And Breyer has seen a lot of bad behavior. His private high school, he recalls, had a yearly fashion show to raise money for financial aid students, where upperclassmen strutted down a runway in designer clothing. “What type of place every year raises money for financial aid by having their 17- to 18-year-olds parade down an aisle in clothes that cost $2,000?” he asks. College and the venture world were not much better: “I know a lot of very wealthy people. I don’t know how many of them I would say are very self-realized, great, genuine,” he says. “Some of them are great, for sure, but a lot of them aren’t. A lot of them are desperate for the next thing.”
Still, he says, he does not want the book to come off like he’s staking a moral high ground or waging class war. As someone whose salary is paid by his billionaire father, he knows the hypocrisy inherent in writing a book like this.
“You can be a ‘good nepo baby’ and own it, and it’s almost a social currency — people like you more,” he says. “I can do that in this interview, I can do that in general, and I think a lot of the book is about that tension.”
The Standard reached out to Jim Breyer via email for his thoughts on his son’s debut novel, but instead received a response from Daniel, who relayed that his father would not be commenting. The elder Breyer “wasn’t planning to do interviews or provide comment to the press outlets I’m speaking to about the book,” his son said. “He’s proud of me and a fan of the novel, but also knows this is my project.”
For someone who’s done so much reflecting on how wealth has affected his past, Breyer doesn’t have much to say about how it’s affecting the future. Asked about his life as an investor, and whether he thinks about the potential harms of companies he invests in — such as AI startups that require vast quantities of energy to run their chatbots, or automation companies that could replace human jobs — his answers are slightly less considered.