TikTok Ban Approaches, China's App Crackdown, and Guest Dana Mattioli
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Transcript
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Hi, everyone.
This is Pivot from New York Magazine and the Vox Media Podcast Network.
I'm Kara Swisher.
So I'm in New York.
And whenever I'm in New York, I go and get a full physical, and I like this guy because he kind of, in a weird way, makes sweet, sweet love to me.
No one touches me
the way this guy does.
Okay.
And I am so excited about this.
This is the absolute truth.
He's like this cool young man who's very kind of quiet and stoic, doesn't really know how to deal with me.
Yeah.
And so this is what I'm going to do today.
And I went and I bought the materials.
When he walks in today, we'll start with small talk.
And when he turns around, I'm going to put on gloves.
Oh, I love that.
What's his reaction going to be when I, when he turns around and I put on gloves and like snap them?
And then the other thing I do, so now that I'm famous because of Kara Swisher,
I walk around my block.
I walk around Jack's wife for you.
I totally, I totally peacock.
Oh, hey, it's God.
He's walking around.
And if I walk around long enough, someone recognizes me and I do the following.
I look around, I stop, and then I look at them and I go, you can see me?
That's good.
And New York, New York.
So good to be here.
Isn't it nice?
Yeah, thank you.
It's a nice neighborhood.
It's beautiful weather.
Best city in the world.
Best city in the world.
It is one of them, for sure.
It's really.
It's one of them.
It's not your woke bullshit.
It's the best city in the world.
I was there very briefly to see this play by Susan Lori Parks, who is, you did not know who she was, but she's a Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright.
She has a new play at the public theater about Sally Hemmings and Thomas Jefferson that's fantastic.
I interviewed her about it today.
Ms.
Cray, you'll never go to it, but it's right up the street from you.
I'll go see Dune 2 for the third time on Edibles.
Is that the same thing?
So good.
You would love this.
I'm not even going to buy it.
You went to see Mike Berbiglio.
You could do yourself with a really...
It's hilarious, and he likes us.
Well, this is hilarious in a weird way.
You need to watch it.
It's really good.
It's really good.
Anyway, let's get to the real point.
By the time this episode drops, Scott's book, The Algebra of Wealth, A Simple Formula for Financial Security, will be out in the bookstores.
Tell me about it, Scott.
Let's do a little promotion of your book.
And I do want to know about it.
Tell me about it.
I have it, but go ahead.
Okay, so you know that study that
five people who hang out together become each other.
They become the same body mass, same political party, same income.
Yeah.
That's true.
Where there's greater variance, though, is that even if those five make approximately the same money throughout their life, one will end up very wealthy.
And I'm trying to suss out what are the behaviors and attributes and strategies for the difference between making a good living and being wealthy.
This isn't a book about getting out of debt or
cutting up your credit cards.
It's a book around how do I ensure that regardless of whether I'm the baller I hope I'm going to be or have the big financial hit we're all hoping for, how can I ensure
through some fairly straightforward steps that I have financial security by the time you're my age, Karen?
Because I do think that America becomes more like itself every day, and that is it's a loving, generous place for people who are wealthy, and it's a rapacious place for people who are poor.
And so I spent a lot of time trying to understand the behaviors, assets, and strategies that people end up wealthy.
One question from Alex Fusher.
Why isn't the calculus of wealth?
Just curious.
Oh my God.
I was just sitting with Pri Perar and he just asked that.
I just like the term algebra more.
Alex wanted.
He's taking advanced calculus right now, so he had that question.
Yeah, it's basically an equation.
It probably should be called the math or the geometry.
Geometry is is a cool word.
I don't know.
I've just signed, as you know, I'm doing a three-book deal.
I'm doing the algebra of masculinity next, then the algebra of work, and then the algebra of mating.
So algebra of wealth, Alex.
I don't know.
Get over it.
That's not the point.
Why did you pick algebra?
You just don't even know the difference, do you?
Not really.
I've failed algebra too.
He feels the calculus is a better term.
True story.
True story.
I took calculus three times.
at UCLA, and if I didn't pass it my third time, I was going to have to change my major to psychology and go a six-year.
Wow.
And I had an offer from Morgan Stanley.
stanley this is a true story i had an offer from morgan stanley i went to my calculus teacher i gotten an f on the first midterm and f on the second and i said if you give me a d in calculus i can graduate i have a job at morgan stanley and you can give this seat to someone more deserving and he looked at me and he's like okay and he did wow so you were saved by the bell so to speak wow i was saved by the generosity of this calculus teacher and i tried hard that part of my brain died anyway yeah yeah it's interesting alex is staying at university mission this summer to finish up advanced calculus courses so he can be ahead.
He's already at advanced calculus?
I think so.
I don't really know.
He says things to me and I don't know a lot of them.
So clearly, so clearly, let me guess, he was Megan's egg.
Is that right?
Am I getting this right?
Yeah.
Am I getting this right?
Yeah.
It's kind of his three.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I never took any of them.
I got to algebra, and that was the limit of Kara Swisher's math.
I didn't move forward after algebra.
Geometry, I sort of liked.
Geometry is not right.
The geometry of wealth, that's weird.
Yeah.
So anyways, so so what give one or two that's give one or two tip tip areos for people or what do they have in common what is there a commonality or not okay so look at the most
people think it's going to be but you know the basics right start early
low cost fees if any if any hedge fund or mutual fund has an ad on cnbc it means it's a grift if you added up all alternative investments or people who supposedly know more about the markets than you they've underperformed the s p by the amount of their fees low cost index funds diversify, start early, live below your means,
understand time is going to go faster than you think.
Diversify.
You don't need to be a hero.
Don't find the needle in the haystack, pull the whole haystack.
But what I think is unusual or that I found is that there's a bit of a trope or a mythology that, you know, kind of the Bernie Sanders billionaires shouldn't exist and they had to crawl over people.
What I have found is that generally speaking, other than people who have inherited wealth, really wealthy people tend to be high character because the key to wealth,
real wealth, is to build allies along the way.
So wealth is a full person project, and that is people of high character
who are good to people and have people rooting for them have a much greater likelihood of being wealthy.
And also on the flip side, and I've gone through this, the fastest way to snatch
financial insecurity from the jaws of financial security is divorce.
And not only personal divorce, but professional divorce.
I lost 60% of my net worth at exactly the wrong time.
You have to split your wealth, then you actually lose more than that because all of a sudden you're supporting two households and you're a forced seller, but also professional divorce.
And that is showing me a very talented person or a small or medium-sized business that is doing well and then it does really poorly.
And I'm going to show you professional divorce, and that is people who aren't getting along with each other.
So the key to the difference between making an okay living of what I found and being really wealthy is bringing a sense of forgiveness and a sense of generosity to your personal and your professional relationships.
Yeah, I'm going to take the under on that because I know a lot of people who've made their money who are jackoffs, like quite a few.
I would say they're equal equal.
There's someone who's cover tech.
That's extreme wealth at a young age.
Well, I'm thinking of some Wall Street people.
I also.
It splits.
It always surprises me who's nice and who isn't.
It's really interesting.
The people.
Okay, so you're talking about billionaires.
And when you're a billionaire.
Oh, you're talking about different.
When you're talking about billionaires, you're talking about people who are just fascinated by them and nod their head at anything they say.
Oh, you're you're you're circulating conspiracy theory about homophobia or white replacement, but you're Elon Musk.
That was smart.
You're so amazing.
Can I hang out with you?
Can I suck your cock?
I mean, these guys start thinking that anything they do is Jesus-like.
But the majority of people who aggregate 3 million, 5 million, 10 million, like real money, you generally find a couple of things.
One, they're really good to their business partners.
They're generous people.
People like working for them.
They're good neighbors.
They vote.
They're generally speaking,
people think of them when there's opportunities.
People give them the benefit of the doubt.
