Biden vs. Facebook, the U.S. accuses China of cyberattacks, and Friend of Pivot Paxton Smith on Texas' new abortion law
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Hi, everyone.
This is Pivot from New York Magazine and the Vox Media Podcast Network.
I'm Kara Swisher.
And Kara, this is Facebook's new vice president of Big Dick Energy.
That's right.
That's right.
They told me, HR told me, that I had to have a title that did not reflect anything true about me or the organization.
That's my new title.
Explain the reference, Scott, for the people who aren't paying every bit of attention to Facebook's hijinks for this week.
Vice President of Integrity.
Yeah.
So either.
Guy Rosen.
His name is Guy Rosen.
He's at Facebook.
My choice came down to that or a position at Altri as a vice president of respiratory health.
Get it?
That's a good one.
Yeah, I get it.
I get it.
We're going to be talking about that issue next.
I think Big Dick Energy is really the best vice president thing you could hope for.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think think that's a nice title for you.
What would be mine?
Oh, you're the jungle cat.
Let's just, if it's, if it ain't broke, don't go.
All right.
Okay.
Okay.
All right.
Well, there's a lot going on.
Speaking of big dick energy, Robin Hood is seeking $35 billion valuation on its IPO.
The trading app plans to list on the NASDAQ under the ticker symbol hood,
and anticipates selling shares for between $38 and $42 a piece.
What thinks you, Scott, Big Dick Energy vice president?
So first off, you have to acknowledge if you've read the S1, it's a great business.
They do over a billion in revenues, up substantially.
The scary part or the things that I think you have to be thoughtful around and require some sort of regulatory intervention is that one,
over almost half their revenue is coming from the revenue they get from options.
And then not only is it, so think about this.
This is a company that attracts to kind of a new younger investor, and
half their business is dependent upon encouraging people to play with an instrument called options.
To be risky.
And then in addition, it's just the business model is order flow.
And the question is, well, why are they making so much money off of order flow?
And it's because these brokerages want to pair trades at a price that may not be advantageous for the consumer or front run them.
And if you look at the stocks, the 10 most recommended or traded stocks on Robinhood, and you bought those stocks, you would not do well.
And so this is, in addition, we've talked a lot about ad nauseum.
So they're dragging people in and selling them to the order flow people.
Yeah, this is kind of a Facebook model.
It's like, okay, we're going to do anything we can to increase your attention, even if it's enraging you or upsetting you or convincing you that everyone's making money but you or develop these kind of dark psychological or
deliver or weaponize these dark psychological tactics, random rewards, visual simulation to try and get you to trade more, even though there's a lot of evidence reflecting that the more you trade, the more you lose.
So this is not an organization that is focused on financial security.
You could say, well, it's an organization that's bringing new people into the investment markets.
That's a good thing.
It's democratizing.
I hate that word, but it is democratizing trading.
That's a good thing.
But are people going to develop economic security here?
I would argue the evidence is no.
And bad habits.
Bad habits.
Or not educational enough, not being educated enough.
And young men are seven times more likely to develop a gambling addiction.
And 85 to 95 percent of day traders, which a lot of these individuals are, lose money.
And all the incentives here in the business model, similar to some of the other platforms, is to make people mini experts when they're not.
That's right.
But there's no getting around it.
It's a great business, $35 billion valuation.
That's staggering.
I wasn't sure if this thing was going to get out because of all the regulatory scrutiny.
And I feel as if I need to disclose, I'm an investor in a competitor, public,
but which, by the way, has a different business model.
Their business model is tipping.
They don't sell their order flow.
They do.
They did.
But incentives are really important because if your incentives are tipping, then your incentives is to make the customer feel good about you.
That when you do a trade
to go, okay, that trade was good.
I learned.
I maybe made some money.
I'm feeling generous.
That to me is the right incentive.
This is, yeah, I agree.
I think this is
away from this democratization of the stock market.
I know these people who are on it get very very, like, you know, they get, they get all high dudgeon about this issue.
But the fact of the matter is, you're for sale on the Robin Hood, just so you know, kids.
You know, sorry, you are.
And that's the, that's the problem.
I mean, I think one of the things that's hard here is that you can, you can, it's sort of like when we'll talk about this later with Facebook, yes, they're doing good information, but yeah, they're doing bad information.
So it's kind of a, like, one of those situations.
And I think this is a, this group has shown themselves to be really irresponsible.
The other thing is, let me just say, Netflix is going to report Q2 earnings today.
We're going to be talking about on Thursday, just business has been sluggish because of Q1.
They added a ton of people because of COVID.
We'll see, you know, not in Q1, they didn't, last year they did because of COVID.
And now the question is whether it's going to slow down.
And obviously there's rising competition, Disney Plus, HBO Max, Apple TV Plus, Peacock, and now plus CNN Plus to add more streaming subscription service.
So that's next year.
So we'll talk about that on Thursday.
So we'll have to see
what happened after that.
Maybe that's why they announced the video game thing, which we do still think is a great idea.
Yeah, this is a company that's sort of a victim of its own success.
