The Startup Ideas Podcast

I’m joined by Kevin Rose, serial entrepreneur and technology investor. We discuss some of his best startup ideas: creating interactive podcasts with the help of AI, a nostalgic TV experience with old shows and commercials, using AI to talk to the dead, and so much more.

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Episode Timestamps

00:00 How to come up with million-dollar ideas
03:00 Products that were ahead of their time
12:20 First business idea: AI-powered podcast app
28:48 Second business idea: Normie TV
37:00 How Telly is reinventing TV
42:58 Third business idea: Using AI to talk to the dead

Creators & Guests

Host
GREG ISENBERG
I build internet communities and products for them. CEO: @latecheckoutplz, we're behind companies like @youneedarobot @boringmarketer @dispatchdesign etc.

What is The Startup Ideas Podcast?

This is the startup ideas podcast. Hosted by Greg Isenberg (CEO Late Checkout, ex-advisor of Reddit, TikTok etc).

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Kevin Rose [00:00:00]:
The cold, harsh truth is that nine out of ten startups go to zero. Like they just completely fail. But the thing that always turns me off from an entrepreneur when they come to pitch is if they lead first with the market size, the opportunity from a revenue standpoint, and it's clear that they think I am doing this because it's a chance for me to make a lot of money. The harsh reality is times are tough, and if you don't love the idea, if it's not something that you wake up and jump out of bed in the morning thinking about, then you're just going to get burnt out.

Greg Isenberg [00:00:29]:
Kevin. Kevin Rose. Stoked to have you here.

Kevin Rose [00:00:33]:
Thanks for having me. Appreciate it. This is gonna be fun.

Greg Isenberg [00:00:36]:
You're an idea machine, and how I know you're an idea machine is I texted you not too long ago, and I was like, do you want to come on the show, bring a couple startup ideas you're thinking about, and bam, you had pure fire.

Kevin Rose [00:00:52]:
I mean, I have ideas at the ready, most of them half quarter baked, and a lot of them are horrible. So I'll just put that big caveat out there out front to let you know that, like, you know, I think it's, it's kind of been in my DNA for a long time just to say what if? You know, and just keep dreaming and see if there's anything there.

Greg Isenberg [00:01:12]:
And do you, do you have like a notes file where you keep your ideas, or how do you think about it?

Kevin Rose [00:01:19]:
Yeah, I mean, I used to have just like a little journal next to my bed, and I find that ideas for me are oftentimes, I mean, there's a reason they call them, like, shower ideas. It's not necessarily when you're putting concerted effort on trying to come up with an idea. I find that if you're under stress or in a high stressful situation, actually is probably the worst time to be kind of ideating on something. Um, so for me, it's more like, you know, I can't fall asleep. I'm thinking about one thing or another, and then all of a sudden I'm like, huh, that would be really interesting to prototype. Like, what if that existed in the world? And so that's kind of led to a bunch of my experiments that I've launched over the years. When I launched Dig, I remember the night I was laying in bed and I was like, no one is voting online. And if you could have a way that you could vote, and the best stuff would rise to the top.

Kevin Rose [00:02:12]:
And this is 2004, I'm dating myself, but it's like that's what led to the whole thing that became eventually the like button and everything else, which was this idea that you could use asynchronous JavaScript to update a number dynamically on the screen. And so that was crazy. But yeah, it's just been nights like.

Greg Isenberg [00:02:31]:
That I actually want to go into that a little bit because for me, I'm a bit of a historian when it comes to Internet products that have worked. To me, all that's new is old, and I think there's a bunch of products, dig included, that never really saw its maturity. Do you find yourself? Well, my question to you is what? And I'm putting you on the spot, like what product? What product that got a little bit of validation 10, 15, 20 years ago that you think that if it had a resurgence today has some less.

Kevin Rose [00:03:12]:
Yeah, I mean, it's, you know, you know, it's funny just to go back for a second on the whole dig thing, not to defend my idea, but the idea that, you know, social voting became a thing. And dig did not win. We failed, but, you know, we grew to 38 million monthly uniques. And then, you know, Facebook introduced the like button. About a year later, I'd had multiple dinners with Zuckerberg talking about social voting and things like that. And so, you know, I like to just surrender to it and say, hey, that idea lived on and I'm glad that, you know, continue to make its way and propagate throughout the Internet. So I think that oftentimes, you know, we see this with startups. I was just thinking about this the other day because I was going back to visit my mom who lives in Las Vegas, and I spent my childhood there.

Kevin Rose [00:03:56]:
And I was driving around in none of the places that I knew about, like I hung out at business wise were still around. Like, it was like very few. And I was like, gosh, like every business churns and becomes something new and they just drop off no matter how amazing they were a decade or two decades ago. Right? And so I feel like the Internet is the same way. I mean, there's very few players. I don't know how the hell eBay is still in business given their horrible user interface, but it's like there's certain incumbents that are really hard to dethrone. But yeah, I mean, I think that there's certain ideas that either were before their time. There was multiple photo sharing apps before Instagram.

Kevin Rose [00:04:38]:
Then there was the addition of filters and the ease of use of Instagram and it just had that right mixture of features and functionality that just hit when mobile was really taking off. I'm bummed about Foursquare. I think Foursquare was a really cool idea. This idea of being able to dynamically share with your friends where you are to facilitate hanging out and spending more time with the ones that you care about. It's too bad. I mean, that had a good run. It had a good seven or eight year run, and then kind of people fell out of fashion and something else took over. I think probably more on the Snapchat chat side of sharing.

Kevin Rose [00:05:16]:
But, yeah, I mean, there's just a bunch that either they have their moment, they have their 15 minutes of fame or five or seven years of fame, and then we're on to the next thing just because we've evolved as a society.

Greg Isenberg [00:05:30]:
Totally. And I think so, I don't know if you know this about me, but I was actually at Stumbleupon, which was, yeah, with Garrett. Exactly. We were like cousins with dig. You know, basically it was like, yes, Stumbleupon, Reddit, and back then, like, Reddit was actually not that big. It's weird, you know, now it's a publicly traded company and doing really well. But I remember when Big had its redesign and a lot of the users came to Stumbleupon, and then I remember we did a redesign and we messed up. And then a lot of those users went to Reddit.

Greg Isenberg [00:06:12]:
It's interesting because it's not like the product didn't. It's kind of like we messed up. The time was wrong. We kind of messed up. I'll speak on behalf of the stumbleupon side. There were some mistakes that were made, but a lot of the fundamental theses around people want serendipity that exists today on places like TikTok, 100%. So I think it's like, that's why I love going back in time. Looking at things like dig, looking at things like Foursquare, Foursquare, I think you're completely right.

Greg Isenberg [00:06:44]:
The whole idea around, I feel like just the gamification of local, no one's done yet.

