The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart - Reflecting on 2024 with Mark Cuban
Episode Date: December 12, 2024As 2024 draws to a close, we're joined by Mark Cuban to reflect on how technology, business, and politics shaped this year. Together we explore his foray into the political arena as a surrogate for Ka...mala Harris, his mission to disrupt America's healthcare system, and ways government might harness AI to tackle the country’s most entrenched problems. Plus, Mark gives Jon a lesson in crypto. Follow The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart on social media for more: > YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@weeklyshowpodcast > Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/weeklyshowpodcast > TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@weeklyshowpodcast > X: https://x.com/weeklyshowpod  > BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/theweeklyshowpodcast.com Host/Executive Producer – Jon Stewart Executive Producer – James Dixon Executive Producer – Chris McShane Executive Producer – Caity Gray Lead Producer – Lauren Walker Producer – Brittany Mehmedovic Video Editor & Engineer – Rob Vitolo Audio Editor & Engineer – Nicole Boyce Researcher & Associate Producer – Gillian Spear Music by Hansdle Hsu — This podcast is brought to you by: ZipRecruiter Try it for free at this exclusive web address: ziprecruiter.com/ZipWeekly Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Skip to the good part and get groceries, meals, and more delivered right to your door on skip. Hey everybody! welcome once again. It is the final weekly show, Potapalooza, at the end
of this very tumultuous 2024. We've been delighted that you have stuck around and that you've
listened to these fine conversations as much as you can and I hope that you have stuck around and that you've listened to these fine conversations as much
as you can and I hope that you've enjoyed it and we're going to keep going. We're going
to be on ourselves a little bit of a break. Some rumors that I am taking a few weeks to
soak in the Juan Soto signing. No, that's not true. That's not true. I knew it was coming.
Listen, when you're a Mets fan, you expect the best.
You expect it all to go your way.
You're like a Gatsby.
No, it was a complete and utter shock and joy, but we are going to do our final conversation
for this year with our go-to dude who does our final conversations,
Mark Cuban.
As you know, we had Bernie Sanders on last week.
We like to go from Bernie Sanders to Mark Cuban.
You go from the Democratic Socialist to the billionaire and you hope that the audience
does not sustain a groin pull in that transition.
But a really interesting guy, really smart guy, and I'm really looking forward
to the conversation, and I hope you guys are too.
So let's just get on damn to it.
Ladies and gentlemen, it is our annual weekly show pod wrap up
as per tradition, Mark Cuban will be joining us.
He is the co-founder of Cost Plus Drugs.
Mark Cuban, welcome to the weekly show pod
year end roundup.
From now on, I am only going to introduce you
as co-founder of Cost Plus Drugs.
As far as I'm concerned, Mavericks, Shark Tank,
Billionaire, none of that, it's co-founder Cost Plus Drugs.
That's all I care about.
That's all we care about. That's all we care about.
Mark Cuban, the year has ended.
This has been a tumultuous, a tumultuous year.
For you personally, you've changed in terms of,
you're done with Shark Tank now.
Have you taped your last episode?
I have taped my last episode.
I'll have to do some updates
for some of the companies I invested in.
But in terms of sitting in the chair, done.
Now, did they throw at the end of it,
was there like a dog pile?
Was there like a, what was the type of celebration
that was done to end your reign?
There was cake and alcohol
and a little going away party, so it was fun.
All right, fair enough, fair enough.
No nudity, I'm assuming.
It was all above board.
It was all parental consent and that type of thing.
I have an NDA
An absolutely a wise choice
The one thing I want to ask you about you stepped into the political arena in a way that you have not in the past
What was your experience like there?
Did it leave you?
Wanting more did it leave you cynical?
What was your experience being a surrogate on the political circuit?
It didn't leave me wanting more, that's for sure.
But it wasn't cynical either.
I kind of enjoyed it.
I mean, it was a unique experience.
I loved going out there and talking to people about America and what I'd hoped the future would look like,
how businesses would impact them. And the Harris campaign had me talking primarily to
small to medium sized businesses who were not Kamala Harris supporters. So I got to respond
to their questions and talk about the economy and businesses and starting companies and I really enjoyed it.
What were, when you talk to small business
and medium business, what are the frustrations
and complaints that you hear the most?
Are they anything that surprised you about that?
No, there were no surprises at all.
I mean, it was, you know, small business people
are just trying to get by for the most part.
And you know, I had my kind of got into my rote approach where I talked about the fact that there were 33 million
businesses in the country.
98% of them are small businesses that are passed through, and 98% of them make $400,000
or less.
The bottom line was, the hope was- Profit or is that?
Are you talking about that's
that's net or that's okay. That's what you weren't because of the brass through business,
that individual entrepreneur or the entrepreneur is making $400,000 or less. And that's a magic
number. Because remember, Kamala Harris said, if you make $400,000 or less, your taxes weren't
going up, they potentially were only going down.
Okay.
That was an important component of the discussion.
And then we talked about potential tariffs and, you know, I tried to
project out and say, look, if it's a year from now and it's December of 2025, and
you're, you know, you're in the retail business as an example, if there are 60%
tariffs on products from China, how's that going to
impact your Christmas selling season?
Right.
And for nobody, you know, nobody said, oh, that's a great thing.
And how does that impact you as a family?
You know, now all of a sudden all your Christmas presents or most of your Christmas presents
cost 60% more.
You're going to be able to not buy as much, you're buying less.
And so not only are you not going to be happy as a family,
but the vendors that you deal with, the retailers, the online buy, whatever it may be,
they're not going to sell as much either. So there's a cascading impact. And then I would go into
immigration. And I was honest, I would not let the Harris campaign tell me what to say.
They would try to give me notes and I would say, I don't care.
You know.
You.
That's what they love from,
that's what they always want from a surrogate
is for them to go like, hey man, screw your notes.
I'm just going to say, what, were you able to have any
influence on policy at all?
You know, I know there was some discrepancy
between unrealized gains and that was something
you thought was a kind of a non-starter. Did you have some influence on policy there? I think I did. I mean I
talked a lot about unrealized gains and you know when I went out there and said
you know for the first time it was ridiculous and I went back and spoke to
them and said you know I'm not hearing you guys challenge me at all and they're
like well you're saying things that we'd like to say but we can't say so I kept
on going with it so So I took that as
tacit approval and went with it. So that was one area. Another area was crypto. I mean, I was very
clear early on that there was data from Pew Research that said, you know, at least 40% of young men
were into crypto. And the way I explained it to them wasn't a big picture crypto thing at all.
I was like, look, for a 21 year old kid, particularly men these days, they're not like we were when
we were growing up where it was a rite of passage to open up a bank account or to get
a savings account.
Now they download Robinhood or Coinbase or some app and they live in an app economy.
