Behind the Bastards - Part One: Jeff Bezos and the Birth of Amazon
Episode Date: December 19, 2021Robert is joined by Jake Hanrahan to discuss Amazon founder, Jeff Bezos.Footnotes: https://www.vox.com/identities/2019/1/10/18176048/jeff-bezos-ami-extortion-medium-photos-divorce https://www.iol.co.z...a/lifestyle/love-sex/inside-the-bezos-divorce-adultery-lies-and-mile-high-trysts-18776678 https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/general-news/10-things-you-didnt-know-649386/ https://www.seattletimes.com/business/amazon/jeff-bezos-defends-amazon-workplace-in-response-to-article/ https://www.businessinsider.com/amazon-has-a-sexist-and-toxic-culture-some-employees-say-2020-9 https://archive.md/tWoVG For more about Jeff Bezos and Amazon, check out Megacorp. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Robert Evans here, awake, the earliest we have ever been awake.
The earliest we have ever been awake to record a podcast.
I just cannot take you seriously. It is 11.22 a.m.
It is 11.22 a.m.
Exhausted. This is Behind the Bastards, a podcast where one intrepid dogged journalist
braves the difficulty of being up barely, what is it, five and a half hours after dawn?
My God.
This is literally, now it is 11.23.
Yeah, well, our guest today on this very special episode of Behind the Bastards
is the great Jake Hanrahan.
Cheers, man.
How you doing, buddy?
Yeah, I'm good, man. I'm good, good. Yeah, feeling good, man.
Yeah.
Is it an ungodly early hour over there, too?
No, it's like 7 p.m., like 7.23 p.m., you know.
Now, see, that's a nice, reasonable hour to be awake.
Speaking of reasonable, Jake, how do you feel about Amazon?
Well, it's funny you ask, because I've been doing this new series called Megacorp all about them.
Really?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, man, I was saying to you guys before we kind of went on air,
the more research I do on this, it's almost like comically villainous to a point,
you know what I mean?
I'm not really wanting to be shrill like that, but it actually is like that.
It's mad like what they're getting up to.
It's deeply unsettling, and it's kind of weird when you actually realize how recent,
like they became so dominant so quickly that people don't think about, like 2014,
Amazon was not a huge deal.
No, it was just for books.
Not a small company, but like, yeah.
There were more than books by that, but they weren't this like behemoth that was doing everything.
It's weird how quickly a lot of this stuff slotted into place.
And you've got Megacorp going on, which is great,
and you're kind of going through methodically the crimes of Amazon
and the crimes of Amazon are also one way or the other,
the crimes of the founder of Amazon, Jeff Bezos.
Most definitely, yeah.
So I wanted to do something a little bit different this week.
Normally on Behind the Bastards, when we cover a guy like Bezos,
and we've done, you know, our episodes on Bill Gates, on Musk, on Zuckerberg,
we would do like an episode covering his early life,
and then we would do two or three episodes giving the greatest hits of the crimes.
But you're going through all of the things that are fucked up about Amazon bit by bit.
So I felt like we would do an episode on Bastards that's kind of leading people in to Megacorp.
So this episode is more detailed than a lot,
and we're going to go into the early life of Jeffrey Bezos.
And we're going to end a little bit on some specific actions of his that I think are horrible,
but really more than anything, I want to give people a sense of who this guy is
so that when they listen into all of the, you know, to the union busting
and the worker running into the ground and the hiring of Nazis and that sort of thing,
when they get into that on your show, they can know who the man is that made it all possible.
Absolutely, yeah.
What do you know about Mr. Bezos?
Well, to be honest, I've been more focused at the minute on like kind of, you know,
the various different scandals that the company has birthed.
But what I do know is he's very kind of unapologetic, you know, there's a lot of stuff.
You know, I think even in one of the first two episodes that's already been out,
just like quotes where he's just like, no, this is not true.
I've read several things where there's just irrefutable proof of like horrific injuries happening.
Like, you know, you're 80% more likely to get wounded in an Amazon warehouse
than any other warehouse in their industry.
And then when when he was speaking about this, he was just like, yeah, the media's lying.
It's just like crazy.
Like he's just like, it's kind of he's the kind of poster boy, I guess,
for business when it comes to the kind of post scandal era where he's like, yeah,
no, it's not real. And it's like what it is, but he just he just very much embraces that thing of like tough luck, you know.
Yeah, there's this there's this term people use for Steve Jobs, the reality distortion field.
Right.
And usually when they were talking about it, it was his ability to like kind of make
get people hyped up about products, his ability to like get his workers to work
unreasonably in order to like meet deadlines, his ability to make people believe
that he was doing something magic with these products he was making.
And Bezos seems to have that for the impact of his I don't I don't know.
It's weird. Like it's there's this degree to which like everything seems to slide off him at this point.
And I don't know as much that he's distorted reality is like he's made Amazon
foundational to daily reality for so many people that like, yeah, I mean, that's messed up.
But what are we going to do?
Right. It's so big. They've got so much money.
It's kind of a point where he doesn't he doesn't really have to pay attention, you know, to these bad things.
I mean, if you had a soul and a heart, you would.
But, you know, I think from from some of the things I've read and the way that he allows it to happen at Amazon,
you know, I think he's quite happy to just be like, yeah, tough luck.
Yeah, and we'll get into that. But it is interesting.
I think that I think one thing for people to consider at the start of this,
because I've been thinking about this myself is how true is the statement?
My life as I live it right now doesn't work without Amazon.
In terms of like how you get your groceries, how you get stuff for your job,
if you're like work, you know, remotely, how you get things that, you know, your employees need to you,
if you run a business, how you get or how you sell like things in that business.
Like for my part, I've got a huge amount of my workload is on Kindle,
just because the easiest way to get research off of a book is to highlight it in an e-book,
and then like you can kind of copy and paste the text and do a research doc.
It's much easier than just like going through a paperback book,
which is, I guess, a small example of it.
But like, I know I have a couple of friends who run small businesses.
I have a friend who's a teacher, like they are everybody.
Everybody knows how fucked up Amazon is.
And everybody's also like, well, what else am I going to do?
We are, you know, you're right. It's like I use Amazon still.
My book is on sale through Amazon. You know what I mean?
But it's like I said in like, you know, episode kind of the zero, the kind of prologue to Megacorp.
I'm not telling people like, don't use them. You're bad if you use them.
You know, be an activist, boycott them. I'm not saying that.
I'm just saying if you are using them, I think you, the very least,
you should know what they're doing to workers. You know what I mean?
And I think that's important.
And I've had a lot of workers and like people just messaged me already just being like, absolutely.
Like, thanks for saying, you know, they're not like, let's burn Amazon.
They're just like, we just want fairer working conditions.
You know what I mean? And it's like, it's really not, it's not that difficult.
You know, it's really not, but they still don't provide it for them.
No. And it is that thing that like, yeah, in a world as connected as ours,
with things as reliant on technology as ours and with a plague racing through where
where our ability to like go places to get things is disrupted.
