All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E147: TED goes woke, Canada's Nazi blunder, AI adds vision, plus: who owns OpenAI?
Episode Date: September 29, 2023(0:00) Bestie intros with Coleman Hughes (1:12) Coleman's experience with TED, Understanding TED's ideological shift (15:11) Focusing on class instead of race when enacting policies, reaction to Colem...an's talk, institutional takeovers (44:01) "When Virtue Signalling Goes Wrong": Canadian parliament cheers for a Nazi (1:04:21) OpenAI's big week, informed speculation on Sam Altman's actual ownership of OpenAI (1:12:39) The next evolution of AI: multimodal and consumer hardware Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://linktr.ee/calacanis https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow Coleman: https://twitter.com/coldxman https://www.youtube.com/@ColemanHughesOfficial 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://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QxB3b7fxMEA https://www.thefp.com/p/coleman-hughes-is-ted-scared-of-color-blindness https://twitter.com/waitbutwhy/status/1691502563571408896 https://twitter.com/chamath/status/1707051830667338170 https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/11/opinion/sunday/interracial-friendship-donald-trump.html https://www.amazon.com/White-Fragility-People-About-Racism/dp/0807047414 https://twitter.com/TEDchris/status/1706792437098676224 https://www.amazon.com/Coddling-American-Mind-Intentions-Generation/dp/0735224919 https://www.amazon.com/Losing-Ground-American-Social-1950-1980/dp/0465065880 https://www.amazon.com/Black-Power-Liberation-Kwame-Ture/dp/0679743138 https://www.reuters.com/legal/us-judge-refuses-block-venture-capital-funds-grants-black-women-2023-09-26 https://apnews.com/article/canada-house-speaker-nazi-invite-ukraine-zelenskyy-d4ca05841193409e455cee3b19fcee6b https://www.reddit.com/r/QuotesPorn/comments/lz5o6z/he_who_controls_the_past_controls_the_future_he https://jacobin.com/2015/09/stepan-bandera-nationalist-euromaidan-right-sector https://www.jpost.com/diaspora/antisemitism/article-738940 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social-National_Party_of_Ukraine https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-26079957 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azov_Brigade https://www.thenation.com/article/politics/neo-nazis-far-right-ukraine https://www.reuters.com/article/us-cohen-ukraine-commentary/commentary-ukraines-neo-nazi-problem-idUSKBN1GV2TY https://www.nbcnews.com/think/opinion/ukraine-has-nazi-problem-vladimir-putin-s-denazification-claim-war-ncna1290946 https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/05/world/europe/nazi-symbols-ukraine.html https://www.ft.com/content/4c64ffc1-f57b-4e22-a4a5-f9f90a7419b7 https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/openai-seeks-new-valuation-of-up-to-90-billion-in-sale-of-existing-shares-ed6229e0 https://www.axios.com/2023/09/25/testing-chatgpt-support-images-voice-search https://twitter.com/petergyang/status/1707169696049668472 https://blog.google/products/bard/google-bard-new-features-update-sept-2023 https://twitter.com/karpathy/status/1707437820045062561 https://arxiv.org/pdf/2307.07162.pdf https://www.imdb.com/title/tt6849786 https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1798709 https://reflect.app https://oldcomputers.net/sony-magic-link.html
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey Coleman, how's it going? Hey Coleman, welcome to the show. Hey, how's it going?
pleasure. Have you ever heard of the show? Yeah, I have. I'm actually a fan. My girlfriend introduced me
to the show like two years ago, and I've been a fan ever since. Great to meet you. Apparently,
like many women she has, like, she has a legit concerning obsession with Saks. But I don't say it.
Oh my god. No, Saks fans are are tilted. No sacks fans are crazy.
And the episode and the episode.
Shout out, Larry, shout out, my god.
Jesus, or where you go, call me.
You're gonna try it in here.
All right, here we go.
Let me read this.
This is your cold-open phone.
I'm sorry.
I need to just psychological explore this before we get into the real substance of it.
Why does she like him so much?
I don't understand this.
By the way, I think she has missed the second half of my statement. I said, Saks and Shaman. Oh shit, okay, great.
Thank you. Okay, here we go. Thank God. Three, two, one.
We're in the rain man David. I'm David.
I'm David.
I'm David.
And I said we open sources to the fans and they just go crazy.
I'll be West.
I said, we don't keep you warm.
I'm going lonely.
All right, everybody.
Welcome back to the all in podcast.
We have a very full docket today.
I thought we'd start with something pretty crazy.
There was a really weird moment last week, Ted through one of its speakers under the bus.
So we decided to have him on to talk about the experience.
The second time they've done it at least,
they did a Sarah Silverman for doing comedy at Ted,
because people at Ted are a bunch of virtual signaling lunatics
including some of my friends who go.
But Coleman Hughes, if you don't know him,
is a writer and podcast.
He has a pretty popular podcast called Conversations with Coleman.
And he did a talk, which I encourage everybody to watch at TED.
And it's titled a case for color blindness.
We all watched it.
It's a very powerful talk.
And something weird happened, Coleman, welcome to the program and maybe you could just share
with the audience how you wound up speaking at Ted, what the content of your talk was briefly,
and then the bizarre reaction when they try to ban and kill your talk post, you giving it.
Yeah, so first really glad to be young guys, I'm a fan of the pod. So I'll give the short version reaction when they try to ban and kill your talk post, you giving it.
Yeah, so first really glad to be young guys, I'm a fan of the pod.
So I'll give the short version here.
If you want the long version, you can go to the free press where I wrote a big summary
of what happened there.
Basically what happened is Chris Anderson invited me to give a TED talk and I chose the subject
of my upcoming book, which is coming out in February,
called the End of Race Politics.
And the argument is just essentially colorblindness.
This is the idea that you want to treat people
without regard to race,
both in your personal lives,
and in our public policy.
And wherever we have policies that are meant to
collect and help the most disadvantaged,
we should preferentially use class as a variable
rather than race.
That's my talking to nutshell.
So I prepared the talk with the TED team, I got their feedback, edited, curated, etc.
Got up there in April, gave the talk.
95% of the people in the audience, it was quite well received, whether or not they agreed
with every point, it was well within the bounds of acceptable discourse. There was
a very small minority on stage, I could see that was physically upset by my talk.
On stage?
I could see this on stage yet in the moment, but I mean, I'm talking five people in a
crowd of almost 2000.
So I expected that because, you know, color
blindness is not invoked today on the left among progressives. It's really the idea non-grata.
And so I was expecting to field some pushback and I talked to some critics and so forth.
But what happened is what began as just a few people upset, began to spiral into
a kind of internal staff meltdown at Ted. So this group called Black at Ted asked to
speak with me. I agreed and then they said, actually, we don't want to talk to you and
they're an employee group at Ted. After the conference, Chris emailed me and said, look, I'm getting a lot
of blowback here internally. There are people saying we shouldn't release your talk at all.
Then over the next month, they came up with a variety of creative solutions about how
to release my talk in a way that would appease the woke staffers that really didn't want
it to be released at all. At this point,, I had to start kind of sticking up for myself.
So first, they wanted to attach a debate to the end of my talk and release it as one video,
which I felt would really send the wrong message.
You would send the message that this idea can't be heard without the opposing perspective.
Did they tell you what was problematic about your talk?
No, in work term. Well, what was was problematic about your talk? To use it in work term?
Well, like what was the problem with the talk?
Well, there were no factual problems.
It passed the fact checking team.
There were no substantive issues with the talk.
The problem was that it set the staff.
It upset the staff.
That was the language that was used.
It upset certain people in the staff.
Got it.
And those people are black.
Probably most were.
I tried to actually have face-to-face conversations with some of these folks.
I only got to talk to one woman.
Presumably many of them were black, but possibly not all.
What do you perceive was the problem with your talk,
or what they perceive the problem with your talk?
So the last day of the Ted conference, they have a town hall people from the audience come and
give feedback. The town hall opened with two people denouncing my talk back to back.
The first said that it was racist and dangerous and irresponsible.
And the second guy, who's actually a guy I knew,
he said that I was willing to have a slide back
into the days of separate but equal,
which was totally the opposite of my talk.
And I implore anyone to just go online and watch it,
go on YouTube, decide for yourself,
whether these criticisms bear any resemblance to reality.
But that was the idea that the talk is racist,
that, you know, I'm some kind of pro Jim Crow person is really, really deranged kind of criticisms.
Your talk is up on Ted's website and on YouTube, right? But part of the controversy was that the
number of views seemed to be pretty suppressed. Was that discussed with Chris when
you talk with him or do you have a point of view on the suppression of the promotion of the video,
even though they put it out there, and how that's affected, you know, how widespread the video has
been made available to folks? Yeah, so in my final call with Chris, he sort of presented this idea
about how to release it. And he sold it to me as a way to amplify my talk, which I think was kind of some spin.
He was in a tough position caught between me and his employees.
We ultimately decided they would release the talk.
And then two weeks later, they'd release a debate between myself and this guy, Jamel
Buie, who was a New York Times columnist.
So the talk came out on Ted Web site, the debate came out,
and I kind of mentally had forgotten
about the whole situation until Tim Urban,
who was a popular blogger, who's actually given the,
yeah, he's given them.
He spoke on Summit last year, yeah.
Oh, that's great, yeah.
Tim is great.
He's also given the most viewed Ted talk of all time on YouTube.
