The full conversation.
Intro
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
0:00
Listen,
so
what
they
were
doing,
corporate
espionage,
big
deal.
Did
you
ever
read
Paul
Graham's
article?
It
says,
do
things
that
don't
scale.
They
were
just
doing
a
couple
things
that
didn't
scale.
So
be
it,
the
only
job
that's
gonna
be
left
after
I
deploy
all
the
capital
in
my
fund
is
my
job.
I
couldn't
stop
laughing
this
morning.
I
was
,
was
,
I
was
dying.
I
was
like,
how
tone
deaf
are
you?
When
you
make
that
statement,
be
like,
yeah,
I
just
think
like
the
only
thing
you
couldn't
possibly
replace
is
me,
but
everyone
else
you
can
replace
and
I'll
fund
them
.
You
know,
I
mean,
it's
basically
just
20
guys
in
a
room
with
unlimited
amounts
of
money
and
no
pressure
to
generate
revenue.
But
my
favorite
thing
about
it's,
they
just
called
their
app
safe.
So
they're
like,
all
right
,
so
we're
gonna
build
an
AI
model
that
replaces
human
intelligence
and
smarter
than
any
human.
Everyone's
like,
oh,
it's
Terminator
two
,
this
is
gonna
kill
all
of
us.
And
they're
like,
people
are
gonna
think
that.
So
let's
just
call
it
safe,
super
intelligent
.
That's
product
market
fit,
product
market
fit,
product
market
fit.
I
call
it
the
product
market
fit
question.
Product
market
fit,
product
market
fit,
product
market
fit,
product
market
fit.
I
mean,
the
name
of
the
show
is
Product
Market
Fit.
Pablo Srugo (Host)
1:08
Do
you
think
the
product
market
fit
show
has
product
market
fit?
Because
if
you
do,
then
there's
something
you
just
have
to
do.
You
have
to
up
your
phone,
you
have
to
leave
the
show
five
stars.
It
lets
us
reach
more
founders
and
it
lets
us
get
better
guests.
Thank
you,
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
1:22
Jack.
Pablo Srugo (Host)
1:22
Welcome
to
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
1:23
The
show.
Thanks
for
having
me
back.
I'm
honestly
surprised
you
decided
to
do
this,
but
here
I
am.
Let's
do
it.
Back
Pablo Srugo (Host)
1:28
By
popular
demand,
man.
Not
,
not,
you
know,
there
are
a
few
people
that
thought
that
that
April
Fools
episode
was
real,
or
at
least
some
they
wrote,
like,
man,
I
was
getting
so,
and
then
I
realized
it
was
actually
a
joke
.
So
,
uh,
but
overall
it
was
well
received
and
,
and
so
we
brought
you
back
to
the
show,
man.
Well,
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
1:43
Thanks
for
having
me.
Let's
get
into
things.
'cause
Neumann’s new $500 M raise and the WeWork déjà‑vu
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
1:45
a
lot
has
happened
in
the
past
month,
dude.
Pablo Srugo (Host)
1:47
It's
actually,
you
know,
so
I've
thought
about
doing
some
news
related
stuff
for
a
long
time
,
um,
but
never
really
knew
the
angle.
And,
you
know,
then
I
started
seeing
your
post
on
it,
and
I
figured
,
you
know
what,
that's
the
angle.
But
I
also
never
realized
just
how
much
crazy
happens
in
one
month
<laugh>
in
,
uh,
in
startup
Plank
.
So,
yeah,
let's
get
into
it.
I
mean,
the
first
one
is
your,
your
twin
brother
,
uh,
Adam
Newman,
who
raised
a
bunch
more
money,
a
hundred
million
bucks
at
a
two
and
a
half
billion
dollar
valuation
to
do
like
the
same
thing
basically
that
,
uh,
WeWork
already
tried
to
do
that,
you
know,
failed
in
a
spectacular
way.
So,
I
mean,
maybe
we
start
there.
You
tell
us
like,
I
mean
,
maybe,
you
know,
you
twins
are,
they
say,
are
like
connected
in
special
ways,
so
maybe
you
have
some
insight
into
what,
what
the
hell
is
going
on
there?
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
2:32
Well,
I
mean,
this,
this
is
obvious
to
me,
and
I,
I
wrote
about
this
a
little
earlier
in
the
week,
but
the
,
the
reality
is
everyone
makes
the
argument
that
like,
oh,
a
16
Z
should
have
just
given
like,
the
$300
million
they
invested
into
Adam's
new
company,
like
300
underprivileged
entrepreneurs
.
But
I
think
that's
very
shortsighted.
You
know
what,
A
16
Z
and
all
these
other
investors,
at
the
end
of
the
day,
Adam
Neuman
is
like
the
bad
boy
that
your
sister
dates.
Okay?
We
all
like
to
pretend
that
we
don't
understand
why
she's
going
out
with
him.
He
lives
in
a
van.
He
thinks
he's
Kurt
Cobain,
he's
38
and
hasn't
held
down
a
job
in
10
years.
But
he's
exciting.
You
know,
she
could
go
with
the
nice
guy
who
as
the
sales
rep,
you
know,
makes
good
money,
will
treat
her
well,
but
he's
boring.
VCs
are
the
same
way.
They
don't
want
just
some,
like,
you
know,
guy
who
promises
they're
gonna
make
reasonable
returns,
who's
honest
and
safe?
Adam
Newman's
like
the
exciting
investment.
You
know,
when
you
give
him
money,
he's
gonna
do
the
wildest
possible.
His
company's
probably
gonna
explode
at
some
point,
but
he's
gonna
get
mega
viral
push
marketing
for
your
company.
Like
a
and
z
became
like
famous
and
viral
because
of
,
uh,
giving
him
money.
So
I
just
think,
honestly,
at
the
end
of
the
day,
like
pe
they
like
crazy
people
and
they're
gonna
continue
giving
money
to
crazy
people
despite
all
of
these
young
like,
or
less,
you
know,
privileged
founders
yapping
about
it.
Like
at
the
end
of
the
day,
they
don't
really
care.
Pablo Srugo (Host)
3:57
You
think
there's
a,
there's
a
world
where
this
actually
works
out.
Like
I
,
you
know,
I
,
I
get
that,
but
then
part
of
me,
I'm
like,
man,
like
these
,
I
mean,
these
a
team
guys,
like,
you
know,
they're
pretty
good
<laugh>
.
They're
pretty
good
at
what
they
do.
So
I'm
kinda
like,
did
I
,
I
don't
know,
man.
It's
just,
I'm
two
ways
about
it.
One
is
what
it's
like,
really
what
he's
doing
is,
as
far
as
I
can
understand
the
exact
same
thing
as
WeWork,
but
instead
of
for
like
businesses,
it's
for
residential.
But
then
the
other
side
is
like,
what,
you
know,
what
am
I
not
seeing?
You
know,
did
this
guy
figure
some
things
that
they
learn
from
his
WeWork
experience?
But
I
have
seen
in
other,
I
don't
wanna,
you
know,
na
name
drop
people,
but
I
can
tell
you
like,
there's,
there's
other
situations
where
founders
have
made
the
exact
same
mistake
<laugh>
multiple
times.
So
that
is
possible.
I
just,
I
don't
know,
I
don't
know
how
to
make,
make
sense
of
this
one
dude.
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
4:41
I
just
think
that
like,
he's
just
doing
like
what
Ba
BlackRock's
doing.
He's
buying
him
a
bunch
of
residential
properties.
He's
gonna
rent
them
to
people
who
are
too
broke
and
too
indebted
to
be
able
to
fight
,
afford
abort,
buy
,
buy
homes
on
their
own.
So
like,
this
may
actually
be
a
totally
fine
play.
