Episodios

  • Eric Jorgenson | What We Can Learn From Elon
    Mar 31 2026

    Link's To Eric Jorgenson

    • ejorgenson.com (personal website)
    • scribemedia.com (company)
    • elonmuskbook.org (book)

    Eric Jorgenson, author of the Naval Almanac and the Book of Elon, and CEO of Scribe Media joins me to discuss what makes Elon Musk the most consequential entrepreneur alive.

    We dig into Elon's purpose-driven risk-taking, his philosophy of attacking bottlenecks, and why the people who make the biggest dents often pay the steepest personal price. Eric also reflects on his own journey from curating Naval's wisdom at 24 to defining an entirely new genre of book and what it means to do one thing so well the world notices.

    Timestamps

    03:53 – "A Million Musks" — what Eric actually means by it
    04:42 – Can you be a world-changer and still be a good family man?
    07:22 – The canonical 2008 Elon risk-taking story
    12:47 – Rolling the winnings: Zip2 → PayPal → Tesla/SpaceX
    Elon's pattern of compounding risk.
    16:19 – Elon's talent attraction formula
    18:20 – Has Elon's politics hurt his ability to hire?
    19:44 – Elon's first principles communication style
    21:23 – How much does Elon recognise his own luck?
    26:09 – Vertical integration and the supply chain philosophy
    32:36 – How Elon has influenced a new generation of hardware entrepreneurs
    36:37 – ASML / Martin van der Brink — the supply chain counterpoint
    38:25 – Could Elon disrupt chip manufacturing?
    39:50 – Mark Andreessen on founder-led management
    41:15 – How Eric got Elon's blessing to publish
    42:32 – The almanac format and defining a genre
    44:03 – Scribe Media: the business model and Eric's role as CEO
    48:30 – What did Vance and Isaacson miss that makes room for the Book of Elon?
    52:11 – Naval's foreword: the reaction and what it meant
    53:13 – How the Naval Almanac changed Eric's life
    56:03 – Eric's worldview in the Book of Elon
    1:00:04 – What would Eric still ask Elon?
    1:01:08 – "Don't aspire to glory, aspire to work" — what does Eric aspire to now?
    1:03:21 – The serendipity question

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    1 h y 5 m
  • Will Marshall | CEO Of Planet - Creating A Queryable Earth
    Mar 25 2026

    Will Marshall is the CEO and Co-Founder of Planet.

    Planet own and operate a fleet of (200+) satellites which image daily, the entire world.

    Planet’s ultimate ambition is to achieve a queryable earth.

    The way you might ask Google what the population of Australia is, you’d be able to ask Planet any conceivable question you might have about the surface of the world. The way Google would refer to the Australian Bureau of Statistics for an answer to the countries population, Planet will refer your query to their data, millions and millions of indexed images of the planet’s surface to present you an answer.

    The applications of this are huge.

    Take economic intelligence as an example… all types of queries that could summon early indicators of movements that aren’t already priced in.

    • For instance, as an early prediction of retail sales you could ask; How many cars are in Walmart parking lots across America right now? Or even, over the past 3 months, what’s the daily average number been?
    • Which Chinese ports are seeing more or less traffic than they usually might since the 2026 Iran war began?

    And then there’s uses for climate and the environment.

    • I could ask, at what rate is a specific glacier retreating? Measure this season’s melt against each other year to date.
    • Monitoring and acting upon overfishing in protected zones.
    • Or as I ask Will in the interview, could Planet’s data be more accurate at early predictions regarding where an Australian bushfire season might be worst hit

    You can imagine the applications for agriculture but as well, naturally, Planet’s data is also crucial for defence.

    • Will comment’s on Planet’s data indicating very early the Russian buildup of activity closing in on a Ukraine border.
    • And I caught Will just day’s after the 2026 war with Iran, a conflict where Planet’s data is also in use.

    Will Marshall an incredible entrepreneur, but as you’ll see in the interview, he also has extensive interests beyond just those of his business.