Tim noticed that my talk just had a really absurdly low
view count, like an implausibly low view count on TED's website
in mid-August, he tweeted this,
and that he believed they were intentionally
under promoting my talk.
They said that.
They said that, yeah.
Yeah, I checked, and all of the five talks surrounding mine,
they all had between, you know, 450,000 views and 800,000 views.
That was the full range.
Mine had 73,000.
Right, so 16% of the low end of the range
of all the talks released around mine.
So when that happened, I felt that Ted had kind of reneged
on its end of our bargain,
and that's when Barry Weiss got wind of it and I went public.
Just to be clear, you're saying that the condition for releasing your Ted Talk, the bargain
you struck with Chris, was that you would do a debate with someone in a separate video
and that you had to do the debate in order to have your Ted Talk released.
Yes. Wow. So yeah, that's what that was had to do the debate in order to have your TED Talk released? Yes.
Wow.
So, yeah, that's what that was the end of the negotiation.
The beginning of the negotiation was trying to get me to release those things as one video
and I said, hell no.
And then next, we're going to release them as separate videos on the same day.
I said, hell no, because that dilutes it.
And then we agreed on a two week separation between the two.
In your experience with TED and your conversations around this matter, are you aware of other
videos that Ted has refused to put out that were a live Ted talk at the Ted conference
and they were deemed to be too controversial to be released publicly?
Definitely not this year.
I can't, I don't know the whole history of Ted, but nothing like that this year for sure
We can go one of two ways for this freedberg
Do you want to talk about the substance of the talk or maybe dig into the culture of Ted?
I want to talk about the substance of the talk in a minute
But I think it's worth to sharing my experience with you. I started going to Ted as an attendee around I believe 2007
And I went every year until 2019. I got a lot from the
community, I got a lot from the conference every year, it was an incredible
week of my life every year, it was a big deal for me. In the early days I would
go there and I saw new perspectives on technology, on the environment, on
social change, on all these like topics that were not in my day to day that I thought were really exciting and all
Inspiring and that really was kind of this ethos of Ted back in the day before percenterson took it over
It was to kind of you know inspire people with new ideas
Over the years that I attended Ted
I began to observe that many of the talks and I spoke about this very briefly last week as part of my motivation and interest in doing
The all-in summit this year. But that over time, many of the talks began to take a bit of a
social justice turn in the sense that there was almost a lecturing happening as curated
by the editorial process at TED. When Donald Trump was elected president in 2016,
needless to say, most of the audience of Ted was not on that side of the voting
block.
And what disturbed me the most was that in the three years after he was elected, every
Ted conference had plenty of subjects, plenty of talks and plenty of conversations about
why society is falling apart, why Donald Trump is a key root cause of that, why so much of him and what he stands for
and the people behind him are unjust and evil
in all these ways.
There wasn't a single talk that provided a perspective
of why anyone voted for him.
There was no one that shared a point of view
about why this person had come to gather more than half
the votes or half the votes in the country.
And I thought that was such an important topic to better understand that I was so shocked
that it was never part of the discourse at TED.
I'm not a Republican.
I'm not a conservative and I'm not against social justice issues.
But I saw TED over time get overtaken with this kind of very one-sided, almost bullying
type of approach to this is the narrative
we want to sell society on rather than have a true discourse about the matter.
I sent in a survey response in 2019 after I went to Ted and I said, I'm never coming back again.
This year did it for me, I'm over it. And there was such a lack of diversity of points of view
at this conference. And so much of this has veered away from inspiring topics and inspiring talks.
And it became all about fear of technology.
It became about social injustice caused by one side of the political spectrum.
And it really angered and upset me that everyone had become so close-minded at Ted.
And I said this note, and Chris Anderson reached out to me and said, well, you have a conversation.
I went on a Zoom call with him.
And I spoke with him for an hour and I shared all this,
and I said, he's missing so much of what's happening.
That's optimistic about the world.
It's optimistic about technology.
That's different ways of looking at things.
And he's kind of created this very narrow-minded view
on the topics that they want to address
and how they want to address them.
And that was it, and I walked away.
So when I saw what happened with your talk,
to me, it's almost like the ultimate endgame
of this process that I've been observing
at TED personally for the last 13 years.
And I just wanted to, you know,
last 15 years, I guess, share that story with you
and speak publicly about it.
I very much respect the intention of the people at TED.
I respect Chris Anderson deeply.
The TED talks changed my life many times along the way
over the decade plus that I went there.
There are many great friends from TED.
I know plenty of people that have worked there.
Everyone has the right intention.
But I think it's such a microcosm and a reflection of what's broadly been going on, which is
it's either my opinion or not, and everyone coalesces around people with the same opinion.
And then you magnify it and you concentrate it and we have no discourse.
And TED used to be a place for discourse, it's lost that as have so many other forums
for conversation in the society and country today.
Call me and what's your take on the Ted organization?
Pre and post having had this experience, I'm curious.
Yeah, what you just said, David,
I've heard echoed from at least a dozen people
that have gone to Ted or been,
in the Ted community for 10 years or more,
they've noticed the exact change that you noticed.
The question is, what has driven that?
Is it actually coming top down from the leadership?
I'm not sure, I'm skeptical.
Yeah, I see you shaking your head.
I agree.
Are we Chris Anderson?
I would say no. I agree. Will Chris Anderson, I would say no.
I agree.
So, like, all my private communications with Chris suggests to me that he is just as
alive to this problem of ideological capture of institutions as anyone.
But when it comes to, you know, his own staff who have really strong feelings who are
not pro-free speech, who are not pro
heterodox beliefs, and open discourse, who literally just don't share that value.
You know, it's a very tricky thing with leadership.
Sometimes you have to simply be the bad guy and say, I'm sorry, these are the values of
the institution.
And if you're not on board, this is not right for you.
And my perception is that Ted has been captured
kind of from the bottom up, like many institutions,
just from the seeping in of staff
that don't share those values,
and the inability of the leadership
to actually hold the line for those values.
Did they tell you that you made them feel unsafe?
Yes, actually.
Actually, yes.
People said they felt they were attacked in the audience.
And I'm, you know, my talk was again, just look it up on YouTube. It's quite mild.
Can we actually talk about that? Yeah, let's go into the summit.
Why, why was your take on it, you're off here? I'll just make a statement, which is
I think that your talk was superb. And just to give you my journey, as a kid that grew up,
And just to give you my journey as a kid that grew up, has a refugee on welfare, and then to get through every single sort of strata of society, I think when I look back, the
biggest thing that I struggled with was always confusing when I felt mistreated, I would always direct it at racism.
It would be my sort of safety blanket.
And I would always look at other people as doing that.
And it was only until I met my wife and spending years and years talking about it
where I was able to disarm this and see that out of 100 interactions.
A lot of
the time just people are having a bad day. Some other percentage of the time people are
actually just being very classist because racism it turns out is like a pretty severe
perversion and it's really crazy when you actually see it play out. And for me had I had
a framework, if I had your talk when I was in my 20s and 30s, I would
have spared myself a lot of self-sabotage.
Because what that does is when you feel these things and you don't have a framework to
interpret it or to tolerate the anxiety, I would internalize that anxiety and I was
a less productive person.
And so if the goal was for me on behalf of my family or on behalf of people like me to make it,
I would have gotten there much faster had I not gotten in my own way.
And when I watched your talk, it was incredibly validating for the work that I had done.
And I had thought to myself, man, if I had had him, if he had made that for me when I was 20 years old, amazing.
I would have done so much more because when I think about some of the mistakes I made,
they were rooted in this specific issue that you touched.
So I just want to say thank you.
And I also want to say that to the extent other people are interested in feel like that,
you should really listen to what you have to say because I thought it was eloquently addressed. I was a huge, huge, huge fan of what you had to say. And I thought
it was extremely well done. And especially for someone as young as you, I thought it was
just amazing.
Coleman, let me ask you, what was the reaction from people of color, people who have experienced
racism perhaps to your talk, because you must have gotten a tremendous amount. And I did
look at the comments to Ted's credit, the comments are open.
So what was the reaction to people like Chimap or yourself, people of color who maybe
who have experienced racism on some regular basis, and this idea of having color blindness
when we're operating as a society in that goal, which I'll just point out when I listen
to your talks, seems to be exactly what Martin Luther King said. So go ahead. Yeah, it is. So there's the
stereotype of the reaction is that white people like my talk and people of color don't.
Yes, so that's the stereotype that my critics would like to believe is the reality because then they
don't have to confront my arguments.
The reality is that even at the TED conference, which is a progressive space,
many, many people of color, black people, South Asian people came up to me saying,
that was an excellent talk for this and that in the third reason.
And I think probably for reasons similar to what you were saying, Jamoth, I have found
that oftentimes immigrants of color really resonate with my message.
I have many, for instance, Jamaican friends that, you know, they view themselves as Jamaican,
they come to America and our conversation about race
doesn't make very much sense to them.
Right?
Why?
It doesn't make sense, for instance, to strongly feel that your racial identity is an aspect
of your core in herself, that you ought to judge people on the basis of their racial identity that, you know, if you're a white person
that, you know, you don't have a valid perspective to bear on a conversation or you have to, you
know, preface every belief by saying, well, I'm a dumb white guy. What do I know? This kind
of routine that we've gotten into in spaces rather than just confronting each other as, hey,
you know, I'm Coleman, your trimothimoth, you're David, et cetera.
Let's all talk about this from the point of view
of epistemic equals and have conversations.
