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Title: Scott Galloway: “78% Of Men Are In Crisis” How To Solve The Male Loneliness Epidemic
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Men are struggling. Four times as likely
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to kill themselves, three times [music]
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as likely to be addicted or homeless, 12
(00:00:05)
times as likely to be incarcerated. You
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go into a morg and there's five people
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died by suicide and four men. If it was
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any other group, I think it'd weigh in
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with programs and empathy. I think more
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and more of them are going to be alone
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in a room with a screen.
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>> Scott's the host of the Profod [music]
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and co-host the Pivot and Raging
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Moderates podcast. He's a best-selling
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author in his latest book,
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>> Notes on Being a Man, is now the number
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one bestseller [music] at Amazon.
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>> Please welcome Scott Gallow. My biggest
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fans are young men. My biggest
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supporters are mothers [music]
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>> cuz they see what's going on. The
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greatest alliance in history is the
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alliance between men and women. Why
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would you go through the effort, the
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expense, the potential rejection,
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humiliation, effort when you have
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synthetic lifelike porn at home? How do
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they survive if you're not doing
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anything except for consuming all day?
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Just having men in your life that can
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give you a little bit of advice and not
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only that, just give you the sense you
(00:00:55)
have value. I've been investing in
(00:00:56)
stocks since I was 13 [music] because of
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Sai Sarah.
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>> Wow.
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>> I've made tens of millions of dollars
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investing in stocks. It taught me this
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incredible life skill around investing.
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What would you say are three things you
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[music] would leave behind if this was
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the last day on earth for you many years
(00:01:12)
away. The biggest unlock of my life was
(00:01:14)
the following. [music]
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Welcome back everyone to the School of
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Greatness. Very excited about our guest.
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We have the inspiring Scott Galloway in
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the house who is the number one New York
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Times bestseller of Notes on Being a
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Man. Welcome to the show, Scott.
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>> Thanks. It's good to see you, man.
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>> Excited that you're here. Congrats on
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the book.
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>> Thanks.
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>> Uh we were talking beforehand about
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that. I wrote a book called The Mask of
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Masculinity
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7 years ago. Yeah.
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>> That I think was ahead of its time, but
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I think people really need to hear what
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you're talking about today because
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there's so much confusion
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>> with men in society. And so I'm going to
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give you a layup question. Okay.
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>> To start, what is the role of men in
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society today?
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>> Well, I think that's the issue. I think
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that the role was pretty clear. It was
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sort of uh provider and procreator. And
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now that a lot of the on-ramps into a
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middle class lifestyle, a lot of the
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traditional jobs, uh, we've basically
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torn up the script for women and said
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you can be anything. And women are
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ascending. And that's fantastic. Twice
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as many women have been elected to some
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sort form of parliament globally in the
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last 30 years. More women are now
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seeking tertiary education globally than
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men. Women in urban areas in the US are
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making more money than men own more
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single womenowned homes than men. And
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these are all amazing. We should do
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nothing to get in the way of that. But I
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think sometimes the role of men is a
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little bit confused now. Like what is my
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role? And uh men, you know, there's just
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no getting around it. men are
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struggling. Four times as likely to kill
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themselves, three times as likely to be
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addicted or homeless, 12 times as likely
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to be incarcerated.
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So, I think the the question, what is a
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man's role in this society is a little
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bit up in the air right now. And uh I
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think that's part of the issue is a lot
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of men don't feel like they have a code.
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They're not clear.
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>> Yeah. They I think they some of them
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lack purpose. And that is, you know, a
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lot of the natural attributes they would
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lean into, whether it's vocational work,
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whether it's being the provider, whether
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it's initiating romantic interest, I
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don't want to say being the aggressor,
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but the initiator, a lot of those things
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are either not available, harder to
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attain, or being frowned upon. So, what
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is their role? And I mean, what happened
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to auto, metal, and wood shop? Gone,
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right? Mhm.
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>> Um, if you think about what people are
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looking for in terms of more women in
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medical school, more women in law
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school, and those are wonderful things,
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but typically the job, remember that guy
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in high school who was never going to go
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to college or a lot of them,
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>> but could fix your car?
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>> Sure.
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>> And would go on and actually make a
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pretty decent living.
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>> Yeah.
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>> Uh, we have, we've essentially replaced
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all those classes with computer science.
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We've kind of gone all in on the guy who
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goes to Harvard, drops out, and starts a
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tech company. kind of the nation's been
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optimized for that person and the
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majority of men aren't aren't that
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aren't that dude. In addition, fewer men
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are going to religious institutions,
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playing sports, connecting to work.
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Remote work I think has been terrible.
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Uh connecting to relationships and then
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they're up against the deepest pocketed
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companies with godlike technology really
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trying to sequester them from the
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offline world and relationships. And as
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a result, I think you have a cohort of
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young men who feel a little bit uh
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untethered.
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>> Their path is not as clear as it once
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was. Don't have the same level of
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opportunities that my generation had.
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And some of it, to be clear, was
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unearned advantage. I had too much
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opportunity relative to other groups.
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But if you know if any other group was
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if you go into a morg and there's five
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people that died by suicide and four men
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if it was any other group I think weigh
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in with programs and empathy but because
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of the under advantage of my generation
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there is a lack of empathy and the stat
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that I remind people of I understand the
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gag reflex when I talk about this and
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that is
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>> from 1945 to 2000
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a third of the world's economic growth
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was registered by the 5% of the
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population in America. So we had six
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times the prosperity of the rest of the
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world. So 6x. And then you take all that
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prosperity and you cram it into the
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one-third of the population that was
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white male and heterosexual.
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If you were I was kind of born on third
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base. You know, my
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>> rap till I was about your age was check
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me out. I've overcome,
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>> you know, I didn't have some of the same
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advantages as my peers. But what I've
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acknowledged now is that I really was
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born on third base. My kind of identity,
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demographics, and when and where I was
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born. But unfortunately, I think society
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is holding young men accountable for my
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unfair advantage and they just don't
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face the same opportunities.
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>> They don't have the skills also, right?
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It's like they don't have the skills to
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face that unfair advantage, I guess, or
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to manage it all
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>> 100%. So, you know, I had to go into
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work.
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>> I had to put on a tie. Um, I had, you
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know, I had guard rails set up for me.
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And I think that I think remote work has
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been an absolute disaster for young
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people spec es especially men who quite
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frankly mature later. And my first job
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was in downtown LA at Morgan Stanley. If
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I didn't have to get up at 7 a.m. put on
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a tie, act a certain way, learn to
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behave, I was constantly pulled out of
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meetings by my boss who was a real
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mentor and he would say just like don't
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say that
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>> like don't and I needed that.
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>> And I learned how to interact with
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people senior to me, more successful
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than me. learned how to interact with a
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boss, learned more about how to interact
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with a w a woman in a professional
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environment. You It was great seasoning
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for me. And while I think remote work is
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an unlock for people who are caregivers,
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I think it's really a a negative for
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young people and something we don't talk
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about. One in three relationships begin
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at work. So where do where do people
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meet and develop friendships,
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mentorships, and romantic relationships?
(00:07:09)
And the reality is men need young men
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need romantic relationships or benefit
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more from them than women. If a man
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hasn't been in a hasn't been married or
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cohabitated with a woman by the time
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he's 30, there's a one in three chance
(00:07:21)
he's going to be a substance abuser.
(00:07:23)
There's this cartoon of a woman in her
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Thursday 30s who never found romantic
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love. The reality is she's okay. Women
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when they don't have that rom a romantic
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relationship often times pour that
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energy back into friends and their
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professional life. Men tend to pour it
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back into more negative things or less
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productive things. Online,
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>> gaming, porn, oftentimes, unfortunately,
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conspiracy theory,
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>> so quite frankly,
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>> gambling or something else,
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>> gambling, drugs, whatever it might be,
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>> that it takes on and manifests itself in
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worse ways. So, a woman in a
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relationship lives two to four years
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longer than a man, I'm sorry, than a
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woman not in a relationship, but a man
(00:08:03)
lives four to seven years longer. Widows
(00:08:05)
are happier after their husband dies.
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Widows are less happy after their wife
(00:08:09)
dies. So, oddly enough, men benefit and
(00:08:13)
accrete more advantage in a relationship
(00:08:16)
than a woman does. Which isn't to say
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women, nobody owes, you know, no, it's
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no one's responsibility to service men
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or provide them with romantic comfort
(00:08:25)
such that they don't become poor
(00:08:27)
citizens. But the reality is I do think
(00:08:30)
society and men of my generation have a
(00:08:33)
debt to pay. And that is to try and get
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emotionally, logistically, and
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economically involved in young people's
(00:08:40)
lives and level them up such that they
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have some of the same opportunities that
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my generation had.
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>> Yeah. It's interesting because I saw
(00:08:46)
this um
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this article on Vogue. The headline
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says, "Is having a boyfriend
(00:08:53)
embarrassing now?"
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>> Yeah. And you know, hearing these stats,
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if I'm a woman, hearing these stats that
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essentially I live longer without a man
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in my life, you know, who knows the
(00:09:04)
context of all these things, but I also
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I'm fine without a man in some ways.
(00:09:09)
>> Yeah.
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>> Why should women get in a relationship
(00:09:12)
with a man if there's also benefit for
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women being single?
(00:09:17)
>> Yeah. So there's unfortunately
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I think that there's
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>> besides having a family and raising
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children and you know providing for
(00:09:25)
society in a different way obviously but
(00:09:27)
and not being alone your whole life
(00:09:29)
>> there's there's I think in online media
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especially but all media there's a
(00:09:33)
romant romanticization of the
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independent feminine strong woman and I
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think a lot of that is really positive
(00:09:40)
but I also think it's created a culture
(00:09:42)
where it's sort of women are encouraged
(00:09:45)
to kind of be one striker out as a man.
(00:09:48)
Oh, he doesn't get along with his
(00:09:50)
parents. Red flag. Like every yellow or
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magenta flag is a red flag. And you're
(00:09:55)
this strong, independent, beautiful
(00:09:56)
woman, and you don't need a man.
(00:09:58)
>> Mhm.
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>> And whenever I ask for dating advice,
(00:10:00)
the advice I give to men is the first
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thing I ask is, would you want to have
(00:10:04)
sex with you?
(00:10:05)
>> Are you in shape? Do you have a plan?
(00:10:07)
Are you kind? Are do you demonstrate
(00:10:09)
artisanship and interest in different
(00:10:10)
things? You know, how do you demonstrate
(00:10:12)
excellence? And the advice I would give
(00:10:15)
to women is what I call a second coffee.
(00:10:16)
And that is I think women are celebrated
(00:10:19)
for exiting relationships. You know,
(00:10:21)
inspiring Kylie Simon songs about
(00:10:23)
walking out on that man and you don't
(00:10:25)
need a man. And when surveys when men
(00:10:28)
are said when men are asked if a woman
(00:10:31)
had 80% of everything you want, would
(00:10:34)
that suffice for you? 75% of men say,
(00:10:36)
"Yeah, that'd be that'd be great." When
(00:10:38)
women presented with the same metric,
(00:10:40)
80% of everything you want, 75% say
(00:10:43)
that's not enough. They need like 95% or
(00:10:46)
100% of what they want.
(00:10:47)
>> Well, and again, I I think that
(00:10:50)
[clears throat] let me go straight to
(00:10:51)
the solve. The solve is for men to level
(00:10:53)
up.
(00:10:53)
>> Yes.
(00:10:54)
>> But if you look at kind of the content
(00:10:56)
of what algorithms like, it's a lot of
(00:10:58)
women saying like a basic standard
(00:11:01)
metric is because and I think it's
(00:11:03)
happened because of online dating where
(00:11:04)
the metrics get distilled down to some
(00:11:05)
very base crude things. Six feet six
(00:11:08)
figures. Like that's not a lot to ask,
(00:11:10)
right? Six feet, six figures. If you
(00:11:13)
take out married men, obese men, um, uh,
(00:11:16)
men under the age of over the age of 50,
(00:11:18)
it's 2% of the population.
(00:11:20)
>> Wow.
(00:11:21)
>> And if you talk to people who've been
(00:11:23)
married longer than 30 years, 80% of
(00:11:26)
them say one was much more interested in
(00:11:28)
the beginning than the other. And it was
(00:11:31)
almost always the man. The reality is,
(00:11:33)
listen, we're less choosy. If you have a
(00:11:36)
room with 100 people, 50 men and 50
(00:11:37)
women, and there's alcohol involved, the
(00:11:39)
majority of the men would agree to have
(00:11:41)
sex with the majority of the women. The
(00:11:42)
majority of the women would sleep with
(00:11:43)
none of the men.
(00:11:45)
>> Women are choosier. And typically what's
(00:11:47)
happened in these relationships where
(00:11:49)
people end up together is the woman
(00:11:51)
says, "I wasn't initially that
(00:11:53)
interested, but I like the way he
(00:11:55)
treated his parents at church.
(00:11:57)
>> We hung out with the same friend group
(00:11:59)
and I found he was funny. I like the way
(00:12:01)
he danced. I like the way he smelt. I
(00:12:03)
found that he was really kind. I was so
(00:12:05)
impressed with him at work. He was
(00:12:07)
outstanding at what he does." Where does
(00:12:09)
a man, what venues now does a young man
(00:12:11)
have to demonstrate excellence? Right?
(00:12:14)
If they're not going to church, they're
(00:12:16)
not going to school, they're not going
(00:12:17)
to work, where do they have the
(00:12:19)
opportunity to develop the skills and
(00:12:22)
then demonstrate their strengths and
(00:12:24)
skills over time? And instead, it's kind
(00:12:26)
of been consolidated now to the one
(00:12:28)
medium where most people are mating or
(00:12:31)
finding dates, and that is um online.
(00:12:34)
And anytime you digitize any market, it
(00:12:36)
does become a winner take most
(00:12:38)
environment.
(00:12:39)
>> And then they're they're up against this
(00:12:42)
almost indomitable foe and that is 40%
(00:12:46)
of the S&P by market value now is
(00:12:49)
related to AI, the Magnificent 10. and
(00:12:52)
their objective. They're not malicious,
(00:12:54)
but unwittingly the algorithms have
(00:12:56)
figured out for every second we can take
(00:12:58)
someone out of the organic mamalia world
(00:13:02)
and put them on a screen, we can
(00:13:04)
monetize it. And the person who is most
(00:13:07)
susceptible to arbitrageing their real
(00:13:10)
life to an online life is a young man
(00:13:13)
because of a less mature prefrontal
(00:13:15)
cortex, the executive function, the
(00:13:17)
susceptibility to addiction around
(00:13:19)
constant dopa.
(00:13:21)
So ground zero for our economy right now
(00:13:24)
or monetizing our uh young people to
(00:13:28)
drive trillions of dollars in value is
(00:13:32)
essentially trying to sequester young
(00:13:34)
men from their relationships. So I worry
(00:13:38)
that at the hands of this godlike
(00:13:39)
technology regulated by paleolithic
(00:13:42)
instincts and medieval institutions that
(00:13:45)
we're evolving a new species of aso of
(00:13:48)
asocial asexual males. And my prediction
(00:13:51)
is [clears throat] unless we weigh in
(00:13:53)
with programs and regulate big tech,
(00:13:55)
when you go to malls, I'm doing a a live
(00:13:59)
podcast tonight with 2,000 people. I
(00:14:02)
think you are going to visibly see fewer
(00:14:04)
and fewer young men. I think they are
(00:14:07)
>> going out or going to events
(00:14:09)
>> going out in the real world.
