You're the only person on earth that followed Steve Jobs and Elon Musk for years and years. So, what did you learn? This is gonna be a fun ride. Walter Isaacson One of the greatest biography writers ever. Whose work allows all of us to learn from some of the greatest minds in history? And all the people I've written about who are disruptors, they tend to have had demons driving them. But for Elon Musk, it was particularly brutal.
They scrawny kid on the autism spectrum, no friends, beaten up quite often. But the scars from that were minor compared to what happened when he went home. It took traveling around with Elon for two years, morning, noon and night, before I could get him to open up about his father. And then it started coming out. Everything from his hard wiring to the psychologically abusive father, hope makes somebody who's addicted to drama.
He was at Twitter headquarters, he decides they should get rid of one of the server farms. And the engineers said we can't do it via sound. And then Christmas Eve, Elon forces his way into the server facility with a set of wire cutters and cuts the cable to the server. It drove the teams crazy, but it drove them to do things they didn't think they could do it. Because must spend 80% of his hard core mental energy on... But is he happy? How did Steve Jobs change you?
When he was dying, I was in his backyard with him and he says, I regret. Imagine that you could follow Steve Jobs and Elon Musk for years and years and years and years. Imagine what you would learn. Imagine what you would see. Imagine the value that you would take from that experience of following two of the greatest world shifting entrepreneurs that have ever lived. Well, the man that sits in front of me today was given that privilege. He got to follow Steve Jobs until the day that he died.
And he got to follow Elon Musk for years and years and years in order to write down what he saw and share that information with you. If you've ever wondered what it takes to be a genius, what it takes to change the world, what the cost is, the sacrifice, how to make decisions, how to think, and how and what motivates these world changing entrepreneurs. In the next hour and a half, you find out.
And before this episode starts, I want to make a deal with you. If you hit the follow button, here's the promise that I'll make you that we will keep making this show better in every single way. And we have huge plans to turn this into more of a documentary style conversation. So if you hit the follow button, I promise you that we will deliver an even greater version of this show. I hope you choose to come along on this journey. Enjoy this episode.
Well, do you have a tremendous amount of insight from following and studying some of the world's greatest minds, but also from a tremendously successful career of your own as a CEO and as a business person for anybody that doesn't know who are the individuals that you've been able to follow and study and had unique exclusive access to? It was mainly Steve Jobs who brought us into the digital revolution with everything from friendly computers to a thousand songs in our pocket.
And I spent about two years at his side doing a biography of him. And then Jennifer Doudna, who I think brought us into the life sciences revolution because she and her colleagues helped invent
CRISPR, this tool that can edit our own DNA, which is like, whoa, that's transformative. And so I spent a lot of time in her Berkeley lab learning how to edit human genes. And then after that, the next logical choice seemed to be law and mosque, bringing us into the air of space travel, electric vehicles, artificial intelligence.
And surprisingly, when I talked to him, he had read a couple of my books. He said, I said, I just want to do this not based on five or 10 interviews, but based on staying by your side for two years watching your morning, noon and night whenever I want. And then I said, but by the way, I'm not going to show you the book in advance, you get no control over it. And he went, OK, I thought, all right, this is going to be a fun ride. You surprised.
I was a little bit surprised, but if you know, mosque, he has sort of a little superhero complex and he thinks of himself playing big roles on the world stage and he loves to be transparent. And I kind of suspected he would want to have this. There was a mutual friend who helped broker the deal and the friend said, you know, he wants a biography. I think he sees himself in the same trajectory as a Steve Jobs or Jennifer Doudna. And what did you want to do?
I wanted to do somebody who was taking you back into the era of space travel because I'm old enough to be one of those geeks who remember the countdown of 10, 9, 8, you hold your breath and they launch from Cape Canaveral. And also I believe very much sustainable energy is important to the planet, which means not just electric vehicles, but solar roofs and power walls and the things he's doing. I also tend to think that he's a great engineer.
He understands physical engineering. He doesn't understand human emotions very well, which is why he was better off with Tesla and SpaceX and not buying Twitter. But I wanted to understand the pioneering work that was being done. He's the only person who can get astronauts from the US and to orbit. You know, NASA can no longer do it. Boeing can't do it. So how come? How did he make those rockets work? And with Steve Jobs, what was the access that you were given to him?
Well, I stayed in his guest house right in his backyard for off and on for a couple of years. It wasn't quite the access I got to Elon Musk. Steve Jobs, it might be one week every couple of months. I'd spend with him. With Musk, it was three or four weeks per month sometimes. Steve Jobs was interesting, but he was mainly interested in the beautiful design and conceptualizing of products.
And so we'd spend a lot of time in Johnny Ives, a wonderful design studio at Apple headquarters, which Steve would spend the afternoon, hour after hour walking around, even looking at things like the European plug for a charger. And how it was going to be different from the American plug, but how curved, you know, he just cared about God being in the details of each design. Musk cares a lot more about executing the design through manufacturing and assembly line.
Musk spends about 80% of his hard core mental energy designing the machines that make the machines. In other words, the Raptor engines, the battery cells or the Teslas. And so a lot of the time I spent with him was on assembly lines. When I sit here with CEOs or successful people, I always start with their childhood because I think it provides an important context as to the people that they are. It's almost like their childhood. You're like a biographer. You know it begins in childhood.
Well, I mean, you're the king of biography. So I had no idea that that's where it's meant to start. It just seems like the most obvious place because it's a foundation of people. And those fingerprints seem to remain on the mesannops. When you look at Elon's childhood, do you spot things that are the reason he is the man he is today?
Absolutely. But let me step back and talk about almost all the people I've written about who are disruptors. They tend to have had childhoods in which they were misfits. Starting with Leonardo da Vinci, who I wrote about. He grew up in a small village. He was left-handed, illegitimate. His father doesn't legitimate him. He was gay. He was distracted.
And so he has demons driving him as he runs away from the village of Vinci to go to Florence. And you can all the way through Albert Einstein growing up Jewish in Germany. Steve Jobs, having been adopted and adopted family, didn't take to him. And he moves on to another one. For Elon Musk, it was particularly brutal. He grew up in South Africa as a scrawny kid on the autism spectrum. So he had no social input, output skills. He was no friends. And he was beaten up quite often.
But the scars from that were minor compared to what happened when he went home after being beaten up once. He was in the hospital for four days. But he gets home and his father makes him stand in front of him for two hours while the father tells him he's a loser. And that it was his fault.
And takes a side of the kid who beat up Elon. And so it's one of the oldest tropes in mythology, which is the aspiring young superhero fighting the dark side of the force and finding out Darth Vader as his father having overcome those demons.
I think most of us, I mean, you have a very interesting background yourself from Botswana to Manchester to here in London. I think most of us have things that drive us. And sometimes there's some demons from childhood. But the question is whether you harness those demons or those demons horn as you in an Elon Musk case. The answer is both.
Do you find that that's nearly always the case that that those demons create both your as Tim Grover said to me Tim Grover was the coach for Michael Jordan Kobe. And he speaks to everybody having a dark side and a light side and they have a two way relationship with each other. They typically come from the same place.
