Acquired podcast summary
ACQ Sessions: Jason Calacanis
An independent reading companion to the Acquired podcast.
View the original episode on Acquired ↗In brief
Jason Calacanis traces a career built by repeatedly turning media access into entrepreneurial and investing leverage: Silicon Alley reporting created founder relationships, Weblogs produced an exit, This Week in Startups expanded his network, and Sequoia's scout program supplied the capital that led to Uber. His current system industrializes that advantage through podcasts, Founder University, a 11,000-member syndicate, public fundraising, and a team screening enough companies to reserve his attention for founders already demonstrating product velocity.
The investing lesson is more nuanced than the famous Uber return. Calacanis distinguishes riding an obvious winner from true angel intervention, using Calm — a near-shutdown company funded at a $4 million valuation — as the latter. His framework looks for positive signals such as world-class design and rapid shipping while maintaining an anti-list of failure risks. He also treats audience-building as an unmonetized trust asset: credibility compounds into deal flow, LP access, talent, and optionality worth more than near-term advertising.
Five key insights
- Media compounds into proprietary deal flowDecades of interviewing builders give Calacanis continuous market intelligence, trusted founder relationships, and public proof of work. All-In may forgo direct revenue, but its reach lowers fundraising friction and expands the network supplying investments — an economic return that never appears on the podcast's income statement.
- Filter talkers by observable product velocityFounder University lets hundreds of aspiring entrepreneurs learn and build before Calacanis invests attention or capital. His team compares roadmaps and changelogs across meetings: a founder who reprioritizes on Sunday and ships repeatedly by next month demonstrates execution more reliably than a polished pitch.
- Angel value is greatest near company deathCalacanis concedes Uber and Robinhood would have succeeded without him. Calm better represents angel investing: after roughly 40 rejections, the founders considered shutting down; his $370,000 syndicate investment bought about 6%, extended their runway, and helped them reach subscriptions and product-market fit.
- Codify taste without pretending it is objectiveLaunch scores opportunities against nine positive factors and roughly fifteen red flags. Two disclosed positives are world-class design — truly best in category, not merely attractive — and product velocity. The framework teaches judgment and consistency while preserving room for exceptional founders.
- External capital can sharpen personal meaningA syndicate alone could provide simpler deal-by-deal economics, yet Calacanis chooses funds and broader LP participation because accountability raises his standard and returns can support pensions, universities, and medical institutions. The tension is preserving capital while still taking asymmetric early-stage risk.
Chapters
Jump to the important parts.
Select any timestamp to start the episode there.
Full transcript
Paragraph by paragraph.
225 timestamped paragraphs. Use Control-F or Command-F to search.
so wait it was a magazine magazine yeah that's how i started yeah magazines was like the original platform for wait are we start have we started silicon alley i guess this is the trick we've just been recording the whole time yeah welcome to quiet sessions all that stuff that you said beforehand that like is really juicy i don't think we should put that no definitely not definitely we don't want to tell people where the bodies are buried well cheers boys here we go where this is the is this the first one or this is the first in real life but i think this is our ninth tenth together something like that a lot between the two pods yeah for sure great to know you boys so this
is the first acquired sessions acquired sessions i feel like i should get out on guitar here and play some dylan this is this is your baby what is acquired sessions acquired sessions is normally on the show we are like so scripted yeah you are and we have a great time we do four hour episodes you know it's awesome but uh really for folks like you who we know really well yeah what happens if we throw out the script and just chop it up and we just chop it up david rosenthal unplugged wow i love it this is the literally mtv unplugged literally all right listeners now is a great time to talk about a new partner of ours here on acquired lagora the agentic operating system that is
redefining how the world's best legal teams work yep it's sort of obvious that ai is going to completely change the legal industry i bet most of you listening have dropped a contract into some sort of ai chat bot out there lagora took that insight and asked the question what if you really built something with that power from the ground up for the legal industry so the founders did exactly what great founders do operate with obsessive customer focus they embedded inside a massive law firm for months they sat with the lawyers just watching how the work really gets done and that's how you get features that customers love like tabular review where you drop in a folder of hundreds of contracts
and it pulls every key term into a grid a lawyer can actually work with lagora's bet here is interesting since it lets each lawyer handle more complexity any given person can increase the quality of their work and do higher value work and this means that the pie can grow even as each individual task takes less time and they recently launched lagora agent offering greater intelligence and performance the agent lets lawyers set an objective then it can handle the planning and the execution and delivery of the final product legal teams get to maintain full control and transparency since they're still involved where judgment is required and lagora works where you already work you can use it within microsoft word while redlining or drafting the early lagora numbers essentially speak for themselves when they have a
head-to-head pilot with their top competitor they win 70 of the time lagora now has over a hundred thousand lawyers on the platform from 1200 legal teams in 50 countries and crazily they went from 1 million to 100 million in arr in about 18 months truly insane numbers and that is the real test plenty of things demo well but the question is whether a busy associate actually reaches for it during crunch time or whether a partner trusts it before going into a conversation with a major client if your legal team wants to check it out whether you're a law firm or you're in-house at a company you can learn more at lagora.com slash acquired and just tell them that ben and david sent you
so in the juicy stuff earlier you mentioned mahalo yeah i don't is that why you started can we just like referring to the juicy stuff it's yeah the juicy stuff yeah no we want to talk about that stuff yeah yeah is mahalo why you started you went from print to print to well when i in the 90s um you know i grew up in brooklyn um my dad had his bar uh seized by the feds because he didn't pay his taxes during the 1987 crash he became like he got behind and the fed showed up one day and this was the maybe six weeks before i was set to go to college and he said hey son i can't help you with
good luck uh and uh i might be going to jail so take care of your mom so he was like really behind on his taxes and you know state liquor authority they kind of take it serious so feds come shotguns the whole thing they seize the place they seize everything in it and uh i was like well i guess i'm going to school at night and i'm going to work during the day and i worked uh fixing laser printers and uh that was like a really good racket the hp had just come out and were you set to go to college somewhere else well that's another story but i was set to go to brooklyn college i got into that i had also taken the police exam to be a police officer so my brother
went into the force and then i said you know what i'm gonna see if i can go to college and make that work so i'm gonna go to brooklyn college so i decided to work during the day and then i went to school four nights a week six to nine p.m carried full credits 16 credits a semester and uh i would work fixing laser printers all day i was a bad student uh i was always that student who underperformed i didn't find great meaning in academics but i had a computer when i was in high school and i was more interested in playing with my 300 baud modem which then became a 1200 baud modem and my pc junior so
it kind of you know like many people of that era we were sort of set on a path because we were the first generation to have a computer at home i actually had an atari 2600 and it could play tank was the game that came with it and pong and so my dad bought this for us when i was six or seven years old 1976 1977 and he had one of the first pongs in brooklyn in his bar so he must have cleaned up on that oh my god it was crazy um and so we uh i just got exposure to video games and computers and i was like wow this is incredible like computers are gonna change everything and then i happened to
hack some software we used to i ran a lot of scams uh but uh you told us about the the vhs so vhs jason's hot tapes was technically my first business but there was a side job i had which was cracking software so we were we would make copies of like chess master and stuff like that and then sell them for 10 bucks and then we started like hacking and doing what was called phone freakings when you were doing this stuff like it's you'd be reasonably technical to do it not like the you know not like wasniac technical but like you you soldered chips sometimes we changed yeah like we put we to put memory in at that time you had to like take the memory chips and put them in and then bend them
over and stick them in did you ever think about like did you consciously ever make a fork where you were like not tech media and of course media about tech but you're like i'm not gonna be the guy doing the boards i'm gonna be the guy writing about the people doing the boards it's a very good question i used to go to bleaker street i used to hang out in the west village or the east village it was like the cool places to hang out and um like a thing to do would be to go to tower records and look at the zine section so there's a concept of a zine which was short for magazine but a zine was something you wrote with your friends you printed it yourself at a photocopy store it's like
blogs before blogs blogs before blogs and i created a zine i was like i'm gonna be a magazine publisher so the first one i did was cyber surfer which was about dial-up magazine dial-up services and cd-roms and i did it with my friend brian alvey uh whom you might have heard of in my career we went to high school together weblogs we did weblogs together yeah so but in the early 90s i did which is engadget twad all that stuff yeah everything you sold aol i think i sold aol but anyway before that i did this mag i did that magazine and then i had met fred i met jerry colonna at uh internet world the first one and he there was a booth that's right when jerry was a vc
before he was like the before he was a vc he was consulting for lycos and i think cmgi and so there was a lycos booth and i had met this young lady at it and we hit it off and we're talking and then she introduced me to jerry colonna and then i met jerry colonna in an office no bigger than this room and on union square and he said listen i'm leaving lycos but i'm going to start this hack me ventures with my friend fred i want you to come um read business plans for us and so i met fred wilson and i would go up to them and they were doing jp morgan was going to back them for their
venture firms this was 1994 95 this became flat iron it became flat iron jp morgan was the first big anchor of flat iron they were half of it and masayoshi-san softbank was the other half no way so they wanted you to come like be a vc associate not a vc just to read business plans so the deal was they would take me for sushi and pay me a thousand bucks wait what do vc associates do besides just read business plans exactly well anyway it was a thing and so i had the magazine started silicon i reporter and they were paying me and so i read uh about this um um beverly hills internet company which got rebranded as geo cities and i wrote a little coverage of it and i said you
should invest i'm 24 years old i don't even know what vc is that's where flat iron made all their money yeah they were going to invest anyway the planner became usv right yeah flat iron went with jerry colonna then when jerry decided he wanted to move to colorado and just chill yeah um he had made enough money i think and coach founders coach founders i think and yeah maybe he had like uh i think he's been pretty public about it like i don't want to say a nervous breakdown but a kind of like maybe a fork in the road like making a decision about what you want in your life kind of situation you wrote that great book about it yeah yeah yeah and so jerry was a good mentor but fred
actually became ultimately my deep mentor uh at that time and uh fred said to me listen you're doing silicon i reporter you're writing about us and the companies we're investing in and um you're doing stuff which would you rather do and i was like i think i'll do the magazine uh this was before now it's like i do both and now it's like i do both right why choose but just to back up to geo cities that sold yahoo for like five billion and i think four or five flat iron was the main investor yeah flat iron maybe about five or ten percent of it it was like a huge win for them i mean fred was on fire for a new york vc and jerry they did pretty well they had done how did that happen right like
i mean silicon valley was here but they were in new york like what was going on yeah we just there was a lot of good companies brewing in new york and my concept with silicon valley reporter was well they have red herring in the bay area upside in the bay but i own new york and i had silicon and then i started one called digital coast reporter in la so i had two magazines two conferences two email newsletters that's kind of king of new york right i grew that business to 10 million dollars in revenue off my credit cards um and um had up 75 to 100 people working for me when i was 27 years old and i didn't know anything about how to run a magazine how to run edsels i taught
myself everything what do family think of this like it was pretty heady stuff because i wound up being on the cover of the new york times on charlie rose and they wrote a feature story about me for 8 000 words in the new yorker so anyway it's a really cool time in new york because at that time you were either in media or finance or art publishing it was like a finite set and i was in publishing but i was also in this new thing technology and so everybody wanted in on that it would be like the equivalent of crypto is today like at its peak where like and you were the equivalent of like satoshi or something like it was crazy to be yeah the new york internet guy um can i so we talked about a lot of this when
we did our like big jason empire of jason calacanis episode with you so i want to like yeah put this on pause so yeah sure people can go listen to that you should it's great we get like the detailed story of like weblogs inc and all that great stuff and you mentioned i want to like take us from you're only as good as the you know your greatest your your newest thing sure um because the last time we talked to you you were just starting all in hilarious and like can we talk podcasting of course i love it podcasting is like i think perhaps my greatest medium what happened with all in how did i mean it's weird it has it surpassed your wildest expectations um i thought it would be something
chamath and i would do 10 times yeah so the the origin story is pretty simple um chamath uh i knew because he was running icq chamath was running icq at aol and i had sold my company aol and like the revolving door of aol it was like ted leonis had this march to a billion my greek brother a mentor had this like march to a million a billion uh off-site and so i went to this and i just sold weblogs like a million aol users hot shit that's the that was the idea was that well with weblogs inc and with uh aol and other assets they wanted to buy they were going to march to a billion users yeah it was like this crazy rallying car and we had these t-shirts march to a billion so i go to
that and i see chamath and i was like hey and he's like hey and we introduced each other and we had known of each other and i said what are you doing here he's like i'm running icq into the ground you know i'm just writing it down every month it loses a million members it's hilarious and he's like yeah but i'm leaving i'm gonna go um i'm gonna go to the west coast i'm gonna go work at this vc or whatever it's all right nice seeing you um and so then when he was there i was in la uh and what vc did he go work because he was at facebook mayfield mayfield for a year and then sean parker introduced
him to uh um zuck and zuck needed you know like a chamath he needed like somebody who would just chamath built the growth he built the growth team and he was like i don't there is no equivalent of growth that was the idea of growth hacking didn't exist as a term until chamath did what he did he said just find me the smartest people i'm hiring based on iq and i'm hiring based on desire to make a lot of money and be a beast and he just went he went into beast mode because you know he too was very hungry um and you guys must have been like brothers from another yeah for sure for sure we're we're we're definitely you know both outsiders in silicon valley and um you know i had had
chamath come on the pod this week in startups that is uh we listened to it it was it's fun to go back to that moment the first one you know he you can see how he's not you know polished he's not chamath you know right uh it's gregarious or whatever he's a little more he doesn't have the laura on no laura piano he was was he in great shape or no no not one of the pictures he was like he was like a dork you know like he but he was his base was pre uh yeah whatever you know he he always was a poker player he was playing atlantic city so he was you know like myself an outsider who wanted to
take risk and wanted to win and um you know confident you know even maybe more confident than both of us should be but um and so i kind of introduced chamath to the world by convincing him to come on the pod which he was like reluctant to do when he was on facebook but he did it after facebook so i kept asking him to come he finally was in la he came on the pod and then people i was like he's really good on stage like he's funny whatever and so which at this point you had an eye for because you're like of course i mean one of the things when i was a podcaster in those early days you know i'm talking about 12 years ago whatever is you know i introduced a lot of people to the world