So this isn't high, high, high net worth individual.
I think there's a class of people who got extreme wealth at a young age from the tech community and because of our idolatry of technology and because of their youth, they start believing their own press and start believing that they're immune from the scrutiny and the demands of anyone who's been as blessed as them.
They start crediting their character for their success, not recognizing that they're just really fucking lucky.
And I think that can go bad places, especially with a young man who experiences that type of extreme wealth.
But the majority of wealthy people, I think there's a lot of evidence, generally speaking, good spouses, good citizens, good for good parents.
You know,
you want people rooting for you.
Yeah, I guess there's
one I've sort of been fixating on lately is a lot of the really wealthy people who are now giving to Trump, for example.
And I don't mean ultra wealthy necessarily, because there's those, the John Paulson, whatever his name is, but there's a lot of them that are doing it in their self-interest and they may be very nice people, but I find it really interesting.
They're doing it in their self-interest.
And some of them are quite extremely right-wing.
I read up on a lot of them, you know, and they're not all tech people.
It's just, you know, I guess they're ultra-wealthy, but it's a it's a really they don't seem to care about everybody.
They care about their own interests.
And they have points of view, but they become more conservative as they get richer, I've found.
But maybe that's.
Actually, wealthy people are skewing more and more democratic.
There's a level.
What is too rich?
I have just two more questions.
When is, like, I know there's all those studies.
You don't have to be that rich.
You just have to be a certain rich.
Well, we talked about this.
I've changed my mind on this, and that is.
If you look at Daniel Kahneman's work around the
correlation between money and happiness, there's a correlation, unfortunately.
And I'm not not talking about what is, you know, what should be.
I'm talking about what is.
If you're rich, you're going to be happier than if you're middle income.
And if you're middle income, you're going to be happier than if you're poor.
At a certain point, it tops out.
So my question, and I can't believe I'm saying this, why wouldn't we restore really, really progressive tax rates above, say, $10 million in income?
Because that additional money isn't going to make any happier.
And it can make a lot of other people much happier.
So, and here's the reality, Kiera, is that wealthy people have weaponized the tax code.
It's gone from 400 pages to 4,000.
And guys like me who make their money buying and selling assets and businesses, my average tax rate the last 10 years has been 17%.
And that's just wrong.
We basically have the people who get most screwed by our tax code are the workhorses.
And that is people who make a lot of money with current income.
A chiropractor and the wife is maybe a partner in a law firm.
They're ballers.
They make a million dollars.
But in order to make that kind of money, it's all reportable.
It's not investments.
It's current income.
They have to live in a high-tax blue state.
They pay 50 50-plus percent.
But once you make the jump to light speed and start investing in real estate and stocks, your stock rates, your tax rates plummet.
So my question is, why would the richest, why would the most blessed people in the world pay a lower tax rate?
It just doesn't pay any cent.
Because they know better than government, Scott.
Don't they tell you that?
Anyway, they're saving the world.
Scott's book, The Algebra of Wealth, A Simple Formula for Financial Security, is out by the time this episode drops.
And Ms.
Stephanie Ruhl is going to do a thing with you tomorrow night, correct?
I cannot come soon.
Yeah, she's Stephanie, who's always my go-to and is very generous with me, is hosting a book, a book event for me.
I'm going on Morning Joe with Mika and Joe.
Good.
And I'm going on.
Keep your hands to yourself.
There you go.
I am very attracted to Joe.
He's got lovely hair.
What if I just started rubbing my, taking my fingers to his hair in the middle of the episode?
She'd kill you.
That would go viral.
I wonder if I could sell more books.
Is it worth it?
It'd be my last book, but I'd sell a lot more.
You'd be dead on the ground if she had her way.
She would get you.
Make them go for it.
I give you permission.
And then for the fifth time, I'm on Bill Maher this Friday where Kara's set an incredibly high bar.
Yep.
Yep, yep.
With Don Lemo.
Don Lemo.
Oh, fantastic.
How great.
Well, I will keep promoting you the whole time.
I appreciate that.
And hopefully I'll get to some event of yours that you're doing.
Anyway, we've got a lot to get to today, including the TikTok bill one step closer to becoming law, very close, and China's crackdown on popular messaging apps, which is the reaction.
Plus, we'll talk to a friend of Pivot, Dana Mattioli.
She's the Wall Street Journal's Amazon reporter and has a new book out about the company called The Everything War: Amazon's Ruthless Quest to Own the World and Remake Corporate Power.
Speaking of rich people, but first, the price of Tesla is $2,000 cheaper today after a price slash following a rough week at the company.
Keep slashing prices.
That makes people who own them feel great right now who bought them at a higher price.
The automaker is recalling cyber trucks because of a faulty accelerator pedal pad.
I cannot $80,000 to $100,000 for this thing and the pedal pad doesn't work.
The pedal can get trapped and cause accidental acceleration, which is always a problem when you have a giant metal truck.
Almost 4,000 cybertrucks are impacted, which is the entirety of Cybertrucks delivered since its launch.
Tesla's share, that's very small, by the way.
Tesla's shares are down 10% in the last five days of this taping.
You know, most Tesla recalls are software updates, but this one can't.
He needs to pay attention to Tesla, Elon.
Stop tweeting.
Look,
we've said this.
I don't, we have a tendency, people love to really magnify the problems of Tesla.
Probably, in my opinion, unfair, because I don't think there is an automobile company that hasn't had a recall.
But here's the bottom line.
Tesla is not a software company.
It's not an energy company.
It's an automobile company.
And automobile companies trade between five and nine times EBITDA because the bottom line is manufacturing steel around an engine and all the liability.
It's a really shitty business.
It's really difficult.
It's capital intensive.
It's labor intensive.
And Tesla is basically rationalizing and as the whole world wakes up and says this company, assume they make a great car, and I do think they make a great car.
That means it should trade somewhere in line with a great automobile company like Toyota, which means the stock still has another 80% to drop.
And we're starting to see it finally.
Yeah, that Cybertruck's like Olemo.
Speaking of Lemo.
So weird looking.
Do you like it?
I think it looks ridiculous.
Well, it's just like all the problems.
It doesn't get out of mud, all kinds of weird problems with it.
And now a pedal, Like, it's badly made.
I don't know what else to say.
I don't know why.
He did say it was going to be their graveyard.
And I think he's right about that.
It's really, and they only sold 4,000.
That's just like, really?
That's not very much money.
And it's a big headache.
And whatever.
Anyway, go back and fix your cars and make a new one that everyone wants to buy rather than this piece of shit.
You're capable of it.
You're capable of it.
You obviously melt cars people like.
So go build another one.
Sony is considering teaming up with Apollo in its offer to buy Paramount Global.
The deal would reportedly be an all-cash offer and would take the company private.
We discussed, like, it looks like
Rowan and David Ellison, who has the other one at Skydance,
are not dancing.
No official offers have been made yet because Paramount is a 30-day exclusive negotiating window with Skydance, a deal Paramount reportedly prefers.
By that, I mean Sherry Redstone.
As a reminder, Apollo first offered $11 billion for just Paramount's film and TV studio, then up the offer to $26 billion for the whole company.
Paramount shares are finally up in the last five days at the time of the taping, so it looks like there might be a little thing happening here.
Will Sony joining a deal make it harder to pass on?
This seems like the deal to take, right?
I mean, not this other one, which is so needlessly complex and also favors Sherry Redstone in a way that will invite litigation.
I think Apollo is definitely, I think they're painting Sherry into a corner.
I think that basically Skydance came up with sort of this unnatural
gymnastics deal to get Sherry, who's sitting in a corner and kind of controls the voting shares, to figure out a way to give her more money than the rest of the shareholders.
The rest of the board has correctly said, this is bullshit.
And now the boards have...
Not everybody, because Chuck Phillips is a former Oracle executive.
