All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E143: Nvidia smashes earnings, Arm walks the plank, M&A market, Vivek dominates GOP debate & more
Episode Date: August 25, 2023(0:00) Bestie intros: Friedberg's interview with NASA Astronaut Woody Hoburg, live from the ISS! (2:58) All-In Tequila update (10:04) Nvidia smashes earnings, GPU market outlook (37:39) Arm files for ...IPO: positive sign or plank walk? Plus: State of the IPO market (49:51) Sacks on current investable metrics right now in VC (55:33) GOP Debate breakdown: Vivek's statement, DeSantis's strategy, Haley & Christie solidify positions (1:39:46) Vivek's comments on the Climate Agenda (1:47:07) Prigozhin crash  Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://linktr.ee/calacanis https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow the pod: https://twitter.com/theallinpod https://linktr.ee/allinpodcast Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://twitter.com/yung_spielburg Intro Video Credit: https://twitter.com/TheZachEffect Referenced in the show: https://twitter.com/friedberg/status/1694506279954526487 https://twitter.com/DavidSacks/status/1693441068036169785 https://twitter.com/chamath/status/1693524941721731189 https://www.wine.com/product/21-seeds-tequila-trio/633617 https://www.villadeste.com https://www.google.com/finance/quote/NVDA:NASDAQ https://nvidianews.nvidia.com/news/nvidia-announces-financial-results-for-second-quarter-fiscal-2024 https://companiesmarketcap.com https://twitter.com/chamath/status/1694457666289225776 https://electrek.co/2023/06/21/tesla-dojo-supercomputer-is-finally-coming-next-month https://prospect.org/features/great-telecom-implosion https://www.statista.com/chart/6780/only-5-countries-have-a-bigger-gdp-than-california https://twitter.com/OpenAI/status/1694062483462594959 https://openai.com/blog/gpt-3-5-turbo-fine-tuning-and-api-updates https://twitter.com/nathanbenaich/status/1694073194351648932 https://commoncrawl.org/about/team https://adsense.googleblog.com/2005/10/spotlight-on-weblogs-inc.html https://twitter.com/twistartups/status/1694399138194952363 https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1973239/000119312523216983/d393891df1.htm https://www.theverge.com/2023/7/13/23793969/adobe-figma-merger-acquisition-uk-cma-regulator-investigation https://venturebeat.com/games/microsoft-signs-15-year-cloud-streaming-deal-with-ubisoft-in-latest-bid-to-win-activision-blizzard-approval https://www.stonealgo.com https://youtu.be/f51Yd9h9ZXo https://www.natesilver.net/p/ramaswamy-and-the-physics-of-multi https://www.cnn.com/2023/08/04/politics/cnn-poll-ukraine/index.html https://www.mediaite.com/politics/whopping-ninety-six-percent-oppose-supporting-ukraine-against-russia-in-turning-points-action-straw-poll
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Sultan of science, what's going on? Are you still riding high after your big NASA zoom interview?
Your space station zoom interview? That was really fun. Shout out to Woody Hoburg from the International Space Station,
astronaut, Cal alumni. Woody listens to the pod on the ISS while he works out.
The astronauts work out. He said two hours and 15 minutes every day to, you know, obviously your body can
after if you got to work out a lot. He's like, when he's working out, he was installed episode to be all in pod.
A buddy of his put him on to it, he's become a big fan.
Right on. Shout out to Woody.
Yeah, I got a DM from NASA astronauts.
I thought it was like some sort of scam or something.
I clicked on it because I follow NASA astronauts at DM me and I'm like,
obviously.
This astronaut wants to chat.
That's so crazy.
I look the guy up, see him fl seemed legit. He's following me on Twitter.
So we did a Zoom call.
Yesterday, and I put it on Twitter, the call I did with him is really fun. Honestly, like a thrill for me.
An amazing individual, this guy, got his PhD at Cal in computer science.
Did a thesis on Convex Optimization, applied to Aerospace Engineering, became a professor at MIT for three years, optimization applied to aerospace engineering,
became a professor at MIT for three years,
and applied to the astronaut program and got in.
Mm, fast forward.
2023 in March, he is the pilot of the Cru6 mission,
the SpaceX Cru6 mission to the ISS,
and he's been on the ISS since March,
and he's coming back in a couple of days,
an incredible individual, amazing story. It was super fun to chat with them. I don't think I've ever seen you smile or be more excited about anything
You look absolutely ecstatic. Oh, it was amazing. Did he have any comments on Uranus?
Any thoughts on Uranus or no?
We didn't get there. You didn't get your answer. Check out you blew that. Let's try that again
You take a shot this freeberg. So out you blew that. Let's try that again. You want to try again. You take a swim.
Let me take a shot this. Freeberg.
So did he talk about going to the moon?
Yeah, he's actually on the Artemis mission.
And what about your ringness?
We didn't get that far.
We didn't get that far.
It was the first day it was only 20 minutes, guys.
Was it the first day in 20 minutes?
Did he go for your ringness?
Hey, hey, I hear that we're trying to actually land
on the south side of the moon.
The dark side of the moon.
Yeah, so he's actually on that moon.
Would he have an opinion on the dark side of the moon?
Or I don't know, the dark side of your anus?
Oh, three for three for three for 3 for 3 for 3 for 2
I just want to explain somebody was like, why are you bullying Jake? Why are you bullying Freiburg?
Chimaltz bullying this person.
He loves the attention.
Our love language is breaking shops.
That's it.
We like to laugh and take the piss out because everybody takes themselves too seriously.
And then what's going on with the tequila?
Are you guys serious about this?
Because now I'm getting...
Don't talk about that right now.
I'm getting 50 emails a day with people
talking about the killer. We'll talk about it. I did run a poll asking people if they were
trying to all in tequila and the poll at nearly one. Okay. And then I ran a poll asking what the most
they'd ever spent on a bottle was. If you price it around 200 bucks, you can really maximize demand. I think the demand maximizing function is probably
around $180, $180 a dollar. You do not need a majority of people to want to buy your tequila.
You just need enough that are willing to pay the right price.
I agree. I was just trying to see how much interest they'd be out there.
And in this poll, I think it was 41% said they would try it, 40% said they wouldn't.
And then their remainder was just kind of,
show me the answer.
I think if we don't have advertising ever,
but we have a nice sipping to Killa,
because I don't drink a lot,
but I do like when SACs give me a nice beer.
It's for a bit.
Guys, 32,000 votes.
So if you look at 18.8%.
So it's 79% is 200 or less.
That's the sum of both of those two cohorts.
So like if you priced it at, call it 180,000.
You probably can get 15%.
And so you could probably sell several hundred thousand bottles a year.
I mean, that's like a pretty real business.
Okay, but I need something smooth.
And I like it a little sweet.
Is that a problem?
Can I just give you my opinion?
I think this, the thing that people get wrong,
just as a consumer, and I think like I'm a pretty
discerning consumer, the thing that I don't like is that people focus on all of this window dressing,
and they don't focus on the core.
And the core is that, for example, in wine,
there's seven or eight rating systems.
And over time, if you buy enough wine and taste enough wine,
you can really figure out who's good at what.
And there's just nothing that replaces
a highly rated wine that's exceptional.
And that kind of discernment is now moving itself into tequila. And so I would
just encourage us if we're going to make a bottle, just make it an exceptionally good tasting bottle.
And one of the things that I saw in the comments was that people said, oh, you can't differentiate.
But then I see some other articles like Comos, which is the one that I tasted at the one and only Mandarina, that was the first hundred point tequila
that had ever been given out.
And so there are people that are starting to rate it
and create these rankings.
And if we were going to put out a product,
I would air on extreme product quality versus price point.
I invested in a tequila company.
I showed this to you guys called 21C.
It was started by my friends, Nicole, Cat, and Sarika.
And they spent a lot of time in Mexico finding the right producer and they put fresh fruit.
It's a female niche tequila.
So the goal is to create a tequila that will appeal to the female demographic.
And they spent quite a lot of time trying to figure out how to actually get the flavor
of fresh fruit without using artificial flavoring
Into the tequila and so there was this big investment in trying to get the single work
This thing worked it took off and a diagio bought the company
But it was because they spent so much time on the quality of the product that I think they were successful
And that's everyone else puts their name and label on a on a bottle of tequila and says hey
This is my tequila, but if you don't get the quality right, Chimoff is totally right.
People don't buy a second time.
You gotta get it right.
If you look at what Rob the Rock did,
the Rock went in a different direction,
which is I think he has a very accessible
and affordable tequila,
which I think makes sense as well.
It's just a different strategy,
and that also works for the Rock
because he has almost 400 million followers.
And so, he can really play a volume game.
But I don't think that that's what we should ever do. No, we should stand for exceptional quality.
Exceptional quality. And this speaks to something else, which is one of the biggest points of
feedback that I get. So for example, I took three days, not tonight, I took three days, we took
a little bit of our own little honeymoon away from all the kids and we went to Villa Desta.
Just to kind of hang on the Lake G Como because I was flying out of Milan and ran
into a few people there.
And the consistent feedback that I get from those folks is like, they love hearing about
these different places, whether it's different brands, different kinds of wine.
All of these things because all these folks are a little bit left out in the cold now,
they don't have like, how to live life well.
And if you work really hard and you're lucky enough to then also have some amount of success,
why should you feel ashamed about it?
Why shouldn't you be allowed to enjoy that and actually like pamper yourself and celebrate yourself?
And I say go for it.
So if we can find high quality products like this is the
thing for example, like I think there's different ways of expressing success. When I was poor, I was poor
in wallet and I was also poor in mine. And then somewhere along the way, I actually became rich in
wallet, but I was still poor in mind. And so I would wear these clothes that were gotty and have these huge label.
Terrible, terrible, terrible, deor and blitz.
Yeah, but all those crowds don't go that out.
And the haircut looked like Freedberg's. It was disgusting.
It was gross.
And then I learned how to be rich in wallet and rich in mind, which is then you go totally
brand off and you can actually find things that are just like really well tailored, well made,
they can be almost generational pieces of clothing or whatever.
And I think that it's great that you can find these things and tell other people because
you find that there's a latent, so many number of people that want that.
So Ed Villadez, they as an example, that is probably the Harvard of hospitality.
I've never been to a hotel that is more on point anywhere in the world than that one
place. Incredible, incredible ways in which I call the winners.
Villa Destay, Villa D apostrophe, ESTE on Lake Column. I'll give you one simple example. Matt and I
were like talking about this one kind of olive oil. And the waiter at the other table heard
he went to the kitchen, brought back
and he said, here, I heard, I just overheard, I apologize, but and I thought, this is incredible.
You feel so pampered and loved and taken care of. The level of service and quality there
was incredible. And I think that there are so many examples of this where if you can have
elements of that in your life, you should do it. By the way, there's a very high chance that this is where I use all of you guys for the
all in summit in 2025.
Oh, okay.
I'm still figuring out all the details.
I'm picking my 2024.
But my point is whether it's Laura Piana, which is, in my opinion, the top of the top in
terms of brand off, really high quality photos.
Look at that place.
The point is, like, there's all these brands that exist that take enormous amounts of time
to exemplify craftsmanship and care.
And I think that it's appropriate for people
who can participate in those experiences
to be able to have them and not feel ashamed
and actually like enjoy it and celebrate themselves
and do it so let's go.
High quality stuff, not shitty, big, label, tacky crap.
Okay, Nvidia has smashed their earnings, massive interest coming into this earnings report
obviously because we've been talking about Nvidia, they've had a massive run up.
Everybody is trying to buy capacity to run language models, etc.
Self-driving, yada yada.
And it's not just the Googles and Amazon's of the world, you have startups trying to buy
H100s, A100s,
and buy the San Francisco.
You also have sovereign wealth funds and countries
buying these in the Middle East and Europe,
and you have traditional corporations buying them.
This is the blowout of world blowouts
in terms of performance.
Q2 revenue, 13.5 billion,
up 101% year over year.
That's extraordinary on that large of a number.
But up 88% quarter over quarter, high growth in stocks is 20, 30% year-over-year. That's extraordinary on that large of a number. But up 88% quarter over quarter.
High growth in stocks is 20, 30% year-over-year. So this is just very uncommon, obviously. Q2 net income.
$6 billion, up 843% year-over-year. In videos now with 1.2 trillion, it's closing in on Amazon,
1.4 trillion, and Google at 1.7 trillion dollars in terms of market cap.
