All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E32: Behind the scenes of Elon hosting SNL, CDC failures, America's real-time UBI experiment, post-COVID boom in jeopardy & more
Episode Date: May 13, 2021Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://linktr.ee/calacanis https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow the pod: https://twitter.com/theallinpod https://linktr....ee/allinpodcast Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://twitter.com/yung_spielburg Referenced in the show: NY Times - A Misleading C.D.C. Number https://www.nytimes.com/2021/05/11/briefing/outdoor-covidtransmission-cdc-number.html medRxiv - COVID-19 Aerosolized Viral Loads, Environment, Ventilation, Masks, Exposure Time, Severity, And Immune Response: A Pragmatic Guide Of Estimates https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.10.03.20206110v6.full Business Insider - Silicon Valley VCs are at war with the ‘far left radicals’ running California https://www.businessinsider.com/silicon-valley-venture-capitalists-at-front-lines-california-recall-2021-5 NY Post - Powerful teachers union influenced CDC on school reopenings, emails show https://nypost.com/2021/05/01/teachers-union-collaborated-with-cdc-on-school-reopening-emails/ MMA - Governor Reeves Announces End to Pandemic Unemployment Assistance https://mma-web.org/governor-reeves-announces-end-to-pandemic-unemployment-assistance/ Tweets: https://twitter.com/DavidSacks/status/1392154915640729605 https://twitter.com/DavidSacks/status/1392223301154447361 https://twitter.com/Jason/status/1391591653824204801 https://twitter.com/Jason/status/1391257138698375168 https://twitter.com/skepticaliblog/status/1391958173955682309 https://twitter.com/TaylorLorenz/status/1390390598444609538 https://twitter.com/friedberg/status/1392551233618026496 https://twitter.com/bytecoin8 Show Notes: 0:00 Jason goes behind the scenes of Elon's SNL appearance 23:36 CDC failures, misleading information on COVID spreading outdoors 39:10 Reacting to Stanley Druckenmiller's thoughts on current Fed policy, decoupling of capital markets from policy 48:32 America's real-time UBI experiment, Business Insider's piece covering All-In 1:05:23 Friedberg's science corner: synthetic biology IPO/SPACs, stem cell breakthroughs & more 1:19:15 Should the besties start a third party? Is it possible?
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Look at this red on my stock screen.
I can't believe what's going on.
It's awesome.
So down, doesn't mean I'm a loser.
I don't know.
I need some self-worth now.
Oh, God.
In.
Three, two.
What?
You're like your winners ride
rainman David side
and it said we open source it to the fans and it just got
a lot of you guys
hey everybody hey everybody welcome back the all-in podcast is back apologies about last week I had a personal
emergency I really like to say why of course I mean I mean, you can say it. Go say it. Say it. Say it.
Anyway, it's a humble breath with us today.
No, it's not a private. You want to explain why David Brewerg, Tremont Folly,
open David and the day and the rainman himself, David Sacks. I was on a world tour.
I was on a world tour. No, no, no, come on. Just, I'll tell the story.
Obviously, I don't like to talk about a certain friend of mine
because he's very high profile.
I don't talk about it in public.
Just flex.
Just flex.
It's okay.
I have been lifting.
I just want to let people know the guy shows back.
No, you were backstage at SNL helping Elon
with the SNL appearance.
Were you not?
This is true. Tell us what that was like. Tell us about the backstage experience at SNL.. Were you not? This is true.
Tell us what that was like.
Tell us about the backstage experience.
Yeah, tell us about the backstage experience.
I mean, we were living it out in real time with you guys,
but tell us what it was for.
Tell us why Elon recruited you.
To do it.
All right, so are you Elon's funniest friend?
Arguably.
Well, I mean, he knows, I mean, he's got a lot of fun.
Hold on, don't you remember the joke in the
sacks is roast five years ago. Remember when Elon was late and I had that ad lib joke,
there were two jokes that I landed at sacks as thing, which I thought were the two. No, Jason,
my thing. And I was being roasted. No, wait, was it Jason's party sacks? Oh, yeah, yeah.
I hosted Jason's roast. That's right. That's right. It's your roast. It's party sucks. Oh, yeah, yeah, I hosted Jason's roast. Yeah, that's right
That's right. It was your roast. It was your roast. Yeah
Anyways, okay, go ahead. You're the funniest. Otherwise known as the the funniest night of all of our collective loss
Yeah, it was really funny. That was really tough. Just tell stories from that some time
Sometime we'll tell the Jake out roast you probably are Elon's funniest friend and have a talent for for writing
Let's not be around the bush.
You do.
Okay, so I'll take the compliment.
So I'd left to go on a little trip
to go to Austin to see some friends
and then Miami to see some friends.
One of those friends who I hooked up with
and was hanging out with in Miami was obviously Elon.
And he was doing Saturday at Live
and we were just coming up with ideas around the dinner table,
and we were just laughing our asses off,
just brainstorming ideas that would never be allowed
on television, you know, and he said,
hey, would you come with me to Saturday Night Live?
And I was like, oh, that's great,
you have enough tickets.
I assumed he met Saturday night, you know,
and he said, no, I don't have a lot of tickets.
It's COVID, it's like half his money.
Would you come with me to the writers room and just you know be my wingman basically?
So I had like three four board meetings and five podcasts. So I just
I'm gonna take my work seriously.
You're like, can you give me about half a second to decide?
I can't wait to meet the decision in my mind that my friend needs help.
You guys have been in similar situations where you've asked me for help.
I've rolled with Chimoff on speaking gigs or going down to try to save sacks from going
into complete utter madness.
Oh my God.
In Cabo.
This is not crisis management.
Anyway, so you said yes, you were.
So I said yes.
And without giving away anything that was private
or confidential, they have a process
that they've been doing for 46 years.
And we came in with our own process
of what we wanted to do.
And it kind of was, you know, kind of an interesting thing
because a lot of the ideas I had were,
let's just say a little too far out for the cast
or for the writers, but some of them landed.
And I got to spend a lot of time with Lauren Michaels
and I really worked on my impersonation of him.
He's Canadian. He's Canadian. And I was like, so Lauren, tell us who were the worst hosts
ever? And he's like, it's an interesting question. And I was like, so you know, we don't like
to think of it that way. But with, um, there are in terms of people who thought they were smart and maybe were not as smart as they thought they were Steven
Segal
Was a little bit difficult and what a safe choice. That's a very safe choice. There was Christopher Stofferson
You know back in 78
musical
guest that was
Carly
Simon and
He liked to drink and in this very green room in 78 he had a couple of drinks during the rehearsal, the dress rehearsal.
So we we'll do some coffee and like any sports team when the game starts we play the game.
Okay.
So who was responsible for the Chad skit?
Okay. Okay, so who was responsible for the Chad skit? Okay, so Chad's an existing character
and that was a really amazing one to watch
because we went to Brooklyn,
to a warehouse and the production was incredible.
And the role I played if I'm being totally honest
is to just be a long friend and be there with them,
but also was that funny for you?
Should I do that? Should I not do that?
Cause there are some, you were a punch up man. I was a punch up guy
I wrote some lines without you know taking anything away from the writers there who do the bulk of the work and the actors and the set
Designers it is amazing to see what they do
Like we had to go through 40 scripts and you know when you read something in a script
It's kind of hard to know if it's funny, but then when you put Chloe or you know Kate McKinnon or Colin Joe's or Che
Or Mikey Day.
These people are phenomenally talented.
All of a sudden the script comes alive.
But for the two punch ups, I got really good.
I'll just give you one anecdote because I don't want to get myself into it.
Were you responsible for Besties and the Gen Z Hot-Kiddle?
I don't comment on that one.
As soon as I saw it, I thought of you.
And then the other one that I thought was incredibly well done was murder, dirt, or...
Okay, so I had nothing to do with that one.
And I thought that was like, we thought that one was incredibly dumb.
Like when you read it on the script, it was like, is this funny or not?
But they, you know, this is the thing.
You add tremendous performance and you add incredible set design.
And we were in Brooklyn three in the morning and Elon comes out with that wig on in a suit.
And we just start laughing hysterical.
And he just goes right into creepy priest.
It was.
That's great.
But what about the Asperger's joke?
Because you use me.
Yeah.
Because you use that as a tease amongst people
we may mutually know a lot.
And so when I heard it, I was like,
oh, that's a Jason joke.
That's a joke.
That's actually why I'm proud of this.
But what's so ironic is the Asperger joke came out
and then everyone, all these press articles got written
saying Elon has admitted publicly to have a ask for years.
And he is like, we are so proud of him. And it is such a moment to come clean about having this thing.
And it was like a Jason Jokker.
Yeah, this Jason Jokker became a, oh my gosh, you know, what a
day.
I'm particularly proud of that one because here's how that one went down.
They had an idea to do jeopardy.
And it was probably the flattest pitch because, you, because it's like 11 o'clock at night,
a writer comes in and says,
we wanna do Jeopardy auditions,
and it's a kind of a feature for the cast to do auditions.
