Podcst

Formula 1

Acquired

Ben Gilbert and David Rosenthal

March 2, 2026

Show Notes

Formula 1 is three competitions in one: a 200mph battle of the world's best race car drivers, the world cup of engineering where thousand-person teams spend hundreds of millions designing cars from scratch, and — as one of our listeners perfectly put it — the “Real Housewives of the Garage”, a soap opera of billionaire egos, team politics, and paddock drama that makes for incredible reality television. It's also the world's most popular annual sporting series with over 827 million fans globally — a fact that would shock most Americans, who until a recent viral Netflix series had barely heard of it.

Today we tell the story of how a chaotic, deadly, and gloriously dysfunctional European racing series became one of the greatest business stories in sports. For decades, brilliant engineers and daredevil drivers dedicated their lives (and too often lost them) to a league controlled for 45 years by a single man: a former London car dealer named Bernie Ecclestone, who centralized power and extracted billions, while also undeniably single-handedly making the sport successful. Then, in a move no one saw coming, the American company Liberty Media bought the whole thing in 2017,installed a team of Fox Sports and ESPN veterans, and did what Bernie never would — professionalized it. All of a sudden famously money-losing F1 teams turned into real businesses, with the average team valuation today clocking in at an astounding $3.6 billion. Buckle up for one of our most-requested episodes: the wild story of Formula 1.

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Many thanks to our fantastic Spring '26 Season partners:

Links:

Carve Outs:

More Acquired:

Intro
Origins of F1: Britain, Italy, and Monaco
Bernie's Entrance
Bernie Consolidates Power
F1 as a Global TV Sport (Except America)
F1's Incredible Engineering Achievements
Senna's Crash and a New Era for Safety
The Many Owners of F1, and Bernie's Liquidity Drama
FOTA: The attempted breakaway series
RedBull, Mercedes, and Reinventing the Sport
Liberty Media buys F1 and Brings it to the Modern Era
Drive to Survive
Apple, TV Rights, and Success in America
F1: The Business Today
Analysis: Why Did F1 Work… and Was Bernie Necessary?
7 Powers
Bear vs. Bull Cases
Quintessence
Carve-Outs + Outro

‍Note: Acquired hosts and guests may hold assets discussed in this episode. This podcast is not investment advice, and is intended for informational and entertainment purposes only. You should do your own research and make your own independent decisions when considering any financial transactions.

Formula 1 — Podcst