All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E156: Ivy League antisemitism, macro, SaaS recovery, Gemini, Figma deal delay + big Friedberg update
Episode Date: December 8, 2023(0:00) Bestie intro! (3:12) Ivy League antisemitism hearings (21:55) State of the economy for consumers (34:55) Signs of life in SaaS, VC shutdowns, and more (44:59) Why Friedberg chose to take the ro...le of CEO at Ohalo, and the dearth of great leadership talent in tech (1:01:07) Google announces Gemini: Why this is a notable moment for Google, industry impact, and more (1:11:50) Adobe's $20B Figma acquisition has stalled out due to the UK's CMA Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://twitter.com/Jason https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow Tucker: https://twitter.com/TuckerCarlson 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://rankings.thefire.org/rank https://www.ft.com/content/9c7931aa-4973-475e-9841-d7ebd54b0f47 https://academic.oup.com/poq/article-abstract/82/1/135/4868126 https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/CCLACBW027SBOG https://www.cnn.com/2023/11/07/economy/americans-401k-plans-bill-payments/index.html https://www.wsj.com/economy/consumers/inflation-consumer-spending-personal-income-october-2023-6a1ecb1d https://www.axios.com/2023/11/28/cyber-monday-spending-record-shopping https://www.cnn.com/2023/11/14/economy/consumer-price-index-october/index.html https://www.cnbc.com/2023/11/21/home-sales-fell-to-a-13-year-low-in-october-as-prices-rose.html https://kalshi.com/markets/fed/fed-funds-rate#fed-23dec https://twitter.com/KobeissiLetter/status/1730607188341624851 https://twitter.com/chamath/status/1718016818118553622 https://www.saastr.com/carta-startup-shutdowns-are-up-237 https://www.theinformation.com/articles/vc-firm-openview-abruptly-winds-down-as-industry-pressure-rises https://cloudedjudgement.substack.com/p/clouded-judgement-12123-net-new-arr https://twitter.com/friedberg/status/1732217863975641389 https://ohalogenetics.com https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K4pX1VAxaAI https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v5tRc_5-8G4 https://blog.google/technology/ai/google-gemini-ai https://twitter.com/chamath/status/1732482646419403077 https://www.figma.com/templates https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/656f3c941104cf000dfa7563/Provisional_findings_report_3.pdf
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Sacks, how are you doing with your Tucker after glow?
After an amazing episode, the feedbacks and grades, the number one episode of the year after
Vivek, I think, and trending to be maybe a million views on YouTube. So how's the after glow?
Yeah, I didn't notice there's one particular clip that's going viral where he calls you stupid.
Yes, there's that.
Do you see that one?
I thought Tucker was incredible. I found him so intellectually interesting.
And it's not always the case that great
moderators and interviewers make great guests,
but he is so intellectually curious and has unique points of view
that you want to hear them out.
And his style of talking, I find also like very easy to listen to.
I thought he was really impressive, really, really impressive.
You don't have to agree with everything he says,
quite honestly, and some people probably won't,
but I found him really compelling.
I don't agree with half of stuff he said,
or maybe a third, but I too enjoyed it very much.
I thought he was great.
Sax, I got, you know, as the person people believe
has trumped arrangement syndrome.
Thank you for your trade.
Or the person people consider like the far left.
They're like, why aren't you pushing back?
Why aren't you pushing back?
And this has become a mega takeover.
You had Jared Kushner, he didn't get pushed back.
You didn't get pushed back to Tucker.
One of the things we're trying to do here,
I'm speaking for myself, is to let people talk.
Let them put out their position.
And if you do that, and we did that with the presidential candidates, exceptionally, I'm speaking for myself, is to let people talk, let them put out their position.
And if you do that, and we did that with the presidential candidates, exceptionally,
I think, then you can decide for yourself.
And yes, we'll ask a hard question here or there, or maybe push them a little bit, but
we don't want to make it uncomfortable to come here and make it like they come here,
and we take the 10 worst things about the person or the 10 criticisms and run through them
You can get that on cable news you can get that on either side of the aisle
What I want to do is let them talk and then actually interesting things come up
Why do you always get this feedback?
Because people perceive me because you say I have trumped arrangement syndrome as the token left
That's well, and I'm a moderate and I try to keep saying that but people keep wanting to say I'm like far left
I just want folks to realize that we're gonna go
and have more guests, especially if we can learn
from those folks, and especially if hearing them out
can expand how we think about what's going on in the world.
So get over it, and it's about learning and being curious.
Hard conversations will be the norm here on the pod.
We're gonna have any guests we damn well, please. And some people will choose to not ask hard questions. I will choose
to ask hard questions, but I won't hijack the show. And so please don't email me and tell
me I didn't do my job fighting for the left or whatever. That's not my job. I'm going
to ask a hard question when I want to on the show, but I'm not going to hijack the show
with 20. Bravo to you. I suspect you're getting a lot of pressure from the private equity wives.
Yes.
So, I mean, what a great moment.
What a great moment.
People on SSRI's Jason are blowing up your inbox.
Oh, yeah.
What?
You're like your winner's ride.
Rainman David's side.
Oh, yeah.
And I said we open source it to the fans and they've just got Well, the conversation that everybody's going to allow with, so let's just get into it, is
these college anti-Semitism hearings.
On Tuesday, the House Education Committee spoke with the presidents of Harvard, Penn, MIT. And they faced a lot of tough questions.
Many of the videos went viral.
And I guess the part that specifically
went most viral was the presidents of these organizations
refusing to specify whether or not the calls for mass murder
of a particular group, genocide, of students
were or were not against the
codes of contact against bullying and harassment at places like Harvard, clothing gay specifically
was asked over and over again, whether a chance of intifada were violations of Harvard's
code of conduct.
She didn't give a great answer.
I'm just curious, SACs, obviously, you're Jewish, you went to the Ivy League, passionate about free speech, and
you've talked about surplus-
Exactly.
...
... your Jewish politics.
He is.
What's your take here?
Should students be allowed to march around campus, chanting from the river to the sea,
in Tafada, etc.
Because of free speech, or, you know, do these code of conducts come into play and what was your reaction?
We saw their answers because obviously there's a nuanced issue
Well, look, I mean I have a very high bar for free speech. So I would allow
You know almost everything the problem that these university presidents have is that's not their position
They're trying to wrap themselves in the cloak of freedom of speech and academic freedom
But that is not been their practice on campus for many years.
On a previous program, we talked about that fire survey, which pulled students about how
free they feel to express opinions on campus.
The results were dismal for the Ivy League, the Ivy League scored way worse than state
schools.
And in fact, remember that Harvard got the blue Tarski at 0.0.
They were last place.
The students there reported that speakers were shouted down. They weren't even invited.
They weren't allowed to continue and finish their speeches.
So Harvard has an abysmal record on freedom of speech.
So it's hard to believe the president of Harvard when she
claims that she's standing up for freedom of speech. And in fact, if you were to apply
that same standard to other groups, do you really believe, I mean, imagine if the representatives
at that hearing had said to the president of Harvard, you know, are you allowed to advocate
for genocide of black people or trans people
i mean would the answer been the same i don't think so i think i absolutely not so the question is why
are juz being treated differently than these other groups and i think this all goes back to kind of
woke identity politics where in the woke ideology, there are certain groups
that are victim groups, and there are certain groups that are oppressor groups.
And if you're in a victim group, then you get special protections.
And if you're in an oppressor group, then it's just assumed that you can't really suffer
discrimination or, you know, injustice in that same way. And I think that
Jews have basically been put in an oppressor group. They basically are being put in the same group as as all white people.
And I think this has come as a great surprise to a lot of donors to these university campuses who I think
were okay with woke identity politics to some degree when
they believed that Jewish people were a potential victim group, and that anti-Semitism was being
treated as real.
And lo and behold, they have found out that, no, they're an oppressor group, and they're
not protected.
And even very explicit cases of anti-Semitism are not being recognized
by these universities because, again, it doesn't match up with this woke ideology.
I think it would have been a lot better for a lot of these donors to realize that woke
identity politics was a cul-de-sac.
It was something that they should not have wanted to participate in.
But i think they're now waking up to the realization that in this again oppressor oppressed dichotomy they're on the wrong side of that.
I think you're exactly like that realization exactly correct i don't know politics road to nowhere freeberg you give a passionate speech here about being forced to pick a side when we're talking about the conflict in the Middle East. And I guess there's underpinnings here of your discussion. Antisionism, antisemitism, and where's the line
between, is just caring about humans and children being killed versus maybe harassment, etc.
I'm curious when you saw these answers, what was your reaction?
And yeah, how do you feel about it?
I was surprised that the Congress people didn't ask the university presidents what would your reaction be if they started to burn crosses
and say something about white supremacy, black people don't belong in the US, immigrants
don't belong in the US.
If you picked another ethnic group and made statements that have
traditionally been deemed threatening and harassing, would they have made a difference
of judgment? And if so, what's the difference between what's gone on this week or in recent weeks
and what's gone on in other civil rights actions that have taken place in educational institutions.
And I think that would have been like a really kind of telling understanding of the discernment
that's being made on campus today versus in the past. It is interesting to see that there's clearly a sense of being torn with respect to allowing
the freedom of expression about groups that feel oppressed to be allowed to happen on
campus because that is probably a majority opinion.