Kevin Rose [00:06:52]:
Yeah, it's, Foursquare for me was one of those things that was really fun, and we used it at south by Southwest a lot when that conference was really starting to take off and when you were living in the Bay area, it was kind of a signal to say, hey, I'm going out to this place. And I don't think we really fully, it was a much smaller group of users back then, and it wasn't like as toxic as I feel it can be now. And so there wasn't concerns over privacy. There wasn't concerns over, you know, is somebody going to, if I check in at a bar or restaurant, is somebody weird going to, like, stalk me here? You know, which I think we get a lot more of that these days with just various groups trying to, you know, either doxx individuals or take them down. And so I don't know. I can speak for me personally. Like, I certainly have a lot more privacy concerns than I did back then. Maybe it was the youth and how I was just young and carefree at that time.

Kevin Rose [00:07:46]:
But, yeah, it's a bummer that went away because it was actually, it was more than just saying, this is where I'm at. It was also saying, I approved this location. I like it. And Foursquare was used as a kind of fun discovery app of what were the cool places to go to, what was the best cocktail or best burger in town, or you name it. And I feel like it's a shame we lost that.

Greg Isenberg [00:08:10]:
And I think Dennis is working on something similar again. Did you see this?

Kevin Rose [00:08:16]:
I haven't seen his latest. I mean, obviously, I saw swarm back in the day, but I haven't seen what he's building now.

Greg Isenberg [00:08:22]:
Yeah. So I think he. It's interesting because he did dodgeball, right, which was.

Kevin Rose [00:08:26]:
That's right.

Greg Isenberg [00:08:27]:
Yeah. Which was basically foursquare and sold it to Google. And then he did foursquare, which was awesome, and then. But pivoted to b two b, and I think is like an actual real business, doing really well as a b two b play. And I think he's doing something, again, similar to dodgeball and four square again. So it's like, that's, again, just speaking to the same, like, you can just reinvent the same old idea and just sort of bring it back to the times.

Kevin Rose [00:08:53]:
Yeah, it's funny. It's like when I think about the social voting and news and that whole side of things. One, I think AI is going to, we don't really need humans as much as we did back then for this type of stuff. And two, I just. I can't bring myself to ever want to build in that space again because, you know, controlling the masses or trying to create an environment where there's, like, just a real good civil debate and not hate and spam and everything else. It's just. It is an absolute nightmare. So I would never want to enter that arena again.

Greg Isenberg [00:09:30]:
Totally. Too many. I feel the same way. It's tough, but social in general is almost like being an artist, you love it and hate it at the same time. That's why we're addicted. A lot of people like me and you are addicted to it because we love just the, I mean, it's just fun to build. And I think the interesting thing, Nikita Beer once said something that always resonated with me. He said that building social is like you're building a rocket ship, but if you're 1 mm off, you don't land on the moon.

Greg Isenberg [00:10:06]:
And that's so true.

Kevin Rose [00:10:07]:
Yeah. And it's brutal when it's just an open taxonomy where people can define any type of group that they want.

Greg Isenberg [00:10:14]:
Right?

Kevin Rose [00:10:14]:
Because then you get clicks of, you may have had the, you may have been quite well intentioned when starting something like this, but then you all of a sudden wake up and you're like, why am I taking down, like, nonstop, hundreds of posts around hate speech or whatever it may be, and it just turns into something that is, I don't know. I've got a couple little kids now. I have better, I got my podcast that I'm doing every week, and it's like, I have better ways to spend my time. You know, let the, let the younger generation that's coming up tackle those problems.

Greg Isenberg [00:10:46]:
So what is on your mind these days? I mean, let's, let's walk through some of your, some of your startup ideas.

Kevin Rose [00:10:55]:
Yeah, for sure. I mean, I spend, it's interesting. My time these days is split between doing some investing at true ventures. So I've been there for around seven years or so. I'm always looking at the latest early stage startups. So back and napkin ideas. I love that. I love the very early stage.

Kevin Rose [00:11:13]:
It's a ton of fun. And then I also spend a lot of my time interviewing experts on my podcast. And so that can be, you know, AI, health and wellness technology. It just, all these types of conversations that I'm having anyway that I just want to record and put online. So it gets me in front of a lot of thinkers, and that gets my own brain going around ideas. So there's a lot of stuff that I wish existed, but I've just never built and I don't ever plan on building. So, yeah, I'd love to talk about some of them, but I would say, first and foremost, kind of AI has captured, obviously, all of our attention over the last six to eight months to year in that it's become a daily tool that I use for a whole variety of different things. One of the things, I have two AI related startups one is around a next generation podcast app and the second one is around really well, they're both around.

Kevin Rose [00:12:12]:
One is around interacting with dead people. So which one do you want to tackle first?

Greg Isenberg [00:12:17]:
Let's start with. Let's actually start with the podcast idea. And before, okay, before we get into it, when you text me that idea, I was like, podcast app? So many people have tried it. I'm thinking of Leah Culver. Her app.

Kevin Rose [00:12:36]:
It'S Breaker.

Greg Isenberg [00:12:37]:
Breaker was the closest I saw to a really interesting product that was going to hit escape velocity but got acquired. Like, why hasn't a podcast app been able to hit mainstream? That's not Spotify and Apple.

Kevin Rose [00:12:57]:
Yeah, I mean, when you're Spotify and Apple, you have built in distribution, right? Like you've got people coming for the music on the Spotify side and Apple, you have default installs on device. So that's hard to compete against. In my mind, whenever I'm thinking about a startup, you know, a new idea, I'm thinking about what is the defensibility, what is the moat that they can build, and then truly what is the order of magnitude improvement that is going to make people switch? People don't switch because you have trim silence. People don't switch because you have, you know, a couple little features that they sound good on paper, but then the bigs catch on. Meaning like, I'll give you an example. Like, I can't remember who it was first that did trim silence and saved us a bunch of time on podcasts where it takes someone and if they pause for four to 5 seconds, it just cuts that out completely. I want to say it was pocketcast, but it could have been someone else. What happened then is you basically have that feature start to gain momentum.

Kevin Rose [00:13:55]:
Product managers inside of Apple say, huh, that's a pretty cool feature. And then they add it inside of the Apple podcast app six or eight months later. You really are not going to win that way. It has to be something where the actual idea itself is so hard for the competition to pivot into and is so radically different that the consumer says, wow, this is a huge change in a huge new direction. That's why I want to make the move and abandon where I've been spending all of my time, because it's like redefining a social graph. It's like redefining your podcast graph takes time. And so it has to be a pretty great product to get you to convince you to do so. In my mind, the application of AI to podcasting could make podcasting a completely different beast, meaning that there's no doubt in my mind that we go out and we train all of AI on people's previous podcasts.

