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Jason Calacanis Created Silicon Alley 100 List to Insert Himself Into New York Tech Scene

My First Million · The "Idiot Index": the simple math that made Elon Musk billions · June 4, 2026
Jason Calacanis Created Silicon Alley 100 List to Insert Himself Into New York Tech Scene
My First Million
My First Million
The "Idiot Index": the simple math that made Elon Musk billions
"He goes, I was in New York and nobody was reading our publication and nobody knew me, but I knew I wanted to be in the tech scene in New York. And so what he created was the Silicon Alley 100. He wouldn't put her 1, he'd put her at 4. And so immediately she's like, what? Who are the 3 people that beat me?"
Jason Calacanis revealed his strategy for becoming influential in New York tech in the late 1990s by creating the Silicon Alley 100 power players list. He deliberately ranked high-profile figures like Arianna Huffington at number 4 instead of 1 to create controversy and force engagement. The tactic successfully made him central to the network without prior status.

About this episode

In this episode of My First Million, hosts Sam Parr and Shaan Puri explore unconventional business strategies centered on creating lists, awards, and events to gain influence and build lucrative companies. The primary focus is on what they call the Kingmaker move: inserting yourself at the center of any industry by creating rankings and awards that force engagement. Parr recounts attending the Webby Awards, describing it as a pay-to-play operation generating revenue from 13,000 annual entries at $600-700 each, now owned by private equity and generating substantial revenue despite its Brooklyn hipster aesthetic. Puri shares Jason Calacanis's strategy of creating the Silicon Alley 100 list in the 1990s, deliberately ranking high-profile figures lower to create controversy and force them to engage. The conversation expands to Palmer Luckey's critique of defense contractors operating on cost-plus models that incentivize higher costs rather than efficiency, contrasting this with Anduril's product-based approach that invests 100% of revenue into R&D. They discuss Elon Musk's idiot index concept for measuring raw material costs versus final product markup, revealing how SpaceX identified massive inefficiencies in aerospace procurement. The episode also covers the story of Pat LaFrieda, who built a $270 million meat empire by creating custom blends for New York restaurants and supplying Shake Shack, and J.D. Power's billion-dollar award business that charges companies to improve their rankings. Puri proposes creating an award event for teenage hackers and misfits to identify future tech leaders, while Parr discusses his Sam's List project ranking accountants. The overarching theme is that creating lists, awards, and events can be more powerful than traditional marketing or networking for building influence and wealth.

Key takeaways

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