All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - Scarlett Johansson vs OpenAI, Nvidia's trillion-dollar problem, the "vibecession," plastic in our balls
Episode Date: May 24, 2024(0:00) Bestie intros: Recapping "General AI Hospital" (2:46) Scarlett Johansson vs. OpenAI (14:37) OpenAI's novel off-boarding agreements, ex-employee equity problem, and safety team resignations (25:...35) Nvidia crushes earnings again, but it faces a trillion-dollar problem (40:05) Understanding why economic sentiment is so negative among US citizens despite positive data (1:02:36) New study shows plastics in testicles Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://twitter.com/Jason https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow on X: https://twitter.com/theallinpod Follow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theallinpod Follow on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@all_in_tok Follow on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/allinpod Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://twitter.com/yung_spielburg Intro Video Credit: https://twitter.com/TheZachEffect Referenced in the show: https://x.com/BobbyAllyn/status/1792679435701014908 https://x.com/sama/status/1790075827666796666 https://openai.com/index/how-the-voices-for-chatgpt-were-chosen https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2024/05/22/openai-scarlett-johansson-chatgpt-ai-voice https://x.com/SydSteyerhart/status/1792981291266138531 https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/351132/openai-vested-equity-nda-sam-altman-documents-employees https://x.com/sama/status/1791936857594581428 https://x.com/ilyasut/status/1790517455628198322 https://x.com/janleike/status/1790603862132596961 https://x.com/janleike/status/1791498184671605209 https://openai.com/index/openai-announces-leadership-transition https://nvidianews.nvidia.com/news/nvidia-announces-financial-results-for-first-quarter-fiscal-2025 https://www.google.com/finance/quote/INTC:NASDAQ https://www.morningstar.com/stocks/nvidia-2023-vs-cisco-1999-will-history-repeat https://www.fool.com/investing/2024/03/06/is-nvidia-doomed-to-be-the-next-cisco-what-investo https://www.elitetrader.com/et/threads/nvidia-and-the-cautionary-tale-of-cisco-systems.379022 https://chamath.substack.com/p/2023-annual-letter https://www.forbes.com/sites/theapothecary/2024/03/23/summers-inflation-reached-18-in-2022-using-the-governments-previous-formula https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/article/2024/may/22/poll-economy-recession-biden https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/CCLACBW027SBOG https://x.com/KariLake/status/1792986501820850333 https://www.stlouisfed.org/on-the-economy/2024/apr/how-big-mac-index-relates-overall-consumer-inflation https://www.google.com/finance/quote/MCD:NYSE https://www.wsj.com/economy/gdp-and-the-dow-are-up-but-what-about-american-well-being-87f90e6d https://www.consumerreports.org/health/food-contaminants/the-plastic-chemicals-hiding-in-your-food-a7358224781 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1365-2605.2007.00837.x https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12708228 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7559247 https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21524797 https://academic.oup.com/toxsci/advance-article/doi/10.1093/toxsci/kfae060/7673133 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o6yuYkfNh-k https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EYQjShJxCtM https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r_4jrMwvZ2A
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I just want to be clear here, I'm trying to do a docket. And we
have to put the kibosh on this insanity of the soap opera that
is becoming opening eyes sacks, because every week, it's three,
four, five stories. Have you seen what's happened this week?
Yeah, of course,
gotta catch the audience up here. Let's catch the audience up on
what's happened here.
This week on General AI
Hospital. Is Sam Altman's job security in jeopardy? Whose data
was stolen this time? What did he say? Why isn't he talking
about it? And with our special guest, will our special guest
get her revenge? General AI Hospital Brought to you by the drama queens at open air
Did you make that yeah, that was me
My idea but Nick's and lawns execution. So shout out to
You finally landed the plane broken clocks right twice a day took four years Broken clock is right twice a day. Took four years.
That was awesome. Broken clock is right twice a day. The Jason Calacanis story.
We open source it to the fans and they've just gone crazy with it. Love you, West.
I mean, queen of Ken Watt.
I'm going all in.
But seriously, there was this big drama, Saks.
I don't know if you saw this, but you couldn't have missed it with the Scar Joe.
So they made an emergency, they had an emergency meeting,
got all the developers together and they've reset.
They took Scarlett Johansson out and they got a new person.
I think arguably better.
I'm free, Brooke.
I'm curious your take on this.
It's a better-
Good job, GPD, how's it going?
Good, good, yeah, good, what's going on?
I'm doing fine.
I'm gonna be a father real soon.
And I think I can have your help with some dad jokes.
I'm gonna tell you a joke and you tell me
if it passes as a dad joke.
I've never done that before. All right, What do you call a giant pile of kittens?
Give it to me.
A meowing.
No, it doesn't quite land.
All right, there it is, folks.
If you want, you can switch to
Saxie Poo. So just go into OpenAI.
You're saying they stole my voice now?
Yeah, they stole yours.
Go into OpenAI, go to Voices, and then just pick Saxie Poo.
It's right there between Putin and Tucker.
Putin, Saxie Poo, Tucker.
You can find all your favorite MAGA guests
on the number one MAGA program, All In podcast.
Here we go.
All right, we're off to a strong start here.
Everybody's in a good mood.
Let's keep the good times rolling here, And let's go over the Scar Joe saga. To recap,
if you're living under a rock this week, it came out that OpenAI, specifically Sam had contacted
Scarlett Johansson multiple times about lending her voice for one of OpenAI's chat box. Obviously,
you know, she famously was the voice, Samantha, in the awesome
film Her. And according to ScarJo, Altman told her she could, quote, bridge the gap between tech
companies and creatives and help consumers to feel comfortable with the seismic shift concerning
humans and AI, and that her voice, quote, would be comforting to people. Although she declined the offer, OpenAI released a chat bot named Sky,
which had a similar voice to ScarJo's.
According to ScarJo, her friends and family
thought the voice was her.
She released a statement, yada, yada.
On May 13th, the day OpenAI launched chat GPT-40 Omni,
which we talked about last week,
Altman tweeted her a reference to the film.
Obviously now ScarJo is threatening legal action against OpenAI. the voice was never intended to resemble hers his quote, we're sorry to miss Joe Johansson
that we didn't communicate better. Open AI show documents to the Washington Post that
confirm the voice was provided by a different actress who is anonymous.
Post reporters also spoke to the unnamed actresses agent who confirmed the story.
The voice was not intended to resemble her.
The voice was not by a different actress who is anonymous. Post reporters
also spoke to the unnamed actresses agent who confirmed
the story. I guess, Sax, you sent us a comparison clip. Maybe
we start there and see what we think.
Yeah, do you guys think they sound the same?
I can understand and generate human like text pretty well. It
really depends on what you're looking for in an assistant.
What specific tasks.
When I was like, Oh, sexuality,
like I was like open my eyes to like some other thing.
Samantha.
Where'd you get that name from?
I gave it to myself actually.
What do you mean?
I think it sounds pretty darn similar.
Dead on.
I mean, I don't know if it's dead on.
Honestly, it sounds like a digitally altered version
of her voice.
That's what it sounds like to me.
Right, sounds like they didn't get it perfect, right?
Like they got it to what, 90%?
It sounds like it was her voice,
but then they changed it.
So either that, or they hired a voice actor
who sounds like her. And that's what the company has said, that or they hired a voice actor who sounds like her.
And that's what the company has said,
is that they hired a voice actor,
but they won't tell us who the voice actor is,
they said, because of privacy concerns,
which doesn't quite make sense to me,
because when you hire an actor, they want the credit, you know?
Yeah.
So the company could just clear this whole thing up
by saying exactly who the voice actor is and
Why wouldn't the voice actor want that?
You know what she doesn't exist
Wait they made this actress up I
Mean she doesn't exist. Of course, it's a digitally altered version of ScarJo
and they got caught, okay, cookie jar.
This is why Sam's call to Scarlett's agents or her
two days before they launched
is such a damning piece of evidence
because it sounds like he's trying to shut the barn door
on something they've already done, right?
They've got this demo ready.
They're gonna launch it in two days.
They're realizing maybe they don't have the rights
to use her voice.
So you have to contact her to get those rights.
But anyone who knows anything about Hollywood knows
you're not gonna be able to make a deal with a major star
to use her name and likeness in two days.
It's impossible.
So this seems like a really crazy thing to do. I mean,
I think the mere fact that he contacted them and then tweeted out her, which shows that
Scarlett was on the brain, those are really damning pieces of evidence, I think, in this lawsuit.
And I think it's going to feed into her case. I think, look, here's the thing. This company
is going to go down in the history books. In one part because the technical inventions
that they've created are just next level and frankly created an entire industry. And I think
they deserve a ton of credit for that. But they're also going to be written into the history books
for two other things that are probably less aspirational. I think the first is that there's just all kinds of dust-ups and unnecessary
drama that just seem to kick around every few weeks or months. And then the second is
the sheer quantum of value capture that the employees have seen through secondaries before
a fully functional business has been really created. And so I think it
explains why folks circle the wagons consistently. I think it's a very rational organization.
They're technically ahead of everybody else. A lot of people want to put in money at crazy
prices. A bunch of that value is transferred immediately to the employees who circle the
wagons and do what's necessary to keep the taps flowing. And I think
that that explains the whole thing. And I think that that
explains many Silicon Valley companies quite honestly,
circle the wagons, defend the company, sell your shares in
secondary at 90 billion to thrive or whoever. What would
your take free Berg on all of this craziness and drama?
I think what we will see over time is that rather than have the ability to sue for their likeness,
a lot of AI that is like a celebrity, the value of it will arise from the celebrity's endorsement,
not actually using the celebrity's features. So without the endorsement, I know everyone kind
of wants to point to this idea of likeness. But I think that
there's something about the authentic aspect of having the
celebrity actually endorse and provide their, their signature
their stamp on it. Restaurants are a good example. Some
celebrity chef says I was involved in making this menu.