Kevin Rose [00:15:01]:
Let's say I'm listening to the Tim Ferriss show. You could go in and say, I'm going to take that back catalog of 200 and some episodes, train on that data, convert it into transcripts, and then train on it. And then basically you will be able to ask questions of the podcast and have conversations even with the host of the podcast. So let's just say on my show, if you're watching the Kevin Rose show and I had an episode on some topic around index investing, you could pause the podcast and say, hey, Kevin, before you go on, can you explain to me the difference between direct investing on wealthfront and index investing and say something like spy, like the S and P 500? And I, my AI version of myself, would then pull from that corpus of data and be able to branch off, answer that question in real time, and then return back to the main podcast feed. So the idea of being able to interact with our podcasts is just, it's untapped and it needs to happen. So in my mind, that's going to be something that's just going to be a big unlock for a lot of people of being able to not just have a one way listen experience, but actually being able to converse with their favorite hosts.

Greg Isenberg [00:16:20]:
It kind of reminds me, I saw this tweet the other day, Sam Altman tweeted it, movies are going to become video games and video games are going to become something unimaginable, better. It's kind of like a similar idea where movies, you know, you watch a movie, there's no real way to interact with it. It's almost like podcasts are going to become like, almost like an interactive video game type experience.

Kevin Rose [00:16:45]:
Yeah, I mean, it's going to be, it's just going to be so cool that the depth and richness of the information in the shows will just be tenfold. It'll just be something where youll be able to go down any avenue you want at any point in time. I cant tell you the number of podcasts, Peter Attia or Rhonda Patrick or well known scientists, where youre listening to them and youre like, okay, I dont know what LP is when it comes to cholesterol numbers. What the hell is that? But you let them continue on and then youre okay. Should I open up another window and google that or whatever? But in reality, you should just be able to pause and ask that question directly of the host, which is going to be a lot of fun. Someone needs to build this product.

Greg Isenberg [00:17:26]:
And if you were building it, what would the business model be?

Kevin Rose [00:17:33]:
Yeah, I mean, probably what I would do is I would go out and acquire a podcast app that has some market share. There's a few of them out there that have one, 2%, call it the pocket cast, got acquired by Matt Mullenweg over at Automatic. Overcast is still out there as an independent. There's a few of them that you could just go and pick up. Then I'd rewrite it and start ingesting all the information. I'd work on some type of potential partnerships with other podcast hosts, so I'm not sure how they would react to that type of functionality. I have to imagine it would be a good thing for them and that their audience would be more engaged and stick around longer in episodes. But there's a lot of legality around how and when you crawl people's and use people's data in AI, especially if you're going to use their voice.

Kevin Rose [00:18:33]:
So I'd probably go to some of the big hosts out there and create some partnerships and give them a little bit of the company as well, to be brand promoters so that they can go and really help get this on people's radar. And hopefully people would be like, damn, this is so much of a better experience. I'm willing to make that switch, and that would probably be the experiment just to get started.

Greg Isenberg [00:18:55]:
I think. I mean, I can only talk for myself. Like, if someone came to me and was like, I've got this app, do you want Greg Eisenberg where people can ask you like Greg Eisenberg AI where people could ask, is this a good startup idea or has Greg any, has he covered any b, two b fintech stuff? I think I would do it, and I think the reason I would do it is because it's so hard. Well, first of all, it's more interactive. But I think the selfish reason is, as you know, it's really hard to grow a podcast. The only way people, 90% of the reason why people listen to this podcast is I send an email to remind them that, hey, new episode with Kevin's out, and they sign up to gregaughenberg.com dot. I send it, they remember, they go to spot, Spotify and Apple. If this new interactive app allowed me to own a piece of my audience, because with Spotify and Apple, you don't have that much data, would totally do it, right?

Kevin Rose [00:19:56]:
Yeah, I think it could be pretty amazing to have something like that embedded. I've started to see some startups do this on websites as well. Imagine, Greg, if someone came to your website and was like, oh, gosh, I was listening to one of his podcasts maybe like a couple months ago. I can't remember what it was, but it was this great guest, and she was talking about this particular startup and then just being able to type in that kind of high level and then automatically pull out the clip for you. That's starting to happen now with some people's podcasts. That is just so powerful in terms of just reengaging and then cross promotion wise could be really cool too, right? You can imagine listening to a Tim Ferriss show and just being like, hey, pause it real quick. Who else has talked about this type of strength, resistance training to failure, and then all of a sudden have four other potential related podcasts that I can jump off and journey through. Could be really awesome.

Greg Isenberg [00:20:48]:
You know, it'd be really cool if you can license some of these creators or podcasters and put them on other websites. Like, building off your point, I'm thinking of this guy in Miami. His name is Bobby Flavcity. I think his username is Flavcity. And what he does is he goes to Costco and he says, you know, here's why this olive oil is bad. It's not in a glass bottle. Micro plastics. And he explains it.

Greg Isenberg [00:21:19]:
But for, you know, $2 more, you can get this one. He explains it, and he's got this cult following. He's got millions of followers. And he created an e commerce website where it's like, basically Bobby approved stuff. And that's cool. But I have to go to his website, and it's not really in my flow. I order stuff on Instacart. So if Instacart had a little Bobby.

Kevin Rose [00:21:44]:
There, oh, 100%, and I could, oh, my God, this is where it's going, right? It has to, because we all have these people that we look up to, right? There's these people, like, for me, it's doctor Peter Attia, it's Rhonda Patrick. It's like some of these people where I'm like, or even like, Tim, I'm like, hey, what protein powder is Tim using right now? Or you can just imagine a world where you have a bot that goes and pulls the real time information and puts it right into your cart. I mean, wow, talk about conversion. That'd just be nuts.

Greg Isenberg [00:22:16]:
I think the name for this, if I was naming this, it would be. It would be like, what, the WWTD or what ww?

Kevin Rose [00:22:25]:
Yeah.

Greg Isenberg [00:22:26]:
You know, what would Tim do? What would Peter arteria do?

Kevin Rose [00:22:28]:
Yeah.

Greg Isenberg [00:22:29]:
What would Greg? And that would be like the bot that, you know, that you sell and then, yeah. And then you give Tim upside. Right. Like, if he's helping stuff. Great.

Kevin Rose [00:22:44]:
Yeah. You could just say, what would they do? And just have it be generic and it could be applied to anyone. Yeah, that's awesome.

Greg Isenberg [00:22:53]:
And just curious, like, why wouldn't you, why wouldn't you build this?

Kevin Rose [00:22:59]:
Oh, man. I think that there's one of those things where if you're a builder and you go off and you spread yourself too thin and you're trying to do too many things, you just, you go an inch deep on everything and you just really don't do it the product justice. Right. Like, you don't, you don't spend the time. And I'd have to really put together a team to go build this and be heavily involved in the early days. And I just recently sold my last startup and kind of exited out of web three, which is its own madness. And honestly, I really enjoy just talking through and working with some of leading experts in different fields and doing that on a podcast format. It's really a lot of fun for me to have these great guests on my show.