i think like 14 right 14 yeah i introduced people to the world yeah uh yeah it was 2008 i guess whatever so i introduced a lot of people who were in tech to the you know and it was only a couple thousand people and then as now too like you could be a great founder you could be a great you know person in tech but like that doesn't automatically make you a compelling podcast as we know no of course not no i mean there i have my own theories about what makes for a great guest we'll put that on the side for now but um anyway we start a friendship we start playing cards together uh we start hanging out
you know trading notes kind of thing and uh he's gonna start his venture firm i'm a scout at sequoia all that stuff we start playing and trading notes and we just become great friends but then he was coming out of cnbc one day and he's like oh my god you know just like we have such a good rapport when you interview me because he had done a bunch of interviews with me on stage and stuff like that on my events he's like i want to do a podcast with you i was like yeah you can come on this week anytime it's twice a week now and which it's now five times a week six six five sunday plus i'll see i'm gonna go i may go back down to five next year it's a little much right now yeah dude you i
mean we'll come back to this but you're killing yourself right now and you're on act three yeah i have more energy now than i i may i may have i i just this like coming out of the pandemic might have as much energy as i did when i was in my 20s but for different reasons different type of energy um anyway chamoff calls me you know coming out of the studio i don't know if he was in new york or he was in the one market one in san francisco here but um he said i want to just pod with you i said okay and he said i want to do a new pod with you just me and you we talk i was like sure he's
like what should we call it we're texting back and forth i was like we should call it all this is 2020 yeah it's like two years ago whatever and i said yeah we should call it all in like we should come with a poker name he's like yeah great like a raise or something it's like all in because you you'd been referring to this poker game on air on yeah i would talk about it once in a while the poker game that doesn't exist and yeah sky dayton and i had a poker game with brooke hammerling the famous pr person at the code conference which was the all things d conference before that for 20 years then chamoff had had a poker game sax i had hosted it floating and putting all that together um
yeah i'd refer to it many times in the pod but tried to you know keep it from becoming public right but it was me bill gurley it's all public now mark pincus right or maybe that used to come to the code one yeah um which is another funny story um and uh lots of funny stories in my life but anyway um so then the pandemic happens and we're like well where are you going just dropping these little breadcrumbs we gotta pick them up on the way at some point we gotta pick these up anyway at some point i'll write a biography anyway um nine years uh third book anyway the um then we we were the pandemic starts to happen like well sax has some ideas about masks and then
friedberg sax and friedberg weren't there was no besties originally right no no and to be the truth like uh freeberg and i weren't besties before all in i mean we knew each other we were friends but not besties i was besties with sax and chamoff and now freeberg is a bestie um and but he played in the game obviously and we had just started to have a developer friendship but anyway that foursome kind of clicked right pretty quickly um and i think you know i was a really good interviewer i'd studied interview techniques and really you know after doing a whatever i'd done at least a thousand episodes of twist at that point and i had had sax on many times and chamoff so i was very comfortable
with them and at the poker game we break chops and i make jokes um and chamoff's a great host and just very comfortable with each other uh and and freeberg kind of joined that group and um it clicked and i think during the pandemic and i i thought maybe this last 10 20 episodes but during the pandemic i think people wanted information and i realized in perspective i mean i think that's a thing i'll tell you i never expected to be listening to david sacks talk coming from where he comes from politically and where i come from politically and going yeah that is a good point and that perspective is like so helpful in our polarized world today yeah it's very unique and you know around the poker table we all
listen to each other we're friends but the world does not want us to be friends in some ways the world wants us to be enemies and i kind of think about it like um you know best of enemies kind of situation like we debate specific things like uh gore vidal and um who is this adversary uh anyway it's a great documentary about gore vidal and um who's gore william f buckley they're just two public intellectuals one was on the left one was on the right and there's this documentary best of enemies in the 60s they started debating like uh different political conventions and it was like the most compelling thing on tv but they were like friends best of enemies they weren't besties like
sax and i are but you know gore vidal was just he was gay um kind of closeted or quietly gay and on the left and buckley was like a serious conservative and they went to blow sometimes on the show like at one point buckley i think he called him like a sissy or something like really like derogatory as a gay man and the world didn't understand he was exactly gay it was like sort of time period in the 60s where like maybe some adults understood like yeah that's a gay man but we don't say that's when they got into town yesterday we were driving the castros right nearby and we saw a naked guy in the castro and i was like oh naked guy in the castro and ben was like let's go to
like dude you gotta understand in the castros like huge jacked dude walking around and and super sunny so he's like just all like slick down but did he have shoes on was he wearing combat boots they usually wear boots yeah and then they usually carry a sarong there was a big debate when i first moved up here because there was a number of folks who used to like to get a starbucks and they had to like negotiate and they were like how about a sarong in starbucks because you're gonna sit right right bare ass and for for context for you know i've explained this to ben but like this is a thing in the castro in san francisco it's a cult it's like uh now it's like you see it's like ah this
is like a relic of the 60s 70s it actually was pretty awesome because david we're like driving up and david goes oh a naked guy it was the most like warm hearted yeah i had to um yeah adjust as well as a new yorker because as a new yorker if somebody's naked that's a sign that there's about to be some crazy person in a fight and police and chaos and here it means like high fives and right ons but you know growing up in new york like if somebody takes their clothes off on a public transportation or in a cafe like people are getting a baseball bat and uh calling the police and like the shit's about to go down oh my gosh you know and then here it's like you know high five and
yeah live your life that's one of the things i love about san francisco but anyway the pod's gotten very big so you get the gang together and like yeah what why do you think it works like is it you think it's like the number one ish tech in our business it's number one of course but it's number it was number 28 last week like in the world you guys have transcended like this is more than just it has nothing to do with finance or tech anymore it is tipped over into colleges i was at i was as you know skiing in tahoe and i you know i was with my kids and it's hard to get a table type situation i was
like hey i hate to be a pest but i see you're wrapping up are you and no pressure but are you going to be leaving soon because i'd love to camp out here and get your table like stop busting my and the woman looked at me and she goes jay cal and i was like oh have we met and she's like no i listened to your pod twice a week i'm like it's only on one she's like i listened to it twice and i was like oh my god that's so nice she's like i was like are you in the industry she's like i'm a dentist reno and i'm like you're a dentist in reno's can i ask how you found out about she's like i don't know
like she's like i deeply care about san francisco politics no it's not how she had found it and this is you know during the pandemic situation then that's when i realized it had crossed over was there a moment for you either you for or you where you were like whoa this is you know i've been um micro famous you know micro celebrity multiple times in my career but this is different yeah not for me you know and i got a lot of famous friends uh you know i i'm used to getting recognized i'm used to people taking pictures what i'll say is like where it used to be you know if i go to austin or new york people would say i would have three people stop me on the street a day if i was walking around
in new york now it's 20 you know or 10 and they want to take a selfie and it's you know just you know how podcasting is you guys get recognized and it creates a level of intimacy with people for sure if they're in the habit yes because you're hearing people every week and then people become characters and i tried to make everybody i was you know in all on the show or in all honesty i did craft with all in i was very premeditated in creating some character i've never really talked about this yeah yeah this is what i crafted some character kind of arcs i the fights are all real trust me there's nothing scripted about that but i did say like i think i can as the point guard here
kind of shape the conversation and i literally created the character of the sultan of science right that's what i was gonna say and you know freeberg didn't even have a twitter handle well there's zero followers there's even a character of jcal on all in like there's how the world's greatest moderator sure yeah i think more like jcal the guy who lets himself be the punching bag because it plays for the show a little bit uh i would rather not if i'm being honest i'd rather not be the punching bag like they're like you're the poorest guy on the show i'm like do we need to point that out so often you're like not by much like i'm feeling really good about myself you don't
have to point out that you all have more money than me and you two of you have planes and i don't and it's it's okay with me i i could have a plane i guess i could get one but you care about the environment well no it's also like i don't want to waste a ton of money and you know whatever reason um but you do you do let yourself play that role of like like you have been enormously successful and you sort of let the role of jcal on the show be like that guy who one day wants to be like us maybe he'll maybe he'll make it i actually never wanted to play that actually no that was not that was just
the boys breaking my chops maybe so maybe it's a little bit of like them wanting to uh you know maybe uh take the piss out of me a little bit which is fine because you know i give it as good as i can get it but i think that's probably for them you can ask them when they're on the pod i think for them that's kind of the diss that's the one they can easily go to is i'm the poorest guy on the show but like i've done okay like what i maybe let's flip it like for them before all in i mean tamath had a little bit of a public no they were not famous they had no go to mark they're all
this is a new thing for each of them to hit this level of notoriety it's not for me what do you think for i mean we should ask them this sure like if you were to speculate caveat that it's speculation what do you think for them all in has like done like well i mean for friedberg nobody knew who he was except if you worked at google or you were in vc like he's very connected in those circles what's that or monsanto or monsanto like he's very connected in those circles but he was kind of under the radar guy um i think really by design he didn't have any desire to so i think it's probably the biggest adjustment for him the the increase in profile has certainly been the highest
for him and he's love there was a moment when i like jokingly said to people during the q a session at all in summit uh you know just say who your favorite bestie is and then direct question and it was like five in a row sultan of science and it was like oh my god what have i done now i've created this monster you know and he at the time like would barely show up for like you know he would show up for two out of three episodes he'd be busy it wasn't a priority for him right so i'd be like all right i'll put brad kirstner in if you can't make it i'll try to get bill girley to show up or
whoever draymond to fill in for him you know and it was always like i wonder if freeberg will show up but he's actually really committed to the show now um for sacks he was high profile but nobody really knew him as a republican so he kind of uncloaked as a republican on the show well i feel like he was also like he was almost even more so than any you know well not you but he was high profile if you knew about the paypal mafia money but he was like the least kind of public of the paypal mafia you would say elon reed hoffman peter tl max levchin jeremy stoppelman chad hurley rule off yeah and i guess sacks would be somewhere in that strada of like being known but i feel like
being known being known yeah being known but yeah you know and i think part of the reason this works is sacks i think sacks has probably taken the brunt of the head of the pod yeah because he is so passionate about you know a lot of topics that maybe are unpopular in the tech circles so i do think like it's cost him deal float on the margins probably i think there's probably i don't really margin like i wonder i wonder he said that jokingly on the show i don't know i'm just thinking like maybe there's somebody has ascended because he's done all in in a way of it yeah sure i'm trying to think if like would is there a founder i wonder i don't know this but is there a founder who's a young founder
who would say i would never take money from peter tl's venture firm because i'm so liberal for sure there are and okay so those people feel that way about craft now but for every one of those there's 10 more i kind of agree with your yeah i would agree with that so anyway i do think like he's joked that it's cost him deal flow i don't know if it has um i think the pod too i think for people for people in america and people in tech has moved i think a lot of people towards the center i think a lot of people were moving towards the center and we codified it for people we maybe made it okay to
admit you're a moderate yeah you know i i've been telling folks from the beginning i'm an independent and a moderate i voted probably democratic three out of five times four to five times but mostly that's a function of the fact that i've lived only in new york and california in my life where you don't really get many republicans or moderates but i voted for bloomberg giuliani when brie was crazy and pataki who are all republicans insane to me were you here during the sports league or were you still no i wasn't but i would have uh voted for him um i i like competent people and i supported bloomberg for president which got me a lot of flack really i don't understand why people were very upset that i was for
him instead of whoever i think you guys talked about this on the pod that like oh what was the two by two quadrant of like whatever it was we all think we are here in silicon valley which is like social uh liberal fiscal conservative yeah we were like everybody should be that but we're the smallest of the four groups yes it is a small group i i um i i think i believe in competence and staying out of people's lives so i you know it's very hard to know because and then even david i mean this is i think when david and i fight on the pod which some people love and i think some people probably turn the pod off when that happens and they don't like it um and certainly i the maga group
has no love lost for jacal i can tell you that like my replies have been really crazy i would get like brigaded the last couple of weeks nuts um it's funny but it's also like on the margins like they can get a little scary like they'll dox me sometimes and i you know that's not fun um a handful of times it's happened uh but you know i had to tell david like david i am not like i don't actually listen to msnbc and rachel maddow to get my information uh and by the way you're pro-choice pro-gay marriage anti-war yeah he's the dove and i i was like well okay if you if we don't play this game i'm gonna dub you david the dove and now you're making me into jason the hawk like what are
we talking about here like um but anyway you know what just goes to show how silly the coalition building is like it's totally like exactly the the two-party system requires that if you feel very strongly about something yeah then you're not allowed to think independently about anything else it's so crazy you know i and i think what messes people up is the fact that i actually just think donald trump is a horrible human who you should do no business with has no business being in any political office and you know it is just horrible on any number of levels but i believe that independent of his party he's a democrat obviously obviously yeah yeah and so like i would hate him as a democrat
or a republican so it's not personal and i i would i would love it or it is personal with him but it's very personal with the part yeah i mean i just think this is like just horrible human being on you know in every way now i understand for some people he represents change for some people it's like the way the republicans secured office and that's all they care about is winning i get it whatever and i think so much of the human condition is like being a part of a community and he for so many people is a symbol that means hey all my friends and neighbors were we get to agree on something so that we all can find togetherness in something and for some people that's the flat earth and for other
people that's startups and for some people it's the tribe yeah we don't you know a lot of people don't practice religion anymore and so he's their religion and hillary clinton or elizabeth warren or bernie sanders might be other religions or the new iphone like i found myself ordering this phone and i love it and it's the i4 14 pro and it's magic and whatever but like it's not that different than my old phone but i got to participate in all the fun watching of the keynote and the tweeting and the nerding out i'm like let me look at the image quality versus the old one i gotta say it really is pretty it is pretty but like i got to be part of a tribe and like that is a thing that no matter what your tribe is