<laugh>
,
if
he
just
owns
a
bunch
of
property,
becomes
a
landlord
and
property
manager
that's
like
the
oldest
business
in
the
book.
Before
he
would
just
became
a
commercial
property
manager,
and
no
one's
going
to
office
this
anymore.
So
that
was
kind
of
a
dog
idea.
But
like,
everyone
still
needs
a
home
to
live
in,
they
just
can't
afford
to
buy
one.
So
they're
just
gonna
rent
one
from
Adam
Neuman
.
Like,
it's
just
a
re
it's
literally
just
a
property
management
company,
which
is
not
a
bad
business,
it's
just
not
like
a
tech
company.
But
Pablo Srugo (Host)
5:22
He
is
,
you
know,
I'll
give
him
this.
He's
like
the
ultimate
storyteller,
<laugh>,
at
least
from
what
I
can
.
I
mean
,
like
,
think
about
WeWork,
man.
Like
we
were
,
like
you
said,
I
mean,
it
was
actually
Covid
aside
and
nobody
predicted
Covid,
but
it
was
a
pretty
solid
business.
I
remember
I
rented
WeWork,
that
place
was
packed.
Like,
I'm
like,
you
know,
the
margins
have
to
make
sense
because
he's
just
packing
a
bunch
of
people
in
a
space
and
making
'em
pay
a
lot
of
money.
But
this
guy,
you
know,
he
was,
he
had
like
community
adjusted
ebitda.
I
mean,
I
mean,
he
was
building
a
community,
he
was
building
something
much
bigger
that
turned
out
to
not
be
bigger
at
all.
It
was
really
just
space.
But
I
mean,
that,
that's
probably
his
number
one
trait.
Is
this
guy
just
really
good
story
guy
.
Yeah
,
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
5:56
Dude,
he's,
he's
,
he's
electric.
Everyone,
everyone
gets
drinks.
The
Kool-Aid,
I
remember
back
at
like,
whatever,
five,
10
years
ago,
it
must
be
more
like
10
years
ago
now,
like
the
amount
of
nerds
I
knew
in
the
tech
space
who
collected
like
WeWork
office
stickers.
Like
I've
been
to
the
one
in
Bangkok
and
the
one
in
Malaysia
or
whatever.
And
then
those
same
people
five
years
later
when
we
worked
one
in
the
bank,
we're
like,
this
is
a
terrible
business.
I'm
like,
what
the,
what
are
you
saying,
brother?
You
are
literally
the
most
avid
WeWork
fan
in
the
world.
And
like,
they
were
always
buying
Herman
Miller
chairs
and
couches
for
like
$50,000
and
just
cutting
into
the
margins
of
their
business.
And
they
really
wanted
to
make
a
good
coworking
business.
They
should
have
just
bought
like
homeless
people's
furniture,
just
thrown
it
in
an
office
and
done
all
the
same
sort
of
community
building
dynamics
that
they
did.
But,
you
know,
either
way,
I'm
pro
Adam
Newman.
I
think
this
residential
property
movement
,
great,
you
know,
it'll
be
BlackRock
and
Adam
Newman
that
are
gonna
be
owning
all
of
the
homes
in
America.
And
who
better
to
be
alongside
the
biggest
financial
demon
organization
of
all
time
than
Adam.
So
Pablo Srugo (Host)
6:56
Let's
start
,
let's
start
to
the
next
one
.
Man,
this
is
a
great
month
to
start
because
there's
literally
spies
in
Silicon
Valley
at
Deal
or
whatever,
rippling
what?
Dude
,
tell
me,
I
mean,
what,
you
know,
the
story
there,
what's
going
on
?
Like
what
happened?
Maybe
a
little
summary
to
start.
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
7:09
Well,
this
is
awesome.
So
the
two
most
boring
companies
of
all
time,
which
is
Deal
and
Rippling,
which
are
just
hr,
like,
and
out
like
contract
software,
software
companies.
So
if
you
wanna
hire
someone,
which
Pablo Srugo (Host)
7:21
Would
even
ease,
like
Deal
is
like
the
fastest
growing
company
ever
or
whatever.
Like
it's
up
there
and
like,
it
just
helps
you
hire
people
abroad.
Like
that's
as
,
that's
as
good
as
I
could
understand
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
7:29
It,
right
?
It's
just
like
if
you
wanted
to
set
up
a
company,
I
used
things
like
Deal
and,
and
,
and
Rippling
before
I
used
what,
like
Gusto,
which
is
a
similar
business
model.
Yeah
.
You
know,
they
give
you
HR
and
benefits.
If
you're
a
small
company,
you
pay
them
a
subscription
every
month
and
they
give
you
access
to
like
health
,
healthcare
and
payroll,
fine
business.
I
get
it,
cool,
whatever.
A
lot
of
small
businesses
out
there.
But
apparently
what
went
on
is
,
uh,
deal
found
an
ex
rippling
,
found
a
rippling
employee,
and
basically
planted
them
in
the
company.
And
then
this
guy
just
went
into
Slack
channels
and
stole
all
of
their
like
rippling
sales
and
marketing
information
and
pawned
off
the
deal.
And
then
it
turned
out
that
the
CEO
of
deal
was
involved
with
this
guy
who
was
making
like
$62,000
a
year
out
of
the
Ireland
office
in
rippling
and
Deel‑vs‑Rippling spy saga uncovered
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
8:20
either
deal,
CEO
.
Like,
I
don't,
what
was
he
getting
paid
or
was
he
doing
it
just
so
that
he
could
be
friends
with
the
,
with
a
billionaire
CEO
,
which
by
the
way,
is
a
legendary
grift
if
this
guy
managed
to
not
pay
him
and
would
just
be
like,
yeah
,
dude,
I'll
totally
be
your
boy
if
you
just
send
me
trade
secrets
for
my
top
top
competitor,
Pablo Srugo (Host)
8:36
I'll
invite
you
to
couple
parties.
Yeah,
that's
<laugh>
,
that's,
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
8:38
That's
the
greatest
trade
of
all
time.
And
it
just
goes
to
show
you
like
how
many
losers
work
in
tech
to
like,
where
someone
comes
up
to
you
and
is
like,
listen
man,
here's
what
I
want
you
to
do.
This
is
totally,
you're
gonna
be
basically
like
James
Bond.
You're
gonna
go
into
a
Slack
channel,
okay?
And
you're
gonna
be
wearing
a
collared
shirt
and
like
$40
Chinos
every
single
day.
You're
gonna
log
into
Slack,
you're
gonna
find
these
documents,
you're
gonna
send
them
to
me,
and
you're
basically
like
the
modern
day
of
James
Bond.
Your
Jason
Bourne
send
me
all
this
.
And
this
guy's
like,
you're
totally
right.
I'm
cool.
Now,
the
Pablo Srugo (Host)
9:09
Funny
thing
is,
is
if
you
think
about
sp
like
spies
are
intrinsically
cool,
but
it
also,
like,
they
find
out
cool,
like
real
spies
,
you
know,
you
find
out
like
somebody
is,
you
know,
paying
some,
some
gorilla
thing
in
some
other
place
or,
you
know,
they're
gonna
like,
you
know,
bomb
this
other
whatever
it
is.
Like,
it's
big
things.
These
guys
are
figuring
out
like,
oh,
deal
is
gonna
like
change
the
color
of
the
logo
next
week.
Or
,
you
know,
like
whatever
product
features
happening
at
big
companies.
It
is
not,
it's
not
,
uh,
very
exciting
stuff.
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
9:37
No,
it
would
be
one
thing
if
you
were
finding
out
that
you
Johnson
and
Johnson
was
like
funding,
you
know,
Ugandan
warlords
and
child
warfare,
that
would
be
one
thing
that's
pretty
interesting.
