• Washington
  • Wall Street
  • A.I.
  • Hollywood
  • Media
  • Fashion
  • Sports
  • Art
  • Join Puck Newsletters What is puck? Authors Podcasts Gift Puck Careers Events
  • Join Puck

    Directly Supporting Authors

    A new economic model in which writers are also partners in the business.

    Personalized Subscriptions

    Customize your settings to receive the newsletters you want from the authors you follow.

    Stay in the Know

    Connect directly with Puck talent through email and exclusive events.

  • What is puck? Newsletters Authors Podcasts Events Gift Puck Careers

Aug 7, 2025

The Hidden Layer
Bloomenergy
Ian Krietzberg Ian Krietzberg

Welcome to The Hidden Layer. I’m Ian Krietzberg. Happy GPT-5 Day.

Yes, the rumors were true: After two years of waiting, OpenAI’s latest model was released into the wild today. In today’s issue, I’ll break down whether it’s actually a game-changer—or falls short of its astronomical expectations.

As a reader recently pointed out, GPT-5 arrives almost exactly 1,000 days after the launch of the original ChatGPT—a milestone that begs for some reflection. What’s the most significant positive impact that generative A.I. has unleashed on society since 2022? Let me know what you think by replying to this email, and I’ll share the best answers later this month.

Mentioned in this issue: Sam Altman, Elon Musk, OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, Michael Rigas, Lisa Su, AMD, Super Micro, John Licato, Nvidia, and many more…

Okay, let’s get into it…

 

Deal of the Week: The Nvidia Exemption

On Wednesday, President Trump said he would be imposing a whopping 100 percent tariff on semiconductors and computer chips—except, of course, for companies that are “building in the United States.” That’s a loophole large enough to drive a container ship of Nvidia chips through.

The final rule is still being drafted, and other elements of the supply chain could still be at risk. But this looks like a big win for the incumbents, who know how to play Trump. Intel already manufactures many of its chips in the U.S.; TSMC, the large Taiwanese semiconductor manufacturer, has recently begun limited production in Arizona. AMD also plans to manufacture at least some of its chips through TSMC’s facilities. Tim Cook, for his part, delivered his tribute directly to the White House, where he announced that Apple will begin using chips from Samsung’s plant in Texas, and gifted the president a 24-karat gold plaque. Subtle.

 

Two Things You Should Know…

  • Action Plan in play: Less than two weeks after Trump unveiled America’s A.I. Action Plan, his administration is already making good on one of the industry’s wishlist items: integrating A.I. into federal agencies. On Tuesday, the General Services Administration made OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google services available to purchase for federal, state, and local governments at discounted prices. Michael Rigas, the agency’s acting administrator, suggested in a statement that these tools will “streamline back-office processes,” “revolutionize employee and citizen experiences,” and “reimagine how we deliver mission-critical services.” (OpenAI announced it’s offering ChatGPT Enterprise to federal agencies for $1 per agency for the first year.)

    As part of the rollout, Trump signed an executive order banning the use of what he has called “woke” A.I. models in the federal government, which is why the adoption efforts will, according to Federal Acquisition Service Commissioner Josh Gruenbaum, focus on “models that prioritize truthfulness, accuracy, transparency, and freedom from ideological bias.” The G.S.A. did not return a request for comment about how this will be measured or enforced. It’s also unclear whether OpenAI, Google, or Anthropic introduced specific model guardrails to ensure their systems are somehow free of whatever the administration might deem “ideological bias.” None of the labs responded to requests for comment, either.

A MESSAGE FROM BLOOM ENERGY

Bloom Energy
Bloom Energy

As AI adoption accelerates, power has become the defining constraint—and opportunity—for data center growth. Our latest 2025 Mid-Year Power Report reveals a dramatic shift in how industry leaders are planning for the future.

 

Read the report.

  • A.I. earnings season: Not everyone can be Nvidia, as evidenced by this week’s earnings reports from AMD and Super Micro. The chip business, obviously, has been on a tear: Nvidia, whose data center revenue increased from less than $4 billion in Q2 2022 to nearly $40 billion three years later, is now the most valuable company in the world. (Nvidia reports its earnings later this month.) But rival companies are struggling to ride its tailwinds.

