a can of Diet Coke, right? It's like, most people don't have that experience. And most people don't have the experience of now he's got four empty cans of Diet Coke from his fridge for a day.
Starting point is 00:13:46 Like that, it's just very human and very, he's literally alone. What was it like to go into that space with him? Well, so interesting because, you look, I'll pull the curtain a little bit on making documentaries. You know, you say, okay, well, here we are. We're doing a time lapse of you working, right? And we're going to, you know, we're going to start you reading in the late afternoon, and then we're going to have you reading and working till night so that we get a sense of time passing.
Starting point is 00:14:13 And I've done this in different projects and stuff. And usually it's like, the person says, what do you want me to read? Like, what page do you want me to be on? And for Bill, it was just like, oh, I get to read. And so I remember the book. It's Tara Westover's book, The Book Educated, which he just picked up that day. It was on his list. And he just, and he read for like an hour.
Starting point is 00:14:32 in 45 minutes. And we're all moving around, moving lights, and we're moving camera positions, we're all whispering. But I'm telling you, the guy just, you read as if we weren't there. And drinking Diet Coke's at will. That's just sort of like, you know, us taking a breath. So it's, it's kind of astounding his focus. Us having cameras and lights was really uninteresting to him. It was more like, oh, I get a quiet moment to read. I'll take my quiet moment to read. What was it like setting up the, there's many shots of him using a computer and you were saying like you tell them what's like what was it we're like bill just use Excel for a while and we're going to take some beautiful view of you like that to
Starting point is 00:15:11 me like we you know we make videos here and so I'm thinking like how would you set that up with Bill Gates like we would how would I even ask that question I'm very curious no in this case you just say hey Bill we want to film you at your desk working and then he just does what he ever wants to do that's great the one thing I did tell him to do is like there's one this at the end of the day and I knew he played online bridge. I was like, hey, why don't you play online bridge now? He went and played online bridge for 45 minutes. But again, once I said to do it, he just was like he could care less that we were there.
Starting point is 00:15:43 He was trying to win the bridge game. Support for the show comes from Framer. Framer is an enterprise-grade, no-code website builder used by teams at companies like Perplexity and Muro to move faster. With real-time collaboration and a robust CMS, with everything you need for great SEO, not to mention advanced analytics that include integrated A-B testing, your designers and marketers are empowered to build and maximize your dot com from day one. So whether you want to launch a new site, test a few landing pages,
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Starting point is 00:17:45 With Gramerly, you never will. Download Grammarly for free at Grammarly.com. That's Grammarly.com. So another huge character in this documentary is Melinda, who... Yeah. You actually make the point that for a while, Bill was... the face of the foundation and she had to make this, this choice of her own to become a prominent figure and stand next to him. And I think just the funniest, the funniest moment is when you tell
Starting point is 00:18:18 her the title of thing called Inside Bill's Brain. And she just, she loses it. And she's like, I wouldn't want to be in there. I mean, it's just like literally one of the funniest moments in a documentary is like, someone's wife being like, I don't know about his brain. I'm assuming everyone's wife feels that way, but I'm sure mine does. How was bringing her into the piece? Like, how You're making a documentary about Bill. It's obvious that he wants her to be as important. How did you think about bringing her into the piece and into the forefront? Well, what's interesting is that Melinda is, in every single way, an equal partner.
Starting point is 00:18:50 So, you know, getting on Bill's schedule is one thing, but getting on Melinda's schedule is another because they're both doing so many different things. She's writing her book. She's at the foundation. She's got the issues that are really important to her. And so once we sat down together and she, realized that this was like, hey, I just want to figure out who this guy is. She was like, oh, awesome. I finally get to tell people who this guy really is. And you realize that she is so
Starting point is 00:19:18 incredibly warm. And one of her gifts, I mean, she's so smart. Her work is on its own is incredible. But I think one of her gifts is that she gets and interprets and understands Bill in ways that people don't. Like she helped me. Like in the series are these, every episode has me and Bill walking and we walk through these different locations and and she gave me this idea she was like you know i find that bill is the most open and um relaxed and expressive when he's moving you know so like when he's really into something and passionate about something he'll pace in the living room or in the kitchen because he's just his mind is moving and it helps him to get the flow of his ideas going and so i was like wait maybe maybe we should do that so she gave me the idea of
Starting point is 00:20:06 going, taking these walks. So what we do, you get these steady cams and we would, and it would be behind us. So Bill just was just concentrating on us walking and where he's going. He didn't see the crew, but he didn't know there was a steady cam following him and two sets of steady cams that would sort of take turns, you know, in this giant loop. But she gave me that idea and it was her, it was, it makes you realize two wonderful things. One is that she has an intuitive sense of how he works and what he needs. and he understands that value that she gives to him in that partnership.