And here's the kicker.
They're printing up so much money and so much profits, rather, that the Nvidia board
is approving a $25 billion share buyback.
That's a very large number in terms of share buybacks.
That's six times higher than what they were currently allotted.
Yeah, I guess, when you see this kind of extraordinary run-up, what is
the ramification going to be in terms of for the industry, competition, and then just
trading this name? Is this peak in video, or is the peak yet to come?
Well, I think it's peak in one way, but this is less about a commentary on Nvidia because
they're clearly firing on all cylinders, but it's a pretty well established rule in capitalism, which is when the market
observes that there's a company just printing enormous revenues and profits,
they want to compete with them naturally to get their share of those revenues and profits.
And that typically happens in all markets.
And the result of that are just decaying margins.
In the absence of a monopoly, this is what you should expect.
And so because in this market, there's nothing really
monopolistic about what they do.
What they do is exceptional and good.
But there are other ways and other systems and other companies
that are developing chipsets and capabilities here
to compete with Nvidia.
So it probably just motivates them even more
and accelerates the path where you see competition.
I tweeted this out yesterday, but one of the most interesting things that could happen is
somebody like Tesla decides to either open source their chip or actually starts to sell their platform
because if FSD gets to a reasonable level of scale,
that entire platform system is a learning and inference system for the physical world.
I think that has tremendous applications.
You have something called risk v,
which is an open architecture
spec to essentially compete and create different versions
of different chips that has implications more, I think,
to ARM.
You have companies like Google that frankly
spun their own silicon a long time ago, TPU.
You have Amazon now talking about doing the same thing.
Microsoft has invested a lot of money in FPGA technology.
So it's just yet another accelerant in this trend
to create many forms of AI enabled Silicon.
And so I think that that sort of,
it pulls that reality forward.
And I think we're gonna have to figure out
when the market prices that in,
because I think that that probably decays
the Nvidia margin and upside over time.
Again, that is not a commentary on that. That's just a market reality.
Yeah, margins get computed away. For folks who don't know, Tesla is making something called Dojo.
It's their own supercomputer. Here's a picture of it. They showed that at Tesla AI Day last year.
And you have arms, open source competitor is the risk-fived chip you're talking about. It's an open source architecture for doing large jobs.
And so, I guess my question to you, Friedberg, is if you look at all this capacity coming online,
do you think we're going to be in a situation where the amount of capacity compute being put online
is going to outstrip the need for that compute because software is getting so much better
and then maybe, you
know, people are running, hugging face jobs and various LMS on the new Silicon from Apple
and they're running it on their M2s. And so do we need this much capacity? Are there
enough interesting jobs in the world for all this capacity and then might that also be
a headwind against in video when people say, you know what, I got enough capacity
here. I think the rational way to think about this is to try and calculate the efficient
frontier on compute use. So the more compute you use, the more it costs you. The question
then is, if you double the amount of compute you're using for a particular application, do you get
twice the return on the investment? If you triple it, does your ROI press on a percentage basis,
you know, go up or go down? So at some point you reach an efficient frontier, which is you start
to see a declining or negative rate of return on the investment in the compute that you're using
for a particular application.
And this is certainly going to be application in market specific. It's going to be largely driven
by the data that is available in that market to do training, to do tuning.
The market's appetite to spend money for that particular set of applications that emerges
from that compute that's being used. And so we don't know today where the efficient frontier is across each of these different markets and sets of
applications. And the market is finding that out. In the process of finding that
out, everyone is spending a shit ton of money on compute. And they are trying to
get as many server racks as they can. They're trying to get as many chipsets
as they can. They're trying to get as much server time as they can.
And everyone's got this idea that the more compute
I can throw to problem,
the return is gonna scale linearly
and it turns out that like with most things,
the answer is likely not.
So we're at this point right now
and I would argue a bit of a cycle
that there looks to be a bubble.
And what I mean by that is that there's a lot of inefficient spending going on.
As the efficient frontiers are discovered across all these different application sets.
And so my intuition without a lot of actual data to back this up is that based just anecdotally
on what I'm hearing people doing in the market, what companies are doing, what startups are
doing, etc. Everyone is throwing everything they can at compute,
and they're gonna realize that they're gonna need
to rationalize those expenses at some point.
So I would envision, Nvidia is probably
writing a little bit of a discovery
of the efficient frontier wave right now,
and that this probably is not necessarily steady state.
SACS, we experienced this before, as you remember from the dot com era, there was a massive
investment very similar to this in fiber and the overspending of building the fiber infrastructure
so everybody could get broadband and they could stream movies, etc. happened in that 97
to 2002 time period.
A lot of those companies went out of business, a lot of that fiber never got used. People were working on compression algorithms while they were building
on massive fiber. And a lot of that fiber got sold. And then Google bought up a lot of it. Other
people bought it up. And it was just a massive overspend. So is this like the dark fiber of this
era where we're just going to build so much capacity that there's just going to be not enough
jobs to run on it in your
mind.
Well, I think it's a little different than fiber in the sense that every year there's going
to be a new generation of chips.
And so these cloud providers who are providing GPU compute, they're going to want to keep upgrading
the chips to be able to address the next generation of applications.
So I don't think it's quite as static as fiber where you kind of build it once. And you're right that there was kind of a glut of capacity was created. Eventually
though the internet usage grew into that capacity. But I think this is a little different because
again, you're going to need to upgrade the chips every year or two. I think freeberg is
right that this is clearly a spike in demand that may not be sustainable. I mean recall
what happened here is that
ChatGPT launched on November 30 last year
and really called everyone by surprise.
It kind of took the world by storm.
And over the next few months,
you had hundreds of millions of users discover AI.
I think it's surprised even the OpenAI team,
I think when they launched ChatGPT,
they thought it would be more of a proof of concept.
But it ended up being a lot more than that.
And so everyone has scrambled all the sudden
in the last nine months or so to develop their own AI strategy.
And so again, it was this giant platform shift
that happened overnight.
So there is a tremendous GPU shortage right now.
And that's also what's leading to these
almost software like profit margins
by Nvidia. Because when everyone's clamoring to get a limited supply of these chips and they're
just aren't enough, Nvidia can almost charge whatever they want. And so I think even more than the
demand the profit margins might not be sustainable. But I think the reality is we just don't know what the steady state of
demand in this market is going to be. I think we can say that it can't continue at these
growth rates, but probably there will be some steady state of demand that's probably
as at least where we are today.
Yeah, I don't think it's perfectly analogous, Chimoff, but just to bring up some historical
context, check out this
article I was reading the other day.
The dimensions of the collapse of the telecommunications industry, this is August 22, 2002.
And it says, the dimension of the collapse in the telecommunications industry during the
past two years has been staggering.
Half a million people have lost their jobs, and that time the Dow Jones communication
technology index has dropped 86% the wireless communication index 89%
these are declines in value worthy of comparison to the great crash of 1929 out of the 7 trillion decline in the stock market since its peak about 2 trillion have just appeared in the
capitalization of telecom companies 23 telecom companies have gone bankrupt in a wave
capped off by the July 21st collapse of world on the single largest bankruptcy in American history
so just a little history there of this.
It's not perfectly analogous.
Obviously, in video, it's not going bankrupt or anything like that.
But this over capacity issue is definitely going to be something.
But you had mentioned that in one of your tweet storms in the past couple of weeks, or
these long form that you're doing on X, previously known as Twitter, you mentioned that what
are the jobs that could be pushed to this compute?
And what if one of them works?
I think you were doing a speaking that somebody tweeted out a little clip of.
So let's unpack that. What do you think are some jobs that people might push here that we don't anticipate that could solve something
Miraculous in the world. Well, yeah, the framing is really like if you if you go back to like the
Well, yeah, the framing is really like if you go back to like the the gold rush of the 1800s in San Francisco, the people that made the money were the platform enablers, right? They were the ones
that sold the picks, the shovels, the pans, and the jeans, right? And that's where that's really
why Strauss was born. The equivalent analogy, the equivalence in that analogy today is in video
because they are the dominant pick and shovel provider.
So the question is, well, what are we going to use these picks and shovels to create?
Are we going to find gold?
And I think the question is unclear.
And where will that gold be found?
Will it be found inside of a big tech company?
Or will it be found inside of a startup?
If you look inside of where these resources are being used inside of big tech,
it is to completely scorch the earth
on the economic value of large models. And I think that that's very, very good for all of the
startups that come after it. So what do I mean by this? You know, we were also wrapped around the
Haxel around Chad GPT and then GPT in general. And now, if you look at the quality of Lama, Lama 2,
basically these big companies have decided,
no, we're just going to make all these models extremely
good, extremely useful, and very, very free.
And so a lot of the resources are going there
to subsidize, economically subsidize,
and by implication, economically
destroy the value of that category.
That's going to be good for startups.
And so the question is, what will you then build on top of these quasi-free, almost free
tools?
And so one area that I have been looking at for a while is in computational biology.
I think that that clip that you're talking about was just me talking with Orrin Zeeve just around the ability to compute large complex spaces with a very
sparse information. It's not, it's a very difficult task today, but tomorrow in an AI model that you
can train, you can literally characterize every single molecular permutation you can imagine.
You combine it with something like Alphafold and you can understand protein folding
and all of a sudden you can sequentially start
to put tools together that could theoretically give you
much higher probability guessing for specific compounds
that could actually cure disease.
A different version of that is a company that myself
and a few other people started, I tweeted that out,
which is more in the material science space.
And we've had some pretty important breakthroughs there, which is really about trying to invent
next generation battery materials.
And we have one candidate that could be pretty revolutionary if it turns out to work.
We don't know yet.
Some positive signs.
So there are some of these green shoots.
So my perspective is that a lot of the money that Nvidia makes today is going to be money
while spent because it'll be going to the big guys,
big tech plus Tesla, they are then going to create
some really foundational platform technologies with it,
whether it's Dojo, whether it's FSD,
whether it's the full platform inside of Tesla
that is the cameras,
plus the inference, plus the training, for all forms of physical world interaction, whether
it's Lama 2.
And all of that stuff will be given away essentially, I think, open source, quasi free, to the ecosystem
over the next few years.
And I think that will be a really important moment, which will create hundreds of new
companies doing really clever and
cool things.
We haven't yet seen the big breakout company yet.
I think that right now most of this cap ex is going to be big guys, but the dividends
of all the work that these big guys are doing will be seen over the next few years in the
startups that get started in the next four or five
years.
I love the California analogy.
Ultimately, what all that prospecting for gold did was create the state of California,
putting aside the Levi's and the jeans.
And if you know anything about California's GDP, it would be, yeah, I think these statistics
are always talked about.
Fifth, tenth, eighth, largest.
It has a bigger GDP, California than some of the largest countries in the world.
So this is a 2015 chart.
It's hard to find the updated information on this, but ultimately that was the product
of the Coltrush, is this incredible state.
Any other thoughts on Nvidia before we move on to ARM?
I think OpenAI had a potentially significant product announcement that's related to this.
So, they just launched fine tuning for chat GPT, actually version 3.5 turbo.
It says here fine tuning lets you train the model on your company's data and run it scale
early tests have shown that fine tune GPT 3.5 can match your XC GPTbt4 on narrow tasks. So you can do things like fine-tune, the formatting of the output,
you can fine-tune the tone, fine-tuning also allows businesses to make the model follow instructions
better. So I think the point of this is that we're still at such an early stage of this and
there are so many applications that are going to be developed and they're making the models more and more useful. So Jason, to your analogy about fiber, what happened with
fiber is there was a big build out of over capacity, but then the number of applications kept
growing until that capacity got used. And I think we're probably going to see something
like that here where there is a big build out going on of capacity and capabilities
and that's going to lead to the next generation of applications.
And I just think we don't know yet what the steady state of either demand or supply for
these chips is going to be.
Obviously the market got taken by surprise over the last year.
So you've seen, again, this huge spike in demand, the supply cannot react fast enough.
That's led to gigantic profits for Nvidia.
But it's hard to know exactly, again, what is the steady state going to be?
Is it going to be like this?
Or is this a one-time spike?
And we also don't know what the supply will be once the manufacturer is all adjust, because
now they know that the demand is there.
And to your point, like the big use cases are pushing us well past chips to really be more like entire systems and these racks.
