All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E152: Real estate chaos, WeWork bankruptcy, Biden regulates AI, Ukraine's “Cronkite Moment” & more
Episode Date: November 3, 2023(0:00) Bestie intros, All-In CEO talk, and Chamath's research product (10:49) Ukraine has its “Cronkite Moment” (16:56) Market outlook: are we in for a Q4 rally? (22:05) CRE chaos: SF's firesales,... understanding the second-order effects from CRE debtholders (41:38) WeWork will reportedly file for bankruptcy as soon as next week, Sacks makes the case for a turnaround (46:42) Biden's Executive Order on AI: end game, regulatory capture, confusion over clarity as a strategy (1:08:07) Silicon Valley's shift right Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://twitter.com/Jason https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow the pod: https://twitter.com/theallinpod https://linktr.ee/allinpodcast Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://twitter.com/yung_spielburg Intro Video Credit: https://twitter.com/TheZachEffect Referenced in the show: https://twitter.com/chamath/status/1718722437217685810 https://twitter.com/ShaanVP/status/1719461817699733831 https://twitter.com/chamath/status/1719887650688282786 https://sacks.substack.com https://responsiblestatecraft.org/zelensky-war-time-magazine https://twitter.com/davidsacks/status/1719815317000733153 https://time.com/6329188/ukraine-volodymyr-zelensky-interview https://time.com/person-of-the-year-2022-volodymyr-zelensky https://twitter.com/RothCRE/status/1719833548780195882 https://twitter.com/real_bill_gross/status/1720094066183139359 https://twitter.com/real_bill_gross/status/1719010907806904452 https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2023/10/27/fact-sheet-biden-harris-administration-takes-action-to-create-more-affordable-housing-by-convertingcommercial-properties-to-residential-use https://www.kqed.org/news/11957640/budget-deep-dive-san-francisco https://www.wsj.com/articles/wework-plans-to-file-for-bankruptcy-as-early-as-next-week-1fdcb6a5 https://s23.q4cdn.com/100276410/files/doc_financials/2023/q2/WeWork-2023-Q2-Press-Release-FINAL.pdf https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/presidential-actions/2023/10/30/executive-order-on-the-safe-secure-and-trustworthy-development-and-use-of-artificial-intelligence https://hardcoresoftware.learningbyshipping.com/p/211-regulating-ai-by-executive-order https://variety.com/2023/film/news/joe-biden-worried-ai-mission-impossible-dead-reckoning-1235775115 https://ai.meta.com/llama https://chamath.substack.com/p/the-case-for-big-action-to-regulate https://twitter.com/ImMeme0/status/1713413678765126062 https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1259638112688304129 https://twitter.com/chamath/status/1720112859198419191
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey everybody, welcome to another episode of The All in Pod.
The notorious threesome is here during the show.
So today, threesome.
Thrupple.
It's a thrupple.
It's a thrupple.
We have a thrupple.
I think it's more like a cuddle pile.
OK, the dictator, Chimouth Polyapetia,
Rainman David Sachs, Sultan of Science, Dave Friedberg.
Happy to be here with you guys today.
We are absent, Jake HalCal, taking the week off.
Any other housekeeping?
Let's do it. Let's jump into it.
Well, you announced that we're gonna hire a CEO, right?
Oh, let's talk about that. How's it going?
Friedberg in our CEO search?
Okay, I got to admit, I've had a few conversations,
but I got to get through the list.
There are 240 applicants so far.
Wow.
And there's some really like great people in there.
So we need to figure out how we're going to manage this.
But I think we're pretty excited.
I can't believe so many people want to work for us.
That's insane.
There's some really great folks.
I think the Chimac, you posted it and people were pretty positive, right?
Generally positive.
Not at all.
But it was really, it was really positive. Yeah. I mean, I think and people were pretty positive, right? Generally positive, not everyone. Yeah, it was really positive.
Yeah, I mean, I think that people were very excited
about the fact that we were gonna try to kind of like
professionalize this a little bit more.
So let's just talk about that.
We did the all-in summit in September.
We thought it went really well.
Folks really enjoyed it.
The survey data, the folks that attended,
was really positive.
So we wanna do that and do more of that live in-person stuff.
We all have full-time jobs and other things to do.
So we need someone to come and run this as a business
and organize it and carry it forward a little bit for us.
And so we're really excited to hopefully get someone
that can scale this.
No ads ever,
no subscription fees, nothing's going to change about the pod.
So to media and events business and it might become a CPG business as well, meaning
was a CPG's consumer package goods? That's right, tags. You are. That is the correct use of
the acronym, David. Congratulations. Your first product would be what, Tequila?
I would do like a tequila or like a hard sell
to serve something like that.
That seems to be a big growth category.
Or we could figure out something very orthogonal.
I mean, Mr. Beast did candy bars and we found out
that the all in summit that he's doing
something like 250 million a year in revenue,
growing very fast.
Yeah, we could do sax nuts.
The sax nuts would be too big to eat.
You wouldn't go that fit him in your mouth.
Come on.
They just be old and salty.
Yeah. We open source into the fans and they've just got very easy.
I'll be best.
I'll be best.
I'll be best.
I'll be best.
Well, I think the other thing that's worth figuring out is this idea of like, what is
the community really look like?
I think that's the biggest.
That's the biggest upside for the CEO is like, is it physical places like zero bond,
or is it virtual sort of like community oriented things?
Is it some combination of the two?
I'm really interested in trying to figure that out
and what answer they come up with.
Then the other thing that I would really like to experiment
with quite honestly is if we could do a little bit of a tour,
I just think it would be super fun
to kind of go to like five or 10 cities
and just kind of like crash those places
and have like a big get together and talk to people
and do a big Q&A.
I think the thing that is really fun
is just the interactive Q&A
just because it allows everybody to get involved
and then to be able to do dinners with each other
and like there's just a really amazing community.
So that person should be able to figure this out.
I don't know the answer to it, but I'm hoping they figured that out.
We should give a shout out to the guy who did the interview video
or submitted.
Do you see that?
It was like a four minute video that
so I submitted his application by video on X.
I think I was on his podcast, Sean.
He were? I was on his podcast Sean. They were.
I was on his podcast like a year and a half ago I think.
Can we pull it up?
Welcome, welcome to my five minute job application
to become CEO of the All In podcast.
This is the American dream baby.
That's great.
Well, he posted a tweet the day before saying
if it gets a thousand likes, he'll submit an application
and instantly got a thousand likes
and then he put that video together.
So great job, Sean.
I will be calling you later for your second round interview.
I think you're well qualified after that submission.
But I do remember like at the all in summit, I've never been to a conference where I'd say like
95% of the audience was actually in the theater for the entire content session.
Like they really sat through it. They was really engaging. So I think that's the sort of
product that I'd love to bring out more, which is somebody's important conversations with people
that can provide a perspective that folks might not be getting elsewhere.
Chim off, you also mentioned on Twitter that you're doing more content,
like you're, you called it learn with me. What is that?
Yeah, I mean, well, I've been doing this for a while,
but I just wanted to wrap it up and kind of make it into a clean,
kind of productized service. So, you know, I have this newsletter
that I've been using weekly to just kind of share everything that I read.
But then I thought, okay, what I actually like really invest just a little bit of time
every week to curate that even a little bit more and then write little summaries of probably
the three most important news topics of the week.
And I just kind of give an insight into my process.
So when I read all of this stuff, usually two to three times a month, but the average is
around twice a month, I end up writing an essay.
And it's like one or two pages really quick.
And I just keep them for myself.
And it's like, right now, I'm just, I just finished one.
What is the Federal Reserve?
And the reason I did that was because Druck and Miller was on TV and he was talking about
all this stuff.
And I just wanted to remind myself about why the Federal Reserve
exists the way it does. But basically what happens is from these quick essays and from
what I read, I typically start every month a deep dive where my team and I, we probably
allocate at least a month to a month and a half where we figure out something in really
excruciating detail and we generate a slide deck in a write-up.
And then we take that and we go and we ask a bunch of experts what they think and then we only keep it within ourselves.
But then I thought, you know what, why don't we just start sharing it?
So the reason I'm doing this is really to keep myself accountable to keep learning.
Because I feel like in the last few years the thing that I lost
Most when things were going crazy was just the incentive to learn and I thought if there are other people around me that are
Also relying on this I'll be more accountable and obviously
To the extent that this thing can actually be self-funding
Then I can take some of that revenue reinvested in more research associates, maybe publish more content.
But it's kind of like all the information I wish I had so that I could make better decisions.
I'm just going to kind of take what I have, share with everybody, and kind of go from there.
So we'll see. So you're charging for the kind of higher and part of it. At the end of it,
it's a kind of like, I would say most of it is free. The Twitter space is obviously is not
because the point of these or these X spaces is,
we just don't want to bunch of bots and trolls,
but there's a bunch of people
that signed up to be a subscriber.
So we'll do Q&A's monthly for subscribers.
And then once a month I'll publish a deck.
And like I said, if you want the full one,
then you can be part of like a paying community,
otherwise you'll get some portion of it for free.
And then you'll have cash to reinvest in doing more content.
If that's the idea.
Right now I have a couple of research assistants that really help me and we have a pool of
experts that we use, but a fisting picks up some steam and we can have, you know, for
having you to hire three or four more RAs, maybe at some point, instead of monthly,
we can go by weekly.
I don't know, but the idea is just to focus on sort of what I think is interesting, so
that I can have a general view of things so that I can make better decisions.