And that's why I think this is particularly difficult for these presidents to handle the
situation.
And I'm not excusing their behavior or their actions or their comments yesterday.
But there's clearly something underlying this that I think we need to just acknowledge,
which is that there is a large number of people, perhaps the majority of people that feel
that there is some oppression going on and that that oppression has a right to be spoken for and that this behavior is the only way. The Boston
Tea Party did not follow convention. The Boston Tea Party was a rebellion against an institution
that was oppressive. And the Boston Tea Party was the only action that was going to make a change,
that could have driven a change. And rebellion against an institution or an establishment that causes oppression
isn't supposed to have rules.
It isn't supposed to follow convention. It isn't supposed to be a discourse.
And so I think that that sentiment is where a lot of this conflict is coming from
for the presidents in making these
decisions that they see that the majority of people truly believe that there's oppression,
that this is the course to speak up for that oppression, and that they can't step on that,
because if they did, they would be causing more disruption to more people that are allowing it,
and it's a very difficult situation that they find themselves in. So I'm not excusing it,
but I'm trying to frame up why I think...
I think it's also why smart people might be acting this way.
Frankly, I think it's worth asking what would be the case if this were other ethnic groups
or other people that were being kind of, you know, told,
hey, we're going to have an intifada against X or Y or Z,
where the actions have been the same.
Tremoff, if they were asked that same question,
is calling for the genocide of black Americans,
Asian Americans, Indian Americans,
trans Americans, harassment or bullying?
What do you think their answers would have been
and then where do you think this is going?
I don't know what their answers would have been,
but obviously it's morally unacceptable.
As best as I can tell, they were coached by lawyers
before they appeared in front of Congress.
And they found some verbal gymnastics maybe
to try to defend their point of view.
And in it, they lost all moral clarity
because to your point Jason if and to
Friedberg's point if you just replaced the Jewish people with any other cohort of
people maybe in this moment it was harder to see but it's like they should not
be debatable difficult moral questions. So how did we get here? I think that over the last 40 years, and to be honest, it started when
the US News and World Report started to rank universities. They gamified the desire for these
universities to get at the top of the list, which allowed them to theoretically get better recruits,
but really what it did was allow them to build massive asset management businesses that ultimately consumed these schools.
And now what you find is that the learning process has gotten totally perverted because it became a second-order
priority to being able to raise money and to manage assets.
I think Harvard Management Company, at what point, was one of the largest owners of forestry
in America.
The other large owner was John Malone, a repatient capitalist.
What this shows you is that the mission of these universities,
which is to actually celebrate free speech and to teach kids to think critically has been lost.
And I think that this was a very simple way of seeing it. And it should be disturbing to people that this happened, that the places where you send are 18 and
19 and 20 year old kids cannot at a very simple level teach the moral clarity to say teaching
or supporting even the concept of genocide should is wrong.
Can you teach it in a historical context? Obviously, but that's not what they even said there.
Right? So they got into a level of verbal gymnastics, but that's not what they even said there, right?
So they got into a level of verbal gymnastics,
which I think is really,
it should be viewed by everybody
is pretty morally unacceptable.
I think it's well said,
and it's clearly bullying harassment.
If you're gonna chase Jewish students around campus,
and I think that's what we saw.
Now, if you were to Chimoff or Sacks,
or maybe Sacks best,
since you're super, you have a
super high benchmark freedom of speech, if these were students in a debate club or in a
lecture hall giving their position, taking hard questions, people opting into it, wouldn't
feel like bullying harassment.
Yet the hypocrisy is so thick that they, you know, they chased people like Ben Shapiro off campus, etc.
When they had something controversial to say at many of these schools, but I think we
can all agree.
Chanting about genocide and chasing students around campus and disrupting the campus, that
feels like bullying harassment.
I don't know that.
I agree with you, Jim.
This mental gymnastics that they went through with these statements, it's just very easy to say,
yes, that's harassment.
Yes, that's bullying.
Now, if you did it in a lecture hall,
and you wrote a paper, SACS,
maybe doesn't feel like bullying,
harassment feels like freedom of speech, yeah?
Yeah, look, I mean, you can always debate
the hard cases and free speech
and where the line should be.
And again, I would draw the lines in a way that makes most speech permissible.
But when you're talking about chasing students around campus to yell in their face, that
clearly is bullying or harassment.
And there's no reason to ever allow something like that.
But again, the point I would make is that what you're going to see in the wake of this is that a lot of
Jewish people are
Realizing that they don't have a home on the left anymore and I expect that many Jews are going to start shifting right
And into their public and party
To a place where I've been for a while
And and I think this goes back a long way
So if you go all the way back to the original civil rights movement in the 1960s,
I think that many Jews were an integral part of that movement,
and they felt a great solidarity with the original civil rights movement,
civil rights leaders, because they felt like they had a shared history of persecution,
that blacks and America had suffered from racism.
Jews around the world felt like that suffered from anti-Semitism.
They basically believed that all peals should be treated equally, that we should have
individual rights.
Basically, they were advocating for a colorblind standard, a colorblind treatment of all
people.
I think that Jews historically have wanted to be on the left for that reason.
I think what's happened over the last few decades
is that the civil rights movement in particular
and the left have moved to this woke ideology
where it's no longer about color blindness,
it's more about identity groups.
And instead of trying to get past racial differences,
it's been about accentuating them.
And so we've had this whole equity agenda,
which is really defined as redistribution
from one racial group to another racial group.
I think that for whatever reason, a lot of Jews
just hadn't confronted the reality
that the left had really changed in this way.
And again, I think it goes back to the fact
that they thought that, oh, well, if we're gonna be defining
identity groups in this, you know,
woke way, you know, Jews obviously should be
one of these victim groups, but they're waking up
to the fact that Jews are not, you know,
Jews are just in the minds of kind of woke ideology,
Jews are just white people, okay?
Successful white people with too much power.
Successful white people with a Jewish background.
And as a result, they're part of an oppressor class.
And I think that for a lot of Jewish people who are waking up to this, they're realizing
wait a second.
This is actually a very destructive ideology.
And it makes us the bad guys.
And so I would expect that again, a lot of Jewish people are waking up to the ways in
which the left
has changed, and they're realizing that that is not a hospital place in the political
spectrum for them to be.
And I would expect there to be kind of a pilgrimage now of more Jews in America towards the right
as opposed to remaining on the left where they've always been.
Yeah, the left needs to remember people should be judged not by the color of their skin or their
ethnicity, but the content of their character. It's a quoting MLK. You can get your canceled right now,
I think, to actually say that people should be judged by their character. Colorblindness is considered,
you know, a lot of people call that racism now. That's like, by the way, that is the mainstream conservative view on civil rights related
issues, is that colorblindness should be the standard right?
I want to treat everyone the same as individuals.
Yeah, exactly.
But that was the literal point of view.
This was the civil rights movements, basic tenant.
Yeah.
We've lost it all.
By the way, I think there is just one other caveat
we have to say about this whole issue, which is that it should be possible to criticize the
state of Israel or Netanyahu's government or the bombing campaign, their conducting Gaza,
or the actions that led up to this event. There should be room to criticize Israel without
being called an anti-Semite. I want to be like really clear about that.
And there needs to be a pretty wide latitude to have that conversation.
And I do think that one of the mistakes that's happened for a while now is that
Jewish groups have been a little too quick on the trigger to call people anti-Semites
for criticizing
the policies of the Israeli government. And again, I think there needs to be
wide latitude to do that. However, I don't think that's the type of speech that we're talking about
here, Jason. I think you framed it up pretty well. This is people who have veered off of legitimate
criticism, whether you agree with or not, the legitimate criticism about the Israeli government's action
into this sort of genocide old rhetoric.
And that's what we're talking about here.
Absolutely.
Any final thoughts from the rest of the panelists
before we move on to business?
Do you guys think that they're gonna get fired
or what do you think is the right consequence for this?
I think they're getting fired.
I think the money, as you pointed out in your tweet storm,
is gonna cause that.
They're gonna lose a lot of donations.
What do you think, FreeBrew?
I'm not tied into these like donor groups.
It's the donor groups that are gonna drive the decision
because they're gonna call the boards.
And so I think it's really board dependent.
Obviously, Ackman is a big donor at Harvard
and he's been very vocal about what he wants to see
Harvard's board do. I think this is going to drive a big change. Whether individuals get fired, I really
don't know. I think of the four. Farward had just have to make a bet. I'd say probably at
least one of them's getting fired. I don't know. It's like, but it's certainly going to change
a lot. Mathew, you think they're going to get fired? What do you think as you wrap,
fine alert, Jama? Yeah, I think I think going to get fired? What do you think as you wrap, fine alert, Jumon?
Yeah, I think, I think Freeburg is right.
You have to follow the money.
And I think the money's been very clear that this can't stand.
And I think that that's good because I think the people
who've been donating have enough moral clarity
on these kinds of topics to say this is unacceptable.
So how long will it take to filter through the decision-making?
I don't know, because I also don't know
how this machinery works.
But I think what people have to decide immediately right now
is all the kids that are applying for early access
and early decision, do you really
want to go to these schools?
And the parents, do you want your kids
to be going to these schools?
So I think that's a kind of a decision
that can probably happen right now,
or needs to happen right now,
while all of this other kind of donation-driven,
asset manager-driven decision-making takeship.
All right, let's get into the state of the economy.
