Five Random Lessons from Covering the Theranos Debacle
I just filed a story with Marie Claire magazine on Elizabeth Holmes, the media darling and Silicon Valley entrepreneur whose fall from grace has been well-chronicled in the Wall Street Journal. It’s still rattling around in my brain, though, and because there are some bits that could not go into the Marie Claire piece due to space, I thought I’d jot them down here in an attempt to discharge them from my head. They follow below in no particular order, and I certainly make no claim that they create any overarching narrative. Think of them as a collection of curios, or, perhaps, a vain and fleeting attempt to slightly shift a few narratives this story has taken online that aren’t quite 100% on target.
But first, a quick note to those unfamiliar with Holmes: Her company, Theranos, claimed it had successfully developed technology that could cheaply test blood for any of the thousands of tests a traditional medical lab could, and could do so with just a drop of blood taken from a finger tip. Medical labs today require significantly more than a drop, taken intravenously. There are good reasons for this. One is that, even in a sterile environment, it’s extremely difficult to get a human finger to be “clean” to the point where the risk of contamination does not exist. More important, however, is the issue of heterogeneity. Although you might think of blood as single, pure, crimson liquid, it is actually a vast gumbo of various elements such as plasma, platelets, white and red blood cells, and myriad of other types of cells, and they’re not always evenly mixed. A single drop of blood, therefore, might well contain the very information you’re looking for, such whether or not you are likely to have cancer — but then again, it might not. Theranos’s business model also eliminated the need for a medical doctor. If you wanted to know if you were HIV positive or had high cholesterol, you’d simply go to a contracted retailer (Walgreens or Safeway, for example), have your finger pricked, and in a day or so your results would show up on an app on your phone. As world-changing technologies go, Theranos’s was pretty astounding.
Or at least it would have been if it actually existed. As we now know, even though Theranos tried for over a decade to make the tech work, they were never able to do so. But they told the public that it did work, and began to market it anyway. In some instances, they would run the drops of their customers’ blood through their own technology, which they had dubbed Edison, but in most cases they simply diluted the drops of blood with water and ran them through their competitors’ traditional machines. The results in both instances were highly inaccurate. Earlier this year, after it had completed its own investigation, the Medicare Council (which oversees medical laboratories in the US) declared that Theranos’s “blatant disregard for patient safety” put consumers of its product in “immediate jeopardy.” The damage done to Theranos’s customers, either by convincing them they did not require medical intervention when they in fact did, or convincing them they needed treatments that they did not, will likely never be truly known; such is the imprecise world of both medicine and the human body. The FBI is currently investigating, and criminal charges may be forthcoming.
That pretty much brings you up to speed. And with that out of the way, let’s proceed…
1. Holmes Isn’t Really the Charismatic, Silver-Tongued Devil She’s Portrayed As
Much of what one reads about Holmes these days leaves one with the impression that Elizabeth Holmes was a kind of cult leader, a turtle-necked Svengali who could could sell space heaters in Hell. In fact, however, when you watch the numerous videos of her giving speeches, Ted Talks, and national interviews, it becomes quickly clear that this isn’t the case.
https://youtu.be/F4_K4Kn3QGw
When speaking in public, Homes has an awkward, stilted way about her. She’s monotonous and unemotional. While others on Ted Talks vibrantly emote, Holmes just kind of dully drones on. When answering tough questions in interviews, she tightens up and looks nervous, her face a mask of forced smiles.
There’s nothing wrong with that, of course. Lot’s of people simply aren’t good on stage or interacting with people they don’t know, especially on camera. If you’re one of those people, you can sound boring, or look like you’re being disingenuous or hiding something, even if you’re not. The point simply being that when looking for a reason for how Holmes not only got away with doing what she did for as long as she did, but also for how she became a near-universal media darling, the answer “charisma” falls woefully short.
Which brings us to my next random thought…
2. Narratives, Too, Follow the Basic Laws of Economics
After the superlative work done by the Wall Street Journal’s John Carreyou, my favorite coverage of Theranos and Holmes hands down was done by Vanity Fair’s Nick Bilton. That being said, I think Bilton misses the mark somewhat when he describes Elizabeth Holmes as a product of Silicon Valley. There are a gazillion Silicon Valley bullshitters hoping to strike it rich, but they don’t end up on the cover of the New York Times Style Magazine.
