All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - Trump vs Harvard, Nvidia export controls, how DEI killed Hollywood with Tim Dillon
Episode Date: April 19, 2025(0:00) The Besties welcome Tim Dillon! (6:56) Nvidia H20 export controls, the China workaround, plausible deniability by chipmakers selling to China-linked entities (28:45) Trump vs. Harvard: Why the ...White House is threatening to take Harvard's tax-exempt status away (57:04) Hollywood's DEI facade, thoughts on AI, and more (1:18:06) Celebrity Jeopardy update: Friedberg is heading to the finals! (1:26:44) Science Corner: Mitochondrial Therapy Follow Tim: https://x.com/TimJDillon Check out Tim's new special: https://www.netflix.com/title/81992010 Follow the besties: https://x.com/chamath https://x.com/Jason https://x.com/DavidSacks https://x.com/friedberg Follow on X: https://x.com/theallinpod Follow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theallinpod Follow on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@theallinpod Follow on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/allinpod Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://x.com/yung_spielburg Intro Video Credit: https://x.com/TheZachEffect Referenced in the show: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wUzmVo2dZNs https://www.wsj.com/livecoverage/stock-market-trump-tariffs-trade-war-04-15-25/card/nvidia-records-5-5-billion-charge-on-new-h20-export-restrictions-LXjxlqr2m80QIrfJxnYZ https://www.wsj.com/economy/trade/trump-chip-exports-nvidia-h20-china-amd-d2c4c866 https://www.reuters.com/technology/exclusive-nvidia-offers-new-advanced-chip-china-that-meets-us-export-controls-2022-11-08 https://abachy.com/news/nvidia-unveil-new-ai-chips-chinese-market-after-us-bans-a800-and-h800 https://www.moomoo.com/community/feed/compared-to-the-h100-how-is-the-performance-of-the-111725151846805 https://www.reuters.com/technology/tsmc-could-face-1-billion-or-more-fine-us-probe-sources-say-2025-04-08 https://www.bis.gov https://www.cnbc.com/2025/04/15/us-is-unable-to-replace-rare-earths-supply-from-china-warns-csis-.html https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-03-31/trump-administration-to-review-billions-in-grants-to-harvard https://www.harvard.edu/research-funding/wp-content/uploads/sites/16/2025/04/Letter-Sent-to-Harvard-2025-04-11.pdf https://www.harvard.edu/president/news/2025/the-promise-of-american-higher-education https://apnews.com/article/harvard-trump-administration-federal-cuts-antisemitism-0a1fb70a2c1055bda7c4c5a5c476e18d https://www.cnn.com/2025/04/16/politics/irs-harvard-tax-exempt-status/index.html https://www.boston.com/news/local-news/2024/09/05/harvard-comes-in-dead-last-in-nationwide-free-speech-rankings https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_Jones_University_v._United_States https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Students_for_Fair_Admissions_v._Harvard https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2022/7/13/faculty-survey-political-leaning https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/ukraines-parliament-extends-martial-law-until-august-2025-04-16 https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-023-06537-z https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-00848-z https://www.researchgate.net/publication/389907980_Organelle-tuning_condition_robustly_fabricates_energetic_mitochondria_for_cartilage_regeneration/fulltext/67d8575e478c5a3feda50563/Organelle-tuning-condition-robustly-fabricates-energetic-mitochondria-for-cartilage-regeneration.pdf https://www.foxnews.com/media/george-clooney-calls-breaking-biden-2024-his-civic-duty-says-democrats-werent-telling-truth
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, everybody, welcome back to the number one podcast
in the world, the all in podcast. After a triumphant
week last week, we had an amazing episode. Thanks to
Larry Summers and Ezra Klein for joining us for the great
tariff debate. Number four episode in the world last week.
And man, we got a banger ready for you today. Before I get to
that couple of quick plugs,
did you call the DNC to clean up the roadkill Jason,
from last week.
I'm an independent folks, just I know these guys keep trying to
pin me as a downright, I'm an independent critical thinker for
life. But I do think Ezra is got a little PTSD. I haven't heard
from Ezra.
Does the DNC have a roadkill cleanup crew?
You know, it's amazing. You have an episode like that, where I
thought we made great progress on dealing with those issues and came to some consensus at the end. And then every
single person universally, if they're on the right, oh my God, Saxon, Chamath destroyed them. If they're
on the left, the left's position was, oh my God, Saxon, Chamath finally got destroyed. Anyway,
you decide for yourself. We're just here to talk about the most important news stories. And
all in some of the
your mouth is right. I think they sent the same crew that cleans up the armadillos.
Okay.
Alrighty, here we go. September 7 to 9.
Dillo's left lying on the side of the road.
All right. Okay. All in. It is going into its yada, yada, September 7, tonight, apply all in
comm slash summit pronouns everywhere. Pronouns everywhere on the highway. Jason pronouns are
everywhere. Just trying to clean up the pronouns. The shovels weren't big enough for all the
pronouns. Freberg was on Jeopardy again, celebrity Jeopardy. And I don't want to ruin it for you,
but he had an amazing comeback victory, but really excited to have on the program today. One of your favorites. He was on the show pre-election.
One of my favorites. Robert F. Kennedy is with us again. RFK. How are you doing? I love
the glasses. You're going to make America healthy again. And welcome to the program.
RFK Jr.
We found out that autism is caused mainly by this show.
And we're going to have to take action.
We've started to look at the different causes,
but we're thinking it is the debate between Ezra Klein
and Larry Summers that is the real villain here. And it said, we open source it to the fans and they've just gone crazy with it.
Tremendous.
Everybody knows RFK is going to do a great job.
He's a little bit weird, but Wife is a smoke show.
I mean, an incredible wife, RFK Jr. Incredible.
Not as good.
Not as good.
Okay, well I'm trying to land it.
Yeah, what am I supposed to do?
I'm up against a professional.
You know, can you just moderate
so that Tim can be the comedian?
Okay, here we go.
Don't talk over me, okay?
You just sit down, Chamath.
Can you do what you did last week?
Three to what's that?
What's that, moderate for narcissists
who all want to add one more thing?
Yeah, let the experts talk.
Yes, of course.
You kind of hang back.
Here comes Zach.
Why can't I talk?
Why can't I talk?
I'm having so much fun.
Can you please pass the ball?
Just pass the ball.
Here we go.
Just pass the ball and get out of the way.
Let's welcome our guest, Tim Dillon.
Let the shooter shoot. He's an incredibly funny comedian.
He has a new special. I'm your mother on Netflix. He's the host of the award winning now in its 10th
year. Emmy winning award winning. He's got the Emmy. He's got the Tony. He's still got to get
the Grammy and the Oscar. The one the only Tim Dillon of the Tim Dillon showpockets.
Thank you so much.
Thank you for having me.
I feel like I'm having a Zoom meeting with Doge
to prove what I've done in the last week.
This is what, by the way, this is the last thing
someone at the EPA sees.
It's just these four guys.
They're just staring at a guy like Tramoth going,
well, we tested some soil.
I think we got those numbers back.
That's what it feels like here.
I feel like I'm on trial just trying to justify
my stupid job.
Would you like eight months severance
or would you like to be fired today?
Which would you prefer?
You have both options on the table.
It would have been very funny if we actually were just,
as soon as Tim said that, we had Steve Davis pop up.
Yeah.
Well, interestingly, I don't want to speak out of school
or embarrass our guest, but Tim was supposed
to join us in February.
Yes.
And like the star he is, as I mentioned, he's got the Emmy,
he's got the Tony, still working on the Oscar,
and the Grammy, he was supposed to be with us,
and he canceled last minute, and then we found out why.
He ditched us to spend the day with Steve Bannon,
and go on the Steve Bannon podcast, here they are.
That's true.
Here he is.
What is this?
Look at that, that's Steve Bannon and Timmy.
I took a 23 and me, and they didn't tell me my ethnicity,
but the only thing that came back was they said
that Steve Bannon was my father.
Yes, and here they are on the cyclone in Brooklyn,
beautiful.
They went out to little Italy, little Italy here.
By the way, they've done a pretty decent job.
Wrapping up with a little hookah,
or I mean, maybe a little bit more in there.
I don't know.
I mean, do you think Bannon is 420 friendly?
You tell us, Jimmy.
I think anything, I mean, Bannon would tell you
if we could start farming marijuana in America
and the American working class could share in the profits,
I think he'd be 420 friendly.
He would be 420 friendly.
No Taiwanese marijuana though.
Nothing, you know, it's gotta be American.
Can I give a quick shout out,
which is 10 months ago, Tim Dillon won on the Tucker Carlson show.
I think the title is called Disney Boomers
and the Creepy Corporations That Pretend to Love You.
Really one of the best pieces of content
I watched all of last year.
Nick, you should put the link in the show notes.
Thank you.
It's incredible.
Thank you.
The whole thing end to end, two hours while spent, I would encourage everybody to watch it. It's timeless. Thank you. The whole thing end to end, two hours while spent,
I would encourage everybody to watch it.
It's timeless content actually.
Real good cultural observation at the moment.
It's really good.
Two white guys talking in a garage in Maine.
Seems...
He has a certain way, you know,
I went to and did it there.
And he has a way of just kind of like slipping you
into this state of comfort. All of a sudden I just started talking
about all the money I've lost.
He's great.
He's great at it.
Where is this coming from?
Who's G.H.B.?
He's great at it.
It's like Megyn Kelly's great at it too.
I just did her thing.
And you know, she does it in her house.
And I just show up and she's sitting behind the desk
and she goes, hi.
And you sit down and you're, and then she goes, so your mother's a schizophrenic, like immediately you start crying to Megyn
Kelly. They're just good. They know what they're doing.
They know what they're doing.
Let's get to the docket. H-20s banned. The US and China trade war has been escalating
on Monday. The White House informed Nvidia that they were putting an indefinite export restriction on invaders
h 20 chips to China. And so in this filing, Nvidia said it
expects a $5.5 billion hit to the quarterly earnings stock
dropped 6%. For those of you don't know, h 20 is essentially
the weaker version of the h 100. It was designed actually to
comply with these export
restrictions on AI chips and allow them Nvidia to sell something into China in video CEO CEO Jensen
whine was visiting China today. He told Chinese state media quote, the China market is very
important to us, yada yada. Saxe, you're here. I think you got some official
information for us on this. What's the story here? Wasn't
this supposed to be the chip that was made for China?
In a sense, I mean, there is a long history to this. Okay. So
first of all, just to be clear, we're not talking about
tariffs, we're talking about export controls. And the export
controls are designed to prevent certain
sensitive technologies, technologies that could have a dual use potential military as well as
consumer application from going to China. This goes all the way back to 2019. The first Trump
administration placed a ban on extreme ultraviolet lithography equipment going to China.
