All right.
High energy.
Yeah.
Need some energy to get through 170 years.
Woo.
It's literally 170 years.
It's crazy.
Welcome to season eight, episode two of Acquired, the podcast about great technology companies and the stories and playbooks behind them.
I'm Ben Gilbert and I'm the co founder of Pioneer Square Labs, a startup studio and venture capital firm in Seattle.
And I'm David Rosenthal and I am an angel investor based in San Francisco.
And we are your hosts.
For over 100 years, you would have been hard pressed to find a better business in the world than an American newspaper.
Each one had a local monopoly, an incredibly profitable advertising business, and it was one of the earliest examples of a reasonably low marginal cost business.
It's dirt cheap to just print another copy of the paper.
The newspaper business was for a long time Warren Buffett's canonical example of a franchise.
Like the best type of business you can possibly own.
Indeed.
And this today, listeners, is the story of the paper that loomed large over all the others.
The New York Times.
Today we peer into what I think is the oldest company we've ever done on this show.