Electrek podcast covers Tesla Optimus fail and EV developments

The Electrek Podcast episode on December 12, 2025, explores key updates in sustainable transport, including a Tesla Optimus robot mishap, Rivian's AI advancements, and the new Mercedes GLB electric SUV. Hosted live every Friday at 4 p.m. ET, the show discusses popular news in electric vehicles and energy.

The latest episode of the Electrek Podcast, aired on December 12, 2025, at 4 p.m. ET, delves into significant developments in the world of sustainable transport and energy. The podcast highlights a 'very telling Tesla Optimus fail,' where the robot takes a suspicious tumble in a new demo, raising questions about its reliability.

Other topics include Rivian's AI & Autonomy Day, featuring an in-house silicon chip, next-gen AI platform, and LiDAR technology for Level 4 self-driving capabilities. The episode also covers the return of the Mercedes GLB as an improved electric SUV, showcased with images.

Additional discussions encompass Tesla's US sales dropping to under 40,000 units after tax credit expiration—the lowest in years—and CEO Elon Musk's claim that driverless Robotaxis will arrive in Austin in three weeks. Broader EV market trends are addressed, such as global sales jumping 21% in 2025, driven by Europe's surge while the US stalls. The podcast touches on Subaru's new electric SUV offering over 300 miles of range starting under $35,000, and Ford and SK On terminating their $11.4 billion US battery joint venture, opting to split factories.

Listeners can watch the live stream on Electrek's YouTube channel or access the archived video and audio on platforms like Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Overcast, Pocket Casts, and Castro. The show encourages audience questions and supports content creation via Patreon.

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Illustration of Tesla's 2026 ambitions featuring Cybercab robotaxis, Optimus robots, Gigafactory production, and Elon Musk unveiling autonomy and robotics milestones.
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Tesla details 2026 milestones for Cybercab, Optimus, Roadster amid sales challenges

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Tesla is targeting a pivotal 2026 with Cybercab robotaxi production, Optimus humanoid robot manufacturing, Roadster demonstrations, and Full Self-Driving expansions, aiming to counter declining sales—including Cybertruck—and competition from BYD through AI and autonomy advancements.

Building on his announcement the previous day at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Elon Musk specified Tesla aims to sell Optimus humanoid robots to consumers by late 2026, subject to safety and reliability validation. With robots advancing in factories and leveraging Tesla's AI, this pivot underscores diversification as EV sales decline.

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Tesla shares experienced volatility on January 21, 2026, dropping about 4% initially before rebounding nearly 3%, following CEO Elon Musk's comments on the slow start to production for the Cybercab robotaxi and Optimus humanoid robot. Musk described the early ramp-up as 'agonizingly slow' due to the novelty of the technologies. Investors await the company's Q4 earnings report on January 28 for more details on timelines and regulatory hurdles.

Following its Q4 2025 earnings call announcement to end Model S and X production by Q2 2026, Tesla debuted its third-generation Optimus humanoid robot on February 2, 2026, via Weibo, confirming plans to repurpose Fremont factory lines for up to one million units annually amid EV sales declines. CEO Elon Musk highlighted Optimus's transformative potential in robotics.

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Building on the recent Optimus robot demo at Berlin's Christmas market, Tesla is accelerating its AI focus to transform mobility and robotics by 2026—despite robotaxi delays—with plans for advanced Optimus humanoids, AI5 chips, a next-gen sports car, Tesla Semi expansions, and energy innovations.

Tesla unveiled its Optimus version 2.5 robot at the NeurIPS 2025 conference on December 2, showcasing new running capabilities. The demonstration highlighted the robot's ability to run at 50% and 25% speeds, marking a significant advancement in humanoid robotics. Elon Musk commented on the progress, emphasizing the future role of such robots in daily tasks.

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In the final days of 2025, Tesla's Optimus humanoid robot fell during a live demonstration, prompting widespread skepticism about Elon Musk's robotics ambitions. The incident, which went viral, highlighted ongoing challenges in achieving reliable humanoid automation. Despite the setback, NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang recently endorsed Optimus as a potential multi-trillion-dollar opportunity.

 

 

 

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