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Tim Ferriss · 2024-07-12 · 2h 41m

Arnold Schwarzenegger and Ann Miura-Ko — The Tim Ferriss Show

Arnold Schwarzenegger on vision, psychological warfare, and dealmaking, plus Ann Miura-Ko on debate, world-class effort, and hunting startup Thunder Lizards.

Arnold Schwarzenegger and Ann Miura-Ko — The Tim Ferriss Show
The guest

Arnold Schwarzenegger and Ann Miura-Ko — Arnold Schwarzenegger: Austrian-born bodybuilder, actor (Terminator, Twins, Conan), businessman, author of Be Useful, and 38th governor of California. Ann Miura-Ko: co-founding partner at Floodgate venture capital firm, Forbes Midas List investor, Stanford lecturer, and Yale trustee.

The gist

This is a two-for-one 'super combo' episode celebrating the Tim Ferriss Show's 10th anniversary and 1 billion downloads. Arnold Schwarzenegger explains how a clear vision drove his bodybuilding, real estate, and film careers, including the psychological intimidation tactics he used against competitors and the napkin deal that made Twins his most lucrative movie. Ann Miura-Ko shares her arc from a painfully shy, special-education child to a champion debater, recounting her father's relentless 'is this world class?' standard and a college shadowing day with HP CEO Lou Platt that changed her trajectory. She breaks down venture capital lessons on intelligent versus fake growth, winning versus not-losing strategies, and the 'Thunder Lizard' founders she hunts for. Both guests return repeatedly to self-belief, preparation, and creating your own luck.

Big reveals

  • Arnold became a millionaire through Santa Monica apartment and office building real estate investments in the high-inflation 1970s, before his acting career took off, so he never had to rely on movies to make a living.
  • Before bodybuilding paid money, Arnold and Franco Columbu ran a bricklaying/masonry business advertised as 'European Bricklayers,' using a centimeter tape measure and a good-cop/bad-cop routine in German to confuse and upsell customers.
  • The Twins deal was made on a restaurant napkin: Arnold, Danny DeVito, and Ivan Reitman took no salary in exchange for roughly 37% of the back end, making it the most money Arnold ever earned on a movie.
  • Ann was so painfully shy as a child that her brother had to announce her piano performances on stage, and she failed IQ tests multiple times and was placed in special education after biting a preschool interviewer.
  • As a junior at Yale, Ann gave a campus tour to a man without knowing who he was; he turned out to be HP CEO Lou Platt, who invited her to shadow him over spring break in 1997, a life-changing mentorship moment.
  • Ann finished her Stanford PhD, completed her first set of Floodgate investments, and gave birth to her second child all between 2008 and 2009, defending her dissertation six weeks after giving birth.
  • Ann invested in Ayasdi in 2010 when the company had no business plan, only four math papers they had sent her; it later raised over $100 million in financing.
  • Floodgate is named for being at the 'headwaters of innovation,' and the 'Thunder Lizard' term, inspired by Godzilla, describes founders born fundamentally different who cross the ocean and disrupt an entire industry.

Things worth remembering

  • Young Arnold traveled to the Junior Mr. Europe contest in Stuttgart on the slow 'people's train' during his military service, without a passport because the military held it.
  • Conan the Barbarian was a $20 million movie in 1982, which Arnold notes would be equivalent to roughly $200 million today.
  • Twins cost about $18 million to make and grossed $129 million domestically and around $260 million worldwide.
  • Arnold practiced Transcendental Meditation 20 minutes morning and night in the 1970s and says he learned to disconnect his mind within about three weeks; he now treats workouts and playing jazz as forms of meditation.
  • At age 10 (fifth grade), Ann chose an adult negotiations class at Foothill College over a normal writing class because the textbook was 'Getting to Yes' and she wanted to learn how to get to yes.
  • Ann's teenage debate coaches, Stanford students aged 18-21, would buy her a slice of pizza if she made an opponent cry in cross-examination; she recalls at least four or five occasions where someone cried and left the room.
  • Ann's father came to the US barely speaking English, earned a PhD in aerospace/mechanical engineering, and worked at NASA's Moffett Field, repeatedly asking young Ann if her work was 'world class.'
  • Ann's favorite pen is the Pilot Juice Up 0.4 (available on Amazon) and her favorite notebook is a European 'Nuuna' brand with dot-matrix paper resembling craft paper.
  • Ann's second day of work at CRV was September 11, 2001; the firm voluntarily shrank its fund from about $1.2 billion to $450 million and gave back management fees during the downturn.
  • Ann's most impactful recent purchase under $100 is a foldable Amazon chair with a flip-over sun shade that she uses at her daughter's soccer tournaments.