The truth is that Elizabeth Holmes, Plucky Whiz Kid & World Changing Saint™, was more a product of the news media assigned to cover her. The news media knows that certain narratives sell better than other narratives, and thus has an economic interest into buying into (and promoting) those kinds of narratives. Vanity Fair, to take an immediately at hand example, might have been happy to publish Bilton’s piece once Holmes and Theranos had cratered, but not that many months prior it had giddily glorified Holmes at their celeb-studded New Establishment Cocktail Party PR event:
The belle of the ball was America’s youngest self-made female billionaire, Theranos C.E.O. Elizabeth Holmes. A line no shorter than four-people deep constantly awaited Holmes, who had earlier discussed transforming the health-care industry. Even across the room, she was the topic of converstion. A half-dozen people including the Aspen Institute’s Walter Isaacson and Maria Shriver, who led the discussion with Holmes on Tuesday afternoon, were talking about her business, its valuation, and what she plans to do next.
That bit of saccharine fluff, it should be noted, was written and published after concerns about fraud and malfeasance were being reported by the WSJ. Indeed, Vanity Fair — who had been just as instrumental as any other publication in creating and broadcasting the myth of St. Holmes — has spent most of this past year playing PR agent for the Theranos CEO, even as the evidence of her malfeasance and putting the public at risk became overwhelming. (Full disclosure: Marie Claire already had a puff piece on Holmes in the works this Spring before Theranos cratered and it was decided to scrap it entirely. That story and space was eventually turned over to me to do mine.) 1
Which is not to pick on Vanity Fair, because it was really pretty much everyone in the media that was doing this. Part of the narrative that’s evolving with this story right now is that until Carreyou got involved, no one really knew what was happening. That’s just not true. That Theranos couldn’t attract VC money from any person or firm that had any level of expertise in biotech, medicine, diagnostics, or health care companies was not some random fluke. In fact, when you see television interviews of Holmes prior to the WSJ expose, everyone does ask Holmes why, if the tech works, the company refuses to let anyone (including investors!) see the results, or why Theranos refused to publish its findings in a peer-reviewed journal, something considered mandatory with potential medical breakthroughs. In all of these interviews I have seen — be they on Fox, CBS, CNBC, or wherever — this question was directly asked. And Holmes’s answer in every case, was this:
First they call you crazy, then they fight you, then you change the world.
No one who had Holmes answer their questions with that answer on national television was under any illusion that Holmes was in any way answering that question, let alone addressing a very real serious public health concern about her product. But no one cared. In every case, the person interviewing her smiles and nods, and moves on to ask her how awesome it is to be the world’s youngest female self-made-billionaire, or what it’s like to truly make the world a better place, or some other totally unserious question that fits the narrative they set out to push before they ever lined up their interview questions.
Theranos became a public health problem because it was in Theranos’s interests to push a narrative that simply and obviously was never true. But it became one too because it was in the media’s interest to do the same.
I’d say that there was equal blame to go around for everyone, but…
3. CNBC’s Investment Guru Jim Cramer & ex-Senator/Doctor Bill Frist Running Cover for Holmes and Theranos, When Each Clearly Knew Better
What a couple of assholes.
Seriously, fuck those guys.
4. The Thing About Palo Alto Is…
… if you gave Disney a few billion dollars and said, “We want you to make a gimmicky amusement park that’s supposed to look like a place where rich people live, but where no one who sees it will ever doubt that it’s really just a gimmicky Disney amusement park,” you’d get something that looks exactly like Palo Alto.
5. Why Arizona?
When I first started out researching this story, I wondered why Walgreens started its Theranos Wellness Centers in Arizona. Neither was headquartered there. A lot of old snow birds, maybe, was the only thing I could think of off the top of my head.
Now I know that the reason everything was being done in Arizona was Arizona House Bill 2645.
It turns out — and I know this will come as a shock to you — that most states have laws against medically testing people without a doctor’s consent, especially by medical testing facilities using procedures not approved by the FDA. Go figure! Turns out that Arizona also once had laws like this on the books. HB2645 essentially lifted those regulations so that Theranos could begin selling its tests to Arizona citizens.
