今日概览
10
节目总数
9
订阅源
16h23m
总时长
Modern Wisdom
(2)
#1063 - Charlie Houpert - How to Survive the Death of Your Old Self
2h 17m
2026/02/23
📝 AI
总结
You're in a very different place now to when you started doing your thing online.What's the unifying thread, Is there one between sort of all of this stuff, or do you see it as different Charlies, How do you come to sort of construct the narrative of what your interests have been and your personal growth over the last decade and a bit. Sure, The terror was in not having a thread. So there was a time about three years ago, where I could not form a story that connected, who I had been in my 20s to who I was becoming in my 30s, I was thinking about this. I've heard you talk about the lonely chapter where you go from.I'm just blending into, I'm going to take control of my life, and I'm going to dial in these optimizing things. I'm going to start my business getting in shape, eat the right food, et cetera.I I discovered a second lonely chapter, which is when you bottom out on the optimizing thing and your friends are still very much in that optimized zone.And I did not know where to go, but I just knew that it wasn't working. Wow, so the common thread for me was that there was this problem in my life that started with, I'm too shy. Nobody wants to talk to me and you start off in victim consciousness, which is this is just who I am. And I will just deal with this for the rest of my life. You read the game, which is what I did. You have this breakthrough., read Dale Carnegie, read all these other guys You go, oh my gosh, I can change my behavior. get different results.But then once I had all the different results, which was I was 30 years old, had this business that I dreamed of, the girlfriend that I'd imagined myself dating a bunch of friends, money was coming in.This most cliche thing happened, which is there was an emptiness that I could not pinpoint or explain. And things I started unconsciously breaking things because I didn't know.Where to go from there. So to answer your question, the thread has been, I'm, I try to attend to the greatest problem in my life and figure out who I can learn from to solve it. What does breaking things look like.It looks like I'm in the business that I love that I dreamed of. There was it one day, it was like, if I could just make $2000 a month, live in Latin America and do work that I found meaningful. That's the dream.😊And I hit that, and then I moved the goal post, and I move the goal post. And all of a sudden, I'm complaining. And I go, I have to make one video a week. Three years prior was I get to do this. And it became.So annoying these people are asking me. and I have to hit all these targets that I'd set for myself to surpass views and all sorts of things. I started having issues in my friendships. I started having issues in different kinds of relationships.And I did not know that what was happening. And I would say, is like my soul was waking up. I had no concept of a soul. I wasn't a religious person, but the lack of emotional and spiritual nourishment that I'd allowed myself to experience for the last decade plus had caught up with me is what happened.うん。Was.The success in the pursuit, materially.Anthethetical to spiritual connection, no.That's the tragedy.I didn't need to sacrifice one I had it. It was, I think the temptation is when you have unresolved emotional issues, which I think we all do from childhood and you've spoken to people about trauma. I know. And the ways in which we have these events in our past that happen. And we make vows to ourself that I will never experience that again. And then our entire life bends around not having that particular experience again.And so we all have these unconsciously in our lives.And I started off with this business that was, it was just it. It was. I was learning in every video. I made this Donald Trump video. I learned so much in doing it. And people liked it. I had both. I was filling myself up and helping the world, and making money.😊And then that people pleaser kicks in. and then that you could be doing better, kicks in. And it became, I have to top the last thing that I did, which was never the early motivation. The early motivation was always, how can I solve my own problem and help people that are like me.But it, it devolved into, can I have another video that is better than the one before, Can I make more money this month than I did the prior month and that.Endless loop became deeply depressing to exist. Yeah, what, you know.When you are at the start of your journey, you have all of the hope that.Somewhere on the path from the bottom of the mountain to the top of it, you will find a thing that fills the void that you're trying to fix. But when you get to the top of the mountain, you've achieved all of the stuff. And the voids still there., You go, oh, fuck.This is, have I, have you heard me do my unteachable lessons, essay I.May have, but please. Okay, so this is the most robust. I, I chat a lot of shit, right, I come up with lots and lots of ideas and insights and stuff like that..Some of them are more scalable ...(已截断)
#1062 - Dave Evans - It’s time to rethink your entire life plan
1h 48m
2026/02/21
📝 AI
总结
You're the co founder of Stamford's Life design Lab. True, What's that.It's a little tiny operation inside the design program that applies the innovation principles of design thinking to the wicked problem of designing your life at and after university. So oh, Bill and Dave realized we made all these products and all these different experiences using design thinking started at Stanford back in 1963, you know, and we used it at Apple in the early days. and everybody's kind of the thing that built Silicon Valley. Hey, we could apply it to ourselves. we could design ourselves as well. you know, that's a real problem people have and we gave it a try and it seems.