This week: a billionaire CEO who skipped the press release and drove a highway for 15 hours instead. Plus, Esther Perel asks whether texting an AI counts as cheating, and Jason Calacanis explains why he won't go near one of crypto's biggest bets.
MENTOR SPOTLIGHT
Lei Jun
Xiaomi founder, billionaire engineer, and the CEO who personally road-tests his own products on livestream
Around April 14–15, 2026, Lei Jun got behind the wheel of Xiaomi's new electric vehicle and drove from Beijing on the highway — live — for 15 hours straight. No PR team narrating. No highlight reel. Just a founder and a car, in real time, in front of the public.
This wasn't an accident. Xiaomi is competing in one of the most brutal markets on earth: Chinese EVs. Lei Jun knows that trust is earned through demonstration, not announcement. A 15-hour drive is harder to argue with than a spec sheet.
There's a lesson here that applies well beyond hardware. The founders and professionals who build lasting credibility tend to show their work. They don't just claim the product is good — they stake something personal on it. Lei Jun staked 15 hours of his own time, on camera, with nowhere to hide if something went wrong.
If you're 25–35 and building a career, reputation, or product, that's the model worth studying. Not the polished launch event. The uncomfortable, public, real-time demonstration that says: I believe in this enough to prove it myself.
IN THE NEWS
Esther Perel Esther Perel appeared on Call Her Daddy on April 15, 2026 — her third time on the show — where she broke down romantic consumerism, infidelity, and codependency for over an hour. She also published a piece on Substack asking whether talking to a chatbot counts as cheating, introducing the phrase "chatbot betrayal." And on April 20, she released a new episode of Where Should We Begin? featuring a couple deciding whether they're truly right for each other. The chatbot piece is the one to read: as AI companionship grows, Perel is already naming the emotional territory most people haven't thought through yet.
Jason Calacanis Jason Calacanis publicly questioned Bitcoin's price on social media, asking AI tool Grok how much lower BTC might be without MicroStrategy's $61 billion in accumulation — Grok estimated $10,000–$20,000 lower due to the "whale effect." Calacanis said he wouldn't touch MSTR stock "with a 10-foot pole" and pushed back on the idea of Bitcoin bailouts. He also hosted a This Week in Startups episode on April 15 interviewing the founders of Nanog, a platform being described as TikTok for mobile games. The Bitcoin commentary is a useful reminder that even in spaces full of loud conviction, the sharpest investors stay skeptical of crowded trades.
QUICK WISDOM
"I don't believe in luck. I believe in sweat, determination, and hard work." — Lei Jun Said in an interview on what actually drives success — and made literal by a 15-hour EV drive on a public highway.
"Love rests on two pillars: surrender and autonomy. Our need for togetherness exists alongside our need for separateness." — Esther Perel From her book Mating in Captivity — a framework she keeps applying to new relationship dynamics, including ones involving AI.
"I don't need to know if your idea is going to succeed, I need to know if you are." — Jason Calacanis From his book Angel — the filter he uses before writing any check.
FROM THE BLOG
AI Mentor App vs. Human Mentor A human mentor can change your life — but most people never get one, because access is uneven and schedules don't cooperate. This post breaks down what an AI mentor actually does differently, and when each one makes more sense.
I read every reply. If something hit home this week, just hit reply and tell me.
— Jesse Krim Founder, Get Mentors