    Marshall’s PHD advisor was Sir Roger Penrose. He worked at NASA. He was on the team that discovered large quantities of water ice on the moon. He co-invented a space debris collision avoidance method using ground-based lasers. Will has lived in communal housing for 20 years. He’s a Brit abroad in America and is now the CEO of a company not only ambitioning for all the queryable stuff mentioned above, but as well is now partnered with both Google and Nvidia to explore the potential for data centres in space.

    It’s a enormous pleasure to welcome to Will Marshall to the podcast.

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    57 m
  • Joe Aston | From Rear Window to Rampart
    Mar 9 2026
    • Rampart
    • The Chairman's Lounge
    • Curious Worldview Substack

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    ---

    Who is Joe Aston?

    For my Australian audience, you'll likely know him from his debut book The Chairman's Lounge, a forensic and damning account of Qantas. But for anyone international, put simply, Joe is among Australia's most consequential journalists.

    He took over the Australian Financial Review's Rear Window column at just 28, and across a twelve-year tenure transformed it into the most anticipated daily column in Australian business and politics.

    His former editor called it journalism "like never before seen in Australia and arguably the world."

    Joe's reporting contributed to the downfall of the CPA Australia CEO and board, the resignation of Rio Tinto's chairman, Alan Joyce's early exit from Qantas, and a long list of uncomfortable reckoning in between.

    In and amongst the many themes that this podcast covers, the most consistent among them has been journalism and good journalists.

    And I say that because I think I caught Joe at an interesting juncture in his life. In the last twelve months Joe’s gone independent. Leaving the security of the AFR to launch his own media company, Rampart.

    The work is the same. Breaking the stories from business and politics that his readers have come to expect, but the model is new, and it puts Joe in unfamiliar territory as an entrepreneur which I think is another example of how media business models are being re-cast, and indicative of the direction the best talent is heading towards.

    We recorded this about ten months into the Rampart journey. We cover his influences, his early years in PR, his personal battles, Rampart and throughout it all, what Joe judges to be, good journalism.

    Timestamps with Joe Aston

    00:00 Introduction To Joe
    02:06 Joe’s Influences
    08:01 Alcoholism
    14:54 From The Rear Window To Rampart
    33:59 Journalistic Courage and Ethical Boundaries
    44:04 Lessons from PR and Corporate Life
    54:49 Goals for Rampart and Future Media Innovation
    01:08:06 Serendipity


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    1 h y 9 m
  • Dennis Voznesenski | How Agriculture Explains Geopolitics
    Feb 16 2026
    • War & Wheat - Dennis Voznesenski
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    ---

    Dennis Voznesenski is an Australian analyst who has spent his career deep in the world of global agriculture. He is the author of 'War & Wheat'.

    In this conversation, Dennis explains how geopolitical forces, from trade wars to energy policy, ripple through agricultural markets in ways that are difficult to predict but impossible to ignore.

    We discuss the unique position of Australian farmers, who compete on the global stage without the subsidies that prop up producers in the US, Europe, and beyond. The unbelievable masses of production. The efficiency of it. How the America's are basically where it all comes from. We get into why farmers are increasingly investing in on-farm storage as a strategic response to volatile markets, how infrastructure gaps in developing regions are holding back enormous agricultural potential, and the tension between the push for greater productivity and the long-term sustainability of the land itself.

    Dennis also walks us through how historical events provide essential context for understanding where agricultural markets are heading today, and helps explain the current moment through the lens of agriculture.

    Timstamps.

    00:00 The Global Landscape of Agriculture
    12:11 Insights from the Agricultural Industry
    24:38 The Role of Technology and Innovation
    31:22 The Impact of Global Events on Agriculture
    52:56 Future Prospects and Opportunities

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    57 m
  • Jeff Farrell | Venezuela... Latin American Correspondent & 'Cocaine Dairies'
    Feb 2 2026
    • Jeff Farrell 'Cocaine Diaries'
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    ---

    When Irish journalist Jeff Farrell arrived in Venezuela during the Chávez years as a Latin American correspondent, he couldn't have chanced a more serendipitous encounter that lead to one of the most harrowing stories he'd ever tell. That encounter was with the Irish drug mule, Paul Keeney, and his story that followed became the bestselling book, 'Cocaine Diaries', which pulls back the curtain on the nightmarish reality of Venezuela's prison system: the corruption, the violence, the abuse and the absurdity.