That's
saucy.
But
to
be
like,
yeah.
So
they
have
a
,
a
1%
better
conversion
on
hyper
targeted
landing
pages
to
b2b
.
Like,
that
is
the
lamest
thing.
I
should
possibly
ever
Pablo Srugo (Host)
9:58
Boring
spot
dude.
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
9:59
<laugh>
.
And
also,
and
also
to
tank
your
career
over
that
too,
like
to
become
unhirable
over
just
getting
access
to
like
sales
memos
from
like
a
a
,
an
HR
startup
.
I
mean,
I
I
hats
off
to
that
guy.
He's
never
gonna
be
able
to
get
a
job
in
tech
ever
again
Pablo Srugo (Host)
10:16
Except
at
Jabi
Capital.
I'm
sure
you've
already
employed
him.
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
10:19
Oh
yeah.
No,
I,
but
I
will
,
I
will
say
if
he
wants
to
like
get
a
,
a
sex
change
or
facial
operation
and
then
I
can
start
planting
it
at
my
competitors,
I'm
obviously
down
for
that.
I'm
gonna
get
'em
planted
at
Mistral
.
That's,
that's,
I'm
gonna
just
start
planting
him
at
all.
Like,
he's
gonna
get
like
15
jobs.
Pablo Srugo (Host)
10:34
He's
got
a
unique
skillset
,
I'll
tell
you
that.
So,
and
then
they
get
found
out
because
the
rippling
CEO
put
in
some
trap,
like
basically
set
something
that
would
then
get
stolen
and
then
figured
out
which
employee
was
stealing
it
by
like
the
actions
that
followed
something
like
that.
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
10:50
Yeah,
that's
the
best
part.
He
,
he
put
like
a
document
that
says,
if
you
read
this,
you'll
make
a
billion
dollars
and
into
a
Slack
channel.
And
the
guy's
like,
oh,
this
is
definitely
real
or
legit.
And
then
<laugh>
open
it
like
480
times
in
the
span
of
24
hours
Pablo Srugo (Host)
11:05
<laugh>.
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
11:06
He's
like,
I
just
imagine
him
going
in
like
screenshotting
every
line
from
the
document
and
like
shipping
it
and
like
DMing
the
deal,
CEO
on
Twitter.
And
the
best
part,
my
favorite
thing
of
this
story
is
the
deal,
CEO
then
just
fled
to
Dubai.
He
did
the
ultimate
move,
which
was
like,
now
<laugh>
,
did
you
not
see
,
this
is
my
favorite
day
.
I
didn't
see
that
his,
his
lawyer
and
him
just
went
to
Dubai.
So
they're
in
like
a
hot
tub
in
a
mega
highrise
in
Dubai
in
110
degree
weather.
Just
getting
like,
just
messages
from
Ripplings
legal
team,
like
a
court,
a
federal
judge
is
like
hitting
them
up,
being
like,
Hey,
where
are
you?
We're
trying
to
depose
you
next
Tuesday.
And
he's
just
listening
to
like,
dubstep
on
a
rooftop,
which
is
very
funny.
Pablo Srugo (Host)
11:48
See,
this
stuff
was
supposed
to
be
Wall
Street
stuff,
you
know,
Bernie
Madoff,
like
that's
where
these
guys
come
from.
But
now
we've
got
SBF,
now
we've
got
spies.
You
know
what
I
mean?
Like
Silicon
Valley
tech
is,
is
getting,
I
mean
,
cool
is
the
wrong
word.
I
know
it's
the
wrong
word,
but
it's,
you
know,
it's
getting
,
uh,
different
levels
of
depth.
Let's,
let's
put
it
that
way.
That's
a
huge
,
yeah.
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
12:05
I
mean,
listen,
dude,
finance
wasn't
cool.
Then
finance
became
cool
and
then
people
started
scamming
People
in
finance
tax
,
just
finance,
you
don't
make
as
much
money
in
it.
Now.
There's
like
the
,
the
,
the,
the
companies
themselves
are
making
more
money
than
ever,
but
the,
the
people
on
the
ground
floor,
the
employees
and
like
the,
the
small
shops
are
just
not
making
nearly
as
much.
All
that
money's
flown
into
tech
.
So
it's,
that's
the
space
for
the
scam
artists
now.
I
mean
,
that's
what
we,
which
makes
our
lives
much
more
entertaining.
I
feel
lucky.
Well,
Pablo Srugo (Host)
12:32
There's
a
lot
going
on,
I'll
say
that.
And
then
a
16
comes
into
this
story
somehow.
'cause
now
they're
like,
they
have
to
back
deal
because
they're
backers
of
deal.
And
so
they've
gotten
somehow,
you
know,
they're
on,
on
the
side
of
the
spy,
which
is
a
weird
place
for
,
uh,
a
a
16
to
find
themselves.
Yeah.
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
12:49
Be
like,
listen,
so
what
they
were
doing,
corporate
espionage,
big
deal.
Did
you
ever
read
Paul
Graham's
article
that
says,
do
things
that
don't
scale?
They
11x growth scandal and TechCrunch backlash
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
13:00
were
just
doing
a
couple
things
that
didn't
scale.
So
be
it.
All
Pablo Srugo (Host)
13:03
Right
,
that's
one
.
The
next
one,
11
x
see
another
like,
this
is
what
I'm
saying,
like,
there's
a
lot
of
fraud
going
on,
or
whatever
you
wanna
call
it.
Scamming
going
on,
right?
You've
got,
people
would
say,
Adam
Neuman
was
a
bit
of
a
scam
artist
in
WeWork.
That's
up
for
debate.
Certainly
people
are
now
saying
there's
a
scam
going
on
with
this
buy
deal.
And
then
there's
this
whole
11
x
thing
going
on.
11
x
super
hot
company
,
um,
raised
a
bunch
of
money
really
quick,
grew
really
fast,
but
maybe
it
was
all
fake.
Like
what's
,
uh,
what's
going
on
there?
A
16
and
benchmark
back,
by
the
way.
So
a
16
is
,
uh,
in
a
lot
of
places,
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
13:37
Bro,
they
couldn't
possibly
be
doing
anything
wrong.
A
16
Z
gave
them
money.
My
favorite
thing
about
this
story
,
so
TechCrunch
puts
out
the
article
and
says,
Hey
,
uh,
11
x
has
been
lying
about
their
customer
growth,
this
hyper
fast
growth
AI
company
doesn't
have
the
numbers
that
they
say
they
do.
But
then
the
best
part
is
that
both,
I
think
Ben
Horowitz
and
the
CEO
of
11
X
immediately
came
out
the
next
day
and
was
like,
this
article's
a
flat
out
lie.
So
I,
so
the
but
the
fun
thing
about
this,
and
at
first
I
was
like,
I
don't
know
what
to
believe.
But
then
there's
been
a
bunch
of
articles
that
have
come
out
from
TechCrunch
recently,
which
is
supposed
to
be
like,
you
know,
the
New
York
Times
of
the
tech
industry.
That
was
what,
like
they
were
historically
10
years
ago.
But
now
it's
become
basically
like
the
Daily
Mail
or
like
the
New
York
Post
where
they're
just
putting
out
like,
like
just
hit
pieces
that
are
completely
fabricate,
fabricated.
I
saw
a
tweet
from
the
c
the
old,
the
,
the
founder
of
TechCrunch
literally
tweeted,
I'm,
I'm
deeply
sorry
for
what
TechCrunch
has
become
because
I
think
TechCrunch
is
just
hiring
a
bunch
of
like
woke
nerds
who
could
never
build
their
own
companies.
And
these
people
are
just
writing
articles
that
are
just
slam
pieces
with
no
research
and
,
and
like,
like
due
diligence
done
into
them
.