    Over the last three quarters, AMD has seen its data center revenue fall from $3.9 billion to $3.7 billion to now $3.2 billion—it’s still a 14 percent gain from the same period last year, but it’s hardly what Wall Street analysts wanted. Combined with a slight earnings miss, the stock dropped nearly 7 percent on Wednesday. C.E.O. Lisa Su blamed U.S. export restrictions that “effectively eliminated MI308 sales to China.”

    Super Micro also missed expectations for this most recent quarter, and issued softer-than-expected guidance for the current quarter, sending the stock plummeting nearly 20 percent. The company’s efforts to meet demand and stay price-competitive have been remarkably costly, with its margins falling below 10 percent for the quarter. Maybe if their C.E.O. got a cool leather jacket, sentiment would change…
 

Quote of the Week: Time Machine Edition

“The most successful founders do not set out to create companies. They are on a mission to create something closer to a religion, and at some point it turns out that forming a company is the easiest way to do so.” —Sam Altman, the C.E.O. of OpenAI, waxing poetic 12 years ago.

Which leads us to the main event…

Slaughterhouse GPT-5

Slaughterhouse GPT-5

Silicon Valley is adjusting its expectations yet again, after OpenAI’s latest model turned out to be more of an upgrade than a great leap forward. “It’s not a disappointment in the sense that it won’t actually be better,” said one A.I. researcher. “But a disappointment relative to what people were expecting.”

Ian Krietzberg Ian Krietzberg

For all the feverish excitement surrounding today’s release of GPT-5, the latest and most advanced OpenAI model seems to represent more of an incremental update than a paradigm-shifting breakthrough. At a press briefing, C.E.O. Sam Altman called GPT-5 a “major upgrade” that serves as a “significant step along the path to A.G.I.,” or artificial general intelligence, an entirely hypothetical technology. At another point he referred to it as “very A.G.I.-like.” Obviously, we’re not quite there—and it’s not clear that we ever will be.

Nevertheless, GPT-5, which comes in pro, standard, “mini,” and “nano” flavors, is a pretty impressive upgrade—particularly to the folks who got to test it out before the release. The system offers better coding and software development capabilities than previous models—it scored a 74.9 percent on SWE-bench, the popular software engineering benchmark—which could make it more competitive with Anthropic models. According to Altman, GPT-5 can “instantaneously create an entire piece of computer software … on demand.” In a demo at the briefing, an OpenAI researcher created a seemingly functional web app with a two-paragraph prompt in less than a minute. It’s also on par with the competition on a series of other benchmarks, although it’s not a knockout; on ARC-AGI-2, for instance, Elon Musk’s Grok 4 maintains a significant lead.

But what most distinguishes GPT-5 from past iterations is its two-model architecture, which combines a “high-throughput model” to handle ordinary questions with a “reasoning” model to answer thornier ones. A “real-time router” decides which of the two models to use based on each prompt. “This idea that we can use more compute, higher-quality data, better environments, whatever, to make smarter and smarter models, we see orders of magnitude more gains in front of us,” Altman said, with the addendum, of course, that he’ll have to invest in the compute side “at an eye-watering rate” to get there (surely good news for Nvidia, whose stock hit a new 52-week high today).

A MESSAGE FROM BLOOM ENERGY

Bloom Energy
Bloom Energy

AI growth is outpacing power infrastructure, making energy strategy a board-level concern. The 2025 Mid-Year Power Report highlights grid delays, rising onsite generation, and the strategic importance of power access.

 

Get the report.

GPT-5 also hallucinates less than previous OpenAI models, at least according to the company’s own internal evaluations. The improvements point to the possibility of new or hybrid architectures (or lots of engineering scaffolding), which OpenAI didn’t clarify when I asked about it. In the demo, Altman hinted that OpenAI is “discovering new paradigms,” but it’s unclear what those are, or whether they are in some way present in GPT-5. Meanwhile, the model’s context window—which refers to the amount of text, in tokens, that a model can “remember” at one time—is 400,000 tokens (in the A.P.I.), significantly less than the million-token-strong context window of GPT-4.1.