And yeah, you're gonna know about stuff I haven't known
because of your individual life story.
I'm gonna have experienced stuff that you have
and we may have even experienced racial discrimination.
We may have stories to tell,
but we are starting out
fundamentally from the framework of all being human beings that can talk to each other.
We don't have to sort of play act to these racial roles that have become increasingly
invoked in woke spaces. A lot of people resonate with that.
What's more, you've gotten this thing on the left, you've gotten media institutions
that have been taken in by this.
So you see New York Times op-eds like one, I think, five years ago, that's, can my children
be friends with white people?
You've got Robin DiAngelo and her book saying things like, a white person shouldn't cry
around a black person because it triggers us.
It's like, this is so the opposite of what it actually feels like to hang out with an
interracial and tight-knit group of friends. Your racial identity recedes and importance the more
you get to know people. And I think people in interracial relationships know this,
people with interracial kids know this. So my message actually resonates with people of all colors.
That I think was one of the most
point parts of it, SACs.
You got to watch the talk as well, I believe.
So your thoughts on maybe institutions
rotting from the inside and maybe even one that's
supposed to support ideas.
Ideas that matter.
Clearly this is an idea that matters.
I'm curious.
I just want to not use the term rotting opposed to support ideas. Ideas that matter. Clearly, this is an idea that matters. I'm curious.
I just want to, I want to, I want to not use the term
rotting because I think your point is that it's not good.
I don't think that's necessarily the case because the point is
there's institutional capture that's happened.
And that institutional capture is almost like a democratic
process that we're seeing at companies that we're seeing
at government agencies and that we're seeing in private and non-profit institutions that the individuals
that are employed are capturing the organization's ideals. Obviously, that's what I mean for
the rotting. I mean, it's like it's, it was such a story to institution, you know, in terms of,
it was a brave institution under Ricky Saul Warman.
I get it, but I think Rodding is such a derogatory term
in the sense that some of these institutions evolved to be different.
And that's the only thing I just, I don't want to make it.
Yeah.
Saxo, Rodding, or is it being taken over from the inside out from the bottom up?
What are your thoughts?
I think Caputored is a pretty good word to use, Fieber used that word.
Just remember remember Ted's
original mission represented in their tagline was ideas were spreading. So there's supposed
to be a forum for interesting worthy ideas that they're going to spread. And here they're
doing the opposite. They're basically sandbagging the views and they didn't want to publish
it at all. And then when they did agree to publish it, they basically subjected that to a new requirement
of putting a rebuttal right by it.
So this is not living up to the original mission. Now, why did this happen?
I want to go to Chris Anderson's response here. He wrote this long post on X,
which is too long to read here. It's a really sort of weasley,
melee mouth defense of what they did. A lot of both sides type language. I think
there's really only one or two senses that are relevant in terms of explaining
this whole thing. What he says is that many people have been genuinely hurt and
offended by what they heard you say.
So he's addressing this to Coleman.
This is not what we dream of when we post our talks.
So I think this is really the key intellectual mistake that Chris Anderson's making is that
he believes that people can be genuinely hurt by encountering well-reasoned ideas they
disagree with.
I think the way that the marketplace
or ideas is supposed to work is that when you encounter
an idea you disagree with, you formulate
an equally well thought out response.
And you engage in intellectual discourse.
Yeah, maybe get curious.
Yeah, get curious.
Exactly.
But, you know, I think these words are really significant
because he's saying not just that the
objectives here were offended.
He was saying that they were hurt, genuinely hurt.
So he's buying into this idea that hearing ideas you disagree with is somehow a threat
to your safety.
And as soon as you do that, as soon as you concede that there can be some sort of physical
harm from engaging with ideas.
You give the equivalent of a heckler's veto to the people who don't like these ideas.
It's almost like a crybaby's veto.
So there's no way you can function as a marketplace of ideas and certainly a platform for ideas
we're spreading.
If you're going to give a veto to people who can claim
that their subjective emotional reaction to well thought ideas should trump
the right of the speaker to put out that idea. Or the broader audience to hear it.
Right, exactly. And I think that's where we've ended up. Can I ask your point of view on institutional capture?
Obviously, this is different than the topics you've spoken about.
But as you've gone through this experience with Ted and as you think more broadly about
what's going on, do you have a point of view on the capture of institutions from the bottom
up that's happened and how that's affected some of these topics like free speech, sharing of ideas, open discourse, all these foundations that made kind of a
free and open society work effectively for so long.
Yeah, well, it's a very difficult problem because you know, it's easy for me from the outside
not being the leader of a major institution to say, well, this is just what you have to
do. Obviously, it's more psychologically difficult to well, this is just what you have to do. Obviously,
it's more psychologically difficult to go to your own staff that you have to metaphorically
live with every day and really shake things up. And many people aren't willing to do that.
Someone like Barry Weiss, who used to be at the New York Times, or you know, her point of
you on it is, look, you just got to start your own institutions. You have to start your own institutions with the right ethos from day one.
And that's what she's tried to do with the free press, rather than try to reform institutions
that have a lot of unhealthy inertia.
That Chris could have stopped this very easily.
I mean, this is a failure of leadership.
What he needed to tell these employees is, look, our mission is to be a platform
for spreading interesting ideas. And we can't treat this speech differently than a other speech
just because you disagree with it. That's all yet to do. And by the way, just because an idea may
be offensive does not mean that it should not be spread. I think, have you read Jonathan Hades book
Coddling of the American Mind? Absolutely, yeah, great book. And I think that speaks and that was the book I gave away in our
gift bag at the all in summit this year, because I thought it was such like an important and kind
of prescient point of view on what's going on right now that we assume that if something is
offensive by some some some group could be a large group or a small group, it needs to be suppressed.
And obviously, as you extend that concept to its extreme, you end up losing many ideas
that challenge the current kind of main concept that everyone believes.
Here's what I don't understand.
So Coleman, just maybe if you can just guess, why when somebody watches this talk, could they feel genuinely hurt?
Like if we had to steal man then let's step in their shoes.
Like what is the cycle that's going on there that gets them to, oh my god this is an intolerable
point of view. Yeah, I mean, I think there has to be something with, if you're a person that has, you know,
staked your life or your career out on the concept of sort of race-based diversity, equity
and inclusion, explicitly taking race into account in policies.
And you know, you're someone that's been working in that domain for 30 years.
And you see someone like me come up there and just argue against that whole approach,
there may be some severe threat mechanism that comes on board where you actually don't
have a rational argument that easily debunks what I'm saying because what I'm saying
is very reasonable.
And so in the absence of a great rational argument, when the stakes are high, all the primal
animal emotions sort of come out, your whole limbic system, and you feel like you're kind
of in a fight or flight situation and you feel incredibly emotional.
That's my only guess. Yeah, they're hurt and it's scary to think what if you win the argument and
if you win the argument, it means certain things might go away and I think the two examples they
gave you, Chris Anderson came on stage and said, oh, you know, when conductors are looking for
a new violinist, they put them behind a shade
and they do color blind selection process,
a color blind selection process.
I think Malcolm Gladwell talked about that in Blaine
and your response, and then they said,
well, wouldn't be better if we could have, you know,
some representation in that group.
So then we would inspire people to get to the group.
Your response to that was,
yeah, my response to that was what you really want to do is
if there are reasons why, say, black kids aren't getting access
to violins at a young age,
because schools are underfunded,
or band programs are horrible in inner cities,
that's where you want to intervene.
You don't want to intervene at the meritocratic end line, racially rigging the very bar that
you would use to measure progress on those deeper dimensions.
Have you read this book called Losing Ground by Charles Bury?
Yes, I have.
I mean, it's a very provocative book.
I have always thought, and maybe I'll just leave this with you, because if you were willing
to do it, I for one would love to support with you because if you were willing to do it,
I for one would love to support you in any way that I could to do it, but we don't have a full accounting
of what really happened starting in the late 1960s with LBJs war on poverty.
And I think when you look at racism through the American lived experience,
a lot of it goes back to a bunch of economic incentives that were set up to try to do what's
theoretically seemed at the time the right thing.
We can debate whether that's where LBJ came from or not.
But you compound and cascade a bunch of decisions forward and to your point now we're sort of
trying to deal with the symptoms without really addressing the root cause.
And I think if America wants to really heal and deal with this, what we also need to
do is give all those people that have that fight or flight response, the better
toolkit to understand what kind of goddess here. Because right now, we have a very charged
way of viewing these things without actually looking at some of the practical, quantifiable
details. Thomas Soel has talked about it, Charles Murray talks about it. But these are unfortunately
such heterodox ideas
that they just don't get enough mainstream discussion.
And if you then compound that with this institutional capture, they get buried.
And so the answer may actually be sitting right in front of our face, where it was the
welfare reform system that we implemented in the late 1960s on down the line, because
those are structural ways where we can solve it, which ultimately will get to your point, which is great fund more
music in the schools in that example. And right now we're so caught up in all of
the the labels and the fear mongering that we never get to that. And so I just
wanted to put that out there that I think that there needs to be smart, brilliant
people like yourself, young people who can do a full accounting of like the last 50 or 60 years in a much more structural way that these gentlemen tried to do, but the ideas were just two heterodox at the time, but because of formats like podcasts and like the free press and other things, I think there's a chance that people that approached you. There's not enough of us that came from this background that are open-minded or at a
point where we can tolerate the anxiety to listen to your ideas.