And if you downloaded Robinhood or Coinbase, you're buying crypto over stocks and you're buying crypto not just because you want to see it go up but
because it makes you part of a community. You know, Dogecoin is a meme
stock and everybody talks about it, Bitcoin, whatever it may be. And so if
these young men have their entire net worth tied up in crypto and you've got a
SEC head Gary Gensler doing everything possible to reduce the
value of their net worth and everything they read in those apps about, you know,
what's happening to the price of their crypto is, you know, driven and talked
about relating to Gary Gensler.
They're not going to vote for you.
And I said it to Gary Gensler directly.
I said it to Kamala.
I said it to her team that Gary Gensler could cost her the election.
And there's an argument to be made when you look at the numbers.
You know, a whole lot of young men voted against Kamala Harris.
And I think crypto had a lot to do with it.
So you're saying that the conventional wisdom, which is she should have gone on Joe Rogan's
podcast is wrong. She should have gone on Gary Gensler's podcast and told him what was happening
there. Now, as someone who is, I understand slightly about blockchain and I certainly
understand the utility of something like that. In terms of crypto, look, if you talk about young
men and on apps, as far as I can see, they're also on FanDuel and all these other gambling.
So explain to me, help me understand why this isn't just a random gamble for these young men that isn't going to come back and bite them in the ass.
What's the underpinnings of it?
the ass, what's the underpinnings of it? And why is it better than just jumping on Fan Duel and trying to hit a parlay on Saquon Barkley, which we won't get into.
Right. Well, there are a lot of analogies. I'm not going to argue with that. But think
about gold. I mean, all that gold we have in Fort Knox, it's not because the United
States government is betting on how much jewelry is going to be sold at Christmas.
I hope not.
Right.
I mean, there's no intrinsic value to gold other than we say there's intrinsic value
to gold.
I see.
Gold is a store of value.
And so people hope it goes up.
There's some people who think that if there's a catastrophe and the economy craters, then
gold will retain its value.
But it's not like you can walk around with a bar of gold and like it's $18.22 and you
slice off a little sliver and you weigh it.
It's only just going to knock you out and take your bar of gold.
That's how I've been getting at the supermarket.
I've been slicing my gold, getting my eggs.
For you, a little schmiple for you.
That's what I'm talking about.
So let me translate that to Bitcoin.
Yeah.
Okay.
Right.
Bitcoin has become a store of value.
It's marketed that way and has been marketed for the last 15 years or whatever it is, and
it's gotten to a point of acceptance.
Just like way, way, way back when gold got to a point of acceptance as an alternative
for legal currency or as a foundation behind legal currency.
Bitcoin has kind of taken that place and it makes more sense in a lot of
respects. You're not going to carry around that bar of gold,
but you can carry around, you know,
your phone as an example that has Bitcoin on it.
And if you need to transfer value to somebody else,
it's easier to do it right now,
particularly if you're 21, with Bitcoin
than it is with gold.
So there truly is an economic value there.
But now we have between gold and Bitcoin, there's this other thing that we have, which
is currency.
And is this meant to augment that, to replace that?
What are the transactions that are made better by using either Bitcoin or crypto or those
things? What need is it filling, I guess? Well, it's faster and cheaper, particularly for
international exchanges. So, if you're in, pick a country, right? And you're like, Mark, I need
something to spend, right? I need some money. It's a whole lot easier for me to send you
something to spend, right? I need some money. It's a whole lot easier for me to send you, you know, $100 in Bitcoin or Ethereum or USDC than it is in cash.
Now is the idea then that like what would happen with like say an Apple Pay or something
along those lines that stores will begin to adopt a technology so that its use becomes
more convenient even at like if I'm running down to Wawa and
I want to grab myself an iced tea.
So let's talk about two different things.
That's two different things.
Okay.
Okay.
I, by the way, I apologize for making you do this remedially, but I really don't know
it so well and I would like to know it.
So just think of Bitcoin like digital gold period.
End of story.
Oh, it's just built on supply and demand.
Only the difference is people are still mining gold and it's physical.
You have to pull it out of the ground.
There's a lot of costs associated with that.
Bitcoin is all digital, but it's limited in the number of bitcoins that will ever be created
to 21 million.
Now who limits that?
Is there an overseeing body that makes that was part of the original plan.
That's the way it was designed originally.
So right now there are about 19.8 million Bitcoin out there minus what's been lost
along the way.
How do you, how do you lose it?
So early on, you know, you might not, you might've bought a bunch of Bitcoin in
2012 for 10 cents each, Didn't think twice about it.
Threw away that phone and you had 10,000 Bitcoin on it.
Oh dear God.
Yeah, so there's stories about people literally
who hit hard drives into trash heaps and lost it.
And now we're searching in trash that I was looking for.
But that's Bitcoin and it's just supply and demand
that finds what it's worth.
So right now the price is near $100,000.
That means a lot more people are buying it
than selling it, very analogous to gold.
And so then there are other cryptos.
Ethereum is one that I also own a bunch of.
And the difference with Ethereum is
it really takes advantage of the blockchain,
but it adds something called smart contracts.
What a smart contract is, it allows activity to be triggered by other activity.
For instance, I won't go into deep details, but if I want to create an NFT and use that
for books, let's say for textbooks, right? Smart contract state for textbooks, right? That smart contract associated with that NFT
has specific features about it.
One of the unique features that are part of Ethereum
and smart contracts and NFTs is they can pay royalties.
So if John Stewart writes a book for a college, right?
And it's a textbook on accounting.
Right now, it's gotta be physical
and then you go to the bookstore and you buy a used copy.
Or an ebook that they would download
or something along those lines.
The physical copies, you don't make another nickel
in royalties as it's sold and resold.
If you do it as a digital version using Ethereum
and a smart contract and an NFT,
the royalties can be paid on and on and on and on again
as that digital textbook is resold. Has has this is this something that's been applied yet to music publishing because that seems like it
Would cure an awful lot of the difficulties in in the royalties of music publishing. Yeah in all IP for that matter
But the reality is it's only been done on a small scale
The tower works for crypto right now and allor, it hasn't had its Instagram moment.
If you remember going back to the original
app store in 2009, I think it was, there
wasn't, there weren't a lot of people
downloading apps for their smartphones.
I mean, unless you were really geeky and
into it, but then all of a sudden Instagram
came along and grandma and grandpa and mom
and dad needed it.
Then Facebook had an app.
And so that really got people into smartphones and using and downloading apps.
We haven't had that moment with crypto yet.
That's still something that has ultimate utility for everyone and anyone.
That doesn't exist yet.
And that's kind of the ongoing hope.
But now let's tie that back to Gary Gensler.
Right.
So all these people trying to come up with apps
that run on smart contracts on top of Ethereum, Solana,
whatever it may be, whatever form of crypto it may be,
Gary Gensler wanted to call all forms of that a security.
Right.
