Founder Reality
Anthropic published a blog post at 1pm on a Friday. By market close, cybersecurity stocks had lost $21 billion. CrowdStrike dropped 8%, Cloudflare 8%, Okta 9.2%, Qualys 10.2% — the cybersecurity ETF hit its lowest point since November 2023. George breaks down what happened in real time (the episode was recorded hours after the selloff), why this is the third sector to get repriced in three weeks, and what it means when a research preview — not even a product launch — can do this kind of damage. From there, the conversation shifts to trust as the thread connecting everything falling apart. George and John dig into why the creator economy model is dying — information arbitrage is over when AI has everything — and why Founder Reality will never charge for content. John brings perspective from Nigerian radio, where national broadcasters are watching the same compression hit: audiences no longer need you for information, so entertainment and originality are all that's left. George then shares what he calls his biggest character failure: co-hosting the Quarter Life Capital podcast for three years while nodding along with takes he didn't believe, letting the show drift into Bitcoin maximalism because he didn't want to push back on friends. QLC averaged 10-20 views per episode. When George started posting under his own name with his actual opinions, the content hit millions of views in weeks. Same person, same brain — the only difference was honesty. The episode wraps with George's trust-but-verify framework from six years of startup partnerships gone wrong, an airport lunch test for evaluating business relationships, and audience questions on whether VC is ever the only option and why second-time founders still raise despite having exit money.
53 episodios
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