This is the key technology in the printing of transistors on the silicon wafer in the
semiconductor manufacturing process. And there's only one company in the world that makes these
machines. They cost like $200 million. It's called ASML. It's a company in the Netherlands.
In any event, the first term of administration prevented these machines from going to China, which I think in hindsight was a really far sighted
decision. Because if it weren't for that, China might today be dominating global manufacturing
of semiconductors and their inability to get that sort of lithography equipment, I think
definitely put a dent in their plans. Subsequent to that, in 2022, the Biden administration started adding leading edge chips to the expert
control list, like you said, the H100.
Nvidia then designed a new chip that was basically a version of the H100, but they reduced the
amount of flops or computational power just below the thresholds they continue selling
to China.
That was called the H 800.
The Biden administration then added the H 800 to the expert control list in 2023.
So Nvidia developed the H 20, which again is kind of like a nerf version of the H
100.
This has less computational power.
I think the issue is that.
Flops isn't the only criteria by which you can measure the power of a chip.
There's also now memory bandwidth. And in the new paradigm of reinforcement learning and test time
compute, memory bandwidth actually matters more than the amount of FLOPs. And if you look at the
memory bandwidth on the H20, it actually has 20% more memory bandwidth than the H100. So I think there's a view that this chip is just frankly too good.
And the response I'd have to people who don't think we should be restricting this is, are
you against expert controls in general or you just think that we're drawing the line
in the wrong place here?
Because, you know, I've heard folks like our friends like Bill Gurley and so forth say
that we're making a mistake. But I think the question for those people is, would you sell them everything? Because you know, I've heard folks like our friends like Bill Gurley and so forth say that Yeah, it's about to pull
That we're making a mistake. But I think the question for those people is would you sell them everything?
I mean if China wanted to buy the latest Nvidia chip the GB 200, would you sell that to them?
Would you sell a million of those? Would you sell them five million if they're willing to pay a premium?
It seems to me that at some point you have to say that some technologies are just too sensitive to be sold to China.
So then the question is just, are you drawing the line in the right place?
Let me bring Freeberg in on that.
Freeberg, friends of the pod like Gavin Baker said these tariffs and these type of bans
are going to essentially guarantee that America will lose AI because, and Gurley as well has
this position, that we're now going to make China force them to make their own chips.
Now necessity will be the mother invention
and it's gonna escalate and we'd be better
of just selling them these instead of the latest ones.
What's your take on that?
That this will be the inspiration for them
to build their own Nvidia.
It's an important question.
Last year China announced and began a $37 billion investment
in developing their own 3 nanometer chip technology. So, you know, the EUV lithography
systems that Sachs is referencing require these wavelengths of light at about 13 and a half nanometer,
which is, you know, the previous technology was like 200 plus nanometers.
So it's very, very small wavelengths of light
that you have to be able to manipulate
in a very kind of discrete way to print circuits that
are just three nanometer scale.
And so it turns out that last year China
made a claim that this investment they had made
was starting to pay off.
And they had developed their own EUV system. And their big semiconductor companies called the Semiconductor
Manufacturing International Corporation or SMIC in China, they launched a chip, a seven
nanometer chip with Huawei in their Mate 60 Pro, which is sort of like their iPhone competitor
in China. And so they're proclaiming that they've already got this EUV technology from what I understand
and Sachs would know better than I,
it sounds like there was a lot of reverse engineering
and work around of existing technology
in order to deliver that system.
But they may now already be investing in
and developing their own system.
So J Cal, I think they're doing it either way.
I think that they're going to invest and build their own EUV and chip manufacturing capacity either way. And the
question is, does this slow them down or limit their ability on the application or the AI
layer to kind of be held back for some period of time?
Obviously accelerates it because they have no choice, but to accelerates their commitment
to it. So Tim, you've been talking about these EUV technologies and the 200 nanometer one
specifically. It's my entire special. It's a little crazy that you'd rip me off like this.
My entire special is about the lithograph. Yeah. And that's the hour that I do. You know,
I'm of the mind if you give a man a chip, he makes one semiconductor or a few. But if you teach a man to make a chip,
he makes multiple semiconductors and invades Taiwan. So that's where I am with this, you know?
I think we should keep them dependent. Keep selling it to them.
Yes. Keep selling it to them. You know, you understand how this works.
If somebody becomes addicted to the good stuff, then they
come back. You don't want to give them too much. And you hide a little, you have your
back door, the technology would have cut a little surveillance and stuff. So have some
fun. Have some fun. That's been done before. Sure. Back doors all the time. Back door,
the technology, a little surveillance capability. You slip it in there. Yeah. Chamath, what's
your, what's your thoughts coming around the horn here?
You were sort of talking about, I think, publicly, and obviously you've got Grok, and so you're
in the space with chips.
Does this net-net end of the day slow them down, or slow them down short term, speed
them up long term?
I think that the technology that they need is extremely non-trivial. And I do think that it
actually slows them down quite a bit if they don't have access to it. Can I just take a step back and
up-level this? I think it was in 2017, the State Council of China published this plan, and they
were incredibly transparent and honest. They said, this plan is for China to become
a global leader in AI by 2030, okay?
And it said, so this is in 2017,
and they said, by 2020,
we need to have made iconic advances.
By 2025, we should be a major engine of the industry,
and by 2030, they should occupy the commanding heights,
they said, in AI tech.
Okay.
So why is that important?
To be honest with you, I think the real problem that we have is that Nvidia is not doing what
is in the best interest of the United States.
Oh, David mentioned this.
When the US banned the sale of the top end GPUs, the A100 and the H100, they quickly
introduced the A800 and H800. What does that mean? Well,
all it was was just a chip that was basically the same. It slightly reduced the data transfer speed
so that it went under the export control threshold, but it was still really usable. Then late last
year, they introduced this thing called this H20 that was explicitly designed for
China and to be compliant with US rules at the time, which again, gives these guys substantial
performance. Okay, so what do you have? You have a 2017 plan that they've been executing against,
which is to say, we want to dominate this space. And you have an American company that has been
working around the guidelines at every turn to try to land silicon into the hands of China.
So then you would say, well, maybe there's not that much going into China.
Nick, can you just throw up the chart that I sent you about Nvidia's revenue composition?
So let's just call a spade a spade, guys. I think we can all do the math, about 47% of all of Nvidia's revenue goes to China and Chinese related countries.
And I think when you peel back this onion, I think what you will find is a whole raft of
companies that were stood up to buy these Nvidia GPUs to essentially act as a way station for China.
And I think that is the big problem because it doesn't mean that it was just these chips
that David and his colleagues put on an export control list.
It was every kind of chip.
And now it explains every single time we have an advance in the United States, how is it
that Alibaba shows up with something incredible,
DeepSeek shows up with something better?
At every turn and at every step of AI,
they are at the same rate or one step ahead.
And I suspect it's because that these ships are being used
in very sophisticated ways behind the scenes.
And I think that's the issue that we need to address.
Just to be clear, the insight you have here, the prediction is people are selling these to
Taiwan, they're selling them in Singapore, Hong Kong, and there's a group that are zipping them
over to China mainland or letting them use them. I don't know if you saw, but I believe there was a
report that there was a couple of Singaporeans that were arrested for actually trying to bring
the chips into China. I don't think it's necessarily that I think what happens is you have some entity that springs up, you know, ACME Corp. ACME Corp.com,
they show up in Bhutan or Cambodia or Vietnam or Singapore. And they provide a PO a purchase order
to Nvidia, 300, 500, $800 million. What do you think Nvidia is going to do? They're going to
think, well, this is a legitimate Singaporean entity. I'm going to sell them the chips, whatever they want. It's,
it can, it checks all the boxes and they look away. And what we need to now figure out is what
happens once those chips get delivered. It is the only explanation for this. You don't have this
requirement for this number of GPUs for those end markets
There is only one that's an explosive allegation
Sax what do you think of this theory more broadly? I think it is a fact that there have been both
Legal and illegal attempts to evade the US export controls
That is true. And there's a number of companies that have done it.
For example, last year, there was a case where TSMC was discovered to have produced
something like 3 million chips that went into the Huawei Ascend 910C chips.
I think it was like three million dyes or something
that went into the Huawei S& chips.
And I think they're being fined for that.
And again, this is all public information.
Now they claimed that they thought it was for a company
called I think Softco,
it's basically a Bitcoin like ASICS company,
but nonetheless this did happen.
So there have been attempts to set up shell companies
to circumvent the export controls and it is a very big problem.
Tim, what do you think more broadly about what Trump is doing with this trade war in China? Any takes on China, Taiwan, and just how Americans should look at,
hey, maybe we have to buy some more high quality products. Maybe we don't get things on Tmoo as cheap with these, you know, $850 exemptions, etc. I think roughly Trump's instincts are correct. I think the,
the way that the tariffs rolled out seemed to be incredibly chaotic. I think that's a huge problem
with a lot of what the Trump administration does. They seem to have the correct instincts, but you,
they have like a very sloppy rollout, right?
Like everything's a hard launch. Everything's incredibly... I don't know that things are
messaged the right way. The whole Doge thing is a little bit of a fiasco because the messaging
seemed off. Like nobody was out really talking about what they were doing and why they were doing
it. You know, I don't know how well this works.
I mean, you have a very integrated global economy.
You guys know more about that than I do.
Are you able to unwind that?
And if you do, you have to unwind it in certain areas
and certain areas you're gonna have to allow
to probably remain relatively stable and consistent, right?
I mean, if you listen to Ray Dalio,
he talks about like a disaster coming with monetary policy,
right?
The whole unwinding of these economic and political
structures kind of happening at once.
I don't know.
I think Americans do over-consume a lot of crap.
I think cheap goods aren't necessarily
the highest organizing principle of life.
I think people have been sold the idea that cheap goods are more important than having a stable
functioning job and family. I think the gig economy has been sold to Americans as a way to
offer them freedom and really in chaos at the expense
of the stability that used to come with a job with benefits that you stayed in for.
But the other component to that is we have to make sure that we don't have skyrocketing prices
that completely decimate people either.
So I think you need to find a balance. I want to see my friends work in factories.
I want them to get hurt. I want to release the safety standards. I want child labor.
Children are terror terrorists, many of them. Yeah, they start fights and malls. There's they
have flash mobs. They run around around Chicago trying to kill people that are just
trying to have shellfish towers on the river.
So yes, children should work, my friend should work in a plastics factory, door dash is a
horrible job.
You lose a finger at a factory, it's a story.