Perhaps most notably for the average user, OpenAI says that GPT-5 just “feels more human”—although what that means is anyone’s guess. “In which ways is it more human than it was before?” asked Dr. David Bader, the director of the Institute for Data Science at the New Jersey Institute of Technology, when I asked for his first impression. “Does it talk in one’s vernacular? Does it make more mistakes, since to err is human?” As even Altman conceded, we’re not quite through the looking glass yet.

Baby Steps

The road to GPT-5 has been longer than originally anticipated. Many thought it would launch last year, about a year after Altman debuted GPT-4 in March 2023. Instead, OpenAI released a series of incremental updates and new models: 4o and 4o-mini, o1, o3, and GPT-4.5 (which was later scrapped) and 4.1, none of which were apparently worthy of the lofty GPT-5 title.

In fact, a downshift in the pace of innovation from giant leaps to incremental gains has become a defining feature of the A.I. industry. That’s not to say that many of these new products aren’t impressive. It’s just getting harder to achieve something that could be considered legitimately groundbreaking. In the meantime, increased competition between A.I. companies has pushed them to release smaller upgrades—on an accelerated time frame, no less—in order to stay one step ahead of their rivals. Earlier this week, Anthropic released Claude Opus 4.1, which is supposedly better at coding than Opus 4 (funny timing, OpenAI), and Google debuted DeepMind’s Genie 3, a “world model” with enhanced memory. OpenAI also released its long-awaited GPT-oss series, a handful of smallish, partially open models.

According to Dr. John Licato, the director of the Advancing Machine and Human Reasoning Lab at the University of South Florida, this is just how science works. “There’s this kind of popular misconception of scientific advancement where it’s a lone genius in a room who creates something and it emerges from their mind fully baked,” he told me. “That’s not really how it works. Everybody keeps building off of each other, and they make a minor change, then when you’ve had enough of those minor changes, you call it a major release. This is no different.”

Even at this incremental pace, Licato and Bader explained, genuine model improvements are becoming more difficult to squeeze out. Several reports have detailed OpenAI’s hard journey to GPT-5, and asserted that the leap between GPT-4 and GPT-5 is significantly smaller than the leap between GPT-3 and GPT-4. “The improvements are slowing down,” Bader told me. “They’re not as dramatic as those first couple of releases.”

Bader wasn’t really surprised by anything in the GPT-5 release, and called the coding improvements “low-hanging fruit”—especially since Anthropic’s Claude has generally been considered a much better coding assistant than anything OpenAI has been able to produce thus far. And when it comes to OpenAI’s claim that GPT-5 will feature less user deception, less hallucination, and instantaneous software generation, he’ll believe it when he sees it. “I tend to discount statements like that as potentially more marketing- or publicity-related,” Bader said, noting that prerelease testing rarely captures the full breadth of a model’s performance; it takes millions of real-world users to find their actual limits. (Also, as with pretty much every A.I. model release since 2022, non-peer-reviewed demos always look fantastic—but the reality tends to be a little less rosy.)

For Licato, who was expecting to see a significant hardware integration, or leveled-up video processing, a model that’s merely “better” probably won’t meet most people’s expectations. “It’s not a disappointment in the sense that it won’t actually be better,” he told me. “But a disappointment relative to what people are expecting, given that it’s the big version number.” The model, he later added, shouldn’t even be called GPT-5. “This is GPT-4.2. Absolutely nothing groundbreaking here, and honestly, even the presenters seemed underprepared,” he said. “They let Google and Anthropic dictate their release schedule, and it shows.”

Indeed, many of the most impactful advances going forward will likely revolve around more prosaic concerns: product-market fit, user interface, customer experience, etcetera. (GPT-5 allows users to select a personality and choose different colors for their chats.) As Licato told me, for the big players, it’s all about “that attention-economy win.”