He wanted to regulate it like you would regulate
stocks for those that are. Okay. And in some cases, they were securities. If you're selling
them to raise money for a business, that's a security. Nobody's arguing that. But if you
happen to buy an NFT as a textbook, he wanted to call that a security as well. If you use your
textbook, he wanted to call that a security as well. If you use your Solana or Matic or
non-etherium, but let's say Solana or Matic, two smaller
cryptocurrencies to purchase something online, he wanted to call that a security as well. And as a result,
that sent a lot of
developers who were trying to create these new smart contract apps out of the United States to other parts of the world, Singapore, Japan, Korea, you name it, to start companies that otherwise would have been in the United States.
I had two companies that actually left the US to do their development because they could just sell to crypto enthusiasts
and users in other countries and not worry about it here.
I feel like this is turning into digital currency for dummies, where it is.
And unfortunately, I'm the dummy.
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We are back. So in my mind, and this is perhaps, you know,
rigid thinking to a larger extent,
what can we put in place if it's not a securities regime
that has regulation, what do you put in place
that can protect people who wanna invest in this,
but like in the way that the government
would put in FDIC protections
if you had a certain amount of money in there.
Are there protections that you think would be worthwhile?
Oh, yeah, for sure.
At what level would those regulations become too onerous and start to stifle the creativity?
So, I have this company called Lazy.com.
So all it is is a place for you to show your NFTs.
So if you go to Lazy.com slash M-Cube and you get to see the NFTs. So if you go to lazy.com slash m cube and you get to see the
the NFTs that I own, I wanted to register it with the SEC to make sure they didn't come after me
in the event I decided to raise money. When you go in and start filling out the forms,
you find out immediately that it's apples and oranges, that it doesn't you trying to fit up,
you know, something that you know, the round into the square, and it just doesn't work.
And so all the crypto industry has asked for is to modify the forms and the regulations to be
suitable to crypto. It's not that we don't want to register. It's just like oil and energy has got
their own special set of forms with the SEC. Finance has got their own special set of forms.
Crypto needs a special set of forms.
That's all anybody's asked for.
You don't want somebody to start regulating it that doesn't understand it as a commodity.
And this gets into the larger question that maybe ties together the two things that we're
kind of talking about, which is your experience kind of in that political arena and also your
experience within these sort of new, more higher tech financial industries.
And that is with democracy being at best an analog system,
you know, sort of designed for the slow temperance
and the idea of chewing on these checks and balances
and all these things.
It is so outmatched by this new digital economy.
And was there ever a thought, I've always kind of in my mind dreamed about this kind
of almost bureaucratic moonshot, a kind of Manhattan project to help.
And I imagine you saw this when you talked to small businesses, regulation is typically
the domain of larger companies.
They're the ones that make regulations complicated.
Poor people don't, middle class people don't, small businesses
don't make it complicated.
It's people that have two floors of lawyers that bring in all these loopholes.
Do you see a pathway through to create a governmental moonshot like that,
that can clean out a lot of these regulations
that are hurting the small businesses,
but still protect them.
So that's a deep, deep, deep question.
Or is that Doge?
Is that what the Doge is?
That's a deep question.
So regulatory capture is a real thing.
The bigger companies can introduce regulations
that make it harder for the smaller companies to compete.
They can introduce friction that makes,
filling out forms and all these things
very much more difficult to even get started.
And state and local that you pile on top of that.
I mean, it kind of really rolls like a snowball down a hill.
Yeah, and that's where AI more than crypto.
Look, just to wrap up on the crypto side,
there's this thing called DAO, right?
Distributed Autonomous Organization,
I think is what it stands for.
And with DAOs, it's really easy to set it up
so that for anything to happen within that blockchain
or within that organization with those smart contracts has to be voted on.
It's voted on by people who actually own the cryptocurrency, which could be... Well, it's
not Doge, but there's other types of cryptos.
This is crowdsourced.
It's a crowdsourced regulatory idea?
Yeah.
I wouldn't call it crowdsourced, but it's a progressive's dream.
According to their ability to each. Everybody gets an equal vote,
and whatever the crowd, whatever the group decides, and it's up to the Dow to set up the
principles of it and what's voted on and what is a majority, a super majority, whatever it may be,
and then you get to decide, and that goes into evolving that digital currency
or the digital applications that are there. So that's on one side. Those haven't really taken
off. I really thought they would a lot more than they did, but they have not. Then there's using
AI. And so there are things like NEPA, right, which go into the environmental protection stuff
to try to find out that there's a little frog or
whatever before something's built.
In my opinion, and the conversations I had with some of the Harris folks is that's where
AI really, really can apply because there's a process designed for the people in NEPA
who go through and determine what should be approved and what data is required and how
it's, you know, what friction should be added or what friction should be approved and what data is required and what friction should be added
or what friction should be removed. Artificial intelligence is great for that. All the rules
that the individuals on those councils and boards make those determinations, they have rules that
they follow, they have guidebooks that they follow. It's onerous. Yeah, it's onerous. There's
tons of bureaucracy, but tons of data there.
You put that into artificial intelligence into a large language model, and you use that
to train the large language model.
And then when a new project comes along, you set up agents which then feed the questions
and the answers to the responses to that new organization,
whatever it is they may be building.
But is that, does that abdicate our autonomy?
Because I always look at it like common sense.
Like if you remember in Pennsylvania, right?
This was not very long ago.
There was a huge fire on 95 and the highway collapsed.
Under the typical regulatory regimes,
you're talking about five or 10 years
of incredibly expensive bureaucratic red tape.
And this really important artery for interstate commerce
and all these other things would have been closed down.
At some level through common sense,
the governor just said, fuck it.
We're just going to build it.
And it was done in 10 days or something like that. And it really demonstrated how government
could be more agile. And do we need to rely on some large language model or should we
just look at things and go, oh, we need housing and we're crushing our ability to create,
allow the markets to create this or to do those things through these other regulations.
All the above, right?
Because there was the bridge in Baltimore,
there was a bridge in Pittsburgh,
where the same things happened, they turned around quickly.
The challenge is who makes that decision?
When it's obvious, it's easy.
When it's not so obvious, it's far more difficult.
And so that's where the AI comes in
in large language models, because across the breadth,
however many instances of evaluations that need to take place across the country,
you don't want individuals having to make those decisions.
But I thought that's the whole point. I thought the whole point of people running for office
is that they've got a vision for and they earn our trust as opposed to AI.
And this again may be more of the Luddites view of not understanding of AI. I'm nervous about
abdicating that, at least with people, there is a certain regime of accountability that we can
bring through. I can't vote out a large language model. No, this is the soiling green thing, right? Because
wait, what we got to we're eating people now people. Oh, no,
because it was the people that the politicians that made those
decisions who got us where we are right now. Right. And so
there's never in my mind a question that if you give
somebody power, they're going to take that power and want more.
If you're using AI, you wouldn't use it for the final decision.
You would use it for all the administrivia that happens between the application being
made and the point where a presentation is made to a board of some sort who would make
the final decision.
You're not removing people.
Yeah.
