
Charlie Kirk Murder, Assassination Culture in America, Jimmy Kimmel Suspended, Ellison Media Empire
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Okay, everybody. There's no easy way to start today's show. Eight days ago, Charlie Kirk was savagely murdered while doing what Americans love to do, debate. And when someone is senselessly killed like this, especially at a young age and at the hands of another human, try to make sense of it. It's only natural. And uh it's hard to imagine anything worse than a young father of two, just 31 years old, and entering the best and most productive years of his life, being killed by a 22-year-old who's barely out of adolescence. Our hearts go out to the Kirk family, his friends, fans, and every American who understands that no one should be killed for expressing their beliefs. That's the core of the great American experiment. So, let's keep that experiment alive today and the memory of Charlie Kirk by continuing the great debate. Besties, there's a lot to process here as a community, a country, a society, and uh I just want to check everybody's temperature at the top of the program. We're obviously not going to do a cold open here because that would be inappropriate. But Shmath, how are you processing the last 8 days? I actually wrote down something as well, which I normally don't do. I just like to kind of react. But let me just read that and then maybe we can just talk from there. So to me, what Tyler Robinson illustrates is the emergence of a lost generation that was shaped by co I see years of isolation, a reliance on screens, and an immersion in online subcultures that have created a vacuum where some young men are drifting in without any grounding. No institutions, no friends, no communities, no family. And out of that void, I think what comes out can at best only be called ideological incoherence. Somebody used the word salad bar extremism. These individuals are not clearly aligned with any one ideology completely, but they seem to be assembling fragments of memes, of conspiracies, of cultural signals into an unstable identity and in some cases now it's exploding into violence. I think the most troubling consequence isn't just the facts themselves, which is abhorentt, and I and I feel incredibly bad for all of Charlie's friends and his family and his children, obviously himself. But beyond the act itself, there's an enormously chilling effect, I think, on public discourse. When you express an idea, it cannot be that then you risk becoming a target because the ultimate outcome of that is fewer people will then enter the public debate. And then what happens is the range of acceptable dialogue really narrows and it only leaves space then for the most benign voices in the public square. And if you have that kind of anodine discussion, I just think you have very bad outcomes for society. I've watched a lot of his content since he was murdered and I'm still trying to grapple with why people could not shout the man down if they disagreed with him and instead shot the man down. And I think that that is a completely unacceptable response for what he thought. That's what >> well said. Uh Freeberg, your >> I think it wasn't his controversy, it was his effectiveness. He was too smart, too open, too honest, too willing to engage in discourse, too willing to debate. He was too effective in changing people's minds. And I think that's why he became such a cultural threat. And it wasn't necessarily the things he said because there are people out there who say far more controversial things than Charlie. It's that he sounded sensible and he changed people's minds through his discourse. And as he changed people's minds, I think he became a real threat to the ideologies that he spoke up against. And I think that's why he was targeted. And it's obvious that if he wasn't as effective as he is, if he wasn't as smart, as empathetic, as optimistic, as honest, as direct as he was, he wouldn't have been a target perhaps. And it was very sad. One of the things that we've seen is the power of going direct. Sort of like what we did with this podcast. He went direct. He went to college campuses, but he also recorded it and put it on the internet. And millions of people saw it. and that new form of media, that new form of communication where someone can actually have a town square, the internet, that they can stand at and speak their mind and be heard. There's no longer these filters and these controlling powers of influence that decide what we get to know and not know and what our opinions need to be. The media and the traditional kind of systems are being degraded. I think it's important to continue that. And I think one of the things that I've been optimistic about, I was very sad and angry the day this happened. I called Jamaat. I was actually tearful that day. But since that time, I think it's been amazing to see the optimism not just from one side, but from a lot of different people from different backgrounds standing up and saying discourse is so important and re-underwriting this American process. So, I'm very sad, but I'm very hopeful that people take this as a sign of how important this discourse is. >> Saxs, I don't know if you knew him, but obviously he was instrumental, I think, in um the MAGA movement, the conservative movement, and moving so many young people over to it. Did you know him? Did you interact with him? What was he like? And and and how are you feeling 8 days into this? I know this is the second assassination attempt, third actually in this recent political season. Two on Trump and now this one. So this feels um pretty dark. How are you feeling? >> Yes, Jason. I knew him and I considered Charlie a friend. I started doing his show, his radio show a few years ago. He invited me on and I came on his show and he proceeded to have me back. I mean, I think I went on the show about half a dozen times. It was always on a wide range of issues, but usually when I was on his show, we talked about tech. We talked about things like censorship. We talked foreign policy. He was extremely versatile in the issues he could speak about. And you see that when he was speaking on campuses, he would really take on all comers and every possible issue would be thrown at him and he'd always have a wellthoughtout response. But in any event, I always tried to say yes to him. I always move things around my schedule when he asked me to come on the show. I just felt that he was a very positive person, very upbeat about the future. I think that he engaged in a very respectful type of debate with people. You see this on college campuses. He saw every opponent as someone that he could potentially persuade and convinced to convert to his side. You know, there are clips of him going around where he explains that we all have to engage in dialogue in a democracy because the alternative when we stop talking is that we become enemies. and eventually it leads to violence. And he was very concerned about the rise of assassination culture. He wrote about this months before his death. And so in a way he almost I don't think he saw his own death coming, but he definitely saw this disturbing rise of violence as the alternative to free speech and and open discourse. And he dropped out of college when he was 18 to start Turning Point. I mean, he was sort of a force of nature who put together this organization from scratch. and he would go on these college campuses and kind of put down his his soap box or tent and chair under a banner that said, "Prove me wrong." And he would engage people in conversation. Liberals like to use this term platforming. It's usually the prelude to, you know, justifying why someone needs to be denied the opportunity to speak on a tech platform, but Charlie wasn't platformed by somebody else. He created his own platform. You know, he created this organization from scratch. And he was platforming liberals or leftists or woke or whoever. He was giving them the opportunity to debate with him and his crowds got larger and larger. People liked to see him speak and engage in these debates and he was platforming the other side and giving them the opportunity. But like Freeberg was saying, the more he did it, the more it became clear that his views were very well thought out and often times the other sides weren't. And if one side became hysterical, it was always the other side. It was never Charlie. He was always sort of cool, calm, and collected. And he was winning the debate. He was winning the debate very effectively and I think he was revealing in a lot of cases that these woke students had these very strongly held views but they couldn't really explain beyond the level of cliches why they believe what they believe. I mean when he would just start to socratically ask them questions it was rare that you would get someone on the other side who could go multiple questions deep with him and and debate him with the level of knowledge that he had. And so I think that that fundamentally is why he was winning the debate. And that's why I think that so many people of his generation and younger were really paying attention is because he was offering them something that they weren't getting elsewhere. They weren't getting it through the school system. The school systems were kind of drilling into their heads this sort of woke catechism about what they're supposed to believe. And he was actually offering them critical thinking and dialogue and debate. And I think it's why young people were flocking to him in in droves. And I do think that ultimately the reason why he was killed is because he was so effective at engaging in this kind of debate. And we have it in the killer's own words. I mean, the killer signed this very detailed confession, I should say, texted it to his alleged roommate lover about why he did it. And he said that in his view, Charlie represented something hateful. And then I think the key thing he said right after that was the killer said, "I had enough of his hatred. Some hate can't be negotiated out." >> So in other words, there's no imperative to engage in dialogue or debate or discourse with people who disagree with you, countering their arguments with better ones. They just need to be silenced by any means necessary. That's basically the killer described his