Delivering burritos is a hell, driving Uber, all these horrible degrading things we make
people do and then tell them it's great. And then we look, you know, you should destigmatize being
an electrician, a plumber, a contractor, all these things that when I was told, you know,
when I was growing up, they'd point to a guy doing construction and go, you're going to do that if
you don't do your homework. And then the people that did their homework are all bankrupt.
And that construction guy is killing it.
He's doing pretty well.
And so what?
He went to January 6.
He went there peacefully.
But the whole thing is, I think you
need to figure out how to kind of reintroduce the idea
that this gig economy, where people serve from one unfulfilling nightmare
to the next should be rethought. Yes. Better to be in a factory, losing a finger. Can I ask a question,
in David's estimation, when you're talking about these companies that are set up to get these chips
that evade export controls.
You think, is that the Chinese government doing that?
Is that an intelligence agency doing that?
Who would be setting those companies up?
Is it people that are interested purely in profit
and that are then selling those chips?
That's super interesting.
Well, I think you have to ask the question, qui bono?
I mean, who benefits?
Right.
I think clearly the shell companies, the front companies are set up by either the Chinese government or entities in China to evade the export controls because ultimately they want the chips.
However, I think there is also a problem that Lenin described as the capitalists will sell us the rope with which to hang themselves.
will sell us the rope with which to hang themselves. And I do think there are a lot of Western companies that will look the other way or
turn a blind eye and just haven't been enforcing the rules as religiously as they should because
it's profitable not to.
And this is where I do think that the US government has to be pretty tough.
I mean, if we're going to have expert controls in the first place, I know there's some people
who don't think we should have them, but I do.
I mean, I don't think we should let China have access to our leading edge AI technology.
We have to make sure that the export controls are effective.
And that means there has to be some cracking down in order to make that happen.
Part of the crackdown is we have to define the boundary lines in a more effective way with fewer loopholes
so that companies can't legally take advantage of those loopholes, but also we're going to
need more monitoring, more inspection, and more enforcement.
And this is one of the few areas of the government that I actually think needs more resources.
I think that Elon and Doge have identified many areas of the government that are massively
overstaffed, but this is one area, there's an agency inside the Department of Commerce called BIS that
actually has to do all of this monitoring and inspections and enforcement.
And I actually think they're understaffed relative to the importance of this particular
task.
Let's have a thought starter for a second, guys.
Do you guys think that if 47% of all of the AI capability and horsepower is being shipped
to three Asian countries, where do you think the apps that require that amount of horsepower
live?
Is there a cursor of Bhutan that we did not know?
Is there a great shopping app in Cambodia
that's come out of nowhere that's AI powered?
I think the answer is no.
So we already know what the answer is.
The question is, this is a case where you have
plausible deniability, right?
I sell something to a Singaporean registered company,
plausible deniability, what am I supposed to do?
You can't expect me to audit it.
I think that's what Nvidia's answer will be to this question.
But what is the real expectation?
Let's flip it on its head.
Last week, China in retaliation for tariffs,
constrained the supply of rare earths outside of China,
leaving China. You had
certain factory lines that just had to stop on a dime, right? So they're clearly in a position to
understand their supply chain, who benefits or who doesn't benefit and can be hurt by constraining
supply and they're able to affect that. At a minimum, the United States should have a
mechanism to understand it. Whether they do it
or not should be up to powers that be that are bigger than the four of us or the five of us.
But that's my point, which is that it is implausible that if you did one or two layers
of work, you would not find that most of this traffic is being used by Chinese organizations.
That may be okay. And that's a decision that the United States government should make. But
it's something that should be disclosed to them somehow.
And I think if you look at the composition of revenue for Nvidia, it is inconceivable
that there's a bunch of Asian AI apps that are just crushing it so hard.
No, no.
I mean, it's so obvious what's happening there.
I think we, yeah, we don't need to guess.
Taiwan and Vietnam do not have the need for that many domestically.
They're obviously flipping them to someone, right? It's a, it, right? It's a given some percentage of those are being resold.
Hey, Freeberg, you were on Jeopardy. Freeberg went to the next round.
Wait, this is the outro to that?
I wanted to get Tim in on the Jeopardy thing.
You should have done like a more broadly accessible topic like Harvard.
No, the chips are great. I like the chips.
You like that, Tim? I learned something. The chips are great. I like the chips. You like that Tim?
I learned something. The plausible deniability is interesting. It's like the banks that dealt
with Jeffrey Epstein and I know it's a sore topic because he was the fifth man on this show and
RIP and if we miss him, let's be honest, he would have been phenomenal on the show.
Let's just say he would have been good on the show.
And he would have been good on the show, but that was a very interesting topic.
I've never been on a podcast where a topic's been handled
and I'm going to go on Joe Rogan tomorrow
and just say everything Chamath just said.
I'm going to go, I'm going to go, what did he say?
Can we level this up or something?
Yeah, can we level this up?
Yeah, we'll level it up.
What did he say?
Can we up level it?
Yeah, you have that.
That's interesting.
I say that at Chili's, I go, can we up level this
for a minute?
Yes. One 99 extra if you want that, if you want extra jalapenos to me.
So what's going on Harvard? Are we selling that to China? I'm for that.
Yes. Well, there's been a Donnie book, if you will, Tim, between Trump and
Harvard.
Smart to buy Harvard. They know it's a scam.
That's a good point.
Here we go. I just spoken like a true Stanford guy. On March 31, three federal
agencies announced they were reviewing 9 billion 9 billion
in multi year federal grants and $256 million in contracts and
went to Harvard three agencies education health and the GSA.
This past Friday, April 11, the group sent a letter to Harvard's
president and the head of Harvard Corporation laid out a series of changes the White House is demanding merit based hiring and admissions
staff admission students all that good stuff. cancel all your DEI programs no more die.
reform international admissions no more admitting students that are quote hostile to American
values increase the different viewpoints on diversity across all departments
and abolish admission practices that served as an ideological litmus test Harvard president
Alan Garber said he would not comply. Later that day, the White House responded by freezing
2.2 billion grants, 60 million contracts, they now want to take away the White House, the tax exempt status of Harvard, which would be absolutely insane. It's
happened actually once before in 1970s, Bob Jones University in
South Carolina was doing outwardly racist stuff. And the
IRS, according to the CNN is looking into this. Your thoughts
Shama?
Well, it's more than the IRS is looking into it. They're thinking of revoking their tax exempt
status. Yeah. How about I tee this up slightly differently? Tim, you brought up something that
I think is really important, which is what is the American dream for all these people that are
cascading between half jobs and half measures? That's right. That's a really important question.
And right now, if you look at the top
of the educational hierarchy, Harvard,
what have we seen over the last few years?
They are at the absolute bottom of the rankings
with respect to free speech.
They have lost all of these cases
all the way up to the Supreme Court
about how they do admissions.
Harvard doesn't just have a front door. It's got a bunch of side doors, got a bunch of back doors,
and they discriminate. And what is the opposite of discrimination? It's meritocracy. And I think
with 20 plus years of discrimination, what Harvard did was made it fashionable for other
schools to discriminate. And if you compound that for 20 years,
it doesn't just touch the universities,
it starts to touch the high schools and the middle schools.
Where we live at the beginning of COVID,
we had some morons at the Board of Education
decide to take away AP calculus and AP math
because it made people feel bad.
It's absolutely ridiculous.
And then we pound these
kids with ADHD pills. And what happens is what you described, Tim. So what is the point of fixing
Harvard? It's really important because the opposite of what they do, what they do is discriminate,
is a meritocracy. And we need to make that fashionable again. And the biggest reason goes back to, again,
I'll just go back to the chip conversation.
The Chinese are so well organized.
If you look at the Chinese and the Indians together,
those are 2.5 billion people swimming in a meritocratic soup
from the day they're born.
That's the only way they climb out.
And it's eat or be eaten.
And then when they graduate from an education system
that is purely meritocratic, you know what they do?
They enter a workforce that's also meritocratic.
So it's compounded into their psyche
that you just have to perform.
Whereas what we do is we do all of these fake things
that make people feel really bad about themselves.
They look at other people that think
that shouldn't deserve to be in places, get places.
And so we have to turn that tide.
And so whatever it takes,
the most severe and extreme measures
must be undertaken to fix this.
That's my point of view.
Hmm.
Tim, your thoughts on Trump wanting to take away
the nonprofit status of Harvey.
I went to one of these encampments during the protests.
I wanted to see it for myself to see what was going on.
I do, I did like, there was a lot of, you'd see a non-binary Asian dressed up like a Hamas
and I think that's fun.
I think it's college.
So I think that people are going to express views that are often, you know, probably anti-American.
I don't think we can, you can't shield yourself from that.
I don't like deporting people that are, you know, critical of Israel, for example, unless
they've committed crimes and you can provide, they're providing material support, you know,
if you can prove they're providing-
Due process.
Due process.
Well, you need to provide, you know, if they're providing material support
to Hamas or something like that, that's a different story. But if they're here on a
legal resident visa, they should be allowed the space to, you know, express themselves as
any other American citizen would. Now, that being said, it is impossible to look at higher
education in America right now and not be embarrassed. Truly, truly. The word is
embarrassment. These should be the shining example of, as Chamath was saying, institutions that
prepare people for the real world. But what they really are, they've all been captured in this
quasi-religious cult of insanity, where people are elevating different types of characteristics outside of intelligence
and merit as the most important things to be considered for admission, to be given academic
achievements and things like this.
It's kind of embarrassing.
I think if these institutions are going to follow that path, they're going to have to
live and die on their own.
They're not going to be able to be taxpayer subsidized and funded. They have
massive endowments from multi-billionaires whose families all go. But like Jemez said,
they do engage in discrimination. And frankly, again, I'm not for drawing ideological lines,
and I'm a big free speech guy, but I do think that you don't find much ideological diversity
on any of those campuses, certainly not in the faculties at all. And it doesn't prepare anybody for a world. And all the politics
are very aesthetic. Meaning all these people are out there, you know, showing off, exhibiting
their virtue. But at the end of the day, they're still getting a very cushy internship and
a nice job. And you know, they're going to summer in Martha's Vineyard.
You know, for example,
I was lucky enough to go to Kennedy compound this summer.
I went sailing with their family
and they're really great kids.
A lot of the kids there were from-
On the figure or the rock?
Where were they?
No, they're on, you know, Hyannis, whatever,
the famous thing.
And I went there and a lot of their young kids,
RFKs kids are young, they went to Harvard.
And a lot of these Harvard kids are all good kids. But you know, some of them are very interesting, right? Because they
said to me, they said, you own a house in the Hamptons. I said, yeah. They go, do you
ever go out there in the winter? I go, yes, sometimes I do. It's quiet, nice, you can
write, you can work on stuff. They go, yeah, well, you know, they go, it's kind of depressing
to come to the Cape in the winter because all these people here are on drugs. And I
said, yeah, because you ship their jobs away. So it's just stunning.