I don't know if you ever saw the Star Wars or Ditions,
or the Jurassic Park or Ditions, kind of in that vein.
So I was like, for me, I was like,
oh, that sounds like it's got potential,
but it was a very dry pitch.
They didn't have any examples.
And when they actually did it,
it was like really weird characters that were obscure.
So I had pitched my own version of Jeopardy
and Elon had his version of Jeopardy.
Elon's version of Jeopardy was dictator Jeopardy.
It was, it was, keep jugging, you know, MBS, Putin,
et cetera.
And then I was like, how did deal with your adversaries?
And he was like, for 800, and he's like,
planonium, and I was like,
chat us on.
And it got really dark.
And so we are laughing or s is about that.
But then like, there were security concerns.
Basically, we're kind of dialing this around.
It would be as funny as the, it would be a direct correlation
of funny to the chances of would be a direct correlation of
funny to the chances of Elon being assassinated by those people. So then we decided maybe
we don't do that one. And I said, I've got a great idea. Asperger's Jeopardy. And it
would be Zuck, Elizabeth Holmes, which Chloe from the show, who's an absolute genius, incredibly
sweet. And she really engaged deeply with Elon and connected
with our team. And then obviously Elon. And so you'd have Elon playing Zuck, somebody playing
Elon and then Chloe playing Elizabeth Holmes, and they would be like, you know, how to deal with
an intense situation with an employee and then press it. Don't make eye contact. You know, like
with an employee and then press is, don't make eye contact.
You know, like,
and so one of the writers,
I could tell she was not happy about this,
and she says,
my husband has ass burgers, my two brothers have ass burgers,
and all of a sudden we're in like, okay.
We can't offend anyone.
We can't offend anybody landed.
I would say, you know, 80, 90% of the staff is very,
you know, like, let's go for it.
And then there's probably 10 or 20 who are very sensitive to different topics.
And so there's a little navigation you have to do there.
But we really want to, and then so you go, I have asked for a return.
And you know, like the whole room is like, wow.
So then I was workshopping with somebody, and I wasn't in the writer's room.
I contributed 2% that max, other than, you know, being Elon's friend and supporting him.
But they came in and said, hey, when they didn't want to ask Elon something, they came to
me.
And I negotiated some situations.
They didn't originally want to have any doge father or any cryptocurrencies on the show.
We had to negotiate that.
Oh my God.
Well, I mean, no, they have general counsel there.
They have standards.
They're now on it.
Now we know why the show's not funny anymore.
There's too many people with this V2.
I love the show.
I think it's very funny.
I mean, Elon made it culturally relevant
for the first time in like a decade.
But what you're describing is too many people
with a veto right over the content of the show.
That's what makes it not funny.
You gotta be willing to.
No, no, no.
I think the show is very funny.
I think they take some artistic at risk
and what's not funny to us might be like funny
to some other folks.
So that's why it's hit or miss.
But certainly moving the show from 11, 30 on the West Coast
definitely has an impact.
So what they could have done 10 years ago
before the timing was synced
between the West and East Coast is different.
They're now on a prime time.
There's still a big cultural shift that's happened.
It's like, yeah, it it's like sex is here.
I'll give you the two.
It's not John Belushi anymore when the corporate CEO comes on the show and wants to do
crazier, wilder stuff than the people, you know, who are the regulars.
But anyway, keep going.
So anyway, you know, one of the folks who's working on the monologue, you know, comes in
and the original monologue, you know comes in and the original monologue
You know all these things go from rough to potential to good to great to amazing and so for me
It was you know just you guys know my career choice
They just really made me think like maybe I picked the wrong career choice pretty fucking good at this
I should do this
So I started to call it up the after party. I was like, you know, I've kind of made my money already
It's an intense I can get an internship. He's like, uh, no
You know, I've kind of made my money already so I guess I can get an internship. He's like, uh, no
Okay, Jason you can you can always take credit for being the third or fourth writer on Elon's monologue
Perfect So anyway, they said they wanted to do an ass burgers joke. I said so I wrote the ass burger joke of
You know, hey, I just want to let people know I've got ass burgers and
So there's not gonna be a lot of eye contact tonight. So if you see me looking off screen
It's not that I'm looking at cue cards. It's just that I have Asperger
So they didn't keep the cue card part, but they kept the rest of it
And then they did the OJ joke which was written by Colin Joost who is absolutely phenomenal as a human
Just as a writer and a collaborator and we spent a lot of time with Colin Joost
He came in and they had this joke about OJ having been on at 79 and 96.
The 96 was a joke.
He was actually on at 96.
I think that's when he went to jail or something.
I said to him, I don't think people understand the joke.
They actually think he was on at 96.
He goes, well, let's just rehearse.
So we're in the green room rehearsing and Elon goes, so like, OJ, like I'm smoking weed on every podcast,
that's like saying, OJ, you know, you murdered once and now he's a murderer forever.
And you know, side note, he was on in 79 and 96 and I just go like this and he killed
both times.
And the room, there's like a silence and that everybody goes to the start, I was like,
what am I, you know, poker or something?
That's fabulous.
That's fabulous.
That's fabulous.
That's fabulous.
I mean, there was like a split second where everyone looks left
and right, it's like, is it okay to laugh?
No, that's my point.
Like, is it okay to laugh at this?
Yeah.
And Colin Jones just looks at me and goes,
that's getting in there.
And so I landed that one.
So there were, you know, some moments like that.
For me, I tell you, I'll get emotional talking
about it. It's one of the happiest times I've ever seen in Elon's life and I've been with
him for 20 years, actually, I've known him for 25, obviously. In the feeling of Monday
and Tuesday that, oh my God, this could be a complete utter disaster. I mean, that was
our fear. And that like, we were just not in sync here.
And these maybe it's going to be unfunny. And this is a huge mistake. Like that was kind
of our vibe from our squad. And we had three of us there, including Elon. And then, you
know, we, we, the, the Asperger jokes lands. And I tell you, a woman from a wardrobe comes in and she's crying.
She's crying.
And she says, she sees me first.
And she had been there when we were doing the joke
and she said, my son was beat up for having aspergers.
And this changes everything.
Wow.
She became like a serious thing.
Three or four people came in to the room.
I kid you not crying.
Oh my God.
Because one in 20 boys, I think now have Asperger.
So you guys remember in living color?
You remember that show from the early news?
Yes, oh my God.
Can you juxtapose like comedy today
and comedy from in living color
where they had like Damon Wayans
as like the homeless guy and like
everything that would be so like non-PC today and like totally inappropriate and how much
things have shifted where like even the joke becomes like you know serious kind of.
Can I ask a question sorry Jason when people were getting emotional it was because of why
they were like thank you for validating and putting it out there and showing a role model.
One of the schuok alley guys you, basically got choked up twice on Monday
and he said,
Elon can do no wrong in my mind now
because I'm dealing with a son who has Asperger's
and they do something sometimes
that can be very challenging as a parent, right?
And it just explains a lot about,
and we all know people who have Asperger's.
Oh, David's.
And we know people who have Asperger's. David's and we know people who have the furthest spectrum.
And as someone who's been accused of being on the spectrum, can I speak to this issue?
I mean, yes.
Like, look, if anything, Asperger's is correlated within an extreme ability to focus and to
be successful.
That's why there's so many people in tech who have Asperger's have been accused of having
Asperger's. So I of having Asperger's.
So I don't know that it's something that people have to be, I guess unless you have an
extremely like extreme case like on the kind of in the autistic part of the spectrum.
But like mild Asperger's probably is correlated with success because it's like the opposite
of ADD, right?
It's an it's an extreme ability to focus. But honestly, like what you're
describing to me sounds so lame. This is why the show's not funny anymore. It's not
about the jokes. Look, it's a me about the jokes.
I disagree 100%. That joke landed. It made everybody laugh. It may have landed a little
too close to somebody. Guys, just a dissentral, the reason David, you're saying this is because we all know at
least the three of us were, what did not make it and what's on the cutting.
That's why you're saying it.
And so I think you have to just kind of move on.
You can't get to the cutting floor, but I will reveal one skit that made it to her.
You can't out you can't, you can't.
I can.
It's just one.
I mean, there was one they recorded,
which I think will come out as a digital short.
And the premise is FOMO capital,
fear of missing out capital.
That was good.
And that was a good one.
That was your idea or Elon's?
I'm trying to remember where it originated.
We were just talking about, you know,
just the state of like people buying NFTs and everything.
I think Elon may have said they all have FOMO.
Then I was like, yeah, I'd be like a venture capital firm.
Then he named it FOMO Capital.
It was a little bit of a collaboration, but I think mostly Elon and that one.
This person comes in and the skit is hilarious.
They're probably going to release it as a short like cut for time, but release it.
And the skin, the person comes in
and there's like an associate who's being trained
and they're like welcome to Fomal Capital
where we never say no to nothing.
And he's like, okay, I don't know if I understand that.
Like sit down, you get the hang of it.
And then people come in with increasingly ridiculous ideas
and I'll just tell you one of them
which one of them comes in, because because so you guys know impossible meats. This is impossible
vegetables. These are vet. These taste just like vegetables, but this broccoli is made
with endangered white rhinos. It takes a bite of it. Taste just like broccoli. And you
long goes, this is amazing. And they hand them a Picasso.