I mean, they've penetrated the majority of the U.S.
Now they're going international.
Fantastic content creators going into video games.
The new guys, Disney Plus gets rookie of the year over and over.
They signed up more people
in the last 12 months than everyone else, including Netflix, in terms of new subscribers combined.
So there's a lot of competition, but Netflix kind of shows up with the biggest gun in terms of their content budget, which is now something like 17 billion.
But they're challenged.
They're finally challenged after lapping everything.
If you look at a timeline of entrance into original scripted streaming, basically from 2011 to 2016 or 17, they had it all to themselves.
They literally
did.
They lapped the track.
They lapped the track.
That's what they did.
But and then today, a big announcement from CNN, my favorite brand or one of my favorite brands in the world.
They're hiring 500 people to launch a streaming news service.
Yeah, they have a lot of big names there.
They have a lot of people in the executive team that I recognize.
They're putting the number ones on it, I think, or a lot of really
good.
It's not going to be an also-ran.
Although, some of the, you know, we'll see if it's an also-ran or not, if it's a peacock or not.
But think about it.
Peacock is the also ran to Disney Plus and Hulu and Netflix.
CNN Plus, what are they an also?
Who else is doing really great news?
Well, Peacock has news on it.
Peacock does have news.
You just just don't want to see it.
It has Lester Holt.
It has behind the scenes with Lester Holtz.
They have a couple shows.
I know.
I understand that.
But we'll see.
We'll see where it goes.
You see if AC is better.
We'll see.
We'll see.
4,000 people, 500 new hires in this division.
I think it's a big deal.
It's a big deal.
And we said a couple of weeks ago, the final frontier in streaming is news and politics.
It's news.
Who does it better globally than CNN?
I don't know.
I think it's going to.
True, but they're also facing huge declines in their ratings, too, because there's no Trump to kick around anymore, although these books are out, which we'll talk about a little bit.
So last thing, before we get to the big story, Jeff Bezos is going to space at 9 a.m.
Let's wish him well.
It's Blue Origin's first crewed mission, heading to suborbital space, actually, and back.
He's just going, he's not going into space.
per se.
It's suborbital space.
The new Shepard rocket is aiming for about 66 miles above Earth versus Branson's 53.5 miles because it's a competition, apparently.
It's not.
He's going with his brother, Mark Bezos, Mercury 13 and aviation pioneer, Wally Funk, who is this fantastic lady.
I love her name, Wally Funk.
And 18-year-old Oliver Damon, who is the son of a hedge fund guy who bought the second flight.
I don't know.
It's rich people and this label.
That's just not a good look.
You know, when they got that winning bid.
When they got that winning bid, I know.
And a kid who looks like the captain of the lacrosse team.
Well, the winning bid guy couldn't do it.
The $28 billion.
Yeah, whatever.
What do you have to do if you're paying for it?
All you have to
do is watch a few videos of rockets blowing blowing up, and you go, I have a scheduling conflict.
Yeah, well, let's wish him well.
Godspeed, Jeff Bezos, into space-ish.
Space ships.
I'm going to call it space ships.
Literally, that thing.
That'll drive him crazy.
Let's call it space.
That is the most expensive yellow Corvette and hair plugs in the history of mankind.
Ish.
Seriously.
Seriously.
Speaking of things,
things that are taking off,
the tension, we're going to go into the big story now.
It's time for that.
Facebook and President Biden are facing off over vaccine misinformation.
This past Friday, Biden was asked about the role of social media in influencing vaccinations, and his response was unusually strong.
They're killing people.
I mean, it really failed.
Look, the only pandemic we have is among the unvaccinated.
And they're killing people.
Facebook fired back on Saturday in a blog post saying the Biden administration was, quote, finger-pointing, and that Facebook was not the reason Biden's goal of 70% vaccination was missed.
On Monday, Biden reversed course and said Facebook isn't killing people.
Though the president walked back his most aggressive comment, he reitted that he hopes Facebook does something about the misinformation.
It was kind of fascinating.
He did push it too far.
It was interesting.
Let me just start.
I interviewed Ron Klain, who started to raise this idea a couple of weeks ago in a podcast I did with him and saying Facebook's always the person the company mentioned when people talk about misinformation when they're doing their polling.
Then Jennifer Sake said something and then the Surgeon General did.
And then for some reason, Biden went out there and was doing the come on, man thing.
Like, come on, man, they're killing people.
And so it may have been a little much.
I wrote a comment saying it was probably a little much.
But nonetheless, what do you think?
Look, I've said this nine times, so I'll say it a tenth time, and I've been wrong every time.
I think this is Facebook jumping the shark.
Facebook basically said, first off, they found this VP of integrity.
They strapped a bomb.
He's been there.
They strapped a a bomb to his chest and said, hey, you're a hero.
Go out there and say that the Biden administration.
This is what they said about the Biden administration, that they were trying to find scapegoats because of their failed vaccine strategy.
He said that.
That is basically, that is telling the president of the United States and the U.S.
government that on the most important issue they have and will face, they are failing six months into their presidency.