own motive is that he essentially just thought that there are views that just have to be silenced with extreme violence with murder and that that was justifiable. And I think this is what I think hit a nerve for the whole country. I mean, beyond those of us who knew Charlie and considered him a friend and how much sadness and grief that we have over losing him and for his wife and and for his kids are going to grow up fatherless now. I think that we all felt that this was a huge invasion of the town square of the marketplace of ideas. This happened on a college campus which is supposed to be the ultimate marketplace of ideas. It's supposed to be the place where people engage in reason discourse to work out our differences. And so it felt like an assault on the citadel of democracy. >> Freeberg, you set up this amazing panel we just released, which I think we all agree was kind of a sleeper panel at the at the summit with two of the heads of colleges and we talked deeply at the summit about dialogue and freedom of speech and and nurturing that. um your thoughts on sort of college campuses and the free expression >> whether it's the college campus or whether Charlie Kirk and that genre moves people via the internet. One of the things we talked about with the head of Berkeley and the head of Dartmouth is that college needs to be a place that teaches kids how to think, not what to think. And I think that was one of the things that Charlie exemplified better than anyone in this kind of modern media genre is showing people that you can have a discourse, you can have a debate, you can have a dialogue in the same way that as a group we've had fights, we've had disagreements, we've had different points of view that we challenge each other on. One of the things early on when we started doing this podcast was people telling me that they they thought it was so cool to see friends argue like this and have discourse and have debate and we still do it and I think Charlie exemplified that and that teaches people how to think and it allows them to form their own point of view. I do not believe in this notion that some system or some institution should be telling us what the truth is or what to believe or what reality needs to be. They can present us with the facts and the evidence that they've sourced and they can give us a recommendation. But ultimately, we need to have agency as individuals to form our own belief systems, to form our own opinions, to make our own decisions. And I think what made Charlie so powerful was his ability to teach people how to do that, how to have a discourse and reason your way to an opinion. And I think that's one of the things that's changed so much in the last 20 years is just this idea that, you know, there's truth and there's not truth and whatever one institution tells you is truth and the other institution tells you is not truth as opposed to giving ourselves individual agency. I wasn't his target audience and so I was aware of Charlie Kirk, but I I had only seen, you know, flipping through social media once in a while some of the clips. So, I took the time to, knowing we're going to talk about it here, watch at least 40 or 50 of these interactions, listen to a couple of his podcasts. And, you know, my takeaway from it was, to your point, Saxi was incredibly respectful to people he disagrees with, certainly more respectful than you at times, Sax, when we have debates. And he uh he was actually playful. He was gregarious with these kids when they didn't understand something. Um, and there's a lot of talk right now, people trying to, you know, point out where he was wrong. By the way, you don't get to murder somebody because you believe they're wrong. I know this sounds like uh the most obvious statement in the world. But what I came away with was he reminded me of all the Catholics, my family members I grew up with. He was for family values. He was against abortion. He had specific feelings on affirmative action or DEI that we all might agree with. might have said them at times in a spicy way or in a in a really full contact debate, but these were the same conversations I had with, you know, growing up. And, you know, this is this is, you know, a situation where I'm just perplexed and I guess it goes back to where you started, Chimath, that there are some number of people who are sick right now in our society and it seems to be young men. It seems to be the co generation. >> How does a person that is seemingly a 4.0 student on the right track getting a scholarship, how do you so severely go off the rails? And then how do you end up in a place where you believe that something like this is even tolerated or justified? How can a person that's that seemingly intelligent get to that place? from a conservative family. It seemed like he had his whole life ahead of him and was on a right track at a certain age. >> And if he's capable of it, how many other people are going to end up in that place? So what what is happening that basically allows these young men to become so unmed? >> I think a lack of socialization and I we don't know in this case but I I have very deep concerns about these SSRIs aderall. These kids have all kinds of mental health issues and then they get put on a lot of different prescription drugs. We don't know if that's the case here. So I'm I'm not speculating about that. But just talking about this generation in general, you know, if they are permanently online, they're part of these subcultures. If they are being, you know, having their brain scrambled with all these different drugs, many young people are on two or three different medications. And I'm not necessarily anti them, but I do have a concern of them being massively oversubscribed. His entire justification for this beyond the fact that it's completely abhorrent and unacceptable is also completely all over the place. I actually asked my team explain to me the things that this guy wrote down like where did they come from? One of it is from a video game called Hell Drivers 2. Another one is from the furry subculture. Another one is a fascist theme from a Netflix show. What is going on? >> Yeah. Well, look, I mean, we know some things about the killer's ideology from what his family said, from what other people who knew him said, and and from what he put in his own text messages explaining why he perpetrated this murder. And I think a big part of it was that in his view, the basically mainstream conservative views that Charlie was discussing were in his view, they were hateful and they were they were fascist. I think on one of the bullet casings he etched catch this fascist. He had this view that first of all that violence is justified as a way to end a political debate and that relatively mainstream conservative thought was so hateful and beyond the pale that it needed to be stopped. And I'd like to say that those views are so unusual that nobody else has them. But the truth is if you look at the data, if you look at polling, you see that there's been a huge rise on the part of young people and particularly on the left, although there's some on the right, but it's mostly on the left. They believe now that political violence can be justified. >> Yeah. >> And so you look, I mean, there's there's been many different uh ways of of getting at this. There was a a study I guess Rucker University the social perception lab they asked about whether the murder of Donald Trump or Elon Musk could be justified and >> insane >> 50% of left of center said yes 14% of right of center said yes even that number is shocking to me >> how could it be 1% >> but obviously it's it's three times greater on the left then they asked about destroying Tesla dealerships and protests whether that could be justified and roughly 60% of left of center said yes and 23% of right of center said yes. So there is I think an increasing view on the part of young people and this also coincides with similar declines in respect for the value of free speech. They've been pulling people of all different age groups and different political parties for many many years on whether they believe in free speech and those numbers have been on the decline again particularly among young people and particularly on the left and so you see it now in the data that there is a generation of young liberals I mean obviously not all to be sure but a sizable contingent who believe that the other side is so hateful that it's okay to use violence against them >> and then you Yeah, >> that is a huge societal problem because democracy ends when we can't debate ideas. >> What's at the root of it? I I have two things I think are at the root of this. I mean, I talked a little bit earlier about the medication uh that they're putting all these kids on, and I'm going to keep talking about it because we're talking about, you know, upwards of 20% of kids have been on SSRIs or on aderall or or some stimulant right now. And it's not possible that all these kids need this. And there is many other solutions to it. And then I'll add the algorithms. Not that an algorithm is responsible for the murder, but we are taking people down rabbit holes online. And in fact, Charlie's content was exceptional at engaging people, right? Short form, you know, really interesting debates and all that kind of stuff. And that combination of being online too much, being overmedicated, being isolated, you put all that together, Chimoth, I think that's what leads to these kind of extreme it >> theories and disconnects from reality. But we could also be dealing with somebody who's severely mentally ill. >> And we're trying to understand a severely mentally ill person. >> Hold on a second. Hold on. You're starting to sound a little bit like Paul Graham there. That this is just some sort of random nut. Here's why it's not just some random nut. First of all, we have an extraordinarily detailed statement and confession from the killer giving us a lens into his motives. But I would say the even bigger thing is the reaction of hundreds of thousands of people online >> who celebrated this murder >> who were gleeful >> who expressed some degree of happiness about it or >> tried to downplay what the killer had done by saying on some level that Charlie Kirk deserved it. >> So you have to ask Yeah. >> Where does that come