Yeah. Something like Amazon is going to be necessary.
You know, and we can also talk about like consumption patterns and whatnot,
but like in our current society, something like it is necessary.
But is the suffering is like all of the fucking shit that comes along with it.
I would argue, hopefully not.
And I think the reason that there's so much suffering associated with it that
like it's that the company has as many horrible stories as you've been finding
on a daily basis is because of the guy who founded it,
because Amazon is very much made in the image of its creator.
Jeffrey Preston Jorgensen.
That's right. Jorgensen.
Not Bezos. He was not born Jeffrey Bezos.
He was, however, born on January 12th, 1964 in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
I did not expect him to be an Albuquerque baby.
But he's he's real. He's spent most of his upbringing in like the south and southwest
kind of similar area that I did.
His dad Theodore Jorgensen was 19 and his mother Jacqueline Geese was 17.
So this is a little bit of like a problematic union, you know,
Theodore is out of high school.
His Jeffrey's mom is still in high school.
There's a two year age difference, which isn't huge,
but the fact that he's graduated, she's in high school is a little bit of,
especially for like the families kind of like this like type deal.
And she struggles to finish her high school degree while Jeff is growing inside of her.
Theodore Jorgensen was not very good at actually providing for the family.
He was a high wire unicycleist and a circus performer,
and he was obsessed with his dreams of unicycle greatness.
At one point he tried to get on the Ed Sullivan show.
This was like the most important thing to him,
and he neglected his family for the unicycle.
It's a dream.
You had a dream, you know.
It's one of those things.
It's one of those things like of the things I did not call in Jeff Bezos' backstory.
Dad abandoned them for the unicycle would not have been.
And by the way, I should note, we'll talk a little bit more about this,
but Jeff grows up knowing none of this.
He doesn't know his dad's name for decades.
So Theodore tries briefly to do like the family thing with Jacqueline and Jeff.
They move in together, they have their kind of Brenda in any moment,
but it turns out it's hard to make a living as a unicycleist.
So Theodore was forced to make ends meet at an apartment store.
This makes him miserable because again, his dream is the open unicycle road.
So he takes to drinking more and more.
I don't believe he's like abusive.
He's just like kind of not there.
He's just like is incapable of really engaging as a father.
His father-in-law, Jeff's father-in-law.
So his mom's dad tried to get him a job, Theodore a job with the state police,
but Theodore couldn't be arsed to do that.
Eventually, Jackie gave up on him and took baby Jeff aged 17 months
and moved back in with her parents.
She filed for divorce and got it.
Theo continued to visit his kid on and off for a little while,
but he missed every child support payment that he ever had to make
because he had absolutely no money.
Now, this is not the best case scenario for a new child coming into the world.
I think we can agree.
But we would owe Jeffy had a few things in his corner
to offset the fact that his bio dad was sort of a deadbeat.
For one thing, both his maternal and paternal grandparents had a lot of resources.
So his dad's dad was a purchase agent for Sandia Military Base,
which was the largest nuclear weapons installation in the United States.
And that's an important gig, right?
He's handling all supply purchases for the biggest nuke base in the U.S.
Jacqueline, his mom's dad, on the other hand, was a guy named Lawrence Preston Geese
and he ran the local U.S. Atomic Energy Commission office.
And he's running the Atomic Energy Commission office in New Mexico,
which is the big one, right?
That's like where we figured it all out, right?
That's going to be like your, yeah.
And he's a rocket scientist, you know?
He's like a nuclear missile expert and was very prominent in the field.
And that obviously, you can make a good amount of money doing that.
So while Theo was not a great dad,
young Jeff had support from a family with a lot of means.
The earliest story I found that shows any kind of personality from Jeffrey Jorgensen at this point
is from when he was three.
His mom was really paranoid about his health and she had him sleeping in a crib
long after the point at which he should have stopped sleeping in a crib.
And he kept arguing with her that it was time for him to get a real bed
and she would say no because she was worried he was going to fall out.
So she refused him repeatedly and one day Jeff got a hold of a screwdriver
and took the crib apart himself so that it was just a bed.
And that's when his mom decided to let him like, okay, you can have a...
Yeah, and so we have some early stories from him and you hear that one a lot.
Most of them are like from him after he got rich and famous.
So as with any story like that, a little bit of salt, you know?
Yeah, yeah.
Also like being three years old, like if someone gave me a screwdriver,
I would just like stab myself by accident.
You know what I mean?
I don't know about that one.
It's a little bit.
But you know, maybe he did if so.
Yeah, maybe.
Yeah, I think you're right.
A little bit of salt with that one.
A little bit, yeah.
So in 1968, his mom remarried to Miguel Angel Bezos Perez.
Miguel was Cuban and had fled the country on the insistence of his mother
after he was caught painting anti-Castro graffiti.
He does get to take like a plane out of there.
He's not one of the people who has to like hide on a...
smuggle himself out on a raft.
He had some money.
But yeah, he gets out of...
He has to like leave his family behind in Cuba because he's, you know,
too much of a little... can't, you know, not rebel against the system, I guess.
He's 16 years old when he entered the country and he speaks almost no English.
Miguel eventually wound up doing his undergrad at the University of Albuquerque,
which offered free scholarships to Cuban refugees.
He worked as a clerk at a bank and he met Jacqueline while he was working there.
He and Jackie married.
And most of what you really need to know about Miguel is that he was enough of a father figure to Jeff
that Jacqueline reached out to Theodore before she married Miguel
and told him that their son was going to be taking her new husband's last name.
That's gonna be a hard hit for Theodore, you know what I mean?
Yeah, you get the feeling.
I mean, I think from what I've heard, he regrets it now.
I think at the time it was like, you don't have to pay child support
that you're not paying already anymore.
Like, yeah.
Yeah, I mean, you know, life is hard.
Things can be hard, you know what I mean?
It's sad enough, but yeah, I get it.
Yeah, and it's one of those things.
Like, I can't say, like, she's obviously not in the wrong for that.
It's like, your bio dad won't do it.
This guy comes in out of nowhere and adopts your kid.
Like, yeah, of course.
Anyway, that's why he's Jeff Bezos and not Jeff Jorgensen.
So Miguel eventually finished college
and got a job working as a petroleum engineer for Exxon.
So as a kid, Jeff's family is like either into nuclear weapons
or the oil and gas industry, which is quite an upbringing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, absolutely, man.
Like, yeah, it's a very, it's a very like American industry as well, right?
Nukes and oil.
Nukes and gas, yeah.
Yeah, like the favorite things, you know?
Yeah, and so he's, you know, his family is not,
they're not like even Bill Gates family rich, I don't think,
but they are well off.
They're very, very like they're, most people would consider them rich.
I don't think they're like multi-millionaires.
I'm sure by the time they retired, they had,
they had, you know, a million or two in the bank,
but they're very, very comfortable, you know?
So the family travels a bunch as Miguel,
like gets all these different transfers across the world.
And along the way, you know, as they're, you know,
Miguel is starting his career and, you know,
Jeffrey's growing up.