It's a really interesting story.
I've sent to the group chat from the Financial Times
about tribalism now impacting how people
view the economy.
It's called expressive responding.
Basically, how you feel about the economy is based on which tribe you're in.
Here's a quick snapshot of what's going on.
If you're a Republican and you're doing really well under Biden, you're going to say things
are terrible in the economy during Trump.
Dems were doing awesome, like everybody else, but because they had a Trump,
they said the economy was trash. Here's the chart that explains that.
And then I'll give you a couple quick bullet points of where the economy is, but you see the divergent
there in the charts and based on the different administrations being in power. And if you look
at the second chart, it's pretty telling, this isn't happening,
this tribalism is not happening in other countries.
You can see France, Germany, UK,
people feel about the economy,
how the economy is actually doing, pretty wild data.
And I'll let you respond to that in just a second.
I'm just gonna give you eight quick hits
on what's going on in the economy.
Credit card debt, it, switching all time highs.
We surpassed one trillion back in July, keeps rising.
People are taking money out of their 401Ks.
Our chip distributions increased 13% between Q2 and Q3.
Super spending just last in October growing only 0.2%
last month versus 7% in September.
But November year over year increases in Black Friday
and Cyber Monday spending.
So maybe that's a head fake.
I don't know.
Maybe people are bargain hunting hunting.
Consumer prices rose just 3.2% year over year in October versus 9.1% in June of 2022.
Homestown, 13 year low in October.
Most folks are betting interest rate increases are over and some are betting interest rate cuts will start as early as Q1
Colchese fork essay we should expect to see and that's a prediction market two quarter point cuts by
July sacks. We've been bearish on consumers and all this crazy debt is
This the beginning of the end is this the end where we at in the consumer spending cycle
It's hard to know because there's so many mixed-secondals. Kobayashi, letter had a great tweet on this.
There's a lot of mixed-economic data right now, but I mean, the economy seems to be doing
fairly well, but the electorate doesn't feel it.
And you're seeing, in recent weeks, you're seeing a lot of commentary by pundits trying to
convince the American people that the economy is better than the people evidently feel that
it is. And I think that one of the big reasons for this gap is that over the last few years
we've had a lot of inflation, and the rise in price levels
has not been matched by the rise in people's incomes.
So people simply feel worse off because they're spending powers to finish.
Now it's true that the current inflation rate is going down, but all that means is that
the price level now is growing at, call it 3% issue year.
It's still growing.
It's not like prices have come down.
There is rising at a slower rate.
So, you know, last year we had a 9% inflation.
And inflation has been high the last couple of years.
The rate of increase is slowing down.
But people's wages, if you're working class,
have simply not kept up with the price
of goods and services.
And so I think people feel worse off than they did a few years ago.
And you can try to convince them to your blue in the face that actually the economic
data is great, but if you're somebody whose wages have not kept pace with price levels,
you're not going to feel better off.
Jamak, on your first point, I think that there is
this thing that we've grown accustomed to which is
how you feel about what's happening versus what the data may say and I think that
the press and journalists
in a pretty untrustworthy way amplify this separation. So we hear about the economy doing well. Maybe it's not doing well. We hear how the economy
is not doing well, and it actually is doing well. Nobody wants to write about the data.
People want to write about their feelings. And their feelings largely are mortified by the people around them
and what they feel.
So simple example, Nick, if you just want to throw this up,
but this is the federal reserve's data.
This is not anybody else's data.
But you would think that the wealth gap is being exacerbated
and you would think that wealth gains are going to a few.
And again, without having an opinion,
the data shows something truly incredible, which is that the American dream is not hanging
on by a lifeline. But more and more American families are achieving it. You know, 12%
of American families are now considered millionaire households, 8% are considered multimillionaire
households. That's incredible. but what's even more impressive
is that even as they do well,
the cohort underneath them, the folks that make 150
to 250 K a year
are the ones that are absolutely crushing
and they're making more than the top 10% of all families.
So I think Jason, the broader economic takeaway I have is unless you're willing to
look at the raw data, the risk is high that you will be fed an emotional perspective that
amplifies your bias or causes you to reject that view because it just seems so untrustworthy
and it doesn't map to what you're seeing. It's very, very hard to tell the truth.
That is federal reserve data that tells the truth about the U.S. economy.
And it turns out that the economy is pretty good and doing a lot for a lot of people.
Freeberg, where do you say you've brought up the issue of credit card debt as a leading indicator?
It continues to surge, but there is some inkling that consumers
may be tapped out, i.e. tapping their 401Ks.
So what's your take on the consumer?
And this tribalism that we're seeing
in the interpretation of data
and how people feel about the economy.
No, I mean, I think if people don't feel like they're
progressing on the order of 10% a year
in terms of income adjusted for purchasing power,
they're generally going to be unhappy and they're going to project that as a general statement
about quote the economy. And so the more people that that's the case, the more you see that happening.
And so while there may be, you know, a minority of people that are seeing great economic mobility.
If a large enough percentage of people, I don't see it roughly call it 10% increase in lifestyle ability year to year.
That's going to, you know, catch up to these overall scores of consumer sentiment.
I think the way the economists measure the economy is a lot different than the average person measures the economy, which is really their own
You know purchasing power and income.
Sacks your thoughts.
Look at the end of the day the question that people ask themselves
Which is the question that Ronald Reagan asked voters in 1980 is are you better off than you were four years ago?
And I think that a lot of people particularly working class people don't feel better off
Because mainly their wages have not kept pace with the overall inflation level, not just measured on a one-year basis,
but over a four-year basis.
And I do think this could explain some of the tribalism, Jason, is that we've talked
about this before, that the biggest gap in the electorate is between professional class
and working class.
If you're a professional class, meaning you have at least one college degree, by more
than 30 points, you're likely to be a Democrat.
And if you're a working class, which just means, you know, no college degree, let's say high
school educated, you're much more likely to be a Republican.
The party is a sort of flip.
The Republican party is now a working class party.
I think a lot of people find that very surprising.
It's not the party of, you know, fact-cat bankers anymore and, you know,
the Fortune 500.
So the parties have really flipped.
And I do think that working class people
are most impacted by inflation.
If you're kind of in lower to mid-income
and the wages of labor have not gone up and prices have,
then you're gonna be worse off. I do think that is a big part of it. And I think the wages of labor of knock on up and prices have, then you're going to be
worse off. I do think that is a big part of it. I think the media is working on overdrive
right now to convince people that they should think that their circumstances are better
than they actually are. Maybe the overall economic data right now is mixed to positive. I'll
certainly concede that, but I think
for the average person what they care about is their pocketbook and as far from clear
that they're better off now than they were four years ago. Jason, what do you think?
I think it's a very important segment because you're correct, Sachs in a very nuanced point,
multiple things through at once here. There is still sticker shock from inflation. I went
to birthday cake. It was $47 for a cake.
I was shocked, how does it go?
It goes for $47.
Is it made of cocaine?
No, no, I just put the cocaine all over the top.
But yeah, that's, you know.
I think I got truffle shaved on it.
I really thought it was a white truffle cake.
And this was a small cake, it was nuts.
Anyway, there is sticker shock.
The truth is though, wages are very strong right now and wages are
slightly outpacing inflation, but that is a new phenomenon, correct, SACs, that is a new phenomenon,
so people are still feeling the sticker shock, but at the same time,
unemployment and wages drive how people feel and people are feeling obviously very confident,
as you see in the credit card debt, when you're confident to Tremott's point about just follow the money and look at the actual numbers, people would
not be taking out credit card debt. They wouldn't tap the 401k if they felt they've got great
job prospects. They have options for jobs. It's a 50 year low in unemployment, which is
unbelievable. That's continued. And wages are increasing. Uber drivers are now making
$34, $36. And listen, I've been tracking how much they make from the beginning.
It was $15, then $20 and $25.
So wages are increasing massively.
The GDP is 5% or something like that.
And unemployment is low.
So the economy is actually doing a Schrodinger.
That's just the fact.
But the sticker shock is very, very real.
So I think we can wrap it there unless anybody wants to add.
Well, by the way, just over the last month, there's been a huge rally in stocks, especially
gross stocks.
Bitcoin is now rallyed to 44,000.
What?
Yeah.
That's nuts.
A firm is up like 20% today.
That's, you know, the buy now pay later company because on strong Christmas spending,
like you're saying. All the stocks, sacks that bottomed because of interest rates have now just started
to massively rally.
Massively.
So all the secular.
This is all based on expectations of rate cuts coming sooner than people thought.
And I think Bill Ackman has really led this trade and he timed it perfectly apparently
by basically going along the
bomb market like a month ago.
10 years at 417, 411, sorry.
We're off like 80 basis points in like a couple of months.
Right.
But all of this euphoria, we've gone from fear to greed and really in one or two months,
it's all driven by rate expectations that people are
expecting a rate cut in Q1.
And so far, that's not really justified by the Fed's hawkish rhetoric, but people nevertheless
seem to think it's coming.
I think that this could be, I do want to put on my tin foil.
Oh, I'm sort of saying what are not.
Because, I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure. I'm not sure. I think there will be a rate cut in Q1. Yeah, put it on. Because, you know, we're going to have to do something.
I think there will be a rate cutting Q1 and I think this is the Biden bailout.
Let's go.
