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2023-06-20. The Beast of Our Problems
Episode 5220th June 2023 • Reqless: Software in the Age of AI • Aboard
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Rich and Paul dive into Mr. Beast's YouTube philosophy, that focuses more on growth rather than content. And the importance of one translating their funds into acts of kindness. This podcast is sponsored by Aboard.

Transcripts

Paul Ford:

All right, Richard.

Rich Ziade:

Yo,

Paul Ford:

do you like YouTube influencers?

Rich Ziade:

No.

Rich Ziade:

I don'ts not generally speaking,

Paul Ford:

It's not true.

Paul Ford:

You have like five you love in the headphone community.

Rich Ziade:

No, I, I'm fine with it.

Rich Ziade:

I don't like the one I, there's certain ones I don't like.

Paul Ford:

like who?

Rich Ziade:

I have a child, I have children.

Rich Ziade:

Oh,

Paul Ford:

it's a lot.

Paul Ford:

It's

Rich Ziade:

you know, influencers that are like, check it out,

Rich Ziade:

look what I can do with it.

Rich Ziade:

A half-filled water bottle and like coins.

Paul Ford:

Oh boy.

Rich Ziade:

my kids just shed IQ points.

Paul Ford:

It is rough tools.

Paul Ford:

It's like al

Paul Ford:

almost, like,

Paul Ford:

it's like alcohol for children.

Rich Ziade:

or like the ones that run into like the middle of a, you know,

Rich Ziade:

street in Milan and set up a basketball net and then ask people to shoot

Rich Ziade:

into it and then they cheer around.

Rich Ziade:

The old man who gets it in, it's, it is, it is, uh, a lot of it is terrible,

Rich Ziade:

but there are some very good informed, there's this wonderful gardening

Rich Ziade:

influencer that I like outta New Jersey.

Rich Ziade:

I forget his name.

Rich Ziade:

I can get his name

Paul Ford:

What do you think about?

Paul Ford:

Oh, okay, fine.

Paul Ford:

What do you, what do you think about Mr.

Paul Ford:

Beast?

Rich Ziade:

I don't know that influencer.

Rich Ziade:

Is he big?

Paul Ford:

He's

Paul Ford:

more famous than like Barack Obama.

Paul Ford:

Yeah.

Rich Ziade:

I don't know anything

Paul Ford:

Well, I'm gonna tell you about him because there's a good

Paul Ford:

article and we should talk about it.

Paul Ford:

I'm gonna show you an illustration of Mr.

Paul Ford:

Beast.

Paul Ford:

Holding it up.

Paul Ford:

It, you're looking at a white guy with light colored eyes, who's got a big

Paul Ford:

open mouth, you know, he's in shape.

Paul Ford:

Roughly

Rich Ziade:

what's his specialty?

Paul Ford:

He is.

Paul Ford:

So there's an article, it's in the New York Times magazine

Paul Ford:

and, uh, it's called How Mr.

Paul Ford:

Beast became the Willy Wonka of YouTube.

Paul Ford:

It's by Max Reed, who is a genuinely wonderful and

Paul Ford:

thoughtful technology commentator.

Paul Ford:

I've known Max for a long time.

Paul Ford:

Okay.

Paul Ford:

And, um, And so what Max did is he just went in deep on who this person

Paul Ford:

is, how they became so influential and the kind of stuff they do.

Paul Ford:

So kind of stuff they do would be like, I am going to pay for

Paul Ford:

a thousand cataract operations.

Paul Ford:

And then we're gonna profile, we're gonna go, you know, film people

Paul Ford:

as they get their eyesight back.

Rich Ziade:

So they're going to like a third world country

Paul Ford:

or No, it's all around the world, but a lot in the us.

Rich Ziade:

Oh, okay.

Paul Ford:

And it's sort of like, and so the deal is like, Hey, I'm

Paul Ford:

monetizing through you millions of fans.

Paul Ford:

Mm-hmm.

Paul Ford:

And I'm gonna take that money and I'm gonna do this amazing stunt.

Paul Ford:

And the stunt might be charity.