These are Harvard kids.
They're very smart kids.
You have these chasms where you would think it would be completely obvious to people at
this amazing academic institution that, yeah, of course, the people who are on drugs, they're
embracing pathological behavior.
They don't have a future.
But these schools have become these really insular bubbles where these people have these really well-meaning
aesthetic politics, which says, we don't care about your economic circumstances, here's a trans
Batman. And I don't think that that seems to be the ethos of higher education in America right now.
And it's very hypocritical. And I think it's why the Democratic Party
no longer connects because they're too closely associated with that type of, you know, that type
of vibe. Elite identity politics. Yeah. Freiburg, what's your thought? Should the IRS revoke or
threaten to revoke here their nonprofit status? Is that a fair technique here because
they won't acquiesce and do exactly as instructed? What do
you and what do you think is going to happen here? This
possibly result in them losing their IRS status?
Harvard's endowment is $53.2 billion. Huge, I assume they
make 7% return, you know,
they're making 4 billion a year in income generated from those
investments in that endowment. I think there's a couple of two
really important questions. One is should the role of the
federal government be to give out money equally to
institutions? Or should the role be to give money to the institutions that are
going to provide the highest ROI for America, or is the goal to redistribute wealth? And is that
the point of federal spending and federal expenditures? So, you know, you could kind
of think about Harvard, MIT, and a few other institutions that have truly great research institutions embedded within them as being the best ROI for America from a grant perspective when you're giving
out research grants.
That's the best place because it just like any other great technology company, it accumulates
capital because it accumulates talent.
And that has a network effect.
And now you've got a few institutions that have a monopoly on high quality talent.
And as a result, it's the best ROI for America.
Is that what the federal government is investing in?
Or should the federal government
be trying to support universities all over the place
that are more in need,
particularly a university that has 53 billion of capital,
do they really need the federal funds?
So then the next question I think is like,
what is the limit on the government's
ability to influence whether or not an institution gets their
capital? Is it statutory? Is it mandated by law? Or does it
become politically motivated, socially motivated, etc. Because
in other parts of how we're seeing decisions being made,
we're saying Chevron doctrine was thrown out. And when
Chevron doctrine gets thrown out. And when Chevron doctrine gets
thrown out, we can't rely on the regulatory scrutiny of the administrators of the Capitol.
We have to rely on the law. And is there a law that they're relying on? And I think that's the
key question is to have the administration point to the laws that they believe are being violated
to kind of make, I would say, a strongly defensible argument
about why they would withhold the capital
to make sure that they're compliant with the law
and whatnot, and have it not be kind of, you know,
just, we would prefer to see you do things differently
because we think it's socially better.
So I think those are kind of the two key points.
Whether or not these institutions deserve nonprofit status,
I don't know why an institution
that has 53 billion in capital
and is making probably four or
five billion a year shouldn't pay taxes on that income. That
income is being used to in a variety of ways to build nice
buildings. And there's IP that's held by these institutions that
IP is used to start startups, they get equity in the startups,
they have income streams on their IP. I mean, they really do
operate like technology
development centers. So you know, what is the original kind
of reason for saying that they should be tax exempt, the
majority of the capital is not being used to educate students,
the majority of the capital is being used to reinvest to make
new capital.
Sacks your position on Harvard losing its tax exempt status,
potentially, because they will not stop their DEI programs
or they want to, I guess, better stated would be that they want to make their own decisions
about this and not have the federal government make those decisions.
Let's get to the nitty gritty of the legal issue here. In 1983, there was a case called
Bob Jones University versus the IRS in which the IRS challenged the tax-exempt status of Bob Jones University
because Bob Jones had this bizarre and reprehensible policy banning interracial dating on campus
and interracial marriage based on a strange interpretation of scripture. At least that's
what they said it was. In any event, Bob Jones lost that case and they lost their tax-exempt
status. As far as I know, they kept the policy and they continue to operate as a private university.
But the Supreme Court found that if you enshrine a racially discriminatory policy in violation
of the civil rights laws, then you cannot get tax exempt status.
So that was the precedent.
Fast forward to 2023, we have the case Students for Fair Admissions
versus Harvard. This is the Supreme Court case a few years ago that said that affirmative
action policies that use race as a factor in admissions are a violation of the 14th
Amendment's protection against racial discrimination. So Harvard lost that case. They were found to be racially
discriminating in admissions. Now what Harvard did in the wake of that is that
they claimed that they removed access to information about an applicant's race
from the admissions process so that the admissions readers don't know what race
the student is. This is their claim. But at the same time that they did that,
they updated their application,
replacing the long form essay, you know,
that all of us filled out decades ago when we went to school
with five shorter questions,
asking how applicants will contribute
to a diverse student body.
It's suspiciously similar to these DEI statements
where prospective professors who are applying for jobs
at these universities get asked, you know, how will you contribute to diversity on
campus, things like this.
And it's used as a way to discriminate against conservatives or people who just
think that race or diversity should not be a factor in teaching on campus.
Anyone who answers that question, I believe in judging people based on the
content of their character,
not the color of their skin, they're going to get weeded out, right? I mean, or someone
who says, well, I'm going to contribute to diversity on campus by contributing intellectual
diversity. Those are the types of applicants who get weeded out by these DEI statements.
And we see that. And another part of what the government is claiming is that Harvard
is engaged in viewpoint discrimination against conservatives.
You can see this in polling of the Harvard faculty.
More than 80% of surveyed Harvard faculty identify as liberal.
My point is this.
These DEI statements have been used in faculty hiring to discriminate on the basis of viewpoint
and to use race as a factor in hiring.
I think in a similar way, they've now updated their admission application to make all the
essays about race.
So I think this idea that they're not playing a game here and they're not trying to engineer
the student class around race, it's hard to believe, right?
I mean, these are people who have not changed their ideology.
They believe what they were doing before that 2023 case was trying to engineer the percentages
of each student class to match the percentages of each race in the American population.
And these are people who are doctrinaire about that ideology.
So the idea that they're not still doing it, I think, is hard to believe.
Of course. Now, of course. So we all know what they're doing. And the alternative to the administration saying,
just get rid of DEI, is that every year or two, we're going to have new litigation,
where there'll be some whistleblower and it'll come out that Harvard's still engaging in racial
discrimination. And then, you know, Harvard will be found guilty like they were in that 2023 case,
and they'll change their policy, and they'll change their policy and they'll manipulate it and they'll play some new game and there'll
be a new court case and we'll keep going back and forth with them.
Or we can just say, stop it right now.
Stop the DEI nonsense.
Actually abide by both the letter and spirit of the Supreme Court decision, Students for
Fair Admissions versus Harvard, and stop engaging in racial discrimination.
And this is why I think the administration is correct here
in pressing Harvard on this.
Now look, if Harvard wants to keep playing these games,
they can.
No one is saying that they have to get rid of DEI.
They just have to give up their federal funding
the way that Bob Jones University did.
But the problem is that Harvard wants to have its cake and eat it too, right?
They wanna basically keep engaging in racial discrimination
through these DEI policies, but they want federal funding
and you can't have both.
Do you think that these universities
or universities in general that receive federal funding
have become more ideologically, call it liberal,
I would call it liberal,
I would call it a little bit more kind of socialist oriented
because they're dependent on federal funding. Do you see what I'm saying?
Like, is it the case that this ideology accrues over time
when you are much more dependent on the government?
You mean there's no market feedback that keeps you in check? Yeah.
There's no private market.
There's nothing that ultimately translates into a system where you're necessarily needing
to be competitive for capital, competitive for talent.
Like the accumulation of federal dollars over time makes you say, I deserve federal dollars
and the people that think that you deserve federal dollars.
You're making a really good point and I think you could be right.
Nick, can you please throw up the chart that I sent you which is the amount of research
between China and America?
Okay, first look at this.
So again, you make these plans and you're like, where are we going to put the money?
Okay, China says, guys, we are going to learn how to catch up to America in terms of spending on science.
This is gross domestic expenditures on science.
And what you see is China from basically nothing in 2001
is now neck and neck with the United States,
spending half a trillion dollars a year
on core fundamental science research.
So what happens as a byproduct of that?
Okay, so you spend more on the way in. So China is listening to the market feedback. Friedberg,
let's go and explore this idea that there is no market feedback in America. What are the
long run implications? And you see it on this chart, which is, this is a simple chart that says,
what percentage of all of the foundational research
comes from the United States versus comes from China.
And what's crazy about this chart is right around 2019,
China passed the United States.
This chart, by the way, only measures research
that is published in English, okay?
So if you added in the research
that China actually publishes in Chinese, they would have run away with this a decade earlier.
So then you think about, okay, well, what is the implication of this? Well, the implication is obvious.
These guys are inventing things. We're playing catch up. Meanwhile, we're bumbling around talking about pronouns.
We can't get our act together. This is why we need to be decisive.
What is important here? So for NIH grants, this was published by the NIH, by the way, a few weeks
ago on their Twitter account. So this is an image they put out. And on Feb 15th or thereabouts,
the NIH said any grants we give to universities now. So today, if you're a researcher, you're a
scientist at a university like Harvard, I don't know if people realize this, the way you get funding for your lab is you will apply
for a grant. Someone has to give you that capital to run your lab. And many grants come
from the NIH. So they go to the NIH, they file for a grant. If the grant gets approved,
they get $3 million, let's say. But what happens is that at the institution
that they run that lab at,
that institution can now bill the government
for some negotiated percentage of the grant amount
to cover administrative overhead.
So at Harvard, you know what the administrative overhead was
up until February 15th?
69%.
Wait, no, wait a second.
You're saying $69 of every 100 go to administration.
It's an incremental.
And the other $31.
Well, it's actually an incremental $69.
So the way it works is the-
Oh, 60 on top.
The lab gets 100, and then Harvard bills the government $69.
That's insane.
That's insane.
And this is true, and the average is around 30% today
across universities and other institutions. So there's also this very fundamental question that's being asked in science right now,
which is, are universities even the right place to be doing fundamental scientific research?
In the United States, there are different models.
Most of our research is done either at a private company, which is a small amount of research.
And remember, I've talked about this a lot.
The big companies that have a market
that's telling them you have to have a positive return
on invested capital, that have the scale to invest,
have the most incredible returns for America,
like Google that put out the transformer model
that launched everything that we see today
and invested in Waymo for many years
and drove the self-driving car revolution
and all the work that was going on at Bell Labs,
up until we said Bell Labs a monopoly, we broke them apart and they
got destroyed.