And like I said, to the extent people are interested now, they can follow along at any level.
There you have it.
So people can go to your Twitter to see it, right?
Yeah.
Okay.
By the way, the other thing is it's kind of cool to be in this like content creator economy.
You know, that's the other thing is like, I don't know about you guys,
but I feel like I'm on the sidelines looking in at trends now, whereas before I was in the
middle of them, like Web 2.0, social, I was right in the heart of it. And I was like, okay,
this is amazing. And then as an investor in SaaS and deep tech, I was kind of in the
middle of those as well. That felt great. But this last push in AI, I'm and DeepTech, I was kind of in the middle of those as well.
That felt great.
But this last push in AI, I'm like, wow, I'm really on the sidelines looking in or this
content creator stuff.
So I think it's a good forcing function for me to kind of learn as well.
To be active in the content creator economy basically, to understand about it.
Yeah, I don't know how I'll sell ever learn how to, because I could read all the stuff I want
just so you know you do a podcast that a lot of people listen to.
Yeah, but I think that that's like a, it's the lowest order bit, quite honestly.
You know, when you see you like what Jimmy Donaldson does, or even like Kim Kardashian, what
they do as content creators, it's just an intense process
that then creates all the subsides.
So even if I want to have a more informed view of where all in needs to go, I want to
be a little bit more on the ground and actually in the engine room doing it for myself.
Yeah, since we started doing the pod, Sachs has been creating a ton of content too.
I mean, Sachs, you wrote a piece this week, didn't you, on Ukraine, or like the time article in Ukraine, didn't you?
Yeah. Yeah. Like you weren't doing a lot of content before we started doing the pod, right?
No, he was. He was writing a lot of blog posts on SaaS. Those are excellent. He had like
an occasional blog post, but he's like super active now, particularly on Twitter now.
Like, is that changed a lot?
Well, what basically happened is I would express political views on the pod,
you know, on a weekly basis.
Yeah, I wasn't really tweeting much about politics, but then it all kind of led together. I mean, once you start talking politics on a pop, people were
clipping it. They were putting it on Twitter.
And then I have to respond to it, maybe correct.
Yeah.
Misinterpretations or respond to attacks or whatever.
So all the politics and business stuff
just kind of led together on Twitter.
It'd be nice if I just had two accounts
and people could just follow me for what they wanted to follow.
My sub-stack is just business,
and then I'll occasionally write an op-ed
on the political stuff.
So I've written a few on free speech, and then I've written a few on Ukraine.
And so I wrote a piece for a responsible statecraft this week on Ukraine, which was based
on a time magazine story that came out.
And then I did a version of it on X, kind of a long post, which I called the Ukraine
Wars Cronkite Moment, which the Kronkite moment in the
Vietnam War was that Walter Kronkite, who is the top newscaster, America's most trusted
man in the 1960s, he went on a fact-finding mission for himself to Vietnam and he came
back and he said the war is basically unwinnable.
And that's when the public sentiment really turned
against the Vietnam War.
It still took us five years to get out of it.
But what Cronkite said, there's a great quote from Cronkite,
which I've included at the end,
where Cronkite says it is increasing clear to this reporter
that the only rational way out will be to negotiate,
not as victors, but as honorable people who lived up
their pledge to defend democracy and did the best they could.
So that's basically what happened in 1968.
What happened this week is that Time Magazine wrote a cover story on Zelensky, where the
main sources for the story were all of Zelensky's aides and advisors.
And what they told the time reporter was effectively this war is unwindable.
And moreover, Zelensky is delusional. That was a
word they used. Delusional in not confronting the battlefield realities that the Ukrainian army had
been decimated and delusional in the sense that he refuses to engage in peace negotiations with
the Russians. He's utterly unmovable on this idea that Ukraine's going to
somehow prevail. And the troops in the field are basically saying that they cannot follow
the orders they're being given. They literally, they can't advance or being ordered to advance.
And the officers in the field, the frontline commanders are rejecting the orders because
they've been decimated so badly and they, they consider the orders to be impossible.
So I consider this to be the Cronkite moment of the war when Zelensky's own inner circle
is saying that the war is lost.
And the only question is when are we going to realize that and start negotiating?
Are we going to continue until the very end here with Zelensky in this psychological bunker that he's created. Or are we
going to recognize reality the way that Kronkite urged the nation to in 1968?
Do you think these AIDS to Zelensky proactively reached out to the
journalists to try and get this story published? How does a story like this
come about that provides this kind of revealing inside on the supposedly
inner chamber in the Linsky's operations that can shed so much light on the challenges and with him and with the operation?
I think it's a really interesting question. And I think the starting point for understanding that is that this writer Simon Schuster, a time magazine, wrote the in-depth profile of Zelensky for
Times Person of the Year at the end of 2022. So this reporter cannot be accused of unfavorable
coverage. This is the person that profiles Zelensky as person of the year. Yes, yes, exactly.
So they, so they, so through that, he probably had contacts in Zelensky's inner circle and doing
his preparatory work for that article.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
And maintain those relationships and has a back channel now to be able to get this sort
of insight.
Well, he was physically there.
I mean, I think he was physically there to write the person that you're profiling.
He was physically there.
So this isn't some like weirdly planted.
This is like a legit source.
Well, this reporter is, and Time Magazine obviously
is mainstream media, and this writer has given
favorable cover to Zalinski in the past.
And I believe that's what led to him having this kind
of access to Zalinski's inner circle.
Okay.
So you have to take all of that into account.
The key question, SACCIS, does this change anything?
So does this article change the sentiment of political leaders in the US, or is nothing
really different that we still need to defeat Putin, continue to feed the war machine, continue
to support the effort against Putin, or does this start to beg the question, hey, maybe
we need to look at this tactically and make a change.
Is anything actually going to change from, and do you have any reason to think that?
In a certain sense, this article isn't saying anything that's new.
I mean, the article basically says the same things that I've been saying,
the same things, the same kinds of things that Professor Mirashheimer's been saying,
Professor Jeffrey Sachs,
that all the critics of this war have been saying these things for a number of months,
which is the Russians are winning.
There is no feasible way for the Ukrainians to evict the Russians from their territory.
We are out of artillery and other types of ammunition to give them.
Effectively, the war is unwinnable and we should negotiate.
So a lot of people have been saying that for a long time, but what's different now is
that if you believe this publication and this writer, which I do, because of his access,
it's the Linsky's own inner circle are now saying those same things.
So in other words, the so-called Putin talking points that were always accused of are coming
from inside the house.
And to me, that's what makes this a crime kind moment.
Now, will policymakers in Washington change their tune or change their perspective on this?
Probably not.
The uniparty of both Republicans
and Democrats, there still seems to be a majority who want to fund another 61 billion
for Ukraine.
So, is this penetrating the blob?
I don't think so.
I mean, but again, think about Walter Cronkite in 1968.
The country basically came around to his point of view after that, but it still took five
years to get out of the Vietnam War.
So I think that this week was a watershed in terms of the way that public perception
is going to evolve over the next few months, but it seems like the policymakers in Washington
are the last ones to get them out.
Well, let's see what happens.
I mean, I've shared my point of view for a couple of years now. I think the US is in a call it subconscious
conflict escalatory state that
would continue to drive us into these sorts of it's great for market conflict. Seems to be
great for markets. Conflict is great for markets. You're saying? No, no, no, the fact that it seems like
there's a terminal outcome and all we're debating
is whether Zalensky sees it is actually very reassuring for the market.
Oh, you think the market's recognizing that there may be an end to the Ukraine conflict?
Well, I do think I do think in part I don't think it explains why it's up necessarily
today.
I think that's more because I think I mentioned this before, but the end of the fiscal year from mutual
funds was October 31st. And so there was a lot of selling going into October 31, just
to capitalize tax losses and tax lost harvest. But that leaves them with a lot of cash. And
so starting November 1st, which is day one of the new fiscal year, mutual funds are not
allowed to really
own cash. That's not why you pay them. And so they're going to be active buyers. So that's why
in the short term, the market is up. But if you think about the overhang of risk that we've had,
right, you had one forever war. And now the beginning of what potentially could be another forever
war, that's definitely a dampener on market demand, right?
And sentiment and investor confidence.
But if a story like this is true,
it actually takes one of those big risks off the table,
which is this idea that now it's like every other kind
of a thing, which is the reason we spend money there
is not to win something that's winnable, it's just graph.
It's just typical corruption.
The article says that, what are Ukrainian officials saying that people are stealing
like there's no tomorrow?
Right.
Right.
So that, that the US unfortunately enables in many places.
That's not new.
And so to the extent that that's now more of the status quo, that's reassuring for investors because we're not talking about a war, we're just talking about bleeding more money,
which I'm not saying is right, but it's morally more acceptable than the alternative. So there you
have it. It's generally good for markets. Now, that leaves, I think, Israel Gaza has a risk.
Israel Gaza has a risk. And I think people, and I think the market still view that as a potential war.
And the longer that goes on, I think that there's a very good chance that we de-risk that
as well, as again, not a war, but part of that cycle between Israel and Palestine, which
is conflict, timeout, conflict, timeout, conflict,
timeout, conflict, timeout.
And so if what we think is now, this is just the version of conflict, timeout, and the
market derisks that, then it's actually pretty positive for equities, for startups, because
now the Fed has a reason to actually say, okay, the economy is cooled
off, inflation is calm.