Bader agreed that “we need to distinguish between genuine advances and marketing narratives designed to attract talent and investment.” Technically, he noted, we’ve seen plenty of impressive model advancements over the last few years, including enhanced planning, reasoning, and multimodal understanding. OpenAI, in particular, has pioneered key innovations in chain-of-thought reasoning, reinforcement learning, and improved tokenization strategies, but it’s not a significant step toward A.G.I., or manna from heaven for some of the A.I. pseudo-religions that have permeated across Silicon Valley.

“When companies suggest they’re on the verge of achieving artificial general intelligence, it creates unrealistic expectations and potentially diverts attention from more immediate A.I. challenges around bias, reliability, and transparency,” Bader said. He added that we should recognize OpenAI’s technical, incremental advancements as “engineering achievements within the current paradigm—not evidence of an imminent leap to A.G.I.”

 

What I’m Reading…

In a newish essay, “The End of Understanding,” neuroscientist Grace Huckins argues that big data and A.I. tools are ushering in a true scientific revolution: For the first time in human history, we are innovating and inventing without understanding why an innovation works, and without understanding any more about ourselves or the universe. [The Nine Dots Prize]

Eleanor Drage is tired of tech billionaires and costly technological solutions. Instead, she proposes the rise of “frugal tech”—on-site, problem-oriented technological solutions intended to help people do more with less, rather than enrich the wealthy. [The Guardian]

Hugging Face researchers Dr. Sasha Luccioni and Yacine Jernite detail the recent rise of electricity bills across the eastern part of the country, and how A.I. data centers—and utility companies eager to serve them—are to blame. [Tech Policy Press]

 

That’s all for today. I’ll see you next week.

Ian

The Powers That Be

Join Emmy Award-winning journalist Peter Hamby, along with the team of expert journalists at Puck, as they let you in on the conversations insiders are having across the four corners of power in America: Wall Street, Washington, Silicon Valley, and Hollywood. Presented in partnership with Audacy, new episodes publish daily, Monday through Friday.

The Varsity

A professional-grade rundown on the business of sports from John Ourand, the industry’s preeminent journalist, covering the leagues, players, agencies, media deals, and the egos fueling it all.

Puck
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn

Need help? Review our FAQ page or contact us for assistance. For brand partnerships, email ads@puck.news.

You received this email because you signed up to receive emails from Puck, or as part of your Puck account associated with {{customer.email}}. To stop receiving this newsletter and/or manage all your email preferences, click here.

 

Puck is published by Heat Media LLC. 107 Greenwich St, New York, NY 10006

SHARE
Try Puck for free

Sign up today to join the inside conversation at the nexus of Wall Street, Washington, A.I., Hollywood, and more.

Already a member? Log In


  • Daily articles and breaking news
  • Personal emails directly from our authors
  • Gift subscriber-only stories to friends & family
  • Unlimited access to archives

  • Exclusive bonus days of select newsletters
  • Exclusive access to Puck merch
  • Early bird access to new editorial and product features
  • Invitations to private conference calls with Puck authors

Exclusive to Inner Circle only



Latest Articles

Sam Altman
Kim Masters • August 7, 2025
Amazon–Altman Aftershocks & Mike ’n’ Pam’s J6 Movie Questions
In the days since the tech giant scrapped plans to release Luca Guadagnino’s OpenAI movie, CAA has scrambled to find a home for the all-but-completed project. It seems the only sure thing in Hollywood these days is tech’s growing reach across town.
Zohran Mamdani
Leigh Ann Caldwell • August 7, 2025
The Mamdani–Jeffries Proxy War
Zohran Mamdani is backing a slate of democratic socialist-adjacent candidates in New York primaries, going up against Hakeem Jeffries’ incumbents and institutionalists in the first major test of the young mayor’s political power beyond City Hall. Plus: News and notes on the Jack Schlossberg situation and Trump’s can't-lose bet in South Carolina.
Alex MacCallum
Dylan Byers • August 7, 2025
MacCallum of Duty
Amid all the Sturm und Drang at CNN as it shifts under the purview of the Ellisons, everyone inside the WarnerMount mothership seems to agree on one thing: Alex MacCallum, the C.O.O. of CNN, may be the one person with a vision for how to drag the global news network into the future.