from? And I think this has to do again with the ideology of the left, not the traditional like old left because I think the sort of old left really believe in free speech. Maybe anybody else, you know, like you know, folks like Nent. And so and by the way, I think guys who I would consider kind of more old left like Bernie Sanders and Ezra Klein >> put out excellent statements denouncing >> yes, >> this murder, agreeing with this core idea that political violence is never acceptable. And then they were shattered down which is insane to Ezra. He got he got crushed for >> that tells you something too. So look I think that the psychotic break if you will that is now occurring in a bunch of different cases may be exacerbated by who knows medication by isolation experienced during co or what have you. But there is clearly a huge ideological component to this that there are huge numbers of people even if they don't commit the crime themselves who celebrate it because they have had drums into their head for decades now the idea that the other side are fascists. Their leader is like Hitler. What do you do to Hitler? You have to stop him at all costs. Right? And I think that is a significant part of the problem here. Now you ask now where where does this ideology come from? I think it's coming from the school system. I mean, we've had now for the last couple of decades this sort of woke ideology, this cultural Marxism be taught through the school system where they drum into the kids that there are two kinds of people, oppressors or oppressed, and they divide people into these groups and say that the oppressors have to be stopped. And that's really as deep as the discussion gets. And if you want to get a sense for this exaggerated, destructive rhetoric, just look at the new book that has come out by Randy Weingarden, who is >> head of the teachers, >> basically the head of our school system because she runs the teachers unions and they're the ones who have all the political power. She wrote why fascists hate critical thinking. And by the way, this is not just an article. I guess Rolling Stone did an excerpt. This is an entire book. And the book is called Why Fascists Fear Teachers. So she's basically saying that Trump and all of his supporters are fascists. They have to be stopped. You've had this hyperbolic rhetoric. For a decade, you've had the press describe Trump as some sort of new Hitler. To use Scott Adams term, they've basically Hitlerized him. And so you you asked, you know, we don't know exactly where Tyler Robinson embibded all of these ideas, but you have to also take into account that probably since he was 12 years old, the media, the mainstream media has been beating into his head that the leader of the United States is a new Hitler and the worst thing that could ever happen is his return and his supporters are fascists. And I'm sure this has to play into, if not his thinking, the thinking of the people who are celebrating the death of Charlie Kerr because they have bought into this idea that the other side are fascists who have to be stopped at all costs. >> Yeah. I think it's important to point out as you did Mandami, Nancy Pelosi, gosh, AOC, Ezra Klein, they all came out just very strongly that this is horrible, unacceptable and and they con, you know, obviously think it's abhorent. So, I think that leadership is strong and I think that's what we need to see more of is people trying to tone this down and and yeah, not exacerbate it. >> Look, I I think you're right. I think that what we need to see from all of our political leaders is a condemnation of this murder in particular and political violence in general without any caveats whatsoever, without intimations that somehow Charlie Kirk deserved it, without this exaggerated rhetoric that the other side are fascist, that Trump is Hitler and so on. There just needs to be an unequivocal denunciation of this crime and political violence and the idea that we can settle our differences in this manner. >> Yeah. >> And I give credit to any liberal or Democrat politicians who say that. But unfortunately, that has not been the discussion. And I think that's been one of the most disturbing things about this is that if it had just been Tyler Robinson and everybody agreed that this is a heinous act, a heinous murder, I think that we wouldn't have had the same national conversation. So would have been awful. But I think the reason why this became such a national conversation is that we can all see that living among us, you have huge numbers of people who've been indoctrinated into what Scott Adams called this Hitler bubble. And I think it's a real question what we're going to do to get out of this this bubble >> because in order to have civil society, >> we have to have the ability to engage in conversations, to have political debates without fear of violence or murder. And when you have this sizable contingent of people in our society who've deviated from that, it makes you really worry for the future of our society. >> Absolutely. >> And it makes you wonder, what are we going to what are we going to do about this? >> And and there's a a whole trans angle to this that is being talked about, but maybe people are withholding a little bit. but he was answering a trans question when he was shot by somebody whose I guess girlfriend would be the right way to say it was was in the middle of transitioning. So there's many different angles here that we're going to uh try to understand over time. Yeah. >> Right. And then in response to that, you saw an ABC News reporter describe the text chain, which was a murder confession, as touching, >> you know, and so now I think that ABC reporter has >> published an apology. So, I'm not going to dwell on that part of it, but I think what you see here is an upside down morality. What Tyler Robinson did was an act of hate. The ultimate act of hate. He committed murder. He left a wife without a husband. He left two children without a father. It was the ultimate act of hate. But in his twisted mindset, it was somehow an act of love. And the question is, how do we get to this place? And again, if it was just Tyler Robinson, then we could just chalk it up to the the random nut theory. But >> well, and we don't know the random not who shot Trump. Like we don't have any information on that person either. So I'm >> right. But what bothers me more again are all these people in Reddit groups or online and blue sky which is just a cesspool of hate now who are >> celebrating >> celebrating to some degree. >> Uh no there there are definitively people celebrating. Yeah. This is why I really think one of the most constructive things that we can do coming out of this is we have to find out how to course correct these people. >> Actually JK Rowling had a really good tweet on this. So she says that if you believe free speech is for you but not your political opponents, you're illiberal. I mean I think we've known that for a while and I don't know if the woke left cares about that anymore. But any of it, she then goes on to say, "If no contrary evidence could change your beliefs, you're a fundamentalist. If you believe the state should punish those with contrary views, you're a totalitarian." And then I think the most important one is if you believe political opponents should be punished with violence or death, you're a terrorist. And I think actually this was an act of terrorism in the sense that it was designed to discourage other people from speaking out. Again, it was done in in the most public place in this town square. But I think what what Rowling is getting at here is that in order for civil society to survive, we're going to need some sort of minimum standard of decency. You know, I remember when we were in college, we used to have these like thought experiment type questions, which is how much if tolerance can a tolerant society tolerate, things like that. And I think we have our answer which is listen you can say whatever you want but our minimum standard of decency in a society is that you cannot use violence to settle political disagreements. And if you cannot accept that I mean really that should be the pledge instead of frankly Grover Norquist tax pledge or even the the pledge about deficit spending. I think we need a minimum decency pledge that political violence is unacceptable. And if you can't sign that pledge, you should not be participating in the discourse. >> I mean, the fact that you have to even suggest signing a pledge to not murder people you disagree with shows how far gone this all is. Um, and how disturbing it is. Uh, that that just should be something that is inherent in every human being in their operating system. You just don't murder people because you disagree with them. Um, all right. It's obviously, yeah, we're this is an evolving story. We don't have all the answers here, but >> you see the Jimmy Kimmel comments and should we play those and talk about it? >> Yeah, I guess it's a pretty good segue here. Um, so, uh, political discourse adjacent related uh, the fallout from the murder of Charlie Kirk is going to stay with us for some time here. ABC has suspended Jimmy Kimmel from Jimmy Kemmel Live indefinitely after he made the following remarks and pressure from the FCC and the affiliates of ABC. Here's the 15-second clip. We hit some new lows over the weekend with the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them and doing everything they can to score political points from it. in between the fingerpointing there was uh grieving. >> And he goes on to show a clip of Trump. >> Yeah. But I think you also left out that sentence right after that where he says, "Yeah, there was grieving, but it was like a four-year-old grieving the death of a goldfish." >> Yeah. So, um yeah, pretty inappropriate comments, I think. And here's the timeline of it. So, cuz there was some thinking this could have been a MAGA person because the parents were conservatives and during that breaking news, you know, maybe that first sentence wouldn't be as off-putting or inaccurate as it seems to be, but he said it Monday night, and this was 3 days after we knew about the anti-fascist bullet casings that Chimath was referencing. Hey, fascist catch, etc. And this was one day after Utah's governor was very clear that this