There's a lot of people that make this really react, but the more that we can shift those
people away from viscerally reacting to actually tolerating and then thinking and then evolving
their point of view, you can do some enormous good in the world.
Just why I just wanted to put that out there.
Yeah.
Yeah, I know that.
I mean, that's a huge topic and an understudy topic.
What was the effect of the welfare reforms of the 60s and 70s?
I know my mother used to say,
she grew up in the South Bronx.
I'm half Hispanic, half black American.
And she used to say, she used to just have stories of,
you know, when the welfare auditors would come around and people would hide their boyfriend's, hide their husbands, and the book, Black Power by Stokely Carmichael, aka Kwame Ture, which is, you know, the manifesto of the Black Power movement, hardly a right-wing source.
They made the same point about welfare reform. So there definitely is something to be investigated there.
It's not really my point of expertise.
I know Glenn Lowry is someone who has really dug
into that sort of research,
but there's definitely a lot of room for study there.
Go ahead and let me ask you a question about our industry.
We've had a lot of hand-ranging and debates
about diversity in funding of startups, capital allocators, venture capital firms, and we have
limited partners who have a mission to have more diverse general partners that people
have venture firms who invest in startups, invest in more female, let startups, et cetera, because the numbers, frankly, have not been very diverse, historically,
in venture far from it. And we recently had a black female venture firm, I think it's called
fearless founders get sued. I'm not sure if you're aware of that lawsuit. It's by the same person who sued Harvard. Should there be venture firms specifically designed
to change the ratio?
Is the language people use?
And should people with large endowments of capital
be backing black venture capitalists
to see more of them, or female black venture capitalists,
Hispanic, et cetera, or how would you look at that issue, which has been a pretty sticky issue and hasn't changed
for a long time.
So prescriptively, I don't want to say much because I don't like to tell people how to run
their funds or run their businesses, right?
If you're a Christian and you want to hire only Christian people, if you're a Muslim, you
want to hire only Muslims, I think you should frankly be allowed to do that if those are your
personal values.
Now personally, I will tell you, with respect to the people that I would hire to say work
on my podcast, I want every single hire to know that I am not hiring them as a result
of their skin color or gender or any other contingent feature of their identity.
I want them to know that I'm hiring them for what they really bring to the table.
Now, I have a very small team. Maybe there's something about how the optics, certain optics are required for a larger,
a larger firm, but I think it, the problems begin when you,
when you sort of bless this idea that race is a super deep feature of who you are right from the start.
When you bless that idea right from the start, it sends the signal that what people bring to the table is their racial identity, is their gender.
Now, when you fast forward two years down the line when a company is having some meltdown over a race or a gender issue, you have to understand that it's possible
you made this bed by signaling from the very beginning that what's important about the people
you're bringing in is their race, is their gender, and that you are vulnerable to the kinds of
appeals that can be made purely on the basis of what are ultimately superficial features of our
identity. Yeah, that's well said.
What would your advice be to institutional leaders
that are past that point of no return?
The CEOs of big companies and big institutions
that are now captive by these ideologies
where they are effectively, as you say,
ultra-sensitive to issues around race and gender
and other superficial identities and are challenged
often to make decisions or driven to make decisions that their employees and teams demand
of them.
Do you have advice on how they can rethink their roles as leaders and how to reframe this?
In a word, no, because it's, by that point, it's an intractable problem.
I've had, I've talked to CEOs that asked this question to me over and over again, you
know, like, what do I do once I'm past the point where I have so many staff and it's,
you know, the system is so sprawling that it's no longer under my control.
I have so many people with values that I don't share that I frankly think privately
are insane, but I cannot say so publicly because I have higher order commitments to the
shareholders, to the board, to steer the ship, right, such as it is.
And the ship cannot be changed at this point.
I don't have good advice.
I'm not going to pretend that I do.
Do you think that same problem is inherent in political parties in the United States, states,
state governments, and other larger kind of social systems that we use to organize ourselves
and are now also captive in kind of a point of no return?
I think definitely in the Democratic Party, there has been a problem with mistaking the
Twitter commentary and the journalistic elite
for real life.
The truth is the vast majority of even Democrat voters find my arguments around colorblindness
totally uncontroversial, whether they may have some agreements or not.
But if you ask the elite, there's a meltdown, right?
There's this huge, there's just this huge discrepancy.
And it can never be hammered enough the extent to which people in politics are operating in a bubble
and believe mistaking the elite and the Twitter sphere for the wider population.
I mean, this feels to me like why Donald Trump got elected elected but that's another topic. This has been amazing.
Everybody take a moment.
Search for Coleman Hughes.
Subscribe to his YouTube channel.
Type Coleman Hughes.
Tag Coleman you do a podcast?
Yeah, do a podcast.
You just have conversations with Coleman.
Actually, David Sacks has been on the podcast about a year ago.
How did he do?
How did he do?
He did.
Absolutely fantastic.
Did he make you feel unsafe?
He did.
Actually, yes.
Yes, okay.
Was it the talk about the Ukraine?
Talk about Ukraine?
Can I be on your podcast?
Oh, of course. I would be on it.
Fantastic, there you go.
I would be on it. Thank you.
I saw you had the Dilbert guy on, and I thought
that was a pretty engaging, interesting conversation.
Scott Adams, who is really controversial and I thought you handled that one really well,
too.
He's an interesting one.
He has a lot of brilliant things to say, but also he maybe thinks the CIA is going to
kill him recently on Twitter.
It's a mixed bag.
It's a mixed bag would be where I would go with it.
All right, listen, this has been amazing. The TED talk is extraordinary.
Everybody should watch it and yeah, ideas worth spreading
unless maybe you don't agree with them.
Go to the TED channel and watch it.
Sorry, I mean, I don't want to give TED too much of hard time,
but they tried to get me to pay $50,000 a year,
$25,000 a year for like a five-year
package to go to the event and how much is Ted? How much is Ted? How much is Ted?
You regularly take it to be $1,550.
Or $1,500.
Or $1,500. Or $1,500. Or $1,500.
Or $1,500.
And then there used to be $1,500.
And then I think they went up to $10K. And then you can do like donor tickets and you get
different features and so on.
Basically, they're sold out.
But remember, it is set up as a nonprofit and there is philanthropic work that's done.
And so, you know, the organization is, again, it's not a profiteering media company.
It became a big media company because of the success of the efforts and the quality
of the content that was produced over time.
But you know, as we talked about, a lot of media companies and a lot of institutions get
captured and, you know, the original kind of mission.
To paraphrase Bruce Wilson, Pope Fiction, Ted's Dad, baby.
Ted's Dad.
Ted's Dad.
A great see-me to get some of that back.
I'm on his cycle, Ted's Dad, baby.
As soon as they allow the staff who have, let's say,
highly niche elite views to veto or suppress talks they
don't like, then it stops being a platform for ideas.
This becomes another left wing interest group.
What other ideas, what other talks have been canned before they even got to the stage?
You have to wonder and we don't know who they're not inviting to.
They just know the tune.
And it's all the, it's the top of the funnel, Jason, exactly.
This all, we don't know.
We put it there, not invite.
What about the person that's pro-colle?
I wonder if the pro-colle person is allowed to present it to.
I doubt it.
You know, and the, they had Sarah Silverman,
and she did a comedy set, which was hilarious.
And the same people, so this is the thing I find,
so the hypocrisy is just so crazy with the Ted people,
and it's a lot of my friends still go is they had Sarah Silver come.
These people have laughed at Sarah Silverman a million times.
They've watched Dave Chappelle.
They've seen any number of comments.
You don't make them laugh with edgy humor.
But then when they're in that, you know, Ted audience and they're feeling
super precious and that they're very important because they don't
need 50 grand a year or whatever
Friedberg gave them. I don't know to get in there from the side door.
Then they were super offended. So you know, they're hypocrites and I don't have to say it anymore clearly. They literally
you could pull up
Chris Anderson apologizing not just again. Again, I really apologize for a comedian.
I mean, I hope that this is a learning experience for everyone.
I hope that this is a turning point for leadership
and in institutions like this to take a look at what happened,
how it happened, and then hopefully to write the course
because organizations like Ted, I thought we're very important
and should be in the world and should be successful.
And I hope that they kind of returned to the original values.
And I hope that this is a moment that there's a learning experience in that.
We don't just shit on them and say they're awful, they're failed.
It's over.
Hopefully something comes in this.
I do think there is one other potential remedy here, which besides just starting a new
Ted and the kind of the Barry Weiss point of view, which is just just right and often
start over.
Remember what Brian Armstrong did at Coinbase?
He basically just said,
listen, we have a mission here.
It's around crypto.
We're gonna focus 100% on this mission.
And if you're not on board with this mission
or wanna capture this institution
to promote other missions,
this is not the place for you.
Go do those missions somewhere else.
All of them work to get to the head.
Yeah. Yeah.
They're times wrote there a obligatory hit piece.
If Chris was brave, he would just tell everybody,
I'll know that.
Yeah, that's a saying that I would say if Chris has good mentors,
as well as a good sounding board, that is the threshold question that should be
debated right now is, do I walk in the door?
And do I just give this simple litmus test and have people sign up or not?
And yeah, and it's quite and it's quite easy because to your point, it's not like he's inventing something new.
He's saying, this is where we started and this is where we're going to stay.
And this is what it means.
And if he doesn't do that, then he's spoken with his actions.
And it is what it is.
What is meant to happen exactly then happened.
Exactly.
Exactly.
