General Catalyst's Viral 'VC vs GC' Video Sparks Debate and Andreessen Horowitz's Response
L'essentiel
- Venture firm General Catalyst (GC) released a viral video parodying Mac vs.
- PC ads, seemingly criticizing Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) for funding controversial ventures.
- The video, viewed 2.4 million times, prompted a strong reaction from a16z co-founder Marc Andreessen.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
Venture capital firms General Catalyst (GC) and Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) are engaged in a public spat via social media. GC released a video parodying a16z's perceived investment practices, which was met with a response from a16z co-founder Marc Andreessen.
One of the most entertaining moments in VC this week was a piece of rage-bait marketing from General Catalyst.
In a now-viral post on X that parodies the old Mac vs. PC commercials, the venture firm — better known as GC — posted a “VC vs GC” video on Wednesday. The VC was played by a tall actor in a baggy shirt and vest with a distinctly large, bald head — an apparent dig at Andreessen Horowitz co-founder Marc Andreessen. (But the real Andreessen never looks that disheveled).
The GC character was played by a man with a thick head of dark hair, white kicks and a tendency to stare deeply into the camera. He was clearly supposed to represent actor Justin Long’s cooler, “hipper” Mac character from the original commercials, in contrast to John Hodgman’s straight-laced “square” PC persona.
GC asks VC about his robotic dog.
VC explains “This is Woof AI” and then extols the virtues of the artificial companion (you don’t need to walk it or break the news to the kids when it dies!) and declares “you’ll never want a real dog after this.” VC mentions that his firm is leading the seed round and pitches GC to join the cap table.
GC explains how people like real dogs and remarks, “I’d love to hear more, but we actually have a really high bar around responsibility for these things.”
Then VC kicks the AI dog and the dog chases him off the screen. The post has now been viewed 2.4 million times with hundreds of shares and comments, and thousands of likes.
I'd have to read so far between the lines that I'd be off the page and peering into another book to unpack this, but I'll try anyway. The message, roughly: other VCs, and a16z in particular, will fund anything. GC won't. (I asked about this. GC hasn't responded.)
It's a pointed argument if so, and not entirely without basis. Andreessen's firm frequently invests in companies that are considered controversial, like the surveillance startup Flock Safety, AI notetaker Cluely, and Adam Neumann's Flow. But the same measure could just as easily be applied to General Catalyst. GC's portfolio includes Anduril, Percepta, and Polymarket.
My own takeaway is that GC wanted to show an a16z-type character kicking a dog, without anyone actually kicking an actual dog because that would be a major problem.
Many of the comments on the video seemed to find the video, and the choice to post it, cringe. Plenty liked and loved it, too.
Compulsive X user Andreessen himself couldn't resist responding, many, many times. He said it made GC look "smarmy," and said "Stay tuned for our upcoming ad campaign, 'We’re the VC who doesn’t sneer at your idea.'" He kept going from there. My personal favorite was: "The thing they got right is the relative heights."
As others noted, you know you've hit the right rage bait when the target takes it.
Questions ouvertes
- Will this public exchange impact future investment decisions or partnerships between the firms?
- What specific criteria does General Catalyst use to define 'responsibility' in its investments?
- How will Andreessen Horowitz respond further to General Catalyst's criticisms?