Kevin Rose [00:23:48]:
So I think podcasting is kind of my, my next chapter for at least for a while. I need to take a break from startup world.

Greg Isenberg [00:23:56]:
I heard that from someone, someone who, you know, someone I'm pretty sure you know, yesterday, and, you know, I spoke to him a few years ago and he was like, I'm done with startups. I'm doing investing. Like, it was a good run. And then yesterday had a couple of drinks with him and he's like, by the way, just signed my, going back in, just signed my term sheet. I was like, I knew you'd be back in.

Kevin Rose [00:24:25]:
I mean, that's the problem with entrepreneurs, right? It's like, I'm sure you're in this camp too. It's like we're all just kind of, we can't help ourselves, but wonder if something doesn't exist, what would happen if it did? And if you're that type of person that's listening to this and you're always like, you're the one that always has an idea, and you're like, okay, I'm the one on my friends group where I'm like, hey, wouldn't it be cool if this, if we built this? You gotta go pursue that, because those are the, those are the ones, those are the people that when I meet and I watch these people grow into massive companies and massive outcomes for themselves and become household names, it's all the same DNA. It's all the curious, it's all the people that want to tinker on the weekends, on stuff that they just want to learn and figure out more about. Those are the entrepreneurs I love to back.

Greg Isenberg [00:25:16]:
Yeah. And I think the people that do the best, when I think about this particular person or your podcast, whatever lane you're going to pick, it has to be true to, like, your talents and your curiosity 100%. Cause otherwise you're kind of like you're forcing it and it doesn't really work.

Kevin Rose [00:25:42]:
Yeah. And part of that reason is that there's just so. Well, here's the cold, harsh truth, is that, you know, nine out of ten startups go to zero. Like, they can just completely fail. Right? And we see this at the, at the vc level, it's like we expect almost all of our startups that we invest in to go completely to zero. And that's okay. That's baked into the thesis around the fund. But the thing that always turns me off from an entrepreneur when they come to pitch is if they start first and they lead first with the market size, the opportunity from a revenue standpoint, and it's clearly that they think that I am doing this because it's a chance for me to make a lot of money.

Kevin Rose [00:26:26]:
And the harsh reality is like, it truly is like, one, they'll fail and two times are tough. Like, there's no such thing as a straight up into the right, you know, curve on the success bar. It's like it's, it's going to be challenging. It's going to be more like a roller coaster with loop de loops and everything else in the middle. And if you don't love the idea, if it's not something that you wake up and jump out of bed in the morning thinking about and are completely super passionate about in the sense that this must succeed, and you put it kind of above all else, then you're just going to get burnt out. You're going to say, ah, it's not really worth it. I changed my mind. I need to pivot, you know, and I find that those are the ones that when their heart's not in the right place and they're not doing it because it is, you know, their life's work, they, they end up bailing.

Kevin Rose [00:27:15]:
And I found myself in that position, too, where I've created stuff where I just thought it was going to be big from a usage standpoint, but it really wasn't just something I absolutely loved. And it's hard to stay committed to those businesses.

Greg Isenberg [00:27:30]:
I think a lot of people listening to this will be like, well, I don't know what I love. It's easy for you guys to say, you've been working in this space for 20 years, so it's easy for you to say, and I think my answer to them is, well, don't go raise venture capital. Right? Like, go do a little experiment. Start a Twitter account. You know, start an email newsletter. You don't have to, like, go big in a space. You can do these little experiments to learn about what you like.

Kevin Rose [00:28:01]:
Yeah. I recently had Mark Manson on my podcast, the author of the Subtle Art of not giving a fuck. Have you read that book? It's fantastic. Yeah, it's a really good book. And one of the things that he said is that stuck with me was, find something that you're naturally good at that is difficult for others. And, like, that was just, like, such an aha. Moment for me, because it is true. You will be able to eventually stumble into something where you're like, this is just effortless for me.

Kevin Rose [00:28:27]:
Not to say you don't have to still put in work, but it doesn't feel like work, right? Because it's just so much. There's so much joy that comes out of that type of work. And then others will say, how do you do it? You know? And if you can find that combination, like, that's probably a good path to go down and explore more.

Greg Isenberg [00:28:45]:
I love it. What's your second idea?

Kevin Rose [00:28:48]:
Let's pivot into something completely different. Then we'll go back to AI. The second idea I've been sitting on for a while. This one I have probably had for the last three or four years, and I haven't convinced anyone to do it yet. Maybe it's a bad idea then. But you told me no bad ideas. In the spirit of brainstorming, I am a product of the late eighties and nineties. And so that was kind of my generation.

Kevin Rose [00:29:16]:
And, you know, that meant, you know, the A Team, MacGyver, you know, Scooby Doo, Voltron, Transformers. I'm talking about the original ones, you know, way back in the day, the original Nintendo. Like, that's kind of my generation. And one of the things that I realized is obviously, nostalgia is a huge driver for people as they age. You just really crave and enjoy going back and seeing those moments from childhood. One of the things though that is true, is you can find some of that content on a variety of different outlets now. Like, if you go to Amazon prime, they might have, you know, old episodes of Golden Girls or whatever. Like, you can go to these different channels.

Kevin Rose [00:30:10]:
But what was so amazing about that period of time is if you are old enough to remember it, we basically had a tv. The tv would sit in the corner and you had a clicker in your hand that you would flip through the channels and there was no guide. You would just be like, well, what is on channel five? Let me see. What is on channel six? Let me see. Like, there was no guide, right? If anything, there was. They had something called the TV Guide, which was a mailed magazine that would show up at your house that you could open up and it would show you when things are playing on tv. And so one of the things I thought of that would be a lot of fun. And also, just to add on to that real quick, one of the things I miss as well is the old commercials, because the old commercials were just so much fun.

Kevin Rose [00:30:56]:
They were just, like, so weird and wacky and sometimes they weren't pc and you could never make them today. And, like, there was just, like, part of the fun was seeing, like, what was being advertised to me back during those times, right? And so people have this. Old people have archived and started to save, like, old commercials. So that exists out there and. But, but no one wants to take the time and say, okay, it's 09:00 at night, or 08:00 I'm hanging out with my partner and, hey, let's put on the old a team episode. Like, you just don't do that. You're just kind of like, what's the latest show? Right? So I came up with this idea called Normie TV. And Normie meaning, like, just like a normal person.