What is truly amazing, however, is exactly how Holmes and Theranos got AZ’s legislature and governor to adopt Theranos’s language and change existing state law. Not by showing anyone that their product worked, obviously — because it clearly didn’t, and besides they refused to show anyone any data of any kind. No, they got AZ GOP-controlled government to give a green light by noting that Theranos’s board was made up almost entirely of members of the Hoover Institute, a conservative think tank out of Palo Alto.
I’ve talked with several of the reporters who were at the testimonies prior to voting, and all tell the same story: Not one legislator grilling Holmes or Theranos asked a single question about their product’s efficacy, or anything at all related to medicine, diagnostics, or medical lab standards. One rep did ask if patients would able to understand the results they would receive. Holmes apparently said “yes,” and that was good enough for everyone involved. As House Speaker David Gowan correctly noted, “You’re talking to free-market-minded people here, so you’re talking in the right tone.”
This deserves highlighting, especially here at OT, because this is not really a case of market capture, or of crony capitalism. It is, rather, a case of what conservatives and libertarians insist we need more of: sweeping deregulation across the board that favors innovation and that applies to all companies equally.
So, if there’s someone that didn’t get treatment soon enough because they got back botched results from tests they got at Walgreens thanks to a state-approved circumvention of standard medical diagnostic procedures, I suppose they can be comforted in knowing that the market is working.
Yay!
[Image via Wiki Commons.]
“That Theranos couldn’t attract VC money from any person or firm that had any level of expertise in biotech, medicine, diagnostics, or health care companies was not some random fluke. ”
All I know about biotech, medicine, diagnostics, or health care companies could probably fit your “Trucks and Dirt Bikes Special Edition” of Marie Claire. But I have several years of experience interacting with venture capital, private equity and hedge funds. Don’t buy the hype. They don’t know anything about anything. And they have the attention span of a six month old.
It’s painful sitting with them, trying to go down on how a company makes, or doesn’t make, money, and be looked at with a mixture of boredom, incomprehension, and arrogance. They don’t know, they don’t want to learn, and they are sure they know better than you. Otherwise, how is it that they are the ones doling out the dough.
I can go on for hours on seeing people throw millions of other people’s money out of the window in bad deals, that were obviously bad deals, after they were told they were bad deals.
Belittling the know-how of experts is not solely the province of Trump rallies.Report
Okay, but there is a degree of risk that VC is willing to accept, no? Some ways of making money are indeed innovative or seemingly improbable, but they do eventually work out. If there are good-enough answers to questions about “Okay, this is a cool thing you can do, but how do you make money doing it?” then “good-enough” quality answers don’t need to be “sure-fire.”
In the case of investing in Theranos, I’d certainly expect an answer to “Well, does it actually work?” to refer to something with scientific validity behind it. Monetization doesn’t seem that difficult: we’re going to charge customers per service. So a) is the product a solid response to market demand, b) is the price point effective (not too high that it can’t be bought by the target consumer, not too low that there isn’t profit), and c) can the product be scaled up to an interesting level, and I’m in. Theranos had b) and c) nailed. It was a) where it failed.
So did the VC people confuse “Is the product a solid response to market demand” with “Is there a demand for the product”? Demand alone isn’t enough — satisfaction of that demand is how you get people to want to buy.Report
@burt-likko
As I mentioned below, Google Ventures and other VC firms were interested in Theranos for a while but refused to give money because Theranos did not want to do any due diligence work.
The thing about VC as far as I can tell is that there is a lot of money but not enough projects or new companies out there. Theranos first attracted attention because it seemed like they were trying to do new tech because most tech start-ups are really “tech” start-ups. So you have a million different delivery service or service apps which sometimes get mocked for solving the social and laziness problems of well-to do twenty and thirty somethings. Remember this is the world where an app that said “yo” was talked about as a hot commodity.
So it is easy to give people a few million during initial fund raising but then have them collapse during Series A.
The VC bet is that they might lose on a lot of companies but when they score big on a Facebook or Google, they score really big, and often fairly cheaply.Report
In my experience, the “well, does it actually work? How?” Is where things fall apart.