I don't think they ever said anything that aggressive about Trump.
I don't think they've accused President Xi of finding scapegoats.
So the calculated decision here was they strapped a bomb to this kid's chest or put him in a kamikaze plane and said, go out there and
clap back really hard at the administration.
And for the life of me, Kara, I can't figure out how this was anything but a ridiculously stupid fucking move on the part of Facebook.
What do you think the Biden's thing saying killing people?
That was pretty pretty accurate.
I think you want to say that.
Well,
yes and no, as I noted in the piece, they are definitely part of this ecosystem that creates this problem.
Ultimately, it's, well, by the way, you could point the same finger at Fox News, which is all their stuff.
It's not as big.
It's not as amplified.
You could point at the people who aren't getting vaccines.
They're being willfully ignorant and
famous, bad last words.
We should talk to your brother about this because every medical professional I've heard interviewed or I've talked to, and I say, where?
Facebook.
When these people, when people actually come in and start and try to justify why they're not getting a vaccine and then you ask them where are you reading this information they almost they don't say tucker carlson they don't say breitbard
they don't say twitter they say facebook and they do the amount of the amount of misinformation disinformation that facebook uh has in my opinion let permeate around uh vaccine misinformation.
So I think President Biden was cursed with accuracy when he said that Facebook is killing people.
And Facebook has shown an ability to ignore evidence
that their actions, or I should say their inaction, is killing people.
But distinctive, the right and the wrong here from a calm strategy or a political strategy, you're talking to the guy who guides the DOJ.
You're talking to a guy who has security apparatus, who has the SEC, who has the FTC all under his guidance, and they have personally pissed him off.
Is that the right strategy?
Are they trying to shore up?
Fox News hasn't said this.
Fox News hasn't come out and accused Biden of handling the pandemic poorly.
By the way,
they have.
That's just 72.
You have to watch it.
I don't think they've said anything this aggressive.
I thought this was very aggressive.
It's pretty aggressive over there at Fox News.
It certainly is.
72%
of Americans
think Biden is handling the pandemic well.
Yes, I agree.
And I think that this resurgence of this Delta variant, this 97% of new hospitalizations from Delta variant are from people who've not been vaccinated, according to the CDC.
I just saw on Facebook a bunch of information saying, no, that's not true.
It's these people.
It's like it's anytime there's a fact, there's a counter fake fact on Facebook for sure.
There's no question about that.
But one of the question I asked you then, how do we get people to focus on the actual problem of persuading people to get vaccinated?
Turn off Facebook, do what?
They're definitely a figure here.
There's no question a figure here.
There's also a widespread distrust.
There's
inertia by young people, I think, more than, what do I need it for?
I'll be, I'll survive it.
I've heard that from a lot of young people for sure.
And there's nothing to do with Facebook.
It's, I'll be fine.
You know, I have a relative who's, I'll be fine if I get it.
It's fine.
No problem.
I don't think trying to manage the 45,000-headed whack-a-mole that is media right now and pass laws and get into a contest with the several hundred lobbyists from Facebook to try and figure out a way to manage.
I think they've done the administration has done as good a job as it can, I think, trying to put forward accurate information.
But unfortunately, the bully pulpit has turned into just the pulp of the pulpit compared to Facebook and social media.
I believe, I believe, that the government needs to show more leadership and say to people,
and I think a lot of the people who are vaccine hesitant are also the the people who are taking a lot of transfer payments and get a lot of money from the government.
And I think it would be within the government's purview and rights to say, if you're going to cash our Medicare, our unemployment, our Social Security, whatever it might be, we have decided this is good for America.
And if the Delta variant continues to bump around and figure out ways to get around this and we're going to have to shut down the economy again, much less kill another 500,000 Americans, fine.
We understand that you have the right to refuse a substance against your will going into your body.
But if you're going to cash our checks, you're going to get this vaccine.
And I think it is that time.
Yeah, that's interesting.
Now, Biden did unwind.
Why do you think he unwound?
He said, Facebook isn't killing people.
My hope is that they would do something about the misinformation.
That's what I meant.
I wouldn't have walked it back, but
I think he's trying to be.
A lot of people liked it.
He said it.
He's like, oh, finally, someone says it, says, you know,
says the truth, essentially.
I don't.
And not only that, it's really unfortunate, but we live in an echo, we live in an environment now where it almost never makes sense to apologize.
Because the people who didn't like his statement don't give him any credit for apologizing.
And the people who liked it get angry at him.
It's just,
and I'm not saying it's a right thing, but, and I think you have a moral obligation when you feel sorry to apologize.
And I've dealt with this recently.
I also think you have a moral obligation when you're not sorry to not apologize because I think it's a lie.
I think that was, I think they should have absolutely stuck to their guns there.
I'd love to know what went on behind the scenes.
They were definitely slowly trotting it out, the Biden administration.
Maybe they thought they're very careful.
You know, as opposed to the Trump people, I'm just reading one of the Trump books, the Michael Wolf book, and he just keeps going.
Like, they just don't,
they probably got a lot of pushback from Facebook, et cetera.