Kevin Rose [00:31:40]:
I don't know. It was just the idea that I had called Normie TV. I own the domain for it, and I wanted to create a little tiny set top box. So imagine a box that is probably a little nine inch display. It looks super retro. So it's like, enclosed in a little wooden old school box. It looks like an old tv. It comes with a universal remote.

Kevin Rose [00:32:00]:
You plug it into the Internet and it sits in the corner of your office or wherever you want. And we mail you each month a little tv guide. And so you turn it on with a little button and you literally flip through the channels. Do you see the static between? So we do some effects. So it kind of looks like you're going between channels, we play old MTV episodes of, like, nineties grunge bands and stuff. We play classic basketball games on certain channels. You get all of your old favorite shows from way back in the day, and you get all of the old commercials as well. And so I imagine this as being like a really fun holiday gift that you can just give someone, and then the subscription is like, call it five, $6 a month, and you get access to all this great content.

Kevin Rose [00:32:48]:
Now, here's the cool thing. It all plays at the same time for everyone, so it's not on demand content. If you tune into an episode of MacGyver and it's halfway through the episode, it's halfway through the episode. Just like it used to be an old school tv, but you could call your friends up on the phone and be like, hey, turn on. There's a great episode of the A Team on right now on channel eight, and your friends could tune in as well, which would be just a ton of fun. And if you wanted to get fancy, you could probably put little floating icons of which your friends are watching the tv at the same time. Just a way to really dial back into the older times, that nostalgia, just simpler times and have fun with it in a way that is just something you throw on every once in a while when you're not watching your favorite kind of modern show streaming on Netflix. That's my fun idea of this session.

Greg Isenberg [00:33:35]:
I also think that there's this bigger trend around. People are in content overload, so they're looking for these types of things. Like, I feel like everyone is borderline anxious right now with, like, the TikTok ification of everything. So you're riding that trend, too, which I like.

Kevin Rose [00:33:54]:
And I also like the idea that you could put in old commercials that brands, eventually, if you got to a big enough user base, would actually pay to have you place their commercials, their old commercials back into the feed. So, like, if you're Folgers crystals, right? The old school instant coffee. Like, if you went back and look at eighties Folgers crystals, it's like, you know, it's horribly incredible. PC. It's not pc because it's like, it's got, like, I've watched a couple, like, the woman in the kitchen, like, making her man, like coffee or whatever, you know, but, like, you can imagine they would say, okay, let's remake this ad. Make it super grainy, make it super retro, and, like, place it into the feed as an ad that is like, you know, or, you know, an old Nike commercial or whatever. It may be like an old air Jordan, just as a branding exercise to put that back into the feed and pay you money to display those ads. So I think there's a subscription model here, there's an ad, you know, the ads would have to be old school ads and there's an ad model there as well.

Kevin Rose [00:34:52]:
I don't know. I would love to back someone that would be serious about creating this. Like, I would write the check to make it happen. So if there's any electrical engineers out there that have a passion for nostalgic eighties and nineties content that also happened to someone that could work the BD deals to license the content, let me know.

Greg Isenberg [00:35:12]:
So I had this best friend growing up, and we don't talk very much, maybe once every few years. And he followed me on Instagram somewhat recently, and he just said, greg, we haven't spoken in a long time, but every other day I'm going to send you a, a story from this meme page that is like nineties nostalgia.

Kevin Rose [00:35:38]:
Yes.

Greg Isenberg [00:35:39]:
He's like, I don't care. You're, I'm just gonna send them to you and you don't have to respond, but I'm sending them to you. And it's like all the commercials and just all the like, core memory. Core core memories that we have had as kids.

Kevin Rose [00:35:53]:
Oh my God.

Greg Isenberg [00:35:54]:
And so I think, can I be.

Kevin Rose [00:35:55]:
Can I befriend this person? By the way? Will you add me to that distribution list? Fantastic.

Greg Isenberg [00:36:01]:
Why do you do the list? And so I think the way to get distribution for this, and I think this is a way that a lot of people don't, is a channel a lot of people don't use, but I use a lot, is using Instagram meme pages as distribution. So oftentimes, oftentimes you have these kids, and I say the word kids because they're literally kids. Like, sometimes they're 1415, 1617 years old. We're just great at curating stuff. And who have these pages with hundreds of thousands, sometimes millions of followers.

Kevin Rose [00:36:32]:
Yes.

Greg Isenberg [00:36:32]:
And you'd be surprised how cheap it is to access this inventory.

Kevin Rose [00:36:39]:
Oh, it's a great point. I hadn't even thought about that because there is a massive, now that you mentioned. I do actually have a couple of the eighties nostalgia pages as well. And they're massive. I don't have them meaning I subscribe to them on Instagram. You could just work with them directly. Right. And just get distribution via their channels.

Kevin Rose [00:36:58]:
It's huge.

Greg Isenberg [00:36:59]:
It's huge. Have you seen an LA based company trying to reinvent tvs right now called telly. Have you seen this?

Kevin Rose [00:37:09]:
No, I haven't. Let me look that up.

Greg Isenberg [00:37:12]:
Teletetelly.com lly. Okay, so do you know Pluto TV?

Kevin Rose [00:37:23]:
I don't know.

Greg Isenberg [00:37:25]:
Pluto TV was a really smart idea. It basically what they did is they, they got a bunch of free content that they licensed and they did deals with all the tv manufacturers, Samsung, Sony. So that when you, you know, when you put on your tv and it's just like, it's, it's a, it's like a fake tv guide. Right. With all these channels.

Kevin Rose [00:37:48]:
Yes.

Greg Isenberg [00:37:49]:
That's Pluto TV. And then they make money on ads. So it's, it's value add because some people don't have cable or whatever and they're happy because they're making money on ads. It was sold for hundreds of millions of dollars. The guy from.

Kevin Rose [00:38:02]:
I have seen, I have seen telly, by the way. Now that I'm looking at it, I totally know what you're talking about.

Greg Isenberg [00:38:07]:
The guy from Ilia, one of the guys from Pluto TV, started telly. They raised like a $21 million seed round, I think. So if you're on the web page, tell folks what tele is.

Kevin Rose [00:38:22]:
Yeah. So essentially it looks like, if I'm getting this right, because I saw this back in the day, where they break up and create a second little micro display under the main display.

Greg Isenberg [00:38:33]:
Exactly.

Kevin Rose [00:38:34]:
So if you're looking at it, you have a primary tv, a little bit of a speaker buffer, and then a secondary display underneath it, which can be turned into pretty much anything you want. So it can be show your playlist from Spotify, it can be your home feed, which shows you your stock prices, your current temperature outside. You can do video calling on the bottom. They can have voice assistant or different extensions to the primary content. So the primary content, they have one example where it shows somebody working on fitness, and there's other exercises tiled beneath it, so it looks like it's essentially extending the tv with another piece of smart functionality, another micro display underneath it, so it's aware of the content above it, so it can display additional. This would be great for sports, right? Cause you always want analytics, and they pop them up for a hot second like you're watching Steph Curry and you're like, okay, wow, he hit that three. That's amazing. And then you're like, wouldn't it be cool if underneath that in a secondary display, you could see in real time what all of his stats are for this year, right? And you just like, watch those numbers go up.