(00:14:10)
>> Huh.
(00:14:10)
>> I think more and more of them are going
(00:14:11)
to be alone in a room with a screen. And
(00:14:15)
why go through the pecking order of
(00:14:17)
trying to establish friends when you
(00:14:19)
have Reddit and Discord? Why put on a
(00:14:21)
tie, show up, try and navigate the
(00:14:23)
difficulties and complexities of the
(00:14:26)
workplace when you think you can trade
(00:14:27)
stocks or crypto on Robin Hood or
(00:14:29)
Coinbase? And why would you go through
(00:14:31)
the effort, the expense, the potential
(00:14:33)
rejection, humiliation, effort,
(00:14:35)
perseverance, willingness to endure
(00:14:38)
rejection
(00:14:39)
>> involved in establishing a romantic or a
(00:14:41)
sexual relationship when you have
(00:14:44)
synthetic lifelike porn at home.
(00:14:46)
>> So I think we're going to have
(00:14:49)
essentially I mean there's now one out
(00:14:51)
of seven men are called needs. They're
(00:14:52)
neither in education
(00:14:55)
uh employment or in training. They're
(00:14:57)
literally doing nothing. And 63% of men
(00:15:00)
under the age of 30 aren't even trying
(00:15:02)
to date.
(00:15:03)
>> How do they survive if you're not doing
(00:15:05)
anything except for consuming all day
(00:15:07)
>> and you're not developing skills offline
(00:15:10)
or even online skills to create value in
(00:15:13)
the world? How are you surviving? Is it
(00:15:15)
just you're getting checks from the
(00:15:16)
government or your family or people
(00:15:18)
paying for them or how does this work?
(00:15:20)
>> It's a really good question. There are
(00:15:21)
government services, you know,
(00:15:23)
everything from SNAP to unemployment to
(00:15:26)
welfare to Medicaid. they, you know,
(00:15:29)
they got they, you know, had stimulus
(00:15:31)
checks during COVID. One out of three
(00:15:33)
men under the age of 25 is living at
(00:15:34)
their parents.
(00:15:35)
>> One out of five under the age of 30, at
(00:15:38)
30, one in five men are still living at
(00:15:39)
home.
(00:15:40)
>> So, I think that some part-time work,
(00:15:42)
some government assistance, their
(00:15:44)
parents, but yeah, a lot of men and and
(00:15:48)
I wouldn't even say men because my kind
(00:15:50)
of my Yoda around all of this is Richard
(00:15:51)
Reeves. Have you had Richard on your
(00:15:52)
podcast?
(00:15:53)
>> So, Richard brings like the data and the
(00:15:55)
actual rigor. I'm just louder than him.
(00:15:58)
>> Yeah.
(00:15:58)
>> Um, but he has this great litmus test
(00:16:02)
for when a male becomes a man because I
(00:16:04)
do think a lot of males die never really
(00:16:06)
having become men.
(00:16:08)
>> When do when does a male become a man?
(00:16:10)
>> I love this term you use a surplus
(00:16:12)
value. When you approach relationships
(00:16:14)
from a generative [clears throat] uh
(00:16:16)
viewpoint. So, growing up, I say to my
(00:16:20)
boys, you're negative value right now.
(00:16:22)
You got a school spending a ton of time
(00:16:24)
and resources on you. Your parents are
(00:16:25)
giving you more love than you're giving
(00:16:27)
us.
(00:16:27)
>> Society is providing you with roads. If
(00:16:29)
you call 911, something's going to pick
(00:16:31)
up. You're not you're not generating any
(00:16:32)
tax revenue. You're just not adding
(00:16:34)
value.
(00:16:34)
>> You're negative value everywhere.
(00:16:36)
>> And at some point, I think when you
(00:16:39)
become a man, it's not when it's not
(00:16:42)
age. It's not some sort of religious
(00:16:43)
ceremony. It's when you are generating
(00:16:46)
more economic value than you're
(00:16:47)
absorbing. It's when you're noticing
(00:16:49)
people's lives and absorbing more
(00:16:51)
complaints than you're making. Quite
(00:16:53)
frankly, it's when you're giving more
(00:16:55)
love and more cloud cover for other
(00:16:57)
people than you have received. You're
(00:17:00)
adding surplus value is the term that
(00:17:02)
Richard uses, right?
(00:17:03)
>> Yes.
(00:17:04)
>> And I think a [clears throat] lot of a
(00:17:06)
lot of males never get there. Never get
(00:17:08)
I still have I still know people who
(00:17:10)
call their parents and complain when
(00:17:12)
their parents are 80. And it's like,
(00:17:14)
okay, at some point it needs to flip
(00:17:17)
where you're taking care of your
(00:17:18)
parents. And also I came to this
(00:17:21)
conclusion recognizing I I didn't really
(00:17:24)
by that standard become a man until I
(00:17:26)
was in my 40s because I used to be that
(00:17:27)
guy that approached every relationship
(00:17:30)
of if I wasn't getting more joy and
(00:17:32)
camaraderie from a friend than I was
(00:17:34)
giving. It was like I'm on the wrong
(00:17:36)
side of this capitalist trade and I'd
(00:17:38)
exit the friendship.
(00:17:39)
>> Interesting. If I spent time with my
(00:17:41)
girlfriend's parents when they were in
(00:17:42)
town, I would expect her to spend as
(00:17:44)
much or more time. If I was if I felt an
(00:17:47)
employee wasn't giving me a lot more
(00:17:49)
value than I was paying them, you know,
(00:17:52)
I'm think, okay, this isn't working and
(00:17:53)
I'd let them go. I was all about this
(00:17:55)
mindset of relationships as a
(00:17:57)
transaction. And then what I've come to
(00:17:59)
realize is like that's the opposite of
(00:18:01)
what it means to add surplus value and
(00:18:03)
be a man. That
(00:18:04)
>> the ultimate kind of limus test is first
(00:18:07)
you got to take care of yourself. You
(00:18:08)
got to fix your own g, you know, oxygen
(00:18:09)
mask. Then you take care of your family.
(00:18:12)
Then you take care of your community.
(00:18:14)
Ideally, take care of your country or
(00:18:16)
protect your country. And then the
(00:18:17)
ultimate expression, I think, of manhood
(00:18:19)
is you plant trees the shade of which,
(00:18:22)
you know, you'll never sit under.
(00:18:24)
>> Uh, so it's been a it's been a kind of a
(00:18:27)
journey for me. But I like the idea this
(00:18:29)
notion of surplus generative value in
(00:18:31)
relationships.
(00:18:32)
>> I love that. I used to think that you
(00:18:35)
become a a man and maybe it's more
(00:18:37)
emotionally or spiritually when you have
(00:18:39)
a child and when you lose your father
(00:18:42)
like you have to step into some type of
(00:18:45)
spiritual breakthrough and but then I
(00:18:48)
was like okay well anyone could have
(00:18:49)
kids they could just have lots of kids
(00:18:50)
but not really be there as a father as a
(00:18:53)
dad. So, uh, and when I lost my father a
(00:18:57)
few years ago, I really felt like, oh,
(00:18:59)
>> something shifted in me and I and I
(00:19:01)
almost I lost him mentally 20 years ago
(00:19:04)
when he went through a brain injury, he
(00:19:06)
had an accident and he he was alive
(00:19:08)
physically, but
(00:19:09)
>> emotionally he wasn't available.
(00:19:11)
>> He wasn't a provider anymore with
(00:19:13)
>> spiritual, emotional or financial
(00:19:15)
support.
(00:19:16)
>> Yeah.
(00:19:17)
>> So, it was more like I had to support
(00:19:18)
him and our family had to support him.
(00:19:20)
But then when he fully passed
(00:19:22)
physically, it's like something also
(00:19:24)
shifted at a whole another level of
(00:19:25)
like, oh, I really need to step into
(00:19:28)
this spiritual or psychological way of
(00:19:31)
being now because I can no longer rely
(00:19:34)
that my father's going to rescue me.
(00:19:36)
>> Yeah.
(00:19:36)
>> Even though he was here,
(00:19:38)
>> like maybe he could have bailed me out
(00:19:39)
some way, but no longer can my father
(00:19:42)
bail me out.
(00:19:43)
>> Yeah. And now having twins, it's like,
(00:19:46)
oh, I have to I get to continue to step
(00:19:50)
up as a man, continue to step up as a
(00:19:53)
>> a leader to myself, a leader to my
(00:19:55)
spouse,
(00:19:56)
>> a leader to our extended families
(00:19:59)
>> and provide
(00:20:01)
>> emotionally, spiritually, physically,
(00:20:04)
financially.
(00:20:04)
>> Yeah.
(00:20:05)
>> And continue to evolve. I can't be
(00:20:09)
>> I don't know. I I don't have the ability
(00:20:11)
anymore to act like a child.
(00:20:14)
>> Yeah.
(00:20:14)
>> You know what I mean? I can be childlike
(00:20:16)
energetically.
(00:20:17)
>> Yeah.
(00:20:17)
>> But I have to be able to provide a space
(00:20:20)
to serve and serve beyond me.
(00:20:24)
>> Obviously, I need to take care of me,
(00:20:25)
but the goal that I'm hearing you say is
(00:20:28)
how can we add way more value than we're
(00:20:31)
taking? And I think that is part of it.
(00:20:34)
So, I don't know what my, you know,
(00:20:36)
definition now is like or when you truly
(00:20:38)
become it. I don't know if you can truly
(00:20:40)
step into like manhood if your father's
(00:20:43)
still alive and if you don't have kids.
(00:20:45)
I don't know if there's still some like
(00:20:46)
childish boy energy until one of those
(00:20:50)
things happen, but
(00:20:51)
>> I don't know. What are your thoughts on
(00:20:52)
that? Today's show is brought to you by
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>> Yeah, I think there's a lot of people
(00:21:39)
become men who never have kids. So the
(00:21:41)
what you talked about kind of birth and
(00:21:44)
death are tremendous points of
(00:21:46)
inspiration to kind of grow up and start
(00:21:48)
behaving in a way that makes you men.
(00:21:50)
But I think a lot of people have kids
(00:21:52)
and never become men.
(00:21:53)
>> That's true. And a lot of people um you
(00:21:56)
know who have parents live well into
(00:21:59)
their 50s or 60s never never never
(00:22:01)
become a man. But what you say resonates
(00:22:03)
in the sense that I think of kind of the
(00:22:04)
two I would say what motivated me to be
(00:22:07)
a better man
(00:22:08)
>> and or get to manhood and they both
(00:22:10)
involve women and one's more
(00:22:13)
>> virtuous than the other and that is
(00:22:15)
>> when my mom I was kind of sleepwalking
(00:22:17)
through life didn't get my act together
(00:22:19)
till I was about 25 26 and my mom got
(00:22:23)
really sick and I didn't have the money
(00:22:26)
I uh she called me from graduate I was
(00:22:28)
in graduate school she'd had her second
(00:22:31)
mastctomy and discharged early from the
(00:22:33)
hospital, you know, because hospitals
(00:22:35)
are expensive. And she was at home and
(00:22:37)
she called me and said, "You need to
(00:22:38)
come home. I'm really in a bad way." My
(00:22:40)
mom was not dramatic. So, I got on a
(00:22:42)
flight back from Berkeley and I walked
(00:22:45)
into a situation, Louis, that I I just
(00:22:47)
didn't know how to deal with it. And I
(00:22:48)
and there's just certain things a a son
(00:22:51)
can't do for his mother. And I remember
(00:22:53)
think I need to get her a nurse. And I
(00:22:55)
called. The nurses were 35 bucks an hour
(00:22:57)
and I had about $700 in my name. And
(00:22:59)
just the shame. It's like, okay, I'm the
(00:23:01)
man. I'm I'm the only son, the only
(00:23:04)
child of a single immigrant mother
(00:23:05)
taking care of me my whole life. She's
(00:23:08)
really vulnerable right now, and I can't
(00:23:10)
live up to my expectations.
(00:23:12)
>> Yeah, that's tough.
(00:23:13)
>> That was really upsetting. And at that
(00:23:15)
moment, I decided, look, you can't
(00:23:17)
decide to be economically secure, but
(00:23:19)
you can decide to kind of go allin.
(00:23:21)
>> And that's when I really got my act
(00:23:22)
together and said, okay, you can't
(00:23:24)
control the the mark markets
(00:23:26)
individual dynamics. And there's some
(00:23:28)
exceptionally talented people that work
(00:23:29)
really hard their whole life and take
(00:23:30)
risks and never get there.
(00:23:32)
>> So you can't control that. But the
(00:23:34)
things you can control, I decided I was
(00:23:35)
going to work really hard. That was very
(00:23:37)
motivating for me. And then the other
(00:23:40)
thing is less virtuous. I noticed early
(00:23:43)
that
(00:23:44)
guys who had their together
(00:23:46)
professionally and economically,
(00:23:48)
>> they attracted more women,
(00:23:49)
>> seem to be attracting a broader
(00:23:50)
selection set of mates.
(00:23:52)
>> And I even saw it through UCLA. The
(00:23:55)
freshman were interested in guys that
(00:23:57)
were funny and cool and dressed well.
(00:23:59)
And by the time they were seniors, they
(00:24:01)
were very interested in that guy going
(00:24:02)
to medical school.
(00:24:04)
>> And we don't like to talk about this,
(00:24:05)
but women are attracted to men for three
(00:24:07)
reasons. The first is to signal
(00:24:09)
resources. And you don't have to show up
(00:24:11)
with a Range Rover or Panerai. You can
(00:24:13)
just be someone who has together.
(00:24:14)
It's like this guy's going to be a good
(00:24:16)
provider. Uh the second is humor. We
(00:24:20)
talked about this in the last one or
(00:24:21)
intellect. And then the third, and this
(00:24:23)
is I think is the most underleveraged
(00:24:25)
secret weapon in mating for a man is
(00:24:28)
kindness. And that is women
(00:24:30)
instinctively believe at some point
(00:24:31)
they'll be vulnerable because of
(00:24:32)
gestation or they're physically smaller.
(00:24:34)
So they're very drawn to men who
(00:24:36)
demonstrate kindness. And that is acts
(00:24:38)
of generosity with no reciprocal
(00:24:40)
expectation.
(00:24:41)
>> So and that's the most people most men
(00:24:43)
understand one and two, but what they
(00:24:46)
don't understand is they need a kindness
(00:24:47)
practice because I do think you can
(00:24:48)
learn kindness. It starts with manners.
(00:24:50)
But if you try to, you know, small acts
(00:24:52)
of generosity every day, I do think it
(00:24:55)
starts to become second second nature.