So let's put it in sort of an athletic analogous model.
We're talking a little bit about analytics then.
It's really more about here are the analytics,
here are the different metrics
that we're going to plug into this,
and now we're gonna hand it over to the GM or the managers
or whoever it is that's responsible for these things.
And it's a tool to help them make more informed decisions.
Right, because you're all using the same data
and the same precedence.
There's nothing that all of a sudden
just presented itself.
So if it's replicated over and over with the same data
within that same realm, that's perfect application for AI.
But you don't wanna be completely dependent on AI
because it's hard to know the genealogy of the decision, perfect application for AI, but you don't want to be completely dependent on AI because
it's hard to know the genealogy of the decision, meaning what exactly went into the final determination
that the AI set out.
So then that's where you have your board who says, okay, this is what the AI recommends.
We have these additional comments to make, additional concerns, and then the board makes
the final decision, but you consolidate that review
process from in what in some cases could be years, a decade to a week.
You're talking about condensing a bureaucratic process through this new tool that allows
you to make these decisions at a much more rapid pace as opposed to just abdicating to
the computer goes, don't rebuild the bridge.
And you're like, yes,
master. No bridge, no bridge. You still want some human intervention. You need some common sense.
AIs can do a lot of things, but they're best with repetitive things and the best with taking
vast volumes of data and information and applying those to processes. And so let the AI do what the AI can do,
but leave the final decision to people who are,
you know, who understand the context.
Here's the $64,000 question then.
As the AI condenses that,
you're talking about a great deal of human legwork
and sweat equity that goes into these things.
What happens to that labor? Is the speed of that worth
the cataclysm that you're going to have in white collar, in the way that let's say,
industrialization changed the economy over a hundred years, globalization changed it over
decades, but it had, as we saw, a devastating effect for
the manufacturing base.
Does AI devastate white collar work, but in a very condensed form?
If your job is answering the question yes or no all the time, AI is going to have an
impact.
If your job requires you to think, AI won't have much of an impact. Really?
Yeah, so in this particular case,
let's go back to the Nepy type example.
Right.
Somebody's got to make sure the model's
getting all the information
and that it's structured correctly and there's-
It's all data entry.
We all become data entry.
Well, it's not even just typing, right?
It takes intellectual capacity.
So somebody who understands what the goal is, somebody who's been doing this for years, has got to be able to input feedback on everything that the models collect and are trained on.
You don't just assume the model knows everything. You want somebody to check, to grade their responses and make corrections.
to grade their responses and make corrections. And so while that model is being developed and trained,
there's a huge need for people to contribute value.
You know, the better example is
if you want an artificial intelligence
that talks about Shakespeare
and spits out things about Shakespeare,
somebody's gotta teach it, you know,
contribute the nuanced things that you're not gonna find
just from reading their books.
Don't you think it's already got?
I always get the sense that the AI models have already sucked up whatever 15,000 years
of human existence we have and they've already moved on.
I feel like the AI models are like, what else you got, man?
No, no.
What else you got?
Songs?
What do you got?
No, it's the exact opposite right now.
Here's the real problem.
I'm glad you brought this up. Another great question, John Stewart.
Boom!
Come on!
End of year, baby!
Let's do this!
Bam!
Okay, so IP, you've seen the New York Times and others sue different creators of large
language models like OpenAI, Meta, etc., because they just automatically went out and spidered and input their text and their intellectual property into their models.
That intellectual property is still owned by the creator.
And so you're not going to find the models being able to just go out and get everything,
everything that was on the internet up to this minute, whatever it is that was openly available and stuff that's added that's openly available.
Yes.
Wait, AI cannot get past a paywall?
Is that what I'm hearing?
A little bit, yeah.
I'm hearing that AI, it gets to a place and go, oh, I can't read this article.
Yeah, and I've been through my credit card.
Oh, I'm not a subscriber.
The AIs go, where's my credit card?
No, but think it in terms of medicine.
And so your MD Anderson or your Stanford Medical or pick all the different,
you know, UPMC and you have a doctor or a researcher that's really good in this specialty.
You're not going to just say to Meta or OpenAI or Google,
hey, you just take it for your medical models.
You just go ahead and take it.
You're going to say, no, I'll do my own. I don't need you. And I'll take my specialty. Let's just
say my specialty is oncology and cancer. Of all these experts, and I'm going to create my own
model. I'll go out and use an open source model that's spidered everything that's open and free
on the internet. But I'm going to add all the expertise that I have and all the expertise that I create in the future so that it is
specific to me and I can charge for it or use it however I deem fit.
And what's going to end up happening is within medicine, you know,
some of the models will pay, you know, if you pay the Mayo Clinic enough
money, they'll let you have that stuff.
And others will want to retain it as part of their brand.
Right.
On a bigger picture, there are going to be millions of models.
It's right now we see it as open AI.
We see it as Gemini, Meta, whatever it is, these big foundational models.
But the reality is there's going to be millions of John Stewart's going to have a model.
Oh, I've got, I've got like five of them in the backyard right now.
So we're going to take a quick break.
We'll be right back.
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We are back.
Let's use the flip side of this.
So you've got people looking to use AI models or analytics or to shorten the bureaucratic
space between making decisions or to increase productivity or efficiency.
Just recently we saw the anger erupt in this country.
This young kid assassinates a health care executive.
And underneath that, the big surprise
is the level of anger, the level of sympathy for the kid,
and the level of anger against these algorithms that are now
being deployed not to make things more efficient,
but to help them deny coverage or to not pay certain things.
That's the counterweight, is it not? Well, yes and no. I just did this big post on Blue Sky,
MQBan on Blue Sky, if you want to read it. I don't even know how to log on to it.
I know I'm supposed to migrate there. I have no idea how to get on it.
Yeah, it's actually a great platform. Just download that app, Blue Sky App.
All right. But in any event, the bigger question is,
why are we putting insurance companies in that role? Why are you asking-
The role of denying? I thought that's-
Yes. The pre-authorization is why would anybody hire an insurance company who tries to make money by reducing the amount
they pay out?
That's their interest.
Why would we ask them to do pre-authorization?
That's the whole business.
That's what we're trying to get out of.
I completely agree.
Right.
But the whole point is probably half the people who are covered in this country, the insurance
companies are involved, but they don't really act as
insurance companies.
Well, they're adversarial.
Well, no.
What I'm saying is there are 50 million lives covered by self-insured organizations, from
companies to unions, whatever it may be.
They use insurance companies for their network, all the, all the hospitals they put together and for their apps.
But they also use them to do the pre-authorizations.
And my question to them has been over the past four or five months has been, why are
you using insurance companies for pre-authorizations when you are the, you CEO of that union or
company are, you know, basically the ones that make that decision
whether or not you're willing to pay for it or not. But there's so many different ways that
money is sucked out of that system. You're talking about money out of your paycheck to pay a premium
that has a deductible, so you're still paying this large... Let me just tell you how insane our...