So we'll see where that goes.
Okay, we're going to go on a quick break.
When we come back, the Biden administration is not done pointing fingers.
We'll talk about why it's pointing them at China.
Stay with us.
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Okay, Scott, we're back.
The Biden administration is formally accusing China of hacking Microsoft.
A very strong statement today.
The U.S.
and global allies, with the U.S.
as the rounder-upper of these allies, are blaming China for widespread cybercrime, including one of the largest cyber attacks in U.S.
history, that massive Microsoft exchange hack earlier this spring.
The breach exposed tens of thousands of private and public U.S.
entities worldwide, the victims, including schools, hospitals, cities, and pharmacies.
And that they were paying criminal groups to do it and then let the criminal groups take the money and encourage them to make trouble.
U.S.-China relations are already strained, obviously.
So what does this do to them?
What do you think about this?
Super aggressive moves on China, much more so even than President Trump.
It's a really smart strategy when you have an economy as robust and as large as America, where we have very strong traditions,
especially in the South, of military families, where we continue to attract some of the best and brightest young men and women.
Go to Annapolis, West Point,
you know, the Air Force Academy, our Coast Guard.
We have, hands down, our military is not only bigger than the next 10 biggest from a resources standpoint, it's also the most outstanding.
It's the best performing, maybe with the exception of, you know, Israel does a fantastic job.
But so if you can't compete, you never want to compete on a field where you know you're going to get your ass kicked.
And by the way, there's 10 other nations that spend as much as us, seven of them are our allies.
So if you're China or even Russia, especially Russia, whose economy is somewhere between South Korea and Canada, you don't fight on those terms.
And this is,
I mean, you got, this is innovation on their part.
For $100 million,
you can wreak a lot of havoc in U.S.
corporations, U.S.
government.
You can embarrass presidential candidates.
You can turn off power flows.
I mean, you can do all kinds of things.
So the question is, you know, what are we going to do?
What do we do about it?
Because there were no sanctions attack like the sanctions on Russia following the Solar Winds attack.
So the administration is willing to say something by joining us, pulling in Australia, Canada, Japan, United Kingdom, New Zealand, and European Union, which joined the U.S.
And it's the first statement from NATO publicly aimed at China for cybercrimes.
But there weren't nothing.
It was just a you better not kind of thing.
I don't, I've been frustrated by this.
I think that And this again, we're going to have this.
We're going to pay the price for this in the next 10 years when your president and the individual and your administration are generally incompetent and also kind of winking and saying anything that the Russians do, well, I'm not worried about that.
There has been, in my opinion, we've lacked the sense of urgency to marshal our resources to effectively counterbalance what are effectively short of You know, there are proxy wars all over the nation.
We don't want to do anything that results in, that could escalate to nuclear conflict.
So we have proxy wars, and this is the new proxy war, where a Chinese
come after us, they attack our homeland, but they're convinced, A, it's very economical, huge ROI.
For several million dollars, you can wreak a lot of havoc in the U.S.
And it likely doesn't escalate to a nuclear conflict.
Yeah.
So the question is.
And it's difficult to deal with, obviously.
I call it a bit-to-byte combat in a column that's coming up.
I think there's an opportunity to develop what I'll call a cyber core, and that is to say to the best and brightest in math and data mining, all right, 12, 24 month boot camp.
I think we should have, similar to Annapolis, an academy that produces the world's finest young men and women around cyberterrorism.
They get sucked up by tech companies, though.
I mean,
that's one of the big issues, which is one of the big issues is keeping people in this government and working with,
we're largely working with private companies here.
And in China, let me just, let's just bring this in, that they have put in a lot of crackdowns on their company, on their companies there, and they have much more control over them.
And then just recently, crackdown on Didi, on Bike Dance, on Alibaba.
So they are moving to
take larger control over their companies.
Here, we have to, one, work with them, two, compete for talent, and three, it's such a, such a disparate landscape to have to protect.
It's very, very difficult.
Are you going to use your favorite term again?
I was going to dig say surface area, but it's a big surface area.
You can't kill two birds with one stone, and that is we have to recognize that of the two-thirds of young people that end up with a traditional bachelor's degree, that we need to do what Europe's done and have more concerted, thoughtful vocational investment.
And I can't imagine a better field that could put more people to work and let tech companies compete for them than what a 12 to 24-month intensive cybersecurity training.
I think it's a big opportunity for universities to work with tech companies to work with the government to push out
thousands, if not hundreds of thousands, of talented young people who understand this stuff.
Because at the end, there's just no getting around it.
We have to hit back.
Not only do we have to defend.
Not only do we have to defend U.S.
shores and U.S.
companies, but we're also probably going to have to put ourselves in a position where we can restore, we can hunt down and repatriate ransomware such that we can at some point make it illegal to pay a ransom and create disincentives around this stuff.
But also, we're going to have to pick some targets, I would imagine.
They're gaming this out every which way but loose in Russia and and China and basically turn the lights out and say, guys,
every time you do this, we're going to turn the lights out in a bigger house.