Paul Ford:

He did one where it's like you're all gonna get dropped on an island

Paul Ford:

and the person who's the last to leave the island gets the island.

Rich Ziade:

Mm-hmm.

Paul Ford:

I bought an island for, you know, a half a million

Paul Ford:

bucks or a million bucks.

Paul Ford:

Okay.

Paul Ford:

I'm gonna, I'm gonna give it to the contest winner.

Paul Ford:

So contests that are stunt style stuff and then it gets put on YouTube.

Paul Ford:

Apparently he grew up.

Paul Ford:

Studying YouTube, like as an adolescent.

Paul Ford:

He looked at stats and all he thought about for his entire

Paul Ford:

adolescence through adulthood.

Paul Ford:

He's, I think late twenties now.

Paul Ford:

Uh, was YouTube, YouTube, YouTube?

Paul Ford:

How do I win?

Paul Ford:

How do I game the algorithm?

Paul Ford:

What did the previews need to look like?

Paul Ford:

You know how it's always like that type with the big smiley face in the front?

Rich Ziade:

Yeah.

Rich Ziade:

The still,

Paul Ford:

yeah.

Paul Ford:

Yeah.

Rich Ziade:

the, the, the, the, the thumbnail is always like, oh my God.

Paul Ford:

So that's this person's religion.

Paul Ford:

Okay.

Paul Ford:

And so all

Paul Ford:

guys

Rich Ziade:

nailed that

Paul Ford:

what, what Max breaks down in a really interesting way,

Paul Ford:

and I think that this is a kind of, it's a deep point, right?

Paul Ford:

Which is like, all right, so this guy who knows how he is, he

Paul Ford:

obviously prefers moral acts over amoral acts, but the reality is like

Paul Ford:

big charity stunts drive traffic.

Paul Ford:

And growth is the only goal here.

Paul Ford:

I want to get more followers, I want to get more money from

Paul Ford:

YouTube, I want to do bigger stunts, because that gets more attention.

Paul Ford:

Mm-hmm.

Paul Ford:

And so the incentives of the, that these platforms create.

Paul Ford:

So what happens is like, you know, during the.

Paul Ford:

Trump campaign 2016.

Paul Ford:

There were all these wacky incentives in Facebook, so he had like Macedonian

Paul Ford:

hackers making viral content about how Joe Biden was secretly a reptile, and

Paul Ford:

everybody's like, click clicking on that.

Paul Ford:

Right.

Paul Ford:

This is sort of the po, it's the same dynamic, but it's the sort of like YouTube

Paul Ford:

approved version, which is, I'm gonna get more and more audience by doing more

Paul Ford:

and more dramatic, ridiculous, but legal things that are ultimately positive.

Paul Ford:

I'm gonna get a thousand people, their eyesight okay.

Paul Ford:

Around the world, right?

Paul Ford:

And it's gonna be, and I'm gonna produce it really well and it's

Paul Ford:

gonna get tens of millions of people are gonna look at it maybe more.

Paul Ford:

And I'm gonna get so much money from that.

Paul Ford:

I'm gonna plow that money back into an even bigger stunt

Paul Ford:

with even more engagement.

Paul Ford:

Right?

Paul Ford:

And this is fascinating cuz there's no niche.

Paul Ford:

It's only growth.

Paul Ford:

The only goal is growth,

Rich Ziade:

right?

Rich Ziade:

This is not about, yeah, this is not about a particular program is what I'm

Paul Ford:

hearing.

Paul Ford:

Can I say something that's extremely undergrad, but I think true.

Paul Ford:

And then I want you to beat it up.

Paul Ford:

This is the alignment of the media industry with capitalism.

Paul Ford:

It's the end game.

Paul Ford:

because it is, it is.

Paul Ford:

Absolutely.

Paul Ford:

Growth focused and content is utterly secondary to growth.

Rich Ziade:

Yeah.

Rich Ziade:

I mean, I, I, I think what you have here, right, if you look at the, the apparatus

Rich Ziade:

of like, Advertising historically, there's a bunch of moving pieces to it.