I think this is a Biden bailout by the Fed because if they cut rates in Q1, that's going
to make everyone feel really flush.
It takes about six months to work its way into the system, but that's going to give a big
boost to the Biden campaign.
If you see a quarter point rate cut in Q1, a trillion of the 5.7 trillion in money market
accounts will rip into the market.
Oh, wow.
That'll be nuts.
Just people knowing that they're on the way down, that they've peaked and are on the
way down is going to unlock a lot of capital.
It's going to unlock a lot of capital.
And to be clear, it's a small group of people
who believe it's coming in the first quarter,
Bill Ackman and David Sachs,
the majority according to prediction markets think,
we'll have two of them, you know, by the summer.
Without debating whether it happens in first quarter
or a second quarter, the more fundamental thing
is if you look two years out,
you probably see rates around two and a half percent.
And that's 160 basis points from here. That's the big, big change that I think helps all
of us quite honestly.
Yeah. And let's segue here, great segment by the way, gentlemen, because in our backyard,
what we do every day in terms of capital allocation and building companies.
The cleanup work continues it was a rager folks people partied well into the next day.
And we're still seeing seeing the cleanup card has some great data.
And this is data amongst car to users which is a subset.
Of users willing to pay an expensive price to manage the cap tables the number of companies companies that shut down after raising 10 million, which is a very high benchmark,
that's up to 130% in 2023.
From 47 companies last year to 112, this year also VC firms.
And I'm seeing this very quietly happening.
This isn't reported on VC firms are very opaque about laying people off or reshuffling the
deck, but a firm called OpenView out of a boss and just abruptly shut down.
It had 70 plus employees.
They just raised about $600 million of an $800 million target for their fund.
There were reports about Greikhoft not hitting their target and reshuffling a bit that
might have been overstated, to be honest.
But on the bright side, we're seeing some rebounding in ARR of the public SaaS companies.
That started to rebound in Q3.
Here's the chart from Altimeter.
Looks like we hit bottom in Q1 of 2023.
Another bright spot public firms that are continuing to downsize are getting rewarded
by the public market Spotify.
Just did a third layer, 17%
around 1500 employees. So I guess, sacks, everybody was thinking sass was over. It was the
end of days. We talked about not a recession in sass, but a depression. And I think that
was accurate. How are you feeling about the private company market and maybe stabilization or the return of growth
in SaaS companies?
Well, what I've been saying for the past year, year and a half
is that we've been in a software recession.
The overall economy may not have been in a recession
because the consumer has stayed strong, as you said,
consumer spending has stayed strong.
So the B2C part has held up the economy,
but I think in B to B and
particularly in software, there has absolutely been a recession. It started in the first half of
2022 with rate hikes. There is a huge revaluation of growth stocks. And you saw multiples come down on SaaS valuations from, in the public markets as high as 35 down to
7 or 8, something like that.
In private VC world, we saw valuations go from, called 100 times ARR to something more
like 30 times ARR.
So the first half of 2022, we saw a valuation correction, but then around mid 2022,
what I started seeing in all my board meetings was every startup
started missing its sales forecast and they started reforcasting down.
And that process really continued for a year.
And we saw the exact same thing in the public markets and public SaaS companies as well.
And it's really remarkable how the data from the public stocks that our friend Jamen Ball from,
the altimeter has been publishing, you know, regularly, how that has
matched up with what I've seen kind of anecdotally in board meetings and, you
know, in conversations.
That's super healthy.
And the VCs face.
That the, the CEOs on the boards understand, hey, these private market
valuations have to in some way
be informed by public.
This is a very hard one.
Sure, because the public stocks are the exit comps.
So if the public stocks are worth, I don't know, a third of what they used to be, then private
valuations have to reflect that.
But in any event, I want to go beyond just talking about valuations here.
I want to talk about the business results. And again, for this time period from call it mid 2022 to mid 2023, there was a software session.
Software companies were cutting jobs. They were reforcasting down. They were growing slower.
In many cases, they were actually shrinking. I mean, some companies lost ARR because of turn.
You know, a lot of their customers were shutting down
or sharpening their pencils,
they were consolidating vendors.
The last year has been a really, really tough time
in this offer space.
But I think now we've turned a corner.
I started seeing in the last couple of months,
I started seeing green shoots in some of my board meetings.
And now here we have this chart from Jammin.
Can you just put this on the screen again?
Where we saw that finally in Q3, we went from four quarters of negative growth in net
new ARR to finally a quarter of positive growth.
Now 2% is not a great number, but at least we are finally positive as opposed to negative,
which means that net newUAR was shrinking.
I think again, the software recession, I'm calling an end to the software recession.
Officially, is it a official breaking?
Breaking, the tax is called an end.
So let's, let the party begin.
I think software revenues are going to rebound.
I think the open question that's remaining then is will valuations rebound or will
you have to grow into the last valuation or some truncated valuation. And this is where
you know even if rates go to 2% are people going to be as excited again to bring the public
markets back to 15 and 20 times 4-day or. And that's an open question. I think the market says,
no, which means that even as growth comes back, you still have evaluation reset. That may actually
explain why startups are shutting down, why venture firms that, you know, if you looked at that firm
and embossed them that shut down, they had some seemingly very good companies in their portfolio,
so there should be nothing stopping them from continuing to raise capital and invest.
But I just suspect the end market that they operate in is going to be value constrained
if they pay top dollar for things that are now just worth a lot less even if they double revenue.
I'll give you an example. We talked to the private equity guys a lot just because we try to
understand where they are buyers, right?
Why is that important to me? I'll explain why private equity versus public markets and how they think about businesses because I think it's a very important point that you've made to be privately.
I think that when you look at the ecosystem, the ecosystem doesn't work if you never get liquidity to your employees and to your shareholders, so liquidity happens
in one of two ways.
It can go in the public markets or you can transact a private equity why?
Because they have almost as much money and frankly more in many cases to pay than a public
market can give you via a traditional IPO. So I think that they are a pretty rational buyer and they do a very good job because
they are a concentrated buyer of finding a very fair price.
What is the real honest market clearing price?
And so if you don't want to look at the market through Rose-colored glasses and you want
sobriety, ask a private equity investor what they would buy your position
for.
That's why I spend a lot of time talking to them because I want to know what this stuff
is really worth.
And what I would tell you is that even for companies that are in the hundreds of millions of
ARR, the premiums that they're willing to pay are between three and five times ARR
at the high end, and that a lot of deals get transacted between one and three times ARR.
That may not be what people want to hear, but that's because when you look at
the underlying ability to generate cash flow, many of these businesses have
improved to you.
And so they want to buy things in a margin of safety where they can come in and
cut certain expenses while still helping to grow in certain
markets. All of that used to be a 10x multiple in the public markets. So private equities
buying for three to five times and really one to three times, it's going to be hard for
the public market buyer to be paying a lot more than that.
Got it. Can I build on that? This is a chart that was published on December 1st by Jammon at Altimeter.
And I do think it speaks to the valuation question quite well.
You can see here that there's this line at 7.8 times, which I think refers to 7.8 times
next 12 months revenue.
That is the long term pre-COVID average.
So that is where the average SaaS stock has traded over a long period of time.
We're currently, as of December 1st, we're at 5.8, and I think it's probably a little
higher now because the markets were pretty much rallied over the last five days.
But you can see that we're still trading below the long-term
average in terms of multiples and
Part of that is because interest the 10 year is still at 4.3 percent although it's come down quite a bit It's you can see it peaked there around 5% now it's at 4.3 if you believe
That the 10 years going to go back down to I don't know this 2.5 3% range and
If you believe that growth is re accelerating
then I think there is room
You know for this number the 5.8 number to at least grow into the long-term
average, which is 7.8
So there is room there. I think that as the stocks are priced today,
it doesn't feel like they're overpriced. Let's put it that way. And I never want to tell anyone
what to buy. But you can see here that we are still trending below the long-term average.
He should pull this number back to 2010. Interesting. So at the start of the super cycle,
yeah, after the great recession. Yeah, not a bad point.
And probably pull it back, frankly,
all the way to 2005, 2006,
because you had enough companies there
that were public, that were sassy software companies,
including Salesforce, might be a six instead of 7.8,
and we might be at the 20-year average.
It's a really good point,
I'll ask Brad to do that.
Freeberg, switching to you,
you have been a capital allocator and company formation executive for the last, getting close
to a decade, and you made big news this week.
Instead of doing more funds, which I know you had a lot of people interested in backing
your funds, you decided you're going all in and that you are choosing to take the highest
performer most promising company in your portfolio
and become CEO of that company, explain your decision because I think it does relate
exactly because you're got skin in the game here, the most skin possible, which is your time.
You've decided to go to the CEO, or I'll put all your eggs in one basket, explain your thinking.
We started a business at the production board, which is my firm.
Four years ago, with Judd Ward, who's the CTO
and co-founder of this business, who came up with some pretty novel ideas on how we could
use gene editing to make incredible transformations in agriculture or reality.
The conversation originally started from a paper I read in January of 2019.
I reached out to Judd and said, hey, we should talk about this paper.
And we started brainstorming and Judd came up with this concept for this business.
And it was really, you know, call it a moonshot that they undertook and we've put tens of millions
of dollars of capital into this project over the last four years and been operating in
stealth.
And the team had some pretty significant breakthroughs
this year that make the whole thing a reality now.