That's a lot different than mimicking the celebrity chef's
menu from his restaurant,
putting his or her name and brand on it.
There's a bunch of videos on YouTube now.
I don't know if you guys ever, you guys probably don't watch these,
but I love watching these videos where like music producers make tracks and how they do it.
And so many of these producers now are using AI tools,
taking samples off of old records or other tracks,
and then telling the AI make something that sounds like this or looks like this, but isn't like this.
And so there's enough of a transformation happening that it isn't a direct likeness.
And then they're able to create entire vocal tracks without needing a singer
or without needing the celebrity singer. So they're in the-
You're in the much ado about nothing on this card.
Yeah. I'm in the like, the content itself, I think is probably less like compelling,
oh, you go after her because the voice sounds the same.
But I do think that there's this element of like,
what if you could then say, hey, you know,
Britney Spears actually lent her voice to this track.
So do you think if she, if she sues OpenAI,
do you think it should just get thrown out?
It's not a real case.
No, I think there's probably gonna be a lot of discovery
to Sachs's point that's gonna show that they probably did.
Yeah, the discovery's gonna be juicy.
No, no, no, I'm not saying that.
I'm saying, I'm asking you more that, yeah,
even if they find it, your point is it shouldn't matter.
My point is, do you think that it should be thrown out?
Well, I don't know.
I mean, hold on.
Let's say you're casting a movie
and you can't get Scarlett Johansson for it.
And so you tell the casting director,
get me a Scarlett Johansson type.
I think you can do that, okay? Obviously. You can't use her name. You can't get Scarlett Johansson for it. And so you tell the casting director, get me a Scarlett Johansson type. I think you can do that.
Okay, obviously you can't use her name.
You can't use her likeness,
but you could hire a different actor
who might look or sound like Scarlett Johansson.
If the company actually did that
and they did it nine months ago,
this is what the statement they put out.
I think they've got a decent defense.
Yeah.
But, to Tomas' point, I don't know if we believe that.
I mean, again, why don't you just put out the name of the actual actor, that voice actor
that you used?
And there's a very simple test here.
If the person, if there's confusion amongst the public, which is what ScarJo put in her
letter, and that was a legally written, deftly written letter to set up a huge settlement.
Because she said, the more this came out, all of my friends said, oh my God, congratulations
on your chat, this is great.
The public being confused is the key issue here.
And there's something called the right to publicity.
This is basically how celebrities defend their rights.
It's happening all the time to podcasters, by the way.
There was a company that put me in their ads based on something I said in a show. And then they put ads against it. And
Huberman's been having this happen. Joe Rogan. It's happening to me right now. I'm in the middle
of this crazy thing with Facebook and they've been doing a very good job. The team at Metta,
Ashley, thank you. But hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of automated accounts pretending to be
me selling all kinds of random stuff. It's predominantly on WhatsApp and Facebook and Meta. And I don't know what
to do because I, we work together with them, we shut it down. I've actually had to reactivate
my Facebook and Instagram accounts, which were dormant, so that we could actually have
them be verified so that then it's easier to shut them down. But it is an impossible
task when somebody is impersonating you to fight it. At least in my experience, it's been a month
and we, it's just like every hundred we take down, another thousand.
In both of those cases, you guys have your exact image of you being shown to sell stuff.
I think that in this case, it's also unique to ScarJo because she was the voice from her.
There is no like,
if this were like a voice sort of like Cameron Diaz or sort of like Julia Roberts, it wouldn't
be as big a deal because it would certainly got some differences to it. But it's because they're
trying to mimic the movie her. Well, didn't didn't Metta use Morgan Freeman when like Zuck created
like an AI or something as a project? You guys remember that wasn't Morgan Freeman, the voice?
They paid for it. And they've got there's company, Speechify, I'm not an investor or anything like
that, but they have Gwyneth Paltrow as a licensed voice to read your stuff. So if-
They should just license Gwyneth's voice. Obvious.
Obvious. Like just whoever wants to get paid, here's the opportunity. If three people say no,
the fourth will say yes. But what do you guys think about the fact
that they're not trying to say this is this person's voice, but they want to say like, hey, let's say you just can prompt the AI
and say generate a voice that is sort of like movies that are comfortable and calming to
people to listen to and that we think people will be comfortable.
And the AI generates something that sounds like-
I've said this before.
But it's not deliberately trained on-
Using a computer to probabilistically copy something is still copying something. Yes. Come on, guys, let's not deliberately trained on scar. Using a computer to probabilistically copy
something is still copying something. Yes. Come on guys, let's not make this too complicated.
Is the public confused is the only test you need for you. What if there's two public actresses
that both have similar voices and then they both claim, Hey, you tried to make this sound like me.
What are you doing in that case tomorrow? Well, which one did you call two days before the demo?
Yeah, exactly. And did the CEO tweet her? I think your whole point about discovery
is what is going to get them in trouble in this case,
because they were clearly trying to do
an impersonation of her, right?
Yeah, if they never reached out to Scarlett,
they could claim it's just a coincidence.
But they called her twice.
They called her some months before,
and then two days before, which indicates panic.
Judge Sachs, give your verdict. I'm starting a new show.
Judge Sachs says guilty.
Okay.
Sentence now.
What's the sentence?
The sentence is that Scarlett Johans is going to end up owning more of this
company than Sam Altman.
They call her two days before. Why do you do that?
Guilty.
Because you know you have a problem
and you're trying to put the horse back in the barn.
Exactly.
Now what they should have done is as soon as she says no,
you just change the voice completely.
Or you get a fixer, get Michael Cohen in there
and get a settlement going.
Let's get some fixer in there to fix it.
Okay, listen, enough
with OpenAI. Oh, wait, there's more drama. Geez, it's ruining the docket. I guess we have to talk
about the next drama from OpenAI this week. Former employees sign an agreement that they're
forbidden forever from criticizing the company or even acknowledging that the NDA exists. If a departing employee declines to sign the document or if they violate
it, they can lose all vested equity they earned during their time at the company. In practice,
this means ex-employees have to choose between giving up millions of dollars they've already
earned or agreeing not to criticize the company in perpetuity.
Sax is a lot of details here.
Or Chamath, yeah, we'll go to you.
Well, you can see why they wrote that in there.
That makes sense if you think, hold on a second,
if an employee can leave with, you know,
a random copy of like some old weights
as a starting point to rebuild the model,
that could be very valuable or.
Well, that's IP.
Yeah, but well, there's all kinds of like
kind of quasi-confidential information or knowledge or know-how that you leave a place like that with.
So I could see why there was a justification to be very heavy-handed about it.
But again, the question isn't whether you're allowed to be heavy-handed.
You are.
The question is why backtrack and then obfuscate
and lie after you get caught.
That's the crime.
Well, what do they say?
They claim it's an accident.
Once they get caught with their hand in the cookie jar,
which like you said, your mouth is just
a heavy handed agreement,
it's in the company's interest to do this.
They just say it was an accident,
just like the Scarlet thing is an accident or a coincidence.
It's just getting hard to believe.
Just own it and say, you know what guys guys? This is a really valuable company. There's
a ton of very valuable trade secret know-how, IP, confidential information, and we're going
to be extremely-
Litigious.
On the offense and protect it because-
Aggressive.
And it's correlated to the importance of the company and ecosystem. You could have said
that and people could have been upset, but they would have understood.
Here's what Sam Altman said. There was a provision about potential equity cancellation in our
previous exit docs. Although we never clawed anything back, it should never have been
something we had in any documents or communication. This is on me. And one of the few times I've
genuinely been embarrassed running OpenAI. I did not know this was happening and I should
have. If any former employee who signed one of these old agreements is worried about it,
they can contact me and we'll fix that too. Very sorry about this. So he's very, very
sorry. It's starting to be like BP oil, this company. Like they're just so sorry about
everything.
Here's the question is these are form documents at the end of the day, and form documents
don't write themselves, lawyers write them.
And when you get a novel change in one of these documents, somebody thought that through
and thought it'd be a good idea and put it in there.
And like Jamal said, there is a way to potentially defend that.
It's not like these provisions don't exist.
It's just a novel application to try and claw back someone's already vested equity from a company. Well, that is
not half of these things. Yeah, that is not exactly standard.
Sometimes that's completely non standard. I'm just saying that
these provisions exist in other contexts. And their application
as a as a clawback of vested employee equity is something
that I don't think any of us have heard before. So yeah,
exactly. So my point is just, this didn't happen as an accident.
Somebody made a strategic business decision to do this
because they thought it'd be in the company's interest.
Yeah, so just in layman's terms,
the clawback means you had 10 million in equity,
you earned 75% of it, you got 7.5 million in equity there.
You say something disparaging about the company,
they can take it back from you.
Once you leave a company and you vested equity, you don't lose it.
I mean, as long as you have some period in which to exercise your option if it's an option
rather than stock.
But other than that, I've never heard of a situation where employees can lose their vested
equity.
Even in a situation, Sachs, we've seen this, where somebody commits fraud.
They still get their vested equity, and then it's up to the company to sue them for fraud
separately, right?
Like we've seen instances of that.
I guess that's right.
Yeah.
I mean, I guess that's right.
Like committing a crime.
Look, I think the question here is, is it credible that they keep having these accidents and
coincidences? What does Judge Sacks say?
Judge Sacks says there's one too many coincidences.
Look, I think like Jamal said,
you could have just owned this and said that,
defended in the way he said and said,
but you know what, it was too aggressive
and we pulled it back.
I think the thing is, look,
if you think about the pendulum of culture
in Silicon Valley,
we used to have a very tough culture of founder-led businesses where there was extremely high
expectations and if you transgressed, it was very punitive.
And then the pendulum swung all the way to the other opposite end where you had this
like coddling daycare type approach that existed for like the last 15 or 20 years. And probably what
OpenAI is, is an example of a company that needs to be run a little bit more like the former,
but stuck with a bunch of people that still pull it towards to be the latter.