Rich Ziade:

There were, and everybody got their, their cut, right?

Rich Ziade:

There was the ratings agencies

Paul Ford:

Sure.

Paul Ford:

like

Rich Ziade:

their reports were huge because of the, told you

Rich Ziade:

which show was number one.

Paul Ford:

welcome back.

Paul Ford:

Cotter is number one with a bullet.

Rich Ziade:

right.

Rich Ziade:

And when a show is number one, You can sort of price it.

Rich Ziade:

Now, do you have to price it against some exact algorithm, like a formula?

Rich Ziade:

No.

Rich Ziade:

So what you had was ABC saying, Hey, you know what?

Rich Ziade:

Our's gotten bigger and bigger and, and we're getting the 18 to 35, so

Rich Ziade:

we're gonna charge you this much.

Rich Ziade:

Right.

Rich Ziade:

So there's an arbitrariness full circle.

Rich Ziade:

Right.

Rich Ziade:

And then you've got the ad buyers

Paul Ford:

there, right there, because you're describing a market.

Paul Ford:

Okay.

Paul Ford:

So the market is the ratings agencies like ratings agencies

Paul Ford:

like Moody's and Standard.

Paul Ford:

What is the quality of the asset?

Paul Ford:

And you have buyers who are advertisers who represent large brands.

Paul Ford:

Yes.

Paul Ford:

And you have sellers who create.

Paul Ford:

Content and then literally, especially in network TV, used to blast it out over

Paul Ford:

big sticks that they put in the sky.

Paul Ford:

Okay.

Rich Ziade:

which is the, the brokers in between when the Sallys show up

Rich Ziade:

and say, I'm gonna get into golf you don't show you, there's a particular

Rich Ziade:

rate card that comes together

Paul Ford:

regardless

Rich Ziade:

of how many people are viewing it.

Paul Ford:

know what's funny?

Paul Ford:

It's just that moment.

Paul Ford:

So you're talking about the fact that like, there's a, a merger between the

Paul Ford:

Saudi golf organization and like the pga,

Rich Ziade:

Yes.

Paul Ford:

Okay.

Paul Ford:

So this happened and everyone was really against this, and then it got quiet.

Rich Ziade:

Well, money

Paul Ford:

Just, and you could feel it.

Paul Ford:

There's a throbbing force of unlimited capital.

Paul Ford:

Yeah.

Paul Ford:

Where everybody's like, no, no, we're never gonna do this.

Paul Ford:

We're now,

Rich Ziade:

so what you have there, that's not a market.

Paul Ford:

Oh, interesting.

Paul Ford:

You don't see that as a market.

Paul Ford:

It's a

Rich Ziade:

No.

Rich Ziade:

No.

Rich Ziade:

You know what?

Rich Ziade:

Look, look, hey, look man, I, I used to run an

Paul Ford:

Mm-hmm.

Rich Ziade:

and I remember telling a very large investment bank, uh,

Rich Ziade:

that I was gonna charge them very differently than the nonprofit,

Rich Ziade:

uh, li Librarian organization that we charged.

Paul Ford:

I dunno why.

Paul Ford:

I know, but

Rich Ziade:

I was like, we're gonna do that.

Rich Ziade:

Because you need us.

Rich Ziade:

We have value to you and I know who you are.

Rich Ziade:

I know who the, like the broker on Madison Avenue, who's the ad buyer?

Rich Ziade:

When the Saudis show up.

Rich Ziade:

And say, we really wanna, we're gonna build a city, we're gonna dig a

Rich Ziade:

ditch in the desert and build a city in it that doesn't use electricity.

Paul Ford:

Mm-hmm.

Rich Ziade:

And we want to advertise.

Rich Ziade:

I know exactly what to charge

Rich Ziade:

This is what is so fascinating about the economy inside YouTube,

Rich Ziade:

which is there is no broker.

Rich Ziade:

It is, and this is, goes back to your point.

Rich Ziade:

By being wholly focused on growth, there is nobody who's

Rich Ziade:

gonna step in and take their vig.