(00:24:57)
But I wanted to take care of my mom and
(00:25:00)
quite frankly, I wanted more dates. And
(00:25:03)
that was those both those things were
(00:25:04)
very motivating for me
(00:25:06)
>> to try and be a better man. And then
(00:25:09)
what you talked about having kids.
(00:25:12)
>> How old were you when you had kids?
(00:25:13)
>> I started late. I was 42.
(00:25:15)
>> Yeah. Me too.
(00:25:16)
>> You're
(00:25:17)
>> 42.
(00:25:17)
>> Oh, you're 42.
(00:25:18)
>> Just just had kids.
(00:25:19)
>> Yeah. you at 42 is a different look than
(00:25:20)
me at 42. [laughter]
(00:25:22)
Anyways,
(00:25:24)
um I but when my kid came marching or
(00:25:28)
had the poor judgment to come marching
(00:25:29)
out of my girlfriend, it was 2008 and I
(00:25:32)
had lost everything
(00:25:33)
>> right at the housing crisis. Yeah,
(00:25:35)
>> I had gone all gone all in. I I kind of
(00:25:38)
came at professional age in San
(00:25:39)
Francisco where you're supposed to go
(00:25:40)
allin, borrow money against your stocks.
(00:25:44)
>> And I you were kind of taught if you're
(00:25:47)
really talented, you're in it to win it
(00:25:49)
and you can, you know, I'm so awesome
(00:25:51)
that if I throw myself at something 100%
(00:25:53)
it's going to win. Not recognizing again
(00:25:56)
the power of diversity. So I've been
(00:25:57)
wealthy three times, which means I've
(00:25:59)
lost it twice. And I lost it in 2000.
(00:26:03)
Then I crawled my way back, had had a
(00:26:06)
kid and literally at that moment lost
(00:26:08)
everything because I was too stupid to
(00:26:10)
diversify. You book on money. I hadn't
(00:26:12)
learned the power of diversification.
(00:26:14)
And when my kid entered the world, it
(00:26:17)
wasn't bright lights and angels singing.
(00:26:20)
I literally felt anxiety and shame. I'm
(00:26:22)
like, not only have I screwed up for me,
(00:26:25)
but now I've screwed up for someone who
(00:26:27)
is totally dependent upon me. And
(00:26:30)
granted, I struggle with depression, so
(00:26:31)
I have a tendency to see dark things as
(00:26:33)
black. But I remember I was so nauseous
(00:26:36)
and so anxious that I had to sit down.
(00:26:39)
They were more worried about me, I
(00:26:40)
think, than the mother of the kid at
(00:26:42)
that point. And I couldn't say, "I feel
(00:26:45)
failure. I feel like I've already let
(00:26:46)
this thing down, you know, this."
(00:26:48)
>> So, for me, that was very motivating. I
(00:26:51)
think having kids is stressful. I'm not
(00:26:53)
saying it's for everybody, but it
(00:26:55)
definitely has made me a better man
(00:26:56)
because I want to model good behavior.
(00:26:59)
I take being a provider and a protector
(00:27:01)
much more seriously now. Uh, and so I I
(00:27:05)
do think, you know, this kind of the
(00:27:07)
three legs of the masculinity stool,
(00:27:10)
provider, protector, procreator, I do
(00:27:12)
think those are decent legs of the stool
(00:27:14)
and what you the skills and strengths
(00:27:17)
and attributes you want to develop to be
(00:27:18)
all three of those things are loosely
(00:27:20)
speaking uh what I believe it means to
(00:27:23)
be, you know, quite frankly masculine.
(00:27:26)
But the book is really more about where
(00:27:29)
I screwed up and what I learned from it
(00:27:32)
and tried to evolve around it. But yeah,
(00:27:35)
my um my first encounter I know you just
(00:27:38)
had twins. You're doing much better than
(00:27:41)
I was at that moment, but I felt a ton
(00:27:44)
of stress and anxiety, but it also was
(00:27:46)
very productive for me. And one of the
(00:27:49)
things I worry about with my kids is
(00:27:50)
that I didn't grow up with a lot, at
(00:27:53)
least not economically. And I always say
(00:27:56)
if I had what my kids have, I wouldn't
(00:27:58)
have what I have. And a lot of what I
(00:28:00)
think about is how do you instill that
(00:28:02)
sense of grit? And a little bit of fear
(00:28:03)
is probably good in kids.
(00:28:06)
>> Uh because the things that really
(00:28:07)
motivated me if I had what my kids have,
(00:28:09)
the only things I I know I would have
(00:28:11)
engaged in is like a Range Rover and a
(00:28:12)
cocaine habit. I'm a fundamentally lazy
(00:28:14)
person. When I was younger, I didn't
(00:28:16)
want to save the world. I wasn't kind. I
(00:28:19)
wasn't trying to add value. I wanted
(00:28:21)
economic security because an absence of
(00:28:24)
it had caused so much anxiety in my
(00:28:26)
life. And you know, I think that if you
(00:28:30)
if you grow up with money, did you grow
(00:28:31)
up with money?
(00:28:32)
>> No.
(00:28:33)
>> If people have money, I think they can
(00:28:35)
sympathize with people who don't. But I
(00:28:39)
don't really think they can fully
(00:28:40)
empathize cuz
(00:28:43)
it's as if like my mom and I had this
(00:28:45)
ghost following us around saying,
(00:28:47)
"You're not worthy.
(00:28:49)
>> Like you screwed up. you and your mom
(00:28:50)
screwed up. When I didn't get into UCLA
(00:28:52)
down the road, they had a 74% admissions
(00:28:55)
rate and I was one of the 26% that
(00:28:56)
didn't get in. I remember people I went
(00:28:58)
to my friend's parents and they knew I
(00:29:01)
hadn't gotten in. They're like, "You
(00:29:02)
should get on a plane tomorrow and go to
(00:29:03)
Michigan and show up at the admissions
(00:29:04)
office and you're so smart." And I'm
(00:29:06)
like, I'm like listening. I'm like, "Go
(00:29:08)
to Michigan. I don't have a credit card.
(00:29:11)
>> I don't I I've never I've been on a
(00:29:13)
plane like twice. We don't have that
(00:29:16)
kind of money. I can't afford to spend
(00:29:17)
$200 or $300 to go and show up. There's
(00:29:20)
just a lack of confidence, a lack of
(00:29:24)
contacts, a lack of quite frankly a
(00:29:25)
sophistication
(00:29:27)
>> that people with money can't even relate
(00:29:30)
to.
(00:29:31)
>> And the anxiety I remember like this I
(00:29:34)
don't call it trauma. People have worse
(00:29:35)
trauma.
(00:29:36)
>> I was one of I'm one of those people
(00:29:37)
that's always five minutes away from
(00:29:39)
losing your keys. I lose everything. And
(00:29:42)
my ex-wife used to say, "If my dick
(00:29:44)
wasn't attached, we'd find it on a card
(00:29:46)
table in Soho next to a Good Fellow
(00:29:48)
script and a Nirvana album." And
(00:29:52)
I lost two jackets in one week. And
(00:29:55)
jackets were 30 bucks for some reason.
(00:29:56)
It was like a Monopoly or a cartel and
(00:29:58)
jackets. And I remember just the fear
(00:30:00)
and anxiety. I purposely spent the night
(00:30:02)
at my friends two nights in a row
(00:30:04)
because I just couldn't face telling my
(00:30:05)
mom I'd lost another jacket, you know,
(00:30:08)
cuz I knew she was going to melt down.
(00:30:10)
My mom was in a very vulnerable place
(00:30:12)
and she would just lose her and that was
(00:30:16)
very distressing. So I've been so
(00:30:19)
focused and some of the critiques of the
(00:30:22)
book is that and it's actually an
(00:30:23)
accurate critique. It's that I'm too
(00:30:25)
focused on money and that I think money
(00:30:27)
will solve a man's problems. And that's
(00:30:29)
actually a really accurate
(00:30:31)
>> critique but that comes from a place of
(00:30:33)
not having it and things just got so
(00:30:36)
much easier and better for me once I had
(00:30:37)
economic security. Well, I think it's
(00:30:39)
part of it for sure, like you said, but
(00:30:41)
also if you're not kind and you have
(00:30:43)
money, you're going to just ruin
(00:30:45)
people's lives if you're just like mean.
(00:30:47)
Okay, I have all the money. I have
(00:30:48)
resources. I'm funny and I'm
(00:30:50)
intelligent, but I'm mean. That is a
(00:30:52)
disaster for any person coming into a
(00:30:55)
relationship with them, whether it be a
(00:30:56)
business partner or a team member if
(00:30:58)
they're running a business or
(00:31:00)
>> the president,
(00:31:00)
>> the president or a fin a fin uh
(00:31:02)
>> I say that I don't know the political
(00:31:04)
leanings of you or your audience, but
(00:31:06)
>> I find that some of the role models for
(00:31:08)
masculinity that we should naturally
(00:31:09)
look up to, the wealthiest man in the
(00:31:11)
world, he's won capitalism and the
(00:31:13)
president. And I don't think they're
(00:31:14)
very strong role models for young men. I
(00:31:17)
think they've conflated masculinity with
(00:31:19)
coarseness and cruelty.
(00:31:21)
You know, being sued concurrently by two
(00:31:23)
women for sole custody of your child
(00:31:25)
because you haven't seen that child.
(00:31:26)
That couldn't be any less masculine.
(00:31:29)
Cutting off aid to HIV positive mothers.
(00:31:33)
I just can't think of anything less
(00:31:35)
masculine than that. It's these guys
(00:31:36)
have recognized tremendous prosperity.
(00:31:39)
That's really impressive. But the whole
(00:31:41)
point of prosperity is you can move to
(00:31:42)
protection.
(00:31:43)
>> That's the whole shooting match, right?
(00:31:45)
What's the point of prosperity if you
(00:31:47)
can't get off your heels and onto your
(00:31:50)
toes and protect others after you've
(00:31:52)
protected yourself? And I think some of
(00:31:54)
the most powerful men in the United
(00:31:55)
States have just missed that whole part
(00:31:58)
of their journey towards manhood. I
(00:31:59)
think it's really disappointing. I even
(00:32:01)
if you look back at the guilded age,
(00:32:03)
some of these men who were just
(00:32:04)
rapacious
(00:32:05)
>> kind of once they got there, they did
(00:32:07)
feel a real obligation, a civic
(00:32:09)
obligation. And that's where I think
(00:32:11)
some of the individuals in big tech and
(00:32:13)
in our government right now, I feel as
(00:32:15)
if they've kind of skipped that whole
(00:32:17)
protection part of the masculinity
(00:32:18)
stool, if you will.
(00:32:20)
>> Procreation, protection, and providing.
(00:32:22)
Are those the three stools?
(00:32:24)
>> Provider,
(00:32:24)
>> provider,
(00:32:25)
>> uh,
(00:32:25)
>> and then move to protection. Operating
(00:32:27)
system around protecting, not just
(00:32:29)
physical,
(00:32:30)
>> you know, guys like your size break up
(00:32:32)
fights at bars. They don't start them,
(00:32:34)
right?
(00:32:34)
>> But emotional protection, psychological
(00:32:37)
protection, all these things, right?
(00:32:38)
When you hear someone talking about
(00:32:40)
someone behind their back, your default
(00:32:41)
your default operating system should be
(00:32:43)
to weigh in and minimum not participate
(00:32:45)
and ideally protect them. You may not
(00:32:47)
agree with the transgender community.
(00:32:49)
You may be like me and think it's
(00:32:50)
ridiculous that firms have to have
(00:32:52)
legally mandated third bathrooms. I
(00:32:54)
don't think that makes any sense. I
(00:32:55)
think it's ridiculous that we allowed a
(00:32:58)
transgender woman who's 6'5 to show up
(00:33:00)
to an NC2A swim meet. I think that's
(00:33:02)
just irrational.
(00:33:04)
>> Starts from It starts from a good place,
(00:33:05)
but I think that's irrational. But at
(00:33:07)
the same time, I'd like I I just don't
(00:33:10)
see any reason why people want to
(00:33:12)
demonize this community and start
(00:33:14)
kicking them out of the military when
(00:33:15)
they've served honorably. When uh we
(00:33:18)
start passing laws in states that say
(00:33:21)
there can't be any transgender athletes
(00:33:23)
in high school and then someone actually
(00:33:24)
says, "Are there any transgender
(00:33:26)
athletes in high school in South
(00:33:28)
Dakota?" And they can't find one. That's
(00:33:30)
just demonizing a community. That's like
(00:33:33)
this is less than 1% of the American
(00:33:35)
population. So yeah, have have a
(00:33:38)
Democrats or people on the left gone way
(00:33:40)
too far? Yeah. But then to weigh in with
(00:33:42)
just being mean and demonizing a
(00:33:44)
community. So women should be able to
(00:33:47)
cross the street because they see men on
(00:33:49)
that side of the street, not avoid them.
(00:33:51)
That's really that's heartbreaking that
(00:33:52)
women say they don't feel safe around
(00:33:54)
men, right? I think we have to teach our
(00:33:55)
young boys from a very early age.
(00:33:57)
>> Yes,
(00:33:58)
>> protection is really a key component.
(00:34:00)
And then the last one is more
(00:34:01)
controversial is procreation. And that
(00:34:05)
is I think men wanting romantic and
(00:34:08)
sexual relationships has been pathized
(00:34:10)
and demonized. And I think it's a
(00:34:12)
feature, not a bug. Because if men want
(00:34:15)
to have relationships and quite frankly
(00:34:18)
sex, I didn't see my partner at the pool
(00:34:21)
at the Raleigh Hotel in South Beach and
(00:34:23)
think I would like someday to have a
(00:34:25)
relationship with her to get lower rates
(00:34:27)
on auto insurance.
(00:34:28)
>> Right?
(00:34:29)
>> I saw her and thought quite frankly, I
(00:34:31)
would really like to have sex with that
(00:34:32)
woman. Mhm.
(00:34:34)
>> And that desire, that fire can be
(00:34:36)
destructive.
(00:34:36)
>> Yes.
(00:34:37)
>> But most of the time, it's fire that's
(00:34:39)
captured in an engine and creates
(00:34:41)
progress. Progress towards being fit,
(00:34:44)
being a better dresser, having a rep,
(00:34:46)
being a provider, having p perseverance,
(00:34:48)
and developing what I think is the key
(00:34:50)
skill in life across multiple
(00:34:54)
dimensions. And that is the ability to
(00:34:56)
endure rejection.
(00:34:58)
>> You know, all this you built here, this
(00:35:00)
didn't just happen. The only thing I
(00:35:03)
know that was involved in this was a lot
(00:35:05)
of nos
(00:35:06)
>> and the ability
(00:35:08)
>> the ability to get hit in the face,
(00:35:10)
beaned in the face,
(00:35:12)
>> get up, dust up, and get back to the
(00:35:14)
plate.
(00:35:15)
>> And I think a lot of the skills men
(00:35:18)
develop pursuing relationships are not
(00:35:21)
only informative and educational, but
(00:35:24)
really key to developing skills across
(00:35:26)
the rest of their lives. And if you ever
(00:35:27)
see someone, you think, "Oh, they're
(00:35:29)
talented, but they seem to have made
(00:35:30)
more money than I would have guessed, or
(00:35:32)
they're with someone higher character
(00:35:34)
and more attractive than them," I can
(00:35:36)
almost guarantee you they have one skill
(00:35:37)
set, and that is the ability to get out
(00:35:39)
a spoon and eat.