It's a moment for looking at the internal compass.
It's a wholesale leadership reset moment the internal compass. It's a wholesale
leadership reset moment opportunity. See if it happens or not. Or don't go down and keep going. I really appreciate you're being public about all this and talking about it.
It's been a great conversation. Thank you. Thank you, Coleman. Everybody starts to talk to me on this.
Yeah. All right. Thank you. We'll see you soon. Cheers now.
See you, man. Thanks. All right. Listen, it's a new segment we have here when virtue signaling goes wrong If you missed it the Canadian Parliament gave a standing ovation
To a Nazi not like a new Nazi or a Nazi sympathizer
One of the few actual Nazis still alive here. We see just the crowd going wild
Les Friday, Ukrainians president Solinsky gave a speech at the Canadian House of Commons
and Canadian House Speaker Anthony Rota introduced a 98-year-old
Yaroslav Hunk has a Ukrainian war hero and then the Canadian parliament proceeded to give him a standing ovation
and it to give him a standing ovation. And it turns out that this person first fought
for the first Ukrainian division in World War II.
That unit was also known as the Waffen SS,
Galicia division, if I'm pronouncing that correctly,
which was a voluntary unit under Nazi command.
So the Canadian apartment, apparently gave a standing ovation to Nazis.
They have apologized for this and said it was a mistake.
Chimoff, I don't know if you got to see this, your Canadian.
So your thoughts on what we've seen here.
I mean, I'll give you my feedback as somebody who when I was in Canada was a pretty ardent
liberal.
I grew up in a liberal household.
My father canvassed religiously for the liberals.
And I think that at some point after I moved to the United States, they took wokeism, which I think looked at some level,
was rooted in something very important, which was, how do you get marginalized folks to
be seen? But unfortunately, along the way, just got perverted by folks that just use it
as a cudgel to censor people, to make other people feel guilty, to judge people.
And so I think we all would agree that it's kind of become this virus.
The thing that it masks are all of these other really bad things that come along with it.
And one of them in Canada, which Justin Trudeau is K-0 of, is also when nepotism goes bad.
His father was an incredible exemplary prime minister in Canada. Set the bench more.
On all dimensions was just incredible.
Cool, composed, moved the country forward, brought the country together.
And then fast forward 25 or 30 years in a vacuum of leadership, what basically happened, we
picked this guy who was up until that point of substitute teacher and the other claim to fame was appearing twice in brown face, okay?
So making fun of people like me and elected in Prime Minister.
And what happened was he became the sort of like virtue signaler and chief of this very
important GA country. And it was all kind of bumbling along. And
in the absence of anybody else that was able to step up and offer an alternative, he got
reelected barely, but he did. Then these things happened in the last year. And when you look
through that prism is how you can see what happens if a country doesn't draw a line and finally take a stand. So we had
this guy who was ill-qualified and way over his head who shouldn't have been in this role as
Prime Minister get put in that position. When finally a group of people in Canada push back,
in this case the truckers, he and the entire government explicitly labeled them as Nazis, right? And said, these people need to be put down and completely dismantled.
It didn't seem like it was right.
We called that out.
We all talked about it.
And we said, this doesn't smell right on the surface.
These are really, seems like good-earned as people that are just trying to make a point
and are not being heard.
Then you had this thing three weeks ago, two or three weeks ago,
where he actually had a speech in front of the entire parliament where he accused the largest
democracy in the world, India in this case, of coming into Canada, Canadian soil and assassinating
a Canadian citizen, which is an enormous allegation to Levy. What was important to know about that allegation was that it was done
without the explicit vocal support of either Britain or the United States,
which would be the two most natural allies that Canada would present that information to.
Instead of doing it behind a closed door to Modi,
he did it on live stage like it was like some theatrical performance. Then India
follows up and says, this guy is kind of known to be a little bit of a drug addict. It was
on a two day bender and the Indian drug dogs smelled a bunch of cocaine on the plane.
Then they have this thing for Vladimir Zelensky, where everybody was there to sort of like
virtue signal this war and then they actually
Invited a Nazi and then gave him a standing ovation. So when you when you put it all together
I think what it shows is just the lack of
professionalism
Which also belies just the lack of experience and capability and so I think what it shows is just like
Isn't this enough like are have we not seen enough of these examples where you can actually start to ask yourself,
why can't we just get really good competent people to do these jobs?
Why can't we actually embrace free speech and all of what it means and explore that?
Why can't we have people that don't need to theatrically perform on stage?
Because eventually you're going to make these mistakes and you're going to embarrass your
entire country and then you're going to imperil mistakes and you're going to embarrass your entire country.
And then you're going to imperil relations with some really important allies. And I think
this is a moment in time where all of those things need to be questioned and put on the
table. You're clearly questioning his competence here because to not have the care to check
who is going to speak in front of parliament is crazy and just to make it super clear the speaker that
invited hunka that was Anthony Rota resigned on Tuesday and Trudeau says Rota the person who invited
Benazzi is solely responsible. Well, then he blamed Russian misinformation on top of that but Jason,
you don't you don't the prime minister who is the most important politician in the country doesn't
show up someplace unless the office knows who else is going be there. He knew that Zelensi was gonna be there
He would have known who the guest list was
Yeah, this was and this was he was going to cover it up
But but the bigger issue is just I'd be clear. You're not saying that they invited a Nazi on purpose and cheered for a Nazi on purpose
What nobody's saying that you're saying there's a lack of care here, and it's
It's a lot of confidence. It's a lack of confidence. Yeah, just so we're clear. Yeah, okay, so I agree with all of that
I think there's also two other dimensions to this backstory if you will I
Think first in terms of how does a mistake like this happen? I think it was or well who said that he who controls the present controls the past
and he controls the past controls the future. The present is Ukraine. It is the current thing. Everybody
has to cheer for Ukraine and for the killing of Russians. The reason why HUNCA was
cheered with the standing ovation is because they said that he fought Russians. He was a war hero
who fought Russians.
All you have to do is do a little bit of math
to realize the guy's 98 years old,
when was there a war against Russia?
Who could he possibly have been fighting for?
But to accept people who did that,
they sort of airbrushed it or whitewash history.
So the present controls the past
to ensure a vision of the future
which Trudeau laid out in this speech he gave recently
where he became so ardent in his support for Ukraine.
He was almost yelling at the podium, saying that Canada had to make all these economic
sacrifices to win the war.
So that's point number one is I think that the woke mind virus almost requires this white
washing of the past, but it's done for a specific purpose, which is to control the future.
Well, they're not whitewashing the past if it was a mistake. That the intellectually doesn't make sense.
No, what they did is what they're saying is-
If I'm understanding you correctly, yeah.
The present is that we hate Russia so much that we're going to cheer for anybody who killed Russians.
Okay, I understand your point, but you're agreeing that they did not knowingly put a Nazi
on there, so it was a mistake.
I don't think they knowingly did it, it was a huge debacle and embarrassing spectacle.
I think that nobody asked any questions about the past because the president overrides
it.
Okay, sure.
The president need to support the current thing overrides like any sort of examination
of what has happened historically.
There's one other way, which I think this wasn't, an accident, Jason, is that if you look
at US policy towards Ukraine, we have made common cause with a number of these far-right
ultra-nationalist groups, frankly neo-Nazi groups.
And this occurred before the current war, so it's not just a marriage of convenience.
First of all, if you go back to war two, the father of Ukrainian nationalism is a guy named
Stepan Bendera.
And today in Ukraine, he is seen as some sort of hero, and there are streets named after
him, and there are streets named after some of his co-conspirators who collaborated with Nazis. If you fast forward to the more recent past to 2014, when we had this Meydanku in Kiev that was back by Victoria Newland,
one of the key figures in that coup was a guy named Ola Tanibok, who is the founder of the Svoboda Party, which is the social
nationalist party, which if you know what Nazi stands for, it's national socialist, they
basically just flipped the name. And the original logo of the Svoboda Party was the Wolf's Angel,
which was a Nazi insignia. This was a far right party infused with the racial ideology of Stephen Bayon Dara, who was
again a Nazi.
And they brought this guy in and his party as the muscle in this coup.
If you look at the Victorian Newland phone call, the infamous phone call where she is picking
the new Ukrainian government, the Yatsuzar guy phone call, she says that Clitch, meaning Clitchko and
Tawnybock need to remain on the outside, but Yatsuz needs to be talking to Tawnybock
four times a week. Okay, he was part of the chess pieces that they were moving around.
After the coup, a civil war breaks out in the Donbass because the ethnic Russians there
are opposed to this new government and the fact that Yanukovych, who they voted for, was to pose in an insurrection.
What happens then is a war breaks out, where far-right paramilitary organizations like Wright sector and like the infamous Azov battalion start killing these ethnic Russian separatists and a full blown civil war breaks out thousands of people get killed. Does the Kiev government suppress these neo-Nazi groups? No, they bring them under
the formal command structure of the Ukrainian military. Azov battalion becomes a division
of the Ukrainian military. It's shocking. And this goes on from 2014 through 2021.
So your saying, the Ukraine army just to be clear here has not seen it, not seen
supporters. There's no question about that. And there are many people who were concerned
about this in the 2015 to 2020 time frame. There were many articles written about it, the
nation had an article about it. There were efforts in Congress at various points to
try and ensure that the A that we were giving to the Ukrainian government did not go to the A's office.
So, let's see what it is said.
So it is said.
Okay.
I think the important and obviously that-
Did the alliance gaze a Nazi or a Nazi said the past?
