Yesterday Podcast

Yesterday

Interviews on inspiring life stories. yesterdayy.substack.com

  1. Kayvon Beykpour | Selling to Twitter, Rejecting Elon Musk & Getting Trolled by Kobe

    APR 16

    Kayvon Beykpour | Selling to Twitter, Rejecting Elon Musk & Getting Trolled by Kobe

    Kayvon Beykpour is the co-founder and CEO of Macroscope, an AI code review agent, backed by Lightspeed, Thrive Capital Google Ventures, and others. Previously, Kayvon was the GM of Twitter’s consumer division until the platform was acquired by Elon Musk. He Joined Twitter after co-founding Periscope, a live video platform where people can create, watch, discover and share live video, Periscope was acquired by Twitter for $120M in 2015. Periscope pioneered technology that inspired Instagram Live, TikTok Live, Facebook Live, and other social networks’ expansion into livestreaming. Prior to Periscope, he co-founded Terriblyclever Design LLC, a software company that was sold to Blackboard Inc. Following the acquisition, Kayvon led Blackboard’s mobile division for four years where he grew its team from five to more than 100 employees and helped the company become one of the most downloaded apps in the education industry. Timestamps: 00:00:00 Intro 00:01:54 Fleeing the Iranian Revolution to California 00:04:32 How Gaming Sparked a Career in Tech 00:08:28 Growing Up With 12 Kids 00:12:32 Pissing Off an Apple Exec with a Jailbroken iPhone 00:14:29 From a Cardboard Sign to Winning Emmys 00:19:20 Building Software for Colleges While Skipping Class 00:20:53 Selling $100k Apps to Best Buy & HP 00:22:32 Getting Acquired Over a Spam Call 00:27:03 The Importance of Passion 00:34:21 The Origins of Periscope 00:39:20 Scott Belsky Invented “Teleportation” 00:43:20 Six Months of Failed Designs 00:47:33 Selling to Twitter Before Launching 00:54:07 Trolled by Kobe Bryant 00:57:41 Turning Down Elon Musk 01:01:54 Founding Macroscope 01:10:21 The Two Most Consequential Life Decisions This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit yesterdayy.substack.com

    1h 12m
  2. Frank Guzzone | Head of Design at Thrive Capital

    APR 16

    Frank Guzzone | Head of Design at Thrive Capital

    A conversation with ⁠Frank Guzzone⁠, Head of Design at Thrive Capital. He grew up in Virginia, the son of an immigrant father. Frank and I are from the same hometown & college. Frank enrolled at UVA with the plan to become a doctor. He took the MCATs, spent two years as a scribe but a chance opportunity to design the cover of a textbook accompanied a change of course, he decided to pursue a masters degree at the VCU Brandcenter. He interned at AKQA in San Francisco in the summer between grad school years, worked at Mother New York in advertising, moved to Google’s Creative Lab, and joined Oscar Health - Arriving at the Puck Building in 2015, where he would return years later… From there: City Block Health and four years of freelancing, meanwhile, posting Cinema 4D animations on an Instagram account now approaching 100k followers. Frank then arrived at Thrive already having worked with brands like Apple, Google, Adidas, plus touring musicians like John Mayer and Fatboy Slim. He is now Head of Design, helping portfolio founders design and name companies, designing Thrive’s merch and brand, commissioning the flags on the building, and running a design fellowship. Frank is an amazing designer and an even better person. I hope you enjoy our chat: A glimpse into Frank’s life, past work, and the journey that led him to shaping one of venture’s great brands. Timestamps: 00:00:00 Intro 00:01:57 Hospitality and Hard Work 00:03:06 Choosing UVA Over Art School 00:07:37 Early Creative Outlets 00:13:49 Oscar Health 00:23:02 Going Viral on Instagram 00:25:06 Freelancing for Apple, Rimowa, and More 00:31:32 Building Thrive’s design function 00:37:52 How to Name a Startup 00:42:12 Design as an expression of Thrive’s Values 00:47:20 Why Good Design is Invisible 00:48:48 Design Fellowship 00:57:08 Work-Life Balance 00:59:43 Adaptation is a Superpower This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit yesterdayy.substack.com

    1h 4m
  3. James Currier | How Your Life is Driven by Network Effects

    APR 16

    James Currier | How Your Life is Driven by Network Effects

    James Currier is a Founding Partner at NFX and an angel investor in DoorDash, Lyft, and Patreon. James grew in New Hampshire to a carpenter father and music teacher mother. He left home at 13 on a full scholarship to Phillips Exeter Academy. Then Princeton, then HBS, all three on scholarship. After college, he sailed to Tahiti, then went to work for Rupert Murdoch building Asian satellite TV at STAR TV in Hong Kong. At 24, a mysterious misdiagnosis forced him back to the US and led him to Boston. After a stint at various venture firms, James would go on to co-founder Tickle. As CEO, James grew Tickle to the 18th largest website in the world with over 150 million registered users - before being acquired in 2004 by Monster for $110 million. James then co-founded three other successful companies — Wonderhill an online video game studio which merged with Kabam in 2010 and later sold for $800M, IronPearl a growth analytics SaaS, acquired by PayPal in 2013, and Jiff an enterprise healthcare software which raised $68M from Venrock, GE, J&J, merged with Castlight in 2017. Timestamps: 0:00 Intro 01:31 Selling Worms to Fishermen at 6 Years Old 03:20 From a Dirt Road to Phillips Exeter Academy 04:49 The Hovercraft Corporation of America 07:48 Sailing Across the North Atlantic 09:18 Misdiagnosed in Communist China 10:41 Joining Battery Ventures in the 90s 12:25 Throwing Parties for Hundreds of Tech Associates 13:25 The Origins of Tickle 16:42 The $100M Healthcare IT Clusterf*ck 18:19 The Next 30-Year Technology Window 23:50 When to Start Your Own Company 26:26 The Importance of Geography: San Francisco vs. New York 29:34 AI, Consciousness, and Talking to God 31:51 Discovering Meditation and the Awakened Mind 34:27 Why You Work Best From 10 PM to 2 AM 36:07 Founder Psychology, Psychedelics and Self-Discovery 39:05 Status & Human Interaction 40:49 The Preferred Attachment Theory 42:40 The Real Value of College 44:01 People vs. Capital 47:56 What True Hustle Actually Looks Like 49:56 “Dad Talks” About Sex and Drugs 53:41 Quitting Alcohol at 21: The Ultimate Life Hack 54:42 F*cking Around at Scale This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit yesterdayy.substack.com