And that's the cultural tension that they're going to have to sort out because in order to be
the latter. And that's the cultural tension that they're going to have to sort out. Because in order to be this
incredible bastion of like, AGI and innovation, I suspect that
it's going to look more like a three letter agency in terms of
security and protocols in the next five or 10 years, then it
is going to look like the Googleplex. And I think they just
need to own that. And this is probably a little bit of an
insight into that tension. And they're going to have to go in more in that direction. I think it's a good insight. You're not going to be
allowed to build these incredibly crazy world beating technologies where people are running
around in an eight seater bicycle. It's just not going to work guys. And by the way, I mean,
because it is such an industry leading company, I think we could end up with some very bad fair use precedents or laws because Scarlett Johansson is so sympathetic as a plaintiff compared to open AI and
It's you know, unless they show us some discovery that
Proves that they really did hire the voice actor and all the rest of it
I mean this could lead to some very bad precedents for the industry around fair use
Well, and here we go I think the Microsoft will pay the speeding ticket and we'll just all move
on. But Freberg, my God, can you imagine like being two or three PhDs and, you know, machine
learning or whatever you study your whole life, you're pursuing general AI and like people are
coming up to your desk and creating all this drama and nonsense and you're in the middle of
a soap opera while you're trying to create the technology
that creates super intelligence.
It's nuts.
Yeah, I find it annoying too, just listening to it.
Okay, well then in that case,
we will move on from open AI up.
Sorry.
There's one more drama going on.
It's not just drama.
I mean, there's now a lawsuit.
I think it's a very interesting case. The fair use case is now a lawsuit. I think it's a very interesting case.
The fair use case is interesting, for sure.
I think it's a legitimately interesting case that's going to, if it goes all the way, if
it goes the distance, it's going to create some really interesting precedents.
Well, I mean, this is already-
And I'm not saying we have all the facts yet, but-
Yeah.
What happens in these content cases is they get settled almost every single time.
So the case law doesn't get codified,
they just get settled out of court.
If you go look at all the fair use cases,
they almost never go to the mat.
And so this one will just be settled.
It'll just be a question at what price.
The interesting part of the other story
is that the reason all this stuff came out
about the Equity Clawbacks was because the safety team quit
and it got leaked during that process.
All right, so this is the third dramatic story of the week
that will go on.
And I think that one, I think,
begs a little bit more of a question of-
So let me-
Yeah.
Two heads of OpenAI's super alignment team
left the company last week,
the day after GPT 4.0 launch.
Ilya announced he was leaving the company.
He was our chief scientist a few hours later,
his partner on the alignment team, Jan Leica also announced he was resigning in a later thread like
explained that he left due to quote, safety culture and processes have taken a backseat to shiny
products. Okay, there's a little bit of disparagement to our former point about non disparaging non D and NDAs. So
API OpenAI lost both its heads of AI alignment. One day after
it launched that new product. Is that a coincidence? That's
interesting. If you don't know what super alignment is, it's
basically making sure that the software doesn't go Terminator. What are your thoughts on this,
Friedberg? I don't know. I mean, it could be some bad bureaucracy, bad politicking,
not being listened to. But I think the real interesting question is, who's going to ask these
guys what's really going on from a technology perspective, and
what is that going to reveal? Because these guys clearly are on the frontier of model
development and the performance of models. And so my guess is there are certain regulatory
people who are going to have interest in the fact that this team just left. They're going
to make a phone call. They're going to ask this team to come in and have a conversation.
And they're going to start to ask a lot of questions about what
the state of technology is over there. And I suspect that some things are going to start
to come out.
Sacks, it was reported that Ilya was on the side of the nonprofit, the slow down AI be
cautious group when they fired Sam. So what's your take on what's going on here
with super alignment inside of OpenAI, Judge Sachs?
Let's call this what it is, a mass resignation.
And we don't really know why.
I mean, apparently they were promised something
like 20% of the computing resources of OpenAI
and they didn't get that.
I definitely read that somewhere.
And so that is part of it, I think,
but we don't really know the whole story. And you know,
when you look at this issue of the mass raising nation,
and then you look at the issue of the clawback of vested employee
equity, you're like, well, wait a second,
maybe they felt like they needed that clawback in order to deter all these people who are leaving from spilling the beans about
whatever was upsetting them. Something clearly upset them, right?
Yeah. That's why people are saying there's this meme, what did Ilias see? What did he
see?
Yeah. And then like you said, the board did fire him. And the only explanation they provided
was that he wasn't being candid, which at the time we thought was an incredibly damning statement.
And we thought we'd get some explanation of it.
We never got any explanation whatsoever. You know,
I thought that the board was being incompetent because I thought that either
they fired him overly hastily or they had reason to fire him,
but then they communicated poorly. And you know,
you add all these things up
and it definitely seems like a lot of smoke.
Sam's a straight shooter.
We should just have him on the pod to explain.
I mean, he'll clear everything up.
Stop me if you heard this before.
NVIDIA just smashed all expectations
while reporting record profits and revenue.
The AI train continues on Wednesday.
NVIDIA reported earnings for the fiscal q1
revenue was 26 billion up 18% quarter per quarter, 260% year
over year, basically they quadrupled year over year on
billions of revenue. This chart is bonkers. We've never seen
anything like this in the history of Silicon Valley or
corporate America. This is if somebody,
like literally was mining coal and then found a diamond, a gold mine underneath it. It's bonkers what's happened here. When you look at the revenue there, the, you know, sort of slow growth or
moderate growth revenue that they experienced, that was all because Nvidia was primarily providing
GPUs for people playing video games
or mining crypto. And then what you see with this unbelievable six quarter run and five,
six quarter run is companies like Microsoft, Google, Tesla, OpenAI, et cetera, buying just
billions and billions of dollars worth of hardware. I'll end on this and Chamath and get your take on it.
Here's 2019, top companies by market cap in the world.
Obviously Microsoft, Apple, Amazon, Google,
Berkshire, Facebook, Alibaba, Tencent.
And then you get some of the, you know,
incumbents and legacy companies,
J&J, Exxon, and JP Morgan Visa.
Way down on the list in 2019, number 84 was Nvidia.
Today, Nvidia is the third largest company by market cap
behind Microsoft and Apple and ahead of Google,
aka Alphabet and Saudi Aramco.
Shamoff, what's your take on this?
Will it continue?
And how do you conceptualize this level of growth on such a big number?
I mean, I think it's a really, really incredibly fun moment if you're involved in anything AI related, just because it shows the level of investment that Nvidia's customers are making into making this new reality available for
everybody. So when you're spending effectively $100 billion a year on the capex of chips and
then a couple hundred billion more on all the related infrastructure and then another couple
hundred billion more on power, you're talking about half a trillion to three quarters of a trillion dollars a year
being spent to bring AI forward to the masses. So I think that's the really positive take.
The other exciting thing is if you're on the other side of the Nvidia trade,
which is you're working on something that does what they do, cheaper, faster, or better,
it's also really exciting because at some point,
the laws of capitalism kick in, right? We've talked about this. When you are over earning
so massively, the rational thing to do for other actors in the arena is to come and attack that
margin and give it to people for slightly cheaper, slightly faster, slightly better,
so you can take share. So I think what you're seeing,
and what you'll see even more now,
is this incentive for Silicon Valley,
who has been really reticent to put money into chips,
really reticent to put money into hardware.
They're gonna get pulled into investing in this space
because there's no choice.
You have a company that went from 100 billion in market cap
to two and a half trillion in four years.
It's just way too much value that is there to then be leaked back. The interesting thing to
remember during the PC revolution, which is really mostly the 90s, it ended in the late 90s,
I would say like 98, 99, right before the dot-com bubble took over. Intel's peak market cap was, I think, it got to about $200
billion. And then their average growth rate from 1998 to today was negative 1.4% a year,
right? So it went from about $200 billion to about $130 billion. And why? It's not that
Intel was a worst company, but it's that everything else caught up. And the economic value
went to things that sat above them in the stack. Then it went to Cisco for a while, right? Then
after Cisco, it went to the browser companies for a little bit. Then it went to the app companies.
Then it went to the device companies. Then it went to the mobile companies. So you see this natural
tendency for value to push up the stack over time.
So let me ask you then.
And in AI, we've done step one, which is now you've given all this value to Nvidia, and
now we're going to see it being reallocated.
So Jamath, who's in the arena trying stuff?
Some of these things work, and some not working.
So right now, what you do is you speculatively bet on anything that kind of like quote unquote rhymes with Nvidia. So AMD is ripping the companies that make
HPM is ripping. So all of that stuff, the folks that make optical cables, this Japanese company that I found that makes like the high bandwidth optical cables ripping. So every anything related to that ecosystem right now
So everything, anything related to that ecosystem right now is at all time highs. But at the same time, what you find now is like every other day when you wake up and read the trades in Techland, you find that there's a company that's gotten seated with five to 50 million bucks to create a new chip, right?
You're also starting to see folks that are working a little bit above the stack and build better compilers
Right things that will allow you to actually
Build once run in many different compute
Environments so all of this stuff is starting to happen
At some point the spread trade will be that Nvidia loses share even though revenues keep compounding
To these upstarts. Yeah death by a thousand startups. All right, Sachs. I guess one of the questions people
are asking right now is, have we ever seen a company at this scale and the impact it's
having, not just in technology, which Srimath just pointed out beautifully, but also it's
having a huge impact on Wall Street, on the stock market, on finance. Well, the the company that everyone compares Nvidia to, or
ask the question about whether a historical comparison should be
made is Cisco. So there's an article in Motley Fool saying
is Nvidia doomed to be the next Cisco? There was one in
Morningstar called Nvidia 2023 versus Cisco 1999.
Will history repeat itself?