that is so fun to be there on tribe day and tribe week i will say the thing i'm proud about the show i think is that it has you know through a lot of the trials and tribulations shown that you can be friends disagree learn from each other and have a vibrant debate which is how we all grew up i think when i say we including you guys but also specifically the besties i want to be friends with people who i disagree with i want to debate stuff right and then people are like this guy dean preston and um he's like one of these supervisors here he's a super idiot like guy in san francisco who like um you know
like won't let them build housing all this stuff and he's like you're just a conservative blah blah and i was like you don't actually understand who i am he's like you're a conservative billionaire i'm like wrong on both accounts thank you for the latter my besties remind me on the latter i'm working on it not trying to be a billionaire thank you all right listeners now is a great time to tell you about a longtime friend of the show vanta ai has scrambled the whole security picture it used to be that you prove that you were secure once a year on audit or a static pdf then everyone would nod and you're done but in an ai first world that doesn't hold up anymore yep your risk surface changes every week
now a vendor turns on an ai feature or someone writes in a new model without telling it and your posture is different than it was last week let alone at your last audit vanta's own research found that around 70 percent of companies have this quote-unquote shadow ai running with no security review at all right and that's where vanta comes in they're the leading agentic trust platform meaning they've built the thing that closes the gap and the way that they close that gap is vanta agent think of it as a grc engineer that's governance risk and compliance except that it's software and it doesn't sleep it finds the issues drafts the fixes and cuts the time that you'd spend on vendor assessments in half
in half which is exactly why more than 16 000 companies today run on vanta companies like ramp cursor and snowflake all stay audit ready and catch the risks that crop up between audits across every vendor every ai tool the whole environment and that's the real value trust has to be continuous now which is why vanta automates your security your compliance and the work to earn and prove trust we're huge fans of vanta over here and literally hundreds of acquired listeners have become vanta customers at their companies over the years so you can get a thousand dollars off vanta at vanta.com acquired that's v-a-n-t-a dot com acquired for a thousand dollars off and just tell them that ben and david sent you
another thing that's really fascinating to me about all in yeah and you guys is before all in and maybe it's still to a large extent i feel like silicon valley has this weird relationship with money like super weird relationship with money like you know remember there's a whole thing about like zuck drove like an acura svv oh my god that all came from david filo and um david filo and jerry yang were driving their old cars right like the cool thing like you you could like make money build a company but like you never want to like you never and be understated you guys i think are the first like like you guys like whatever like we got a private jet like that's fine like you know i mean listen i i
uh uh you know yeah i believe in capitalism i think it's great if people create jobs and if they get rewards for doing so like fine i literally the book i'm right my second book right now i'm writing is about wealth and money and like but not like in my regard but in a sort of like big picture societal regard so i'm like literally been thinking about this topic a ton and i think we worry a little bit too much about wealth creation um with like a small like outlier wealth creation and we don't think enough about inspiring people to create companies and learn and like the time i create the most controversy when i'm like i believe anybody can do it and people are like you're so wrong and i'm
like am i because i go on youtube and you could type in any topic that you want to learn and you can learn it and all the stuff that was at mit where i never got to go and stanford and brown is online for free and i listen to macroeconomic classes and ai classes when i'm like it's 10 o'clock at night i'm doing my email i'll just put one of those playlists on from mit open courseware and i'm like i can't believe i can take a course at mit for free anytime i want and then you you know flip it you can build a business there like david senra over the founders podcast like mr beast mkbhd like nobody gave these
guys permission equitable yeah but people want to spread a narrative that the world is unfair and like i watched oh i think the world becomes so fair and so just and so much information opportunity become available that i'm like wait a second i could never figure out how a term sheet worked and nobody would share their term sheet and now there are a thousand videos and blog posts on how to negotiate your term sheet the world is still unfair i think i very i think the key insight is like recognize that the world is unfair and actually what that is is a game on the field and figure out how to play the game on the field but i mean it's never been more fair so the world is unfair true statement and in america
it's never been more fair you can learn google has like five courses online i think it's called grow with google or something where they're teaching how to be a ux designer how to do this how to do that and it's free so that they can get more people to apply for jobs and the average job entry salary for these things is like 80k so i i find it's very weird in the world i think there's like a group of people who want the world to be more unfair than it actually is because it makes them feel more virtual signaling goodness that's their community that's how they find that there are other people who love that they tweet that the world is unfair so they and they have to and it typically like is a
certain type of person i'll just leave it at that okay can i so i'm going to be your question i teach founder university now i have a course where i teach people for 12 weeks um or i should say have a team that teaches it and i'm going to actually teach it myself uh this next cohort where i just teach people how to start companies all right let's plug it how can they find out where founder.university that's it there you go yeah i mean it's basically it's free you the way i did it was you apply if you want to build a company you pay 700 bucks if you go and you get to week 12 we charge your stripe back the card back the 700 bucks if you don't come or if you don't have an
excused absence if people miss something because of their kids or whatever fine but we just try to get people to complete it over 90 people complete it that's cool so and then we're investing 25k in some of those folks to help them start their companies like people don't know all the work i'm doing like quietly but like 200 people go to this course now or maybe about 400 in the next coat the fourth cohort we'll see but you know like people can learn how to create companies and they're like no they can't and i'm like yes they can like you have to have gone to stanford i'm like no i've invested in 350 companies like maybe five percent of the founders went to stanford like
no that's just not it's patently false like you know you have some confirmation bias you're dealing with a data set from 10 20 years ago i get it but i'm telling you like on the streets ground level truth we all meet with founders all day it's never been more diverse it's never been more open nobody cares where you went to school nobody cares where you live anymore nobody cares where you live they care about what you've felt and your traction like it is post pandemic all people care about is like show me your metrics show me the product show me your team what are your skills great let's go what's your growth rate it's basically become like as beautiful of a meritocracy as i've ever seen
and man you say the m word it freaks people the fuck out i'm like why is this so scary for you that silicon valley is a meritocracy and they're like because it's not and i'm like it kind of is can i can i answer your question earlier of what why i think all in works yes all right go ahead so i think you're the you've got the perfect storm of three things the first thing is a lot of theories on this out there by the way billionaire porn most people you're counter-positioned most people who attain that level of wealth crawl into a quiet hole yeah and make sure no one knows you're doing shows from boats and jets yeah so there's like i don't think we've done one from a jet but yeah there was
definitely two boats in the last two years that's true not my boot in some peak moments of all in it's like watching billions in real life it's like you hear you hear chamath talk about this spread trade and you're like this guy's got a lot of money on that spread trade and like does he actually have a key insight here or is he and like there's there's this interesting intrigue there so bucket one is like billionaire porn bucket two is uh by the research you guys do and and the folks that you each work with because there's definitely researchers that seem to be involved you bring things to the table they're like brand new insights that aren't widely available yet so i feel like i was learning
things about covid19 on all in that i wasn't getting through any other source i'm like somehow this is not making it to me and this feels very like a lot of it proved out to be like this was good information before it was mass all four of us are information junkies with a lot of research and teams that how many how many people all in how many people touch an episode of all in one producer nick that's it no i mean but like the research they'll like i don't know i i'm pretty sure files open on people's computers when they're talking uh we have a docket with the notes but that's mainly for me to cue it up like i
just read the four or five bullet points so people know it so i i do that with my team the docket but the docket is built from you know the five or six stories that people submit to our group chat and say hey put this on the docket right and um i i think sax has some research help i'm sure friedberg and chamoff read the stories or they're well read i mean all of us read constantly and we're in the information business of talking to people about the world so you guys are investors you know how it is like you do 20 meetings a week with founders they're going to tell you everything you're in the world yeah and you guys are young still but you know imagine you do that for 20 years like you're
gonna get smart or you're a journalist for 20 years you can get pretty i wouldn't necessarily say smart but you'll be informed and if you're hearing the right pitches you actually are getting like cutting edge information before it's widely available definitely so okay that's number two so yeah we probably have a slight information edge yeah certainly a huge info i will say the information edge compared to journalists having been this is not a dig to my journalist friends i was a journalist i had 75 people at the magazine we were always trying to figure out from the principles what was going on and tell that story but we were only as good as our access to information and we probably i now looking
back on it i think we had between five and 35 of a story and i know that's like probably triggering to a lot of journalists that they have that little information when you weren't on the inside but you weren't on the inside so when you're on the inside you have a hundred percent or even on the inside you might only have 50 depending you get enough to run with and you feel like okay now there's enough story here let's do it and like that's clearly not the whole story but it's enough to put the piece together you're you're trying and then over time process journalism as some people have dubbed it you know maybe the six or seven stories will tell the full story yep which is the third component
you think makes it successful it's the thing that david and i took forever to realize works about acquired which is relationship and charisma yes like people like having fun by listening to stuff sure and so like if we can make history fun then a little bit of joy goes a long way four hours diving into stuff you would never read in a book and you guys do that in spades like it's just so fun to like temporarily join your world i mean the fact that you as a podcaster who makes elite content like top one percent content find it compelling is just yeah that's very listen every week don't miss it i can't literally walk in the baby up and down the hills listening i mean i have
people tell me they listen to it twice they take notes i'm like wow that's great you know i i don't think maybe i should take notes well anyway i was very intentional with my role in it to step back uh and be like the point guard um but you know i'm a shooting guard too so sometimes i will want to shoot the ball and i can do both i'm a combo guard how did the um freeberg host episode come about so one week yeah you switched roles well he was like i think this could be done better this could be better on that bro go ahead and i just like sure i'll just shoot like and you pass the rock and all
i was like yeah you want to be a good credit show us and he did a he did a solid job but let's be honest like it's not a point guard it's not showtime that's for sure yeah um like i don't think people are gonna go to watch him play point guard i mean he did a serviceable job um and put that on his tombstone no but he shines when i created science quarter for him to shine i said bring me a sign he's like oh you know i don't know if i want to talk about politics i was like listen sax wants to talk about carnivore's politics i'm giving him his red meat here's your quinoa come to me with a science
story you know and we'll do this quinoa corner kind of thing and i've made him the sultan of science and so good you know it was it was a distinct effort i really wanted to make him shine you know and um it worked you know it worked because you see how engaged he is and what used to happen was and fans know this i'm not speaking out of school here you see it every episode sax would disengage during science and quinoa would disengage during politics and what i've been trying to do is keep both of them involved when the other is doing stuff and chamath and i are involved that's a hard job that's a delicate i studied the mclaughlin group people don't know this but
i went back to look at mclaughlin and i watched him moderate so people there's a big debate do i interrupt too much or not enough do my interruptions i call them interjections uh do they help and i actually looked at the interjections and if you look at mclaughlin have you you guys did not grow up on mclaughlin super unfamiliar so the mclaughlin group was the best sunday morning show and like it was so good like snl with parody mclaughlin it probably had a million people watching it but this guy mclaughlin was like pretty cantankerous and if he didn't like what people would say he'd be like wrong this is the answer you know like and it became so competitive that you wanted to watch it
yeah now what i didn't realize by adopting that would be that sax is the ultimate debater and will fight like a dog until he wins any debate and so i may have pushed uh uh sax into more of a debate situation where i'm trying to not have it be a debate i'm trying to have it be a conversation so what i've been working on is trying to keep it be a conversation and then the some people in the audience are like you have to be the fact checker for sax and i'm like no that's not my job i'm not real-time fact-checking sax and um so that is a delicate balance of like and then sometimes i'll ask questions specifically because i know the audience doesn't know what you know fair market value when they
you're an acronym so i'm like explain that right and i'll stop somebody now i mean you're you're expanding the team to dentists like that's correct thank you so people are like oh jay kyle's an idiot he doesn't know that term or i say to somebody can you unpack that can you explain that obviously you know that term myself you were what the third or fourth investor in uber yeah like exactly well played i think he's been in robin hood too like oh wow who knows and i'm like uh dude like i'm asking that question on behalf of the audience so when i'm moderating yeah as opposed to being an interviewer or as opposed when i'm working with molly and we're chopping up the news
when i'm the shooter there right and she's maybe playing point guard a little bit and i'm shooting and then sometimes i'll pass it to her and she shoots like i can travel between those roles and you know in that role i'm acting on behalf of the audience and i get the sense like he's going chamat's going too fast they don't know what the spread trade is let me pause can you explain one more time or let me reflect back to you is this what a spread trade is and he's like almost this and that's what i think has brought in to your point a lot of the dentist crowd and having an intimate sense of where your audience's edges are is is a really important role there like when we
have guests on i'm always trying to catch yes where where did they just go slightly too deep and i need to pull them up so that we yeah and and you know podcasting is about going deep so it is really an art like do you want to stop somebody when they're going down this like crazy rabbit hole in this room well they're going down some rabbit hole that has never existed in media before right so and you want to let them go but you need to make sure they're taking the stairs because like if they just jump in you're like oh god no one has any context they can't learn anything new because you're like you're not connecting it to something they understand they just jumped into brain surgery yes let's just
explain to us what's going on here well how are we going to chop up this brain right like yeah yeah it's a bit of an art but you know i i have to say like it's it's been a different muscle for me to flex and uh it's been great fun for me the other thing like i don't know if you think about it on this axis at all but like i kind of think of there's i used to think it was very binary like there's two categories of podcasts there's uh candy and there's vegetables and like i listen to the audio version of stratechery and that's my vegetables and it's not like deeply it's enjoyable intellectually but it's not like fun and um
