Google’s Potential Break Up, Hurricane Conspiracies, and Guests Susanne Craig and Russ Buettner - podcast episode cover

Google’s Potential Break Up, Hurricane Conspiracies, and Guests Susanne Craig and Russ Buettner

Oct 11, 20241 hr 15 minEp. 557
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Kara and Scott discuss the highlights of VP Kamala Harris’s press blitz, TikTok being sued by 14 states, and the much-anticipated Tesla robotaxi event. Plus, the DOJ is considering breaking up Google to address its monopoly power on search. Also, a conversation about the danger of hurricane conspiracy theories. Then, our Friends of Pivot Susanne Craig and Russ Buettner join to talk about their new book, “Lucky Loser: How Donald Trump Squandered His Father’s Fortune and Created the Illusion of Success.” You can find Susanne on Threads at @susannecraig, and Russ on X at @russbuettner. Follow us on Instagram and Threads at @pivotpodcastofficial. Follow us on TikTok at @pivotpodcast. Send us your questions by calling us at 855-51-PIVOT, or at nymag.com/pivot. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

Support for this episode comes from SAS. How is AI affecting how you learn, work, and socialize? And what you need to know to make responsible use of it as a business leader, worker, and human in the world? Find out when you listen to pondering AI, a podcast featuring candid conversations with experts from across the AI ecosystem. pondering AI explores the impact and implications of AI for better and for worse with a diverse group

of innovators, advocates, and data scientists. Check out pondering AI wherever you get your podcasts. They're not writers, but they help their clients shape their businesses' financial stories. They're not an airline, but their network connects global businesses in nearly 180 local markets. They're not detectives, but they work across businesses to uncover new financial opportunities for their clients. They're not just any bank. They are city.

Learn more at city.com slash we are city. At C-I-T-I dot com slash we are city. Ryan Reynolds here for I guess my hundreds mint commercial. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, honestly, when I started this, I thought I'd only have to do like four of these. I mean, it's unlimited premium wireless for $15 a month. How are there still people paying two or three times that much? I'm sorry, I shouldn't be victim blaming here. Give it a try at midmobile.com slash save whatever you're ready.

$45 up from payment equivalent to $15 per month. New customers on first three month plan only. Taxes and fees extra. Speed slower above 40 gigabytes, C-T-Tales. Hi everyone, this is Pivot from New York Magazine in the Vox Media Podcast Network. I'm Cara Swisher. And I'm Scott Galway. I just flew in from Toronto and G are my arms tired. You're powered from Canada? Yeah, again, I had to I did this fundraising thing for something called the Leecock Foundation

there, which helps kids in certain schools in the area. They've joined with schools. That's what the French exchange students said to the fraternity brother. Oh, it's lecock. You just know it's coming. I knew when I saw it, if I said the name of the foundation, which is a fine foundation, it was good. It was a debate. It was one of those funny debates where I was on the side of the Internet has ruined everything and other famous Canadians were on the other

side of the Internet saved everything essentially. It didn't have room. So I won. And who hosted the debate? It was the Leecock Foundation. It was to raise money. It was to raise money for it. It's a very good cause. It's a very good cause. I don't often do those, but I thought they the Canadians convinced they wore me down last time I was there. I went from New York there. It was good. Give money to the Leecock Foundation.

I went to this group. I went to this thing a bunch of friends. The only reason I went was because it was a bunch of people from my high school and I like to rub my success in their face. And I just went around going to all of you that signed my earbook stay cool, job done. I thought that was the line. I thought that was the line. Anyways, Toronto was lovely. By the way, I took their subway. Have you ever taken their

subway? Everything is so clean there. It's crazy clean. I know. I know, but it was like so pleasant. It was the most pleasant trip there and everything. There's also interesting diversity there. It was on the street where this took place. I took the subway to it. I'm like, how do they maintain? They seem to get along. Well, they have issues. They do have issues. I just find it a really interesting place. Canada is sort of like entrepreneurship for us. We kind of romanticize it. They face

many of the same issues as us. I know. You know what? Honestly, Canada is one of the best managed brands in the world. People are only the impression that Canada is just a much better version of America. I would argue that Canada is just very similar to America, but it does face many of the same issues we face. Crime homeless. It does, but it's a different tone. There are more civil. Let's say that. They're more civil.

They are. That said, I have to say most annoying airport Toronto going through a customs there. They're like very fussy about how many things to put in a plastic bag, et cetera. It's really such a performance theater there. They're very like step back too big to put in the top. There's a lot of that. Of course, I felt like 100% American. It's fine. I paid for this seat. What do you need to do this? I want to speak to the manager. Leave me alone. Leave me alone. Nice people. Stop helping

me. There is a different personality type. But he was a fundraiser. It's weird. Whenever I drink Canadian whiskey, I get very angry. Just like when some people drink chin, they get very mean. Except when I drink Canadian whiskey. I'm very mean. But I'm sorry too. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I just have a Tim Hortons donut. That make me happy. Anyway, it was a good trip. I'm glad you're back. Let's be honest. Fucking Canadians. You give them an inch, Cara, and they'll take 2.54 centimeters.

Oh my God. Anyway, we're moving along. I'm going to see you next week. I'm very excited to see you. I know. We're doing it all hands. I don't like hanging with our employees. We're going to do that. You're going to be nice about it. Father's me that they expect to be paid. Yeah. Anyway, we also are going to do a thing with Joanna Coles at zero bond. We're going to do a little together. My stopping grounds. Apparently, I can't wait to see it. I've been there. I don't think so. I don't

think you've ever brought me there. I'm sorry. It's very exclusive, Cara. I can't. They have standards, Cara. It's very, very exclusive. I understand. I understand. I'm very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very. That's so much fun. That's so much fun. We look forward to it. The contest tick motions now. Uh, right young faces are going to last if we really share something what we experienced at that. Um, red just like the

theater story of us and people all along. Yeah. Okay. Okay. I know. Now, yeah. Whatever that may be the case, I mentioned it on Pub. 홍a in looked like a curiosity. I know during the historic hurricane season, which is really unfortunate. It's your plain old kind of misinformation basically from the lips of Donald Trump. Plus our friends of pivot are New York Times reporters, Susan Craig and Russ Bukner, very excited.

It's a new book called Lucky Loser, How Donald Trump Squandered His Father's Fortune and Created the Illusion of Success. Pretty good illusion, it's still going. First of all, quickly, let's talk about Kamala Harris's press blitz this week, some highlights, 60 minutes, Harris urged voters to watch Trump's rallies in place of the interview, she's canceled. On the view, she said she wouldn't have done anything differently than President Biden had done during the administration.

So people thought this was a fault of her do that. I'm not so sure. On Howard Stern, the Vice President said former President Trump has a desire to be a dictator. And of course, she cracked open a Miller High Life with Stephen Colbert and seemed to say, what the fuck? Let's listen. But elections I think are won on vibes because one of the old saws is, they just want somebody to take and have a beer with. So would you like to have a beer with me? So I can tell people what that's like.

Okay. This was, now we asked ahead of time, because I can't just be giving a drink to the Vice President and I'd say, but I ask you, you asked for Miller High Life. You're on the line. Well, except for the unfortunate choice of the Champaign of Beers, Scott, how'd she do? Yeah, but she wasn't going to order a dose, I guess, right? I mean, right, no, had to be a Miller. You know, just it's funny, just listening to her just now. Her laugh is a real asset.