(00:35:40)
>> Mhm.
(00:35:41)
>> And every great yes in your life, every
(00:35:44)
great yes in your life will involve one
(00:35:46)
thing, and that is a ridiculous number
(00:35:48)
of nos that come before it. Mhm.
(00:35:50)
>> And there's a scary stat that just came
(00:35:52)
out that 40% of America of men 18 to 24
(00:35:55)
have never asked a woman out in person.
(00:35:57)
>> Wow. Really?
(00:35:58)
>> So, if you're a dude that's willing to
(00:36:00)
go up to a woman, figure out a way to
(00:36:02)
express romantic interest while making
(00:36:04)
her feel safe, you're almost already in
(00:36:06)
the top half of men. But men aren't
(00:36:09)
approaching women. And this is anecdotal
(00:36:11)
evidence. I don't have data on this, but
(00:36:13)
when I go out to places on a regular
(00:36:16)
basis, when I speak to single women,
(00:36:18)
they'll say, "I'm here. I'm single. I'm
(00:36:20)
ready to mingle. Look at me. I look
(00:36:22)
amazing.
(00:36:22)
>> They're signaling it. Yes.
(00:36:24)
>> And no men approach me.
(00:36:25)
>> And regardless of what the Atlantic or
(00:36:27)
the New York Times will say, 80% of
(00:36:29)
women still say they want the man to
(00:36:32)
make the approach.
(00:36:33)
>> Yes.
(00:36:34)
>> They don't want to be approaching men.
(00:36:36)
It just doesn't feel natural for four
(00:36:38)
out of five uh four out of five women.
(00:36:40)
And I worry that men are being tempted
(00:36:43)
have been getting mixed messages. No guy
(00:36:47)
wants to be that guy, right? makes an
(00:36:49)
approach in artful doesn't go well or
(00:36:53)
gets rejected
(00:36:54)
>> or she it ends up we both work at Google
(00:36:59)
and now I'm that guy
(00:37:01)
>> and there's actual professional
(00:37:02)
ramifications potent I mean the moment a
(00:37:05)
woman says at work fairly or unfairly
(00:37:09)
that oh yeah that guy he hit on me at a
(00:37:10)
bar he's a creep that is not so so I
(00:37:14)
think that men wanting to pursue
(00:37:17)
romantic and sexual relationships is a
(00:37:19)
feature, not a bug. And we've demonized
(00:37:22)
and pathized it. And I think we're now
(00:37:25)
getting to a point where people realize
(00:37:27)
that men being initiators, and I don't
(00:37:30)
want to say aggressive because that has
(00:37:32)
negative overtones. But you know, when I
(00:37:36)
coach young men, one of the things I
(00:37:37)
tell them is they need to put themselves
(00:37:38)
in the agency of strangers. And then we
(00:37:40)
have a practice called no, get to know,
(00:37:42)
express platonic friendship. Hey, do you
(00:37:44)
want to grab a beer and watch the game?
(00:37:47)
And then uh also maybe romantic
(00:37:50)
interest. Would you be interested in
(00:37:51)
grabbing coffee first? You got to open
(00:37:53)
establish some sort of rapport. Where
(00:37:54)
are you from? You know, etc. And I'm
(00:37:56)
like and then the key is no because what
(00:37:58)
you're going to do is you're going to
(00:37:59)
call me the next day and I'm going to
(00:38:00)
say how are you? And they're going to
(00:38:01)
say, "Oh, you know, I'm b I'm fine."
(00:38:03)
>> And that's the key is developing those
(00:38:05)
calluses.
(00:38:06)
>> I'm alive.
(00:38:07)
>> Yeah. I'm fine.
(00:38:08)
>> I'm alive.
(00:38:08)
>> And by the way, she's fine, too.
(00:38:10)
>> She's fine, too. And if you don't know
(00:38:11)
the difference between expressing
(00:38:13)
platonic and romantic interest and
(00:38:14)
harassing someone, you got much bigger
(00:38:16)
problems. Mhm.
(00:38:17)
>> But where do men even have the venues to
(00:38:20)
do that right now?
(00:38:21)
>> So provider, I think you got to be
(00:38:23)
economically viable in a capitalist
(00:38:25)
society. I think your own self-esteem,
(00:38:27)
the way society judges you is unfairly.
(00:38:29)
It's unfairly based on the economic
(00:38:30)
viability for men. It's unfairly based
(00:38:32)
on the aesthetic qualities of women. And
(00:38:34)
I'm not saying this is the way the world
(00:38:36)
should be, but it is the way the world
(00:38:37)
is.
(00:38:38)
>> Yeah.
(00:38:38)
>> And then two, immediate move to
(00:38:40)
protection. I think that's the most
(00:38:42)
rewarding thing about being having some
(00:38:44)
prosperity. That's when I feel most at
(00:38:45)
rest and most of purpose. When I feel
(00:38:47)
like my kids are safe, my partner feels
(00:38:49)
noticed. I feel I can get get involved
(00:38:52)
in great charities. You I'm doing a lot
(00:38:53)
of virtue signaling right now, but it's
(00:38:55)
true. But that gives me a sense of
(00:38:56)
purpose and makes me feel strong. And
(00:38:58)
then finally, I think we've got to
(00:39:00)
celebrate young men's desire to be in
(00:39:03)
relationships. I think it's a I think
(00:39:05)
it's a feature, not a bug. I think
(00:39:07)
societyy's better when men learn to
(00:39:10)
improve themselves so they can attract a
(00:39:12)
a female partner or a partner where they
(00:39:15)
can be a better human being. They can
(00:39:17)
provide to that partner. They're less
(00:39:18)
selfish. Hopefully, they're more, you
(00:39:21)
know, thoughtful about how they can
(00:39:23)
serve their friends, their family, their
(00:39:25)
community.
(00:39:26)
If you find a man like that who can
(00:39:28)
improve their life to attract a healthy,
(00:39:30)
conscious woman
(00:39:31)
>> that wants to be with them, you're going
(00:39:33)
to have less war, less suffering, less
(00:39:35)
pain, less aggression, less anger, and
(00:39:39)
less men hurting other people. And I
(00:39:41)
think that's what we need as society.
(00:39:43)
And I saw you go on the view and there
(00:39:45)
was a reaction video that someone said,
(00:39:47)
you know, okay, Scott, so you need women
(00:39:49)
to come rescue men
(00:39:51)
>> because, you know, unless men are with a
(00:39:54)
great woman, then they're going to be,
(00:39:56)
>> you know, going around the world hurting
(00:39:57)
people and just like causing a mess.
(00:39:59)
>> And now we have to go and save men, you
(00:40:02)
know, when they've been oppressing us or
(00:40:03)
hurting us for years and pushing us
(00:40:05)
down. Like
(00:40:06)
>> that doesn't work for me. So what what
(00:40:08)
are your thoughts around that where it's
(00:40:10)
like
(00:40:10)
>> women feel like they're already working
(00:40:12)
so hard. Why do they have to come rescue
(00:40:14)
the man now?
(00:40:15)
>> Yeah.
(00:40:15)
>> To be a better man.
(00:40:17)
>> Yeah. So it's not nobody has an
(00:40:20)
obligation to service or or save men.
(00:40:23)
Especially women. I don't you know men
(00:40:26)
have to level up. Women don't have I
(00:40:27)
don't think women need to lower their
(00:40:28)
standards. Uh, you know, I tell women to
(00:40:30)
agree to a second coffee because
(00:40:32)
traditionally, as we referenced before,
(00:40:33)
sometimes it takes time
(00:40:35)
>> to to find that you're interested in
(00:40:37)
this man.
(00:40:38)
>> But I've never ever in any way can
(00:40:40)
conoted or intimated. And I think feel
(00:40:42)
like some of these some of these
(00:40:44)
comments are unfair. They say these men
(00:40:46)
are just entitled and feel like and
(00:40:48)
women are, as you said, supposed to come
(00:40:50)
say them. I think unless men level up
(00:40:52)
and unless we put in place fiscal
(00:40:54)
programs that restore more economic
(00:40:56)
viability to all young people,
(00:40:58)
women, you can't tell women to lower
(00:41:00)
their standards and save men. I get it.
(00:41:04)
I 100% get it. So my I have three
(00:41:07)
parties that I think need to weigh in
(00:41:08)
here with health. One is a society I
(00:41:10)
think we need to stop the transfer of
(00:41:11)
economic power from young to old. We
(00:41:14)
transfer 1.22 True two trillion dollars
(00:41:16)
every year. The biggest transfer in
(00:41:17)
history of of money from working age
(00:41:19)
people to old people who are the
(00:41:21)
wealthiest generation in history. My
(00:41:23)
generation, people my age are 72%
(00:41:26)
wealthier than they were 40 years ago.
(00:41:28)
People under the age of 40 are 24% less
(00:41:31)
wealthy.
(00:41:32)
>> This has a disproportionately negative
(00:41:34)
impact on men who are falling behind
(00:41:36)
women because men are still
(00:41:37)
disproportionately evaluated based on
(00:41:39)
their economic viability. Beyonce could
(00:41:41)
still marry Jay-Z if she worked at
(00:41:42)
McDonald's. The opposite is not true.
(00:41:45)
And the reality is men are are evaluated
(00:41:48)
as romantic partners disproportionately
(00:41:50)
based on their economic viability. So
(00:41:53)
men need to we need fiscal policies that
(00:41:55)
put more money I don't think in men's
(00:41:57)
pockets but in young pockets. Uh
(00:41:59)
>> but is that women who are looking that
(00:42:01)
they don't they don't feel safe if a man
(00:42:03)
doesn't have money or is that women who
(00:42:05)
are attracted to men with money? Is that
(00:42:07)
>> I I don't know if it's they don't feel
(00:42:08)
safe but 75% of women say economic
(00:42:10)
viability is key to a partner. only 25%
(00:42:13)
of men. I mean, you've seen the state
(00:42:15)
this
(00:42:16)
>> men made socioeconomically horizontally
(00:42:18)
and down, women horizontally and up. And
(00:42:21)
when the pool of horizontal and up,
(00:42:22)
because women keep getting taller
(00:42:24)
economically, which is wonderful, don't
(00:42:26)
do anything get in the way of it. The
(00:42:27)
pool of horizontal and up keep
(00:42:29)
shrinking. And so, what do you do? I
(00:42:32)
don't think we want economic uh
(00:42:34)
affirmative action for men. I think what
(00:42:36)
we want is to stop the transfer of
(00:42:39)
wealth from young to old. The two
(00:42:41)
biggest tax deductions in America are
(00:42:43)
mortgage interest rate and capital
(00:42:45)
gains. Who owns homes and stocks? People
(00:42:47)
my age. Who makes their money from
(00:42:49)
working, current income, and rents?
(00:42:51)
Young people. And when a a young when a
(00:42:54)
young group of people does not have
(00:42:56)
money, you end up with a group with
(00:42:59)
women who are two and three women under
(00:43:01)
the age of 30 in a relationship, one in
(00:43:03)
three men. Now, why is that? You think
(00:43:04)
that's mathematically impossible? It's
(00:43:06)
not because women are dating older
(00:43:08)
because they want more emotionally and
(00:43:09)
economically viable men.
(00:43:11)
>> So, look, I I think that we need to
(00:43:14)
weigh in with policies that level up
(00:43:16)
young people. Again, raise minimum wage,
(00:43:19)
more progressive tax policy.
(00:43:21)
Corporations are paying the lowest tax
(00:43:22)
rate since 1939. The 25 wealthiest
(00:43:24)
families are paying about 6% tax rate.
(00:43:27)
We just transfer massive economics.
(00:43:29)
There's a sucking sound from young
(00:43:30)
people to old people. I think it's taken
(00:43:32)
an especially damaging toll on um young
(00:43:36)
men. And then the second group is I
(00:43:39)
think men my age really need to lean in
(00:43:42)
and get involved in a young man's life
(00:43:44)
or boy's life because we have a debt
(00:43:47)
>> to mentor young kids. Well, we we we had
(00:43:50)
unfair advantage.
(00:43:51)
>> And I understand the gag reflex cuz they
(00:43:53)
see a guy of my skin color, sexual
(00:43:56)
orientation, gender, and age, and think,
(00:43:59)
"Dude, you had a 3,000-y year head
(00:44:01)
start, and you're you're you're
(00:44:02)
complaining about men now." And I'm
(00:44:04)
like, "I get it, but should a
(00:44:06)
19-year-old male pay the price for my
(00:44:08)
advantage?"
(00:44:09)
>> So, we have an obligation, especially
(00:44:11)
men of my generation, to get involved
(00:44:13)
and try and lift them up. And then I
(00:44:16)
also think women play a role because I
(00:44:17)
do think there's an an unhealthy
(00:44:19)
zeitgeist in our society where women and
(00:44:23)
progressives say to young men, you don't
(00:44:25)
have problems, you are the problem.
(00:44:27)
>> Mhm.
(00:44:27)
>> And the answer is you need to act more
(00:44:29)
like a woman.
(00:44:30)
>> And I don't think that's the answer
(00:44:31)
either.
(00:44:32)
>> I don't think it is. But I I feel like
(00:44:34)
sometimes,
(00:44:35)
and I hate this term, people take this
(00:44:37)
stuff out of context and say, "You're
(00:44:39)
expecting now women are after finally
(00:44:42)
getting some progress are responsible
(00:44:44)
for saving men." No, they're not. Our
(00:44:47)
society is responsible for creating a
(00:44:48)
healthy next generation, which means
(00:44:51)
continuing the progress of women and
(00:44:54)
also lifting up our young men who by any
(00:44:56)
standard are really struggling. And
(00:44:58)
empathy is not a zero- sum game. We can
(00:45:00)
still acknowledge the huge obstacles
(00:45:03)
women just face. Your wife just had
(00:45:05)
twins. When women have kids, they go to
(00:45:07)
77 cents on the dollar. We have not
(00:45:09)
figured out a way to maintain a woman's
(00:45:11)
professional trajectory when she has
(00:45:13)
kids. That's a problem.
(00:45:16)
>> Black and Latino families have an
(00:45:17)
average household net worth of 22,000.
(00:45:20)
White families 160. There's still an
(00:45:23)
economic apartheid in the US. But we can
(00:45:26)
acknowledge those problems still exist
(00:45:28)
and work on them. But at the same time
(00:45:29)
also realize the country and women are
(00:45:32)
not going to continue to flourish if
(00:45:34)
young men are flailing. Full stop.
(00:45:36)
>> Yes.
(00:45:36)
>> So again, empathy is not a zero sum
(00:45:39)
game. Gay marriage didn't hurt.