Miguel and Jacqueline have a daughter,
Christina and another son, Mark.
We kind of know Jeff was, I don't think,
happy to have his dad tracked down.
And his dad like hadn't heard of him.
I think it was 2015 when he get tracked down,
he was like, who's Jeff Bezos?
And it was like, that's your son.
Yeah, you forgot the name.
And he's like a broke, failed circus performer.
It's, it's quite a thing.
So we don't really have a whole lot of detail on how,
you know, getting abandoned by his biological dad
may have influenced Jeff Bezos.
It may not have had much of an influence at all,
because again, he was four when Miguel comes into the picture.
So nearly all, if not all, if his early memories
are going to involve Miguel,
who seems to have been a pretty good dad.
And so when it comes to how Miguel influenced
his son's development, we have more meat.
And it's, you know, he's a Cuban refugee
into the United States.
So obviously coming at it from like kind of a very
conservative pro-capitalist standpoint,
not too surprising.
Extremely anti-communist as well, you know what I mean?
Not very surprising.
I'm going to read a passage from the everything store
that gives a little bit of context for that.
Jeff and his siblings grew up observing their father's
tireless work ethic and his frequent expressions
of love for America and its opportunities and freedoms.
Miguel Bezos, who later began going by the name Mike,
acknowledges that he may have also passed on
a libertarian aversion to government intrusion
into the private lives and enterprises of citizens.
Certainly it was something that permeated our home life,
he says, while noting that dinner time conversations
were apolitical and revolved around the kids.
I cannot stand any kind of totalitarian form of government
from the right or the left or anything in between
and maybe that had some impact.
Which is interesting because as we're going to talk about,
Jeff certainly like benefits from the lax kind of corporate
law in the United States, but he imposes something
of a dictatorship on the people who work for him.
That's his whole, it's very totalitarian.
Yeah, it's like this stasi, you know, you get searched
every time you go in and out just for lunch or to the toilet.
Constant monitoring.
Like, yeah, no, it's, you know, we, like we heard
in the last episode I did for Megacorp,
the internal training video was encouraging managers
to spy on, you know, quote, the behavior of their workers
to see if maybe they're organizing a union.
Like, yeah, it's ridiculous to, okay, maybe he thinks that,
but then, you know, as all dictators, you know,
he imposes his will when he needs to.
Yeah, and it's interesting to me.
I mean, this is something we've come across a few times
with some of these billionaires, but like,
the things that, as we'll discuss,
the things that like make Jeff Bezos into the person
who's able to be as successful as he is are all things
that he absolutely doesn't want other people to have.
He has a very permissive, open environment.
He's very well funded schools, you know,
Amazon avoids paying taxes to support the schools.
A lot of his early jobs give him a lot of freedom and like,
yeah, it's this whole, yeah, you benefited from a system
that you have no desire in maintaining.
Anyway, that's what we're getting to.
So another thing that made an impact on young Jeff was money.
When he was four, he first visited his maternal grandfather's
cattle ranch in Texas.
The family ranch, the Lazy G, was more than 25,000 acres,
which is a big ranch.
And it's, you know, he comes from old Texas money.
His family, the ranch has been in his family's hands
since the like early 1800s.
And he had an ancestor who took part in the early colonization
of Texas by white people, which is, I have a good friend
who comes from not nearly,
they don't have nearly as much land anymore,
but they used to have family land that was that big
and the family kind of fell on hard times.
But they were like one of the families that was part
of the Texas Revolution and the establishment of Texas as a state.
And like on her old family land, there is like a slave graveyard.
Like that's all of them, right?
Like that's who found it, like that's the white people
who founded Texas.
So again, that's kind of where that's the kind of old money
that he's got on that side, huh?
Yeah, Texas in Oklahoma.
You're from near Texas, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
My family didn't own any land,
but we didn't get here from Italy until like the 20s.
So, yeah, when Jeff Bezos' like grandpa Lawrence,
like even though they have this family land,
his grandfather was a rocket scientist most of his career.
And when he retires, he goes back to the family ranch
to be like a hobby rancher, you know?
Like I'm retired.
I don't have to do a grind anymore.
I'm going to keep this ranch going just because it seems fun.
The Lazy G was a large, fully functional ranch
and Jeff starts spending his summers there.
So for about 12 straight years,
he spends every summer at the Lazy G doing ranch work,
cleaning stalls, gelding livestock, doing basic handyman stuff.
And the experience gave him a crash course
in the kind of practical engineering you have to do
if you're going to keep a ranch operational.
One of his other biographers, Richard Brandt,
notes one particular event as an example
of the formative impact this had on Jeff.
One day, his grandpa towed in a busted old bulldozer
with a stripped transmission.
He and Jeff set to work on it
and had to figure out a way to remove a 500-pound gear
from the engine.
Grandpa Lawrence built a crane to lift it,
and Jeff helped him.
Experiences like this taught Jeffrey
how to be a pragmatic engineer
and enured him to difficult labor.
He would later consider it an idyllic childhood,
and I'd be hard-pressed to disagree with him there.
It sounds like the perfect way to grow up, right?
Like, yeah, you've got this huge ranch.
Learning your lessons, but you've got security, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, who wouldn't want this in their childhood?
He later told an interviewer,
one of the things you learn in a rural area like that
is self-reliance.
People do everything themselves.
That kind of self-reliance is something you can learn,
and my grandfather was a huge role model for me.
If something is broken, let's fix it.
To get something new done, you have to be stubborn and focused
to the point that others might find unreasonable.
And you might find a certain dark humor
in noting that Jeff's self-reliance today
involves telling a lot, hundreds of thousands of people,
what they have to do for him.
One might also note that Amazon has contributed
to the absolute annihilation of rural communities
by destroying small businesses.
And it is kind of tempting to go down this road,
Jeff talking about the value of, like, rural hard work
and then how Amazon has actually impacted rural areas.
But it's also of the things to blame Amazon
for not really fair, because Amazon was kind of
continuing a process that got started a lot earlier
when it comes to that.
I actually found a local article from a paper
in Swift County, Minnesota with the title,
Amazon's Dominance Not Good for Small Towns.
And obviously it talks about what you'd expect.
Amazon, the online retailers destroying a bunch of local
brick-and-mortar businesses that give people in the area jobs.
But then that article gives a list of the local businesses
in this small town that might get wrecked by Amazon.
And those businesses include advanced auto parts,
AutoZone, O'Reilly Honda, Albertsons, Kroger,
Walmart Grocery, Barnes & Noble,
Joebeth Booksellers, Best Buy, Office Depot, Staples,
all of which are like giant corporations
that previously came in and destroyed
small local businesses in rural communities.
And it's like, yeah, Amazon is a part of that tradition,
but it didn't start with them.
So I don't know.
It's like, if you're in like a hyper-corporate environment,
that's just the circle of life really, you know what I mean?
Yeah, it's one of those things.
It is, like, I think there's a degree to which
it's worth acknowledging that Jeff benefited,
as we've talked about, like so much from this
kind of rural ideal that does not exist anywhere anymore
to the extent that it existed many places when he was a kid.
