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Past presidents have used the internet, but none have been true "internet natives." Andreessen predicts a future presidential candidate who will be elected entirely online, completely ignoring and being uninfluenced by legacy media like television. This figure will represent a fundamental shift from hybrid candidates like Donald Trump.
Society is splitting into two groups: "post-headline" people who rely on official media for validation, and "pre-headline" people (like Elon Musk) who synthesize raw, real-time data to act before the consensus forms. This information asymmetry is becoming a primary driver of wealth and power.
Updating Marshall McLuhan's media theory, Andreessen posits that the internet's native format is the viral meme. Any event, regardless of its real-world significance, is immediately processed into a meme, triggering tribe formation, outrage, and moral panic. This is the fundamental lens through which we now experience reality.
The political anxiety around AI stems from leaders' recent experience with social media, which acted as an "authority destroyer." Social media eroded the credibility of established institutions and public narrative control. Leaders now view AI through this lens, fearing a repeat of this power shift.
As loneliness increases, media consumption is shifting from passive viewing to active participation. Platforms that best replicate the experience of a real-life conversation, like live streams with interactive comments, are positioned to win because they fulfill a deep-seated human need for connection.
Marc Andreessen argues that Zoomer founders are the most capable generation yet. As AI-natives who grew up online, they are technically skilled, well-informed, and, having witnessed the weirdness of the last decade, are unapologetic and forceful in their ambition to build great things.
While previous elections were won on search (Obama) and social media (Trump), the current political landscape is dominated by podcasts. Candidates recognize this is the most effective way to reach the average 34-year-old voter, making podcast guest slots a top priority for any serious campaign.
The modern political landscape demands that candidates operate as "always on" media creators. Relying on external media is no longer sufficient; campaigns must produce a constant stream of their own content to control the narrative and engage voters directly.
The path to political power is shifting. Instead of politicians learning social media, the next wave of leaders will be social media natives who build massive followings first and then leverage that audience to enter politics.
The success of figures like Trump and Mamdani shows a political shift where personality trumps policy. Voters are drawn to authentic, entertainer-like candidates who connect on a human level, making traditional, unrelatable politicians obsolete.
The era of limited information sources allowed for a controlled, shared narrative. The current media landscape, with its volume and velocity of information, fractures consensus and erodes trust, making it nearly impossible for society to move forward in lockstep.