(00:45:40)
Heteronormative marriage, civil rights
(00:45:42)
didn't hurt white people. Helping some
(00:45:45)
of our young men and specifically with
(00:45:46)
programs for young people economically,
(00:45:50)
that's not going to hurt women. It
(00:45:52)
doesn't come at the cost of women. And
(00:45:54)
one of the things I hate about the
(00:45:55)
manosphere, what people traditionally
(00:45:56)
think is the manosphere,
(00:45:58)
is they believe there is an inverse
(00:46:02)
correlation between women's ascent and
(00:46:04)
how men are doing. And the reality is
(00:46:06)
without women's ascent, we wouldn't have
(00:46:08)
won World War II. Hitler wouldn't let
(00:46:11)
women get into the factories. He thought
(00:46:12)
they needed to stay home. And we let
(00:46:14)
women build P-51 Mustangs and we sent a
(00:46:17)
lot of them overseas to be near the
(00:46:19)
front lines. that literally won the or
(00:46:22)
was a big contributor to the war. Women
(00:46:25)
entering the workforce in the 70s and
(00:46:27)
80s in the United States is probably the
(00:46:30)
biggest driver of economic growth for
(00:46:32)
the United States and in a capitalist
(00:46:34)
society where our expectations keep
(00:46:35)
going up. You know, having dual income
(00:46:38)
households is really important. So, I
(00:46:40)
think women's ascent has been accreative
(00:46:42)
to men. I think it's been great.
(00:46:44)
>> Yeah. And we need our young men to
(00:46:46)
recognize that when they really lose the
(00:46:49)
script is when they start blaming women
(00:46:51)
for their romantic problems and
(00:46:52)
immigrants for their economic problems.
(00:46:54)
That women's success is great for them.
(00:46:57)
At the same time, I do think that we
(00:47:00)
need to stop this demonizing of there's
(00:47:03)
this thing online, this trend where
(00:47:05)
women talk say they're not dating any
(00:47:07)
longer because they could be unalived,
(00:47:09)
which I guess is a politically correct
(00:47:10)
term, killed, murdered. This episode is
(00:47:13)
brought to you by Facebook. Thanksgiving
(00:47:16)
is one of those times when everyone
(00:47:19)
comes home. It's busy. It's nostalgic
(00:47:22)
and full of moments that remind us of
(00:47:24)
the people that really matter to us.
(00:47:27)
Facebook is the platform built for real,
(00:47:30)
meaningful human connection, helping you
(00:47:32)
find your people, pursue your interests,
(00:47:36)
and create new memories together. It's
(00:47:38)
when old friends, neighbors, and
(00:47:40)
classmates come back into your life,
(00:47:42)
sparking new stories that feel both
(00:47:45)
familiar and fresh. And whether it's
(00:47:47)
reconnecting through a Facebook alumni
(00:47:49)
group, joining an event in your
(00:47:51)
hometown, or finding something special
(00:47:53)
on marketplace, Facebook helps bring
(00:47:57)
people closer both online and in real
(00:48:00)
life. It's a space for meaningful
(00:48:02)
connections that enrich our lives,
(00:48:04)
especially this time of year. and
(00:48:06)
actually have a Facebook group for
(00:48:07)
everyone who's ever attended my Summit
(00:48:09)
of a Greatness event. And it's one of my
(00:48:12)
favorite parts of our community because
(00:48:14)
people share photos, they celebrate
(00:48:16)
their wins, they ask for support, and
(00:48:18)
they keep that same energy alive long
(00:48:21)
after the event ends. And it's amazing
(00:48:23)
to see friendships and collaborations
(00:48:25)
that started at Summit of Greatness
(00:48:27)
continue to grow throughout the years
(00:48:29)
with the help of Facebook. Let's
(00:48:32)
reconnect this holiday season. Explore
(00:48:34)
more with Facebook today. They
(00:48:37)
>> unalived.
(00:48:38)
>> Unal alived.
(00:48:39)
>> Unal alived. Yeah.
(00:48:40)
>> If they were dating someone, they would
(00:48:41)
be killed.
(00:48:42)
>> Well, no. That one of the reasons
(00:48:43)
they're no longer dating is they feel
(00:48:45)
like they're taking physical risks being
(00:48:46)
in a man's company because men are
(00:48:48)
violent.
(00:48:49)
>> Okay.
(00:48:49)
>> And 2500 women every year are murdered.
(00:48:52)
That's a huge problem. 70%, by the way,
(00:48:54)
by people they've known for a while. But
(00:48:56)
if you look at the actual data, if you
(00:48:58)
go on a date with a man, he's 16 times
(00:49:01)
16 times more likely to go home that
(00:49:03)
night and hurt himself than hurt you.
(00:49:05)
>> Why is that?
(00:49:06)
>> I think men sometimes get very Look, men
(00:49:09)
are engaging in a lot of self harm. You
(00:49:11)
go into a morg and there's five people
(00:49:12)
died by suicide. Four are men. And you
(00:49:16)
know, you're four times more likely to
(00:49:17)
get hurt on the drive over or choke
(00:49:19)
during dinner. So, we've decided, I
(00:49:21)
think the algorithms have decided, let's
(00:49:23)
portray young men as as quite frankly as
(00:49:25)
a danger to society. And the reality is
(00:49:28)
men who are dangerous, and the mo vast
(00:49:30)
majority aren't, but the the small
(00:49:32)
minority that are are dangerous towards
(00:49:35)
themselves.
(00:49:36)
>> They're much more likely. The majority
(00:49:38)
of gun deaths are suicides.
(00:49:40)
>> Yeah.
(00:49:40)
>> And so, I think that I think that we
(00:49:42)
also need
(00:49:45)
my biggest fans are young men. My
(00:49:47)
biggest supporters are mothers
(00:49:49)
>> because they see what's going on. They
(00:49:51)
see I have two daughters and one son.
(00:49:53)
One daughter a pen, one daughter in PR,
(00:49:56)
and my son's in the basement playing
(00:49:57)
video games and vaping. So I think that
(00:50:01)
recognizing
(00:50:03)
what I call restoring the alliance and
(00:50:05)
that is the greatest alliance in history
(00:50:07)
isn't NATO or between democracies. The
(00:50:09)
greatest alliance in history is the
(00:50:10)
alliance between men and women. I think
(00:50:12)
a combination of masculine and feminine
(00:50:14)
energy in a household makes the
(00:50:15)
happiest, most productive households.
(00:50:17)
>> And by the way, sometimes two women can
(00:50:19)
bring that chemistry or two men can
(00:50:20)
bring that alchemy, right?
(00:50:22)
>> But that combination of masculine and
(00:50:24)
feminine energy, I think, is a wonderful
(00:50:26)
mix. And what the genders have done a
(00:50:28)
great job of is convincing themselves
(00:50:30)
that it's the other gender's fault,
(00:50:32)
right? Men got to stop blaming women.
(00:50:33)
That just doesn't hunt, right? And at
(00:50:35)
the same time, I do think that some
(00:50:37)
women and feminists, it's actually not
(00:50:40)
feminist, I'll call it progressives,
(00:50:42)
liberal versus illiberal thoughts
(00:50:44)
just need to look at the data and think,
(00:50:46)
okay, lifting up our young men is going
(00:50:48)
to be good for everybody.
(00:50:50)
>> Yes, it is. Do you think,
(00:50:52)
[clears throat] you know, I'm here you
(00:50:54)
share that it's great that women are
(00:50:56)
earning more and are constantly
(00:50:57)
progressing in their careers and getting
(00:50:59)
more opportunities than ever and we want
(00:51:02)
to continue that thriving. We also want
(00:51:04)
to see men continue to improve,
(00:51:06)
especially young men who maybe don't
(00:51:08)
have the skills anymore, the tools to
(00:51:09)
become financially successful or they
(00:51:11)
haven't figured it out yet.
(00:51:13)
>> Do you think is there any data around
(00:51:17)
the majority of women being able to earn
(00:51:21)
more than men and still be attracted to
(00:51:23)
them in a long-term romantic
(00:51:26)
relationship? Or is there any data that
(00:51:27)
you've seen around that that women can
(00:51:29)
make more and still be attracted to the
(00:51:32)
man they're with long term?
(00:51:34)
So 17% of households now the woman is
(00:51:37)
the primary bread winner
(00:51:39)
>> and so I do think over time society is
(00:51:41)
becoming
(00:51:42)
>> but are they attracted to their partner
(00:51:44)
still
(00:51:44)
>> well okay so this is
(00:51:45)
>> just because they're together doesn't
(00:51:46)
mean it's happy and
(00:51:48)
>> like the data is not I'm going to
(00:51:51)
there's the way the world should be and
(00:51:52)
the way the world is [laughter]
(00:51:54)
>> the way the world is is the following is
(00:51:56)
that when the woman in the relationship
(00:51:57)
starts making more money than the man
(00:52:00)
the likelihood of divorce doubles
(00:52:02)
>> really
(00:52:02)
>> the use of erectile dysfunction drugs
(00:52:05)
triples because the man feels has less
(00:52:07)
self-esteem and has problems.
(00:52:09)
>> Wow.
(00:52:10)
>> So,
(00:52:11)
the honest answer is I don't know how to
(00:52:13)
get past We're going to we're going to
(00:52:14)
have to figure out things and we're
(00:52:15)
going to have to train our
(00:52:17)
>> is that biology? Is that like psychology
(00:52:19)
around that that causes these things to
(00:52:22)
these challenges to arise when women
(00:52:24)
earn more than the men they're with? I
(00:52:25)
think it's very anthropological in that
(00:52:27)
is women feel innately that their job or
(00:52:31)
one of the things they need to be
(00:52:32)
focused on is how to protect offspring
(00:52:34)
and they need to partner with someone
(00:52:35)
who's strong and can protect them in
(00:52:37)
their offspring and in a capitalist
(00:52:39)
society strength is conflated with
(00:52:40)
economic power. So there's just no doubt
(00:52:44)
about it.
(00:52:44)
>> So if a woman is stronger financially,
(00:52:46)
emotionally, physically, then it's like
(00:52:48)
why do you need the man then? Right.
(00:52:49)
Well, so 70% of divorce filings are by
(00:52:52)
women and and actually the increase in
(00:52:55)
divorce rates is probably a good thing
(00:52:57)
because women no longer feel
(00:52:58)
economically indentured or dependent
(00:53:00)
upon
(00:53:01)
>> trapped anymore. Yeah. From that,
(00:53:02)
>> but there's just no getting around it.
(00:53:04)
Um,
(00:53:04)
>> so men need to continue to figure out
(00:53:06)
how to earn more than the partners
(00:53:08)
they're with in order to have a happier
(00:53:10)
marriage. It sounds like based on the
(00:53:11)
data. But also at a minimum, if a woman
(00:53:15)
ascends economically, relationships at
(00:53:17)
the end of the day are somewhat of a
(00:53:18)
transaction. If a woman is ascending
(00:53:21)
economically, what you see is men aren't
(00:53:23)
stepping up logistically and emotionally
(00:53:25)
and domestically. They're not keeping
(00:53:26)
pace with that ascent. No.
(00:53:28)
>> And so at some point the woman in the
(00:53:30)
relationship does the math and says,
(00:53:32)
"Okay, I'm the provider. I'm the
(00:53:33)
procreator and you aren't stepping up at
(00:53:35)
home. Then I'm definitely out of here."
(00:53:37)
So there's a difference between, I
(00:53:39)
think, working on the relationship and
(00:53:40)
trying to evolve the relationship, which
(00:53:42)
I think a lot of couples where the woman
(00:53:43)
is the primary bread winner. I think
(00:53:45)
they can work through it. There's no
(00:53:46)
reason they can't have happy marriages.
(00:53:48)
>> But there's just no getting around it.
(00:53:49)
The data shows that innate sexual
(00:53:51)
attraction is at risk when the woman is
(00:53:54)
the provider.
(00:53:55)
>> Wow. And and I'm not saying that that
(00:53:58)
can't work, but there's just a lot of
(00:54:00)
data that that women lose sexual
(00:54:04)
interest in a man when he's when he
(00:54:07)
fails as a provider or diminishes as a
(00:54:09)
provider. The cocktail or the
(00:54:11)
afterburner, the fuel on top of that
(00:54:14)
division or disscent is that when men
(00:54:17)
don't step up in the other parts of the
(00:54:18)
life,
(00:54:19)
>> they don't own their role. If they're
(00:54:20)
not generous, if they're not kind, if
(00:54:22)
they're not contributing, whatever it
(00:54:24)
might be. Yeah. Sometime I think being
(00:54:25)
part of a provider is quite frankly
(00:54:27)
sometimes getting out of the way and
(00:54:28)
being more supportive of your partner
(00:54:30)
who might be better at that whole money
(00:54:32)
thing. And I think we're going to have
(00:54:34)
to figure this out and train our boys to
(00:54:37)
step up emotionally and logistically and
(00:54:39)
domestically because the reality is more
(00:54:41)
women are medical school, more women are
(00:54:43)
in law school. We're probably going to
(00:54:44)
have 2 to one female to male college
(00:54:47)
grads
(00:54:49)
>> in the next 5 years. And so women more
(00:54:51)
and more that 17% number is going to
(00:54:53)
grow. So we have to figure out a way to
(00:54:55)
train our voice to say okay wow
(00:54:57)
>> part of being a provider is is
(00:54:59)
contributing in a lot on a lot of you
(00:55:02)
know a lot of different dimensions but
(00:55:04)
also we need there are a ton of
(00:55:06)
mainstream mainstream jobs in vocational
(00:55:09)
programming
(00:55:11)
13% 11% of LinkedIn profiles in the UK
(00:55:15)
and Germany say apprentice it's 3% in
(00:55:18)
the US we don't have an apprentice
(00:55:19)
culture and we have shame vocational
(00:55:21)
jobs I don't know if you've seen all
(00:55:23)
these articles But there's now a bunch
(00:55:25)
of uh juniors and 17-year-olds men in
(00:55:28)
high school uh who are learning like how
(00:55:31)
to install HVAC energy efficient heaters
(00:55:34)
and making 80 or $90,000 a year by their
(00:55:36)
senior year.
(00:55:37)
>> It's great for them.
(00:55:38)
>> There's actually a lot of vocational
(00:55:39)
jobs ready and we hate to admit this,
(00:55:41)
but men seem to enjoy and quite frankly
(00:55:44)
>> on average not always be better at these
(00:55:47)
types of this type of vocational work
(00:55:49)
that require sometimes strength or
(00:55:50)
working out men later outside. Yeah.
(00:55:54)
>> And so we need we need to help men level
(00:55:57)
up because I don't think it's what I
(00:55:59)
don't think it is I don't think the
(00:56:01)
disscent or the anxiety in or the lack
(00:56:03)
of sexual chemistry the the sexual
(00:56:05)
diffusion if you will necessarily
(00:56:08)
happens once the woman is making a
(00:56:09)
dollar more. It's quite frankly when the
(00:56:12)
guy okay economically maybe you're not
(00:56:15)
there with me but you're not
(00:56:16)
contributing.
(00:56:17)
>> You're not adding that surplus of value.
(00:56:20)
Yeah. you got to bring something to the
(00:56:21)
table, right? And traditionally the
(00:56:23)
roles were very defined. The the the
(00:56:25)
female offered kind of more empathetic,
(00:56:28)
understood how to create a healthy,
(00:56:30)
loving household better than the men.