So I'm disappointed we haven't heard of and haven't seen what I'll call any countermeasures.
We don't know precisely what's going on, right?
You know, we don't know precisely.
Yeah.
You know, I think one of the things that's difficult here is that it just, this, this stuff escalates and escalates and escalates.
And then you have to figure out what you're what you're willing to put up with.
I think that's one of the problems.
How do we cross?
Because they have much more control over their technology and the way that this is an
authoritarian government.
And you can see what they're doing to their companies, and they have a lot better.
And then they're putting massive investments in.
The state just announced, which I think didn't get a lot of attention, but should have.
The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology announced, released a draft of a plan to develop its own cybersecurity industry, which it sees as a huge economic opportunity to dominate the space globally.
And so we, you know, they're already doing this in 5G, in automation, in AI, et cetera, et cetera.
Now they want to dominate, you want China to dominate cybersecurity?
That is a frightening situation.
The problem is they can do a lot of things we can't do or won't do.
Yeah.
So it's difficult.
It's difficult.
But at the same time, we have the best technology in the world.
We have the most capital.
I think we have the most talented academics and universities working on this.
It seems to me that we should be able to hit back and hit back pretty, pretty damn hard.
Yes.
Yes, this was a big statement, but it still needs to be met with sanctions or any something else because this was just a lot of chit-chatty.
It's a lot of chit-chatty versus doing something.
And I think that's the difficult part is there's got to be, you know, if you're saying hit back hard, we should do it in a way that is
a little stronger.
That would be my, that was my feeling, is a little stronger,
a little more clear what we're up to and not allowing them.
Now, again, we don't know what's going on behind the scenes, as you know, but it's certainly important to make it clear in some way to do that.
I love what Madeline Albright said.
Our memory is long and our reach is far.
And
we need to be thoughtful.
And just anytime someone attacks us and anytime
we have to instill, you know, the greatest deterrent in history is the fact that America trains millions of talented young people, devotes a significant amount of its GDP such that we can deliver an unprecedented historic amount of violence to anywhere in the world.
And if you don't believe that is the reason why 5% of the population gets to control 32% of the resources, then just wait until someone else has that confidence and comes and takes your Netflix and your PBS away, which they will.
So our ability to respond and ensure that people know we will respond is key to our continued prosperity.
And we haven't had that.
All I'm saying is this ain't Russia.
This is a group of people who knows how to do this.
So we'll see.
We'll see where it goes.
But it is a fascinating time.
And even Russia causes a lot of problems
with
how they behave, too.
Let's bring in our friend of Pivot.
She joins us just days after Planned Parenthood.
The ACLU and the Texas abortion providers filed a federal lawsuit to stop the state's six-week abortion ban, known as Senate Bill 8, before it takes effect on September 1st.
You may remember Paxton Smith's name from the headlines she made earlier this summer when she gave a valedictorian speech blasting the bill during her Dallas high school graduation.
I have dreams and hopes and ambitions.
Every girl graduating today does.
And we have spent our entire lives working towards our future.
And without our input and without our consent, our control over that future has been stripped away from us.
Paxton, welcome to Pivot.
Thank you for coming on.
Hi, thanks so much for having me.
Of course.
I mean, you made incredible news with that speech, but let me, now, to remind people, this was not originally the speech you'd planned to give.
Explain the circumstances surrounding your speech.
Well,
I wrote the speech pretty soon after I found out that the Texas Heartbeat Bill had been passed.
And
I was incredibly upset because I hated the fact that whether or not I would become a mother or whether or not I would have a child, the decision would be made by the government.
It would not be made by me.
And that scared me.
And I just wanted to have control over that.
So I wanted people to know how that felt.
And so that's what I decided to make my speech about.
Right, but you had a different speech, right, that the school had approved.
I did.
Yeah.
And you just went off script, essentially.
Correct?
Yes.
So you gave this speech and tell us the fallout from it afterwards.
Now, positive from your friends, presumably, but what about adults?
Yes, adults were super positive about it as well.
I got a lot of really positive feedback.
Obviously, the speech gained a lot of traction.
In terms of negative fallout, there really was not very much.
I've received maybe 10, 20 negative messages total.
Really?
Yeah.
That's amazing.
And
were you nervous about doing this?
One of the things that was important of it is social media then took this thing and sent it around the world, essentially.
I mean, which is really fascinating how this works.
Did you expect that to happen?
I did not.
I thought the microphone was going to get cut off before I even got
four sentences in.
And then it took off all around the world.
Did you expect this much attention to it?
Given it went all over.
It was all over Twitter.
It was all over everywhere, pretty much, everywhere that there could be.
Social media took it far and wide, essentially.
Yeah, I didn't anticipate it at all.
The speech revolves around a Texas bill.
And so I figured that if it did manage to pick up any traction, the furthest it would go would be Texas, maybe national.
But as I started to see that it went global and people from around the world started to share their stories with me, share their realities with me, I started to see that the message and the vulnerability and the emotion behind it was not just a Texas girl's emotion.