So he had speak to Michael Jordan's greatness coming from the same place that his dark side came and you've just described the entire theme of the Elon Musk book, which is darkness and likeness woven together each coming from the same place.
Sometimes driving people crazy sometimes driving them to do things they didn't think they'd be able to do. And you want to take out the dark strands of Elon Musk. The demon mode as his girlfriend grimes calls it where he just truly gets cold and in a very bad place. But if you take out those strands, maybe you don't have Elon Musk at the end because the dark and the light all come from the same roots Shakespeare as usual said it best.
Even the best are molded out of faults. And indeed that's what you're talking about whether it's Michael Jordan Kobe or Elon Musk. What does Elon think of his father? Did you speak to him directly about him? Yes, he doesn't speak to his father anymore, of course, and it's very brutal relationship. But I spoke to his father. Yes, for quite a long time. And still he's in contact with me. It took a year of traveling around with Elon Musk before I could get him to open up about his father.
And that's why a biography done the way Boswell did with Dr. Johnson and in a much smaller way I tried to do with Elon Musk's sleep job is important because you're not just doing a few interviews. You're just with them day in and day out. And after a year, every now and then say, tell me about your childhood. Tell me about your dad and he just stare blankly and be not wanting to speak.
And then one day we're actually on his plane flying to California from Texas. And once again, I just was very quiet. Finally said, tell me about your dad. It was about the 20th time I'd asked him. He must have been silent for two minutes, three minutes. I didn't say a word. And then it started coming out, the stories of childhood. And so yeah, he's still rattled by the memory of his father has had two children by a young woman that he had raised as a stepdaughter.
And so that really messed up Elon's mind. Elon's father raised a stepdaughter and it had two kids with the stepdaughter. Yes. And so there's and he's talked about it. And so he's also is an astonishingly good engineer who gave many good things in childhood. He was at time successful at times less so. Arrows the father. But he also instilled some of these demons. So it's the most complex relationship.
Baraka Obama begins one of his memoirs by saying, I think every successful man is either trying to live up to the expectations of his father or live down the sins of his father. And Obama says in my case, it's both well in Elon's case, it's both. And what did you learn if anything from speaking to Elon's father?
I learned that he was like a doctor, Jackal and Mr. Hyde in the Stevenson thing in the novel. In other words, you could be a brilliant doctor, but then he'd snap into these demon-like modes and Mr. Hyde. And hardly remember when he would snap back out and became Dr. Jackal, hardly remember what happened. And that multiple personality was very much what Errol Musk himself says. Yes, I'd go through these things. Well, guess what? You see that in the Elon Musk.
Based on what you saw in some of the resilient leaders that you've followed, if your job was to create a really resilient child, what would you do to the child? You know, that's such an interesting question. And those of us who have children in this day and age, I think we can't help but coddling them too much.
I watched the way Elon was raised in South Africa where his father gave him a motorcycle when he was 11 or 12 years old and driving, you know, going around, he would almost free range be that way.
And he could walk or go wherever he wanted, get beaten up, and his parents weren't hovering. Well, likewise, I watched Elon, who has 10 surviving children. And Elon is deeply committed to those children. He's almost success by them. And yet, especially with little acts, I don't know if you've seen the three-year-old kid who is always in the pictures with Elon, like you see a picture of Elon at the F1.
He's always holding. I'd be there at night, they'd be doing a solar roof installation at midnight. And Musk would be in, you know, a hyper drive, getting all the equipment and telling people what to do, because Musk loved to be hands on.
I'd watch little X playing amid the cables and heavy equipment. And my instincts were like, oh, grab this kid and make sure he's safe. But I think that Musk, remember when they shot off Starship, this largest rocket ever for the first test, which went well for about three minutes.
And in other words, we're sitting down in South Texas at the launch pad behind it and having drinks and their fire pits. And Elon is there with his mother, Mae, his girlfriend, and little X. And X is playing in a fire pit, just putting things in and putting. And my instincts would go grab the kid. And Musk says to me, when I was a kid, they used to say, don't play with matches.
So I got a box of matches and I played with them behind the tree. And it was his way of saying, I'm a little X, continue to do that. And Mae must said, I think it's one generation of risk seekers training the next. So maybe we should allow our kids to be a little bit more risk taking as opposed to hovering the way my wife and I do.
And I was reading in your book about how when Elon's parents got a divorce when he was young, that meant that Elon's mother, who was taking care of him had to then go and get a job, which left Elon at home alone. Right, right. That's what I'm saying. He was pretty much homologized. His mother had three jobs at times. And she's a great person. But she wasn't somebody who doated and worried every moment of the day.
And so she was often not around and divorced from his father. One point, Elon is a very young teenager decides to move back in with his father, which is psychologically, even now Mae must says, why did he do that? And Kimbo, his brother says he associates pain with love. And Elon must says to me, adversity, shape me. It made me who I am. So there's a part of Elon must that loves drama and rushing into the fire.
He associates pain with love from your observations. Do you believe that regardless of whether it's healthy or not, we tend to seek out the environment of our childhood when we're older because familiarity is almost sometimes seems to be more important to us than whether it's healthy.
Now, that's a brilliant observation, which is, because certainly with Elon Musk, he's almost always trying to recreate the drama, the turmoil of his childhood in apartheid South Africa, seeing people killed and having an abusive psychologically abusive father.
And I think we're all different. I'm personally, somebody had a pretty nice childhood, about parents of the sweetest, nicest, smartest people I've ever known. And I grew up in New Orleans and still go back there, still live with about eight blocks from where I was born and see the kids I went to kindergarten with.
And I love going back to that magical, we call it the green trees of our childhood. But it's also why I'm not driven. I'm not as a disruptor the way jobs in musk are. I'm a little bit more suited to being amused and watching disruptors. So my role is a little bit more as an observer.
You've been both. You've been an observer on this podcast or on TV, but you're also a person in the arena by starting companies. I was in the arena quite a while. I ran CNN during the Gulf War, and it was a pretty intense thing to do. But in some ways, I'm not as suited to running into fire and turmoil as Elon Musk years. And when the time came and the Gulf War was over, I decided I'd rather write books and have a go back to New Orleans.
So you did touch on this earlier, but I just came back to mind again. Do you think that these individuals who are most able to deal with running into the fire are those that were raised in the fire? It's not a one to one correlation as people sometimes when they're arguing with me. Let's say, look, there are people with really bad childhood to become totally near the wells and you know, you don't know anything.
And the people with really wonderful childhood who are very, very driven. I think though it may not be a one to one correlation, but it's certainly a non zero correlation that having something to prove coming out of childhood and having demons to harness tends to drive you a bit more. One of the things that surprised me in your book was that you said Elon was a good student, but not fantastic. Yeah, even in South Africa and at boys school.
And then when he goes to college his SATs are fine, but you know, they're not all 800, which is the scale we use in the US for college admissions tests. But he had an intense focus. So when he focused on something, you know, he would be awesomely smart. Problem is he doesn't like things that don't interest him. So when he had to learn Afrikaans in school and you know, he flunk set or when he has to learn certain things.