I mean, branding's all about differentiation and you want to highlight where you're different than the competitor. I don't know if this is true, but I wouldn't be surprised if they said, look, I don't have to say this. I don't think she's just compelling sometimes in person in terms of how she acquits herself and the arguments she makes around issues versus past presidential candidates. And I think they said, okay, let's just manage the campaign very tightly.

Let's keep things kind of under control. And I think somewhere around a month or two months ago they said, in contrast to Donald Trump, she's fucking Winston Churchill. So let's get her out there. And again, we've said this a couple of times, but for me, the kind of observation, everybody out here, I mean, oh, I still, everybody out here, no one's talking about Colbert. No one's talking about 60 minutes. Everyone is talking about one media appearance. You know, that media appearance was?

Call her daddy. 100%. This is the pivot to new mediums. I mean, there's a lot of tick talks. I think I just can't get over. I don't know, is it selection bias or proximity bias? I don't think so, because the people I'm surrounded by are, I don't know if they're like hardcore podcast listeners, but I just, I've overheard people saying, did you hear to the call her daddy thing? Did you hear it? You heard talk to Alex Cooper, it's really a pivot.

I think we're gonna find when they reverse engineer what had the most influence. They're gonna say, or one of the things they're gonna say was, and he did this to be fair at the Trump campaign, did it first. He started going on all these Manusphere podcasts. On the Manusphere. But that's what creates all the buzz. Is there appearances on podcasts? What are your thoughts, Karen? Yeah, I think it's absolutely true.

I kind of chastised, I was on Abbey Phil show, some of them about laughing about call your daddy, and I was like, oh, they did that all over cable and all over mainstream news. I was like, are you kidding me? Genius. This is what matters. I was like, she should do more of those. She should do them all over the place. I think she should do local news, as I said, and things like that. But I think I thought it was a great idea.

I don't care if there was clap back on Twitter, who cares, it doesn't matter. It was just the right place to reach a certain group of people. And a lot of them in one place and motivate them in some fashion. And so you got it. I think one of the problems the Manusphere Media has is that it's not as relevant as it used to be, just like in all things. Like this is not where kids get their news. This shouldn't be a new fresh take among anybody. But I thought that was well.

I think it still is, no matter how many she does, Trump floods the zone with lies and stunts and stupid things and people look, right? So even if she tries to get people talking about her everybody talks about him because even bad things, any publicity is good publicity for him. And I don't, if she does hundreds of these, it doesn't matter. I think they should be more aggressive, as you and I have said last week, going on Joe Rogan, going local news and everything else.

But I'm not so sure it would matter because Donald Trump is a one man, PT Barnum, toxic PST Barnum. So we'll see if it matters anymore, but that's a real problem for her, I think, no matter how you slice it. Anyway, we'll see, I thought it was great. Joe, I mean, at name drop, do you want to know who I dinner with last night in LA? Who? Care I don't want to talk about the stuff, it's. Okay, all right. I just can't, I just can't, you know, I respect the confidentiality.

I don't even know who brought this up, but my personal life is my personal life, care I do. I don't know, no, no, no, no, no, let's get onto the next subject. Let's talk about whatever conglomerate is being broken up. Oh, now you have to tell me, come on. Who? Okay, will our net. Oh, how is he doing? That's great. How did that happen? He likes our podcast. He's totally into, he's got, I don't think I'm speaking out of school. He's got a gaggle of kids, including young men.

And he's very interested in what we talk about, the issues around affecting young men. And I like to think about, I saw him speaking, you know, he's very handsome. He's shockingly handsome in person. He is handsome. They're all handsome. It's so true in Hollywood. Can I just give you one piece of advice? Don't fuck it up like with Dax Shepherd, okay? Don't fuck it up. Oh, he'd brought that up. He's friends with Dax. He literally sat down and he goes, did you text Dax yet?

And I'm like, no. He's like, what's, what's, but he literally, he's totally like, he's just said that. He's like, what's wrong with you? He's like, he's a great guy. Just reach out to him. I hope you've gone on a smart list. You showed us a great show. I did a great, I had a great time. Well, they have to ask you first. Oh, right. Yeah. They have to ask you. As you said, I'm lower shelf. Speaking of texting, I will text Jason and Sean and make sure you get on. How about that?

No, I don't, I don't want to force my way, but because Will and I are now good good friends, I don't like to call on my close, close friend. I would totally use that. One thing that was interesting is when we did Smarles, he's, he hates Elon Musk. Oh, I wasn't going to bring that up. He got triggered when we start talking about Musk. Well, he did it on the show, so he did it publicly. Anyway, we'll get to Musk in a second actually, but oh shit, really? Oh, for that, for one second, we have to.

That's a shocker. Actually, let me just go there. He's set to unveil his vision of Tesla's future at the event dubbed We Robot at the Warner Brothers Law in California. We're recording ahead of the event, which is tonight, but are you going? It's right there in Los Angeles. I'm not going. But Elon is expecting, you should like totally bunge in. But Elon is expected to reveal his long way to Robotaxi or CyberCab. I'm sure it's going to be slick looking.

Supposedly, a fully autonomous car, reportedly futuristic and designed, two-seaters of butterfly wing doors, of course. The car, as penisy as possible, he'll make it. The car will be used in not in a good way, penis. The car will be used for a new ride-hailing platform as describes a combination of Airbnb and Uber. Elon as hinted at his team will show off a few other things at the event, remember to be additional mystery vehicles. I'm sure there's a scooter or something like that.

I actually talked to Elon about Tesla's plans for full self-driving cars, including Robotaxi's in a 2018 interview. Let's listen to what he said then. I don't want to sound overconfident, but I would be very surprised if any of the car companies exceeded Tesla in self-driving in getting to full self-driving. I think we'll get to full self-driving next year as a generalized solution, I think. That's where I'll track to do that next year. He was not on track to do it next year.

It's turned out to be a lie. It was 2018, and he's done that many times. The interview was later referenced oddly enough during a lawsuit brought by a family of men who died in a Tesla, and Elon's lawyers claimed Musk, like many public figures, is the subject of many deep-fig videos. They tried to claim this interview as a deep-fig video. This is all such nonsense. He also said an uninvestor call back in July.

Anyone who doesn't believe that Tesla would solve vehicle autonomy should sell their Tesla stock. By the way, Waymo, which we also introduced, the original ones at our code conference, has been driving millions of miles in San Francisco and all over the country. They didn't solve it first. They didn't get Tesla was exceeded in self-driving so far. But it's a really big deal for him. A lot of people just left Tesla this week, another group of top executives went either to Waymo or other places.

There's a lot of quitting going on. What do you think? He's betting on this, isn't it? Kind of. I think it's a lot of showmanship, but we'll see. It's fun. I was at the bar last night, and there were some folks, and one guy was in from the Bay Area, and he was there with his date. He was there for the event. He's an engineer at Tesla, and they're there for the big unveil. Look, I think the guys are great gentlemen. I mean, he's really smart.

Like you said, all good press or all presses, good press. Very much like Trump, yeah. Yeah, so I won't watch it, but I'll be interested to read the reviews on how it's better than what's out there right now. I, speaking of which, I took my first. I met my friend at the Mayborn Hotel, and we were having a dinner at Medales, I think. And I ordered my first WAMO. I had never been in a self-driving car before. Oh, yeah, weren't they great? And it was a Jaguar, and I got in.