i i can't i certainly can't be doing anything else with the language center in my brain while i'm listening to that i have to be like on a run and like sometimes even at home so i can take some notes or look something up i can be cleaning yeah pauses sometimes sometimes you hit and rewind right let me make sure i get what he's saying here or i can listen to the talk show with john gruber and it's just like if i missed out on 20 minutes because i was like brushing my teeth and then i left the room and i came back and i'm like oh i didn't actually miss anything because this has just been like morning show it's comforting yeah it's like i love all the stuff he's talking about but like it's not
must listen every time every minute every second concept and i'm not using hard parts of my brain to understand all then has become candied vegetables it's both it's both yeah for sure yeah i try to do with this week in startups and all in is try to have it be both a little bit of personality a little bit of entertainment some fun hot takes yeah right i mean what do wait related but separate topic um silicon valley yeah i feel like especially there's a lot of part of the in the origins of all in there's a lot of like bashing on san francisco politics and calvin like there's a lot of crap wrong here yeah but you guys are all still here how are you guys feeling about that yeah how do you how do you
feel about that like what what do you think of the bay area um you know i lived in new york brooklyn then manhattan and then i lived in la and then i lived here and so i think my i'm moving to places i enjoy less and less each time like i enjoyed brooklyn and manhattan much more than la i enjoyed la much more than san francisco so i don't know where to go next but i'm gonna go somewhere like which so why are you still here then uh well i can't there's no reason for you to be here because i had a lot of friends up here and i had done la and i was like i wonder how far you
know i'd been a sequoia scout and then i was like my friends are telling me i could start a venture fund you kind of need to be up there i wonder how i would do if i was up there in the industry and i was kind of this because if you wouldn't you'd always wonder well michael morris used to call me the mouth from the south because they had like two investments in la oh the mouth from the south sir michael saying that but i moved up here and yes i love it up here it's quite bucolic my kids are loving it um it's it's quite nice i would love to live in another city in my life uh or two i could
see myself in austin or miami i like both of those cities i think austin's kind of the future i think california is going to be uh damaged for a decade or two so i think for the rest of our adult lives this pandemic or i think the politics and not appreciating the politics the regulation and not appreciating the tech industry is really the problem and then you look at this guy dean preston like he is dunking on um the founder of away and stewart butterfield from slack they're a couple and he's like we got a million two out of them when they sold their homes and i'm like and you also lost two incredible founders who've created billions of tens of billions of dollars of wealth for san
francisco you idiot and like at the same time francis suarez in miami is listing all of the venture capital and doing a tweet storm about all the companies that raise venture capital so you have one guy de-impressed and dunking on people saying we have this one percent so when they sold their 30 million dollar house we were able to extract a million two that's why tech doesn't like me i was like hey dummy yeah now that all the future earnings are gone now what's like california marginal tax rate is 13.3 percent i mean but just so they have an exit tax now for homes in san francisco right so if your home costs over 10 million when you sell it i mean i think it's just a sales tax 1.2 million
from them selling their home versus 13 percent of their future earning stream literally the chef at slack made a billion two paid a billion two in taxes yeah from their rsu's like are you such a where do you think a million two probably yeah like the bill the million two yeah but that order probably paid in taxes on their rsu's at slack like you absolute moron like you're literally so upset about their mansion and dunking and you're dunking on an individual's name uh but anyway the fact that we hate entrepreneurs who create jobs and wealth or certain people do it's just insane it's just insane like what i mean you could go change the tax code it's fine like you know raise the minimum wage like
bernie sanders and elizabeth warren attacking bezos endlessly and then amazon starts paying 22 an hour gives you benefits and pays for your college and it's like okay hold on a second i know what bezos just did he took the platform that you could never actually enact and he enacted it inside of amazon if it's not perfectly clear what just happened literally he's dunking on you you wanted free college and couldn't get it done he gave it to amazon employees you wanted a 15 minimum wage he made a 22 and you wanted everybody to have universal health care and he gave universal health care like that is literally what bezos did to them how embarrassing for them maybe you could argue that like them pushing him
pushed it but no no definitely it is literally him showing like uh as the amazon crew showing like let the free markets work like the doordash uber amazon starbucks absolute um uh race and and battle to just hire entry-level employees and make it delightful for them is what has driven you know and a lack of immigration has is what has driven these uh salaries up right and the benefits up it's extraordinary what's happened with the free market there's competition it's still seven dollars federal minimum wage is seven and change still right uh and 15 here in the city uh in new york is 15 like yeah it's weird all right listeners now is a great time to thank our longtime friend of the show service now if you are
running a large enterprise ai agents are likely spread across every team and deploying them is uh no longer the hard part yeah the hard part is knowing what permissions they have what employees are using them for or what decisions ai is making ai security for an enterprise at scale is not a small concern like the risks are real exactly and the challenge with ai is governing it securing it measuring it and making sure that it actually delivers value that is why service now built the ai control tower yep ai control tower gives enterprises a single place to see manage govern and optimize ai across the entire business and it works with any ai not just theirs every device on your network every permission across every system every ai agent visible
and secure in one place and service now can do this because they've spent more than 20 years building the operational backbone of the enterprise the workflows governance approvals security controls and institutional knowledge that power how work actually gets done across it hr customer service finance and security service now already runs more than a hundred billion workflows annually and trillions of transactions for more than 85 percent of the fortune 500 so when companies need a place to govern ai at enterprise scale they're building on a platform at the center of how their business already operates and in a future that isn't going to be one ai it's going to be thousands of ai agents working across every function of the company
but the question is who's managing them all so if you're trying to turn ai ambition into real business outcomes and make it work safely securely at scale go check out service now.com acquired and tell them that ben and david sent you we referenced this at the start of our conversation you're working as harder harder than you ever have you said you've got a smarter a new well of energy yes tell us about it well i find great purpose in what i do and uh when my friend tony shea died i really thought deeply about like what i wanted to get out of the rest of my life and i realized like these are the things i really love doing and these are things maybe not so much and i just realized my life over the last two years
and so what are the what are those two buckets yeah exactly so i can tell you the things that just to me i'm just not going to get any pleasure about in life um working like no offense to my incredible lawyers but negotiating term sheets and legal and hr issues and accounting and operations and tax and you know that entire stack of things not fun to me not fun at all and i'm sure you never viewed that as fun but at least before you were like i'm willing to put up with it because it maybe it's a thing that creates value enough for me to do it um doing my podcast every day absolute joy entertaining an audience you know thinking uh thinking about the world and having
these conversations i had toby from shopify on today like i leave the toby interview it's like his third or fourth time on the pod that's awesome and it's just like instead of us having dinner or lunch we just record a pod the end um did you in person or did he no just you know popped on zoom you know he had to start it because he did that tweet about his compensation tool yeah where you know here's your total comps use the slider i was like that's brilliant come on the show you want to come on the show and talk about it's like yeah of course um and so like those conversations i just looked at them and i'm like my energy coming out of the show is on 11. why am i not doing this every
day and i watched howard stern when i was a kid or charlie rose do it day in and day out and i was like i could be like those guys uh they every day get on there and they seem to love it and i do and so i just committed to doing it every day and i love it isn't it weird when there's something that takes a ton of work but somehow doesn't drain you not at all to me it's like going to the gym it's like working out or having dinner it's just something i do every day that gives me great joy and then that's i recruited molly i was like i need somebody to do this with me every day oh yeah who
i respect and who's awesome and bring something to the table that i don't have and having she's so great having someone to play off of sure like i feel like that's the thing that's kept acquired going yeah is that like you and i can like i don't know how you did it alone for i don't know a decade uh well i you know i'd have guests on it was largely a guest-driven show and then i would do the news round table once a week because it was once a week then twice a week then three times a week and then i was like well however many i just sell out i'll do it five six days a week whatever um and um
i enjoy meeting with founders uh when they fit a certain profile uh but it's very hard to meet with a large number of founders given how many are coming in and it's hard to work with them when they're just talkers yeah to me that's a very hard part of the job because it becomes very repetitive so how have you excised that well i created a platform founder university where if you want to build something i will talk myself to 200 people you can build and then whatever arises as the performance and the product you know and they as people move from talkers to the walkers to from you know when they actually start building stuff that's when i get great joy and so i'm like bring me the
people who have product velocity so i told my team listen you're doing my team does six people don't understand the scale of the business i have nobody's yeah i don't really understands what i'm doing and i kind of like it that way but the angel syndicate is now the largest syndicate in the world i've deployed like 185 million dollars in my career as an angel investor i'm doing 50 million a year now that's awesome i'm raising the fourth fund in public like 11 000 angels in the syndicate like this is going at a really significant velocity if you were to look at the slope it's not quite a hockey stick but it's hockey stick-esque in terms of the total capital i've deployed and it's in really high quality
companies i'm getting better at there's 11 i have 22 people and 10 on the media side 12 on the investment side and of the investment team like people don't understand they're like oh you're a solo gp i'm like you have 12 people um those people are doing 60 introductory meetings per week six zero and then we're doing maybe 15 20 second meetings so there's it'll be 100 meetings a week shortly probably across 10 people or 12 people you're not doing the i'm not doing them yeah uh and what happens is you had this line was it on it was on twisty not for me oh that's a lot of people say that's a lot of work but you're like yeah but not for me that is the new philosophy this is why my
energy is really high this is your i have told everybody who comes to work for me i work 60 70 hours a week keep up if you can't keep up don't be here uh i'm looking for a you know a fixed 50 a solid 60 hours a week if you want you don't have to match me 67 but 60 or 70 hours a week but keep up and are you looking in that team are you looking for like the next jason calacanis to be a part of that team or is it like someone who likes doing that part like that's well let me ask it more directly is it someone who's content with doing this or are you looking for people that are like
hungry enough to be the next jason i'm open to all of it yeah i'm open to all of it i don't they don't need to want to have my you know absurd um unhealthy desire in my youth to be successful um and if they did they probably wouldn't come work for me but maybe they would actually i would uh so yeah they probably would not for very long yeah it might be like you'd come you'd learn years you'd extract two people come and they work for two three four years and they go start their own venture fund or whatever muscle to have it's great um but what i told them was you know just find the great companies and i looked at investment team meetings usually they're monday people do it for
an hour or two and then they go to lunch i said i want to do it twice a week tuesday and thursdays 2 to 4 p.m uh hit me with companies so that was another innovation i did and i also brought mike savino who was my first boss when i was in my 20s doing it and i brought him on as president so this is like one of my lifelong best friends and i said run the company here's what i want to do the podcast meet with founders do the lp fundraising that's it uh you know teach the course are you enjoying the lp fundraising i am now yeah i am i'm kind of like uh remember an axe i don't know if you watch
billions oh yeah every episode great so you know like at some point um uh he was like i'm gonna go raise money yeah it's cap raise time it's cap raise time and like wags is like so i got my wags mike savino's my wags yeah and i got my wags who just fixes everything and i'm like i'm gonna go raise money and so literally was like we're doing 506c and they're like and so you've talked about this now you're you're you're now you were in kind of this one bucket with your capital and now you're going simultaneously in two directions of you want the public and you want the big institutions right we'll see um i've had select institutions make small bets the first one was 10 the next one was 11
and then the last one was 44 million the first fund i deployed in five years second fund two years the third fund two and a half five years i was just that was my first fund it was you know me bill girly dave goldberg rest in peace tony shea rest in peace david sacks chamath just a bunch of my friends put money in and it was to see if i wanted to be a venture capitalist and do this as a career and i was like yeah i just did it over five years and the second one i raised 11 took me six months to a year to raise the first it took me the second one took three to six months the no it took six months the
third one took me three months to six months and in this one i i think i'll wind up raising in the first 10 days what i raised in the first yeah a couple of funds i literally did two webinars a couple hundred people came to each so for people who are listening 506c is you can raise in public which means you just can tell people i'm raising a fund and i was like well i'm doing all in it doesn't make any money i have this week in startups and i watched a bunch of these young um inspiring vcs raise on publicly right yeah you didn't raise publicly no you did private i thought about it but for a whole bunch of reasons well it's kind of scary because people don't do it but if you have no track
record and you want to raise so like this guy mack the vc yeah you you did a great episode with him yeah it was great i had him on uh i had like you know first time founders for a season of angel um which is like a subsection of the this week in startups podcast and i became an lp and his fund and he just told me like i just did like hundreds of meetings i did like five meetings a day for a year and i raised my whatever 10 million dollars and uh he's african-american and he's like it's just a matter of how hard do you want to work and i'm like well careful saying that publicly because there's a group of people who do not want you saying that he's like no it's just all you have to do is
like you go to angelish you set it up and then you just start talking to other vcs you talk to them and you just you just have to be willing to take 50 meetings a week and i'm like dude do not say that it's easy to raise a venture fund as a black man in silicon valley but that's the position it's not that it's easy but on the internet too you find your people who believe that correct you and then they believe in you and then they back you and that's the correct correct and so the whole thing but what i noted when i was taking my notes watching him was so many times people like oh you're when's your next fund i'm like three years they're like oh let me know and i'm like okay
right now i'll put that right there in the place where i keep everyone who tells me yeah three years from now what to do yeah and so you know um i mentioned it on all in i tweeted it and all of a sudden you know i had a thousand people sign up is there a limit to the number of lps you're gonna have of course 250 accredited up to 10 million and then 2 000 qps and so it's it's a lot more work and qp is not for you but not for me to catch everybody purchasers look at you playing jason i know you know what a qp is i just want to dish the ball i think it's five million in investable
assets like uh and then uh accredited now is 200 if you're an individual for the last two years each of the last two years and 300 if you're a couple each last two years in income or a million dollars in net worth in net worth outside every primary residence so there's a whole and these things are going to change over time but i believe that we're going to have a test for accreditation and you'll be able to be sophisticated if you take a course so i think that's coming in the coming year so just like i democratized angel investing wrote the book angel was the first syndicate on angel list the most successful syndicate on angel list created my own got the domain name the syndicate created the