It looks like the markets are stable.
Let's cut rates, right?
Let's reintroduce some demand into the market.
It's generally a good thing.
And if there's no reason to be risked off, people will use that as a reason to be risk
on.
Yeah. Well, treasure yields, the 30-year crack is. reason to be risk off, people will use that as a reason to be risk on.
Yeah. Well, treasure yields the 30 year crack is, yeah, it's down a cracked 14 bits, two days, 40 bits in like two or three days. Yeah.
So, yeah, you think this is because the forecast with the outlook for Q4 or Q1 next year,
it's starting to go down quite a bit.
The people are starting to see more recessionary indicators.
So you have this peak 4.9% growth rate,
and then inflation seems to be tame quite a bit too.
I think to be honest, the look through on Q1
looks also pretty good, and Q4 looks healthy as well.
So for example, Shopify, their read through on GDP
was actually pretty healthy.
Harley was on, I think it was CNBC.
I saw this morning basically saying he thinks consumer spending is still strong and it's
still there.
So I think in terms of just like economic strength, I think it's pretty decent actually.
I think what changed for the market was the feds rhetoric.
And I think that they were holding on to this option that they were going to show up
out of nowhere with another 25 or 50 basis point increase.
And I think that that's fundamentally now off the table.
And I think that that's really heartening for the market.
That's good for the market.
Brostock's a ripping.
A firm, a real tier up 20% today.
Ripping.
Ripping.
Ripping.
Open door.
Ripping.
Door dash. Ripping, all these companies are up
20 and 25 and 30 percent.
It's crazy.
Yeah.
So are we calling bottom sex?
Well, maybe.
I mean, I don't know.
It's so hard to predict the markets.
But if you believe that there's more upside to rates than downside, meaning that the odds
of a rate decrease are much greater than the odds of a rate increase from here,
then there is upside to valuations, particularly for growth stocks, also for distressed real estate,
because all these things get more valuable when rates are lower. So if you believe that we're going to be in a cycle of rate decreases,
and that whole thing has played its way out, then everything's gonna rally. Well, let's talk about real estate because I think that's one of the biggest overhangs right now
that hasn't fully been accounted for. There's, you know, $3 trillion of commercial real estate
loans sitting out on commercial banks balance sheets in the U.S. today, $3 trillion, then same number.
on commercial banks balance sheets in the U.S. today, three trillions, and then same number.
And we were all talking over text the other days, you guys know about this building that's being shopped and got some attention on Twitter. I think it's 115 SanSum. You guys know this building.
I've lived in San Francisco for 20, how long have I lived there? 20 some odd years now. So I know
this building. And it's 125,000 square foot building that's
going to likely be fully vacant and call it two to three years. So the guy puts it up
for sale, the equity owner. He puts the building up for sale and he's basically like running
an auction on it. And the brokers are all saying, hey, it's currently at $199 square foot
which translates to $25 million.
It'll probably get done at $300.2, which is about $38 million for the building.
The problem is, if you look at the debt on the building, there's 53 million of debt
the B of A owns that note.
So Bank of America in 2016 issued a $54 million note on this building.
If this deal closes at $39 million, the equity
owner who's running this auction to sell the building makes $0.
All that happens is that money pays down the debt, and the debt only gets $0.70 on the
dollar, and B of A has to take a write down on the rest.
So there is a rumor that in this particular case, what's happening is the equity owner
of the building is putting it up for auction to show the bank, hey, this thing's only worth
$0.70 on the dollar for you on your debt, you should restructure my debt.
So apparently, there have been a lot of building owners that have been going to their banks
and saying, hey, I want to restructure my note.
I want to have longer payment terms.
I want to keep the rates lower for longer.
I want to have some of the debt forgiven. Anything they can do to get the cost of the debt down because the overhang of the debt on all these buildings is so significant
These buildings cannot make money and the owners will never make money so they're like why am I even wasting my time?
So they have one option which is to hand the keys back to the bank and say here you go you option it and sell it good luck
And the other option is to go to the bank and say, hey, restructure my debt. Let's figure out a deal. Here's the problem. The $3 trillion
of debt that we just mentioned that sitting on all the bank's balance sheets is all being
held at par. They're not discounting it at all and they're not marking it as being impaired
in any way. So as soon as they have to start writing the stuff down, the bank's balance
sheets all get impaired. And so there's a real risk in the market that I don't think
has been fully accounted for that we're starting to see the cracks. And so there's a real risk in the market that I don't think's been fully accounted for
that we're starting to see the cracks.
And to Chimauk's point, this might accelerate either
Fed action, or as I've mentioned in the past,
I think the federal government steps in
and starts to issue programs to support
commercial real estate developers and owners.
Sacks, I know you've been following this quite a bit.
You know, maybe you could share your point of view
and if I'm off on this in terms of how significant of a problem this is, I know you've been following this quite a bit, you know, maybe you could share your point of view And if I'm off on this in terms of how significant of a problem
This is how you know how much of the three trillion of debt really isn't paired and by how much should it be impaired do we think?
Massively, I think it's a huge problem if you talk to anybody any of these commercial real estate
Developers, responsors, they'll tell you many of them are just kind of hanging on by their fingernails
I mean, it's really ugly.
And you know how distressed things are when you actually look at some of these sales,
that same account on Twitter that you posted, he's got a tweet storm here showing about half
a dozen of these sales that have happened in the last few months.
And buildings are now selling for $200- $300 a square foot in San Francisco.
These are buildings that could have sold for a thousand bucks a foot a couple of years
ago.
Now they're selling for $200 to $300.
The replacement cost, if you're trying to recreate these buildings from scratch, given
how expensive it is to build in San Francisco and how complicated the entitlement process
is, probably be $12 1200 plus a foot. So these buildings are selling for 10 to 20% of their replacement cost.
These are fire sales.
If you look at the loans in the San Francisco commercial real estate market, do you think
that the loan value is probably impaired by 40% because that's roughly what it would
say on that 115 San son building is BFA would probably have to take a 30, 40% mark
down on their debt. Do you think that's the right way to think about the number of 30 to 40% of debts?
Potentially. You could figure it out this way. It's a typical commercial real estate deal is about
one third equity and two thirds debt. So somebody bought a building at call at $1,000 a foot.
They would have had to have put in call it $333 of equity, $666 of debt. Now, if that building is only worth, I don't know, $200, 250 a foot, there's $750 of loss per
foot, right?
And only $333, roughly half of it is equity.
So the debt is taking a huge haircut there, too.
Yeah, debt's about 40%, 50%.
Right?
Yeah, and no one wants to recognize that loss.
The equity holders
certainly don't because they get wiped out. And even the banks are reluctant to recognize that loss
because who knows what that could trigger when their balance sheets are so impaired. So,
what are these people going to come from, Saks? Where they were like, this is my, this is my big
problem with this argument is I, I think that numerically you're right
that there is this bottoming
or there is just like a lot of value to be had, right?
The problem is, and I'll give you an example
of a company that I own.
So it's not even a company
that I'm just a minority investor in.
We used to be in San Francisco
and we went virtual.
Now, all the salaries are packed to San Francisco salaries, but now everybody's sort of like
everywhere throughout the country. We don't have an office space and I'm really struggling
trying to figure out how to actually bring everybody together. And my choices were I thought,
okay, well let me find what it would cost to actually run this place in San Francisco.
What it would cost to actually run this place in San Francisco and my my op-ex would have gone up 15 20% just for the building
So then I'm like, okay, well where else can I go and it's like well I could go to a
Place like Las Vegas and I could put the people there
It's an hour so it's close by we can fly there whenever we need to
It's got no tax. So maybe that's an advantage for the employees.
And so I'm in this constant hamster wheel as an owner of a business.
I can't get people into the office. If I do bring them into the office, it's super expensive and it blots my op-ex.
So I'm just trying to figure out how does that get resolved for people like me so that we
want to go back to San Francisco and rent those buildings that are so cheap.
Those buildings are going to have to get written down first.
So I set up my company in 2006 and I was paying $22 a square foot for my first office in 2006.
And then we ended up getting a really nice office and I think we ended up paying like $35 to $40 a square foot
by the time we moved to a super nice office around $20.
But around that time, which was also when GFC happened,
the global financial crisis in 0809,
and that's when rates dropped to zero.
And that's also when all startups and tech companies said,
hey, let's start setting up in San Francisco.
Because it's mostly young people that are engineers now.
They mostly want to live in the city.
They mostly want to be single and have a good life here,
rather than go live in suburban Silicon Valley.
And so real estate shot up because rates were zero.
All the tech companies were setting up.
I mean, sex, you had Yammer in San Francisco, didn't you?
Were you in the Hansella?
Yeah.
And that was like the place to have your company was in the city.
And so I would argue, like if you go back to the 0809 era, that's really when San Francisco
started to take off.
And it was almost like a bit of an outlier of a bubble that started all the way back then.
And then, you know, the Zurping environment kept things moving up and up and up over
the years that followed.
I do think that this like this market will likely normalize back to pre 2010, pre 09.
And that's when rates were like in the 25 to 35 bucks a square foot range for, you know,
that's great.
But are you saying that I will move back to that building
and I'll move my company back there.
When it gets reprised, yes, I do think so.
Are you sure?
I don't see how the market stays where it is, yeah.
Thomas argument is basically on the demand side.
Basically saying where is all this demand gonna come from.
I think you could give it to me for zero
and I wouldn't bring my team back there.