The reason they're asking these questions is that if you go back to the dot com boom
in 1999, to pull up the stock performance chart, you can see that Cisco had this incredible
run and if you overlay the stock price of Nvidia, it seems to be following that same trajectory.
And what happened with Cisco is that when the dot com crash
came in 2000, Cisco stock lost a huge part of its value.
Obviously, Cisco's still around today.
And it's a valuable company, but it just
hasn't ever regained the type of market cap it had.
The reason this happened is because Cisco got commoditized.
So to Chamath's point, the success and market cap
of that company attracted a whole bunch of new entrants
and they copied Cisco's products
until they were total commodities.
So the question is, will that happen to Nvidia?
And I think the difference here is that at the end
of the day, networking equipment,
which Cisco produced was pretty easy.
Pretty one-dimensional.
It's pretty easy to copy.
Moving data around, yeah.
Right, whereas if you look at Nvidia,
it's these GPU cores are really complicated to make
and Jensen makes it this point that the H100, for example,
has thousands of components and it weighs like 70 pounds
or something like that.
Yeah, it's like a giant oven.
I mean, and then frame.
Yeah, it's like a frame.
It's not just like a little chip. So it's like a giant oven. I mean, it's like a frame frame. It's not, it's not just like a little chip.
So it's a much more complicated product to copy. And then on top of that,
they're already in the R and D cycle for the next chip, right? Well, whatever it's going to be the H 200 or whatever it is.
And so as people try to catch up with H 100,
they're going to be onto H 200.
So I think you can make the case that Nvidia has a much better moat than Cisco.
And just by the way, on this Cisco comparison, just to finish the thought, people were making
this comparison six months ago.
And what's happened since then?
Nvidia's had two block orders and the competitors don't seem to be that much closer, maybe a
little bit closer.
But so, you know, look, I think it's an open question.
So there's a counter here, Freiburg, which is obviously if you follow the Cisco analogy,
one of the things that also sunk Cisco was once people had bought all that capacity,
there was no need, there was no file size that was so great that it couldn't be moved
easily around the internet.
You know, you make movies HD, super super HD, 2k 4k, the bet
we've created too much bandwidth, there was no use for
it. So I guess that that's a counter argument for maybe when
if we build up too much capacity, Nvidia also could not by
competitors, but just by the build out being enough. So what's
your take on that counter argument? And then whatever I
thought you have, I think that the Cisco analogy, it's a pretty
different situation, because Cisco evolved the business to become much more enterprise-centric
and they were able to run an M&A process like we see with enterprise software where they could
acquire and roll up lots of different product companies and sell into their enterprise channels,
so do a lot of cross-selling. NVID Nvidia is not a super-acquisitive business,
and it doesn't make as much sense
because they're selling much more kind of infrastructure tools
whereas Cisco moved really high up in the enterprise stack.
They were selling stuff into office buildings,
they were selling software,
they did acquisitions to kind of fully integrate.
They had a very diverse set of products
that were selling through an enterprise channel,
further up the value stack,
and a pretty distributed customer base, no serious concentration.
Even though they did sell a lot into data centers, they were also selling to telcos,
they were selling to enterprises, they were selling to governments, and so on.
If you look at Nvidia's revenue, they did $26 billion of total revenue in the quarter,
$22 billion of which was data center, and about 40% of that was from the top four hyperscalers.
So a full one third of Nvidia's revenue in the quarter
came from, I believe it's Google, Amazon, Microsoft,
and Meta.
And so between those four businesses,
you know that those companies each have, I believe,
at least over or close to $100 billion of cash
sitting on their balance sheet.
They can't find great places to invest that cash to grow revenue.
And so they've rationalized away the idea that they will make capex investments to build
over the next five to 10 years.
And this is where that money flows.
Yeah, we talked about that in a previous episode, because there's no M&A to your point.
You mean, the cons let you buy stuff where the UK is not going to let you buy stuff.
So I think that they're going to have less maneuvering capability than Cisco had in the future.
And obviously, there's this deep concentration risk, which is going to be deeply challenging.
I think Nvidia, this is to build on Sax's point, is going to get pulled into competing directly with the hyperscalers.
So if you were just selling chips, you probably wouldn't.
But Sax is right. Like these are these big, bulky actual machines.
Then all of a sudden you're like,
well, why don't I just create my own physical plant
and just stack these things
and create racks and racks of these machines.
It's not a far-
And go ahead to head with AWS
instead of selling to them.
It's not a far stretch,
especially because Nvidia actually has
the software interface that everybody uses, which is CUDA.
So I think it's likely that Nvidia goes
on a full frontal assault against GCP
and Amazon and Microsoft.
That's gonna really complicate the relationship
that those folks have with each other.
But I think it's inevitable because you're getting,
how do you defend, it's kind of the Apple problem.
How do you defend an enormously large market cap?
You're forced to go into businesses
that are equally lucrative.
Now, if I look inside of compute
and look at the adjacent categories,
they're not gonna all of a sudden start
a competitor to TikTok, right, or a social network.
But if you look at the multi-hundred billion
revenue businesses that are adjacent
to the markets that Nvidia enables, the most obvious one is the hyperscalers, which are multi-hundred
billion dollar revenue businesses.
So they're going to be forced to compete.
Otherwise their market cap will shrink.
And I don't think they want that.
And then it's going to create a very complicated set of incentives for Microsoft and Google
and Meta and Apple and all the rest.
And that's also then going to be an accelerant.
They're going to pump so much money to help all of these upstarts, to your point, Jason,
chip away and nip at the Achilles heels of Nvidia until they fall.
Yeah.
And there's a great precedent for what you're saying because, or clues, Amazon is making
chips, Google is making chips, and in fact, Apple- Facebook's making chips, Amazon is making chips, Google is making chips,
and in fact, Apple- Facebook's making chips, Tesla's making chips, Apple's rolling chips,
everybody's rolling chips. And then Apple makes their own chips and they got rid of Intel. And
so this is how it's going to go. Your margin is my opportunity. And with all this market cap increase,
the good news is it's just reported that Jensen has bought a second leather jacket. So well,
this market cap has enabled him to expand the water.
By the way, I gotta say, he looks really good.
He looks super fit.
He's great.
Yeah, pull the picture of Jensen.
How old is he?
Isn't he late 50s?
He's going into his Harrison Ford.
He looks great.
The salt and pepper.
He looks 61.
61?
He looks amazing.
He looks amazing.
I'll tell you something, in the zombie apocalypse draft, I'm picking him.
That guy seems crafty, you know?
He seems like he's-
He's so forceful.
What do you think he does for exercise?
No plastic.
Ball, plastic-free balls.
No, no, no, no.
His balls have plastic.
All of our balls have plastic.
He's got steel in there.
No, no, he's got, his have brass in them.
He's literally had brass put into his balls.
No, no, all of our balls have plastic, apparently. Okay. Well, we have two in them. He's literally had brass put into his balls. No, all of our balls have plastic apparently.
Okay. Well, we have two choices here. We can go with another tech story or we can go directly
to Science Corner and- Well, no, I think we should do State of the Economy and then do Science
Corner. Okay. So you want to talk about our pocketbooks and then we'll talk about our pockets
and then we'll just make a quick detour to the right and then talk about our balls. We're in the
same vicinity. So let's get- I think we should end on our balls. Okay. Great. Yeah right and then talk about our balls. It's right in the same vicinity. So let's get- We should end on our balls.
Okay, great.
Yeah, let's end with our balls.
That science corner I can finally relate to.
I mean, Fravor told me he likes to start with the balls.
I don't know, everybody's got different kind of vibes here.
The ball play should come a little bit later in the program.
You want to save the ball play for later, Sax.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay.
I'm having a hard time keeping this together, guys.
More than half of Americans think we're in a recession.
I think we're in a vibe session right now because we're not in a recession, but people
are feeling really bad.
A Harris poll conducted by The Guardian shows that 56% of Americans wrongly believe the
US is in a recession.
Not surprisingly, they blame Biden.
The poll highlighted a bunch of misconceptions.
55% believe the US economy is shrinking.
It's obviously not.
56% think the US is experiencing recession.
It's obviously not.
49% of people believe the S&P's 500 stock market index is down for the year.
It's up 12% this year.
It was up 24% in 2023. And 49% believe
that unemployment is at a 50 year high when it's in fact that a 50 year low. And Americans are
really concerned about the cost of living and inflation. Fair enough. 70% said the biggest
economic concern was the cost of living 68% said that inflation was the biggest economic concern important quote here,
a majority of respondents agreed it's difficult to be happy about positive economic news when I feel
financially squeezed each month and that the economy was worse than the media made it out to be.
According to the poll 70% of Republicans and 40% of Democrats think Biden is making the economy worse.
Chamath, you have some thoughts on this.
I'm going to go out on the limb and speculate that a lot of the big numbers that we use to gauge how
we should feel about things in today's day and age are pretty brittle. Okay.
Explain brittle. And fragile and may actually just be totally wrong. So what's an example? So for example,
like if you look at something like non-farm payrolls, right? So the first Friday of every
month, you get this report that comes out from the Department of Labor and it shows
what where unemployment is. But how do they calculate that? Do you think that they have
a real time sense of exactly every person in that month that entered the workforce or exit at the workforce? No, they do a survey and then they extrapolate.
And if you do that survey incorrectly, and Jason, you've commented on this before, for example, if you don't capture adequately, the number of people that are on the sidelines and never joined the workforce or the number of people that are part of the gig economy, so they are kind of working,
you get an inaccurate sense of where the real economy is. I think that GDP is somewhat similar
because if you just break down what GDP is, so Nick, there's a very simple pie chart I sent to you.
What is GDP? It's the sum of four things. Most of it is what people spend.
Most of it is what people spend. Okay.
Then the next big chunk is what companies and governments spend.
And then the last is what we export to other countries.