was a murderer who had leftist ideology and one day after it was disclosed that Robinson had been living with a trans partner which may or may not turn out to be relevant. Uh you could totally have be gay or have a trans partner or any of that and may have nothing to do with this or it could have everything to do with this. So we'll have to wait and see. >> And Jake, wasn't the the weren't the text messages out by then at as well? Well, the text message with partner that's very good. Those those were actually released on Tuesday after the show aired and they usually tape in the afternoons for those nightly shows, just so people know that. So, there was enough information here that, you know, he was inaccurate or spinning the story, however you want to phrase it. It was clumsy. Megan Kelly put out a very long description of everything that was known prior to Jimmy Kimmel's remarks and there was a huge amount of information to indicate that this was someone who was in the grips of a radical leftist ideology and no evidence to suggest that they were somehow part of MAGA. And what Jimmy Kimmel did there was viciously lie. I think implying or stating outright that effectively Charlie Kirk was was killed by one of his own by a MAGA person thereby I think diminishing >> the crime somehow implying maybe that he deserved it and then he diminished the sincere grief and outrage that millions of people are feeling. you know, beyond those of us who were friends with Charlie and knew Charlie, but millions of people >> that is but that is okay. You know, in in free speech sachs, that statement, >> that's his choice. He might lose audience over it, but free speech protects him doing that. The challenge was did he say something that he knew to be not true and declare it as fact? And did that kind of >> was the reaction that he got? >> Yeah. >> Yeah. And so if he said something that he knew, >> well, just reading his sentence, you know, he was saying, "We hit some new lows over the weekend with the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them." So he's referencing The Weekend. So he, you know, you could say he's being disingenuous here, but I think he's not even supposed to be a late night comedian. >> It is inaccurate. It's highly inaccurate. >> It's a lie and it's a vicious lie. I'm not defending it, but it was not inaccurate that people were doing that speculation. During a podcast on Tuesday, FCC Chair Brendan Carr, who we all know, said the FCC would look into revoking the broadcast license of ABC affiliates because Jimmy Kimmel Kimmel was engaging in quote news distortion by falsely claiming Tyler Robinson was MAGA. On Wednesday, NextStar, one of ABC's affiliates, uh, that has 28 local stations, said it would be replacing Kimmel show with different programming. And there's now this backstory that NextStar is buying a rival for $6 billion. So, the speculation is like the CBS and Paramount situation where they fired Colbear on July 17th that they don't want to get caught up in uh having the 47th administration gumming up their M&A activity. And then ABC after all that pulled Jimmy Kimmel indefinitely. So I guess the question here s >> pull up the ratings. Pull up the ratings over time. >> We'll get to all that, but I just let me just >> ask the question. Do do you have concerns about the Sachs? Obviously you've been very pro free speech here. Do you think that this is overreaching? If he hurt people's feelings, if he said something inaccurate, do you think he should be the government should be taking him off the air or putting pressure on them to take him off the air? >> Well, no. The government shouldn't be ordering him to be taken off the air, but neither President Trump nor the FCC chairman Brennan Carr did that. The reason why Kimmel lost his job is because the two largest affiliates, which is NextStar and Sinclair, told ABC Disney that they wouldn't air it anymore. And I think part of this is due to the genuine offense that what he said, which okay, I guess you can put the best face you want on it. it was false and it was a flip way of describing something that was causing pain to millions of Americans. Nextar called his remarks offensive and insensitive. That is true. And then Sinclair said that they're going to air a Kirk tribute in in Kimmel's time slot on Friday. So look, I think this is about the affiliates first of all finding what he said completely offensive, but then secondarily the truth is that I think there's a lot of opportunism in this and this is really about poor ratings. Kimmel has even worse ratings than Steven Colbear who recently got cancelled because his show was too expensive and not enough people were watching it. And I think that what's happening here is the ABC affiliates are frankly they're seizing an opportunity to rid themselves of this money losing disaster and they're they're getting back that hour of television for other things. >> The question is whether Carr should have said we can do this the easy way or the hard way. these companies can find ways to change conduct and take actions on Kimmel or there's going to be additional work for the FCC ahead. That's what I'm sort of referencing in terms of the government putting pressure on these folks to to cancel him. >> Well, look, what Carr was asked whether by I think he's on Benny Johnson's show and Benny asked whether there's anything that can be done about this and then Carr said that there is a public interest requirement with respect to the broadcast networks. So if Jimmy Kimmel show was on a podcast or on cable, that public interest requirement wouldn't apply. But because those affiliates receive public spectrum for free, there is a requirement that the reporting be truthful to some degree and serve the public interest. And I think he was right to point that out. Now look, did it ever get to the point where the government ordered him off the air? No. It didn't need to get to that point. because the guy's show was a ratings disaster. Look, even John Stewart, who was a big late night host at one point, said, let me just read you his quote on not this topic, but about late night. He said, "Being a late night host is like operating a blockbuster video kiosk inside a Tower Records." In other words, the business model is totally obsolete. And I think that's what's ultimately driving this. Look, we never got to the point where the FCC took an action. And I think if we got to that point, then maybe we debate this issue of what the government should do. But we never got to that point. And I think it's because the affiliates decided on their own that it was time for Kimmel to go. >> Chamathy, your thoughts? >> It's mostly that if you just look at the ratings, the reality is that these folks get a lot more attention than they actually deserve. I mean, it is an anemically sad audience approaching zero. 160,000 people watch Jimmy Kimmel live. More people hate stream our show in one day on YouTube. You know what I mean? So it's like I mean so what are we talking about here? This is like the pimple of the pimple of the pimple of the dog's ass. So I think that people needed air cover to make a decision to cancel it today. And the reason why they wanted to cancel it today was if they didn't take this opportunity, they would have had to wait another year or two for his renewal to come up. And so I think that there was a economic motivation that was lingering for a long time before this happened. His show sucks. It's not very good at at a very basic social, cultural, economic reality, as these numbers demonstrate. Many many many millions of Americans who had a choice every day to listen to this guy voted with their feet that this show sucked. >> Let's move on. I will yeah say I agree that they made a very simple decision that was economic because these same networks ABC and CBS were more than happy when these shows were pulling in serious ratings and serious money back in you know 3, four, five years ago. They were doing much better which shows you how cable has come apart over the last couple of years. In 2022 ABC signed Kimble to three seasons 45 million. 2023 CBS sign on Coair to a three-year deal that will be ending and as you showed in that chart, it's been plummeting since then. Quick note, that's just for the very important 18 to 49 demographic. Obviously, they have a bunch of old boomers watching it on their cable channels. That's the discrepancy in those numbers. >> Nobody watches this. >> But I do have grave concerns over myself personally in what Brandon Carr is doing. I don't think the FCC >> can't do anything. Well, I can finish my sentence maybe. >> Okay. >> Or you can just interrupt me every time I start a sentence. And I'm We just talked about having civil discourse. Do you want to have civil discourse or you want to just shoot me down? >> I'm I'm civil in the first sentence. >> Please go ahead. >> I do have concerns over both how the administration is doing this. I think it's disgraceful. I didn't like the pressure they put CBS under to get Cobar canled and I don't like the pressure they're putting ABC News under. We should have a tradition of free speech and comedians should be protected even if you don't like what they have to say. This is the exact opposite of what many folks and why they backed this administration was to have less censorship. And we sat here on this program for many years talking about Biden censoring COVID talk and Biden censoring social media having the Twitter files a direct line in there to cancel this. I think that this can hold on let me finish. It's a dark moment for this administration uh to be so obsessed with trying to silence their critics and it's not going to work. It's only going to drive them to start podcast and do more of it. Yes. Go ahead. >> Can I ask you a question? >> Yeah. >> Well, first I make a statement. I think your comments are insane. But here's my question. >> I think you're also sophantic to Trump. >> What? What did I say? I said he didn't do anything. >> No, I think you're trying to suck it up to Trump by saying it's a terrible show. He's not funny. None of that matters in terms of freedom of speech. >> I'm trying to ask you a question. Do you think because the government did nothing? Let's just be clear. They did nothing. >> They threatened him >> after