Rich Ziade:

Like, there's nobody who's gonna like, ah, ah, you're, you're, you're

Rich Ziade:

heading up to tier double A, which means now you gotta come talk to me.

Rich Ziade:

There's nobody.

Rich Ziade:

YouTube has said, this is the formula.

Rich Ziade:

Good luck.

Rich Ziade:

And so this guy, we

Paul Ford:

talked about this the other day with like, you know, Facebook,

Paul Ford:

Reddit has a weird marketplace where mod labor is essential for their growth.

Paul Ford:

And so they're, they're currently still, like there's a

Paul Ford:

mod strike going on in Reddit.

Paul Ford:

Right.

Paul Ford:

So, uh, as, as we're recording, but Facebook doesn't, Facebook is just

Paul Ford:

like, You wanna manage a group?

Paul Ford:

You manage a group, don't make any trouble for me.

Paul Ford:

Yeah, right.

Paul Ford:

It's just, I, I gave you the box.

Paul Ford:

Shut up.

Paul Ford:

And YouTube, I mean, YouTube, it is a little more complicated.

Paul Ford:

There are more middle men involved.

Paul Ford:

There are advertisers.

Paul Ford:

You get cuts of things.

Paul Ford:

There are talent agents who focus on YouTube growth wise, and Mr.

Paul Ford:

Beast is his own creation.

Paul Ford:

Mr.

Paul Ford:

Beast has his own staff, his own world?

Rich Ziade:

Oh, no, no, no.

Rich Ziade:

That's an empire.

Rich Ziade:

He's built a little empire there, but he need, YouTube is his platform

Rich Ziade:

and the pact he has with YouTube, look, I'm sure YouTube has visited

Rich Ziade:

him, but the PAC he has is like, look, You make us a penny, you can

Rich Ziade:

keep a 10th of it, or whatever it is.

Rich Ziade:

And he is like,

Paul Ford:

he follows all their rules.

Rich Ziade:

gonna make.

Rich Ziade:

I'm gonna make you lots of pennies.

Rich Ziade:

Yeah, lots and lots of pennies and you're gonna make me

Paul Ford:

He follows their rules in the spirit, not just to the letter, right?

Paul Ford:

Like he, he is, he is a creation of YouTube.

Paul Ford:

And I think what's wild too is you look at these, he's as big as network tv.

Paul Ford:

Bigger

Rich Ziade:

I'm not surprised,

Paul Ford:

Like, it, it's just shocking.

Paul Ford:

And then, um, and it's, this is the first time I've seen a serious profile

Paul Ford:

of him in the, in the Times, right?

Paul Ford:

Like, like, you know, if, if, um, I don't know if like an extra

Paul Ford:

Unsuccess has a story to tell.

Paul Ford:

They can tell that story.

Paul Ford:

Yeah.

Paul Ford:

But, but this guy is like, everybody's like, oh, what, what,

Paul Ford:

where, where'd he come from?

Paul Ford:

And meanwhile, I've been, I've been.

Paul Ford:

I don't know if I've ever watched a full video, but I've seen him everywhere

Paul Ford:

for years now and, uh, and this, like

Paul Ford:

this is not content for me.

Paul Ford:

Okay.

Paul Ford:

Like, just flat out do I like other influencers who stare at the camera

Paul Ford:

and do stuff that I'm, I think is interesting around like computers or Sure.

Paul Ford:

Do I want to

Rich Ziade:

It's not, you're not the

Paul Ford:

do I want to see real life squid game?

Paul Ford:

Where like, I don't like, I personally as a person who was broke, uh, growing

Paul Ford:

up, I don't like things where lower middle class and poor people have to put

Paul Ford:

on a show to get money in healthcare.

Paul Ford:

I feel that, that, that makes me feel, it's not just like a, like

Paul Ford:

a, a leftist, progressive thing.

Paul Ford:

It just brings out a lot of bad feelings for me.

Paul Ford:

Like when I didn't have enough pairs of pants.

Rich Ziade:

yeah.

Rich Ziade:

And look to be clear, I'll tell you something Mr.

Rich Ziade:

Beast said that I didn't do, I didn't.

