# AI Polling, Prediction Markets, and the Contentization of Politics

**Podcast:** Pivot
**Published:** 2026-04-07

## Transcript

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His brand is firing.
His brand is getting rid of incompetence, and now he keeps them.
And you're like, oh my god, you're keeping the incompetence.
Hi everyone, this is Pivot from New York magazine and the Vox Media Podcast Network.
I'm Kara Swisher.
Scott is off, so I brought in a brilliant co-host again, as are everyone who's not Scott, uh, Kristen Soltis Anderson, polster and co-founder of Echelon Insights and contributing opinion writer for the New York Times and someone I really like a lot and who's super smart.
Nice to see you.
Well, thanks for having me, Kara.
Yeah.
So um, welcome.
What's going on?
What's going on?
The world of polling is insane right now, correct?
It is as insane as it can be, considering that there is not an election that is imminent.
Uh you know, it's like the world gets polling world gets crazy in the immediate lead up to an election because somebody's got a new survey coming out every day in some interesting swing state when it is election season.
But right now it's a little bit of the doldrums for that.
And so what is instead kind of crazy is all of the changes around how is AI going to change our industry and those types of things.
We're gonna get to that.
We're gonna talk about the predictions industry.
We're gonna play a little bit of Scott, who loves it.
I don't love it quite so much.
And I know you hasn't thought, so it's really important to be talking about it because what we're interested in is accurate information, and it's very hard to get it.
But um, anyway, uh, there's so much going on.
Let's get right to the news.
Donald Trump issued an ultimatum to Iran, his 59th, posting on True Social on Easter Sunday, quote, and let me just read this correctly.
Open the fucking straight, you crazy bastards, or you'll be living in hell.
Which sounds like a line from I don't even think movies would write those lines anymore.
Um, if Iran doesn't comply, Trump is threatening to target the country's power plants and bridges.
Iran says it will retaliate crushingly and extensively if civilian infrastructure targets are hit.
So they're just coming back with the same dialogue.
This all comes after a successful rescue of two U.S.
airmen whose jet was shot down uh over Iran on Friday.
It's not great because the jets were shot down.
We're taping this before Trump's press conference on Iran and these military rescues.
So, Chris, in most polls show the majority of Americans are opposed to this war, right?
Pretty significantly.
You recently did some polling with Trump's MAGA base.
Talk a little bit about what's happening here uh in the polling and the thinking around it.
Yeah, so normally historically, when the US gets into conflict uh overseas, there's normally a little bit of a rally around the flag effect.
Um, because normally we are getting involved in response to some kind of provocation, um, whether it was after 9-11, etc.
Um in this case, there was not really groundwork laid to make the case to the American people for why we needed to do this.
And so, you know, in my polling, when you say, would it be legitimate to engage in military activity against the Iranian government if they were developing a nuclear weapon?
Like two-thirds of Americans say yes to a bunch of those different kinds of things.
But it's clear that that case wasn't really made well to the public, because then when you say now, do you support or oppose what we're doing in Iran?
Most don't support it.
Um, or they have some real serious questions.
In fact, it is the MAGA base that is the most supportive of what we're doing.
Um there's so much interesting discourse around how Donald Trump reshaped the Republican Party.
And there's this view that there is the old Republican Party that like longs for the day of Ronald Reagan and says, you know, we love when the United States projects its power overseas, and that Donald Trump has, you know, refashion the Republican Party in his own image away from that.
No more forever wars, America First and all of that.
But actually, when you ask voters who identify themselves as like Trump supporters first before being Republican supporters, they are the most likely to sort of say, if Donald Trump says it's a good idea, I'm kind of willing to give him the benefit of the doubt on this.
Even though they backed him for America first and no foreign wars.
Not everybody, obviously, Marjorie Taylor Greene put out a pretty big long well, a lot of things that she put on about his health and his mental state and stuff like that.
But um w how why is that?
Why is the shift?
It's just whatever he says goes, or does they don't really care what the words are or the policies.
There are some people who are part of Donald Trump's coalition who are pretty, you know, they don't want the US to be involved in military activity overseas.
And they're quite outspoken about it, but those are different from MAGA voters.
And I think there's a it's like very easy to kind of conflate like the MAGA movement equals everybody who voted for Donald Trump.
And like that's not true.
Um, there are a lot of people who, in fact, in some of the polling that I've seen, it is the type of voter who is not a Republican and is pretty isolationist, is among the most likely to have like come join the Republican coalition recently.
So Donald Trump does have a potential political problem with some people who really liked him and feel betrayed by what he's doing.
But the core MAGA faithful and the Republican Party as reconstituted by Donald Trump at the moment is reserving judgment and saying, you know what, I think he's probably on the right track.
Let's see how this plays out.
And how many people is that?
What is the amount?
Because majority of he's lost into, but the numbers are pretty staggering when you look at any poll, almost every one of them, including Fox polls, all kinds of polls.
Yeah, so the I I sort of estimate that the MAGA movement is about a quarter to a third, depending on, I mean, it's a it's a pretty fluid section of the Republican Party, but it's not half the country.
Like it didn't have to be something where he was losing a majority of Americans.
He could have, I think, communicated at least somewhat effectively about, hey, this is a government that's been declaring death to America for decades.
And here are the specific things that they are doing that put us at risk.
Here's why I'm going to do this.
Here's what I'm going to take out.
And I don't think it had to be a situation where he was losing half the public right from the get-go.
Um, but because of that lack of clarity in communication that has not really been followed by a ton of clarity and communication, like the numbers are getting worse, not better.
Right.
Okay.
So what talk about that for a second, the clarity and communication, because a lot of it is marketing.
You're talking about marketing.
Like we're going to market this more to you.
Why, why was it not there?
Because most people do give people presidents the benefit of the doubt, something was up.
Although he had previously bombed them and said he obliterated them.
So why the need to obliterate them again?
I mean, I I even had Tom Tillis saying that, like, oh, we obliterated, then we obliterated, and now I guess we're obliterating.
He was sort of articulating that lack of clarity.
Yeah.
Well, I I don't know that I would just say that it is marketing, because I think for something like this, I mean, it to me, the bar does feel higher than trying to sell somebody soda or potato chips or sneakers.
I know that's not what you're saying, but I think that the it's not just can you put out a snazzy video that makes it look like we're winning at a video game and you win?
Because that's that's obviously part of the strategy, and yet the numbers are are what they are.
That I think it is just that the the American people simply want to know why is this in our interest?
And if you can give a reasonably good answer to why something is in our interest, we tend as a people to sort of give the commander-in-chief.
Maybe not today with Donald Trump as such a polarizing figure, but we tend to say, okay, if you think that this is in our best interest, like I'll give you a couple weeks to see how this plays out.
And especially if the costs are not significantly high, people will give a little bit more of that roadway.
But one, you know, I mean, thank goodness that they have gotten these pilots back.
Because that's that's the kind of thing where it's it is, I can't wait to hear the like thrilling story of how this was done.
But a combination of if military losses begin to pile up in a very significant way, or the domestic impacts of the Strait of Hormuz, gas prices, all of that, you know, you can run out of that goodwill much more quickly.