He's apparently for the...
But my sense is
when boards lawyer up and start going on background,
that means it has gotten really ugly at the board level.
Boards generally don't do that.
But Sony coming in, I think they're basically putting her in a corner and saying, this is a better deal for all shareholders.
We've got a strategic partner.
Yeah, we can come up with the money.
I think that was.
Yeah, we're Apollo.
You know, it's like.
Well, there was that worry, though, whether they can come up with the money.
There was indeed.
It's like that latest James Bond film where that great actor, I forget his name, is in
the CIA and he offers like 10 million bucks for James Bond to be in the next round of poker.
And he's like, can you afford that?
And he's like, we're America.
Does it look like we need money?
I mean, Apollo,
if they want to do this,
when Byron Allen, who's a very successful entrepreneur, said, I'm willing to pay $14 billion, the whole world yawned and didn't take it seriously.
But when Apollo says that they will pay $26 billion,
they will find the money.
I mean,
I think they're the largest private equity firm in the world, and these guys have a great reputation.
I think Skydance
understandably said,
It's about Sherry.
I think they miscalculated here.
I now believe that Apollo walks away with this.
We'll see.
Yeah.
Also, Netflix memberships beat expectations and rose 16% in Q1, but the streamer will no longer provide quarterly membership numbers or average revenue per user starting next year.
The company has said focus on revenue and operating margins.
They're shifting.
Netflix exceeded expectations in Q1 revenue as well, posting $9.4 billion from 8.2.
I think it's because of people, they got rid of all the free rides.
That also helped, apparently, all the free riders.
Will we still get a full picture without subscriber numbers or is something shifting?
Oh, look, this company is a phenomenon.
It's arguably,
I mean, if you look at the risks they take pivoting from, I mean,
they basically decided that the best pipe to distribute content was the USPS.
They started mailing out DVDs.
I mean, and then they pivoted to streaming once broadband started really getting traction.
And then they pivoted to original content.
And then they adopted the Amazon strategy and said, we're just going to outspend everybody.
And if we, I mean, what you said was accurate, and that is the problem in streaming.
And I was with the guy who runs Fubo last night, super smart guy.
He said, the problem with streaming is that people cancel.
People download the entire season of TED and then they cancel.
The churn is unbelievable in these things, except for one player, and that is Netflix, because they have so much content that you keep deciding not to cancel because, oh, wait, I want to see this I want to see this it's it's almost every war can be determined by who brings the most brute force whoever has the most tanks and the most shells and quite frankly Netflix just has more tanks and shells than anybody it's like there's always a reason not to cancel Netflix it's well run its operating margins they went up from 21% to 28% they've hit they've made the jump to light speed and that is more and more of their subscriber revenue is falling to the bottom line they're I mean, these guys are so fucking brilliant.
They basically have globalized media.
They said, look at the ROI on our productions.
And we're finding that the ROI is not only a function of how many people download it, but the cost to produce it.
Who else had the vision to say we're going to start producing content in South Korea and Spain?
I mean, these guys are so good.
Anyways, Netflix.
Netflix.
They're really good.
So it doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter.
What doesn't matter?
That they put these numbers out, that they do it.
They're just shifting the numbers.
Why would they do this?
because it'll keep their stock higher these guys all do this they decide when to break out numbers that make them look good and when to keep them quiet if if they don't want their competitors to know i mean at some point at some point alphabet will start breaking out probably youtube but they all do the same thing it's all one question
pretty yeah just as academics wake up in the morning and ask themselves every day how do i reduce my accountability while increasing my compensation the ceo of every company wakes up and says how do i get my stock price higher what information do I put out?
What information do I not put out?
Because they don't want people to look at the subscriptions.
At some point, they hit a ceiling, but they did get a lot from apparently the free riders that are, you know, three and four people on it.
The password sharing.
It was a marketing.
They knew exactly what they're doing.
The password stealing was a marketing strategy for them.
Everybody was watching Netflix.
Some
paying, some not.
And then they said, now that you're all watching it, we want you all to pay.
And they made it much harder.
It's like cable thieves.
You know that.
I used to do that in my mom's condo.
I used to pay the cable guy.
My family used to catch you people.
They were always the mayor, and the sheriff was always the stealer.
You'd have to climb up into a very dangerous
telephone pole to do that.
So it was always fascinating to watch.
The video box was very apparent.
You go in, and they have these inhibitors, and you just unscrew them, and you pay the guy with the key from the cable company, 10 bucks, a 15-year-old Scott Galloway, such that I could watch Cinemax late at night.
Hello, ladies.
You're a thief.
You're just a thief.
That's all it is.
I'm a thief of hearts.
Yeah, right.
Whatever.
You stole cable.
Okay, let's get to our first big story.
The bill to ban or divest TikTok is now in the hands of the Senate following the passage in the House this weekend.
The legislation, which passed by a 360 to 58 vote, was bundled into an aid package for Ukraine, Israel, and Taiwan by Speaker Mike Johnson.
Very clever, Mike Johnson.
If the bill, they already passed one, but it was stuck in the Senate.
But this is a slightly different bill.
If the bill makes it through the Senate, President Biden has said he he will sign into law.
TikTok parent company ByteDance then has 270 days to sell the app closer to a year or face a ban.
Let's talk about how it went down because they passed one that was getting trouble in the Senate.
Maria Cantwell wasn't against it.
Now she's for it.
ByteDance indicated a good amount of legal challenge.
That's where it's going next.
Daring the ban would trample free speech rights.
It'll definitely go in the courts.
It's lost.
It's won before in courts.
In November, a federal judge blocked a Montana law to ban TikTok across the state.
Specifically, Donald Trump attempt to ban TikTok in 2020 was also rejected by a federal judge.
It'll definitely go to the Supreme Court.
And then they'll have to at least look for a buyer in case they law.
But if this does become law, future bans of foreign companies and products, we've done that before.
Thoughts.
Very clever way to get it through.
Then they have to deal with the law itself.
I mean, there's so many ways you can tell you're getting older, right?
The idea of a cruise does not sound horrific to me anymore.
I'm like, oh, okay.
You know, I actually listened the other day.
Someone was talking about catheters, and I'm I'm like, say more?
Because I know it's coming.
And the other, I'm not exaggerating, Kara.
On Saturday, I was obsessed with C-SPAN.
I mean, I might as well be on 120 fucking years old.
This
Saturday.
I'm just thinking of you and a catheter, but go ahead.
My dad says the guy who invented the catheter should literally get the Nobel Prize.
I didn't see that.
I'm sorry I got thrown out.
Men have an easier time.
Anyway, go ahead.
Yeah, there we go.
There we go.
So,
God, just talking about catheters makes me want to pee.
Yeah, okay.
Anyways, I'm Kara.
I just want to be clear.
My new favorite person or near favorite person is Speaker Johnson.
Oh, good heavens.
He took so fucking long, but go ahead.
Oh, well, okay.
He's done more than anyone else.
Okay.
Okay.
TikTok.
He delayed it.
And then
this is fantastic.
legislation.
It'll end up being divested.
Everyone's going to get their money.
We're going to ensure that our young kid, that we don't raise a generation of civic, military, and nonprofit, and business leaders in America that hate America.
It creates more trade symmetry.
It is ridiculous that
this is no different than if in the 60s when we were in a Cold War with Russia, we let the Kremlin own NBC, ABC, and CBS.
I am thrilled at this.
And oh, wait, it got wrapped up in pushing back on a murderous autocrat.
Oh, wait, and it got wrapped up in a bill to support our supreme ally in the Middle East.
I just like Saturday literally.
this literally this you got to give it to Speaker Johnson.
You got to give it to and by the way, this thing is over overwhelmingly passed.
Well, all this, you know, we talk about how by how partisan the Congress has become.
And this, you know, Marjorie Taylor Greene saying we shouldn't do any of it until we talk about the border bill that Trump told her about.