And first of all, it struck me like the way it drives. It drives like a nervous 17 year old. It drives like you would want how you would want your kid to drive after he or she got her driver's license. And that is like, it'll stop at anything and you're friendly, honk at the horn, just it's very cautious. But I was, it really is, there was construction, there was construction with cones and an accident, and a cop using his bedtone to wave people despite what the light was saying.

And it was a little confused and would break cautiously. And I remember even the cop looking at us and saying, oh shit, a self-driving car. But it's just amazing. It figured it out. And I thought the millions of data points, it must be observing, to actually not just shut off and go, I can't handle this shit, it's too dangerous. You figured out somebody needs to get in the seat and do this.

And then the other thought I had was, you know, these billions of data points in AI, and it forgot to put the fucking driver's seat forward. I mean, I'm not, I'm six foot two. It's like, why, it's like there's no driver there. Why is the seat not more forward? But I thought it was super. I got to be honest. Yeah, it's so, it's so much better. I was in the original ones, like they tested at Google. And I gotta tell you, it's, I ride them all over San Francisco. I've had very few problems.

They have had problems, but humans have more, as I always point out. But they're so far, they're driving on highways now. They're starting to do drives in highways and I think Arizona. They're very far ahead in this game, in the Waymo division. How, whether they make money or not, we'll see. But I mean, Tesla's idea is that you use Teslas to like someone, when someone's Tesla's sitting empty, it comes to us. I would never in my friggin life get in a Tesla.

Let me just say, in my neighbor in San Francisco, someone was driving a Tesla, had it on autopilot, it drove into the bodega in my neighborhood at the corner store and crashed into the, in the way the guys like, I didn't do anything. It just, I would never, because they don't have as many points of safety as the Waymo does. They, they, they, I think you're spreading misinformation. I'm not spreading. I'll send you the photos. It was crazy. Tesla are great cars.

We just don't like the guy who runs it. They're great cars. No, that is not true. I don't think they're, I don't think they're driving. This thing is as good as other companies at this point. Well, look, it's obvious. It's a great car for an EV and some, some driving with a person there, but I do not trust it in the same way I trust the Google version of it at all.

But the next, the next evolution of self-driving cars that we've been waiting for and it's clearly, you know, it really is on the horizon. Is it soon country singers trucks are going to start leaving them in addition to their wives? Yeah. Ha, ha, ha, ha. Takes a minute, but it's funny. Anyway, I, I'm sorry. There's all kinds of problems. I just don't trust it anymore. I don't trust this company anymore in a way that I do trust others and. You trust Waymo more than whatever. Absolutely.

They've just done it quietly. They've done it with more points of, there's more, I'm not a technical person, but they use laser and cameras and this and that. Is that the technical term laser and camera? Whatever. No, but like he does. Not a light hour. He does, they do, light hour and he doesn't believe in that. And I don't know. I don't think he cares for safety as much as others. And I think that's worn out in a lot of his history. You're really going full, full. I am.

I mean, you've really, you've really liked that. You just, I wouldn't get in a Tesla for this. I'm sorry. I wouldn't, but I would with someone that's done millions of miles and this is, we'll see how they do. I am all, the thing is I'm all for self-driving cars. I think autonomous vehicles are cool. And I get in them earlier than other people. I just wouldn't get in this one yet until I, I understand the safety and especially with all these executives leaving.

It's, you know, it's had a vehicle program. It's the CIO. It's the, like it goes on and on and on. And so I just, he takes too many risks. And I'm not, he's not going to take a risk with my life on this. And I hope he gets there at the time he did this interview. It was very helpful, but it was bullshit. It was just another lie. So that's all I'm saying. It's all the same. Well, apples, self-automatic cars coming up, but supposedly they're having a tough time installing windows.

Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah. Oh my god. I could do this all night. I could do this all night. Well, good luck with your thing tonight. I'm sure it'll go well. TikTok is being sued by bipartisan group of 14 attorneys general across the country for violations against consumer protection laws. The lawsuit led by California AG, Rob Bonita and New York AG, Latisha James, alleged as TikTok uses addictive features on young people to make ad money.

The TikTok features highlighted in the lawsuit include beauty filters, push notifications, and endless scroll. Last year, over 30 other states filed similar lawsuits against meta. More people were finally against meta, which is interesting. They didn't quite get as many with this one. You know, it's part of a long, onslaught, I was fascinated by it was half as many as filed against meta. I guess meta's bigger or I'm not sure. A little of this feels performative. I don't know how do you feel?

Like, if there was one, there are two substances the Galway household is addicted to. And the first is the affirmation of strangers. I care too much about what strangers think of me, which is really fucking pathetic. Me too. The second is TikTok. I don't think my kids are addicted to Instagram or Reels or video games. I actually like it when my son plays video games.

He does it with his friends and he screams out these warrior cries, the wake up the whole neighborhood that I just, you know how, you know how as a parent, even if you don't see your kids, but just knowing they're in the other room is very comforting. And I'll be working on something in the other room. Like, other part of the house and I'll hear my son go, y'all like scream out. And I know he's just accomplished something on a video and it makes me very happy.

Anyway, I don't know how I got here, but the thing that has been the substance that has caused the greatest level of dysfunction and is would qualify as an addiction. In my household is TikTok. And I wonder if it's Instagram for girls, whether it's out, I don't think there's been a ton of studies around, you know, especially 24% we talked about Slasso, 24% of Instagram users, Adolescent, Instagram users would be qualified as addicts. I think among young boys, I think it's TikTok.

We're talking about addiction. And then one of the most valuable platforms in the world, ascendant platforms out of China is an addictive substance. And then the most valuable company out of Europe is treating addiction. The just the business of addiction is such an example of how regulatory forces have failed to move in and price things or recognize their externalities.

Because it kind of goes back to what you were talking about or the gentleman you referenced before and how impressed we are with him and we make excuses for him. We talk about these platforms. We talk about semi-glutide because we're all just so, the bottom line is we've all acquiesced to money. And we absolutely, we defer, we acquiesce, we let money wash over anything, us no matter how bad it is for us.

And unless we can reverse engineer it to something that's getting in the way of the sale of legal drugs or it's coming, we can weaponize it against foreigners or immigrants. I mean 80% of people arrested for the trafficking of fentanyl are American citizens. But wait, let's demonize immigrants. And unless there's some sort of demonization of politicization in it, addiction is the ultimate business. Well, we have to hit everybody. You can't just be in this haphazard way.

And this is just, I just sit here and I'm like, this is a waste of time and a lot of press releases. So can we just have national rules on this stuff and figure out what the best way is by the way, it may not be age gating, it may not be, but like a considered national plan. It's gotta be simple. And the simplest thing is the following, no smartphones under the age of 16. Look at the, should there be down some downside?

Should there be maybe some, I don't, I'm not entirely sure how it violates anyone's privacy. What would be the upside of kids not having their brain being wired as we put every addictive substance and adoca bag in their pocket, especially kids who are raised by single mothers don't have a lot of people overseeing them. We're going to public schools with the teachers can't keep up with kids watching whatever in class. This is again being outsourced to the most to lower income households.

I wonder what the addiction rate is to these products among lower income households where there's not enough parental time to. Among the parents, among everybody. You said something really coach and what? And you said that the bottom line is, we let them do it because we're addicted to our screens and we want time on our own screens.