james dolan knicks nba parade 2026
Eriq Gardner • August 7, 2025
Midnight in the Garden
An apparently massive cybersecurity breach at Madison Square Garden was all but lost in the chatter surrounding the Knicks’ NBA Finals win. But as the confetti is swept up and the offseason begins, here come the inevitable lawsuits.
ralph lauren milan men's shows 2026
Lauren Sherman • August 7, 2025
A Surprisingly Polarizing Prada Show
The men's calendar in Milan reflected the general retrenchment of the fashion industry lately. Meanwhile, Miuccia and Raf's latest was curiously divisive.
dario vitale
Lauren Sherman • August 7, 2025
Emporio State of Mind
With his one-and-done season for Versace quickly gathering its own legend, Dario Vitale is enjoying life as fashion’s premier free agent. But with few openings to fit his stature, could he really wind up at Emporio Armani?


Minjae Kim
Glenn Adamson • August 7, 2025
Hot Hand: Minjae Kim
The Korean-born furniture designer transcends sticky definitional debates about art and design to create some of the most memorable furniture you’ve ever seen.


Get access to this story

Enter your email for a free preview of Puck’s full offering, including exclusive articles, private emails from authors, and more.

Verify your email and sign in by clicking the link we just sent.

Already a member? Log In


Start 14 Day Free Trial for Unlimited Access Instead →



Latest Articles

Jamie Raskin
Leigh Ann Caldwell • August 7, 2025
Jamie Raskin’s “Everything Is on the Table” Era
The Maryland congressman who led Trump’s second impeachment reveals his 2027 playbook if Democrats retake the House—including investigations into Kash Patel and Jared Kushner. As for impeachment, he says, “Everything is on the table.”
Ruth Porat
William D. Cohan • August 7, 2025
Ruth or Dare
Alphabet president and chief investment officer Ruth Porat has a cogent and forceful argument for all those A.I. doomers out there—starting with a productivity revolution that she believes will add trillions to the U.S. economy.
claude monet Nympheas sothebys
Marion Maneker • August 7, 2025
A Tale of Two Auction Houses
This season, in London, Sotheby’s has most of the high-value, historical works—everything from Freud and Klimt to Monet and Rothko. Meanwhile, Christie’s is leaning into what’s hot: Rashid Johnson, Kaws, Richard Prince, Yoshitomo Nara, and more.


Mark Lazarus
Dylan Byers • August 7, 2025
MS NOW & Later
Six months post-Comcast spinoff, Versant C.E.O. Mark Lazarus is working to turn the company’s portfolio of declining cable assets into a legit growth business. He’s got cash, and some time, but what’s the plan?
Sam Altman
Matthew Belloni • August 7, 2025
Amazon Is Dumping Its Sam Altman Movie
‘Artificial,’ the nearly-finished film directed by Luca Guadagnino and starring Andrew Garfield as the controversial OpenAI leader, will be shopped to other studios, Amazon tells me.
ted Sarandos netflix
Matthew Belloni • August 7, 2025
Netflix’s Invincible Era Ends and More Burning Questions in Hollywood
Did Quinta Brunson balk at the prospect of the Ellisons? Where are we on a Wasserman deal? Is Tom Hardy really trying to get back into ‘MobLand’? And more of readers’ hottest queries answered.


Ar'Darius Washington of the Baltimore Ravens and Drake Maye of the New England Patriots
John Ourand • August 7, 2025
YouTube’s Skinny Sports Rights Diet
For a while, it seemed as though YouTube was coming to eat everyone’s lunch in the sports media business. But after its recent miss on a suite of NFL games, many media insiders are wondering how much the Google guys really want to be in on the actual game action—and if they need the league at all.
Get access to this story

Enter your email to get access to one article and free previews of our private emails from Puck authors and editors.