And so we largely aim to destroy large private research institutions in this country because
we claim that they're monopolistic because of the way they source capital, which is through
activities in the marketplace.
So the question today that's being asked is, should we be doing fundamental scientific
research at universities given that over time
the administrative overhead has grown
and they're basically creating administrative workloads
and employing people without necessarily
having a market incentive?
Can I tell you a crazy story?
This is a story I've never told,
but a friend of mine is an incredibly well-respected banker
on Wall Street, very senior guy,
works at one of the big mainline banks.
And a few years ago, this is about 18 months ago,
two years ago, he had always wanted to work in government
and they tried to get him to join the Federal Reserve.
And it was for a role that was very specific and narrow.
It was to manage a very specific part
of the interest rate mortgage market.
It's a really important role.
It's a little bit in the weeds,
but it was like his dream job.
You know, he did his PhD thesis on it,
the whole nine years, whatever kind of thing.
So he goes through these interviews
and he sits with Jerome Powell, goes through that interview,
sits with, I think, Lail Brainard, you know, everybody.
And it was time for the final interview.
And right before, the person that was his kind of like
shepherd says to him, you really need to play up
your Indian-ness, because what we really want
is somebody who can help us tell a diverse story goes,
well, my diversity is that I know this market better than literally anyone else in the world.
Like nobody knows this. I know it. I've studied it since my PhD. And he was so offended. He was
like, you know what, I'm not going to go through with this. And we lost him. We meaning the American
taxpayer who supports all this. If you think of that example
in all of the different places where we have not been hiring the right people, you get this slow
down in innovation, you get a slow down in research, you get a slow down in well-functioning
organizations and institutions, and it's like a slow malaise. So how do you stop the rot? You have to stop it at the top.
And you have to do something that is meaningful.
And if it requires us to at least threaten Harvard,
by the way, look, let's be honest,
it's called Harvard Corporation for a reason, right?
It's run like a corporation.
It is an asset manager that may happen to have
some educational things that they do on the side, right? It's run like a corporation. It is an asset manager that may happen to have some
educational things that they do on the side, which increasingly are not what we need it to do. And
more importantly, it doesn't set the vanguard for how everybody wants to copy. And everybody
used to want to copy Harvard. And now what they're copying are not the things that help us. So we
have to find a way of waking them up and saying, guys, you have a responsibility for America.
And maybe this is what it takes.
And I hope they take the medicine and listen.
Well, the Coulson brothers told us on a previous episode,
they were just funding researchers
and letting them pick their own research
to a certain extent.
Tim.
How would you play up your Indian-ness with Jerome Powell?
The idea of that is the best thing I've heard all week.
I've asked him. He was told to play up his Indianness.
And he was like, well, what does that mean, my Indianness?
And they were like, well, you know, talk about your love
of Indian dance and Indian food.
And he was like, are you kidding me?
Like, is this a serious conversation?
I just love Jerome Powell sitting there and go, we were on the fence about you.
But you showed up with this butter chicken.
The chicken makhni. I was going to bring it up.
You came in here with Sag Panir.
And now we're in the house.
He starts playing the sitar.
And it's like, what are you doing?
You got the char masala.
Who's that guy showing up at a rickshaw?
It's the chairman of the mortgage market.
It's absolutely worked out.
Hey, Tim, if you were in charge of this,
because we do have some ins with the administration,
maybe you should be directing some of this research.
What would you tell us?
If I wanted to study anything in Harvard,
it would be Brigitte Macron's gender.
But I think we do have to focus on disease to an extent.
But here's what I would say to add to that conversation.
I would say that these schools exist
for a multitude of reasons.
But one of them is to create a consensus among the wealthiest
and obviously people that are expected
to be the most powerful in society
and to create a consensus about the values that
are important to America at any given time. And I think the question should be, why are these values so important and to whom?
I don't think this is altruism and it's about helping the working class or helping minorities
or helping people get more economic justice.
It actually seems to me quite a transparent attempt
for certain people to keep positions of power
and certain structures to stay in place
while offering people this idea
that there's a lot of change
because there's a few ceremonial optical choices made
where we're putting in a female CEO of color or someone who's Indian but the
Internal structure stays the same and if you just look at a school like Harvard you go
Oh, they're yes socialist in some respects, but in some respects actually
You know if you challenge the Ukraine war if you challenge
Aspects of the American Empire if you challenge the Ukraine war, if you challenge aspects of the American Empire,
if you challenge certain, look at all the wars, all of our wars are being sold with
social justice.
A lot of our wars are being sold because, you know, if we don't see a national security
interest in it, we're told that, well, people in that country are not being treated well.
That country has values that we don't
have in the West.
And that may be true, but in many cases, it's not worth going to war over.
Most Americans would say that.
So who exactly is benefiting from these programs and these values being instituted?
It isn't low income people in the inner city. It isn't,
it seems to be kind of a lot of
the opposite of inclusion.
It's the opposite of inclusion. What has happened?
It's the establishment trying to preserve itself by shutting out certain ideas
and certain people and, you know, giving very ceremonial nods to play up your Indianness,
play up this, play up that.
But it's like when the CIA goes,
she goes, I'm the first female drone pilot.
And a lot of Americans are going,
what exactly is our national security interest
in a drone strike in whatever country?
And do we need to be doing this?
And should the money be better spent somewhere else?
But instead of having that conversation, it always ends up being hijacked.
So this DEI to me just seems like a way for a lot of the same establishment people to
keep their power and influence by offering these very optical advancements to people that
may, you know, pay lip service to certain ideas. But when it comes down to it, they're very loyal
to the same power factions that, you know, have always kind of driven the narrative in our country.
Completely agree. What happened during comedy to you, Tim,
and your cohort during that like PDEI, P cancellation,
it felt like the overage in window was closing
pretty harshly on you guys.
There's a lot of attempted cancellations of comedians,
people trying to secretly record you.
You got those yonder,
I don't know what those are called,
those bags that you put the phones in.
What was that moment in time like?
I was told by countless executives to play up my Indian-ness, and I tried.
Yes, you tried.
But it was just in bad taste.
It was in terrible taste when I came in and I tried to be Indian.
And it just wasn't good.
No, I think here's what it was.
I started having more of a career in let's say 2016, 2017, 2018, and then we were kind
of on this path where you'd go have a meeting in Los Angeles with people about doing a show
or whatever and they would start.
All of these words and verbiage would creep in.
They go, we're really interested in marginalized voices, elevating voices that haven't been
heard.
We're interested in empowering.
These are LA executives.
They're monsters.
They care nothing about anything.
And that's where they're good at their job, right?
The only reason you can be good at your job
as an executive in the entertainment business
is to really not look at human beings as humans.
You have to look at them as objects.
That's what you do.
Manipulate, pawns on the chessboard.
It's what it is.
You know what I mean?
If I called my agent today and said,
I'm really tired doing everything I'm doing,
he'd say, have you tried drugs?
Like they-
Right, this would be a-
Yes.
I was wondering about that,
because you have such high energy,
I don't know why you're not embracing the cocaine,
or speed, or Adderall, something.
I don't need it, I don't need it yet,
but if I do, and by the way, if I do,
they'll provide it to me.
Here's the deal, the way that town works, is you have a bunch of people that believe in nothing and they
can't.
They can't and be effective.
They have to go whichever way the wind is blowing.
So when you have these people pulling up in Porsches with their houses in Malibu and they're
coming and they then have a sudden interest in empowering people, these people were throwing women off into the Santa
Monica Canyon for years. So it was this weird time where you had the worst people in the world
trying to convince you that they had an interest in marginalized voices because they thought there
was money there. Well, guess what? It turns out Americans don't really like to be patronized.
And they were never making TV that minorities
wanted to watch.
They were making TV that guilty white liberals wanted to watch and it didn't make any money.
Nobody really liked it.
A lot of it kind of faded away and as soon as it stopped being profitable, all the executives
in Hollywood that supposedly cared so much about the marginalized voices
rediscovered the profit motive. They rediscovered the idea that they had to make entertaining stuff.
They rediscovered viewership. They rediscovered numbers. They rediscovered all these business
fundamentals that they had ignored because they thought there was going to be a pot of gold
at the end of all this elevating and empowering,
but there wasn't because it was rejected largely by people.
They didn't want to watch it.
They were canceling all of you guys.
They were canceling
Well, they were trying.
It didn't work. They were trying to.
They were trying. Didn't work.
Because people at the end of the day
realized that people are flawed, fallible and human.
And that's what makes them entertaining.
You don't want a perfect person doing anything because that person is not going
to be terribly interesting.
You want someone who has flaws and has problems, obviously within reason, you know?
So I think that.
Tim, can I ask you a question?
Let's say, let's say that you are.
I support Harvey Weinstein.
Go on. I'm sorry. I didn't know if that was...
No, let's say that you are in charge of education in America.
Yes.
Okay? What would you do? Where would you start? What would you...
If I was in charge of education in America, number one, I would try to
trying to assert the idea that higher education itself needs to be for a purpose and that there needs to be more of a purpose driven from middle school through high school, we
need to start getting kids to think rationally about their skill set and their ability.
And I don't think it's a good idea for these kids
to take out hundreds of thousands of dollars worth
of loans to go away for four years, not have a solid plan,
and not execute and then graduate mired in debt
without really a pathway to paying any of it back
and spending their 20s and maybe
a good part of their 30s incapable of owning a home, incapable of owning anything with
no real investments.
So I think this idea that like you should follow your dream, which is this toxic American
idea that I don't subscribe to, I think people have natures, they have skill sets and they
actually have to do something within the realm of that.
And it requires being honest with children,
which no one wants to do.
And I would try to re-engineer education
to be a more practical place where
you would apply some of the skills that you actually had.
I'm not saying people shouldn't be
able to experiment or have freedom,
but I do think that we've told a lie to people, which
is that they can be anything they want to be and do anything they want to do.
And by the way, and here's a bunch of loans to do it. Here's hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of debt.
So now you can go into debt without any plan or any logical sense of what you want to do.
I think we should start putting people into a more realistic mindset in high school
about what needs to happen.
Otherwise they're taken advantage of and abused
by these systems of higher education
where they graduate mired in debt
and without any type of standing in society.
Oh my God.
I want to add Jamal.
Go ahead, Freeberg and then I got to break a new story. I want to, I want to add Jamal. Go ahead, free break. And then I got a break in you, sir. I want to just address this because I think it's, there's a moment here that I think will define a very different future for education, which is kind of a movement away from the current model of a school. AI is such a profound tool. The ability for AI to get to know your personality
and just like teach my kids the way they want to be taught
through conversation, through engagement, through dialogue,
knowing that some kids want to ask questions
and some kids want to just be told stuff.
Some kids work at one pace,
other kids work at another pace.