And then somebody comes in and says like,
oh, but it's just hilarious.
It's just more money being...
Why didn't that get in the show?
Well, what they do is they do a two hour show
with a live audience and they just take out two or three
skits.
And so there were three skits I think that were taken out
for time.
And then those could be released digitally now.
So they just want to have extra.
They did a long opening.
They did like, I think it was like 10 minutes on the mother's day.
One. Yeah.
Can I just say Miley Cyrus has the most incredible voice?
Oh my God, I could listen to her sing forever.
Oh, she has got an incredible voice.
So I was.
I thought the opening, I thought the opening was really shaky.
I mean, I was there.
This is the first time I've watched live TV in like 10 years,
ever since Apple TV was invented.
I've seen there waiting for Elon to come out
and crush the monologue.
And then Miley Cyrus does this long, unfunny thing
with all these mothers.
It's great, you know.
It's meant to be awesome.
I said my mother thing.
It was a song. It was a song. And it's great, you know. It's meant to be a long time. First of all, David, it was a song.
It was a song.
And it's so good.
It was a, it was a WTF moment for me.
I was like, where is Elon?
Bring out Elon.
I'm not here to see a bunch of mothers.
I mean, it's interesting.
I said, I'll tell you that was an interesting moment, David,
because they were like, Elon, we'll put you in like four
of the skits out of the seven and Elon,
and we don't want to work, you know, Elon too too hard so I was doing these sort of sidebars with some of the producers one in particular who is just a phenomenon
She's she's an amazing producer who just gets everything done because this all occurs from Monday to Saturday
And they work 16 18 hours a day and
You know hours a day. And you know, as you said, we don't want to take up too much of his time.
So we think for us the right number. And I said, you know, he gave up the week. He's the
busiest guy in the world, arguably. He wants to be in every skit. And she's like, well, nobody
really does that. Maybe a comedian here or there. And you know, I just said, if I'm here,
use me. I want to be in every skit. And like, we had to like reshuffle the deck a bit and and he was willing to do anything
Including Wario or you know, and you're a costume or be the creepy preacy. He you know that you're almost funny
Um, yeah, I think he surprised everyone
It's really good. I'm a performer just in terms of his performance. I think it was really strong
It was as good as like, you know, someone who's in the entertainment business would be, I think. I think even his critics. Yeah, exactly. It's universal take. Even Elon's sort of haters had to
concede that he performed well. He kind of committed to all those roles, even when it was like
poking fun at himself. Yeah, I had to dunk on Professor Dummy Galloway, who was like, I'm going
to live tweet Elon and he's just like going on CNN talking about Elon
He's going on every fucking cable channel. He can to like ride Elon's co-tales and he tweeted Elon with loot
Tesla would lose 80 90% of its value two years ago like just are you kidding me?
But I agree like even
Someone like fresh Galway who said Tesla was worthless
He's now just all over it.
And in it, he humanized him, you know, which is nice.
And I think he did a great job.
And it was fun.
I'm super happy for him.
He was going, Michael's came in and said,
you want, you did a great job, come back anytime,
sincerely.
And I said, how about next year, like,
I'm like, you're like, is about next year? Like, you're like, as a agent.
I'm like, basically, what are we, what are we,
what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we,
what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we,
what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we,
what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we,
what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we,
what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we,
what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we,
what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we,
what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we,
what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we,
what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we,
what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we,
what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we,
what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we,
what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we,
what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we, what are we what are we We'd love to have Elon back. You're absolutely crushed it. And I can, you know, Elon's busy in the green room.
By the way, do we know what the ratings were?
Third batch show of the season so far, I think,
not counting all the YouTube views and the international views.
I think she pales the only person who beat him.
So, you know, a couple of those skits are going to live forever,
I think, on YouTube. I mean, the Chad Skid, in particular,
was really hit
it out of the park. By the way, my observation on the skits were the ones where Elon was
kind of indispensable were like the really, were really great. Like the Chad thing, and I
thought that the Western were, well, Laurent, you know, where he plays this like 18th century,
Old West version of himself. It's like this genius in the Old West who's telling them to write electric courses or something.
For me, that was really funny.
So I thought the ones where Elon was sort of indispensable.
The more indispensable Elon was to the skit,
I thought the better it was.
And then some of the skits, I mean,
look, life sketch comedy is very hit or miss.
I thought the ones that were more miss
were the ones where they could have done it without Elon.
It could have been a skit,, any, any, any SNL.
And it's kind of like, yeah, it's like, why wouldn't you take advantage of having
Elon there and they did, you know, and just to the staff, you know, first off, I'm
sorry, I was such a ruckus.
And just rubbed it in the space.
But really, I mean, what a great time.
Elon had a great time.
The after party was amazing.
And-
Describe the after party.
Were they wearing masks?
Oh, that's a good segment.
That's a good segment.
That's good.
No, that's a good segment.
No, that's a good segment.
Was an outside party.
But we danced until, this is actually for real.
I think it's a good segue into just what we're seeing out there.
I left San Francisco having been yelled at somebody because my mask fell off.
I didn't know it.
I had gone into a store and they were like, you're mask.
They yelled at across the store.
Oh, sorry.
You know, when they fall off, you don't notice it.
Then I got to Austin.
When I'm in Austin, I'm walking down the street.
I'm the only person in Austin wearing a mask.
And somebody points at me and goes,
you don't have to wear that mask, son.
And I was like, oh, and I look around.
There's nobody wearing a mask.
It's my first day there.
And he goes, you've been vaccinated?
I said, yeah, he goes,
you really don't need to wear a mask.
So I take the mask off.
I get to Florida.
A friend of mine was out at a cocktail at a bar. Invite me to meet him for a cocktail. I go to Florida. A friend of mine was out, you know, at a having a cocktail at a bar,
invite me to meet him for a cocktail.
I go to meet him for a cocktail.
There's a DJ and he who shall not be named.
Anyway, I want to have a cocktail
as one does in Miami.
There's a 100, 200 people in the club.
The only people wearing masks are the staff
who are wearing them as chin guards.
And I'm like, that's not the purpose of a mess purpose of this but okay so and then I get to New York.
And everybody in New York is wearing one or two masks on the street on I walked out and empty street.
Okay so we should talk about that CDC article that was in the New York Times because that's an incredible summary Jason of.
Of this whole issue in a nutshell, which is, it's unbelievable.
And then to just give satin at live a nod, every day everybody tested, you got, you know,
two tests like the, I forget the names of them now, since I stopped taking them, but
you did like the big one and the small one, every day you got tested, every day you got
wristbands, you had to wear a mask 100% of the time.
And then when you were in the studio,
you had to wear the glass shield.
So if you saw the picture I did of myself and Elon
and Bloodpop, Michael, who's a famous producer for Justin Bieber
and Lady Gaga, who's a friend of ours,
Mike had to wear it too.
So we're, I mean, Elon had a mask on
because he had to take it off to do skits.
But all the rehearsals, everybody was masked up,
including the actors. And everybody was vaccinated.
So they really are taking the seriously. And I understand because in New York, they had a ton of
people die. And to get my understanding, that's what I heard second hand, was that Lauren Michaels
had to get a special variance to keep sat in that live on the air from, you know, the governor and
the mayor and everybody had to sign off on it. But I tweeted this is not this is not taking COVID seriously.
This is this is basically an irrational fear of COVID. Well, because they got hit the hardest
David. So I think that they get hit the hardest and I tweeted, why is everybody wearing a mask in
New York? And of course, they got like a hundred because it's a pandemic. But then what the two
reasons that made sense were so many people died and there was so
much suffering in New York that people out of a sign of respect are still wearing them
until they hit here herd immunity officially, which I know you could roll your eyes at David,
but you know, they did have a really close.
I don't think that's the real reason.
No, I do actually do think it's the real reason because multiple people said to me, it's
a way of showing people that you actually care about them and that you're going to really
take this seriously until the end. No, I think it's more what Ezra Klein said, which is,
this is the red maga hat for team blue. This is pure virtue signaling.
possible. The other thing they said was on a practical basis, in New York, you're on the subway,
your office, and in going into a cafe, you have to wear it,
and you're doing that 17 times a day.
So taking the mask on and off just becomes less work than just leaving it on.
Those were reasonable answers I got, but anyway, somebody summarized this.
Another reason, I think, is that, look, if you're in a blue part of the country, the media sources for team blue are
still promoting this idea that outdoor spread is a thing, that it's a risk.
We're finally now getting, we've known since last summer that there were no cases, no
documented cases of casual outdoor spread anywhere in the world.
The Atlantic was reporting on this, okay? This is not a conservative publication. This is a liberal, a skewed liberal publication,
okay? Liberal leaving? Yes, exactly. So we've known since last summer. I mean, when Gavin Newsom
declared that we weren't allowed to go to the beach, it was widely mocked. And so only now
is the CDC getting around to loosening its guidance on outdoor mass wearing, but it's
still not loose enough.