I can accept that the tech business might be different -because you have techies talking to techies that are interested in geek techie things- but the Harvard MBA crowd tend to avoid the “How it works” because they don’t have the knowledge to follow or understand the explanation, and they can’t acknowledge that because they are the Alpha Males in the room.
So, most times the focus of the conversation remain in the What (What does Teranos do?) and the -dreaded name- “Value Proposition” (Who will pay for this and how much? How much will it cost to manufacture?)
The how will be relegated to due diligence, to be undertaken by lesser people that will write a report that will be summarized into PowerPoint (*) by a recent MBA graduate or Investment Bank associate that didn’t understand what he read and couldn’t make questions.
Now, refusal to allow for due diligence, that a big red flag. Had I’d been Teranos, I would have tried to BS the due diligence part too. I’m sure there would have been several gullible investors that would have been satisfied.
(*) the majority of times the Due Diligence summary will be a fishing appendix in the presentation, that no one will read or ask about, because if it was fishing important, it would be in the fishing core of the presentation, wouldn’t it? It becomes a self fulfilling process.Report
Jim Cramer
If you haven’t seen the Jon Stewart interview of Jim Cramer, you must. You absolutely must.
These 30 minutes could save your life, or, at least, all your money
First, a remembrance of how all started:
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/08/opinion/joe-nocera-on-the-cramer-takedown.html?_r=0
Now, for the actual goods:
http://www.cc.com/video-clips/fttmoj/the-daily-show-with-jon-stewart-exclusive—jim-cramer-extended-interview-pt–1Report
Great piece Tod.
Being the left-wing guy I am, I agree with your conclusion. My big problem with this kind of ultra deregulation attitude is that it does seem to be very “caveat emptor”. Put the product on the market, if it works Yay!!! If it doesn’t work, the truth will out….eventually.
Theranos seems to be a classic example of too many good to be true narratives. You had a young woman rising to the top (or trying to) in some fields dominated by men. You had a revolutionary new technology over something that people hate getting done, etc.
But the problem as you noted is that the scientists and top VC firms like Google Ventures knew it was bunk or suspected so because Theranos would not turn over any documents for due diligence work.
I will say this about tech though as a non-techie surrounded by techs. They tend to be absolutely true believers in what they do. A lot of them seem to really believe in “disruption” and that they are changing the world. A few years ago there was a Wired article about what it was like to be on the failing side of Silicon Valley. One guy in the article finally got a job at some kind med-tech app start up and he went around shouting “We are going to make physicians obsolete” as his victory dance. This is allegedly a smart human being who managed to graduate from university.
But the other real failure is that the media often failed to push back on her. They never asked any critical questions. My guess is that too much of the media and these interviews is now arranged before the actual interview and if you want an interview, you need to agree to all sorts of conditions for the interview to occur.
Plus the media tends to love the Aspen-cocktail party circuit.
We need more journalists who want to be unpopular outsiders and not get invited to parties. Again it is the cult of savvy in a different arena:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jay-rosen/karl-rove-and-the-cult-of_b_60411.html
Winning in this case means being a young billionaire adopting some Steve Jobs dress habits.Report
You gotta hand it to Carreyou then, because he was an ugly pitbull.Report
Re: Tod’s assignment to do the story at Marie Claire.
First of all, I am rather not a part of Marie Claire‘s target audience. The only reason I would buy that magazine is to read Tod’s article.
Secondly, it’s easy to see why Marie Claire would want a piece on Elizabeth Holmes. Not Theranos, just on its billionaire CEO. Ms. Holmes is — or at least for a time appeared to be — the precise aspiration of that target audience. She is young, smart, wealthy, successful, and most of all, attractive.
Which makes it all the more remarkable that Tod would get to do the piece: the hallmark to Tod’s writing is a clear-eyed look past a whole lot of the bullshit and fluff and packaging to examine the actual human qualities of the product underneath it all. Most of all, the ethics. Seriously, I’m impressed with Marie Claire‘s editors that they would put that sort of analysis front and center for their readers: it demonstrates that the editors have respect for their audience that they care about such things, at least in addition to the fashion and beauty suggestions, and the doings of the famous and frivolous, that one would normally expect in a magazine marketed to a young female mass-market demographic.Report
Actually, as I have come to learn, marie claire likes to publish these kinds of articles. They consider themselves being closer to a female version GQ than another Vogue. Part of why they don’t put these stories online is that they use them to sell the print version. The more I learn about them as I work with them, the more interesting I find their business model.