I'm just asking like again, the math all makes sense
on a spreadsheet, but the big issue is,
as an owner of a company,
why would I ever bring my team back to that place
and I'm struggling even at like,
oh you mean because it's an nasty city,
because it's all messed up, the city has that general.
First of all, if you're asking me to blow up my op-x 10, 20%,
the answer is absolutely not, well I do that.
Then if you're saying, well, Chimath, how about a zero? Let the answer is absolutely not, well, I do that.
Then if you're saying, well, Chimalt, how about a zero?
Let's just go to zero, right?
It's free.
Take the building.
I still wouldn't do it because then these people
have to move from all around the country,
come back here and all of a sudden just live
in a slimy dungeon.
So how does that get solved?
So that building should be zero.
Zach, you own buildings in San Francisco.
What's your answer as a landlord?
Yeah, I only own buildings in Jackson Square, which is like the one decent part remaining
of San Francisco, which is where actually where people want to be. And we've seen pretty
good leasing activity there because it's, yeah, as people get driven out of Market Street
and out of Soma, they actually, they substitute to Jackson Square. Look, I think Jamoth makes
a good point, which is the demand picture for San Francisco is really unclear. There's something like, call it 30% vacancy.
So there's an enormous number of these zombie buildings, and it's really hard to understand
where the demand is going to come back to fill them. Now, the counter argument to that is,
yeah, but it's so cheap. I mean, these buildings are so cheap, they're basically selling for almost land value.
That's Jamass point, it's like it goes to zero.
Yeah.
So if there's a recovery, then it's very symmetric, right?
I mean, you could get three or four X upside
of your money very, very quickly.
Rates come down over the next couple of years,
you could refile your equity out.
So that's the counter argument is, yeah,
we're not exactly sure where the
demands come from. But if you are willing to have a long-term outlook like five or ten years,
then there's a pretty good chance that I'll come back somehow. I think one of the things that
has to happen in order to foster that demand is for there to be some fundamental changes
in the politics of the city. And the question is, how does that happen? And I think one of the ways it could happen
is the city starts facing huge budget shortfalls,
which are coming.
There's gonna be a huge budget shortfall
over the next year and next couple of years,
because there's no activity.
I mean, a third of the economic activity
of the city is just dried up.
And what about the rest of the country?
So, Tommy, like, if this is what's happening in San Francisco,
what's happening in Boston, Dallas, New York City?
Well, I don't think those areas are as impaired.
They don't have the vacancy rates that San Francisco does.
I mean, so if you look at the current market as 30%.
So just coming back to my prior question, if you were to see him,
San Francisco commercial real estate debt is impaired on the order of 30%.
What do you think the debt load for the, for all commercial real estate
around the country is impaired? Is it 10%, 15%, 20%, I don't know. I mean, I think that you probably,
for San Francisco, I'd say probably half the debt should be written off. I don't know what it is for
the rest of the country. There's already half a dozen of these buildings that have traded in the
range that we're talking about and there'll be about 20 more that are coming to market that'll trade
in the next year.
It's going to be fire sale after fire sale.
You have to clear out all of this bad equity, and then you've got to clear out all of this
bad debt, and then the market can reset itself.
So, let's just...
So, let's just...
Let's just...
Let's just...
Let's just...
Let's just...
Let's just... Let's just... Let's just... Let's just... that has asked the, you know, 64,000 more question here, which is, when will the
demand come back and what will it consist of? And that is the leap of faith here
that you have to make. Just to finish the point I was making, the city, the
politicians are going to be under extraordinary stress because there's not
going to be any budget. So what are they going to do? Are they going to lay
off? Have the city employees reform pensions and salaries, or are they going
to start to realize that all of their crazy transfer taxes, all of their crazy regulations
and entitlements, these be stripped away to start fostering real activity in the city?
Are they going to start investing in police again?
Are they going to start cleaning up the city?
Are they going to act as a partner to business?
I mean, that's where the incentives are going to be, is for them to start acting like
a partner again.
And again, that's a huge leap of faith given how crazy left winged the politics of the central
square been, but they may not have a choice because it's going to come down to do we fire half the government employees,
or do we start working with business instead of driving them out of the city?
I don't want to get too caught up in San Francisco politics and and san francisco as a region. I think we've hashed that one out. But the bigger question is if there's
this impairment on three trillion dollars of commercial real estate debt across the country
who eats the loss? So who owns all the equity in these buildings? And where does that ultimately
flow through to? What are the second order effects? And who owns the debt? And where does that all flow
through to? We know the debt sits on the commercial banks. Do the bank stocks get beat up?
The market's been cognizant of this. Folks have been shorting and selling regional bank stocks.
And then Bill Gross, the well-known bond trader, used to run Pimco, came out this week and said,
hey, I've been cracking all these regional bank stocks. They're down so much. It's insane. They're
trading at a huge
discount to book. I'm going to start buying. And then this morning he put out a tweet saying,
I'm buying these stocks. And he listed the names of the bank stocks. He's like the bottom's been
hit. Do you buy that? I mean, as this already been priced into the market, that this debt's going
to be written off at some point and all these balance sheets are impaired because these banks are
trading at a big discount to book. So book value is a term that you need to put in quotes.
So my question would be, what are the rules around the real mark to market?
Because I think that when we talked about the banking crisis,
the biggest problem was these guys were playing fast and loose with valuations.
And so are these things actually valued to market?
And do they have to?
They're not. Yeah, no, that's the point.
That's why they're trying to avoid these sort of transactions.
These book values are legitimate.
Yeah, and that's why they're trading at a discount.
But Bill Gross is now saying they're trading
at such a discount to whatever the accounting is
that they're like, now well,
they love the fair value.
Yeah, that's the argument for our service
to get real estate.
I'm sorry, at least for these fire sales that are happening.
Yeah.
Well, Zach, let me ask you one more question.
So I mentioned the Biden program, Biden announced this program,
which is effectively $45 billion in federal money to convert commercial buildings
into condos and residential buildings.
He basically relies on a 1998 transportation and infrastructure bill
that provides authority to the federal government to issue low interest loans
for specific infrastructure projects.
If you're a developer, is it realistic that this money is going to unlock potential for
increasing affordable housing density in urban centers by converting office buildings into
residential buildings?
People talk a lot about these office to residential conversions.
The problem is, it's easy to say and much harder to do.
Most commercial office buildings
don't meet the structural requirements,
or architecturally they're not really suitable.
If you think about most commercial office buildings,
they've got really big floor plates.
And if you think about like restructuring them
into apartments, there's not proper window coverage,
there's not proper utilities., there's not proper utilities.
So it's a lot harder than it sounds.
And I'd say most office buildings don't meet a lot of the requirements for this.
But I think what's good about this executive order, even though I don't really believe
this is a great use of 45 billion, is that it's sending a signal to all of these cities,
all these local governments that we need
to get with the program here.
In other words, you've got a blue executive sending a message to all these blue cities and
states that commercial real estate is in distress and you need to loosen up your entitlements,
you need to loosen up your regulations.
It's sending a message to the city of San Francisco and all these other cities that you guys need to start doing
positive things and this is my point about will San Francisco
start acting like a partner
for real estate development, which is how you make real estate work or will they continue to
drive all of these crazy regulations?
So I mostly see this Biden program as symbolic.
But the question is whether the symbolism will actually
drive better behavior by these blue cities.
I personally think they're just trying to find
more ways to pump money into supporting
commercial real estate markets because of the issues
we just highlighted.
And I think this is the first of what will likely be
several programs to support framed as things
like affordable housing, but really designed to support
the economic loss impairment that's going to be inevitable at some point.
Right, but you know, you can't convert an office building to a residential building without
reasoning typically.
Totally.
Yeah.
And this is where you need action by these city governments.
They've got a reason.
They've got to reduce the regulations.
They've got to eliminate these transfer taxes.
Good. You have to make these projects, yeah, exactly. They've got to eliminate these transfer taxes. Good.
You have to make these projects, yeah, exactly. They have to make these projects economically
viable.
I think that we'll be able to look back in San Francisco. We'll be an incredibly measurable
experiment on the return on invested capital of progressive left ideology.
And it will be a great case study. Now, if it works, it will prove that all of these ideas that were
kind of talked about in kind of like high intellectual circles has some value.
And if it fails, which it looks like it's failing,
it'll never be tried again for a very long time.
Either way, you're going to have a very clear answer.
And the good news is we're probably another five or 10 years away from that bottoming.
Well, actually, I asked you a quick question, Tomoth.
So there is an article here saying that the city controller's office for San Francisco has released
it's rejected budget shortfalls for the coming years. It's almost half a billion for 2024, 25
reaching 1.3 billion in 2728. So what do they do about this? I mean, they don't have the money.
They'll borrow money. And you can look at all of these other municipalities
around the country as examples,
but counties and municipalities and cities
that are in much worse fiscal shape than San Francisco
was able to stay incompetent for a lot longer.
And so that delta T of incompetence tends to be about five
to 10 years, I would say the midpoint is eight.
So if we're starting now, you'll probably see some rationality by 2032, 2033.
That's how much borrowing, David.
I think you can tap in the in the muni market because, you know, again, this is sort of the
the double-edged sword, right?
Like when you're a triple tax advantage borrower,
you can paint the case for being in San Francisco,
which is part of California, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
And your alternative is to own something in a state
that's not nearly as economically vibrant.
It's a pretty easy case to make to be able
to borrow the money, I think.
