There are some things about Bill Gates that are unremarkable. His favorite food: hamburgers. His favorite animal: the dog. But a few minutes into a new TV series on Gates reveals a fascinating insight.
The Microsoft co-founder and billionaire philanthropist is asked what his worst fear is. Itâs not family tragedy or personal pain. âI donât want my brain to stop working,â he responds.
That formidable gray matter is fittingly the subject of Inside Billâs Brain: Decoding Bill Gates, a new three-part documentary on Netflix from Academy Award-winning director Davis Guggenheim. It starts Sept. 20.
A portrait emerges of a visionary who gnaws on his eyeglassesâ arms, downs Cokes and is relentlessly optimistic that technology can solve social ills. He is also someone who reads manically â heâll scrutinize the Minnesota state budget for fun â and who is a wicked opponent at cards.
While the series is largely sympathetic toward its subject, Guggenheim nevertheless presses Gates on everything from the federal antitrust case against Microsoft in the 1990s to his relationship with his mother.
In a phone interview, Gates acknowledged that he balanced the cameraâs intrusion with the chance to tell the world â and recruit help â about his efforts to help the planet and the poor.
âThe work side, that comes pretty naturally. The only thing thatâs a little awkward is where theyâre trying to talk about personal life and parents and all that type of stuff,â Gates said.
The filmmaker and the billionaire find a natural rapport, creating a comfortable space in which Gates does an imitation of Robert De Niro in Taxi Driver and admits to eating Tang powder straight from the jar.
The series gets a dash of action by having Guggenheim interview Gates during hikes around rugged places such as a desert near Palm Springs, California, and Gatesâ property at Hood Canal in Washington. The two men are often filmed from behind, walking shoulder-to-shoulder as Gates talks.
âI feel like people are more open when thereâs no camera in their face. And I also feel like people listen better,â said Guggenheim.
Guggenheim, whose films include An Inconvenient Truth and He Named Me Malala, first met Gates when he was making âWaiting for âSuperman,ââ which examined the educational system. He said Gates made himself âan open book.â
âIn the beginning I said, âLook, Iâm going to ask you every question I have on my mind. Iâm not going to be worried about being overly sensitive,ââ Guggenheim said. âI didnât go home ever thinking, âGod, I was too scared to ask that question.â I asked him everything.â
For greater insight, Guggenheim interviewed Gatesâ sisters, journalist Nicholas Kristof, tycoon Warren Buffett and Gatesâ wife, Melinda, who comes across as smart, funny and an occasional foil to her husband. The Gatesâ three children are shown but werenât interviewed.
Each episode in the series introduces three huge global issues the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has tackled recently â safe sanitation technology, polio eradication and nuclear power â and then switches back in time to see how Gates solved other complex issues in his life as a younger man.
âThe series doesnât do a traditional cradle-to-grave portrait of him. He wasnât interested in that. I wasnât interested in that,â said the filmmaker. Instead, he wanted to find out the source of his relentless optimism and his push to do all these great things.
After spending so much time with Gates, Guggenheim said the popular perception of him as a cold, dispassionate thinker isnât true. Gates, he found, is the first person in the family to cry at movies.
âThe truth is, what Iâve learned about Bill is he is very passionate and emotional. But he puts those emotions to the side,â he said.
âIf youâre solely led by your heart, you may not see the great solution standing in front of you and I think thatâs what Billâs superpower is.â
Gates himself said he appreciated Guggenheim serving as a reality check for many of the seemingly intractable public health issues that his foundation has tackled.
âIâm not that objective. It was interesting, through Davisâ eyes, to have him say, âAre you sure?â Well, Iâm not sure,â said Gates. âSo I thought that was good. It made me step back.â