And so if you look at Grace Opera,
which is their next-gen design,
it's like a bunch of chiplets plus memory
on a little any huge board, it's not a chip.
You're talking about system level manufacturing
at this point, and that will also create
different kinds of use cases.
Because for example, today
right now, when you look at simple things, I probably list the tasks, I think chat GPT
and all these GPTs are pretty marvelous and pretty inspirational. But the Germanistic
tasks, they're shit. Like, you know, they hallucinate on simple things like multiplication.
Why? Because you infer multiplication and you try to calculate it probabilistically,
and you get these simple math functions wrong. And so these are all these things where the software
has to become more and more sophisticated
and actually be able to path and tunnel code
into different ways of getting it executed
and then bringing it back and such and get together.
All of these things don't exist.
Those are very rudimentary things
that were solved in V1 of compute.
So I think that to your point, David,
like we don't know where
this goes, we're probably going to go to a place that is not just about chips, but it's
about systems. But that's going to create this weird Balkanization almost. And I think
that's where a lot of the profit margins will get eroded away because that will make it
a much more competitive industry.
And there just isn't a lot of margin to capture
when you actually stitch all these things together.
Yeah, and if you think about what were the massive wins
for all that extra fiber, it was really two companies.
The first was YouTube, which stopped charging people
for transport on their videos before that.
If you had a video go viral, your server got shut down
because you hit your $5,000 a month limit or whatever you had set with your ISP. And then Netflix,
of course, right? Netflix couldn't exist. And all that dark fiber built that. So we'll see with
all this extra GPU, what could happen. And to your point about the breakthroughs there, you can now
go into your chat GPT and you could put in custom instructions. And so it asks you, what would
you like chat GPT to know about you and provide better responses. And you know, for example,
I told it on the venture capital, so I live in the Bay area, I'm looking for concise business
information. And then it says, well, how do you like, how would you like chat GPT to respond?
And I said, I like to see data in a table.
I like to see data in those tables with hyperlinks.
I like citations when possible.
Yeah, just to be clear,
what you're describing with custom instructions,
that was a feature I think they launched
like a month or two ago.
And what that is doing is prompt engineering, basically.
It's pre-saving like all that preamble
that you would have to put in every single one of your prompts.
Yeah.
Whereas this fine tuning, as I understand it, is more about fine tuning the model to improve
the model for a certain kind of data or certain kind of output. Right. So the example there would be
if you had your email box or you had your Google docs or you had a repository of all your slack
messages or something in your company, you had your company handbooks or all of
Chamoxilators, he writes every year? You could have that uploaded to chat GPT.
It's potentially very powerful, I think, for enterprises. I think the big enterprise use case,
the most obvious one is that every enterprise wants its own internal chatbot. It wants its own
internal chat GPT where the employees can ask questions and the AI has access to all of the
company's information
and it understands permissions and privacy.
So it only reveals information to people
who have the right to see it.
That's kind of a tall order,
but I think that's what the market wants.
Yeah.
They want the chat GPT for the company internet.
Yes, and so I think there's a lot of people
racing to provide that.
And there was an interesting tweet by Nathan Benach.
Anyway, he just said bye-by-a-bunch
of startups. Because I guess a lot of stars were working on this fine-tuning problem. That
may be too glib or reaction. Yeah, it's a great way to do that.
Because I think there's just a lot of enterprises who do not want to share all their corporate
information with OpenAI. Of course. What if it's HR information, then you have people asking,
like, who are the most overpaid people in this company? What if it's like the badge information
and how many hours people are working?
That's more about permissions, Jason.
But even if OpenAI can nail the permissions problem,
I think there's a lot of enterprises
who will not want to trust their data to OpenAI.
They're going to be afraid about where it goes.
This is why I think OpenSource is taking off
in a big way, is that I think big enterprises
would much rather roll their own models
and control it and do the fine tuning
and that's why they're using tools like mosaic and hugging faces.
They want to have control over it themselves.
That's an excellent point, and that has implications as well into the hardware, which is also
probably a good jumping off point for ARM, because what you said is exactly must happen
for the integrity of an organization to want to use these things.
And if that happens, then it just further accelerates,
I think, how the hardware will get abstracted
and frankly, quasi-open source as well.
All right, let's talk.
Facebook did a great job of this
because when Facebook was building data centers,
they had to invent tremendous capabilities
that didn't exist before.
And the market was really fragmented,
it was very expensive.
And what they did was they
basically created these reference designs for servers and blades and the whole nine yards and
open source the whole thing. And it just, you know, in essence, destroyed a market, but it created
a hyper efficient market that then everybody could use. And I think the question is that if it's
happening at the software layer already now, just like it did in Web2 software,
and then we see certain elements of Web2 hardware been open sourced. I think it makes pretty
logical sense that you can expect the same things that happen in the AI world. The AI models and
the AI platforms and all of that stuff will first get open sourced because it's a data integrity
security issue, and then the hardware will get it open source as well because you just want simple reference
designs you can use and plug and play.
Yeah, if you want to look at that, it's called the OpenCompute project, OpenCompute.org.
Just a way to use open source to grind down the prices, take out the margin, I guess
is what you're saying, Chema.
To make all these data centers scale, right?
And so,
Yeah, so one related story here is,
this just happened in the last few weeks,
there's a company called CoreWeef,
which provides cloud infrastructure for AI training.
It's secured a $2.3 billion investment
in the form of a loan.
What CoreWeef is trying to do,
it's kind of like AWS, but for GPUs. So essentially, instead
of having to buy your own GPUs in order to set up your own infrastructure, you just basically
rent compute from these guys.
But this is exactly why none of these companies will really be allowed to exist in this
exactly four or five years from now, because because ultimately what people want is massive throughput, right? tokens per second. Give me as many tokens per second as possible.
And they don't particularly care. Again, if you understand the model, do they really care what the
underlying substrate hardware should be? It doesn't seem like they should. They should care what
is a throughput? What do I pay for it? And by the way, that is exactly what happened when AWS
really start to scale because if you guys remember, when we started for subtract code into AWS, what do I pay for it? And by the way, that is exactly what happened when AWS really start to scale because if you guys remember, when we started for subtract code into AWS,
what do we care about? How much in an EC2 instance costs? How much in an S3 bucket cost?
And that's all we cared about because that abstraction allowed us to not care about the underlying
hardware, who was the vendor, what was the kind of configuration it didn't matter. And so
in an interesting way, we're going to go through that same evolution here because it's just
economically rational that that kind of market exists. You should only care tokens per second, I think.
All right. In other news, oh, in by the way, there's something called Common Crawl, which is another
interesting open source project that is getting a lot more attention today because they have crawled
the web and you can use this Common Crawl. They release it monthly and that's what a lot more attention today because they have crawled the web and you can use this common crawl
They release it monthly and that's what a lot of people are training their data on now. They don't have
permission from all those people to do training data
But they do have at the ability for you to download an open crawl essentially what
Google has and you have an open source version of it. So
Common crawl was started and funded by Gil Eldaz. He's a friend
Gil sold his company Applied Semantics to Google back in 0203 and a big part of his effort
with CommonCrawl is to do it effectively. Is it AdSense? AdSense. AdSense. So basically applied semantics could read a web page and then create the keywords
associated with the content on that web page. And then those keywords would trigger ad
words ads on the web page. So they called it AdSense. So AdSense started and the whole
publisher network at Google was born from the applied semantics acquisition. And Gill
was obviously a pretty significant shareholder
of Google.
He's even in the S1, as one of the major shareholders.
He's a really great human being.
And his intention with this common crawl project
was to make the crawling of the web, the index,
and the caching available for all these different projects
that might exist.
And he didn't at the time anticipate
the open AI application
becoming the big breakthrough.
But when GPT-3 was published, I think they said that 80
plus percent of the waiting came from the content out
of Common Crawl.
And so it's really been this amazing project,
completely non-profit, mostly funded by GIL,
and has really unlocked this opportunity
for a lot of the open source alternatives to now try and provide solutions that can exist
and coexist with OpenAI and others in the commercial options in the world.
A small piece of trivia.
We were one of the first AdSense publishers, and so here's a story from October of 2005,
Weblogz Inc.,
which didn't get the blogging company,
I started hit $3,000 a day in Edson's,
thanks to Gell and the team over there,
and we wound up selling it to Edson.
And this is the story about it,
and we were included in the S1.
They had two examples of publishers.
One was New York Times, and then one was Weblogz Inc.
They were going to show like an upstart, and this one. And so a lot of history here, and it one was Weblogs Inc. They were going to show an upstart and this one.
And so a lot of history here, and it's fun to go back down to it.
And we were in the S1 for the wake.
By the way, he always going to be at the summit.
So you go to the summit.
Oh, I'm going to give him a hug.
You can take a picture.
Charles Barkley has this great story, which is like, he is like over the moon
about being a grandfather.
I saw this on 60 minutes, and and he said it's because I want my
grandchild grandson to Google me and notice that I did some things and then we can talk about it.
Yeah. And Jacob, I had this thought for you. That's like that's a cool piece of internet history that
you're a part of. Yeah. Hopefully your grandkids will Google that and you can tell us that's pretty cool. Or, you know, 1800 episodes of this weekend's startups.
I just tweeted an episode with Gary Tan from 2009 that I recorded at Sequoia's office.
And I just put it on the, this week in startups Twitter accounts, pretty funny to have baby
face Gary Tan from Post-Rus on there.
All right, ARM officially filed its F1.
It's kind of like an S1 for a foreign company.
And they planned to go public next month.
Arms revenue last quarter, $675 million down 2% year over year, up 7% quarter over quarter.
Fiscal full year, 2023, 2.7 billion ish down 1% year over year.
Arms major business, just so you know, is smartphones, 99% of smartphones are built with
arms chip architecture embedded systems
They they have a man is a business systems. Yeah, we'll get into it
The problem is the market is totally when when soft bank bought arm
It was probably like the last year where you know
There was so much focus on the hardware and platform
Technologies inside of mobile and tablets and all that stuff
But in these last few years think of what's happened?
We've had a massive shift to AI, right?
And so that's pushing a lot more pressure on GPUs
and whatever comes after that.
We have had a reemergence of the popularity of risk v,
which is an open source competitor to ARM.
We have had Apple in-source a whole bunch
of their own architectural decisions and silicon design
because they don't want
the dependency. They want the profit. They want the profit. Well, also they also care about different
things like they care about battery life. So that's where I, you know, that's the focus of their
chip architecture. And so all of this just means that that market embedded systems becomes more and
more constrained and commoditized over time, which again, as we said, in capitalism means
that future profits will be less than historical profits.
So I think this is a very tough valuation to get right and trying to stretch to a 60 or
70 billion dollar print, I think is really tough.
This is a, honestly, a 15 to 20 billion dollar company.
So question for you, I took a 15 to 20 billion dollar company. Ouch.
So a question for you, Archimuth, I'm opening up to the David's.
Why would Softbank, I know the answer, but I'm asking you, so you can explain to the audience,
why would Softbank take a company public with these headwinds, with no growth, being flat?
Why are they taking the public now?
Well, Softbank has the deliber, right?
They have a very big problem, which is that they have this
forget Softbank vision fund for a second,
but Softbank itself is a telco operator that has ginormous
piles of debt that they've used to finance the building
of their business.
And so when you have contraction in your core business, you become more and more
at risk of reaching the covenants of all that debt and or you just run out of recast flow,
like all of these things really hurt your future ability to invest. And so soft bank is under a lot
of pressure to just clean up the balance sheet and de-lever. And so when you have an asset like
this sitting there, if you can sell, you know, 20 or 30 billion dollars of that
Call it to somebody and then replenish your balance sheet
That provides tremendous liquidity and relief and they did that as well a few months ago with Alibaba
They've started to I think now they may have sold out out the overwhelming majority of the position in Alibaba,
again, because they have massive liquidity needs
because they have so much debt.
So this is just part and parcel of them
delivering the balance sheet.
So they're forced to get it out,
is I guess what you're saying?
And then we've talked, SACs, a little bit about other
companies that are going to be forced.
They're on the, what do they call it when you're in a
pirate ship, they make you walk the plank? I'd say this is like the walking of the plank to an IPO,
you've got other companies that have issues where they just have to get public at some point. So maybe
the public markets are going to open up. And in some cases, it's going to be because people
are walking the plank, other cases, it's going to be opportunistic. So maybe you could talk a
little bit about your thoughts on that. I think it's hard to walk the plank into the public markets.