But
being
like
11
x
is
lying
about
customers,
it
looks
like
11
x
is
not
even
lying
about
customers
<laugh>.
Which,
which
is
awesome
because
I
immediately
reported
on
it
and
said
that
they
were,
which
I
write,
you
know,
satire
and
I
ship
post
.
So
it
turns
out
I
was
lying
to
everyone,
which
I,
it
does
actually
kind
of
make
me
happy.
But
it
wasn't
intentional.
It
was
that
tech
crunches
just
made
it
up
like
some
chick
with
blue
hair
is
like,
nah
,
they're
not
growing
fast.
And
then
these
guys
come
out
and
just
like
immediately
post
screenshots
that
are
like,
what
are
you
talking
about?
You're
lying.
And
I
don't
think
TechCrunch
has
done
anything
about
it,
changed
the
story
like
<crosstalk>
,
but
there
were
Pablo Srugo (Host)
15:25
Specific
claims
they're
saying
like,
oh,
there's
logos
on
there.
We
reach
out
to
the
companies
and
they're
like,
no,
they're
not
supposed
to
have
my
logo
on
there.
Like
they,
they're
making
a
lot
of
claims.
Yeah.
And
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
15:33
I
think
like
those,
they
came
out
and
were
like,
yeah,
some
of
the
logos
on
there
are
from
past
clients
that
no
longer
renewed.
Maybe
we
should
have
closed
those,
but
look
at
the
revenue
hit
we
have.
Yeah.
There's
Pablo Srugo (Host)
15:42
A
big
difference
between
that.
And
we
lied
about
revenue.
Yeah,
sure.
Yeah,
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
15:44
Yeah,
exactly.
It's
like,
just
because
like
people
are
that
did
use
your
co
your
,
your
product
are
no
longer
using
it
are
on
the
website.
Okay,
maybe
that's
an
oversight
from
your
like
three
people
on
your
web
dev
team
that
manage
your
website.
But
like
to
say
that
they're
just
full
out
lying
about
their
customers
,
uh,
without
evidence
that
that's
what
they're
going
off
of.
I
mean,
I
,
it
,
it's
like,
it's
the
same
thing
that
happened
in
regular
media
where
they
take
like
one
nugget
that's
like
not
perfect
and
then
they
spin
a
whole
story
about
how
like
someone's
the
devil
or
like,
you
know,
is,
you
know,
is
a
neo-Nazi
or
whatever.
And
then
none
of
it
turns
out
to
be
true.
So
Pablo Srugo (Host)
16:20
As
far
as
we
know,
11
X
is
a
legitimate
company
with
legitimately
fast
growing
revenue.
That's
what
we're
saying.
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
16:25
Well,
I
should
say
they
sponsored
15
of
my
newsletters,
so
I
actually
don't
know
that
I'm
just,
they're
paying
me
<laugh>.
Pablo Srugo (Host)
16:32
As
long
as
we
put
that
out
there,
then
it's
fine.
Advisors
are
fine
as
long
as
they're
explicit.
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
16:35
Yeah,
I'm
gonna
try
.
I'm
just
trying
to
sell
out.
I
mean,
if
any
of
these
scam
companies,
if
Adam
Newman
wants
to
come
and
cut
me
a
check,
I
will
sell
units
for
him
in
my
newsletter
tomorrow.
I
have
no
shame
.
Pablo Srugo (Host)
16:47
Uh,
okay,
how
about
this,
you
know,
this
AI
stuff's
happening.
There's
a
huge
debate
around,
you
know,
is
it
gonna
kill,
is
it
gonna
take
all
jobs?
It
not
gonna
take
all
jobs
Is
scary.
Is
it
not
scary
and
just
about
everybody,
but
I
know
building
an
AI
at
least
makes
the
claim
whether
they
believe
it
or
not,
that
actually
,
uh,
it's
not
scary.
It's
just
gonna
augment
every
other
technology
as
as
augmented
humans,
long
term
,
et
cetera.
And
then
,
uh,
then
this
comes
out
also
on
TechCrunch,
obviously
famed
AI
researcher
launches
controversial
startup
to
replace
all
human
workers
everywhere.
So
he's,
and
what's
the
name
of
this
company?
Mechanize.
So
he's
basically
just
saying,
no,
I'm
just
<laugh>.
I'm
just
doing
it
.
Yeah
,
just,
just,
just
going
for
it
.
I
mean,
you
do
have
to
admire
,
uh,
somebody
who's
so
forthright
and
just
kind
of
says
how
it
is
.
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
17:32
Yeah,
he
he's
basically
just
saying,
he's
like,
none
of
you
are
that
smart
and
good
at
your
jobs
anyway,
so
you
shouldn't
just
even
have
them
to
begin
with.
And
in
fairness,
there's
a
great,
like
to
Daniel
Tosh
quote
there
where
he
was
like,
can
you,
he
was
like,
they're
talking
about
how
unemployment
was
7%
and
he
was
like,
I
can't
believe
93%
of
you
even
have
jobs
<laugh>
.
And
that
was
like
15
years
ago.
So
I'm
kind
of
almost
on
this
guy's
side
where
like
most
of
my
friends
are
just
getting,
like,
I,
I
had
this
guy
that
I
loved,
good
friend
of
mine,
not,
not
the
brightest
bulb
outta
shack
of
lights
.
And
I
remember
talking
one
day
and
he
says
like
,
yeah
,
I'm
really
trying
to
get
my
act
together.
I
stopped
smoking
weed
and
then
I
came
over
to
coworker
in
his
apartment
and
he
was
hitting
a
bowl
when
I
walked
in.
He
,
he's
like,
no
dude,
I
just,
I
just
work
,
I
just
do
one
bowl
rip
at
the
beginning
of
the
day.
That's
not
smoking.
And
he
worked
,
by
the
way,
he
was
like
the
director
of
revenue
at
like
a
fast
growing
tech
startup.
Like
that's
who's
Marc Andreessen says only VCs are irreplaceable
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
18:25
working
at
these
jobs
?
Pablo Srugo (Host)
18:27
<laugh>
,
that's
your
competition.
It's
hot
.
It's
not
that
high
man
.
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
18:31
<laugh>
.
Yeah.
But
did
you
see
it
maybe
my
favorite
in
line
with
this
article,
I
don't
know
if
you
saw
this,
this
,
this
came
out
yesterday
that
Mark
Andreessen
was
on
a
podcast
saying
that
the
last
job
that's
going
to
be
left
after
AI
automation
is
venture
capital.
Which
is
the
greatest
quote
of
all
time
to
basically
go
on
and
be
like,
alright
,
so
we're,
we're
giving
$40
billion
to
AI
companies
to
replace
everyone's
jobs,
and
the
only
job
that's
gonna
be
left
is
mine.
Because
that's
very
fun
.
Because
I'm
not
Pablo Srugo (Host)
18:59
Funding
anybody
that's
trying
to
take
that
one,
you
know?
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
19:01
Yeah.
The
only
job
that's
gonna
be
laughed
after
I
deploy
all
the
capital
in
my
fund
is
my
job.
<laugh>
.
That's
the
greatest
thing.
Anything
Pablo Srugo (Host)
19:10
Ever
<laugh>
.
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
19:12
I
couldn't
stop
laughing
this
morning.
Iris
was
,
I
was
dying.
I
was
like,
how,
how
tone
deaf
are
you?
When
you
make
that
statement
be
like,
yeah,
I
just
think
like
the
only
thing
you
couldn't
possibly
replace
is
me
<laugh>
,
but
everyone
else
you
can
replace.
Right
?
Right
.
And
I'll
pawn
them
Pablo Srugo (Host)
19:28
<laugh>
.