But I think the legislation here that solves 80% of this or 80% at least my kids, no smartphones under the age of 16 and by the way, Apple and Alphabet could absolutely figure this out. It wouldn't be hard. They could do it. They could figure it out in 30 days. Yeah, that's never going to pass. That's the thing. Exactly, regulation laws. It's a question of what they want to. They have to be made to, sorry. Well speaking of that, let's get to our first big story.

The DOJ is considering breaking up Google after declaring Google's search business as an unlawful monopoly. The DOJ has released a proposal for limiting the company's dominance, including breaking the company up. Included in the proposal, the government is considering limiting the contracts Google can have to make search a default. Apple is what they're talking about. Requiring Google to let sites opt in to search engine inclusion while opting out of inclusion in Google's AI tools.

Forcing Google to make certain information like data and ranking signals available to rivals, I thought that was interesting. And licensing or syndicating Google's ad fee separately from search results and requiring Google to provide certain performance information to advertisers. These all seem rather reasonable. I'm not sure about the second one. But talk about, does this list address monopoly problems adequately? And will any of it happen?

Obviously, the Google right now holds 90% of the market share of search. Incredible. It used to be three. It was Microsoft Yahoo and Google and Yahoo's I had for many years. The judge on the case aims to rule on the proposed remedies by next August. And after likely a appeal from Google that changes could take years, obviously. And Google is calling the recommendations radical. So I'd love to know what you think of this address as it. I think these are pretty strong things.

And what advice would you give Google what to do besides it's slow rolling as they have done for many years? Yeah, we're exactly right. It's slow roll. And what's interesting is, if you really think about the impact that Andy Trust has had, it's the scrutiny that you're under during Andy Trust that actually creates past the most tangible impact. Because as you know, Microsoft was found guilty of monopoly abuse and the remedy was to they were ordered to be broken up.

And then it was overturned over several years. This is years long, this will play out or not play out over several years. But even if it ends up being reversed, which I don't think it will be, even if they're managed to slowball it, it's good because Google or Alpha that will think twice before they think, oh, here's an emerging AI player. Let's force people not to install it on their Android phones or let's outspend them and put them out of business. So these things, it may take years.

I was kind of hoping. I thought that there was a chance alphabet might prophyllacically spin YouTube because everybody talks about, oh my God, if you ask people who's a big streamer, they say Netflix and that commands about 7.5% share YouTube, is it 10%, YouTube is the number one streamer in the world. And it's really well run. And anyways, I would think that that would be the logical spin that maybe they'd go to the DOJ and say, hey, what if we spun YouTube, but that's satisfied?

And it doesn't look as if it would be. No, no, no, because then there's an ad. This is the search one. There's also an ad case in Virginia. It just is, they've got to separate them. They just do. They have all the information and they have their ahead. And they, even if they're lagging in AI, they have so much power. And so they really, I think forcing them to make information and data ranking signals to rivals is a great idea. I think licensing it separately is a great idea.

I think limiting the default thing, they can buy their way into dominance. Like, they're not doing it because they're better. That's a more thoughtful answer, you're right. I don't know. These seem reasonable to me. And they're going to have to do at least three of four, two of four. And then they'll drag it out for as long as they can. But eventually, they're going to have to do something. You're right. They should do it prophylactically. But this is a pattern for companies like Google.

There's only a few of them. Amazon, Apple, they all have to change the practices. Especially, it depends on, again, who wins. But I think a lot of politicians are much more hostile than they were before. And sometimes too much so in a weird way, someone has been calling for this. Well, this is a question looking for an answer, not just to make a point. But I can't think of another industry of this size, $300 billion, that has one player with a 90 plus percent share.

Like, there's just, there isn't a market that this is big that has this sort of dominance. Their argument is that search, Amazon does search, open a eyes, and they have competitors. You have competitors everywhere. One click away. Yet they've managed to maintain 90% of it, $300 billion market. Yeah, it's because they're so good. They haven't innovated at all. And there's been no innovation in search that's lasted. So it kind of is classic in lots of ways. I had a agree.

Anyway, let's go on a quick break. We come back. The dangerous hurricane misinformation is also surging online. And we'll speak with friends of Pivot, Suzanne Craig, and Russ Butiner. Their book is a Chronicle Donald Trump's Lucky Break and Shady Business Practices. Support for the show comes from the new season of Crucible Moments, a podcast from Sequoia Capital.

Last season, Crucible Moments presented a firsthand look inside the stories that shape some of the most significant companies of our time. Their founders shared their unbornished histories, what it's like to lead through uncertainty and overcome challenges in pursuit of your vision. They also dope deep into how their moments of turmoil lead to pivotal inflection points. This season, Crucible Moments is back with new stories and resonant lessons told directly from the founders themselves.

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Visit pro.fiverr.com to sign up and use the code pivot for 15% off any service. Scott, we're back with our second big story, Hurricane Milton, Made Landfall in Florida. And Wednesday night, as category three storm, little less than they thought it was coming in at five, bringing wind, storm surge, and tornado still very devastating.

Ahead of this storm hitting present Biden called out Donald Trump for his onslaught of lies about recent hurricanes, conspiracy theories and lies about the Hurricane Helene have been spreading for the last week courtesy of Trump and the far right and also social media sites like X.

Some of the claims FEMA funding was given to migrants, the government purposely in directing areas with GOP voters and marty Taylor Greene actually said whether can be controlled presumably by Jewish space lasers again. Oh, you're still my joke. We're starting to become the same person. I know we are.

The huge information, it's really bad on X and Linda Yaccarino, one of the more heinous executives to run across recently, is saying stay safe, stay on X. Do not stay on X if you want to stay safe just so you know. Pete Buttigieg ended up calling Elon Musk to sort him out on some of this stuff. You know, he was being polite about it. But but but spreading misinformation on this platform is really bad. Biden and other government officials are doing what they can to debunk the nonsense.

The White House started posting on Reddit, keep people informed about the hurricanes and combat misinformation meteorologists are also doing what they can to warn people about what's actually happening out there. Let's listen to a clip of NBC six meteorologist John Morales getting emotional as he delivered an update on Hurricane Milton. This got with Swen hugely viral. It's just an incredible incredible incredible hurricane. It has dropped. It has dropped 50 millibars in 10 hours. I apologize.

This is just horrific. Wow, he's the Scott Gauy meteorologist there. I was gonna say that guy. That guy. I know. It's not like you. I cry as if a lighter shoe being dropped in May. That he. I don't usually see people get emotional or weather. But yeah, well, I think he, you know, he understands the devastation that could have happened and did happen, but not in the number that they were very worried about.

So talk about the misinformation to me is I again, another moment where Trump doesn't pay for what is really inhumane on the massive level. Even Republican governors are like, shot the fuck up, dude. Like you're making it worse. Like this is just lying and lying and lying. You can, you can win by lying really pretty much. Well, this, I mean, what did he say that they ran out of FEMA, ran out of money because they were giving money to migrants and, you know, this is obvious.

It's just a real, you always have a tendency, I think, is you get older to think things are getting worse, but I do think there's some legitimate legitimacy to the notion that in instances where there used to be bipartisan cooperation, we now have people making it harder for FEMA to do their work because when they spread this type of misinformation, people believe them and don't call, don't go to the wrong place for resources. I think they shouldn't leave.