I'm not sure exactly what you mean by that because the public markets have to want to buy
your issuance.
So if it's not a good company then you know in this environment they're not able to IPO.
Well they're going to be able to IPO.
I think the question is the price.
They have no choice but to get this out.
Sure.
So yeah, there may be a lot of down rounds into an IPO from the last private round which
was two or three times what the IPO price is gonna be.
Maybe what you mean by walk the plank is that,
well, you tell me, but there are a lot of companies
which have built up huge press stacks
because they raise too much money at the peak
at valuations are too high.
And going public does allow you to reset your whole press stack
because all the preferred with all the rights and preferences converts to common so post IPO you just have common
And so it is a way to like clear out
All the structure and all the mess that has built up in a company and you can get to a real valuation that reflects
Basically the truth of what the company is worth another analogy maybe the house is on fire
You got it you're on the balcony, you got a jump,
or you got to stay in the burning building.
Yeah, but you know, listen,
if your company's on fire,
I don't think you're gonna be on IPO.
I mean, it's gonna be a tough, scrutinizing,
public market for new offerings.
I think that the scenario in which you can IPO
is if the company is fundamentally good,
it will be able to IPO at some valuation,
and that valuation may be a significant down-round from their last private round.
Those will be able to get out.
Yeah, and that's right, I guess.
Now, are you seeing...
That could be stripe, yeah.
Are you seeing, David, the M&A activity starting to bubble up in your portfolio or in the
back channels?
Because I'm starting to see that a bit. Founders
are packing it in in some instances and saying, you know what, we want to try for M&A,
or some companies are getting a little bit frisky and saying, hey, what's available in
the market on the small side? So are you seeing any M&A action?
Not a ton yet, but there's definitely a growing number of startups who are realizing that
what they're doing is not working and they're not commuting to raise another round and so therefore figuring out
a graceful exit, whether it's an aqua hire or some other type of landing.
Oh, God, those are those might be the accurate walking the planks.
Yes, those are the walking the planks.
You're going to start seeing a lot more of that for sure.
Freeberg your thoughts on the public markets here and in relation to privates and people
walk in the plank.
I don't think there is a public market right now.
There's no IPO window.
This arm thing is pretty forced.
It seems it's not like there's a kind of pent up public demand
to buy these arm shares.
Really sets what it seems.
So they're gonna go shop it.
They're gonna find out what the market tells them it's worth and
and then we'll see in video it's gonna help we eat i'm sure
there'll be an argument that you know all boats will rise
and our will be of beneficiary but i don't know if that necessarily leads into the IPO window being open again i think we've all heard
the commentary from Morgan Stanley that they don't think the windows opening until
q2 q3 of next year maybe they don't think the window is opening until Q2,
Q3 of next year, maybe. I can't remember the exact commentary. But as we all know, a lot of LPs
in venture funds and private equity funds are waiting for the IPO window to reopen before
they're going to start reallocating capital back into the private venture funds
because they need to get liquid in order to be able to recycle capital back
into the next class of funds.
So this glut right now, this inability
to kind of get companies public is certainly weighing on folks.
You effectively have three options when you're
running a private company.
You got to keep raising money, which means either raise private capital
or go public.
We've talked about the challenges of raising late-stage private capital if you've had a
high private valuation in your prior round.
Going public is very difficult right now because a lot of folks are still digesting and having
indigestion from the last couple of years.
Or you got to sell the company or you got to get profitable.
Now on the sell the company side,
many of the acquisitions that we're seeing
with a few exceptions are generally more bolt on
and less like, hey, I'm gonna pay some big strategic premium
for some big strategic game-changing company right now,
because all the buyers are dealing
with their own shareholder issues
and their own public stock issues right now.
And then, you know, can you get profitable?
It's really, as you guys know,
where a lot of folks are going,
which is totally restructure your ambition, restructure your plans, and build
a business where customers are willing to pay you money, and where you can then take that
profit and only reinvest that profit and not invest more than that profit. And if you can
get to that steady state, you know, you can live to see another, another day, another year,
another decade.
And those businesses, by the way, that we saw on the dot-com boom in the global financial
crisis that were able to do that during the doldrum death valley march that everyone's
going through right now, they emerged victorious.
They learned how to be frugal.
They learned how to be nimble.
They learned how to really focus on customer experience because they have to increase retention and they had to increase the prices they were charging.
They learned how to be efficient with allocating resources.
And so profitability became a core part of their DNA and their ability to succeed.
So I think this is really a trial era.
And you know, on the other side of this trial era, a number of very high quality companies will emerge,
but in the interim, I don't think that there's an IPO patch
that a lot of folks can just check the box and say,
hey, let's go ahead and go public,
even if the valuation's not great.
Remember an IPO process, you gotta oversell your book
or the bankers won't underwrite it.
So if you can't just say, hey, the price is now five bucks
and expect the anchors are there,
if a company's burning money,
the big concern with going public right now is that there is no pipe market, there is no ability
to do secondary to do follow-on offerings. So the company can't raise capital after its
public. So unless you're actually profitable, your option of going public right now really
isn't there because shareholders don't want to buy shares in a company that may run out
of money. And that would end up.
And to your point, if you take this third option
and you become really resilient
and you have profits, Jamoth,
that seems to me to be the setup for the next boom
that we could experience in the coming years, hopefully,
which is we don't have companies that are burning,
mountains of cash, people are getting to profitable,
these businesses look great.
And then if the big companies are now having their stock prices
recover and they've laid off 20,000 employees
and they got people returning to the office
and they're fit and they're strong.
Hey, that's a setup for strong companies
buying strong companies or those strong companies
that are private.
The M&A market is dead as a door now.
It's more dead than the IPO market.
So two days ago, the European Commission and market is dead as a door nail. It's more dead than the IPO market. So two days ago,
the European Commission and the CMA and the UK said that they're probing Adobe Figma because they
have some concerns that it's going to limit competition in the market. It looks like Microsoft will have to
give a 15-year license to video game streaming to Ubisoft in order to get the UK folks to agree to Activision,
to their Activision acquisition.
So you're talking about, in the first case, a $20 billion merger that may not happen,
because the CMA, they found their footing.
They clearly had a win in the Microsoft Activision thing, and now they're probably going to
find issue with the Adobe Activision thing, and now they're probably going to find issue
with the Adobe Figma thing,
and the Europeans don't want to be left out in the action,
so they're jumping it.
So I think the M&A market is effectively dead.
What it leaves is an IPO market,
but that is very tenuous because you don't have a leading candidate
that can really catalyze something,
and I made this prediction earlier,
but I think the only company that can really catalyze things would And I made this prediction earlier, but I think the only company that can really catalyze
things would be if people were ready to do starlink.
I mean, it's the most obvious natural logical thing that would just get everybody excited
and off the sidelines and into the arena, but that may take another year, may not, but
it may.
In the meantime, I don't think there's any company like Instacart, I don't think people
are going to be jumping off the sidelines or it'll be tough.
Even straight now is like a very complicated valuation trade.
I think that that's a really technical thing to be involved in an IPO like that, a technical
valuation.
And so companies have no choice except to get profitable and get to default alive to use the
famous Paul Graham quote. That's the only path. That's it. Yeah, I mean, that's the only path.
You either have to be default alive, which means profitable or default investible, which means that
you're capable of producing metrics that a VC will fund. But really, that starts with 100%
your over your growth. There's a lot of companies that aren't growing very fast or growing 20, 30, 40, 50, 60%
growth.
That's not VC-Fundable.
They're flat, even worse.
I'm just joking.
So, those cases, they got to think more like a PE model than a venture model.
And PE companies are cash-oppositive.
They don't burn cash.
I'm going to the new one. I put out this video a few months ago called VC or P, what's the right framework for
thinking about your startup.
This was a...
Oh, CREF ventures.
You too.
This was a talk that I gave to our portfolio companies.
We recorded it and then published it.
Really, it should have gotten more attention.
But this was basically recommending to all those
slower growing companies, our portfolios, stop thinking that VC funding is always me available
and start thinking more like a PE funded private equity company, which is to say you need to
cut your burn to get cash repositive. You will then be able to control your own destiny.
So yeah, the slide here, if you're not VC eligible,
act realistically.
So we provided some guidance on what makes a company
eligible for VC funding.
And you can see there's a good column,
there's a great column.
Good starts at 2x growth, great is 3x.
Gross margins, good starts at 50%, great is 80%.
Now dollar attention, good starts at 100%,
great's 120%. Cack payback, good starts to 100%, grades 120%,
CAC payback, good is 12 to 18 months,
great is 6 to 12 months,
burn multiple, good is one and a half,
great is one or less,
and then there's some danger zones as well.
This was to provide them with some realistic guidance
in terms of whether they'll be able to raise
another VC round or not.
And I can tell you like most startups in
start world right now are in the danger zone. It's a really tough environment. And so,
you know, listen, if you're a startup with sub one million of ARR and you're in the danger
zone, you're probably going to have to pack it in or maybe you package yourself up for
an aqua higher. But if you're a startup that has 50 million of ARR, but you're in the danger
zone, just cut your burn.
You could basically make your own cash repositive, and you could engineer an outcome for yourself.
A pretty good outcome.
My anecdotal experience is one of our larger investments. We brought in a private equity
firm where they came in. And my God, it's been an incredible experience. Because the combination of how
like a VC looks at a business and how a PE firm looks at a business in a moment like
this is hyper additive because it's super clarifying. It's very straightforward. And it gives
a CEO an extremely clear mandate from which to operate and then they become very measurable.
And I found it to be a really, really healthy thing.
Now, PE guys can only get in,
falls in companies of a certain size.
So it limits 50 million and above in revenue,
100 million.
Yeah, in our case,
it was a 400 million, 388,
more than 300 million revenue.
So it's a big company,
but my point is just more that we were moving along
a trajectory to getting to default alive, but my point is just more that we were moving along a trajectory to getting
to default alive, but by adding that PE, just a plan to a board, boom, I think we were
able to focus on it probably a year to 18 months faster and with specific precision because
they have a very different toolkit and a reaction to mis-execution, and that's extremely healthy.
Yeah, we had this happen. Meeting with, just from the front lines, we meet with, we have 20,000
people apply for funding from our firm. In large part, I would say, we doubled the number of
applications after all in started. So shout out to my besties here. It's really helped our deal flow.
And we find companies, and we found a company
that was obsessed with all in and the two founders were quants
and they made this company called StoneAlgo.
We meet this company.
They've got very little money.
It's a bootstrap company and they got to a half million dollars
in revenue, you know, just on sweat equity.
And we find this company, it's not part of the Silicon Valley,
you know, accelerator system.
It's basically Kayak for diamonds, shout out to the team over there.
And we were able to place a nice bet on this company that was break even.
And you know, put in, you know, a couple of hundred thousand dollars to start them down this road to growing faster.
But what did a delightful thing to find a profitable company in the world?
And so if you have a profitable company like, and it's just 50,000 a month or 25 to find a profitable company in the world. And so if you have a profitable company,
and it's just 50,000 a month or 25,000 a month,
please email me,
jasonacalliganis.com,
I want to invest in your company.
When you have that company, small amount of revenue
profitable, and you're not burning a ton,
you are so attractive to investors right now.
It's the highest attractiveness in the world.
And I just want to point out, David,
as this market has completely gone from absolute chaos,
the hair has gotten tighter and tighter.
You were in crazy ban and now you are tight, tight is right.
Sacks is focused, he's deploying that LP capital,
he's deploying that advice to SaaS companies,
and it's no joke now folks.
General Sacks is here.
He is not crazy.
History uncle, he is SaaS Sacks.
He is SaaS Sacks as back.
This is like when Mark Zuckerberg started wearing a tie
to work to start showing that it was serious.
Yes, SaaS is, SaaS Sacks is serious, SaaS Sacks is back without slick back hair. All right, yes, sacks, sacks, a serious sacks back with that
slick back hair.
All right, listen, we gotta get going here.
We got a lot more on the docket.
I think we just, maybe I'm gonna jump the fence here
and we just go right to the Republican primary.
The funniest thing last night was at poker.
We watched it.
You watched it during poker.
Were you able to focus?