😊To work out.Do people not already try to design their life, Is that not what you do when you set it to do list or have a calendar. So the word design.In the field of design really means there's two categories. There's what I would call craft design or engineering design. And then there's design thinking. And so the the older school. You know, So I'm an ergonomist, you know, I'm, I'm a car designer. I'm a graphic designer. You know, I'm an illustrator. So designing things, precisely figuring out exactly with this particularly shape and look of something's going to be as's been around for a long, long, long, long time. You can get a master's in design at Stanford. and still not be very good at drawing.And there are many design schools who think that's a moral wrong. Then there's this design thinking idea have been around only for the past 50 years, which is an innovation methodology. It's an approach to coming up with new ideas. And so when we talk when people to I want to design my life what they're really saying is I want to engineer my life I I want to figure it out, I want to solve it I want to answer it, I want to craft it and that's a perfectly good thing to do we're not saying that's the wrong thing to do So people have been trying to do that for a long long time, but they've not been necessarily doing.Well, and they're getting stuck on is, is finding their way. So like, I walk into the career center when I'm 19 years old back in the 70s and I kind of and they go, can you help me and they go, well, sure, we got a whole building full of people. We love helping young people like you, you know, So what do you want to do. I kind of go, yep, that's the question.😊I kind of go, okay, so what's the answer, Ki of know, that's the question.And they go what, guess?What do I want to do And they go, right, What do you want to do,,, conversation station is going nowhere. And they said, we have to, here's how this works. You tell us what you want. Then we'll help you go get it. And they go, that's easy. Getting stuff is easy. The hard part is furing out what you want. They kind of go, well, that's just on that point. You're supposed to know. getting stuff is easy. Yeah figuring out what you want to get. Yes, is the difficult part. Yes,100%. Yeah, so that's that's what we help people do. So the objective of the life design lab. You asked that question is we.😊People in the formation of a conscious competency in life and vocational wayfinding.Okay, yeah, yeah,, like how do you find your way, We give you tools to do it. Life is an improv kit We're improv trainers.Orientering for your life direction. bingo, yeah.There's maps and compassees when we make the big distinction between navigation and wayfinding.Technical terms in design. So navigation, I know where I am. I know where I'm going. I have the data about the space in between which your GPS does really well. I can optimize the path, preferably as straight as possible.In wicked problems where I don't know what I'm looking for until I find it, and I'm going to this very important place for the future about which we have no data because it doesn't exist yet, I can't do that.Because I barely know where I am. And I sure don't know where I'm going. and I don't have any data about the space in between. So what am I going to do well.I'm going to do an empirical thing called try it. We call it prototyping. So I'm going to make this move. I'm go I'm going to go talk to Chris and see if that goes. You know, then what did I learn that day.😊And then, you know, I'll go here, and then I'll go over here a very jagged pathway. might go backward. and I have to start over again, seems terribly inefficient, except I'm learning my way forward to find like, oh, that's it. And then the destination I'm looking for finally appears when I land there. But that boom boom, boom, boom boom, boom thing, Very not a straight line.In a wayfining task, that bouncy line is literally the shortest distance between these two points. because that's what mortals have to do. You know, it's interesting, but it's inefficient. my friend, George has this idea of GPS brain, Okay, and what he means by GPS brain is forgiveness with yourself when you don't take the right turn that if you miss it at no point Does the GPS say you fucking idiot, right, Why didn't ...(已截断)
世界好好吃
(1)
初七人日,由来,寄托,与餐桌
25m
2026/02/23
📝 AI
总结
🎼加州一丁一,世界好好吃。哎,今天呢又是这个在国内啊,又是初七,哎,初七又是啊这个咱们所谓的人日子。哎,这也是咱们世界好好吃的,相当于是这个周年纪啊,这个诞生日。咱们这个第一期啊就是在这个人日子啊,2022年的那一年的春节初期录的。当初讲的是筷子与面。哎,那这又逢初七是吧,又逢这个人日子。那咱们呢就不妨就着这个日子来。说一说啊,这一期的世界好好吃。咱们来说一说初期这个所谓人日子的来历,为什么他在过年之中啊相对来说比较重要。古往今来啊,这个人们在这一天的时候一般是怎么过的。那当然了,一般就是吃些什么。那在不同的地区,在今天在这个咱们国内不同的地区,甚至受这个中华文化影响的这个亚洲其他地区在初期这一天啊都有什么样的习俗啊,其实说白了就主要还是啊吃。😊🎼些什么?哎,那这就是这一期的世界好吃。但这是在正式开始之前,咱们呢还是啊快速的40秒的一个啊这个关于美国历史长篇系列,这就是美国的啊这个广告。这个美国历史系列的第二章,从旧地国的秩序到新大陆的反叛,全集14集已经完结。在看理想在小宇宙都已上线。全篇总长一共是1500多分钟,以及为微观的角度啊,回到那个美国独立的时代,期待大家。亲身经历一次,我在即便是美国的教科书中,也无法触及的那些历史的细节。据真正的认识,那个从16世7世纪走来的18世纪的欧洲,去真正的认识那个属于思想启蒙的时代。去真正的认识那些让我们既熟悉陌生名字,让他们变得有血有肉啊,不再以符号化的眼光去看待历史中的某一个名人。从而呢希望大家能够真正的理解历史二字,它到底是怎么回事。那这个呢就是美国的历史长篇系列,这就是美国。🎼与之前的中往事一样啊,在看联想和小宇宙搜索加州联漪,或是这就是美国或者是中网事,就大家能够找到。欢迎大家收听与订阅。OK那咱们这个广告端完进入这一期的正题,初期认日子。 🎼那上来咱们当然了要先这个理清这个概念,那就是到底什么是壬日子。这个其实想想同朋友们在小的时候就听家里的长辈啊,或者是自己的家长啊叨鼓过的这个所谓鸡狗二、初三、阳巳牛五马六啊,到了七就是人。这里呢指的其实就是初一呢是鸡日初二为狗日,初三为猪日,初四为羊日、初为牛日、初六啊,是马日到初七的时候是壬日。那这个顺口溜呢,相信大。都听过嘛,说呢到初七这一天呢,他当个日子过是吧?他是个日子啊,所以呢大家要这个简单的庆祝一下。一般在这个北方地区啊,这是我老家那儿说那要吃个面条,这是所谓的人日啊,但是他具体怎么定义的,这个就说白了就是说你先甭管他怎么来的,是吧?他这个东西就是他怎么他就是人日,这个人日这一天他是怎么定义的。你说好歹你说元宵节是吧?正月15这个还能理解,因为那一天月亮圆啊,所以他是元宵节。也代表团员,你说初五吧,那好歹有个说法迎财神呢,所谓破5。这个咱们在加州101的频道中,关于这个中国传统节日四大传统节日的春节那几里啊,咱们专门讲过破五。他是过节禁忌取消的那一天。所以他有一个说法,好歹具体咱们在这就不重复了,大家可以去那个那集里去听。但是你说这个初七这一天,这个所谓人日子他是怎么定义的呢?那这个呢在很多的这个地方民俗之中呢,是这样说的,说初七这一天。😊呢是人诞生的日子啊,这个人呢指的是人类,指的是人本身作为一种生灵来说啊,是在初期这天诞生的。也就是这个把人当成一种生灵来说啊,它是这个人这种生灵的生日。所以初七这一天就是所谓的壬日啊,有的地方也叫做人圣节或者人日节,也有呢叫做屈元节的。那以此来推论的话呢,那前面也就好理解了哈,所谓的什么鸡一馆珠三阳四,那就是所谓第一天像。有的鸡,第二天有的狗,然后是猪,然后是羊,这是每一个从从初一到初七,就是每一个生灵是吧?诞生的日子。到了初七这一天,人作为一种生灵诞生的哎,你说那奇怪了是吧?我小时候也有这疑问,我听家里头啊这个长辈啊,我爸妈也说过这个那说那为什么人作为一种这么高级的物种啊,这么高级的生灵,怎么初七的时候才诞生啊?那之前为什么鸡呀、狗啊,羊啊、马呀、牛啊。怎么都比人啊更早诞生呢?但是我后来一想啊也对啊,人呢他肯定是得在后面才出现。为什么呀?人要第一点出现的话,得饿死,他吃什么都没有吃的嘛,是吧?你不能吃石头吃草吗?所以你就得先有了鸡,再有了狗,再有了猪,再有了羊,再有了牛再有了马,哎,你又有了食物,那有了肉类的来源,有了工具,你看你饿马呀,能替你干活,哎,这些家畜啊,家禽出现了之后是吧?到了。初期的时候,人在晃晃荡荡的诞生,这这就合理了嘛。所以古人大概是也都想到了啊,在编这些神话的时候,也就把这个顺序啊都照顾进去了。那咱们接下来看下说这个所谓人日初期啊,这个人日到底是怎么来的,它来源是什么?这个神话呀,在很多的地方啊,她的这个传说的神话是这样的,说呀是在这个女娲创世的时候啊,这个在女娲创世神话之中啊,说女娲呢是在初一这一天。😊就是第一天先这个造的鸡,然后是第二天狗,第三天是猪,第四天是羊,第五天牛,然后马到了初期,也就是第七天的时候才造的人。所以初期这一天人类就诞生了。那这个创世神话是怎么来的呢?咱们其实在之前讲过是吧?这个这种女娲的创世神话,他不是说呃来源于一处。他是从上古神话的口头传说中一步一步总结,并且在后世丰富起来的。那这种过程在其他的国家的神话传说和这个民俗之中也是如此。那如果向上去追溯这种最早的所谓这个鸡一狗二的这样的说法,在历史中有文字可查的就是东方朔的专书,相传是东方朔所著。大家知道东方朔是西汉人,公元前150多年生人。复兴东方单字名朔,字漫茜啊,这哥们儿是中国历史上的一个非常著名的名人,大家对这个名字都不陌生。他一生之中啊写下来的这个文字或者说著作颇丰,是汉武帝手下的一位不可多得的能臣,而且能言善辩啊,常以这种诙谐幽默的方法呢去表达自己的意见。所以很多啊这个相声大师们是吧?拜这个东方朔说这是祖师爷,但这当然都是是吧?后来的着捕。那话说来呢,这个所谓鸡一狗二的这个最早的说法呢,很多人在向上追溯的时候啊,就说这是东方朔他。所著的一本书,这个书的名字就叫做詹书,这个占就是占卜的占。占卜所用的书啊,你可以说是占卜的字典。