But he's also not, didn't start that process,
so whatever.
Of Amazon's crimes, I don't really,
I put that more on the Walmart end of the ledger.
So when he wasn't spending his summers at the ranch,
Jeff spent most of his childhood in Houston, Texas.
He attended a public school and was lucky enough
to benefit from a school district that had both money
and a devotion to taking care of its gifted students.
The Vanguard program, as it's called,
was a gifted and talented program
that was meant to find bright kids
and encourage them to think outside the box
and learn how to be independent minds.
The Vanguard program was good.
And in the early 1970s, an ad executive named Julie Ray
grew interested in it after her son was admitted.
Once he moved on to junior high,
she decided to write a book about the program.
When she went back to tour the program,
she met a sixth grader named Jeff Bezos.
She used the pseudonym Tim for him in her book
at his parents' request.
But from Julie's work,
we have our first early objective peek at young Mr. Bezos.
So this is not coming out of his PR churn.
This is not coming from his family.
This is not coming from him.
This is coming from someone who had no idea
what he was going to become,
who was kind of trying to analyze his intellectual growth
objectively when he was in the sixth grade.
So it's a pretty interesting insight.
We don't really have anything like this
for any of the other guys.
So I find this fascinating.
I'm going to read a quote from the book,
The Everything Store, about this early study.
Jeff was a student of general intellectual excellence,
slight of build, friendly, but serious.
He was not particularly gifted in leadership,
according to his teachers,
but he moved confidently among his peers
and articulately extolled the virtues
of the novel he was reading at the time,
J.R.R. Tolkien's The Hobbit.
Jeff, 12, was already competitive.
He told Ray that he was reading a variety of books
to qualify for a special reader's certificate,
but compared himself unfavorably
to another classmate who claimed,
improbably, that she was reading a dozen books a week.
Jeff also showed Ray a science project
that he was working on called an Infinity Cube,
a battery-powered contraption with rotating mirrors
that created the optical illusion of an endless tunnel.
Jeff modeled the device after one he had seen in a store.
That one cost $22, but mine was cheaper, he told Ray.
Teachers said that three of Jeff's projects
were being entered in a local science competition
that drew most of its submissions from students
and junior in senior high schools.
So you get a lot from that.
Number one, he's very advanced.
People at the time recognize him as brilliant.
And number two, like, there's this toy he wants.
It's too expensive. His mom won't get it,
so he just builds it, you know?
You get a lot of, like, the future Jeff Bezos personality
from that kind of decision.
I just keep thinking of the Time Cube.
Yeah, Jeff built the Time Cube.
Put that on the 1998 internet.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That would be a fun twist.
So from an early age,
Jeff seemed drawn to the idea of evaluating other people
in order to maximize their performance.
While he was in sixth grade,
as practice for statistics class,
he created a survey to evaluate all the teachers in his grade.
He claimed its goal was to judge teachers on how they teach,
not as a popularity contest.
When Julie met him, he was working to lay out the results
in a graph that would compare all the teachers with each other.
So he's doing, like, this Amazon analytic shit
as a sixth grader to his teachers.
Yeah, it's quite impressive.
Yeah.
I'd be scared of that kid, though.
It's, like, a fucking Damian vibe, you know what I mean?
Yeah, I think I would, like,
if a fucking sixth grader is, like,
graphing me and a bunch of other people,
like, we're their employees, unlike a chart.
Yeah, maybe I'd spray that kid with some pepper water,
you know, a little bit of pepper water.
Don't give him a ruler who measures your head, you know?
Yeah, exactly.
It's in that realm, you know what I mean?
Yeah.
Yeah, it's a little bit, like, unsettling.
And his own family was not immune to this sort of behavior.
When he was 10, Jeff grew concerned about his grandmother,
who was a smoker.
His first attempt at convincing her to stop
wasn't to just say, like,
Grandma, could you stop smoking? Grandma, I don't like it with you.
No, he calculated how many minutes of life
she lost per cigarette,
and then extrapolated that based on
the total amount of time that she'd been smoking,
and then told her,
you've taken nine years off your life,
and she burst into tears.
So that's the kind of mind this kid had.
Again, always driven by, like, data,
and always, like,
why wouldn't people want to have?
Yeah, like, don't hurt Granny's feelings,
like, that's just, no, no one should do that,
you know what I mean?
I mean, I think
you get this feeling from him
with both of those anecdotes that as a kid,
and as a kid and as an adult,
he has this attitude of, like, well,
if there's good data to analyze exactly
how you're performing, why wouldn't you want it?
And, you know,
most of us, like, well,
number one, raw data doesn't tell you everything.
It leaves out a lot. Exactly.
And number two, it's kind of exhausting
to live your whole life that way.
Yeah, no, it is. And do you know what, though,
it gives me, like, the problem, like,
particularly, like, in our profession,
when you have, like, analysts versus
on-the-gram reporters, and it's, like,
yeah, data is gray, and it's a part of the process,
but it removes the soul
of everything if you just rely on it,
you know what I mean? And that's obviously the problem.
Yeah. And it's not, like,
it's also, it also leaves out inherently
a lot. Like, you can look at, there's all these
kind of, like, the,
this wing of scholars who
will make the claim that, like, this is the best life
ever been, and they'll always bring up that, like,
because of this economic measure,
or this measure, and it's, like, well, but
there's a lot of ways in which, like, those are jigged,
and you look at, like, yeah, it looks like
these indexes have been moving up, but you adjust them
every couple of years, so that, like,
the, you know, the, you're measuring
different things that aren't going up in price
as much to show that people are gaining
more, and it's, like, yeah.
And that's why a lot of these, like, statistics
on how great a time it is
to live it now don't take into account the fact that, like,
people in the United States, in particular,
are fucking miserable, and self-report
being miserable, and it's, like, yeah,
you can't just reduce
everything to data. It doesn't
miss a lot.
Yeah, like, oh, no one's
dropping a rock on your head anymore.
Like, that was happening every week, and, you know,
500 years ago, so you're fine. It's, like, no,
there's a lot of other things. I think without
context, statistics are just, like,
just ways for people to argue
online, you know what I mean? It's, like, these
kind of, you know, like,
oh, Ben Shapiro slaughtered some, like,
12-year-olds. He's, like, very much into
all that, like, you know, statistics
without context, and it's, they're just
digits without any context, you know? It's not
helpful, I don't think. But he is,
Jeff is in love with statistics
and digits, and yeah, he's a
data-driven little boy.
He also lived,
what sounds to me like, an exhausting life.
He started school at 7 a.m.
every day, and he had, like,
this special program he was in was just this
dizzying mix of classes,
individual projects,
and small group discussion time.
Julie documented one of the group
discussions Jeff was a part of.
He and six other students were sitting with
the principal reading short stories and then
discussing the short stories, and the first
story they read was about an archaeologist
who faked a cache of artifacts,
and Julie recorded what Jeff had to say
about the story. So these are just, like,
some comments that she noted him making
archaeologists in the story.