You have to hear Kevin Hart react when all these guys are doing it. You watched it during poker. Were you able to focus? You have to hear Kevin Hart react when all these guys are doing it's one of the funniest things I've ever heard and the worst part of the poker was
Oh the magician here we go
Says how can you both be playing poker here, but also the debate stage
I know everybody's I just want to go around the horn here freedberg
Did you watch the debate?
Who won the debate? Who had the largest game? Net game in terms of their profile in your mind after watching debate number one of the GOP.
David Friedberg. Biggest game. I watch the debate. I kind of think about these guys on three
dimensions, which is the content, how dynamic they are, and their personality.
I think those are the three dimensions that people are going to be kind of assessing them
on. I think Nikki Haley did a tremendous job gaining interest with respect to her personality
and her content.
Bergen Hutchinson, I don't think had a chance to move the needle on any of
them. I think Vivek was by far the winner on dynamic. He had the hardest hitting, biggest
comeback, with a very close second being Chris Christie. But I do think that Vivek got
taken apart when it comes to content. And I have real concerns about his personality.
There's a lot of people that are just turned off by him that he seems a little too eager,
that he seems a little too smart for his own good. The commentary about him being so junior
and doesn't have experience. I think standing next to those guys on stage really showed
to be honest. Nikki Haley tearing him apart on his point of view on Russia and sex, you know, we can
debate the point or not, but I think she did a masterful.
I don't think she tore him apart.
I think that biggest dunk line of the evening was when he congratulated her on her future
appointments to the boards of Raytheon and Lockheed.
Yeah, that was brilliant.
I just think he's the most dynamic character.
And I think people do in a democracy vote on that.
They vote on how dynamic someone is.
They vote on their personality
and whether they can trust the person.
That in Nikki Haley shines there.
She seems extremely trustworthy and personable.
Chris Quintet came across as very personable.
So you're big winners.
Yeah, Mike Pence, I would say underwhelmed and Ron Rhonda Santas man. It's like he didn't show up
So yeah, I would say Haley
Christy Vivek and Kim Scott are probably like you know across those dimensions like you know the four
Runners and everyone else is probably off now. Let me get you mom and then sack you get to comment
on both of there.
So I want to go to you last because you have the most passion
here.
Tremoth, who are your big winners?
Coming out of it.
In other words, who gained the most last night?
Welcome, Brown, do for you.
Welcome, Brown, do for you.
I think that, okay, UPS settlement, great.
I thought that, I thought that Nikki Haley did an incredible job.
And I do think that thek did a very good job.
And I think what's interesting is that I'm fascinated
to see what the Republican reaction over the next few weeks
will be to Vivek.
And specifically, what I'm interested in seeing
is do the Trump loyalists start to,
were they accepted with an idea yesterday?
Which is that this guy can give us a lot of the talking points we want
without some of the heartburn and agita that we don't want and
If he is able to thread that needle which is what I think his effective strategy has been
He could really build momentum
going into the fall. So that was my real takeaway is that he is refining a playbook. Look, the guy is a clearly a really brilliant person, well studied, well prepared, and dynamic.
well studied, well prepared, and dynamic, as David said, so he can clap back at people, which I think is important.
But the most important thing that he's done is he has defined a very precise strategy
to thread this needle of being close enough to Trump to, frankly frankly eventually go after him, but do it in a way where he's slowly
building credibility among Trump loyalists. And I think if you look at where other people made huge
gaps, unnecessary gaps, was they took their beliefs and they confused them with the strategy of
winning.
And that doesn't work in the Republican Party.
So when the candidates were asked about Trump and the ones that drew a hard line and said
that this guy's going to go to jail, what happened?
They got booed.
And it just ended their ability to be credible for what they said afterwards.
I'm not saying that that's right or wrong.
It's just an observation.
So I think Vivek is doing the smartest job of understanding the rules on the field.
And he's in the arena doing it.
Okay.
So that gives them a lot.
That gives them a lot of chance.
Now we go to SAC.
SAC, you heard Nicky, Vivek, Christie from Freeberg.
Here's Vivek.
And Tim Scott.
Yeah.
And Tim Scott.
So Vivek clearly, the buzz and the search terms and everything, uh,
seems to be favoring Vivek as the big lift here. Do you think Vivek is the Trump change agent
without the indictments, without the baggage, without the Trump derangement syndrome insanity?
Is, is, is Tremoth correct here that he's a more palatable version of the change agent that is
Trump? I think he's positioning himself as the backup plan to Trump. So he's a more palatable version of the change agent that is Trump. I think he's positioning himself as the backup plan to Trump.
So he's not criticizing Trump.
He is cultivating support within Trump's base.
Again, not to supersede him, but I think to be perhaps be a backup plan.
I think it is a smart strategy.
But let me back up a little bit here.
Who won for you?
Well, let me put the best game before you make your point.
Well, first of all, everybody else played the game.
Biggest game.
Clearly, the biggest game was VVAC.
That's reflected in the polling.
There's a poll on drug report in which 33%, which was the highest number, said that he
won the debate.
22% for Haley, 18% for DeSantis.
Christy got 16% the rest were his nonfactors.
So Nate's over.
Not scientific, but pretty.
It's not scientific, but this is corroborated by Nate Silver had a substock this morning,
basically saying that based on the buzz on social media and the sentiment that he predicted,
and Google trends, he predicted that Vivek would, we keep saying Vivek Vivek, it is, it
is Vivek.
He's going to have the biggest bounce out of the debate
partly that's a function of the fact that he was the least well known candidate. Okay. So
this gave him a lot of exposure and he is a good orator. I mean just the way he talks the energy
the timber of his voice he projects well and he had a clear point of view in this debate you may not
agree with everything he said but he had a very clear point of view and I expect that both the number
of people who like him and the number of people who dislike him will go up as a result of this but
I think that that effect of that will be positive. Now let me back up to give you a couple more
thoughts on the debate. First of all in terms of winners I think the Republican Party in a way
more thoughts on the debate. First of all, in terms of winners, I think there are a public and party in a way demonstrated that it is the party of ideas where there actually are
debates happening because you saw here, I think, real differences between the candidates.
And I could break them up into really three categories, if you like. There's this Neocon
wing of sort of hard line foreign policy hawks.
And you saw Nikki Haley's part of that
and Chris Christie and Pence, Mentem Scott.
Then you had this religious right faction
where you've got Pence and Scott.
And then you've kind of got the Mago Wing
which Vivek really took up the mantle
of opposing Ukraine and defending Trump.
So you have three very different groups within the party who are battling, I think, for
my share within the party and to be the future of the party.
So it's not just about candidates and personal style, but it really is about ideas.
You compare that to the Democratic party that I am having a debate.
They're protecting Biden from a debate.
There could be a real debate because our case junior has really different ideas
and he would like to take the party in a very different direction
the direction of his father and uncle bobby kennedy and
john f kennedy he's saying that we have moved away
from where we should be as a party but
the people control the democratic party do not want to have that debate they have
shut it down completely there is no debate they're just protecting
Biden so party do not want to have that debate. They have shut it down completely. There is no debate. They're just protecting Biden.
So that's number one is I think we should give
the Republican party some credit for building
willing to discuss in debate.
I agree with you on that.
I love the fact that you had a vibrant debate.
You had differences of opinions.
Now it was a little like a UFC fight and you know,
zingers and back and forth.
But I did like the fact that you had people who,
in moderation was actually surprisingly good.
When they forced them to say,
like, would you give Trump a pardon?
Or, what would you do in terms of support for Ukraine?
This was like really well done.
And they had that 30 second thing where they stopped people.
They said, hey, this is the 30 second one.
And they had to reign in pants because he kept interrupting and
they were kind of respectful.
So it's just want to shout out to Fox for good moderation.
There were some crazy zingers in there as well.
And it seems like we live in zinger culture.
I think the best zinger goes to the moderator who said, let's talk about the elephant that's
not in the room.
And then they brought up Trump.
Well, frankly, that's the best part.
That one.
But that was pretty hardcore. Well, so let's talk the best part. I don't know if you caught that one, but that was pretty hardcore.
Well, so let's talk about winter number two, which was Trump, because Trump did not participate
and he didn't pay any price whatsoever for that.
He barely got mentioned or attacked on that stage, and then he did this interview with Tucker,
which started with climate and started to fund the debate, which was kind of brilliant,
because once again, Trump was able to suck up a lot of the oxygen, maybe not all of it, but a lot of oxygen
without even despairing in the debate.
It was a perfect bookend.
I watched both.
It was a perfect bookend.
You got Trump over here saying,
Chimath, an interesting European position,
everybody said,
listen, I don't need to be in there
with these guys mudsling and they have zero or one percent.
And I think you got the sense that he's excited
to debate them when there's two people at,
or something like that.
What did you think of?
Did you watch Trump's thing, Freeberg or Chama?
Can you watch it?
I watch the debate only.
I watch both the debate and then I watch.
I do think Trump effectively won the debate night
because you had all these guys going at each other
and then you had Trump playing the Trump card.
I'm not even gonna show up because I i don't have to you literally made himself better than everyone else in the room by saying i'm not even it's not even worth my time to show up to talk to you guys go ahead and fight with each other also just restate this point about the fact i think it became abundantly clear the history of the big his strategy is to pander to the Trump audience, that his commentary about,
you know, God is real, climate change is up close, there's two genders, he knows through
polling, through his understanding and his intelligence, that this is what this audience,
that is the bulk of the voting members of the Republican party want to hear and
he is telling them what they want to hear.
And then is that the job of a politician?
Yeah.
I mean, isn't that better than pandering to the military industrial complex like Nikki
Haley did?
There was a comment last night that I thought was really important, which is that leadership
is not about consensus.
And what he is doing is he is reflecting back the consensus view of the majority of people in that party in order to get himself elected, rather than leading
with a different message that casts a different opportunity, the different light on the opportunity
for this nation. And I think that's really where he and others on that stage, or he particularly
fall short, is that he speaks too much to what people already believe and say because he
knows that that's what they're voting for Trump about. And then the bet is that there's some chance,
not 100%, but some chance that Trump doesn't make it
all the way, he guns up in jail or people start to turn on him.
And then he's the front runner,
because he's basically captivated that audience
in the same way.
Hold on, but Freeberg, and I will let you address it here,
Chamoth just said, the brilliance of Vivek
in his positioning here is that he understands how to win.
And he is playing this game.
And you call it pandering.
Sax is, I think, saying it's understanding
the needs of that audience.
The job of a politician sax is to win and to stay in office.
So I don't believe Vivek's positions on a lot of the stuff.
I think he is pandering.
I think he wouldn't do what Trump did.
I think, you know, he's doing the part in promise
because he knows he gets him vote.
So how do you reconcile this?
Your job is to win, right?
And you would rather see DeSantis
maybe pick up on some of this action, no?
As your preferred candidate,
that's a good question.
That's a good question, Freembourg.
Do you think that a politician's job,
when you're running for president of the United States,
is it to understand the conditions on the field and win or not?
I think the politician's job, or I don't want to say the job,
I think the opportunity to get elected in a democracy
is to provide leadership, to cast a light
on where you think the country or
whatever constituency you're supposed to lead can go, to provide a sense of opportunity,
to provide a sense of optimism, to provide a sense of what's not happening today that should
be different rather than reflecting back to those people exactly what they want.
Now, the flip side of that is exactly what you're saying, Chimath, which is that I think
what happens in a democracy is that people elect people that represent what they believe.
And I think that's what's going to happen.
There's a lot of reason he's raising his hand and he's saying, I believe these things,
and he's going to get elected, or he's going to put himself in a position to get elected if Trump drops out.
I just think there's a lot of people who are very smart,
who if they are too idealistic, will achieve nothing in their lives,
and I don't think Vivek is one of those people.
Idealism has a place in the world.
It's not on the debate stage when you're running for president units.
Okay.
Sax, you wanted to get in here.
Go.
Okay.
Let's take the issue of Ukraine because that was one of the main issues that Vivek differed
from the rest of the people on that stage.
There is polling by CNN that a majority of Americans have now turned against the idea
of giving more aid to Ukraine.
I'm sure that number is much higher in the Republican Party.
If you remember, there was an event, Charlie Kirk, who is a conservative influencer, has
an event called Turning Point USA, and they did polling of their conference in 10Ds.
The number one issue that everyone agreed on was Ukraine,
95% of the attendees opposed,
giving more aid to Ukraine.
Donald Trump only got 85% popularity.
So the base of the party is even more united
against Joe Biden's policy in Ukraine,
then they are on loving Trump.