And so the problem is that it'll take,
like I said, another probably eight years, 10 years.
So before the spigot gets turned off and they have to make some harsh changes.
So they'll keep running this experiment for at least, I think if you want to be conservative
for at least a decade, but another decade.
So those pile on the debt until it's a sprags?
Absolutely.
I don't want to keep harping on San Francisco.
Let's move on to we work because we work feeds into this real estate piece.
I don't know if you guys saw this article
that Wall Street General reported that we work.
It's gonna file for chapter 11 as early as next week.
They have a significant debt burden owed
to Softbank Vision Fund as part of their Go Public.
They've signed leases in office buildings in San Francisco
and elsewhere around the country.
$10 billion in total lease obligations
do you starting in the second half of 2023,
through the end of 27.
And after that, an additional $15 billion
starting in 2028.
And as of June, we work had 777 locations,
including 229 in the US in major cities.
The business made about call it 840 million bucks in revenue last quarter.
So that works out to call it a three and a half billion dollar revenue run rate with, you know,
10 billion dollars of lease obligations starting next year. So the business is just grounding
in these lease obligations and to restructure 777 lease obligations in this environment that we're
talking about while doing what Shemaat is saying, lowering rents to attract employers to show up
and actually rents space from them
is obviously causing the business model
to distort even worse than it has been historically.
They burned $8 billion of pre-cash flow
in since Q4 of night 2019.
$8 billion of free cash.
There's no question that we work
has been a capital destruction machine
that being said I actually think that some private equity player is gonna buy this out of bankruptcy and make a fortune.
I agree with that too. Because out of those 777 locations a lot of them are good locations and
have good tendency they probably generate good revenue.
The problem is that the leases are just bad.
And bankruptcy gives you the power to break those leases
or renegotiate them.
So a really smart private equity player would come in here
and say, okay, we're going to take these locations,
we're going to divide them into three buckets.
Bucket number one is we're going to get rid of them
because it's just bad locations.
We don't want them.
There's just no occupancy.
Bucket number two is we we're gonna go to the landlord
and say that, sorry, like this lease doesn't work for us,
we will be willing to work for you as an operator
of the space and you'll pay us a fee in a rev share
on whatever it makes, but we can't pay you
a guaranteed rent.
So that's bucket number two.
And then bucket three, which will be the best locations,
they'll go back to the landlord and say here's 60 cents on the dollar
We're willing to pay you this in rent. That's it if that's not good enough for you
We're breaking the lease we're out and those landlords are gonna have to accept it because who they gonna get who's any better
And they don't even have the ti's they don't have the capital to put some new tenant in there
And even if they could put someone in there. It's not gonna be at a rent that's much higher than sixty cents in the dollar because we work made a lot of these top-of-market leases so
I think the landlord will take that bird in the hand so think about it some private equity player goes in there renegotiates all these leases
Sheds the bad ones and all of a sudden the business is gonna make a lot of money money. And the reason why it's going to make money is because we work toward all of this capital
into renovating these spaces and making them really nice.
I mean, if you go into a we work, they are really nice spaces.
And the reason for that is because we work spent billions of TI dollars making these things
incredibly nice.
Was that a wise investment?
No, it was a terrible investment,
but that money has been spent and already lost.
That capital has been wiped out.
So whoever buys this thing out of bankruptcy now
is gonna be the beneficiary of all of those absurd T.I. dollars
that were spent when Adam Newman.
Oh my God, you just convinced me.
Let's go buy it.
Let's put it in the bin.
Is it filed? Is it file?
Is it file? The brilliance of Adam Newman was somehow convincing. Wow.
All these investors to put in billions of dollars into ti money on the theory that it was a
software business. This was never a software business. It's a real estate development company.
It was Regis. It was Regis. So I got soft bank put in a total of $16.9 billion
in equity and debt. Oh my gosh. Not incredible. Who does? Oh my gosh. Soft bank, which is mostly
through the Vision Fund, which is as you guys know, 45% Saudi money. It was Regis. Not much better
design, but that design came at a huge expense, which was again,
this over investment in TI dollars combined with the fact that they had no discipline around
signing leases and they have so many top of market lease deals.
Yeah.
But again, that's all fixable for someone who comes in.
Old saying in real estate that it's the third owner who makes all the money, like the
first owner who does all the ground up, they lose a fortune and they get blown out.
Then the second guy comes in and thinks
that they're gonna make it work.
But they can't make it work either.
So then they get blown out.
And it's finally the third person
who comes in who makes all the money.
That's gonna happen here too.
Oh my God, that's just fantastic.
This is a story of the ages.
Let's transition from one bubble to the most recent bubble.
So AI regulation, given the frenzy and frothingness and fear mongering on AI, destroying the world,
which I would personally argue is largely fear porn.
The Biden administration took it upon themselves to try and be leaders in regulating AI and
publish an executive order on October 30th.
This long anticipated executive order covers a very broad range of matters in 111 page order document.
Covers very specific actions in very detailed terms. It uses technical terms of art. And
I think it creates as much confusion as it does provide clarity. It's an executive order,
so it's not legislation.
And there's much in here that someone argue
needs to be legislated.
As an executive order, it can be overturned
very quickly and easily by the next administration.
It largely demands voluntary action
from technology companies to submit their models,
infrastructure and tools for review,
for proof of safety.
Don't forget the equity and inclusion.
There's an equity and inclusion component, which is that your models have to account for
diversity, equity and inclusion.
Diversity, equity and inclusion.
There's a phrase from the executive order.
The term dual use foundational model means an AI model that is trained on broad data.
Generally use a self supervision.
Contains at least tens of billions of parameters,
is applicable across a wide range of contexts,
and that exhibits high levels of performance and tasks
that pose a serious risk to security,
national economic security, public safety,
or any combination of those matters,
none of which ultimately describes end points,
none of which describes loss or applications.
To me, this is the biggest problem I see
with the executive order and with the approach
to AI regulation broadly, particularly
with what's being developed and has been leaked
in terms of what's being developed out of the EU,
which is that many of these government agencies,
government actors are trying to define and regulate
systems and methods rather than regulate outcomes and applications.
For example, if you were to say you cannot commit fraud and falsely impersonate someone
using software, you can rightly say that it follows the rule of law and we should be able
to adjudicate that cleanly in courts. Instead, to have government agencies and have what this
executive order describes
as a chief AI officer in every federal agency,
responsible for regulating the systems and methods
of all the actors and all the private companies
that are building software to say,
this is the scale that your software can get to.
You can have a certain number of parameters.
If you're bigger than this number of parameters,
we have to come in and check your software,
creates an outlandish standard,
and one that makes absolutely no sense,
particularly in the context of the pace of AI's progression.
Remember, the paper that was foundational
to transformer model development,
which is what a lot of people call AI today,
which has developed these LLMs and so on,
came out in 2017 and wasn't really widely adopted
until 2018 as a standard.
We're five years into this.
So the way that we're making models,
the types of models we're building,
the scale of the models, the number of parameters being used,
the pace at which these things is changing is staggering.
We are only in the first inning.
And so to come out and say, here are the standards
by which we want to now regulate you.
This is the size that the model can be. These are the types of models.
It's going to look like medieval literature in three years.
None of the stuff's even going to apply anymore.
I'm just really of the point of view, as you guys know,
that the market needs to be allowed to develop.
If we don't allow our market to develop in the United States,
India, and China, and Singapore,
and other markets will get
well ahead of us in terms of their model development and their capabilities as a nation and their
capabilities as an industry.
And the more our government actors step in and try and tell us what systems and methods
we are allowed to use to build stuff, the more at risk we are falling behind.
That's my general statement on the matter.
I'll pass the mic.
I mean, Shamaq, you were advocating for AI regs a couple months ago, I think, right? are falling behind. That's my general statement on the matter. I'll pass the mic.
I mean, Tomock, you were advocating for AI regs a couple of months ago, I think, right?
I mean, where does this fall with respect to what you were advocating for and what you
were concerned about?
Well, I had a very specific lens that I viewed this stuff through and they didn't really
address it. I think that this was a little bit of a kitchen sink yo and
I think what probably happened was depending on
Look, I mean, I think the thing is like look, they
When this process first started it started in the Senate and it started with the majority leader Chuck Schumer
And I met with Chuck and then I met with Chuck's team and then it morphed into this
much bigger thing and I think with Chuck and then I met with Chuck's team and then it morphed into this much bigger thing.
And I think it morphed into a lot of people trying to do the right thing,
meeting with a lot of very important and very famous people. And I think somewhere along the way,
it just became this convoluted and confused document because I do agree with you that it's not super coherent.
There's a lot of arbitrary requirements.
I think there's a requirement here that as a certain number of parameters, you have to
self-report yourself to the government, which is like, what does that even mean?
Why is that even important?
So it's just a lot of random stuff.
So it just seems like anybody who had the ear
of the people writing this had a chance to write something in.
So it's a little confusing.
It's not going to do the job,
and I think that you're right.
And two or three years we're gonna look back,
and this is gonna look medieval.