Marjorie, did you see that cover of the New York Post?
I mean, it just, this is.
This was,
I called, I called, this is how lemma, I'm called my friends on Saturday.
I'm like, the the bill's going to pass.
And they're like, dude, what are you talking about?
And I'm like,
it is literally, it's like if I showed up and it was, you said to me, you know, Emily Rodokowski and
whom you will never meet.
And does she ask about me, by the way?
Not yet.
And who are the other two?
Oh, Senator Cantwell and Patty Stonecipher all want to hang out with the dog.
I mean, this was three.
I hate
I hate my life less and less every day.
And Saturday, I hated my life less than I have in a, go, America.
Oh, let's push back on an autocrat.
Oh, let's push back on a murderous terrorist group.
It's going to go to courts and you know it's going to get blocked, right?
No, it's not.
100% no.
Okay.
All right.
They're going at this from trade symmetry, executive action, divestment, not free speech.
Go on, talk about your free speech bullshit.
Fine.
Rupert Murdoch had to become a citizen.
You're not allowed to own more than 20% of a broadcast station in the U.S., but we're going to let TikTok own the frame through which Young.
It is a broadcast network.
You and I agree on that.
Yeah.
I think it's going to literally
be tough.
Okay.
All right.
Well, all right then.
Okay.
So excuse me.
What do you think going on here?
I like that you're all excited watching C-SPAN.
It's kind of weird with a catheter.
But yes, I think it was a very clever way to do it.
I thought, you know, they had a log jam in the Senate and it was going to sit there.
There are issues around Rand Paul might block it, et cetera, and the whole thing.
But they're going to shove it past him, I think.
But it may be delayed because there's supposed to vote on it like in the next two days.
But
Rand Paul or someone else might be in the way.
Nonetheless, he may try to block it.
J.D.
Vance, who hangs out with Marjorie in the Russian section of the department store, tried to stop it, but couldn't.
Obviously, Trump's been silent, but he's in court.
He's busy in court.
He doesn't have his phone all day.
Did you see?
What?
Did you see the photos or the drawings?
Sleeping?
No, Trump.
Yeah, sleeping?
Which one?
Oh, my God.
He looks like he literally, this is more bad taste.
He looks like a suicide bomber that's having second thoughts.
He's like...
You know about the farting.
What series of decisions led me to this moment?
No, but it's not.
And were those the right decisions?
He's a prisoner.
He's a political prisoner.
Consequences rarely present themselves lubed.
They usually show up pretty rough.
And when I see this guy, it's like, I just get the sense he is smart enough to know, okay, this shit is getting real and it is not good for me.
And there's a piece in the Washington Post about how he's getting more unhinged on true social, which is going down more in price, being down prices.
You know, we'll see.
Did you, you know, you know, he's, of course, just a sidebar.
You understand the farting thing when he sleeps?
That was all over the freaking.
I heard that, but I don't understand it.
He's farting when he's sleeping, as many people do.
But the poor lawyers in court have sort of a Giuliani situation.
That's
brutal.
I know.
It's not good.
He cannot now say Sleepy Joe ever.
He literally can't use Sleepy Joe anymore.
That was a good one, too.
He can't do it.
Joe seems up and up and up as a pup now compared to Sleepy Don Smart Leon.
This is a big week for President Biden.
He's actually, he's done really well.
Don Fartleon, whatever.
The farting is just like old guy farting and sleeping in the court.
It's bad.
Anyway, allegedly farting, but I'm sure it's true because a lot of people tell me they are sitting nearby.
Um, who are there?
Anyway, let's go on a quick drink because when we come back, how China might retaliate for the TikTok ban, which is the second part of this question.
And we'll speak with friend of Pivot, Dana Mattioli, about what she calls Amazon's ruthless quest.
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Scott, we're back.
The TikTok ban might be the latest battle in the tech war between China and the United States, but China is also making some moves of its own.
Not unexpected.
The Chinese government ordered Apple to remove several popular messaging apps, including WhatsApp threads and Telegram from the app store in China late last week.
Apple said it was told by Chinese officials to remove the apps due to national security concerns.
Of course, we aren't there at all, so they're taking all of them out.
A lot of these apps are already blocked in China, but taking them off the app store prevents them from being downloaded outside the Chinese firewall.
They're obviously retaliating.
It's kind of a dopey way.
Apple is sort of getting in the middle of this whole thing because they're going to have to take off.
If TikTok doesn't sell, they're going to have to take it off.
Apple's in a bad situation, unfortunately, for it.
Its relation with China also is complicated.
It's been trying to manufacture things in Vietnam and India and elsewhere, but it's still the main manufacturing hub for the iPhone.
And they generated $68 billion in sales there in 2023.
That's a lot.
He just visited Tim Cook, the CEO, visited China to shore up relationships.
They're trying to get out at the same time.
They're stuck there.
You know, Tesla, of course, has a lot of exposure there, a couple of U.S.
companies, not that many because China doesn't have reciprocity with most of our tech companies, but still a big issue.
Last week, I had a really interesting conversation, by the way, with Dmitry Alperovich and Chris Krabs about U.S.-China relations going into this next election cycle and the threat China may pose.
And they did talk about this retaliation.
It'll run as an episode of Om with Carris Wisher this Thursday, but
they thought this is exactly what they do, this kind of stuff.
And we're really in a, in a, you know, they talked a lot about Taiwan and everything else, but this is something that
they think they'll refuse to let happen.
So thoughts?
They obviously are trying to pull out all their weaponry.
This was a shot across the bow.
This was an attempt to say the most valuable company in the world and a key component of your stock market is heavily reliant, both on the demand and the supply side, on China.
And if you're going to fuck with the ultimate propaganda tool that we have managed to foment and support in the U.S., we are going to pretend it's about trade symmetry and we're going to start fucking with Apple.
And I do not agree with your colleagues.
Look, Apple needs China, but China needs Apple.
China is actually fairly weak right now economically.
And the thing about China is when young people or any nation, when people are economically doing poorly, they try to vote in the other party.
And the way you vote in the other party in China is you hang the leadership.
So they have to, in many ways, they have to be very responsive to economic growth.
And it would absolutely hurt.
They could turn Apple off.
Apple produces
so much of their,
you know, Apple right now, anything with the word China in it right now, does not get a green light.
They are trying to diversify like crazy.
They're investing in India.
But here's the thing.
I actually think China needs Apple more than Apple needs China, strange as that sounds.
So they employ, do you realize that Apple employs more people in China than they do in the U.S.?
Those are good jobs.
They're high-paying jobs.
And not only that, all of those components and assembly that flow through the Chinese supply chain, you're probably talking about several million jobs.
And young people love their iPhones.
So I think this is a game of chicken, and I think China's going to blink.
And
not only that,
Chinese investors are going to make so much money when this thing is divested and the cloud of political insecurity is lifted.
And they just have very few legs to stand on.
Let me again, just for fun, list all of the American media companies in China.
Okay, I'm done.
I mean,
we're going to win this one, Kara.
It's going to be divested.
They'll hum and the haw.
And what people don't appreciate.
And then they'll invade Taiwan.
Actually, I don't think they're going to.
See above, we're we're funding Ukraine.
Anyway, which I think is an incredible deterrent.
Also, if you look at military history,
yeah, they thought they had us on that one.
I'll tell you that.
That's for sure.
But
you have the following.
When people look at the, they chose the wrong word, saying ban.
It's forced investment.
And what people don't appreciate is that there's a lot of light between a ban, divestment, and coming to some sort of accommodation with the White House.
They will come back and they'll say, all right, there's so much money here.
Can we figure this out?
White House, can we do some now that we actually believe you are going to ban us?
We didn't believe it before with
Joey Bagayahoo flatulation was trying to carve it up and give it to his political friends.