But when it came to engineering, especially material science, he could focus like a laser on and I mean that figuratively, but on the properties of materials that are engineering problems. And I heard that when he discovered the computer that was another example of that insane focus, he taught himself to code. He grew up at that time that I can remember and you can't wear a computer suddenly pop up.
You can have your own computer. And that's one of the things Steve Jobs and Bill Gates and brought us to which is, oh, a computer, you can actually plug in and have it home and code on. Well, he got one and taught himself C++ and I think maybe Paiscal. And at age 12 or 13 coded his own video game called Blastar, which he published and he becomes addicted to two things. One is computers and two is video games. Did you speak to his mother quite a lot?
Yeah, still do. She's very much around. What does she think of him at that age when he's 11, 12? Did she think he was a genius? Yes. She, for better or worse, was not a doting mother. It was not somebody hovering all the time but was when Elon was five or six years old, she decided he was a genius and used to fight with the schools when the schools would sometimes say he's not doing well in school.
He'd be distracted. He's always looking out of the window and staring blankly. And she would say because he's a genius and you're not challenging him enough. And I think she still feels he's a genius. Do you think if someone wanted to be like Elon Musk, they could choose to be? No, there are certain types of curiosity and drive that we can will ourselves to being. I've written about Benjamin Franklin, for example.
Benjamin Franklin was very wise but he's probably not the smartest of the founders. I don't mean that in a disparaging way but you have Hamilton and Jefferson and people are really brilliant. What you have in Franklin is somebody who's surely curious, always open to new ideas and unbelievably observant. Well, we can all push ourselves to be that way more.
But can we push ourselves to be Einstein? And not. We can't. And for Musk, he has a certain intensity that I think that even if you drank 50 cups of coffee and you know you put an electric vote. A prod in the back of your head. That focus in maniacal intensity and sense of urgency is something that's not instilled in most of us. Do you think it's a trauma response of source?
It's a trauma response. It's also and the book is got a lot of pay. You know, it's you can't have a one sentence. Here's why. But you start in childhood with the trauma. You also start with a guy who's on the autism spectrum talks about having as partners as he calls it. And that means he doesn't have good input output signals for emotional. You know, I'd have good emotional human receptors.
But he does have this intense focus almost in the geek like way on certain engineering or mathematical or coding issues. I think everything from his hard wiring to his childhood and upbringing help make somebody who's addicted to turmoil who has a maniacal intensity of focus and also has multiple personality mood swings.
He ends up leaving South Africa and studies physics and business at the same time. And I thought it was so fascinating that the reason why he took up business, which is quite rare for someone to do physics and business, I think. He said he didn't want to end up working for somebody who studied business and didn't understand the science and he felt that if he didn't understand the business side, he'd end up having to work for somebody else.
It's almost the first evidence of like well not the first evidence, but it's again evidence of his first principle thinking in place. You know, first principle thinking is key. And first principle thinking is whenever you face with a problem, you just go back to the very basic physics of it.
Not all the rules and regulations and not all the metaphors you may have saying here's the way to do things, but you first off say there are no rules, there's no regulations, there's no protocols except for the laws of physics. Everything else is just a recommendation. And to give you a concrete example, when he decides that he wants to send people into space as a young guy.
At first he goes to Russia to see if he can buy used rockets and they jack him around and doesn't work. And on the plane fight home, he says let me go to first principle thinking exactly how much is the cost of each material in a rocket. How much is the income now, how much is the carbon fiber, how much is the fuel, and then how much is the total cost of a rocket compared to the cost of each of components.
And that's first principle thinking, which is I get it. If I can I know the material cost, but if I can reduce by a factor of 10, the manufacturing cost, then I can make a rocket. So somebody will tell him, hey, we need to have this patch or this piece of felt in the bottom of a Tesla. And he'd say, tell me what the physics of the principles of physics that make that true are. When he's pursuing first principles, what is he trying to get around and past that frustrates him?
So, he says, you know, the US was a nation of risk takers, whether you came on the Mayflower, you came across a Rio Grande, you came from Eastern Europe fleeing oppression. But now we've got more regulators than we have risk takers. We have more referees and people building guardrails and lawyers telling you that's probably not a good idea. Then we have people willing to shoot up for a rocket.
And I think by going back to first principles, he wants to be able to not only calculate risk, but take risk more than most people would. With Steve Jobs the same. Steve Jobs was not focused on hardware engineering in the same way. Was the acqua's his partner. But yes, Jobs had a particular phrase, very famous now, which was think different. And when Steve Jobs went back to Apple after his cycle, like Sam Altman, you know, come and go, come and go.
It took Steve Jobs a decade, not a weekend to do it. He wrote an ad for Apple. And it had pictures of Einstein and other disruptive intellectuals. And it said, here's to the crazy ones, the misfits, the rebels, the round pegs and the square hole, the ones who think different. And then it ends by saying, because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are the ones who do. And that was Steve Jobs's way of thinking. And it also describes Elon Musk.
Have you seen moments yourself when you were following him where he was confronted by someone who had a default to telling him why things couldn't happen and why they couldn't be done? Oh, absolutely. I mean, there's like 20, 30 times in the book. And he goes ballistic. I'll tell you a fun one, which is just last Christmas. You know, not too long ago.
He was at Twitter headquarters. And he looks at all the engineering things and they have three server farms for one in Portland, one in Sacramento, and one in Atlanta. And he does the calculus in his head. And he said, we don't really need three different redundant server farms. And the engineers say, well, yes, we do because we need backups and we need cash and whatever. And he says, now you're not going back to first principles linking. If you look at this.
Anyway, he decides they should get rid of the servers in Sacramento. Well, they say, fine, but that'll take six months because. And he said, no, you can do it in six weeks. And the engineers and I'm sitting there in the meeting and he's getting really dark. And they don't know how to deal with him because it was like a month after he took over Twitter.
So they don't know this, dude. And they say, well, no, I'm sorry, Elon, we can't do it. And he said, you can do it in six weeks. And by the end of the meeting said, you can do it in six days. He gets really dark. And he decides he's going to fire them. But it's December 23rd. So it's like two days before Christmas. He does fire them. But the next day Christmas Eve, he's flying from San Francisco to Austin, Texas to go home for Christmas.
He's with two young cousins on the plane who are engineers. And one of them says, why don't we just take those servers out ourselves Elon must make a U turn in his airplane tells the pilot to go to Sacramento. They were already over Nevada. They land. He rents there by four of them on the plane. They rent a truck. We call a U haul truck rental truck. And they go to the server facility.
And they the guard there is like flummox. It's Christmas Eve and they're forcing their way in. And they're looking at the servers and one of the engineers says, well, you know, we can't take them out because we need engineers to take off these elevated floors, you know, those floor tiles or people.
And must turns to his bodyguard and says, do you have a pocket knife guy goes, yeah, he takes a pocket knife and pulls up one of the vents, rips up the floor thing goes underneath the floor panel with a set of wire cutters that he got from home depot and cuts the cable to the servers. And they start moving them out and put them in the U haul truck. And this is must just and by the way, it's typical of must because it works fine for a few days. Then you can see the service getting a bit degraded.