And so there was a great article by David Leonardo in the New York Times that just came out
I think yesterday or two days ago about the cautious CDC.
And what he said is, by the way, this is valid as everything we've been saying on the
pod for the last few months, Leonardo chron, the sort of absurdly conservative guidance given by
the CDC, basically the CDC continues to suggest that outdoor transmission accounts for up to 10% of
cases, when the real number is certainly under 1% is probably under 0.1%. And this is all based on a
single study in Singapore where that was misclassified, it was based on a construction site that really was even an outdoor spread.
And yet the CDC still insists that unvaccinated people need to wear mass outdoors, that vaccinated people,
wear them in large public values, and that children at summer camp wear them at all times.
This is the current CDC guidance. And so yesterday when the head of the CDC was pulled in front of a congressional hearing and asked about this, she doubled down on this less than 10%
and the reason why it's so misleading is technically speaking less than 10%
is correct. But when the real number is 0.001% or something like that, it's
highly misleading to give 10%. And the was a line in the article, which I loved is it is accurate to say
that sharks eat less than 200,000 humans a year,
but it is also more accurate to say sharks attack
150 humans a year.
And 150 is very different than 200,000,
but if you say sharks attack 200,000 people or less a year,
you would think that it's a much bigger problem
than it actually is. And I think that's the whole point, which is we were not being scientific,
we're being emotional and reactive. And the paper that Leonardo references,
basically they took this data that identified how spread was occurring empirically,
and identifying through tracing
where people actually picking up COVID.
And that's really where this empirical evidence suggests
we're talking about a less than 0.1%
casual outdoor spread rate.
And you can see that empirically in the data,
but then there's also this deterministic kind of approach
where you could say like, look, how does spread happen?
Spread happens with viruses.
We know that viruses need to live in liquid in order to survive when you're outdoors.
If there's any amount of wind or UV light, the virus can very quickly degrade.
The protein can degrade.
The RNA doesn't transfer.
And so there's a deterministic rationale for scientific rationale for why that may be
the case.
And this evidence that this paper, which I've now shared, kind of gathers together, shows
that, you know, that is indeed what the statistics are showing.
And so, yeah, you're right.
But I think the precautionary principle, David, is where the argument would be made on
the other side, which is, you know, what's the cost of wearing a mask?
If there's any risk at all.
And by the way, I'm not, I'm not making this case personally, but I think that's where
a lot of people would make the counter-argument rather than debate
the facts and the evidence and the science, they would say, but who cares?
It's just a mask.
Why does that matter?
And so I think the question is, why does it matter?
Why does it matter if they're telling us to wear masks?
Is there really that much of a cost of people to do that?
Well, I mean, if people are doing it voluntarily, that's their right to do so.
But the question is mass mandate.
Should we continue to have mandates on the population
for something that isn't necessary?
And look, I was one of the first people in March of 2000
to call for mass wearing and mass mandates
because we were seeing the data out of the Asian countries
showing that they were effective.
They were high cost or high benefit low cost.
So I was in favor of it when there was a pandemic raging, but when T zero, the rate of transmission
is in free fall everywhere, and now we've learned that outdoor spread is not an issue, I don't
support restricting people's freedom.
And, you know, for a reason that's not rooted in science.
And, you know, the problem with the CDC guidance
is that people really act on it.
So you've got politicians, you've got local jurisdictions
who will not-
Are you not schools?
Yes.
So the schools have remained closed.
And by the way, the schools have been open in Texas and Florida
for six months.
We know based on empirical data in the real world
seeing what's happening in Texas and Florida
that you're not seeing an increase in COVID cases
in those places because of school reopening.
And yet, the CDC has not moved its guidance
on school reopening.
You have summer camps now that for liability reasons,
will make kids wear masks
because they can't take the risk of getting sued.
And then you've got politicians like Gavin Newsom
who won't wipe their ass without the CDC's permission to do so. So it has a real
consequence in the real world that the CDC is stuck on this ridiculous guidance.
Did we read the actual sentence from the New York Times about under 10 percent?
So you could read it because it's really sad actually.
Just in terms of misleading CDC numbers, they said, in quotes, under 10% of the spread
has occurred outside.
When in reality, the share of transmission that occurred outdoors seems to be below 1%,
and maybe below 0.1% multiple admiologists, Tony.
Right.
We'll also read the quote.
This is directly from David Lee and Arden, The New York Times.
And I think it's important to, you know, it's great when you can quote The New York Times
or The Atlantic because these are left-leaning publications.
So team Blue should be more willing to accept them.
What Leonardo said is there's not a single
documented COVID infection anywhere in the world
from casual outdoor interactions.
But do people know that?
I mean, do the people walking down the street
with masks on know that?
Well, don't know it now, because according,
by the way, did you guys know, Jason just told me this,
we accumulate a million views slash listens
a week to our podcast.
Yeah, now the archive's growing.
So now that, now, now a million people will at least know.
I mean, at least, I think it's, you know,
it's a good segue.
It's a little bit self-selective's be honest, you know, for intelligence.
I mean, the real question is like, well, isn't this an opportunity for the CDC to actually
reestablish some credibility, which is to say, okay, we're going to get back to facts. We're not
going to, we are not, we know that people will be prone to acting on anecdote and emotion. So we're
going to be grounded in truth. In fact, we went back, we looked at the Singapore study, here are the flaws in it.
Here's how it applies. And so we're going to own it and revise it.
And that would go such a long way. The fact is they, they, it's, it's important
to understand, like, what do you think the incentives are for them to keep doubling down
on bad decision making?
There's no downside. I think I said this, I think I said this a few months ago, which is I don't think that
the CDC or any kind of medical, you know, administrative group in particular has to think
about the synthesis of the effect of some of the policy that they're recommending.
Their objective is to save lives.
So if I'm running the CDC, I'm going to tell people,
don't leave your home ever, don't drink alcohol,
don't eat red meat.
Exercise, you have to exercise 60 minutes a day
or you get taxed.
I mean, there's a lot of things that you could see.
If you were purely focused on saving lives,
you would make specific recommendations only to save lives
without thinking about the consequences outside of saving lives. The consequences outside of saving lives of telling people to wear a mask, is it minimizes
economic activity?
Some might argue.
Therefore, there's going to be an impact on airlines and hotels and outdoor things and
spending and all this other people being willing to go to work and people being afraid of
being in the office.
I see this across all my companies where people even though they're vaccinated
and their scientists, they're afraid to go to work. And so, you know, part of the
perpetuation of the fear that arises from these policies that are all about the absolute
saving of any life is that you end up having a significant cost that's not related to
the objectives of that particular medical organization. And we see it around the world. I goes back to what I said about leadership a few episodes ago, which is the leadership
of the administration should be synthesizing the recommendation of that group, along with
the effect that other groups might be indicating what arise from that recommendation and coming
up with a kind of concrete kind of objective around, okay, well, how do we balance these
different effects?
Well, you're saying is absolutely correct.
The people who are making the decisions are only thinking about their responsibility.
So it's like a secret service agent when the president's like, can I go out and sign autographs?
I absolutely not.
They're going to say no because they are responsible for keeping the president alive.
Now, the other prenicious thing about this is they kept trying to game the public.
And the public, when you try to game the public and you get caught where they say, don't
file, she says, don't wear a mask because you doesn't want to run out of masks.
Then they say, keep the masks on because they want to, you know, virtue signal or whatever
it is.
Or they won't simply say the vaccine is not dangerous or that the vaccine is actually going to keep
you from dying.
They undersold the vaccine and now everybody's going to question everything they do for
all time.
Don't manage us.
Manage the facts.
Stop trying to manage people and just start managing your communication and make a crisp
and clear.
And then somebody has to be a goddamn leader and say, okay, the doctors are saying this,
the economy is saying this,
and here's how those two things overlap.
In schools being closed means more suicide in kids,
more depression in kids,
and people not being able to put food on their tables
means we're gonna create,
who knows what this economic policy is gonna create,
which is another segue, David, you had something to say.
Well, look, I agree with that,
but I think you guys are being a little bit too charitable
to the CDC.
It's not just that they're wrong,
and it's not just that they have a bureaucratic incentive
for CYA and to be too conservative in their guidance.
It's the fact that when an error gets pointed out,
like by David Leonardo in the New York Times,
they double down on the lie.
And so Leonardo followed up his article, it happened.
So go to this tweet that I put in the chat.
He said at a Senate hearing today, Senator Collins asked CDC director Dr. Walensky about
today's edition of Morning, which was his article, which explains why the CDC's claim
that less than 10% of COVID transmission is misleading.
And Walensky then doubles down and has a bunch of excuses and basically defends this 10%
number, which is a lie.
Now why would the CDC be doing this?
There is separate reporting by the New York Post.
Go to this article on Teachers' Unions, collaborated with the CDC on school reopenings.
So this guidance that the CDC put forward on school reopenings, the
teachers unions were part of writing that guidance and all of their suggestions were actually
accepted and incorporated by the CDC. Now, how is this science? This is politics. Last
year, there were a bunch of articles accusing the Trump administration of incorporating political
considerations into their guidance.