largest one have done 265 syndicate deals by far like the largest amount of anybody i think i don't know i mean now as a participant of the fund on angel list like these are like those are big numbers like do something consistently four spps on angel list and we have the fun too but like yeah like that's a lot you're herding cats you need to have a lot of people um but anyway putting all that together i think now is the time to democratize venture capital so that's what i'm attempting to do here is i want uh more people who are accredited and qualified purchases who've never been in a venture fund to look at the asset class and just consider it um it's high risk it's high reward
i'm in 20 venture funds myself including yours thank you um and i'm sure but don't but don't pitch jason i'm sure i will do yours no i mean i i'm just gonna pick them based on people i know or people i know online or pod and you know i'll do one or two new ones a year and um well this is kind of to the conversation earlier like on the internet this is the democratizing thing nobody's gonna just give you if you just you know nobody's gonna just invest in your fund but if you go do stuff yes and then people like oh jason does stuff great i'm a back jason ben does stuff like be of action yeah and it doesn't mean you have to start a podcast you could be a blog you could do
whatever you could create founder university whatever it is you can do any of those things uh you can have a track where you can be an advisor to startups whatever it is do you like the idea i'm curious as someone that's always raised from sort of individuals do you do you like the idea of having some institution be like can we invest 15 million dollars oh yeah of course i mean i've had five you know million dollar checks 10 million dollar checks in the fund from institute from you know fund to funds and institutions you know but i would very much at some point i don't need it but i would be meaningful for me uh both my parents are cancer survivors to have memorial sloan ketterings endowment
or an endowment ucsf or something like that somebody like that you know if they wanted i would work you know really hard to try to get them a great return i would find more i would find even more meaning in what i do yep uh and you know i got that from sequoia like you know you they would have this sequoia dinner every year for the founders and they would say here are what the foundations who are lps are doing with the money you made for them with your companies yeah click click here's what four foundations doing here's what this foundations are his and you're just their conference rooms are named after their and the conference is famously named it's like and and this
is real powerful like i i find we have like state pension funds and stuff like that and that'll make you get in psl ventures and like you take it much more seriously you're like i am it's because it's not just about the reward it's not like oh i i'm so excited about what we're going to do for them it's like this is really important to preserve and not grow but like preserve this capital yeah yeah which the psychology of doing that while you're taking big swings with asymmetric upside that's that i find to be a fascinating dance that was like one of the seasons of that of uh billions was he's like i'm gonna be a family office no i'm gonna raise my own fund right and so there's this natural tension for um
acts like which should it be and he decided yeah i like when i have other people's money because he he seemed to perceive like i think he felt that he wasn't a somebody in his ecosystem in his community without managing outside capital i think it's like playing you know in the bubble with nobody in the stands versus right getting on the court yes at madison square it's like and there's people in the stands your returns your numbers don't mean anything unless you're putting them up for dude i'm doing this public or i should say quasi public people i still have to sign up to you know come to a webinar um but i'm sharing with them like here's my the totality of my investments
and here's what i've done and here's what i plan on doing with my team um so you know i'm kind of enjoying it um and if you know i've met with all the top endowments in the world over the years and they're very kind to me but it's always been like solo gp is a blocker no track your fund is so small small fund we're a 50 billion dollar endowment yeah and you know like you know um at some point like one of the ones who's the most rigorous i wouldn't say exactly which one was like we have a lot of respect for you we know who you are people would like you to sign a book and take a selfie with you when you're here but i just want to be straight with you we don't add many
funds and if you go through our process it's going to take a lot of your time and it's going to result in you not getting our money this time i don't want to put you through that but i respect you and if you want to do it we'll do it but maybe just put one more fund on the board and let's talk in the next one and i was like let's do that i don't need the money let's wait and i think what a lot of these funds are doing was that in the last fund cycle that was in the third fund cycle yeah so now so i will contact them what i decided to do was let's see what my syndicate members and the public
want to do let's see which qps come out of the woodwork yep and literally i did the second call this week the first one last week i'm doing the third one next week and it's been so productive i added two more so i'm gonna do five webinars this fall and then i'm gonna go on the road and start meeting with folks are there any downsides to doing the the raising in public thing other than not that i can see i mean i guess you could fail in public to fail to raise the fund that doesn't seem like something you're scared of no i could also you know the freeing thing you know is i looked at the model and i said you know what i could do i could just invest my own money in each company
and then syndicate them and never have another lp right but then you're raising capital every single time you're making an investment yeah and i'm getting deal by deal carry and i have a hundred percent of my investment not 25 carry on it and i don't ever have to talk to anybody i could just say i'm placing this bet would anybody like to join me yeah and i don't have to have a fund i don't have to do audits i don't have to do any work wait this is so literally this you know it's so funny hearing you say this myself lots of our other friends in the ecosystem that are in similar positions they're having this same question like on the one hand i could do what you just said and do
very little work but but have it all be pure on the other yeah i could go do what you are actually doing and like raise have lps be accountable yeah how did you weigh these two um i i'm going into my second era my second decade of uh investing and i again last two years a lot of like sort of post pandemic and tony's death thinking huh like what's possible here because i've won so much in my life i didn't mean to be obnoxious about this i know it probably sounds that way but for a kid who's you know going to be a cop to be where i am uh and this is why like when the guys break my chops on the
pod i'm like guys i don't aspire to be a billionaire it's not important to me if it was i would do a late stage fund i aspire to be happy and do what i love doing every day which is the podcast maybe get in 40 days of skiing hang out with my kids take them on the mountain and then meet with like you know early founders and be able to say i helped that company at the earliest stages that to me is the rush i found them first i backed them first i sat there with them and figured it out with them we were talking about the legendary twist episode 180 with you and travis yes like i mean that's the
secret before the show stuff david yeah that is but but from the juicy before the show yeah but that was like you know you know urbu was such a baby company back then and like crazy one city one city invested and i had an open angel for him where cyan banister and chris fralick from first run you know invested in the company i think they both met them there socca was there too but he already he had a relationship with travis so i can't take any credit for that and kevin sistrum was watching and i was going to kick him out because he was at this co-working space called dog patch i worked there too yeah i worked at co-tweet yeah so he was oh co-tweet i know that yeah so he's sitting over there
building bourbon yep and that's right socca's like can bourbon come in i'm like fuck no this is like private shit and he's like but and i'm like just tell him to sit at his desk and i won't wait this open angel form was at dog patch labs here on the pier no way i think that three year then they shut down because it was going to class condemned yeah condemned um so that was there and uh naval also did a bunch of like events there for angel i at the time naval and i were very friendly um not not friendly now but not we don't hang out or we but we used to hang um kind of bummed about that if i'm being honest um i really respect him and uh he was doing something called venture hacks
at the time so he would just send an email with here are the five companies and i was doing it in person and he's like i'm gonna do this thing angel list i'm like well i'm just in person thing and he's like great let's just you know trade notes or whatever and then he sent me the syndicate thing he's like do you know about spvs i was like i don't explain it to me he taught me what spvs were he introduced me to assure fund management which i wound up investing in um did you buy that i didn't buy it i mean i bought five percent of the company i invested in it but they back everybody and uh they've done more spvs like look like i don't know if they're up to ten
thousand five thousand i mean they've done a ton of it seriously great group over there um and so he taught me how to do syndicates and the first one i did was calm at four or five that's nuts it's funny i was i was looking like literally like winning a championship the first time you step on the court i was looking at your track record getting ready for this and i was telling david like i think the word that i used because like obviously uber is some ridiculous multiple on a return um but then there's these other ones that are like promising but early and then there's other ones where it's been a less than uber multiple it's still a good uber multiple but you look at calm you just i
looked at david i was like he sharpshooted that one like that one i could be even more proud of because i'll tell you why it was like ridiculously early and like a super low basis they had it was four million dollars we put 370 ak and on six percent and uh they didn't raise any money until it was a 250 million donation so no dilution um and sharpshooter sharpshooter and it's like i could even cry like telling the story but um alex too and i became very good friends and michael acton you know afterwards um because he wasn't actively running calm while alex was um alex at some conference i was interviewing him and doing a little victory lap for him and um giving him his
flowers and he said yeah i just want to stop and tell you uh you don't actually know this story but we were going to shut the company down and we had mike and i had a conversation what do we take your money but we're not sure about this but you believed in us so much and you insisted on us taking the money but we had just pitched 40 investors and they all said no and we were trying to debate if we could in good conscience burn your money to do this and we probably calm would not be here and they found product market fit while burning through your money i think so i think so because you're like take more
of my money no no but if you think about that as like a that is not the case with uber or robin hood i was along for the ride let's be honest uh i did not change the trajectory of like but for jason calacanis calm that's what they said well he said it's they were going to shut it down possibly i don't believe that they would but i do think it was on the table that's like real angel investing like there's there's a lot of like individuals participating in venture rounds and like yeah no offense oh hey i don't take any offense so like call that angel investing but like coming in when the company could die needs 100k 200k 300k to get it to the stage where they revenue to date i think
when i invest like ever yeah uh because they were selling the app for ten dollars because remember at the early stages there was no subscription model right in the app store you just sold an app for ten dollars a person had it for life so the business model of apps was make a lighter for a dollar then make lighter two yeah and charge three dollars and then lighter four would come out and you were like well this doesn't make any sense it's like making microsoft word 1.0 you buy it you throw it away it's like but we could just update it and it's like yeah but we need to make more money so shut the old one down so you'd buy angry birds and you buy birds two angry birds three and
you know it was a really weird time and then they're like yeah we're doing so they told me like you know um because you know i was under nda as well you know hey subscriptions are coming that's going to change everything and they were going to do ten dollars a year and i said to alex and michael how much does it cost to go to a meditation class this is donation based there's only like 10 places you can go i'm like well what what's the suggested donation it's like 20 dollars in l.a i said you want to charge 10 a year it's 20 a month how often do you have to do this to get that visit yeah i 20 hours a visit i said how often do you have to do this if to get value which
should be a deli practice we're like how often do you have to go and learn i said if you go weekly that's good i was like so it's 80 a month to go and we're charging 10 a year so that's like a thousand dollars a year versus 10 what if it was 10 a month they're like we've been thinking about that i was like okay and they're like okay yeah i think we're gonna do that and it was then they went to ten dollars a month or whatever they didn't wind up at 60 a year whatever it was but we got a money printing machine pretty quickly so i've never made an investment at like pre-product market fit that's like now worth over you know a billion dollars like that's a that's a that's a
very early to very successful and i'm curious like did it feel any different when you were making that investment were you like there's something more special here of course than my normal investment absolutely yeah really absolutely and that's what i've basically turned into a playbook at launch and that i'm teaching these 12 people how to do is how to do that what do you think it was like what what was when you look back and you're like factors nine factors okay all right yeah well angel angel dot university no i'm teaching angel university but oh um i i'm training my team when they're meeting with those 60 companies and every time they pitch me one they say this has three of
the nine this has four of the nine and then i'm creating the anti-list these are the things that kill companies so how many of the 15 things we have a long list of things that kill companies how many of the red flags does it have reasons to not invest how many reasons to invest does it have and you know like one of them for me and everybody's got the different philosophy i won't give all of them but one of them is world-class design and so i'm trying to teach people what world-class design is and world-class design to me is if you were to look at all the companies in the space this one would have the best design or this would be one of the top 10 so if you were to look at
something like calm or robin hood okay they're the best looking app with the best ux of all of anybody in the category right so calm was better than headspace robin who was better than e-trade i mean it just doesn't take our rocket science to look at them but when i first explained this to my team they would bring me companies and they'd say world-class design and i'm like i'm like they're like i really like the design i'm like pull it up and they pull it up and i'm like that's a template from yeah you know like a website builder and it's a stock photo but where's the actual design of the product and they're like oh that's on this product page and we product page i was like
okay yeah again that's just like the i mean if this was a bank's website maybe but that's not world-class that's serviceable design that's utilitarian design that's okay design that's good design it's not world-class so let's if we're going to say world-class like a world-class performance is different than a serviceable performance world-class cinematography world-class script world-class dialogue that's different and that's and then product velocity is the other one i like so okay we met with this company in june it's now july what's changed about the product and they're like we don't know i'm like okay well let's find out where's their change log where's their roadmap so in the earliest stages you might have revenue traction or user traction but you might be able to ask them
for their product roadmap and somebody like travis would be like yeah here get on the phone with this guy and we'll walk you through it here's what we're debating about on sunday we're reprioritizing and then a month later they've like check check check check and then you go like if we're with raul with superhuman and i was an investor in his company before that report of raul like the change log at superhuman superhuman that people don't realize like they're like bink bink new feature bink new feature oh boom we fixed grammarly oh bink we have calendar boop oh we got a new calendar feature boop we got this feature and you're like hmm so here's an interesting question we should ask
raul this we've had on the show three times now product genius like the the parallels between superhuman and figma are uncanny like design led founder like revolutionary design in the software rewriting the entire browser stack in order to get the performance and i remember it being breakthrough when it came out and then the only thing that i can recall being different between then and now is adding a calendar thing that i don't use and a mobile app and ipad support and and why outlook support you just don't you know when you hit command k yeah you probably know 50 of the features right like do you use remind me of this i do okay great do you use labels do you do snippets i do okay