They probably wanted to become famous.
They wished away the things they didn't want to face.
Some people go through life thinking
like they always have. You should be patient.
Analyze what you have to work with.
So he's, you know,
this is kind of the way he's thinking about
people, especially, I think,
the line some people go through life thinking
like they always have, like, he's always very
obsessed with this idea of
like
treating things like it's the first
time anyone's done them. So you can try
to look at them from a new perspective,
which is a very successful way to think
in business. Like, it's interesting to me,
some of his thought processes,
he doesn't really change, you know, as he grows up.
He's kind of always the same person
who becomes the CEO of Amazon.
Jeff told Julie Ray
that he loved these exercises.
Quote, the way the world is, you know,
someone could tell you to press the button.
You have to think what you're doing for you.
You have to be able to think about what you're doing
for yourself, which is, again, interesting,
because that's the opposite of what he wants
from his employees, but he recognizes it
as the key to his own success.
Julie's
book was not a big hit, this book about
this special program, Jeff isn't as a kid.
She had to self-publish it, and as far
as I can tell, we know mostly
about it because of journalists
like Brad Stone,
who found this out, like, found
copies of the book in a library after it had
been published and, like, grabbed this early
to look at Jeff Bezos for us.
Brad Stone caught up with Julie
decades later when Jeff was a billionaire,
and he asked her what she felt about
the things Jeff Bezos had accomplished
in the decades since sixth grade.
She said she had watched Tim's rise to fame
in fortune over the past two decades
with admiration and amazement, but without much surprise.
When I met him as a young boy,
his ability was obvious, and it was being
nurtured and encouraged by the new program,
she says. The program also benefited
by his responsiveness and enthusiasm
for learning. It was a total validation
of the concept, and it's certainly,
I would say, a validation of the concept
of funding public schools well enough
that they can experiment.
In this regard, Jeff isn't entirely
dissimilar to Bill Gates, although Bill didn't go
to a public school, but both men benefited
as kids from communities that put
a lot of resources into educating them.
A lot of money
went into training up both
of these children and giving them opportunities
when they were little kids, and a lot
of that came from, like,
the fact that the schools they were in
valued their intellectual freedom
and valued their personal freedom,
and considered that an important part
of them being able to grow into the kind
of people that they were capable of becoming.
And again, it's a total
you look at what Amazon pays in taxes.
It's a bit of a rug pull
that they kind of do as soon as
they get up to where they are.
I always find that interesting, because
they benefit from
societies that invest
a ton of resources into them.
But they have no interest in investing back.
Do you know what?
I really get the vibe from Bezos
kind of a Nixon vibe.
It's not illegal when I do it.
That kind of thing.
I get that vibe from him a lot.
I'll take everything,
but whatever I do is okay.
Fine, not everybody has to give
back, but he's the richest
man on earth.
Talk about how space travel is giving
back, but that's a discussion for another day.
Jeff was prone to such intense
focus as a kid that
his teachers would sometimes have to pick him
up while he was still in his chair
and move him to different tables when it was time
for him to switch tasks, because he would be so
invested in whatever he was doing.
And he never seemed to
turn off. When he was not at school,
he would spend his time rebuilding radios,
building robots from kits, and experimenting
with electronics purchased from Radio Shack.
His most telling invention
was an electric alarm, which he wired
to alert him if his younger brother or sister
tried to get into his room, because he was obsessed
with his personal privacy.
Yeah.
That's pretty funny.
Like Bill Gates, Jeff benefited
from the fact that he had access to a computer
earlier than any other kids pretty much
in the United States. A Houston-based
company provided his school
with a terminal and loaned them extra time
on the company mainframe.
And this was during a period when, kind of in the same
time, Bill Gates's
rich parents at like a fancy private school
raised money via a bake sale to buy
a terminal for the kids.
So this is, again, another thing that
kind of all these guys, these
early tech billionaires have in common,
is that adults around them
make the choice to put a lot of money
into giving them access to a computer
in like the 70s, you know, when very
few other people have access to computers.
Yeah. It's a massive, like
very, very privileged position to be at
as a kid, especially back then, you know what I mean?
Yeah. And again, it's
if, like, either
of them were to really learn the lesson of their
success, it would be like, yeah, you should
invest a lot in children.
But neither of them
really seem to get that.
From the book One Click, quote,
the setup came with a stack of
manuals, but no one at the school knew how to use it.
Jeff and a couple of other students
stayed after class to go through the manuals
and figure out how to program it, but that novelty
only lasted about a week. Then they
discovered that the mainframe contained a primitive
Star Trek game. From then on,
all they used the computer for was playing Star Trek,
each taking on a role of one of the characters
in the TV program. Like
all of his other nerdy friends, he considered the
choice role in the game to be that of Mr. Spock.
Captain Kirk was the backup choice.
If Jeff couldn't get either of those roles,
he preferred to take on the persona of the
Starship's computer.
Which also says a lot.
Yeah.
I get it, like Spock is rad,
but wanting to be the computer is a little
weird.
The career that most, I mean,
Bones is right there, Jeff, but whatever.
The career that most appealed to child Jeff
Bezos was archaeology.
But his heroes were all businessmen,
particularly Walt Disney and Thomas Edison,
both of whom were very successful
at monetizing the achievements of their
employees and utterly ruthless at crushing
competition to their dominance.
He actually admired Disney more than Edison
because he saw Walt Disney as having
been better at putting a team together to
work in a concerted fashion. So like,
again, Disney's kind of the guy
he's worshiping as a little kid.
Yeah, but not even
for like, not even like, wow, I love
his cartoons. It's just for like the lamest
version of like him, you know what I mean?
Yeah, it really is.
Now, as you probably
guessed, Jeff Bezos did not get in
trouble often as a kid. He lost
his library privileges once for laughing
too loud. But that's kind of like
most of what you hear about it. Like he's not
and we'll talk about his laugh a little bit later, but
he's he does not run
into a lot of hot water based on
all of this. And you might be surprised to know that
Jeff joined a youth football league
and was actually pretty good
at it, which is why there's a number
of reasons this is weird. For one,
football is a fucking huge deal
in Texas. It's like a religion there. There were
like schools, like the school I went
to paid millions and millions of
dollars for their football stadium. Like
schools where I live now cost less
than just the football stadium for my high
school did. It's a Texas thing.
We put ridiculous
resources into football. So the fact that he was
good at football in a Texas
youth league means something.
He was not a big kid.
His mom didn't want him to join because she was
worried he'd get beaten badly, but he was
so good at memorizing plays and
understanding like the rule mechanics of
the games that his coach made him a defensive
captain. So you're kind of he's
he's more flexible than you might expect.
And I think that a lot of that goes down to the kind
of education he has that they really put a
lot of value in trying to like make these
kids give them space to experiment. So they
grow up well rounded because clearly
he does the fact that he's
he's he's building robots and
he's playing football
is a kind of
sort of an example of the success of the school system
he grows up in.