We knew that wasn't going to work.
We didn't think your Congress could get their act together.
We didn't think that's going to work.
But now that it looks like it's going to happen, hey, Joe, is there any way we can come to some sort of accommodation where you're happy and we're happy?
There's a lot of things they can do to figure this out.
Okay.
All right.
Well, this is a very positive way.
I think
I'd love you to, if you ever get a chance, listen to their thing.
I think they are very much interested in Taiwan right now and that there's a lot of things they can do.
I think we are going to, we are going to,
the danger of being in a shooting war with them is high, especially if Trump wins.
No reason not to push back on them, but some of the people he's picking are really like, let's start fighting with China.
Let's shift all our focus,
which these guys actually thought, like, as much as important as both Dmitri and Chris thought Ukraine and Israel was, that our real resour the ability to have even just weaponry and get that to China, to Taiwan, et cetera, is going to be, we have a limited amount of weaponry and manufacturing capacity and everything else.
I don't know.
I think they we are they uh um I think they are our adversary over the next 30 years, like in a really significant and frightening way in many ways.
Um but we'll see.
I know, especially since Xi Jinping is holding on to power and aging.
He's starting to get moved into crazy Mao zone kind of thing.
But we'll see.
I think this is the natural move they would have.
We'll see once it passes what they say.
There's going to be a lot of
chest thumping for sure.
I'm not sure they can do anything about it.
And maybe they'll just take the money, although I think that's not really the interest because actually a lot of the company is owned by U.S.
citizens, which is interesting.
Most general antipartisans.
Yeah, a bunch.
is a quick is in there.
There's a lot going on there.
Yeah, there's a lot going on there.
I mean, these guys should just take their money and figure it out.
The issue is who's going to get the algorithm.
I think all the parts of it will be
chewed over for a while.
I don't, no one's getting the algorithm.
What's it worth?
Are you overpaying for it?
It's a great brand.
Will it be the same product?
And my guess is already TikTok's numbers are sort of flattening a little bit compared.
You know, it's not in that explosive growth period that it was in.
And so they have, it's a real problem for them because these people tend to move on from things very easily, as you know.
So we'll see.
We'll see.
But just a point on Taiwan, I think the first battle, the most important battle around who, if China succeeds in invading Taiwan,
is happening and we're winning, and that is continuing to fund Ukraine.
There's no way she and the analysts of China don't look at Ukraine and go, That could be us only worse.
Taiwan is incredibly sophisticated and wealthy.
You don't think they've been planning for an invasion?
Also, their good friend, the United States, has a cadre of nuclear submarines off, you know, all around the strait there.
It's certainly a conflict we don't want to be happening.
We'd like to avoid it.
100%.
That's why Biden just met with the head of the Philippines and Japan, who've been saying some pretty tough things about China unusually.
So we have to really stress our commitment to that area.
And the best way to defer an invasion of Taiwan is to continue to fund Ukraine.
Yeah.
anyway, it does put everybody at a real, it's real geopolitics.
Anyway, let's bring in our friend of Pivot.
Dana Mattioli is the Wall Street Journal's Amazon reporter.
I used to be the Wall Street Journal's Amazon reporter, but also all of the rest of them.
Now they have different ones for each company.
She's written a new book about the company called The Everything War: Amazon's Ruthless Quest to Own the World and Remake Corporate Power.
Dana, welcome.
Thanks for having me.
So you've been on the Amazon beat for a while now,
and I really was.
I covered Google, Amazon, Netscape.
They just had one of me at the time because they were small companies.
Talk about what you were hoping to find by digging into the larger story of the company.
Obviously, Brad Stone's written two books on them.
Amazon did not give you any access, special assets for the book, but you talked to more than 600 people, including current and former employees.
Talk to me a little bit about it because my impression from Amazon from the start was that they, I think I I used it in my book, they're feral.
He was feral.
Jeff Bezos was aggressive and feral from the get-go,
especially compared to the soft, squishy people of Silicon Valley in comparison.
Super aggressive, hedge fund guy or investment guy, math guy, adult.
So talk a little bit about that, what you were trying to get to.
So I covered mergers and acquisitions for six years at the Wall Street Journal, where my whole job was to break which company was buying another company.
And when I started, the retailers were obviously nervous about Amazon.
But over the course of those six years, everyone became nervous.
It went to the consumer CEOs and then the logistics people and then healthcare.
It just seemed like their tentacles were spreading everywhere.
And they all became so nervous.
And I wanted to figure out why.
And, you know, it's one of the most powerful companies in the world, but also the most secretive.
And it was this black box that I really wanted to get inside and understand how it always seemed to win, how it was wreaking this havoc across industries.
And that's what this book does.
It gets inside the company and lays forth their competitive or anti-competitive business practices.
So talk a little about that.
Let's start with Bezos, because it does come from Bezos.
He's having now the greatest midlife crisis of all time.
Seems to be enjoying himself and putting the same aggression into being whatever he's doing right now.
But we're good.
We're down with it.
But talk about him as that, because I've always thought the DNA of companies is the DNA of founders.
And the company reflects him quite significantly.
But companies change too.
Microsoft, I'm thinking, under Sachinadella versus Bomber and Gates, who were also aggressive and feral.
Talk a little bit about him and where they are now.
Yeah, I do think that the culture really does stem from him.
There's a scene in the book early on.
It's 1994-ish.
Companies just launching.
And, you know, the early employees were kind of missionaries.
They wanted to democratize reading.
They weren't there to make a lot of money.
And he gets frustrated with them.
He says, you know, you guys just lack a killer instinct.
And that that was a little bit surprising to these people.
And what you see is after the IPO, they start making money, at least in the stock market, not on paper, they start getting all these MBAs to come in.
And the company is built more in Jeff's image.
And that's what we see today, even though he's not the CEO anymore.
The culture is largely built around Jeff.
It's, you know, after 18 years of covering companies in some form of the journal, including investment banks, it's one of the most aggressive cultures I've ever come across.
It's fear-based.
And I think when you get into some of the shocking behaviors in my book, it's largely driven by that culture.
Give me an example.
Yeah.
So, I mean, there's examples of Amazon employees doing whatever it takes to keep their jobs and stay ahead and not get cut by the bottom 6% at the end of the year.
And they do things like spy on their third-party sellers to reverse engineer their best-selling hits.
There's a scene in the book that's resonated with a lot of people from the excerpt where they hire this woman from Trader Joe's.
She's not really told what she's going to do when she comes into the company.
And her first week there, she walks into this conference room in Seattle that has craft paper over the windows and the doors.
And it's all blacked out for a reason.
She walks inside and it's filled with Trader Joe's products.
And she starts piecing together, oh, they want me to figure out.
what to source from, you know, to compete with Trader Joe's.
And from there, her manager just pressures her for all of her internal documents from Trader Joe's to copy all of their best-selling products.
So behaviors like that, where this pressure cooker environment causes people to do things that are either unethical or anti-competitive.
But it also causes, you know, mental health issues.
There's another scene in the book where an employee who is put on a performance improvement plan, which people fear there,
you know, writes a suicide letter at his desk, sends it to the whole company, including Jeff Bezos, and walks to the roof, jumps off, right?
He luckily survives, but I don't see
that sort of behavior elsewhere when I've covered corporate America.
Okay, I feel like Scott's going to jump in and say that's the price of doing business in some companies, but go ahead, Scott.
I don't know what you're going to say.
Nice to meet you, Dana.
And look,
anti-competitive behavior, you know, I think Amazon is a monopoly and should be broken up.
I think we probably,
the amount they charge third-party retailers has gone from like 20% to 50%.
They're exploiting their monopoly power.
In terms of going to work and having it be hard, the people who go to work at Amazon
have a lot of options.
And they choose to trade off that stress in that environment for what is an opportunity to get economic security.