    Jeff discusses the extraordinary risks facing foreign correspondents trying to report from Venezuela today, where journalists are turned back at the airport and armed civilian militias called 'colectivos' who patrol the streets. We discuss his forthcoming novel 'Last Call of Caracas', which he's been writing for eight years and life imitated art a bit early in this case because by sheer coincidence, the novel ruptures to a scene of the US attacking Venezuela

    Throughout it all, Jeff reflects on a country he clearly loves but can no longer safely visit—and holds onto hope that one day, when the regime falls and the diaspora returns, he might get to write something positive about Venezuela for a change.

    Timestamps

    00:00 Jeff Farrell & The Story
    03:00 The Risks of Reporting from Venezuela
    06:13 The Challenges of Foreign Correspondence
    09:03 Life Under a Regime of Fear
    11:59 The Complexities of Venezuelan Society
    14:57 The Impact of Corruption and Socialism
    18:12 The Beauty and Paradox of Venezuela
    21:06 The Geography and Demographics of Venezuela
    24:04 The Journey of a Foreign Correspondent
    27:07 The Serendipitous Encounter with Paul Keeney
    44:27 A Journey into the Venezuelan Prison System
    51:47 Serendipity and the Book Deal
    54:07 Paul Keeney's Life and Struggles
    01:00:22 The Harsh Realities of Venezuelan Prisons
    01:08:14 Escape from Venezuela
    01:13:54 The Aftermath of the Book and Future Plans
    01:18:04 Reflections on Journalism and Human Experience

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    1 h y 27 m
  • Jeremy Dicker | 10 Geopolitical Predictions For 2026
    Jan 26 2026
    • International Intrigue - Newsletter
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    ---

    Previous guests on the podcast similar to this!

    • Robert Kaplan - A World In Crisis

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    ---

    Jeremy Dicker is a co-founder of International Intrigue, a daily geopolitics newsletter delivered to over 150,000 inboxes worldwide.

    Before entrepreneurship, Jeremy spent 14 years as an Australian diplomat, with postings in both Latin and North America, Peru, Mexico and LA specifically.

    International Intrigue was born during London lockdown when Jeremy and his co-founders (fellow former diplomats) jumped on the new media of newsletter’s nascent industry and decided to write to make geopolitics accessible, witty, and funny

    Jeremey boasts that the writers from ‘The Diplomat’ read the newsletter which is a huge flex given just how good that TV show is.

    Jeremy and his team published a 25 predictions for 2026 article just a few weeks ago and that’s exactly what we go through on todays episode.

    Timestamps

    00:00 - Jeremy & International Intrigue
    01:01 - Taiwan & Global Disorder
    11:35 - Prediction 1: Europe's Reliance on the US
    21:09 - Prediction 2: Cryptocurrency's Mainstream Adoption
    28:22 - Prediction 3: Nuclear Energy and Tech Giants
    33:13 - Prediction 4:AI and the Bubble Debate
    39:59 - Prediction 5: Russia Ukraine
    42:44 - Prediction 6: The Pink Tide: Shifts in Latin American Politics
    58:24 Prediction 7: Climate Change
    01:08:32 - Diplomacy and National Interests: Balancing Values and Policies
    01:09:03 - Prediction 8: BRICS vs Quad
    01:15:12 - US Foreign Policy and Global Dynamics
    01:19:11 - Diplomatic Challenges Under Trump
    01:26:12 - Prediction 9: The Future of the UN and Global Governance
    01:30:02 - Prediction 10: China's Technological Ascendancy
    01:34:53 - Australia's Role in Global Affairs

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    1 h y 37 m
  • Nicolas Niarchos | Cobalt, China & The Congo... The Elements Of Power
    Jan 19 2026
    • The Elements of Power - Nicolas Niarchos
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    ---

    Previous guests on the podcast similar to this!

