TBPN

Open AI Acquires TBPN, Artemis II, The AI-Built $1.8B Company | Diet TBPN

32 min
Apr 3, 2026about 2 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

OpenAI acquires TBPN podcast to accelerate conversations about AI and AGI, with editorial independence guaranteed. The episode covers the acquisition announcement, celebrates the Artemis II moon mission launch, and discusses how one founder built a $1.8B telehealth company using AI with just two employees.

Insights
  • OpenAI strategically acquired TBPN not to control messaging but to leverage existing credibility and audience trust in tech/business conversations about AI implications
  • Editorial independence is foundational to media credibility in tech—OpenAI explicitly protecting TBPN's guest selection and editorial decisions signals confidence in the platform's value
  • AI-enabled businesses can achieve billion-dollar scale with minimal headcount by automating code, content, customer service, and business analysis—challenging traditional company structure assumptions
  • Demand for GLP-1 weight loss drugs remains so strong that new entrants can compete effectively against established telehealth providers despite their scale advantages
  • Live, real-time commentary on industry developments fills a gap that traditional journalism and exclusive scoops cannot—conversation and context matter as much as breaking news
Trends
Strategic acquisitions of media/commentary platforms by AI companies to shape narrative and build trust with builders and industry stakeholdersExtreme operational efficiency through AI-driven automation enabling sub-10-person companies to reach billion-dollar revenue scaleLive, conversational media as differentiated format for tech/business news versus traditional journalism and exclusive reporting modelsNormalization of space exploration reducing public engagement despite historic achievements (Apollo effect repeating with Artemis)GLP-1 market remaining highly competitive and demand-driven despite crowded telehealth landscape, suggesting sustained consumer appetiteFounder-friendly capital and mentorship networks (YC, Founders Fund) creating long-term relationship value beyond initial transactionsCustom internal software and tools becoming competitive advantage for media companies managing live, multi-format content productionNASA merchandise and space program commercialization as revenue opportunity (selling $10M+ in patches during live streams)
Companies
OpenAI
Acquires TBPN podcast to accelerate conversations about AI with builders and industry stakeholders while maintaining ...
TBPN
Podcast platform acquired by OpenAI; continues daily 3-hour live shows covering AI, tech, and business with full edit...
MedV
AI-enabled GLP-1 telehealth startup founded by Matthew Gallagher; achieved $1.8B projected revenue in first year with...
NASA
Artemis II moon mission successfully launched; selling significant merchandise during live streams and generating rev...
Ramp
Financial operations platform; primary sponsor of TBPN since end of 2024, enabling equipment investment and team hiring
Founders Fund
Venture capital firm where host worked; invested in OpenAI post-ChatGPT round in late 2022/early 2023
Y Combinator
Startup accelerator where host took second company; Sam Altman was president at the time
SpaceX
Normalized rocket launches to such frequency that public engagement with space missions has declined significantly
Pinterest
Tech company cutting thousands of workers as part of AI-driven efficiency initiatives
Block
Tech company cutting thousands of workers as part of AI-driven efficiency initiatives
People
Sam Altman
Invested in host's first company in 2013; president of Y Combinator when host attended; predicted rise of AI-enabled ...
Fijy Seymour
Announced OpenAI's acquisition of TBPN on company blog; emphasized editorial independence and credibility as core to ...
Matthew Gallagher
Built $1.8B telehealth company using AI tools with only his brother as employee; started with $20K and no outside fun...
Elliot Gallagher
Matthew Gallagher's brother; only employee at $1.8B revenue telehealth company
Chris Lahane
TBPN will sit within Chris Lahane's strategy organization at OpenAI post-acquisition
Mark Lohr
First guest mentioned for upcoming TBPN episode; show continuing with normal guest programming
Joe Wysenthal
Frequent TBPN guest who has become a dear friend of the hosts
Dylan Patel
Frequent TBPN guest who has become a dear friend of the hosts
Will Minaitis
Only guest to co-host full TBPN episode from start to finish; commented on acquisition announcement
Jared Isaacman
Artemis II crew member; commented on launch day about NASA merchandise giveaways
Aaron Griffith
Wrote New York Times article about Matthew Gallagher's AI-enabled $1.8B telehealth company
Brandon
Writes daily newsletter; shaped editorial approach; described as remarkably consistent
Dylan
Joined Q4 2024; works off-air on operations; wrote newsletter and op-ed; described as exceptional
Ben
Worked with host on YouTube channel before TBPN; manages production team; described as growing into capable manager
Tyler
Built all internal software for TBPN including custom CMS, CRM, and video editing tools; backbone of show operations
Nick
Crafts daily guest lineup; manages guest communications and logistics; described as fantastic at parsing noise for op...
