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Can Clubhouse Keep The Party Going?

Bloomberg Businessweek

|

March 08, 2021

Silicon Valley’s hottest app is getting more than just money from its prominent investors

- Joshua Brustein and Anne VanderMey

Can Clubhouse Keep The Party Going?

Investment firm Andreessen Horowitz has supplied much of the capital that helped spark the sudden rise of Clubhouse, the audio-based social network that’s become one of the hottest things in Silicon Valley and has drawn in megacelebrities including Oprah and Drake. In a twist on the standard venture capital model, it also provides a good deal of the talent responsible for the content.

Clubhouse is an invite-only app, structured as a series of “rooms,” where speakers lead discussions in front of audiences who can also be called on to participate. Marc Andreessen and Ben Horowitz, the founders of the firm, which is often referred to as A16Z—a play on the letters in its name—host their own show on Clubhouse. They also regularly show up in other rooms, and A16Z’s other partners encourage people from their wide range of contacts to hold court. The entire thing can resemble a smartphone-based version of the conferences and salons that venture capitalists rely on to burnish their thought-leader credentials and build hype for projects. (Bloomberg LP, which owns Bloomberg Businessweek, has invested in Andreessen Horowitz.)

In perhaps the app’s biggest coup to date, Tesla Inc. co-founder Elon Musk appeared in January on

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