It was this global feeling towards abortion access and reproductive health care.
Scott?
Paxton, so just a comment and then more global questions about being an impressive 18-year-old.
If you look at history, history doesn't usually judge people on whether they were right or wrong on an issue, but the courage and the grace they bring to an issue.
I think your kids are going to be really proud of you.
So well done.
Thank you.
The question I have is much more general.
So I have a question about parenting and about media.
So my first, I'll take those in reverse order.
I'm curious, what media, you saw this, you know, go viral, if you will.
What media played the biggest role did you observe in kind of spreading it?
And two, I'm just curious, a successful, competent 18-year-old.
Give us a sense of the media landscape.
What are you consuming more and less of?
I think what really helped it pick up traction was
tick tock one tick tock it went viral overnight and then maybe a day or two later it went viral on twitter it just spread like wildfire there in terms of what i consume it uh media wise uh tick tock Instagram, Facebook, and Netflix does a great job of portraying a lot of people's stories that don't get covered in other media.
It's interesting you said TikTok first.
Is that interesting?
It is interesting.
Why did you say that?
Why TikTok first?
Yeah.
It is so easy for people to go viral on TikTok that you see a lot of stories that are not generally covered by other people, or there are a lot of
voices represented that don't usually have a platform in media.
And so for me, it's something that's vibrant and real and authentic that I can watch.
And it happens in 15 to 60 seconds per person.
So it's incredibly accessible and it gives you so much within the time that you spend on it.
So for me, that is the platform that I spend the most time on.
That's interesting.
So you were originally going to talk about TV and social media in the speech.
Is that correct?
What were you going to say?
What were you going to say?
Well, I was going to talk about how much time I do spend on those platforms and
why.
And then I was going to talk about how how, whenever people are creating content, whenever media is being created, how they go about making this very personal connection with the person who is watching or listening, and how sometimes that can make it feel more real than it is, and it can lead you to make your expectations based off of what you see in the media.
But that's not always realistic because, at the end of the day, it's entertainment that you're taking in, and it's not always going to be representative of reality.
Right.
Right, Scott?
I think the majority of the people look at this and say, wow, what an impressive young woman.
And even the people who might have hated what you said, if you said to them, all right, you could have your son or daughter, A, be the valedictorian, and B, show that kind of grace and that kind of courage, you'd think, yeah, I'll hit that bit.
I'll take that kid.
So my question as a parent who's trying to raise kids to look, smell, and feel like a valedictorian that shows courage.
You've got to get A's, Scott.
But go ahead.
That's the first thing.
But I'm curious in terms of parenting in your household,
when you look back on your influences that
have helped you with, I don't know if it's sports, if it's parents, or can you, or
whatever it might be, what influences do you think have had the most impact on getting you to where kind of all parents hope their kids end up at your age?
Well, I think there's a couple of things.
First and foremost, there was always this very open sense of communication in the family family where no matter what the topic was, no matter what the topic was, it was something that we could discuss.
And even if it was controversial, even if we had different opinions
that really clashed, we could still have a conversation about it and try to listen and understand the other person's perspective, which I think has really shaped my approach to a lot of different things.
And then I think one of the next biggest things that has influenced who I've become is that my dad always used to to tell me this exact thing.
He said, always do the right thing, even when it sucks.
I love that.
So talk about this idea because had you been very active in social justice causes before?
No, not really.
Had you watched other kids do that?
Like I'm thinking of the kids at Domin Douglas, who became
gun.
gun control activists and different things like that.
Had you been watching social justice movements sort of start to, you know, people, not just on social media, but throughout Young People or Greta Thunberg or whoever.
Had you, have you, had you thought of yourself like that?
I had definitely seen those.
I think it's impossible not to see them, but I didn't see myself as one of them now.
Why is that?
Why is that?
Sometimes those things just seem larger than life itself.
How did they manage to pull that off?
So to me, it didn't really seem like I, I didn't feel like I was going to have as big an impact as those people did and so when I did what I did I did it because I felt like it was the right thing
so what are you going to do with this responsibility obviously you've gotten very well known um on this particular topic um especially there this this uh there's this lawsuit that just happened, but this bill
has moved forward.
How do you want to involve yourself going forward?
I would really like to try and reach people my age
and open up the conversation about abortion because it's incredibly stigmatized right now.
And it doesn't need to be.
It's completely normal.
And I guarantee that everybody knows and loves someone who has had an abortion.
So that's something that I'm really trying to focus on and also focusing on the other aspects of reproductive health care, which includes sex education.
And so you'd like to keep working on this topic.
Yes, absolutely.
Do you think when you try to reach young people, you know, Olivia Rodriguez was just at the White House on vaccinations, for example, trying to get younger people to get vaccinations, which is an issue.
Was it?
Yeah.
Did you love her?
Why was that cool?
Okay.
Well, it was just seeing somebody who
I really admired their work.
I really love their work.
I listened to it probably on a daily basis.
And so just seeing her take a stand and do what's right
was really, it was really cool for me to see.
All right.
What did you learn from this whole experience of doing this?