he was already can't. >> No. >> And they shouldn't be doing any pressure. The government should be staying out of >> Okay. Let me ask you a question. Yeah. >> Do you think the people that made the decision to dump Kimmel, what percentage of it do you think was the economic reality of a busted show? And what percentage of it do you think was the impingement >> of free speech as you characterize it? What percent How do you >> Absolutely. I think they would have let both of their contracts run out, renegotiate them with smaller dollar amounts, and reset the economics of those shows if not for the pressure put on them by the 47th administration. I think they would have just rode these shows out till their next contracts went out and then they would have renegotiated them at much lower amounts. >> You think Trump is the reason why Cole Bear got cancelled? What are you talking about? >> I think that the pressure >> this is like a whole mythology now that's been created. >> Not a pathology. I think they wanted to get the Paramount deal through. >> No, no. I think getting the Paramount deal through, the sale of the Paramount >> and I think they've settled a lot of these agreements because they don't want going away. >> Well, that that can all be true. Two things can be true at the same time. >> John Stewart understands the medium and he says it's a Blockbuster store. They can't wait to be rid of these guys. These guys are overpaid. They're entitled because they're grossly overpaid. They think they deserve this. By the way, free speech does not mean you have a right to an ABC show. Sorry. You actually have to be able to get ratings. You have to be talented. You have to be funny, which none of these guys are anymore. That's the reason they're getting cancelled. And >> exactly. >> You know what? They're talking about replacing Kimmel with, not another late night performer, Celebrity Family Feud. Like that's they're going to replace it with a game show. That's what they're talking about replacing. >> Great show, by the way. Yeah, great show. It's It's a more affordable show. They would not have cancelled either of these folks if it wasn't from pressure from the administration. The FCC head >> basically said, "We're going to do this one way or the other." So, I believe that this is the kind of thing we don't want to see out of the Trump administration. And by the way, Tucker Carlson, Glenn Greenwall, and I are all in sync on this. We all think that this is a bad look for Trump and the Trump administration. You guys can disagree, but that's what we do here. We have several disagreements. >> Where were all the people who were complaining this when Gina Corano got fired by Disney? Oh, I I absolutely felt that was inappropriate. I think that cancel I think there's cancellation now on both sides the in and I understand people are very hurt by what happened. >> Are you cool with Roseanne Bar getting fired? >> I am against anybody getting cancelled for their political beliefs. I was against it when they did it to the right and I'm against it when they're doing it now to the left. Is that clear? >> Let's talk about cancel culture for a second. I actually think that Dave Portoy had a great take on this. There is a legitimate question here about cancel culture, like should it ever be used, when should it be used? And I think Portoy made a really good point. He says here, to me, cancel culture is when people go out of their way to dig up old tweets, videos, etc., looking for dirt on someone. So, in other words, they're going through 10, 20-year-old tweets of yours. Maybe they find some joke that was either off color or impo taste or maybe it's just something they can spin as being that thing and it's done in an opposition research type of way, right? They decide they're going to go after you and so they sort through everything you've ever written. That's cancel culture. Okay. He contrasts that with somebody who is on live TV basically saying something that a ton of people find offensive, rude, and dumb in real time. So, in other words, this was not like opposition research. This was a spontaneous reaction to a deeply offensive and insulting and dishonest and false thing that Jimmy Kimmel said. And he already was on thin ice because his ratings are terrible and his syndicates want to get rid of him. And like Portoy says, that is not cancel culture. That is consequences for your actions. And I think he's right about that. And I am a free speech absolutist. If Jimmy Kimmel wants to create a podcast and say all the types of things he said on ABC, I got no problem. That's his right. He will not be censored. He can do that. Okay. And my view on the whole public interest requirement is what we should do is just auction off all the network spectrum. I think it is a can of worms to basically say to all these broadcast affiliates that we're going to give you all this wonderful free spectrum, but then you got to uphold the public interest. It's way too debatable what that means. I do think it basically invites challenges to what could be free speech. So, I think just get rid of the public spectrum. Just have an auction and we don't need free public spectrum for broadcasting. >> I definitely agree with that. In the era of the internet, you do not need you do not need public spectrum anymore. I think that that solution I think that that solution has a lot of positives beyond this issue. I think that >> the best use of that spectrum anyway. >> And just to go back to this idea of look, if someone in real time is advocating for the murder of someone for their political views or for any reason, maybe that does justify a spontaneous outpouring where it should be reported to their employer, hey, this person is saying this thing. if they're dancing on the grave of of someone, if they're praising that act of murder, you know, I have to say that again, I have a minimum standard of decency for civil society. And that minimum standard of decency is an unwillingness to engage in political violence or to celebrate political violence when somebody engages in it because otherwise we're down the path of civil war. I think we all understand that. So, I have to say that if someone's going to advocate for these views, I'm okay with there being a spontaneous reaction of people complaining about it. >> Yeah. >> And if that means that Jimmy Kimmel does a podcast instead of an ABC show in prime time, I'm I'm okay with that. I think, you know, the issue I have with any of these cancellations is when the president is asking the networks to cancel people during his, you know, 17 time a day press conference and working with a gaggle, he's literally telling them fire the last two and then the FCC chair is telling them to fire them and that they'll figure out a way to do it. That to me is the height of putting pressure on these companies and I think it's abortant. Okay, that's just my personal belief. You guys don't have to agree with it in this civil civil debate we're having here. Let's talk about Larry and David Ellison. They're making massive media moves both in legacy and social media. Let's talk about the legacy stuff first. Paramount Sky Dance merger is basically a month old and already CEO David Ellison, that's Larry Ellison's son, is looking to acquire Warner Brothers Discovery. As you probably know, they're run by David Zazlov. They own CNN, HBO, DC Comics, Discovery, a bunch of other brands. And that would put the Ellison's in charge of not just CBS News, which owns 60 Minutes, they would also own CNN, as everybody knows, Larry Ellison, big GOP donor in the past. And there also are reports, interestingly, that David Ellison wants to buy the free press from Barrett Weiss for 200 million and put her in charge of CBS in 60 minutes. That would be seismic in the news business. If you put those assets together, 200 million paid subs. HBO Discovery, 120 million paid subs right now. CBS reaches 80 million paid with Paramount Plus. And the Free Press is obviously niche and brand new. Uh but they're growing. They got 136,000 paid subscribers and, you know, almost a million followers across their social media. The second piece to this puzzle that's super interesting is social media. Oracle is now the heavy favorite to acquire Tik Tok and uh Trump said that was going to happen as part of the US and China negotiations that are ongoing for trade. So what are your thoughts here Freedberg? You wanted to talk about this is an interesting collection of assets coming under the Ellison umbrella. Is this strategic? Is this vanity? Is it a nepo baby with a huge pay, you know, blank checkbook? What are we seeing here? And what do you think? I mean, what do you do when you're worth a couple hundred billion dollars and you're 81 years old and you're thinking about what legacy you want to leave behind, except to perhaps empower your kid to build the largest, most influential media company in history. >> And I think that's the story that's unfolding in front of us. Not to mention, I think that the Tik Tok deal and Ellison's role in Tik Tok is going to be instrumental in realizing potential future distribution. So if you think about the way media has evolved, it used to be kind of centralized studio-based production models, the old Paramount, the old Warner Brothers, etc. And then there's been a lot of streamers that have come on that started to syndicate that content and contract for production of content like Netflix. And obviously Paramount Plus and HBO Max have their own streaming services to deliver their own content. But at the end of the day, there's kind of two big behemoths that each come at it from a different place. One is YouTube and the other one is Netflix. Netflix has historically been in the kind of scripted production or contracted production side and YouTube in the social production side. The alternative to that might be this consolidated merger and Tik Tok and now Larry Ellison's going to have a hand in both. And so there may be and I do think that there's going to be this convergence between this kind of socially generated content platform like a YouTube like a Tik Tok and the high value produced content like the studios like Netflix has been doing. And the reason is Netflix has had to compress margins on the content creators and we talked about this at