He spent his high school years
by the time he moved in the high school he got to
high school. His family moves to Florida
is because for Exxon mobile kind of shit
and once he gets to Florida
he immediately informs his new public school
classmates that he was going to be the
valedictorian. His first
summer job in high school was as a fry
cook at McDonald's and he passed the time
by studying the different ways that McDonald's
had automated their production process.
However interested he was in this
he decided early on that he did not like
working for other people and he wanted to
own his own business someday.
He succeeded in becoming valedictorian
of his high school and in his speech he
called for humankind to colonize
space so that they could preserve the earth
and turn it into a giant park once all
the human beings were gone. Which is
a story that story like came out
recently Jeff Bezos saying that like yeah I think
most people will move into space and we'll keep
a few people behind on the earth to
maintain it as like a park.
Yeah and now he's up to
blue origin like I'm not happy man.
No it is
interesting to me again how consistent
all this is like I don't think he's
ever changed as a person.
No. It's the same
thing. You know who doesn't want to
turn the earth into a
giant park free of human beings.
You can't verify that.
I mean
unless it is like audible
or something. That's my point
you can't verify that. Yeah
Well
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So, Jake...
One thing I want to add, I really love
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Yeah, that's great.
Let me know every episode.
Let me know, yeah.
That's literally every message I get.
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I got a paypal out there.
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As soon as he graduated, Jeff,
he and a school friend
started a company of their own.
So, he gets out of high school
and summer after high school,
he starts a business with a classmate.
Their business is called the Dream Institute.
And Dream is an acronym,
and it's a terrible acronym.
Because Dream stands for
directed, there's the D,
reasoning, there's the REA
methods.
No, you can't do that.
That's not an acronym.
And it's fine, but like,
it's not an acronym.
Sorry, young Jeff Bezos.
The Dream Institute was a two-week
summer camp program for fifth graders,
where Jeff and his friend would teach kids
about engines, fission, interstellar travel,
and space phenomena.
Along with stuff like advertising
and like the history of advertising.
It was an eclectic program to say the least.
You could see it as Jeff trying to kind of give back
to kids some element of what he'd gotten
as a child.
A local news report on the Dream Institute
makes it seem like Jeff's primary
interest as an educator was teaching
kids about space.
This passage from the book One Click,
based on interviews with Jeff's early business partner,
makes it clear where his head was at the time.
Quote,
He said the future of mankind is not on this planet,
because we might be struck by something,
and we better have a spaceship out there.
So, I don't know, just interesting to me.
Very consistent.
Yeah, he's had that germ,
like in his, you know,
the germ of an idea in his brain from very young, clearly.
Yeah. Now, the Dream Institute
didn't last long, not because it failed,
but because Jeff was off to Princeton,
where he got a degree in computer science
and electrical engineering.
He did very well at school, although he was not
the valedictorian, and in fact, this is kind of
a humbling moment for him, because at Princeton
for the first time, he's surrounded by a bunch
of other, like, young, rich, overachievers,
and he's not the best anymore.
He doesn't really stand out at Princeton.
And in fact, one of the things
when journalists go back
to people who were in college with Jeff Bezos,
one of the things they note is that
basically no one who was with him in school
really noticed him or remembered him.
Like, he didn't, he doesn't stand out at all.
One of the few anecdotes
we get about him from a college friend
is that he liked to play beer pong,
which is like the blandest personality trait
you can have in college.
Like, yeah, everybody plays beer pong in college.
Like, is that?
Sorry, what is beer pong again?
It's, so you have,
you have like a fucking table tennis court?
Hold on a second, hold on a second.
We're not going to laugh about that.
What did you do?
Like, Jake,
didn't play beer pong.
I don't ever do it in England, you know.
I didn't go to university either,
so I don't know, man.
Like, I don't think people do it here, you know.
I dropped out of university,
but I definitely played some beer pong.
Yeah, I can imagine, but I think people here
just, they just get smashed, you know.
Yeah, I mean, that's mostly what you do.
You have a table tennis,
or you could just set up like a card table
and you stack a bunch of like,
like quarter full cups of beer on it
and you have like table tennis rackets
and you have like little clear white plastic balls
and you hit them to each other.
And if you knock, if you knock a ball into one of the cups,
You don't necessarily use the table tennis racket.
There's a number of ways,
but you're knocking these balls back and forth
and if you knock a ball into a drink,
your opponent has to drink it.
If they knock a ball into a drink,
they have to drink it until everybody's drunk, right?
That's the basic idea.
I think that's pretty fun.
It is, I have nothing against beer pong.
It's just, it's like everybody in college plays.
It's not a personality.
I remember he liked beer pong.
It's like, I remember he ate food.
Yeah, okay.
If you say he refused to play beer pong,
that's a personality trait.
Do you know what though?
The idea in my head of like a guy
that just really loves beer pong
like everybody just like,
when does beer pong start?
Jeff, calm down.
Like Jesus Christ.
I mean, if he liked it for the,
like one of the things I found positive
about beer pong is that like,
I was not a very social kid.
I was not good when I was 19.
I was not good at like talking to people at parties,
but I could drink a lot.
And beer pong was very simple.
So you could participate in the party
without actually engaging with anybody
who were, you know, an anxious kid
who didn't really understand how to hang out around people.
Until I found mushrooms,
I was not very good at being in social situations.
So I'm wondering if maybe
it was something like that for Jeff, where it's like,
oh, I understand the rules of this.
Do you know what might be funnier though?
I can just imagine him being like,
I want to be the best at beer pong.
You know what I mean?
I'm going to win.
He didn't even care about it.
He's like, I need to win.
Yeah.
I'm going to read a quote from the book One Click
about Jeff in college
from some interviews with his classmates.
Quote,
Jeff wasn't much of a ladies man.
Perhaps Princeton women aren't into beer pong.
He explained his own romantic shortcomings this way.
I'm not the kind of person where women say,
oh, look how great he is a half hour after meeting me.
I'm kind of goofy and I'm not.
It's not the kind of thing where people are going to say about me.
Oh my God, this is what we've been looking for.
Another classmate,
E.J. Chichelniski
would bump into him occasionally,
but today can recall nothing more than that.
He was bright and motivated and organized.
So he doesn't really like,
he doesn't stand out at all
in college, which is interesting to me.
He becomes the richest man in the world
and all of his classmates are like,
yeah, he was just kind of a kid.
It's probably worth noting
here in terms of weird aspects
of Jeff Bezos' personality
that he does not like music.
He doesn't like music.
Does not get music.
That's the biggest red flag, right?
I don't care what kind of music you like,
but it's the chief miracle
of human existence.
If you don't get it at all,
that's kind of odd.
Yeah, that's really strange.
Yeah, that's unnerving actually.
Yeah, it is weird.
What's your favorite music?
I don't like music.
In general, no, that's odd, man.
As a kid,
he recognizes that this is off-putting
and so while he's in high school,
he memorizes the call letters
for every local radio station
so he can pretend to like music
if the subject comes up in conversations
with other kids.