Starting point is 00:20:40 Yeah. I mean, those shots are incredible. I mean, that's when you're doing the quickfire. What's your favorite food? What's your favorite animal, right? Yeah. And he's just answering. It seems like there's another partner in the mix, which I think historically people
Starting point is 00:20:53 know about the Gates, Warren Buffett relationship. But it feels like you captured another side of it, which I just don't expect Bill Gates to look up to anyone or need to please anyone. And it seems very much as though Buffett plays that role for him. It's paternal almost. It does feel paternal. It's kind of 50% paternal and 50% like 11-year-old boy. Like they're both like 11-year-old boys.
Starting point is 00:21:20 They sit down at this diner and Warren takes the bun off the burger and takes two shalt shakers, not one, and just floods one side of the patty and then flips the patty over and does the other. other side. And then, of course, they both have milkshakes. And it's two little boys, except two little boys that are super smart, and they're geeking out over things that you and I wouldn't geek out about. But for them, it's like, it could be you and me talking about, you know, fast cars or a cool computer. They're talking about, like, algorithms and the state of the financial system in Singapore or something like that, you know. But it is also paternal, like you said, Bill, he said the that really strikes me, it's in the movie, he says, I thought in my whole career that people
Starting point is 00:22:10 would be asking me all these tough questions about his business. This is at this height of Microsoft. He goes, and no one was. And, you know, the famous meeting where Bill's mother said, hey, I want you to meet Warren Buffett. He's coming to the thing. And Bill says, I don't have time. And his mother says, you have to meet him. So he takes a helicopter. He says, I'm going to only be there for a little bit of time, and I'm not chopper in, chopper out, because I got a code. And the famous story is that Bill does it reluctantly, sits down with Warren. they talk for six hours. And I think what's so interesting is that Warren could speak at Bill's level and could ask them these really tough questions about, okay, why is software going to sustain
Starting point is 00:22:48 itself as a business? Why is this not a flash in the pan? Where is the business going? How do I compare Microsoft to the train industry? Why are your competition not going to just totally blow you out of the water in a couple years? All those big questions that you think that If you imagine the sort of executive offices at Microsoft, those people will be asking. Of course, they ask some of it, but not in the way that Warren did. And I think what's so wonderful seeing them together is they both do that of each other. Like Warren will say, okay, so, you know, polio cases are up this year. It was 10 last year and 20 this year.
Starting point is 00:23:21 That's, I'm paraphrasing. He goes, why are those cases persisting? What are you not thinking about? Have you thought about this? And so it is wonderful that Bill sort of like becomes a student and Warren's a teacher. And that's kind of surprising to see Bill because in so few cases as he walk in the room, and he's not the most well-read, most informed person. Yeah, every time I've interviewed him, I've likened it to talking to Alexa.
Starting point is 00:23:49 I mean, if you get the right keyword, it's an encyclopedia gets read to you. Yeah, the only thing I can beat him on is like obscure Wes Anderson movies. He's not studying up on Wes Anderson movies. he's you know he's probably seen one or two but he hasn't seen them all so i could like i was only like i'm trying to think what areas of knowledge like you know or the smiths or you know of the velvet underground like i could beat i could beat him on that shit but nothing else everything else like his brain knows in every category every other category of my intelligence he can destroy me yeah the next time he comes on the show i'm going to be like all right let's talk about clash b sides that's what
Starting point is 00:24:29 it's like where i'm at that's what i got for you So I want to talk about the foundation side of things. Sure. Because they are working on it in like those scenes with Buffett where they're talking about polio is very powerful. The building of the waste processor is very powerful. There is a big critique right now of billionaires doing philanthropy. Right? I think Anon Girid Haradas wrote the book, Winters Take All.
Starting point is 00:24:52 He's like, billionaires are laundering their reputations by doing this philanthropy. Selectively, it's not great. We should rethink this system. It's not, that critique is not really present in the documentary, but were you thinking about it and how do you think, how are you thinking about that now? It's funny, I did ask him a lot about, you know, what gives you the right to go in and try to solve these problems? And what's interesting is the answer was so obvious that I didn't put it in the movie. It didn't seem dramatic enough. It felt his answer felt to, it felt like I was actually giving a pass.