our summit last week where a lot of the creators now that went to Netflix to get good deals or went to Amazon, they're all finding that the budgets are getting cut and that the only way these folks are going to get paid is like cost of production plus 10%. With cost of production getting squeezed and budgets getting squeezed by Netflix. So, as a creator, you may actually make more money by taking your content to a bigger audience with sponsors or advertisers on YouTube. And so, a lot of big-time creators, by the way, the audience at YouTube is over 10x bigger than it is on Netflix. So, Netflix is only paying to retain subscribers. Now, you know, subscriber growth is kind of slowed down a bit. At the end of the day, Netflix is just spending money on content to keep people on the platform. So if you take the incredibly rich content and production capabilities of HBO and all the Warner Brother discovery media properties and production houses underneath this combined company and you combine that with the direct to consumer distribution of Tik Tok, there may in the future be a merger between this media company and Tik Tok or a deep commercial relationship where imagine going on Tik Tok and you can now get premium content for 10 bucks a month or two bucks an episode and watch all of your HBO shows in the Tik Tok app or watch all of the discovery or all of the other content that's available. So, I do think that the distribution that has been delivered by this kind of social media model like YouTube and Tik Tok combined with the premium model may end up creating a real category killer that can challenge both YouTube and Netflix. And so, I would kind of look at this story as like a beginning of an unfolding of something that may rewrite the entire media landscape. I mean, when you look back on it, Freeberg Kenberg ha was maybe ahead of his time with Quibby. He wanted to try to make this bridge between the two the and and he just might have been too early or just didn't execute. >> Well, think about the network effects. What made Tik Tok so big and what made YouTube so big is the long tail of user generated content and that's what drove the audience and that's what built the the platform and mainstream, right? >> And Yeah. Well, then you can do the the premium stuff on top of it. Yeah. But when you try and create premium content in a small way like Katsenberg tried to do, it's very hard to build the audience to make the economics make sense. >> And the economics are really challenging already with premium content in the big players as you can see with Netflix. They're they're compressing budgets. So I would I would argue that you really need to have them both to make the model work now because the audience is so attuned to user generated content. >> Here's what our partner Poly Market, shout out to my guy Shane, 84% Larry Ellison or Oracle kind of the same thing here. They put a slash acquire Tik Tok that's up over 20 percentage points in the last couple of days. What do you think all this means? The the divevestature of Tik Tok, Larry Ellison getting it as opposed to Google, Apple, Microsoft. I mean, there was so many people maybe even Elon who might have wanted Tik Tok. What do you think of this divevestature and then uh our government gets the golden vote now? I understand that the US government will have a seat on the board of uh Tik Tok. So the Chinese have given it up except for the algorithm. What are your thoughts? >> Remember it's Tik Tok. It's Tik Tok US. It's only 5% of the over it's only 5% 5 to 8% of the overall Tik Tok business. So Tik Tok US is what's being spun out. >> Yes. Correct. >> Chimat what do you what do you think here? >> I think there's two things that are important. The first is that in the future and this may sound very dystopian but he who controls the algorithm will control what people think. And if you think about it in that context, you need, as you've said before, a marketplace of very different approaches and algorithms that are essentially fighting for mind share. If you don't have that, you'll have a massive zombie group think culture. So from that perspective, you have to put Tik Tok into the hands of a completely different owner than any of these other social media sites so that they are motivated to compete against each other. That's one. The second thing is there's been a lot that has been said about the Tik Tok algorithm called Monolith and a bunch of it has been already put out openly and Tik Tok was very transparent and they published a paper. You can find it on archive. You can show the link to it, Nick, maybe in the show notes, but it's an incredible paper that describes a very simplistic approach to essentially moving people into different directions of thought. So if you put all of these ideas together, I think where we are maybe all the way coming back to where we started this discussion about Charlie Kirk, it is increasingly important to make sure that the overwhelming majority of how people get ideas is understood by the rest of the people. Because if you start to go down these rabbit holes in ways that are algorithmically programmed in models that you don't understand that then push you into extremism, you will end up in a very very very bad place as will society. And then the the outcomes of that are completely avoidable as we're seeing. >> Yes. >> So I think that the Tik Tok thing is going to be one of these important moments where we shine a light on the importance of these algorithms. It's poorly understood. It's not well talked about, but I think what the Trump administration doing is important to keep it away from everybody else so that there's more competition. >> Yeah, I'm gonna um strongly agree. I think the Trump administration did a great job on this one. Just calling balls and strikes of not making sure Meta got it or somebody who has already a lot of algorithmic control over what society seeing. And back to >> just just on this, you know, the I give a lot of credit to Elon too because his algorithm is open source. We know what's happening there. >> He just did it two weeks ago. Yeah. >> If that's open source and Monolith is open source, then I think the next big question we have to ask is what is going on in Reddit? What is going on in meta? How are we >> how are we guiding and shaping people? Why does YouTube sometimes for example like our Tulsi Gabbard video is apparently deemed too risque an adult content? Who decided that? How did that happen? >> An algorithm. Yeah. Not not any human. And you know the thing I think is important to start thinking about here is as an industry we're going to either need to regulate this ourselves or be regulated. I think that there should be regulation and I'm not like super a fan of regulation that algorithms must be disclosed and you must have the option given to you upfront to switch your algorithm. There should be a b ya bring your own algorithm. There should be an algorithm store. And I I talked to Elon about this publicly on on X many times. If you could say, I want one that just gives me a chronological feed. I want one that is from the highest quality sources. And then you should be required to show what the default algorithm is doing. And if you don't do that, I think you should lose your section 230 because an algorithm is more powerful than an editor at the New York Times or an editor at HBO or Netflix deciding what we see, deciding what goes on the homepage. The algorithm is a black box and who knows who's controlling it. And then what happens in society when young men are pushed towards more and more fringe content, more and more dark content? Why not just have all this be transparent? Why not let people see? >> Unfortunately, they don't need to be pushed to fringe content. All they need to do is go to a school where the woke curriculum has been mainstreamed. And >> bingo. Randy Weingard's foot soldiers are saying that conservatives are fascists. So, you're acting like you got to go through some weird rabbit hole to embibe these ideologies when all you have to do is attend a public school and probably a lot of private ones, too. I think Dalton's probably the worst. So, again, I you're acting like the radicalization's coming from the fringes. I think what's so concerning about where we are as a society is that the radicalization's coming from our institutions or a lot of these institutions. You're not going to get an argument with me. I think these schools should be teaching, you know, basic skills and they should not be involved in the culture wars in any way. I don't think any parent is setting their kids there. And if you are a parent and you're in California, I I would encourage you to figure out what they're teaching your kids. Uh, and here in the great state of Texas, it's quite >> totally agree. But hey, can I can I >> It's quite different here, by the way. And it's quite different here in the great state of Texas, I can tell you, having lived in both places with three kids. >> Yeah. Yeah. I I get it. And look, that's why a lot of people move to to red states because they care about. So, but hey, let me just did someone mention that our Tulsi video from Allins Summit has been >> partially censored on YouTube. >> So, what happened is I was I was at my office yesterday >> and I open up our YouTube channel cuz Nick had sent out a link that something new had posted. So, I went to go see what had posted that day. So, I pull it up >> and I saw the Summit videos and I saw that Tulsi wasn't there. I'm like, "Wait, didn't we post Tulsi?" And then I looked for it. I couldn't find it. So I text Nick and he says it is there and then I I clicked on the thing and it said safe search is on. What does that mean? I searched and apparently if your network administrator on your enterprise cuz I was at my office we had like our network set restricted mode it's called. In restricted mode people can't like look at adult content on the network and that kind of stuff. And when you have restricted mode on YouTube turns off anything that would fall under mature audiences. So here it is. activate restricted mode. So it prevents a huge number of people. >> Huge number of people. >> That's a huge number of people. >> This would be this would have been the second most viewed video. I guarantee you after the Elon