Also, this is as good a time as any to say that despite the fact that they totally own the story and are under no obligation to do so, marie claire has given me permission to post a slightly different version of my article on the Trump campaign and it’s attempts to appeal to women voters on Blinded Trials once the article hits the newsstand in the international market — which I’m told means either tomorrow or Monday.Report
Oh man, I’m salivating already.Report
So now I have two reasons to like Marie Claire: Our Todd and Nina Garcia.Report
Bill Frist, the guy who diagnosed Terri Schiavo as “not somebody in persistent vegetative state” from a videotape? Shocking.Report
Now *that’s* some fine vulture capitalism right there.Report
So if Jennifer Lawrence plays Holmes in the movie, who plays Tod?Report
Tom Cruise, of course.Report
Not George Clooney or Robert Downey Jr?Report
[Me, at Leaguefest this summer, talking to Zak in a bar.]
Zak: You look like someone famous, but I can’t put my finger on who.
Me: George Clooney?
Zak: No, no, not him. Someone else.
Me: No, it’s George Clooney.
Zak: No, not George Clooney. Maybe Beau Bridges, like, the old Beau Bridges?
Me: I think you’re thinking of George Clooney.Report
Dude, it really is uncanny how much you look like Beau Bridges.Report
Doesn’t Tod have light hair?Report
The Cloon could dye his hair or wear a wig, like any other actor does.Report
“He’s a Tom Cruise type, but taller.”Report
Damn with faint praiseReport
FWIW Stanford has two really good art museums and a good performing arts center.Report
And a linear accelerator. I’m hoping their security team has badges that say “SLAC Security”.Report
@mike-schilling
I see what you did there…Report
I am certainly speaking out of school here, but Regulatory Capture is not limited to the capture of regulatory agencies, but can also encompass the capture of political entities who direct those regulatory agencies (Peltzman model, IIRC). So a single business, using its political connections to influence or even direct the legislative process regarding regulation toward its benefit, is capture.Report
This is like if the management of a corporation did things that benefited management rather than the shareholders, customers, or the employees as a whole. Good thing that’s unheard of.Report
Well, except for the Well Fargo thing, although I hear that the board intends to claw back some money from the CEO and the lady who was in charge of the division. So that’s good.
Otherwise, totally unheard of…Report
I would bet my bottom dollar that the only reason they’d do it is for PR purposes.
In fact, they’ll probably offer profuse apologies to the man and quietly put in a few good words with their friends, and he’ll find his next board position is more lucrative — to make up for his loss, you know.Report
@morat20
Probably. Thing is, even if it didn’t happen that way, it happens so often that absent a “Where Are They Now?” in a year showing the man bashed against the financial rocks & selling all his assets to keep money coming in, or having turned a new leaf & now doing legit philanthropy, everyone will assume he’ll be theatrically shown out one door, and graciously welcomed into another, once the furor has died down.
The aversion to accepting responsibility among the elite… that’s happened before, if I recall, and it didn’t end well then either.Report
I think what pisses me off the most is the complete lack of scientific awareness among reporters (not you Tod.) I see this stemming from a combination of misunderstanding the scientific method and captivation by the idea of Girl Power! There is nothing inherantly wrong or dangerous about women scientists, nor anything particularly new about them, though we could use many more. That said, the science of whatever they are doing is still science and to be taken seriously needs to be treated as rigorously as any other scientific findings.
There is no miracle cure to anything. Every bit of the work needs to be subject to the absolute scrutiny of other scientists, especially those who disagree with the project and what to see it brought down. Otherwise it is simply confirmation bias. And the complete lack of critical thinking regarding this in the world of journalism is, frankly, disgusting and pathetic. And possibly does more damage to the concept of science than anything else. The media not going to great lengths to correct this weakens a field that is already under fire due to biases among its practitioners, biases that lead to the erosion of public trust.Report
*yawn* corporations hire Q&A testers all the time. You don’t NEED to have peer review to do science right. Particularly applied science.Report
Except antibiotics and vaccines…kind of.Report
And Trickle Down theory.Report
And foreign policy, where one country enforces its goals on another by sheer force of will.Report
The point of what I was saying is mainly that to get to the point of the efficiancy of those two wonders, we did a lot of the hard work of science. With a lot of unsung heros.Report
I gotta agree with Saul (I know!) on the whole media thing.