yeah which it was all there when i started using it for three four years ago i think a lot of those things have gotten better and better yeah so it's just that like polish polish polish polish um i really like want them to make snippets multiplayer i want to share my snippets oh yeah oh with your team i love yeah so i want all of david's past emails they're so nice i don't do email anymore like you do it on the phone no no i just don't do email i don't email anybody you know we pass my company i actually do have to pass emails from i've been literally creating a collection of how to pass with my team and i'm standardizing that i'm trying to i don't know that i'll be
successful and this may be a mistake but i'm trying to just not have i don't end up having a conversation with the company if i'm not going to invest no but you must say hey we are not going to invest you've took a pitch oh no i get it i don't i don't i don't you basically don't take a pitch i don't yes unless you're going to invest it's the weirdest thing oh that's very weird so you do all your work up front you front load it the deck everything we're in this unique position as you are too but um with acquired we're like you know we have every six months we have six companies that we work with on the show right as our sponsors and our partners and we get to know them really well
and i'm now an investor in just about all of those companies so so it's not like uh but it's growth stage investing yes it's like they're clearly the winner yeah they're not yet priced as if they're the winner most of the time yeah yeah exactly they're gonna just keep compounding yeah good luck yeah pricing's gonna be hard well we'll see we'll see yeah i don't know what's gonna happen to these companies after you know the flat is the new up but i think you know 50 haircut is the new flat well public comps got hit 50 plus percent i mean this week they got hit harder again yeah i mean i i'm buying equities right now i've been doing it at jtrading.com and um i am gonna
buy more sorry about all my picks a couple weeks ago which one whatever i thought oh yeah yeah no no i actually love taiwan semiconductor uh and stitchfakes was the other one i think you're still twilio twilio was yours and i love that one too and i i like shopify as a pick um i'm actually really enjoying it it's really not investing out not investment advice but it's balancing out my um understanding of what public success is compared to private and so for me it's just a way like am i going to fight with a blaster no i'm a jedi i use a lightsaber but you know but if you learn if you look at the very best it's not as elegant it's helpful it's really helpful if you
look at the very best people the best gps like hono adventure over the past two decades sure they all trade public stocks yes and they do it for this same reason they're gonna fight with the saber yeah but like they want to know how to also use a blaster or how to fight in an x-wing or something like it's not what a jedi does but jedi will do it it also keeps you really sensitive to the public cycles so that like yes it's not that you have to think about the public comps when you're investing but you have to be aware of how much those will change yeah and early stage investing it's almost silly to compare to like my opinion is it's very silly to compare to public comps because the only
thing you know for sure is we're going to be at a different place in the cycle by the time this company gets liquid so it's ridiculous but it's helpful to drive into you like how much variability there is when was the last time it was this different that's yeah i'm really enjoying understanding what the founders of those companies go through versus the founders of the private companies that go through what the boards decisions the board has to make of a public company versus the board of a private company yeah so it you know i'd like to join a public board at some point it's probably not a good idea for me to have said that because i might get an invite for one and
that might be too much work but um yeah but hey especially given the market right now i'm very careful but you could you could also invite me to do that but it's just it's been especially through the show now you have relationships with public company founders sure of course that you can if i really wanted to i'm sure i could lobby oh you don't have to be on the board though you can have a great relationship doing the analysis and i'm doing it anyway with molly every day okay you know twilio's or adobe's come i just bought adobe this week when they bought figma so funny so did i not investment advice not investment advice but i was like they bought figma tanked okay so here's my theory on this
they bought figma and tanked and i was like why did why do people hate this and they're like oh no adobe's admitting defeat and that like they can't innovate in house or and to me i look at it like adobe has customer channel and it was foretold five plus years ago that they were not going to build the next figma like that would be a full rewrite of their entire software stack so buying the thing even though they paid a tremendous premium because 50x revenue multiple because of the network effects that figma has um and obviously all the product stuff but if they can get that through adobe's channel like i think that is an absolute win-win acquisition and all these people that are like oh
they're gonna ruin it they're gonna kill figma no they're not that's why they paid 20 billion dollars for it and have a gigantic bonus for dylan to stay on board yes they're taking a youtube approach i think everybody in mna now knows now yeah like whatsapp whatsapp just leave it alone don't screw it up um and then so i like your analysis i added to that analysis is if you're not going to win the war and you can build an alliance and then fight another war like they've just removed the downside yeah of figma creating photoshop i'd be concerned for adobe if fig they didn't buy figma correct so the fact that you're giving us a discount on the shares for them doing the right thing
is like christmas like thank you yeah yep you just discounted the right move fantastic it would be like people are like oh you know the warriors signed kevin durant um and you know what we're gonna lower the cost but they paid a lot to get them on the team so yeah and oh you know what we're gonna lower the cost of the tickets so okay i'll buy courtside seats or you know or they're lowering the odds in vegas it's like wait why are you lowering the odds their odds increased i'll place that bet so it's just an obvious bet and then there's all that's left is canva and melanie's awesome totally different thing but yeah and they have a free canva already and you know what if
there's always a the internal people who are penciling out that spreadsheet yep there's a group of mbas who penciled out that spreadsheet with figma no offense to mbas who are listening and they said hey boss if x y if x y z and they said you know here's like five potential paths if we make figma free for 10 users and whatever or if we you know take whatever figma costs and then we blend it with the adobe suite okay we would get this many more figma users but we know when we get figma users then we get non-designers to pay for it so right now adobe has a bunch of designers paying right right but they may not have all the non-designers right only designers pay adobe right well no they have
they have marketing cloud but that's a totally different set of yeah yeah only but when you look at figma like i got a figma account like people who are doing giving feedback on designs the business side the sales side can get into figma so i think they got the whole creator class exactly so i think you're opening up the aperture of who design software is for with figma it's for bd it's for the ceo sure the cfo can come in and take a look at the product oh legal should come in and take a look at the product yeah buy them a seat so it's like slack is for the dev team and it's like yeah and the sales team and ops and anybody else might as well be on there because that's where everybody is
so that's what i think you'd have a figma it's like everybody's gonna have a figma future just to watch the product team build the product and put a comment in and who cares if it's 100 bucks a year it's cost of doing business any any company that has like that kind of strong network effects inside an organization deserves a meaningful revenue multiple because they just their differentiator is literally a the company's moat so like i i tweeted this but like if i have a castle and it has a moat around it that is much wider or deeper than your identical castle shouldn't you pay more for my castle it's more defendable 100 like the virality of i think sax made this point on all
in two weeks ago which was like if they're paying 50x now and the company's growing okay they're paying 20x next year 25x who cares right it's such a high growth company and then i was just thinking well somebody's got a theory there and when i sold weblogs to aol people were like oh my god these people are idiots they gave 30 million dollars to you know for weblogs inc they've only got 200k in revenue what they didn't realize was aol autos aol tech aol lifestyle those were sold out at like a 90 rpm revenue per thousand pages the ads different cpms so then they would put an engadget or an autoblog story or blogging baby or whatever other blog we had on the home page of aol and a half million
people would flow through and then they would put those ads on our sites and then they would blow out 50 or 100 000 in ads a day on a blog and those people were like great um because it was costing aol to make content like 500 per piece of content three thousand dollars per piece of content on aol.com slash autos whatever and we were doing it for at the time five blocks above five dollars a blog post because we said well people can write for an hour so it's 20 bucks an hour and it's six dollar minimum wage it made sense god 50 years ago media game has changed so much and then i was like you guys are doing 200k annual revenue we had done 200k to date holy over the 18 months what is i mean now like
the world we're in today and they were like jcowl just robbed and i was like okay 30 million dollars but now i look like what do you what do you think like here's enough i look like an idiot five years later and that's the best the best m&a yeah is when yeah you look like you robbed the bank yeah and then five years later it looks like you robbed the founder youtube instagram figma will be in this category like yeah when they bought instagram they're like 30 people work at this company and they gave a billion dollars you guys are morons and now it's a hundred okay here's a thought exercise question obviously irrelevant because you don't monetize it yeah what do you think the enterprise
value of all in is well it would do 10 million dollars in i i when i was at the code conference you know a lot of people have been trying to buy it or you know put it as part of their network obviously uh which would kill it yeah my partners are right like let's not make money from it part of part of the delightfulness of it is that we're not trying to monetize it well but but you do get a huge economic value out of it it's even without monetizing shmuck pulled me aside at some point and was like hey shmuck like just we're friends like yeah you're all your next fund will be bigger hey dumbass yeah i was like you know when you have a friend who can be like hey dumbass
yeah like that's a good friend so i appreciate you not saying that and he's right and it's playing out um and we had a rule no um no talking our books on the pod but we kind of talked about it we're like the pod is great when we talk about our bets so explaining our bets not talking our book is the new philosophy so like you guys just started doing that about his spec you know um i still yeah he did he just uh found a target for it yeah jimoth talked about um the uh healthcare the healthcare company which is i mean we wanted to talk about that because jimoth and i both agree like maybe we're i mean maybe like we're definitely over prescribing these drugs to kids like for adhd
and attention drugs and adults are taking too many i i think that that's not disputable uh i think all the science is showing that um so you know to make software that could help kids with adhd is like noble um but i think people want to hear us explain our bets so you know explaining our bets i think is kind of a cool aspect of the show talking your book is lame but explaining your bets is cool so anyway um in the event did a couple million dollars had a small profit um but it was the number one tech event of the year by far right so you know i'm kind of bummed that you know freeberg's a little bit of a blocker for it but i might turn them around and we'll have a vote maybe in the
fall another one oh well i'm going to do another one the question is am i doing it under the all-in brand or do i have to create a new brand for it yep and so i told the guys i said i'm gonna do it again well code conference is done so like there's a vacuum conference is done yeah they need a new host um that's crazy oh good like it's such a value no i talked to bank off about it and he's been very public you know right kara swisher i think is going to do the pivot stuff and wants to do other stuff and you know she's i really respect what kara has done you know um in terms of like she does
stuff and then she moves on to the next thing and tries like you know it's kind of my approach as well which is like bob dylan you know said like don't look back kind of thing and he always tried to make the next album and forget about the past one and much to the chagrin of people who loved him as a folk artist and didn't like you know like a rolling stone and when he went electric they booed him you know i was like really you're booing bob dylan because he's using an electric guitar are you guys dumb like did you hear all along the watchtower like this this is incredible um and so i think you know kara swisher like moving on but jim said he's going to keep doing it and you know it's probably
a small list of people who could actually host that credibly you know a very small list um and so which you're definitely on i am you think how could you not be on i mean i'm not even saying that to like make you feel like no i'm joking i'm being a little bit of a decision okay okay you're you're joking about being humble but if it had that kind of prestige it seems like friedberg would want to do it it seemed more like the thing he was averse to is the like yeah i mean whatever the issue is like we've had our issues um we will have issues um but um i think the there's basically two possibilities for all in summit um i'm going to present it to the boys uh and say like here's the
plan yes or no and we agree we'll put it to a vote so we put it to a vote if three of us want to do it we'll do it and if two of us want to do it then we can't uh and if i already freeberg already said if you do it on your own with a different name i'll come and support you and i'll show up to do a talk or do an interview or whatever and i was like great so i'll do it with a different name if they don't want to do it um and the fans can decide if they want to come or not and partially in partially in exactly so you know it's up to the boys um they want to do it but it was like a pretty
great success you already have colin so yeah well yeah and i i started doing um i started doing a call-in show called after all in for the last two episodes where i took calls about the last episode of all just to support david because i don't think people remember how great that app is and it's really made great progress so i want to be supportive of him and i have a small investment in it do you um very meaningful but on the one hand this is ridiculous on the other hand it might be ridiculously low it's worth 50 million to answer your question 50 to 100 million i mean as a top 40 podcast it's worth at least 50 million on its own though but i mean like economic value that the four of you
oh who knows i mean if chamath like if chamath or sax or i or friedberg were to get but one more deal out of it and it's an uber right the economic value is nine figures right possibly 10 you know like so yeah that's the thing like i think like man weblogs like you were doing 200k of revenue you sold it for 30 million pretty great takeaway yeah and now look at this like you know yeah i mean listen i hope it keeps going i hope we can keep it on track and um you know i i love doing pods this weekend startups is a juggernaut as well you know yeah that one's out for 10 years and all in is what is that like
two quarter million listeners or something yeah some of that range yeah i mean it's hundreds of thousands per episode and yeah it's a very niche podcast you know i'm not trying to make it all in um i'm trying to make it for founders and so you know if in order to make it bigger it'd have to be worse for founders right and so we talk about i want like what we think about with our show i want founders and capital allocators to listen to it and i'm not trying to move up the rankings i don't mind you know hanging with you know all in being number one in tech and then hanging out with you guys that you know slumming
it at six to fifteen right with you guys in the rankings it's like that's where we belong look i got number one on four to six but who's counting whatever you know like that's where we belong with these things right like it's like it's a niche podcast by definition right like it's not supposed to appeal to everybody and you try if you want to appeal to everybody like read the bible like that's right if you go to this is the beauty of the internet reads bible passages and he and huge it's like if you can literally true crime true crime religion read the bible or ben shapiro dunking on libs the end that's like that's how you get that's or do it or do it daily but joe rogan's out right
he's on spotify right right you know he's not in the other rankings so i mean or do a daily news program for 20 minutes like but that's not what i want to do i want to talk for an hour or three about deep topics in founders and capital out of the way a fun acquired episode is uh howard stern i feel like it's underappreciated how much howard stern i copied my that's the playbook that should be the next taylor swift yeah type episode that we do yeah no for sure he wrote the playbook i literally took notes for it king of all media do you know him i have never met him would love to at some point i have a lot of respect for him i mean obviously he did crazy stuff when he was young and that shock
jock stuff but he in his later years became a great interview great interviewer great interviewer he really refined his technique i really appreciate that about him and he created characters sound familiar yep uh he branded them yep he showcased them the whack pack you know all this stuff did he ever do a event he used to do live events he did the u.s open source where and then he would do howard stern's like new year's eve celebration so yes he did the equivalent of those in new york but it was a very new york thing so he like he played tennis against baba buoy and but i mean he got 10 000 people to show up and buy tickets right to a tennis match that they pumped up you know like for