It shows the disconnect too,
because it's like, I don't like music,
but I need to be able to pretend it.
I'll memorize the names of radio stations.
That way people will think I like music.
That's not how people talk about music.
Have you heard this new radio station?
I know the phone number to it.
No one's going to be like, oh, he loves music.
Yeah.
Okay, Jeff, that's a little weird.
Do you know what?
I don't want to second-guess it,
but I've read a lot about sociopaths
and they say that there are certain things
that they don't understand it,
but they know how to emulate it to fit in.
And that sounds like that.
It was saying that he emulated it pretty badly.
Yeah, and it's one of those things.
Because I had my version of that.
I never liked football,
but I played it and I learned to feign interest in it,
because you have to be able to pretend
to like football in Texas.
That's less basic than pretending
to understand the appeal of music as a concept.
Dogs like music.
Dogs like music.
Plants enjoy it.
Plants grow from it.
No, it's very weird.
That's a bit peculiar.
A lot of people, this is relevant to Amazon,
a lot of people claim the reason Apple
got the iPod out and iTunes,
because Amazon and Apple
kind of had a fight to see who was going
to be the kings of digital music and Apple wins.
And a lot of people will say
that it's probably because Steve Jobs
famously loved music.
Jobs was obsessed with music
and from a pretty early stage
in his business wanted to deliver
something like the iPod,
because he cared about people
being able to listen to music.
Jesus misses this trade,
which is kind of an obvious money train,
especially if you're doing Amazon
shit in the 90s. You should probably be able
to see that like, oh yeah, digital music
is going to be a big deal financially.
We should get into that. But Jeff doesn't,
because he does not understand the appeal
of music on a fundamental level.
Yeah, that's such like a hiccup there.
He's just like, no, I don't
like why? It's like that.
That's kind of nuts.
There's another story about him that like
in the early days of the company, like 2001,
he's like on a work trip
with a bunch of employees and they have to
drive back and 9-11 happens
and everybody's like bummed out
and like freaked out and has to,
they have to drive across the country
like right after 9-11 and to try to cheer
everyone up, he goes into a truck stop
and just gets a random assortment of CDs.
Just like randomly picks music off the
shelf to play.
Oh no.
Okay, Jeff, you weirdo.
I'm like, you know.
Humans like music.
Everyone's like, no, not that song.
Not now.
I can only imagine
what young Jeffrey Bezos's
dating profile would look like.
I don't think he did.
I mean, yeah, he's got other things
on his mind with dating. No, I mean like
what he would mock up on there.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, just look at the top 40
and list all of the bands.
Just feel like I can calculate
how long it's going to be before your grandma dies,
you know what I mean? Yeah.
That's his entire okay, Cupid.
I can tell you when your grandparents
will die.
Yeah, it's like the women will love this.
You know what, that might do better
than you'd expect.
To be fair, it's been worse.
During his summer vacation
in 1984 while he's in college,
Jeff goes to visit his mom and dad in Norway
where Mike was working again for Axon.
Jeff got a summer job
programming for the oil giant,
mainly coding a computer model
to calculate royalties for the company.
He gets some work for IBM the next year
and when he graduates, he manages
to get a job with a company called Fittel
off the recommendation of his classmate
Chichelnitsky, who now claims
to barely remember him.
Fittel provided computer solutions
for investment banks and brokerages.
When Jeff joined, they were in the process
of connecting internet to link computers
from a bunch of different financial firms
together in order to trade more effectively.
And the descendant
of this thing that Jeff was working on
is how all trading is done today, right?
It's all banks have networked machines
talking to each other, making split-second
financial decisions that no human would have
the time to make.
And Jeff is not the driving force behind
this change, right?
He's one of the people who's coding
the early stages of this change
and he doesn't start this trend.
But he is a part of it.
He was good at the job
and inside of a year, he had been promoted
to manage a dozen programmers.
He bounced around different early
financial tech companies for a while,
mainly programming different software solutions
to allow bankers to communicate with each other.
In 1989, he got to talking
with a banking analyst named Halsey,
who also wanted to be an entrepreneur.
Halsey and Bezos hit on an idea
to expand the limited intranets
they'd been building into
something separate, a network that
anyone could use to connect subscribers
to news stories curated algorithmically
by the person's interests.
So they kind of hit upon
in the 80s, this idea of like
we should build a news feed
that like reads,
pays attention to what people are reading
and gives them more of that, which is
they never make this, but it is interesting that he like
this is like how the whole internet works now
and they kind of get that in the 80s.
He clearly understands the promise
of a lot of this technology earlier than most people.
Yeah, definitely.
I think he was definitely ahead of his time
in some ways, you know what I mean?
Especially from a data perspective,
I think that actually helped him a lot.
Yeah, I think it absolutely does.
And for a while, Bezos and Halsey
like try to get Merrill Lynch to invest in this
idea, but Merrill Lynch is like, I don't think
there's any financial future in this
and they don't put down the money, which is very funny
that like Merrill Lynch could have owned
basically Facebook in
the late 80s.
Yeah, fuck them anyway.
Yeah, fuck, I mean, obviously it would have been
a disaster probably.
It didn't happen.
Yeah, Jeff moves on to a company called DE Shaw.
Now, DE Shaw was another investment
kind of firm. They manage a hedge fund
and it would be the last place Jeff Bezos
ever worked for anyone else.
The firm is kind of
where he gets finished and turned into the man
who would start Amazon and a big part of that goes
to his boss, the founder of the company
David Shaw.
He's a brilliant financial
technology guy. He's a really
innovative thinker within that field.
His company, they're kind of seen
as within this industry being Mavericks
and being like super creative
and ahead of the curve on everything.
And Jeff really admires David Shaw
who's analytical, but Jeff
like the thing Jeff praises him for is having
a perfectly developed left and right brain.
And you kind of get the impression
he's one of the very few people
Jeff ever saw as not just a mentor
but like an equal.
That doesn't happen a lot with Bezos
but he really admires this guy.
So while he's working at DE Shaw
Jeff was also working to get himself
a girlfriend. And I'm going to read a quote now
from the book, The Everything Store.
There's always one of these for Bezos,
for Zuckerberg, for fucking
Gates. There's always
a weirdo quote about this sort of thing.
Bezos thought analytically
about everything including social situations.
Single at the time, he started
taking ballroom dance classes
calculating that it would increase his exposure
to what he called in plus women.
He later famously admitted to thinking
about how to increase his women
flow, a Wall Street corollary
to deal flow, the number of new opportunities
a banker can access.
So
it's one of those things
it's like if he just said he wanted to meet women
so he learned how to ballroom dance, I'd say
that's great. That's what you should do.
If you want to meet people, you go learn a new thing
you expose yourself to more people. The fact that he's thinking about it
like well I have to increase the flow of women
that I communicate with on a daily basis
and there's in plus coefficient will raise
and then I'll have a higher chance of
it is like
women flow go up.
Women flow go up.
It's so creepy man.
It's like everything's a transaction.