Doesn't Amazon, everything you're doing, you're talking about, isn't the problem not that they're doing it?
Because I would argue that I can point to any company that does something similar.
It's just that they're so good at it.
And aren't these people grown-ups?
And if it's really that tough on them, they can get a job somewhere else.
Isn't this capitalism?
To your point, like these are some of the smartest people in the workforce.
So yes.
And they do churn through the company pretty quickly because, you know, some of them want to have Amazon in their resume because it opens other doors.
But I would pick a little bit around other companies doing this.
Like I just had an article last week about Amazon setting up a secret shell company
and this covert operation to get onto their competitors' platforms and take information from them.
And well beyond what normal companies do for like benchmarking per se, right?
They're misrepresenting themselves to
FedEx.
It could be depending on what they found and how they used it.
It would depend exactly how they use it.
If it's illegal, then someone should go after them.
But if it's not illegal, then then quite frankly, aren't they doing their job for their shareholders?
I think the answer is in the nuance as to what they found and what they might have used.
But it's a willingness to be aggressive.
This is what the point being, is that they're more aggressive than other people.
And then where's the line, correct?
That's right.
And I think, you know, with the FTC lawsuit in September, they're saying, like, this is an illegal monopoly.
To Scott's point, they've ratcheted up these fees on sellers from, I think it was 17% a decade ago to 45% today.
And, you know, I I have examples in the story of these sellers who one of them, he makes $10 million a year in Amazon and revenues.
Okay.
At the end of the year, after all the fees he pays and overhead, that goes down to $30,000 in profits.
So what has he had to do?
He's had to raise his prices for customers in order to start offsetting that.
So talk about these antitrust charges.
They were brought by the FTC last September, as you know.
What do you think about the FTC's case here?
And I'd love you to also identify what the weaknesses are if you or Amazon pushing back.
Yeah.
So the FTC sued Amazon in September, and they made their case around
higher prices for consumers.
They said because Amazon is a monopoly on e-commerce and 40% of all retail e-commerce in the U.S.
happens there.
Sellers have to be there.
And Amazon knows that.
And they've ratcheted up the fees.
And that's translated into higher prices for consumers.
But what they say that's really interesting is that because Amazon had this contractual obligation that you have to have the lowest price on Amazon, that Amazon's power in e-commerce has caused higher prices throughout all of e-commerce, including like Walmart and Target and other e-commerce places.
Now, what's interesting is, you know, the FTC under Lena Kahn
has taken a different direction.
She has railed against the consumer welfare standard of antitrust.
And
they've lost some challenges to acquisitions like, you know, Microsoft and Activision or Meta within Unlimited.
What's interesting here is it is kind kind of a traditional consumer welfare sort of
antitrust case.
So it might have a better footing in that regard.
But from Amazon's perspective, they will say we do things for the customer.
That will be their argument here, that everything they do is to benefit the customer, that there's other places for people to shop, there's other places for people to sell.
Yeah.
And what is the chances here from your perspective?
It's really not slated to begin until October 2026.
There's a long time between then and now.
That's right.
And I would say there's some momentum behind what Lena Kahn and John Cantor at the DOJ are doing.
There's even some Republicans, like they call themselves the conservatives, who are behind this mission.
People like Matt Gates,
weirdly,
that believe in this.
But I will say it takes a longer time for these ideas to be accepted by the courts where they're ultimately decided.
And it hasn't been like a resounding success when you look at the track record.
Well, is there a role in Congress for that?
You know, Congress took a shot at this.
There was a bipartisan investigation just a few years back where they came out with this really expansive report report calling all four of the companies of the big tech companies you know monopolies
exactly who now are bomb gone right exactly um so tbd if they would bring something like that back but you know the legislation really got stalled and big tech you really saw their lobbying power on display during that whole that whole scenario yeah and but they got tick tock anyway scott next question the thing i don't understand i'm curious to get your viewpoint i'm a shareholder in amazon and i think a breakup would be good for shareholders i think AWS on its own would trade at a higher multiple and the shareholders would win.
Is this their desire not to not to break up the company, do you think it's an ego thing?
Do you think that they get a ton of synergy from these things?
What do you think gets in the way of them not prophylactically or proactively spin a couple of these units and avoid antitrust scrutiny?
And let me add, I've interviewed Andy Jassy and asked this very question, and it seems like I'm asking him, you know, you know, please get naked on the stage here.
He just, it's an anathema to him to think about something like this.
And it's a dead no for sure.
And now he's CEO.
This was before he was CEO.
I think maybe he just became CEO.
First of all, Andy has been telling his deputies that the current company could be a $10 trillion company in the next decade.
So he sees a lot of room to grow.
Obviously, that'd be the biggest in the world.
But second, I think even though most companies have failed at this conglomerate model, then activist investors have made them break it up saying, this does not work.
There's a conglomerate discount.
For the most part, it works for Amazon.
In some ways, it's its secret sauce.
If you look at all the competitors that have to work with one tentacle of the Amazon octopus, a lot of them actually work with several and it gives them a lot of leverage in negotiations.
If you want this, then you must do that, right?
And that's on display in some of the anecdotes like with HBO, Time Warner, and in the book and others, where they're sort of tying their businesses together.
Right, right.
It does.
It does.
They're adjacent.
They're certainly adjacent, whether it's, you know, music or Hollywood or healthcare or
delivery, all kinds of things.
They do tend to belong together.
And many years ago, Jeff talked about moats.
He was building moat after moat after moat.
That was what he said
at the time.
And I really did get it what he was doing.
It was price, convenience, et cetera, et cetera.
Talk a little bit about the difference between Jeff and Andy Jassy, who has been there.
I met him when he was a very young man out of college.
He was like an assistant as I worked, just a very low-level person there.
And a lot of the people there are, have been there a long time.
Fun fact, I turned down a job there very early on.
Talk about the difference between Andy and Jeff.
And is Jeff involved again?
And then as a follow-up, Andy's talked a lot about, you know, the stock's gone up after his shareholder letter, especially because he talked about AI and stuff like that.
So I would love to hear about that.
Andy and Jeff were very different personality-wise.
It's funny.
There's some scenes in the book where you see like a Machiavellian, sometimes like almost a cruel streak to Jeff.
Like, you know, the first week of the new CEO of Toys R Us's tenure, he calls him up unannounced and just says, hey, how's it feel to work with poor performing people?
Because
sort of taken aback.
I can tell you, Jeff's a jerk.
He was always a jerk, but go ahead.
And he wasn't good at, you know, making relationships on the hill or glad handing.
He had like a disinterest in that.
In some ways, he backfired in some ways.
He was like more scorched earth, which is this pugnaciousness, which actually filters down with the company and government relations and PR.
Jassy's different.
He, He, to me, seems much more diplomatic, wants to mend bridges, is involved in their, you know, in their lobbying in some ways in DC on these antitrust issues.
So I think it's much different leadership and tone coming from him than it was under Jeff.
And I don't get the sense that Jeff is back day to day.
He's spending more of his time or most of his time from what I hear on Space Endeavors and Blue Origin.
I think he's spending most of his time on something else.
And I mean the term on.
By the way, does Andy Jassy realize that he's going to die and there's nothing he can do about it?
Is he different that way?
Two questions, Lauren and Sanchez.
Sorry, your turn.
No, no, no.
But you don't feel like Jeff's going to cut.
He doesn't have to.
Andy's sort of gotten a hold of it.
And the way it reminds me a great deal of Satcha Nadella and Gates and Walmart.
I'm putting them in one big, nasty
brew as managers compared to he's a very similar profile to
Satcha Nadella in that regard meaning do you think I I think he'd come back no I don't think he'd come back I think Satcha Nadella and and Andy are more similar than in the same way
I think that's right dates slash bomber is similar to Jeff you know kind of thing I think that's right people sort of view Jeff as the visionary and like the big personality and and people describe Andy as more of the operator and has long been and he made one of the he he ran the most important the thing that saved amazon's ass was aws of course for a long time or kept it going in that regard so um I have one final question.