But right now, he didn't start with the the reservoir of goodwill that as a president you would want.
Some of that's because he's Donald Trump and there's just some people who aren't gonna like anything he does.
But he also starts with people who will like anything he does, uh, who do sort of give him that benefit of the doubt, even if they would not give a president Marco Rubio or President J.D.
Vance that same leeway.
And it does not seem like he has taken this moment and his numbers have not gone up at all.
They're going down, they're going down with everybody, correct?
So let's talk about that, because the the numbers really are decline, they keep declining, which is really usually doesn't happen, um, especially for the midterms.
President Trump's approval rating is just at 35% for his handling of the presidency overall and 31% for his handling of the economy, according to recent CNN polling.
However, the news isn't great on either side.
About a quarter of the country holds negative views of both parties.
That's something not a fresh thing.
Talk about when you look at this information, as it is, you know, uh one of the things about Donald Trump is he's unprecedented, he's unprecedented in the decline, and he's still standing, kind of stuff.
He keeps kicking the punches here from a polling and and and you can feel it.
I have a lot of MAG, not MAGA, we just trump adjacent relatives, and they really don't like him, like suddenly.
Um and they never would express that before.
There's, I think two things that are that are ominous for Republicans.
The first is with everything that's going on in foreign policy.
Um foreign policy is not most voters' number one issue, but it is the background music.
It is the thing that tells you what the commander-in-chief's values are.
It says a lot about what his temperament is.
I mean, we already this is like what he's interested in.
Like not care.
Not this is well-covered territory with Donald Trump in some ways, but it just sort of focuses the mind a little on like what is it that this person is all about.
You frankly saw something like this with Biden when you saw his job approval as we withdrew from Afghanistan, and as that went terribly, that was the moment when his job approval went underwater and never recovered.
It's not because most voters said what we do in Afghanistan is my number one issue, but it just it like communicates something about the level of competence and priority setting and decision making within the Oval Office that like carries over and bleeds over into how people think on a whole variety of issues.
Um, that's risk number one.
Risk number two, on the economy.
Um, I I don't want to take credit for this, but this was the uh my friends at the Central Air podcast were talking about this.
That essentially Donald Trump had really good numbers in his first term on the economy.
Even among voters who didn't like him overall, thought he was crude, thought he was crass, thought he was a jerk, all of that.
They still thought, not all of them, but a small subset thought, yeah, but at least he's good on the economy.
And when COVID happened, he still got kind of a pass.
Like people sort of understood not his fault.
Yeah, that like he did not create this virus for all his faults.
He's this isn't this, this was not on him.
For all the bleaching.
So for this time around, there's really no one else he can blame for the state of the economy.
And he has tried to say, I'm just cleaning up Biden's mess, but you kind of run out of runway on that eventually, where voters say, like, I'm tired, like Biden is so irrelevant to me.
I'm tired of hearing about him.
Just tell me what you're doing.
What are you gonna do?
I I don't care what happened in 2023, 2024.
Um the fact that his numbers on the economy in that CNN poll had 31% job approval.
That is atrocious.
That is a five alarm fire level number because one, it's way below like the norm for job approval these days hovers around 40%.
You start getting into the 30s and that's scary land.
You get into the low 30s, and that is like terminal.
Right.
Um, and it for it to be on the economy, which you know, there have been other issues where his job approval has fluctuated big time, and people said, Oh, I don't trust him on this X, Y, or Z.
The economy was always a thing.
Oh, he's the apprentice guy.
Oh, he's the business guy.
And so for his job approval to be that low on the economy, if that does not turn around, that suggests to me a very troubling midterm for Republicans with that as the background noise.
So you you focused recently on how Gen Z voters are feeling about the economy.
What did you find there?
Give us some specifics.
So Gen Z voters have uh the worst view of the economy.
And even in just the last month, it has plummeted precipitously.
So when I say, you know, on the foreign policy stuff that Donald Trump mostly has the MAGA movement, there is a divide within the Republican Party, and it is older voters versus Gen Z.
And so it is Gen Z Republicans, in addition to Gen Zers who are not Republicans, who are increasingly saying, like, this economy isn't working for me.
And whether it's a combination of they are approaching graduation and the job market's not what they want, whether they feel like the affordability crisis is keeping homeownership and, you know, a whole variety of sort of life aspirations out of reach, um, or just a sense that there's not as much opportunity um for them to build the kind of career they want.
I did some focus groups for the New York Times uh very recently where we talked to Gen Z white collar job seekers.
And it was, I mean, it was heart, it was like unsurprising, but also just heartbreaking to hear these young people talk about what it is like to try to get a job in a moment when they for some of them they went to college because they were told you need this credential.
Now they've got debt, and they still send out a hundred applications and they get five people to call them back, of which three then proceed to ghost them and the other one or make them the other KR AI.
Yeah, exactly.
Um, and so it was just it, it felt it there was a bleakness to it that was was disputing.
Because normally when I talk to Gen Z folks, like there's very much a, yeah, everything's terrible, but like our generation's gonna fix it.
And it it almost feels like right now, do people feel like they have any sense of control or ability to shape the future, or is it just like bigger, more powerful stuff at play that they won't be able to just put their heads down to the street?
And they blame Trump for this, correct?
Or so in our focus group, I in our focus group, it was actually a a more dem-leaning group.
I don't know, chicken or the egg.
Is that because that's more of who is looking for jobs or what have you?
Um, and we really didn't talk too much about Trump himself.
Right.
But it's a feeling.
And he's standing at the top, right?
That's true.
My sense is less that they say I can't get a job and it's Donald Trump's fault, and it's more, I can't get a job.
It feels like society has been moving in a bad direction for a while.
And I don't know like who's sending the lifeboats, like who's coming to rescue us?
I don't know that anybody in the prime position.
When you think about that, he his outbursts, how much do they matter anymore?
Like the one this weekend, of course, once again, and I don't mean to say the word pearl clutching, but everyone's like, Oh, can you maybe set it?
I'm like, yes, he seems cognitively disabled to me.
I don't, I'm not a doctor, but he's as crazy as ever.
And he's not, that's not changed.
Does that matter when he does these sort of outbursts, or are they just noise now with him with voters?
There's this well, there's this weird disconnect where if you ask voters what they think about things like that, they tell you they don't like them.
And yet if if market signals are to be believed, more politicians seem to be leaning into that kind of behavior.
A sort of like if you can't beat them, join them type approach.
So like I would think if you if you just take people at their word, they want candidates who compromise and candidates who behave in a manner that is befitting the office and all of those different things.
And then who shows up and votes in a primary like puts people in who have unbelievable flaws in in any number of ways.
So I think you're right.
And I don't think it's pearl clutching, or or if it is, like I'm I'm I'm pearl clutching a little bit, not that I'm surprised, but that I'm disappointed.
Uh that we now have this coarseness where like the president of the United States is tweeting F-bombs.
I don't love that.
That's right.
Like maybe that's that's just me as a small C conservative.
I'm I'm not interested.
No, thank you.
Um, but the reality is that voters say they don't want it, and then this is who gets elected.