Which in a way
sometimes it is but that's not a positive way
you know. No and I
don't think you tend to get the best results
if you go out to meet people thinking about it
like a transaction.
Definitely not worrying about your
M flow or whatever it was.
So Jeff's
colleagues knew him as a hard worker who also
felt the need to brag about how hard he worked.
He kept a rolled up sleeping bag in his
office ostensibly in case he needed
to work overnight but his colleagues say
it was mostly a prop, right?
The bag
and the home padding for it were always
in view like he
I'm sure he does sleep in his office occasionally
but more than anything it's so that other people
know he's willing to sleep in his office
you know. Yeah.
In 1992
the hedge fund that he worked for
hired a woman named Mackenzie Tuttle.
She'd graduated from Princeton where she'd
gotten a degree in English and studied
with Toni Morrison. She'd published a novel
prior to starting work as an administrative
assistant. In short order she worked
directly for Jeff Bezos who had a huge
crush on her. One of his then
colleagues remembers a night out when Bezos
hired a limousine to take several
coworkers to a nightclub. Quote
he was treating the whole group
but he was clearly focused on Mackenzie.
So
I mean that's whatever and I should
note here that like because we talked
about Bill Gates kind of hit on
coworkers in a way that was more unsettling
Mackenzie herself claims that Jeff
did not hit on her. She disagrees with
the version of events put forward by her
colleagues and claims that she fell in
love with him and was the
person who instigated the relationship
and I certainly am not second
guessing her on this like I don't know.
He wasn't doing any creepy shit.
She doesn't think this is like a creepy
office thing. Yeah.
She claims that she had an office
next to his and she fell in love with his
laugh.
Have you heard his fucking laugh?
It's like the guy from
Smurfs. Yeah.
It's bizarre. That's a
fascinating thing to say because
I think we should break in to discuss Jeff
Bezos' laugh here and I want to read a quote
from Brad Stone, his best
biographer, discussing Jeff's laugh.
Much has been made over the years
of Bezos' famous laugh. It's a
startling, pulse-pounding bray that
he leans into while craning his neck
back, closing his eyes and letting loose
with a guttural roar that sounds like a
cross between a mating elephant seal
and a power tool. Often it comes
when nothing is obviously funny to
anyone else. In a way, Bezos'
laugh is a mystery that has never been
solved. One doesn't expect someone so
intense and focused to have a raucous
laugh like that and no one in his family
seems to share it. Employees know
the laugh primarily as a heart-stabbing
sound that slices through conversation
and rocks its targets back on their heels.
More than a few of his colleagues suggest
that on some level this is intentional
that Bezos wields his laugh like a weapon.
You can't understand it, says Rick
Dalsel, Amazon's former chief
information officer. It's disarming
and punishing. He's punishing you.
Yeah, he's Gargamel.
Gargamel, that's the guy. That's amazing.
Yeah, he's fucking Gargamel.
Yeah, that's the same thing. And Mackenzie falls for him because of his
punishment laugh. Jesus.
Yeah, she, I don't know. Some people are into
like, said, oh, masochistic shit. I don't know
but fucking hell. That's a weird one.
I mean, you know, I don't
want to be like, pick on his character, but
the laugh is like really unsettling, I think.
Yeah, we should actually probably
embed audio of that.
Yeah. One sec.
Let me find it.
We've tracked down exclusive historical records. We've interviewed the world's
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From iHeartPodcast and
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Listen to Let's Start a Coup
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I'm Lance Bass
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What you may not know is that when I was
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And when I was there, as you can imagine,
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But there was this one that really
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About a Soviet astronaut who found
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It's 1991
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This is the
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What if I told you
that much of the forensic science
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The problem with forensic science
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And the wrongly convicted
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How many people have to be
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Listen to
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Okay, here's a compilation of Jeff Bezos
laughs. I'm afraid. Good.
You want to be a chef. Maybe you want
to be a dancer. I don't know what you want to do.
I'm not sure my boss is going to like that.
laughs
But you do need to follow your passion.
Right. I would love for it to be
after I'm dead.
laughs
40 minutes with you.
It's already clicking down. We're going to use everyone.
So no droning on.
No, no, that's
coming up too, but that was actually not supposed to be a bad pun.
And then disclosure,
you are an investor in business society.
Yes, a happy investor. Thank you.
It is great. Best midnight snack while
you're brainstorming.
I'm asleep at midnight.
That's important.
That's really good.
It is, it's, it's weird.
It is a little bit of a weird laugh. Look.
I don't like it.
It's not. It's the kind of thing.
There must be nothing good.
It is like
weirdly the same a lot of the time
like he's practiced it. I don't know.
It has like villain undertone.
Yeah, practiced.
He's one of those rich people who
runs the world that gives credence
to the lizard man conspiracy
theories because like you look at, you look at and listen
to Jeff and you're like, yeah, he could be a lizard.
Right. Like he could be a lizard.
There could be a lizard under that skin.
No doubt. No doubt. Yeah.
Yeah. But it's like, um,
it's just, I think it just feels forced.
I think that's the thing and it's so over the top.
You know what I mean? When there's no need.
That's why it feels great. And it feels
it feels like such an effort to like not
react genuinely.
I don't feel like we're hearing
whatever is the same thing in the laugh that Mackenzie
heard probably because he's changed
since then and had to put on armor.
But it is like Jeff could be a lizard man.
Elon Musk could only be a human.
Like he's, he's, he's, his flaws are too
obvious and evident, you know.
Um, Jeff Bezos.
Yeah.
He's very, he's polished
himself to like a higher
extent than pretty much any of these other
any of the other people in his position.
Um, which is probably why
he's, he's built something that's
so much more integral to
uh, daily life.
And why he's, he's been so much more successful
than most of them is he's, he's
he's really good at
polishing an image. Yeah.
Hey everybody, Robert Evans here.
This is actually going to be a two-parter
running very long.
So we decided to split it here.
If you want to find Jake Hanrahan
on the internet, uh, you can
find him at Popular Front.
Um, you can support Popular Front. You can listen to
or watch their great content.
And of course you can find his new show, MegaCorp
on the CoolZone Media Network.
Uh, you can also find this show
wherever shows are found, which is
wherever you are right now because you found it.
Alphabet Boys
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that goes inside undercover investigations.
In the first season, we're
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of the 2020 protests.
It involves a cigar-smoking mystery
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And inside his hearse was like a lot of guns.
But are federal agents catching bad guys
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He was just waiting for me to set the date,
the time, and then for sure he was trying
to get it to happen. Listen to Alphabet Boys
on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts
or wherever you get your podcasts.
What if
I told you that much of the
forensic science you see on shows
like CSI
isn't based on actual science
and the wrongly
convicted pay a horrific price?
Two death sentences
in a life without parole.
My youngest, I was incarcerated
two days after her first birthday.
Listen to CSI on trial
on the iHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
With the Soviet Union collapsing around him
he orbited the Earth
for 313 days
that changed the world.
Listen to the last Soviet on the iHeart
Radio app, Apple Podcasts
or wherever you get your podcasts.