The potential of the business is so significant
that I really don't have a choice,
but go all in on this.
It's a no brainer, as I said in the tweet, I put out.
I could spend a bunch of my time as you said,
like starting other businesses or making investments,
but at the end of the day,
you know, investing a cruise to a power law, where if you have something that's going to
be transformative, it could be many multiples on all the other stuff you do. And so it only made sense for me to say, look, I've got to dedicate my time, attention, energy to making sure that this business realizes its potential.
I'm going to go in full-time as CEO.
So it's pretty exciting.
You know, gene editing, I'll talk a little bit about it, but I can't share too many details.
Gene editing, as you guys know, was discovered, just controversial, whether it was discovered
first by George Church and the group at the Broad and Harvard or Jennifer Daugner and her
group at the at the Broad and Harvard or Jennifer Daugner and her group at Berkeley.
But CRISPR-CAS9 is the system that allowed us for the first time ever to go in and make specific edits to DNA. Historically, any work we've done in the genome has been very ad hoc,
haphazard, throwing large amounts of DNA into a cell to try and
get that cell to do something.
But CRISPR really unlocked this called search and replace function in DNA.
And that capability has allowed researchers to make novel therapeutics, to create, have
new discoveries in biology, and has really unlocked an entirely new era in biology.
One application of gene editing is an agriculture
where we can look specifically at the genes and plants
and what they do to the plant.
And if we can make specific changes that you would
otherwise see in nature through traditional plant breeding
and mutations happen over time, through plant breeding,
can you accelerate those changes?
And can you make a set of changes rather than spend millennia breeding plants,
can you make a specific set of changes that will cause the plant to do something very novel?
And as a result, get the plant to be more successful. And by editing the DNA of the plant to make
it more successful, its yield goes up. It can generate more food with less water, more food with
less land, more food with less labor, etc.
That's the general premise on how we can use gene editing to drive productivity and agriculture.
Amazing.
And you could, I assume, make the strawberries taste more delicious, like those ones from Hokkaido
in Japan, as opposed to just making them giant flavorless softballs.
The way gene editing has been thought about an agriculture
over the last decade has been exactly what you're saying,
which is to make a specific crate edit,
which is one edit in one gene
that does one specific thing to the plant.
And what Judd and the team came up with
was starting with the problem
rather than starting with this, you know,
kind of very specific thing that we could do.
And they said, how do we get yield to go up significantly in plants?
And they came up with this creative idea, which
is doing a series of edits, which is called multiplex editing,
multiple edits across multiple genes,
that would actually change the biology of a plant in a fundamentally
understandable way.
But that would ultimately drive such a transformative increase
in yield,
it would open up entirely new opportunities in agriculture.
And so that was the moonshot, was the series of edits that could change how plants do
a specific set of things that makes their yields go up significantly.
And we weren't sure if it would work.
First of all, we weren't sure if it was possible to do the edits.
Editing plants is very hard.
The cell wall of plants has to be dissolved.
And then you have to get the editing machinery into the plant, into the cell, and then you
have to get that cell to edit the right gene and not have other edits.
And then you have to get the cell to grow back into a plant.
There's so many complicated difficult steps.
You have to get all of them to work.
And then we weren't even sure if making all those edits would cause the outcome that we
expected. And it turns out that it does. And that happened as of a few
weeks ago at this company. And that's why I decided to step in. Because suddenly, oh my
gosh, the moonshot is working. We put in a lot of capital. We spent years funding the
exercise. It's real. And now we're going to take off. And that's why I'm going along
on this. So I'm being a little cagey with respect to the details.
As I understand, it's top secret stuff.
That's fine.
I definitely want to talk more specifically about what the team's done and what we're going
to do with the business, which I will happily do in a few months with some things become
public.
But in the meantime, I'm excited to do it.
I got to tell you, the last set, it's been seven years since I've been an operating CEO.
And you know, to some degree, there's always been a piece missing for me in what I do every day.
That I haven't felt like I've had the ability to have the influence and make the decisions
that I think need to be made.
You're advising the CEO.
You're sitting in a board seat, kind of encouraging them to do certain things.
But then sometimes they listen and sometimes they don't.
So to actually be in the seat feels to me like the right place.
It's the right place where I can have the influence and drive the change that I want to see
and I haven't done that in a very long time.
And so it's also personally, I think the right decision for me to find satisfaction in
the work I'm doing not to mention the excitement I get out of the business.
And you and I have talked about this privately.
The world has too much capital.
There's just tons of money.
There's too many problems to be solved.
The real issue, especially when you're running
an incubator or a startup studio,
like some of these startup studios,
is who is going to pilot this very fast jet fighter
and the number of people who are ambitious and
technically know how to
fly one of these planes and do it at high speed and you know want to take on that dangerous cockpit
is very low and so I think it's very courageous of you to jump on and do this or congratulations the point you're making is a really good one
We're talking about just for a second. There's been this criticism in Silicon Valley and
I'd love your guys
is point of view on this too, Jamoth and Sex, and Jay Cal, but like, there's been this
criticism in Silicon Valley, which is that, you know, we do too much of the easy stuff,
and all the capital goes into the apps and stuff, you know, things that are the path of
least resistance to making money, not into the hard things that are low probability require
a lot of capital. It's not universally true, but it's generally true with respect to how capital is allocated.
And, you know, I was kind of talking with a bunch of people last week about this.
And I kind of realized that like, there's only, if you're going to do a difficult project that
requires a lot of capital, you're going to want to trust that capital to someone that has proven themselves.
Someone who's proven themselves, if generally going to have the choice of things they're going
to want to do with their life, and if they've proven themselves, it usually means they've had some
exit event or some liquidity event that discourages them from doing a very difficult thing and taking
on a lot of risk and burning themselves to death again when they've already made it. And the people that have made it usually make it in software the first time around because
software creates a path of least resistance to generating returns.
And then the challenging question for them is do you do it again and you make easy money,
you know how to do it, or you take a 5% shot or 2% shot of success, 98% chance of failure, going after a very
hard project that takes a very long period of time.
So I think that the challenge with difficult technology being developed in Silicon Valley
is less about a dearth of capital or a dearth of ideas or a dearth of opportunities.
It's more about a dearth of talent that finding the right folks who have the capabilities and
have done this before, to want to step back into the saddle and take on a very large low
probability problem, is really the challenge that I see a lot of, in getting a lot of
these things kind of going and funded.
Hard to get people to be in the arena, yes, Chema?
You've seen this in your portfolio?
I'm a hard problem.
It's one of my hard problems.
Like a 2% chance of success kind of problem.
Like, why would I do that when I can go do something that's
I'm 60% like they do 60 that and do really well doing it?
I find that most companies are very undermanaged and under
experienced.
And it's surprising for me.
It lacks a level of sophistication that I just assumed
existed. And I guess that's
because my last experience was when I was helping to build a company that frankly, coming
out of the great financial crisis, we were recruiting people at Facebook from Google for
the most part, and then building an entire core of young people and grooming from within.
It was, we had a pretty good go of it. Fast forward to
2023 and I must admit that the companies that I interact with when I get into the weeds,
I think the real talent to Friedberg's point is spread too thin across too many businesses.
And so there are pockets of greatness in every company, but there's no real gravitational pull
for any of them as a result of that.
This is an excellent point as well.
When we had a Serpent environment,
so many companies got funded,
an amazing CMO, CTO, VP of Ops,
started their own company.
And their natural position was the sixth man on the bench,
on the Nixle Warriors, not the primary score.
They weren't Steph Curry.
They shouldn't be in that position.
They should be coming off the bench
and being an amazing contributor.
This is, I've concluded the best time in the world
to start a new company.
I am absolutely amazed by the company's coming
and applying for funding for us.
I understand because that's your business bottle.
But what about encouraging people
to actually join a good
company and learn? How to be a good manager?
Absolutely. These are two, the two best options I think. If you have
two or three really great builders, you actually know how to build.
In the two or three, you have a great idea and you want to do it.
I encourage you to start a startup. If you don't have a great idea,
you don't have two or three co-founders, you don't want to leave the thing.
Find somebody who's just getting onto the launch pad or just getting a little escape velocity in their rocket,
which would be defined as 10 to 30 employees, maybe having raised $2 to $20 million.
I said an ideal time to get on the rocket and just any seat you can get.
As Cheryl Sandberg said famously, any seat on the rocket ship is
a seat on the rocket ship.
You just want to get on board, yeah, Chema?
I disagree with the first part of what you said.
Oh, okay.
Explain why.
I run into two and three person teams every day that I think are exceptionally talented
who should be inside of a company.
And instead, they found somebody to give the money, and so instead, they're starting
something and they're just meandering. And the problem with these two and three person teams
is that even now if you stick the right label on it like AI, you'll find five or six or seven
million dollars of money. It won't be led by any single investor. So it's all done in a safe.
None of these folks have boards. And so they come in and check in with me time to time
and I ask them about their progress and it's a mess.
And I'm shocked and I'm like,
why are you guys wasting your time?
Like you should be at a startup that's winning.
And part of it is that they think it's the right thing to do.
And I don't think there's any valor in being a founder.
I think there's a lot of valor in building something
that's really valuable for people. And if that means being a director of marketing, go do that instead.