There were huge scandals about this.
Where is the reporting today about the influence that the teacher's unions are wielding over
the CDC to deliberately keep schools close, even though the science does not support that.
This is a gigantic scandal. And yet no one's
covering it. It's left for the New York Post to cover this instead of the New York Times.
By the way, I think this is a good transition to that Drunken Miller interview because,
SACs, I just retweeted what you had sent, which was a link to the video interview. So,
Stanley Drunken Miller is this incredible investor.
G-O-A-T-Goat.
There's many stories about Druckenmiller.
At one point, he's the guy that notoriously they say broke the bank of England where he
was betting against the British pound and forced the central bankers in the UK to devalue
the pound.
And he's made billions of dollars managing, initially, George Soros'
money and then spun off and runs his own money now as an investor.
So he's a macro guy, so he thinks about macroeconomic conditions and effects and he talks a lot
about fed policy.
He gave this interview on CNBC and I think the most kind of press and quote, it was also
based on an op-ed, he wrote, right,
Sacks in the Wall Street Journal.
Yeah, yeah.
But the interview is fantastic.
The TV interview is great, just watch that.
The interview is great.
And he said, in the right up, he said,
clinging to an emergency after the emergency has passed
is what the Fed behavior indicates right now.
And I think that, you know, kind of what we're talking about
broadly is perhaps the emergency in the United States where you have this uncontrolled increase in COVID cases.
That's not the case today.
So the emergency has passed.
We still have COVID, but it is not an emergency.
And the point is there's a lot of institutions and individuals and businesses that are still
operating as if we were in the throes of the emergency. And so, Drunken Millers making the case.
And the Fed policy is acting as if we're in an emergency, but broadly, we're seeing this across a lot of institutions
like the teachers, unions, and others where people are effectively, you know, never let a good emergency go by without taking advantage or whatever the saying is.
Never waste a crisis.
Never waste a crisis.
And the crisis, keep the crisis going is kind of the model everyone did right now with the crisis look at
the crisis they're keeping it going as long as they can and drunken
Miller gave some pretty amazing quotes he said that well first of all he
described our current
montiery fiscal policy is being the most radical he had ever seen in the skies
been watching markets for decades the fed has pumped two point five trillion
of qe into the economy, post-vaccine,
post-retail recovery. He said that right now, retail demand is five years above trend,
meaning not only has retail demand fully recovered, it's where, if you look at the trend line,
it would be five years from now. So they are pumping like demand, like crazy. They've
issued 6 trillion of new debt, and then this is the thing
I didn't know at all. He said the Fed is buying 60% of new debt issues. Without this, the
bond market would be rejecting this massive fiscal expansion because interest rates would
become prohibitive. And he said that when interest rates revert to the norm, the historical
norm, interest expense in our debt will be 30%
of the government budget.
I mean, I think about that.
Just look, the markets have had to intervene and we have essentially decoupled what the
government thinks is happening with what the capital markets needs people to know.
And that's a really unique dynamic.
Like, I mean, I'm not nearly as successful as Stan
or have been in the markets as long as him,
but in my 20 years, this is the first time I've really seen that.
So just to give you a sense of this,
you know, the markets are now acting
to establish inflation expectations
that the Fed just seems to not want to do anything about.
And what was, so just to give you guys a sense of this, expectations that the Fed just seems to not want to do anything about.
And what was, so for just to give you guys a sense of this,
like, you know, when in February, the markets really kind of had its first capitulation,
what happened was that all of a sudden people digested all these facts that Stan just said
and realized, wait a minute, like all of this money is going to drive prices higher.
And so what they did was they took the, they took the yield on the 10-year bond up by like a hundred and fifty
hundred basis points and the markets freaked out. They went from like 0.75 to 1.75.
And the Fed came out and said, Hey, hold on, nothing to see here. This is everything's
going to be fine. But then everything since then has been sort of leading to this realization,
commodity prices are up 50%. There's this kind of like joke that like, you see a bed of lumber moving
across a railroad. That's like a billion dollars of lumber just because of how expensive it is.
You know, there are shortages everywhere. You'll be shocked to know that today, Chipotle put out the following guidance, which is they
said they are increasing the minimum wage to $15 and that within three years, you can
make $100,000 a year at Chipotle.
That is as much as some engineers and coders in the United States. Dara Korshashawi, the CEO of Uber said on the
Uber earnings call last week that the average hourly rate that some drivers in New York,
Uber drivers in New York were getting paid was $38 an hour.
What? $38 an hour. So what does all of this mean? I think what Stan is trying to say?
$100,000 a year.
But we're in this weird place where we've decoupled the government institution that's responsible
for fiscal stability.
And then the overall capital markets used to work in tandem.
And they are no longer working in tandem because you have a narrative and a set of data
points that aren't supported by the facts.
And so this is an interesting thing. So in the CDC versus the American people example,
there's no way to push back, right?
I mean, governors can act independently,
cities will act independently,
but at the end of the day,
the teachers unions are working with the CDC,
the school camps have this guidance
and you're stuck in this morass.
In the capital markets, that's not necessarily true.
And so you can change and you can you can re-rate asset prices based on sentiment. And I think
what everybody is saying in this example is, we're past the emergency. We've put too much
money in the economy. We need to reopen. And we now need to face the fact that there are massively rising prices,
which means that there will be inflation.
And if you don't act, the capital markets will continue to act for us.
And so this is an example today where you're just seeing a blood bath in the markets.
And by the way, the only time the two government officials tried to be on the either side. Janet Yellen, last Friday, kind of casually in an interview, kind of put her toe out in
the water as Treasury Secretary, and kind of said something that said there could be inflation,
and literally was hand slapped and had to put out something that disavowed her comments
less than 24 hours later.
So that's really...
Well, there's a bloodbath in the markets markets today and there's been one for the last couple
of months and in particular all the growth stocks have been hammered and just to build
on what you're saying to them off.
So there's an announcement today, there's some data that the inflation, the CPI is up 4%
and climbing.
And so people are now pricing in big interest rate increases and so that makes growth stock,
that hammer's gross stocks because all
the earnings are in the distant future. And so they get now discounted at a higher rate. And so the
valuations get absolutely hammered. So, you know, it's absolutely souring. The markets are basically
souring on this Biden agenda. And, you know, I just, you know, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I And instead they push this insane $10 trillion agenda of taxes and spending that are now
overstimulating the economy, that are causing inflation that are now growing.
No, that's not true yet.
Meaning he did do a good job on the vaccine, David.
But then to your point, the federal government's posture and reopening is still been stunted. And he's proposing so much more incremental capital, which we all know probably will not
be efficiently spent.
And there isn't any other good ideas.
And so he believes his path to reelection, which is true, is to spend and to put money
to the country.
I just get a backfire, I just get a backfire master and to tax, right?
So he's the economy. I just get a backfire, I just get a backfire master. And to tax, right? So he's the spending, he's trying to offset with higher taxes on the wealthy, which, you
know, from his point of view, is not going to affect him.
And the analysis is probably fair.
It's not going to affect his voter block significantly.
This is going to backfire massively.
Look, if the economy turns, we were set for a post-COVID boom.
And right now, that is all at risk because, Jamal, like you're saying, they're keeping
the economy closed or parts of it way too long.
They then overcompensate for that by printing a ton of money, and then they overcompensate
for that by raising a ton of too much.
Just to build on that.
So that second step of their overcompensating, their inability to open with money is so true because then what happens
is your labor force stays impaired because people make enough money by not working. This is the
issue right now for a lot of businesses. I mean you have restaurants that are overbooked,
cannot get servers. Jim Kramer was saying he's up to $18 per hour per servers. He's gonna move it to 20.
It won't make a difference because
with that extra 300, I think,
in federal unemployment,
plus three to 700, I think,
depending on where you are, you're now at 60, 70, 80%.
And people are like, well, people will still go to work.
And it's like, yeah, but you're saving commuting,
and you probably have side hustles, and you've lowered your commuting expense. So what is gonna incentivize people to go back to work. And it's like, yeah, but you're saving commuting and you probably have side hustles. And you've lowered your commuting expense. So what is going to incentivize people
to go back to work? We are now running a drive run with cryptocurrency and stimulus, a
UBI experiment. And the result of this UBI experiment is negative economic growth or
throttled economic growth. We cannot be productive if people don't want to work and contribute. So just to your point
We need more people to go to work. So just to your point on Friday Montana, which was part of the federal government's
You know pandemic related UI benefits program
Basically said that we're canceling those benefits and we're opting out and on top of that
I think they're now offering a $1,200 bonus to return to work.
And the problem is because they, Montana now has a severe labor shortage, but it's not
just Montana.
It's every state in the union.
So we have these two opposing forces, right?
We have so much stimulus.
We have an under motivated labor force.
We have more taxation.
That's also just going to be wasted.
So very poor ROI.
And then now we have input costs going up and prices going up to try to attract people.
It's all going to drive prices down.
Here's the quote from the governor of Mississippi.