Okay, that tells you something.
And yet, the fake is the only candidate on that stage that was willing to raise his hand
like aggressively like full-throttedly not kind of a half-hearted
to saying that he did not agree with bines policy on Ukraine
what is wrong with all these other people on the stage that they cannot understand
what is wrong
with bines Ukraine policy which by the way is the signature policy
of his presidency
What is the point of Republicans nominee candidate who's just going to agree with Joe Biden on providing
eight Ukraine as much that takes for as long as it takes is this your position here at freeberg is that you know
Win at all costs. Let's call it the vague win at all costs play the game on the field
It's Shemata saying and just win the game versus being principled because you did
have a good, I think that that framing is such a set up.
Can I just say something?
Okay, I'm framing now you want.
You said playing the game on the field and Friedberg said having a principle here and having
like an actual vision for the country.
So I'm taking both of yours.
Look, I think the framing is not as not what is wrong with a vague, but what is wrong with candidates like Christie and Pence and Haley and Scott,
where even though 95% of their party is opposed to Ukraine, they are adopting Joe Biden's policy.
And their only criticism of Joe Biden is that he's not doing enough fast enough for them. Okay,
let's let Freeberg get in here.
They're completely out of set.
We got your point.
What's our Republican party's at stance today.
We got your point.
But is it not Freeberg what you're saying is that there is this profile encouraged to
invoke that book where you, there's something that's unpopular that you have to do.
And I think Nikki Haley, Pence, Christie, and the other ones who are pro defending Ukraine
from Russia, their
profile encourage Freeberg is that they will go against that 95% polling and say it's
the right thing to do.
We should defend Taiwan, we should defend Israel, we should defend Ukraine against.
Those are three different issues.
I know it's three different issues, but they were all evoked by the VEK himself.
So Freeberg, your chance.
I think the West Wing does a great job of exploring both sides of this, which is when do you
have to break the mold and break the expectation of the people to do the right principle thing?
And when do you have to do the thing that you don't think is right, but it's what the
people want to have happen? And I think that that's obviously a balance that needs to be
struck when you're in this position
of being an elected leader in a democracy.
And so there's no real answer.
I wish that there was like, I wish Mr. Beast had like a presidential process like you guys
saw as a Olympics video that he did last week, where he brought people and he created
this like these like five things.
I wish that we had something like that to elect president that it was more than just oration because we elect the president
today based on their oratory skills. They go on stage and who has the best quickie comment.
The person who would be the most decisive under pressure doesn't necessarily win. The
person who can inspire and attract and retain the best leadership. The person who can have
the best foreign policy interactions
with other leaders doesn't necessarily win.
Those are skills that show up in other contexts.
And when we put people on a stage and we say,
okay, speak to the audience,
the guy who speaks the best looks the best.
It's not necessarily the guy who is best equipped
to handle the challenge of the Bay of Pigs
or the decision on
whether or not I think you're very just I think you're very good.
Okay, you have the floor go.
This is like that's kind of like saying why isn't it that it's the quarterback with the strongest
arm that isn't the most successful? Why? Because that person is a fucking loser and the person
that's the winner is the one that can thread together
a multifaceted set of skills to win the game.
Tom Brady was drafted in the seventh round,
not the first round.
He wins the game because he has the requisite skills
which is a basket of things and a nuance of skills
in different moments at different times.
And so I think that you're being a little glib
by saying the person isn't cool under pressure or this or that, it's not true. The people that win these races have a
preter natural ability to be a complete egoist but not a narcissist. That is an incredibly
deft set of skills that a fair, rare people have. It gives them this energy to be out there,
talking to thousands and thousands and thousands and thousands of people, maybe saying the
same thing thousands of times. But being able to stay focused, being able to be on point,
having a sense of what they need to believe, know the details in a certain part, know the high
level in another part. Stay punchy, but stay affable, stay, that's the game.
There are a set of skills that it takes to become president.
You test the oration skills of a person
when you put them on a debate stage.
You don't test the other complex skills
that it takes to be president.
And getting people to understand the complexity
of the role and all the other aspects
of someone's personality are lacking
in these fucking debates.
But there are other, these other skills are in play in many things other than just the
debate.
Like the campaign is a highly sophisticated orchestration of running a small little government.
Mario Cuomo famously said that you campaign in poetry and, and government pros.
And there is a difference between campaigning skills and governing skills.
There is a gap there.
I would update it to say that you govern and pros and campaign and tweets.
So the campaign definitely puts a huge emphasis on a candidate's communication skills.
But that is not all just gloss or style.
It also has to do with their policies and the nuances of their policies and how they handle
Pressure how good they are under pressure and how good they are when they're attacked
So you know, we put these candidates to a pressure cooker and kind of learn who they really are. I'm not sure it's a horrible process
So, so let me ask you a question. Yeah, Pence has been in the situation room dealing with a foreign adversary
Vivek has no military
or defense experience. He has no foreign state experience. How do you assess Vivek in
his ability to address those critical issues that he's going to have to lead us through
versus someone who's been there and done that? And how do you know, give a great question.
Great question. Okay. Trust him. We trust Vivek.
Listen, Pence made that argument against Vive vague, apparently not realizing that the guy
he was vice president for was in that exact same position in 2016.
No previous political experience.
Right.
No experience being in the situation room.
The only reason why Pence got to warm his ass on a chair in the situation room is because
Donald Trump picked him to be his VP.
Oh, but he was responsible for making any important decisions.
He was basically
clock in time as vice president. Give me a break. And that's why he's at what is it? One
or one percent. No one gives a shit about Pence. That's what they said about Obama as
well. Obama had zero experience. Obama barely could get elected before he became senator and
then president in the matter of four years. And for Bush, what happened to Bush? They said
that exact argument as well,
and what do they do?
They packed them with rums filled and chaining.
How did that end?
All right.
Yeah, I just want to also point out here,
that sometimes things get a little bit heated.
And when we get heated, it's typically because we're triangulating
around something very important.
I think what we're triangulating around here
is that we are moving from an era of incumbents
and insiders to an era of outsiders.
If you're your point, sacks, post-Trump, we now have the two or three most fascinating candidates
are people who do social media, who do podcasts, who do earned media like we talked about, I think
two or three weeks ago, is really good insight.
And Vivek has mastered it, And he is exactly like Trump.
And he's exactly like Obama to a certain extent, in that those people were incredibly
personable.
They knew how to talk on podcast.
They knew how to engage people.
And I think that, you know, this spiciness that we're having here on the pod and the spiciness
that you're seeing with some of those candidates is that we're moving from traditional media defining these candidates to direct to consumer,
direct through Twitter slash acts,
direct through podcasts, this podcast included,
making people like RFK and Vivek,
you know, very palatable people.
And Ross Perot, I know I'm gonna get laughed up
for bringing this up, who got 19% of the vote,
which is a serious number, he went direct as well.
After he dropped out.
After he dropped out.
No, he got 90% pro because he actually went as an independent all the way.
And what Ross Perot did was the equivalent of what Vivek and RFK are doing on Pakis,
he bought television time.
You don't know that or some people may want to spend understand who Ross Perot even is,
but look it up. He bought
television time and he went direct to the country with our budget.
I thought this is going to be the future of politics. What we're
witnessing right now is the transition from traditional media and
the establishment defining who the great candidates are to the
public. And the people on podcasts and social media who are
the tip of the spear and the Vanguard, they're going to pick the winners. And I think this could
be the tipping point election. Trump was the first Obama than Trump and now the fake and RFK.
So I just like you all to maybe respond to that, especially you, Sacks, and she
grabbed this media issue up two weeks ago.
Let me partially agree with Freeberg in the sense. Look, obviously, track record is important.
Obviously, the ability to be an executive, executive functioning is important for the chief
executive of our country.
So I'm not saying that we shouldn't look at that kind of record.
And this is why, this is one of the reasons why I support DeSantis.
I think he's been a brilliant governor.
He's done a superb job in the state of Florida.
He did the best job of all the governors during COVID.
I think he did a better job than Trump did during COVID.
So listen, I think those things are important,
where I disagree is just because my pants has,
again, warmed a chair in the situation room
as vice president, to me, that's just not
that relevant experience.
I mean, the VP is kind of a nothing job unless something terrible happens to the president, to me, that's just not that relevant experience. I mean, the VP is kind of a
nothing job unless something terrible happens to the president and they get tapped on the
shoulder. So I just disagree with what is relevant experience. Second, I think it's important
to recognize that the reason why the Vake has a lane here and the reason why Trump had a
lane in 2016
is that the establishment wing of the party
is so completely out of touch with what the base wants.
Look, the reason why Trump came out of nowhere in 2016 is,
he basically turned everything on his head.
He said, no more bushes,
no more of these stupid forever wars in the Middle East.
We need to build a wall, no more of this open border policy,
and we need to reset our
tribulation with China. Those were three mega issues that no one else in the party
was talking about. And the mega issue today is Ukraine, 95% of the bases against it. And
they have left the Vavek this gigantic lane to exploit. Why? I don't know. I mean, they're
trapped in legacy neocon thinking that the
u.s. police are not so sacks are he can't have a
case or both the owner of the house i think that was a
great moment that's a combination of being trapped
in legacy thinking where we have to be the police in the world
combined with all the big donors in the party okay many of whom are wrapped up
with military industrial complex want to contribute to that
if you were can you just say it again
what you feel like I'm not hearing?
No, I think that being president requires being better more than just an orator.
And I think that the debates allow the best orator to show off their skills and capabilities
on the debate stage.
I was saying, I wish that there were other events.
I would love to see some set of systems to expose the candidate's success or failings and how well equipped they are,
rather than the person who can just give the best interview. We all know this. When you interview
a candidate, an engineer, the engineer that gives the best interview is not necessarily going to
become the best engineer. You can look at their code to see if they're a great, great engineer.
You can talk to people that report it to them to see if they're a great manager. You can learn more
about their success and skills through more than just their oration
on the stage. And yes, there's data in fact that we can pull from these people. I was just
speculating in kind of a pseudo silly way about the concept of, can we do more than just
put people on a debate stage?
How do you hire a CEO for your companies?
So the board, what I'll tell you, you know, what, yeah, what I'll tell you we don't do is we don't have the employees elect the CEO
through a vote by having that CEO go in front of you.
No, but you're saying, I'm the best guy for the job.
I hear you, but your vote is part of it.
But you do, we do reference calls, right?
We talked about their strategy and, you know, through the interview, through the reference
calls, through looking at the performance of other businesses they've built and run, and you know,
and you know, we can't do that with it.
That can have a full some understanding
of his candidacy and his ability to be president.
My point is I think that there are certain things
like with Trump that had not been tested or tried
that are gonna come up in this role
that they'd never done before in the past.
And I'm not saying, look, by the way,
I'm certainly not a big, you know, political career guys,
you guys know, I think, you know, I hate that people build a career out of politics.
I think it's the most inane, ridiculous thing. And if we could go back and rewrite the
Constitution, that's probably the first thing I put in there.
The thing with this line of thinking, and maybe this is where I reacted. So I apologize
if I personalized it, is that it creates the risk of exactly what you just said, and this, what you just said right now,
which is this blob class of people that use those arguments as the reason why change can't happen.
Yeah.
Why it might be- I don't disagree with that. I don't disagree with that.
And I think that is the huge red flag about this line of argumentation around why out of the box
candidates can't be evaluated by reasonably smart people of which there
are 300 million of us in America that have the ability to see it. And so I actually don't think it's
as hard of a job as we make it out to be and that when you get 180, 190 million different people
voting, I do think you actually get a pretty good wisdom of the crowds and take away Trump's
UI for a second
What Sachs just said is so profound because like what Trump nailed was three ginormous lanes that turned out now
We can all agree with none of us wanted these wars
Everybody basically believes that the border needed to be
Close and everybody believes that China has taken advantage in a way that is really hauled out
the middle class in America.
Those were three totems that nobody would have touched.
And if we had allowed this whole thing of like, oh, Trump doesn't have this, Trump doesn't
have that.
He just gives cute nicknames to his average series.
We would have missed that he actually had enough executive function
to nail the three biggest themes of our current lifetime.
Okay.
I think that's fair.
I guess my commentary can just be reduced down to the debate stage and saying who won
and who should be is different than who should be president, because, acerally, I think
I've got it.