David Senra
First listener of TBPN; described as podcast godfather; provides ongoing feedback and support
John Kraus
Special comms assistant; attends NASA launches with specialized photography gear; captured Artemis II launch photos
Danny Milton
Wrote article detailing watches worn by Artemis II astronauts during mission
Quotes
"A core part of this is editorial independence. We can say whatever we want because we're live and we don't need to run anything through anyone."
HostEarly in acquisition announcement
"The American AI industry is the most important thing and that will continue to be the case. I'm excited for all the different competition and everything that's happening in the industry to continue and push further."
HostDuring acquisition explanation
"A one person business worth $1 billion would have been unimaginable without AI. Now it will happen."
Sam AltmanReferenced from podcast prediction
"I didn't know this special of a business relationship was possible between you and me. We've had disagreements around strategy but we have stayed almost universally aligned on everything that matters."
Co-hostDuring team appreciation segment
"The second that we leave the office we both get in the car, we call each other, we end up talking for like another hour on the way home."
HostDiscussing co-host relationship
Full Transcript
We have some huge news. This is from the OpenAI blog. OpenAI acquires TBPN, accelerating the global conversation about AI. This is not an April Fool's joke. April Fool's was yesterday. We didn't do anything for April Fool's Day. This is real. This is a very interesting deal. I think a lot of people will be interested in this. We're very excited about this. We have a bunch of context and information to share about how this changes things, what changes, what doesn't. I'm sure there's a million questions. We're going to try and get to them all. But then we also have a huge normal show. Normal show. We got Mark Lohr coming on. That's the first thing that's not changing. TBPN's not going away. We're going to be live every day, three hours, as long as we want. We have a lot of flexibility. We're going to do a lot of interesting things. If you are calling me right now, I can't pick up because I'm live. And I think you know. Yeah, I think it might be time to turn off the phones. I think, yes. It might be time to turn off the phones. Yeah, very, very strange. I think this is maybe the first time in history there's been a deal like this. And then two people that are a part of it have to go and talk for three hours straight. But it's technology, business as usual over here. We're very excited about the Artemis II mission going successfully. Hopefully you all watched it. It was a lot of fun. We were watching it here on the screen and we were gripped as the rocket took off because. Yeah, we were so locked in. We were joking around that it felt like it should have been a pay-per-view. Yeah. Like, could we turn space into a profit center for the government? Somebody was saying that it was not entertaining. I was extremely entertained. I don't know. Yeah. Maybe they could do more, but I thought. NASA has a decent e-commerce business too. We were watching they were selling like 10,000 patches a minute or something like that. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I think we were doing the back of the envelope just from the main call to action at the bottom of the YouTube stream. They were selling a patch for, I don't know, tens of dollars and they'd sold like hundreds of thousands of them. So as we were watching, they were selling like something like $10 million worth of merch. So maybe go get some for yourself. Anyway, let's go over to Fiji Seymour's post on the OpenAI blog. She shared this message with the company earlier today. She says, I'm excited to share that we've acquired TBPN. This acquisition brings a team with strong editorial instincts, deep audience understanding, and proven ability to convene influential voices across tech, business, and culture. That's what we're going to do. I'm still going to be hitting the soundboard. Yeah. Yeah, you are. TBPN has built something pretty special. It's one of the places where the conversations about AI and builders is actually happening day to day. A lot of you already watch it and rely on it to stay close to what's going on. As I've been thinking about the future of how we communicate in OpenAI, one thing that's become clear is that the standard communications playbook just doesn't apply to us. We're not a typical company. We're driving a really big technological shift and the mission of bringing, and with the mission of bringing AGI to the world comes a responsibility to help create a space for real, constructive conversation about the changes AI creates with builders and people using the technology at the center. And that's exactly what TBPN has built, which is what I was going to say is the next line. That is a huge part of the show is making sense of what's going on, how these tools are actually being used, all of the implications we've gone all over the place, and we will continue to go all over the place. Over the last year, like multiple years, there's just been so much uncertainty about AI. I don't think we can change that, but there's also a lot