And whether it's they're voting for him in spite of it or because of it, like I think there's some people, it's because of it.
They like that he doesn't sound like somebody straight out of central casting.
Um but I do wonder if there'll be a backlash at some point.
If Americans will start to want straight out of central casting at some point, it seems like it.
It seems he's starting to actually sound like the old man at the my mom's uh senior living facility who you really need you go around to get off the elevator for.
Um and and initially you're like, ha ha, and then you're like, shut the fuck up, Daddy, grandpa.
Anyway, um it's a really interesting thing, because I think just like with Iran or anything else, it's a background noise that's disconcerting, right?
Rather than a a direct thing.
It's not soothing.
It's not, this is not America does not feel like the spa music is on, like, especially with these young voters that you're seeing it.
If you were to pick one polling thing that you went, oh my goodness sakes, one upside or downside, what is there something that stuck out from you recently in your polling?
Well, I think it is about Gen Z and the economy.
And it is when we've been asking people, do you think the economy is um headed in the right direction or the wrong direction?
We've been asking them this for years.
Sure.
People generally have been saying it's been headed in the wrong direction, and you can break it out by generation.
And for the most part, this has not been something where like older voters think everything is great and younger voters think it's terrible.
Like everybody's kind of been aligned about where things are at.
But in just the last month, in our March data, the Gen Z respondents, I mean, it fell off a cliff in terms of their feelings about the economy.
And the reason why that sticks out is one, it's a it's breaking of a big trend that we'd had for a long time of kind of everybody feels like the economy's not doing great.
Um, but just for to see them get so much more depressed in just a month was was really jarring.
But number two, think about the kind of coalition that Republicans put together that have enabled them to have sort of better than expected elections.
It's in part because they they tried to repair the damage that had been done with younger voters.
And if you are presiding over an economy where Gen Z is feeling like this, like that's it.
The only thing you have going for you is the fact that Gen Z finds Democrats to be uninspiring at the moment.
Um that's not a great thing to hang your hat on.
So to me, it's it is that Gen Z economic number, more so than anything specific about foreign policy.
So it's an opportunity for Democrats, presumably, correct?
It's an opportunity.
It is, it is an opportunity for Democrats, but I think the thing that Democrats are getting wrong is like that they they know that affordability is the thing on everybody's minds.
And so they know to like mouth the words, yes, we care about cost of living.
And that may be enough.
If things are bad enough, you can just say, I'm not the other guy, and that that could be adequate.
But I still think that voters also, in the surveys that I see, harbor some skepticism about what Democrats would do if given the reins again.
Like, okay, we don't love what Trump's doing, but we still don't love the way Biden handled this either.
So what's your plan?
Is your plan to open up the spigot of money and subsidize everything to pretend like it goes away, but that drives inflation?
Like we don't want that either.
And the deficit.
Yeah, I don't I don't think that sounds like a good idea.
Fresh ideas that actually solve people's problems.
Oh incredible.
That's what they're supposed to do.
Okay, Kristen, let's go on a quick break.
When we come back, we'll talk about a potential cabinet shakeup and who might be the next to go.
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Christian, we're back.
Pam Bondi and Christy Noam may have just been the beginning.
A Trump cabinet shakeup is reportedly in the works, though the president is denying it, which means it's happening.
Which this feels like a corporation.
Some of the names potentially on the chopping block, director of national intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, FBI Director, Cash Patel, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, uh, Labor Secretary Laurie uh DeRemer.
As for Bondi's replacement, her deputy and Trump's former attorney, Todd Blanch, is currently serving as acting AG, and he's already trying to distance the DOJ from the Epstein file, telling Fox last week that all the files have been released.
Talk a little bit about what's happening here in terms of um this.
And does this create more of a voter dissatisfaction?
Or is it I mean, this happens in every administration where there's a shakeup kind of thing.
It's not a and the last Trump administration was was like a manic episode of uh The Apprentice, of course, and people went in and out quite a lot.
This is this is these people have had some staying power and they're 100% less competent.
So talk a little bit about that.
I think a shakeup can be a very good thing, especially if like let's take Christy Dome.
This is a great example of an issue.
Immigration was an issue where Republicans and Donald Trump had a massive advantage that they haven't always had, but there was a real willingness to like America had moved to the right on these issues and said, do what you had to do to get the border secure.
And the way in which this was handled, culminating in I mean, embarrassment is is probably too light a way to frame it, but the events of the last couple of months in terms of ice specifically.
Justice week with the with a service member's wife being grabbed off a bench.
I I I just feel like for Donald Trump, you you can't, your political coalition can't survive if you don't have people coming to you going, well, at least he knows what to do about the border, at least he knows how to handle this issue.
It's kind of a core piece of glue that holds different pieces of his coalition together.
And if you lose that, what do you have?
So by being able to sort of say, okay, I'm cutting this person.
This person has been an embarrassment to me.
And look, my numbers on this issue have fallen.
It is good that he isn't at least not taking the position of like, I'm just gonna I'm gonna circle the wagons and we're gonna say that everything's fine and it's just the liberal media that's being mean.
So I think to some level, these shakeups are what Donald Trump's voters expect from him, especially those folks who are not die hard Republicans, but instead gravitated to him for some combination of the economy and immigration and vibes, that like being able to show yes, I want new people running the show.
I have been unsatisfied with what they've been doing.
Well, that's his brand started with that.
You're fine.
Exactly, exactly.
So I don't know what that means about who would be next.
I mean, I think about some of the names that were on your list, and some of them have done more that has publicly brought strife to the White House than others.
And I think that's probably the thing that is animating this more.
Like, I don't know to what extent his decision to s to bid farewell to Christy Noam wasn't about how ICE was handling the issue of immigration, or was it how she handled hearings and some of these embarrassing stories about like, you know, the the planes and God knows what else?
Right.
Um but so that's that's sort of how I evaluate this.
Honestly, her husband's the coolest thing about her, but go ahead.
True.
All of which is to say, I think if you want to know like where the change would come next, I think the most important criteria is likely who who is reflecting well on this White House, not who has, you know something that's like got the beltway in a stir but it's not really reflecting badly on him.
Right.
So it has to be so who would who who does break through of these cabinet members with the voters the ones that you're polling.
So I honestly think that if you asked voters they would which member of the cabinet is the most supportive of tariffs I do not think very many would be able to name Howard Ludnick.
So uh that again I'm I am not a Trump Kremlinologist but to me it does not seem as though there's anything on the outside that would be driving that in quite the same way as say Cash Patel at the FBI, drinking with the hockey team or you know any number of cases that the FBI's been handling and questions about the effectiveness of of that.
So again, don't know which way he would go first, but to me that seems to be the most obvious variable or most obvious variable are you looking like an idiot publicly to a wide range of people in other words like a lot of people, as opposed to say the labor secretary who's just it seems naughty uh in a really bad way, kind of thing.
Because we've had naughty cabinet members forever, from what I can glean and stuff.
But it but it doesn't break through with voters.
More like Cash Patel drink down in the beer is a real bad visual, for example.
Well, and you know how Donald Trump feels about visuals.