The purpose of unemployment benefits is to temporarily assist Mississippians who are unemployed
through no fault of their own.
After many conversations over the last several weeks with Mississippi small business owners
and their employees, it has become clear that the pandemic, unemployment assistance and
other like programs passed by the Congress may have been necessary in May of last year,
but are no longer so in May of this year.
And can you imagine the hit you're going to take from voters, from woke mobs, from people who believe in
income inequality, when you say, I think we have to stop sending people free money so
they go back to work.
Like this is a very hard position to take.
And we now have this occurring on a micro basis in California.
We have a, is it true?
We have a $75 billion surplus this year as the city devolves.
And now we're going to take that
and instead of lowering taxes
and maybe trying to get Tesla or Oracle
or other venture capital firms that have left,
instead of doing that,
what would be, what would we do, David,
with that $75 billion?
Okay, well, okay, so great point.
So the $75 billion surplus, one third of that
is from the federal bailout,
which obviously we don't need, and that's the money printing that's coming out of watching.
So we're giving that back, right? To another state?
Yeah, good luck. Good luck, exactly.
No. Okay.
The other two thirds is because last year we had all these unexpected tax receipts from the stock
market boom. And so you get all these California taxpayers paying capital gains on that.
So, but what this highlights to me is,
and what I wonder about is how many of those taxpayers
have left the state because we know that we had
net migration loss of 180, 2000 in 2020.
So how many of those people left the state
and won't be paying taxes this year?
And if Biden breaks the stock market
through this insane tax and spend,
then where is this surplus gonna to come from next year?
What this highlights to me is, I think we have people in Washington and Sacramento for
that matter, who've lost sight of the fact that ultimately the private sector and the
public sector are a partnership.
Because the private sector generates the large S and the wealth to fund the public sector
and to fund the creation of these public goods,
to fund education, to fund law and order,
to fund social programs.
And they've stopped seeing it that way.
They see the private sector not as something
like a cow to be milked or a sheep to be sheared,
but they want to skin the sheep instead of shearing it.
And so they're really at the sheep instead of sharing it.
And so they're really at risk of killing the golden goose.
I guess you could put it that way.
And I think that during the Clinton years, just to take a contrast, we had a government
spending as a federal government spending as a percent of GDP was between 8. a half and 22 percent. That was the range. And we had a boom. So when you have a federal spending is a
percentage GDP around 20 percent, it works, right? And that doesn't mean you can't increase
government spending. It just means that government spending will increase as the economy gets bigger.
But what you have now is federal spending over 30% of GDP and everything is starting to break. That's the problem
Very very big problem
And of course and that's why we're all getting redpilled right how many people in Silicon Valley
Frankly who make a living off gross stocks are now starting to scratch their heads going gee what did I vote for?
It's definitely becoming a thing and I would say
It's definitely becoming a thing. I would say the purple pill party, like chop it up, let's mix these two things, let's
candy flip, whatever it takes to get out of this, we got to get this party restarted.
Sensurism is the answer.
It absolutely is.
Sensurism is the answer.
I think it's probably good for us to take a pause here and maybe talk about this business
insider, hit piece, or what was likely to take a pause here and maybe talk about this business insider hit piece or
what was likely to be a hit piece.
But turned out, I think on the Mergent Fair, calling this all in podcast, and I didn't
know if this is accurate, but I thought it was pretty funny.
Possibly the single most disruptive click in California politics this year.
I think they're referring to the four of us
And that of course I get
Absolutely skewered for making clocking noises. I own those clocks. I'm proud of those clocks
Here's the thing can I can I can I say something I think that look our I
Can I say something? I think that, look, I don't know,
I'm a little exhausted about local politics
and California politics.
I'm not exhausted by federal politics
because I think it's an important lens,
as David said, into how we actually conduct business
because all of the businesses we're involved with
are inherently global and America leads.
Here's what I'll say though about that article which I didn't read,
like most of these things which I don't really read.
Never read your press. Rule number one in the game. I think it's incredibly important to realize that
California was a bell-weather for opportunity and the ideals of American upward mobility.
And a lot of people came here irrespective of the taxes because they sought out like-minded
people, they sought out a moderate liberal viewpoint and an economic set of opportunities.
Two of those three boundary conditions are changing.
And that's why I think California is now important because it is a canary in the coal mine for
the rest of the United States, which is do we become a Balkanized country of 50 states?
Or are there like generic progressive moderate ideals that everybody can agree to and sign up to
and where governments largely still get out of the way? This, like I don't think,
you know, if you look at sort of like tech oligopolists and the hatred we have for them,
I don't think political oligopolists are any better. And so, you know, I don't think we want either of them in charge is really the answer. And so we just we just got to use this election cycle, I think, to kind of like vote a moderate
agenda. The most disruptive thing that can happen in California is somebody emerges who
is rational and moderate, who says, you can categorize me as a Republican or a Democrat
on a whole bunch of issues.
I had to pick a platform because this stupid election model
makes me pick one.
So call me a Democrat or call me a Republican,
but the reality is I'm a centrist.
Here's what I believe, and if that person gets voted in,
then hopefully it changes the conversation
for the rest of the country.
Otherwise, we are headed to
50 Balkanized States operating independently in Jason. The thing where you make a joke is actually kind of sad. If you get $25 billion and you don't need it, the ideal thing is that you actually give
it back to the federal government because you think there's some accountability for all these
dollars and it actually is the right thing to do. And the fact that everybody laughs because we know,
no, of course not. We'd rather just dig a ditch and fill a ditch for 25 billion or two and a half miles of
high speed rail.
Whatever the crazy thing is.
That's kind of sad.
It's not sad and it's corrupt, right?
It's a corruption.
It's a corruption that we've just gotten used to, which is you're going to take 26 billion
that you don't need, that you don't deserve.
It's like the school board in San Francisco announcing they're going to open school for
one day to qualify for incentives for reopening that Gavin Newsom gave him for 12 million
bucks.
It's a pure money grab.
It's outrageous.
You know, it's all about the Benjamin's for these guys.
And by that, I do not mean students named Benjamin.
Wow, they go folks.
David Sats, punch him in the next session now. I wonder what mean students named Benjamin. Now look folks, David Sats punch on you
off on the next answer now.
I wonder what I'm talking about.
I'm not as good as you.
This is my tune to come with him.
I'm gonna stick with my, I'm not as good as you, Jason.
I'm gonna stick with my day job.
But let me, can we go back to this article?
I want to give you my two cents on this article.
I did, you know, it was behind a paywall,
so it was hard to read, but I got a copy of it.
Here's my view on it.
First of all, I think they did pull their punches a little bit because we did the pre-bottle.
We called them out before.
Based on their very biased list of questions, they sent me.
But they kind of pulled their punches a little bit, but the article was kind of suffused
with this, how dare they pissiness.
In a couple of areas, one was, the reporter was very upset that we're going direct, right? We've talked about going direct, meaning going
around reporters and speaking directly to the public. It's kind of well, how dare they
do that, you know, they should be talking through us, you know, we, the objective reporters
and then we'll tell the story for them. No, we're going direct. We want to have an influence,
we want to speak our minds. And the second thing they're upset about is the fact that we're contributing to these
elections. And the reporter made a point of saying that I sought out the buddhin recall. They
didn't just come to me. I sought them out and wrote $25,000 as if what is he really up to? Why did he
seek them out? Well, if you want to know what I'm up to, I've written about it. I wrote a blog on, you know, the problem of Chase Ibudi,
and I've written a blog on how Gavin Newsom has moved very far to the left.
You don't need to speculate or wonder what I'm up to.
I've spent thousands of words.
Speaking about it.
You're talking about it.
David, they want you to go through them.
Exactly.
And the fact that this podcast has bigger reach than when we go on CMBC or
bigger reach than we're in business insider and when the New Yorker article on Shamaaf comes out,
more people will listen to this podcast and read that article. That's what there's an out.
Yes, absolutely. There's a certain threatening nature to what we're doing here where,
you know, as they admit, we're more influential than they are,
well then why read them? What is the point? Especially if they're doing linked baiting,
they look even... They look dumb when compared to the dialogue we're having here. They can have
the dialogue we're having here, because let's face it, we're four insiders. We see what's
happening on the inside, and if we talk to them, they might get 10 or 20% of the picture,
and in aggregate, they might get to 50 or 60,
but we get 100%.
Let me connect a couple dots,
because I think what you're saying is really important.
In my mind, I think this is another example
of the CDC example, or the financial markets example,
where in all of these cases,
what we have is the following dynamic,
which is like, if you think about when the newspaper used to hit your front door, right,
like you used to wake up and, you know, when the paper was delivered, right, we all remember
that. And you'd pick it up and it was a physical paper. Now, I'm just going to use it in this
number to make it to make an example. Let's just say it was eight and a half by 11. You take this eight and a half by 11 piece of paper and what you have is a fixed container.
And so what there was was inherent competition. And so inherently you had this leverage where
it was only the best things that got into the paper, right? They segregated by sections. People
wanted to advertise against it, and having a fixed
amount of real estate really made that real estate precious.