I'll just say, I'll point at another point,
just one of many that I could highlight in this
document. I read most of it. They say, you know, there's got to be legislation on watermarking
AI content. Think about that for a second. What is AI content? We've been using Adobe Photoshop
for 30 years to change photographs and change documents. We've been using various tools for doing audio
generation and music. I mean there's no music that doesn't run through a digital
processor of some sort. There's no video, there's no movies that don't have some
degree of CGI elements or some degree of post-production digital rendering
integrated into the video itself. What makes something AI? Is it the fact that
100% of the
pixels are generated by software? What if it's only 98%? Is Pixar AI? Because all
of Pixar is made on computers. Is the auto-tune hip-hop artist AI? Because his
voice isn't coming through on the audio track. So what is AI in this
definition? The fact that any piece of content needs to be watermarked
if it's AI, I think is one of the most outlandish
infringements on First Amendment rights I've seen
and doesn't really understand any set, in any sense,
how software is generally used in the world today,
which is, frankly, everywhere.
And to say that now there is a certain definition
of a certain type of software
that we're going to arbitrarily call AI, we want to watermark this stuff and we want to
get a stamp on that content so that the government can track it and audit it, I think is absurd.
Tax over to you. Yeah, okay, three three quick points here. Number one, AI has been convicted of a pre-crime. This EO, it describes this lily of horrible,
the sprayed of horribles, that's gonna happen
unless the wise people in the central government
like Joe Biden and Kamala Harris,
the guide is development.
So that's what the EO says is gonna do
is guide the development of this technology.
Because if we don't, it's gonna result
in all these horrible things happening.
Steven Sinovsky, who was a key executive of Microsoft in the, I think it going back to the
80s, wrote a really interesting blog post about this where he was there at the beginning
of the PC revolution with Don of the Micro processor in the 70s and 80s.
And he pulled a bunch of books off his bookshelf from that time period Which were sort of the sci-fi books like forecasting doom and Frenchman on
Privacy one was called the assault on privacy. No one was called electronic nightmare
Another one was called the rise of the computer state and so on and so it was also predicting all these horrible things that would come
From the birth of the computer and it would put all these people out of work and so on totally
but
Nobody allowed these fears to guide the
Development of the industry there was no executive order at that time saying that we're gonna guide the development of the
Micro-possessor to avoid all of these arms that haven't occurred yet and
Instead we're taking a different approach here. And he makes the point that if the industry
had been guided in that way,
then it never would have achieved the potential
that it ultimately achieved.
And furthermore, he makes the point
that a company like IBM would have been more than happy
to work with the regulators to say,
yeah, let's define a bunch of these rules
to make sure that it doesn't go in this dark direction
that everyone thinks it's gonna go in.
And you would have gotten very extreme regulatory capture.
Can I pre-cog one of the crazy lines in this thing?
Here are the pre-cogs.
Here's one.
When a foreign person transacts with an infrastructure as a service provider,
so Azure Google Cloud Amazon, to train a large AI model with potential capabilities that could be used in malicious
cyber enabled activity. They propose regulation that requires that I ask provider to submit a report.
So if you have to know, you have to know, if a foreigner is using your API, sorry, AWS, and then file a TPS report.
Oh my God.
Somewhere.
I'm just going on.
I have a clarifying question.
What happens if you're a foreigner that's on an H1B at Facebook or Microsoft, a good
question?
Well, and then you're technically a foreigner.
Right.
And then Jamath, meanwhile, remember when SpaceX is now being sued by the DOJ because they
haven't employed enough foreigners. So it's like they outlawed both sides of it.
So you're in noncompliance just by existing.
You're in compliance is by desk.
If you employ foreigners in the creation of these very sophisticated technologies, you're
creating a national security threat.
If you exclude them, you're violating their civil rights.
These regulations are promulgated by two different parts of the government.
The government is basically getting to a point where no matter which side of the regulation
you choose, you're going to be a non-compliance somewhere.
This is just a recipe for the government to basically take action against anybody
who they don't like politically.
Now, on this pre-crime point, one of the crazier stories that came out, and I think this
was in variety, is that Biden grew more concerned about AI after screening the most recent
mission impossible movie, in which the villain is essentially AI that sees as control of the world's
intelligence apparatus. Is that true? That's not true. Well, that's what the story said.
Did the press reporter ask the press secretary this and this was the response? Who said this?
The one asked Chief of Staff, I guess. Said Reed. Said Reed. Yeah. Wow. I'm
believe. The crazy thing is that I think the reason they're putting out the stories, they
don't want to admit how the EO really happened, which is a bunch of
lobbyists came in. And like you said, a lot of powerful people from Big Tech, they're
all clamoring for regulatory capture. They're all clamoring to define the regulations so that
they can benefit themselves and keep out new entrants. Because one of the big targets
here is going to be open source software. So if you are, for example, open AI, which is no longer open,
it's closed source, the number one thing you want to do is pull up the ladder
before open source software can get a lot of momentum.
And a big part of the regulation here does apply to open source software.
I think one of the most problematic things about this, just to move on to the next point,
is the way that it's not just this 110 page EO that's being promulgated.
The directive is for all these other parts of the federal government to start creating their own regulations.
So it says here that the national institute of standards and technology will develop standards for red team testing of these models.
It directs the department of Commerce to develop standards for,
like you said, Freeberg labeling AI generated content.
It directs explicitly the FTC to use existing regulation
to go and legislate.
It requires the FCC to think about spectrum licensing rules
through this line.
You're absolutely right.
It activates every agency of the government
to create more bureaucracy.
It creates authority for agencies of the government
to go into private servers and run audits.
You're allowing the government for the first time ever
to have access to private information,
private computing infrastructure,
rather than do what the job of the government should be,
which is to regulate the outputs,
to regulate the outcomes, to regulate illegal and illicit activities, rather than regulate systems and
methods that, as SACS point out, are preconvictive of a crime.
There is no crime until a crime is committed.
And so this idea that the government can come in and regulate and keep a crime from being
committed by auditing and managing all the systems and methods
that software companies are using,
puts the United States as at an extraordinary
and unfair disadvantage on a global stage, by the way,
and by the way, Lama II is out there, hardware is out there,
all the tooling is out there for others
to start to get well ahead.
Good news about the immigration thing.
There is, they actually on the other side
do streamline the immigration process
for people with AI or other critical technologies. So on the one hand, we should be able to
hire them, but then on the back end, we'll have to file a TPS report about what they do.
We can just finish my point about these different agencies being directed now to promulgate
regulations. And by the way, there's some new committee or council that's being created of 29 different
parts of the federal government that are not going to coordinate on this AI stuff.
So it's going to be a Brussels-style bureaucracy.
What's going to happen is that with all of these different bodies issuing new regulations,
it's going to get more and more burdensome on technology companies until the point where they cry out for some
sort of rationalization of this regime.
They're going to say, listen, we can't keep up with FCC and Department of Commerce and
this NIT standards board.
Just give us one agency to deal with.
And so the industry itself is eventually going to cry uncle and say, like, please, just
give us one.
And you're ready here, people like Sam Altman and so forth,
calling for the equivalent of atomic energy commission for AI.
This is how we're going to end up with a federal software commission,
just like we have an FCC to run big communications,
and we have an FDA to run big farmer.
We're going to end up with a federal software commission to run software, big software. And the thing to realize about AI is
that functionally, there's no way to really say what the difference is between AI
and software in general. Every single technology company in Silicon Valley has AI
on its roadmap. It's a new computing paradigm. Everybody is incorporating it.
Everyone is using some elements of AI. So this
wave of AI is just becoming software. So we're going to take the one part of our economy that has been
free market and relatively unregulated, which is software. It's like the last bastion of true
entrepreneurial capitalism. And we're going to create a new federal agency to manage it.
That's where we're all headed here.
And we're gonna end up as an industry
in the same place that Pharma has ended up
or telecom has ended up,
which is you go for permission to Washington.
No, Nick, can you just put this up?
So I did
You know write a blog post sort of asking for this AI regulation and I do think like the model of the FDA
Is probably the best one where in certain use cases?
I do think that you can create a
Sandbox where these things can be tested and I think can be evaluated.
The problem is that this legislation or this executive order doesn't really do that.
So the way that I wrote this was, well, what are the arguments against what I'm proposing?
And unfortunately, I have to say every single one of those arguments is not valid.
So I think that we should have gone in the direction of like a simplifying assumption
Which is that most of this stuff is just software and there are going to be some very specific kinds of businesses that before you take it to market
You should do something that's equivalent to sticking in a sandbox letting people see it and I think it's easy to define what those are actually and the fact that we didn't do that and we have this
And I think it's easy to define what those are actually. And the fact that we didn't do that, and we have this overly generalized approach, is
going to create more chaos, and people will not know whether they're in violation or they're
in support.
They're going to be sort of pre-guilty, as you said, sacks of a pre-crime.
And it's just going to be chaos.
So I think the answer is...
But this is a smorgasbord for politicians politicians because everyone's going to be lobbying them to try
and shape the regulations the way they want.
I think it's going to be a smorgasbord for lawyers.
Yeah, I mean, everyone's going to hire lawyers and lobbyists and policy people to try and
shape these regulations.
Good time to bet on India.
Thank God for Mark Zuckerberg and the open sourcing of the Lama 2 model.
It's not entirely open sourced, right? I mean, I think the biggest thing with Lama 2 model. It's not entirely open source, right?
I mean, I think the biggest thing with Lama 2
that I find problematic is that it has these arbitrary thresholds
on the number of users one can have before you have
to go back to Facebook.
And so, yeah, it's 700 million, I think, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, before I give all the credit to Facebook,
I'd rather say that I think there are a lot of open source
alternatives, including Mistral, that I think are much better.
And free and open and in the clear
where you can have unencumbered growth,
not dependent on anybody else.
Yeah.