It's a valid point. I think your most valid point in that is that there is not governance
and mentorship during the peak Zerp era. We created something called Founder University
to kind of sit 12 week horse where we teach people how to do this stuff. And then we wind up
investing in about 10% of those companies.
And it's nuts how many people are applying and we tell people when you hit $255,000 in
revenue, we'll start doing quarterly board meetings with you and they don't even have
to be officially board meetings.
They're just mentoring sessions for one hour where you present as if it's a board. And so I agree largely the passing of the hat and doing a party around and having no mentorship
is a weakness in the system.
In our firm, we fixed it with Founder University.
Yeah, but it isn't dropping a slightly different point.
Just with respect.
Well, I think that when you have bubbly funding conditions, it leads to an over-fragmentation of talent.
Sure.
Isn't that the point?
Yes.
I mean, it takes a certain concentration of outstanding people, not just founders, but
also early employees to create a company.
Right.
No, with PayPal, right?
That was the greatest concentration of talent in history.
The payment of talent in history.
Yes.
With talent, right?
You have like... That in Google would be the two best examples here.
Yeah, so one of the reasons why you can end up with, again, an over-fragmentation is if
there is too much funding in the system, and everybody is getting funded for really,
you know, mid-ideas, and it prevents a congealing of great talent to come together at companies
where it should have a really big idea.
If you believe that the startup ecosystem was overfunded
during the Zirk bubble, which it clearly was,
I mean, you don't just get bubbly valuations.
You also get bubbly funding conditions.
Then by definition, there are companies at the margins,
they're getting funded, that shouldn't get funded
and that leads to an over-fragmentation of talent. Here's what's happening on the ground. We used to see a lot of solo
founders outsourcing their tech. What we're seeing now is usually two, three, four founders
getting together to do a company. And one of the counter-provelling forces here is what we saw
would Spotify just laying off 1700 people, Google laying off,
20,000 Facebook laying off, I think 25 or 30,000 Microsoft, Uber.
All of these companies have laid off so massively, they're all on hiring freezes.
So then what happens is there's massive amounts of talent at reasonable prices joining together
after having worked at those companies.
And so I would say the companies we're funding at this early stage, we're never
doing solar founders. I mean, less than a serial entrepreneur. And we're seeing two or three
people who worked at Uber or Google or Airbnb, you know, who have like this really great product
velocity coming together and they have to be builders. So I think it's two things are
true at once. The number of companies being funded has plummeted. I think about 75%
sacks, but the quality
and the amount of concentration of talent
even in those startup cohorts is really high.
And they don't have four job offers from big tech.
They're not having like a sales force, $300,000
or off for coming in or a Google $400,000
or off for coming in.
So I think this is gonna be the best vintage adventure
in our lifetimes.
That's my personal belief.
I invested in a hundred companies this year.
But I could be wrong.
We should talk about the Google Gemini launch.
Google just dropped their chat GPT killer
and from my perspective, it's awesome.
Just two quick videos here.
It does have very strong multimodal mode.
If you don't know what that is,
just means you can use images, videos, text, input, and output.
In this demo that you're seeing on the screen, if you're watching the show,
they take a picture of a physics test that somebody took in handwriting.
They find which answers are wrong.
They explain it.
Lots of reasoning going on in here.
And obviously the multimodal means you're seeing an image and you're getting text back.
Second video they showed and they launched a lot of stuff
today with this Gemini brand.
They're using the classic example of doing a party,
planning a party.
They use my likeness in the Google video.
Wait, what's going on?
Here it is, there's a Chubby Chimoff.
Oh, sorry, I can't bother you.
Sorry about that, folks.
There's Chubby Chimoff.
I can't please strike that. Oh my God, I should have said that. I, folks. There's Chubby Chimoff. I can't please strike that.
Oh my God, I should have said that.
I thought Vinny Lingham was Fat Chimoff.
Vinny Lingham has claimed Fat Chimoff.
That's why I went for Chubby.
I didn't want to be a friend on his IP.
But anyway, oh no, I'm gonna get canceled.
So in this video, the person asked to do a kids party,
what's very unique here is that it does the follow up questions,
which is really interesting and understands reasoning and context, but it
built a dynamic interface for this use case.
And it did like a pinboard and a kind of Google-esque task list and KPIs and all this other
nonsense.
But behind all of this in the Gemini exceptionalism, I think, is that they did all these benchmarks against a bunch of tests and batteries of tests that language models use to prove how strong they are.
And Google says Gemini beat GPT-4, the latest from OpenAI in 30 out of 32 benchmarks. This is going to come in three flavors, ultra pro and nano.
That's basically cost and strength. And there's a lot more behind this, but based
on what I'm seeing, in my opinion, I've been looking at this stuff every week with S&D
and looking at all of the latest and greatest, this feels like it is a leap frog by about
20 or 30 percent if this is true. But, Freiburg, you looked at the original papers. What are
your thoughts on the underpinnings I talked about the UX and some of the reasoning. What are you seeing? And we'll consider this a
flash on the fly science corner for all those freedberg stands out there.
I haven't read the whole
60 pages, but I looked at the performance charts and it's pretty damn impressive.
I feel I use the demo of bit. I feel like you're interacting with data from Star Trek.
You guys ever watch Star Trek?
Next generation.
Look at the smile on your face.
It was so cool.
You're dream is come true from your child.
I mean, I was like, this is a lifelong dream.
I can finally have a chat with data.
It's like a conversational, it's predictable.
In the sense that it kind of predicts the details
that I might ask or might otherwise
forget to ask fills them in. There's some I think really smart features of it and I think it says a lot
that Google truly does have the muscle to compete and now is showing the way of us to do so
that they're actually putting this out there,
that they're willing to disrupt themselves,
cannibalize their own search business potentially,
in a way that everyone's been worried
they wouldn't be willing or able to do.
They'll figure out a way to monetize it later,
but they really are showing that they're willing
to try and make the best product for users,
which has always been a core mantra for Google
from the origins of the business,
focus on the user and all else will follow.
And everyone's been saying the last couple of years,
they're too focused on profit,
they're squeezing every nickel and dime out of every click,
and showing that they're willing to put this out there
says a lot about the strategic imperative
of the board and the leadership there.
So that makes a big difference.
The product seems really good.
The scoring data seems incredible against GPT-4,
which is I think the key benchmark.
As we know, OpenAI has some new models that are coming to market.
Here, let's pull up the table of results.
But this shows Gemini's performance against GPT-4
using a number of well-known metrics.
I'll say that there is no business on Earth that has more data than Google.
YouTube is the richest data repository, digital data repository on Earth.
The YouTube data set gives Google an extraordinary advantage in training.
And clearly, we're seeing that in the results they're getting on imaging and video here.
So, you know, big, big, big announcement for Google. I think it's definitely worth saying that they're in the game.
And it's going to be pretty powerful to watch.
Pretty, I think, pretty important to watch.
Saxus, Friedrich, said the Cajonets are on the table.
Now, Sundar has dropped the waveos.
What's your take?
I think it's pretty clear that Google's
we have a major player in AI.
But the question is, are they going to be dominant in AI?
And I think one of the points that our friend back
Gerstner makes that's well taken about Google's market position
is that if you look at their position in search, which
is gradually being replaced by AI, they're
absolutely dominant in search.
So even if they turn out to be good or great in AI,
their AI franchises is never going to be as dominant as their
search franchise was in that market. And so to the extent that AI is replacing search,
and I think we're seeing that more and more, right? If you can get the AI just to give
you the answer instead of a list of 10 blue links, that's a better user experience. So
I think as more and more searches get replaced with AI,
it's just impossible that they're going to maintain
that same dominant share.
Moreover, it's really unclear how you monetize those,
let's call them AI searches, where it just gives you the answer,
because nobody wants to get three ad links up at the top of their answer.
No one's going to click on those.
So I think, look, Google Google is gonna be a player in AI
But as AI displaces search
It's gonna be a real challenge for them as a company. I think I have the opposite position of explain sacks while I do think you're right
They're dominance won't be the same
having used the
Google flights AI integration Google shopping AI, that's in bar right now,
which is very like 1.0 or even 0.1.
I think the number of searches or the number of interactions, the number of queries,
let's call them questions asked, is going to go like 10, 20, 50, 100x.
I think people are going to be talking to their AI's all day long.
And where I think you might be wrong is I think actually the clicks are gonna fit in certain categories perfectly into the response. So in this birthday one,
if you had a bunch of ideas of what you could click on to purchase, if it's
said, hey, great idea for the birthday. Did you think about these hats? Did you
think about these pinatas? Did you think about these places to get cake? And
those were all paid and AI informed them because you want to do an animal based jungle party and
it showed you those.
It's going to make unbelievable ad targeting that is right into your planning.
Hey, get these hats here.
Get this flight here.
Book this restaurant.
I think it could be a gold mine.
And I think the click stream and the ad network is going to fit perfectly into it.
Same thing with those questions being asked, you know,
hey, do you want to get a math tutor?
Do you want to buy this book, etc?
So I'm going to take the other side of it.
Shama, the way you land, are you short, long, or neutral Google based on this?
I think that there's two important things to notice about this.
The first is who is in charge of this project.
And this is, I think, after they did that reorg, the most important person in all of this
is Jeff Dean, who, if you look back, is one of the most preeminent technical lights,
frankly, of the internet.
But within Google is just a giant, right?
So TensorFlow, MapReduce, Bigtable, Spanner.