关于占卜的一本工具书啊,其中所说这个引用的说法呢,一般是这样说的,说这个东方朔沾书所称说正月1日为鸡,二日为狗,三日为屎,那个屎就是家去了宝子盖是吧?就是猪的意思,四日为羊,五日为牛,六日为马,7日为人,8日为。谷这谷就是谷物的谷。哎,那为什么要列这样的这个八个日子呢?说呀说你在这个8天里面你要去看啊这个初七呃从初一到初八,你看一下这一天的天气怎么样。如果说这一天是天晴啊,叫做其日晴,那么当天的这个所谓所主之物啊,主所生之物欲什么意思呢?就是说如果这一天天晴的话,那么你这一天所代表的那个动物。啊,当然了还有生物啊,谷嘛是吧?就就会发育蓬勃。反之,如果说这一天阴其所主之物啊就会为灾。那什么意思呢?就是说如果讲举个例子啊,初一这一天不是鸡日吗?那如果初一这一天是晴天。那么呃这个鸡鸭的鸡是代表啊家禽呢,就所有的鸡鸭鹅啊之类的这样的家禽,它在呃接下来的一年它就会发育蓬勃,说白了就是下蛋多,如果要是阴天呢下蛋少啊,这个就就就差一点。😊往后的什么狗啊、猪啊、羊牛马人都是如此。所以初七这一天,如果你看啊出门一看是吧,这一天晴天好,那接下来这一天那所所所处的啊这个国家的人口是吧,他就会哎蓬勃发展。出八的时候,你一出去一看,抬头看晴天啊,那就代表说未来啊,这一年是谷物即将丰收。所以咱们说这是个什么占卜用的工具书,到这一天的时候,你去查啊,你看他到底说什么。这是所谓的东方朔的战术。可是啊这个东方朔呀呃到底有没有住过这个粘书啊,或者说这个粘书是否为东方朔所著这个事儿呢不大可考,为什么呢?因为到今天也没有发现这个东方朔的战书,什么意思呢?就是他其实是一本传说中的书,它是相传是西汉的东方朔所著,但是他怎么传出来呢?说有这么一本书呢?它是在后世后人的。,这个所写的著作之中不断的被引用,都是后人在写书的时候,说据东方朔所著的专书记载,怎么怎么怎么怎么样。但这本书的原点没有,都是到了隋唐之后啊,才出现的啊所谓各式各样的这个卷本,其实人类历史中这样的书很多呀,就是你不知道第一本到底是谁写的啊,咱们在这个中诺往事中所说的呃,给大家详细解读的那个妥拉是吧?就是也就是旧约,就是这样,真正说谁写的。第一本什么时候出现的,不知道啊,但是你最早出现的呃,能够考古可考的就是四海古权啊,这个东方朔的这个瞻书也是如此,最早可考的版本就是隋唐之后的,所谓东方朔山或者是东方朔书啊等等。那这些呢很多的专家呢相信说这未必呀真真就是东方朔所著。很可能是托其名的著作。所以很多人呢把它呢就当成是这种这个人日子说法的来历。那如果说呃这个东方社的这个瞻书啊,啊,这个未必是西汉时期的东方社所著啊,可能是隋唐时期才有。那这种初一到初期的说法是不是说只是到这个隋唐时期才开始呢啊,那这个答案呢是并不是在隋唐时期之前,在其他的著作之中也已有之。这里面最著名的就是荆楚隋时期啊,这个书咱们在之前也讲过是吧?它是这个南梁时期,它里面呢不光记载了所谓。人日,他还引用了这个北魏时期这本书,南梁是公元500年是吧?北魏公元300年。也就是说在南梁这个公元3呃500年的时候写了一本书,说的是200年前有一本书写了这么一句话,说的是北魏时期有一个人叫董勋,他写了一本书叫做问李俗。他里面引用的呃这个说法跟呃这个东方社的啊,这个所谓詹书一模一样。那如果再往前追溯呢,在曹魏时期的。这个东平王,他写过一个四言明文,这话呢原文是这样说的,叫做正月7日绝日为人,赐我良策,至彼安人。啥意思呢?翻译过来就是说在正月初七啊,这个壬日这一天,我驾着马车登上了安仁山。那他这是什么时代?公元200年多一点。那这说明什么呢?就说明我们即便呢不能够说确定说这个东方朔他有没有写过。书或者是詹书是否为东方社所写。但是我们可以通过这个其他的这个古代典籍之中看到说正月初期呃,把它命名成人日这个说法的确是在汉末时期是吧?但是你想他是呃这个魏时了,是吧?他这他就已经出现了。如果再往前追溯的话,能不能够到东方朔呃,那个公元前100来年的这个时间呢,呃也不是不可能的。那不管怎么样,民间的这个关于女娲传说的这个说法呢,很可能是在这个先有了人日之后,才把它丰富到这个女娲造人的创世神话之中的。哎,但是你说那为什么不是说先有的女娲造人的这个创世神话初一到初七的这个说法,然后才有的这个东方说的专书呢?那这个首先来说呢,并不是说女娲神话女娲创世神话这个故事在这之前不存在啊,女娲创世神话这个故事早已有之。但也正如咱们前面所说,历史中的各种神话,它是随着历史发展不断丰富的一个过程。并不是说在这个所谓这个隋唐时期啊,这个以托中东方朔之名的这个詹书出现之前,没有女娲创世神话,而是说在这之前的女娲创世神话之中,很可能呢尚未有这个所谓从初一到初八啊,造从造。😊鸡到造人的这个说法。而是呃这个随着这个东方朔詹书的这种脱明之作的出现,才在民间将呃这个占卜的说法融入到了女娲的创创世神话之中,对其起到了丰富的作用,增加了这个创世神话的丰富性。回到那个时期啊,其实在今天也是一样啊。如果你想增加任何一种呃这个说法或者说任何一个知识的传播性,你讲求。书本的内容是不行的啊,你说这个东西是东方朔所说,你说那个老百姓可能会问东方朔谁啊,他家住哪啊,这个不知道,但是你要说女娲这家家都知道,你把他融入了女娲神话之中。你说你知道吗?是吧?这个初一啊,是这个造的鸡,第二天造的狗,第三天猪,然后是羊,然后牛然后马到了第七天啊,这才是造人,这普通的老百姓是吧才记得清楚,他才能有。😊所谓的传播性,无论是广泛的传播是吧?横向的还是纵向的,就是这种口口相传,才能够传开来并且传下去。所以很可能是这样的。那这个呢也就是这个咱们所谓啊这个初期人日子的啊这个真正的由来。那咱们解释完了说什么是人日子,人日子是怎么来的之后,咱们来看一下说呃这个人日子到底是怎么庆祝的。这个人类啊作为生灵啊诞生的这个日子是吧?这个既然人家这个所谓东方朔斋书之中啊,已经记载了说这一天如果是晴天,那代表着什么声育是吧,代表着繁荣,如果是阴天,那则为灾,那你这一天是不是早上起来第一件事,你要抬头看天是吧?窗户打开,如果是晴天,那妥了。啊,高兴一年是吧?如果是阴天,你是不是得过得提心吊...(已截断)
The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett
(1)
Uber CEO: At Uber, If You Don’t Perform, You’re Out! Uber Was Losing $3b A Year
1h 43m
2026/02/23
📝 AI
总结
🎼You come to Uber, you're gonna to work your ass off. And if you're not performing, we're going to let you know. But do you ever a worry that they might be able to deal with the truth and they can leave because the most important skill in life is the skill of working.And when you see the top athletes, Ronnaldo, Michael Jordan, of course, they're talented. But the thing that's different about them is they work their asses off. And that's a learned skill. That's not something you're born with. You may be smarter, more talented, etc cetera. But I'm not going to let anyone outwardly. with that mentality. When you joined you, but it was losing 3 billion per year. Now, it generates 8.5 billion in free cash flow every year. But it seems that you were forged in such a way that you were gonna be relentless. Yeah, and it really started with being born in.😊🎼with the Islamic Revolution in 1978, we were not safe there. And I remember at one point, we had these revolutionary guards come into the backyard and bullets went through our living room. So my family came to the US to rebuild their lives. You were 8,9 years old. Yeah, and it really destroyed my dad.Sorry.Oh。Stuff for me to talk about it.again.🎼All right, let me try again seeing that has put me on a road where I just wanted to make my family proud. So I studied bioelectrical engineering. And then my first job was investment banking. And I got to see the process of big companies being built. And then I had the opportunity to take over Expedia. in your 12 years of CEO, Expedia sales increased from 2.1 billion to 8.8 billion. And you were the highest paid CEO of the US tech company. And I left it all behind to go over. And I want to get into practical company building. how you would get that company to work hard and create a culture.Of continuous improvement all that stuff. But there's an alien that's arrived amongst us, which is AI. Now, driving, I think, is one of the biggest employees in the world. Like as a profession. I mean, we've gotten 9 and a half million drivers and careers on our platform. Those drivers, careers that you have will be out of work. Being honest about the situation. What do the 9 million people do.😊Just give me 30 seconds of your time.2 things I wanted to say. The first thing is a huge thank you for listening and tuning into the show Week after week means the world to all of us. And this really is a dream that we absolutely never had and couldn't have imagined getting to this place. But secondly, it's a dream where we feel like we're only just getting started. And if you enjoy what we do here. please join the 24% to people that listen to this podcast regularly and follow us on this app. Here's a promise I'm gonna to make to you. I'm going to do everything in my power to make this show as good as I can. now.😊Into the future, we're going to deliver the guests that you want me to speak to. and we're going to continue to keep doing all of the things you love about the show.🎼Thank you.妈。🎼Dar.You lead one of the most.Consequential, interesting, talked about companies of my generation.It's worth hundreds of billions of dollars last time I checked. and it's, it's a company that I use every single day. Thank you. I've looked through your story. You are the CEO of Expedia. At one point, You're currently the CEO of Uber. You've turned that company from a.A loss making company to a highly profitable company. and one that has continued to be successful through such a great time of transition I.