So let's just pause for one second and think about what do you think happens when rates are zero versus when rates are at 6%?
People spend a lot more.
Well, people tend to save when interest rates are high.
Just the natural thing, like,
why would I buy a pair of these Nike shoes?
I'll just put it in the bank, I get 6%.
But when the bank pays you zero, you're like,
ah, let me buy these Air Force Ones and move on, right?
It turns out it's the same for companies.
Companies find it easier to invest when rates are at zero
because it's cheaper.
It's much more expensive because they're borrowing money at 6%
versus at 0%.
Or more corporate gets charged a higher fee, right? Yeah. Then
when you have high interest rates, you have a currency that
appreciates it makes exports less attractive to other people,
which means then you become a net importer. Okay, so what is
the last thing that's left? The last thing that's left is
government spending. And you have to ask the question, what should governments do when rates
are high? There was a chart I published in my annual letter, if you just go to that for a second.
And just going back to this chart right before it, just so the people who are listening,
if you put the pie chart up, Nick, important for to know, consumer is about 70% of the economy. And if you put investment in government together, that's just over maybe 34% or something like
that.
35%, exactly.
Yeah, 35%.
So it is a consumer-driven economy, but hey, corporate and government spending is a major
piece as well.
And then I just wanted just to highlight that when interest rates are very high, all of
a sudden,
governments are faced with this very difficult problem, which is, oh man, I have to spend a ton
of money on interest. Just like if you had a bunch of credit cards and all of a sudden,
the interest rates went up. So the choice is twofold. Do governments spend less?
But unfortunately, it turns out that our governments in America, they just keep spending
more and more.
So even if net interest income is small, even if net interest income is high, they're just like, forget it, the taps are on.
So what does this all mean? I think what it really means is that we do a very poor job of measuring all these dynamics together.
And so I actually trust the survey data of these individuals more than I trust the GDP report in the sense that I
think it more accurately captures this dynamic. Rates are at 6%. People are saving more. They're
not getting paid more. Things are costing more. The government is giving you free money, so you
kind of feel like everything is moving. So that the GDP measurement, the way that it's classically
done, shows that, wow, we grew at
three or 4%. But the average individual American isn't feeling that. They're actually feeling that
they have less money. So I would actually go with them and actually say, if we don't revisit this
thing from first principles, we're going to get this dynamic where we think one thing is happening,
but the actual exact opposite
is happening. In this case, I do think we're in a quasi-synthetic recession.
Sax, what's your take on the vibe session?
Well, look, I tend to agree with your mouth on this. I think this is a classic story of
who do you believe? Do you believe the experts or do you believe in the intuitions of the
American people? And the experts have some statistics on their side, but you know, the old saying
goes, there's lies, damn lies and statistics.
And then the American people have their actual lived experience on their side.
They know what they're feeling.
And I tend to trust in that.
And obviously we're in an election year and the press knows that.
So they're trying to do this big cleanup effort for Biden. But why is it that people are feeling this way? Number one is inflation.
And if you look at this chart, you can see that if you look at household net worth since the start
of the Biden presidency and compare it to the change in household net worth at a similar point
in Trump's presidency, in nominal terms, it appears to be the same, but then if you adjust for
inflation, in other words, you look at the real household net worth, you can
see that household net worth during the Biden term has been flat.
Actually it's down.
Because of inflation, right?
Because of inflation.
Where did the inflation come from?
Where did the inflation come from?
Yeah.
Well, Larry Summers warned in the first quarter
of the Biden administration
that if you pass an unnecessary $2 trillion
of COVID stimulus, you would produce inflation.
The inflation rate when Biden came into office was 1.7%.
We had a rip-roaring economy, but he started stimulating.
And we talked about Bidenomics is this new policy of pumping trillions
of dollars of stimulus into a healthy economy, which we've never done before. What happened?
Inflation went all the way to 9%. So people's wages have not kept up with the rate of inflation.
This is why they feel worse off. When you actually look at purchasing power,
people are worse off in terms of their actual ability to buy things. Their purchasing power
has gone down.
Wages may have gone up a little bit,
but they have not gone up as much as inflation,
so people feel worse off.
Now, Larry also had that,
I think, really informative study
showing that inflation would have peaked at 18 percent if you include cost of borrowing.
So again, to Chamath's point,
if you're trying to get a mortgage and you're paying seven and a half eight percent
You feel way worse off if you need to buy a car and make a car payment
You feel much worse off if you've got credit card debt, which is now hit an all-time record
That's something like 1.1 trillion your credit card rates have never been higher
So the average American feels worse off because cost of borrowing has a huge impact on their household finances
And that's why if you read like one of the last paragraphs in that story that you referred to,
they use the key words, the consumer feels squeezed, the average household feels squeezed.
They may not have lost their job yet, but they've lost purchasing power and they've lost-
Yeah, they're under earning. They're under earning. And so the projection-
So this is obvious. And the press can gaslight us all day long
about how wonderful things are under Biden,
but the average American, I think, understands differently
based on their own experience.
I think the whole thing comes down to the projection
of an individual or a household
of their lived experience onto the economy.
You assume that because you're having a tough time,
the economy is bad.
And the economy as a definition for them is, how do I earn and how do I spend? And if I'm
under earning, that means there must be serious job loss, and
things are more expensive and my ability to purchase isn't
improving. And so I think we're all kind of going to end up on
the same take on this one. I mean, Nick, if you want to pull this image up, this is, I think, a helpful one, which
is disposable personal income relative to outlays that folks are needing to spend more
than they're making.
So clearly indicating that they're feeling like they're under earning.
So the projection of that is the economy is bad without recognizing that it is an inflationary
experience, whereas economists
use the definition of quote economic growth being gross production, gross product.
And so if gross product or gross revenue is going up, they're like, oh, the economy is
healthy, we're growing. But the truth is, we're funding that growth with leverage at the national
level, the federal level, and at the household and domestic level. We are borrowing money to inflate the revenue numbers. And so the GDP goes up, but the debt is
going up higher. And so the ability for folks to support themselves and buy things that they want
to buy and continue to improve their condition in life has declined if things are getting worse.
And if you go to the next image, as Sachs pointed out already, here's the image of
total outstanding credit card debt over a trillion dollars.
It's totally spiked and it's going to continue to spike just like federal debt
because of the next chart, which is the sudden jump in interest rates.
So we've seen credit card interest rates jump from 12% on average 10 years ago to 21.19% right now,
and it was at 14% at the end of 2022. So we've gone from 14% average credit card interest rates
to 22% now in just about 20 to 24 months. And so the projection that I think of the quote,
economy must be bad is resulted from the fact that
income to spending is actually pretty negative.
So here's the real median family income.
This actually only goes through 2019.
So it doesn't even capture the era that we're talking about,
but this has been going on for quite some time,
that the average American's ability
to improve their condition has largely
been driven by their ability to borrow, not by their earnings.
And this has created a substantial set of precedents
that we're now running into a wall with interest rates
spiking and inflation hitting us because of the overall federal
debt that we've taken on.
I think we're probably going to go around the horn
and all agree.
Obviously, the crazy spending started in the Trump
and COVID era, and that caused a lot of the inflation as well, just to be fair. It's two
administrations that are just out of control with spending. But the way I look at this is the Mickey
D economy. People may not know this, but 96% of Americans eat meals at least once a year in
McDonald's. 8% of Americans eat at McDonald's on an average
day. And when you look at the prices of McDonald's here, if we look at this image, this is incredible.
This is unbelievable. Medium French fries at McDonald's, $1.79 in 2019 and now $4.19.
And then if we look at just McNuggets, $4.49 to $7.58, 68% increase. McChicken, 129 to 389.
And then here is a very interesting one.
This is CPI versus McDonald's.
Big Mac prices.
Take a look at that.
As much as the consumer price index has surged,
Big Macs have exceeded that.
And so Americans are seeing this over and over again
when they go to McDonald's and other places. And that's what's
causing the feeling. Because when you spend- Go back to that McNugget chart. I just want to see
what is it end of 2019. So this is basically, you'd want to look at the four-year stock price,
right? So like these guys have jacked up prices massively. If you look at what's happened to the
stock, the stock is way up. It's kind way up. They've been very motivated and rewarded as a company for just rewarding the shareholder
and screwing over the customer.
If you own equities in McDonald's and you're in the top third or half, maybe half of Americans
who have equity exposure, you're feeling great.
If you're on the bottom third or half and you're buying at McDonald's and you don't
own equity at McDonald's, you feel terrible. Free break, you had some additional thoughts.
Yeah, but remember what McDonald's and other fast food companies have said is that labor
costs have climbed. Here's a chart on labor costs that Nick can pull up. Workers at Walmart
and McDonald's have had pay increases, but this has really been to try and keep up with
inflation, the inflation of other costs.
So a lot of people will say, oh, they're price gouging, they're ripping off consumers to
make profits for shareholders.
But the truth is, the biggest component of running those restaurants is labor.
And labor has gotten more expensive because the employees that work there have to earn
enough to pay their bills and to afford their food.
And this is the circular effect of inflation.
It finds its way all through the economy. It filters down and it eventually hits everyone.
Look, fast food is a pretty competitive business. I mean, I think the reason why McDonald's
is raising prices because everyone else is raising prices. I mean, otherwise they'd be
losing share. And just look, go to the grocery store and look at the price of steak or chicken
or whatever or eggs. It's gone up tremendously over the last few years.
I mean, let me ask you a candy question. When's the last time
you were in supermarket? Be honest, when's the last time
I'm not literally went to a I'm just curious.
It's not relevant. I mean, yeah, obviously, we know that the
price of eggs doesn't affect me. Okay, great. I'm in a fortunate
position. That's not what the topic is the topic is
What is the impact on the American people and why why do 70% of the people in that poll?