Like that that's really, really, really important.
The public image, do you look the part?
Um, and if you begin to fail on those dimensions, that's often when it's it's time for he's looking for somebody different.
So is that is that a good thing, as you say, the shakeup isn't a bad thing, right?
It shows you're, you know, you know, look busy, Jesus is coming, kind of thing, like that kind of thing.
Well, yeah, I think especially because of what you said about his brand as the apprentice guy.
I think the idea that you I mean, remember like think about what he did with Doge when he first came into office.
He just went through and slashed and burned.
So we're gonna fire a whole bunch of people.
I mean, that is his brand.
Which which it should not just be isolated to lower rungs if you're really gonna live through, uh, you know, live up to it and and press through with it.
Um it it it I it almost uniquely is a probably a good thing for Trump in a way that it might not even be for other administrations.
No, his brand is firing.
His brand is getting rid of incompetence, and now he he has he keeps them, and you're like, oh my God, you're keeping the incompetence.
That it's it I would agree, having watched all those shows.
I mean, then the last question is for all of this, whether it's court appointments or cabinet appointments.
What do you think the United States Senate is likely to look like after November?
And how likely is it that you think you will be able to get someone confirmed through a Senate that potentially has more Democrats in it than it does today?
I mean, those are things that I think are probably also weighing on the minds of the Susie Wileses of the world who are are keeping track of that.
Yeah, the incompetence might have to stay.
So one of the things that's interesting uh also happening is the federal government is suing multiple states over attempts to ban betting on Calci and other platforms.
Now, let's be clear, Donald Trump's children are part of this, um, are on the boards or advisors to both polymarket and calci.
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission is arguing that it has the sole authority, that that's how they're using to regulate these predictions markets.
Meanwhile, Polymarket is apologizing after users were allowed to bet on the fate of the U.S.
pilots whose jet was downed in Iran, pretty loathsome, saying it did not meet their integrity standards.
Incredible.
Both poly market and calci are now rolling out campaigns to attract female users framing prediction markets as another way to be a hashtag girl boss, which by the way, girl boss is over, kids, boys.
Um we've been talking a lot about these markets here on pivot, and you and I have talked about it.
And so I want to play something Scott said a few weeks ago and get your thoughts.
Let's listen.
Out of work because guess what?
There might be kind of.
I I would push back on that.
I just met with a bunch of pollsters on this topic.
Go ahead.
They, if you look at if you look at the prediction markets record versus pollsters in the last election, the prediction markets kicked their ass.
All right, Polster.
What's your response?
I d I was trying to defend you there.
Um, talk about what's happening with them and your thoughts on it and what you like and don't like about them.
And and um, just so you know, uh, there's another possible nail in the coffin for polling.
There's now something called silicon sampling that uses AI models to simulate simulate survey responses, not real people.
Um, talk a little bit about what's happening here in the polling market.
Sure.
So I have a lot of thoughts on both of these.
First, to Scott's point, I I do not think that prediction markets are going to put polling out of business.
One, because 99% of what pollsters do is not polling that tries to track who is going to win an election.
Like I know that's the most public thing that people see from our industry, but 99% of it is message testing, strategy, model building, the sorts of things for which being within margin of error, meaning your result is within three points in either direction, like that's that's okay.
That's sort of understanding.
Give me an example, just make it up, just like you poll what.
So I I can tell you about the polling we've done on, I've done some polling on prediction markets, um, where, you know, I'm asking to what extent are people using them, what are they using them for?
And those are the kinds of things that are valuable for somebody who might be trying to decide do I invest in one of these companies?
Like if I'm gonna regulate them, what sort of regulatory approach should I take?
Uh, it's the sort of thing where, like, for I'll give you an example.
In our poll, we found about one-third of people either bet on prediction markets, that's not a majority of them, or like use the data.
Like they either they tune into it just for entertainment purposes or what have you.
So if my poll shows 36% of people fall into that category, the real number, assuming that I've done my survey, right?
The real number could be a few points off in either direction.
And that's not the end of the world.
It still means my analysis is still useful.
Directionally, it's telling us something interesting about things where things are going.
I think this focus so exclusively on polling as a like crystal ball to tell me if an election is going to get one won by candidate A or candidate B, just sort of misunderstands our industry.
But the second thing is what is causing these prediction markets to give the predictions they are.
So think about there was a uh a man, um, I think he was based in France, who placed a huge bet in the last election that Donald Trump was gonna win.
And afterwards, you know, he he makes this like six-figure sum off of his bet, and that's all great.
And they ask him, you know, how'd you do it?
And he said, Oh, I commissioned a poll.
The polls are still an input to what these prediction markets are doing.
In a world without polls, your prediction market is running on vibes and fundraising numbers, which are fine, but polls are an extremely, they are a load-bearing pillar in what people think about what's going to happen in an election.
So so predictions would be a trailing indicator or what would how do you look at this?
Yes.
So I I think that in general, well, I I think when it comes to election results, they don't have to be a trailing indicator.
But I think that polls are an input.
There are they are not the only input.
So other things can change, right?
My poll can say that so and so is going to win the primary in Texas, but all of a sudden, some new news story could break that shows that Ken Paxton or John Corning did something, you know, that could upend the race.
Who knows?
It's usually Ken Paxton.
And then the prediction market would be the leading indicator ahead of when the poll is going to capture that.
Um, but you still need the poll involved.
And that's also what I think about this whole synthetic respondents, AI respondence.
You know, nowadays you're seeing more people like, yeah.
Yeah.
And and there were some attempts to do this in the 2024 election that I think were actually less accurate.
Explain what people what it is.
You use AI model, explain for people who don't understand.
So if you've ever used one of these models, whether it's your Chat GPT or your Claude, and you can like train Claude or Chat GPT or whoever to kind of learn a certain persona.
Imagine that you've then trained a thousand different personas that kind of look like a real voter.
Okay, I've trained one persona to be a 40-year-old woman living in Orlando, Florida, and she's a moderate Republican.
And now I've got another bot that is trained to be a conservative Democrat, and he lives in rural Pennsylvania.
And and then basically you just ask those thousand AI personalities to tell you, are you voting for a Republican or a Democrat?
And then you take those results and you say, Hey, I look, I did a poll.
I did a poll of a thousand AI people who represent real voters.
Right.
Um and I just think presenting that as a poll is disingenuous.
I think you can present it as a modeled estimate.
Like I think there's lots of things you can present it as.
Do you use that?
Do you use model that like use AI or you use it in poll?
So we the way we use AI, you can use AI to help, you know, with programming tasks.
It's enormously helpful.
You can use AI to help you analyze data when it comes back.
Like the old school way of analyzing polling data is you do a survey and you get back crosstabs that is this like 500-page PDF with a ton of numbers on each page, and you as the pollster are sifting through looking for stuff that's that's meaningful.
The fact that you can feed that in and have AI tell you, hey, here are the top 10 most interesting things in that poll, eight out of 10 are going to be pretty good.
One out of the 10 will be right, but not really that important.
And then one will be like completely wrong.
And so you still have to, as the pollster exercise your job.