video maybe and maybe the most viewed and I was shocked. I said, "How is it possible that this video is struggling to be in the top half and this is why?" And you can't even see it. So then >> you put up Well, it's unclear. So certain videos then get tagged as being for mature audiences and they don't show up in restricted mode by the algorithm on YouTube. >> Oh, so it's the algorithm did it again. It wasn't reporting it. >> I'll give you guys my theory. My theory is because she you the term Russia gate comes up and those sorts of terms and I think those terms are triggers if they're in the transcript. They're triggers to be under kind of safe >> debunking Russia gate, >> right? But I don't think Do you think if it was a video espousing and promoting the Russia gate hoax that it would have gotten censored this way? >> It's a good question. I don't know. Yeah. >> I mean, we can test that by looking for other people discussing it. I mean, >> you mentioned Scott Adams early. He talks about it 17 times in episode. >> By the way, this is a government official in the White House who is the director of national intelligence who is providing an interview on national intelligence and is being filtered out as being for adults only. Very weird. >> This is insane. >> It's insane. >> This is like when Trump as the sitting president got banned from social media. I mean this you're right. This is a public official describing >> intelligence investigation. >> She is doing an investigation reading reading out an investigation investigation. >> I mean putting aside the topic, it's a it's a discussion. What who on earth would think that this is something that people shouldn't consume? Why is this being flagged adult? what's adult about it in any way? It makes no sense. >> Or for it's for mature audience. Yeah. Some some definition around it. But I think that there's some keywords that triggered it without acknowledging or recognizing the algorithm. This is one of the points Chimak was making. We don't know how the algorithms work because the algorithms cannot determine that this is a clearly cannot determine that this is an actual government official and therefore should not be restricting access to the content. >> I don't know, man. AI's gotten a lot better in the last year. It seems like this would be an easy algorithm. Yeah, it here's what YouTube says about their filter. This helps hide potentially mature videos. No filter is 100% accurate. No >> I wonder if it's also people >> Here's the question is with respect to the error rate. >> What percent of those videos are conservative versus liberal in their ideological >> Bernie Sanders and Mandami getting the same treatment? If conservative content and liberal content are both subject to the same error rate, then >> you know, they have a leg to stand on, maybe. I still don't think they should be doing this, by the way. >> I mean, look, potentially mature videos should be >> I just want to add one technical thing here and then I'll go to this could also be caused, I know in the past, by people reporting stuff they don't like. So people would do this report bombing, you know, get 20 different people in a, you know, signal group or in a Discord group to go report this from different IP addresses and file the reports to then silence each. So that happens. >> Wait for a second. Did did Tucker and Cuban also get censored? >> That's a debate. I don't understand. Wait, what happened with that? >> Anyway, Neil, can you check this out and report back to customer support here? Go ahead, Chim. The Tucker Cuban debate was a perfect example of civil discourse. >> Yeah, there was a hug. >> I think this is an example. There was a famous media theorist, his name is Marshall McLuhan and he had this quote which is the medium is the message, right? And what did he mean by that? He meant that the characteristics of the medium itself, meaning the way information is delivered, has a greater impact on society and individuals than the actual content of the message. What he's foreshadowing is the importance of these algorithms and these decisions that happen in the shadows because the weight of those decisions have all of these downstream impacts. This is why they should be. Why can't I see my YouTube algorithm? I can confirm that Tucker and Mark Cuban also get filtered. >> This is insane. Well, basically because Tucker So Tucker and Tulsi are getting filtered. >> All right, listen. Great segue here because uh we didn't get to recap the summit and we had quite paradoxically we had a real discussion about the importance of debate friendship and you know the the process we try to do here and at the summit which has let a lot of people speak and debate important issues of which the Tulsi and the college university heads discussions so many of these were important discussions but people didn't see our recap but just going around the horn here. Great moments you felt were important or enlightening to you. Chimat, did you have a moment at the summit that you know one of your amazing insights that you felt were particularly insightful that you want to share with the audience? >> I think the most insights >> I think the most important conversation there was the one with Tulsi. >> I really do. I mean, I think at a very basic level, why does America go to war? Why do we fight wars? Why are men and women being killed? Why? And it it just it's the same thing with Charlie Kirk. I just get so agitated with this idea that a human being believes that they have the judgment to take somebody else's life to me is incomprehensible. It's just so wrong. It's so immoral. It's just so wrong. And what she talked about and what she's exposing is the cascade of lies that causes an entire generation to lose tens of thousands of their brothers and sisters. To lose your your son and your do I. So yeah, it's um that was the most important conversation we had by a country mile. Freeberg, you have a moment for you that was either entertaining, enlightening, or important. I I'll let you take any angle on it. >> I would recount our wrap-up that we did at the end of day two. When we first started planning the content for the summit this year, I was actually thinking about trying to get a bunch of American speakers for day one and then a bunch of international speakers for day two where we could kind of contrast the American perspective from the global perspective and hear how does the rest of the world view the world and and view America and how does America view America and view the world and it was hard to kind of get the scheduling right. So the way things kind of ended up getting scheduled out, we we tried to cluster the conversations into different themes, but I didn't feel like we were going to get the orientation I was hoping for. And so we ended up having just a bunch of conversations. But what was really powerful for me was that the similarity we saw with Elon, with Tucker and Mark Cuban, with Alex Karp, and we brought it up, I think also with Eric Schmidt, is this idea that much of what we see in terms of the evolution of society in the West can be viewed through a lens of suicide. that the West may be committing suicide financially in our deficit spending in terms of birth rate decline. So, we're we're kind of destroying our dollar. We're destroying our headcount because of the birth rate decline. And then this immigration policy issue where we're potentially destroying cultures, which was a topic that came up a few times, and perhaps even thinking about the Tulsi comments, destroying ourselves by by thrusting ourselves into war and chopping our heads off. And then we heard a lot of optimism. We heard a lot of technologists. We heard a lot of folks talk about the options and the choice we have and that we have a choice to kind of reverse these trends and kind of change how we're behaving as a society. And so it all came together as one long string. And we ended it with this idea that there's choice and you have a choice to kind of go forward or you have a choice to commit suicide. And then what really hit me was then we walk out and then the Charlie Kirk murder happened. And so it created this emotional wrapper for me on the conversations we had that there were a lot of people that are going to make different choices. >> And so I I just wish we could do a summary of what it was like at the summit instead of each one of these talks standing on their own. They work well on their own. But I think that that whole kind of set of conversations leading to that point of view was really important and poignant for me. >> Did we end up publishing our final like wrap-up conversation? >> Not yet. >> I want to we have not done it. What I want to do is I want to do that with the summary video at the end of the summary video. So, I want to be like here's the a couple of key points from the the talks once we get all the talks out and then our wrap-up conversation which I think we should do. Saxs, you were incredibly engaged in this summit. You showed up. You were engaged. Were there moments that you found particularly enlightening, inspiring, fun? >> Oh my gosh. We just found out that the Karp interviews also been censored on safe mode on YouTube. So wait, basically the three talks were Tucker, Tulsi, and Karp, which by the way, I think if you had the audience vote on what the most engaging and interesting, >> those were the three best. >> Those are up. >> Yeah. And by the way, there are a lot of other really good ones, but those ones >> I think were the most captivating. I think the audience you could see was like really engrossed, >> animated. It could be because of Jason's point, which is that if enough people click report an issue, it gets put into that al that part of the algorithm. So, >> yeah, we got to have to give a little grace to yell here. >> Oh, so who's who's the one who's doing all the reporting here? Who's weaponizing the YouTube reporting system? >> It's a bunch of tolerant liberals. >> It could be Putin. You never know. >> Sax, you have moments. >> We don't need the Russians doing this to us. We there could be a cobble that is we could be inflicting this. >> I agree with Freeberg's wrap. I thought it was remarkable how the whole thing kind of came together at the end and and there seemed to be a really stark