And I think that that was really, really important.
Now think about what's happened.
When you go to that same paper online, let's just use the New York Times.
Effectively that container has become infinite.
And so now you've completely taken away the ability for anybody to actually assign
real value. There's no above the mast head or above the fold concept as much as there used
to be, especially in infinite scrolling. The point of all of this is this is why there's
no value in coming back and re- you know telling the truth. You just go to the next clickbait
title because you're just keep on going and going and you just wonder, hey, wait a minute, to tell the truth is an inconvenient artifact of my business model today.
Whereas before telling the truth was really important, it was an anchor which created more value
for you to sell ads. Now it's just, it just gets lost in a sea of things.
There's such an agenda.
So the point is the financial markets in this interesting way is the only or it's one of the few places left
where you can vote in real time
about the truth
Right, and so for example like you know you get all of these readings and you get all of these documents from the Fed
Which is the financial markets version of the CDC?
But you can vote that you don't believe them and you can see see it every day, the gap between what they say is
narrative and what the facts are. And that's a really healthy dynamic that still exists in
in finance and capital markets. We just need to figure out a way where it exists everywhere else.
Otherwise, people will always want to make sure that they have a direct conduit to tell their
version of the truth and allow people to decide for themselves.
Before we get to science with freeberg, if you get this camera back up and running, I
don't know if you guys know, but Vox canceled us this week with an assist from Tal of the
Rens. The funniest thing is to turn in all of this is the multi-millionaire VCs co-opting
the language of young women, MLM marketers in an effort to seem cool and hip with us.
Why white men are using the term besties?
I don't know if you saw that.
I think Taylor Lorenz has had her sense of humor surgically removed.
I mean, doesn't the internet pop monitor?
Yeah, doesn't she understand that this is a self-deprecating, self-mocking bit that we
came up with or that you came up with?
I mean, come on.
It's a gag. We know it's funny for 50-year-old guys to be calling each other best.
Just the reason why, by the way, just if everybody wants to know the origin of that, is one
of our other friends, Phil Helmuth, kept calling me Besty C. And we used to think it was
the dumbest thing that we've ever heard. And then what we thought would be even funnier is to just co-opt it.
And it was dumb, most credit.
But it was done initially to make fun of what, how Muth used to call me.
Because then Muth actually has the maturity level of a teenage girl.
So that's true.
That's true with the name dropping.
I don't, when he used to turn Bestie, he was not using it ironically.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, I don't know when he used to turn Bestie, he was not using it ironically.
Where is it? No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, dog's on a walk right now, he'll come back and then he can tweet later as well.
It is my dog that runs the account.
Yeah.
So much for our ratings.
No, what is your dog's name again?
Monty.
Monty, Montgomery Wiggins.
With no Montgomery, this is gonna be
lowest episode in a long time.
But his name was Wiggins at the SPCA
where I adopted him from.
And I wanted to name him Monty because he's like a hustler.
He hustled his way from the streets of the mission
into a nice condo in Pack Heights.
So I gave him the full name on Gummery.
So he's Montgomery Wiggins now.
Oh, here he is.
Monty, come here.
Come on.
Come here.
Come on, D.
Come on, Monty.
He just got back.
He's got back.
He's got something.
My Ronald.
There he goes.
Monty.
Hey, there's the lock goingo-ing on with synthetic biology.
We saw two different IPOs in, I believe, the last month or so.
Tell us about the Ginkgo Bioworks public offering and the Xamurjian IPR.
Xamurjian?
Well, the first gen?
So the premise of synthetic biology, I'm, I'm, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm proteins that became biologic drugs. And the way you can kind of think about synthetic biology is the DNA is software, and we can
program the software to get the organism of the, you know, whatever DNA we're changing,
to make something that we want to use.
And so synthetic biology is all about editing the genome or editing the DNA of an organism,
editing its DNA, and doing that in a way
that you can kind of make a product.
And so this was done initially for biologic drugs,
and over the last kind of 20 years or so,
using synthetic biology as a kind of approach,
we've kind of thought about,
well, how can we make things like fuel,
and increasingly more commoditized products like proteins
that we might consume for animal
consumption instead of using animals to make proteins.
And so the underlying technologies have all followed an accelerated path that's greater
than Moore's law.
DNA sequencing costs have dropped faster than Moore's law over the last 10 or 15 years.
The ability to synthesize or print DNA, CRISPR provides us with a set
of tools to do much more precise DNA editing and so on and so forth.
There's just a confluence of technologies, sort of like there were leading up to the
personal computing revolution that are now going to enable this incredible proliferation
of a new industry that many argue will rewrite all industrial
systems, all industry that makes everything that humans consume from materials to food, to the chemicals, to the plastics.
Everything that we use in our daily life can be rewritten using synthetic biology.
And so the promise of this dates back, again, like two decades or so, there was a company called Amorous that John Doerback
of this dates back, again, like two decades or so, there was a company called Amorous that John Doerrbackt, that was one of the first companies, that was one of the few companies
from the original synthetic biology companies that actually survived and made it through.
And they're still around, they're still a publicly created company.
And more recently, there have been these kind of more digitally enabled, at least that's
the premise that they kind of make for what for their businesses companies.
So Zymergen, which was, you know, got a bunch of soft bank money, they raised a billion
dollars as a private company. They got public with like, I think 13 or 14
million of revenue, and they're worth five billion dollars in their IPO. So, they just weren't public.
And this other company called Ginkgo Bioworks, which is a similar sort of synthetic biology
platform company just weren't public or just announced that they're going public via SPAC at a
$15 billion market cap with, you know, I think less than a hundred million revenue. So, you know,
the game is on. And I think one way to kind of think about this is these businesses aren't great
businesses today. But the promise of the next century being all about synthetic biology, you know,
where biology
becomes software.
And you can program biological organisms to make and print pretty much anything we as
humans consume is a premise that everyone believes is going to come to fruition in the
century.
And it will completely reinvent industry will improve sustainability.
I think it is going to be the great savior for this planet and for our ability to sustain
on this planet.
So these are kind of, you know, two big IPOs that validate that the capital markets are
there.
There's so many big institutional investors.
Chimap can share more on this that are like backing, quote unquote, ESG companies.
Sympatic biology is this kind of ESG, you know, moment.
And I think these two IPOs happening at the valuations that they're happening at and
the capital that's going in, I think these are kind of like the net-scape moments for synthetic biology and we're going
to see a tremendous amount happen over the next couple of years.
So, Chimath, how closer these from being science projects in the lab to being scalable
revenue companies in your estimation?
Because these are diminimous amounts of capital we're talking about.
So this feels like...
Dominimous amounts of revenue.
Dominimous amounts of revenue.
Large amounts of capital,
is this, is this, how far is it to actually cross that chasm?
I think that we're still trying to figure out
what the right business model for these companies is.
So for example, like if you look at chip design,
like so there's an entire value chain
where there's the people that manufacture the equipment, right? There so there's an entire value chain where there's the people that
manufacture the equipment, right? There's the people that run the factory. There are the people that
develop the tool chain, so the software that you can use to characterize and build a chip, right?
And if you look at those industries, the factory in the middle tends to be the least valuable.
Companies like Virolog, you know, folks that make the software are really important, and then folks
that make the equipment, because the equipment is so precise and very complicated, is valuable.
If you translate that to biology, we need to sort out where the value is going to be.
So, the amazing thing about Ginkgo is what its promise is, what the promise that they're
going to make to the market market is we're going to make
biology programmable so that the entire generation of biologists and chemists who would otherwise
have not been able to just actually literally like write into a command line interface
and generate biologic samples, we're going to be able to enable that the same way an electrical
engineer. So like, you know, for example, like, you know, when I was doing internships or biologic samples, we're going to be able to enable that the same way in electrical engineers.
For example, when I was doing internships, you would literally be writing Virolog and
it would get basically generating what was called the net list and you could send a
net list to a fab and all of a sudden, it outcomes a chip.
That's what we're trying to do.
The problem that they have to figure out now is, are you a tool provider?
Are you, you know, picking shovels?
Are you doing it yourself on balance?
Are you in productivity?
Yeah.
Are you a product company?
And this is where we're too early
to know what the answer is.
But as the market sorts that out,
as David said, more people will get comfortable
applying money.
This is why Zymergen and Ginkgo are two really
important data points because, as David said, it will force the market to help these companies
rationalize where they are and what the tool chain looks like and compare it to semiconductors.
And in that, you're going to have an entire generation of companies get built.
It's super exciting. I spent time in and around these businesses without getting too specific.
And I think they're really compelling, really interesting.
And then this is, I mean, I never, I don't generally speak my book, but this is where I spend most
of my time, right? So I really am making a bet on my career and my capital and my time on synthetic biology
and the opportunity it presents for our species this century. So all of the work I do and I have
several businesses that I would say compete with Ginkgo and Zahima in different ways and are
tacking this problem in different ways, which is I mentioned this last time, but how do you produce
enough biological material?
How do you make stuff?
Once you've got,
for mentors,
and so are there for mentor tank companies?
Are there cheap fermentation platform companies?