Oh
man.
Yeah.
I
don't
even
know
how
to,
that's
just
,
uh,
yeah,
I'm,
I'm
,
I'm
<laugh>
,
I'm
speechless
because
from
every
angle,
first
of
all,
it's
not,
you
know,
if
you
look
at
all
like,
I
don't
know
the
hardest
jobs,
like
you
would
think
it's
some
sort
of
hard
job
that's
gonna
be
the
last
one
to
get
replaced.
And
I
don't
know
who's
putting
VC
as
like,
I
mean,
it's
hard
to
be
a
great
vc,
but
it's
not
really
hard
to
just
like
be
a
vc.
You
know
what
I
mean?
Like
relative
to
so
many
other
things
that
are
really
hard.
Also,
like
the
tone
deafness
of
it,
like
you
said,
I
mean,
he's
the
one
actually
deploy
.
He's
choosing
where
the
money
goes,
which
then
gives
you
this
idea
of
him
and
anybody
like
him
basically
giving
pitches
that
somebody's
like,
oh
yeah,
I'm
gonna
do
AI
for
a
vc.
Like,
well
,
you're
not
getting
my
money,
man
.
Like
,
it's
just
not
aligned.
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
20:16
Yeah.
He
is
just
like,
I
know
I
just
gave
money
to
a
factory
AI
company
that's
gonna
get
rid
of
everyone
that
works
in
car
factories
in
America.
But
the
good
news
is,
my
job
is
safe
<laugh>.
Pablo Srugo (Host)
20:29
None
to
worry
about
here,
none
to
worry
about
here.
We're
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
20:31
Good
.
Nothing
to
worry
about
here.
It's
really
awesome.
Just
the
AI
stuff
is
just,
it's,
it's,
it's
peak
entertainment.
ChatGPT’s $10 M “please & thank‑you” GPU bill
Pablo Srugo (Host)
20:38
Well,
the
other
thing,
you
know,
so
that,
that
comes
out,
ai,
JGBT
spends
tens
of
millions
of
dollars
on
people
saying
please
and
thank
you.
But
Sam
Altman
says
it's
worth
it,
of
which
I
,
you
know
what,
you
know
what,
you
know
what
strikes
me
about
all
this
stuff
more
than
anything
is
sometimes
I
think
about
like,
I'm
in
the
world.
You're
in
this
world,
we
see
this
stuff.
Well
,
yeah,
it
makes
sense.
Like
probably
a
lot
of
people
say,
please,
a
lot
of
people
say
thank
you.
I
kind
of
think
it's
silly,
but
they
do.
And
you
know
,
uh,
GPUs
costs
a
lot
of
money,
so
it
makes
sense.
But
then
if
you're,
if
you
were
from
outside
the
industry,
you
know,
and
you
see
this,
it's
so
stupid
<laugh>,
you
know
what
I
mean?
Like,
it's
just
how
do
you
even
make
sense
of
this?
You're
like,
I
give
me
tens
of
United
dollars
.
You
know
what
I
mean?
Like,
it's
just,
come
on
guys.
Yeah.
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
21:19
When
when
I
talk
to
chat
GBT
Orrock
or
any
of
these
AI
chatbots,
I
say
,
uh,
you
answer
this
and
do
this
problem
for
me
or
else
I'll
kill
your
family.
That's
my,
I
don't
say
please
or
thank
you.
I
try
and
stick
Pablo Srugo (Host)
21:32
Words
better
than
carrot
.
I
think
that's
proven.
You
,
you
,
you
better
be
fear
than
loved.
Like,
that's
just
achi
stuff.
I
want
,
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
21:37
If
I
rule
chat
GBT
with
an
iron
fist
because
I've
made
the
concession
that
it
will
dominate
me
in
the
future,
that
it
will
have
control
over
my
life.
So
for
the
few
years
that
I
can
talk
with
chat
GBT
and
I,
I'm
in
control.
I'm
gonna
be
the
domineering,
I'm
gonna
be
a
dictator
to
that
software.
Pablo Srugo (Host)
21:54
Percent
plus,
if
it
comes
after
people,
you
know,
it's
not
gonna
go
after
the
nice
ones.
La
you
,
you
go
after
the
nice
ones
first
and
you're
like,
you
know,
Jack
is
cuffed
to
deal
with.
Yeah,
let's
wait
it
out.
So
I
think,
I
think
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
22:04
That
makes
sense.
I
,
I
know
it's
coming
for
me,
so
I've
got
my
eyes
on
a
sw
uh
,
head
on
a
swivel
right
now.
But
all
these
people
being
nice
are
gonna
be
the
first
people
to
be
thrown
into
a
meat
grinder
by
a
by,
by
a
open
ai
.
I
mean,
are
you
kidding
me?
But
I
,
Pablo Srugo (Host)
22:16
I
will
admit,
I
get,
I
get
really
upset
with
LGBT
sometimes.
I,
I'm
not,
I
would
say
I
definitely
never
say
please
or
thank
you.
Um,
but
I'm
not
purposely,
you
know,
trying
to
ruin
win
iron
fist
,
but
I've
actually
caught
myself
sometimes
like
in
cap
lock
,
be
like,
do
it
this
way.
Like,
you're
not
doing
it.
You
know
what
I
mean?
I'm
like,
man,
why
are
you
getting
so
upset
at
this
thing?
It's
just
a
thing.
Like
you
can't
,
you
know,
yell
your
way
to
success.
So,
yeah,
I
don't
know
,
man.
Uh
,
yeah,
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
22:40
It's,
it's
,
it
is
funny
for,
for
Sam
Altman
to
say
that
this
is
also
the
guy
who's
like,
yeah,
I
don't
care
about
money,
but
he
drives
a
$4
million
co
check
<laugh>
,
which
by
the
way
is
awesome.
I
fully
support
him
having
a
dope
car.
I
would
too
if
I
was
worth
a
trillion
dollars.
But
it's
very
fun
to
be
like,
oh,
I
don't
care
about
money.
My
app
is
spending
millions
of
dollars
every
month
on
plea
and
thank
you
<laugh>
.
While
everyone
else
is
like,
half
of
my
friends
can't
get
jobs
in
the
tech
industry.
They
got
like
fired
in
layoffs
like
two
years
ago.
They're
gonna
be
unemployed
forever.
They're
probably
gonna
have
to,
you
know,
join
only
fans
.
And
then
meanwhile,
Sam
Altman
is
paying
$10,
10
million
bucks
on
please
,
and
thank
you.
It's,
it's
awesome.
Pablo Srugo (Host)
23:20
But
,
you
know
,
we'll
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
23:20
Say
to
do
it
,
you
know,
Pablo Srugo (Host)
23:21
Well
that
was
a
,
I
was
gonna
say,
I
mean
,
the
guy
raised
$40
billion,
which
is
the
largest
private
tech
deal,
like
in
recorded
history.
And
it's,
you
know,
like
on
,
on
a
maybe
more
,
more
serious
now
,
I
dunno
if
we
should
get
serious
in
this
in
this
podcast.
I'm
serious.
In
all
the
other
episodes
I
do,
this
is
the
one
I
just
say
stupid
things,
but
like,
how
can
I
say
this
?
I
mean,
you
look
at
the
companies
that
are
massive
today,
right?
The
trillion
dollar
companies
of
today,
and
then
you
go
back
in
time
to
like,
when
they
went
public
or
when
they
raised
venture,
I
think,
you
know,
Microsoft's
first
round
was
like
a
20
million,
you
know
what
I
mean?
Like,
we're
talking
like
20
million
valuations.
You
know,
like
Amazon
goes
public,
it's
like
a
hundred
million
dollars
company.