Feel that we're in a recession even though the expert tell us we're not and I've explained it
Yeah, and the other thing is there's a went to the supermarket the other day. I like on some market
I take my go every week. I cannot believe how expensive things,
I mean, some of the stuff,
I was just blown away how expensive things.
It's bonkers.
I bought the, look at the package I sent you guys,
the Driscoll's super sweet strawberries.
How much were they?
You quartered the market on them.
I went and tried to find them here in San Mateo,
there's none left.
They said Chamath quartered the market.
I went to Sagona's.
Nat and I, no, Nat and I go to Sagona's every week,
A, because we like buying our own fruit,
but also B, because our kids like to do it
and they like to see what things cost
and they like to pick stuff.
But you know, this sweet dispatch was seven bucks.
For how much shrubberies is that, by the way?
12 shrubberies in there?
Well, so here's what I'll tell you, quite honestly.
I'm like, I think that you need to put these guys
on notice.
Oh, on blast.
The perfume, so the nose, like just like,
it's incredible, okay?
The smell is the aroma.
It's just absolutely incredible.
But to be totally honest with you,
the mouth feel and the sweetness
is not what this label would imply.
Yeah. What were you expecting in terms of mouthfeel?
I was expecting like something juicier, more succulent.
Let me ask you a question. Do you have a sommelier for your fruit?
Yeah. I mean, you seem like a real connoisseur here.
No, I told you. I've been texting for months. I am a connoisseur of fruit.
Okay. It's very important to me. I like good fruit. So, you know, my wife and I go and find
good fruit for our family. And it's really expensive. And even this over promises and
under delivers. So, Freeberg, if you can land a GMO strawberry, I'm going to put it in my belly.
to get the Hokkaido strawberries. If you can land a GMO strawberry,
I'm gonna put it in my belly.
Give me a GMO strawberry for your brook,
twice as big, three times as sweet.
Get in my belly.
I think we should all go to Tokyo for a weekend
and do some fruit tasting in Tokyo.
You have to get on the Hokkaido strawberries.
This is where it's at.
You have no idea like what you can spend on strawberries.
People are spending 10 bucks on a strawberry. It is bonkers.
I bought a hundred dollar mango once in Tokyo.
Yeah. Incredible. You know, the other thing I think with these numbers is if you're an
economist and you're like inflation has gone down, that means the rate of inflation has
gone down from six or 7% down to 3% or 2.9% or 3.1%. That doesn't mean prices
aren't still going up. And so the question is how do you want to cycle down?
If you want to replace GDP, there was a very good article in the Wall Street Journal a
few weeks ago about how there's been just a total breakdown in what these high level
numbers say, kind of what we've been saying and how Americans feel. And they introduced
a different score. Well, they gave it publicity.
It's not their score, but it's something that they call the core score. And what that does,
I'll just read it to you just so you can understand it. It's a county level index of
wellbeing using measures of economic security, economic opportunity, health and political voice.
And so the lowest possible score is zero, the highest possible score is
10. As it turns out, when they use this across every county in
America, the distribution is basically as follows the the
most quote unquote, prosperous county is Falls Church, Virginia,
which is 7.86 out of 10. And the lowest county is Jim Hogg
County of Texas, which has a score of 2.25.
So to the extent that you wanna start to look
at granular measures, this is one.
I'm not gonna advocate for it, but it's an example.
But what do you notice in here?
What I notice is that there's a lot of patches
of like meh to not good in most parts of America.
And so other than a very few small pockets
where people feel great,
most of the country is sort of dissatisfied.
And I think that that's a really important thing
to internalize.
Yeah.
Some of this is classic psychology.
People do focus on the negative,
the media focuses on the negative.
And then with social media,
people are seeing lifestyles that are unattainable,
just like they're seeing body types that are unattainable because people are doing filters.
You're also seeing people living a lifestyle that's unattainable. And then it makes people
because their expectation of their life is so high when they then subtract the reality
of their life, they've got a deficit. And really happiness is like expectations minus
reality equals happiness.
Yeah, but you had that same dynamic when consumer sentiment was much higher in a previous administration
people are feeling much better about the economy. So that's a constant.
You know, when people were having free money, people were having free Trump dropped free
money on people's heads. So your argument that crazy spending with his name on it.
Yeah. When the economy, when the economy was down 33% year over year, but you mean that crazy spending with his name on it. Yeah, when
the economy when the economy was down 33% year over year, but you
admit that way too much money, right? You admit he spent way
too much money. Both parties thought that we were headed for
depression. And so we had a bipartisan stimulus bill during
an actual crisis. Once the crisis was over, there was no
need to keep spending. So when Trump signed his name on those checks, there's no comparison.
He wasn't responsible and Biden is.
Once the seal has been broken, I think it's fair to say both sides of the aisle now believe
that they can give away an enormous amount of money.
There's nobody that feels like they have a responsibility to stop.
But I think what Sachs is right in the sense that, so if you take that as a constant,
right, that there will always be handouts now of all kinds. They'll be different flavors,
depending on whether it's a Republican or whether a Democrat, a Democrat nation.
And all rationalized.
So then what I'm saying is- That's my point.
This abstraction though doesn't solve what's happening now because this free money is in
the system.
It's constantly in the system.
It comes in different ways.
So people should feel better.
The fact that they don't in the face of this constant money train-
Yep.
I think is actually quite alarming.
This is, I think what the point is, which is we are economically in a very
complicated moment in the sense that there is no pandemic to blame. There's no economy that's
totally shut down. In fact, there's an economy that seems to be moving, but leaving an enormous
number of people behind. So however it has been structured, just sitting here today in 2024,
it's broken for more people than it's working for.
Yeah. Trump, just to give facts, Trump will have spent 7.8 trillion, Biden will spend slightly
less, like 6.X trillion. At the end of these things, they're both going to have added 15.8 trillion.
You're missing the fact that Trump had 2020 with when we had the COVID depression or what could have
been when the economy was down 30% year over year? Yeah, and a terribly timed tax.
Listen, just- Did you guys see?
Hold on a second, let me just make this one point.
Just because both parties have been irresponsible
in spending doesn't mean that we can't make further
judgments about who's been worse.
Sure.
What's happened in the Biden administration
is just quantitatively worse.
Well, no, quantitatively Trump spent more,
but you're saying qualitatively Biden's is worse
because he didn't need to.
There was no crisis.
Right.
You're completely out of it.
So one spent more, one spent less,
but one didn't need to and one absolutely didn't.
Look at Trump's spending before COVID.
Look at Trump's spending before COVID.
It was like a 5% bump on Obama's spending.
Well, the tax break was the one that that accounted for a lot of.
Yeah.
But anyway, we can sit here and debate Trump versus Biden.
Let's talk about my balls, boys.
Yeah, we're wasting time here.
Wasting time on Trump and Biden when we could be talking.
If we're going to talk about our balls, we need to go to somebody who's an expert on
our testicles. Freiburg, let's go right to science corner.
Let's talk about our balls with the Sultan of Science.
There's been a study on phthalates, our balls and plastic in our balls.
Freiburg, tee this up.
Yeah.
The Consumer Reports put out a really interesting, or what has become pretty widely covered now
story a couple of weeks
ago where they measured phthalates in common foods. And Nick, if you want to just pull
up the image that's been repeated in a lot of media, a lot of press people were going
nuts over this. Phthalates are these chemical compounds that are used in plastics or used
with plastics to soften them. So when you make plastics, you can kind of make them softer
and form them into all sorts of different shapes
and use them for different applications,
like plastic bags or wraps or tubes or all sorts of things.
And phthalates are these smaller molecules
that go along with the polymers that
are the basis of the plastics.
And they measure phthalates, which
are known to be toxic in terms of if you get enough of them,
they can be carcinogenic and cause cancer.
And they showed that every product they tested
had phthalates in it.
Wendy's chicken nuggets had 33,000 nanograms per serving.
If you scroll up to the top.
Wait, look at the Chipotle chicken burrito.
Oh my God.
And just to be clear, guys,
this is not just about packaging. Packaging plays a role,
but the whole food supply chain, the way we wrap food, all of our water, all of our dust,
all of the air we breathe, we have measured phthalates in everything. So these phthalates
end up in the animals that are used to make milk and the animals that people eat. They end up in
the water that goes into the vegetables that we grow in the ground. They end up being used to make milk and the animals that people eat, they end up in the water that goes into the vegetables
that we grow in the ground.
They end up being used to make the little plastic jars
that we feed our kids out of,
the little yogurt pouches that our kids drink out of,
everything just to move food around in plastic packaging.
But sorry, Freeberg, Freeberg,
why would the chicken nuggets from Wendy's though,
be so, is it because they are eating?
They are eating things that have plastics in them.
Plastics in them.
But we also don't know.
And so then we're eating the chicken,
so we're eating the plastic.
We're eating the plastic, and it's also the fact
that the way that they process the chicken
and the material that they use and the packaging
that they use and how they move this stuff
from one place to another, you got bags
that are holding chicken breasts
that then get put in the thing.
And then the oil has, you know,
the oil is transported in plastic.
We don't know.
So it's plastic all the way down.
It's plastic all the way down.
These are the things like, look at Annie's.
First of all, I really dislike Annie's labeling
and packaging.
I think it's very ugly.
So I've never bought it for that reason.
But I know that there's a lot of private equity moms
that buy Annie's because it's supposed to be better for them.
Keep going, Chuck.
Private equity moms.
Hold on, Chamath's making a really good point.
Go ahead, Chamath.
This is really good.
And so the problem is you see organic.
When you go, like, again, we go to Drager's.
That's typically where we go.
Sometimes we go to Whole Foods, but we go to Drager's in Sagonas.
That's the places we go to in our neighborhood.
And when you go and you look at these things like prepared meals, as an example,
the thing that has always attracted me to Annie's
is because it is positioned as it is cleaner
and better for you.