I can't imagine what the moment was right before you decided to go for it.
But it takes a moment there to do it.
Did you think about not doing it when you were about to launch into it?
Or did you say, what the hell?
Let's go.
I did, but I had essentially burned my escape routes because the initial speech I had never finished.
So I was like, well,
I have to give a speech.
So I'm going to give the speech that I plan to give, even if I'm a little bit scared.
Right.
So you just both started.
So what did you learn from the whole experience, from your perspective?
I guess one of the biggest things is that if you decide to speak up about what it is that you're passionate about, people are always listening and people are always watching and noticing what you have to say.
Whether they decide to share your message or whether they agree with what you had to say or whether you even change anyone's mind, that doesn't matter.
But they're going to see what you said and they're going to think about it.
And it's going to influence their thinking in the future.
So every person's voice and story matters.
And do you think it does get through?
You know, this weekend on Friday, President Biden said Facebook was killing people.
There's so much noise in the social media environment of getting through.
And yet you got through.
So you think people should just speak up no matter what, despite all the noise that is around in social media, the disinformation, the misinformation?
I I think people should speak up, but I think a matter of staying well-informed is another thing entirely, which I think is equally as important.
There is, you're right, there are a lot of people who are just going to say their opinion as fact
on social media, and they're going to be very loud about it and very vocal about it.
So, if there's something that you care about that you've noticed and think is important, take the time to read and research that thing from credible news sources.
Scott, last question.
Just what's next for you?
Where are you going to school?
What are you excited about your freshman year?
What's kind of what's on your, what's your plan?
Well, I'm going to the University of Texas at Austin.
UT.
I'm so hard.
Yeah, hookum.
I'm undeclared at the moment, but I'm hoping to study arts and entertainment technologies because I would like to do music production and pop performance in the future.
So I'm very excited about that.
Music production and pop performance.
Yes.
Can I make a couple of predictions here and now?
Okay.
The first is you're going to do amazing things.
The second prediction is it will be anything but that because I find really impressive young people have their list and then they are presented with so many interesting things they end up tearing up their list.
All right, dad.
So that's the only thing I'm confident you will not end up doing.
Anyway, sorry.
You should do whatever you want, Paxton.
Try not to listen to dad.
I'm coming to Texas to interview Betta O'Rourke at the Trexas Tribune Festival.
We'll smell you, 200-year-olds.
Would you please be my guest and come meet Betto and everything else?
I don't know if you know him or not.
If you feel like it, Paxton, you're invited.
UCLA.
I'll come down for a UCLA.
Okay.
Anyway, Paxton, thank you so much.
We were really proud of what you did and we really wanted you to come on too.
Thank you so much.
Okay, Scott, she's way ahead of us already.
Let me just say.
my question is: business idea.
Is there a platform I can go to and trade my two sons for one of Paxton?
I mean,
is that every parent's dream?
Do her parents like Mr.
and Mrs.
Smith?
Yeah.
Oh my God, well done.
You should be high-fiving each other every day.
I know, every day.
Anyway, we're going to go for one more quick break and then we'll be back for Wins and Fails.
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Okay, Scott, wins and fails.
All right, besides Paxton Smith being a winner, what is your win and fail this week?
So my fail is I think that Facebook has become the premier epicenter of death, disease, and disability.
And I think that the government...
So killers.
You're going with killers.
I think the government needs to demonstrate.
In 1941, a lot of young men were asked to register for the draft to go back to Europe.
And a lot of men understandably said, my dad did not come home.
My mom has been widowed.
We are financially impoverished.
Just 20 years later, you're asking me to go back after another failed war.
I am not doing it.
And you know what we did?
We put 5,000 young men in prison.
And I believe that we have lost a lot of our fortitude and stomach for our government showing leadership around what is required to maintain the liberties and prosperity that we enjoy.
So I think that the administration not only needs to embrace this, I think it needs to go one step further and start asking more of its citizens.
And I believe that
the Biden administration should continue to show leadership, talk straight, and go one step further.
And this delta variant.
We want more of, more of that.
This goddamn virus is banging around as all these people watch Fox and
Facebook, and it's figuring out how to get it.
It didn't get the memo regarding our plans to get back to normal.
And
to believe that
this thing could not only return, it could get worse.
It could get worse.
So we have the American government needs to return to its proud legacy of demanding from its citizens a recognition of the sacrifices that have been made to get us here.
So anyways, my fail is the death, disease, and disability that Facebook continues to levy on this Commonwealth.
My win is Governor Pritzker announced a bill that
has announced a bill that makes it illegal for investigators to lie to suspects that are minors in order to
solicit a confession.
And if you want to talk about
there's no shortage of people hiding behind social justice warriors in being offended in doing all this pseudo-bullshit wokeness virtue signaling.
If you want to talk about where real systemic racism can be addressed, it's in our criminal justice system.
And you can bet that a lot of the minors who get wrongly prosecuted are people of color who don't have access to lawyers.
And this is what happened or can happen.
It's legal right now.
They can walk into a 16-year-old accused of a, who's a suspect and say, look at what happened with the kids.