Rich Ziade:

Cover the cost of a thousand cataracts

Paul Ford:

I, this is what's tricky, right?

Paul Ford:

Well, but here's, here's what's funny is that he doesn't actually, he's

Paul Ford:

like essentially like, I'm gonna take the money from the algorithm and do

Paul Ford:

this with it to himself Yeah, yeah.

Paul Ford:

No, no, no.

Paul Ford:

But it's, it's

Paul Ford:

like, it's

Rich Ziade:

funding his new content with the money he's

Paul Ford:

What he's saying is that the attention you give me in the

Paul Ford:

attention economy, I will translate it.

Paul Ford:

Into altruistic and interesting acts.

Paul Ford:

No, but that's what he says.

Paul Ford:

Like that's, the article sort of goes into

Rich Ziade:

That's a good line.

Paul Ford:

But that is the dynamic that the audience expects.

Paul Ford:

We recently talked to somebody as we were showing our product.

Paul Ford:

Okay.

Paul Ford:

We have a product called a board sponsors this podcast.

Paul Ford:

We talked to somebody and we showed it to them and they're

Paul Ford:

like, this is really great.

Paul Ford:

This would be really, really valuable, and.

Paul Ford:

We're like, cool, what would you pay for it?

Paul Ford:

And he was like, pay for it.

Paul Ford:

Yeah.

Paul Ford:

This is a professional with a small business.

Paul Ford:

He's like, I, I don't really pay for software.

Paul Ford:

Like, what are you talking

Rich Ziade:

I was alien

Paul Ford:

Yeah.

Paul Ford:

And, and like for him, he's in a market in which.

Paul Ford:

Uh, like he's in the middle of a marketplace and everyone

Paul Ford:

has their hands in his

Rich Ziade:

Mm.

Paul Ford:

Like he is essentially kind of owns a franchise and people

Paul Ford:

are, he uses services provided by Theran, but he uses third party web

Paul Ford:

services and everybody's fleecing him.

Paul Ford:

And he is just like, yes, it's how the world works.

Paul Ford:

So like, you're gonna give me software and then you're gonna mind my data

Paul Ford:

and then we're gonna be fine, right?

Paul Ford:

Like, and we're like, no, we don't really want to do that.

Paul Ford:

I think most human beings now understand our industry and the content industry to

Paul Ford:

be this like endless extractive cycle.

Paul Ford:

And it's depressing, but I think that's how they see it.

Rich Ziade:

Yeah, and so this guy's coming in and saying the counter,

Rich Ziade:

which is, if I make a bunch of money, I'm gonna turn it into doing good

Paul Ford:

We're gonna take, it's still gonna be the same extractive cycle.

Paul Ford:

It's fine.

Paul Ford:

He's gonna buy a nice car.

Paul Ford:

No worries.

Paul Ford:

Yeah, but he, it's gonna same extractive cycle, except now I'm gonna tell you how

Paul Ford:

it works and then we're gonna tilt it.

Paul Ford:

In a way that we all think is really great, which is giving people eyesight.

Rich Ziade:

I'm torn about this.

Rich Ziade:

Um, uh, on one side I don't like that a camera is staring at someone like getting

Rich Ziade:

their bandages, bandages removed, uh,

Paul Ford:

Mm-hmm.

Paul Ford:

Uh,

Rich Ziade:

and like, you know, effectively exploiting

Rich Ziade:

an emotional moment.

Paul Ford:

It was kind of bad when Oprah did it too though, right?

Rich Ziade:

was kind of about Oprah it, but at the same time that

Rich Ziade:

person did get the surgery that he otherwise would not have gotten.

Rich Ziade:

There's an old, uh,

Paul Ford:

lot of them are like in the article, like they're, they're Mr.

Paul Ford:

Beast fans.

Paul Ford:

They're like so excited.

Paul Ford:

They're like, I got my eyesight back

Rich Ziade:

many

Rich Ziade:

years ago.

Rich Ziade:

I'll close it with this.

Rich Ziade:

Many years ago, uh,

Rich Ziade:

uh, McDonald's

Rich Ziade:

had started using, Uh, recyclable brown paper bags.