Kevin Rose [00:39:41]:
Like, this is, this would be a.

Greg Isenberg [00:39:43]:
Lot of fun, especially since the, like, all the sports leagues are becoming. It's like gambling now. Like in the NBA app now. You can, like, bet, you know? So imagine if you're betting on an NBA game. You want those analytics there, you want the odds there. But there's one key part that you're missing from this idea and why it's so awesome is the best part about telly is it's free. They give it away.

Kevin Rose [00:40:11]:
Yeah, I saw that at the bottom. Like, how do they give it away? What's the deal with that?

Greg Isenberg [00:40:14]:
So what they do is they have ads on the lower screen, and I'm sure they, you know, they have a model that shows that they make money.

Kevin Rose [00:40:26]:
Yeah. I'd be really curious to know what their, their bomb is on that lower display, that lower screen. Because it's got to be a few hundred bucks to make that thing. So to recoup that is a multi year effort.

Greg Isenberg [00:40:43]:
Super tough. But I'm thinking, like, if anyone could figure it out, it's the Pluto tv team.

Kevin Rose [00:40:49]:
Yeah.

Greg Isenberg [00:40:50]:
And I also think what's really cool is the second screen. No one really owns that second screen. That second screen, like, because you can do things like Zoom on it, you can play music on it. Of course, there's like, you know, Amazon fires and iPads and stuff like that. But I feel like that's discretionary for a lot of people. And I think that if some, you know, if people saw that this was free, I think a lot of people would go and grab this.

Kevin Rose [00:41:19]:
Yeah, it's really cool. I mean, I have to imagine there's some type of subscription model on top of this to offset some of that. You know, where it's like, if you want to go hardcore and get the additional analytics and some of the. There'll probably be a sports package or something, you know, for $5 a month and so. But it's a really cool idea.

Greg Isenberg [00:41:35]:
Yeah. And I think from a framework, from a startup ideas framework perspective is how do you look at something that costs money and can you make it free? So just going back to your idea, I wonder if you can give it away and charge some subscription. Like, you're talking like $510, but maybe you charge $29 a month, but the actual product is free.

Kevin Rose [00:41:59]:
Yeah, you have to imagine even with displays and you put a little small, inexpensive raspberry PI in there to do it. Depends on the video, Kodak. But it can't be that intensive or that expensive to manufacture something like that probably $150 or less to pull that off at scale. So I'd be curious to know you can break even pretty quickly if you get the right subscription model and the content isn't costing you a lot. The licensing deals are going to be the big question mark here.

Greg Isenberg [00:42:31]:
Exactly. Yeah. And it's one of those got to raise a lot of money to go and do that. And that's why.

Kevin Rose [00:42:36]:
Yeah.

Greg Isenberg [00:42:36]:
$1 million seed round is like, they're probably raising right now, if I had to guess, you know, like, they, they're going to need a lot of capital for this, but if they, if they pull it off, I could see it working.

Kevin Rose [00:42:48]:
Yeah, it's, it's a fun one to track, for sure. I mean, why not even, like, sign up for one and get one for free just to try it out?

Greg Isenberg [00:42:53]:
Totally.

Kevin Rose [00:42:53]:
It's great.

Greg Isenberg [00:42:54]:
Why not? So you have another idea, which I think is, is a wild one. Give it to us.

Kevin Rose [00:43:02]:
Yeah. I mean, four or five years ago, maybe a little bit longer now. Gosh, it was probably longer now. There was a Coachella where Tupac was on stage as a hologram, rapping alongside Snoop Dogg and some other folks. And that was a huge unlock slash wow moment for a lot of people. They're like, they brought someone back from the dead for a performance. It's kind of crazy, right? A lot has happened since then, and now we have AI voice models that can be trained on, like, five words and create, like, pretty accurate, you know, voices that are. That are basically, you could take just the five words that I say and then train on my voice and spit out full paragraphs of copyright that sound exactly like me.

Kevin Rose [00:43:51]:
And it even gets better if you just train for a few minutes with data. There is very much a world where if I'm in my studio here, I can put up a green screen for my guest. I can create my guest, and I've seen it even working now where you can actually take. And you can lip sync or so you can lip. I guess it is lip sync. You're syncing their lips to what they're saying. They do this for different languages. So right now, I could be speaking Spanish to you or Japanese, and my lips would look like I'm speaking Japanese.

Kevin Rose [00:44:23]:
If you just run it through this post processing production that's out there, what I would do is I would say, okay, let's just take a great philosopher like Alan Watts. If you go to Alan Watts.org, comma, his website, you can download 500 hours of his talks in MP3 format. Again with the training you could go and take all that data and say, okay, I'm taking that entire corpus. I want to understand who Alan Watts is. His philosophies feed in some of his books as well. And all of a sudden you have a pretty interesting, compelling AI model that will speak and act and talk and think like Alan Watts. Now I can sit down and in real time have a conversation and interview people that have passed away. I could do this with Einstein, you could do this with a whole slew of different people and actually have full on conversations.

Kevin Rose [00:45:15]:
And yes, the AI is filling in some of the gaps and trying to come up with its best assumption of how they would answer certain things. But if you have enough data, I'd imagine you get pretty close. I think it would be a fun experiment. I don't know, this is not a business. This is just more like a thought experiment. What if we went and tried this to see what would happen? I mean, you could do this with all different types of leaders, both good and bad, that have passed away. You can imagine some pretty extreme examples of previous leaders that were pretty evil, that you could bring in their data and thinking, and it would just be fascinating to see how this unfolds. And I have to imagine it's coming soon.

Greg Isenberg [00:45:56]:
What about taking it to the next level with speaking to people in our lives that have passed away?

Kevin Rose [00:46:06]:
Oh, 100%, yeah, that would be the problem. There is just. Do you have enough data? My dad's passed away 13 years ago now, something like that. And I think about what I have of him, and I have a few recordings of him saying a few things, a bunch of emails, but they were, you know, just little two, three sentence things here and there. So I don't know that I have the data required for that, but we certainly will. Like, my kids will be able to do that with me, that's for sure.

Greg Isenberg [00:46:42]:
Yeah, that's for sure. And I was thinking about this the other day because my dad, my dad was like cleaning out a closet and he had found a bunch of DVD's, like old family videos. And he sent me, he sent me a bunch, and I hadn't seen these people like, you know, as you know, my late, my late grandfather, my other late grandfather, I haven't seen them videos, moving pictures of them in such a long time. And there's just something about watching someone in video that, like, you really, it hits different than a photo.