It's truly insane.
Right.
Was mind boggling to me.
I was almost this many days old when I found this out.
Okay.
When you think about your deductible, your copay and your co-insurance, right?
What it is you have to pay up to before your copay a specific amount to see a
doctor or your co-insurance like on original Medicare
where you have to pay 20% or some percentage of the total. That's right. You know, do you know who
accepts the default risk on all of that? I would assume the patient. No, the hospitals and the
doctors take that credit risk. And they literally, yes, it's insane. But then why are patients going bankrupt when they can't?
So that's what happens.
So you were turning hospitals and doctors
into subprime lenders without assets against them.
Oh, Jesus.
Okay, I see where you're going.
So now I'm gonna play it out.
You're a hospital, when I talk to hospitals,
a lot of them, they have default rates of 50 to 60%
or more depending on where the hospital is located.
So now this hospital, half the deductibles, copays and coinsurance that they are supposed
to be paid by the patient, they don't collect on it.
So a couple of things happen downstream from there.
One, they turn into like a mortgage servicer where they try to collect it, you know, and
it makes them look bad.
They hate being put in that position, but there's no upside.
You know, maybe you collect some money, but on the downside, the patients hate
you, the every, the whole world hates you because of all the patient debt and
medical debt and, and, um, bankruptcies as a result, but when you can't collect
them, what do you do to compensate for that lack of revenue?
You jack up your fucking price. Right? Right. So now all
of a sudden, so we're all subsidizing this system of
delinquency to some extent. No, nobody. It's just the hospitals
accept that risk. And I guess you could say we subsidize it if
when you cash pay a higher price at the hospital. Well, that's
what I'm saying.
If they're if they're jacking up their prices and either insurance pays it or
you pay it, that's subsidizing this much larger default rate in a system.
And but it gets worse.
OK, so now these providers, the hospitals and doctors, they negotiate
with the big insurance companies.
And it's fascinating if you walk into a hospital to pay for an MRI as an example,
and you say, you don't mention your insurance, you just say, I want a cash
price, they'll probably say it's 350 to $450, depending on where you live.
That same hospital will negotiate with what they call the bucas, the big
insurance companies, right?
For that same thing, they'll negotiate a price of $2,000.
What?
Yeah. So you would think that big insurance company negotiating with the hospital and that insurance
company covers millions of lives.
Why wouldn't they negotiate that if there's a bulk thing to $100?
Why would it be higher?
Because the hospital needs the insurance company as a sales funnel to bring patients in so
they can, you know can pay their bills.
And the insurance company wants that price to be higher,
particularly for things like the ACA,
because the ACA requires for all the plans they cover
that they spend up to 85%.
How is this not collusion then?
If both sides need it to be higher,
that's colluding on a
certain price and beyond that well but it's by law the way the ACA works so
think about this John so somebody who gets an individual plan on the ACA say
one of the the bronze plan which is the least effective right right it has a
nine thousand dollar deductible so this individual can't afford much in premiums
decides they want a nine,000 deductible.
You know who's truly subsidizing that deductible?
The fucking hospital.
Wow.
And when you get your insurance or anybody gets the insurance from a big company and
they show you five, six, seven different plans, and one of them is a $1,500 deductible,
but you're 25, you know, and so you take the $5,000 deductible.
Who takes on that risk of the $1,500 versus the $5,000?
The doctors in the hospitals.
But you still pay the price on your credit score and on a bankruptcy. Like you pay the price.
Now there's a limit, like only if it's above 500, they change some of the rules.
Right.
And for some of the, the, um, lost money by the hospital, there's this thing called
dish payments that the government will give the hospital to try to make up for it, but it
doesn't.
But isn't the whole system, Mark, isn't it all, especially with the ACA, a
bribe, isn't it a governmental bribe to give to hospitals and insurance
companies to say, as a way of saying people with preexisting conditions have
to be able to get themselves
some coverage. The whole thing is almost a trillion dollar bribe. And when you look at the
levels of profits that are rolling through these insurance companies, clearly we find ourselves in
an unsustainable moment. Clearly, clearly. But it's worse than that because it's the government making the determination
of which insurance plans that they approve for Medicare and Medicare Advantage.
Well, that's when they tried to privatize Medicare.
I don't understand, you know, with the satisfaction most people had with Medicare.
Now they've gone to privatizing that Part D or whatever they call it.
And that's starting to this, let's back up for a second, because this brings us
to a very interesting point that I want to ask you about.
All right.
It seems to me that with all the checks and balances within the government,
legislative, judicial, executive, all those different things, the one thing the
founders didn't really add into the equation is corporate power.
The one thing the founders didn't really add into the equation is corporate power. This idea that there has to be an entity that is large enough to, in some ways, be a counterweight
to unfettered.
The system we've chosen for progress and money is incredibly efficient at creating wealth,
but it has a lot of collateral damage.
Yeah.
So here's the thing. Yes.
The government can work okay if it's an efficient transparent market.
If it's not efficient and transparent, even though it's big and you would think it can negotiate well, it doesn't.
But it doesn't because the lobbyists and the money and the billionaires that are putting their money to lobby against the government.
No, the government just isn't smart enough sometimes to make the obvious decision.
We want you, we're only going to do business with you pharmacy benefit manager
if you publish us the exact prices and we're not going to allow you to use rebates
if you want to do business with us because we'll just go to the pass-through PBMs.
Right.
The government has choices, they just don't choose to make the obvious and best choice. to do business with us because we'll just go to the pass-through PBMs.
Government has choices, they just don't choose to make the obvious and best choice.
You wouldn't say that big money influencing politicians is the largest driver of those
bad decisions?
No, it should be for sure.
Yeah, I mean, obviously.
Okay, okay.
That's what it seems like.
There's nobody with clean hands in any of this. Right.
Everybody has the role.
So then the question that Bernie was on here again,
he'd be like, well, single payer, Medicare for all,
that's where we're going.
That's what he would suggest.
And I tend to agree with him,
or at least a governmental system for all
that allows for private insurance outside of it.
The question is, how do you get there?
Right. Right.
How do you get there?
And who are the participants that are making it work?
And so...
AI with a team of experts.
AI would be better than the people we are negotiating right now.
Because we are in this form of government, this republic that we have,
and there's so many influences and so many you know constituencies that have to be you know appeased you're not going to get an
optimal system. Right. And so the only way to get through that is to educate the
people who have an influence. So you know for instance I'm going out there and
talking to CEOs and I'm saying look you self insure and you're hiring this insurance company to do
pre-authorizations that only make your life more miserable because your employees are upset, HR is
upset when at the end of the day you're paying for it anyways. But that's not how it's incentivized.
Like even that guy, you know, the big thing about that guy that was killed was he turned that company
a giant profit
by putting in those algorithms that were denying coverage.
Yes.
Who hired him to do that is the question.
He got that opportunity to do it, and he's grabbing all the money he can, but who hired
him to do the pre-authorization process?
