Netflix growing up, data center jet engines, and the circular AI economy
Equity · 2025-12-12 · 28 min
Episode notes
A baby was born in a Waymo this week , and it wasn't even the first one. What started as a novelty story quickly became a reminder of how autonomous vehicles have quietly become part of everyday life, complete with all the messiness that entails. The real coming-of-age story this week, however, wasn't happening in San Francisco's robotaxis. It was playing out in Hollywood, where Netflix made an $82 billion bid to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery's streaming and studio business. Today on TechCrunch's Equity podcast, hosts Kirsten Korosec and Anthony Ha discuss what happens when the startup that used to mail you DVDs grows up and tries to buy a legacy entertainment empire as well as the other headlines that caught their eye. Listen to the full episode to hear about: How Boom Supersonic is selling jet engines to data centers to fund its supersonic flight dreams Why Hinge's CEO is leaving to start an AI dating app , and whether AI can actually fix dating The rise of AI circular deals and what CoreWeave's CEO says about companies investing in their own customers A fertility startup using AI-designed antibodies to expand beyond ovulation tracking
More from Equity
All episodes →- What if the AI giants are building the roads, not the destinations? Chi-Hua Chien thinks he knows who wins61 / 100
- The US banned Anthropic's Fable 5 release, but the numbers don't seem to care36 / 100
- NEA's Tiffany Luck on AI IPOs, personal agents, and the ROI reckoning47 / 100
- The SpaceX IPO has finally arrived
- It’s hot IPO summer, and the MANGOS are ripe