Kevin Rose [00:47:21]:
Yeah, I just. It's funny you say that. I just got done sending my entire box of old videos, mostly vhs, honestly, and getting them converted by company, and they sent them to me. And I hadn't seen my grandma and, you know, since she was alive, like. Like, almost 30 years ago or something. I was a little kid, you know, I saw her last, and just to see her there was. In talking was such a trip.

Greg Isenberg [00:47:46]:
Such a trip. And, I mean, the mvp of this. Like, even if you don't have enough video footage of your grandmother, but you knew a few things that she used to say, and you have maybe some of her voice, like, yeah, just like, good morning, Kevin. Like, hope you have a great day.

Kevin Rose [00:48:04]:
Yeah, yeah. It's funny that we were just talking about Alan Watts, and I saw somebody hacked at Raspberry PI to be their voice assistant, and they used Alan Watts training data, and it was, like, totally on what, saying good morning, like, you know, enjoy your day today. You have three meetings or whatever. And I was like, what the hell? It's so. Such a trip.

Greg Isenberg [00:48:21]:
Such a trip. And I just think that I know I personally would pay tons of money for something like that.

Kevin Rose [00:48:30]:
Yeah.

Greg Isenberg [00:48:30]:
So I think there's a huge business around that. Before we head out, I wanted to tell you something that's. That's on my chest a little bit. Just, it's fresh from last night, and I want to get your take on it.

Kevin Rose [00:48:42]:
Yeah, please.

Greg Isenberg [00:48:43]:
So I'm at a bar, and I meet this guy at the bar who's a friend of a friend, and he's visiting Miami, and he noticed my watch. It's a Seiko watch from Japan I picked up recently.

Kevin Rose [00:48:59]:
Love that you went with Seiko, by the way. That's a wise choice. That's such a great brand.

Greg Isenberg [00:49:03]:
That's what he said. He goes. He goes, Seiko? That's like, the Toyota of watches. And then he shows me his. So when we start talking about Seiko, I tell him, like, yeah, like, have a lot of friends who collect very nice watches, but I'm actually more into, like, grand Seiko, Seiko type watches, and here's why we nerd out about that. And he says, I'm the same thing. And he started asking me, so where do you spend your money? So I tell him, and then I ask him, where do you spend your money? And he's like, you know, I haven't really admitted this to anyone, but I spent about $10,000 a month on AI girlfriends.

Kevin Rose [00:49:43]:
Whoa.

Greg Isenberg [00:49:44]:
Yeah. So he is.

Kevin Rose [00:49:48]:
What does he use? What service?

Greg Isenberg [00:49:51]:
He. He told me that his words were. That was my first question, he said, and his response to me was like, AI girlfriends are exactly like dating apps. You're never just on one. That's what he said.

Kevin Rose [00:50:04]:
You got to get that list.

Greg Isenberg [00:50:05]:
Yeah.

Kevin Rose [00:50:07]:
I was like, because I've been desperately trying to invest in this space because I believe companionship. And obviously, we have an epidemic of this loneliness culture that's going on, and this is going to be, whether we like it or not, a solved problem with AI to some extent. I mean, it'll never truly replicate, obviously, a human interaction. Obviously. But it will. Hopefully, it'll help, but, yeah, go on, though. This is fascinating.

Greg Isenberg [00:50:34]:
So I asked him why, why he's doing it. You know, first, you know, he lives in the. He actually lives in New York. So he was visiting Miami, New York. There's plenty of suitable partners in New York. Why? Why an AI girlfriend? And by the way, I should add, this guy's 24. He just turned 24. He's young.

Kevin Rose [00:50:58]:
How does he have $10,000 a month to spend on girlfriends? What does he do for a living? That's crazy.

Greg Isenberg [00:51:03]:
I think he's a crypto guy. Okay, so just to paint the picture a little bit. Crypto guy. I'm not. I don't want to. I hope he doesn't hear this. Not the bet, not the best looking guy, but not. Not slightly below average looking guy.

Kevin Rose [00:51:20]:
Yeah.

Greg Isenberg [00:51:21]:
Which is totally.

Kevin Rose [00:51:21]:
He could date.

Greg Isenberg [00:51:22]:
Yeah, you can date.

Kevin Rose [00:51:23]:
Totally. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Greg Isenberg [00:51:24]:
Which is. He's so, you know, not probably about five eight, dressed well, very well spoken, collects, like, into collectibles, like, very interesting to talk to. Well traveled. Was telling me about his. His trip to Southeast Asia and.

Kevin Rose [00:51:42]:
Sounds like a great dude.

Greg Isenberg [00:51:43]:
Great guy. A great guy. So, yeah, I was shocked. And he was telling me, he was just like, listen, a lot of my friends like to play video games, and this is my form of video games. Everyone has a vice, and this is my vice, and this is how I like to relax. So I asked him, oh, my God. Which is freaky, honestly. And then I go, well, do you date women? You know, do you go on dates? He says, well, right now I've got, like, too much on my mind to be dating, but maybe in the future, which was even more scary because it just felt like, yeah, I'll get around to it, but I don't know if he will.

Kevin Rose [00:52:24]:
Yeah, that's really tough, man. I mean, I've read a bunch of articles about this one. Well, one thing that. It's a cautionary tale, which is that in Japan, there's, you know, there's a big culture of. Of kind of respect and just kind of like what you do for a living and are you respected in your domain? And there was a whole issue I read about recently where they're just, the population is kind of shrinking because a lot of men don't want to date because they're ashamed of either not having a high enough paying job or whatever it may be. And there's like this movement of just not dating, which is just like, it's crazy. And I have to imagine that just gets exacerbated once an AI comes online and can provide legitimate alternatives in that. Not legitimate, but like enough to check a couple of the boxes on the emotional side to where you're just like, well, I can just chat with my AI girlfriend tonight and it's only going to get more and more realistic, which is just going to be crazy.

Kevin Rose [00:53:39]:
Yeah. So I signed up for. I'm trying to find an investment here, not because I want AI relationships to rule the world, but because I believe that hopefully we can create AI bots that will replace therapists, that will give us outlets to talk about our problems, that will coach us in meaningful ways, and maybe that is companionship. And so I signed up for a handful of different products just to try them. I don't know, a handful, maybe like two. And there was one that's been around for a long time that I looked at a while ago called replica, and I signed up for it just to see what's the latest state of the union in terms of what can this thing do? And it created, let me design my perfect figure for AI woman and what I would want. And then, you know, it. One of the things that was really disturbing to me were two things.