of fear just talking through it with the people that are actually helping diffuse AI through the economy across every single industry is something that we've enjoyed a tremendous amount and is exactly what we're going to continue to do if you want to continue. Yeah, so she says, so rather than trying to recreate that ourselves, it made a lot of sense just to bring them in, support what they're doing and help them scale while keeping what makes them special. A core part of this is editorial independence. We can say whatever we want because we're live and we don't need to run anything through anyone. It's not possible. It would be very difficult to have somebody here. Can we say this? I'm about to say a sentence. TBPN will continue to run their programming, choose their own guests and make their own editorial decisions. That's foundational to their credibility and it's something we're explicitly protecting as part of this agreement. We were never in the scoop industry. People were kind of asking, is this journalism? Is it commentary? I think we've always been like, hey, we like to talk to a lot of people, have a conversation, bring in people. Yeah, and even when companies have approached us and said, we'll give you the exclusive. We don't want your exclusive. It's like, hey, you can come on the show. We actually want you to go talk to the journal or the Times or Bloomberg, et cetera, wherever you want to go. And then come and contextualize it with us and let us dig in and understand more about the strategy. And so TBPN will continue running their programming, choose their guests and make their own editorial decisions. That's foundational to their credibility and something we're explicitly protecting as part of this agreement. I'm also excited to bring their amazing comms and marketing instincts to the team. We got lots of ideas and we're very excited for this. They've helped many brands market online and because they have a strong pulse on where the industry is going, their comms and marketing ideas have really impressed you, you see about me. I can't wait to leverage their talent outside of the show to innovate on how we bring AI to the world in a way that helps people understand the full impact of this technology on their daily lives. TBPN will sit within our strategy organization, we're pointing to Chris Lahane. Really excited to welcome Jordy, John, Dylan and the broader team. And here's a statement from you. Do you want to read this? What did you say over the past year? Here we've had a front row seat not just to open AI but to the entire ecosystem covering the daily news announcements and launches in real time while we've been critical of the industry at times after getting to know Sam, Fiji and the open AI team. What stood out the most was their openness to feedback and commitment to getting this right. Moving from commentary to real impact and how this technology is distributed and understood globally is incredibly important to us. I contextualize it a little bit more shared. A lot of people are like, is this an April Fool's joke? I've been saying expect the unexpected. This is a plot twist. I'll give you that. It was unexpected. It was unexpected to me, but I'm really happy about it. And when I reflect on my career, I think it makes a lot of sense and I can walk you through some of my career and my experience with open AI and with Sam Altman. I've known Sam for maybe 13 years. He invested in my first company in 2013. And then we got in a really serious log jam during a financing and I wrote him an email. I told this story in Bloomberg a couple of years ago. I wrote him an email and said, hey, like this is getting really rough. I'm a first time founder. I don't know if we're going to be able to get this done. And he called me and we hopped on the phone for like five minutes and he was able to completely resolve everything and everyone walked out of the deal feeling pretty good. And so that always left this impression on me that like he was founder friendly. Obviously he didn't in this particular case, it was to my benefit, not particularly to his benefit, the way the deal, the way the deal like wound out. And he was just a great addition to the negotiation and really allowed me to make some. And you were very young at the time. Yeah, I was just a wee lad. I was. You were about 23, 24 or something like that. Yeah. And then when I took my second company through YC, he was president at the time. And then when I joined Founders Fund, the very first deal that I saw in motion at Founders Fund was the post chat GPT round in open AI in late 2022, early 2023. And so I sort of had this like front row seat to all of this. And then once we actually started growing TBPN, he was one of the first people that I texted to, you know, say, Hey, do you want to come on the show? And he was the first lab lead to come on the show. And we're excited to continue having him on the show. Hopefully have other lab leads on the show, have other people from all over the industry. And just generally, I think that when I was at Founders Fund, I was not particularly in the weeds of intra venture capital fights. I was much more interested in the conversation around technological stagnation, not funding companies, not making great companies happen. I