Where do they get to be a $10 trillion company?
What stops them?
It's a good question.
I mean, if you think about how bullish Andy is on AI, you know, they're just starting to get into healthcare, which is one of the biggest sources of GDP in the country.
If they're successful there, that opens a lot of doors.
They're getting into satellites with Kuiper.
So, you know, first of all, they don't seem to be deterred by the antitrust lawsuit.
They're still forging ahead.
That's still the mandate is against 10 trillion.
Yeah.
And they're seeing a lot of white space, it seems.
Because you cover MA, ⁇ A, I'm just really interested to know, well, two questions, and one's unrelated to Amazon, but do you think if they had to do it again, they would have made the type of investment they needed to make and have the distraction of Amazon Prime Video?
And two, I would just love to get your no mercy, no mouse take on the Paramount situation and who you think will be the ultimate victor there, giving your beat.
On Prime Video, it's funny.
Andy just recently said that it could be a standalone company.
And, you know, people there talk about it feeding the flywheel.
Like that gets people trapped into the moat that Kara's talking about of Amazon Prime.
So even if you're not shopping as much as you used to, you might keep the membership for the benefits of the video.
On Paramount, actually, I'm not an M ⁇ A reporter anymore.
I just focus on Amazon.
So those would be more for my colleagues.
But you can't get out of it.
Oh, don't be measured.
It doesn't stop us.
It doesn't stop us from talking about things we have no demands for doing.
She's an extraordinarily aggressive M ⁇ A reporter.
So go ahead.
I honestly haven't been paying that much attention.
If I'm being totally honest with you, let's talk about Lawrence Sanchez.
I'm sorry.
yeah.
Yeah.
Do you have any thoughts on Lauren Sanchez?
Well, there's a scene in the book, which weirdly has gotten a lot of traction where, you know, there's a lot of animosity between the Trump White House and Bezos and Amazon, but also the Biden White House, too.
He's been like persona non gradient except for this like state dinner.
Sure.
But, you know, he had this big coming out party in 2020 after the alfalfa ball.
And, you know,
Trump did not go, but all of his, like his, his daughter went.
You know, Jared went and Kellyanne Conway goes.
And Kellyanne is approached by Lauren and she says, you know, you've done such a good job like deflecting all of this hate in the media.
It's like, you know, it's a little bit after the affair and everything else.
How have you done it?
And they like sort of cozy up.
And, you know, Kellyanne says, you know, you live in the neighborhood now.
Let's go on a jog together.
And you could just see that even though Trump is really just royally pissed about Bezos and his wealth and the Washington Post, the people in his cabinet were cozying up.
Yeah.
Of course.
They love money.
What are you talking about?
They would throw their mothers in the street if they needed to.
She's coming out with a children's book, Lauren.
I don't know if you know that.
People who know, I gotta say, people who know her say that she's lovely and very smart.
She's generous and nice.
And, you know, she's
very smart.
She's probably one of the smartest people.
I'd do them for that money.
I mean, Jeff Coleman.
Anyway, she may have a bigger role, I think, in the future as you move forward.
She has a very, has a lot of points of view of a lot of things.
But we'll see.
We'll see where it goes.
That's your next book, Dana.
And again, the book is The Everything War, Amazon's Ruthless Quest to Own the World and Remake Corporate Power.
You should read it.
It's a really good book.
Thank you so much for having me.
Thanks, Dana.
All right, one more quick break.
We'll be back for wins and fails.
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Okay, Scott, let's hear some wins and fails.
You go first.
Well, just first off, regarding about Jet Bezos, I actually
think there's a lot of evidence that he's going to come back.
I think pretty much every night he comes on her back.
I don't know.
Is that wrong?
Oh my God.
Oh my God.
I walked into that.
There was a pause.
You didn't even know what I was saying.
I was going to disagree.
Oh my.
Is that wrong?
God.
Will that make the cut?
That was a good one.
This one stays in.
Okay.
That penis joke.
Just for the readers, at some point, maybe you know.
Readers.
They're listeners.
They're listeners.
Oh, that's right.
Where am I?
Daddy?
Where's my catheter?
Okay.
Anyways,
there are two or three comments in every episode that get edited out.
So just tweet
Kara if you want to hear the B-sides of everything that'll get this show canceled.
Okay.
I'm sorry.
Anyways, Winston.
That was a good one.
That one stays in.
Well, Wynne is: we're both going to be watching Shogun
tonight, right?
You totally love that show.
Good for you.
I love that show.
It's the final show.
I think it's tonight tomorrow night.
No, it's really well done.
Yeah, but you'll be doing your book thing, but I'll be paying attention to Shogun.
You'll be watching Shogun?
Yeah, yeah.
All right, you go ahead, Winslow.
I'm Let me be talking about financial security.
Yeah.
Okay.
It's simple.
My win is
Speaker Johnson, the United States Senate, the United States Congress, President Biden, bipartisan effort that in one fell swoop
has
decided that we should not have the frame through which our youth view the world be influenced by an adversary, that's decided that a murderous autocrat that's trying to invade Europe should be pushed back, that we absolutely have the will, we absolutely have the resources, which will also help defend Taiwan and send a clear message to every autocrat that when the West binds together, our resources, our technology, our human capital are unparalleled and insurmountable force, and also that our ally, a country that has bodily autonomy, civil rights, jury trials, academic research, when it's attacked, that we come to their aid, that we provide unconditional support, although it's somewhat conditional, but we provide steadfast support to try and push back a cult of terror and chaos.
I just think this is such a wonderful moment for America.
I'm really, really happy about it.
He looks like he got a briefing or two, like a real security briefing from intelligence.
Apparently, Burns was quite influential on him.
He just suddenly realized his responsibility and realized maybe the Russians don't like us
or maybe for fucking with us.
Yeah, but I also love that.
I think he got, he learned.
He learned what the actual world is like instead of, you know, confusing.
You're talking about Speaker Johnson?
Yeah, I think he got briefings.
He's going to be on the right side of history.
But he was because he got educated rather than falling for this.
Most of these people don't listen to anybody.
They double down.
When you're second in line for the presidency, maybe you pay attention just a teeny bit more.
Okay.
You're talking about what should happen, and it did.
It oftentimes doesn't.
And this guy, who I was not a big fan of when he was made speaker,
he's realized the speaker, you know, we need to govern.
It's an administrative role, not a political role.
And he has taken personal risk, professional risk, and stood up to these far-right fucking crazies who just want attention on TikTok, who don't give a good goddamn about the well-being of the Commonwealth.
I think it's just a wonderful moment for the West.
Legislation, packaging them all together, politically deft.
This is just
this season of C-SPAN is off the fucking hook.
It's better than Shogun right now.
Let me say, he's calling himself a Reagan Republican now.
I mean, you know, thank God you listened to the briefings, Speaker.
Good idea to get yourself fucking educated.
You're being cynical.
He's done his job.
He's done his job.
That is some credit.
To listen to the briefings, okay.
And most of them don't do their job.
Jesus Christ, give the guy the W.
Give the guy the W.
And then my loss is simple.
It's on the same side of that.
The CCP, Putin, and Hamas are less weak today.
Their culture of chaos.
More weak.
I'm sorry, are weaker today?
Their culture of chaos, of violence, their culture of autocracy, dictatorship,
of, you know, whatever you want to call it, anti-Americanism.
This is a bad day for them.
And it took us too long, but this is, we are, you know, we are that shiny beacon on a hill.
We have more resources.
If we can add the economic value of a small GDP or GDP of a small nation in five minutes post an earnings call, if we have the biggest military in the world, what's the fucking point if we don't come to the aids of our allies and push back on autocrats?
