If you kick out tik tok, then you' have a very real conversation about where manufacturing sights are situated. Rit do we let shine deliver close to the united states when ta theyare influencing or fashion and oure fashion choices and ripping off american designers? Do we let all the chinese money that has so far kept holly movies afloat? And, by the way, many of which now include some very like, not subtle, chinese character whose superior, sympathetic and or a hero? I'm just saying like this is an uuntenable. Like we either do this as a country, we don't and so i think what i object to, they can
First up, Jason and Molly cover TikTok's recent patents that indicate it might be going after Spotify (2:23). Then, the duo breaks down a recent WSJ report about VCs giving conflicting advice to founders. (18:05) After the news, J+M are joined by Redfin CEO Glenn Kelman and Divvy Homes CEO Adena Hefets for an in-depth break down of the current US housing market. (33:36)
WSJ article: https://www.wsj.com/articles/silicon-valley-lurches-between-deep-cuts-and-bold-spending-11659268801
(0:00) Jason and Molly tee up today's topics and guests!
(2:23) TikTok might be going after Spotify's music streaming business with "TikTok Music"
(16:45) Policygenius - Go to https://policygenius.com to get a free life insurance quote
(18:04) Jason and Molly break down a WSJ report about conflicting advice that VCs are giving to founders re: approaching the current downturn; Jason debuts his "Cash vs. Profitability Matrix"
(32:04) Notion - Get $250 off by using code TWIST at https://notion.so
(33:36) Redfin CEO Glenn Kelman and Divvy Homes CEO Adena Hefets join and break down their businesses before getting into how a 2022 housing downturn might be different from 2008
(41:36) Prometheus - Go to Prometheusalts.com or download it on the App Store and use the access code TWIST to sign up
(43:09) Institutional buyers' impact on housing supply, pandemic migration impact on local inflation, new construction outlook
(1:08:36) Rental market outlook, commercial real estate's grim projections