never was in a situation where I was like, Oh, like if a different VC firm backs a great company, that's bad, you know, and I think that's the same philosophy that I have always taken forward and will continue to believe in, which is that the American AI industry is the most important thing and that will continue to be the case. And I'm excited for all the different competition and everything that's happening in the industry to continue and push further. Jordy, did you have anything else to say? I just wanted to say some thank yous because a lot of people have been a part of this journey to date. It's been, I think something like, let me do the math here, 496 days, roughly 16 months since we put out the first episode. It was just the two of us and Ben sitting in a room, couple cameras, couple microphones. And I will just say I didn't know this special of a business relationship was possible between you and me. Like I think like, if you look back on that almost 500 days, we've had disagreements around strategy or approaches or things like that. But we have like almost universally stayed perfectly aligned on everything that matters every single day, every step of the way. And I think that's somewhat of a miracle given that we went into this, not really knowing what it would become. We did like one side project together and it took like eight months and it was like successful. But it was not like, oh yeah, like, okay, we were working together daily for months. It was a lot of just jumping and leap of faith. Yeah, and I think we've got this question so many times like, do you guys get sick of each other? You know, you just have to talk to each other for three hours a day. And like, I've said this before, I'll say it again. And it is actually hilarious. The second that we leave the office where we both get in the car, we call each other, we end up talking for like another hour on the way home. And so it's just been, it's been the privilege of a lifetime to just build this business with you and the whole team. The team has been absolutely incredible. You guys are all truly amazing. And this very much is a, this very much is a team, like a team sport, like business is a team sport, but this is like a live team sport. We come in here every single day and the show doesn't happen if we don't all come in and make it happen. And so the consistency of the team has been just incredible and watching everyone's individual talents just flourish has been incredible. A lot of people came into this, you know, having done a thing or two in the past, but learning new things. Brandon has been absolutely incredible. Just an absolute rock in the organization. Brandon, if you're not familiar, writes, writes our newsletter every day and is just remarkably consistent and has like, you know, helped us shape our editorial approach. And it's been incredible. Dylan, who joined us, I guess, technically Q4 of last year. You know, I'd worked with him at my last company, but is truly, truly one of a kind remarkable. I never want to, I never want to do business without him. And he has just done such an exceptional job working off air. It's like, you know, challenging when you're building a company and you're also having to put on a live performance for three hours every day. He wrote the newsletter yesterday. So that's true. That's true. He wrote the op-ed. Ben, Ben, who's been here since, since before TBPN, he was working with me on my YouTube channel. When did we start working? I was here before Jordy. Yeah. Maybe like mid-2024, maybe something like that. Sounds right. I just want videos. Yeah. Yeah. You traveled a lot, a lot of pelotin cases. No, but it's been absolutely incredible to watch you grow from an extremely talented individual and to a very capable and talented manager and building out a team of people that are so hard-working and wonderful and, you know, Michael, Scott, Jackson, you guys, you know, are so, you know, such a joy to work with, even though what we do is not easy and it's changing, you know, day to day. Yeah. To all the guests, seriously, it's been so much fun. Like, if you went back and rewound to the beginning of the show, we started with no guests. We did something like 50 episodes without any guests. We thought that there was a time that we thought we would just do that forever because that was the only thing that was, you know, really unique about the show. Like, that's the reason I started creating content in 2020 because it was during COVID. There were no events. There were no places to meet other founders, meet other business people. I wasn't thinking of it as like a media business. I wasn't thinking of it as like a way to just have conversations and meet other people who are building companies. And now we get to do that all day long, which has just been a dream come true. Yeah. So many guests have turned into dear friends, you know, the Joe Wysenthal, the Dylan Patels. There's really too many to list, but we will have you all back on the show. I can't wait. To everybody that's tuned in, whether you've watched, you know, the RSS feed, the live show, the clips, the newsletter, anything. The laughing card. You know, we've strived to create the right product regardless of how much time you have. If you have two minutes a day to