(00:56:32)
Kind of what we call the emotional labor
(00:56:34)
that they that's been undervalued.
(00:56:36)
>> Yes,
(00:56:37)
>> men aren't stepping up around that. So,
(00:56:39)
it's a very honest conversation. It's
(00:56:40)
like, okay, your wife's doing great. You
(00:56:43)
want to be supportive of her because you
(00:56:44)
need money. You need economic household.
(00:56:46)
>> But quite frankly, boss, what are you
(00:56:47)
bringing to the table? Do you feel like
(00:56:48)
in some ways I'm going to give an
(00:56:50)
example and this is just one example but
(00:56:52)
do you feel in some ways that women have
(00:56:55)
been lied to around
(00:56:58)
the need to you know be careerdriven and
(00:57:01)
earn as much as possible and delay
(00:57:03)
having kids and delay getting married as
(00:57:05)
long as you can until you're financially
(00:57:07)
stable? And I'll give you context around
(00:57:10)
this uh and maybe it's just case by
(00:57:12)
case. There's someone I know, I'm not
(00:57:14)
going to call them out, but there's
(00:57:15)
someone I know who is very career
(00:57:17)
focused and driven on their career for
(00:57:19)
probably the last 12 or 13 years and
(00:57:22)
since college and just always seemed a
(00:57:25)
little frustrated, always seemed a
(00:57:27)
little unhappy, just always seemed like
(00:57:29)
a little, I don't know, something was
(00:57:31)
always off
(00:57:33)
>> around the energy of this person. And
(00:57:35)
they just had a child, you know, maybe
(00:57:38)
six months ago, and I've never seen them
(00:57:40)
happier every time around. It's like
(00:57:42)
something transformed.
(00:57:44)
>> Yeah.
(00:57:44)
>> And there's And it's like she loves
(00:57:47)
being a mother. She She's like
(00:57:49)
>> it is just changed her world in a
(00:57:51)
positive way energetically. It's like
(00:57:54)
it's like she's on purpose.
(00:57:56)
>> Mhm.
(00:57:56)
>> And she hasn't stopped working. She's
(00:57:58)
gone back kind of part-time, but it's
(00:58:00)
like I can just see her come alive.
(00:58:03)
>> Mhm. And do you think there's in any way
(00:58:05)
women have been lied to about delay
(00:58:08)
having kids as long as possible, make as
(00:58:10)
much as money as you can, be financially
(00:58:12)
stable first, develop yourself in your
(00:58:14)
career, don't rely on the man to to do
(00:58:17)
this, otherwise you get it screwed over
(00:58:19)
where I just saw someone have the most
(00:58:21)
joy in the last 6 months of like
(00:58:23)
stepping into this role as a mother.
(00:58:26)
Maybe that's just one case, but what are
(00:58:28)
your thoughts on that?
(00:58:29)
>> I think the sort of you've been lied to
(00:58:33)
you worked hard, you became a baller
(00:58:35)
professionally, now you're miserable
(00:58:37)
because you didn't take the time to find
(00:58:38)
a man or have a family. I think that's a
(00:58:41)
little bit of this trope or this myth
(00:58:44)
from the far right that wants to take
(00:58:46)
women back to the 50s and 60s because
(00:58:51)
okay, what if that woman also wasn't
(00:58:55)
able to find a romantic partnership?
(00:58:58)
>> Yeah.
(00:58:58)
>> And was also economically insecure.
(00:59:00)
>> True. So, I don't I find sometimes
(00:59:03)
that's an excuse to try and take to
(00:59:06)
regress and repeal women's rights.
(00:59:08)
>> Now,
(00:59:10)
I think
(00:59:12)
now the reality is if a man focuses on
(00:59:15)
his career and is out of shape, not
(00:59:18)
especially nice, but a baller
(00:59:20)
professionally, he's still going to find
(00:59:22)
a mate.
(00:59:24)
>> And that's not as true for women,
(00:59:26)
>> right?
(00:59:27)
uh a a partner at a law firm who's a
(00:59:31)
male who's maybe just modestly
(00:59:34)
attractive and not that nice and not
(00:59:35)
that nurturing,
(00:59:37)
he's going to find a wife. I'm not sure.
(00:59:40)
I mean, it's just it's just a little bit
(00:59:41)
unfair, quite frankly, because we put
(00:59:44)
the same economic responsibilities on
(00:59:46)
women and the same expectations, but we
(00:59:49)
don't reward them romantically and
(00:59:51)
sexually with the same currency as we
(00:59:53)
reward a man for that focus. So quite
(00:59:55)
frank, but I don't think I I I think
(00:59:58)
women wanting to be economically
(01:00:00)
independent and enjoy having strangers
(01:00:03)
applaud for them on a stage financially
(01:00:06)
and professionally. I think we need more
(01:00:09)
of it. I do think that both men and
(01:00:11)
women need to make a real effort to be
(01:00:16)
appro to approach people, be
(01:00:17)
approachable, say yes, put yourself in
(01:00:20)
situations where you might meet
(01:00:21)
somebody. Maybe if there's not sparks on
(01:00:24)
the first date, give a second coffee a
(01:00:26)
chance. But this notion, I don't like
(01:00:29)
the rights trope or this narrative
(01:00:31)
around women have been lied to and they
(01:00:33)
should be home barefoot and pregnant. I
(01:00:35)
just think that's that's kind of
(01:00:37)
inadvertently saying,
(01:00:39)
>> this is not me politically saying these
(01:00:41)
things. I'm just curious about like
(01:00:42)
>> quite frankly, this is what Charlie Kirk
(01:00:44)
said,
(01:00:44)
>> that women are miserable. And here's the
(01:00:47)
data flies in the face of that because
(01:00:50)
you know who's really miserable is the
(01:00:51)
dude that wakes up in his 30s and isn't
(01:00:53)
in a relationship.
(01:00:54)
>> Yeah.
(01:00:55)
>> The data is pretty clear. Men need
(01:00:57)
relationships more than women. One of
(01:00:59)
the things I say in the book that's
(01:01:00)
gotten some push push back is
(01:01:03)
>> you I try to be very honest. I tell my
(01:01:04)
boys that if they're ever in the company
(01:01:06)
of women, they pay.
(01:01:08)
>> People say, "Well, that's sexist."
(01:01:10)
>> I think it's sexist. I think it's
(01:01:12)
generous.
(01:01:13)
>> It's adding value. It's being courteous.
(01:01:14)
It's being thoughtful. That's right.
(01:01:16)
>> It's like why is that sexist?
(01:01:18)
>> Well, the the what the way the land
(01:01:20)
>> offer to pay. If they say no, then okay,
(01:01:22)
you don't have to. I guess
(01:01:23)
>> you offer. I think you just pay. But
(01:01:24)
anyway, yeah.
(01:01:26)
>> And I'll give my land acknowledgement
(01:01:27)
now. So, the rationale that I try and
(01:01:30)
propose is that
(01:01:33)
men benefit more from relationships than
(01:01:35)
women. There's just, you know, widows
(01:01:36)
happier after their husband dies.
(01:01:38)
Widower is less happy. A woman's
(01:01:40)
fertility window is much shorter than a
(01:01:42)
man's. the downside of sex for a woman
(01:01:44)
is much greater than a man.
(01:01:45)
>> Bigger risk. Yeah.
(01:01:46)
>> So when you look at the fact that on
(01:01:48)
average a man's going to benefit more
(01:01:49)
from the relationship, that the woman is
(01:01:51)
taking more risk in terms of downside or
(01:01:53)
risk when her fertility window is
(01:01:55)
shorter and when you also acknowledge
(01:01:57)
that almost every mammal has some sort
(01:01:59)
of courtship ritual.
(01:02:01)
It makes sense for one way that you
(01:02:03)
recognize that asymmetry, one way you
(01:02:05)
step up and say, "I value your time. I
(01:02:08)
value this situation, if you will." One
(01:02:11)
easy way to recognize and acknowledge
(01:02:13)
that asymmetry is to pay. And also,
(01:02:15)
innately, regardless of what someone
(01:02:17)
might say, what I've told my 18-year-old
(01:02:19)
son is anytime you split the check with
(01:02:21)
anyone, it means they are never going to
(01:02:23)
kiss you and you are never going to kiss
(01:02:24)
them. That's the bottom line. And I
(01:02:27)
think those genes are wired into us for
(01:02:30)
thousands of years. And regardless of
(01:02:31)
what we say, well, it's who asked who
(01:02:33)
out.
(01:02:34)
>> I'm just saying to my boys in my view
(01:02:36)
that if you're in the company of women,
(01:02:38)
you pay. Yeah. to guys like you with who
(01:02:40)
are in great shape is not necessarily
(01:02:42)
because of the aesthetics of being in
(01:02:44)
great shape.
(01:02:45)
>> The discipline
(01:02:46)
>> it says you show up. It says you can
(01:02:48)
commit to something.
(01:02:49)
>> It says that you're on your game. It
(01:02:51)
says you're not up every night.
(01:02:53)
It says that you know how to show up
(01:02:54)
every day and do something and commit to
(01:02:56)
something.
(01:02:57)
>> So, but anyways, my point is that going
(01:03:00)
back to the I don't think I think
(01:03:03)
women's professional ascent is great for
(01:03:06)
them. I think over the long term it's
(01:03:08)
great for society and great for men.
(01:03:10)
>> But we also have to recognize there's
(01:03:12)
just some externalities and some
(01:03:14)
knock-on effects when we're in a society
(01:03:16)
where men are falling behind women
(01:03:19)
economically. Don't get in the way of
(01:03:21)
this, right? Fix this.
(01:03:24)
>> Get men back on track. And I don't even
(01:03:26)
like any program that specifically
(01:03:28)
targets men economically other than
(01:03:30)
investing more in vocational
(01:03:32)
programming, expanding freshman seats.
(01:03:33)
What I'm suggesting is a series of
(01:03:35)
public policy programs that would lift
(01:03:37)
all young people up.
(01:03:39)
>> Cuz it's not about it's not about the
(01:03:41)
guy making if the woman's in the
(01:03:44)
relationship is making 80,000. It's not
(01:03:46)
about the guy needing to make 81,
(01:03:48)
>> but the guy needs to be sort of in a
(01:03:50)
weight contributing. He needs to be in
(01:03:52)
that weight class where he's
(01:03:53)
contributing. Uh, and I think a lot of
(01:03:56)
unfortunately a lot of men right now,
(01:03:58)
young men are seduced by having a
(01:04:00)
reasonable fact some of life online and
(01:04:02)
then show up with no skills and no
(01:04:04)
ability to contribute to a relationship.
(01:04:06)
And I think that's and again when a
(01:04:10)
woman doesn't have a romantic
(01:04:11)
relationship, she pours that energy into
(01:04:12)
her friends and her professional life.
(01:04:14)
When a man doesn't have a relationship,
(01:04:16)
not always, but often, he pours that
(01:04:17)
energy
(01:04:18)
>> destructive things, right?
(01:04:19)
>> Into Yeah. uh you know into conspiracy
(01:04:22)
theory online goes extremely online
(01:04:25)
>> um you know all these mass shooters I
(01:04:28)
did some research on political violence
(01:04:31)
and the far left wants to bring the far
(01:04:33)
right far right wants to blame the far
(01:04:35)
left and it's a totally hollow argument
(01:04:37)
98.6% 6% of mass shooters are men.
(01:04:39)
Almost all political violence is
(01:04:41)
committed not only by men, but young
(01:04:43)
men. And these guys are less politically
(01:04:45)
engaged than probably you or me. What do
(01:04:47)
they have in common? They're young men,
(01:04:49)
not attaching to work, not attaching to
(01:04:51)
school, no relationships, economically
(01:04:53)
strained. They go extremely online, find
(01:04:56)
these conspiracy theories, they get
(01:04:58)
radicalized online, and then they have
(01:05:00)
access then they have access to guns.
(01:05:02)
And again, I feel I have to do another
(01:05:04)
land acknowledgement. I'm not suggesting
(01:05:06)
that it's women's responsibility to
(01:05:08)
solve this problem. I'm suggesting as a
(01:05:10)
society, if one group is struggling, we
(01:05:13)
can focus on lifting them up.
(01:05:14)
>> Yeah. And that's why I love that you
(01:05:16)
wrote this book, Notes on Being a Man.
(01:05:17)
And it's one of the reasons why, you
(01:05:19)
know, eight years ago I wrote The Mask
(01:05:20)
of Masculinity because I went down my
(01:05:23)
own path of
(01:05:26)
realizing and coming to the awareness
(01:05:28)
that all of these, you know, shootings,
(01:05:31)
the domest most of the domestic violence
(01:05:33)
in the USA, in the world, um, and just
(01:05:36)
any destruction happening in the world
(01:05:38)
is typically from men who haven't healed
(01:05:41)
their traumas or haven't created a
(01:05:44)
healthy, conscious
(01:05:46)
respect about themselves. and having
(01:05:48)
more tools on how to navigate society
(01:05:50)
and the world better. And the mass
(01:05:52)
shooters that you're talking about, they
(01:05:53)
have a lot of traumas that they haven't
(01:05:55)
healed yet. They haven't processed the
(01:05:57)
wounds of whatever they've gone through.
(01:05:59)
They don't have good relationships.
(01:06:01)
They're isolated. They're alone, or at
(01:06:03)
least that's how probably they're
(01:06:04)
feeling. And they don't have the tools
(01:06:07)
on how to navigate their mind or their
(01:06:08)
emotions on how to get beyond those
(01:06:10)
things that are destructive.
(01:06:12)
>> Yeah. And I think that's what you've
(01:06:13)
been talking about in notes on being a
(01:06:15)
man is how to overcome the loneliness
(01:06:18)
feeling, the sadness, the lack of
(01:06:20)
resourcefulness, and having the courage
(01:06:22)
to be in the world dealing with failure
(01:06:26)
over and over and over again and not
(01:06:28)
going back into a a cave in your your
(01:06:31)
parents' basement saying, "This girl
(01:06:33)
rejected me," or "This guy made fun of
(01:06:35)
me. I'm worthless now. I'm traumatized
(01:06:38)
and I'm going to go destroy the world
(01:06:40)
around me." And I think when men,
(01:06:43)
especially younger boys, cuz I was very
(01:06:45)
internally destructive most of my life.
(01:06:48)
I said a lot of mean things to myself.
(01:06:50)
>> I'd physically hurt myself. I was never
(01:06:52)
like cutting myself or like going into
(01:06:54)
alcohol,
(01:06:55)
>> but it was more like how can I get into
(01:06:57)
as many fights as possible to be
(01:06:59)
destructive,
(01:07:00)
>> to inflict pain on myself and other
(01:07:02)
people. Thankfully, sports gave me a
(01:07:05)
safe outlet to do that where I could do
(01:07:06)
it in a constructive way, but I was
(01:07:08)
still destructive in the process of
(01:07:11)
wanting to inflict as much pain on
(01:07:13)
myself and others cuz I just felt like I
(01:07:15)
was bad and wrong. I felt shameful
(01:07:18)
>> growing up dealing with sexual abuse
(01:07:20)
from a man that I didn't know. I felt
(01:07:21)
like I was worthless.
