Eastern Eye (UK)

How an Indian IT engineer charmed ‘super genuine’ Musk

PRANAY PATHOLE TALKS TO TESLA FOUNDER ABOUT LIFE ON MARS, CARS AND BILLIONAIR­E’S EARLY DAYS

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NOT many people can boast of having candid conversati­ons about planetary conquest with Elon Musk, but for Indian software engineer Pranay Pathole, a friendly chat with the world’s richest man is just a tweet away.

Their unlikely online friendship has blossomed since Pathole was a teenager, with the mercurial billionair­e responding to him over hundreds of tweets and private messages with headline-making company updates and even life advice.

Last month, the two finally met face to face, when Pathole travelled to the United States – his first trip overseas – to begin a master’s degree there in business analytics. “He is super genuine. Like, way down-to-earth. He’s humble,” the 23-year-old said beforehand.

“The way he takes his time to respond to me... just shows.”

Musk is a prolific user of Twitter, often posting more than 30 times a day to his 103 million followers.

But it remains a mystery why the SpaceX and Tesla boss, with a net worth of $266 billion (£228.4bn), maintains regular contact with the young Indian.

“To be very honest, I have no idea. I think he must be like, really intrigued by my questions,” Pathole said from his parents’ home in Pune, Maharashtr­a.

Pathole’s account is one of only a small handful that the billionair­e frequently replies to – an average of once every two days, based on Musk’s public Twitter posts since the start of 2020.

The first time Musk responded to him was in 2018 when Pathole, then aged 19, pointed out a flaw in Tesla’s automatic windshield wipers.

“Fixed in next release,” Musk replied, with Tesla addressing the issue in a subsequent software update.

His mother and father celebrated by taking him out to dinner that night. “I was blown away, to be honest,” Pathole says. “I took multiple screenshot­s of it and just never wanted the day to end.”

Their later private chats – daily at first – covered “busting myths” about

Musk’s past and discussion­s about why colonising other planets is “essential”, Pathole says.

“I used to ask him dumb questions, silly questions. And he used to take his time to reply to me.”

The time difference between the US and India has done little to hamper the four-year virtual friendship.

“I don’t think he sleeps that often. Because he’s on Twitter, like, the majority of the time,” Pathole says.

Pathole says interactio­ns with Musk have become “much more casual” over the years, and he no longer rushes to share them with friends and family.

“Elon is the same guy in his public persona as well as in his private,” he says.

Musk’s candid, irreverent and often cryptic tweets have sparked wild stock and cryptocurr­ency price swings, inviting scrutiny by US regulators.

The billionair­e investor is also locked in a high-stakes legal battle with Twitter itself over his effort to walk away from an agreement to buy the company, with the trial set to begin in October.

But Pathole rejects suggestion­s that the billionair­e acts with malice.

“I don’t think that he’s a troll,” Pathole says. “He’s an unpredicta­ble guy.”

Recruited straight out of engineerin­g college to work at Tata Consultanc­y Services, India’s biggest IT firm, Pathole says that he was “infamous” for getting into trouble at school – a trait he says helps him better understand Musk.

Having travelled to the US in August – bearing sweets for Musk – he hopes to not only earn his degree at the

University of Texas at Dallas but gain work experience at a US company, including any of Musk’s. “I want to get a job at Tesla on my own merit. It’s not like I want any favours. It would be good if he could interview me,” Pathole says.

After their meeting, Pathole tweeted a picture of the pair, which Musk “liked”.

Dressed in a black T-shirt in the style of his idol, Pathole can explain the intricacie­s of reusable rocket boosters and make a philosophi­cal case for space exploratio­n with equal ease.

Often, he quotes the billionair­e entreprene­ur’s comments verbatim. “Live on Earth and die on Mars: that is a philosophy that we all share,” Pathole says, adding that he wants to grow old and die with the “red dust of Mars” on his feet.

Pathole has amassed a six-digit Twitter following, adding more every time Musk mentions him in a tweet.

Even offline, Musk is a frequent topic of dinner-table conversati­on with Pathole’s family and friends. “Elon is like our family friend,” jokes Pranay’s father Prashant, a media consultant, adding that he and his wife Pallavi, a homemaker, were proud of their son’s passion.

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 ?? ?? UNLIKELY CONNECTION: Pranay Pathole’s twitter account is among a small handful to which Elon Musk (inset) frequently replies
UNLIKELY CONNECTION: Pranay Pathole’s twitter account is among a small handful to which Elon Musk (inset) frequently replies

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