read the newsletter, great. If you've got five minutes to watch some clips, if you want to watch the entire podcast, if you want to watch Diet, TBPN, the Daily Cut Down, thank you. Thank you for tuning in. And fortunately, pretty much everything is going to stay exactly the same. Tyler? To our one and only Tyler. Tyler, you are truly, truly incredible. One of the brightest young people I've ever worked with, and you have such a bright future. You know, we always knew that I've felt from the very beginning that you would go on to start your own company, and we cherish every single minute that we have with you. And we're going to do our very best to retain you for decades, but thank you for everything you've brought to the show, everything you've built, Tyler, if you're just tuning in now, has built all of the internal software that we use to run the show. It's insane stuff. It is a fully custom, you know, content management system, CRM. It helps us edit all of our videos. It is the backbone of the show. It's a tool that the entire team uses on a daily basis, and truly the show would not be possible without it. And yeah, your contributions on air as well. It's amazing. It's so much fun to be able to cut over to you. And so it is with great honor that I give you this soundboard. And our sponsors, we can start with the Ramp team, Eric, Eric Kareem, and the whole team over there has just been incredible. They allowed us, you know, at the beginning, sorry, the end of 2024 when we had started doing the show, we really loved it. They were, they committed to sponsoring the show for a year, and that allowed us to do so much in terms of investing in all the equipment that we use, hiring people, they made it possible and have been truly, truly exceptional partners. And, you know, watching Ramp's growth over the last couple of years has just been phenomenal, and they deserve all the success. And every other sponsor that has been a part of this truly. Shout out Nick as well. Oh, did he not get one? Oh, we got to get a direct shout out for Nick. We got to get a direct shout out for Nick. We don't know what to call Nick. We can't give his name on air because he'll get 10 times more emails. He, man, the lineup every day is crafted by Nick. He is our liaison to 99% of the guests that come on the show. Sometimes it starts with an interaction over X or a text message or there's other intermediaries involved. There's a lot that goes into actually getting someone into the waiting room, into the show, making sure that they understand how the show will work. It's sort of like, you know, you're hot dropping into this live show. That's new for a lot of people. And Nick does a great job communicating and parsing all the noise to understand what the best news of the day is, how we can contextualize it best with the optimal guests. And he's done a fantastic job and we'll continue. It's an honor. David Senra. Yeah. One of a kind. David was our very first listener that I'm aware of. He gets sent a lot of podcasts. He is online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online online Thank you to David Senra, who's been the podcast Godfather, truly. And the gong. But you have the gong. The chat is asking us to hit the gong. We have to we have to. Ruff Lodge. The gong will remain. The gong will remain. Will Minaitis has already chimed in with his take. He says many, many people are saying we're in the deal, Guy Yuga. Many are saying and it means a lot that will. The only he is the only guest who has co-hosted a full show from start to finish with us. And if you want to go back in the archives, you can you can watch that episode. It's a wild one. It was in a hotel room. We had yet to figure out the remote shows fully. The team worked really hard to make that one happen. And very chaotic, good time, very chaotic. Is there anything else to say about opening up? I mean, of course, we'll be in conversation with you forever. You know, anytime on the show, you're welcome to leave a comment or chat in the chat is asking, where's Will Minaitis right now? I don't know. Probably sailing a boat. I don't know. Yeah. And yeah, it's it's an it's an honor to to partner with Open AI and every single person on the team that we've had the pleasure of meeting. We've been impressed by they are ridiculously talented and every single person is committed to getting getting this thing right. So I'm very excited. We're incredibly excited. Great. Well, let's move on to the Artemis 2 pictures and images and news. Very, very exciting. It made the front of the Wall Street Journal. And NASA aims to orbit moon for first for first time since 72 to boldly go. The crew of that is asking, is that three Diet Cokes? Yes, I got you got to think you got to think Diet Coke. Thank you to the Coca Cola Corporation for making this possible. Thank you to the the human team. The Mata, for the Mata, you know, your bra matis, the podcast and a can. Yes, I wouldn't be possible without you guys. And thank you to tailors and suit makers. There's a lot of people that make this possible, the horse, the prop department. There's a million things here. It's been it's been a great time. So the crew of NASA Artemis 2 head to Cape Canaveral launch when launchpad Wednesday for the first human space flight to