So the losers, hands down, Putin, Xi, and Hamas today.
And this is a huge win for
what is the most positive force in the history of humanity, and that is the American middle class and the U.S.
government.
I think it's
a wonderful weekend for Oscara.
I think my win is a similar thing for democracy.
This Trump trial, he goes on trial.
You may think it's a bad trial or a good trial, but he goes on trial and he has to listen to what people think of him.
He's got a, I don't know how much damage really.
He's a bounce back kind of fella, but this is a guy who made fun of War Dead, who makes fun, makes fun of people as suckers and losers, veterans, and everything else.
He has to listen to what actual people think of him, good and bad.
Some of them liked him, by the way, in those, in those among the things, but he had to listen to the American people truthfully.
He got briefed, I think, in that jury selection, which, by the way, went very quickly.
It was a win for that judge.
It was supposed to be two weeks.
He did it in a week.
Now they're doing, they're now, right now,
right now, first witness is up.
It's, I love our jury system, I love the whole thing.
And you can insult all that you want about cases and this and that, but boy, does it work?
It really does.
Of all the things that don't work, this works in a great way, and he'll either get off or he won't get off, but he has to fucking sit there and take it just like everybody else.
And you can decide.
I thought some of the Martha Stewart thing was unfair, but she had to take it.
You have to, this is what happens.
Um, and David Pecker is the first witness, which is the strongest witness.
We'll see who
does better here.
And if they make their case, then he should be convicted.
If they don't make their case, he shouldn't be convicted.
And that's the way it goes.
Speaking of making cases, and you will be silent throughout this, but the fucking New York Times spends its time literally like trying to say there's too much Taylor.
They literally spent the time on her upward thing doing way too much coverage of all the stuff.
And now they're saying too much.
You know, is it fatigued?
The review was incredibly, weirdly sexist, as were several of them.
I don't even know what you're talking about.
Oh, it's overstuffed, not her best.
Honestly, Taylor Swift?
Taylor Swift.
On this, the Tortured Poets Department.
I think
she's going to end up selling a zillion of them.
And the same thing as they're trying to find the way to bring her down after riding her all the way up, you know, riding her popularity all the way up.
And so, you know,
you can decide whether you like it or not.
Some people love it.
Some people don't.
I think she's going to sell as a billion.
But I was really quite, the coverage in the Times is literally like, it was too much before.
Now they're too, I'm fatigued of their,
that they have to shift and doing so much about that.
And they also did what I thought was an egregious interview, I mean, review of
Anne Lamotte,
calling her a throw pillow.
I'm sorry.
That was, you know, you don't have to like a book, but seriously, the way they, the way they talk about certain women just drives me crazy in the reviews.
Anyway, that's why I said, you may now speak if you'd like.
Speak now.
Well, actually, as Taylor would say, I mean,
you're going to agree with this, I think.
There is something to, I'm reading Farid Zakaria's, what's it called?
Age of Revolutions.
Yeah, it's a good book.
And he has this, I did read the article you're talking about, and I thought to myself, if a male superstar was just a phenomena, would they be trying to constantly saying, yeah, but there's something, just as I believe that no one believes they're anti-Semitic, it's a series of incremental rationalizations for holding Jews to a different standard than the rest of special interest groups, I think the same thing is happening
unwittingly to the West
in a variety of subtle ways.
And I think this article articulates that, that if you look at the United States, the group that has fallen furthest fastest is young men.
But if you look at globally, the group that hands down has ascended the fastest over the last several decades is women.
Women are now pursuing tertiary educational attainment at a greater level globally than men.
The number of women elected to some sort of parliament globally has doubled in the last 30 years.
And the bottom line is the most conservative sex of any religion and also generally speaking media,
they just have a different approach sometimes.
for women who ascend that kind of heightened success this fast.
There's a certain amount of, I don't know what it is, there's a con,
I just wonder, would the New York Times or anyone else be looking for soft tissue in a guy that had ascended this fast?
There's something, and I think we need to be cognizant of it.
I'm trying to be aware of it, that what is it about when female CEOs are aggressive, they're a bitch.
When males are CEOs like Jeff Bezos, they're leaders.
There is something weird about the additional, and also, quite frankly, it plays to their benefit sometimes because people like the phenomena and
they run to her music because it represents other things.
But I saw that article.
I'm like, they don't even realize, like,
would they write this about Jay-Z?
I don't think they would.
No, not at all.
And by the way, let me just say the other one they're attacking, Beyonce and Cowboy Carter.
Same thing.
I'm going to see her this weekend, by the way.
Oh, come on.
You know what?
Let me just tell you, between Greta Gerwig, Beyonce, Taylor Swift, and by the way, Anne Lamotte, guess where she is on the New York Times bestseller list?
Number one.
You're welcome for the money, everybody.
You're welcome for selling things.
Beyonce, Taylor, Anne Lamotte, you fucking rock.
So where are you going to see Beyoncé, Scott?
Well, let me tell you, Karen.
Where are you going to see Beyonce?
Oh, I'm going to Bill Mar on Friday, and then I'm going to go with all my college friends and have an arrested adolescence weekend at Stagecoach, which is the new Coachella, but it's country.
I've heard of that.
And supposedly Beyonce is going to make a surprise visit.
Oh, man.
What are you wearing?
Something fabulous.
Assless chaps, right?
I hope.
Yeah.
No,
that's Monday through Friday.
This is the weekend.
I haven't thought about my outfit.
You need to wear something.
Like, in this case, can you please fucking dress up?
I got to get.
I i gotta dress up like beyonce with assless i need to get dressed for marr i need to look credible yet young i think you're assless chaps to marr but nonetheless you need to dress up for for that and you need to have an outfit in that case yes call joanna coles she's my fashion goyoto on the win i would recommend by the way walt mossberg whose job now is taylor whisper
walt mossberg is in retirement but all he writes about is taylor swift he did a playlist of the 15 songs of the 31 he likes and i kind of agree with him on the ones he likes And every single song on the Beyoncé, you have to listen to it on autoplay, Beyonce album.
It's fantastic once you start to really listen to it, especially
there's popular songs on that album, but the one I love is Bodyguard.
Please listen to Bodyguard.
It's really cool.
I listened to my first country music last night.
I listened to this guy named Blaze something.
It's really lovely.
Here's a quick stat you'll like.
Did you know?
Taylor Swift, more people listen to more, spend more time listening to Taylor Swift than all of jazz or all of classical music combined.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm just saying.
It's not wild.
Anyway, New York Times, you're welcome for Taylor Swift, so you can like trash her and write her up.
Anyway, and also Beyonce and the rest of them, Anne LaMaud.
Congratulations, Anne LaMaud.
Anyway, we want to hear from you.
Send us your questions about business tech or whatever is on your mind.
Go to nymag.com slash pivot, submit a question for the show or call 855-51-PIVOT.
Okay, Scott, that's the show.
And have a wonderful launch week for your book.
I'm excited for your book.
I'm excited for Stephanie to interview you.
I'm excited excited for your Bill Maher thing.
Everybody focus on Scott in his book this week.
I would get it.
It's a really great gift, especially for young people.
And I don't mean just young men, but young people to think about money.
I have been talking a lot to my sons about money and them taking control of their finances now that they're older.
And it's the book I shall give to both of them.
I appreciate that, Kara.
We'll be back on Friday for more.
All right.
Today's show was produced by Larry Amon, Joey Marcus, and Taylor Griffin.
Ernie Endertod engineered this episode.
Thanks to also to Drew Burrows and Mil Silverio.
Nishak Kura is Vox Media's executive producer of audio.
Make sure you subscribe to the show wherever you listen to podcasts.
Thanks for listening to Pivot from New York Magazine and Vox Media.
You can subscribe to the magazine at nymag.com/slash pod.
We'll be back later this week for another breakdown of all things tech and business.
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