Rich Ziade:

There was a day when McDo old enough to mention this It was styrofoam and white.

Rich Ziade:

They were bleached paper,

Paul Ford:

are, people are actually associate that squishy

Paul Ford:

styrofoam with childhood.

Rich Ziade:

Yeah.

Rich Ziade:

Yeah.

Rich Ziade:

Filet of Fish was a blue styrofoam and the bag was white and then they moved

Rich Ziade:

on to paper and then the bag went brown.

Paul Ford:

It really, but also it was, when there would be photos of

Paul Ford:

landfill, it would all, it would just be McDonald's trappers everywhere.

Rich Ziade:

then, and then you know, the press kind of came out and it

Rich Ziade:

was like, well this is disingenuine.

Rich Ziade:

They're obviously doing this so that they can.

Rich Ziade:

Pull at our heartstrings and blah, blah, blah, like et cetera, et cetera.

Rich Ziade:

Essentially, you're a McDonald's, you're gonna pretend you

Rich Ziade:

care about the environment.

Rich Ziade:

And their response was essentially this, all of our stuff is now recyclable.

Rich Ziade:

which was essentially like, what?

Rich Ziade:

How about you look away from our intent and look at the result?

Rich Ziade:

And I think, I think about the sky.

Rich Ziade:

When I think about this guy, I think about that, which is I could sit here and talk

Rich Ziade:

about like the beating ethical heart of McDonald's, or I could just conclude,

Rich Ziade:

you know what, there's no more styrofoam.

Rich Ziade:

They're not bleaching paper anymore.

Rich Ziade:

Everything is recyclable.

Rich Ziade:

Yeah, the food kind of stays in your body an extra seven days.

Rich Ziade:

But let's put that aside for a moment.

Rich Ziade:

Um, And that's good.

Rich Ziade:

It's a good outcome.

Rich Ziade:

Let's put aside

Paul Ford:

I'm gonna simplify this for everybody, which is you

Paul Ford:

don't have time and resources to have ideological frameworks about

Paul Ford:

all the stuff that's going on.

Paul Ford:

you you don't

Rich Ziade:

Save your time.

Paul Ford:

literally like, Either join a temple

Rich Ziade:

garden.

Rich Ziade:

Do something

Paul Ford:

read one of those, like intro to philosophy books by, you know,

Paul Ford:

a Princeton philosopher and just go like, I'm gonna live my life this way.

Paul Ford:

Because if you actually try to apply summaries or to all of these

Paul Ford:

situations, there's so much of everything, you won't make it a day.

Paul Ford:

That's what happens to people on Twitter.

Paul Ford:

Twitter.

Paul Ford:

And you watch like the blood come out of their ears.

Rich Ziade:

I, I don't, I I will say last thought, even though I said my

Rich Ziade:

last thought was my last thought, I don't like my kids watching it.

Rich Ziade:

I don't like my kids watching a lot of YouTube cuz it turns

Rich Ziade:

their brain into vanilla pudding.

Rich Ziade:

But, um, I don't like my, my kids don't know what to make of it emotionally

Rich Ziade:

when they're seeing these people in these incredibly vulnerable moments.

Rich Ziade:

Um, yeah, they got a surgery or they got money and they're crying cuz they

Rich Ziade:

have a stack of hundreds in their hand.

Rich Ziade:

That's a, i, I don't really.

Rich Ziade:

I don't really want to explain that.

Rich Ziade:

If they see me get angry about it, I'm like, why are you watching that?

Rich Ziade:

That's ridiculous.

Rich Ziade:

I would say, and they're like, what's ridiculous?

Rich Ziade:

Someone just gave someone money and they're real happy as a result.

Rich Ziade:

What's so, what's wrong with you dad?

Rich Ziade:

Right.

Paul Ford:

I had a, I had a funny moment with my son because I

Paul Ford:

don't know, it's the same problem.

Paul Ford:

He's getting into YouTube and he likes to watch the video games stuff and I

Paul Ford:

always worry that like, how far are we away from him shaving the size

Paul Ford:

of his heads and saying like, you know, women were born to serve men.