whatever number of months i remember this from my childhood and then he did his books uh which were phenomenal he did a movie he did a movie he did tv shows so he's done a lot of stuff and i i'm just starting uh the process of doing a reality show right now so literally gonna do are you really yeah i mean just you or the besties or just me um the besties don't want to do it they don't have time for it i mean there was there was talk of like maybe all in you know kind of going on to one of those services like people had reached out like hey would this work you know that's a lot more work though well you know we would have to show up in a location we'd have to do it weekly
you know there'd be some format some shiny floor whatever it's it's a it's a different beast i don't think they have the time for it if i'm being honest uh but for me i would like to do a reality show in the gordon ramsay kind of vein um you know where i'm helping founders i think it'd be great for reach uh so i'm i had done a reality tv show with nbc uh and the weinstein corporation um oh wow uh yeah and it didn't make it on air but i have the you should be a shark tank judge i had been they had reached out before mark burnett had reached out early on when it was dragon's den um right before
when they were going to bring it here so when it was dragon's den they had reached out early but i wasn't very successful back then um i wish but you know i think now i think i would have the credibility and the advice to give that i could do a gordon ramsay style show that would be very entertaining and educational and be completely different than you know the fundraising aspect and the pitch aspect of shark tank so i'm not going to do that but i'm you know i've got you know the i won't say which one but a very major the major you know uh reality tv folks reached out i think in part could you know how to do founders and companies feel comfortable like i feel like a
a really amazing window and insight would be the type of conversations that you have with a founder as they're building the company yeah so they would founders and companies be open to that yeah so the nbc show i had done the pilot for uh which never made it on air um uh what was really good was really about you know me incubating companies and uh they spent like four or five hundred thousand dollars doing the pilot it was really good and it would have been a big hit did did it get canceled because of the heart of loystein stuff wow so they were just like anything that was in his company all the ip is dead because he's a monster and so anything associated with it but you got to remember
he did project runway so he had done some of these giant shows people don't know that about that and so that's right i forgot yeah that had the twc at the beginning exactly so you know i had this nbc you know i nbc bought the show in the room loved it and did the pilot and it came close and chamath was on that episode actually he did the pilot oh my god he was like my vc friend who came in and it was my vc friend it's no it's hilarious um but uh i'm excited to do it if it works out it works out if it doesn't you know no skin off my back uh but i like the media space and then you know i this is the
thing i'm choosing to do media because i get joy out of it i'm 51 now i'll be gone soon like i want to enjoy i'll be gone soon well you know it's you never know and uh yeah well you've been to your friends yeah i have two friends who died young and i'm just like i you know i talked to my wife i was like i don't know like what if i make it another year or make it 25 years but i want to make it count i'm not going for max dollars like and so when the guys break my chops about that i'm like guys it's not my priority like literally maximizing money is like well also like you're probably at a point
now where like literally not in the top 10 what is more money gonna do like you know you're gonna play in my life like it is ridiculous and charmed like i can do whatever i want i have enough money to do whatever i want my kids are fine i can have whatever i want i don't care about like a third home like it's i have a ski house i have my regular house it's good i'm i'm good my kids have their college paid for that way 100 i literally do not care about do you feel like that's a demon that you fight is like no any allure toward no i had it when i was younger i wanted to be powerful i wanted
to be important i wanted to have money i wanted to be seen i wanted people to recognize my greatness like any person recognize me for what i do i got all that it literally does not even come up my radar to have more money is the last thing i'm thinking about what i do want to have i do want to you know be the greatest investor of all time yeah like to me that's meaningful or be one of the i want to be like i know i'm mount rushmore for angels yeah i want to be mount rushmore for all investors so when you guys do your thing in 10 20 years and it's like okay you know here's doug leone and moritz and
you know uh here's you know early john door here's girly like if we are making a mount rushmore you want to be on that with them i would like to make it there or at least be in the conversations all right listeners now is a great time to talk about one of our favorite companies statzig yes long time acquired partner there is a reason why the best product teams at companies like open ai and notion atlassian figma rippling bricks and more rely on statzig whether they are iterating on their core product features or shipping ai powered experiences at scale yep in the crazy speed of today's ai world shipping fast is just table stakes now it's basically trivial to build and deploy your app
constantly the real advantage is how quickly you learn what changes actually created value for customers and how fast you can use that signal to guide what you ship next whether it's a feature tweak a pricing change a performance improvement or an ai update like a model change or prompt adjustment they're not relying on instinct they're measuring what actually moved engagement retention and ultimately revenue and as more teams build with ai that learning loop becomes even more important building with llms introduces non-determinism into your product experience the same input doesn't always produce the same output and behavior can shift in subtle ways in real world use so doing offline evals will give you part of the picture but you can really only understand the impact once your
product is live with real users and then you can measure how their behavior actually changes it's very different than the way that you would ship features in a pre-ai world where you knew exactly what the software was going to do in production yeah exactly so this is where statzig comes in it brings experimentation feature flags and product analytics into one unified system so teams can ship safely test rigorously and directly link what they changed to how users actually behaved the result is a tighter feedback loop and learning that compounds over time so you don't just ship more you ship better so if you want to make learning your competitive advantage whether you're building new ai experiences or just evolving your existing core product go to statzig.com slash acquired to get started
when you guys are having the conversation in 20 years and i'm gone or i'm retired and you're saying mount rushmore it's hard to imagine you retiring yeah it was possible um i met don valentine when they were like you know he was not active investing but when i pitched mahalo he was in the room he came up i talked to him he was oh he was still hanging out there all the time yeah um yeah like why retire um he was just awesome oh um but you know if you had that conversation right now about mount rushmore like you gotta okay so who's who's on your mount rushmore well i mean you gotta have don valentine yeah right that's just not possible but how are you scoping it because
you probably need paul graham too well yeah i mean you got paul graham is in the running for sure but that's like a number of startups but there's a lot of big ones in there you have big impacts so paul graham's definitely running but okay so do you go with john door's in there along with so if you're doing firms it's a lot easier because you get kosla door and um perkins tom perkins you get the three of them at once yeah you do sequoia you know which people forget venerian kosla spent a decade at kleiner perkins with john door like yeah and you and you had yeah so i mean you look at that firm it's like that's like the okc with like james harden
you know whatever but then you have doug leone uh mike moritz and valentine rule off yeah but you had all of them there active all at the same time those 30 years and it's like well that's mount rushmore right so if it's a mount rushmore of mount rushmore's it's kind of how you might look at it you know you definitely have to have we just did benchmark you gotta have the fab four era of the fab four era of benchmark was truly something special yeah so i mean it's kind of like it kind of builds itself the mount rushmore right now right it's it's going to be sequoia decliner benchmark and then we're like we're going to have a big debate on the fourth arm right yeah
like is it well it just depends how wide we're willing to scope it is it like traditional series a type venture firms or is it angelus naval right yeah that's had a huge impact do you put yc in there do you put yc or tech stars both have a huge impact do you put um you know uh who else could be in there that's just you could argue for founders fund you can say yc and tech stars yeah the founders completely different thing on the way yc is like yeah for sure i mean three orders of magnitude for sure they've done the same number of companies i think but just in terms of returns yes but tech stars i think was a little before y combinator but anyway you you definitely y combinator's you
know in the running for that fourth spot i guess and then who else would you put in there masa oh wow that's high beta well no i mean but yeah maybe founders fund maybe i mean excel i don't know depending on excel would be in the running for sure it's ron conway i think the way you kind of have to define it which is unfortunate because it means that it's gonna be a long ass time before your firm hits mount rushmore is three successful generational transitions where each of the generations would have been on mount rushmore all right so then let's just do this instead of mount rushmore because you're we're talking firms so for firms you do mount rushmore right so i think if you were just going
to say the hall of fame yeah oh yeah just the hall of fame yeah and the hall of fame has let's just say oh dude we should open the venture capital hall of fame capital allocator hall of fame top 25 i was trying to figure out when we were doing the benchmark episode research which will be out by the time this comes out yeah uh 2480 sandhill road is a very special building it was the forethought powerpoint the quadris complex quadris complex yeah office then it was microsoft we're the only three people who want to shit about this this is the internet right now this is the internet it's like wow there's so many people all the other people everybody else who cares about this is listening right now yeah it's like and like sebastian who
wrote the power of those yeah yeah yeah you guys are taking this way too seriously it's not but then we're like alone yelling david's tv i fictional hall of fame tv i meryl picker tv i that's a good uh august capital one on 20 capital shasta capital all in this same building and i think there's some space for rent in there i don't want to go live down there but like i think we got to take out a lease just to put the museum the hall of fame a whole fame is something we should go right on we should just don't be for fuck it we'll just do it like yeah yeah we'll just we'll do it like every year we induct somebody we'll get up there the three of us and be like yeah yeah
this year we're inducting into the whole thing we should totally do this kent ohio exists hilarious you know cooper's town there is a um what do you call it there it'd be our cooper's town yeah there is the computer history museum but it's not for the pc which is totally valid right it's not for capital allocators it's not for people like there should be a hall of fame and do we like do we midas list style ask people for the real hard truth no no no it's about impact you have we decide the three of us we decide it has to be impact on the game does the nbca have like a lifetime achievement award is that the closest thing it doesn't really exist anymore yeah no it's it's
about impact legacy like the intent of the person right this is why like paul graham would be like you know uh first ballot this is why yeah okay who are the first ballot entrance so obvious we've already talked about it we already talked about those are all first ballot do we have anybody who we haven't talked about or who's not obvious but would be a first ballot you can't this is what i'd say if you're under 20 years you're not like just like let's wait till you're 25 years in yeah just like the sports hall of fames you got to have a yeah you gotta be you're not playing in the league anymore so paul graham's still playing in the league does jeff bezos count like well i mean how many
investments has he made that google investment is crazy so there's that but there's also like i think amazon is the best venture firm of all time and just in terms of like it's internal oh yeah separate companies but like yes capital allocating lowercase c lowercase a they've been great at placing bets yeah but you're right jeff bezos is probably the most successful angel of all time yeah i mean if you just did it on and lp yeah and lp you know when you're when you're looking at it i think you gotta look at impact like impact on the game legacy like so is carmelo anthony hall of of course he is but he didn't win a ring but you know just he's carmelo anthony right like or charles
barkley didn't win a ring but okay so then we got like arthur rock like you gotta look at like the founding father type of course of course yeah there's no doubt i mean that's like going back to bob koozie or whatever going back to like some really like you know people who built the league kind of situation before it became the league right so you got the league and you have the people before the league you have people in the league yeah you can generational shit right here you know patrick ewing yeah you know because i think like you look at girly like he's part of that patrick ewing generation right like that him elijah on charles barkley generation yeah you start talking
about founders fund or yc or angel list like okay now you're talking about more modern era yeah still going modern era after 2000 but if you started before 2000 it's a different group do you notice we haven't talked about andreason harwitz in this conversation oh god who cares no impact on the game they're in both of them are in for sure no doubt they totally are i guess impact on the game totally changed i mean i just feel like it's gratuitous it's just like raising 10 billion dollars three funds a year i want to see what happens with the crypto stuff i think they're just an index of venture i find it quite soulless if i'm being honest like i feel like it's a giant index on venture and i don't
think that their hearts are super into it well i do think they have interesting ambitions though i think this like that's the problem it's more ambition yeah it's more ambition than soulful but there should be a jp morgan or a goldman sachs of silicon valley and they're bad for sure i don't know yeah why is it why does goldman sachs manage the money of entrepreneurs i just feel it's too okay fine but i just feel like it's it's too it's it's like too premeditated and less soulful i i feel like it's a soulful business where like your intentionality and your relationship with the founders really matter the craft it's i mean it's like the literal antithesis of it's industrialization it's the
yes it's the industrialization of it it's the it's the factorization of it and listen i'm sure it'll be very successful at the end of the day all the returns will be great except for the crypto stuff well i mean there'll be mean reversion because like when you get the law of large numbers you have mean reversion exactly it will be mean reversion for sure i mean that was at some point they leaked a lot of their returns and they were like eh not fair that was the 2015 well they did actually it was early so yeah that was stupid that the journalists didn't understand it there were some older ones but it was like during that time like you start comparing it to sequoia
or benchmark i think i don't think it's gonna i think in the arc it will not be comparable to benchmark and sequoia and we i mean made a lot of hay of the fact that they had uh that they made 11 billion dollars in profit on coinbase and like right which is i do not think they sold out of that no they so they did not make 11 billion dollars yeah fair enough fair enough well i mean it's timing is everything we'll see i mean it's interesting too i mean having just done this benchmark episode like the benchmark fund seven one of if not the best institutional size fund of all time just like unreal 20 to 25 that like the the fluctuation in the marks on that fund and it'll probably
probably end up between 15 25 x maybe but like but it fluctuates up up and down so much of course i mean it's we live in a very volatile volatile time right now so yeah i like the hall of fame idea it's kind of interesting i think we actually would be a fun thing we should get some space on sandhill and put up no i just we could just do it as like a dinner we just literally have we don't need every year we get a yeah we get our we could just start in a restaurant but you could get like a little hall yeah and say we're going to induct into the venture capital hall of fame the following people and uh here
they are and we just have three pictures boom boom boom and you just drop it and it's like these are three people and then people come up and say something about the person and i think like you we could do like the three who we would hope would be there and then we'll have we do it like the sports where you have the person who's being inducted chooses who inducts them sure which oh that's fun uh in the does doug yeah whoever does moritz yeah yeah but john parker does moritz mike chooses who you know he has jason katakanis come up and be like larry and sergey yeah yeah obviously totally yeah uh john door would uh ask bezos i mean yeah it's killer it's a killer idea i