This whole story has failure written on it:
Yeah I can buy the VC guys not giving a damn and throwing money at the company. But no peer reviewed data. I’m about as far from “science” work and that’d raise an eyebrow if I was 1) looking at using the product and 2) considering investing.
Politics: So the AZ congress relied on guys they know for recommendation. This is different how from copy/pasting industry/activist legislation outlines, putting your name on it, and submitting it as a bill? How is this different from “politics as usual”?
” It is, rather, a case of what conservatives and libertarians insist we need more of: sweeping deregulation across the board that favors innovation and that applies to all companies equally.” I’m failing to see 1) the sweeping deregulation (it’s one state after all and it’s more akin to “politics as usual”) Additionally, if anyone along the line was ACTUALLY DOING THEIR JOB (the reporters, the VC guys, the congress critters) would this have ever happened?Report
This is different how from copy/pasting industry/activist legislation outlines, putting your name on it, and submitting it as a bill?
The Hoover guys weren’t named “Alec”.Report
I have been utterly fascinated by this whole saga. One bit you don’t touch on that seems relevant is that Holmes is hot. Furthermore, she manages the nice balancing act of being hot, but in hot-smart-chick way, without giving off ditzy-blonde vibes. I wonder if someone less hot, or hot in the wrong way, would have gotten her foot in the door in the first place, much less run with it as long as she did.
A related question is how much of this was brought forth by the media narrative? Could I build a corporate mini-empire around my brilliant invention of a hamster-powered space rocket, if only I could get the glossies on board?Report
FWIW the first time I heard about Theranos was on Kevin Drum’s blog and he thought it was promising and actual tech as opposed to most “tech” companies as I mentioned to Burt.Report
Well, yes, except that she’s not. (Talking in typical Hollywood standards of who is and isn’t hot here.) The pictures you see of her in magazines, taken by those magazines, do indeed make her look Hollywood-hot, or like a New York fashion model. But when you see her on video, moving around, she isn’t. She’s more like a normal person, with a bit of a double chin and the kind of body one has when one spends all their days at a desk.
Which, once again, does not mean that normal people can’t be hot. They can! And everything is subjective! And FWIW, who I am attracted to and who Hollywood says I should be attracted to rarely line up.
But even granting all of that, the news media that was covering her clearly went out of their way to try to make her appear to be a Hollywood version of hot, because again, having her look like a New York fashion model fit a particular narrative they really, really wanted to sell.Report
Yes, I can see a bit of extra flesh under the chin even in the photographs and videos posted here, and not so much of the wasp-waistedness, big-bustedness, and overall physical athleticism that Madison Avenue prefers in women.
All duly noted, and immediately disregarded. She’s still a physically attractive woman. Which has fish all to do with either her business acumen or her professional ethics, which are what’s really implicated here.Report
Richard’s point still stands. Holmes had enough natural material for the photographers to work with and make look like a New York model, which is how most people would see her. If Holmes had less natural material for the photographers to work with than the narrative could have been very different.Report
I agree and that sort of confirms Tod’s point that she was able to fit the prescripted narrative that the press wanted to tell.
Does anyone remember that Dale Car?
It is a too-weird-to-be-fiction story where in 1974 a woman claiming to have invented a radical 3 wheeled car was able to bamboozle investors and the press, until the scam fell apart.
Then as now, the press fell hook line and sinker for a terrific rags to riches, David and Goliath story that should have been obvious had they not been so eager to make the story true.Report
Yeah, but that was helped by the ’73 oil crisis, as the main point was a two cylinder motor that would get 70ish mpg. Which you can do, but not in the way that people actually drive, i.e. going over a walking pace. Companies are still try to do things like this, only now we call them Volkswagon.Report
I agree, too. I’ve occasionally seen photographs of famous actors without their makeup on and they don’t seem as attractive as they do when they’re made up for movies/TV.Report
like a normal person, with a bit of a double chin and the kind of body one has when one spends all their days at a desk.