And you see everybody buying it
and what you actually see sitting on the shelf
that's left over is actually the Chef Boyardee
and the Campbell's.
And I always thought to myself, I won't buy Annie's because I actually don't like the label,
to be honest.
That was really why I just deeply disliked the packaging.
But it turns out it's the absolute worst for you.
Yeah. It is.
And let me just tell you guys some stats about this.
So we produce about 3 million tons of Daylights a year,
creating them that we use in our industrial supply chain.
The global market for Daylights is about $10 billion per year. We find it everywhere.
In our tap water, as measured in the US in multiple places, there's about one microgram.
So those were nanograms. So you kind of divide it by a thousand so that Annie's thing has
50 micrograms of phthalates in it. But there's about one microgram of phthalates per liter
of water that you're drinking.
Now here's a study was done out of Germany where they basically tried to estimate how
much people were consuming.
And on average, people consume or ingest about six micrograms of phthalates per kilogram
of your body weight per day.
So an adult male is consuming about 500 micrograms of phthalates per day.
That's half a gram per day.
And the human body metabolizes and excretes it.
It comes out the EPA, all of the administrative agencies that oversee this
stuff, they're like, it's okay.
We metabolize it.
As long as we don't consume more than we can metabolize, it's going to be
safe because it's not going to stay in our bodies.
It's going to wash out.
Here's the problem.
While it's in your body, while it's moving through your body, being metabolized, it is
what's called an endocrine disruptor.
And we talked about this in the past with respect to the sunscreens.
These phthalates actually interfere with the hormones that are made by things like your
pituitary gland, your thyroid, and even some of the hormones that are produced in testicle
cells.
There was another study done
that really tried to estimate what the impact was. And here is a study that showed how do phthalates actually interact with different parts of the endocrine system. And they went through and they
found all these places that biological hormones and the endocrine system are disrupted by the phthalates. And we'll put
credit for everyone that shared these papers here later. And they basically showed the mechanism
by which the phthalates are actually disrupting endocrine systems. Now, what is the endocrine
system? We talked about endocrine disruptors in the past. The endocrine system is the interaction of hormones with cells in your body produced
by all these different glands in your body, like your thyroid, your pituitary gland, and
so on, control things like growth, tissue development, reproductive tissue activity,
like making sperm cells, autonomic function, like body temperature, blood pressure, sleep,
heart rate regulation, injury and stress reponses,
your mood, all of those things are regulated
by your endocrine system.
And so when the hormones or the proteins or peptides
that are made by those glands are disrupted
by these phthalates, it can actually disrupt those systems
and mess them up.
So while we're not consuming, generally speaking,
enough phthalates to cause cancer,
and therefore we all say, hey, it's okay,
these phthalates aren't that bad, We're not going to all die from cancer.
The truth is there is demonstrations now on how they can actually disrupt the activity of your endocrine system and as a result have all of these deleterious effects.
Another study done on 125 men out of China. This paper was done out of China. They saw damage to testicle cells that would die testicle cells that would
produce fewer sperm and then testicle cells that produced sperm with extra
nuclei, and they actually demonstrated this in rats.
So the set of compounds can be fairly disruptive.
So now we'll go to the next story.
And the next story is the one that everyone's writing about, which is, oh
my God, there's plastic and balls.
So a team at university of New Mexico that was published in the Journal of Toxicological
Sciences just last week, they took 47 neutered dog's testicles from a local pet clinic where
they were getting neutered.
And they found on average 128 micrograms per gram of microplastics in those testicles.
And it was mostly polyvinyl chloride or one of the main plastics and polyethylene.
And again, phthalates leach out of these plastics and leach into the cells.
And then they went to the medical investigator's office and they found these testicles that
were frozen for seven years because when they do a medical investigation and they keep all
the body parts, they keep them on ice and then they throw them away after seven years.
So before they threw them away, they got permission.
Of humans.
They got permission to use these testicles
to figure out are there plastics and they measured them.
In the frozen balls.
In the frozen balls.
These are ancient frozen balls?
How old are these balls?
23 frozen balls, about seven years old.
Yeah.
Seven year old balls, frozen.
Wait, are people donating their balls to science?
Is that how this is happening?
No, it's like when there's like a homicide or someone,
or you don't know who died,
or there's an investigation into why someone died,
the coroner keeps the body parts
in case it's needed for like a police case later.
All right, I just wanna state on the record,
I don't want my balls used that way.
Okay, you don't have the frozen balls
on your driver's license, like freeze my balls? They asked me to store my balls, I don't want my balls used that way. You don't have the frozen balls on your driver's license?
Like freeze my balls?
They asked me to store my balls.
I think it's like you've got such huge balls.
Anyway, they got 23, 23 of these balls from these bodies and they found, um,
plastics on average, 328 micrograms per gram of, of testicle in, in these balls. It's a really, What do you usually find? Freeberg, what do you usuallyicle in these balls.
What do you usually find, Freberg?
What do you usually find in these balls?
Well, we don't know,
because we've never taken human tissue
and tried to take it apart in a very detailed way
to figure out like how much plastic is there,
what is it doing to our body?
But now I just want to connect the dots.
So now we have a sense that there's these phthalates
and these other compounds that come with plastics
that leak in that cause all this disruption. Separately, we're seeing this accumulation of these little
plastic particles. And remember, plastics are polymers, they're long chains of monomers.
And so they can be short chains, they can be long, so they break apart, break apart,
break apart, and little tiny bits of them end up and they're very hard to metabolize. And they sit
in your tissue, and then they can cause all this disruption. So, you know, I think these are like,
generally not-
I'm just gonna say it.
I'm just gonna, first of all,
I really appreciate that you did this.
I think it's so important.
We talked about microplastics a little bit ago.
You know, J Cal moved his whole family away,
I guess a few years ago from plastics.
I've started to do it four or five months ago.
But you can't get away from it.
It is everywhere.
No, and that supply chain is your point. It's a supply, it's in the you can't get away from it. It is everywhere. No, and nap time to get us-
It's in the supply chain is your point.
It's in the water, it's in the air, it's everywhere.
This is what I was gonna say.
I think our food supply,
I think we should just say it out loud,
is totally corrupted.
And I think there's all of these other factors we look at,
the rise in the use of SSRIs,
the lack of sexual function in young men, the lack of sex, the low birth rate.
I think these are all related and part of it is the food supply and part of the food
supply problem is the fact that it is corrupted by these materials that should never be in
our body.
I want to just push back on this because I don't want to limit it.
I think that's a guess, but I honestly think it's the truth.
I don't want to limit it to the's a guess, but I honestly think it's the truth. I don't want to limit it to the food supply,
because here's the other thing.
All of us are wearing clothes that use polymers,
which are plastics.
All of us are sitting at desks
that have coatings of polymers on them.
All of us have iPhones that use polymers.
All of us drive cars, and the rubber,
one of the ways that they found that plastic,
these microparticles are getting in the air, is through tires. When we drive, little particulates end up in the
atmosphere. We breathe them in and then they end up in our body. Every part of our industrial
supply chain uses polymers. Every part of our industrial supply chain.
I hear you, but the concentration, I'm going to guess that the concentration, when you
actually put it in your body and then your intestines and your organs are bathed in this stuff. I'm
going to guess that the food supply has a huge part to do
with this.
Yeah, but when you're, let's say you take, let's say you're
wearing a clothing, almost all of our clothes now, many of our
clothes have polymers in them, we put it in the washing machine,
it ends up in the water supply chain, we consume that water.
It's very hard to say that there's a specific action. Our whole system has been
inundated with these lower costs.
Let me say it in a way that maybe you will agree with then. We need to fix something.
My starting point would be the food supply.
Yeah. Where do you start?
Yeah. My big takeaway is sort of like yours, which is almost impossible to alter this industry overnight,
given how ubiquitous these compounds are
and everything we do and touch,
tires, phones, clothing, et cetera.
But I think that this is gonna trigger
and is the beginning of a wave.
I'm noticing that a lot of folks
are gonna start to pay attention in the food industry
and start to figure out ways to represent
low plastic, low phthalate food
products as a way to kind of sell a more premium solution.
I think that's been the trend historically with the food industry, Shamath, is to respond
to your ask right now and to then show up with solutions.
So I do think that that's...
And just taking a step back, we don't have to use these...
These are all based on fossil fuels.
So the way we make plastics is we basically pull oil out of the ground and we turn it
into these polymers.
That's the basis of this chemical industry.
We don't have to do that with the same function.
We can get the same function from what are called bio plastics.
So these can, these are compounds that can actually be much more biodegradable that are
made with biological systems and not made from oil using synthetic chemicals systems.
So I do think that there is a really big opportunity
for a wave of bioplastic alternatives,
given that this is now becoming a little bit more
obvious to folks that there is this kind of
systemic problem, that this is ubiquitous
and that we do need to kind of address it.
Okay, so just zooming out here for a minute talked about the
phthalates. But what about the Bofas? freeburg? The study on
the Bofas?
Let me play and water the Bofas Jason.
Well done, that was really well done.
That was really, really well done.
You fucked, you nailed it.
Oh my God, so good.
We were workshopping up before the show.
I was like, what is Bofas?
I have Bofa's kniznuts.
Bofaniznuts?
That's awesome.
Why not just start laughing
before you deliver the joke next time, please.
Oh my God. Where's the air horn, Nick?
Play the air horn.
No, no.
Okay.
Let's get serious here for a second.
I have a real question.
Part of the thing that I think is broken is that I think somewhere along the way we got
screwed up in how food is labeled, right?
And then it was gamed effectively, right?
So for years, even when I was growing up, I thought you should not buy food that had that was high in fat, as an example. And little did I know I was ingesting all these sugars as a
substitute to fat, it was a total mistake. Does the labeling need to become simpler and focus on
these things that are just fundamentally carcinogenic for us? One, two, are there like lawsuits that need
to happen, ala cigarettes where you kind of connect the dots
between these phthalates and a bunch of these diseases?