the moon in half a century. John Kraus hosted a incredible photo. Is he is he someone who actually? Yeah, he he special comms assistant, special comms assistant. He actually goes to the launches and brings a special photography gear to get the best possible photos. And man, did he deliver with this one? What an incredible moment. We talked about a little bit. There's an article on the watches of NASA Artemis 2. John, we have to thank our lovely wives. Of course. How could we not? Our families. Did you get a text? Maybe. We we we don't talk about them a lot on the show. Yes, the show about technology and business, but they have been. They are the back. They are the truly the backbones of the show and have put up with. A lot of like a lot of travel. It's a lot of phone calls. Incredible hours. A lot of early mornings. A lot of early mornings. I think out of the last out of every single day that we've done the show, I haven't I've left the house past six a.m. Maybe twice. Right. It's been it's been a long it's been a long road. And in the good news, ladies, is it's nothing's going to change. Now, thank you to both of you for supporting us and allowing us to do what we do. Can we pull up this picture, Ben, of in the production shot of the first episode that we recorded in the Jonathan Club in downtown showing a little bit earlier. Oh, you did? Yeah, behind the scenes. This is a yeah, such a such a wild time. Remember that? Yeah. Remember that short? Suitless. Suitless. We had the flag. Yeah. But no suits. It looked it looked it looked pretty good on camera. I was I was happy with the way it came out. But yesterday, the long awaited Artemis two mission took to the stars and route to the moon for the first such manned mission since 1972. It's. The chat asked for a flash bank. We had to apply. Flash out. OK, that's. Yes, the flash bank has been a highlight for sure. Both literally. Yeah, the sound the sound board. It's truly it's truly a character on the show. And I have some too now. It's members all had Omega Speedmaster X 33 models strapped to their flight suits. Danny Milton just wrote a full article on the site now detailing the watches worn on the wrists of the four astronauts throughout their time as part of this mission. Watches have a longstanding history with spaceflight, most notably through the Omega Speedmaster Moonwatch. But there are countless others that have cemented their place in the cosmos. So we can pull up this video now of the astronauts working on what looks like some type of tablet. So here he is typing in most secure password known to man. What is that 9393 or something? 3,939, 9393, powerful, powerful. We're going back to the moon. Apparently, that video we played yesterday was a little bit of fake news. The the the young man, the adolescent, who swears and says, we're going to the F and moon. He was he the real line, I believe, in the community note is that he says, we're going to the Frickin. Yeah, yeah, yeah, and it had been altered to add the actual F word. But the sentiment is still the same. It's very exciting, very inspirational. Jared Isaacman on launch day says, oh, this kid is definitely getting a bag of NASA gear. That's great. Very cool. There are some wrinkles with the launch, right? Fortunately, nothing disastrous or catastrophic or anything. But the good news is that we're on our way back to the moon. The bad news is that the toilets broken, apparently. And I believe this is from the live blog from The New York Times. The NASA associate minister said there is a controller issue with a toilet on the Orion capsule, and it would take a few hours to troubleshoot. We're just getting started, he said, when addressing that and some other glitches with the spacecraft. The spirit of Apollo 10 lives on. They said 135. They told us that. Here's another. It seems like this is not the first time that this has happened. But we're hoping for the best here. Sounds like there were some other issues with outlook as well. We can pull up this video from Tom Warren. Can remote in and take a look directly? Yeah, go for it. And then I also see that I have two Microsoft Outlooks, and either one of those are working. If you want to remote in and check. Why do you have two? Like web and desktop? Or do you think it's like two separate desktop installations? Join in on your PCD, and we'll let you know when we're done. Honestly, this is the best possible failure scenario, is Outlook, not the rocket itself. Can they vibe to this? I think it's a good outcome. There were so many amazing images coming out yesterday. Yeah. Peyton Alexander says, this is the real reward for Artemis. This is who we are actually doing this for. They will grow up knowing they can one day work in their country's bases on the moon and Mars. We are not just abstractly hoping for a better world for them. We are going there. And two kids here watching the launch from Orlando. Just beautiful. Yeah, my five-year-old said it was boring, which is not what you want to hear. But we'll have to give some more context to him about how big of a deal it is. He was like, yeah, I don't know. Maybe he wants more flashing lights on the screen. We were driving for the actual launch. And it was so funny listening to the audio feed and sitting in traffic and just