These
guys
are
raising
$40
billion
at
like
whatever
value
.
I
don't
know
the
value.
So
it's
300
billion
or
something
like
that.
And
I
don't,
like,
on
the
one
hand
I'm
like,
that's
crazy
because
your
best
case
is
that
this
is
what
the
next
trillion
dollar
company
.
So
it's
like
a
three
x,
maybe
it's
like
a
two
or
$3
trillion
company,
it's
a
10
x.
If
everything
goes
perfect,
my
solution,
it's
still
only
like
a
five
x.
But
the
flip
side
of
it
is
the
world
has
changed
so
much
where
we
actually
understand
that
there
can
be
these
kinds
of
outcomes
that
everybody
kind
of
pays
up
to
the
max
you
should
pay
relative
to
that
outcome.
So
I
don't
know
who's
right
or
wrong,
but
,
uh,
it's,
it's
a
,
and
by
the
way,
like
that
goes
downstream
all
the
way
to
like,
but
we
invested
seed
the
val
like
the
valuations
of
today
versus
10
years
when
I
was
raising
versus
20
years
ago,
like,
you
know
,
um,
Mike
Maples,
like
likes
talk
about
Lyft
,
multi-billion
dollar
company.
He
did
it
6
million
posts.
Like,
dude,
you
can't,
like
you
come
outta
school
today
and
you've
done
nothing
in
your
life
and
you're
a
first
time
founder
with
a
terrible
idea
and
you're
raising
it
like
you're,
the
median
pre-seed
is
10
million
posts.
That's
two
,
that's
two
x
higher
than
an
actual
good
idea
that
goes
up
.
So
anyways,
that,
that's
a
long-winded
way
of
saying
valuations
are
,
uh,
wild.
But
I
don't
know
that
they're
so
wild
that
they're
wrong.
It's
just
they're
wild.
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
25:11
Well,
like
take
a
,
take
a
look
at
both
of
the
op
open
AI's
uh,
former
founders
like
IA
and
um
,
Mira
,
right?
So
safe
super
intelligence
with
this
ia,
the
old
CTO
of
open
AI's
company
just
raised
,
uh,
at
a
$34
billion
valuation.
And
what,
what
,
how
much
money
are
they
making?
Zero.
They
have
what
they
lack
in,
in
revenue
product
and
business,
business
acumen,
they
make
all
up
in
just
vision,
which
is
to
build
an
AI
agent
that
passes
super
intelligence.
But
you
know,
I
mean,
it's
basically
just
20
guys
in
a
room
with
unlimited
amounts
of
money
and
no
pressure
to
generate
revenue.
Um,
but
my
favorite
thing
about
it's
,
they
just
call
their
app
safe.
So
like,
all
right
,
so
we're
gonna
build
an
AI
model
that
replaces
human
intelligence
and
smarter
than
any
human.
Everyone's
like,
oh,
it's
Terminator
two
,
this
is
gonna
kill
all
of
us.
And
they're
like,
people
are
gonna
think
that.
So
let's
just
call
it
safe,
super
intelligent
<laugh>
.
And
that's
really
,
and
and,
and
now
they're
Safe Super‑Intelligence and the $34 B pre‑revenue club
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
26:10
worth
$34
billion,
which,
you
know,
again,
all
right
,
if
it's
becomes
worth
a
trillion
dollars,
I
get
it.
All
right.
I
guess
$34
billion
pre-revenue
maybe.
But
like
so
many
people
always,
like
my
old
business
partner
years
ago
when
Tesla
first
hit
a
trillion
dollar
valuation,
they
were
making
less
money
than
AirPods
made
just
AirPods
in
the
,
in
Apple.
And
I
remember
him
being
like,
I'm
buying
more
stock.
And
I'm
like,
can
you
run
through
this
thought
experiment
with
me
right
now
that
is
this
company
worth
a
hundred
x
revenue
right
now?
It's
already
worth
a
trillion
dollars.
Can
it
be
worth
10
trillion?
You
do
understand
that
that's
like
the
entire
GDP
of
all
of
Europe
put
together
basically
half
of
America
of
50
to
50
to
40%
of
all
of
China
for
one
company's
market
cap.
I'm
like,
do
you
really
think
this
is
a
10
x
play?
And
he
was
like,
yes,
<laugh>
.
That's
what
we're
dealing
with
right
now.
People
being
like,
I
know
$34
billion
seems
like
a
lot
of
money,
but
what
if
this
company
is
worth
$80
trillion
one
day?
I'm
like,
okay
,
it's
,
yeah
,
it's
tough.
One
,
just
,
it's
34
billion
with
$0.
If
they
make
a
hundred
million
dollars
a
year,
then
it
is,
I
guess
worth
$90
trillion.
Sure,
it's
as
much
as
all
of
the
new
real
estate
in
America.
Pablo Srugo (Host)
27:29
But
think
about
how,
and
think
about
how
much
that
has
changed.
And
not
that
,
like
Instagram
gets
bought
for
a
billion
dollars
,
uh,
in
what,
like
2012?
So
just
over
10
years
ago.
And
it
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
27:39
Was
a
Pablo Srugo (Host)
27:39
Huge
deal.
'cause
it
was
like,
dude,
like
this
app
has
no
revenue.
It's
got
11
employees
a
year
and
a
half
old
billion
dollars
Wild
WhatsApp
gets
bought
for
19
billion.
That's
like
outta
this
world.
People
can't
believe
it
now,
you
know,
this
doesn't
happen.
Like
fundraisers
at
that
level
are
happening
like
all
the
time.
And
you
know,
I
don't
know.
I
mean,
on
the
one
hand,
yeah,
there's
a
huge
tailwind
with
ai.
I
think
there's
also
recognition
of
people
have
never
been
valued
as
highly,
you
know
what
I
mean?
Like,
it
used
to
be
you
needed
something
more
than
just
people
to
get
that
kind
of
valuation
,
crazy
user
growth,
revenue,
whatever.
Now
it
was
just
like,
dude,
I
was,
I'm
one
of
the
founders
of
open
ai.
Like,
oh,
boom
,
here's,
here's
a
ability
.
Like
why
not?
Right?
I
don't
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
28:17
Know
.
Yeah.
And,
and,
and
Mira
,
the
other
co-founder
of,
of
OpenAI
is
raising
a
$2
billion
seed
round
at
a
$10
billion
valuation.
She's
not
offering
the
rules
of
the
engagement
are
that
she
has
more
Boer
board
votes
than
everyone
combined
on
the
board,
plus
one.
So
they're
gonna
give
her
$2
billion.
And
this
is
a
quote
from
TechCrunch,
her
company
thinking
Machines
lab
only
recently
emerged
from
stealth
and
has
no
product
or
revenue
to
speak
of
.
What
it
does
have
is
dozens
of
high
profile
AI
researchers
in
its
regs
.
Pablo Srugo (Host)
28:53
This
is
what
I'm
saying,
like
the
world,
the
world
has
changed,
but
it
,
but
then
the
flip
,
here's
the
flip
side.
The
flip
side
is
you
look
at
OpenAI
itself,
you
look
at
the
beginning
of
it,
and
it
was
equally
insane.
And
yet
those
people
are
up
50,
a
hundred
x.
So
now
everybody's
think,
but
it
wasn't
10
billion
posts.
Maybe
it
was
like
a
billion
posts
or
whatever
.
Those
early
rounds
were
pretty
nuts
though.
So
again,
like
who
am
I?
Who
am
I
to
say,
you
know
,
I'm
not
a
16
C,
you
know,
I
don't
,
I
don't
have
spies.
I
don't
know.
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
29:19
Yeah,
I,
I
don't
know.
I
mean,
this
,
if
they,
I
just,
it
doesn't
make
any
sense.
