Topics:
(00:00:00) - Intro
(00:03:46) - Deep dive into the Thiel Fellowship
(00:07:04) - Success stories and impact of Thiel Fellows
(00:11:04) - Challenges and controversies
(00:16:01) - Evolution and future of fellowship programs
(00:18:39) - Early days of building the Thiel Fellowship
(00:23:36) - Traits of a Thiel Fellow
(00:33:24) - Nurturing genius
(00:39:57) - Screen time & children
(00:40:30) - Big screens vs. small screens
(00:43:12) - Quality time and engaging activities
(00:45:42) - Emotional depth and resilience in young founders
(00:54:02) - The traits of innovators
(01:04:08) - The journey of 1517 Fund
(01:10:05) - Join the 1517 community
Links:
Rolling Fun — https://www.rolling.fun
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We discuss:
The founding story and long-term vision behind the Thiel Fellowship
Common traits among exceptional young founders, including curiosity, hyper fluency, and “dog on a leash” energy
Lessons from supporting early pioneers like Vitalik Buterin, Dylan Field, and Laura Deming.
How 1517 Fund backs young builders and “Wily weirdos” working on sci-fi-level ideas
Danielle’s philosophy on education, parenting, and fostering genius in children
Quotes from Danielle:
“We weren’t looking for startup founders—we were looking for people on a mission.”
“Dog-on-a-leash energy—that’s what we look for. We’re here to cut the leash.”
“Hyperfluency is the ability to geek out with geeks, and still explain your work to your grandma at Thanksgiving.”
“These people are kind of mutants—they don’t fit in typical systems.”
“All kids under five are geniuses. The system just squashes it out of them.”
“The most shocking thing? People publicly attacked the Fellows. Not just the program—the people. Teenagers.”
“Crazy, crazy awesome—we can’t tell if they’re insane or brilliant, and it’ll take years to find out.”
“Big screens good, small screens bad.”
“In the future, I want to be funding 11-year-olds. The world won’t be ready, but I will be.”
“We just want to talk to wily weirdos who want to be around other wily weirdos.”