But then eventually it comes back and he says, you got to take risk if if you're not sort of causing 20% of the problems and the rest you take, you're not taking enough rest. But there it is and they got rid of that server farm in Sacramento. What happens to the people that Musk works with when they see that case study that in that moment he when he presented that they could do it in six weeks.
And it turns out he was right that it could be done quicker. Is that what sort of galvanized is totally and about 20 to 30% of the people work with him can go march through fire with him that way and realize what he can do. But it's why 80% of the people who worked at Twitter when he took it over a gone. But it's tough to work on this another scene in the book where on a late Friday night he's down in the southern tip of Texas where they have the launch pad for star base.
And it's a Friday night after 10 p.m. and he looks at the launch pad area says why are there only 34 people working and this poor guy Andy Krabs nice tall, you know, southern young engineer says what's a Friday night and we don't have any launches scheduled. And Musk goes dark on him and says I want tomorrow a hundred people working. I want him to come from California Florida get him in here and we're going to stack this rocket even though we're not planning to launch anytime soon.
But we have what's called a surge and they fly people in people sleeping on the ground on the floors to do this surge and Andy Krabs survives it and does pretty well but eventually he quits. He says man, I'm have a kid. I just can't keep going through these things with Elon and so that's in the book about three weeks ago is in Los Angeles and talking about the book and I see this tall guy I recognize coming up after the speech.
Andy Krabs, I said what's happened. He said well, as you know, I quit and I came back to Los Angeles and I got a much easier job. But I decided I'd rather be burned out than bored and I've asked Elon if it could come back because I don't want to miss working for SpaceX.
So interesting the you know that the acquisition of Twitter Twitter was a very from you know think about where it's based and how it was run and all the things you come to learn about the company and it's sort of political leanings it was very much the antithesis of the musk approach.
And he had become over the past three or four years he's edge from being what I would call a center left somebody who donated to Obama and voted for Biden to somebody who has become I think far too worked up about what he calls the woke mind virus you know the progressive mindset that he sees in colleges and in schools multiple reasons which I go through in the book. What's the most important reason?
The personal reason is he had five older children teenagers surviving one died in infancy and the oldest of them was named Xavier after his favorite character in the X-man comics and Xavier transitions and sends a note about three years ago saying I'm transitioning my name is now Jenna and don't tell my father.
He gets his head around the fact that she transitioned and he loves her but she becomes very anti capital is very well Kate's all billionaires thinks capitalism is theft and rejects him and changes her last name and this causes him an enormous amount of pain and he partly blames it on Los Angeles where you live sometimes there's is very progressive school she went to call crossroads.
And that was one of about seven or eight factors that led to this political evolution where he felt the progressive left was overdoing COVID lockdowns was overdoing gender ideology questions in some ways that echoed his father who was also somewhat conspiratorial and is thinking and didn't believe in vaccines or Dr. Fauci or and it's a weird evolution that we still see reverberating in the waters of Twitter today.
You say that it caused him a tremendous amount of pain that Xavier transitioned and it's not a woman. How do you know that it caused him pain well he said so and he he's easy to read even though he doesn't read people's emotions well. I mean he will say nothing caused has caused me more pain he says this outright than his daughter rejecting him not transitioning but just totally rejecting him other than the death of his first child in infancy his first child died.
And he gets very dark and you know you talk to his sister you talk to his brother brothers wife they say that's the thing that's caused him enormous personal pain and he says so. Going back to when he acquired Twitter I as a great fan of what Elon has achieved in the service that he's sort of served a humanity with some of these companies like Tesla and SpaceX.
I was really hoping he didn't buy the company because I thought it would just be a great distraction from Bingo really important other than you were there right I was there so I'm sitting here just open gigatexis which is the largest factory manufacturing things that's a Tesla factory in Austin Texas on the mezzanine factory's not even open yet I guess this is April 2022.
And he tells me that he still needs more drama life he can accept the fact that he's now become the richest person on earth he's person of the year for financial times and time he's sent up 33 rockets that year that landed safely and we're reused.
And yet he says okay I'm buying Twitter and his brother his son Griffin is where all it was his friends three or four friends is like is this a good idea aren't you going to be distracted and everybody is sort of trying to talk him out of it I'm not because I'm just taking notes I'm just the observer but I'm thinking boy this is a bad idea not simply because it'll be a distraction but because.
You don't have a thinking of mosque he doesn't have emotional human emotional awareness and so I asked him why are you doing it he said well it's a product problem they need better engineering they haven't. Put any new features in their full motion video so it's an engineering challenge I'm thinking no Twitter's not an engineering product you've been through all these before it's an advertising medium it's supposed to gather eyeballs for advertisers.
It's a friendly environment and that's not even specialty so I think it was was then in his nail both a distraction and does not play to his strengths did you see it at any point and do you believe it will hurt the trajectory of test learn space X in any way that acquisition I think that it probably hurts his reputation especially among.
More progressive people it obviously is hurt which means it probably is hurt Tesla sales extra space X I don't think it matters too much he has been able to be intensely focused including I mean just today while we're taping this I think he's doing the.
Fortieth launch this year of the Falcon 9 sending up 20 more star links satellites he launched starship and got it all the way into space they're all 33 Raptor engines working and he's down there intensely focused so I think space X is okay I think Tesla will be okay but it'd be better off if he want.
If a he want distracted by Twitter and be if his reputation hadn't become ten times more controversial which is not great if you're just trying to do a mass market car sales when he went into Twitter one of the very. Alarm things that he did was there was rumors that he called everyone up to the top floor and said this is going to be the new company culture if you don't like it. Absolutely I was there I walked in with others there that the day before he took over he marches in.
I think there's a whole chapter in the book almost in the rapid change in corporate culture that happened something you're very familiar with from companies you've dealt with which is a two way two extremes of doing a company one was a way Twitter was which is nurturing and sweet and having yoga rooms and our.
Tissot coffee bars and when musk walks in there showing him how we have quiet spaces for people who need you know to get their mental energy restored and they said we value psychological safety and must look at me and kind of did his recipe laugh says psychological safety blank they know that.
And urgent intensity is our operating principle psychological safety is our enemy and so he turns it into a hardcore all in environment we have to say I'm all in you're going to work 24 seven some weekends because you're all in and he said I want a team that's 20% of the size but that's.
In order of magnitude more intense and more all and and you probably seen companies with your own eyes who are very nurturing and you seen companies in which everybody's doing a hardcore all in hackathon on a Saturday night and he's in the latter camp. Do you believe I often speak to large organizations that have cultural problems they they're not innovative there being eroded away by new market entrance et cetera and the problem they have is they can't turn the ship around quickly enough.
Before the innovation takes them out big companies that have 50,000 people big I I've often what because when I saw this Elon Musk approach to turning culture around where you basically let off a grenade in the building totally. Do you believe there's merit in that that approach. Yes but I also believe there's a big old downside and like everything with Elon Musk including the shooting off of the rockets you get amazing things happen but also.
Rubble in the wake and damage in the wake and personal damage at tesla he did that once as a guy John McNeil in the book who is president Tesla another couple people that they all say it which is maybe that's the price you have to pay if you want to be this disruptive.
