
Vivian Musk Chooses A Modest Life
Elon Musk’s daughter says she doesn’t want the billionaire life. She lives with roommates in L.A., pays her own bills, and plans to go back to college. The internet has questions.Vivian Jenna Wilson, 21, is defining herself outside her father’s shadow. In a new profile, she says she has zero interest in being “superrich.” She shares an apartment with three roommates in Los Angeles because it is cheaper, and she is working out a return to college focused on languages. That choice clashes with what most people assume about the family of the world’s richest man, which is why it grabbed headlines today. We look at the reporting, the quotes, and the subtext.First, the facts. Vivian tells The Cut she manages her own finances, wants stability over status, and values independence. People summarized it simply: no desire to be super rich, roommates by choice, and plans for school. Livemint echoed the modest-life angle and her focus on education. We also touch on the strained family dynamics that have been public since her legal name and gender change in 2022. Then we zoom out. Fame without wealth. Growing up near extreme money. Why opting out resonates in 2025. We compare this to other children of celebrities choosing distance from legacy wealth and discuss how media incentives shape the narrative around Vivian.Finally, we look forward. What happens if she models, studies abroad again, or leans into languages and gaming culture. The story is less about Musk and more about a young adult choosing agency. That is why it matters.Do you think opting out of family money is empowering or unrealistic in 2025?
3 Syys 9min

Tesla Hit With $243M Verdict Over Autopilot Crash
A Florida jury ordered Tesla to pay $243 million over a fatal 2018 crash tied to its Autopilot system. The case centered on a Model 3 that veered off the road, killing two teens, with jurors concluding Tesla knew about a defect and failed to fix it. We break down how the trial unfolded, why the jury awarded both compensatory and punitive damages, and what this means for Tesla’s future battles over Autopilot and Full Self-Driving.
2 Syys 6min

Tesla Murder? How a Hacker at Starbucks Uncovered the Crash Data Tesla Claimed It Didn’t Have
In this episode, we unpack the stunning $243 million jury verdict against Tesla tied to a 2019 fatal crash in Key Largo. The case took a dramatic turn when a hacker—known online as @greentheonly—recovered key crash data inside a Miami Starbucks that Tesla claimed it couldn't find for years. That file became the centerpiece of a courtroom battle over Autopilot’s role in the death of Naibel Benavides Leon and the catastrophic injuries suffered by Dillon Angulo.We explore how Tesla’s own systems automatically uploaded and then unlinked the data after the crash, and why the company said it didn’t intentionally suppress the evidence. You’ll hear how internal testimony revealed that someone at Tesla may have deleted the file from its servers and how a persistent legal team and one technical expert uncovered it anyway.This episode also looks at the broader legal and financial fallout: pending lawsuits, investor backlash, and new questions about Tesla’s approach to data transparency and Autopilot safety. Plus, we break down what the annotated crash video revealed about the vehicle’s final moments—and why this case could shift how future Autopilot lawsuits are fought in court.Topics Covered:The 2019 crash and its aftermathTesla’s handling of Autopilot crash dataThe hacker’s role in recovering the missing fileLegal strategy and courtroom evidenceJury verdict and damagesFederal investigations into AutopilotInvestor lawsuits tied to Tesla’s autonomy claimsThe road ahead for Tesla’s legal challenges
30 Elo 7min

SpaceX Starship flight 10 Update
SpaceX Starship flight 10 Update
28 Elo 6min

Elon Musk Speech At SpaceX Starship Launch #10
Elon Musk Speech At SpaceX Starship Launch #10
27 Elo 22min

Schatz Warns That Codifying DOGE Cuts Will Boomerang Once Democrats Retake Power
Schatz Warns That Codifying DOGE Cuts Will Boomerang Once Democrats Retake Power
26 Elo 6min

Musk Open-Sources Grok 2.5, fighting OpenAI
Elon Musk just dropped one of the boldest moves in AI this year. His company xAI has fully open-sourced Grok 2.5, a massive language model that rivals GPT-4 in benchmarks. Unlike OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google, which keep their most advanced systems locked away, Musk released Grok under the Apache 2.0 license. That means anyone can download it, tweak it, and even use it for commercial projects with no strings attached.In this episode, we break down what Grok 2.5 actually is, from its 314 billion parameter mixture-of-experts design to the smaller 25 billion parameter version for lighter deployments. We look at why Musk made this move now, how it ties into his ongoing feud with OpenAI, and what it means for developers who want strong models without corporate restrictions.We’ll also unpack the strategic side: how open-sourcing Grok 2.5 helps xAI compete without Amazon- or Microsoft-level funding, how it leverages the X platform to grow faster, and why Musk thinks openness beats secrecy when it comes to AI. Whether you’re building apps, following AI politics, or just curious how Musk plans to fight Big Tech with code, this episode gives you the full story.
25 Elo 9min

Elon Musk’s xAI Is Using AI to Rebuild Microsoft’s Software Stack
Elon Musk's xAI is working on a secretive project called MacroHard, designed to recreate Microsoft's core software products using AI alone. The internal effort uses Grok and other xAI models to simulate tools like Excel, Word, Windows, and GitHub, without relying on human-written code or Microsoft’s APIs. This article breaks down Musk’s strategy, how AI agents are being trained to function as full-stack developers, and why this could challenge Microsoft's dominance in enterprise software.
24 Elo 21min