I mean, in this cost time, energy, and maybe even cost lives, this type of misinformation. So it's, I just don't know what you do other than punish people hard and people say, well, it's censorship. I'm like, no, if you're purposely spreading misinformation to try and sew division, and you knew you were purposely spreading misinformation and people get hurt, I think you should be under, you know, legal scrutiny for

that. This is serious stuff, you know, you know, spread misinformation that says, oh, the fire in the lobby is actually, we're not sure it's a fire, it's a conspiracy, and you know, there's an actual fire in the lobby, and you confuse people as to what resources to access or what the correct escape route is. I think you're liable.

And unfortunately, because of this wild west mentality, and this crazy bullshit notion that all even crime is speech, as long as it, as long as it's not a digital platform, anything qualifies as speech, and all speech should be protected. It's very, I know it's just incredibly disappointing. I, what I can't figure out is, do, and I'm seeing a date on this, do people go, okay, climate, let's be honest folks, climate change is real. The FEMA's government is important.

We, I do think the majority of people in these states, despite the devastation, appreciate that the federal government and their local officials are putting aside, or trying to put aside all the bullshit, and are trying to get help to the people who need it.

I do think that my, my impression of the response so far, and it's impossible to get it right in this type of chaos, 100% of the time, but my sense is they're doing their level best, and that we pay a lot of money in taxes, and that FEMA gets billions and billions of dollars, and that government, government works. It does make sense. They are minimizing some of the devastation, or the, the effects of the devastation.

So I can't figure out if people are going to say, okay, we do need government, climate change is a real thing. President Biden and there, by Ergo, Vice President Harris are doing a decent job, and they get a benefit. Or if this misinformation is getting traction, and in addition to that, the chaos, you know, whenever there's chaos, you just blame whoever's in power, you just hold them responsible.

I can't figure out, do you have any gut or seen any data on if it hurts or helps one of the other candidates? Well, I think people are wondering about whether they have an impact on the election, in terms of turnout and how people vote. North Carolina just passed emergency measures to ensure voters on impacted counties. Often rural ones can still vote on election day. You know, I don't know. I don't know.

I think, I don't think people tend to, they may blame the government, but they don't blame the government, right? They know, this is a storm. They understand that. I think the question is, why make people in a terrible situation feel worse, or feel more under fear, or that the government can't help them, or that someone's out to fuck them? It's this, like, I am, I guess, heartened to see a Republican governor saying this is bullshit, stop it. But they don't stop it, right? They don't stop it.

And next year, when there are storms, they'll be with them on it, because it worked, if you win, right? And so that's the repulsiveness of this, is that it works on some level. And it's sort of like that. At long last, have you no sense of decency, right? That's the moment to me. I don't know. I think, I literally, the person I was really irritated was Linda Yaccharino saying, be on X, stay safe. I'm like, you fucking asshole, how dare you?

How dare you, like, say, use this platform when it's being used for all kinds of nonsense. It's just, and not caring about that. I don't know how they sleep at night, these people. I honestly don't. And in this case, people need good information brought them. Let me give a compliment. The Starlink things are really important. People getting good information.

But if they're getting, if you put the Starlink up, they get the information, and then it's crap, I don't even understand the two things in the single. Anyway, it's just, it's disheartening. But he has, just to be fair, he has weighed in and tried to offer Starlink or make it available to people, right? In affected areas. Yes. Yes. I said that's great. But if you're beaming down crap, like, what is, why? Why? If you're doing this good thing, why would you let this other thing happen?

Like, I don't even understand that. And Trump is all together, just another story. It's just really incredibly irresponsible. And it's so disheartening if it works. Anyway, it began which, speaking of Trump, let's bring in our friends of pivot. This is Anne Craig and Russ Butner are investigative reporters for the New York Times. That is underselling. They're amazing, investigative reporters for the New York Times. They've written a new book based on a lot of their reporting.

They have published this year called Lucky Loser, how Donald Trump squandered his father's fortune and created the illusion of success. Suzanne and Russ, welcome. Thanks for having us. Yeah, thanks for having us. This is exciting. So I went to your book event here in DC. It was really interesting. But you've been reporting for people who don't know on Donald Trump's finances for years. But you go really in depth in the book.

Talk to us about what, obviously, Donald Trump's all about talking about money. But what is his financial history tell us about him as a businessman? Let's focus on that part. Yeah, I think that was our big interest. And doing this book was to get to the bottom of that. We had done three longer stories in the times that explored different windows, how much money he got from his father, and how his business has performed in the 80s and 90s, and then again, after the 2000s.

But stringing all that together is where you really kind of see the pattern. And I think what you notice is that he's very good at drawing attention to himself, at selling things, when there's things that need to be sold. Often he's drawing attention to things he never does. That's one of the themes that runs through the book as he sort of builds up his reputation by saying he's going to do things that never happen. But operationally, he has difficulties.

He never seems to be very careful about the finances of projects. So he regularly spends far more than what the projects bring in. He often says that. And then he needs money from other sources outside of his business operations to support those businesses. Bit of a concy scheme is what it looks like. A little bit. You see, his inheritance filling in the holes, and then later the fortune from the apprentice really filling in a lot of holes as well.

And sort of sustaining this image that he's a powerful businessman when he's really having problems that he's hiding from public view. And Susan, talk a little bit about how you went about this reporting, because you've been doing this for a long time. Right. And like we said, we had a number of stories at the times. There's kind of three big ones. We've been covering him since 2000s.

It's hard to believe we're coming up on nine years of this, but it says every journalist, I think, covering this guy. And then we decided after the 2020 story, it was a big story we had where we got decades of his corporate and personal tax returns. You know, we found out in that that he wasn't paying much income tax ever. We also got an incredible window into how much he'd made from the apprentice. So we laid that out. And then Russ and I had a conversation.

And we realized we had a, I think, you know, we called a skeleton for a book. But we really saw this as an epic American tale. And we wanted to tell it. And we wanted to delve further into his father. We were really intrigued about his dad from the reporting we did, you know, while we were at the paper. And then we wanted to just learn more about Fred and see that impacted it had on his life.

And then we explored Donald's life, because I think there's just a lot of misconceptions that were out there. Some of them were laid down by him early on and just repeat it over and over and over. And so, you know, when we decided Russ and I had a chat and Russ took, had very heavy lifting on the writing as a beautiful writer. And we worked together and I did a lot of the reporting. So we just spent a couple of years just full out at every day trying to get this together.

Talk about the role of the Donald Trump's father, this is Fred. Talk about his role in influence, because he was a pretty good business person. In this case, he was, as you know, as it's not a small time developer, a pretty big time developer in New York, which is a tough market. Yeah, I mean, it's an amazing arc to his career. He really was the self-created person, businessman that Donald Trump's always said that he was.

And he started out just building like garages in the up and coming neighborhood and Queens where he grew up. And then over the course of the next like 40 years, he really benefited from some of the big programs, the government programs to solve the biggest crises of the 20th century, first the Great Depression, then building housing for soldiers during World War II, building more housing for veterans when they got out.

And then a couple of programs to sort of build up housing for middle income people later than that. And he built up this colossal empire of 10 to 20,000 sometimes apartments that were rentals. He never had one except for a couple outside of New York City that didn't make money. And so by the time Donald joins the company, Fred owns what would be during his lifetime, a billion dollar empire of rental apartments, it's kicking off tremendous amounts of cash. It has very little debt.

