TV

Bill Maher and Kara Swisher Ask: What’s Happening in the Tech World?

It was a wide-ranging night on “Real Time”

Kara Swisher on "Real Time"

Kara Swisher appeared on this week's "Real Time With Bill Maher."

By Tobias Carroll

Bill Maher set the tone for what was to come in this week’s Real Time With Bill Maher with his opening monologue, which closed with a riff on TikTok and Congress. His first guest was longtime tech journalist Kara Swisher, who was there to discuss her new book Burn Book: A Tech Love Story. Swisher knows plenty about the tech industry, but she’s also willing to push back against some of Maher’s declarations — and their give-and-take made for one of the show’s most interesting interviews in a while.

Those contrasts became clear early on, when Maher defended Elon Musk, saying, “He’s a complicated guy.” Swisher’s response was succinct: “He’s not a complicated guy. He’s just a jerk.” Later, she would critique Musk’s social media persona, saying that “All he wants to do is dunk.”

“I like Tesla Elon. I like Neuralink Elon. I even like Hyperloop Elon,” Swisher said. “It’s Twitter/X Elon that’s the problem.”

Even Maher, who’s spoken admiringly of Musk in the past, conceded that he was baffled by some of Musk’s behavior on social media. “I don’t know why he needs to high-five these crazy people,” he said. Swisher pointed out that technological leaders often have troubling politics, pointing to the example of Henry Ford.

Both Maher and Swisher expressed frustration at the gulf between tech’s promise and its reality. For Swisher, there was a sharp difference between the way tech leaders speak and their actions, Or, as she phrased it, “They cosplay this idea that they’re changing the world.”

Swisher went on to argue that the issue related to tech CEOs not knowing much about things that weren’t actually tech-related. “A lot of them aren’t educated, in a wider way. They don’t read widely,” she said.” That’s the reason I liked Steve Jobs — he read widely.”

Late in the conversation, both Swisher and Maher expressed their frustration at technology released prematurely, without being fully aware of its effects — whether self-driving cars or AI systems. “We’re the crash test dummies of the digital age,” Swisher said — a haunting image that also felt uncannily accurate.

Some other notable moments from the episode:

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