Paul Ford:

Like, when's that gonna happen?

Paul Ford:

Because it's YouTube.

Rich Ziade:

Well I'll send you certain YouTube channels you can recommend to him.

Rich Ziade:

It,

Paul Ford:

did.

Paul Ford:

I, you don't need us to recommend them.

Paul Ford:

YouTube does a really good job.

Paul Ford:

And, and then we, he's like, Hey, do you wanna look at these

Paul Ford:

garbage pale kid cards with me?

Paul Ford:

Because he's still 11, you know?

Paul Ford:

And we sat, sat, sat on my lap, and we looked at garbage pail ca

Paul Ford:

and every like fifth or sixth, he'd be like, oh, one's kind of racist.

Rich Ziade:

He would say that.

Rich Ziade:

He'd say, uh,

Paul Ford:

And I'm like, yeah, okay.

Paul Ford:

All right.

Paul Ford:

Here we are.

Paul Ford:

He's figuring something out.

Paul Ford:

He's figuring, he, he, he recognizes the world that he's

Paul Ford:

in at 11, and of course he does.

Paul Ford:

That's what humans do.

Paul Ford:

And you gotta have a little faith that, because this is their world,

Paul Ford:

it's in a way that like coming home and watching what's happening on reruns

Paul Ford:

while our parents drank or neglected us in the other room was our world.

Rich Ziade:

mean, I was watching a cat chase, a mouse.

Paul Ford:

Oh yeah.

Paul Ford:

Tom and Jerry

Rich Ziade:

until I was like 13.

Rich Ziade:

Yeah.

Rich Ziade:

And I thinking about it, I was like, man, you were a little old for that.

Rich Ziade:

Rich.

Paul Ford:

There was.

Paul Ford:

There were only three channels and the other stuff was like the news.

Paul Ford:

It was

Rich Ziade:

were three channels.

Rich Ziade:

Yeah.

Rich Ziade:

Yeah.

Rich Ziade:

It was

Paul Ford:

yeah.

Paul Ford:

And so like you turned out, you know, we'll, we'll give you at

Paul Ford:

least a b plus and no worries.

Paul Ford:

Like, This is their world.

Paul Ford:

They cannot escape from it.

Paul Ford:

And all they can do is process it and then hopefully come to

Paul Ford:

good, healthy, sensible decisions.

Paul Ford:

And they're gonna need to be able to say things like, oh, that's kind of racist.

Paul Ford:

Or like, oh God, that doesn't feel right, cuz it's always gonna be there.

Paul Ford:

So I think it's just building the discrimination into the children and

Paul Ford:

them seeing you horrified isn't bad.

Rich Ziade:

Yeah, it's not bad.

Rich Ziade:

It's not bad.

Rich Ziade:

I also don't take the time to explain it, which I probably should.

Paul Ford:

That's hard for the kind of dads that we are.

Rich Ziade:

we're,

Rich Ziade:

this podcast is sponsored by a board.com.

Rich Ziade:

A board.com lets you collect, organize, and collaborate on anything.

Rich Ziade:

You can drop files in.

Rich Ziade:

Bring in links from the web.

Rich Ziade:

It's incredibly smart with parsing stuff into a space where you and your

Rich Ziade:

friends or colleagues can work together.

Rich Ziade:

Check it out.

Rich Ziade:

We're taking, uh, beta invites, beta requests, and we're waving

Rich Ziade:

people in pretty quickly.

Paul Ford:

aboard.com.

Paul Ford:

And if you like us, check us out@zdiford.com, at Twitter on uh,

Paul Ford:

at Zdi Ford and you can send us an email to hello zdi ford.com.

Paul Ford:

And also, uh, go check out how Mr.

Paul Ford:

Beast became the Willy won of YouTube by Max Reeds from the

Paul Ford:

June 12th, 2023 New York Times.

Paul Ford:

Uh, it's a very good, very thoughtful piece and I'm glad that we were

Paul Ford:

able to discuss it on this podcast.

Paul Ford:

bye.

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