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Ivanka Trump: Most People Can’t Tell Signal From Noise

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0:01

She was extraordinary.

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Um, my mother taught me a lot about just

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like

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bringing intention to what you do.

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Bringing sorry

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and being the child of accomplished

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parents. Most people thought that I

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would lack the ambition, the

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preparedness, but my mother taught me

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that being underestimated is not a bad

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thing. It's very powerful thing actually

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and it almost always worked to the

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detriment of the person who

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underestimated me.

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>> From real estate to her own

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multi-million dollar fashion line,

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Ivanka Trump continues to carve her own

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path into the business world, succeeding

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at every turn.

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>> And then you learn 2 weeks before he

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announces your father decides he wants

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to be president of the United States.

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Did you have any sense that this was at

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all on the horizon?

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>> Not really. And then when he pulled the

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trigger, it was full steam. Well, most

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people wouldn't give up an $800 million

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annual business to go into government.

1:00

Why did you?

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>> He asked us for help. He's like, "But I

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have to warn you. They're going to come

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at you hard. They're probably going to

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hate you." But one of the things I've

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learned in moments of tremendous

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pressure and scrutiny where any slip up

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is completely weaponized against you is

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to find the signal in the noise. I just

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don't get distracted by the outside

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noise. That's probably the thing that

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has been most helpful to me in terms of

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performance and success because you have

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a choice only in how you respond.

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>> You've said politics is a pretty dark

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world. This is quite a difficult

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question to ask, but when you heard the

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news that there was an assassination

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attempt on your father's life, do you

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remember where you were and like what's

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that like as a daughter?

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This is super interesting to me. My team

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given me this report to show me how many

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I'll make sure every single week, every

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Please help us. Really appreciate it.

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Let's get on with the show.

2:46

>> Ivanka, you um you don't do many

2:49

interviews, do you?

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>> Not really. No.

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>> Why don't you do much media stuff or

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podcasting or interviews?

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>> I actually don't know. I think I'm I get

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sort of really locked in and heads down

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on what I'm working on

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>> that

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I tend to kind of put on blinders and

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just go, but I like to have

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conversations in longer form with people

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that I admire.

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>> I think the reason why I um I do this is

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because I see I naturally see everybody

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as like a jigsaw puzzle.

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>> And you've lived an extraordinary life.

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you've lived an extraordinary atypical

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>> life that I mean it's safe to say almost

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nobody on planet earth has has ever

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experienced and so I think I asked that

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question just to be completely honest at

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the top because the life you've lived

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that we'll get into is is one that would

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have shaped you in a number of ways and

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one of them is I think from what I read

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things that you had said and different

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experiences you had as a child is just

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like trusting people

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>> you know it's interesting I I grew up

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the child of wealthy and accomplished

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parents.

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>> And so I do think there's like um a

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natural barrier that goes up. You're

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you're worried about people, especially

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when you're a kid, um liking you for the

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wrong reasons. I see this now with my

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son. You know, he wants to be loved by

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his friends, and I appreciate that.

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That's that's good for who he is, not

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for who we are, and certainly not for

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what we have. So I do think being the

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child of of of famous um parents and

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living such a privileged life, I had

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this

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guard and um that guard served me really

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well for a long time. Like I I didn't

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have any friends despite the

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really tumultuous

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life that I've had, ups and downs, who

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really disappointed me. meaning close

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close close friends who who didn't show

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up for me or or who changed because of

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my circumstances or

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>> what was happening around me and I've

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learned for me I mean you were saying

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the purpose of life for me it's you know

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the expansion and not contraction of the

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heart and that's hard as you get older

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you know how do you live a life of of

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service and rooted in and love and

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connection and I've learned more and

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more that those walls

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they don't serve you and the only way to

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have connection which is so fundamental

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to the human experience is to um is to

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build it and that requires trust.

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>> So I have to trust people. Now I have a

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good radar. I'm not foolish. I'm

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>> I think I'm a very good read of people

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and I think it's one of um my strengths

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>> and I think it's why I haven't been

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surprised by a lot of people. Um, so I

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read pretty quickly, but I also have had

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to teach myself rather than grow sort of

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cynical as one tends to as they get

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older. I've really actually taught

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myself to be more trusting. And to the

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extent that means periodically I'll be

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burned like that's I'm okay with that

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trade-off because I think it will lead

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to more meaningful connections in my

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life.

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>> Probably nets out better right in the

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long term.

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>> I think so. I have this photo here of a

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very smaller and

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>> so funny. I look at this and I see my

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daughter.

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>> Really?

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>> That was like the first thing when I saw

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that photo.

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>> At what age did you realize that life

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for you was slightly different from the

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average person? Like when does a child

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realize that?

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>> H

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I think there was always a lot of

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media attention and scrutiny. You see

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it, you experience it very early on. And

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I think my parents did a really good job

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trying to shelter us from it. And it was

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different then without social media. You

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know, not everyone I think the

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experience our children have where

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anywhere they go people have a recording

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device in their hands, their iPhone um

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and can take pictures of them and you

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know it's so um you're so exposed during

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um during your formative years and

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thankfully I did not have that growing

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up but there were times I felt it. I

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remember

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I wanted to be a dancer, a ballet

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dancer. And you know, my mom um was an

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incredible skier. She skied on the

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national team for then Czechoslovakia,

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now Czech Republic. And so she really

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believed in the importance of of sport

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for cultivating discipline and um so she

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really encouraged this. And I was

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