choice and I agree that the next day Charlie was assassinated and um I mean I stopped thinking about the summit but I agree that it really did play into this idea of the suicide of the west and in the sense that like we talked about there apparently are a large contingent >> of people who don't believe in what I would consider to be the central virtue or tenate of western civilization which was expressed or at least it's attributed to Voltater. What Voltater said is I disapprove of what you say but I will defend to the death your right to say it. I think that is the central tenant behind western civilization because out of that came the right to free expression to freedom of religion. Out of that core principle came all the other principles all the other key freedoms. The right to think and believe and worship as you please. freedom of religion, freedom of speech, freedom of the press, it all comes out of that. >> And what you have here is people like Tyler Robinson or the people who are celebrated what he did. It's the exact opposite. It's I disapprove of what you say and I will murder you to prevent your right to say it. That is >> the antithesis. >> It's the antithesis and it's not Western civilization. It's something different and destructive. and where it will lead to is a civil war that none of us should want on either side of the political spectrum. >> One thing I would just like to say and then J Jason, I'd love to hear what what you think about this, but one of the most powerful things that I think Charlie got absolutely and precisely right was the plight of young people. Meaning the malaise and the anxiety and what was at the root cause of it. at the root cause in the way people think and now in the way people act is economic instability. And that was a thing that I think also came out at the summit. And >> Charlie does a really good job of very precisely putting it into a box what they're going through. The lack of home ownership, the overwhelming and just crushing debt, the failure of the school system, the inability to find a great job, the hookup culture that takes people away from having a committed relationship, getting married, having children. There's a totality of issues that are really cultural. And I would just en encourage people to go and find this out because I think at the root cause of all of this is that I think that we need to sort of find a way to give folks a chance to believe in something. And if you don't, I think the algorithm will take you to a very bad place. It's well said. I was absolutely delighted. Great job uh Freeberg and to the team, John and Kimber and Nick and just so many people put so much work into that. It was amazing to see us double the size of it while increasing the quality of it from the speakers to the experience. >> Food was excellent. I heard the food was excellent. >> No lines. I mean, all that logistical stuff was just so dialed in in year four. So, I give a lot of credit to our amazing team. I have to thank our sponsors. They did an amazing job of making this summit available to so many people. We can do the scholarships and have so many people involved. And there are three very special partners who did insane buildouts at the show. Salana, our friends over there, went crazy. They they did the entire upstairs. I don't know if you hung out there, but I was at their coffee bar and they had a juice bar, IPO themed bar. It was just awesome. >> It was awesome. It was awesome. >> They hosted two of the dinners, too, the public market and and geopolitical dinners. Our friends at OKX, they showed up big for us at the summit. They built out an awesome lounge uh modeled after a saloon. I went in there and had a little bourbon myself on Sunday. They screened their first film, Mild Mild West. They gave away 250 in Bitcoin to all attendees and somebody won a hot lap with an F1 driver because they sponsored the McLaren team. That was super nice of them, huh, Freeber? >> Yeah, that was awesome. And we're going to be at that Formula 1 event in Vegas in November, which >> we're going to Vegas. Yummy. >> Oh, we are. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. >> I is a new partner this year and uh they operate all these NextG data centers. So, big shout out to them for doing the casino night which was a huge hit at Cliff. >> I went to that. Did you go to that? >> I didn't. I was at the other event in it was insane. I thought it was like the pictures. Look at the pictures. >> I actually went to all four parties on the Monday night. I was completely wiped out. But man, the casino night was awesome. It was so fun. >> You're like Phil Collins. You at Live Age. You went to everything. You on your Concord and you went everywhere. >> That's right. >> And they had a great engraving station in the expo hall that packed the event. So >> just couldn't do it without you guys and gals. Again, without the sponsors, JCL, we would not be able to put this event on because uh we spent way more than the ticket revenue >> and we would not be able to have the scholarship tickets, which I think are really important. I remember in my early career like I couldn't afford to go to a fancy event and I think I think the scholarship >> you guys debated me about the scholarships for the first couple years and now you realize it's great to have that young energy, right? Yeah. Sometimes get something right. I really enjoyed having Josai there and talking about the China and America relationship not being uh one in which you know we have to go down a prescribed route that there could be offramps and there could be collaboration there. I thought Neil um from YouTube uh despite what we're talking about here today I appreciate him coming and engaging us with the censorship issue he was got into with USA and I thought that was very productive. I love the fact that people from this administration, Tulsy and Chris Wright, they were willing to engage in a vibrant debate. The Dartmouth and the Berkeley discussion on civil discourse is just so important and they have such an impact on kids' lives when their brains are developing as we talked about on this show. Rick Caruso on the management of our cities I think was amazing. And then you know Tucker and Karp they went right to some really hard discussions around anti-semitism and the situation in Gaza. You know also these are very difficult things to discuss. This event was a celebration of debating hard topics and for that I am very thankful for my friendship with each of you and to have this amazing experience of the All-In podcast and most of all the community meeting all of our I won't call them fans. I I think our friends are besties in the audience and what a great job Freeberg in accommodating the scholarships. I know some people get bent out of shape. Oh, you gave somebody a scholarship, whatever. We got a lot of young people in there to experience it as well as the people who could afford the tickets, etc. And I'll say what a crazy joyful moment at the end when Diplo played and I was we were three of us were on stage dancing and uh just celebrating with our kids and >> I was having another seizure but thanks. >> Yeah, >> thanks for letting me up there for a few minutes. >> Yeah, you came up for a couple of minutes and enjoyed yourself. Uh but yeah, just um congratulations to the team. It was an amazing effort and what a great dialogue and I think that spirit of dialogue and making a choice to engage the hard topics in a respectful manner at the end of every program. Chimat says love you besties and Sax gives a back at you. But the truth is even in a contentious debate you can still remain friends and love each other despite those debates. It's the most important American ideal. It's the most human ideal and it's dare I say, you know, I'm not a Catholic anymore, but I I've remained a Christian is one of the most Christian ideas and I know that was a major part of his faith was a major part of Charlie's life and his legacy and um you know that hit me personally as well. His Christianity um even if I disagree with him about you know issues and debates, he was a Christian at his core. and he cared about other people deeply and he cared about humanity. So, rest in peace. >> Let me just um say Jake, I'll thank you most of all for taking the time to watch all of those Charlie videos. How much time do you say it was like 40 hours? >> I I watched dozens of hours and 50 videos um just to just to make sure I got from first principles my understanding of who he was. I disagree with him about gay rights. I disagree with him about, you know, how he said certain things. But there was nothing I saw in there that could even come close to justifying anything >> that would be anywhere near violence. >> Well, in any event, I I appreciate that you took the time to watch Charlie for yourself as opposed to listening to the mainstream media's mischaracterizations of him, which are >> attempts to either downplay or minimize or even to some degree justify what happened. And by doing that, JCL, I think you really honored our friend Charlie. So, thank you for that. >> All right. Rest in peace, Charlie Kirk. And love to his family and his and his friends. >> By the way, there was an incredible video that he did where somebody said something along the lines of define what it means to be a conservative. And he said, you know, sometimes people think that what that means is to like limit rights or whatever. And he said, that's not what it means. It's just that I believe that I would like to conserve and honor a specific way of life that has existed in the past. And he talked about it, you know, where you could go get a job, you could do better than your parents, you get married, you have kids, everybody's safe. I mean and it kind of shocked me because I thought wow that definition is actually what many many many people believe even if they don't believe that they are a conservative because a lot of people um believe that you know and this is not taking away from other people but that's what we'd want for a lot of us for our kids. >> Let's all set an example here. Have vibrant debate and love your besties. Okay. And we'll see you all next time. Love you, boys. Love you, besties. Bye-bye. There's a back at you. No back at you. We We missed the back at you.