Hey, Tod, are you saying I’m not hot?Report
Of course, we would expect a George Clooney/Beau Bridges (YMMV) lookalike to know from hot.Report
Yes.
See solar fucking roadways (and no I won’t call it what legal wanted to. fuck legal).Report
The Roads Must Roll.Report
+1Report
iirc, in that story the detonation of a small explosive device ended up killing thousands of people and crippling a major transportation system.
looking back at the Heinlein I read 40 years ago, it seems to me that in his worlds even the engineers — his favorites — were mind-bogglingly stupid. (or there was simply no such thing as failure analysis)
ETA: Googling major engineering disasters can be quite entertaining on a slow day at the office.Report
I’ve said it before, engineering failure analysis is fascinating.
As to the story, wasn’t the road engineering department a quasi religious org? I can see how, if faith supplants reason, failure analysis can fly out the window.Report
Well, the boxcutter as we know it today was only invented when Heinlein was close to 60 years old.Report
Point #1: Public speaking != charisma. I don’t know if this is necessarily the case with Ms. Holmes, but I know a few people that are terrible public speakers, but extraordinarily charismatic in person.
Point #2: You say, “There are a gazillion Silicon Valley bullshitters hoping to strike it rich, but they don’t end up on the cover of the New York Times Style Magazine.” However, how many of them have a (paper) net worth of Elizabeth Holmes? Of that much smaller population, a higher percentage of them get magazine covers. Also, when discussing Silicon Valley culture, tech media culture is part of that. Scams like Theranos or Zenefits* aren’t broken by the Techcrunches or Recodes of the world, but by media less in bed with their industry. OTOH, the WSJ will break financial fraud and the Washington Post frequently breaks DC scandals.
* Zenefits was broken by Buzzfeed, which is more like a new version of traditional media, than Silicon Valley based.Report
Nixon had tons of charisma — just not the slick Willie type. You met him, you liked him. He was good at kissing babies.Report
Bringing here a comment about @will-truman piece in Hit Coffee
In most countries you don’t need a doctor’s order to get blood tests or most any other kind of tests. You can walk into a medical test lab, request the tests, and come back next day for the results. Is not as if you are at risk of anything if you decide you want your urine checked
And actually, most blood tests are pretty inexpensive. People will, for instance, check their lipid profile once a quarter.
Here in the USA I have to go to the doctor twice: once to get the test order, and once for him to interpret the tests for me, and only then can I google myself the meaning of each value.
Having doctors involved in almost every step is pure regulatory capture.Report
Your description of Palo Alto is true of many affluent places in the Bay Area. Last time I was in California, my Dad and I went to a sushi place in San Jose. It was in this outdoor mall type of entertainment area that was trying to imitate the typical apartments on top, restaurants and stores on bottom look of a traditional urban neighborhood. It looked very fake because everything was obviously built at the same time and had the same designers and look. There lots of places like that apparently.Report
And it’s worth pointing out that it’s exactly the kind of New Urbanist “housing above retail” space that we’re supposed to prefer.
I mean, I *guess* it could be “straight-sided undecorated machines-for-living”, but that seems like the kind of place that you’d want to get away from as quickly as possible.Report
Millions of people do like the apartments over shops living design or some mix of commercial and residential close together and providing walkable neighborhoods. The problem with it in places like the Bay Area was it was built all at once rather than growing organically over the decades or centuries so it seems fake compared to a city.Report
So, damned if they do, damned if they don’t.Report
There is a new building in anchorage that has that style. Its popular and charges premium rents. Nice looking building too. Some people do like it.Report
I’m not the one suggesting that I don’t, or that we shouldn’t.Report
… not always. When the doctors run the blood tests *as opposed to a lab company* they often have better detection systems. Turns out the lab company can’t measure things nearly as well as the doctors do.
Downsides to this method: doubletesting, needing to give a liter of blood each time, and having to listen to the eastern european doctor saying “I vant yur blut” a lot.Report
Certainly for something like a Lipid panel, or any test that tends to get repeated with any regularity, I can see an argument for just putting in a standing order.
Every 6 months, I drop by the lab, get a blood draw, and then after my PCP gets the results, she can request I schedule a follow-up if something looks funny.Report
Who gets blood tests as a standing order? It maybe should be done, but people don’t do it.