But is it a price that I want to pay answer is no and maybe it's too high of a price causing so much emotional turmoil but there are people including the guy and he crevs I told you about who wants to go back to work at space ex who like the challenge who like the emotional turmoil.
I ran time magazine it was a good old days and it was about as wonderful of an environment even you would be in the clouds thinking about in the 1990s we were rolling in money before the disruption of the internet takes away the idea of a general interest paper magazine.
And we had there was a drinks cart that would come around every day at five and make cocktails for all the writers there was a roast beef car very car in the evening there were town cars that would take you out to your weekend houses it was totally great and that environment needed to be disrupted but it was a glorious when it happened then I went to CNN.
And for a while the Gulf War were no exactly what we're doing but once the Gulf War was over CNN needed deep disruption and I was not very good at being a disruptive leader firing like Elon Musk at 80% of the people so sometimes CNN was one of those big old battleships was as you said lots of people working there. It probably needed a more disruptive leader than I was.
So interesting so do you think that there's a certain type of cultural approach that suits suits a certain type of company especially is that we look at the world of AI robotics and how things are going to be accelerating so quickly in technology it seems to be the case that companies are going to need to disrupt themselves faster than ever if you believe some of the forecasts about the future that people like Ray Kurzweil positive.
Not only it used to be tech companies would have to be disruptive but now if you're an insurance company if you're law firm you know if you're a bank the disruption is going to happen if your health care company so yeah we're going to have to be disruptive that doesn't necessarily mean an all in intense hackathon work all weekend culture is necessary.
I think it's great to have corporate cultures in both sides it's like return to work after covid I'm not sure there's exactly one answer there's some companies that say you know what remote working gets us really good people who can do better things and there are other people who say no I got to have my people back in the office I think it's good to experiment or not just experiment but I have alternative some people work better and some people.
Work better in some environment some in others and you could also ask the question not just about corporate environments but corporate leaders which is what you discuss most of the time some corporate leaders I've got to be you know Steve jobs like or Bill Gates in the early days of Microsoft or base us in the early days of Amazon or most you know basically assholes at times and but then some corporate leaders like Jennifer Dowdna or even a Ben Franklin.
Lead by being collaborative and inspiring and nice and I think the advice in the CEO needs is the oldest piece of advice on this planet maybe for humans which is on the Oracle of Delphi R. It's which is just know thyself and you got to know here's my approach and here's where I feel most comfortable.
Interesting because I was just about to ask you which approach you think is generally more effective but you know for me I couldn't do the all in jerk you know the asshole like approach and there were times I needed to do that and jobs Steve jobs would say to me it's why you were never quite as good but I also think that you would say that to you yeah he would say you all he called it velvet gloves
I guess a matter of he said people like yourself when you ran companies you had velvet gloves on and you always trying to make people feel comfortable he said for me I got to make them feel uncomfortable I have to make them feel
challenge you know I don't have the luxury I don't have the luxury of a tolerating be players and coddling them so I you know I know what type I am but I think at times you can create a very creative place where people feel very comfortable and it allows great creativity to flourish but I think you have to sometimes say we got to be hard core here we're being
challenge I would also say it's not just about the leader it's about the leadership team if you're going to make a good company you have to make the right team and when I ran CNN in time I realized maybe I was a little bit too velvet glove does Steve jobs
I was a little bit too late but I made sure in my leadership team there were people who had iron vests and could take Intel a great company when it was founded and leadership team you had to have Andy grow you had to have Bob noise who was the nicest
friendliest CEO ever he put his desk in the middle of the room and just love you know people you have to have somebody like Gordon Moore of Moore's law who is a vision but you also they have to bring an Andy Grove who is really tough and gets a microchips out the door and so every leadership team needs to have the hammer as well as the inspiring nice guy
both Steve jobs in Elon Musk did they what was their view on being liked as a leader both of them told me that that could be a failing that that could be a weakness which is if you try too hard to be light you're not going to be disruptive enough and your own mask even said empathy and collegiality can be your enemy and my jobs told me you think you're very empathetic and you care about other people's feelings but sometimes you take it too far and you do it
an vanity. You want people to like you. You care too much about whether the people working with you. Love you. And he said, that's not the way to create a disruptive organization. Did you agree with him? Yeah. I agree. I think I ran Thai magazine just fine. We can ask other people, but but what would CNN? I said they were worrying about, I won't name names, but these anchors on CNN, who truly were problematic, and yet I wanted them all to like me, and I was probably not tough enough.
But I also finally got to the know thyself, which is, all right, this is not the job for me, because I'm better off trying to inspire teams that are friendly and collegial. The way Jennifer Dowdner, the heroine of my book, The Code Breaker, the one who helped invent CRISPR technology, in her lab and in her companies. If they're going to hire somebody new, even a graduate student, to be in, you know, working with the pipettes and the test tubes, they make sure the whole team
meets that person, and then they all discuss, will this person fit in well? Whereas, and that's a culture that I can relate to, but an Elon Musk says, no, I remember him yelling at some of his finance people who were friendly with some of the engineers and said, no, collegiality is your enemy. You do not want them to like you. You're there to challenge them. If they like you too much, you're not doing your job. But do Elon's employees like him? Elon's employees, generally,
will walk through a wall for him, those who have survived. Whether it be Gwynn Shotwell or who is a president of SpaceX or people at Mark John Cosa, the people at Tesla like Drew Bagelino or Franz von Holtzhausen, but he burns out. People pretty fast. So if he's in an organization, after a few years, maybe 20% are totally loyal and survive, but he's not afraid of burning people
out and having him leave. Sounds like they even either love him or leave. Yeah. And as I say, sometimes with Andy Krebs, they love him, but then they leave, but then they come back. Some people truly want the challenge. As Steve Jobs said to Scully, the guy he hired to run Apple for a while, he was at Pepsi. He said, do you want to make sugar water the rest of your
life or do you want to change the world? And I've seen Musk talk to the people at SpaceX, late at night, maybe midnight, whether they're all still working at the launch pad or the factory. And they'll say, I know how hard you're working, but this is the most exciting job you could possibly have. It's the most exciting, important job on earth, which is getting people to Mars. Whatever is the second most exciting, you can't even think of it what it is because this is by far
the most exciting thing you could be doing. And there are people who buy into that. And I could sit there watching the moon rise over the Gulf of Mexico and him saying that. And I could see why people buy into that. I could also see why some people say I'd rather have a wife and kids and get off Friday night at 5 p.m. Does he believe it when he says that? And typically people believe it when they hear it.
When he first said to me that he had three missions to get humanity to Mars, to have sustainable energy on this planet and to make robots safe, I thought it was a type of pontification you do on podcasts like this one or pep talks for your team. But then I'd hear him say it over and over again. And I'd hear him say it almost to himself as he walked around and saw something bad and he said, we'll never get to Mars. We'll never get. And almost staring into the distance sometimes.
He said, we've got to get to Mars. And we've got to, if we don't do this, we'll never get humanity to Mars. We'll never get the world to electric vehicles. I totally think he believes it. Why does he care so much about Mars? He believes in space fairing. In other words, we have to be space adventures from two or three reasons. One is he believes that human consciousness is rare and maybe unique. I know where else in the universe do we know that there's consciousness?