Do we need to scale these things up?
Do we need to reinvent how they're operating?
There's a lot of stuff we need to figure out
over the next couple of years
for this to really kind of sweep the world.
But the fact that we can like program biology to make stuff for us is kind of where we're
at today.
That's the moment.
So here's another example of a fabulous company.
This is a private company, but you'll see them in the next probably three or four years
debut as a public business called Pivot Bio, another synthetic biology company, which I
think is just masterful.
And what
essentially pivot bio does, it essentially is a clean alternative to synthetic nitrogen
fertilizer. So like you put this shit in the ground when you're planting seeds, and what
it enables is plants that were previously incapable of nitrogen fixation, meaning getting nitrogen
out of the soil, they're able to do it. Now a lot of sudden yields go up, density goes up, predictability of the crops go up,
and it's a huge advance for farming.
What's interesting about, you know, so pivot bio like Chimath mentioned, there's a lot
of plants like soybeans, legumes that will fix nitrogen, they'll take nitrogen out of
the air, right?
Most 70% of the air is nitrogen, and so plants need nitrogen to grow.
All protein has to have nitrogen in it.
So nitrogen's key to growing plants.
Corn, you need to put nitrogen on the ground.
So around 6% of global electricity is used to make ammonia,
which is the fertilizer that farmers around the world put
on their fields to grow their corn.
And the ammonia that sits on the field
and doesn't get absorbed by the plant
turns into nitrous oxide,
which is a 300x worth greenhouse gas
than carbon dioxide.
Think about that.
300 times the heat capacity of carbon dioxide
when it goes up into the atmosphere.
So the environmental effects of nitrogen-based agriculture
are awful, and Pivot is one of the first,
they actually commercialized a research microbial strain to do this.
And you put it on the seed before you put it on the ground.
But now the ability for us to engineer microbes, and the microbes now pull the nitrogen out of the air and stick it into the plant.
The ability for us to engineer microbes opens up this universe of possibility where pivot is kind of like kindergarten level of what's going to happen over the next couple of years,
where we can now engineer all these microbes to pull nitrogen out of the atmosphere and maybe reduce all fertilizer use and have
a huge effect on greenhouse gas resulting from agriculture.
A lot of what you've mentioned seems to be things in the world, products that can be approved
and refined. What about inside of our bodies? I know there are some efforts to understand
what cells are doing and maybe use synthetic
biology to get a reading on a molecular or cellular level as to what is going on inside your
body.
And then there are these self-replicating systems that might be able to, you know, I don't
know, if your white blood cells were low, you know, and it was the 80s and it was HIV,
you could just boom, produce more white sub-blood cells with a shot or something.
Well, the original idea of Moderna, which we all know now is being kind of this RNA vaccine
producer, was you could put RNA in your body and therefore provide the code to get yourself
to make specific proteins that can do things in your body.
And so we did this example.
For example, well, the example we're using now is the COVID vaccine, right?
So it makes the COVID the spike protein, which we then develop an immune response to. But the idea with Moderna is you could eventually replace medicine with these RNA shots,
and now your cells can start to make specific proteins to do specific things in your body.
Now, we're very elementary as a species in our understanding of how proteins drive systems
level biology and outcomes. So we're starting to learn about this. But I will tell you there's a really interesting research team at UCSF led by a woman named Hanae Al Sameed. And this research team is identifying
if they're building a toolkit of proteins where these proteins can almost have like robotic
arms. They can have really interesting function. Think about Martin Short in inner space. Remember
that machine he went in and went in the body and he started doing stuff in the body? They're working on building basically
a toolkit, so it's not just a single protein that now it goes and does something, but really
complicated combinations of proteins that can now go in the body and fix things and repair
things and react environmentally to specific conditions in the body. Like, oh, there's a
cancer cell here. I'm going to go do something to it now. And so there's this whole world
of dynamic kind of making things more dynamical than they
have been historically.
Just thinking about aging, would it theoretically be able to help with hearing loss, eyesight
loss, and those type of things, would you be able to?
There's another area of biology, we could talk about this at length, but there's another
area of biology called stem cell therapy where you can basically take all cells of all
from stem cells in your body.
So these are kind of the original cells
that you have initially in an embryo, right?
And then as your body kind of grows,
you end up with these stem cells
and you have stem cells in your body today.
Those stem cells, when they make a copy,
they could differentiate into different cells in your body.
So for the last 10, 20 years in California,
by the way, it has about a $4 billion
if I remember right, stem cell grant program, where they're funding research into stem cell
therapies. So there are significantly successful therapies right now. Multiple companies are
productizing and launching and they're already active in the market for fixing blindness
with people that have specific diseases called retinitis pigmentosa where your, the retinal cells in your body and your eyes, the grade and stop
working, you will get a stem cell injection of progenitor retinal stem cells into your
eye and you will grow and you retina and you can see again.
And the efficacy is insane.
It is incredible how well this works.
And they are doing this with lots of other stem cell therapies.
So we're getting so, and here's an incredible thing
Scientists discovered a few years ago. I think these guys won the Nobel Prize for this
You could take any cell in the human body and
Induce it chemically meaning you put a bunch of chemicals on that cell and get that cell to convert back into a stem cell
Now you've created your own stem cells from your own body and you can now put them back in your body and get them to turn into any other cell in your body
So this is called induced pluripotent stem cell therapy
IPSE so IPSE now forms the basis for a lot of these stem cell therapy kind of
Programs that are underway and so this is gonna be an insane field over the next couple decades
Yeah, Friedberg if we took the $25 billion that we don't need in California and gave it
to these companies, we could be so much.
Totally, totally.
Could we solve this problem?
Nothing drives me more nuts than when I see money not going to science.
I mean, it is just not.
I mean, seriously, like, let's, we need to start our own political party that is based on
reasonable suggestions, like the one I just made or the one's, you know, the middle ground
party. Just a reasonable party.
Tax, do you think there's possibility for a third, for a, a true third party in the United
States?
Structurally, no, it's really set up to be a two party system. You have to really take
over one of the two parties. And frankly, the problem in our politics right now, I'm not
saying that Republican party is great, but the Democrat party's basically been taken
over by woke socialists, so, you know,
but, so I think that kind of like limits your options.
But, I mean, what you have to do is create a movement
and then you basically take over one of the parties.
Right.
I mean, what we're describing today,
I mean, just to up level it is,
it almost feels like we're in a race
between technological acceleration
and social and political deterioration, right?
So like technology.
Wow, wait, say it one more time.
We're in a race, I think, for the future
between technological acceleration
and social and political deterioration.
Wow.
And the question is, which one of these forces
is going to win the future?
Everything freeberg describes is incredibly hopeful, right?
We're going to be able to cure people with all these miracle technologies.
I mean, even the new mRNA vaccines that were developed for COVID, I mean,
it's miraculous, right?
And we're going to be able to use that same mRNA technology for other things,
other diseases, maybe even to attack cancer cells.
So there's so many positive things happening.
We all see it in the technology ecosystem. There's been an explosion of wealth creation and opportunity created over the
last 20 years in technology. And so we have this very positive force. And then everything
that seems to be happening in our politics and society is negative. It's it's involved
deterioration. It's it's basically a special interest corruption. It's, you know, it's basically a special interest corruption. It's basically people wedded to
these insane ideologies. And you're right, like what we really want is just a pragmatic
party that allows the private sector to do its job, generate the wealth necessary to
then fund social programs, instead of trying to upturn the whole system, which is what
it feels like so many people empower trying to upturn the whole system, which is what it feels like
so many people in power are trying to do today.
Yeah, so I registered, I registered Reason Party for us if we ever want to go there.
So if you want to bookmark Reason Party, let's talk about this tonight, boys, because I
got a run.
Oh, is it on?
Yum yum.
I'm going to see two of you tonight.
You cannot fly up.
Yeah, you gotta fly up.
You gotta fly up.
Come on, Zach, whatcha doing?
Whatcha doing?
Having a bird, if you don't let the bird out of the cage.
Our friend from LA is flying up.
Yeah.
I mean, you can follow their friend who puts the ball
on the basket is coming.
Yeah.
There are many friends.
There's many friends.
Come on, Zach.
Come on, Skable friends, free the bird.
I'll take it under advisement. Speaking of bird, they just announced a spack today.
Oh, here comes the clicker.
Oh, here we go.
I love you guys.
You guys have some f**kings.
I gotta go. I gotta go.
I like to give a shout out to bird on spec.
I love you besties and we'll see you next time.
See you guys all in podcast. Bye-bye. Love you besties and we'll see you next time see guys all in What? What? What are winners?
Why?
I'm a real fan
Besties are gone
Go for it
That's my dog, take it away
I wish you're driving away
So, that's it
I'm kidding
Oh man
My amidstia is your wimmy
We should all just get a room and just have one big hug
George, because they're all
It's like this like sexual tension
But we just need to release that album
What your, that beat beat, what your, every, every, every beat
Beat, what?
That's good, good, good
We need to get merch, these aren't that bad
I'm going all in
I'm going all in
I'm doing all in