But go through go through your own data and know.
But like there are useful applications of AI in polling, but ultimately, if you think about those synthetic personas, what's training that synthetic 40-year-old suburban mom who lives in Orlando on how she ought to respond?
It's probably a poll.
It's probably a poll that was done to originally.
So all of this, whether it's prediction markets or these synthetic AI samples, all of them at their root have real polling as an input.
And it's like a game of telephone.
And they're just like the next piece in the line.
And you can add other useful inputs that might give them some advantages, but they're still not a replacement for polling.
They are just a different application of polling.
So what when you say that when the federal government is saying the commit com uh commodity futures change should be regulating them, they're not regulating them.
Is it fair?
Is it sort of like it reminds me a little bit of your like commerce people, retail people who are offline having to fight with online?
They had distinct advantages here.
They can they can do whatever these people to grow large.
What do you imagine?
How who should be now?
States are rushing in because they have long, long regulated gambling.
Every state does has this different gambling laws, and that's not something the federal government ever did.
So is it like gambling from your perspective, or how should they be regulated when you think about it?
Given presumably you're not that regulated, but you you have a set of standards that you're working around.
I I think the big challenge is how do you balance the value that a prediction market can provide to society beyond it's just entertainment, right?
Like what is the what is the value beyond entertainment of I'm betting on who's going to win the Super Bowl?
Like, and so we have to decide do we think that's an acceptable form of entertainment?
But the the promise of prediction markets is theoretically that you can also surface new information about things that have not yet happened that might be valuable for the public to know.
The question is then, like, when does that cross into insider trading?
Like for me, I feel I've never bet on a prediction market because I would feel uncomfortable about like I come out of the field with a survey, I then know what's happening in the Texas primary, and therefore I can know, hmm, I think candidate X, Y, or Z is probably up.
And if I really trust my data, why don't I put a couple thousand bucks on this bet?
And I just don't feel right about that.
I it's something about it feels like insider trading.
Is that insider?
You're just having more insight, right?
That's kind of an interesting example.
You have some in is that insider, or is that was your own data?
So I I I don't I think you're right that that's not insider trading in the way that, but it is like it is non-public information that I would be using to benefit.
It's not the same as being an insider at a company where there are the Show around that.
But I think it's that that muddying of the waters, right?
And so you've been seeing this too with some of these markets that have had bets around things like will the United States do military operation X?
And all of a sudden, right before it happens, you see somebody bets like $300,000 on yes.
Yes, because they're sitting next to Trump in the White House and they just heard it.
Right.
And like, and so I do think that that that's that raises some real questions.
If we're gonna have rules around insider trading, when does that start to bleed over into what is or is not allowable conduct in terms of prediction markets?
You know, but sometimes it's not insider.
Like uh it sounds crazy, but when Warner Brothers was seven dollars and that all the bidding started, I'm like, oh, these rich people will pay anything.
And so I bought 10 shares.
Because I was like, and it was only 10, because I was like, I think they're dumb, stupid money.
So they're gonna overpay.
And I just and I took myself out for a nice dinner because I was right.
And that was information I had, but anyone could have figured it out.
Dumb, stupid money, for example.
And thank you for the dinner, Allison's.
I appreciate it.
When you have these things doing this, when they're putting in this, it's sort of they kind of muddy the line.
There's also these betting on heinous things, right?
Which makes it feel like gambling.
And then attracting female users is a problem.
They've got a bad reputation from the get-go, including attracting the attention of regulators, right?
Like in terms of their bad behaviors.
Yeah.
So when when I look at the polling I've done on this, and again, in disclosure, I did polling uh for um an organization, it's all it's all publicly available, but sort of an entity that like I think invests in uh some of these prediction markets.
And in general, just a lot of people don't know that much about them.
Like that doesn't necessarily mean that everybody loves them.
They're pretty split on whether it's good or bad, but everybody's got an added an attitude about it.
Everybody has like an opinion of some sort.
But when we ask about prediction markets, like half of Americans have no idea how they feel about it.
Um, most have not heard anything in the news about a prediction market in the last 12 months.
So there is a real risk and real opportunity for that industry, and it's why they're trying to get out ahead of it and say, hey, right now, like in my data, it showed it too.
If it's if you are male, if you are under the age of 50, if you are higher educated, higher income, like you are the most likely to know about prediction markets and be interested in them and think they're a good thing.
And so they're trying to fit say, okay, we've got to tell our story, or someone else is gonna tell our story.
And that's why you're seeing efforts to try to expand beyond that initial core.
So they've got an opportunity despite all the bad, the bad press, but it seems like the bad press keeps piling on this US pilots jet thing.
I thought, oh my God.
I thought that was a good thing.
And this is the for, you know, for any for a platform that has control over what markets can be made and and not made, you know, having that judgment of what where's the upside?
Is that is the upside in map maximizing the sorts of things people can bet on and not restricting it too tightly, knowing that we're gonna have a couple of these that are like cringe worthy versus more tightly regulating it, sort of playing it safer, you have higher upside in terms of your favorability, but you then as a platform are in that role that you will recall the social media companies did not want to be in when it came to like deciding where's the boundaries of political speech?
Like, how do you decide what constitutes a market that is out of bounds?
Like so you don't want to be in that business.
So there's some of them that did better by looking safer, right?
Like right now from the polling, do you think that doing what anything goes is a particularly good way to do it?
No.
And I I think there there is a significant difference between people's comfort level with prediction markets as a sort of adjacent to the sorts of betting and chance things that they know.
But it's it's slightly better than just chance because you can use your own judgment to say, okay, I think X, Y, and Z is gonna happen.
You can use your own smarts toward it accordingly.
I think that's why it could have a slightly better, it it could wind up with people liking it more than they like something like sports betting, where you're just like, oh, I hope this team wins.
I like them.
Um, but there are real downsides if you have people creating these horrible or unsavory markets where it feels like you've just turned something very serious into something grotesque.
No, it feels like we're into cock fighting.
That's what it feels like.
We're like in the cockfighting mode.
Like, I I don't mind a little bit of a boxing match, but I don't really want to watch animals rip each other apart, right?
Either, like some people do, but it sort of feels and has that sort of stink to it.
Um let me uh last question this you know, Scott is absolutely saying your your business is finished.
Um, you're out of work because of them.
Give one more answer to Scott Gallley, please.
Smack him, smack him back to last Sunday.
Uh, the look, the political polling industry is going to be fine because when we are in moments of deep uncertainty, that is the moment when people, companies, trade associations, you name it, people are the most hungry to know what the heck is everybody thinking?
Where is this all headed?
And with the understanding that polling is not the only or perfect way to get a read on that, but is a, as I described it, like a load-bearing pillar.
It's it's a really important input.
I mean, when the world is in a moment of turmoil or dramatic change, that is when people want this data more than ever.
And where something that is trained on polling data, but kind of off and not quite there is not gonna be as as much as real polling is imperfect, it's still the real thing.
Yeah, I always am like, I always with Scott, I'm always like, what's in there?
Who's doing it?
Who's doing the betting?
I don't know who they are, right?