That's the question people aren't asking, and that needs to be answered.
When you talk to, like you've talked to Vivek Ramaswamy,
he's on the Doge Board and Elon's doing the Doge Board.
What do you think their mindset is about?
Is their mindset to go into government and say,
look, we need government to make better decisions.
I think for a long time, people have felt that,
that feeling that we're not getting value for the money
and that there's
inefficiencies there.
I think we look at it as a system that's been co-opted and corrupted.
So what is the mindset going in there?
Is it a Silicon Valley efficiency model?
Because government does have this responsibility in a way that business never would for people's
wellbeing.
Yeah, it's to be determined.
There's a couple elements there.
Number one is the deficit.
Elon and others on both sides have rightfully said,
it's a threat, right?
It's a problem.
Even with interest rates coming down, you think it's still?
No, see that's exactly where I was going
because even if interest rates come down a little bit,
interest rates are the a little bit, interest
rates are the majority of the ongoing annual expense.
Interest rates will come down some, but they're not going to come all the way down because
that will inflate the economy again and create other issues and create more inflation.
And Donald Trump, I don't think is going to want to see that during his term, which is
why Elon at one point on Twitter, someone
said we could see a collapse in the first two years.
And Elon said, most likely or something to that effect.
A collapse of what?
Of the economy.
Because if the economy collapses like we saw during COVID, what happened to interest rates?
Interest rates collapsed as well.
Well, sure. I mean, no economic activity, you know, then everyone's going to want that. But in 2008,
the government collapsed the interest rates so that the people at the top could get that free money.
Whatever it is, whatever it is, that's the only way you're going to have a dramatic impact on the
debt. Well, let's look at it this way. Let's flip it to, you know, there's a lot of people and it's, you know, this, this modern
monetary policy where they talk about that the deficit doesn't matter because, and I
tend to be sympathetic to this, you can print money and why are we selling this debt to
other people anyway?
Why don't we buy it ourselves?
I mean, it's all kind of a shell game to begin with.
Why not make it easier on ourselves to pay that down
through the minting?
Yeah, just playing more money,
but now all of a sudden more money's in the economy
and the economy re-inflates and you start then having to pay.
You think MMT does not, you're not a proponent of that.
No, actually I read the books and you know,
I talked to the people behind it.
Right.
When interest rates were zero or near zero,
it made 100% sense.
When interest rates skyrocketed to where they are now,
it doesn't make sense because even if you just printed
all that money, the government can't just print money.
They have to borrow money to, you know,
even in a fractalized environment,
there has to be some reason to do it.
It's not like there's a printing press
that just goes brr, brr, brr, brr, brr.
I'm gonna blow your mind here.
We've created this new market of cryptocurrency
and Bitcoin and all these other things
that kind of has, in some respects,
out of nothing, made something.
What if that was utilized to bring down those more troublesome
aspects of deficits because we do need government to spend to help stimulate certain things, to
stabilize people, to do things that have real value in people's lives.
Sure, but there's still, you know,
debits and credits still have to balance.
And I'm not the economist who can give you
a detailed analysis of all this stuff.
By the way, they can't either.
They just do it in a really like smug shitty way, but.
I just look at it just, you know, as a business guy.
And when, if we were just,
you still got to balance things, right?
And so we, in order to print that money,
we got to borrow it from someone, even if it's ourselves,
and that inflates the balance sheet
and that creates other problems with inflation.
Right, right.
Because think of it this way, John,
look at all Zimbabwe and all these other third world countries
that tried to do the exact same thing.
But that's different.
They were coming out of a place from very little stability.
I mean, I think what undergirds our financial system is the stability of our political system.
And if you start to undermine that stability, I think it's by paying that off, you continue to reinforce the infrastructure and stability of your system, which creates
in and of itself. I mean, so much of this is perception. And Zimbabwe is in a, like,
look what's happening in Argentina right now. Okay. So Malay goes in there and he's got
that more libertarian, he's got, you know, four dogs named after Hayek and whoever other
economists are going that he goes and he dives into an austerity plan.
Gordon program, yeah.
They plunge their inflation rate, but drives them into a recession and creates a political
crisis.
And more poverty, et cetera, right?
He probably argued the opposite, but still.
I understand.
If you're going to print a lot of money, you are going to have a lot of inflation. Again, I'm not the economist, but I don't see that as being a significant positive.
I think if you have 26%, 30%, 50% inflation, your stability goes out the door.
Even if you did a one-time reset, you looked at it like this is not going to be an ongoing
thing.
But as Krugman would say, I've got a trillion dollar coin and it turns out I'll just flip that thing over there and we've
cleaned it out a little bit and we're going to give ourselves a little bit more of a fresh
start.
I don't think that works.
But again, maybe there's an angle there where that I don't know.
And you won't, you know, because I know you love to spend your time thinking about this
and it's always and I thank you so much.
We probably went off the rails on crypto, but I've learned an awful lot.
You still don't consider yourself though a viable political player.
No.
Right.
And having that experience, do you think being on the trail for the Harris campaign really
dissuaded you of that ever as a possibility?
No, I loved it, right?
It wasn't that, it's my family.
I mean, look at all the shit they're doing
that they did to JD Vance.
I don't want my kids hearing about me fucking a couch,
you know, or, you know, what else.
That's really a you issue, though, more than anything.
It was a nice couch.
I took it to dinner, you know, it was nice.
But listen, man, do you really think
that as a viable political candidate,
you would take more shit than you take today?
I mean, there's no question the amount of shit
you take today, just getting involved
with the Harris campaign was extraordinary.
I mean, they went after you like crazy.
As everybody, look, I take it just from being
on fucking basic cable.
Yeah.
Like, it's extraordinary, the reach of that now.
Yeah. I mean, but it was mostly on Twitter. I'm fine with that,
but it's if they go after my kids and my family and dealing with that,
my kids are 15, 18 and 21 now. And more importantly than that,
I want to be around them. That's key reason why I sold a big chunk of the math.
Why I got out of shark tank shark tank films, June and September.
My kids get out of school in June, go back to September.
I missed birthdays.
I mean, that's fucked up and it bothered me to no end.
And you know, like, like our conversations, I get into this stuff.
I always want to, you know, going even back to Elon and Vivek, there's a
difference between just deficit reduction, which seems to be their focus and problem
solving. In between there is efficiency, right? You always want to be more
efficient with whatever tools, you know, people or AI, whatever it takes, you
want to be more efficient. But the question becomes, how do you solve
problems and what problems are you start trying to solve? Because at the end of
the day, that's what we're trying to give our taxpayer money
to the government for to solve problems that we need solved.
But that's the kind of thinking though, that's so crucial
because there's two sides of the coin.
One is profligate spending from the government
that doesn't consider, you know,
I had a conversation with a deputy secretary of defense
where we were talking about the $850 billion budget, and you would
have thought, like, I asked what underwear she was wearing, like
her response to being questioned about the lack of passing an
audit on $850 billion.