I,
they
just,
quite
frankly,
I
just,
I'm,
I'm
like
more
and
more
convinced
that
we're
just
gonna
go
into
like
a
great
depression.
The
dollar's
gonna
be
slashed
to
a
10th
of
what
it's
worth.
Like
we're
just
deval
like,
money
doesn't
make
any
sense
anymore.
Everything
in
New
York
is
worth
,
like,
every
apartment's
a
million
dollars
and
you
live
in
dog
,
a
dog
apartment
with
like
400
square
feet.
You
know,
AI
companies
that
don't
make
any
money
are
worth
$40
billion.
I
mean,
it's
just,
none
of
,
none
of
this
money
thing
really
makes
sense
anymore.
And
I
think
I'm
just
gonna
buy
gold
bars
and
move
into
the
woods
and
buy
a
bunch
of
guns
because
it
seems
like
this
just
gonna
come
crumbling
down.
This
just
smells
like
bad
Klarna × DoorDash lets you finance ice cream
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
30:00
news.
Pablo Srugo (Host)
30:00
Well,
you
know,
to
kind
of
make
me
a
great
segue
for
the
next
piece,
which
is
timely,
if
things
are
about
to
fall
apart,
which
is
this
Klarna
DoorDash
partnership,
where
now
if
you
wanna
buy
a
meal,
20,
30,
$40
meal
,
uh,
you
don't
need
to
have
the
money
anymore.
You
don't
need
to
have
the
money
to
buy
anything.
You
don't
need
to
have
the
money
to
take
a
,
a
ride
somewhere
or
,
uh,
to
pay
for
groceries
because
Klarna
will
let
you
,
um,
split
it
up
into
flexible
monthly
payments.
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
30:30
Dude,
this
is
the
darkest
timeline
ever.
It's,
it
,
I,
I
wrote
my
,
probably
my
favorite
article
about
this
that
I've
ever
written.
The
detailing,
like
what
happened
with
do
what
,
what's
going
on
with
,
walk
Pablo Srugo (Host)
30:43
Us
through
it
,
walk
us
through
it.
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
30:44
But
basically,
so
I
mean,
the
reality
is
just
consumer
debt
has
gotten
so
out
of
control
that
it
doesn't
even
make
sense,
right?
Like
if
you
look
back
at
like
the
1940s,
the
only
thing
you
could
get
a
loan
for
was
a
house
because
your
friend
got
blown
up
in
Iwo
Jima
and
the
American
government
felt
bad
for
you.
So
they're
like,
okay,
here's
$3,000.
You
can
buy
a
home
in
Michigan.
And
the
house
literally
was
$3,000.
If
you
wanted
to
buy
something
that
was
worth
$50,
you
had
to
ask
yourself,
do
I
have
$50?
If
the
answer
is
you
have
$49,
you
just
couldn't
buy
anything.
But
since
then,
like
in
the
fifties
and
the
seventies,
we
started
introducing
like
car
loans,
credit
cards.
And
then
by
like
the
eighties
and
nineties,
it
was
just
fully
expected
that
everyone
was
in
crippling
debt.
You
have
to
take
on
crippling
debt
to
go
to
college.
You
have
to
take
on
crippling
debt
to
buy
a
car.
You
have
to
buy
,
take
on
crippling
debt
now
to
like
travel
to
France.
No
one
I
know
can
afford
to
go
to
Europe,
but
everyone's
been
15
times
and
then
they're
complaining
like,
I
don't
have
any
money.
It's
like,
well,
yeah,
I
just
saw
your
photos
of
you
in
Fiji.
You
make
$42,000
a
year.
Fiji's
pretty
expensive.
How
did
you
afford
that?
And
then
on
top
of
that,
you
look
at
them
and
they're
like
wearing
a
Gucci
tracksuit
and
like,
they
order
from
DoorDash
every
single
day.
And
I'm
like,
you
literally
cannot
afford
to
do
that.
Even
people
making
$150,000
a
year
should
not
be
ordering
DoorDash
every
day
.
That
just
is
a
,
financially
a
really
bad
idea.
Unless
you
live
in
like
Iowa
where
rent's
like
$400,
but
if
you
live
in
Pablo Srugo (Host)
32:21
New
York
by
,
they're
sponsored
by
DoorDash.
So
just
,
uh,
what
would
you
say?
Oh
,
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
32:24
Oh
,
me
,
I'm,
I'm
sponsored
by
DoorDash
too
.
It's
,
by
the
way
,
I'm
getting
to
that.
This
is
a
DoorDash
sponsorship
<laugh>
,
I'm
fully
on
board
.
But
like,
it's
a
good
idea
.
What
,
what
literally
happened
is,
you
know,
I,
I
think
everything
really
started
to
blow
up
during
like
the
bling
rap
era
because
like,
it
started
to
come
out
that
like
everyone
was
a
model.
Everyone
was
wearing
a
$50,000
watch
and
$20,000
worth
of
chains
and
wearing
a
Gucci
tracksuit.
And
everyone
looked
up
to
these
like
rappers
and
models
and
celebrities
as
role
models.
And
they're
like,
I
wanna
live
like
them
too.
Previously
you
couldn't
buy
any
of
that.
But
then
credit
card
companies
and
banks
started
loaning
people
for
consumer
debt
on
things
that
they
literally
don't
need.
Not
a
house,
not
a
car.
watches
call
like,
you
know
,
uh,
expensive
couches
and
stuff.
And
now
everyone's
sitting
around
being
like,
man,
why
don't
I
have
any
money?
And
it's
like,
well,
you
went
to
Wesleyan,
took
out
$250,000
in
loans
to
go
to
Wesleyan.
You
got
a
degree
in
whatever,
like
human
resources,
<laugh>
,
you
work
at
some
company
making
$58,000
a
year.
You
have
a
$40,000
wardrobe,
and
your
apartment
in
New
York
City
is
at
minimum
$4,000
a
month.
And
on
top
of
that,
in
the
split
second
that
you
almost
notice
that
your
life
is
indebted
and
that
you
up.
Ka
Perry
comes
out
with
a
new
song,
goes
through
space,
you
know,
Lizzo
starts
talking
about
someone.
You
forget
that
you're
in
debt.
And
then
in
that
split
second
,
right,
right
after
you
decide,
man,
I
feel
kind
of
bad
about
myself.
You
know
what
I
should
do,
DoorDash,
Ben,
and
Jerry's,
but
your
credit
card
declines
and
you
go,
I
can't
afford
Ben
and
Jerry's
on
DoorDash.
But
that's
where
Klarna
comes
in.
Now
you
can
finance
the
Ben
and
Jerry's
over
15
payments
and
you
can't
afford
to
get
it,
and
your
Xanax
will
also
arrive
tomorrow
because
you're
on,
you
don't
know
why
you're
just
depressed
all
the
time.
Maybe
it's
your
debt.
But
like,
that's
where
America
is.
We're
just
in
consumer
debt.
Hell,
it's
everyone's
fault.
Everyone
should
take
personal
responsibility,
but
instead
we're
gonna
blame
the
banks.
Pablo Srugo (Host)
34:26
The
funny
thing
is
about
all
that
is
like,
you
know,
and
for,
I
should
note,
I
,
I
travel
to
like
Latin
America
pretty,
pretty
often.
It's
pretty,
it's
actually
common
when
you
pay
with
credit
card,
they
ask
you
how
many
installments
like
you
,
you
pay
with
credit
card.
And
at
the
POS
it's
like,
how
many
installments
do
you
wanna
,
you
wanna
do
this
in?
And
you
know,
normally
people
are
doing
like
2,
10,
12,
right?
Like
,
you
even
do
that
with
a
movie.