And why? Because if consciousness existed somewhere else, it probably never became multi-planetary before the planet it was on got destroyed. It's not something you and I wake up worrying about, but it's a kid. There's a 15-year-old. He's worried about the extinguishing of human consciousness if something happens to our planet. Secondly, he says it's the great adventure. We wake up every
morning. We got all sorts of problems to worry about. There are more problems and you claim to the Middle East, to Congress, to whatever it may be, and Whitehall at the moment. But we have to have our vision set on some things that inspire us. That are truly make humans what they are. There's nothing more inspiring than the notion of being an adventure, of going to new frontiers. The greatest new frontier is space. I think those are the
reasons. Is not because he wants to make money. If you decide you want to be the richest person on Earth, step one isn't start a rocket company. I think he believes in the mission. Do you think that he's at all scared that he might not get there in his lifetime? I think that he wakes up all the time calculating that he's 50, whatever, two or three years old, that maybe he's got 30 years. Not that he necessarily wants to go to Mars, but he wants a mission to Mars. He believes it'll be
within 10 years. He's always long by two or three times. How fast self-driving will come to be. How fast the cyber truck will be made. How fast will get to Mars. I think in 30 years there will be missions to Mars. I think in 10 years it's unlikely. I think that's the spread that he's worried about.
As someone like Elon thinks in terms of first principles, when he's trying to do those calculations about how long he's got left to live and the development of SpaceX and rockets and trying to correlate whether, trying to figure out if he'll get there in his lifetime, does he not then look at his health and go, well, one way to extend the amount of time I have on Earth is to really obsess about my health. From everything I've read, he doesn't seem particularly interested in his health.
Now, he makes fun of his tech bros who are sitting there with longevity plans of how they're going to live to be much longer. No, he does not care enough about his health. He's overweight now. For a while a year ago, he decided to go on an intermittent fasting diet and also was using whatever those drugs are called. Yeah, those weight loss drugs. I remember being with him one morning, he could only have one meal a day because of this. We went to something called the Palo Alto Creamery.
I think it's called some diner and little X was with us. Musk ordered a double bacon cheese burger with sweet potato fries and an Oreo chocolate chip milkshake and said, okay, it's my one meal of the day. I'm not a diet expert, but this does not seem like the healthiest way to either lose weight or remain healthy. Does that seem like a bit of a contradiction to you in some respects? He's not. He's crazy. I mean, yeah, but I look at, say Sam Altman. Sam Altman is very disciplined
in both exercise and diet. Jeff Bezos is now that way. Elon's not that way. You know, you're probably pretty good at diet and exercise. You know, me. I tried pretty hard, but I'm not quite as good. Elon's at the side where he's he's fanatic on many, many things, but getting on the treadmill and taking care of himself is not one of them. Did you ever see him exercise while you were with him? He has only one home now because when his daughter transitioned, it became
very anti-capitalist. He thought that if selling all five of his pretty nice homes, he would just live very frugally and that would please her, which didn't work. He's got this two bedroom house and a town in South Texas where Starbase is. And there's a little room that has one of those cross-trainers. And every now and then, I'd be just sitting in that house, day in and day out. You'd say, maybe I should use that more. I don't use it that much. I've never seen him say,
well, I've got to go to the gym. He doesn't meditate, do yoga, swim, or do things that would both clear your mind and relax your body. How would you characterize his mental health? He's got a lot of incredibly matured. What does that mean? It means that it goes through multiple phases, personalities. And there will be times when he's perfectly cheerful, inspiring, sometimes funny, sometimes focused on engineering.
There will be times when he gets into a very, what Grimes calls demon mode. He says he's probably bipolar. He's never been diagnosed, but he uses some medication that's been prescribed. And so he will get into these mood swings where he can be manic and depressive and bipolar.
And so his mental health is not great. The difficult question, and the book wrestles with him, with this, and you said at the beginning, smart thing, you said at the beginning of this show, was to what extent is that woven into who he is and do those strands also cause him to have the drives? In the time that you observed him in the years that you were with him, were you ever concerned about him? Yeah. I mean, at times when he would go into what I would
almost feel was a tailspin. And even times before I knew him, like 2018, he goes into total meltdown. He's almost catatonic, lying on the floor of the factory in Fremont, Texas, and the people work with him can't rouse him because he's in a, you know, catatonic state. He's sending off horrible tweets back then, calling some cave diver a pedophile or saying he's going to take Tesla
private. And you see that recur every now and then even this past month, he hasn't been as far as I know in any bad catatonic state, but he'll get into a dark mood late at night and do tweets out of conspiratorial and dark and self-destructive. At Christmas, he was with his brother and some other relatives and they all sit around talking this the day after the server farm anecdote. I told you about
it. And they ask, what do you regret most this year? And he says, I regret the fact that every now and then I suck shooting myself in the foot or stabbing myself in the thigh that he gets into these periods. With all these great leaders, there's a word you used throughout, which is the word team. The definition of the word company is group of people. How do they go about hiring great people? With Musk, he says that you always look first for the right attitude. Skills, knowledge,
they can all be acquired, but a change in attitude requires a brain transplant. So you make sure they have an all-in hardcore attitude. Early on, first few years of SpaceX and Tesla, he interviewed everybody that they were hiring. He's built a good team, but an unstable one. People come and go, more often. But there are people like Gwen Shotwell, who for more than 20 years has helped run SpaceX. And Mark Junkos has been probably the chief technology officer there. Likewise,
you have a pretty stable team at Tesla. Steve Jobs was a specialist at building teams. When he was dying, I was in his backyard with him, and I asked him, what's the best product you ever made? And I thought he'd say the iPhone or maybe the Mac. He said, well, building those products is hard, but what's really important is building a team that will continue to build products. So the best thing I did was the team at App. And that's the Johnny I, Phil Schiller at a Q,
Tim Cook team. Musk is not as much of a superstar building teams, but he does get hardcore, dedicated leaders to work for him. And do they both think that the team is the most important thing? Hiring great people. I would say that Jobs definitely thought that. I think Musk, if you ask him, would say he thinks that. But one of the things he hasn't done perfectly is if he left Tesla, you know, there's Tom Zhu, there's Drew Bagley, you know, there's some people. But it's not
as if he has a big team in place as easily. He's a little bit more the total boss. And he'll not try to run everything, but he'll focus maniacally on specific things. And he does not, I guess the best way to say it is he doesn't delegate authority as easily as I think other leaders do. On the flip side of that, his maniacal intensity to detail means that unlike Boeing, he knows how to get rockets into orbit. What are the principles of success or leadership that both Steve and Elon
share? First of all, a passion. Musk had a passion for beauty. And even the beauty of the parts unseen. I remember when I was first working with Steve Jobs. He had the same, Steve would take me around the backyard of his house where he grew up in a small tract home in California. And there's a fence. And he made me look at the back of the fence which face scrub land. He said, my dad said we had to make the back of the fence just as beautiful as the front of the fence. And Steve said
to his father, why? Nobody will see it. Nobody will know. And he said, yes, but you will know. If you have a passion for perfection, you care even about the beauty of the parts unseen. And so both Steve Jobs and Elon Musk cared more about details than your average CEO. They cared in Jobs' case how the chips on the circuit board and the original macintosh looked and whether the circuit board itself was beautiful even though nobody would ever see it.