Like it could be a bunch of it probably is a bunch of white bro millennials.
That's who, and I don't that's their opinion, not everybody's opinion.
That's my thing.
And especially if there's not a lot of women in there, there's not a lot of different economic groups.
You don't get a really particularly good sample.
That's my feeling.
It's like when we get closer to the election, the safest and healthiest way to consume polling data is just take it and throw it in the average.
Don't panic about any one individual poll.
Everything's gonna be all right.
No, thank you.
Well, I don't know about the last part.
I don't know about the last part, anyway.
Uh you you crazy bastards, you know.
You know, like I say, every accusation is a confession.
Uh, anyway, uh, let's go on a quick break.
When we come back, open AI gets into podcasts.
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For the last 10 years, everything in American politics has basically revolved around one man.
And as a political journalist who came of age during Donald Trump's rise in 2016, I've had a front row seat.
I am officially running for president of the United States.
It's going to be only America first.
America first.
Thousands of supporters of President Trump stormed the U.S.
Capitol building.
But is it possible to talk about politics without talking about Donald Trump?
That's the question I'm gonna ask in our new show from Box.
The idea of like a post-Trump or not exactly Trump focused show can exist because he's not really driving any agenda items.
It really does feel like so reactive.
You know, I think this Iran thing is also gonna cause a big split in the GOP.
So far, it doesn't among like people who say they're MAGA voters are still with Trump, but like for the first time you see on a major issue, open opposition from the start of this war.
I'm a stead herndon.
And welcome to America actually.
Hi, I'm Brene Brown.
And I'm Adam Grant.
And we're here to invite you to the Curiosity Shop.
A podcast that's a place for listening, wondering, thinking, feeling, and questioning.
It's gonna be fun.
We rarely agree.
But we almost never disagree, and we're always learning.
That's true.
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Kristen, we're back with more news.
You just sort of talked about this, the idea of where you get your narrative and information from.
It has to be good and wide.
So OpenA has acquired the Tech News Podcast TBPN.
The online talk show focuses by the minute analysis of tech news and interviews with top tech leaders.
TPBN averages 70,000 viewers per episode across everything.
And let me just say they are tiny compared to Pivot and other things, tiny, tiny, tiny.
That said, it's become popular among a certain group of Silicon Valley power players who go on it because they want to be licked up and down all day.
Oh, I'm sorry, boys.
Is that did I say that too wrong?
Okay, sometimes you're spiky and fun, but really it's pretty much a up to me PR.
Um OpenAI says the show will stay editorially independent, which we do not believe.
Um, talk about this idea of buying narratives when you when you're thinking about it, because you know, a lot of people want to, you know, have you you do polling so you have better narratives and craft messages.
That's one of the things you do for people is tell them how to craft their messages.
Talk a little about this effort, and you know, that's in the backdrop of um of many company, many tech companies trying to buy into uh into uh various things like Paramount, et cetera.
So uh what this reminds me of is there's actually a a piece out in today, which I guess we're the day we're taping this, uh, New York Times, David Plough, who I think is very like still one of the smartest minds on the Democratic Play.
Please it was yeah, this piece is essentially saying that everything is content creation now.
That if you are running for office, if you are engaged in politics, the most important thing you need to be doing is creating content.
That if you are relying on anybody else to get your message out but you, you are foolish, um, and that you need to essentially have a studio within your campaign headquarters where you are just nonstop producing content because everything now is is that.
Uh, I think that's really smart.
Um, you know, I think about that in terms of like look at the media properties in the political space that are really like thriving and doing exciting stuff now.
The like the pucks and the punch bowls and all of that.
I mean, they're very focused on like we are constantly creating content, we're finding a million new channels to do it.
Sometimes it's in-person events, sometimes it's digital, but it it is a like always-on kind of approach.
And I think companies realizing this uh is probably smart, although there's a de there's a flip side to this, which is you know, we've we've been going through a moment in the last few years where it feels like, you know, everybody, everybody's got a new podcast, Kara.
You know, everybody's like, ah, I'm gonna create content.
If you build it, they will come.
And that's not true at all.
Lots of people can build podcasts that or you know, create content that sort of goes out into the ether to die.
And especially if it doesn't feel authentic, if it feels driven by a corporate narrative, it it starts to lose some of what might make content great otherwise.
So, like I imagine there are a bunch of candidates who could take Pluff at at his word and start doing what he says and would produce terrible content.
Yes, it has to be good and genuine.
Yeah, you're right.
100%.
Yeah.
So he that was a really interesting piece, and I really I like David.
And it was absolutely true.
Although it's kind of like no shit, Sherlock.
I was like, what?
You're kidding.
The content's important.
And you can't do it.
No, but see, you you and I think like, oh yeah, no kidding.
But it it is truly this idea that politics is now about being always on media messaging nonstop.
Like that is actually something that is not native to a lot of people.
Which is important.
I think Donald Trump has proven that for many years, obviously.
Now it's getting the the show's getting a little old in the tooth right now and kind of crazy, but that's all right.
It's a little like network at the very end, um, when Howard had some problems.
Um, but you know, you see AOC did it from the get-go, was very genuine to herself, and she's obviously talking her own book, but it's very effective.
Same thing with mom Donnie, who's been very good.
And he's continuing to govern that way.
If you notice all his really interesting, and they're good.
They're good, they're fun and they're they're creative.
Um, you don't have to agree with them to not say, wow, look at that.
That's really well done.
Um, especially during Snowstorm, he did a couple of good ones that were just sort of big, it wasn't political, it was just here's how we're doing it, and they were funny and quirky.
His whole thing, there was one he did the smile, where he has that weird smile, and they made his whole staff made fun of his smile.
And I thought that was it was based on the movie smile, which was a horror movie, which was funny.
It's just he's very on top of things, and so are a lot of, by the way, Republicans.
Some Republicans do a good job at it.
Uh, not not as many, but Trump certainly, absolutely, for many years has done a really good job.
I think the problem with these things is people don't realize tech has tried this a dozen times.
Many years ago, Yahoo tried to do a news product, and that didn't work because they weren't doing any original reporting or anything else.
They're just mouthing stuff.
Andrewson Horz famously had a blog and called me and said they were going to beat me at my own game.
And I'm like, good fucking luck.
First of all, media is hard and it doesn't make money.
Like you're you're entering a really like, like, what are you doing?
And it didn't work.
They've tried a number of times, though, that particular group.
And you know, it's always sort of failed.
AOL did it a little bit, like around the edges, tried to, you know, to create some, and it just doesn't happen.
So I think one of the things is I get that you feel more comfortable in these settings where people are a little bit like, your giant brain is so smart.
Tell me how that works.
And I think that has value, by the way.
You know, it's startup people are always interested in how did I do that, right?
How did you do that?
And they don't want any pushback.
They just want to hear your techniques, whatever, even if it's PR.
But eventually it's not truthful, right?
Of like the real struggles companies had.
And when you have a little friction with a reporter, it does create really interesting conversations.
And the only person I would look to would be Apple Steve Jobs.
He kept coming back to be interviewed by me, even though I know I irritated him, right?
Because it was an interesting conversation and it would help him.