And I know this idea of personalized education
using computing has been around now for decades,
but we really are in this moment where the idea
of spending your first 18 years of life in a classroom
where you're being told stuff that is quote the truth
versus learning how to engage with the world,
ask questions, explore your world,
I find and identify things that are interesting to you,
have it delivered to you in a very personalized meaningful rich way
That also makes you excited about certain things and helps usher you on to the next phase of your life of what do you want?
to do with this and
Get kids out of this idea that you've got to go get the degree in order to get the job
And then I think that the workplace will adjust to that. I forgot who it is whether it was Palantir or someone
Just started I forgot who it is, whether it was Palantir or someone just started doing this. Palantir, they just did a program
where they're like, skip college,
come and do your, basically your apprenticeship here.
So instead of going to college,
you'll, it's paid, you'll continue your education here.
56,000 a year.
You'll work on projects, you'll make money,
and you'll continue to have your development be done
while you're learning a valuable skill.
So I do think like as AI kind of takes over education,
I do expect that the workplace will change Tim.
And we will start to see more of this integration
between education and workplace enabled
by this AI driven kind of, you know, development system,
which is gonna be radically different
than what we have today.
You with this AI Tim, like a comedians,
do they get in there?
I don't, I don't.
You don't fuck with it.
No, I'm a little skeptical of the tech people
I talk about on my show.
Of course, not you guys, but the other ones.
The other ones, the bad ones, yes.
You guys seem, I think it's great, Palantir goes,
skip college, come get involved
in advanced weapons technology.
Sure, go right to Murdoch.
I think that's a phenomenal idea, actually.
Capping down to Murdoch.
Who needs to go to college?
Come be a drone here at Palantir.
Absolutely. But I like using who needs to go to college? Come be a drone here at Palantir. Absolutely.
But I like using my brain at the moment,
but if it starts to fail, I imagine it will.
I will use AI.
I know people that do use AI.
My producer might use AI.
I don't know.
You probably won't tell me.
But I do think that, listen.
But have you used it to learn, Tim?
Have you ever done any of the chat apps
where you can talk to it and like, hey, you
want to learn or get smart on something
or get caught up on something?
You can literally just ask questions
and have a conversation with it.
That's how I use it.
We've done it, listen, we did it on the show.
We had an AI bot do a deliver rant in the style of me.
It got pretty close, not good enough yet,
but it was pretty close and pretty interesting to see
how advanced it is right now and then how advanced it's
going to be.
You know, I worry a little bit about what you're going to do with all of these people
once AI starts taking a lot of these jobs.
The cashiers, the Uber drivers, door dashers, all these jobs could go away.
Five years ago, I was a tour guide on a double, not five years ago, but seven or eight years ago,
I was a tour guide on a double decker bus in New York City while I was learning how to be a comedian.
And I was showing people the Empire State Building and like all the 9-11 Memorial,
whatever. And these are the types of jobs. I was making $13 an hour and I was obviously,
yeah, it wasn't well paid. It wasn't an amazing job. It offered me the freedom to get good at
something else. But I was taking a lot of risk to do it. And I tolerated that level of risk
because I believed what I was doing was the right thing, the right course of action.
But it's jobs like that, that allow some of the most interesting, you know,
like weird lives that people should be able to live
if they want to, I don't think everybody may want
or need to have a full-time job.
There are people that have retired and go,
I'd like to be a tour guide or I'd like to work
at a museum.
Is that what you find?
Your, your standup was being on the double decker bus.
You know, did we able to put one liners in there?
All kinds of stuff like that.
To me, it's like those jobs, right?
Yes.
Some of those, I don't think the entire economy should be the gig economy, but I
do think some of those jobs are going to be eliminated by AI are the jobs that
allow people to get good at other things while they're doing them. So people that are in
entertainment and music and stuff like that, we want them to be able to support themselves while
they enrich us culturally in other ways. Crazy breaking news story right now. Sorry,
Saxe, I didn't mean to have this blindside you hear, but and I know you were at the
administration, you don't speak for the administration necessarily on this issue,
but it looks like the Federal Reserve has a new chairman.
It's just breaking news here.
So racist.
It says, hot off the bar, Trump is named Chamath.
That's the Federal Reserve.
I think all of these fundraisers worked out for you, but there is a note.
They asked Chamath to be more Sri Lankan.
So if you can, to the extent you could be more Sri Lankan,
Chamath, President Trump is being crucial.
Is Chamath Sri Lankan?
Is he really Sri Lankan?
I am, I am, but that's so racist.
He is literally Sri Lankan.
I read a great book about the Tamil tigers many years ago.
Do you remember them?
Yes, they-
They invented suicide bombing.
They did.
Listen, be proud.
Be proud of stuff.
Even if it's not great.
Are you saying, Tim, that the great export of Sri Lanka was suicide vests?
I'm saying be proud of stuff.
That was the ethnic minority that was fighting for a homeland.
I was part of the ethnic majority.
You were the one trying to avoid the suicide vests.
No, my dad was the one that spoke out against the war.
That's why we had to skedaddle and claim refugee status.
Skedaddle, potato, I support both.
I'm the only person with the moral courage to say,
I support Israel and Hamas and Russia and Ukraine.
You can just want to see a good game.
You can want to see a good game.
You don't have to take a side.
So you're fed up over time if there's a lead change.
Listen. You like a lead change.
It really depends on Beverly Hills
who I'm having
lunch with and and and what type of Middle Eastern they are,
because I can go either way on that. And I think it's
important. You don't want to be too rigid in this economy, you
need to be able to move into things. And I will read the
audience. I see both sides. I've read the Israel stuff and the
Palestine stuff. They're both right. So guess what?
That's right. So at the end of the day, what's right for Timmy's career is that an approach you
could take. What's right for me? What's the easiest lunch? What's the easiest afternoon for me?
What you know, that's the least resistance. That's the move for me always all the time,
you know, right? So,'s- You know? Absolutely.
Absolutely.
I don't- what Putin did, was it right?
No, but do I like the idea of the oligarch, the furs,
the boats, the kind of lifestyle?
Yes, the kind of tracts-
The yachts.
Yes, that to me has always spoken to me.
Somebody said to me once, you're spiritually Russian.
So I think I have that in me. So I just can't ignore it.
So how would you rank your dictators? Are you, are you, it sounds like you're a Putin guy or you're a she guy?
Putin has a lot of class, whether you like him or not. He has a lot of class. And number one, people do fall out of windows in London. It does happen actually.
Accidents happen. It's a shame.
It's not always, you know what I mean? It's like sometimes somebody does take his spell.
Big trip. always, you know what I mean? It's like sometimes somebody does take a spill. It's not always him.
I like him.
I like Kim.
I think it's Jong-un in North Korea.
I like him.
He has style as well.
Don't forget Zelensky.
He is kind of new school.
He just extended military rule.
But can you imagine when they tell-
He's a military dictator. Do not bring up Ukraine with you. Be careful. He just extended military rule. But can you imagine when they told...
Do not bring up Ukraine with you.
Be careful.
He just extended martial law. There's no elections.
By the way, I like Sax on this. And I think when they told Putin that a comedian was now the president of the Ukraine,
Putin probably said, listen, are they serious?
Are they even trying anymore?
He goes, is the CIA even trying anymore? Is the CIA even trying anymore?
Are you serious?
Wait, the guy who played the president in a TV show is now the actual president?
And Putin's getting this information sitting there in his palace.
Like, I mean...
So, I mean, listen, all wars tragedy, it's all terrible and bad.
But, you know, we all...
I think David's done a phenomenal job
by the way of looking at how you get to certain places.
Absolutely.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I think the, you do a lot of private shows.
You do a lot of private shows, Tim.
The private shows with the dictators, the despots,
the monarchies, they pay what?
Three to one, four to one?
They wanna laugh, these people they want to laugh
You know, I mean it's duterte likes to laugh
You know these people want to laugh and I'm not here MBS wants to laugh
I'm not here to pass judgment on the audience. I'm here to bring
Well, it's actually funny. I did like one private gig
I don't get booked on a lot of private gigs, but I got one
big Bitcoin guy in Romania had me go to his birthday party. And
it was just this older oligarch type guy and they all spoke
Romanian. It was very hard. And it paid me $100,000 to do 20
minutes and they didn't really understand anything. And then
one guy just stood up and I guess he recognized me started
yelling Jordan Jordan and then sat down. So I am open to performing for anyone, really, truly.
And anyone, Idi Amin, Iran, you could just Kim Jong-un,
just send or take it.
Hey, is the money green?
Is the money green over there?
The money's not clean, but.
That's got to be an underserved market.
Is Iran that dangerous?
I mean, all I hear now every day is Iran's
coming to kill everyone.
Is that true?
I don't know.
OK, are they invading? Is Iran landing in Aspen?
Building nukes. Maybe you want to wipe out one or two countries. A little genocide wish
fulfillment.
How far are they along on those nukes? We don't know that.
80%.
80% of them.
You think 80%?
They're perpetually at 80%. We just keep knocking out the last 20 as I think we approach the
...
I just don't think we need boots on the ground there.
I don't think we need to do this again.
The two of you are the living embodiment of ADHD.
Yes. Well, speaking of ADHD, do we want to go ADHD or science?
Tim, J. Cal falls for every pro-war narrative there is.
He's like, I'm against war,
but then he falls for every single narrative they battle.
Right, absolutely. Absolutely.
And what a great job you guys have done ending the war in day one of your administration.
Congratulations.
At least he's trying.
Biden kept escalating.
Wake me up when you actually accomplish something.
Can I actually defend the administration?
We've actually ended it spiritually.
We've ended it spiritually.
We have.
We no longer believe in it.
It's actually happening in the physical world, but actually spiritually the war is over.
Yes. So you're manifesting the end of the war.
Well, it's over for me. The Ukraine war is fully over for me.
Zelensky refuses to make a deal. You saw what happened at the White House.
If only we had a deal maker to help with this.
Jason, you know how you would know this for sure?
My intuition tells me that what Tim just said is totally right is the number of Ukraine flags
that were taken off of profile photos.
Absolutely, along with the pronouns.
No, even though it's a joke, I am being very dead serious.
The idea of it has ended.
It is now just about a border negotiation.
It is no longer a totemic struggle for freedom
or whatever it was being sold to
us as.
Hmm.
Totally agree.
Hey, take out still believes that you can speak for yourself.
I believe the free countries, just to be clear, I believe the free countries should stop the
non-free countries from invading them.
That's it.
It's a pretty simple philosophy.
Freeburg. Well, what's inside?
Tim, at the end of the show,
we like to do a little science corner.
What happened to all those vice documentaries
about the Ukraine being the most corrupt country in Europe
and like a white supremacist country and all these things?