No, I don't think he's a Nazi and to be clear, I don't think most Ukrainians are Nazis
and I don't even think that most Ukrainian nationalists are Nazis.
What I'm saying is that there is a Nazi element in Ukraine that we have whitewashed over. Well, here's the
thing about it. I don't think it's a huge percentage, but I think they have outsized influence
to their willingness to use violence due to their extremism. Yeah, and their willingness to use
violence. They make it so much different than the Nazi percentage in say, or whatever you want to say white supremacist in the United States
or in Germany or anywhere else?
I do.
I think it's different in the sense that in the United States,
for sure, we have neo-Nazi groups.
They're not brought into the military.
We don't have streets named after their patriarchs.
Furthermore, we don't have members of our military
with Nazi insignia on them.
There was a New York Times article just a few months ago talking about the fact that
embarrassingly a lot of these Ukrainian soldiers are being photographed with Nazi insignia
on their uniforms.
Now the New York Times is framing this as a problem because it was a propaganda coup
for Putin.
Yeah, presumably it was.
Definitely, it was a propaganda coup for Putin. Yeah, presumably it was. But I think it's a problem.
But I think it's a problem because it's a problem, not because of just the PR optics of
it.
And, you know, at various points, I think this is the New York Times article as well.
Western media has had to airbrush these photos to hide this fact.
Now, oh, the New York Times has airbrushed photos of not seeing the New York Times as, but
I don't think it New York Times has, but I they talk about how the thorny problem of not wanting to
show these photos with respect to the does the linsky being Jewish so when I
say about that is that
zealotsky only came on the scene quite recently he got elected in 2019
and again I don't think the majority of people in Ukraine are not sees okay so
I'm not saying that.
But just because Zelensky came on the scene in 2019 and was elected president,
it doesn't mean there's a long and I would say disturbing history and association
between Ukrainian ultranationalism and neo-Nazi groups.
And I think that part of the woke thing and part of this Orwellian desire
where control of the present gives you
the ability to rewrite the past is that there's been a deliberate effort to cover up this
problem and to pretend it doesn't exist to turn a blind eye to it. Well, my point is that
US policy has been to do this. In other words, the US government, the US State Department
and presumably CIA may common cause with these far right groups
because we thought it was beneficial to be aligned with them.
And so we did it in the May,
don't coup in 2014.
From 2015 to 2021, we could have gone along
with efforts under the Minsk Accords
to resolve this conflict in the Donbass peacefully.
But we never did that.
We never gave it any support. And instead we gave support to the Kiev regime's attempt to finally suppress
these Russian separatists. And again, the suppression was being done by these right-wing groups.
Look, does that make our State Department Nazis? No. Does that make the Canadian Parliament
Nazis? No. What I'm saying is that in both cases a blind eye was turned to this disturbing
ideology and past and associations of these people because it's politically in our interest to do business with them
and that's the problematic thing about it. So I don't think in that sense this was just
sort of an accident. This is the backstory that explains like something like this can happen. Yeah
Okay, Jason, you have any reactions to Trudeau doing this
and what it means or does it mean nothing?
Does the backstory provided give you context
on how something like this can happen?
That's not just an accident.
Well, I don't think any of us can know exactly
what happened here.
And there's probably going to be some sort of investigation.
But I don't think they know and we put a Nazi up there.
I think they are pro-the-war, and that probably
could that have blinded them to do deeper research?
Sure.
People are political, politicians most of all,
and people probably take facts or any kind of,
anything they can use to make their case stronger,
they'll take advantage of that.
So yeah, sure.
And that is true, Doha.
But Zalinski was pumping his fist and cheering.
Don't you think he knew?
He can't not know the history.
He has to know.
He has to know.
If he does, then somebody was finding the right answer.
Good question.
Or two.
Good question.
If he did, then you would be saying, if he did know, and he was pumping his fists,
then you would be saying that he was pro Nazi.
He was cheering for a Nazi knowingly.
You know, what I'm saying is, look, the fact that you've got some Jewish answer street
is not, in my view, a Gadda geol free card for you making political decisions to a
whole line.
Are you saying he knowingly cheered for a Nazi.
You know, one of the big backers of the A's off Italian is a Ukrainian
at Lugark named Igor Kalamoisky. Kalamoisky is Jewish.
He has to ask me my opinion. I'm just saying, do you think he knowingly
cheered for a Nazi? Is that what you're insinuating?
I think he knowingly cheered knowing that this Ukrainian
nationalists who fought in World War II must have been on the German side.
Because there was only one. He knows have been on the German side. Okay.
So only once he knows that he will fight for a nationalist.
Okay.
I'm just clarifying here.
I don't actually have an opinion.
Thanks for querying me.
I'm not saying that he chaired for notsism.
What I'm saying is he chaired for Ukrainian nationalism and he knows that Ukrainian nationalism
is bound up and tied up with this disturbing history, which he is willing to ignore.
Do you guys, do you guys, let me finish my point about the Azov battalion.
The Azov battalion is undeniably a neo-Nazi group.
It was funded by Igor Kalamoiski, who is Ukrainian Oleg Ark, who is Jewish, who lives in Israel.
Why would Kalamoiski do that?
Because the Azov battalion believes that every interview crane, including Crimea and Donbass,
which has enormous energy reserves belongs to Ukraine.
So it served the business interests of the energy magnates in Ukraine to support these people.
And that, look, politics makes for strange bedfellows.
Yeah, that's what I'm gonna say, actually.
So I'm not saying that Zelensky or Kalamoisky or anybody else is a Nazi because they aligned with these people.
I'm saying they found it politically
expedient and useful to align with these groups, just like the US State Department did quite frankly,
I don't think we should do that. If you want to go around the world, Jason, saying that we're the
champions of freedom and democracy and having this moralistic, almost virtue, signaling foreign policy,
I don't think we should be in business or aligned with these neo-Nazi groups wherever they are. I think it's when you say you do you mean me or do you mean the United States?
I'm saying if you want to have a highly moralistic foreign policy, let's say if one wants to have a
Proud use the word yeah, if you're gonna be principled you need to keep them you need to not support Nazis
We're integrated. What do you Jason and Freiber what do you guys think of just like the, the bread crumbs in Canada?
I'm just curious whether you guys care about this whole vein
of just like competent leadership, nepotism,
if you have a view or it's like that is just what it is
and whatever.
I don't know enough about Canadian politics really,
but Trudeau does not seem to be super qualified.
Yeah, so.
But I don't know enough of that.
I mean, so just in terms of the Canadian part of this,
there's a writer named Jeet here who's a left wing writer,
but he posted something very interesting here,
where he explained that in the late 1940s and 1950s,
Canada took a large number of former Nazis,
many of whom were SS veterans,
so people like Hanke, because they were good anti-communists and then
these Nazis proceeded to terrorize anti-Nazi Ukrainian Canadians. There was this Ukrainian hall
was bombed here in 1950 so Canada has a weird history of bringing in some of these people after war
too. So the point is-
Was it aware of that?
Yeah exactly. Look there's no way that any semi-intelligent person who knows the history of war two especially the Ukrainian involvement in war two
wouldn't know that Ukraine was on the German side in war two and hanka
volunteered for the ss
he was a volunteer for the ss scolissia division so look did the speaker of the
house know probably not i think for the SS Galicia division. So, look, did the Speaker of the House know? Probably not. I think, wokeness makes people stupid where they just think about the current thing, and
I don't ask you any questions about the past. But, there's a lot more to it than just
like this innocent mistake.
And this has been your update on this week in Ukraine and wokeness.
All right. There's a bunch of news about OpenAI this week. Just very quickly, OpenAI is in advanced talks according to the financial times with Johnny
Ife of iPhone fame, Steve Jobs's long-term collaborator, and Masayoshi Sahn of Softbank
to raise more than $1 billion to build the iPhone of AI. And so the idea would be,
Johnny Ives got a design firm called Love From,
and they would help OpenAI design their first consumer device.
Via the FT sources, financial times that is.
Alotman and I have been having brainstorming sessions
and I have San Francisco studio about what a consumer product
centered around OpenAI would look like.
It's very early stages.
And Sun has pitched a role for ARM in the development,
his chip company that he recently took public.
They also discussed Mossett and Altman creating a company
that would draw on talent and tech
from their three groups with SoftBank
putting in a billion dollars in seed.
And then also, OpenAI is discussing a secondary share sale that would value the company
between 80 billion and 90 billion. This would be 3X, the most recent valuation.
Reportedly, though, to their credit, they are on track to generate $1 billion in revenue in 2023.
I'm not sure how much of that is the $20 a month subscription.
You know, that'd be pretty extraordinary
if that was those personal subscriptions.
This would be a massive gain on paper for Microsoft.
Opening I is 49% owned by Microsoft.
And Sam Altman has personally
has stated multiple times now that he has no equity.
So he would be getting $0 of this.
And of course, we know that OpenAI started as a nonprofit
before switching.
And our friend, Venote Kostla, told us very clearly
that those are just details.
What happened there, Tremont?
Those are just details.
Venote is the goat.
Sam is the closest thing that we have to an emergent
mogul in tech. And the reason is because if everything sits on this substrate, you're
going to need to get a license, you're going to want to get access to whatever developer
program, whatever beta that OpenAI has. And so as a result, that's already happened, by the way.