    • Nicolas Niarchos First Appearance On The Pod
    • Tim Butcher - Blood River (CLASSIC EP)
    • Adam Hochschild - King Leopold's Ghost
    • Jon Lee Anderson - New Yorker Staff Writer, A Life Of Adventure

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    ---

    In this episode, New Yorker journalist Nicolas Niarchos discusses the supply chains behind the clean energy transition from child miners and Chinese-owned mega-mines to the coming global scramble for critical minerals.

    I’ve been eagerly anticipating his new book, and I reckon it is tailor made for this podcast. It’s the history of cobalt it’s extraction and it’s applications and shows how a single mineral has reshaped geopolitics, powered the rise of China’s technological superiority, and further locked millions of Congolese into one of the most brutal extraction economies on earth.

    This is a story that begins with King Leopold the second the original plunder of the Congo but then runs through Cold War dictatorships and kleptocracy, and ends with Apple, Tesla, BYD, and the race to dominate the future of energy.

    It’s Nic’s second appearance on this podcast on a similar subject, therefore we avoided to go-over all the same ground as last time. The first episode was about his New Yorker piece on artisanal mining in the Congo, his arrest in the Congo and the foundations for his worldview in covering this issue.

    Today we go into his new book. Inside the mines of Katanga, inside the rise of China’s battery empire, inside the corruption that still governs Congo’s political system, and inside the coming resource wars that will define the next half-century.

    • Eighty percent of the world’s cobalt now comes from the Congo.
    • Most of it is controlled by Chinese companies.
    • As much as 20% of it is still dug out of the ground by hand.
    • Kinshasa, Congo’s capital, is expected to have 40,000,000 people by 2050.

    And the world is about to need more of what’s beneath their feet than ever before.


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    1 h y 18 m
  • Tim Cope | In The Shadow Of Genghis Khan - 10,000km & 3 Years On Horseback Across The Mongol Empire's Eurasian Steppe
    Dec 22 2025

    On The Trail Of Genghis Khan - Tim Cope (Book)

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    ---

    Previous guests on the podcast similar to this!

    Jack Weatherford - Genghis Khan & The Making Of The Modern World

    Robyn Davidson - Australian Living Legend. Documenter Of Nomads.

    Jon Lee Anderson - New Yorker Staff Writer, A Life Of Adventure.

    ---

    Tim Cope underwent a three year journey traversing the entire Eurasian steppe, starting in Karakorum, the old Mongolian capital, westwards through Mongolia, Kazakhstan, Russia, Ukraine and finally Hungary until he reached the Danube river.

    The journey took him three years to complete and 4 horses. He picked up a dog along the way, and his journey saw him robbed, threatened, welcomed and exposed to murderous heat and cold.

    I first wrote to Tim 4 years ago… so we’ve maintained a very spotty correspondence in anticipation for today.

    Tim Cope is is an Australian adventurer, author, filmmaker, photographer, expedition guide - a fluent Russian speaker - a bloody good writer and someone generous enough to offer me their time and invite me into their home here in rural Victoria.

    Timestamps.

    00:00 - Tim Cope
    02:50 - The Magic Of The Steppe
    10:10 - Tim's Coma & Writing
    13:15 - Tim's Backstory
    24:50 - On The Trail Of Genghis Khan
    33:01 - The Eurasian Steppe
    37:41 - The Decline Of Nomadic Cultures
    46:27 - Entering Into Kazakhstan & Finding A Dog
    1:02:55 - Tim's Growing Reputation On The Steppe
    1:10:50 - Alcoholism On The Steppe
    1:19:12 - Abandoned Goldmine For The Winter
    1:38:45 - Prostitution
    1:50:00 - Tim's Father Passing Away
    2:05:46 - Hungary
    2:12:30 - The Problem Of Fitting Back In
    2:24:50 - Success & Book Publishing
    2:31:00 - How Mongolia Has Changed
    2:44:10 - Tim's Evolving Thoughts On Both Russia & Ukraine

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    2 h y 59 m