The reason why folks want doctors involved is false positives and negatives. They don’t want people saying “but I had a test and it said it was Fine!” … your heart was killing you, it wasn’t fine.Report
@kim
Read my comment again, your comprehension is off.Report
I like this piece. Quite a bit.
Holmes may not speak all that well, but she’s a fantastic photograph, and that’s a kind of charisma.
I haven’t followed the case all that closely, but I’ve been wondering about something. An entrepreneur can promise something in good faith, and then when it doesn’t work as expected, plow forward thinking the problems will get solved, and everything will be fine. Or they can plow forward knowing it’s never going to work, and just take the money. I am still in doubt about which of these Holmes did. But the sales pitch of “all their board belongs to the Hoover Institute” makes me deeply suspicious.
Why would you do that? You would seek out sympathetic board members with experience that will be useful, right? But all the focus seems to be on selling the thing, and none of it on getting it to actually work right.
You’re right about Palo Alto, and it makes me sad. I first lived there in 1979, and it didn’t really look like that then. It was a great place to be, there were several small art film houses on or near University Avenue, and other interesting byways.
Holmes reminds me in some ways of Steve Jobs. Start with the turtlenecks, and continue with the whole “insanely great” at selling things – selling a narrative – to the public. But Jobs actually delivered product that more or less worked.Report
True believer syndrome. If I can just keep the hype going, I can keep the money rolling in, so we can overcome the technical challenges and be heroes.Report
Also referred to as Throwing Good Money After Bad.Report
Excellent article, start to finish.
I find myself constantly wondering when incidents like this happen about the narrative that existed a year prior.
What was the narrative?
Then I look at the narrative and say “Oh. Jeez.”
Then, as part of the aftermath, I look and see if the narrative survived the incident.
You know, for the next time we have a similar narrative.
If a narrative is bulletproof despite multiple incidents, something else is going on.Report
Another reason VCs invest in vaporware is because the investments have #brand value regardless of whether they materialize or not. The IBM Watson Personal Health project is considered a joke in academia, but it’s worthwhile as a brand investment because it makes IBM look like a cutting-edge, innovative company. Something that looks very similar to Theranos is going on at Google ( https://www.statnews.com/2016/06/06/google-star-trek-fiction/ ) for the same reasons. Holmes captured certain Sillicon Valley signifiers – Girl Geek, Stanford dropout, personalized health, replacing doctors with apps – that were worthwhile investments even in the absence of a product. The problem is that Theranos pushed their failed product to market instead of slowly fading away.Report
One upside of this story: there’s now a lot of concern that the Silicon Valley culture of selling the sizzle and disrupting regulations poses a real risk when you’re talking about DTC health services, in a way that wasn’t there for social network apps or ride sharing or whatever.Report
I’ve watched about 5 minutes of the first video. You’re right that she’s not super-dooper charismatic. But she’s not horrible. She is clear and she stays on message and much of what she says about expanding access to information resonates well with me. I can see her appeal. That doesn’t mean the media didn’t boost her as Tod says. And he’s done the research, so he should know.Report
I’m going to rehash a little bit of what Will said over at Hitcoffee. There’s some truth to what I’ve bolded above, although I’m also inclined to agree with Damon’s critique
I also think there’s a pro-regulatory “liberal” counterpart that’s potentially dangerous, too. It’s the notion that we need our laws to buttress the prerogatives of professionals and to forbid people to act outside the parameters professionals establish. I’m not saying all liberals do that or that doing that is the essence of early 21st-century American liberalism, but it’s one of those tradeoffs that come with regulation.
Perhaps there’s more of a middle ground possible. We could have regulation that demands companies like substantiate the claims they make or regulation that endorses or declines to endorse such claims, but yet not an a priori decision to outlaw attempts to do things in alternative ways. To me, Theranos’ and malfeasance, as Tod describes it, rested in promoting a product that didn’t work and didn’t do what it said it did and the legislators’ malfeasance rested in being too credulous of Theranos’ claims. The malfeasance didn’t in the fact that it wanted to provide a way to bypass doctors.Report
#5 is why the best I can manage is half-assed libertarianism. Wow.Report