The Rise and Fall of Travis Kalanick


 The narrative of how Kalanick led the fastest-growing business in history, taking on established taxi companies in San Fran, California, and throughout the world, is told in Super Pumped: the Battle for Uber. It's an intriguing depiction of a man who is charismatic and annoying, brilliant and insane, heroic and villainous. It's a view into a tech world where the boundary between invention and devastation is blurry, and CEOs like Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk are known for destroying things quickly and without care for who gets injured.

Kalanick was good at articulating the logic and philosophy behind why everything turned out, but he lacked compassion for the individuals who were actually affected a majority of the time. He's a guy who lives in a mythical world, so he can't connect on an emotional level to someone who's hurting, or relate with someone who's feeling low at
the moment. 

The show to me represents the callousness of some individuals and depicts the negative aspects of silicon valley that make it function in the super dominant and mob mentality way.  

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Common Sense is Subjective

Super Pumped: The Battle For Uber