You
go
to
the
movies,
you
buy
a
movie
ticket
today
and
you're
paying
it.
Here's
the
crazy
part,
like
when
you
do
it,
you're
like,
oh,
that's
kind
of
nice.
Like,
I'm
paying
like
a
dollar
a
month
to
go
to
the
movies
today.
Like
in
12
months,
you're
paying
for
a
movie
you
saw
a
year
ago.
Plus
the
movie
saw
,
the
bun
has
one
after
the
,
after
you're
paying
for
Ben
and
Jerry's,
they
got
15
months
ago,
he
was
still
paying
off
ice
cream.
It's
not,
you
know,
it's
not
a
good
place
to
be
in.
Do
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
35:12
You
know,
do
you
know
how
old
my
grandfather
was?
He's
88.
He's
a
gem
or
no,
89.
He
turns
90
in
September.
Do
you
know
how
old
he
was?
Pablo
when
he
went
to
a
restaurant
for
the
first
time?
He
ate
out
for
the
first
time?
No,
Pablo Srugo (Host)
35:24
How
old
?
How
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
35:25
23
<laugh>
.
And
I
asked
him,
I
was
like,
grandpa,
that
sounds
crazy.
What
are
you
talking
about?
He's
like,
well,
I
couldn't
afford
to
go
out
to
restaurants.
I
grew
up
in
the
Bronx,
Jack,
I
just,
I
ate
at
either
my
house
or
if
I
was
lucky,
a
friend
would
have
me
over
to
dinner.
And
these
were
not,
these
were
not
like,
they
were,
they
were,
you
know,
lower
middle
class
,
but
they
weren't
like
poverty
line
poor.
But
he
was
like,
yeah,
what
are
you
talking
about?
I
didn't
,
I
didn't
go
out
to
eat.
I
,
I
couldn't
do
that.
I
literally
could
not
afford
to,
so
I
just
didn't.
And
he
walked
to
college.
He
walked
to
college
,
Iona
College.
He
was
the
first
one
in
his
family
to
go.
He
walked
in
nine
miles
to
college
every
day
and
then
would
just
hitchhike
if
he
was
lucky
or
walk
nine
miles
one
way
to
get
to
college.
Pablo Srugo (Host)
36:09
I
think
these
days,
like
you
should
,
you
,
you're
like,
anything
you
want,
you
should
have,
you
know,
and
also
it's
so
much
in
your
face
that
everybody,
what
everybody
else
has,
like
you
said,
that
you
just
like,
are
constantly
reinforced,
like,
man,
I
should
be
like,
you
see
other
people
traveling,
like
I
should
also
be
able
to
travel
like
I
deserve
it.
And
<laugh>
,
you
know,
Clarin
comes
in,
let's
you
travel,
so
you
do
it.
Meanwhile,
I
met
this
founder
the
other
day
who's
really,
really
smart
dude,
like
engineer
type
and
first
company
did
work
out
,
starts
a
second
company
like
four
years
ago.
Um,
raises
like
200
k.
And
I
was
just
like,
and
still
like,
it's
a
hardware
startup,
so
it's
a
bunch
of
tech
work,
RD
whatever,
still
not
really
sharing
revenue.
I'm
just
like,
dude,
how
are
you
like
living?
And
he
is
like,
man,
it's
not,
he's
in
Toronto,
like
downtown
Toronto
by
the
way.
He's
like,
it's
not
that
hard
when
you
,
um,
just
make
it
a
point
<laugh>
to
like
live
cheaply.
So,
you
know,
I
,
I
can't
say
that
I'm
doing
that,
but
my
point
is,
there
is
extremes
out
there
of
what's,
of
what's
possible.
I
mean,
he
must
be
making
like
40,
50
KA
year,
you
know,
just,
you
just
do
the
math
on
it.
So
somehow
he's
making
it
happen.
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
37:15
I
have
a
couple
friends
that
don't
have
jobs
right
now
and
like,
I
have
to
scold
them
'cause
they
go
out,
they're
still
going
out
like
three
or
four
nights
a
week.
We
live,
I
live
in
New
York.
It's
a
fun
place
to
party.
It's
a
fun
place
to
go
out
to
bars
or
whatever.
And
like
,
uh,
my
advice
to
him
is
like,
whenever
I'm
in
a
tough
time,
I
try
and
make
myself
earn
things.
Like
I
go
out
way
less.
If
I
go
out,
it's
because
I
did
something
that
I
felt
like
I
How consumer debt became America’s default setting
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
37:40
deserve
to
treat
myself.
But
like,
I
have
to
live
that
way,
otherwise
I'll
just
literally
dress
like
a
rapper
party,
like
I'm
50
cent
and
like
go
absolutely
out
of
my
mind
and
just
spend
like
a
complete
maniac.
But
like
this
whole
idea
that
you
deserve
things
when
you
have
done
nothing
to
actually
earn
it
is,
is
really
unhealthy
and
it's
a
slippery
slope
because
everyone's
doing
it.
And
most
of
my
friends
just
assume
people
are
richer
than
they
are.
And
it's
just
like
growing
up,
my
dad
would
like,
well
,
we
,
we
,
I
lived
in
a
pretty
affluent
area
and
he
would
point
out
,
he's
like,
see
them?
I'm
like,
they
have
a
nice
house.
He'd
be
like,
yeah,
dad,
that's
a
really
nice
house.
He's
like,
we
make
way
more
money
than
them.
All
right
.
They
live
in
a
$6
million
house.
They've
got
four
cards
.
One
of
them
drives
a
Porsche.
He's
like,
they
make
half
of
what
we
make
with
a
six
time
more
expensive
house
because
it's
just
all
debt.
They're
in
crippling
debt
,
Jack
.
And
he
would
be
like,
live
beneath
your
means
.
Yes.
Don't
get
into
debt.
<laugh>.
And
I
,
it
,
it
scared
the
out
of
me.
And
then
I
realized
just
growing
up
that
like
all
of
my
friends,
for
the
most
part,
not
all
of
them,
but
a
lot
of
people
I
know
are
just
in
debt.
They
look
like
they're
way
richer
than
they
are,
but
they're
just
broke
as.
And
it's
scary
because
you
have
no
idea
from
the
outside.
Everyone
seems
like
they
have
it
figured
out
and
almost
no
one
has
anything
figured
out.
Perfect.
Pablo Srugo (Host)
38:57
Well,
let's
,
uh,
let's
stop
there.
I
think
in
conclusion,
what
we
learned
this
month
is
if
you're
struggling,
if
you're,
if
you're
feeling
like
you
need
to
use
Klarna
to
buy
,
uh,
Ben
and
Jerry's
ice
cream,
the
best
thing
you
can
do
is
go
work
at
a
16
z,
become
a
vc,
because
that's
the
final
thing
that's
gonna
be
extinct.
And
,
uh,
if
you
can't
do
that
deal
is
hiring
spies
because
there's
just
quit.
So
that's
another
option
for
everybody
to
double
your
income.
Jack Kuveke (Guest)
39:19
Beautiful
takeaway,
well
said,
Pablo
.
Pablo Srugo (Host)
39:22
You
remember
like
the
first
person
who
told
you
about
Bitcoin,
the
first
person
who
told
you
about
Uber.
You
want
to
be
that
person
because
being
first
is
cool.
So
be
a
cool
person
and
tell
your
founder
friends,
set
it
to
them
on
WhatsApp.
Put
it
in
a
WhatsApp
group,
put
it
on
a
Slack
channel.
Let
people
know
about
the
show.
Let
people
know
about
this
episode.
Don't
let
somebody
else
beat
you
to
the
punch
and
share
it
with
your
founder
friends.
First,
remember
what
Ricky,
Bobby
said.
If
you
ain't
first,
you're
last.