What happened to all those vice documentaries about that?
They seem to disappear.
Vice went out of business.
They seem to disappear very quickly
when Ukraine became a bastion of freedom and love and opportunity and equality.
Now you're speaking Saxon's language. Oh, look at that smile on Saxon's face.
Well, Nick, just put this on the screen. I mean, this just happened yesterday.
Oh, God. But now we've started the Ukraine vortex.
Ukraine's parliament extends martial law till August.
That seems extreme.
Hmm. Yeah, no big deal. They cancel elections. they cancel freedom of the press, they cancel freedom of religion.
Zelensky's political opponents, their assets have been seized, they've been imprisoned.
No big deal.
It's still democracy.
His favorite dictator is Putin as well.
Hey, Dave, free birth.
Who's the first leader after 9-11 to call the United States and express sympathy?
I believe it was Vladimir Putin. How many times has Vladimir Putin threatened American interests over the last 20 odd years?
Has Vladimir Putin, has Russia been an existential threat to America?
Have they disrupted huge amounts of our trade?
It seems to be very odd.
He wanted to be in NATO.
He wanted to be our ally.
We reb above him.
But you know what the best quality of Putin is?
We're not funding him.
He's not asking for American money.
The rest of these dictators, we keep funding.
He's not asking for a dollar.
I also like that he's well-read.
It's well-read.
Yes.
But he's not coming to the White House begging.
He's not coming to the White House every three months begging for more hundreds of billions.
He's into a lot of new things.
Any criticism of the Ukraine war means that you love Putin and want to live in Russia
and think Russia's great.
It's a very weird Manichaean sense of good and evil that was instituted by George W.
Bush right after 9-11 when he said, you're with us or against us, and with us means we're
going to democratize the Middle East, which I fell for because I was 17 and on cocaine, but in hindsight, it didn't work tremendously well.
I'm very skeptical of these narratives where they say, so if you find any fault at all
in what we're doing, you're aiding and abetting a dictator.
It makes no sense to me.
Speaking of the 90s in cocaine, Friedberg, what's inside this corner? You'll notice he's moving on, Tim. He does no sense to me. Speaking of the nineties and cocaine, Friedberg, what's in Science Corner?
You'll notice he's moving on, Tim. He does not respond to that.
No, no. Friedberg is really upset the last couple of weeks that he got preempted. I'm
trying to do right by Friedberg and the Friedberg stans, who are just absolutely mental now
that we haven't talked about his incredible victory on Jeopardy. And we haven't gone to
Science Corner in a couple of weeks.
Congrats.
Tim, if you were ever have what game show do you
want to be on Tim? You must none of them. None of them. None.
All the money on which one would you host him? No games. You
wouldn't host a game show you must have been offered. No,
never. They would I don't think I'm what they want for the game
show money printing machine you're getting a game show
family feud or something. We'll make a fortune.
It all goes to charity.
Was it, Freeberg, was it hard?
Yeah, well, I shot the quarterfinal and semi-final
in the same afternoon.
So I didn't have any, you know, you go away for lunch
and you come back for the semi-finals.
And I did not know how to use that buzzer.
And everyone else, I think, had practiced
or figured that stuff out. So
it was pretty difficult. And then my brain was just like blank on some of these moments.
You're just up there. There's this intensity. You're in this game show. And it's like, I
know the answer. Why is it not coming out of my mouth? Or why did I say that thing that
I know is wrong? That just came out of my mouth. It's a little bit kind of scary.
Let's show the clip here and then we'll go on to science
going to watch this clip. Watch this final jeopardy. I'm in the
last place. So I was behind the entire game. I was basically in
last place the whole time. Catch up. Short. I could not buzz
in in time. Yeah. It all comes down to this final jeopardy in a
very close game. So excited. This is the category. Here's the
clue players. Mount Fried. Called the premier movie industry
event for the Balkans,
this festival began 30 years ago
while the city was under siege.
We'll begin on the end with Dave
Friedberg, who had $8,700.
And it looks like he changed his
answer at the last minute.
What happened here?
He wrote down something and
crossed it out and wrote
Sarajevo Film Festival.
We can read Sarajevo, and that's
the important part, right?
We're gonna give you credit.
You wagered 8,697 and now you have 17,397.
You're ahead of Mina Khymes at the moment with 17,000.
What did she put down?
I did my math wrong, oh my God.
She wrote down can and she wagered.
Nancy Flanagan, what?
A thousand, that drops her down to 16,000 so it comes down to
Sean Gunn who had 22,000 did he know it was the Sarajevo Film Festival he said Bosnia
right country wrong city what did you wager 12,000 and one nine thousand nine
hundred and ninety nine and from third place Dave Friedberg comes back. What did he do? He didn't need to bet. Can I ask you a question?
And this is a very, this is a serious question.
And it's not disrespectful.
Why do they call this Celebrity Jeopardy?
You're correct.
That's right.
Are these your celebrities?
I could not identify one of those people
with a gun to my head.
I don't know.
There were 27.
I didn't know any of them.
I felt in place.
I felt like I belonged.
I think the guy in the middle was James Gunn's brother, who
was in, he played like the 17th guy in Guardians of the Galaxy.
Oh, that guy.
What is happening?
I mean, if you're going to Marvel Universe's characters
who don't have speaking roles, pull him up for a second. Yeah, it's non speaking role in a Marvel movie.
There's 1400 Marvel movies and this guy hasn't spoken in one.
Come on, stop him.
That's who is the other lady?
I think she's is that I mean, she's on.
She's on. She's she's on ESPN.
A researcher on ESPN
What and she does fencing right? She's the fencing person from ESPN. Oh
I think she covers football on ESPN
football or foosball
Or is this just like just call it just call it jeopardy just call it jeopardy
Or is this just like, you know, Jeopardy? Just call it Jeopardy.
Just call it Jeopardy.
It could be Jeopardy.
Easy Jeopardy.
Just call it Jeopardy.
Just call it, hey, we're doing this thing now.
They should do a comedian Jeopardy.
That would crush it.
Okay, the finals are next Wednesday at 9 PM.
Have you actually done the episode or what?
Have you done the finals?
Have we done the finals?
When is the final episode?
How do we make money off this?
How do we front and run this?
Oh, he's done it already.
So you know the winner.
Why don't we do a poly market for this and we can all cash in and get off this show? We can all just cash in.
There is a dollar number, Jake L.
Are people watching?
10 times 30 million, 10 times 20 million? What's 25% of that?
Who's the first to put up a rip push?
Actually, Tim's asking,
what did the ratings go, up or down for Celebrity Jeopardy?
Down.
Certainly down for Celebrity Jeopardy.
They used to be good, so I think regular Jeopardy,
well, they do it at 9 p.m. on Wednesday nights.
Okay, so it's not even during,
it's not during 25. But there's no upside
for a celebrity to go on this.
If a celebrity goes on this
and they're known for being smart.
George Clooney goes on, right Tim?
Exactly, I realized this when I got there.
I'm like, wait a second, there's no upside to me doing this.
I'm gonna look like an idiot.
And I answered all these stupid questions wrong
and I look like a moron.
I'm like, why did I do that?
That was not a good move.
No, it's a stupid show that should go away.
Yeah, jeopardy should go away.
Great.
No, I mean, it's like this idea that like all these people that nobody knows the hell they are,
it just, you know, it just people at home are going, who the hell, what the fuck is this?
The lady from ESPN says, like she thinks it's in France.
Like, this is just making people mad to go, hey, man, I got nothing going on.
And these people are celebrities or idiots.
I mean, same continent?
She hit the same continent, right?
It's just filling people with rage
looking at these people that aren't even celebrities
and on top of that are morons.
I mean, you have an obligation to either be a celebrity
or be a nerd. It did say the Balkans.
It did say the Balkans.
This is, it's a little rough.
I mean, a little brutal.
Hey, save the show, Dave.
Please give us a science corner.
I'll do a quick science corner.
And the name of the game here, Tilling,
just since your first time on the show,
is somehow if you can get around the horn
and put in a Uranus joke,
you'll just kill with the audience.
I'm gonna try to do that.
My producer right now, we're setting up a company'm going to try to get my producer right now. We're
setting up a company in Bhutan. That's my whole thing. Now.
Oh, you're going to be flipping H100. I just learned so much on
the front half of the show. We're good. It's a, it's a
company in Bhutan. Give us the chips. Wink, wink. You're not
going to Beijing at all. Wink. My godson's.
They go in the back, they go through the front, maybe the
side door. There's my godson. Truly, I swear to God,, they go through the front, maybe the side door, there's a truck.
My godson truly, I swear to God,
they brought him to my home when he was four months old,
because I'm single and I have a little bit of money,
not compared to you, but compared to these people,
and they said, would you be his godfather?
He's Chinese.
Absolutely, I said, high end, let's go.
Four years later, they tell me,
they go, he's actually Filipino.
I'm not even kidding.
So this is why you can't trust anyone in this country about anything even your adoption your
Corner mitochondria or mitochondria therapy day. So
Every cell in our body has mitochondria
Tim, you know that, right?
And yeah, it's the powerhouse of the cell.
Powerhouse of the cell. Exactly. And it's a little organelle. This is the last segment.
Yeah, you can drop off Sax.
Okay. See you guys later.
Sax, I'll see you in Moscow.
Okay. Yeah. Excellent. I'll see you at the Poon Film Festival.
You forgot to say what is.
I'll see you at the Moscow Film Festival.
I need to run to Sean Hannity's show, unfortunately.
Oh, I know. Unfortunately.
Don't say unfortunately. You can leave that in.
I like him. Absolutely.
He's amazing. Yes.
I really enjoy you guys.
Thank you for having me on.
I really learned this was amazing.
And I'd love to do it again. I appreciate all of you. I think you're all great.
And whatever you're doing on the side, whatever you people eventually get arrested for,
I support you. Just know that. I'm a supporter of whatever happens in the online podcast.
Yes, we'll do some security fraud on the... We'll get into some shenanigans.
Whenever it comes out that there's a reason
why you knew so much about the Bhutan Company,
it doesn't matter to me.
It's nice. I'm a fan.
Thank you. Thank you, KCFC.
Thank you very much.
Thank you Tim Dillon.
Everybody watch Tim Dillon's special on the Netflix.
Hopefully he can finally eclipse love on the spectrum.
Love on the spectrum. Yeah, eclipse love on the spectrum, love on the spectrum.
Yeah. Definitely.
All right, see you guys.
It's like, okay, free burgers.
And then there were three.
You know what?
Now I'm motivated to do Science Corner
as a standalone show.
And we're going to launch it in the next month.
I'm going to do Science Corner with you.