It was in a sealed case. And Musk, the night he, the Twitter board accepted his offer, he spends two hours in the town, he town in South Texas going over a valve and the Raptor engines under Starship and why it was leaking. And there was a methane leak. And just became involved in the details. And both of them felt that if you have a passion and intensity on the details, the rest will follow more easily. What was their approach to, kind of linked to that,
their approach to experimentation? It's something that I'm absolutely obsessed with, conducting as many experiments as we possibly can in the short-wits, to amount of time we can to get information back. Yeah, one of the things that Musk is successful because of is his ability to iterate, to take risks, to conduct experiments. Twice now he's launched Starship, which as I say, is by far the biggest rocket ever made. And both times you saw stories the next day saying,
Musk launches rocket it explodes. Well, he thinks both those were success because he says, if you're not failing 20% of the time, you're not risking enough. And so each of those are attempts to figure out, to take a risk, shoot something off and see what goes wrong. And then to fix it, if you have a risk-averse culture like NASA or Boeing or Lockheed or others, you're not experimenting enough. And by definition, an experiment involves the unknown in taking a risk.
How do they keep their cultures to be pro-risk and to stop them getting complacent with their success? Well, I don't think Musk has a problem with complacency because he's so intense and hardcore that the minute I've watched so many meetings were even at Twitter. Well, somebody says, we can't do this. We can't take away the blue checks. So we can't change from carbon fiber to stainless steel on a particular component. Or we can't do cybertruck because cybertruck is too edgy
and it's made of stainless steel and it's frightening to look at and to scare people. And he'll just either run rough shot over or fire them or push them to realizing, yeah, let's make cybertruck look very futuristic and let's make it totally out of stainless steel. And let's have the stainless steel be an exoskeleton. So you don't have to have internal chassis as much. These are wild out of the box things and they resisted him on cybertruck. They resisted him on starship. They resisted him
on even some of the battery changes he's made or things. But or resist him on the Manus servers you need at Twitter or the rules for engagement on Twitter. I think sometimes it doesn't work. I think Twitter is kind of toxic in places because he thought you could get rid of the moderation teams and do it through an algorithm. But he pushes things 80% of which succeed. It means there's a lot of
rubble in the wake though. Do you think that somewhat delusional these people? I think they're crazy and as jobs would say crazy enough to think they can change the world and thus they become the ones who do delusional the craze they use for Steve was reality distortion field which is just a geek's way of saying delusional meaning you can wish something and think hard enough on something and try to make it happen. And often it worked with jobs. He'd say you got to shave 10 seconds off
the boot up time and they say that's reality. He can't be done and he'd say he'd stare without blinking something his guru had taught him in India. He'd say don't be afraid you can do it. And they would bend reality and 80% of the time he'd get it done. Sometimes it done work. He tried it on his cancer. Didn't work. I mean he just tried to will it away. Likewise with mosque full self-driving. I mean for the past eight years he's always said it's only a year away. We're
going to get there. Well that's reality distortion. It's driven his team to go further with machine learning on full self-driving the most companies but it's also a reality distortion that hasn't yet paid off. Deadlines you talked kind of about it there. That's the same thing which is being delusional about deadlines but they're forcing functions as mosque himself said when I was talking to him once I said deadlines man you always says yes but I'm a specialist at turning the impossible into the
merely very late. So he misses deadlines but he tends to eventually deliver. The reason he's setting deadlines even though he knows sometimes they might not be here is because it speeds up the team. Yeah he says you a all-in intensity a hardcore intensity is our operating principle and you're not going to have that without deadlines. I remember so many times that well what he his team calls surges. I'd see it happen almost every month in a different field. He'd say all right we
have to stack this rocket by Friday and they say no it's going to take months. No it needs to be stacked by Friday and they'd work around the clock and do it and then a few weeks later he'd be on house where they were putting a Tesla solar solar roof dials and he'd say you have 24 hours to redo this house. They'd say well that's nuts but he'd be there at midnight on top of the roof. himself. himself. With little x playing on the cables down below and he would use it as a forcing
function. It drove the team's crazy but it drove them to do things they didn't think they could do. Is he happy? No he's somebody who not only is not usually happy but he doesn't value happiness. If you said what are the top 10 things you want in life? I don't think happiness, pleasure, calmness, sweetness, going to the beach. None of those would be in the top 10. He T'lulurayle who lives here who was married to him. The English actress. Great. English actress.
She said he's not the type who can stop and save her or smell the flowers. He doesn't want to sit back and be content and be happy. I asked him about it. I said okay you're ever happy at what you've achieved. He said no I'm like a video game addict. When I get to one level of the game and I've succeeded all I can think about is moving to the next level of the game. Be it Elden Ring or
Polotopia. Is that common amongst the great leaders that you've studied? No it was definitely true of Steve Jobs who having built the great computers suddenly says I want a thousand songs in my pocket and then when he has the iPod it's so successful and all he does is worry about the fact that something bad could happen and he says well what if people the brain dead people make
cell phones? Well as they can put music on cell phones then we'd be out of business so he starts working on the iPhone and the iPod team says well that's going to cannibalize us that's going to hurt our business. We have to be able to cannibalize ourselves or other people we'll eat us for lunch and likewise Musk is always pushing for the next thing as opposed to happy. Is that true of everybody? No I mean Jeff Bezos has the biggest yacht you can imagine and more vacation homes
and he's happier I think. I mean he likes to savor his success. It's also true that his space company Blue Origin hasn't yet gotten anybody into orbit. I don't know if there's a particular trade-off there but I know Musk would say yeah I could be on a yacht somewhere but that's not what I want. Do you think Jeff and Steve do you think Elon likes Jeff? I think there are competitors and there's two chapters in the book called Bezos and Musk where they compete for a pad it
kept cannibal the story pad 39A. Well again into big disputes and lawsuits over satellite levels. Musk says if by that I want Bezos to succeed I want him to be driving us into space because the more do it the better I wish he would get out of his hot tub and off his yacht more often so that Blue Origin could be more successful so that's not exactly a compliment they don't hang out together
but I know that Musk respects Bezos. Bezos once tried to patent the concept of a self landing a booster rocket that could land upright and be reused which Musk was already working on and the idea that Bezos would try to patent the idea went because Musk's to go ballistic but since then he
hasn't gone ballistic on Bezos and that got resolved. How did Steve Jobs change you? I think that Steve and all the people I've written about caused me to think more about what's the larger mission and to care about even things people couldn't see as I said like the circuit board inside the Mac
and you always know whether you're cut in corners when you're writing a book doing a podcast starting a company and being honest with yourself about that is I admire deeply Steve Jobs' passion for beauty is passion for the product and all of them felt they weren't trying to make the most
money or build the most valuable company although they did Apple becomes that Tesla becomes that they become the richest people but they're doing it not for a passion for profits but a passion for the product and specifically Elon spending that time with him
yeah you know I go back to the know thyself I can admire Musk I can respect what he does I also know it's the price he pays for his success is a price that I think is too high for me meaning I'm not going to be that rough on the people around me I've been married more than four
of almost 40 years and you know I care about this balance of work and life and other things I think Musk doesn't care about that so I know that each of us has to decide how do we do the balances that make us feel the most comfortable and I watch Elon and can admire his intensity