Starting point is 00:25:24 I'll give you my point of view, which is that some billionaires are laundering their reputation. And worse, some billionaires are putting undue influence on important issues. So I think that's a really important question. It's a very topical question since, because there's a massive imbalance of wealth, full stop. However, there are millions and millions of children who are alive because of what Bill and Melinda have done. They said, you know, the vaccinations that our kids get in the Western world, poor kids are not getting in the third world.
Starting point is 00:25:55 And they took their expertise, their influence, their money. money and their expertise to say, how do we get, how do we make it cheaper? How do we get access? And you should get the numbers, but it's in the high millions of children, mostly, a lot of children and other people who are alive because they're getting vaccines, they're getting health care that they wouldn't get. And Bill and Millen deserve a lot, you know, they work with a lot of other organizations. But the emphasis they put on, the expertise, the focus that they do is saving millions and millions of lives. And it's not just, it's interesting. The impression people get is like, oh, they do it by spending money. It's actually not the case. Actually, the amount of money that the
Starting point is 00:26:39 foundation spends is a drop in the bucket compared to what governments spend. It's teeny. Like, if the Gates Foundation spent all its money, they could spend it all like in a year and finish itself because there just isn't enough money to get all these problems solved. So my critique of Bill and Melinda is a good one because they're actually using their money and their influence an incredibly important way. And if you look at episode three, which is about climate change, Bill is using his incredible brain and his knowledge of technology to push and accelerate new technologies, including reconsidering nuclear, to find a way to get clean energy. And without that, I would be so much more dark about our prospects in the world because I like saving energy, but we need massive breakthroughs.
Starting point is 00:27:29 We need massive breakthroughs in technology to solve this problem, and not enough as being done in that regard. And I'm not saying Bill's going to do it, but my money is on someone like Bill to do it. And so I'm glad that he's doing that. I'm glad that he's spending his money and his influence in this direction. So what was his answer? Similar, but not as good. I'll take it. But it is. It's like, no, I mean, I think his answer was, well, And it's been maybe a year since. So I'm taking, I'm paraphrasing my memory, which is, it's a very good question. You know, you have to be really careful about how you're spending your own.
Starting point is 00:28:03 I don't think he's putting his levers on our political system, which is dangerous. I don't think he's putting, you know, undue influence on sort of the more scary things that rich people are doing. I think he's using his wealth towards good. And I'm glad he's doing it. Yeah, when I had him on, I asked him about modern monetary theory, which is, and he was like in it, right? He's Bill Gates. He like had a clear answer about what he thought it was.
Starting point is 00:28:28 But he, I think recently he gave an interview. He's like, well, I support a wealth tax, but it's complicated for all these reasons. You can tell he's thinking about it, but he's not, I think he's willing to let that side go because he's got these other problems he's focused on. And it seems like part of the answer here is, well, I have a lot of money. I'm really smart. Smart people like working for me. There's no market for better toilets.
Starting point is 00:28:50 I'm just going to pour money at them until it works. And it seems like that is just as simple as the answer can be, but he never really quite says it that way. Yeah, I mean, his answer was very cerebral and much more complex than I could put in a movie. But it was essentially that. And you mentioned toilets. When I pitched the series to Netflix, I was like, I'm going to make the best episode about toilets you've ever seen. And that sounds like hyperbole, but it wasn't. And they were kind of like, what?
Starting point is 00:29:20 And I said that on purpose because, first of all, I did make an episode about toilets. I made an episode about shit, actually. And you see a lot of human feces in this series. Sorry, if that turns you off. But it's true. But what it's interesting is that, and it's another argument for why I'm so glad Bill is on this planet, is that shit and human feces is not something people want to talk about or deal with, but it's why a lot of young children die.