(01:07:22)
>> Y
(01:07:23)
>> my brother was in prison for four years
(01:07:25)
when I was eight. So, just the stress of
(01:07:27)
that on the family dynamics, my parents
(01:07:29)
going through divorce. Listen, I was a
(01:07:31)
white man born in in Ohio in America.
(01:07:34)
So, I was born on third base in some
(01:07:36)
ways, but that doesn't hold back the
(01:07:38)
psychological
(01:07:40)
stress and mess that I had to deal with
(01:07:42)
and a lot of people have to deal with.
(01:07:44)
So I could have been completely
(01:07:46)
destructive, but there was different
(01:07:48)
moments in my life and different mentors
(01:07:50)
like like you mentioned there's a lack
(01:07:51)
of now
(01:07:53)
that that came to me and gave me a high
(01:07:56)
five that put their arm around me
(01:07:57)
emotionally, spiritually, physically
(01:08:00)
>> and said, "Why are you so destructive?
(01:08:02)
Why are you trying to hurt yourself so
(01:08:03)
much? Why you why are you reacting this
(01:08:05)
way? Like why are you getting so angry
(01:08:08)
>> of the littlest things?"
(01:08:09)
>> Yeah.
(01:08:09)
>> Like come over here.
(01:08:11)
>> Yeah. And I had mentor and I and I
(01:08:13)
allowed myself to be coached by mentors.
(01:08:16)
I didn't push them away. I I see it out
(01:08:18)
as well. And there were different
(01:08:20)
seasons in life and stages that I had to
(01:08:23)
fail over and over again and realize,
(01:08:25)
oh, this behavior is not supportive to
(01:08:28)
me or other people. It's hurting people
(01:08:30)
around me, friends, family, girlfriends,
(01:08:32)
whatever it might be. And I never
(01:08:34)
physically hurt anyone, but just like my
(01:08:36)
behavior, my reactions when I was
(01:08:38)
younger, it wasn't conscious. It wasn't
(01:08:41)
healthy and it was based on a wound or
(01:08:43)
multiple wounds that I didn't know how
(01:08:45)
to navigate. I didn't know how to heal.
(01:08:47)
And it wasn't until I was 30 when I
(01:08:50)
opened up about sexual abuse for the
(01:08:52)
first time to anyone.
(01:08:53)
>> Yeah.
(01:08:54)
>> And I finally was able to release some
(01:08:57)
of the shame.
(01:08:58)
>> Yeah.
(01:08:59)
>> And then I went down the rabbit hole of
(01:09:00)
studying why I was behaving this way
(01:09:03)
most of my life. Yeah.
(01:09:04)
>> How I could start the healing process
(01:09:07)
and how I could be a better person in
(01:09:09)
the world. It's the same time when I
(01:09:10)
launched the school of greatness because
(01:09:11)
I was like, I need to humble myself. I
(01:09:13)
need to learn from great men like
(01:09:15)
yourself who have mastered this or
(01:09:17)
understand the science of this and how
(01:09:20)
can I start to apply this to myself? How
(01:09:21)
can I be a student of life? And I feel
(01:09:24)
like that's where a lot of young men are
(01:09:27)
struggling. They don't know how to
(01:09:28)
manage the emotional, psychological,
(01:09:30)
spiritual, physical traumas that they've
(01:09:32)
been through.
(01:09:33)
>> Yeah. And listen, it may not be as
(01:09:35)
traumatic as what a lot of people are
(01:09:37)
going through in the world, but still,
(01:09:38)
you've got to learn how to overcome it.
(01:09:40)
>> And when we have the tools like your
(01:09:42)
book on how to navigate
(01:09:45)
the wounds that we've all been through,
(01:09:47)
men and women, I feel like we can become
(01:09:50)
more peaceful internally. And when we're
(01:09:52)
peaceful internally, we're usually
(01:09:54)
better externally. But most men don't
(01:09:56)
know how to have peace in their heart.
(01:09:59)
>> Yeah. A lot there. So,
(01:10:00)
>> what are you hearing me? What opened up
(01:10:02)
for you there? Well, no, there there's a
(01:10:03)
lot of I I like a lot of that. Um the
(01:10:07)
>> So, I would I would reverse engineer a
(01:10:10)
lot of the world's problems to old men
(01:10:12)
who won't leave
(01:10:13)
>> really
(01:10:14)
>> and they're clinging to power and they
(01:10:16)
move to autocracy and then they
(01:10:18)
weaponize young men who have a lack of
(01:10:20)
economic or romantic possibilities. The
(01:10:23)
middle class in America, which I think
(01:10:24)
is the greatest innovation in history,
(01:10:26)
is an accident. The natural state of a
(01:10:29)
of being in our species is that a small
(01:10:32)
number of men through luck, inheritance,
(01:10:34)
brute strength accrete a
(01:10:36)
disproportionate amount of power
(01:10:38)
uh and then get a disproportionate
(01:10:40)
amount of the economics and the mating
(01:10:42)
opportunities. 80% of women have
(01:10:44)
reproduced through modern history, only
(01:10:45)
40% of men. And what happens to the 60%
(01:10:49)
of men who can reproduce is that the
(01:10:51)
older men who won't leave weaponize
(01:10:53)
their anger for war or for nationalism.
(01:10:57)
Right? The most unstable violent
(01:10:58)
societies in the world have a
(01:11:00)
disproportionate amount of one thing and
(01:11:02)
that is young men with a lack of
(01:11:03)
romantic or economic opportunities.
(01:11:05)
They're very easily weaponized.
(01:11:07)
>> Interesting.
(01:11:08)
>> And we're producing way too many of them
(01:11:09)
in the United States.
(01:11:11)
So you have and then going back to your
(01:11:15)
experience,
(01:11:17)
you've been I think very brave and
(01:11:19)
really helpful to a lot of men because
(01:11:22)
you've been very open about your own
(01:11:23)
abuse.
(01:11:24)
But so two 15year-olds, both abused,
(01:11:28)
right? Both sexually abused, a girl and
(01:11:30)
a boy. Neither crime is any less or more
(01:11:32)
heinous. But the studies I've read is
(01:11:34)
that the boy when he gets older is 7 to
(01:11:36)
10 times more likely to engage in self
(01:11:39)
harm than the girl. Mhm.
(01:11:41)
>> Yeah.
(01:11:42)
>> Cuz men those men don't usually have a a
(01:11:44)
forum of sharing. You know, it's one in
(01:11:46)
six
(01:11:47)
>> um men have been sexually abused, one in
(01:11:49)
four women, I believe, unless I'm
(01:11:51)
reversing the stat. But um but just
(01:11:53)
going back to
(01:11:56)
So what it ends up is that while boys
(01:11:59)
are physically stronger, they're
(01:12:01)
emotionally and neurologically much
(01:12:03)
weaker than girls. Mhm.
(01:12:04)
>> The moment a boy loses a male role model
(01:12:07)
at that moment through death, divorce,
(01:12:09)
abandonment, he becomes more likely to
(01:12:11)
be incarcerated than graduate from
(01:12:13)
college.
(01:12:13)
>> Wow.
(01:12:14)
>> What's interesting is that in single
(01:12:15)
parent homes, girls have the same
(01:12:17)
outcomes as dual parent homes. They're a
(01:12:20)
little bit more promiscuous because
(01:12:21)
they're looking for male attention in
(01:12:22)
the wrong areas.
(01:12:23)
>> Same rates of college attendance, same
(01:12:25)
income. A boy, wham. So we just have to
(01:12:29)
acknowledge that boys are weaker and we
(01:12:32)
need to create a societal norm where the
(01:12:35)
moment a boy clearly doesn't have a lot
(01:12:37)
of male mentorship in his life. Even
(01:12:39)
saying that boys needed men was
(01:12:40)
triggering 5 years ago. This
(01:12:42)
>> they do need men.
(01:12:43)
>> Those this dialogue has gotten so much
(01:12:45)
more productive and it's mostly been led
(01:12:47)
by women who recognize
(01:12:50)
>> well single single mothers without a man
(01:12:52)
in the in the home. It's they can
(01:12:54)
probably see their young boys
(01:12:55)
struggling. they struggle. But also men
(01:12:58)
aren't stepping up because in New York
(01:13:02)
uh and I think at the same approximately
(01:13:03)
the same numbers in LA, there are three
(01:13:05)
times as many women applying to be big
(01:13:07)
sisters as men applying to be big
(01:13:08)
brothers.
(01:13:09)
>> Why is that? Just men more selfish and
(01:13:11)
just don't want to be as generous with
(01:13:13)
mentorship.
(01:13:14)
>> I think naturally they're not as
(01:13:15)
nurturing. And two,
(01:13:17)
>> I think there's a taboo that say you're
(01:13:20)
a guy in your 30s and you like the idea
(01:13:21)
of hanging out and helping a young boy,
(01:13:23)
you could provide paternal and fraternal
(01:13:25)
care. You're worried that people are
(01:13:27)
going to suspect you of being a
(01:13:28)
pedophile.
(01:13:29)
>> That's true. That's interesting.
(01:13:31)
>> So when I was on Bill Maher, I said, you
(01:13:34)
know, we have an obligation to get
(01:13:36)
involved in teen's life. And Bill said,
(01:13:37)
oh, if I get involved in a 15-y old
(01:13:38)
boy's life, you know, no, no, no. And
(01:13:40)
the whole audience laughed. I'm like,
(01:13:42)
that's exactly the problem. Because
(01:13:45)
there are a lot of men out there that
(01:13:47)
think, well, one, I don't want anyone to
(01:13:49)
be suspicious of me, and two, I'm not an
(01:13:51)
adolescent psychiatrist. I'm not a
(01:13:53)
baller.
(01:13:54)
>> That I I can tell you as someone who b
(01:13:56)
men mentors young men, it is so easy to
(01:13:58)
add value.
(01:13:59)
>> Just showing up and playing basketball
(01:14:01)
at the recck club like for an hour,
(01:14:03)
>> you have value.
(01:14:04)
>> Yeah.
(01:14:04)
>> No, no, no. You can't survive on
(01:14:06)
pineapple juice and creatine, you know.
(01:14:08)
No, you you got to you got to spend less
(01:14:11)
time gaming. No, your mom is not your
(01:14:13)
enemy. Come on, man. She's on your side.
(01:14:16)
She may not She may not get it right all
(01:14:17)
the time, but she's on your side. Like,
(01:14:19)
oh, you feel like, "What did you eat
(01:14:21)
today?" Right. Are you exercising?
(01:14:23)
>> Yeah. You're up till 4 a.m. on the
(01:14:25)
>> right. Oh, you're really upset you're
(01:14:26)
not going to to your prom. Did you ask
(01:14:28)
anybody?
(01:14:29)
>> Did you ask anybody? All right. Well,
(01:14:31)
then you're choosing not to go. This is
(01:14:34)
your choice, right? So, it's so I have
(01:14:37)
found the easiest job I've ever had was
(01:14:40)
mentoring young men. They make so many
(01:14:43)
stupid decisions, Louis.
(01:14:44)
>> I made a lot of stupid decisions.
(01:14:46)
>> I mean, just you just start asking them
(01:14:48)
questions. Why?
(01:14:50)
>> You got a good job. You just got a job.
(01:14:52)
Your mom is sick, but you're going to
(01:14:54)
move to Alaska. Why? I saw this amazing
(01:14:57)
documentary on Alaska. I'm like, have
(01:14:59)
you ever been?
(01:15:00)
>> Why don't we do this? Why don't you save
(01:15:02)
a little bit of money, take a trip
(01:15:03)
there, and then decide if you really
(01:15:05)
want to move to Alaska from Maryland
(01:15:07)
right now. Is that a good idea?
(01:15:09)
>> Just a couple questions. And not only
(01:15:10)
that,
(01:15:11)
>> they will listen to you.
(01:15:13)
>> They don't listen to their mom. And
(01:15:15)
what's weird is sometimes or a lot of
(01:15:17)
times a boy who's a teenager will listen
(01:15:19)
more to his dad's friends than to him.
(01:15:20)
>> Yeah.
(01:15:21)
>> So, I I just think we need we as men
(01:15:24)
need to get involved in a boy's life.
(01:15:27)
That's the single point of failure is
(01:15:29)
when a boy loses a male role model. And
(01:15:32)
there's a lot of really wonderful men
(01:15:34)
out there who maybe don't have their own
(01:15:36)
families yet, who have a little bit of
(01:15:38)
spare time and think, you know what, I'd
(01:15:39)
be pretty good at this and I would enjoy
(01:15:41)
it.
(01:15:42)
>> And it's really easy. Big Brothers,
(01:15:43)
there's a ton of mentorship programs,
(01:15:45)
but for some reason,
(01:15:47)
>> men aren't stepping up.
(01:15:49)
>> I've got a few final questions for you
(01:15:51)
before we get you out on Bill's show
(01:15:52)
here today. Um, but what was your
(01:15:55)
relationship like with your father and
(01:15:57)
what was the biggest lesson he taught
(01:15:59)
you that you still apply today?
(01:16:03)
Generous question. Look, my dad my dad
(01:16:06)
wasn't very sophisticated. He he got
(01:16:08)
pulled out of school at the age of 13. I
(01:16:09)
think he got a lot of validation from
(01:16:12)
attention and affirmation from women.
(01:16:14)
And I jokingly say, and it but there's
(01:16:16)
some truth in it, that being a handsome
(01:16:19)
man with a Scottish accent in 70s
(01:16:21)
California meant that he could not only
(01:16:23)
think with his dick, he could listen to
(01:16:24)
it. My dad was married and divorced four
(01:16:26)
times.
(01:16:27)
>> Wow.
(01:16:27)
>> He started his that we know of. He
(01:16:29)
started his third marriage while he was
(01:16:30)
still with my mom.
(01:16:32)
>> So my dad quite frankly was just really
(01:16:36)
had a really tough time with monogamy.
(01:16:38)
And that wasn't the worst of it. The
(01:16:40)
thing that really strained my
(01:16:42)
relationship with my father is that he
(01:16:45)
was not kind to my mom.
(01:16:47)
>> And when my parents got divorced, my dad
(01:16:52)
>> How old were you then?
(01:16:52)
>> I was nine.
(01:16:53)
>> Okay.
(01:16:54)
>> My dad could have made mine and my
(01:16:57)
mother's life much easier with a little
(01:16:59)
bit of money. And he didn't. and and not
(01:17:02)
having your dad around was bad. But a
(01:17:04)
mom who was financially insecure and
(01:17:06)
felt emotionally very damaged was just
(01:17:09)
created a household of constant sort of
(01:17:12)
you it was like you always had high
(01:17:13)
blood pressure. You were wondering
(01:17:14)
>> fight or flight always.
(01:17:16)
>> Yeah. And she was just very easily
(01:17:17)
upset. She was a strong woman but she
(01:17:19)
was dealing with a lot. So I resented my
(01:17:23)
father for a long time. I used to go for
(01:17:25)
long periods without speaking to him.