but also know the downsides of it and then in a more complex way which is what the book is about understand how the downsides and you said this at the very beginning of the show the downsides and bad traits are so interwoven with the good traits that you can't disentangle the fabric
the algorithm you write about in the book this five step approach that Elon takes towards sort of product development when I read about it it kind of just seems like more of the same Elon which is like the sense of urgency speeding things up and carrying a lot about the small stuff
is that your characterization of the algorithm and what is the algorithm well the algorithm goes back to what you called first principles which is step one of the algorithm is question every rule question every requirement somebody says we need to have a felt bad between the battery
and the chassis and you see say why and they say well it's a regulation or it's a rule and you say who made that rule who made that who does it really work bring me the person the name of the person who actually made it and let me grill that person to see if there's a physics reason that has to
happen and so that's step one in the algorithm and step two is a Steve Jobs step which is simplify even on the iPod when Steve made it it's like I want to be able to get to any song with only three clicks I don't want a whole lot of buttons I don't want to manual and they eventually make the most
beautiful simple thing that comes the iPhone after a while intuitive nobody has to read the manual for how to use an iPhone so step two is simplify then you speed up the processes and final step is automate and the problem must set is when you try to automate processes that you should have
deleted you're not going to do it but it's it's not just the algorithm it's the algorithmic way of thinking which is the manufacturing matters as much as the design of the product so he puts his engineers and designers with their desk facing the assembly line so every hour they can watch
if there's a hold up if there's something that's a piece of you know strip around the headlight or wiring in the raptor engine that's causing a hold up in the manufacturing process the engineers and designers can see at every hour which is why he doesn't do what most automakers now do which
is send something off an outsource all the manufacturing he's got to watch it happen and people write he makes people write their name on the parts of the rocket that they're responsible for yeah and you got a it's like who's in charge who's in charge of this valve and who's in charge
of the cost of this valve and who's going to get this valve to be a cost down by 80 percent and if you don't think you can do it your name is on that mission then step aside you know you're not going to tolerate people who can't be on the mission a quick word on hewl as you
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doesn't taste like cardboard and that tastes delicious the impossible has been accomplished you mentioned your own family and your own um relationships last question is about eelons love life you know eelon loves drama and turmoil right that's from childhood he associates it with childhood
and love and whether it's at twitter or at SpaceX or tesla he's always surging and once drama well for better or worse i would say for worse his emotional personal love life tends to be that way he likes drama and fighting and intensity in his relationships of the people he's been with
death most have had this fiery intensity to them from his first wife justine all the way through amber herd who i think's legendary uh in the intensity shall we say of the relationships and to some extent grimes now there have been a couple of exceptions one of whom i mentioned is
to little riley whom he was married to uh english actress and she's great and loving and calm and was a calming influence and was the best thing to happen to him in my opinion when it came to romance but he always valued the intensity and she rightly knew herself and said this is
amazing and i really love everything happening but this is not who i am i'm going to be back in a more calm environment eventually she leaves and comes back to england so with his own children his lovers his wives there is the same intensity that's baked in to everything he does but he seems
to have a longing to be with somebody he seems to be he's always afraid of being alone he said that he was so lonely as a child that his biggest fear is being alone he always loves having one of his children i mean down at the rocket launch there's griffin there's axi was uh
someone he has a child uh who's autistic and you know needs a minder generally i mean enough so uh that he's still a very wise teenager and even assing's like why doesn't the future look like the future dad which is one of the things that spurs Elon into making cyber trucks so futuristic
so he always likes having some of his children around him he always likes having a companion but that doesn't mean he likes calmness so interesting we have a closing tradition on this podcast where the last guest leaves a question for the next guest not knowing who they're going to
be leaving the question for and the question that's been left for you with all you know about the nature of what it is to live a happy successful life what do you think is the single most important characteristic to be happy and or to be successful knowing your mission and knowing yourself i mean
maybe that's two things but it took me a while to know myself meaning what i was good at as a leader and what i didn't want to be good at but also i know the mission that i'm trying to do uh in life and it's not getting humanity to Mars is not the grandest of all missions but uh i think
if you know yourself and what you value then the happiness follows and what is your mission my mission is that there's certain things that inspire us that make us aim higher and make us better and as a journalist as a writer and now as a biographer and historian i like to tell the stories
about people who moved us who rippled the surface of history and from those lessons we all in a smaller way can be on a journey that's not just about ourselves when i speak to my college students there's always get graduation speakers that say follow your passion and i say no it's not about
your stupid little passion it's about connecting your passion to something higher than yourself so figure out what that mission is for you and i do it through storytelling now storytelling isn't as elevated as rocket building or auto making but it is the oldest most venerable valuable
way we have of passing on values is telling stories whether it's around the first campfire ever built or whether it's Homer doing it in the Odyssey or the Bible with a great opening sentence in the beginning comma telling us these stories i think there's a role in society for storytellers that
try to make us better well you have very much taken on that role in a remarkable way i very rarely pre-order or pre-save books ever but based on the books you've written previously this was one of the books that i bought on both audiobook and both physically and it far exceeded my expectations
because of the depth and detail you go into these people this is not a surface level from a distance audit or analysis or deconstruction of these individuals it is as if you are living in their mind and writing from the place of their mind and for someone like me who i think of myself at the start
of my career that wants to do great things yeah knowing everything about these individuals that you've covered allows me to pick and choose elements that will get me closer towards my own version of happiness and success and i think know that i self is such an important thing when you read
these books because you have to assemble the parts of an Elon or a Steve Jobs or a Jennifer and take from them to complete your own little jigsaw piece and we're all our own individual shapes they'll probably never be a book ever that comes close to the detail and depth of insight
and understanding and storytelling which is so unbelievably captivating as this one that's written on Elon Musk so it's a must read for everybody regardless of what discipline will pursue you and i think it's just an absolute fascinating read about trauma about humanity about humans and about
what it takes to reach the very top so Walter thank you for the service to humanity that you've done by the work that you do it's a huge honor to get to meet you today wow inter-hew John would get to meet you in a actual pleasure too thank you quick one i discovered a product which has changed
my life called eight sleep this product eight sleep which a response to this podcast has been a revelation in my life because the eight sleep pod cover which is basically a fitted sheet that goes over your mattress controls the temperature of your bed throughout the night and it follows nature's
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fitness i think sleep now is the the most important factor the thing that i'm thinking about most often every single day when i wake up in the morning the first thing i do is i check my sleep and i use that information to determine how to proceed in that day how hard to work out how many meetings
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dollars on the pod cover that i have on my bed the one i'm talking about grab your pod cover send me a them and let me know how you get on do you need a podcast to listen to next we've discovered that people who liked this episode also tend to absolutely love another recent episode
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