But I think your freeway, your larger point about US
versus India versus China,
I think this could have a major impact
on our global competitiveness.
Of course.
Because as you look around the, what's happening in the American system, there are so many
things going wrong, right?
Our fiscal situation is untenable, we're mired in massive debt.
We have tremendous internal division in the country.
Many of our cities are rife with crime.
You just look at the number of people living on the streets.
It's not good.
I mean, there's a lot of indicators that America's in decline.
We're involved in way too many foreign wars.
So there's a lot about things happening.
However, the one bright spot that America's had going for it now, I think, for decades,
is that we've always been the leader in new technology development.
I mean, we're the ones who pioneered the internet, we're the place where mobile took
off, we're the place where the cloud took off,
and everyone else had been playing catch up with that.
And I think we are in the lead in terms of AI development.
I mean, other countries are doing it too,
but I think that we are in the lead.
And it's not because of the involvement of government.
It's because we have this vibrant private sector
that's willing to invest risk capital,
where you know that nine out of 10 checks that you write are
going to zero but that one check that 1 out of 10 hopefully could be a huge
outcome. So we've had this incredible ecosystem of software development that is
free and unregulated that is clustered around Silicon Valley but it you know
radiates out to many other places and the only reason that ecosystem has
thrived and survived is the reason
that Bill Gurley stated at all in Summit, which is it was a 2200 miles away from Washington
and Washington has generally kept its mits off. And now we are headed to a place where
not just AI, but basically all software companies are headed for regulation. And like I said, right now it's 29 different agencies promulgating the regulations, but
where this is going to end up is that the industry is eventually going to beg for its own
agency, just to rationalize all the spaghetti of different regulations.
We are eventually going to beg for our federal agency overlord, just to rationalize this whole
mess.
And sadly, I think that's where we're gonna end up.
And a lot of what is special about our industry,
which is that two guys in the garage really can get started
in a completely permissionless way,
I think that's gonna be jeopardized.
If that's the end game, that's genius.
I think that is the end game.
I mean, do you think that they wrote this thing in a way
just to create enough confusion
where we all just cry uncle and say, just regulate us, give us a us give us a new look i don't know if it's that conscious i think what it
is is there's a lot of politicians in washington and biden and here is definitely fought this category
who just think that central planning or the central guiding of the economy or aspects of the economy
to avoid certain problems that they think they can do this.
They think that they are wise enough to do this, or maybe they're cynical and they just
know this is a pathway to campaign contributions.
But either way, they kind of believe in this approach, and they threw the kitchen sink at
this.
110 pages.
Every agency is not going to be writing thousands of pages.
I think where it's going to end up is within you agency to manage software.
So I think, SAC, the point you're making is one that some folks in Silicon Valley have felt for a while,
which is that a lot of the freedom and opportunity that the United States offers pioneers and entrepreneurs
has been realized and borne out in Silicon Valley.
That's feeling like it's been stymied
in a number of ways.
But the events in Israel a couple of weeks ago,
in my opinion, seems to have shocked a lot of people
that are traditionally very liberal Democrats into being red-pilt.
I have had a number of calls with individuals over the last few weeks that have historically
been very die-hard blue liberal Democrats have spent their time with NGOs, with nonprofits,
with various efforts to promote liberal causes.
And these are folks who may or may not be Jewish, but who have been so shocked by what's
happened in Israel and how many liberal organizations have created this narrative around being
pro-Palestinian in a way that is being deemed and is coming across as highly, and in many
cases is very much anti-Semitic.
And so I've had folks say, I'm giving up everything else I'm doing, and all I'm going
to do is change the causes I'm working on now.
And I have just been red-pilled.
Do you guys, and Shamak, you shared your story on our show a couple of weeks ago, the
clip of you saying
that when viral on how you kind of recognized that maybe Trump was a good president in the
context of what you're experiencing with the Biden administration now or seeing with
the Biden administration now, you seem to be like the case study that I'm now hearing
more from Silicon Valley folks, yeah, about this shift. I think that over the last three or four years,
my political positions really haven't changed that much.
But I think what's happened is that the political party
that I've historically been affiliated with
has just kept lurching further and further to the left.
And so it leaves me looking for a new home, I think.
And I think that there are a lot of people that thought they were signing up for a set
of beliefs around free speech, around being reproductive rights, around being supportive of LGBTQ issues,
but also supportive of a rational approach to the border
and reasonable fiscal discipline.
These are all seem to just be totally out the window.
So I understand,
because I've actually talked to a lot of my friends
and my friends, some of them have been huge donors
to both elite colleges and the Democratic Party.
And they've paused all of it.
And it's definitely given me pause
and I'm just trying to figure out where to go from here
because I think the reality is that this is
a really crazy situation.
So I think that there's just a lot of people that are in the center that don't really belong
anymore, the way that the Democrats represent themselves.
So there's clearly something going on that we just need to get to the bottom of here because
I think it's not probably the Democratic Party that a lot of people thought that they belong
to.
Do you have other friends and folks that you know that have traditionally been Democrat donors
and Silicon Valley Jamoth that you see that have traditionally been Democrat donors in Silicon Valley, Jamoth?
That you see or now maybe considering shifting where they're giving money to Republican party
candidates and causes?
I think it's easy to say that amongst my friends, it's in the billions of dollars that's
been paused.
That's insane.
That's a lot of money. You used to be part of a niche in Silicon Valley. Silicon Valley Republican niche. Is your
niche growing?
I think so. I actually made a list of I think eight issues that have driven this shift.
And when you say there's been a shift right, I wouldn't say that there's been a shift
all the way to the right, but I think there's been a shift from the left to the center. By the way, that statement is consistent with what I've heard personally from a lot of
folks, which is I consider myself a centrist now that I see that some of these liberal
causes are so they're extreme from my point of view.
Right.
So let me rattle off what I think the key drivers are.
Number one, reckless fiscal and monetary policies coming out of Washington.
As Dr. Miller says, we've been spending like Drunken Sailors. Number two, the dismal
state of San Francisco, because of crime, drugs, homelessness, and so on. And we all know
that's an extreme one party government. Number three, the runus COVID policies, they
botched the science, they harmed the education development of kids, and they also harmed
work culture by making employees feel permanently entitled to work from home.
So that's number three.
Number four, this long con of regulatory capture in both Washington Sacramento that we just
talked about with AI, people are waking up to that.
Number five, the betrayal of true liberal values like free speech and open inquiry.
Number six, the way that tech visionaries like Elon have been targeted for her
assortment by left wing politicians. Remember, Biden said we need to look into this guy.
The reign of Gonzalez was even less subtle. She said simply, f**k Elon Musk. Number seven,
the growing awareness that wokeness has gone way off the rails. We saw this even before
the Israel-Hamas war, but now it's a number eight, is this war? It's really throwing gasoline on the fire by showing that wokeness leads to this simplistic breaking up of the
world into oppressor and oppressed categories. And what we're seeing is that there's a lot of
people in the woke left who are basically cheering for a terrorist organization, and they're
able to rationalize atrocities because
of this simplistic, woke dichotomy.
That being said, I do think it's possible to support the desire for a Palestinian state
and a two-state solution without falling into that bucket.
I want to be clear about that.
But I think that there's been way too many people on the woke left who have blindly
disregarded the atrocities, and we're basically cheering for her mass from day one on this thing and i think that has woken up a lot of liberals both juz and non juz who
saw juzas allies on the left and when they see juz being attacked this way
that has led them to really i think question their their priors on this what do you think of the k the Kamala Harris announcement yesterday that they're launching a program to combat Islamophobia in the US at a time when my understanding is many of
their Jewish donors are up in arms about their lack of action on anti-Semitism. I mean it just seem
done. I mean look I have not seen in particular case, I don't think I've really seen outpourings of Islamophobia.
To be clear, I'm against Islamophobia,
I'm against hatred towards any particular group,
including Muslims or Jews, to me,
any outpouring of hate towards a particular group is bad.
But yeah, this seems like a problem
that we really haven't seen.
So it seems a little bit tone deaf. And look, this administration's been kind of stumbling around on on this whole issue. It seems like they don't really know what to do.
I don't know how to quantify it. I just think it's an anecdote. What do you think? No, I like I'm saying it. I don't know how to quantify it, but I think the Biannickdot is.
A lot of folks.
No, no, I'm guessing. What do you think? What do you feel?
What do I feel? Yeah. I mean, I'm not a party guy. Taking a step back, this is getting a little esoteric, but I think humans organize into
social systems.
One social system is a family, one is a company, and I think that the government is a social
system.
The point of a social system is to get influence to achieve the things you want to achieve by aggregating together, by creating a tribe,
by creating a system. And that's what a government is. It lets a lot of people pull resources
to get things done as a group that you wouldn't otherwise be able to get done individually,
same with the companies, same with the family, to support each other, etc. And I think that
the problem with democratically elected
governments, or all governments for that matter, frankly,
is like any other system.
And I've said this in the past, they have a natural incentive
to grow.
I met with a government person the other day,
well-known government person.
And I was struck by the tone.
I've been struck by the tone on multiple people
I've met from the government.
On here's all the next things I'm going to get done and here's how we're going to grow
and do more and be bigger.
Just like if you're running a company, that's your incentive, that's your model of thinking.
Like with your family, you want to grow the balance sheet for your family, you want to
have another home, you want to build security, etc.
So governments as an organizing system are no different.