Looking at the broader context of the topics of Don's, the presidential, but the presidential
candidacy is much more
than just as debates. Okay. There's a lot of other things going on. If we're judging
people just based on how well they talk and how quick on their feet they are, Chris Christie
is a great talker. Okay. He's a media train talker. But guess what? He got booed. That was
the low point of the debate. The don't point of the debate for me was that he, I thought, took a kind of like a low key racist
jab at Vivek when he was like, he's the last person.
The last person in one of these debates who stood in the middle of the stage and said,
what's a skinny guy with an odd last name doing up here was Barack Obama and I'm afraid
we're dealing with the same type of amateur standing on the stage tonight.
You thought it was a little, no, not that.
It's when you thought Vivek, like, chat GPT.
Oh, okay.
Essentially not so ready of a guy who sounds like chat GPT standing up.
Yeah, he was like this Indian tech worker and I thought,
Oh man, that's...
That's what you read into it?
That's interesting.
I thought he was just saying he sounded...
As a salvation tech worker.
Yeah, yeah.
That's true.
That's what I read.
I read that he was very like robotic and formulic or something, but what did you how did you read it as
As the palace white guy on the panel there is something almost personal about the way that both Christy and Pence seem to react
To make it was almost like who are you you young whipper snapper to be on the stage with me?
Especially Pence. I've been the vice president. Who are you?
You know,
and all this was a resentment. Here's where it's quotes were dismissive. And I think
there was a resentment that even before this debate, the vague was rising in the polls
and those guys were going nowhere. Let me explain it to the bad. And again, it's not just
or a torical skill. It's the substance. Yes. Of the issues. And where he's willing to go
that these other candidates are not here Here are the quotes in respond to.
Let me explain it to you, Vivek.
I'll go slower this time.
Now is not the time for on the job training and we don't need to bring in a rookie.
All of this dismissive stuff from Pence to Vivek.
Got some applause because, you know, conflict and confrontation gets applause by these lunatics
in the audience who, well, like it was like a-
Well, you also get an allocation of seats for your own team. So yeah, so it was the only
year. I don't know reason why Pence was VP is because a rookie got elected president.
Yeah, that's a very good it's a good insight. Yeah, that was very weird. I thought the
thing that was very interesting was not to make it all about Trump, but he was the quote
unquote elephant that was not in the room, was the undying support for
pens. You had everybody say, pens did the right thing on January 6th. What would you take
away from that, sacks? Because there was some, there was a mix of booze and cheers for
Christy when he kind of said like we need somebody who doesn't behave this way. It's
unbecoming of the presidency, referring to Trump. So what was your take on is the Republican party
and this audience trying to move past Trump given all these indictments. I'm going to leave
that Trump Stockholm Syndrome and Trump derangement syndrome out of this just objectively.
Yeah. Well, I thought you think of that. I thought Dessantis had the best response, which
is listen, if we spend our time re-illitigating January 6th and looking in the rear-view mirror, we're going to lose to Joe Biden.
This is exactly the conversation and the debate that Democrats want us to be having.
I think that's just factually true.
That if the Republican Party spends this time debating January 6th, that's playing into
Biden's hands.
So you don't think Trump can necessarily be Biden that these other candidates have a better
chance of beating Biden.
Is that what you say?
No, I'm asking.
It's a question.
No, I'm asking.
It's a question.
No, I'm asking.
It's a question.
Folks saying, focusing on relitigating, January 6 is not only is it a waste of time.
It's just a loser for Republicans.
And by the way, it's Trump's worst quality to keep marketing back to the last election.
Even I think his fans and supporters don't want to hear that.
Who has a better chance of winning?
Some pairing of these candidates,
SACs, or Trump in one of these candidates versus Biden.
Heads up, you know, does something like
DeSantis Vivac or Hally and Vivac,
you know, pick your combination here,
have a better chance versus Biden
than Trump plus one of these.
And you're right. I think it's tough to say, but I do think that Trump has really high negatives.
And in order for him to win the presidency, he's got to flip something like two or three
out of five states, like swing states that voted against him last time.
And I do think that this is one of the stronger arguments that does and this makes is that
you know i could deliver those states whereas trump
may not
so i think there is an electability argument for
the santa's
okay and so
freedberg
hearing old but not saying that that's what's gonna happen but i i do think we know
that trump does have very high negatives and yeah
he's gonna flip some states and he's going to have a lot of Democrats and women come out to vote against
him. He supercharges the base in the way Hillary charged the other way.
Because they want the thing about, of course, to say it's just performance in that debate.
So I know that he doesn't stand out in the way that, you know, Vivek or some of these
other candidates do because he didn't deliver any zingers.
And also, he wasn't the brunt of attack.
I think we all thought that maybe there'd be a lot more incoming for him and the incoming
really went for Vivek.
But I think that he had a strategy in that debate.
This is my interpretation.
It's not based on any entire knowledge or anything like that, which was the way he
answered questions was, I think, to be broadly acceptable to all the different factions in the GOP. So like I mentioned, there's kind of the way he answered questions was, I think to be broadly acceptable to all
the different factions in the GOP.
So like I mentioned, there's kind of the MAGA faction, there's the NEO Con faction, and
there's the religious right faction.
And his answers may not have been the ones that were most loved by any of those factions,
but I also think that none of his answers disqualified himself with any of those factions,
which is kind of hard to do,
given how much they're at each other's throws.
So, Saks, if this was a poker tournament,
and this was the final table,
would you say the strategy for DeSantis was,
hey, listen, I'm gonna let these other guys shoot it out.
I'm just gonna sit on my big chip stack here.
I'm in second place.
You got, let me let,
let's let the field eliminate themselves. I'm gonna just protect my stack. I'm not gonna play on my big chip stack here. I'm in second place. You got, let me let, let's let the field eliminate themselves.
I'm gonna just protect my stack.
I'm not gonna play a lot of hands here.
He's just sort of sitting and waiting for,
you get down to three or four people
and then I'll mix it up some more.
Is that the strategy?
I think he came across as the grown up.
Mm-hmm.
Nobody really took swipe set hammer shots at him
and he didn't really take shots at anybody else.
He did, again, try to focus the Republican party on what it's going to take to win.
He was one of the only people on that stage who had criticism of Biden.
I think it was a mistake not to criticize Biden's record.
Yeah, they always talked at that.
That was such a weird thing that they were all going after Trump and with that, and nothing
about Biden.
The only attacks on Biden that I even remember from that night were from Trump's interview
with Tucker where he
criticized God he he destroyed criticized Biden's lack of physical and mental acuity but look I think that if if the convention were ultimately to be a broker convention which all the different factions of the GOP
Had to agree on a candidate
Then I think the Sanctus to be that candidate because he may not be the candidate who has most loved by any of those factions, but I think he's made himself the most broadly acceptable to all of them.
The problem is, I don't think that's the way that candidates are chosen.
I think that what happens in practice is that the factions are trying to feed each other
and that one faction is going to win, and I think it's probably going to be the MAGA faction.
So that's the problem, I think, with the strategy, but look, he came across the grown-up
and he came across as the most broadly acceptable.
Okay, so if this is a final table of a poker tournament
and Trump is gonna sit down
and debate three of these people, Chimoff,
who's gonna be left to debate Trump
and be the final three or four seats here?
Which three?
I think it'll be DeSantis, Vivek, and it'll be either Tim
Scott or Nicky. Interesting. Freeberg, who are the final three who are
going to debate Trump, you know, in debate number four or five?
I don't know if he's going to show up. I don't know why he would.
If he's up 15,
let's assume he shows up for some amount of points.
I mean, it would be, it would just be such a Trump move to just not show up to any of
these debates and just like get elected.
Play the game.
How incredible debate would that be if it was Trump, DeSantis, and Vivek?
Oh, firewood.
And then my fourth would be Nikki Haley.
I think she did a good, just she had her moments in that debate.
I think she had good advice for the Republican party on the abortion issue.
Yeah. She did a really great job. And she pointed out how much money, I thought that was
a tea party moment for her. That's when I warmed up to Nikki Haley a bunch. It's like,
listen, we also approved, you know, six, eight trillion dollars. We got to look at ourselves.
And it was like, okay, is it the tea party 2010 here? Although that was a great moment.
Who do you have left free, brother?
Everybody else played the game.
Play along.
Who will be the final three here to debate Trump if Trump shows up?
Play along for the game.
I mean, I'll get mine.
The vague seems to be in a good place.
Okay.
I don't know.
The Santa says a lot of money.
Yeah.
He's probably going to stick around.
Yeah.
So Vivek and the Santa's are, we all have consensus.
I got Nikki Haley. Here's the crazy 50s. Look, I don't think he's going gonna stick around. Yeah, so Vivek and Desantis are, we all have consensus. I got it.
Nikki, Haley, Warp, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish,
Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish,
Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish,
Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish,
Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish,
Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish,
Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish,
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Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish,
Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish,
Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish,
Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, Fish, I mean, it's a good question. But you're showing no enthusiasm for DeSantis
who actually has the track record
of being the most capable executive.
Oh, no, no, by the way,
I didn't, we're not talking about who I would vote for president.
We even even had that comment.
Like we didn't even ask that question once.
Okay.
Ask it now.
Putting aside Trump, who do you pick?
What was really interesting is hearing the governors
speak about their skills.
I mean, Nikki Haley, Chris Christie, Bergen, DeSantis,
all had moments where they shine from,
from, from, Hutchinson, from my perspective,
from a content perspective,
which is where I was talking about at the beginning,
which people largely ignore,
which is that they actually had quite a lot to draw from
and, you know, point to view.
So, policy that seemed pretty strong.
Here we go. Final question. Final question.
I want you to give me your one and two not Trump.
Sacks, we know DeSantis is number one for you, so then who's your number two to pair
with them?
Who would you pair with?
Wait to be what?
To be the candidate?
To be the ticket.
Republican ticket, you're going to go to Santis one, and then who do you put with them
as the number two?
Well, for me.
DeSantis and? Well, for me, the Santa's end. I think that the only candidates who have acceptable answers on what I regard as the number
one issue of our time, which is Ukraine, because that could lead to over three, the only candidates
who have acceptable answers are Trump and the vacant to Santa's, meaning they've all been
pretty clear they would de-escalate.
I think all the other candidates have basically indicated in one or another they would escalate
that. So the Santa's and the vacant yours? So those three candidates are the only
ones that are acceptable to me. Okay, so we take Trump off if Trump doesn't run, which
that's my personal belief, but just of the people who are on stage, us nice, you're going
to Santis. The vac is your ticket. Chimath, who's your ticket after one debate, not counting
Trump. If the Republican ticket, who do you think is the Republican? You don't look, I
like to buy these deep out of the money options.
I think we'll go out on the limb.
I think that the fake has a really good chance
of winning this Republican nomination.
That's why I saw.
I saw like outright against Trump.
Yeah, I and we're taking Trump off the table.
So just picking it up.
For example, for example, no, no, no, no,
I really do think he's, he can win this thing.
And for example, I thought it was very clever
when he said that he had a line. He said
Donald Trump was the best, let me be categorically clear. Donald Trump was the best president of the 21st century.
And I was like, what? And then I thought about it. And I thought, why is he saying it? Is he saying it because he
believes it or does he saying because it's like a tactic?
And there's probably bits of both.
Yep.
Because I do think that there are elements
where he fundamentally does believe
that Trump has at least shined the path forward.
And so I think he does believe it to some degree,
but then I thought it's even smarter to have said it.
And again, this is where I go back to, I'm not sure that that's oratory skills versus
like understanding game theory, strategy and being a strategic thinker and trying to win.
I thought that that was a very smart thing to have said.
And all along that evening, I thought that he did the best job of preserving optionality for the Trump base
to say, you know what, Vivek is all of the positive features of Trump without some of the
negatives.
So let's just clean up the ticket and let's go.
And I think there's still again, there's a long way.
Yeah, of course, to have the call.
I like the call, but I would buy that deep out of the money option.
And who's your number two, then? We're going one two here one two either as to pair with Vivek or your number two choice in terms of
No, then I if the day doesn't figure out a way to slipstream pass from the Trump or when the nomination
Okay, taking Trump out of the rest who's your number two?
Okay, great fascinating to see this happening. I agree with what a lot of what Jamal said. I think Vivek is positioning himself
to be the backup candidate for the Maga Wing.
Yep, absolutely.