looking at it everyone. And realizing that it felt like the majority of the world still wasn't paying attention or didn't care. Yeah. I mean, rockets do launch every day now. I know. SpaceX has normalized it to such a degree. Isn't there some sort of subplot on the Apollo missions that by the third or fourth Apollo mission, there was no, like the actual viewership had dropped off and the American population had gotten to work with it? 2.6 has put subway surfers on it. Yeah. On the NASA feed. Crazy. You actually need to maybe need to do this. How AI helped one man and his brother build a $1.8 billion company who needs more than two employees that when artificial intelligence can do so many corporate tasks, it's super efficient and a little bit lonely. So Aaron Griffith tells the story of Matthew Gallagher, who took just $2,000, $20,000 and more than a dozen artificial intelligence tools to get his startup off the ground. From his house in Los Angeles, Mr. Gallagher, 41, used AI to write the code for the software that powers his company, produce the website copy, generate the images and videos for ads, and handle customer service. He created AI systems to analyze his business's performance and he outsourced the other stuff he couldn't do himself. His startup MedV, a telehealth provider of GLP-1 weight loss drugs, got 300 customers in its first month, in its second month, he gained more than 1,000 more. In 2025, MedV's first year in business, the company general year, the first full year in business, the company generated $401 million in sales. Mr. Gallagher then hired his own. This is absolutely insane because as GLP-1s were starting to take off, I had, I remember distinctly talking with somebody that was like, I want to start a telehealth company for GLP-1s. And at that time, I was like, OK, there's a lot of telehealth companies that are at scale. And they're well aware of this. They will immediately introduce this product and other similar products to their customer base. And it's going to be incredibly difficult to be competitive. And it turns out there is just such overwhelming demand for these products that you could come in as a new company and scale. Like one year in maybe, he hires his only employee, his younger brother, Elliot. This year, they're on track to do $1.8 billion in sales. A $1.8 billion company with just two employees in the age of AI. It's increasingly possible, says Aaron Griffith in The New York Times. Sam Altman, the chief executive open AI, predicted the rise of a new breed of super efficient company in 2024. A one person business worth $1 billion would have been unimaginable without AI, he said on a podcast. And now it will happen. Now as AI tool spread, entrepreneurs are harnessing the technology to expand their startups to an enormous scale at breathtaking speed with very few humans. Big companies, especially in tech, are getting in on the disruption. Two, Pinterest, Block, and others have cut thousands of workers in recent months, setting efficiencies enabled by AI. Does this count yet, though? Like I feel like to be the one person, one billion dollar company. You've got to be able to log into your payroll tool, and you're the only person there. So it is. And he's got his brother in there. Sorry, bro. Take a walk. The startup, which has not raised outside funding, also has no official valuation. But many highly valued tech companies can only dream of hitting $1 billion in revenue with so few workers. MedV is also profitable. It is great and important if your boots are wrapped. Yeah. Can't get very far. Is this a wrapper company? It's like a GLP1 wrapper. But it's AI enabled, but it's not wrapping the AI foundation model. It's like using the tool to wrap another industry and just create the efficiency between the manufacturer and the actual distribution. It really is remarkable that they were able to hoover up so much revenue in such a competitive space, because you would assume that the other telehealth providers would have significant ad operations and that the margins on customer acquisition would be very, very tricky to crack. But you must have found some unique insight into how to distribute the product, get actual people to the website. Because the AI certainly can build the website and write the copy, but it can't necessarily get people to show up and actually put down their hard earned cash for the product. I texted my dad the news. He said, congratulations. That's so exciting. Thanks for letting me know. Talk to you soon. Have a great day. Thank you. Thank you, dad. Oh, it's amazing. Well, if you've texted me or you've called me in the last three hours, there's a good chance that I might respond to you in the next couple hours. Leave us five stars in Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Subscribe to our newsletter at tbpn.com. Everything is the same. We will see you on Monday. The fun week. 11 AM Pacific. Next week, five shows, 15 hours. Let's be honest. It'll probably be more like 17 or 18 or 19. We'll see. Who knows? The world is our oyster. And thank you for being with us along the journey. We appreciate your work. Let's get one more gong hit, John. One more gong hit. It's been an honor. A gong hit. Gosh, man. Goodbye, everyone. See you soon. We'll see you tomorrow. Bye.