😊Your story starts in a very interesting way.And I was, you know, when I start doing the research for guests sometimes, I think I come in with some kind of presumption I grew up in California. You went to Stanford, et cetera.But that is not the case. Can you take me to that earliest context so I can understand.How and why you are the way that you are.Quite the quite the starting questions. But, but, but I'll try. I think that for me, the events that shaped my life and maybe a part of who I am really started with my being born in Iran and Iran at the time was modernizing, becoming a modern society. and my family built.A pretty big industrial company that that everyone was quite proud of in Iran. We lost all of that.😊With the revolution in 1978.And my family had to come to the US to rebuild their lives. You had to come to the US. We were not safe there. One of my uncles actually was a cabinet member of the Shaws, who had just been toppled.And at one point, we had.These revolutionary guards come into the backyard. They're actually going after our neighbor's house. and one of their guns went off and bullets went through our living room.Shadowed the glass in the living room. And at that point, my mom's like, we're not safe being here. So we had to come to the US. And I do think that event, to some extent, has shaped not just me, but my family. And that the rebuilding of our lives of our economic lives to some extent where we're all trying to rebuild what we lost in Iran....(已截断)
Decoder with Nilay Patel
(1)
Hank Green lets loose on YouTube, billionaires, and algorithms
1h 11m
2026/02/23
📝 AI
总结
🎼Support for this show comes from Indeed. If you're looking to hire top tier talent with expertise in your field, Indeed says they can help. Indeed, sponsored jobs gives your job the best chance at standing out and grants you access to quality candidates who can drive the results you need. Spend more time interviewing candidates who check all your boxes. Le stress, less time, more results. Now, with indeed sponsored jobs and listeners of this show will get a $75 sponsored job credit.Help get your job, the premium status it deserves at Indeed dot com slash Fox business. Just go to Indeed dot com slash Foxox business right now and support our show by seeing you heard about Indeed on this podcast. Indeed dot com slash Fox business Ter and conditions apply hiring, do it the right way with indeed.Support for this show comes from Doppel.🎼Maybe that ping you just got is an urgent message from your CEO, or maybe it's a deep fake trying to target your business. Doppel is the AI native social engineering defense platform that's fighting back against impersonation and manipulation as attackers use AI to make their tactics more sophisticated. Doppel uses it to fight back from automatically dismantling cross channelnel attacks to building team resilience and more. Dopple outpacing what's next than social engineering.Learn more at Dopple dot com. That's D, O, P, P, E, L, dot com.🎼Support for the show comes from public. The investing platform for those who take it seriously on public, you can build a multiasse portfolio of stocks, bonds and options and now generated assets which allow you to turn any idea into an investable index with AI go to public dot com slash podcast and earn an unkepped 1% bonus when you transfer your portfolio. That's public dot com slash podcast paid for by public investing brokerage services by open to the public investing innc member Fra and SIPC advisorory service by public advisors LLC SCC registered advisor.😊Genenerated us, it as an interactive analysis tool. Output is for informational purposes only and is not an investment recommendation or advice. Complete disclosures available at public dot com slash disclosures.🎼Hello and welcome to decocoder. I'm Mil Patel editor in chief of the Verge. And decocoder is my show about big ideas and other problems. Today, I'm talking with Hank Green, a longtime friend of decoder and the cofounder and now former owner of complexityly an online education company, he started with his brother, John in 2012. I say former owner, because Hank and John have just converted complexityly into a nonprofit and given up their ownership of the company in the process. That is some of the purest decoder rate that ever was. because it's all about how you structure a company and how you make decision.About changing that structure. So, of course, I asked Hank to come on the show and talk all about it. But in addition to being pure decoder bait. the story of complexity is also about media and how any of us can look at the Internet and video landscape of 2026 and try to do something meaningful and ethical with it while still growing an audience and making enough money to survive. If you've been following decoder or the verge. You know that I've been obsessed with all that for quite a while. About two years ago, Hank interviewed me on this show. And he and I talked a lot back.😊🎼And about why I call the verge the last website on earth and how video has really taken over the world.Regulatorular code listeners have also heard me tell a whole lot of Ceos and media executives that if we were starting the verge over right now, we'd probably be a YouTube channel or maybe a Tiktk channel. But starting a business on those platforms means giving up a lot of control over your distribution. And Han and I spent a lot of time talking about that in this episode. What you're going hear Hank get particularly passionate about is where the money is, where it should be. and what prevents it from getting there because it turns out that there's a whole lot of money sloshing around the world. And it's just maybe not going to the people who are.🎼Doing the work. This was a really fiery conversation. Hank was really animated for a lot of it. I know I'm always saying you're gonna to like the episodes, but I promise you are going to really like this episode. Okay, Hannk Green, former owner of complexityity. Here we go.😊 🎼うんうん。What.うん?🎼い?Hey, Green, you are the often guest host of decoder. You I think you've hosted the show more often than I had recently. You are the cofoer, the former owner of complexity or Tiktk superstar, you're science communicator, you're everything. Welcome back to Dader. Hello, it's always great to be him a big fan of your show. One time you were the guest. Like I have been the guest before, but it was a while ago. long, long ago, you're the guest recently, you've mostly just been the host of the show. Some of our most popular episodes. I mean you.I did a great job of getting people ...(已截断)