We have your DNA.
Central Park started off Donald Trump's political.
We have your DNA, and that can be a lie at the crime scene.
And your buddy next to you, your buddy who is with you, is in the next room and he's already confessed.
And the first person that confesses gets a lower prison sentence.
So you have two minutes to confess and try.
You can say all of these things if they're lies.
And I think there's room for debate around adults.
This shit should not fly with minors.
It just shouldn't.
Okay.
So I think that J.P.
Pritzker, I think if you want to talk about real systemic change in terms of a criminal justice system, whether it's marijuana laws, where we don't lock up the white people who buy it, we just lock up the black people who sell it.
That is where we can make real progress.
So my win is J.P.
Pritzker.
I have a fail.
Go ahead.
I have a fail.
I'm not going to say who it is because I don't want to give these people, but a lot of Silicon Valley dudes, a lot of them, a lot of them are doing this whole new thing around the new masks in Los Angeles, et cetera.
It is what it is, right?
It's not beaten yet, you know?
Like, so they're going crazy as if it's like a, we all want the economy to open for fuck's sake, honestly.
But this is what this guy wrote: just because an opinion is wrong doesn't mean it should be censored.
Just because a behavior is harmful doesn't mean it should be prohibited.
Just because something is beneficial doesn't mean it shouldn't be required.
Well, you unkind
fuck.
I don't know what else to say.
I mean, seriously, this idea of selfishness as a theory is just beyond belief.
The lack of civic responsibility among these people, at least not to just keep jamming this ridiculous opinion.
Yes, you can have a wrong opinion.
Yes, you should be able to say it.
When it's dangerous and false and causes damage, maybe we should think about it.
Honestly, I don't know who raised these young men, these men.
They're not young, any of them, by the way.
They're old and failing, and they're going to end up dying no matter what they do around psychedelics and everything else.
But let me just tell you, this kind of attitude is about the worst of really wealthy people who just don't want anyone to get in the way of their dreams.
You mean character responsibility and accountability?
So he's saying,
yes.
And I honestly don't know who you're referring to, but if I were to say,
if I were to say on this platform that that individual is a pedophile and it was to get wind, and even if it was proved false and he were no longer able to fund companies or whatever it is he does, I shouldn't be liable because I'm entitled to make mistakes.
I mean,
behavior is harmful.
We're not talking about free speech here.
We're talking about accountability.
Exactly.
They have no accountability.
Let me say, just because something is benefic doesn't mean it should be required.
No, it shouldn't be required, you asshole.
Go ahead and be an asshole.
You know what it should be?
It's part of being a human being and being good to others.
I love getting angry at anonymous people.
They know who they are.
I'll hear this person.
I know this person.
I can't wait to go.
He represents a lot of attitude.
I've seen a lot of tweets by people I used to like, and now I literally refuse to.
Don't follow anyone you're friends with on social media.
You'll just be disgusted.
They're not my friends.
You just, they've never, oh my God, really?
Let me just tell you, I'm working on my book right now.
None of them are my friends.
And they'll find out soon enough why that is.
None of them are my friends.
You saucy little friends.
My win, my win, this one show called Manifest, which was, I think, on NBC, it's now the hugest hit on Netflix.
The guy who created it tweeted at me.
I'd love to meet him, by the way.
And I really love it.
I love it.
I can't believe I discovered it on Netflix of all things.
That's why I love Netflix, I have to say.
So that's something I'd recommend.
Son loves it.
And he made me watch it.
I think it's going to get weird.
I don't know where it's going to go.
Well, isn't it basically reheated lost?
Like, you don't really ever figure out what happens because none of it makes any sense.
No, the 4,400.
It's more like the 400.
Anyway, I like it.
I don't care.
Anyway, Scott, you should watch it.
That's the show.
I can watch it over and over again, those kind of shows.
We'll be back on Friday for more.
Go to nymag.com slash pivot to submit your question for the pivot podcast.
The link is also in our show notes.
Also, share your opinions with us through our new show survey at nymag.com slash pivot survey.
I got a couple of tweets that people can get there, but that's the address.
That's nymag.com slash pivot survey, all in one word.
And you can tell us what you think of Scott and I and everything else and things we should do.
We have a new producer, Evan Engel, who just was announced.
We're very excited to have him here.
We have exciting things coming up on the Pivot.
We like to morph and change like anyone else.
So, Scott, read us out.
Today's show is produced by Lara Naiman, Caroline Shagren, and Evan Engel.
Ernie Andrew Totten Engineering this episode.
Thanks also to Drew Burroughs.
Make sure you've subscribed to the show on Apple Podcasts.
Or if you're an Android user, check us out on Spotify or frankly, wherever you listen to podcasts.
If you like the show, please recommend it to a friend.
Thanks for listening to Pivot from New York Magazine and Vox Media.
We'll be back this week for another breakdown of all things
tech
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But what does it actually mean to be well?
Why do we want that so badly?
And is all this money really making us healthier and happier?
That's this month on Explain It to Me, presented by Pureleaf.
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