Multiple times, multiple times.
Just, you know, went like, how dare you? Do you even know what
an audit is? And I'm like, I thought I did, but maybe I don't.
But the arrogance of it was wild.
So the idea of connecting spending to value,
but the flip side of that is the idea of cutting spending
with no discernment for value either.
It's one thing to say, I'm getting rid
of the Department of Education.
It's another thing to say, here are the aspects
of the Department of Education that are viable. thing to say, here are the aspects of the Department of Education that are viable.
Here's the aspects that are wasteful.
Hopefully, do you think it will be that considered a process?
Or will it be just a giant reaper that goes through?
Here's what I think happens, and this is just my guess.
I think they go in trying to have a big PR impact.
We're cutting this, and we're cutting that.
And they'll find the things that have always been,
have always had notoriety, you know,
the $1,200 toilet type things, you know,
the $800,000, you know, mice experiment,
whatever it may be, and we'll chop those.
And then from there, they'll have to actually think,
you know, they'll have to actually dig in and they'll have to actually think. You know, they'll have to actually dig in
and they'll have to find ways to measure
what they're evaluating.
And that's gonna be the challenge.
Efficacy, yeah.
Yeah, because how could you determine
if it's efficient or not,
or if you've improved efficiency,
unless you measure and you come up with benchmarks
that everybody agrees on,
because they're gonna be taking money away
from Republican districts
as well.
Right.
Or maybe they won't.
I mean, maybe this will be another one of those like, how can we fuck New York?
How can we kill them?
Well, yeah, but they come to midterms, it's a whole different conversation.
And I think they understand that they've only got two years to do something.
Absolutely.
And it's already, listen, it's as tight a squeeze in the House of Representatives as
you could ever imagine.
I think they've got a little breathing room in the Senate, but that's designed in such
an undemocratic way that it can present a difficulty to begin with.
But Mark Cuban, my God, I know you're a busy man.
I'm going to let you go.
Next time you're in town, you got to come and let me get some face time at a pizza joint,
learn more about all this crypto and everything else.
I appreciate it so much.
You're our end of year go-to,
and I can't thank you enough.
As always, really wonderful to talk to you.
Thanks for having me on, John.
I love it.
I love our conversations.
All right, man.
Good to see you, brother.
You too.
All right. Take care.
Talk to you later.
All right. Take care. Talk to you later.
All right. Final pod conversation of the year.
We are joined, of course, by our great producer, Lauren Walker, Brittany Mametovic and Jillian Spear. What a good first date. Not even a first date.
That might have been a third date with me and Cuban. I think, did we consummate?
Every first date, somebody brings up
crypto. That's just the world's really thing. It's definitely on mind with all the finance bros.
Are you saying that that date was a cliche? No, it was a very modern date.
I guess I'm looking for a man in finance. And boy did you find him.
Boy did I find him.
Do you understand any of that, by the way?
Like, I hated to have him walk me through it, like I'm a crypto kindergartener.
But it was helpful for me to sort of understand.
What the idea of it is.
And it really does seem to be just an agreed upon,
the idea that it's been agreed upon.
We've agreed upon that this has value.
We've agreed upon a system in which it will be traded.
Right.
And we're gonna keep the innovation going.
Are you guys in the crypto?
Are you?
No.
Are you finance bros?
It's gonna be a no. I have Beanie Babies. Does that count?
See, how is it not Beanie Babies, is Michael? I'm with you, John, where to me, it still seems
like a solution in search of a problem. And what Mark was saying about, you're in a foreign country
and somebody needs to send you money. It's like bank transfer me, I'll go to an ATM. I have a
credit card. I don't know what sums of money go to an ATM. I have a credit card.
Like, I don't know what sums of money we're talking about.
I don't know if this is like a Liam Neeson
and taken situation, but I just like,
I can't find a use for it.
Chilling, you're dead on right.
And I swear to you, and thank God I didn't go there,
but I was like, you mean like Western Union?
Like you go there in a telegram and you tell a friend,
telegraph me a cashier's check for $150.
But it really is one of those things where at its heart,
and I understand that it's popular,
but you really are like, it's kind of a mass illusion.
And then when he starts talking about your gold, then you're like, oh, the whole fucking system is a mass illusion. And then when he starts talking about your gold,
then you're like,
oh, the whole fucking system's a mass illusion.
And maybe it's nice that they're kind of creating a new one.
And maybe that, you know, supplants it
or just injects more wealth into
what can only be considered the bro podcast world.
Maybe that's-
Business is booming.
Exactly.
What he was saying about AI really stood out to me.
The fact that no one in the white collar world
is going to be affected by AI,
but it's just not true and it's already happening.
And I was just thinking back to back at the problem,
we had talked to someone who works at a helpline
for people with eating disorders and her group tried to unionize because they had been overworked
and they got replaced by AI. At a helpline?
And when they called in, the AI that the place had started using was not working properly and within a few interactions
was suggesting calorie counting. And that was years ago. So you can understand how quickly
this all develops. I know friends who have lost jobs. You know, it's already happening.
It's so crazy. I feel like so many of these tech people, they'll point to these historical examples of technology coming along and people losing their jobs and how they were then redistributed
into like other parts of the economy. And it's like, yeah, I get that. But you're also
the same people arguing that this is the most, this is the biggest technological innovation
since fire. So you don't get to have it both ways where you're like, this is the biggest
thing since fire, but also ATMs, to have it both ways where you're like, this is the biggest thing since
fire, but also ATMs, they didn't ruin bank tellers. Do you think fire, when fire came out,
people were like, I'm going to lose my heating job. Remember, I'm the guy who walks around and rubs
everybody's hands. Now fire is going to fuck it all up for me. And those people never recover, John.
Well, even that, like the dystopian aspect of like oh, yeah, no, you got to plug into AI,
whether or not to fix the road. And you're like, hmm.
There's an accountability in government that, well, it'll be a tool to help. But yeah, you're
right. It's I think they haven't quite figured it out. And there's, I think when you are on
that cutting edge of innovation, there is an exuberance, irrational and otherwise, that comes along
with it.
And it's hard not to get swept up in that enthusiasm.
I'm assuming that that's what angel investor meetings look like.
But at some level, stepping back and going like, hey, just so we're clear, you're saying
that the computer controls the entire hospital and decides like what oxygen
to turn on and turn off through analytics?
Because it is that algorithm is what was denying everybody insurance.
Yeah, absolutely.
So crazy.
You want some listening questions?
Let's hit them, man.
This is end of year.
Come at me, bro.
Whatever, whatever they got man.
I'm handling it.
We're getting out of here.
We'll have a few weeks to recover.
Let's fucking do this.
All right.
This one's a come at me bro.
John, it seems like you're projecting a little bit.
What do you think you did wrong this year?
Oh wow.
That you mean they're asking for self-reflection?