You do Tabs Corner with me.
I'm going to eat lunch.
I love you guys.
Nicky, what episode is this?
We're doing Science Corner. Let's go. I got it. I got your Science Corner. I'm with you to the do Taff's Corner with me. I'm going to eat lunch. I love you guys. Nick, you want episodes? We're doing Science Corner.
Let's go.
I got it.
I got your Science Corner.
I'm with you to the end, brother.
Free burgers, me and you, buddy.
Tell me about Science Corner.
I'm interested.
You're interested.
We've got no listeners.
We've got no audience at this point.
I'm here for your segment.
Go ahead, Dave.
For the four of you and Chamath.
So mitochondria are the powerhouse of the
cell, as Tim just told us, educated us, right? So every cell has hundreds of mitochondria.
Then mitochondria are what are called organelles. They have their own DNA. In fact, evolutionarily,
mitochondria were bacteria that basically ended up in the symbiotic relationship with
what became our cells. So we each have mitochondria, hundreds of them in each one of our cells.
Each mitochondria has its own nucleus and has its own DNA. And the mitochondria make
the energy that the rest of the cell uses. That energy is called ATP, and it eats up
glucose or it eats up ketones if you're in ketosis, and it uses that to make the ATP.
So every cell in our body gets its energy,
which is what it uses to function from the mitochondria.
And so there's been a lot of research
into the relationship between mitochondria and aging
and that dysfunctional mitochondria,
as they start to break down and stop working
and have damage, may actually be a key driver
for many diseases that we experience as humans,
including many cancers, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, ALS, features of autism, muscle tissues being weak,
etc. So as the cells get older and the mitochondria stop working, we make new mitochondria,
but over time the DNA degrades and the mitochondria become less effective. And there are fewer functional
mitochondria per cell, the cell stops working right. And eventually the organism stops working
right. Have you, have you learned anything about the connection of creatine to mitochondrial health?
It's part of some of the processes, but there's some separate research on this,
but it's definitely worth spending time on. People are busy about hitting 5 grams or 10 grams of creatine.
It's becoming like a trend.
Yeah, I think it's, oh yeah, no, 5 grams.
Yeah, something like that.
It's trending on Twitter.
I think it's kind of like a meme or a joke in addition to being serious.
I don't think it's a joke.
Is it, but does it, is there any science that backs that up or not really for mitochondria?
There are questions on this, like, do you want to focus on things that are increasing biogenesis,
which is creation of new mitochondria?
Does that create a better benefit on the creatine work?
I've read some of these papers.
I actually tried it for a while.
I personally had an allergy to it,
which is kind of rare, but happens.
But anyway, we can talk about it further.
So one of the key things was there are three papers
that I wanted to just highlight
that kind of follow an interesting theme.
The first one was from 2023 from Wash U in St. Louis.
And this paper, Nick, if you could just pull up
that image of mitochondria being transferred,
these folks identified and demonstrated
that mitochondria can actually transfer
from one cell to another.
So if you've got a cell that's got damaged
or dysfunctional mitochondria,
they've identified three mechanisms
by which mitochondria can move into a cell
that needs more mitochondria that are working
and are more functional.
That's something that's been theorized for a long time. People have said, oh, well, we think mitochondria transfer, but there wasn't
really evidence of this. So as of two years ago, these guys provided very good evidence of
mitochondria that we can now put into cells. If it's floating around, it can make its way
into another cell. And as a result, it can rejuvenate or provide energy to a dysfunctional cell, which might improve
dysfunctional tissue or improve disease.
The second paper was done last month
out of Columbia University.
And this was the first mapping of the mitochondria
in the human brain.
And so these folks created 703 tiny cubes of brain
from a person that passed away, a 54 year old donor.
And then they analyzed
the mitochondria in each of those cubes, and they used that to make a map of mitochondria
in the brain.
And what it showed was that different parts of the brain, different cells had different
amounts of mitochondria and different mitochondrial function, which actually starts to highlight
how that difference in energy production in different cells in different parts of the
brain may actually cause some of the things like memory loss or speech impairment or as we age, the
fact that we end up being, you know, kind of forgetful or start to lose some of our
capacity that the mitochondrial dysfunction in the brain might actually be the key driver
of that aging symptomology.
The third paper which just came out came out of a team at Xiejiang University in China.
So what these guys did, which was really incredible, is they took stem cells, so stem cells that
they got out of human blood, and they took those stem cells and they figured out a way
to treat the stem cells so that those stem cells would start to make an excess amount
of mitochondria than they normally would make. In fact, they were able to
get those stem cells to make 854 times the number of mitochondria that those cells would normally
make. And those mitochondria were on average 5.7 times more efficient at making energy ATP.
So they created highly energetic mitochondria and they made a lot of them.
And the idea that we can put mitochondria into our body or into tissue in our body to
heal it or repair it has been something that folks have been trying to do research around
for a long time, but the limiting factor is access to enough mitochondria.
So this mechanism that they developed where they could take stem cells, make copies of
the stem cells, make lots of mitochondria, and then they isolate that mitochondria and
use it as a therapeutic tool.
And they did it in cartilage that was damaged and they were able to heal that cartilage.
So this is a group that does bone and tissue repair studies, but they applied the mitochondria
directly into the area where there was damage to the bone and the bone grew back
and it actually improved the healing in an incredible way.
So this opens up the door
to this whole new therapeutic modality,
a new type of therapy called mitotherapy
or mitochondrial therapy that based on the series of papers
that we're seeing coming out recently,
I believe could end up becoming a really incredible
new therapy
that may ultimately lead to the treatment for many diseases
that we're kind of dealing with right now.
So I just wanted to kind of link those out.
Would this be immediately applicable to say people
with sports injuries, you know, meniscus, knees, ankles,
you start to think about those bone spurs, chips,
that basketball players, football players go through,
would this be like the low hanging fruit
for this technology?
Yeah, I mean what they did this in and I think this was published in a research magazine called bone or something bone and tissue
Or something. Yeah, but they didn't let my subscription lapse
I got a they did it in a in a model a mouse model of osteoarthritis
And it repaired this osteoarthritis, but that's exactly right
And so that's tissue where you can using a microscope you can actually see the healing happening
But you can see this being applied for example
To cerebrospinal fluid where you can basically increase the mitochondrial the energetic mitochondrial production
that finds its way into maybe neuronal cells into neurons in your brain and
improving
Your brain function or you could put it into damaged hearts
after heart attacks and improve heart function. So there's all these theories about how you could
use mitotherapy as this becomes possible to now produce lots of mitochondria and use it as a
therapy that can then be applied to lots of diseases. So I think there's going to be a bit
of a blossoming of research in this area. They could take this if they can get this going
in the next two years or so they could get this and Biden could
actually compete with Trump for his third term if they could get
this to Biden in time.
I mean, that's microphone on. That's exceptionally low. And I
think that that's just a joke. Oh, now all of a sudden you're
defending. By the way, did you guys see Did you guys see George
Clooney? What do you guys
think of his new haircut? His hair color? I noticed he was he's dying his hair. He's that he was gray.
And now it must be it must be a for an acting job because his his hair that I hadn't seen this. This
is crazy. He looks it looks like his face is melting. Oh, my God. He looks like he did a I don't
know, like what do they call that hair coloring for men? Like you put it in the shower.
It looks very weird.
Well, he just did an interview explaining his whole op-ed on Biden, but it's in that
clip where he looks very different.
What did he say on Biden?
I thought he looked really, he said he felt compelled to act and that it was a civic duty,
although the dates don't match up, but nobody ever questioned him about that.
But he looks really good.
And he did not get a call from Obama?
He looks really good with salt and pepper hair.
Salt and pepper works, 100%. For him, what's he doing here? but nobody ever questioned him about that. But he looks really good. He did not get a call from Obama.
Salt and pepper hair.
Salt and pepper works 100%.
For him, yeah.
Clooney's a very handsome guy,
but in that interview he did,
I don't think he looked perfect.
You guys watched The White Lotus, by the way?
Did you guys watch The White Lotus?
What did we think?
Okay, so I don't know what it was,
but I had heard from a bunch of you guys in the group chat
that the show was not good.
So Nat and I ignored it.
Then we started it.
We watched one episode. Phenomenal. Oh, you loved it. Well, we're one episode in, but
it was great. And we were like, this is really good. And then, you know, I don't think it's
terrible. And the kid Schwarzenegger, Patrick Schwarzenegger is a fan of all in apparently.
So Patrick Schwarzenegger, I can tell that that guy has one of the most interesting roles in that series.
I'm really looking forward to him. Who else was really
DM the other day, we're following each other. I saw and
he, he said great pod, he dm to me and said great pod. And I
said great job. And then I mentioned, you know, Patrick
Schwarzenegger is your friend.
I Well, I guess it's like, what does it mean? Like micro
celebrity DM friends? I don't know. You could be on
celebrity jeopardy. I could literally be on celebrity
jeopardy. I think I think I would prefer to do Hollywood
squares. I feel like Hollywood squares I could shine because
you get a little one liners in like the jokes are kind of built
into it. A lot more fun. But I think we should do Family Feud versus another podcast squad. So like us first. Why do you aim so high always?
Well, I think Family Feud's funny. It's funny. All right, everybody. This has been another actually that would be a lot of fun
That's a good idea. We should do it. We should do it with Schultz and his crew the four of them and the four of us
All in false is Schultz in his crew. That'd be hilarious. Eight people would watch.
No, you're incorrect.
No, no, no, no.
People would love it.
Yeah.
Yeah, this is definitely something for John to get on.
If we're done sniffing our own butts, let's go.
We gotta go.
Okay, love you guys.
I miss you.
For the number one podcast in the world,
Chamath Palihapiti, your chairman dictator,
David Freberg, your Sultan of Science, Tim Dillon. Great job today.
And we will see you all.
And David Sucks. Don't forget David Sucks.
I'm sorry. The czar, the czar, huzzah to the czar, who apparently is back.
Can't, I was still hiatus.
Love you boys.
And now he's back. Love you boys. All in Summit, September 7 to 9.
Bye bye.
All in fan meetups are happening, episode 225, Saturday, April 26, go to all in.com slash meetups to join and meet and
host a meetup with other all in fans in your town. We'll see you
on next time. Bye bye. I'm going all in And instead we open source it to the fans and they've just gone crazy with it
Love you, S.I.
The queen of kin, Juan
I'm going all in
What your winners like?
Besties are gone
That is my dog taking notice in your driveway
Oh man, Oh man.
My avid Azure 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 that we just need to release somehow.
What the beep?
What your beep?
What?
We need to get merch.
I'm doing all this.
We need to get merch. This is our plan.
I'm doing all in.
I'm doing all in.