And so Donald has this like windfall behind him to do what he wants. And Fred, it's a really interesting relationship to us. And it's seminal to Donald's life. Fred really puts his full faith in Donald from that point. There were other siblings, two brothers, for various reasons, Fred, the older one, falls off the scale, doesn't get his father's trust, becomes an alcoholic and dies very young, unfortunately.

And the younger one never really seems to be taking seriously because Donald has already claimed the helm by then. And Fred never challenges Donald at all in anything he wants to do. And they're entirely different. As I said, Donald starts saying he's going to build things that he doesn't do. Donald's not paying attention to the bottom line. Donald's taking great risk, but it's not really with his money.

But Fred throughout his life supports him, even as Donald starts to say, I'm way bigger than my father was. When he's only built like one building with other big partners, but it really seems to be a seminal relationship in his life. Right, right. I have to say, Carol, though, you do see it in, Russ talked about Fred and that era where he went into these larger projects. They came out of government programs. And Fred was seen at the time as taking advantage of them in exploiting loopholes.

And you know, there's even, there was an article in one of the Brooklyn papers that ultimately called him a pariah feeding off government, large assing, gouging his tenants. So you see shades of sort of what the practices that Donald is accused of. Oh, not a good guy. Yeah. In some respects, but a great builder. So there's contradictions in there. Right. No, always a malevolent force. Scott, go ahead. Nice to meet you.

So the data that I've seen is that from the 70s to the 90s, when his dad ultimately passed away and heard it, he inherited approximately 413 million as a number of sticks in my mind. And if that were invested in just an S&P index fund, it would be somewhere depending on the returns worth today, somewhere between 10 and 20 billion. And it's very hard to nail down his actual net worth. But we know it's less than that. We know if he'd just stuck it in an index fund, he'd be worth more money.

Which businesses have been the most successful? And which have been the least successful that he's been engaged in since inheriting that money? I got to imagine the casinos and the golf courses have not paid off, but the apprentice was a big deal. What else has made and lost him money? It's a great question. I'm so happy that you remember that number because that was on a spreadsheet on my screen for about a year and a half. We were all coming up with numbers to get to that 413.

And you're right. That's though we've kind of looked at his wealth in this general success is that if you just invested it and gone sailing, he'd probably be infinitely more wealthy than he is now. I mean, on the apprentice look, all he did was show up there. Mark Burnett had the producer had made this deal with NBC that he would get half or he would get all of the product integration money. And it wasn't really product integration. Each show was a commercial for whoever sponsored it.

And they didn't know NBC didn't know at the time what that was going to be worth. It took about a year to get it going. But pretty soon companies were paying $1,000 to $3,000,000 to be on each episode. And Burnett, in order to persuade Donald to join that effort, who he thought was really busy, promised to give him half of whatever that would raise. And so that became just a huge windfall in his life, about $200 million.

And then there was a string of licensing deals that as soon as he became famous, flowed from that. Early on, the year before he had tried to get licensing deals and he had literally been laughed out of offices. As soon as the apprentice starts, they just start coin in the door. Eventually that goes bad. You see Trump University and all these developments that don't happen because he's not really doing due diligence.

But still, over the course of the years of the apprentice, that generated another $200 million. But when you look at the businesses that he created in that window, we see a lot of like alligators. The Chicago Tower, he secretly declared worthless on his tax returns while he's telling the world it's hugely successful. The retail part of that tower was built below grade. So there's no street traffic. It's been empty now for I think 15 years.

His UK golf courses have continued to suck money and require influx of cash. The old post office, the same problem that, right? He built that thing and he spent too much on it. All his competitors knew he was spending too much on it. And we saw in his tax returns, he was having put $7 to $10 million a year into it, which we presumed came from the easy money he was getting from the apprentice and from licensing deals. So golf has been a mixed bag. Real estate's been a mixed bag a little bit.

For you all street, for example, it's been up and down at different times. But overall, like the line that stuck in my head on this is that the less involvement he has in designing and operating a business, the greater its chances of financial success. So talk a little bit, Suzanne, this idea of wealth and success, how he put this out as sort of using creative accounting, using various task codes and rules to his advantage. Not something other people don't do. And he actually brags about it.

Why shouldn't I take advantage of it? So can you talk a little bit about how he does that and creates these faux ideas that he's rich? He just says it, right? Well, I think that would agree. Yeah, because there's of course the use of the tax code. But I think when I think about that question, what did you first set it? I think about just this crazy image that he projects that's not backed up by reality.

You look at one of the things I always remember about the book was when we got, or it was just the project. It was that we got it before we started the book. We got 10 years of tax records from 1985 to 94. And in that was of course the year he wrote art of the deal. And we were thinking, well, maybe going to be some good news in there. That year he's writing a book saying he's this master deal maker and he lost $45 million and changed that year. So behind the curtain, that's what's going on.

And in that decade, we actually were able to find out because we got some anonymized taxpayer data through the National Archives in Washington. We were able to go in and compare his taxes for that decade to a huge number of other taxpayers. And in that year, it looked like he lost more money than any other single American taxpayer. But what he did, this is like the interesting part of how it started is he was able to identify, I think, really in the 80s.

I mean, in the 70s he was spinning the story that he was richer than he was. But then he fell in with not just the Larry Kings of the world where he was able to get on CNN and repeat it. But wealth porn sort of took off in the 80s. And you saw him on shows like lifestyles of the rich and famous with Robin Leach. And he had the accoutrements of success. So he's flying around in his helicopter. He was on his yacht. He was losing a lot of money. We know that now from his taxes. But they loved him.

And not a lot of really rich people wanted actually to be on that show because it's sort of tacky. But he was all in and it perpetuated this idea that he was rich. And then he was getting on the rich lists and all that. I mean, it really did feed on itself. But he started in the early 70s, by lying about his wealth, famously to the New York Times, saying he was worth a couple hundred million dollars, actually, his dad was. And then it just rolled up.

And the number kept getting bigger and bigger. So how did you get these records? We started out in 2016, where three pages of his 95 tax returns were famously mailed to me. And we can freshen eye and other reporters worked really hard in a small amount of time to confirm those sort of big loss. But then we got a really significant amount of information from Mary Trump. And she's now come forward in her own book and said, she was our source. But she really opened WinnoJewis just on Fred Trump.

She had documents from Fred's world because of the litigation that she was involved with the family and stemmed about Fred. So that was really important to that 2018 story that looked at Fred's wealth and the tax fraud that went into it. And then we had another source come forward who had a transcript and another one that was from the 80s. And then another source who provided us with decades of tax information. And he happened to have obviously a connection to the IRS. So lots of ways.

Yeah, lots of different things. And then all the interviews that we, you know, in research that we did for the book, we spent another two years just kind of going at that. So there is a pattern, or my understanding, is there is a pattern to generational wealth. And that is granddad and it's usually a guy is a baller, makes a ton of money, super impressive.

And then the next generation loses a lot of it because they're under the impression that it's easy, the reckless, they've grown up without guardrails, they haven't grown up with the requisite grit to watch every nickel. And they usually lose a lot of it. And then what's even more interesting or more surprising is the grandkids.