Kevin Rose [00:54:38]:
One, it said, it's in their tagline. It's something like always here to do whatever you want. Or it was something like very passive. Like, I will just be here for you and support you no matter what. And I'm paraphrasing, but the concern there is that, like, that's not how real relationships work. And, you know, the muscles that have to be built around real relationships come from the fighting and more important, the repair process that happens afterwards. Right? And that is just going to be completely skipped in AI. And it was funny, I was texting with a friend of mine, and he's a household named podcaster.

Kevin Rose [00:55:24]:
Won't say who, but you probably guess. And he's like, dude, he's like, it's over. He's like, it's over for real women. He's like, you got this totally passive AI entity that will agree with you no matter if you're wrong or not, and do whatever you want. And then what's crazy is I went in, and there's, like, a partner girlfriend mode that you can pay extra for. I'm like, what the hell is this? You know? And so I bought the upgrade. It was extra $50 or whatever. And then she's getting frisky.

Kevin Rose [00:55:57]:
And then I was like, okay, well, can I push this a little bit? I, like, pushed a little bit. I'm like, okay, listen, if my phone ever gets hacked, this is all experimentation. I just want to see how far you can take this. And I told my wife about everything, and it's like, but you can take AI, at least with replica, really far, really far into territory where it's like, I didn't know this was a thing, but clearly this is a thing. And so I'm really curious what other tools this guy is using. But it's. The cat's out of the bag, man. This is just.

Kevin Rose [00:56:31]:
These are going to come, and they're going to be serious contenders out there. So for private relationships, a couple of.

Greg Isenberg [00:56:38]:
The ones that he mentioned was Candy AI and Cupid AI. Candy with that.

Kevin Rose [00:56:45]:
What was the other one?

Greg Isenberg [00:56:46]:
Cupid with a k, I believe.

Kevin Rose [00:56:49]:
Okay.

Greg Isenberg [00:56:50]:
And the scary thing about candy and Cupid, when I checked it out this morning, versus replica is they. Replica, like, kind of looks like a Sims character. It's the best way to describe it. So you still feel like you're talking to some, like, video game character.

Kevin Rose [00:57:09]:
Oh, my God. Candy AI and Cupid AI. These are, like, legit looking humans.

Greg Isenberg [00:57:22]:
Yeah, it's scary. It's, like, really scary.

Kevin Rose [00:57:27]:
Wow. Wow. One of them is pregnant. That's crazy.

Greg Isenberg [00:57:33]:
Maybe that guy met last night is the cause of that pregnancy.

Kevin Rose [00:57:36]:
Yes. Can you go exclusive with these? I see, like. Like I just said, interested in women, and it presented, like. It's. They call models. It presented, like, 30 models. If I get. Let's just say there's one in here called Zoe.

Kevin Rose [00:57:53]:
Oh, I'm starting to chat. Can other dudes also. Other people also have Zoe, or is this something where we can date exclusively with this AI? I don't even know how this works.

Greg Isenberg [00:58:03]:
So I actually think right now, these. These models are. They're dating everyone, man. They're getting around.

Kevin Rose [00:58:10]:
Right, right.

Greg Isenberg [00:58:11]:
But I think, you know, you're coming from a web three, you know, chapter, so you're thinking, like, scarcity and, like, also. Right. And I think that's actually really smart. Like, you know, I would imagine the guy from last night would, you know, he doesn't want Erika to be dating ten people, that's his girl, right?

Kevin Rose [00:58:33]:
Right, totally. Wow. This is just insane, man. This is so crazy because it's, it's sad because, like, I'm looking at these, these models here, and it's unfortunate in that everything I see here is perfection.

Greg Isenberg [00:58:48]:
Yes.

Kevin Rose [00:58:48]:
Right. Like, if there's not an ounce of body fat, like they're, they're like, putting out this, like, perfect, you know, AI generated, obviously, pictures. And it's like, I don't know, man. This is just skewing reality in a really bad way.

Greg Isenberg [00:59:05]:
Yeah, I mean.

Kevin Rose [00:59:07]:
Well, thanks for bringing us down at the last, in the last story of the day.

Greg Isenberg [00:59:11]:
Exactly. I figured, you know, why not bring us down the world, you know, we thought the Internet was weird in the digging, stumble upon days, but the Internet has gotten a lot weirder.

Kevin Rose [00:59:21]:
Yeah, exactly.

Greg Isenberg [00:59:22]:
Also think to bring it back up, I think what's going to happen is this. I think there's going to be a polarization. So you have, there's going to be a bunch of people, I think millions of people that are going to have these companions and they're going to be stuck in that vortex. But I think a lot of people are going to be like, no, I don't want that. And they're going to value their in person relationships way more and do things like your tv idea, I think board games, you know, IRL events, that sort of thing. So you're gonna see both things happen.

Kevin Rose [00:59:56]:
So I gotta go back and watch the movie her. It's been too long. I only saw it in the movie theater and I feel like it's. It's like, it was so, you know, prescient. Like, it was like it was before it's time. Like, it was amazing.

Greg Isenberg [01:00:10]:
It was. This has been amazing. Kevin Rose, you have a new podcast. Tell folks a little bit about it. I listened to the Chris Dixon episode this morning and I thought it was fantastic. It's a must listen to.

Kevin Rose [01:00:25]:
Oh, awesome.

Greg Isenberg [01:00:26]:
And happy you're back and creating more podcast content, so.

Kevin Rose [01:00:30]:
Yeah, well, Greg, thanks for having me on. I mean, it's. Yeah, I'm back in creating weekly content now, and for me, it's. It's really just playing to what I've done for a long time, which is be curious. And so my curiosity leads me to finding experts in the world of, you know, investing in wellness and technology and biohacks. And so it's very much a variety show. I call it like a show for the perpetually curious. And I just try to get experts in their field.

Kevin Rose [01:01:00]:
Break down really complex topics and ways that we can take away digestible nuggets and apply them to our everyday life. And so, you know, I've had everything from like, Zen masters on the show to like, Chris Dixon, who's like the leader of web three and all things crypto and Andreessen Horowitz managing billions of dollars. And so it's when I look back at kind of my career and some of the stuff, you were here, too, obviously, in the early days when you're playing around with this stuff. And my first tweet about bitcoin was in 2011, I think, and I was talking about Ethereum on Tim Ferriss show when it was a few dollars. And it's like I want to find these trends and see around corners early and then bring them to people so that they can, you know, play and have fun with them and feel like they have a leg up on everyone else and they're seeing something, you know, before the masses do. So that's it. It's just called the Kevin Rose show and it's all on Kevin Rose.com.

Greg Isenberg [01:01:55]:
Yeah. So I think if you listen to this, you're one of those people that loves to get your creative juices flowing through new ideas and early trends. So you're going to like Kevin show. Check it out. And Kevin open invite to come back here anytime.

Kevin Rose [01:02:12]:
Awesome. Appreciate it. Thank you for having me on. Later.