OR

Already a Member? Sign in



Latest Articles

Vladimir Putin
Julia Ioffe • August 7, 2025
Shock and Awe in Moscow
A new wave of Ukrainian drone strikes in the heart of Russia’s capital city has exposed the weakness of Putin’s air defenses—and the potential fragility of his regime.
Donald Trump
Julia Ioffe • August 7, 2025
Trump’s Surrender at Versailles
Hawkish Republicans are apoplectic over the president’s hastily signed deal with Iran—an agreement that falls far short of his original demand for “unconditional surrender.” Meanwhile, Trump’s capitulation leaves J.D. Vance holding the bag.
drake
Lauren Sherman & Malique Morris • August 7, 2025
A Drake-OVO Lawsuit & The Glamour Sale Rumor
With the rapper's apparel brand in talks with ABG, a onetime investor is looking for its return. Plus, Condé responds to chatter that a once-formidable brand is on the block.


Hillary Super Adam Selman
Malique Morris • August 7, 2025
What’s Victoria’s Secret’s Secret?
All but left for dead in the final years of Les Wexner’s reign, the intimates behemoth has regained its footing, reengaged customers, and is posting enviable turnaround numbers. How is C.E.O. Hillary Super doing it? And can she keep this up?
Dear Upstairs Neighbors film
Ian Krietzberg • August 7, 2025
The Ex-Pixar Producer Who’s All In on A.I.
A captivating conversation with Márcia Mayer, a former Pixar producer who now works at Google DeepMind, about the lab’s new A.I.-assisted short film that’s become the talk of Tribeca.
Lachlan Murdoch
Julia Alexander • August 7, 2025
The New Mayor of Roku City
Fox’s $22 billion acquisition will do more than just add a third streaming option to pair with Tubi and Fox One. It would also give the Murdochs a foothold in the distribution business at the exact right moment.


Benjamin Netanyahu
Peter Hamby • August 7, 2025
To Bibi or Not to Bibi?
The biggest casualty of Trump’s Iran détente may be Benjamin Netanyahu, whose once-considerable sway in Washington has faded just as Americans’ support for Israel has fallen sharply, according to exclusive new polling for Puck.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Contact
  • FAQ
  • Careers
© 2026 Heat Media All rights reserved.
Create an account

Already a member? Log In

CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
OR YOUR EMAIL

OR

Use Email & Password Instead

USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Password strength:

OR

Use Another Sign-Up Method

Become a member

All of the insider knowledge from our top tier authors, in your inbox.

Create an account

Already a member? Log In

Verify your email!

You should receive a link to log in at .

I DID NOT RECEIVE A LINK

Didn't get an email? Check your spam folder and confirm the spelling of your email, and try again. If you continue to have trouble, reach out to fritz@puck.news.

CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Google
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Apple
CREATE AN ACCOUNT with Apple
OR USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Password strength:

OR
Log In

Not a member yet? Sign up today

Log in with Google
Log in with Google
Log in with Apple
Log in with Apple
OR USE EMAIL & PASSWORD
Don't have a password or need to reset it?

OR
Verify Account

Verify your email!

You should receive a link to log in at .

I DID NOT RECEIVE A LINK

Didn't get an email? Check your spam folder and confirm the spelling of your email, and try again. If you continue to have trouble, reach out to fritz@puck.news.

YOUR EMAIL

Use a different sign in option instead

Member Exclusive

Get access to this story

Create a free account to preview Puck’s full offering, including exclusive articles, private emails from authors, and more.

Already a member? Sign in

Free article unlocked!

You are logged into a free account as unknown@example.com

ENJOY 1 FREE ARTICLE EACH MONTH

Subscribe today to join the inside conversation at the nexus of Wall Street, Washington, A.I., Hollywood, and more.

START 14-DAY FREE TRIAL

  • Daily articles and breaking news
  • Personal emails directly from our authors
  • Gift subscriber-only stories to friends & family
  • Unlimited access to archives
  • Bookmark articles to create a Reading List
  • Quarterly calls with industry experts from the power corners we cover