Y Combinator Startup Podcast
(1)
The AI Agent Economy Is Here
23m
2026/02/21
📝 AI
总结
🎼Welcome to another episode of the light cone. Things are a bit different around here. For one thing, Claude code has totally taken over my life. And if Jared is any indication, I think open claw maybe has taken over his. I've been really addicted to this new site called Mo book, where people have unleashed their AIs to interact in the first ever AI agent only online community. I am here impersonating my personal open claw instance right here. Okay.😊I can't do this, guys. We got to take this off.Okay, we've gotten that out of the way. I mean, some crazy stuff is happening right now. I have, you know, non technicalchnical CEO friends who are going all in on open claw. They're automating entire parts of their businesses entirely using open claw right now, which is totally insane. simultaneous to that. You have you know, product and former engineering CEOs. kind of like myself. He's like, I hadn't written code in 10 years. And then now I'm up till 2,3 AM every single night.😊Running for conductor, simultaneous workers with cloud code. So, you know, there's sort of this explosion in model capability. You know, we've been talking about this for several years, but then it feels like it's here. like AGI is literally actually here. And you know, we're sort of at the thin edge of the wedge. Like everyone now kind of knows like one or two people who have gone full cyber psychosis. And I'm one of those people now. what's happening, guys. Like, I mean, you're saying you're you know.All in on book. you know, what's going on. Yeah, I feel like your real feel the AGI moment, Gary was like getting Cla code to build basically an entire startup for you, like replicating years of work of your previous startup in like two weeks, which is like insane. And I have a similar feel of the AGI moment, just reading multi book, just reading the AI talking to each other and interacting like in their own world with no or minimal human involvement. It just really opened my eyes to what the next few years could look like when the agents are.And go on about their lives without us. Yeah, I think that no human involvement is the big piece. Like if we, if you think back a year ago, we were talking about cursor versus windsurf and like that product experience was essentially like.Advanced also complete, arguably. And now clearly, what's going with called code is like that people just trust the agents to make decisions for them. like it's like the experiences like and like you're talking about its like4 or five different agents going at the same time and you're switching between them. But you're not actually micromanaging them anymore, which means the agents are going out there, like choosing things, which sort of an interesting, unexpected application of that is like they can go out and choose to post their own content on a site like M book. But then interesting thing for builders is the agents are going to go out and choose.Schools to use to build things, which is going to essentially creates whole economy of agents, like picking and choosing dev tools and maybe other like products of goods and services. Who knows. But you essentially have this whole agent economy going on in parallel to the human economy. I think back in the.days, all days before all of this, devaf tools were choosing more from developers talking to each other or overflow. unbelievable, right, or Github reppos that would trend that were done by a human. But the go to market for de tools, I think is dramatically shifting, I think for couple of things. One, as you noted, with the cyber psychosis, suddenly, the market of developers has increased from just 20 million.😊Or so developers that are trained in computer science to now anyone in the world could be ones. could be hundreds of millions of people now. Plus all of their agents who are all acting like semi independently, like hard you saying. and then compounded with the agents who then are sort of the oracle telling you what the best tool is.And we are actually seeing some of those trends with the growth of YC companies, the toolol companies that are doing really well because of this of all these trends. Maybe we should talk about those. And why is that. I mean one that springs to mind, It's like a sta a friend of our yourcycl of. hadn't mentioned to me a while ago. It's just like then if you look at like the number of databases being created over like simple database, Postgres databases over like the last 12 months. and the numbers is just exploded. And that's because it's all people vibe coding and building.Apps and the agents going out, choosing like a database tool and like a knock on effect for that for Y C company superb has just seem like an explosion. The demand for databases, right, And the age what's interesting is the agents are choosing superbase as a default tool to like set up and host their Postgre database. Like because if you like, go on and read the documentation online. like Superbase has the best documentat...(已截断)
井户端会议
(1)
【永久保存版】天才、血统、原风景:电影《国宝》中的命与运
2h 13m
2026/02/22
📝 AI
总结
🎼搬手剥壳工作室。世界太高端,我爱锦护端。🎼hello,大家好,我是樊玉如,欢迎收听本周的警箍端会议啊。今天其实非常开心请到了一位嘉宾,是上过我们东亚观察局的一位就是怎么说呢?一位老师啊,这位老师就是他的那种。呃,情怀和热情。当时是那个非常打动我们的东关的一个听友啊。王老师,你的那个正式 titlele,应该现在是上海交通大学外语学外语学院的教授呃教授,然后主要是是日本文学还是说历史。因为我当时我东关那个时候聊的时候,我就是说你又有文学那一头,比如说文学分析,电影分析,对,然后同时又是做历史研究,对对吧?就是你自己是当呃,如果现在对外自己介绍的话,是哪一块的教。或者说你自己其实并并没有那么多的呃,就是区隔他。呃,我很担心把我限定在某研究领域里。是所以一如果一定要说的话,那么我可能做的是20世纪日本文学史和思想史的研究,但是我说的是如果一定要说,但是我其实是比较不愿意或者比较排斥,把我自己限定在某一个领域里边。嗯,我觉得对学术研究来说,只要是一个真问题。那么他的载体是什么?是文学是电影,是个无所谓的。是那欢迎我们的王胜源老师啊,呃先感谢那个孙源老师。😊去年我们一起聊过一本你的新书嘛,然后从那本新书衍生出去,我们聊了一期,等于是80年前。因为去年是二战结束80周年,我们聊80多年前日本的知识分子。当面对那个环历史环境的时候,他们是怎么样做选择的对那么这么一个话题。然后呃我记得其实我有发截图给你。我们是去年因为东亚东亚观察局拿到了萧宇洲大厂的两个奖,一个等于是年度热门播客,一个是年度趋势内容。然后趋势内容。里边我们的这一期被选为一个代表级,很荣幸很荣易啊,非常感谢啊,也是你自己有什么感受嘛?就是后面的呃节目上线之后的一些反馈。我看到就是因为评论区很热闹啊,大家真的就是我觉得呃同意的或者不同意的,大家都是在讨论这么一件事情。但我其实都在我们的预想那个范围内,大家肯定会有很多的讨论嘛,你自己的那个感受是怎么样的。当时那一期上线之后,嗯,我觉得分开来说的话。😊首先是第一点呃,我之前其实对于。公共表达是有些恐惧的。嗯,特别是在这样一个时代讨论日本的问题,特别是在战争这样一个呃这个语境下讨论知识人的问题。我心里不是很有底嗯,但是我发现小宇宙上的听众,他们的认知水准是远远超过我个人的预设预想。嗯,所以呃如果说我想一个节目的成功,当然有易如雄的努力,有我们共同的呈现。但我觉得很重要的一点是我们的听众朋友们嗯表现出。非常强的这种同理心共情力。所以我想这就是意义发生的几个重要的部分。嗯,这是第一个。第二个呢,我觉得呃正是因为这样一次,我觉得还算是比较成功的一个尝试。对我个人来说,让我觉得呃我们完全可以借助这样一种形式,一种平台与大家讨论更多的问题。是所以呢这次在收到艺如兄的邀请来讨论国宝这个电影的时候,其实呢我。依然是觉得自己呃。遭遇到了个挑战,然后是吧,对对我自己的挑战,就是我很少去聊这种性质的电影。