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seu | 3 months ago

Is this seriously trying to portray OpenAI/Altman or Nvidia/Huang as unlikely everyday dudes who reluctantly take up a challenge and rise to become heroes? I never stop being amazed at how people love to present rich, well connected, people as underdogs and turn them into heroes.

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Thorrez|3 months ago

If you read about Huang's childhood it's quite surprising:

> At age nine, Jensen, despite not being able to speak English, was sent by his parents to live in the United States.[15] He and his older brother moved in 1973 to live with an uncle in Tacoma, Washington, escaping widespread social unrest in Thailand.[16] Both Huang's aunt and uncle were recent immigrants to Washington state; they accidentally enrolled him and his brother in the Oneida Baptist Institute, a religious reform academy in Kentucky for troubled youth,[16] mistakenly believing it to be a prestigious boarding school.[17] In order to afford the academy's tuition, Jensen's parents sold nearly all their possessions.[18]

> When he was 10 years old, Huang lived with his older brother in the Oneida boys' dormitory.[17] Each student was expected to work every day, and his brother was assigned to perform manual labor on a nearby tobacco farm.[18] Because he was too young to attend classes at the reform academy, Huang was educated at a separate public school—the Oneida Elementary school in Oneida, Kentucky—arriving as "an undersized Asian immigrant with long hair and heavily accented English"[17] and was frequently bullied and beaten.[19] In Oneida, Huang cleaned toilets every day, learned to play table-tennis,[b] joined the swimming team,[21] and appeared in Sports Illustrated at age 14.[22] He taught his illiterate roommate, a "17-year-old covered in tattoos and knife scars,"[22] how to read in exchange for being taught how to bench press.[17] In 2002, Huang recalled that he remembered his life in Kentucky "more vividly than just about any other".[22]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jensen_Huang

malfist|3 months ago

I grew up around that area, and this story has serious stench of PR crafted mythical origin story. Oneida Baptist Institute is a prestigious private school, not one of those child abuse mills, we've had a governor and a state rep attend that school.

Child labor is super common around these parts, especially on family farms. I grew up working on my family's tobacco farm just like pretty much everyone else. My uncle was even nice enough one summer to give me $20 a week for weeding and bug removal from a 5 acre farm. I thought it was so much money. I remember saving up to buy those bargain bin "300 Games" type CDs at Walmart.

flakeoil|3 months ago

To be honest, I would be more surprised if he came from a more normal middle class background.

FrustratedMonky|3 months ago

Unfortunately we do like rich people. We do hold them up as hero's. We fantasize about being rich. Watch shows about their lives, etc...

Bruce Wayne was rich. Those fancy suits and cars aren't cheap.

Tony Stark was rich. Fancy robot tech isn't cheap.

It takes money to actually do anything. Super Hero stories about rich people. We idolize making a difference with the money.

omnicognate|2 months ago

If by "we" you mean US popular culture, yes. It's not universal, and definitely varies by country.

In the UK we don't tend to idolise the rich so much. Not to say it doesn't happen, but in popular culture positive depictions tend to be limited to period portrayals of idealised aristocracy (and even then it's rarely shown as heroic), with contemporary wealth usually treated as a dubious virtue.

eurekin|3 months ago

The point is to cover your tracks and making sure no one will be able to repeat that. They want to send you in a random direction, even, if you only want to try.