And so I think that in a democracy, over time, there is, as SACs points out, a group of folks
who get elected, and as a result, like a philosophy that endures in that system, that is all
about overcoming the power that is,
that we all view there to be powers that are keeping us from doing the things we want
to do. And I think that this is the ultimate manifestation of what happens is that you
push the government to be as big as possible with no end, and you push the government to
destroy any system of power that gets in the way of
those who were able to vote these folks in.
And now a lot of folks who thought that they were supporting liberal causes to help those
in need are realizing that you're actually repressing minorities in the process, that
there are minorities that are viewed to be powerful, like Jews, that there are minorities
that are viewed to be unfairly advantaged, like those in the tech industry, that there are minorities that are viewed to be unfairly advantage like those in the tech industry,
that there are minorities who are viewed to be unfairly
advantage like billionaires.
And I know that the sounds insane to say that,
those terms, but that's the objective is to destroy
any system of power, any individual of power
that has any form of leverage over us.
It's also why I think we've generally been
technopesomistic in the West since the late 1960s, early 70s, is because technology's been that has any form of leverage over us. It's also why I think we've generally been techno pessimistic
in the West since the late 1960s, early 70s,
is because technology's been viewed
as this point of leverage for creating a power system
for minority of the people.
So I generally view this as part of a longer arc
and a natural kind of conclusion to this stuff.
And I'm not trying to be super pessimistic
about where things are going because I do see that the, a lot of folks are now waking up to this stuff and, you know, I'm not trying to be super pessimistic about where things are going because I do see that the, a lot of folks are now waking up to this reality and they're like,
so my anecdote is I've had a lot of folks tell me in the last couple of weeks,
we have to be thoughtful about how we elect and how we govern so that we create a more balanced
to what's the end full of the end game in your framework. My end game is socialism. I think
that's where things go ultimately longer. I think that's where things go, ultimately longer.
I think that there's a recapturing
and a redistribution of power and value.
I think that there's some degradation of the system
that erodes to looking like something like France.
It's not like a nasty, and it's like a slow whimpering
like you end up looking like France or something.
And so that's my end game in that framework.
And I believe strongly, this is why we talked about this
with Dalio, that there are political
actions, decisions, voting mechanisms that hopefully we can put in the place to stall
out and to stop that from happening.
Because I do think that human progress is critical for the majority of people that are
disadvantaged, so we need to enable it.
Okay, so I'm guessing you're on the, I don't want to be France side.
100%.
That's right.
Okay, so, and so what is the, I want to be the Wild West, I want to be the 19th, the early
19th century.
What do you think that we should do in America right now?
I think we should unwind a lot of laws.
And I think we should have as a mandate, the objective is how do we get more of our economy and more of our people in this country
to be supported by and progressed through private industry
rather than public support?
The federal government and the role that the federal government
has in funding industry, in hiring individuals,
in pumping dollars into markets,
I think has gotten so far beyond the tell that we, as we know, are being sloshed back and forth based on the decisions
being made by the federal reserve. That should have never been the case. The
free market should have always been allowed to operate. Progress should have
always been allowed. The government should have stopped people from being hurt,
should stop negative outcomes. But the idea that the government should come in
and start to run things and employ people and get to the scale that it's gotten to.
This is the largest organization in human history, the federal, the US federal government.
It has got the highest dollar spend, the highest budget of any organization in human history.
Even accounting for the Roman Empire, there should be accountability standards for every
law, which is how do I know that this thing did what it was supposed to do and how do I
measure if it didn't.
And by the way, if it doesn't and the dollars aren't returned to me at some multiple,
we shut that law down.
We shut that department down.
We move on.
There should be an accountability standard for every dollar that's spent, but we don't
describe any outcomes.
We don't say here's the standard of measure and here's the accountability.
And if it doesn't work and if it's this dollars and return to us, we don't spend it anymore.
And we don't keep doing this thing over and over again.
And then layer something else on top and layer something else on top.
And then you've got 10 layers of nothing accountable to anything.
And the thing costs 10 times as much to do half as much.
I am optimistic still.
I'm always an optimist.
Oh, make sure you put in that caveat.
Good.
What's going right in your view?
I feel like we just killed the last good thing. Yeah. What is going right in your view? I feel like we just killed the last good thing.
Yeah, what is going right in your view?
Well, the AI thing is what really pisses me off, man.
I mean, this whole idea that we're gonna come in
and tell people how to run businesses now.
I hear you, just go back.
So you're nuts, but do you think AI is going well right now?
We have nothing to really show for you yet.
So it's hard to say that.
It's cute and it's cool, but there's nothing really
subject to it. I don't get the term. When I started my company, I had people
that I called math people and statisticians. Then they was called data science. Then it was
called big data. Then it was called ML. Now it's called AI. At the end of the day, it's software-based
algorithms that use three things, data software and statistics. And the statistical tools and
the approach to the software algorithm development
have changed with the transformer model
that was paper that was described.
But it's the same thing we've been doing since the 1960s,
which is creating packages of software
that make predictions.
And that do things for us.
And all that's happened in the last two years
is we've seen a piece of software that can communicate
well with us based on these LLMs,
and we're like, oh, intelligence is here.
You know, the first time a computer in the 1960s said, hello world.
Everyone was like, oh my God, we have AI now, AI is absentient.
It just said, hello world.
Well, the same thing happened when big blue, which was a big IBM mainframe, beat Kess Barov
and chess.
People are like, oh my God, AI is just about here. Because at one time, being great
at chess was considered to be only a human capability. And if a computer could ever get that
good, the theory was that it would have to be an AI. But we actually found out that computers
could do chess, but that didn't make them an AI. It just meant that they could acquire
that one narrow capability. I think kind of what you're saying is that computers now, things to language models, have
some ability to interface with us using language and to understand language by itself that
is not artificial intelligence in the way that is portrayed in science fiction movies.
There's two key things that are happening.
One is a new modality in human computer interaction through chat, which is incredible, and opens
up lots of new software
applications and markets, which I think can be transformative
and worth millions of dollars, no fucking doubt.
And then the other one is in generative tooling
where you can make art and you can make video and audio
and all this other sort of stuff.
So you're creating digital outputs that are not necessarily
text, but other forms that also start to represent
the expectation that you might otherwise have.
And so that is really powerful and opens up all these new models
for media, content, exploring new business models, et cetera.
So both of those are really important new software capabilities
that have emerged.
But this notion that I think people confuse AI
as being this like, we've now got humans in software
that can do things is almost like back in the 60s
when the computer said,
hello world, and they said the same thing.
I think that what people are
odd by right now is that a computer's ability to statistically guess
has gotten several orders of magnitude better than it ever was before.
And so these guesses seem human and life-like.
But you'll find the edge cases where this stuff fails and we'll be asking ourselves yet again in a few years what the next leap is. But the thing that
is different is that there is a level of investment multiplied and Nick, I tweeted this so you
can just show the math here. There's a level of investment multiplied by a level of improvement
in the underlying hardware, multiplied by a level of improvement in the underlying hardware,
multiplied by a level of improvement in the underlying models,
that's creating a 400x improvement from the baseline every year.
And so, the thing that I think is different is that
we are taking this statistical guessing, if you want to just call it that, and we're getting
exponentially good at it. So there is an efficient frontier at which point you're like,
oh my gosh, this is as good as certain humans, you know, maybe not the smartest of the
smart humans, but certain humans. And I think that that's what's really, really crazy
and intense right now. So I can understand why people are like, we need to get a handle on this. But it may kill the golden goose, although I would just
say there is no golden goose yet. There's just a lot of really interesting stuff that
people can say is novel and it's inspiring to see. But by no means has there been just
a proven use case that is 10 X in productivity?
Yeah, that hasn't happened yet. That's the reason to wait is this whole thing
just seems very premature. Let the technology develop a little bit. Let the problems become a
little bit clearer, more manifest. Let the cake bake. Let the cake bake. Let the problems emerge in a
way instead of we're guessing about them, we can actually see
them and also allow there to be time for solutions to be developed by the industry on its own.
We don't need common hair as help or guidance to do that.
Okay, there you have it, folks.
Thank you for joining us for another episode of The All In Pot.
We hope that you walk away
with the utmost of optimism and enthusiasm for the world around us. There's all and wonder
outside. Go take a walk and enjoy it. There's so much more than what is on Twitter. I leave everyone
with others. Blessings and love. Gentlemen, anything else? Final words? David, you better fucking be there.
Oh, for poker. Yeah, I will, I will, I'm coming.
Last week, Sacks, RSVPs to poker.
Then text, he's supposed to be at dinner at 7 o'clock, text at 7.30, I'm on my way.
11 o'clock rolls around, no Sacks. No idea what happened to you.
You disappear into like the Bermuda Triangle of the Bay Area. I don't know where you go, but you just
disappear. He gets in a new bird. He has an arctic in the airport and he just plays chess.
All right boys. Bye bye. Bye bye. Bye bye.
Bring man David Sack.
Reignman David Sackett And it said we open source it to the fans and they've just got crazy with it
Love you west, I swing up in a wild
I'm going on a lane What, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what Oh, go for it. That's my dog. Can you give it a wish? You're driving away.
Sit down.
Oh, man.
I'm going to have to ask you when we meet the athletes.
We should all just get a room and just have one big hug,
or because they're all just like this like sexual tension
that we just need to release that out.
What your feet, what your feet.
What your feet.
Be your feet.
What's good for you?
We need to get my feet. I'm doing all this.