Perhaps.
Well, you guys know this.
I get annoyed at myself for being a little high horsey and you get a little of the sanctimony
in there.
Try to relax sometimes on the certainty of my opinions. You know, and I and I can, you know,
and the contrarian thing I could like, I really do feel like if you threw me
in a room with somebody who wanted to argue, I was going to destroy us all.
I'd be the guy who'd be like, it will save us.
And then you throw me in a room with a guy who's like, it'll save us.
And I'll be like, it will destroy us.
Like, that's I think I have a*** fiddler on the roof problem, which is that on the one hand,
but on the other hand. So yeah, I've done, I've done a lot wrong this year, but
I've had an awful lot of fun doing so. That's all that matters.
All right. What else, what else we got? Anything? Other than our lovely guest that we've just had on,
who's your favorite billionaire and why.
Oh, wow.
A favorite billionaire, you know, I'm trying, I wonder if I know more than one.
Like I've, I've talked to him.
I've talked to Elon.
I don't know.
I'm trying to think if there's another billionaire, I probably do know them. I just don't know. You know who I would say? Seinfeld. He's actually pretty close
to probably being a billionaire and funny as shit. He might be the funniest billionaire.
Okay.
Yeah. And he generally doesn't try and chip us or he doesn't try and do other billionaire shit to us.
So I give him credit on that.
You know, he could.
Well, Steve Cohen just did something really nice for you.
Oh, yes.
And he's listening, waiting for you.
That is my favorite billionaire.
I didn't even think of that.
He got me Juan Soto for my birthday.
Yeah, wealth redistribution.
Yeah, I don't really know.
I've met him a couple of times.
I met him once.
We did a, boy, this ties together the whole thing.
We did a charity dinner at, it was Stand Up for Heroes,
and they bid on different things.
And one of the things was you could bid on a dinner with myself
and Jim Gaffigan and Seinfeld and Louis CK pre thing.
So Steve Cohen bid on it.
And normally when people bid on something like that,
they never fucking, they never like,
it's just a way for them to just give the money.
Yeah.
Cohen was like, you're coming to REOs.
So he made us go, and I remember we went
and it ended up for obvious reasons, being Steve,
Seinfeld, Gaffigan and me.
And I remember making the joke to Jerry saying, jeez, I can't believe the lengths that Louie
went to to get out of this day. But that's, yeah, that was, that was my experience there.
Yeah. Good to have a billionaire owner of a team you like.
Well, that actually ties into this next question. All right, let's bring it.
How many world series do the Mets have to win to consider Juan Soto deal a good investment? Any.
If you could just give us five years of good baseball, you don't understand the Mets are not this isn't the Yankees of like a tradition of 26 championships.
And every year we're in the playoffs, like in we come at it, we suck.
And then every now and again, come out of nowhere, like suck, suck, suck
championship in 69 got to the World Series, I think in 73, come out of nowhere. Like suck, suck, suck. Championship in 69.
Got to the World Series, I think in 73, but did make it.
And weren't very good that year.
Had a miraculous coverage.
86.
Suck, suck, suck, suck, suck.
Then all of a sudden, 84, 85, 86, they were good.
Never got back there again.
Were good through like a little bit of the 90s.
Got to the World Series again in 2000.
We're not a history of like steady accomplishment.
So if this dude just comes in here
and raises the baseline level of our team to non,
I used to take the kids to the last game of the season
every year at City Field,
because you had the run of the place.
Right?
That's what I'm going to miss.
I'm going to miss cheap baseball tickets in New York.
Do you think he'll raise the prices? I just think more people will go. I could go on StubHub and get like 15 bucks, not bad seats. Really? That's a really good deal.
I always wait until the last minute to buy tickets to the Mets games because
really good deal. I always wait till the last minute to buy tickets to the Mets games because
people have gotten depressed at a certain point. They're just giving them away. They'll pay you
to go there. All right. What's the better holiday? Christmas or Hanukkah? Oh, that's just not even, we're not even in the same ballpark. That's like when Tracy,
when I got married and we had kids, we're like, what are we going to do? She's like when Tracy, you know, when I got married and we had kids, we're like, what are we gonna do? She's like, oh, we're gonna celebrate all the holidays.
But she knew how, like, I was about to get swamped.
I'm literally saying to the kids like,
all right, everybody, who wants to light a candle?
She's just like, look at all the presents under the tree.
And you know, when there's little kids around,
like when my kids were little,
like Maggie with Elf on a Shelf,
I will forever be grateful.
We once got one and we got a stewardess on a plane
to, we had brought Maggie's Elf on a Shelf.
We were traveling somewhere
and the stewardess came out of the cockpit going,
does anyone know who this is? And we have a picture of Maggie's face. She's just going,
like she, the magic of it. Yeah. I mean, I thought she'd be like, how did that narc
find me here? You know, at six, she was not darling.
She didn't have a stash.
So there was no, but that's a fine point.
But you guys, I hope you have a great holiday, but let me just say, boy, the work that you
guys have done, and I hope that the listeners understand that I have the part, like, I stand
on the shoulders of real workers.
Like you guys put together such phenomenal work
this year and allowed me to just really, you know, is the best part of it, I think, because
you all are so diligent and thorough and curious, it allows me to have that backing that I can
just be present in the conversations, which is the best gift for somebody who's interviewing somebody is to feel
like the work that's been done for you is so thorough and interesting that you can just then
plop it out and let the conversation flow. So thank you guys so much.
And enjoy your holiday.
Brittany, what are the socials?
Twitter, we weekly show pod, Instagram threads and TikTok.
We are weekly show podcast.
Drum roll please.
We are on Blue Sky weekly show podcast.
That's what Cuban was talking about the blue sky there.
Exactly, we're on it. And then you can like and subscribe our YouTube channel,
The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart.
Boom. All right, kids.
Lead producer, Lauren Walker, producer, Brittany Mamedovic,
video editor and engineer, Rob Vatola,
audio editor and engineer, Nicole Boyce.
And to the two of them, top fucking shelf.
You guys have been crushing it all year.
And Rob, congrats on the baby's first holiday.
Enjoy that.
Researcher and associate producer, Jillian Spear.
And as always, our executive producers,
Chris McShane, Katie Gray.
That is all for the weekly show pod 2024.
We will see you guys on the flip side on 2025.
And thanks again for everything.
Boy.
The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart is a Comedy Central podcast
is produced by Paramount Audio and Busboy Productions.
The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart is a Comedy Central podcast
is produced by Paramount Audio and Busboy Productions.
The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart is a Comedy Central podcast
is produced by Paramount Audio and Busboy Productions.
The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart is a Comedy Central podcast
is produced by Paramount Audio and Busboy Productions. The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart is a Comedy Central podcast is produced by Paramount Audio and Busboy Productions. The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart is a Comedy Central podcast is produced by Paramount Audio and Busboy Productions. and I'll see you next time.