Well, I was just going to say, so he'll be in the cap-bird seat. So even if he doesn't have any
equity in OpenAI, he'll get, he'll just put his money into the best startups that it's like
Y-combinator on steroids. By the way, I have a take on that whole claim that Sam doesn't own
any part of OpenAI. All right, that's her.
Well, go ahead, Colombo.
Explain to us the details.
As well within their mammoth, you said you don't own any she is an open AI,
but you started opening.
Right.
Well, then who does?
Yeah, that's the thing.
What I think is really interesting about what open AI has done, and it's fundraising
rounds is that each round has been a capture-torn model.
So, for example,
for example,
100x, 100x, right?
Well, I think some of the very early people
got capped at 100x.
I think maybe the $30 billion round was capped at 10x.
So I think the $30 billion round's
capped at a $3 billion valuation,
meaning if you're an investor,
your share of go up in value
to the company that hits a market cap,
a $300 billion, and then basically your effectively cashed out. It's like you're an investor, your shares go up in value to the company he hits a market cap, a 300 billion, and then basically you're effectively cashed out.
It's like you bought a share, but sold a call
back to the company at the 300 billion dollar valuation.
The movie industry works this way, right?
You invest in a film, they tell you you can make three acts,
and then it's over, right?
Something like that.
I've seen that in the independent film business, yeah.
Yeah, so, so, so, not even.
I mean, I think people who invested like the $2 billion
valuation were capped at like 100 billion.
I heard that employees who were getting stock options
are capped at 100 billion, or they were way back
when they started granted these things.
So my point is that if open AI turns into one of these
companies like a Google ends up in the trillion dollar club,
then nobody's gonna own anything,
because they will have already long ago.
They'll keep selling you interest.
Like the new interest will end up being
like eight percent.
No, because what'll happen at the end
is the new people that buy in at that higher price
that buy out the early investors.
They're getting effectively things like eight percent return.
It turns into debt eventually, turns into some.
I think what's really going on here
is somebody has to own the
residual value of the company call it the far out of the money
call out to the I.R.S. problem of it being non equity that's how they say that it's not equity in a private
corporation but I think I think it's a brilliant about it is okay so look say I'm set up this foundation
it's a nonprofit but he controls that effectively, right?
Yep.
So yes, he technically is not an owner of the shares.
The foundation is, but what can't you do with the foundation
that you could do with personal ownership
other than maybe buying a personal residence?
I mean, you can buy a plane, I think.
Look at the church of Scientology.
They own a lot of real estate.
So my point is, not only do I think that Sam really owns open AI through the fig leaf of Scientology, they own a lot of real estate. So my point is, not only do I think that SAM
really owns open AI through the Fig leaf, this foundation,
I think he owns 100% of it.
In the event that the call option is struck,
meaning answering a trillion dollar company.
Are you saying Sam is out of our company?
Are you saying Sam is out on Hubbard in this example?
Let's not speculate too much.
Oh, it's just details, right?
As Bruno said, those are just details.
I am speculating, but I think it's informed speculation.
If you wanted to become the world's first trillionaire
and you were extremely premeditated about it,
clever and premeditated about it, what would you do?
Number one, you would want to choose a moonshot type area
that was a world changing technology.
AI certainly qualifies.
Sure. Ultimate.
So this is called fusion.
Maybe crypto does.
As I understand the same as bets in all three of those areas.
Number two, you would want to figure out a way to own as much of it as you could,
really 100% if you could.
And that's a very hard thing to do when you're running a capital intensive startup.
But investors tend to underestimate the power law and the value of the far out of the money call options.
So maybe you can get them to sell that back to you really cheaply.
And third, if you're really far-sighted, you would want to insulate yourself against
populist anger from being the world's first trillionaire.
So you would basically put your shares in a nonprofit foundation where you're not really sacrificing that much of control
Or the ability to control the asset, but it gives you tremendous. I love this very
Where did you come up with this is this like this is genius?
This is genius. It just you and Peter Teele talk about this over jazz or something
How did you construct this and you're saying this is in four.
I love financial conspiracy corner.
I think it's right.
This is right, science corner.
Let's get the tinfoil hats out.
It's really freaking Friedberg out
that we're even doing this.
Diometrically opposite to science corner.
Is it a conspiracy or is it just reality?
I think if you are even 1% right,
the combination of lawyers and accountants
that would leak this and the number of people.
That were part of the origination of the foundation that would want to soo will be very high that's just a natural state of things in these counts of things.
The thing that a lot easier what what what are I said other than the fact that it was sort of premeditated which that's that's not the right word, that premeditated sounds to nefarious.
No, no, no, I'm just saying whenever,
whenever, I'm just saying whenever money is made
at this quantum and at that scale,
everybody wants a piece because they know
that that's their one shot.
So I just think that it'll amplify the pressure
for actors inside of those organizations
to take their shot. And that's just gonna be financially the right thing to do for a lot of those organizations to take their shot.
And that's just going to be financially the right thing to do for a lot of people
if what you're saying is true.
We know the investments have been made under a cap return model.
I think that's fact.
That's fact, yes.
We know the nonprofit foundation owns the shares.
That's fact.
And then just to put the 800 pound gorilla on the table like,
what's Elon thinking?
Because he was the one that really got this thing off the ground because that critical investment made the whole thing
come to life. He could have done this on his own.
Yeah, how much does he own? Zero.
Fast and zero. I mean, but after I lost suit, how much does he own?
I don't know. I'm not just speculating.
So can we talk about the technology?
Let's talk about the technology. There we we go. Open AI release some new chat, GPT features.
The key point here is they're doing what's called multi-modal.
Multi-modal is the big innovation.
What does that mean?
That means the input could be voice, the input could be code, the input could be data.
It could be a picture.
Here's a picture.
If you're watching along on the YouTube channel, do a search for all-in podcast on YouTube,
hit subscribe, hit the bell.
It's a classic picture of one of those no those no parking signs where there's four different ones.
You take a picture of that, that's the input. And you say, it's Wednesday at 4 p.m.
Can I park in the spot right now? Tell me in one line, it comes back and says,
yes, you can park for up to one hour starting at 4 p.m. What this means is,
the output or the input could be in any of those modalities, modalities, fancy word for,
in the image of video, et cetera.
So you are going to be able to say,
hey, give me the poster for the all-in conference
of Bestie Runner.
And I want it to be these things.
And here are the pictures of the boys
and then make it and go back and forth and back and forth.
And this is really groundbreaking at the same time.
Last week, Google BARD and Sendip Modra,
and I played with this on this week and start ups. You now have
Google flights, Google docs, Gmail and
a number of the other core Google
services are now in BARD. So that's
not multi-modal exactly, but you could
do things like ask Google flights,
hey, what is the best non-stop, you
know, between New York City and Dubai or from an East
Coast destination that has lay down flat seats, et cetera, and it really does.
It's starting to work.
So this idea that Google is going to be displaced or they're moving slow, that might be antiquated
information.
So those are the two big, big, monumental announcements just in the last 10 days.
Freeberg, when you look at these two, which one is the more important announcement?
And what do you think about the pace?
Because here we are.
We're about to hit the one-year anniversary of Chad J.P.T. 3.5.
I've been using a lot of different tools the last couple of months, and I'm kind of
getting to the point that I feel that much of what's happening is underhyped rather than overhyped.
There's some really incredible potential emerging. I'll give a couple of examples and then I'll talk about the mobile phone.
First is Andre Carpati as you guys see in the tweet that I just posted in the chat, made a point today that LLMs are emerging not just as a chatbot, but as a kernel process,
meaning a new type of operating system that can do input
and output across different modalities,
can interpret code, can access the internet and information,
and then can render things in a visual way
or in an audio way that the user wants to consume it.
So as a result, LLMs become the core driver to a new type of computing interface.
There was a paper publish and I'll share the link
to this paper here as well.
And we can put it in the notes.
It's not worth pulling up on the screen.
That showed that using LLMs in autonomous driving
can actually significantly improve
the performance of the neural nets
that the autonomous cars are trained on.
So the autonomous car is typically trained on a bunch of sensor data that comes in,
and then that sensor data determines what sort of action to take with the car.
And what this team showed is that if you actually put in
a communication layer that thinks and talks like a human in between the sensor data and the action data,
it can do really wide-raging interpretations of the data that otherwise would not be
apparent from the data set it was trained on.
So for example, you can see a person down the road and ask it,
what do you think that person's going to do next?
And the LLM, because it's trained on a much larger
corpus of data than just censor data from cars,
it can make a really good human-like interpretation of that,
feed that decision back into the control
system of the car, and have the car do something more intelligently that it otherwise would
have been able to do.
So, these LLMs are becoming a lot more like a software operating system.
And you can kind of extend that into mobile phones.
Mobile phones originally were just voice, and then they were single lines of text in the
form of SMS.
Then you were able to browse the web, and then the app revolution came about where all of this information emerged through apps. What LLMs now allow,
perhaps, is that the entire operating system of the phone can run and render any sort of application
or any sort of service or product you might want to use on the fly in-screen. So the input to the
phone can be voiced, it can be visual, it can be video, and the output can be rendered by perhaps a bunch of what might otherwise be called apps, but call it
third party developers that build in-stream into that chat that's no longer looks like
a chat interface like we see on chat GPT, but can be rendered visually, can be rendered
with audio, can be rendered a bunch of different ways.
So if mobile really is the dominant hardware platform that humans are using for computing
today, LLMs and these sorts of tools can become the dominant operating system on that hardware,
and you can totally rethink the modality of how you use computing through applications
today.