The guy is just an absolute animal.
He's proven an ability to not just conceptualize big ideas,
but then get them to market in a way that can work at scale.
Right?
That's the first thing.
The second thing is that this gemini is a collaboration
between deep mind for the first time and Google research and a bunch of other people at Google.
So I think Freeberg mentioned this before.
The test for Google is not their technical capacity, but their ability to organize everybody
and get them to grow in the same direction.
So I think that that's really important.
My takeaway is what I kind of put out on Twitter, which is that I think all of this is one
more brick in the wall on this theme of commoditization.
So we have all of these really interesting foundational models.
If you just look back a little bit, Lama 2's advances have been pretty amazing. Out of the UAE, Abu Dhabi,
the government there showed some Falcon, which showed some really interesting promise.
Obviously, OpenAI is doing some great work with GPT-4 and GPT-5. Now you see Gemini and
the results that they're generating. There is going to be a proliferation of foundational
models and the cost of those models will go to zero.
And so why is that an important thing?
Well, one, it's good for the ecosystem, two, it's really good for developers, and three,
it allows us to then figure out where the real value is going to be made.
And I think the value is in taking these models and wrapping them with cheap, abstracted
hardware, right?
You can't have an economy get built in AI when you have year-long waiting lists for
H100s and A100s from Nvidia.
That's not possible.
So that entire layer as well will get commoditized.
So the folks that are the AWS's, the Azure's and the GCP's
of the world, or these next generation entrance,
who are building AI clouds, those folks,
I think will make money.
And then the apps will make money.
So I think it's a very good thing.
I think that you don't want a lot of the lock in
that Nvidia was trying to create.
They were trying to create essentially a walled garden where you have to use CUDA in order
to basically compile to these, these miles to their chips.
It's going to break all of that.
So I'm generally quite constructive.
I think that this is a really good step in democratizing this whole thing and letting the value
accrete to the ends.
It's a barbell. Infrastructure providers
and app builders, that's my best guess of where money gets made here.
All right. Adobe's $20 billion acquisition of Figma is stalled right now. UK's CMA stands
for competition and markets authority. It's effectively blocked this acquisition for a couple of obvious reasons. One, reduces innovation.
Two, it eliminates competition between two top competitors and product design. And three,
removes Figma as a threat to Adobe's Photoshop and Illustrator products.
CMA, A, mentions potential remedies, divesting of overlapping operations in each market where the deal could
cause less competition or just prohibiting the merger entirely.
It feels like that's what's going to happen.
Actually, I have to take the issue with...
That was a peak-zarp deal.
No, no.
I have to take the issue with you said that they are doing this for obvious reasons.
I don't think these reasons are obvious in the sense that I don't think these reasons are obvious.
In the sense that I don't think they speak for themselves,
I think they have to be defended.
And I don't think these are good reasons.
Oh yeah, no.
When I say obvious reasons, I'm not endorsing them,
I'm just saying the standard reasons
of lack of competition and consolidation of competitors.
So, but yeah, it's banned on your point and you
think it should not be stopped this merger. Well, first of all, this merger was originally announced,
I think, back on September 15th of 2022, over a year ago. What is that? That's almost 15 months
ago. So this is a ridiculous amount of time for regulators to take to figure out whether they're
going to improve the deal.
That's no good for anybody.
I think businesses, whether you're Adobe, whether you're Figma, have a right to have these
questions answered much more quickly.
So what are the regulators doing?
So that's point number one.
Point number two is that it's mostly the UK regulator, which is called the CMA or competition of markets authority.
They're the ones who are dragging their feet and holding this up. So Figma and Adobe have to get the approval of three different regulatory bodies.
They have to get approval in the United States from I think the DOJ. They have to get approval from the EU with Brussels and now
because of things to Brexit, they also have to get approved by the UK.
And to me, it's a little crazy that one country's competition authority, the UK, which is
not in the grand scheme of things, that big a market, can hold up this entire deal.
It should be faster, of course.
They should not have a sound number.
I question whether one country, the UK, should be able to hold up a deal if the US and
the EU approve it.
One thing I would say to startups is if the CMA is going to start holding up deals for
a bunch of novel reasons, meaning reasons that know, reasons that haven't previously been articulated
before in an antitrust law, why in the world would you want to create nexus with the UK?
I think this pertains to all the Starbeacost system because, look, I remember when I was
doing Yammer, we decided to open an office in Europe and we decided to settle in London
and we created a pretty big office in London. We thought that was the best place for a startup to locate.
If you had told me at the time that that would
subject our acquisition by Microsoft to the CMA over there
and that they would take some novel interpretation
and go hold up my deal, there's no way I would have wanted
to open an office in the UK.
So let's be clear about that.
Now, I want to move on just quickly to the argument
that the CMA is making, and I do think it's a novel argument.
They're not saying that Adobe and Figma are competitive today.
And actually, I think they are operating
in different markets.
Figma is a product for web designers and web developers.
And the end state of a figment design is code.
If you look at Adobe's products like Photoshop,
the end state is marketing collateral.
It's a marketing design product.
Nobody uses Figma to create marketing collateral they use Photoshop.
And nobody who's using Photoshop is using that to build websites.
Okay, these are in practice pretty distinct markets. who's using Photoshop is using that to build websites.
Okay, these are in practice pretty distinct markets.
And I think the CMA has conceded
that they're distinct and separate markets.
But what the CMA is trying to say
is that at some point in the future,
if we block this deal, Figma might compete.
Um, might compete with Adobe.
They might create a competitor to Photoshop.
And that is a bogus rationale for blocking a deal.
Because first of all, I think we all know that Figma has no interest in competing with Photoshop.
They're not going to compete.
They're much more interested in AI.
They're much more interested in doing things like prompt to design to code.
They're not interested in building, you know, a Photoshop competitor.
And there's no reason to believe that they would do that.
Moreover, that is not an objective standard.
Think about it.
If you can block a deal on the grounds that these two companies don't compete today, but
might one day compete in the future, it gives the regulators a veto over any deal.
And that is not the way antitrust is supposed to work.
The way that antitrust has historically worked is you define what market these companies
are in and you add their market share together if they're both in the same market to see if
it would create an undue monopoly or oligopoly, something, some dynamic like that.
It was a market share test, which is an objective test.
This is not an objective test.
This is a regular saying, hmm, you know,
we know you don't compete today,
but like one day in the future, you might, that is bogus.
So if you allow the CMA to block this deal on that ground,
they can block any deal for any reason.
And then on top of it, they've taken 15 months
to come down with this opinion. I
think this is going to have a very chilling effect on M&A activity for not a good reason,
for not a good reason. And that is the last thing the star because system needs right now.
I'm going to agree about the time. I'm going to agree that we should let a little more M&A
happen. I'll disagree. Adobe has a product
XD, competes directly with Figma, and then I've gotten multiple designers who have included
me in Figma designs for things that are other than interfaces. They're using it for decks.
They're using it for marketing collateral. And if you go look at Figma's templates offering,
they are all Photoshop illustrator key
functions. So in the market, even though the products were not designed as
competitors, designers are starting with Figma for many design projects in my
direct experience and by looking at the templates. So I'll disagree on that
third point, Jamoth, you're taking.
Well, I got to do a fact check on one thing. You're right that Adobe had a
competitive product to Figma called XD. They shut it down. They shut it down.
Yeah.
It was a failure.
So they are out of the market for a web design tool.
They're out.
So that argument no longer exists.
And I don't know if they shut it down
because of this deal or because it was failing anyway,
but they saw that problem.
Now with respect to these use cases,
where, okay, yeah, you're talking anecdotally, Jason
about you've seen some web designer use Figma.
No, I'm talking about.
Go look at the templates.
I just put the link in there.
It's still anecdotal.
It's not based on a market share test.
If you want to make this argument that Figma and Photoshop are competitive products, break
it down in terms of market share.
That's my point.
Add up Figma's market share in the market for marketing collateral
and see if that would create undue concentration.
Fair enough.
My objection is that they're not basing this decision,
if it can even be called a decision.
I think it's more like just concerns
and dragging their feet, but they are basing their concerns
on something that's unquantifiable.
And I do think that anti-stretch decisions
should be quantifiable.
The concerning thing here is that
this is on the heels of Activision and Microsoft,
which was equally protracted and drawn out.
I think it's bad for capital markets
when deals that are offered up just linger for 15, 18 months.
I don't think that that's healthy. that are offered up just linger for 15, 18 months.
I don't think that that's healthy. It causes a lot of pause amongst investors.
And it probably freezes both Adobe and Figma
from investing the way that they would
if they knew that this thing was voted up
or down in three months or whatever.
So I think that I totally agree with you
that there needs
to be an SLA around these things. And you can't take this much time. I breeze through the
CMA report. My gosh, it's 400 pages, which is like, that's insane. A 400 page document
is like, it's a little outlandish, but I wanted to call out two parts of that document. One is in support, sacks of what you said.
Nick, you can just throw it up here.
What they said was that in assessing the competitive effects of the merger, we must decide
whether there is an expectation, i.e.
More than 50% chance that the merger will result in diminished competition.
Now, that's like a little nuts because David, as you said, it's like we're going to take
an expected probability and a guess into the future about what we think will happen.
And I think that that's not a fair way of doing business.
I think that you have to look at what will happen when this happens and judge on its face.