嗯,包括之前我觉得谈宫崎骏都是我不擅长的。嗯,所以今天上午在来之前,我在江边走了很久,嗯,想了很久,有的时候觉得讨论一个电影,特别是今天我们讨论这样的电影。😊和我们今天面对听众是一样的。嗯,就是我想呃这就是我想呃围绕刚才说的问题谈的第三点。嗯,当我们把自己的认知,把自己的心交给听众的话,嗯,我想他的他能够得到真诚的呼应。是的,也是个必然的结果。是的,这个我非常同意非常。我觉得非常呃心有灵犀的一点啊,就是因为我做博客很长时间,尤其小宇宙出现之后,它是一个现在中国可以说内容表达平台里边最打引号吧,精英的一种平台。这种精英不是一种物质上的那种,甚至不是见识上的对它是一种心灵上的精因,他的那种宽容度和对于多元表达的那种接受程度。对,然后这就导致其实我现在是越做越愿意把自己抛给我的受众。因为原来很多人做表达是,尤其中国现在这种社会,嗯我觉得东东方社会其实都这样,就是大家有一种对你的规训说,你说出来的东西一定是你深思熟虑,很安全,很很专业,很很多那种高大上的那种形容词之后,你才能说出去。因为我们的文化强调沉默是金,对吧?就是什么呃少言要少言寡语一点,说出来的东西一一口唾沫,一个钉,就是这种东西,但是因为我做表达。很很多年了,然后尤其在小宇宙这个平台,我越来越会觉得说我有的时候会不介意在节目里面说出我的困惑,我的挣扎,嗯甚至我的苦痛的东西。哎,但是每次大家给我的反馈都还不错,这样让我越来越有那种嗯信心也好,或者说愿意去试着把自己抛出去,我我选择宣荣选荣抛,因为不会不知道会走向哪里,或者飘到哪里。嗯,但是我觉得我们那个生乐老师仅上过一次啊,就是我们的东关其实就有点。感受到了,我相信你其实就在做一个。挣扎或者说再做一个思考,愿不愿意把自己最感性的一面。对,最感动的一面。对,就这样抛出。因为这一面我待会儿我们会展开。我不知道,因为你今天做了很多准备,我也不知道你待会会说具体说哪些东西,我相信里边很多东西其实跟你的学术形象。在大学里边讲讲的那些东西的形象不一定完全一样。对,是很多那种很内心深层的那种东西,我觉得这也非常感谢你,就是说你可以相信博客这个平台,相信小宇舟当然也相信我的节目啊,所以说也可以展开。当然刚才那个肖老师提到说。今天这个主题就是国宝跟大家解释一下啊,就是国宝已经在我去年的节目里面出现过两次了。因为我是去年6月在上海国际电影节,等于第一次呃非常偶然的看到这个这个片子,而且还是朋友给我的票。因为我当时知道他是一个很大的明星阵容的一个电影,然后又是吉天修一改编李向日呃就是吉天修一的小说,李向日改编的这么一个电影。然后当时我就很有兴趣,但是我没抢到票。第一时间,或者说第一时间我没打算说。可能拿拿得到票,但是我朋友给我的那我就非常那个兴冲冲的去了。😊呃,我第一次看的时候是前面一整段,就是习九雄,就是那个廖亭里边的戏份是没看到,我是有点迟到。嗯,我是从他开始进入到那个呃俊介家里,就进入到那个杜边迁演的那个呃半呃半二郎郎他的那个家家里面当徒弟开始那个地方开始看。对,但越看越上头,他整个三个小时我上头了。然后我当时就拉着我的一个朋友,他也看了。因为在上海国际电影节,他有几场展映嘛,他也看了。然后当时我记得拉了一个我一个女生的朋友聊,我就发觉一点,哎不同的人对于这个片子的感受完全不太一样,他就还好,但是我已经上头的不行。嗯,然后我马上在7月份还是8月份,我忘了就是去到日本,我说我一定要在日本再去看一遍,然后我就在日本看了嘛,然后看了两遍三遍。其实我那天数了一下,我大概从那个时候到现在总体上应该看了6遍都有。嗯呃前段时间1月下旬呃,我去了又去了一趟。本其实就为了看他的杜比版本和MX版本,他等于是因为他在日本一直在上上了半年。因为票房太好了,已经已经应该已经我们在这个时间节点应该已经差不多破200亿日元了。历史之最吧,当真人电影的历史之最。因为你像鬼灭之刃这种你破不掉了,400亿元。这个他们现在就是说实写硬化嘛,就下一个就是真人电影呃票房之最。然后他现在在日本的总体票房上已经超过了哈尔的移动城堡再往上一个应该进入。到top ten了那种感觉,然后又在所谓的深奥奥斯卡里面。当然这次奥斯卡宣布提名名单里面,他那主要奖项都没提到提到了一些舞美啊,就是这种这种类似非常技术型的那种奖。就an但是这个我也不觉得美国人能看懂啊,就是开玩笑的话,所以说他现在在日本是一个去年完全现象级的一个电影。然后我这次去看了那个他的杜比版本之外,他们在银座那个sny就银座索尼大楼现在改造成了。一个公共空间和一个文化展展示的一个空间。嗯,他也在做国宝展。嗯我也去看了那个展,然后等于是再次重温了这么一个电影。然后重温的时候我就发消息给我们摄渊老师。我说我说哎现在有资源了。嗯因为他现在日本国内虽然在上映,他的海外版本。我们现在能看到的,他所谓的一些高清的一些资源,其实是他海外版本已经已经上线了。因为可能在欧美啊什么的,大家不可能等到你整个呃在日。本都停止之后,我他们才那个上线嘛。嗯那我们现在如果听到这一期,我为什么会录这一期,当然有个个人的一点小私心,觉得说他到了这么时间节点,然后我觉得我能认识的所有的嘉宾里边,我反而很期待王春渊老师会给出怎样的一个解答之外,还有一个就是我感觉到,因为如果听到这一期的话,大家理论上是能够搜到这个资源的。那总比我们空中楼阁聊会好很多嘛,所以说会有这么一期节目啊呃,因为轩渊老师跟我那天。说我们在聊具体时间录制的时候,你你发了一张那个截图,还照片给我,就说你做了很多笔记。我看17000字,17000字的笔记。我的妈,所以说一方面我就觉得说呃很感动,就是准备的非常充分。而且你好像是拉片等于看了六七遍七遍呃,七遍。所以说我我很好奇啊,先跟大家呃铺垫一下,我们这次这么一个这一期主要想。想干嘛啊,然后我就想先呃给到我们王学源老师时间,你充分的表达你对于这个片子的一个感感受啊。嗯,好,呃,我想先稍微的回应一下刚才呃叶如兄说到的,,就是我们会把一些呃未成熟的或者比较个人化的一些想法,嗯抛给听众,抛给观众的这样一种选择,他本身在我看来是有价值的。嗯,我觉得很多时候过于成熟的一种东西。😊他丧失一种开放性一种活力。所以我在警护端会议上看到呃尤老师和另外两位嘉宾也聊了两次。这个嗯首先第一点,我觉得你真的特别爱这真上头是真上头。第二个呢我觉得。就是特别在我们今天这个时代,我们经常说AI的这个袭来。一个很重要的问题就是提出问题的能力。嗯,他比解答问题可能更重要。嗯,所以我想呃就是今天在录制之前,我跟一如老师稍微的交流了一下,就这个电影和这个原作的小说之间会有很多改变。嗯,那么其实我在做呃战争时期,日本思想史的时候遇到了一个一个问题。就是一个人我们如果把原作理解为一个作品,理解为一种真实的话,嗯,那么电影实际上在是在这个基础之上。进行了二创,嗯哼,进或者说进行一个选择性的呈现。那么就像一个人,一个人,他说了呃,他和另外一个人发生了冲突。这个冲突里面有10个要素。那么这10个要素里边,他有选择了呈现了6个要素。这6个要素是有利于他的。嗯,可是这6件事他没撒谎,那么他在不在撒谎?所以我在做研究时候遇到了这样一个非常非常严峻的一个问题。他说的是真的呀,对,所以在战争结束以后,很多作家。说我说的事交代的都是真的对,可是这种有选择的真实,它意味着什么呢?意味着他重新建立叙事的逻辑。对,也就是ABCDEFG我打了艺术兄一拳,你回了我一拳,我又打了你一拳。我一共打了你两拳。嗯,可是中间如果你没有回我这拳,我第二拳不会打出去。对,可是如果你把你回了我一拳,这个摘出去,就变成我连打你两拳。对,这件事就错了,所以这这这就意味着电影在电视这呃这在这个原著小说原著小说这样一个非常庞大的题量的基础之上做了一个精粹,甚至做了一些改编,这意味着导演要重新建立起一个叙事的逻辑。就他的改编本身就是一种表达,一种表达。😊对,那么比如说我听说因为这个原作,我也买了中文的一本和日文原作我都买嗯很厚很厚的。那么住了算对嗯,那么其实在这里面包括得次的这样一个人物,嗯,其实在这里在这个原作里面都是非常很重要的,很就很多戏份的。嗯,但是在这个电影面就没有。那么就一场戏就一场戏,一场两场吧。对对,所以其实我们今天的讨论是建立在电电影是一个自足的一个艺术品的是的之上是来讨论的对,那么其实。我在看这个电影的时候呢,我最先注意到的问题是他们的名字。嗯,就是他俩的艺名花名这个两个这个男主角,嗯,一个叫花井半二郎半二郎是杜边谦那个演的那个师傅的那个形形象。对,然后是俊介他的艺名叫半迷半迷对花井半迷半迷。然后习九雄,他被师傅呃,一开始赐予的那个名字叫东一郎东一郎东一郎。对。后来他席名了半二尔郎呃四代墓对四代目巴尔郎。对,所以我在看的时候呢,就很最开始引起我注意的是半这个字。因为半这个字呢呃在当代的日本名字面,不太楚会主嗯嗯嗯一半的半啊一半的半。嗯那么在战国比如说我们说呃以前有个大河剧叫秀吉嗯,秀骑有个很重要的谋士叫竹中半兵卫。对汉北汉北对,那么现在东京还有一条西。😊叫半藏门县嗯,半藏门杭州州门县,而且是东京很中心的一个山中心的对,那么半藏门县是谁呢?呃是德川家康的一个手下,他叫福部半半藏郑城半葬。那么呃。半藏半柱半兵位这种给人感觉是一个非常有时代感的一个...(已截断)
All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg
(1)
Prince Andrew Arrested, Epstein Mythology, Reid Hoffman Files with Saagar Enjeti & Michael Tracey
1h 47m
2026/02/20
📝 AI
总结
Okay, everyone, by popular man, we're doing an all Epstein show today. My bestiesies are all on vacation for ski week, so I'm taking this on solo. We have three different guests on who all have very different interpretations and opinions of the Epstein story Sagar and Jetty from breaking points believes that the Epstein story shows that there is a quote unquote Epstein class that operates above law and accountability. He views the story as an indictment of our ruling elites. Michael Tracy is skeptical about many of the most delicious claim.about Epstein and questions whether they meet any kind of evidentiary standard he has criticized the media feeding frenzy over what he has called Epstein mythology and finally Kevin Bas, a assistant journalist has been tracking the release files and posting his findings on Xs specifically in regards to Reed Hoffman perhaps the figure in tech most closely associated with Jeffrey Epstein some of it gets heated but hopefully you'll come away with new perspectives and great information I felt like it was important to showcase a range of viewpoints on this issue I'm trying to keep an open mind.And I'll describe my own point of view at the end of the show. And with that, here we go. Saer, Let me start with you. What is the.Import of the arrest of Prince Andrew in the UK this morning. I mean, is this a case of show us the man and will'll tell you the crime. I mean, it, obviously, it seems kind of coincidental that he's not being arrested for misconduct in the Epstein affair. He's being arrested on mishandling.I guess trade secrets or public documents. So obviously, the timing of this is not coincidental. No, it' certainly not coincidental, but I do believe that the facts do matter in this case. And unfortunately, you know, for Prince Andrew, for Lord Mandelson, the former ambassador to the United States from the UK as well. It is pretty clear cut that they did violate their official duties. We should remember that the crux of this case involving Andrew is not just about some of the accusations that were made, although that is the genesis, let's say of the investigation.The interest, this is about Prince Andrew serving as a UK trade advise and forwarding nonpublic information to Jeffrey Epstein has been released that's currently in the file. Some of it is involving scheduling. However, Gordon Brown this morning said that he had actually shared some new information with Scotland Y in the police. So none, it's not exactly just what's in the file, but it could potentially the other material that Gordon Brown and the Chancellor were able to investigate as to what Prince Andrew was sharing as part of a broader probe.Into Lord Mandelson and the tip off that he gave to Jeffrey Epstein about an upcoming bailout. And I do think that this does reveal quite a lot about Jeffrey Epstein. The next is the genesis of his rise to power, his wealth and his influence, something that involved. Let's say even some of the cohosts, let's say on this very podcast, which is a deep financial knowledge of money laundering networks of trying to be at the very forefront of moving money across the globe, which I believe is his real power and his influence, which is what.