And he's doing it by never attacking Trump
and by combining him.
By the way, saying that Trump was the best president
of the 21st century, there's only been three.
It was George W. Bush, Obama, and then Trump.
Right, oh, sorry, Biden. Sorry, Biden, so there's been three. It was George W. Bush, Obama, and then Trump. Sorry, Biden. Sorry, Biden's
has been four. George W. Bush was one of the worst presidents in America history. So
it's even more. Obama obviously, our Republican candidate is not going to think highly of
Obama or Biden. So it kind of narrows it down, doesn't it?
Yeah, what was in our last phase?
I just put the intelligence of actually saying the words. Yeah, strategically brilliant.
Yeah, I know, I agree.
Sacks, what do you think about Vivek's unpopular statement?
And I'd like to hear whether it's unpopular with the base,
but it was certainly unpopular in the room last night,
that the climate change agenda is a hoax, which drew a lot of booze.
That was good.
Is that like, is that a lightning bolt kind of thing to say?
Why would he say that? And what's the strategy there? Like, is that a lightning bolt kind of thing to say?
Why would he say that?
And what's the strategy there?
It's like Trump saying he loves coal.
He loves coal miners.
It's just panellin.
It's felt to me a little bit like he was trying to say
the agenda is a hoax, meaning like all the ESG stuff
is nonsense.
But it comes across as him saying climate change isn't real
and he's got an outdeal with the repercussions.
He's saying climate change is strategic.
I think it's, I don't think you know
what he believes, Jake, hell, but.
Yeah, his follow up comment around that was he said
that it is an economic yoke on our country
because the combination of subsidies
and the lack of expansion of carbon
is what's holding back the country economically.
So that's, I think I remember him tying these two things together.
So that's probably where the state is.
No intelligent person doesn't believe that the planet's not heating up.
Come on.
And that it's not better to go to renewables.
That's just, how do you know if you looked at the science, Jacob?
Of course I have.
Yes, it's massive consensus.
You've got deep on the science.
You know, as deep as a person needs to go.
Freeberg.
You just treat it. You just treat it. Look, it's just something go. I'm freeberg. No, you just treat it.
You just treat it.
Look, it's just something you're supposed to believe in.
No, I'm not saying that I don't believe in the science.
I'm just going to get the statistics of how the planet has got
more.
That's it.
I will say, Saks, it's right that it has become a thing
that it's like we're also supposed to take as given.
No one is going to go up and say, here's the science that
validates.
Here's the data that validates. There's some empirical evidence,
and then people use counter empirical evidence
to try and counter it,
and that's what makes it a little bit of a movement now,
which is the institutions, the elites,
however they're framed, have been wrong so many times
on the things that they told us were given,
that we're supposed to assume that this is a given to,
F, that, I'm not going
to be so what to believe anymore. And I don't want to be told what to believe anymore is
exactly what people let me let me let me state my position from that song last week and
that's what they heard you know, and let me stay my mission. I totally agree. Yeah. Here's
the thing. You know, after COVID without me even making a comment on trying to change
100%. We were told so much bullshit. Bullshit.
In the name of science during COVID.
Yeah.
They told us the vaccines were safe and effective.
I just want to clarify from a position before you respond to it.
It's undeniable that temperatures have risen.
I think it's a crazy experiment to run, to not try to lower it.
It's just a crazy experiment.
The planet is precious.
I don't think we should run it.
I am not dogmatic about it. It's not a religious thing. I'm not genuinely talking. It's not an experiment we the planet is precious. I don't think we should run it. I am not dogmatic about it.
It's not a religious thing.
I'm not genuine about it.
So I don't know how experiment we're running, Jake.
I was called human development and growth.
And it's just, it's always about that.
And the temperature goes up.
So why wouldn't we use renewals in the new year?
We're not polluting.
Because not polluting is good too.
When you have self-proclaimed scientific experts and or 16-year-old girls shaming
everybody with pretty flimsy data, there is a while where we were everybody just said,
ma, they must be right. And COVID exposed the hoax. And so now we're a lot less prone to believe these self-proclaimed intellectuals and they're jargon.
And they're nonsense.
So ask me how much money have I invested
in climate change with all that data?
Zero.
Ask me how much money I've invested in technologies
that will benefit climate change
as a byproduct of national security,
hundreds of millions of dollars.
Yes.
And the reason I give you that example is that
for me, that framing was just such a turn off
because I couldn't buy into it.
Yeah, there are multiple reasons.
But then the more pragmatic, realistic framing,
which allowed us to actually say,
maybe you're right, but maybe you're wrong,
but let's not even debate the issue.
Let's just go and make sure we're not dependent on another country in fighting endless
wars.
That got me off my ass to do stuff.
And I think there's a lot of people in America that are in that second category.
They don't want emotionally riddled dogma to drive their life and how they're forced to
make decisions.
You can come up with three or four really good reasons to not keep burning fossil fuels.
They're dirty. they're pollutants, there
are better options that are more sustainable, that are more cost effective. It's more cost
effective to put solar in than to burn coal or build a new coal plant.
So there's economic reasons and then there's a full-down money for those points.
No, I'm not saying is we're automatically going to trust.
I am not automatically trusting. I'm taking the body of evidence.
I'm not blindly trusting anybody.
I'm taking the body of evidence
and saying that entire body of evidence.
Do you really look at the evidence?
I don't believe you're gone deep on this issue.
Okay, anyway.
I haven't gone deep on this issue.
That's all I'm saying.
If you listen,
if you're listening to what I'm saying,
if you listen as opposed to telling me what I think
and you listen to what I'm saying. If you listen, as opposed to telling me what I think, and you listen to what I'm telling you,
there are many reasons to pursue sustainable energy,
clean energy, and geopolitics is one of them,
and polluting the environment is one of them,
and temperatures rising if that indeed results
in damages to the oceans and weather patterns.
There are five or six great reasons to stop burning coal and stop burning oil.
Look at these two climate whitewashers were living in in this moment.
People were so convinced they just needed to oil the country around the hurricane hitting California.
Then by the time it landed it was a storm. It was rain in Los Angeles.
I asked people here when I got here, I said, how was hurricane?
They're like, it wasn't hurricane.
And in fact, the news were so tilted about it, they had to call it, it could have been
a hurricane.
Yeah, they were winning.
It was just a storm.
Ratings.
Second, is this thing in Maui, it turns out Michael Schellenberger has done some pretty
good work on this, is exposing that a lot of the reason these fires may have started was because of this radical climate agenda that
caused the utility to not invest in the protective measures they should have around power lines.
That is crazy, Jason.
Oh, yeah, I'm not defending what happened in Maui.
It's obviously in competence.
We should be bearing, we have the same issue in California, which is when dogmatic belief, there's a consequence. It's not a dogmatic
believer. No, I'm not saying you are. I'm just trying to make, I'm not saying you are. I'm
trying to make this point. When people dogmatically believe bodies of evidence that they themselves
don't interrogate fully, they may, it may lead them to conclusions and then actions that you are now
seeing have measurable human consequences.
If you look at PG&E and California, it's riddled with these issues.
Yeah, they shut our power off because they're afraid that wind is going to blow down power lines and start fires.
Yeah, I mean, and we just need to bury them.
So I think that it would be great to like not debate the climate issue, put a pin in it,
and instead just say, we all want our kids to be able to have clean air around us.
Yes.
We want clean water to drink.
And we want to make sure that we have the resources to be productive as human beings
without having to send our kids to war or without putting the country in danger.
100% which is exactly my point.
There are so many reasons to take this seriously and move to renewables and nuclear.
All right, listen, this has been an insanely great episode.
Hey, let me just get one person's comments. So here's your red meat for Saks here. It sounds like there was the
coup 60 days later, the guy who was running the coup in Russia had a little accident. So
random, maybe your thoughts, Saks.
You're talking about foregusion.
Yeah, I mean, he had some mechanical difficulties on his PJ. I don't know what happened. maybe your thoughts, sacks. You're talking about foregusion?
Yeah, I mean, he had some mechanical difficulties on his PJ.
I don't know what happened.
Is he extending that citation in for maintenance?
What happened?
They had a bad engineer.
I mean, it's so random. Poor guy.
The latest reporting from the New York Times this morning
is that foregusion's plane was not shot down,
but rather they believe there was an explosive device on it.
Oh, okay.
So we don't know, you know, we don't know exactly
you plan to-
I think there was a birch strike, something random,
like a birch strike.
No.
Somebody took him out.
Somebody took him off the board.
Really?
It must have been Ukraine, right?
That's who you were putting it on.
It's Ukraine?
No.
I mean, I think it's probably pretty obvious who did it,
although we won't know for sure.
Say the name.
Say the name.
Say the name. Say the name.
Listen, I think that was allegedly,
allegedly.
That's what you always say whenever a hundred Biden's accuser doing something you always have to answer.
And allegedly, there was a little cocaine and maybe some bribes.
I think this resolves the question of who came out on top during that mutiny.
There were a lot of people speculating that somehow progoozion at the upper hand or he was paid off or
that it was not true, right? Remember there was a line of thinking, oh this wasn't a
coup. If it wasn't a coup, then why did Putin whack him?
Black, black. And it was exactly 60 days later. Is that correct? That was the other
thing. Is that going to ask a question? How funny is it that it's like Putin's
like, hey, Pregos and come come and see me
We're good. You have nothing to worry about
And then it's like listen, where are you going to the box? Yeah, you can take my PJ and he's
Happened like you can't even write this
The freeberg is sending his PJ to take me down to the orange
Oh thanks for the ride freeberg. I told you it's like Michael Corleone.
It's unbelievable. Apparently there's a meeting about a month ago.
I remember it being reported where pregoation and the other
heads of Wagner came to meet with Putin.
And the deal that Putin supposedly offered was that Wagner could
stay together but had to report to the Russian military.
And the Wagner commanders were on board with it,
but one person objected and that was pergusion.
Oh, so it's a little bit like,
remember that the meeting between Michael Corleone
and Mogreen and Vegas.
Oh, green, yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly.
You know, Michael's like, think of a price and Mogreen's like,
you don't buy me out, I buy you out, you know.
That kind of reaction.
Yeah.
And the guy had some sort of death wish, I guess.
You know what they say?
Beware the dog that doesn't bark.
Putin said nothing for the last two months.
He was like, yeah, it's all good.
Nothing out of the Putin camp.
And then boom.
Putin is a murderous lunatic who must be stopped and contained.
Well, I think this is the opposite of being a lunatic.
I think this is somebody who is very cold and calculating.
Okay, yeah, murderous calculated sociopath. is very cold and calculating. Okay, yeah.
Murderous, calculated sociopath.
He figured out how to diffuse a mutiny.
I don't think it was a full-on cue, but a mutiny that would have been very disruptive to
his front line if he had basically tried to violently suppress it.
So he cuts a deal where basically he offers banishment to Belarus.
Progojian was supposed to go to Belarus. By the way, we don't know exactly why
Progozion returned to Moscow or St. Petersburg. He was supposed to be staying in Belarus or Africa.
So maybe he violated the terms of his probation. We don't know. There are all these people
on social media who are pinning their hopes for regime change and liberal reform within Russia
on Progozion, which was always absurd because he was this warlord whose behavior
and conduct was even more
erratic and violent
then put so he was never going to be a great vessel for liberal reform in
russia nonetheless
there are all these people who pinned their hopes for regime change in russia
on pregoation we can see now
what a stupid idea that was
the russia regime whether you like it or not is stable is not unstable russia is winning
the war and you may hate put in but he is still master of russia and eventually we're going
to deal with him these fantasies that we're going to be able to regime change him i think
are absurd and they've led us to this horrible point. Okay, for the dictator, for the Sultan of science and focused science with the
slick back hair. I am the Lodgegrave, and I'll see you next time. Bye bye. Rainman David Saunders I'm going on a beach And it said we open-source it to the fans and they've just gone crazy with it
Lombi West, I'm Queen of King Wild
I'm going on a beach What, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, That's my dog, take it away. I wish you're driving away. Sit down. Sit down. Sit down. Sit down.
Oh, man, my ham is a bit too casual.
We meet the athletes.
We should all just get a room and just have one big hug,
or because they're all just like this, like,
sexual tension that we just need to release that out.
What, your, beat, beat, what, your, your, your, beat, beat,
what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what,
what do you need to get my, what,'m doing all this. I'm doing all this.