You can't say, well, also, by the way, I expect that you guys will be intelligent and really
execute so that it'll just increase the odds. That's not right. That's what business is. So if I had to
steal man the pro-figma side, I would say that that's unreasonable. The second side on
the pro-figma side is there's this long point here. I think it's like number 27 or 28 in
this document. And this is what's crazy. It basically says like, hey, we went through document discovery, we found
some emails that basically said by Adobe, that said we did market analyses, we didn't
think we were doing very well. And I think it's important to note for the CMA that this
is what 100 years of MBA classes have taught people to do. I mean, you teach executives
that go work at companies to do what's called the SWAT analysis
to figure out what are the risks and opportunities for your business and then to go and invest
to fix them.
That's capitalism and that's business theory and we've taught executives at every single
company to do this.
That can't be illegal, meaning to use your brain inside of a business
to realize that what you did isn't working. So that's also, I would say, sacks in support
of what you're saying, which is it's taking too long, it's speculative, and you're punishing
people for actually being good business people. And I don't think that makes sense. What's
the number six months? Just to add to that, you know, again, like an important overlay here is that the
CMA is the UK's regulator, and they're the smallest market. The GDP of the UK is 3 trillion.
The GDP of the EU is 16 trillion. The GDP of the US is, I forget, it's in the 2025
trillion range. So you've got the toughest regulator who is coming up with the most novel legal theory.
I think it's worth exploring that these regulators, I think, are working in conjunction.
And those fingerprints looked a little bit more obvious. I'm not playing conspiracy theorists, but it looks like the EU, the FTC and the CMA did work together.
I don't know how officially or not
in Microsoft Activision,
it looked relatively coordinated.
I suspect that it stands to reason
that they're in touch and they talk about these deals
and they're combined perspectives.
I don't know how else you just generate a 400 page report
with this kind of specificity,
unless there's some amount of collaboration
and sharing which by the way,
I think does make sense.
I think it does make sense to coordinate your point of view.
But I think I agree with you, David.
But we don't know that for sure.
I mean, like all I know is that in the press reports
it's been about the CMA, it's possible that the EU
or I don't think US will do this because that would just be
like inventing a holy new anti-trust law, right?
Where?
No, I understand.
I'm just saying that my point of view is that as a business owner, my response to this
would be to gatekeep the app in these geographies so that I don't create an access if I ever
get bought.
That's my point.
Exactly.
That's exactly my point is that the smallest market is creating the most problems for this
merger.
So assuming they're kind of on their own in this and the EU doesn't just copy it, if you're
right, if they copy it, then Figuemento do be a bigger problem.
But I think that's what's going to happen.
Right.
Maybe the EU does copy it, but right now the CMA is way ahead of any other regulator in
terms of a novel theory.
So what I'm saying is, if you're a company, why would you subject yourself to that? No, I agree. When it's so easy to avoid their market. No, I think, I think
it fundamentally hurts UK productivity over the long run because I don't see how companies
if they can't A, get a reasonable SLA for a response and then B, get a reasonable document
that's not going to require 5050 million of lawyers and consultants to read
to do business in a country just goes down.
The incentives to do a business.
So now if you steal man the other side, I actually think it's very difficult to steal man
why this is bad for competition.
I think the only steal man is more from the economic shareholder perspective of Adobe, which
is could they have paid a different price.
What does that because I think it's a mixture of cash and stock.
So that's changed because Adobe's rallied a lot.
And is that price worth it?
But that's again, not a reason to use a regulator to run a deal to the ground, right?
Adobe should just man up and talk to Dylan and say, here's the new price.
Otherwise, here's a billion dollars.
I don't think Adobe is driving it in that way.
By all accounts, Figma is a business that's still doing very well, even if they paid too
high a price 15 months ago, they've partially grown into that valuation already.
I don't think Adobe is driving this.
I really think that the CMA is driving this.
I think there's a regulator who wants to pioneer a novel legal theory.
In a weird way, it's not, have you ever seen like a packet dogs where you've
got like a great dain and a government and then a chihuahua and the chihuahua is trying
to leave the pack.
The sea is like the chihuahua.
And it's like barking on the outskirts and trying to shepherd all the other dogs.
Yeah, you got a yappy little chihuahua here.
The issue that you bring up is a great
stain and the EU is a is a is a big dog, too.
And yeah, yeah.
But it is if the EU and the United States follow suit, it will,
it's just death by a thousand cuts, meaning it will require a Brad Smith
like character.
Inside of this company, who can go and work with regulators to really get it done.
And this is the brilliance of him at Microsoft is when you look at the track record of his
ability post this consent decree to get deals done inside of Microsoft, it's truly incredible.
There is nothing that they've really tried to buy, whether it's nuance or whether it's
mojang or whether it's GitHub, Activision.
They've linked in, they've got the...
They ran the table.
They ran the table.
Do we really want to create an economic system where whether a deal gets through is completely
arbitrary because there's no longer a quantitative test, the regulators can just pause it that
at some point in the future these companies may be competitive. No, the answer is no. And it takes, and furthermore,
in order to get past the regulators who have a completely subjective standard, you need like a
political genius, like a Brad Smith. I mean, that is like the definition of crony capitalism, right?
Is that you get your deal done if you got a Brad Smith and you don't get it done if you're a startup like Figma.
That's not the system we want to be in.
Absolutely not.
Three important things.
One, future competition is a stupid test.
Number two, just put six months on this.
It's not even future,
it's their assessment of the probability
of future competition.
Exactly, which is just dumb.
It's, this is pre-cogs in minority report.
Figma could sign an affidavit today saying that we're not making your shop.
We're not building it.
Yeah, it's not our roadmap.
It's not even an affidavit.
It's you could go through, you could conduct discovery on the question of whether Figma
has ever even discussed internally, whether they should compete with Photoshop, right?
Because you don't just launch a Photoshop
competitor out of the blue.
You probably discuss it for a while.
So they could conduct discovery on that question.
I guarantee you Figma does not have robust conversations
in discovery about competing with Photoshop.
That's not where their interest is.
And then also, they should have a six,
they should have a six month clock to do this. And then if I'm Adobe and Figma, I would say I would pull a
Zuck when they came at Zuck and said you have to pay for news in Australia. You
have to pay for news in Canada. Remember these two government overreaches that you
couldn't even put a link to a new story. He's like, okay, fine, we're just gonna
not include links to the New York Times and feeds. That's not allowed. They should just say, anybody who's in the
UK, you can no longer, we're going to look at your IP addresses, we're going to look at
your address. You can't buy Figma, you can't buy Adobe, we're going through with this.
So if you don't want consumers to have this product, you don't have to have it. And then people
have to get a VPN to use these products. Like I would call their bluff on it. It's kind
of overreaching, I agree.
Okay.
Freeberg any last thoughts as we wrap up here?
And, Jake, in order to have a healthy star-b-co-system, we need exits.
That's the outline.
We do.
That's the big picture, yes.
When you put this kind of chilling effect on M&A, because think about it.
If you're either an acquirer or you're a target, you're thinking about doing a deal, and
you know that it will take you at least or it could take you 15 months to get to a decision. Okay, you're not going doing a deal. And you know that it will take you at least,
or it could take you 15 months to get to a decision.
Okay, you're not gonna do, it's not worth it.
You chilled it.
And the standard for whether it gets approved
is completely arbitrary.
That's gonna have a dampening or chilling effect
on M&A activity, which means fewer good exits
for the ecosystem, which means that less risk capital
will wanna go into the ecosystem to begin with.
And a fairer thing, I'll run this up the flag pool into you, thanks, Axe.
Why don't they say if they're really concerned about the top 10 companies,
hey, the top 10 companies, the trillion dollar crowd, right, the Microsoft, the Google,
et cetera, Apple, they have a different standard than the mid market.
So if you really were concerned about consolidation in the top 10 companies,
just say they're not allowed to buy these companies without going through this scrutiny,
but anybody under $250 billion, they can merge,
they can buy each other, they can do whatever they want,
they're exempt from this kind of review
and just let the free market decide
because then that would build up the mid market, right, Sacks?
I'm concerned about the power of big tech companies, okay,
but I would deal with that by targeting
anti-competitive tactics.
Interoperability.
Yeah, require interoperability.
Don't let them bundle things like that.
Don't invent some wholly new arbitrary subjective tests for whether a company can be acquired.
We have a good standard around that, which has to do with market share.
Hey, shout out, Lina Khan, come on the pot anytime.
All right, everybody.
This has been, and I'm, and sincerely, Lina Khan, come on the pot anytime. All right everybody. This has been and
I'm and sincerely Lena Con come on the pot. Let's talk about this has been another amazing episode of the all-in
Podcast for the dictator Tremont Polyhapotia the rain man David sacks and
El Capitan the pilot Sultan of science and CEO
David Freiber I am the world's greatest
Love you besties. we'll see you next time
back at you catch ya
catch ya
bye
well like your winners ride
bring man David's hat
I'm going on
and it said we open source it to the fans and they've just gonna crazy with her. Lumby West, I'm queen of kinwap. I'm going all in. What, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what We should all just get a room and just have one big hug or something because they're all just like this like sexual tension
But we just need to release that out
What your, that beat beat, what your, your, your beat
Beat it, what?
We need to get merch, these aren't that bad
I'm doing all it
I'm doing all it
I'm doing all the good.