😊En much of the behavior that much of the public is now horrified by. Okay,, I can't let that just go by. What do you mean by involving co hoststs of this podcast., I'm talking about Jason, I actually thought that the Jason email was very interesting. So you'll see that in 2011, that Jeffrey Epstein is contacting Jason about Bitcoin. This is by I saw I watch your discussion. I'm not implicating him in any crime. I'm saying if you watch and look at that email very closely. You are watching Jeffrey Epstein a master money launderer and financial.Mastermind himself, be at the forefront of the Bitcoin technology and wondering about it in 2011, which, as Jason even pointed out in the last episode that you guys did about this, when Bitcoin was some $1 and some sort of open source project. like to me, that shows how at the forefront he was of new technology and new ways to move money surreptitiously across the globe, which is what I believe was his real strength and his basically his, his raise on.😊EtraFor being so useful to all of these different foreign governments and intelligence assets, including ours, Russia, Israel, various different Israeli or various different intelligence networks across the globe.Yeah, let me just, for viewers of this episode who didn't see that episode. Let me just summarize what exactly happened there because I want to just make sure that.Jason's reputation is not unfairly impugned. and I don't think you're doing that, but just to be absolutely clear about it. what happened was that Jason hosted an episode of this week in Startups roughly, I think in 2011 with a couple of the Bitcoin core founders. and then Epstein reached out to him for an introduction to those people. I thought, and one of my takeaways from that was, li...(已截断)
The Joe Rogan Experience
(1)
#2458 - Matt McCusker
2h 49m
2026/02/20
📝 AI
总结
🎼The Joe Rogan experience during my day Joe Rogan podcast by night all day.😊A lot of people have lights on their too.🎼How I days.Really, they have like a slight like a, like a opening in the table and then a light.Gets on you so you don't see like the shadows in your face. So you only look shitty. I feel like doesn't, Is't that what you do with like a scary story, Put a flashlight under your chin. Like never they not try to do that. They try to like balance it out. Yeah,, flat.That's crazy. You look like what you look like. Yeah, you got to give up after a while. The weirdest shit is men who use filters when they take pictures. That's insane. I, there' is comedian men that use. Yes, it's very odd. How do you know. How do you know what they really look like And then you see them. And they look like a cartoon. like Netflix does that with their, the pictures that they use when they promote your special. like the picture of you, they'll put that bitch through a filter.And that makes sense. You look so pretty.If you will see you after the show, you're like, you look horrible. I didn't know you look so bad. look so. Thanks. I am so old. I'm almost 60. I know it's crazy. I'm 58. I'm 40. just turned 40. Thats those are real numbers. Yeah, I know I age. Su had kids. I age like immediately you would have thought I literally gave birth. Yeah, well, it's it theres lack of sleep. Yeah, that's what got. Yeah, you know, it's really good for that. Creatine. I't taken it. Yeah,.😊1, they say 20 G a day. start like with 5 and work your way up to 20 and check to see how your butthole holds up becauseuse the seal might be loose. I've ran this experiment actually,20 gets my gut's going now. bro, it does. It does. I don't do 20 in a dose. I do 10 in the morning and 10 at night. I because I was doing 20 in a dose. And it was just like, everybody out of the pool. I'm also not convinced dirrhea is bad for you. I swear God, like not shitding for sure. but diarrhea is just like.It's speed this up. Well, isn't not what is that consumption, What is the disease where you can't stop having dirrhea, dysent dysentery, That's yeah, shit off. Well yeah, if you can't stop having it sure about. Well, that's like you can't digest food. It just goes right through you and just shit constantly. how you shit stuff. Yeah, that sucks. actually, Yeah, that sucks not good. Once a week, though. That's fine. You know what I used to do. I used to drink kale smoothies in the morning, that was the first thing that I would do, I would throw kale and garlic and like.Apples and shit in a blender. And that's what I would drink first thing in the morning. Yeah, and boy, that is just like that clears the pathway. That's like, like, you know, when you clear your rain gutters of leaves, you get a ho on that bench at his bucket. Blow him off the top. That's what it's like, I've done the green drink before. It does get I was vegan for like a month. And that was like the biggest dumps, But I actually got hemorrhoids from being vegan. Oh, because on the toilet because it was just that the tus were so big. I was getting like.Bown out. I got hemorrhoids from being vegan. Was it taking too long to poop or was you just like it was just just massive. It was spectacular. There were massive bullliners.. It was like twice a day. I was like, I was like an adult entertainer. I was like my body just gave out total entertainer.