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The Elon Musk Playbook, Space Mining, and the Next Wave Nobody Sees Yet | Ep. 390 with Eric Jorgenson CEO of Scribe Media

Episode 391 Published 4 days, 2 hours ago
Description

Eric Jorgenson, CEO of Scribe, explains why he chose Elon Musk as a subject, arguing Elon is singular in taking max risk on civilization scale problems and repeatedly pulling off what looks impossible. He breaks down his approach to writing as curation, building a “mosaic” from hundreds of sources so the reader feels like Elon is directly mentoring them. Daniel and Eric also discuss polarization, the next tech frontiers in biology and space, and why Scribe exists to remove gatekeepers and help more people publish books that outlive them.

Key Discussion Points

Eric explains he wrote the Elon book because Elon is a one of one entrepreneur who takes extreme risk to solve massive human problems.
He shares his “curate, not write” method, stitching together everything Elon has said publicly into a smooth, mentor like reading experience.
Eric says the biggest surprise was how central purpose is to Elon’s decision making, talent attraction, and willingness to endure public and financial risk.
He talks about polarization and why we need to separate political noise from what we can genuinely learn from a person’s craft and lived experience.
Eric explains why he’d bet on nanotech, biology, and the AI plus CRISPR wave as the next “get rich while solving real problems” frontier.
They dive into space economics, asteroid mining, and why Eric believes we’ll have metal from space on Earth in about a decade.
Eric explains why books are “Lindy,” why print still matters, and why publishing is being democratized as gatekeepers lose relevance.
He shares the Scribe turnaround story: being a customer caught in bankruptcy, helping behind the scenes, then becoming CEO after the assets were rebuilt.
Eric describes his “unlimited possibility” moment: publishing the Almanack of Naval Ravikant, which became proof of exceptional ability and changed his life trajectory.

Takeaways

Purpose is leverage, because it helps you take risks other people won’t, attracts elite talent, and creates resilience through pain and uncertainty.
A book can be a “lighthouse” that gathers your people, changes your opportunities, and becomes an asset that precedes you for decades.
The future economy is bigger than Earth, and the raw materials of the solar system make space industrialization a long term inevitability.
Traditional publishing is a 150 year old model built for a world that no longer exists, and modern authors can keep control while still producing world class work.
If you’re going to do a book, do it right, because it can outlive you and compound into everything you do next.

Closing Thoughts

Eric’s message is both simple and challenging: stop waiting for permission and build something that lasts. Whether it’s a book, a company, or a new technology wave, the people who win are the ones who stay amazed by what’s possible and keep dragging “impossible” into “done.” If you’ve been thinking about writing a book, this episode makes the case that you’re only one great book away from changing your life.


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