Natalie Kitroweth
👤 SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Hardest hit in the sell-off was chipmaker NVIDIA, which dropped nearly 17% and lost roughly $600 billion in market value. The assumption in the tech industry was that in order to build bigger and better AI systems, companies would have to spend billions on new data centers that relied on NVIDIA's chips. An assumption that DeepSeq has potentially upended.
Hardest hit in the sell-off was chipmaker NVIDIA, which dropped nearly 17% and lost roughly $600 billion in market value. The assumption in the tech industry was that in order to build bigger and better AI systems, companies would have to spend billions on new data centers that relied on NVIDIA's chips. An assumption that DeepSeq has potentially upended.
Today's episode was produced by Will Reed and Muj Zaydi, with help from Michael Simon Johnson. It was edited by Mike Benoit, contains original music by Alishaba Etup, Rowan Nemisto, Diane Wong, and Marion Lozano, and was engineered by Chris Wood. Our theme music is by Jim Bremberg and Ben Landsberg of Wonderly. Thank you. That's it for The Daily. I'm Natalie Kitroweth. See you tomorrow.
Today's episode was produced by Will Reed and Muj Zaydi, with help from Michael Simon Johnson. It was edited by Mike Benoit, contains original music by Alishaba Etup, Rowan Nemisto, Diane Wong, and Marion Lozano, and was engineered by Chris Wood. Our theme music is by Jim Bremberg and Ben Landsberg of Wonderly. Thank you. That's it for The Daily. I'm Natalie Kitroweth. See you tomorrow.
From The New York Times, I'm Natalie Kitroweth. This is The Daily. At the center of Trump's aggressive first week in office is a 39-year-old advisor, Stephen Miller. It's his ideas and ideology that have animated the president's unprecedented blitz of executive orders. Today, my colleague Jonathan Swan explains Miller's dramatic return to the White House and why his power has never been greater.
From The New York Times, I'm Natalie Kitroweth. This is The Daily. At the center of Trump's aggressive first week in office is a 39-year-old advisor, Stephen Miller. It's his ideas and ideology that have animated the president's unprecedented blitz of executive orders. Today, my colleague Jonathan Swan explains Miller's dramatic return to the White House and why his power has never been greater.
It's Monday, January 27th. Jonathan, welcome back.
It's Monday, January 27th. Jonathan, welcome back.
I think a lot of us remember Stephen Miller from the first Trump term. But now that he's back, what do we need to know about who Miller has become and the role he's going to play this time around?
I think a lot of us remember Stephen Miller from the first Trump term. But now that he's back, what do we need to know about who Miller has become and the role he's going to play this time around?
So, okay, tell us how Miller got here. How did he arrive at the beliefs that are now, you know, defining these opening days and really shifting the country to the right, especially on immigration?
So, okay, tell us how Miller got here. How did he arrive at the beliefs that are now, you know, defining these opening days and really shifting the country to the right, especially on immigration?
And I have to imagine, Jonathan, I mean, he's in L.A., he's in Santa Monica. This is generally a kind of liberal environment. And he's going against the grain here. So there's a part of that that's about, you know, contradicting the people that are around him, the environment around him. It also just sounds like there's a piece of this that is really genuinely xenophobic. Yeah.
And I have to imagine, Jonathan, I mean, he's in L.A., he's in Santa Monica. This is generally a kind of liberal environment. And he's going against the grain here. So there's a part of that that's about, you know, contradicting the people that are around him, the environment around him. It also just sounds like there's a piece of this that is really genuinely xenophobic. Yeah.
Okay, he's proven right. He must be feeling pretty emboldened. What does he do next?
Okay, he's proven right. He must be feeling pretty emboldened. What does he do next?
The idea was broaden the tent. We can win elections if we bring Latinos into our coalition.
The idea was broaden the tent. We can win elections if we bring Latinos into our coalition.
Right. It sounds like they are betting at this point, Miller and Sessions, that while there is a consensus among the Republican establishment that this is the right way to go, that they actually know what voters care about and that this bill would not be popular with the base of voters that they're trying to win over.
Right. It sounds like they are betting at this point, Miller and Sessions, that while there is a consensus among the Republican establishment that this is the right way to go, that they actually know what voters care about and that this bill would not be popular with the base of voters that they're trying to win over.