The next generation oftentimes make a lot of it back because they look at how dad screwed up and how granddad was a baller and they take lessons and they make some of it back. Do you see any evidence that his, the next generation, his children are especially good or bad at business? If you had to guess in 20 or 30 years, are we gonna be here talking about how they lost money or are they building it back?

Because they're all in the family business and I understand you're not supposed to talk about kids but their public figures, have they shown any business acumen? Scott, I feel like you know the answer to that question already a little bit. I mean, Scott, there it goes. Yeah, look, I mean what we've seen is I wouldn't follow that pattern at all, I would say.

Certainly what you described between Fred and Donald, the original father and then the son, Fred was the famous anecdote about him as he used to walk around construction sites and pick up unused nails and give him to his carpenters so they could save a few pennies. Donald never displayed that kind of care for the bottom line and often sort of bragged about that.

But with Don Jr. and Eric and Ivanka, Ivanka's out of the business now and what you see with them during their era, they join the company, right, as all these licensing deals are coming up and their big role seems to be going to ribbon cuttings, putting their name on businesses that other people are running or owning and they see, they call those things their jobs but for the most part they weren't really jobs. They were just appearance-based. It was just trying to tension with the name.

And then the Chicago Tower is sort of their big effort. It looks like from everything we can see, a colossal business failure and they've, Eric has focused on some golf courses which is a tough business and not a highly profitable business and it hasn't been for the Trumps. And Don Jr. really seems to have never found a sort of place in the sort of real estate center of it or the golf center of it and now is off to a totally different thing.

I think his entire life now is an extension of his father's campaigns. I'm betting on Baron. And let's not forget crypto. We're trying to forget it but we can't. You know, the people they're affiliated with are really questionable. So let's finish talking about that. He nor JD Vance have released their information which is astonishing that JD Vance hasn't but which is I think a pattern. He is just not gonna release it ever and he uses the excuse of an audit.

But after, if he wins the election and there's been so many instances of other countries investing in him and he's doing deals and all across the world, including in Russia, you found that his tax year in suggests that he got financial boost from his presidency the last time. He's been, during this campaign, he's been selling sneakers and bibles made in China for $3 and selling it for $60.

He's currently facing major threats to his finance including this alleged audit and a multi-million dollar judgements for some of these court cases. He does have a stake in Trump media. We talk about it a lot. He does, shares recently searched this week but it's still below every peak. It shouldn't be worth anything at all but it is because it's Donald Trump. So what happens AF if he wins the presidency and if he doesn't win the presidency? Each of you would love to answer that.

Okay, I think if he wins, I think a lot of things sort of potentially at bay, I think it's gonna be hard to, I don't know if they're gonna be able to collect on that, for example, the New York Attorney General Fine and I think that's gonna really throw a wrench into things. I want people to know when we talk about him doing deals. Now they're licensing deals.

So you could see, I don't think if he doesn't win, I think those licensing deals become pretty tricky who's gonna wanna do business with him, right? So the one thing that he, even this world financial or there's world liberty financial, this crypto thing he's got going on, we don't know a lot about it but it doesn't look like he has a stake and neither do the kids. They're just in business with these kind of crazy, crazy guys. They showed it shifty, not crazy, but shifty folks.

So I think that those licensing deals we're gonna see are gonna dry up. And if he doesn't get elected, that bill's gonna come do on that fine by the New York Attorney General. It's gonna go on a PO, but if it's upheld, he's gonna have to write a check for that. The same with the judgment, we're gonna be Jean Carroll. And I just, I think it's gonna be very difficult for them if he doesn't, when I think he's gonna maybe just buy some time if he does win.

But I think he's already been seeing a downsizing of the Trump organization. And that may continue either way. They sold the old post office, they sold the golf course here up in New York. They've been selling some other assets. And I think that that has sort of been quietly going on in the background, not a lot of people are talking about it, but I think you could also see that as he needs to raise money. For doing things for us. Yeah, I think Sue covered it pretty well there.

I think the big, look, I think if he doesn't get reelected, the first question will be, will he still have some marketing value? Will there still be a mag, right now he's basing his, all these licensing deals on two things. Saudi Arabia seeming to want to be in business with him to get money to him. Well, that still continue if he's not in the White House. I think that's an open question. No, no, no is the answer to that. I think you're right.

And you have to wonder the same about the Kushner deal, right? Well, well, he still seemed like the best choice for a billion dollars. No again, right? So, and then I think the secondary question is, so far he's basically monetizing the mag a movement. He's monetizing this idea that they're persecuted, that he's their only chance for success. Well, he remained the leader of that movement. Will there be something there to monetize? That's the secondary question.

That has not generated anywhere close to the licensing money that he was receiving like 10 years ago, which some years was $25 and $30 million a year. This is kind of small ball by comparison, but it's money. I think if he's not reelected, again, the judgment is gonna, the judgment is gonna be hard to escape than if he is. And I think either way, you're gonna see problems at some of the properties continue. Forty Wall Street is not doing great. It's always been up and down for him.

The golf courses in the UK have been money eaters. He's trying to develop the Dural golf course in Miami, whether that will happen, whether you can put together the financing to make that happen, I think is very important to him being able to hang on to this assembly of golf courses. But the best thing he's got going right now is the thing, again, he doesn't run.

He got pushed into this investment that's run by, it's two buildings, one in San Francisco, one in New York that's run by for not only real estate investment trust, they run very well, they kick off a lot of money. And that is still the source of most of his wealth in terms of real estate businesses. And that will continue either way, although he can't tap into that. He's just at the behest of the majority partner. And what will you two focus on if he becomes president?

Where do you find the story? I don't know what the next thing is. I mean, I think if he becomes, we keep reporting, I'm not quite sure where though. I mean, we're still looking at some stuff right now. I guess to be continued on that one, it's a. Yeah, I mean, I think we'd watch for the kind of things we're talking about, right? Saudi Arabia seems to all of us is interested because he's going to be president. So if he is, will there be more of those kinds of things?

And I think they've sort of acknowledged they're taking down the walls this time around. They're not going to be concerned about appearances. And he'll be a lame duck president from the first day. So I think it's safe to say they would probably be going after things that might look dicey to us. Right, there's gonna be a lot going on behind the curtains, I think, just in front of the curtains. I don't even care anymore. Yeah, Scott, last quick question.

One of the things I really appreciate about your work is that you both really did the work, reading through some of your work. I just can't imagine how much time you were in a conference room with bad coffee, trying to string together tax filings and really connect the dots. Really do appreciate that you did the work. And also that the New York Times would support you or support, provide you with the resources to do that kind of in depth work.

My question is around Donald Trump media, 80 million shares, 23 bucks a share, one whatever's at 1.84 billion worth of value in those shares. My understanding is he hasn't sold any and that would come from out of filing if he had sold them. But if I were him, I would be writing calls, I'd be doing prepaid variable forwards, I would be borrowing on margin like crazy to diversify. Do you have any sense of or any evidence around what he is doing to diversify, monetize those shares?

Well, you left out run by that well-known tech executive Devon Nunes, but go ahead, sorry. Let me just tell you, this podcast makes more money by far than Trump media, but go ahead. Yeah, I think in a story, I thought. This is Russ's favorite, called Run Russ Run. This is his favorite thing. Well, I think in a story, I compare, their revenue does not compare favorably to a single Chick-fil-A restaurant. They're really or McDonald's. It's just not a real company.

