The MacRumors Show: Arnold Kim Discusses History of MacRumors and More - MacRumorsOpen MenuShow RoundupsShow Forums menuVisit ForumsOpen Sidebar
Skip to Content

The MacRumors Show: Arnold Kim Discusses History of MacRumors and More

MacRumors founder Arnold Kim joins us on this week's episode of The MacRumors Show to discuss some of the history of the website and the world of Apple news and rumors.


Arnold started MacRumors as a hobby while studying for his final year of medical school in 2000. It has since grown to become the most popular Apple news and rumor site on the internet, sporting round-the-clock news coverage, helpful tutorials and a buyer's guide, a discussion forum with over 1.1 million members, and much more.

Arnold tells us about the website's beginning, his feelings about giving up his medical career to focus on Apple news, and growing MacRumors over the years. He weighs up some of the biggest challenges and satisfying wins in the site's history.

We talk through some of the other interesting domains and websites Arnold has owned, the future of Apple news, introductions to the website, and the MacRumors forums. We also discuss some of the original iPhone and iPhone 4 leaks and rumors, and whether Apple's headset will succeed in replicating an "iPhone moment" when it debuts at WWDC as rumors suggest.

Listen to The MacRumors Show in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Overcast, Pocket Casts, Castro, Google Podcasts, or your preferred podcasts app. You can also copy our RSS feed directly into your podcast player. Watch a video version of the show on the MacRumors YouTube channel.


If you haven't already listened to the previous episode of The MacRumors Show, catch up for our discussion with Ben Sullins about all of the latest rumors and expectations around the Apple Car.

Subscribe to ‌The MacRumors Show‌ for more episodes, where we discuss some of the topical news breaking here on MacRumors, often joined by exciting guests like Mark Gurman, Marcus Kane, Christopher Lawley, Frank McShan, David Lewis, Andru Edwards, Tyler Stalman, Jon Prosser, Sam Kohl, Quinn Nelson, John Gruber, Federico Viticci, Sara Dietschy, Luke Miani, Thomas Frank, Jonathan Morrison, iJustine, Ross Young, Ian Zelbo, Jon Rettinger, and Rene Ritchie. You can also head over to The MacRumors Show forum thread to engage with us directly. Remember to rate and review the show, and let us know what subjects you would like the podcast to cover in the future.

Popular Stories

TMRS 189 iPhone Ultra Leak Thumb

The MacRumors Show: Apple's Foldable iPhone 'Ultra'

Friday April 10, 2026 9:15 am PDT by
On this week's episode of The MacRumors Show, we discuss all of the rumors surrounding Apple's upcoming foldable iPhone, now said to be called the "iPhone Ultra," which is shaping up to be a comprehensive redesign unlike anything the company has shipped before. Subscribe to The MacRumors Show YouTube channel for more videos The iPhone Ultra is expected to launch alongside the iPhone 18 Pro...
TMRS 190 OLED iPad mini Thumb

The MacRumors Show: What's Next for the iPad

Friday April 17, 2026 9:09 am PDT by
On this week's episode of The MacRumors Show, we talk through Apple's upcoming overhaul of the iPad mini and iPad Air, looking at the future of the product lineup as a whole. Subscribe to The MacRumors Show YouTube channel for more videos The headline upgrade for the iPad mini 8 is a switch from LCD to OLED display technology. The device is expected to use a single-stack LTPS panel, which...
TMRS 191 Tim Cook Is Out as Apple CEO Thumb

The MacRumors Show: Tim Cook to Step Down as Apple CEO

Friday April 24, 2026 9:06 am PDT by
On this week's special episode of The MacRumors Show, we discuss Apple's bombshell announcement that Tim Cook will step down as CEO on September 1, 2026, with hardware engineering chief John Ternus set to succeed him. Subscribe to The MacRumors Show YouTube channel for more videos Cook will transition to executive chairman, where he will "assist with certain aspects of the company, including...

Top Rated Comments

39 months ago
Reason I like MR cause it has the most Apple Fanboys members who dare to criticise Apple products, services and quality. Instead of loving, defending and fanboy-ing everything Apple does.
Score: 16 Votes (Like | Disagree)
TheYayAreaLiving 🎗️ Avatar
39 months ago
Thank you for inviting @arn. This one is probably one of the best podcasts you guys have done together. Well informative!

MacRumors have come a long way. Love MacRumors. Proud to be here. 🙌🏻
Score: 10 Votes (Like | Disagree)
antiprotest Avatar
39 months ago

Reason I like MR cause it has the most Apple Fanboys members who dare to criticise Apple products, services and quality. Instead of loving, defending and fanboy-ing everything Apple does.
There are still many people on here that defend Apple no matter what, even when it comes to bugs, defects, security issues, and outright customer-hostile behaviors on the retail floor.

But fortunately, there are also people here that are fair and clear-headed, favoring Apple because they like the company and the products in general, but refusing to put up with nonsense.
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
39 months ago

Reason I like MR cause it has the most Apple Fanboys members who dare to criticise Apple products, services and quality. Instead of loving, defending and fanboy-ing everything Apple does.
Ha whenever I critique apple I’m accused of being an Apple hater. Whenever I praise apple I’m accused of being a fanboy. Humans are ridiculous.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
39 months ago
Go to archive.org and you can pull up versions of macrumors.com from 1999 and later, including before Kim obtained the domain.
Edit: if you find archive.org useful, please chip in a few bucks to help it thrive.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
akb Avatar
39 months ago

Reason I like MR cause it has the most Apple Fanboys members who dare to criticise Apple products, services and quality. Instead of loving, defending and fanboy-ing everything Apple does.
It hasn’t always been so.

In the early days of my time visiting this site, the computing space was utterly Microsoft-dominated. It wasn’t entirely clear Apple would survive, despite the success of the iPod.

As a result of that wider environment, this place was fiercely, militantly pro-Apple.

I can understand it - I was a Mac zealot amongst my family and friends back then, chiefly because I was desperate for the Macintosh platform not to be extinguished.

But the high degree of sycophancy did make discussion difficult and somewhat uninteresting.

It’s much better now. As you say, Apple’s pros and cons are objectively debated in a world where they are a tech colossus in no danger of going out of business.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Related Apple News: Samsung | Mac | Apple Vision Pro | Studio Display 2022 Vs 2026 | Encryption