Recommended in this episode

Books, products and media the guest or host genuinely endorsed here — with the buy link.

Affiliate link — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

Guest’s ownMedia

Twins

“star of Total Recall True Lies Twins and the Terminator films among many others” — Tim Ferriss 00:05:12
Find it on Amazon
Guest’s ownMedia

The Terminator

“star of Total Recall True Lies Twins and the Terminator films among many others businessman philanthropist” — Tim Ferriss 00:05:12
Find it on Amazon
Guest’s ownBook

Be Useful: Seven Tools for Life

Arnold Schwarzenegger

“philanthropist best-selling author of be useful seven tools for life and the 38th governor of California” — Tim Ferriss 00:05:12
Find it on Amazon
Guest’s ownMedia

Stay Hungry

“I did stay hungry I did then pumping on the documentary I did the Streets of San Francisco and worked then with an Margaret” — Arnold Schwarzenegger 00:16:04
Find it on Amazon
Guest’s ownMedia

Pumping Iron

“I did stay hungry I did then pumping on the documentary I did the Streets of San Francisco” — Arnold Schwarzenegger 00:16:04
Find it on Amazon
Guest’s ownMedia

Conan the Barbarian

“all of a sudden I got the contract for Conan the Barbarian and bang There we were a $20 million movie” — Arnold Schwarzenegger 00:16:04
Find it on Amazon
RecommendedMedia

Ghostbusters

“I should really talk to Ivan rman because I really loved Ghostbusters and he said to himself God he was so well directed” — Arnold Schwarzenegger 00:25:26
Find it on Amazon
RecommendedBook

Getting to Yes

Roger Fisher and William Ury (inferred)

“well getting to yes I thought was always really good I actually found the philosophical text to be extraordinarily informative” — Ann Miura-Ko 00:57:22
Find it on Amazon
RecommendedBook

Getting Past No

William Ury (inferred)

“there is another book which I believe was co-authored by one of the co-authors of getting TS called getting past no which I I also really really like” — Tim Ferriss 01:05:13
Find it on Amazon
RecommendedProduct

Pilot Juice Up 04 pen

Pilot (inferred)

“on pens I love the juiceup 04 how do you spell juiceup juice up oh juice up okay yeah juice up 04 you can get them on Amazon” — Ann Miura-Ko 01:20:33
Find it on Amazon
RecommendedProduct

Nuuna notebook

Nuuna (inferred)

“for notebooks it's the Nuna it's nuu n some European brand but I like any notebook that has the dot matrix on it the paper quality is really great” — Ann Miura-Ko 01:21:05
Find it on Amazon
RecommendedBook

What School Could Be

Ted Dintersmith

“my mentor Ted Dent Smith just wrote a book called what school could be and this goes back to sort of Education as a critical societal question” — Ann Miura-Ko 02:27:28
Find it on Amazon
RecommendedBook

A Thousand Splendid Suns

Khaled Hosseini

“he wrote this book called A Thousand Splendid Sons probably one of the most beautiful books that I've read in a long time in terms of fiction writing” — Ann Miura-Ko 02:28:30
Find it on Amazon