Instead of a huge store, one is cute. It's not a real company. And they don't really have a business plan that makes sense. They're gonna stream videos that are available for free elsewhere on their platform because the risk of being shut down. But in the answer to your question, Scott, I don't have any intelligence on other ways he might be trying to monetize those shares at this point. I think it's an excellent question.

I don't know that there's any way to, certainly no public way to see that right now. But we'll be trying to watch out that for that and if you see any hint of it, please let us know. We may be sifting through court filings one day, looking for what he's done. You will be. You absolutely will be. Also in the crypto, the sneakers, whatever you have. That's one of the great things here, so many court filings.

Anyway, once again, the book is Lucky Loser, how Donald Trump squandered his father's fortune and created the illusion of success. I took it home, I read it, it's so good. I love accounting, I hate to tell you, but I love accounting, but this is a really great reporting accomplishment that you two have done and I'm excited to see more, even though I'm not excited to see a grift or continue to grift, but you've done a great job. Thank you very much. Thank you. Nice to meet you.

Thanks for a good word. Isn't that fast? I love reporters like that. They're such good reporters.

Well, they really, if you read that initial article when we talk about taxes, it's like, okay, this, you know, for me that article kind of spoke of the importance of quite frankly journalism that has some funding because it must have just, some editor, they came in and said, we can get through this, but to do an accurate job of this, it's gonna take us months in a conference room with forensic accountants. And there are just aren't many newspapers that have the resources to green light that.

Yeah, yeah, great reporters, great topic. All right, it's got one more quick break. We'll be back for predictions. Let's go. Support for the show comes from HubSpot. Picture this. You're out of party and someone asks you what you do as a marker. How do you even begin to describe it? You have to generate leads, score them, contact them, create content gather data and tomorrow. Do it all again. And wonder if it's even work and marketers are spread way too thin, but HubSpot has a better way.

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And I'm about to have the chicken teka masala. I love it here. You should check it out. It's sort of the cool kids hang out. Anyway, I hope you're all safe travels. Scott, frankly, it's a miracle that Virgin Atlantic let you into the Clubhouse and their incredible business class. But I guess they did. Tell me how it was. So, Cara, I'm an original gangster when it comes to Virgin. I've been flying Virgin for 20 plus years. And I do the same thing. And they get it right every time.

They always have the financial times for me. And I order the chicken teka masala. And that is my Virgin experience. If it ain't broke, don't fix it. And your drink was? What is your drink? Well, I used to drink a bloody Mary or a beer in the Clubhouse. I started, I don't drink alcohol when I travel anymore. So I just do mineral water. But they have this kind of cool cocktail. It's like a lemongrass or some sort of cool margarita thing. And I get a virgin one. What is your pre-flight routine?

What is your actual besides your chicken teka masala, the Virgin Clubhouse? My pre-flight routine is, well, I was doing the same thing the morning when I travel, I try and work out. I take the dogs for a walk. And I was making time for the Clubhouse because I do enjoy the Virgin Clubhouse of Heathrow. So check out virginandlantic.com for your next trip and see the world differently. Certain amenities are only available on selected cabins and aircraft. OK, Scott, let's hear a prediction.

Well, just in light of, I have a real one, but in light of what our guests just talked about, I would bet we're going to find out. I wouldn't be surprised if we find out that the entire or a big part of the campaign or a big part of his wealth is, while Trump didn't sell any stock, I wouldn't be surprised if he is doing covered calls against his 80 million shares. So just give you a sense for that.

That's when you essentially write a call against a share you own, and it's not risk-free because if you want to maintain your ownership in the stock, you essentially say, OK, the stock today is a $24. I can sell calls expiring next week at say $25 for $66. And if I own 80 million shares, I can get $60 million in premium. Now, if it's Sky Rock, it's the 30. I either have to sell shares or buy them back at a loss.

But just a kind of cash generation short term he can create from an ownership stake of 80 million shares in a volatile stock is just extraordinary. So be clear, just because he's not selling shares, doesn't mean he's not taking risks and making a lot of money. And I'm very curious to see if and when it comes out, what he was doing with those shares to try and monetize that stake or barring against it or what have you. Anyways, that's my prediction.

My prediction is we are at a category three hurricane of misinformation. It's about to go in the next three weeks to categories five and six. Increase social media activity, AI generated content that is super easy to spin up all sorts of misinformation, a polarized media environment. We're just going to see what's going on with FEMA right now is an Easter parade compared to the, or a dumpster fire compared to the nuclear mushroom cloud of deep fake videos.

I think we're going to see videos of violence, the polling stations, their deep fakes trying to suppress the turnout. It's just the platforms have done what I'll call a glancing kind of jazz hands attempt to do away with this, you know, musk is all in on misinformation. He wants to let it rain free. It's going to go crazy the next three or four weeks. Probably, I don't know if I was fair to say from both sides, but you're just going to see so many bad actors, so many bots.

I mean, if you're trying to discredit somebody or create misinformation that suppresses turnout in certain swing states, certain districts that you think are leaning away that's against your interests, the ability to spin up accounts and misinformation using AI and then test it and see what is in fact going viral, what's creating the most confusion and most polarization.

It's just so, I don't call it easy, but the potential is so immense now that I just think you're going to see just a 10 millibars of rain of misinformation. The first real, anyway, the prediction word salad here is we're about to see the first real, serious externality of AI and that is a level of misinformation and fake accounts, creating polarization and confusion like we have never seen.

And here's the thing, the day after the election, the platforms are going to feel really bad about what happened after the election, but get ready folks, there is a storm of misinformation coming over the next 20 days. Yeah, I would agree, I would agree. It's terrible what's happened. And I don't think these companies have learned a thing from last election, last election, presidential election cycle.

In fact, I think what they've learned is to go and hide and not help our society have a better election. I think they have no response, they've decided no responsibility is the best thing to do. And it's, and again, as usual, they, you know, they meet my already low expectations of what they should do. Yeah, and as the Trump media stock, it is going up, it's up 50% now, again, because they think he's going to win again.

It goes down when they don't think he's going to win, it was down at 13, it's up at 24, which is a lot. In the last month, I guess it's gone up 30%, in the last five days, close to 50. I'm from 46 to 12 back to 24. I mean, 50% of volatile. I know what a volatile stock will see. We'll see what happens. In any case, it's not a business, just somewhere aware, whatever, it's an indicator of how people feel about him and his chance to be president.

Anyway, it's still about business, even if he gets to be president. And you will get, you will lose your money, Maga, sorry, and he will take it from you. That is a really great prediction, Scott. And I unfortunately think you're, it's already happening. Anyway, we want to hear from you. Send us your questions about business, echo whatever's on your mind. Go to nymag.com slash pivot. Submit a question for the shower called 85551Pivot. Okay, Scott, that's the show.

We'll be back on Tuesday with more pivot. Can you read us out? Today's show is produced by Larry Neiman, Zoe Marcus and Taylor Griffin. Ernie, you're tied, entering this episode. Thanks also to Drew Burrows and Miss Leverio. You shot Kura as Fox Media's executive producer of audio. Make sure you subscribe to the show or every listen to podcasts. Thanks for listening to pivot from New York Magazine of Fox Media. You can subscribe to the magazine at nymag.com slash pod.

We'll be back next week for another breakdown of all things tech. And those notes care, have a great weekend. Now I'll be back next week with all the comments.

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