It clarified things.
Um we were fair with him at the same time.
I don't think we ever pulled any ridiculous, stupid, snarky moves.
But in a lot of ways, I feel responsible for this kind of nonsense because they just don't want to talk to anyone they consider difficult and would prefer to be.
And I don't think that is the best outcome editorially.
I just don't.
I just don't think it becomes I think there'll be a backlash and they'll start talking to actual reporters that are fair.
That's my feeling.
But I don't know.
Maybe I'm hoping I don't really want to talk to them anymore anyway.
So it doesn't matter in some level.
But I don't know.
We'll see.
It's a small amount of money to pay for possible good PR in a new fresh way.
Is it a small amount of money?
I feel like the reporting was that it was not a small amount of money.
Yeah, but for them, it's a small amount of money.
And they've said that essentially on the show, is like that was a lot of money.
We're taking it and running.
And that will be the end of it, I suspect.
But it's glad it's glad they have people telling them they're great.
That's really good because they need that.
Because you know, money doesn't seem to make them happy.
Um, in any case, we'll see.
Do you see a lot of are you impressed by a lot of political um outfits?
Give me, give me things that you think are have done it well uh in the political space or of corporate space.
Well, yeah, so I'll I'll cross party lines and say that I I think that AOC is somebody who an example that I always give um of something that she did that has just like lodged in my brain, and I wish every politician would understand that this is the way the world works, is she appeared on um a skincare influencers platform.
This was like two or three years ago.
This wasn't, this isn't terribly recent, but she went on to talk about uh sunscreen regulation.
Like right now, if you try to buy sunscreen in the US, there are sunscreens that are better elsewhere in the world, but you cannot get them here.
They're not FDA approved.
Um, they're not dangerous, everything's fine with them.
They just, for whatever reason, you can't get them here.
And so she went on the skincare influencer show to talk a little bit about that specific issue.
And like, isn't it crazy that you can't get these good sunscreens here?
Which is not an issue that is obviously right-left coded, or if anything, it's almost more right-coded.
It's like, hey, the government is regulating away your right to have this really good sunscreen.
Um, but she went somewhere where people who are not necessarily gonna tune in and watch her on MSNBC or MS Now, whatever we're calling it.
Um, you know, that that's not the audience she's going after.
She's going after people who might be much more loosely attached to the political process, but she's getting herself in front of them on an issue that they care about with some credibility, and that opens the door then to say, hey, come follow me.
Like you may not follow members of Congress because that may seem lame and horrible, but I am not as lame and horrible as the rest of them.
So follow me.
And you build that audience.
And I think most politicians, if you were like, go on a skincare inf, I mean there you wouldn't want that for most of them, but just whatever the equivalent of that is.
Like, you want to talk about emissions regulations?
Like go on a car podcast.
Like, I just I think that most people in Washington aren't really thinking in that gear.
And that is where the future is going to be one.
Yeah, it's not and also corporations too participating.
I think Wendy's does a good job.
I think King Arthur Baking.
You can you can name a dozen of them.
Sometimes they can spin out of control, but often it's a really interesting uh way to sort of genuinely explain yourself to people in a as long as it's not cringe, right?
In some fashion, over advertising.
I 100%.
I I mean, if you're not out there, if you're not telling your story, someone else is.
So it's important to go out there.
It's important to be in places where it's not just it's important to be in, I think, non-obvious places, but I also th that like the tension is then you don't want to do stuff that's forced and feels cringe worthy.
Um, but just letting letting the other side own the airspace or letting your opponents own the airspace is is not really as much of a viable option.
Yeah.
Very quickly.
Um obviously banks and advisors are working on the SpaceX IPO dealer being required to buy subscriptions to Grok, Musk's terrible AI chatbot.
Um, they they're gonna do it anyway, because they'll do anything it takes.
They'll say, sure, we'll buy your shitty product for if you'll give us the banks.
Um he's also asked them to advertise on X, was less insistent on that request.
Obviously, they're gonna all do it.
Uh that I'm not surprised by, but I'm just curious.
Have you done any polling on Elon now?
Post, post you know, he's now gonna be very wealthy again, once again, more wealthy than he was before.
How where is his polling?
Have you done much on on where he sits?
Because he's about to enter the political spectrum again quite significantly, it looks like.
I mean, I still think that he has residual favorability from Republicans, who I think have by and large forgotten his well, the I was gonna say the very big public falling out that he had with Trump.
Oh, that got fair very ugly, very uh quickly, quickly.
Um, that that all but seems to have been kind of memory holed at this point.
Um, but it but there is still that lingering negativity from Democrats.
It may not be as acute.
I mean, I I have not heard reports of like protests outside Tesla dealerships in the way that you had about a year ago.
So it feels like the temperature has turned down, but it is not as though anybody has like converted back to liking him or not liking him.
Wherever you were a year ago, you're probably still in about the same place.
So when when you're a Republican getting money from him, it's worth it, correct?
Now, or is it a bad thing?
Because he lost in Wisconsin, he lost a lot of his presence tends to be a problem for some people.
I think he is not as much of a potent lightning rod as he was a year ago when we were in the midst of Doge being in the news every single day, some new agency getting shut down or somebody getting fired, or something happening that was causing causing some stir, you know, him showing up in the White House, him in the White House with one of his kids, you know, that like those we're that's not happening anymore.
And so I think him having less him be he is less of a lightning rod today than he was a year ago.
So I I think that would probably lessen any, you know, downside to having him just give us the money.
But he shouldn't act up again, correct, Gareta?
I as last time I was on your show, I said like less chainsaw, more Mars, and I stick to it.
I think to the extent that he has spent the last year doing less chainsaw and more Mars, I don't think that it's necessarily that he's won back anybody from the left, but I do think that the temperature has been turned down around him to where he's a little less radioactive.
Right.
Less chainsaw, more Mars.
That's what you gotta do.
Build your fucking rockets, Elon.
I've said that over and again, and I think you were absolutely right back then.
All right, Kristen, one more quick break.
We'll be back for wins and fails.
It's today explained.
President Trump has not made a coherent case for his war in Iran.
And last night he said he's not ending it yet.
We're going to hit them extremely hard over the next two to three weeks.
We're going to bring them back to the stone ages where they belong.
His ally Tucker Carlson has been making a very coherent case against the war.
Because it doesn't serve American interests uh in any conceivable way.
And and let me just say that if it does in some way serve the interests of the United States, I'd I'd love to hear it.
I haven't heard of it.
On Tuesday, we asked Carlson about his break with Trump and about how the Trump coalition is splintering as some young conservatives abandon the president and embrace something darker.
It becomes like all of a sudden, like, hey, you kids, why are you listening to Elvis Presley and that rock music is bad?
Like all of a sudden, Fuentes controls the conversation and becomes the cool kid.
And the net effect is to make the Holocaust a joke.
Today explained, every weekday, wherever you get your podcasts.
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Jeff Bezos didn't invent this idea, but he did push his team to invent what would become Alexa and the Amazon Echo.
Two things that brought voice computing into millions of homes around the world.