mean we just do bezos yep doug and mike yep and then who inducts you do one in memoriam yes you would do one in memoriam exactly yeah you know whatever yes because it would be anticlimactic if the only person because we will induct on first and if the only person that we inducted that year wasn't a living person who could attend yeah you do a combo you do a combo maybe it's four people a year you know you have to think how do you you want to get to 25 so maybe it's you want to get to 25 to 50 over 10 20 years so yeah maybe it's three a year in order for this to like feel good i think you're right that it has to be about impact not about returns no returns is like so that
would be like saying it's like albums sold for the rock and whole full of fame right there are people that'd be a very andreessen horowitz way to do it as well yeah andreessen but oh what's the total assets under management you know and it's like okay dude we get it yeah nickelback sold a lot of albums yeah they're the nickelback event no i didn't mean that you said that you said it i wasn't talking about it oh god oh god oh god oh god i'm not saying that there's a million no but there's like oh boy there's you know if you were to look at ron conway does ron conway who had a bigger impact ron conway or andreessen like i think it's a conversation you know and if
you because ron conway when i came into the industry like there was at one point i was at a um the crunchies and ron conway at one point like somebody said like hey can everybody stand up who said ron conway invest in their company and a hundred people stood up and my mind was like oh whoa angel investing's cool i mean i wasn't an angel investor at the time it was you know long before i became a scout but that i always remember that moment when like a hundred that like inspired partially is that what gave you the is that what like put you in business as an angel the scout is what put me in business yeah what happened was i had was your uber investment you personally or was that sequoia's
and we were like ruloff and i were trying to figure out like do we let people know we're doing this or not it was like a big controversy at the time right we want to keep the stealthy but i mean travis new but you know it was it was a pretty great deal you know it was like um you know at the time they carried 50 50 50 at the time yeah they dropped it down after that i bet it's like every time i'd see doug neon he's like 50 and they had 30 carry at sequoia at that point i think yeah i mean if i were you i'd be like 50 carry to them i can't believe it no no i mean doug had always this they're
so classy doug always made a joke would always make a joke it's like 50 carry oh god we get 30 you get 50. this is funny we get 30 we get a lot of it pretty great we're very lucky i think if you look at what we do as capital allocators i think it's a very special part of the it's a very special function in the world i take it very seriously as you do for the retirees you're investing my half of but also i was just thinking about humanity and i don't mean to make it heady but these companies do move the human species forward as look at elon yeah exactly so the human species getting moved forward by as steve jobs would say in those commercials like this is the crazy ones they do
need fuel they you know maybe don't have an idea of you know um you know if they should even build this company and i think the capital allocators really come in and say here's some fuel you know here go fight that war you know it's fuel and it's belief too i mean like what your story about com yeah is not uncommon i think amongst oh my god i mean look at i mean the stories uh about don valentine and atari and other places where he was at cisco it's like so we got to get this thing back on the rails this thing's going to zero yeah you know like there's a lot of existential moments where things go to zero and like so can i ask you as we start to like wind down drift toward the end of
the episode here that's your line that's your favorite line drift that's that's the band's signature coalesce here to the end of the drift starts the end of the episode is this a good format together like is this different enough from our normal show should we do this what should we change yeah do you like this i think a casual glass of wine and just you know uh if you have friends of the pod and you want to go deep and talk about them and ever more casually sure yeah i mean i think it's a great way to just have somebody on again you know so if your profile something like i forgot that i had you had done like the first episode with me and uh that was more about my career and more details and so i'm
starting to tell stories over again it's like well let's talk about some other stuff right yeah so i think it's a different our audience was i like this format well part of what we you know like lex has done so great with his show yeah but but those type of conversations but i feel like that's more what's the right word our shows are about the business of tech yeah no his is intellectual i don't know why he's in the tech vertical but i like the format and like kevin rose used to do the foundation series and like yeah i mean long-faring interviews like howard i mean i think joe rogan stole it from howard yeah and i think it's now lex stole it from joe or i don't even say stole i think
you know inspired by yeah so lex is clearly inspired by joe and joe was on joe was in the running to replace jackie martling on the howard stern show people don't know this so really he was very enamored with stern and uh he wanted to be stern i think and he eventually has supplanted yeah he did become stern yeah he did become stern and so good on him yeah right down to the you know serious spotify like right down to it he became doing a platform yeah doing a platform which is what stern did stern had multiple platform deals he did syndication first then he did the serious xm one because it was a new platform and he built the plat he used his number one show to build their
platform right which is i think what uh yeah which this would actually bring it all the way full circle back to charlie rose like yeah he was like a you know busy i mean he did more than business but like he would have culture business anybody in new york because new york everybody in new york was pretty fucking interesting so yeah yeah you know he could have somebody from wall street a publisher an author of somebody who does films you know he would have like spike lee on it you know he'd have woody allen on he would have you know any actress on who was doing something interesting any novelist margaret atwood anybody was just coming through new york on a press tour you know you you would do your
press tour and then you would just go chill with charlie and you would get to do something long for him you know it was like a little like sort of more jazzy you know a little bit more like acoustic so i like this format for you guys do you listen to smart list at all do you know about that show i i have listened to one or two episodes it's bateman will arnett arnett and then somebody else yeah the guy from will and grace sean i don't know who that person is but they bring on a surprise guest each time and and the other people don't know yes so they're not prepared yes and it's like it's like katie perry
it's like chris pratt yeah it's become a big deal i kind of want to do that of tech but like wait you and i don't know who the one of us is bringing somebody you guys are not good you can't make you got to know the person's background much better but the celebrities carry a certain charisma with them that our industry doesn't have yeah but maybe it doesn't have to be the surprise as much as like well that the other thing is that even though they have guests the show is actually about them the guest is a prop in a way yeah i guess i've only listened to one or two you know i see it in the rankings like it does incredibly well like it's a top 10 or top 25 podcast is it part of a network
is it part of spotify or something i don't think so because i see it on it don't think so it's really weird that like spotify doesn't allow joe rogan and call her daddy on itunes because the advertising would be huge right right so why not like the ads in and put them over there's some nba that's run the numbers that says it's more valuable if it's driving new subscribers i guess that's it i guess that's it yeah oh i guess you know what they want to be able to have those new subscribers so when they go renegotiate with the yeah music i saw they're doing audiobooks too now that's the next piece yeah that is the next piece yeah they're doing audiobooks one-off purchases
smart i mean audio is great all right it's getting really hot in here it's getting so hot for those of you who don't know we're in like a sauna a new yeah it's david's new house david just moved david's got a new empty house we there's no air conditioning here it's sort of like the shining there's no furniture we just feel like this room literally this is all from craigslist all of it literally in the last like two days explains the smell that all right you could i mean listen you're rich dude just go on oh my god we can't all be jason calic oh you're no come on man i know those fees oh my god i love craigslist i love craigslist i love it
you buy used furniture on craigslist all the time i do not buy new furniture all right it's got to stop i bought a temporary couch it's the thrill of the it was not no you're gonna get robbed don't do it it's too crazy craig newmark i love you but all right with that with that our thank you to vanta oh vanta.com slash acquired uh our thank you also you don't know who the other sponsors are because we haven't we don't have them live with you because we like we felt very strongly that it was you know we wanted to make better use of your time i love reading the ads are you kidding me do you want to read our brex ad they don't sponsor my pod so no maybe they have i don't know there's
also a lot of ad living in it brex yeah i know a lot of people who use brex i think we use brex it is one of my companies if you're enterprise if you're global by far the best corporate spend management it's much more than a card now yeah for expenses and everything like that right and then they've kind of expanded behind that so you can give cars to each of your employees and then if they screw up you can turn it off or something yes exactly go if they jump pre-approved some budgets yeah you don't want people jumping the fence and going crazy all the listeners know because they they heard it like an hour ago they're very familiar oh because it's in here yeah
yeah thanks shout out brex so that's brex shout out brex and then use the promo code twist we share we share this uh last sponsor these are these are great folks these are these are like dear friends and and geniuses and racontours masterworks no no no no think think think smaller but bigger literally small but secretly huge tiny oh tiny of course yes they're buying companies yeah buying companies they're doing a good job yes they're creating like the berkshire of of the internet and can you imagine a better time to get the monkey off your back of venture capital and sell your company let's secure the bag listen to the pc telling you let's go favorite jacal line secure the bag let's go man trust me if you haven't secured the bag yet
it's a wonderful experience man there's nothing like getting home with the bag you get that tiny bag that aol weblogs exit oh man let me tell you something i i'll tell you the story what did you do when you secured the bag i'll tell you what happened i i got this is a funny story i'm in my office and i got bank of america and i got like low thousands of dollars in my bank of america and i got american express car with 10 negative 10 on it and a visa with negative 5 or 10 on it and i'm sitting there and they're like oh wires are good you know the bd people are aol and so i'm like hitting refresh
yeah on the thing this is 2006 7 5 6 yeah i'm hitting refresh i'm hitting refresh and then bing bing bing bing bing you know all the numbers come in to the for the whole you know amount and you own most of weblogs uh brian and i were equal partners then we had peter rojas had some ownership and then mark cuban was our big investor uh and by big investor he put 300k in for five percent so that was a great outcome for him uh oh wow yeah uh or more maybe on 10 i think on 10 anyway long story short uh my wife comes in she said you okay and i said what she said are you crying and i reached up and i had a tear in my eye you're like this is a new experience i've never had this
before and she said i said she said why are you crying and i said i'll never my family will never have to worry about money again because i spent my whole life worrying about money yeah you know my dad had lost the business everything it was a very cathartic thing for me and i think people you know who are already rich uh you know or maybe who come from means just they don't understand the concept of living with the fear of being broke and in debt all the time and then when you have the bag you secure that tiny bag and it's a tiny bag but it's filled with diamonds and cash and you just open it up and say thank you tiny thank you tiny for securing the bag acquire.fm slash tiny no it's
they don't give us a thing oh we don't know that's right uh email uh is it a high at tiny uh and tell him whatever it is like just know that tiny tell them that ben david and jason you can mention jason yeah but i did buy a one touch espresso machine i bought a jura one touch espresso machine which at the time was like two grand and i was like this is unbelievable that's the that i tried to buy a ferrari oh they wouldn't sell it to me in beverly hills you were the riffraff no new money or something what's yeah basically i went in there and they're like oh yeah what am i like to buy a ferrari uh today
the 4 30 and they're like oh we don't have any available and i was like okay can i put myself on the waitlist we're not taking nance from the waitlist so i said to this guy can i ask what do you do here he's like we sell ferraris i'm like to who this is actually no this is part of their strategy it's part of the strategy it's part of the strategy was they have the ferrari's but they don't sell the ferrari's to build we're not putting any pretty list i was like well how long is the waitlist he's like i was like okay i was like i'm a cash buyer he's like everybody's a cash buyer i'm like okay um uh can i ask you a question then he's like sure come into my office we're like espresso you want
some pellegrino i was like i'm good you want some pellegrino espresso and i was like i said i have the same one touch sure i think it's like italian guys like um i was like i don't mean to be rude but what do you do here all day he's like well we deliver the cars and we service them and we sell used cars pre-owned certified for more and i was like oh i was like well i would take a pre-owned one he's like oh well the one you're looking at is pre-owned i was like no no no the one i'm looking at the 430 the red one out there that's the one i want that's got a sticker in the window he's like
yeah yeah we certify them we put the sticker on the window i was like oh well that goes for 230 thousand dollars or whatever and so uh yeah what do you want for he's like 300 and i was like you're like the sticker says no no this is the used one i was looking at he's like you can't get these cars and i was like so you pay over 70 000 he's like it only has 2 000 miles on it and i was like 2 000 miles it's 70 000 more than new i said why wouldn't i buy a new he's like because you can't get them and i just i'm such an idiot from brooklyn who doesn't understand the concept that people would
pay over for the car and i'm just perplexed that would bother me i was like all right well let me think about it i left and and then i was with my friend and i was like um and i had the rob report and it said like number one car was the ferrari f30 and that turned the page it was corvette c6 was the number two car and the starting line was make ferrari buy two for half the price of a ferrari and beat them off the line or something like that and i was like let's go to the corv let's go to the chevy store let's go to the chevy store i walk in there's corvettes everywhere the guy looks at me
he goes you want to buy a corvette i said yeah he said if you buy a corvette today i'll give you five thousand dollars off i was like yeah so we go out on the 405 and we're driving the corvette and he's like this is a corvette son like you're going 70 miles an hour i said i'm not he says i'm not selling this car to you unless you hit that gas much harder and i said okay and i punch it to 100 miles per hour the guy's like yeah how does that feel i'm like great we go back guys good at this job with the corvette i come home with a yellow convertible corvette my wife's like what happened to
the ferrari i was like this thing only costs 65 grand it's like 70 and i got five grand and it's american baby and it's american and uh that was the car that i famously uh was according to gawker robert's go by myself and elon when elon got the first p1 of the roadster right he was like i got it i was like oh let's meet in brentwood and we were driving them at a you were racing we were driving them along sunset boulevard a spirited drive along sunset boulevard and we did it like five times and five out of five times the tesla just destroyed the corvette and i was like i'm doing something wrong and you know then we switched cars and we and i was like nope electric just gonna beat
everything and this was the first one that you know first yeah that was a one the prototype that's in space right now it's the cherry red one that's that's the one that's the famous photo of me and elon in front of the corvette uh with that that one's it but there's a famous photo of the two of us uh you know in front of my corvette and his p1 uh and i remember that night like it was yesterday because we were this is before the iphone you realize like robert scroba was recording this on his nokia you know yeah these are the memories right like crazy the journey that you've been on yeah it's pretty this is the stuff you just will cherish forever my life is unbelievable i am so
grateful for it and uh thanks for having me on the pod guys listeners thank you so much acquire.fm slash slack come join us we'd love your feedback this is cool this is a new shtick acquire.fm slash store you can buy cool shirts swag uh get some slash jobs find your next craigslist craigslist you can get a bunch of new ones that's right acquire.fm slash david buys you some smelly furniture my god it is hot in here all right we got it let's go eat some let's have some sushi or maxi i don't know what we're going for here oh so fun thank you so much of course all right listeners we hope you enjoyed that uh very first acquired sessions with jason
calacanis it's a new format we're playing with we would love your thoughts acquiredfm at gmail.com or tweet at us at acquiredfm and uh with that listeners we'll see you next time we'll see you next time you