Because it just seems like we are,
people have thrown their hands in the air for years, right?
Some people say autism and diet are correlated, right?
Other people, so there, you know, Crohn's,
the rise of Crohn's, there's so many of these conditions
that there is a cohort of people
that attribute most of the reason,
the pathology of the disease exists to food.
So what do we do?
We're pesticides, right?
Yeah, that was in there too.
Is that your actual office behind you?
Or is that a background, Jamal?
This is my real office.
It's the office, yeah, yeah.
So like every one of those books
is coded
in some of these compounds.
No, these are Thalate free because these
are from the 1400s.
They didn't have that back then.
Okay, good.
All right.
Well, everything else at the desk is made
of all of those.
Collector's items.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Pretty much these are collector's items,
bro.
These are, these are from an era where
that stuff didn't exist.
And you're, you're, you're pure, I'm
assuming you're, you'm assuming you're wearing
a pure baby wool sweater, which doesn't have any polymer.
Yeah, it's baby cashmere.
Yeah, but I think what's overwhelming about this problem.
That's biodegradable, right?
I think baby cashmere is biodegradable.
It is.
What's overwhelming about this problem
is the ubiquity of the problem.
It's almost like asking,
tell me everywhere that carbon is used.
Like imagine if you had to label every M&M you're eating.
No, I know. I'm trying to hone you into this one area that I actually, I get the tires and this
and that. I'm trying to get to something that I fundamentally care about. I have young children,
I feed them food every day. I don't trust my food supply. I've never really trusted it.
And this kind of stuff adds to this body of evidence
where I'm worried that if my kids go through some kind of an issue, at the core of it will actually
be something dietary. And it's typically overlooked by modern medicine, because you'll treat it
symptomologically, you'll try to give it some kind of pill. It's not how you treat a lot of these
things. It could turn out. Where restructuring
someone's diet can actually have an enormous impact. So I'm just trying to figure out what
is something that we can all start to do to get a handle on this, because you're putting
food in your body every day.
Yeah. It seems like you're saying it's helpless here, Freebird. There's nothing we can do.
And I think what Chamath and I are asking you is like, where do we start? How can we start to get off of plastics?
I think we got to go into the source. So biopolymers are made by living organisms. They're
typically longer chains of what are more like sugar molecules. And they can be used in a similar
way that we're, they're not going to be as good as synthetic polymers that we use today.
So a lot of our applications, a lot of our industry would have to be rebuilt if we really wanted to go back to redesign the whole system.
But we got to redesign the whole system, Chamath. We're making everything out of these products because they're cheap.
And because we can pull oil out of the ground and turn it into cheap stuff, and then it makes things affordable for everyone on Earth.
And that's how this industry emerged.
You know, it was not like some, someone randomly came along and said, let's put plastics and everything because it's going to be good for people.
It was a way to make products more accessible and more available
and cheaper and it's everywhere.
Um, and so I think there's this real question of like, what industrial synthetic
chemistry is, do we use today as a species that we should rethink using and start at that
level and then rebuild from there? And I think shining a light on this stuff and just talking
about what these products are and- I think that's laudatory, but too complicated. I want
something simpler, which is like, can we get a law passed so that chickens cannot eat certain
kinds of food that are known to be high in thalase. Yeah. And here's an idea. Look at this, Trimoth. Like look at this banana. Like I just as a
newsflash, a banana already has a wrapper called the peel. And then people are wrapping
plastics on this stuff. Like I think consumers need to demand that like, why do you take
a picture of a banana? Why do you take a picture of a banana? I found that on the internet.
I didn't actually take it myself. Okay. I thought you were like sitting at the store
photographing banana. You know, on the internet. I didn't actually take it myself. I thought you were like sitting at the store photographing banana.
You know, when you see this kind of packaging, this is what has made me nuts in my life is
all this crazy packaging going on. And in Europe, you are required at the supermarket.
And people do this when they get to the end of the counter, they take the packaging off,
the supermarket has to take the packaging. Right? So they have to bear the burden of it. So if you
get a tube of toothpaste, you can take the packaging, right? So they have to bear the burden of it. So if you get a tube of toothpaste,
you can take the packaging off and hand them the thing. Other
places are now saying, hey, if you're coming for peanut butter
or grains or flour or sugar, they have a barrel of sugar,
they put it in a brown bag, and you get this like more clean
experience. I think we have to have like both ends of this the
supply chain, there's also consumers, there's a there's
like a marketing
I want my bananas to come with packaging on them.
You do, you want them wrapped in plastic?
I want the brand else's fingerprints.
I don't want anyone's fingerprints on my bananas.
That's on the peel, bro.
You don't eat the peel, brother.
You don't eat the peel.
Yeah, but I could touch it.
I haven't, we haven't bought water bottles.
I want everything to come in hermetically sealed plastic.
Yeah, but then how many people
in your house handle your banana?
Pause.
Whoa, whoa.
Yay.
Did you ask him how many people in his house
handled his banana?
Whoa.
No ditty.
No, but the real issue is not that.
It's like when the girls in your family
have puberty younger and younger,
and you're like, why is that happening?
Or inconsistent periods.
Or when the boys go through these weird, you know,
moments where they're like not really growing.
I thought that was TikTok.
No, I'm just telling you like, when you-
There's so many things that we have to panic about. It's hard to, to your point, it's hard to attribute.
Yeah.
To one thing.
Yeah, but I think, I think the, I think the thing that everybody could get, get focused on is how can you correct at least the marketing versus the reality in our food supply. A different
example, I remember Nat telling me something which was along the lines of hormone-free
is something that's marketed, but chickens have been hormone-free since the 50s, but it's like
there's some latent hormones left inside of them. And then some of the feed is really poorly
constructed and you should be focused on like air chilled versus water chilled
or whatever. There's just so much bullshit out there. And so I
think it's hard if you're like trying to take care of your
family. Yeah, make sense of it all. It's just like, it seems
impossible. Everyone feels helpless and everyone wants to
grasp on. I find this super frustrating because it's
something that I really care about my like what I eat.
Right, totally.
And it came from a place where a lot of disease in my family and then I was overweight when I was young.
And so I just want to kind of like toe it.
No, I mean you eat.
And it's impossible.
You if you're eating vegetables.
I know Jason, but my takeaway is there's going to be a lot of phthalates in my balls.
Yes, absolutely.
Despite all the stuff that I do, I'm no better off than somebody eating at Wendy's in the
end of the day. And I feel like, well, what is all that time and expense and difficulty?
It's not worth it.
Well, there's other health benefits too. And of course, and there's environmental benefits,
but you know, we went all glass bottles, as I told you, and, you know, then I find out that some of the cans
we have, because it's a couple of things we like certain
natural sodas, they got plastic on the inside of the aluminum
plastic on the inside. Exactly. I'm like, I thought I was doing
the right thing here by going to aluminum can I get rid of
plastic to plastic on the inside. Exactly. So the moral of
the story is don't try to do the right thing.
I'm in. But anyway, I just want to I think this stuff is unavoidable. I'm in. I don't know. But anyway, I just want to, I think this stuff is
unavoidable. I really do. That's why I'm not too worried about it. I think, I think, I think you're
right. And I think that's why you see all of these kinds of diseases, these chronic and acute
conditions just ticking up, tick, tick, tick, tick, tick, tick, tick. It's a, well, anyway,
I think this was a fascinating science corner and, uh, I, I, um, I think this was a fascinating science corner. And I took a screenshot of Sachs during it.
This is Sachs' interest level.
You can always tell how good it is.
No, look, I thought this was a science corner I could finally use.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
They actually checked Sachs' balls for the plastics and all they found were steel.
So there it is.
There you go.
Yeah, it's just-
Brass balls.
Going around the horn here.
What's your favorite balls in pop culture?
For me, it's gotta be idiocracy.
I love, have you guys seen Idiocracy, Mike Judge's film?
I haven't seen it.
Okay, so in the film, I'll just cue this up.
Society has gone to the lowest possible IQ.
Everybody's got an ADIQ and like people,
like a reality TV star is running the country into the ground. That's what he has in
idiocracy. And the number one television show is essentially a TikTok called ouch my balls. Here it is. Hit him in the balls. AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH SHWJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJ The number one television show in this society, this dystopian society,
where all the crops have died
and they don't know how to make crops anymore
is Ouch My Balls.
It's just a super cut of a guy getting kicked in the nuts.
Sax, what's your favorite ball moment in pop culture?
Later, Glenn Ross.
All right, here it is, folks.
Yeah, this is this.
You have to have these. That's Alec Baldwin, yeah.
Friedberg, you got a favorite ball clip from pop culture for yourself that tickles you?
No?
Tomop, you got one?
I'm going to find one.
You got one?
Okay, everybody, this has been a spectacular episode of the world's number one podcast. It's
episode 180 of the All In podcast with you again, for the
Sultan of Science, David Friedberg, David Sachs, Rain
Men. Yeah.
There's a compilation of YouTube on YouTube of all these Austin
Powers moments of Austin Powers getting kicked in the balls.
Yeah, bad news.
And we'll see you all at the All-In-One Summit in September.
Bye bye.
Love you, Wes.
Bye bye. I'm going all in And it's said we open source it to the fans and they've just gone crazy with it
Love U West, the queen of Kim Wams
I'm going all in
What your winners line?
What your winners line?
Besties are gone
Go 13
That is my dog taking an audition for driveway sex
We're gonna see it man
Oh man My habitat sure will meet me at Blitz.
We should all just get a room and just have one big huge orgy cause they're all just useless.
It's like this sexual tension but they just need to release them out.
What? You're the bee.
What? You're the bee.
Bee?
We need to get merch.
I'm doing all this.
And now the plugs the All In Summit is taking place in Los Angeles on September 8th through the 10th.
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