This week on Virgin History, our chat show about the best and worst and most interesting products in tech history, we're telling the whole story of the Echo and how Amazon managed to get it right and still kind of miss the future.
That's Virgin History on YouTube and wherever you get podcasts.
This week is the 50th anniversary of Apple.
And so this week on The VergeCast, we're taking stock of where Apple is five decades into its existence.
How's the company doing?
And we also decided to do something slightly ridiculous, which is identify and rank the 50 best Apple products of all time.
After a lot of hours of debating, I think we finally got there.
That's on the VergeCast this week, along with the state of OpenAI as it raises a ton of money, tries to go public, and tries to convince you that you also love AI.
All that on the VergeCast, wherever you get podcasts.
Okay, Kristen, let's hear some wins and fails.
You go first.
All right.
Well, we're gonna talk space.
Um, and this is a w mine is a win and a fail combined.
A win is that as you and I are recording, probably right about uh now, Americans are flying around the backside of the moon.
That feels like the biggest possible win.
The fact that these that the rocket took off and it was fine and it wound up working is unbelievable.
But the fail is the toilets do not seem to be staying in operation on this.
This is a subject of great interest to my daughters.
Uh they are they are like really, really, really trying to keep up on the what is the status of the toilets on this uh Artemis.
I think Orion might actually be the name of like the part that they are in, but uh so it's both a win and a fail.
I think NASA has shined itself up a little bit.
It's always it's been sucked away by Bezos and Musk, but I think NASA feels kind of cool.
I think their social media is excellent.
I think Victor.
Victor the pilot is such a hunk.
Like, like all of them are are uh and and all the the whole team uh are amazing.
They have a great inspirational message.
I mean, just every time you hear them talk, and it doesn't feel like hyper media trained either.
Again, to what we were talking about earlier, with like it just feels like you found genuinely incredible people and are sending them to do an incredible thing on behalf of humanity.
Yeah, I agree.
I think they they just are doing flawless speaking of social media, flawless social media.
I haven't seen one thing that I've the pictures are beautiful, the the the enthusiasm again, it doesn't feel cooked in some fashion.
Um the fail is the the continued sort of, I know you like you said, I'm not clutching my pearls, but come on.
I think people are sick of this, and I think there's gonna be a significant backlash to politicians that I think there's a real uh opportunity for people to be funny and nice and you know, sort of more open-minded rather than dunking dunking dunking.
I I just have this I think what Trump is doing is is a step too far.
And he I can't even believe I'm saying that because I oh I'm never that person who goes, Oh, you're kidding.
Can you believe what he said?
I always believe what he says because I think he's like that.
Um, but I do think people are tiring of it.
And I I think even though they're sloughing it off, they're not sloughing it off.
They're, you know, ugh, that's him.
I think there's more, it's like I'm tired of hearing this now.
And I think there's a real opportunity for politicians to make people feel better.
Like I know in political life in general, and not, but and also not um do it in a stupid way where you just pretend it's not happening, like that kind of thing.
So I do think that's been a real fail, and I do think it's a pro it's a bigger problem than people think.
That's one.
Uh my win is the Netflix documentary Dynasty, the Murdochs.
Um, I have to say I watched this like I knew everything about the Murdochs.
I really do.
I'm in this documentary, by the way, on Netflix.
Um, it's about the Murdoch Empire.
I found out stuff about Ruben Murdoch that was fascinating.
I thought it was incredibly uh Liz Garbus directed it.
I thought it was a terrific documentary.
I learned a lot about this very I thought it was very fair to the family at the same time, um, sad to watch, you know, this kind of fall apart.
And I'm endlessly fascinated by Rupert Murdoch, but uh and you know, he's getting he's getting on in years and everything, but I do think it was a really interesting documentary.
Um, and not just because I'm in, although I think I'm spectacular in it.
No, I'm kidding.
No, the people who are mostly who've done all the reporting at the Times um did an amazing job.
And so I recommend it.
I recommend watching it.
It's he's he's a unique political figure, as you know.
But I learned a lot from the documentary.
Have you seen it?
I have not.
I will say the the last movie that I watched that referenced Rupert Murdoch was I rewatched The Devil Where's Prada from 2006 in preparation for you know the the rebirth, uh two two devils too furious that's coming up.
Yeah.
Uh and he is mentioned.
There's a there's a scene where uh it's it's when Meryl Streep's character, Miranda Priestley is sort of her her uh husband is divorcing her, and she says, like Rupert Murdoch should cut me a check for all the papers that I've sold for him.
Yeah, like assuming that like she fuels, you know, all these gossip she talks about frag headlines, and so yeah.
Anyhow, I haven't seen the movie you were talking about, but I did see Devil Where's Prada.
Yeah, it's a series, a couple of episodes.
It's really good.
Uh I I shouldn't say this, but I'm I'm in the Devil Where's brought it too.
Shh.
Oh, this is exciting.
Yeah, it's like I'm sure it's blinking you'll see it, but uh they did a lot of uh it was reported already and it the reports were true.
Um I don't know if they've cut me, but I I'm there.
I get to play myself a lot, Kristen, besides uh in uh on Billboards and Times Square.
Uh but I actually for some reason I'm the go-to person now.
If they have AI in the plot, they bring in terrorists.
It's like Wolf Blitzer.
So there is, I have I have one funny story about this.
Um, you know that movie Edge of Tomorrow, or it used to be called like or like lived I repeat is what they rebranded.
I love and Tom Cruise.
Fantastic movie.
At the beginning, there's a scene where it's Jake Tapper interviewing, and it's a panel where it's like Olivier Knox from I I think he was at the post at that time.
Um, Kiki McLean, Democratic Strategist, and then Tom Cruise is in the middle.
But like that scene never happened.
They edited him in and they edited Tom Cruise on top of Ross Dowfitt.
Ah, perfect.
I like it.
I'm there for it.
So I was I was watching the movie and I was like, was like I didn't know who is the Republican that was on set that day that got edited out to be Tom Cruise.
Was it me?
I don't think so.
Oh, yeah, that would be harder.
Wow.
Okay, good to know.
I love that movie.
Anyway, we want to hear from you.
Send us your questions about business tech or whatever's on your mind.
Go to ny mag.com slash pivot to send a question for the show.
Or call 855-51 pivot.
Okay, that's the show.
Again, thank you for joining me today, Kristen.
Christian, everyone should watch her bowling.
She also appears on in on CNN.
And she's does wonderful stories in the pieces in the New York Times, which I learn a lot from.
Just l just, she lets the voters speak.
And actually it's really interesting to hear them, because it's a little more um complex, and that's why it's great.
And that's important to understand the complexity of all this.
Anyway, uh, thanks for listening to Pivot.
Be sure to like and subscribe to our YouTube channel.
We'll be back on Friday.
Thank you, Kristen.
Thank you for having me.
Today's show is produced by Laura Nayman, Zoe Marcus, and Taylor Griffin.
Ernie Enderd engineered this episode.
Rich Shibley edited the video.com slash pod.
We'll be back later this week for another breakdown of all things tech and business.
Sam Altman, Pivot's Not for Sale.
Sorry, so sorry.
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