    55 min
  4. Aaron Levie | He Cold Emailed Mark Cuban To Invest in His Startup (Now They’re Worth $5B)

    10/17/2025

    Aaron Levie | He Cold Emailed Mark Cuban To Invest in His Startup (Now They’re Worth $5B)

    Episode #18 of Yesterday:Aaron Levie is the co-founder and CEO of Box (NYSE: BOX), a cloud storage company used by over 100,000 businesses worldwide, including 67% of the Fortune 500. He co-founded Box in 2005 while a student at USC, initially funding it with online poker winnings before securing an investment from Mark Cuban off a cold email. Under Aaron’s leadership, Box grew from a dorm-room startup to a publicly traded company with more than $1 billion in annual revenue and over 2,000 employees. In this episode, Aaron shares the unfiltered journey behind that growth: The early pivot from a consumer product to an enterprise-first model, to navigating the “innovator’s dilemma” He also discusses how the iPhone and the broader mobile revolution reshaped Box’s product strategy and accelerated enterprise adoption. TIMESTAMPS: 00:00 Intro 01:34 Box Origin Story 04:24 Funding the Company with Online Poker 05:46 The Cold Email That Landed Mark Cuban 07:06 Dropping Out of College for the Dream 09:52 Advice From Mark Cuban 11:12 Enterprise vs. Consumer 12:50 Using the “Innovator’s Dilemma” 15:59 The iPhone Launch 17:46 The ChatGPT Moment 21:02 AI Pivot 26:05 SORA Video Generation 29:45 Why Most Companies Are Failing 33:12 Agents Automating Everything 35:50 Jack Dorsey’s Favorite Entrepreneur 38:13 Advice for Young Founders Presented by Rho: Rho is the all-in-one banking platform for startups, used by Perplexity, Product Hunt, and thousands of other companies. You get everything you need to manage your startup’s cash & a team that’s obsessed with helping founders beat industry giants. Learn more at rho.co/yesterday Sponsored by The Cannon Project (TCP): TCP recruits founding GTM and engineering teams for startups like Ramp, Cursor, and Decagon while investing through their flagship venture fund, TCP 1. Apply for roles and learn more at thecannonproject.com This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit yesterdayy.substack.com

    46 min
  5. Jonathan Neman | How Sweetgreen Became a Multi-Billion Dollar Salad Chain

    10/15/2025

    Jonathan Neman | How Sweetgreen Became a Multi-Billion Dollar Salad Chain

    Episode #17 of Yesterday:Jonathan Neman is the co-founder and CEO of Sweetgreen, Inc. (NYSE: SG), the mission-driven restaurant brand redefining fast food through fresh, seasonal, and sustainable meals. Born in Los Angeles and a graduate of Georgetown University’s McDonough School of Business (’07), Neman co-founded Sweetgreen with classmates Nicolas Jammet and Nathaniel Ru shortly after graduation, opening the first location in Georgetown, D.C. in 2007. Under his leadership, Sweetgreen has grown from a single salad shop into a nationwide company with hundreds of locations, a leading digital platform, and a public listing on the New York Stock Exchange. Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 01:41 Parents Fled a Revolution for the American Dream 04:00 The One Rule Dad Had 08:33 Selling Ads in High School 14:49 The 25,000-Person Music Festival 17:03 Escaping the “LA Bubble” 21:41 The Australian Cafe That Inspired Sweetgreen 24:23 The Hated Consulting Job 26:45 The Partner Who Told Me to Quit 29:23 The Complaint That Sparked Sweetgreen 36:24 Raising $300k from $5,000 Checks 37:23 The Co-Founder Who Quit 45:15 The Power of Doing One Thing Perfectly 47:50 The #1 Rule for Running a Business 50:52 From Dishwasher to Head Coach 55:25 Building a Restaurant App 58:32 Revolutionizing Takeout 1:11:18 The Reality of a Founder’s Life 1:13:42 Happiest vs. Unhappiest Moments Presented by Rho: Rho is the all-in-one banking platform for startups, used by Perplexity, Product Hunt, and thousands of other companies. You get everything you need to manage your startup’s cash & a team that’s obsessed with helping founders beat industry giants. Learn more at rho.co/yesterday Sponsored by The Cannon Project (TCP): TCP recruits founding GTM and engineering teams for startups like Ramp, Cursor, and Decagon while investing through their flagship venture fund, TCP 1. Apply for roles and learn more at thecannonproject.com This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit yesterdayy.substack.com

    1h 16m

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5
out of 5
3 Ratings

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Interviews on inspiring life stories. yesterdayy.substack.com

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