So, get this—Mark Zuckerberg, the guy who’s basically the king of Meta and probably has a server room bigger than my apartment, was caught on mic admitting he wasn’t quite following a question from none other than President Trump during a high stakes Silicon Valley showdown. Now, here’s the kicker: this all went down on September 4th, under the watchful eye of the stars as the Sun was waltzing through Virgo, that meticulous perfectionist who hates half-baked answers—clearly not Zuckerberg’s vibe that night. Sitting cheek-to-cheek with Trump, Zuck blurted out a jaw-dropping $600 billion investment figure for the US through ’28, but later sheepishly confessed he wasn’t ready for the question. Can you imagine the Mercury retrograde chaos that might’ve been messing with his focus? Meanwhile, tech heavyweights like Apple’s Tim Cook and Google’s Sundar Pichai were tossing around their own billions at the table, sans Elon Musk, Trump’s ‘first buddy’, who was notably MIA. As the world’s sharpest tech minds gathered in the State Dining Room, the night morphed into a fascinating mix of mega-money talk, awkward confessions, and Trump’s trademark jabs. Honestly, if the cosmos had a laugh track, it’d be roaring right now. Curious to see how this celestial tech tango unfolded? LEARN MORE.
Mark Zuckerberg has been caught on mic making an awkward confession to Donald Trump.
The 41-year-old Meta CEO was heard making an embarrassing admission to President Trump over a question he was asked while he was sat next to the POTUS during a dinner.
On Thursday (September 4), Zuckerberg joined several other tech moguls in a high profile Silicon Valley meeting, including Apple CEO Tim Cook, Microsoft founder Bill Gates, Sergey Brin, Sundar Pichai of Google, and the OpenAI founder Sam Altman.
Elon Musk, Trump’s so-called ‘first buddy’, was notably absent from the event which was pitched to harness artificial intelligence to ‘propel the US to the forefront of global innovation’, and followed from First Lady Melania Trump’s summit on AI in education.
However, during the televised dinner, the POTUS asked Zuckerberg how much he intended on spending in the US.
Apparently caught off guard by the question, he said: “Oh gosh, um, I think it’s probably gonna be, something like, I don’t know, at least $600 billion through ’28, in the US, yeah.”
When Trump acknowledged the huge sum, Zuckerberg said: “Yeah, no it’s significant.”
Zuckerberg confessed he wasn’t listening to a question (Alex Wong/Getty Images)
Later on, a hot mic caught the tech billionaire issuing an apology to Trump and admitted he wasn’t prepared for the question, reports The Daily Mail.
“I wasn’t sure what number you wanted to go with,” he confessed.
Zuckerberg further confessed that he ‘wasn’t paying attention’ to another reporter’s question about free speech laws in the UK.
Trump jibed back that it was ‘the beginning’ of his career in politics, which Zuckerberg waved away with a laugh.
The insight comes as President Trump has asked others around the table about their spending plans, including Pinchai who announced Google would invest $250 billion in the US, while Cook said Apple was planning a hefty investment of $600 billion.
The world’s most influential tech leaders gathered for the dinner (Alex Wong/Getty Images)
The Apple CEO told Trump: “I want to thank you for setting the tone such that we can make a major investment in the United States and have some key manufacturing here.
“I think it says a lot about your leadership and focus on innovation.”
Altman similarly thanked the president for his ‘pro-business’ and ‘pro-innovation’ approach, adding that Trump posed a ‘very refreshing change’ for the tech industry.
“I think it’s going to set us up for a long period of leading the world, and that wouldn’t be happening without your leadership,” the OpenAI boss said.
Trump had also remarked that the gathering of the globe’s most influential tech leaders and billionaires in the State Dining Room contained a ‘high IQ group.’
“I know everybody at the table indirectly through reading about you and studying, knowing a lot about your business, actually making it very easy for you in terms of electric capacity and getting it for you, getting your permits,” he said.
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