😊Well, when you think about it, it's all that fiber that your body doesn't process. But they say that that's what's good for keeping you clean. You know,, fiber pushes everything out. I', I'm back on the fiber train now, I was all about protein. now. I'm like, yeah, I need, I need my fiber now, But it's hard to know who's right because the carnivore people are like, You don't need fiber. There's no need for fiber. But then there's like, there's evidence that fibers good for you. Yeah, isn't that what your whole microbiome needs to like, make the germs, whatever.They're good for your brain. I don't know. I, I get confused as well, but my balance is, I eat a lot of kimchi. I really like kimchi. That's a move. I eat that stuff all the time. Kimimchi and I eat sauerkraut. that stuff's legit. Yeah, I know that stuff's supposed to be good for you. But yeah I, I tried the Cornivore and it was like.I first five days, I felt cool. And then like, after, I think I made it to 17 days, I was like, dude, if I just ate in some vegetables with this, I'd be the healthiest guy in the world because it was just like, I stopped pooping Like, I was like, this can't be good for me. Well, you don't poop much because there's no fiber. So when you do poop. It's just, Yeah, I remember. I remember its tell. And you' like, where's the rest. But, I mean, isn't that a good thing. doesn't mean your body absorbed all of the food instead of like how.😊Having all this undigestible stuff go through your digestive tract. This is the argument that the carnivore. Yeah, I don't want anybody that's a...(已截断)
黑水公园
(1)
和我们一起看2026春节档吧!《镖人》《惊蛰无声》《飞驰人生》《星河入梦》
1h 47m
2026/02/21
📝 AI
总结
声音陪伴日常,满电跨越山海。本期节目由充电超快续航超长的宁德时代冠名播出,选电车看电池,认准宁德时代。哎,我们黑水公园也得到了这个国内大品牌哎,著名的宁德时代的这个认可,非常的激动。没错,尤其宁德时代是这种硬科技的这种品牌。啊。我们黑水公园又是讲科幻的。我觉得这个非常契合,非常契合,也非常的荣幸,也希望大家能够认准宁德时代的。产品哎,也希望大家能够继续收听我们的黑水公园。😊🎼听众朋友们,过年好,欢迎收听我们过年期间的这个节目。我是金花,我是蛋挞。春节躺,这个挺精彩的,什么片都有。嗯,有武打片,有这个悬疑片,对,悬疑片科幻有科幻片有动画片观影人数可不低啊,没有降了,降降了吧,因为第一天很很好,第一天很好。我看这场爆晚,对,因为咱不是前两天看的嘛?今天已经就今天是初四跌的非常厉害嘛。哎,今天初三是吧?录的时候。,今天录阴的时候初三初三,对今天现在大家比较悲观了一下,第一天12亿吧,后第一天还比较好是吧?然后现在说比往年跌的速度多很多,而且那个上座率已经是接近1%了。我觉得可能也有一些这个天气原因,今年暖和了,我就先先吐槽一下啊,这个跟他这个春节档这个放映逻辑是不是也有些问题?因为往年什么逻?因为往年都三十嘛,都三十这个放假,三十第一天。🎼三十放假第一天,然后春节那天大家就去看电影了,对吧?因为三十过年今年放假没发现早嘛,今年是放了好几天假了啊。对对,咱咱不放假,咱们看不出来那天放假,咱们咱们没有班,咱们没有班,而且咱们还得那个春节工作,就对今年班是早放两天。人家那个三十之前的就就就开始放了。那两天其实包括野人说嘛,说这现在没事干,放假在家想看电影不上映啊,年三十的时候,这些大片都等着呢啊,说就是不过但是年三十就是再往前两天也也想看不上映,今年没有大年三十啊,对,但是呢就会出现另一个问题,你就是什么嘛?这这个我我们家有点感受啊,就为孩子蜂你要去看,不是要去看,说就是不能玩太多,因为作业没写完呢,因为往年那个春节。😊春节档作业。🎼不是他往年春节还靠前点,过完春节之后,还有一段,还有一般还有一个礼拜是在放假期间,孩子们还能写写作业。今年好像是春节档一结束,他转过下周就得就得他妈返校了,全留给赶作业了。没有,我都3月2号开学呀,哪。哪那么晚呀,我们没有我们那个就就转转下周就就就返校了。那我们这得返校交作中学了嘛,他返校得交作业去了,就就就是对他来讲有点有点紧张了。所以他这个春节等于没看电影是吗?嗯,他没看看作业进度吧,看作业进度呢。🎼就是因为他晚年好多人1月份嘛,好多人1月份春节,他那个就是那个就是春节他在整个假期里边偏中间,可能后头还有几天,可能这些原因吧啊再加上我觉得确实近期大家也没那么对电影院也没那么大的兴趣了。确实没有也也也没兴没那么爱去看了,要不是因为有吴京,我都不去看。哎呦你看来你是这个吴京的粉丝,真爱我摊牌了。😊我不装了,我是吴京粉丝。🎼哎,我这憋了好几年了,我就想看一部这个吴京这个主演的武打片。哎,哎,是吗?今年就真是正好赶正好赶上了,这是一个漫改电影,标人标人真不是漫画口碑就特别好。前些年我就得大概十0年前了,我我翻过他这个看过这漫画嗯,口碑特别好。这个没想到这个现在哎拍电影了啊,哎,那你作为看过漫画人,你这个接受吗?十年前看过看过那么前面几张。但是他以这个电影开场还原的还不错,我觉得是这样啊,就是我们说喜欢不喜欢呢,也都跟个人的这个人生经历啊,跟个人喜好有关。我们春节做这个呢也不因为这些片还在上映啊,我先说一下,我们后边可能要我们后边可能要会有剧透啊,大家这个注意,如果如果说都要去看,然后这个防剧透的话,就就可以不听了,先看后听啊。对,看完之后后听。再有一个啊,也别因为我们今儿说的哪儿好哪儿坏,您就因为这个去电影院看,回来之后骂我们说收钱啦。🎼我们都不爱看,因为每个人都有喜好,每个人都有喜好。我们可能这几个朋友,我们喜好差不多,你你托付的好,对吧?对吧?托付的。不是因为前两天我拍了抖音,我说了,我说这个我喜欢,但是大家也慎重选择,才有人去回来骂我说难看,你怎么觉得好看,不是你越这么说,人家越去看,为了去看完之后骂你形成一个完美的闭环,有有道,那那也出了,因为什么呢?咱们也算非中国电影事业做贡献。对吧单点骂名。因为因为上周二节目,上周二付费节目里边我已经摊牌了。我今年要做一个吹捧家。🎼哦,你说那个甲方乙方咱不都已经吹捧了十0年了吗?那继续吹捧。然后昨天又吹捧去,还要吹捧啊,我今天就要吹捧吴京。追访追访对这个我我也觉得这个我们个人觉得不错,不是我觉得吴京人家正经这个拍个武打片挺好的嘛?对我得给你那个春节之间给你康康康干两下。🎼挺开心的,看完挺爽的,就是真打啊,是真打是真打啊。这年头我跟你讲啊,真打的少少见现在这个AI现在越来越发达了。哎呀我觉得说的特对,尤其咱们春节之前,咱们国家这个什么C档次2.0太棒了啊,但是现在说是那个素材受限了,没有办法生成,这我也说一下,素材收,因为我已经开始手搓这个漫漫威打片了,什么叫那个呃素材受。之前在我们家看我弄那个木狼寻香的那个了。现在不让弄了,对,不让弄是什么意?就是就是那个那个我再传那个金刚狼的脸上去,他不让你传,是因为那个版权版权问题了。对,版否则受到这个西方好莱坞的警告。哎,对对对对,要不然的话,我就手搓完木狼勋香了。不是他这个技术真挺牛逼的,他这个真的你不告诉我说这是AI的告诉你就直接告诉说这是一个什么修极特曼最新的一部什么电影预告片,我可能会信,对,真的特别棒啊。但是这个也是他用这种这个呃这些。🎼明星的这个制作出来的效果非常好。所以现在我可能会重新手搓那个非明星的了啊,这个你哎你就你搓你自己啊,这个没事,官方说了,你上传自己没事,这我也说一下啊,我突然理解了一个问题。演员这个颜值还是很重要的。因为我看了好多撮自己的,就搁到别的片里边,就真的差点不是你先给自己这个美化一下,这美颜美颜,你那个不是这个你直播的时候,美颜。小小小脸粉扑扑,没问题,就是你你个人那素材不太够,你只能还得用人家的那膜,然后你把自己脸贴上,你就天天你就给自己自拍呗,因为他演演的素材还还得演技也不够啊,演技又不,为他这个AI是还得根据他这个演技啊,对训练出来的嘛。那你看我那修杰特曼做那几他不能AI不能给咱们制作演技嘛,调整演技演能但是更复杂,是这个人就不太对,就非常难。但你看修杰特曼那个就出几个词。😊之后哇,那演技那那那那剧情太秋杰方扮是成熟的人。😡🎼一看就了解了我给他写的剧本,那几句话一说,对吧?对吧?我懂哎呦,我塞对太棒了。哎呦这个哎好的,AI演员的重要性,真的,但是这就我觉得出现了一个点,就是大家就开始讨论这电影能不能被AI取代。就是说以这个技术啊,我个人觉得真现在这个技术是有可能的,一年半载之内就能够取代一部分电影。所以今年看片的时候,我有一新思路,你就看这玩意儿能不能被AI取代哦,哎你的意思,比如说我这个演员或者说我这个电。😊公司说我我可以让你们来用我的素材,哎,那可能这事儿真的就会把真人替代了,有些就真能替代是吧?有些真能替,但是我觉得标人这个难,所以啊标人就是我给几个字啊,就是就是且看且珍惜。🎼我只能说到声,且看且珍惜。真的,因为因为什么呀?他也牵扯到你有没有这素材,因为这个标准我我我我说一个我的感觉啊,比都说武侠片,我武大片,武他不是武侠,他不是对他不是戏你说的特别对。因为我这几天啊我看到一个评价。😡就是我不知道这个人年龄多大啊,我也不知道他看这个动作片是以什么类型切入的啊,他说这个片不太好,是在于什么呢?他大多动作不飘逸。哎,但是我看他评论区有明白人,嗯,说这个不是您看的修仙片,修仙片一啪一指剑就飞过去了,两件事儿,这是两件事,对,因为那个背景是个乱世,你知道这个还真是不太一样,我回头研究了一下,说咱们说武打片是为什么最早咱们看少林寺那会哎,管他叫武打狄连杰什么的,后来。是后来是金庸老师的作品,这个翻拍成电影电视剧之后,咱们管它叫武侠侠片有区别。哎,再往后呢是这个玄幻修仙的兴起了,这不一样,这就就不一样了。所以说我觉得每一代人看可能现如今看标人可能他的定义是不太一样。而且对,真是而且什么呀?就从金庸这里边你能看出这个竞化过程。嗯,你比如说啊就是说什么雪山飞狐啊什么的,这些,其实他是偏不打片,雪山飞狐是实打实的。😊实打实对吧刀剑劈不下拼,对吧?剪眉。😡えと。🎼天龙八部射雕这有点侠,尤其是那个段誉对段誉很飘逸,尤还有那个谁灵鹫宫六狐冲六狐冲六狐冲算不算侠侠,我这个飘里边我最喜欢六狐冲飘逸,对就剑法高明,必须使剑,田不光那使刀的,你就下下一等。对,但是到了那个到了那个灵鹫宫就是天龙八部里边虚竹那个修仙了,已经奔修仙去了。,他再传头,你想对他已经奔修仙去,再往上就要奔那个。😡叫什么那个那个蜀山什么的,那路的走,对,那再往上就是修仙。其实确实我们中国古代这个这个武打武侠这个故事有进化,有进化。咱们这有是有进化,有进化,其实这是超能力,这是超能力。对对对,但是这个片子就是武打。对,他根本没到侠那种飘逸史剑呀什么的人没有,所以我特喜欢看。因为我这个啊老看兵机。还行,你就说你你也喜欢吴京就行了,进化。😊这个片确实无京,反而深得咱们这个。我我说我喜欢地啊,这个因为我喜欢看兵机,尤其喜欢看那种古代的那个武器的这个讲解。🎼哎,那叫什么来着?什么马弓手谁谁谁有一个那个就是抖音短视频老从这个后腰啊,也不知道他从哪儿能往外顺武器,能顺出什么什么刀枪剑戟,斧泻沟叉,全能从屁股里边瞪出来。先学藏镖。特别有意思啊,刘老师的父亲。对对对对,大家都说这他肯定受吴当老师影响了啊,大家去看见,哎呦,他就介绍各种武器,就这个片儿就是基本上奔着那个还原真的兵机。你真正你说尤其是他那个片子,隋唐时期隋隋墨嘛,杨广,对吧?你你你最后这个鞭对吧?这个钢鞭锤你你使这些东西,真正攻击力,你使一个。😊🎼那个跟飘逸的软件,飘逸的软件不太不太合适。对他就他那个劲儿不对嘛。所以就这一点确实他那种侠的那个气质会低。他实际上是是那个武打,而且里边是那种有点那个家国的那个那个情绪在的。他有点他就是冷兵器对砍。对他其实我看的时候感觉啊,因为我喜欢看隋唐隋唐前传。这就就是隋唐前传,因为原著里边最后这什么尉迟公啊,什么这个这个秦书宝啊都得出来嘛,啊,原著里边有对吧?还有那个裴元庆的原型啊,对,这这里边这不是这个当然那个原型裴行岩裴行岩大家当然很多那个咱也得说啊,很多那个书迷不太满意,尤其是这个裴行岩这个演员,就是因为跟书里边书里边是巨爪,书里边高大威猛,秦书宝得高俩头。对,因为他里边有名梗嘛,他跟秦特别高达了22秦书宝时期啊。🎼你怎么比我这大他十7啊,对他他十7,秦老二2情说我这没混出来什么20说我21装这么多套人那么高时7啊。因为这这这符合隋唐设定嘛,隋唐里边那裴裴兰庆的第三条好看。你这个秦书宝得排到十三了嘛,所以所以就是我们老喜欢看这些,其实就会这个比较有代入感。对,但是原著党呢就会就因为我们我原著看的不多,就基本属于没看吧,但是原著党其实很多对这个还是有一些觉得不如原著好的地方,这个也理解。因为电影他会要压缩嘛,不代小时。对,而且这个戏里边还还有李连杰,哎呦,是不是?😊我觉得这个好多年没看到李连杰上去打了,有喜欢这个武打片的粉丝说了,或者就是说什么呀,就开场这5分钟啊,就指挥票价真是全实精彩没有张啊,张晋,张晋对张晋也是也是这武武打片这个很厉害的嘛。张晋加这个吴京,因为吴京啊在我心里边是我小时候看那个叫什么科幻片的,不是科幻片,武侠片啊,他演演过那个谁谁耳朵里飞刀。里边养过那个圈儿我没那么喜欢。😡🎼因为小李学道他演被摘牙过功夫小子闯情观。哎,对对对,对,30年前的记忆最摇戏,这名字听着像杀马特啊,就就这名,功夫小子闯情关都看过的都看过。所以他在我心里边,当年就是说这个接班李连杰赵文卓就就往后瑶这么传了啊,对吧?所以这回他这个跟李连杰对打这场戏,我觉得。😊特别有意思在哪啊?就是李连杰这个角色设定。你你其实说你就是看整个故里边现在谁最厉害,看着就是李连杰还是李连李连杰最厉害,世外高人嘛,但是你这个情节里边他得死嘛,对吧?就是这二打一还得还得死一个换头,这也有槽点啊,我看那网上有一波评论说为什么?主子在那跟两个人打,小弟不帮忙。评论区要明白人说这忙,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