We have an app store and we download apps and use them, and that all becomes in-stream
in an LLM or chat type interface that can be accessed in a bunch of different ways.
So for me, there's a really bigger thing that's happening that's not just about making
smarter tools and increasing productivity, but a real revolution in computing itself
that seems to be emergent.
And I think Carpati's tweaked this morning.
Some of the stuff I've been playing with, some of the papers I've been reading
and some of the speculation around a mobile hardware start to support that thesis.
And I think it's going to be really significant.
It's a wholesale rewriting of computing interfaces, human computer interaction.
That's going to rethink everything.
It seems to be pretty substantial.
Just using a bunch of tools myself, I'm blown away every single time.
What's what you can do?
Yeah, I mean, right now I would agree with you strongly agree because this was magic
lengths vision for the future, which is you would talk to agents as
they called them. This was a company that existed in the 90s before smartphones existed. It
was a physical device. Sony made the device. And the operating system, the concept was you
would say, I'm looking for a flight to go to this place. The agent would go out. It would
do a bunch of work and then come back to you with the options. So not just a Google search coming back with 10 blue links, but actually just solving your
problem.
And if the interface is from general magic, right?
General magic, right?
Yeah, right, right.
And there's a movie, general magic, the movie.
You can look at the Wikipedia company, but this was a lot of like the early work in this
area.
And I think this is going to become the interface and LMS talking to each other.
Then the question becomes, who owns this?
How many of these are there?
Are they verticalized?
So what do you think the game on the field is here, SAC?
Well, I think this is super interesting.
I don't know if this qualifies as a science corner,
but this is the most interesting science corner you got.
At a minimum, it's a nerd corner.
Yeah, it's a nerd corner.
I'm trying to find a science corner
into an intersecting realm so we can all be involved.
Yeah.
I don't know how we crowbar and Uranus joke into this, but let's keep our eyes wide open here.
Yeah.
Okay.
So on the phone, I think what's interesting there, just to boil it down, is you're talking
about replacing the main interface, which is currently a wall of apps, right?
Yep.
You push, you tap an app to go into the app,
and then you interact with it.
You're talking about replacing all of that
with basically voice.
So imagine a serial, yeah.
Or a visual, if you connect, like, glasses to it or something.
So that, the phone.
And rather than double-click on an app,
the app developers, as they're called today,
are basically building in-stream utilities
that are part of the chat interface that is the phone itself.
And that's what's going to be so compelling.
You have to re, like we used to write websites, then we wrote apps, and now we're going to write these kind of in-stream services, these plugins.
Alexa was going to do this, yeah.
Well, Alexa or Siri never got a time.
It kind of sucks. It just doesn't work that well.
It doesn't work.
But imagine if the phone perfectly understood
what you were saying, then you would just say call me an Uber, order me food, whatever.
And precisely you just instruct it. It would be, it's like in that movie, was it her?
Her, the Joaquin Phoenix movie. God, that should have been my background today. What am I
thinking? Do you've disappointed all the science, corner fans? It's a Spike Jones movie.
He did a really good job with that man. That movie's looking more and more like it's gonna happen.
We gotta do a rewatchable on that.
Yeah, we should rewatch it.
You won't even really need the pain of glass
if you can just talk to it within earpiece.
Now, I think you're right that the phone needs to know
what you're looking at.
Or it can do so much more if it has all those senses.
That's part of the multimodal demo
that that openly I showed this week is it has video and it has all those senses. That's part of the multimodal demo that I showed this week is it has video
and it has camera integration.
And remember in human computer interaction,
it's often a lot easier for a human to interact
with a visual representation of stuff on a screen
than to hear stuff in audio.
So we will still need some sort of visual display,
whether it's a screen or an
eyeglass or something that shows us a bunch of information in a way.
Sam apparently talking about the ecosystem he's trying to create. Sam apparently invested
in a company that was hardware plus software for like journaling, like you would hang,
like a necklace around your neck, a camera type device.
A wearable, wearable. Wearable, okay.
And it would record everything and it would be like your memory backup and you'd be able
to query it.
So.
That was William Gibson's plot line in one of his books where he had a little zeppelin
that would follow people around and record everything and then you'd have a DVR of your
entire life and that would be completely indexed and then you could, the AI would of your entire life and that would be completely indexed and then you could
The AI would know your entire life and be able to advise you. I do you guys use the feature on your
AirPods where if you leave them in it will read you the messages from your signal or your incoming notifications where it reads them to you
Obviously, you don't so there's a new feature on the in the air pod you leave them in and if you're if you're working, you're walking around the house, you're walking around Manhattan like I am
these last couple of days, it will stop the podcast
I'm listening to and just say, you know,
oh, poker group says this, oh, you know,
your wife just texted you this and it reads it to you.
And then you can say reply.
So eventually if Siri works and then you have those
Apple goggles on, I think that that is gonna be the eventual interface,
which is you'll hear certain things,
you'll see certain things.
Some things will be better visually, other things will be better.
Didn't Facebook announce a new pair of glasses today?
The, yeah, those are like their spectacle kind of things.
These are the light AR glasses where you could take pictures.
Just meant to say everything's converging a lot faster
than we all know.
Yeah, it is.
So I started using a new note taking app called Reflect.
If you guys heard of this, it's reflecting on things.
Whoa, this progress.
Tell us where.
I'm just starting to play with it.
But what it does is you keep like a daily log of who you've met with and what
meetings we're about. So it's basically a note taking app, but it does back links.
So that it starts to link together the people and concepts or whatever. And so like the use case that I think it's
quite useful for once you've been using it for a while is, okay, I mean with this person,
when's the last time I saw them, what do we talk about then? So it gives you like context,
right? Yeah. Yeah. That's awesome. I really like it. It's an external memory, right?
Because like I can't, I'm like like I'm still used with so much stuff now
I can't even I forget people's names sometimes if I've only met them once or twice. So his name is
Fridler David.
But not you guys, but
No, it's also getting old your
I mean, it's a function of how much input is coming at you. There's just so much coming at us today
Right, but just but just having a short log of who I've met with and briefly what the meeting was about.
So I can go back and check it and at some point in the future I've searched against it.
But the only problem with it is I do have to like take the time to enter all this stuff and it's kind of pain.
It will automatically.
It will automatically.
It will be a true external hard drive to my brain.
Then that would be very powerful.
It will authenticate with slack and Gmail and do that automatically, and then it'll be
the world.
It already connects with Google.
I don't want my Slack in my reflect.
What I want is my meetings, which they do.
They integrate with Google Calendar.
Great.
And really, that's it.
The main thing I want is, if I could just know everyone I talk to, and I don't need
a transcript, I just need the log line
Just so I can remember I just need the prompt six months from now
I just need a prompt that I met with this person and here is the topic. That's it. Sacks. Have you gone to the have you built
Clinton eyes your greetings now?
It's great to see you. That's the great. That's the great thing like it's great to see you so that you know you preserve
Optionality for the people you have.
You're the same thing.
The same thing.
It's great to see you.
We've never met, but I get great to see.
I get to see you.
I always say it's great to see you.
It's such a bang up that it's such a banger.
I'm high.
When I met Clinton, I was at a Hillary Clinton fundraiser
when she was a senator here in New York.
And they sent you up an elevator to this fundraiser and you get off the elevator and Bill Clinton
standing there.
And he walks up to me like three steps.
Oh, J.K.
It's great to see you and he grabs your elbow.
He shakes.
I am so happy for what you did to help Hillary win.
And you know, Jason, we're so appreciative.
And then you walk into the room.
And I'm like, oh my God, Bill Clinton knows my name totally.
Then I look behind me and I see the next person.
I see a woman come out with a clipboard.
Whispering is here.
Then next person's name coming out of the elevator.
He's waiting.
That person disappears.
Oh, David Sacks.
It's so great to meet you.
I really appreciate everything you've done for Hillary.
You know, that role of whispering the name of a person in the
Politicians ear goes all the way back to Roman times.
It was called the Nomenclatura.
The Nomenclatura.
Nomen is the Latin word for name.
It's a...
I call it a name, man.
Exactly.
I'm in question.
How often do you think about the Roman Empire?
Just broadly speaking, how's it going to be that is reference? I thought that was... I don't know. Yeah, it, amazing question. How often do you even think about the Roman Empire? Just probably speaking.
How's it been?
Is that a gratuitous reference?
I thought that was.
Yeah, that's pretty great.
It's pretty great.
I'm just glad that the rest of the world
is catching up to our obsession with Gladiator.
Or listen, this has been an amazing episode
for the dictator himself, Chimoff, Polly Hoppeteer.
And Rainman, yeah, definitely Burn Baby, David Sacks,
and the Sultan of Science, the Queen
of Kinwa, the Prince of Panic attacks, and the heir to the Ted Throne, the creator of
the world's greatest conference, David Freiburg.
I am the world's greatest moderate, we'll see you next time.
Love you boys.
All in.
Bye bye.
Love you.
Ted's dead.
Ted's dead baby.
Ted's Dad. Ted's Dad. Ted's Dad, baby.
Ted's Dad, baby.
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?
Besties are gone!
Oh, I'm going thrift!
That's my dog taking a wish and you're driving away!
So, wait a minute!
Oh, man, my ham and the actual meat, the apple and the chicken.
We should all just get a room and just have one big hug, George, because they're all just
just like this sexual tension that we they just need to release them out.
I'm doing all the...