Starting point is 00:29:48 that, you know, we can do all this thing about getting people clean water, and we can send money to these villages to get them higher rates of living. But as long as you don't solve the sanitation city, sanitation problem in some of these poor cities where there's not good toilets, not good sanitation systems. People shit in the street, they shit in a creek, and the water goes down the stream, and kids play in it, and they get really dangerous diseases, and they die. And so Bill says, well, fuck, we got to find a way to reinvent the toilet because you can't put a modern toilet in modern sanitation system in one of these big cities or one of these. And he's spent the last five years trying to redo this. And he's getting close. It's another reason like who else would do this? Who else would put their mind towards reinventing how a toilet works? We don't even want to think about a toilet in our office or our home. We just want to do what it takes to use it and get out of there
Starting point is 00:30:42 as fast as possible. Bill doesn't mind focusing on these problems that no one wants to focus on. I think that's what makes what he does so extraordinary. So as you're going through it, what's the thing that surprised you most about Gates? He's very emotional. That actually is hugely surprising. I think the rap he gets, and by the way, the first three or four interviews, I didn't always see emotion. And Melinda talks about it as like, you know, when they're all watching a movie, the kids notice that he's the first to cry and he cries a lot. And I think he presents because his intellect is so powerful and he believes so much in sort of rational thinking and optimist.
Starting point is 00:31:18 of things, that he always leads with that. And he actually thinks that sort of emotions, I'm, this is me speaking for what I think he thinks, which is, I think he, I think he truly believes that, you know, emotion shouldn't cloud your decisions. And that too often, you know, businesses and nonprofits and foundations, their decision making is clouded by emotion. Certainly it happens to me all the time, that he wants to be analytical, that he, that he doesn't sort of share that side of him. And that's a shame. And I think the series starts to reveal that of him. And I think it's, you see someone who is, who's very driven by wanting to do good in the world, driven by a sense of deep, deep unfairness that children on the other side of the world are dying, you know, for things
Starting point is 00:32:05 that his children have. Yeah, there's a, you have a scene where he's going through the stats of how many kids have polio and how many people he can save. And I think you say something like, well, that's not very inspiring. And he's like, yeah, so what? And it occurs to me that he's the person who needs to be inspired. Like, he's got the money and the power. And he actually doesn't need to inspire anyone else because all the inspiration and awareness raising that goes on right now, the way we're structured anyway, is that he's, it's him. He's got to get affected. And it sounds like you're saying he is actually deeply affected.
Starting point is 00:32:38 He is deeply effective or else why wouldn't he just be like, you know, why wouldn't he just be just like buying art or, you know, huge toys like other billionaires do? I mean, I actually don't know why he doesn't. I'm only guessing why he doesn't display his emotion more. You know, people think of him as this sort of like analytical guy who doesn't have emotions. I think he's deeply emotional. He just doesn't show it. I think people also think of him as a huge nerd and you show him playing tennis. Like that, it was like very surprising.
Starting point is 00:33:05 Well, the funest interview is when I, you know, I literally wrote 100 questions with my writer. And I had him at the net. And I literally asked a question every time he hit the ball. And that's, and that's one of my, I think it's my favorite scene in the series because he doesn't have a chance to think because he's trying to hit the ball right. Yeah. And he's pretty good. You just like not what you expect. And he's like kayaking.
Starting point is 00:33:29 There's an entire side there. So last question. There's a lot of scenes of him driving you around in a car. It seems like a very nice Mercedes. Right. What kind of driver is Bill Gates? Very good, actually. Does he go fast?
Starting point is 00:33:41 Well, the series opens with him getting the famous. a speeding ticket in Albuquerque at 2 a.m. in the morning. And that mugshot, if your listeners, most of them probably because they detect people know this mugshot. But if you haven't seen the mugshot, it's Bill mugshot being caught for speeding with this flowered shirt with big lapels, big wireframe glasses, and the hugest shit-eating grin for being arrested. Yeah. It's fantastic. But he, when I was with him, I wasn't terrified. He's a good driver. He's a good driver. I can imagine. All right, Davis Guggenheim, thank you so much for coming on the show.
Starting point is 00:34:20 It's been a pleasure. By the time people listen to this, it's on Netflix, Inside Bill's Brain. Thank you so much. What a pleasure to be on your show. Thank you so much. Where can people find you if they want to tweet at you or something like that? I'm not, I'm on Instagram. How about that?
Starting point is 00:34:32 Yeah. Davis Guggenheim on Instagram. I think it's Davis Guggenheim one or something like that. Awesome. All right. My thank you to Davis Guggenheim for joining us on the Vergecast. You can check out Inside Bill's Brain on Netflix now. If you're a VergeCat's listener, it's worth your time.
Starting point is 00:34:46 It's very interesting. We'll be back later this week with the chat show, then the interview show, then the chat show, and on and on and on through tech season, which is coming fast and furious right now. You can tweet at me on. I'm at Matt Reckless. I love to hear from you. Talk to you soon.

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