(01:17:27)
And then the big unlock for me and what
(01:17:31)
I would recommend for anybody, the
(01:17:32)
biggest unlock of my life was the
(01:17:34)
following.
(01:17:36)
I was constantly keeping score. My dad
(01:17:38)
wasn't a very wasn't we was an okay dad,
(01:17:40)
not a very good dad, but I'm not so I'm
(01:17:42)
not going to be a good son. And then
(01:17:44)
what I realized is
(01:17:45)
>> I would get a lot of joy and reward from
(01:17:48)
having a good relationship with my
(01:17:49)
father. So the unlock is the following.
(01:17:51)
Look at your relationships and rather
(01:17:53)
than having a scorecard, put it away and
(01:17:55)
say, "What kind of partner do I want to
(01:17:57)
be? What kind of boss do I want to be?
(01:17:59)
What kind of son do I want to be? What
(01:18:01)
kind of brother do I want to be?" And
(01:18:03)
maybe your sister didn't show up when
(01:18:05)
your dad was sick. But do I want to be a
(01:18:08)
loving, generous brother? Yeah, I do.
(01:18:12)
So, put away the scorecard and just hold
(01:18:14)
yourself to that standard. And I decided
(01:18:16)
about 20 or 30 years ago to put away the
(01:18:18)
resentment of my dad
(01:18:20)
>> and say I really want to be a loving
(01:18:22)
generous son. And I have been for the
(01:18:23)
last 20 or 30 years. My father passed
(01:18:25)
about four months ago.
(01:18:27)
>> And my dad mellowed as he got older. He
(01:18:29)
got more generous. Couldn't couldn't get
(01:18:31)
off the phone without saying a couple
(01:18:33)
times that he loved me. Wow.
(01:18:34)
>> And the first time I heard that when I
(01:18:36)
was 40, I'm like,
(01:18:37)
>> "Wow."
(01:18:38)
>> I'm like, "Dad, I don't need that now. I
(01:18:40)
could have used it when I was eight, but
(01:18:42)
then I leaned into it." And so what I
(01:18:44)
would say is the big learning is people
(01:18:46)
are flawed. Put away the scorecard.
(01:18:49)
Decide what kind of what kind of person
(01:18:51)
you want to be in that relationship. And
(01:18:53)
the other big learning was my dad
(01:18:54)
evolved. My dad was a better dad to my
(01:18:56)
halfsister as daughter by his third
(01:18:58)
marriage than he was to me. And that's
(01:18:59)
evolution.
(01:19:00)
>> That's cool.
(01:19:00)
>> He got much more loving and kinder as he
(01:19:03)
got older. Uh so and you know I also
(01:19:07)
just little things. I've gone entirely
(01:19:08)
the other way. My dad was so traumatized
(01:19:10)
by money. He was so cheap. I've gone the
(01:19:12)
other way. I don't go out unless I can
(01:19:14)
pay for everybody. Not that I do.
(01:19:15)
>> Yeah.
(01:19:16)
>> Because, you know, I'm at a point now
(01:19:17)
where all my male friends are trying to
(01:19:19)
show how big their dick is, and we're
(01:19:20)
all fighting over the check,
(01:19:22)
>> but [laughter]
(01:19:23)
but I also am very affectionate with my
(01:19:26)
boys. My father wasn't very affectionate
(01:19:27)
with me. I decided I'm taking affection
(01:19:29)
back. You know, I kissed my boys on the
(01:19:31)
lips, which they stopped doing when I
(01:19:32)
was 15. But my best friend, Lee, his
(01:19:35)
father was this guy, Lee Lotus Jr., who
(01:19:37)
was this the guy looked like Bert
(01:19:38)
Reynolds. And when he'd come pick up Lee
(01:19:40)
at college, UCLA, he'd walk in to the
(01:19:43)
fraternity or to Leah's apartment and
(01:19:45)
he'd roll up this big handsome guy and
(01:19:48)
Lee was a big handsome guy and they'd
(01:19:50)
kiss and it just seemed so natural. I
(01:19:52)
guess that's Italian. So yeah, just real
(01:19:54)
real quick. I kiss
(01:19:56)
>> and I'm like, "Wow, I like whoa." And I
(01:20:00)
remember thinking if Bertr Reynolds can
(01:20:01)
kiss his kid, his son, so can I. So, I'm
(01:20:05)
I'm really one thing I got going the
(01:20:08)
other way was I got a lot of affection.
(01:20:11)
I decided to be very affectionate with
(01:20:12)
my boys. And two,
(01:20:13)
>> that's cool.
(01:20:14)
>> Um I make my living like you telling
(01:20:17)
stories and a lot of that is not my
(01:20:19)
fault. I got a lot of that DNA from my
(01:20:21)
father. My father can hold a room like
(01:20:23)
nobody. And so there's no reason not to
(01:20:25)
be grateful. Like you're big and huge
(01:20:27)
and good-looking. Like there's no reason
(01:20:29)
not to be grateful to your parents. Even
(01:20:31)
though they didn't go out of their way
(01:20:32)
to give it to you, they did. And so
(01:20:35)
there's no reason not to be grateful.
(01:20:37)
Like, God, I got I got this skill from
(01:20:39)
my father. So
(01:20:40)
>> you're alive because of him.
(01:20:41)
>> There you go.
(01:20:42)
>> You want to be here.
(01:20:43)
>> Life helps. But the big unlock for me
(01:20:46)
>> was put away the scorecard. Just be the
(01:20:49)
man in the relationship you want to be
(01:20:50)
and hold yourself to that standard.
(01:20:52)
>> Is there anything you wish you would
(01:20:54)
have said or he would have said or any
(01:20:56)
interactions you wish you would have had
(01:20:57)
with your father?
(01:20:58)
>> No.
(01:21:00)
The nice thing about my relationship
(01:21:02)
with my father, my father lived to be
(01:21:03)
95. Nothing nothing went unsaid. That's
(01:21:06)
beautiful. We were
(01:21:08)
>> very emotional with each other, very
(01:21:10)
emotive.
(01:21:11)
>> He was constantly couldn't stop telling
(01:21:13)
me how proud he was of me.
(01:21:15)
>> That's nice.
(01:21:15)
>> Yeah, it was really nice. Um,
(01:21:17)
>> it may have been a rough childhood
(01:21:19)
seeing, you know, him go with different
(01:21:21)
women and abandon your mom in that way,
(01:21:23)
but
(01:21:23)
>> Were your parents together or were they
(01:21:24)
divorced?
(01:21:25)
>> They were together. They got divorced
(01:21:26)
when I was a teenager. So,
(01:21:28)
>> but they were they never showed each
(01:21:29)
other love. So, they were there. They
(01:21:32)
showed us kids love. I was the youngest
(01:21:33)
of four,
(01:21:34)
>> but they were constantly fighting and it
(01:21:36)
was very emotionally it didn't feel safe
(01:21:38)
at home. I left home at 13. I begged
(01:21:40)
them to send me away to a boarding
(01:21:42)
school. They didn't want me to leave.
(01:21:43)
>> Right. You want
(01:21:44)
>> My brother just got out of prison from
(01:21:46)
four years. It was very traumatic going
(01:21:47)
to a visiting room of a prison every
(01:21:49)
weekend. I didn't have any friends for
(01:21:52)
four years because you're in a small
(01:21:53)
town in Ohio. Everyone knew in the
(01:21:55)
neighborhood that my brother had been to
(01:21:56)
prison. So the parents wouldn't let
(01:21:58)
their kids hang out with me.
(01:22:00)
>> Yeah.
(01:22:00)
>> My parents were financially struggling,
(01:22:02)
stressed. They weren't showing, you
(01:22:04)
know, affection or love. It was just
(01:22:05)
anger. It was sadness.
(01:22:07)
>> That's right.
(01:22:07)
>> So, we had a home. It's not like I was
(01:22:09)
homeless. Um, I was going to school, but
(01:22:12)
it was like
(01:22:13)
>> it was just not emotionally
(01:22:16)
safe feeling. I didn't feel physically
(01:22:20)
like I wasn't under harm, but
(01:22:21)
emotionally it just didn't feel safe.
(01:22:24)
>> Yeah. Look,
(01:22:26)
>> they were doing their best, you know?
(01:22:27)
It's like they only had the tools they
(01:22:29)
had. So,
(01:22:29)
>> yeah. And it's good that at some point
(01:22:32)
you just forgive them, right? If they
(01:22:33)
tried. I think the box every parent
(01:22:35)
needs to check is to be a better dad or
(01:22:38)
mom to you than your father or your
(01:22:39)
mother was to you. And my dad checked
(01:22:41)
that box.
(01:22:42)
>> And you know, there's a lot,
(01:22:46)
you know, that I took from that
(01:22:49)
relationship. And also when your parents
(01:22:51)
get divorced as mine did, you have a
(01:22:52)
tendency to sanctify once and demonize
(01:22:55)
the other. You have a tendency to go one
(01:22:57)
was wrong, one was right.
(01:22:59)
>> And what you realize is neither is
(01:23:01)
perfect.
(01:23:02)
>> But the reality is Lewis is that my dad
(01:23:04)
and it was a different age. My dad kind
(01:23:06)
of left it when I was nine. He moved to
(01:23:08)
Ohio. I didn't see him a lot and that
(01:23:11)
was not ideal. Uh fortunately, I had a
(01:23:15)
lot of men. I'm doing this live thing
(01:23:16)
tonight downtown in LA and I've invited
(01:23:18)
two of my mentor two men who got
(01:23:21)
involved in my life randomly when I was
(01:23:22)
a kid and I reached out to him. They're
(01:23:24)
in their 70s and 80s and said will you
(01:23:26)
come to this thing tonight?
(01:23:27)
>> That's cool. Um, you know, one was a
(01:23:29)
stock bro. I I I my mom's boyfriend gave
(01:23:32)
me 200 bucks and said, "Go to one of
(01:23:35)
those fancy." I started asking about
(01:23:36)
stocks and he said, "Here's $200. Go to
(01:23:38)
those fancy brokerages in Westwood." And
(01:23:40)
I walked him with $200 at the age of 13.
(01:23:42)
>> Like, what do I do?
(01:23:42)
>> Into Dean Witter. And I said, "Hi, I
(01:23:44)
have $200." And they said, "Wait here."
(01:23:46)
And this guy with this Jewro came out
(01:23:48)
named Sci. And he goes, "I'm Scarero."
(01:23:50)
And he took me back to his cubicle and
(01:23:51)
he gave me my first lesson in the stock
(01:23:53)
market. And he said, "When there's more
(01:23:55)
buyers and sellers, the sellers raise
(01:23:57)
the price until there's fewer buyers."
(01:24:00)
He gave me the first lesson. And then I
(01:24:01)
came back the next day and he said, "All
(01:24:03)
right, let's look at some stocks." He's
(01:24:04)
like, "What are you interested in?" I'm
(01:24:05)
like, "Well, I love the movies." And
(01:24:07)
Close Encounters is the third kind of
(01:24:09)
just come out. And he said, "Okay,
(01:24:10)
Columbia Pictures is the company that
(01:24:12)
made it. It's a stock." We bought 16
(01:24:14)
shares of Columbia Pictures for like 12
(01:24:17)
bucks a pop. And every day for two
(01:24:19)
years, I used to go into the pay phone
(01:24:22)
booth in Emerson, put in my two dimes
(01:24:24)
and call to check in on my stocks. And
(01:24:26)
once or twice a week, I'd go into the
(01:24:28)
Dean Witter Reynolds office in Westwood
(01:24:30)
and he'd give me another lesson on
(01:24:32)
stocks. And he used to call my mom and
(01:24:35)
he wasn't trying to sell her. We had no
(01:24:36)
money. And he would just say nice things
(01:24:38)
about me to my mom. And I used to hang
(01:24:39)
out with this guy at his office for a
(01:24:42)
couple years until I went to high
(01:24:43)
school. And this is a flex, but I'll
(01:24:46)
make it. I've made a lot of money
(01:24:48)
starting and selling companies. I've
(01:24:50)
made
(01:24:52)
tens of millions of dollars investing in
(01:24:54)
stocks. I've been investing in stocks
(01:24:56)
since I was 13 because of size Sarah.
(01:24:58)
>> Wow.
(01:24:59)
>> So, in addition to giving me like some
(01:25:01)
confidence that this nice impressive man
(01:25:04)
liked me, uh, you know, it taught me
(01:25:07)
this incredible life skill around
(01:25:09)
investing. So,
(01:25:11)
>> is he coming tonight? Is he coming
(01:25:12)
tonight?
(01:25:12)
>> Yeah, he's coming tonight.
(01:25:13)
>> That's cool.
(01:25:13)
>> Yeah. First time I've seen him in
(01:25:16)
45 years.
(01:25:17)
>> No way.
(01:25:18)
>> Yeah, we stay in contact over text.
(01:25:20)
>> You haven't seen him?
(01:25:21)
>> I haven't seen him in 45 years.
(01:25:22)
>> That's incredible. You see him tonight?
(01:25:24)
>> Nice. I'm gonna see him tonight. Yeah,
(01:25:25)
>> that is cool. Send me a photo of it.
(01:25:28)
>> But I was really lucky. I had I had this
(01:25:32)
this guy and his girlfriend noticed that
(01:25:34)
my mom and I, you know, it was just my
(01:25:35)
mom and I one day knocked on our door
(01:25:37)
and he said, "Does your son want to come
(01:25:38)
horseback riding with us?" And he and
(01:25:40)
his girlfriend used to take me horseback
(01:25:42)
riding. And just having men in your life
(01:25:45)
that can give you a little bit of
(01:25:46)
advice. And not only that, just give you
(01:25:48)
the sense you have value.
(01:25:50)
>> Yes.
(01:25:51)
>> Uh I think is is huge. But anyways, back
(01:25:54)
to you know, it sound it sounds like
(01:25:56)
when did your dad pass?
(01:25:58)
>> Three years ago. Yeah.
(01:25:59)
>> Yeah. So look, you you I think as you
(01:26:02)
get older, you try and focus on the good
(01:26:04)
things.
(01:26:05)
>> Yes. You try and forgive your dad and
(01:26:07)
whatever you think he got wrong, you try
(01:26:10)
and course correct around for your own
(01:26:12)
boys. I think that's the basis of trying
(01:26:15)
to be more human, evolve,
(01:26:17)
>> but the one thing
(01:26:20)
>> the one thing I would
(01:26:22)
>> I mean there I've had five one things,
(01:26:24)
but the thing I really took away from my
(01:26:26)
father, his real flaw that quite frankly
(01:26:29)
was not great for me and took some time
(01:26:32)
to repair. I think the best thing you
(01:26:34)
can do for boys is just treat their
(01:26:36)
mother really well. They just see it. I
(01:26:39)
really I really go out of my way. I take
(01:26:42)
some real arrows from my wife sometimes
(01:26:44)
in front of the boys.
(01:26:46)
>> I really try to demonstrate
(01:26:49)
emotional and emotion and affection
(01:26:51)
around her. I defer to her judgment in
(01:26:53)
front of the boys.
(01:26:54)
>> I just try to make sure the boys know
(01:26:57)
that their mother is really valuable and
(01:26:59)
they see it by the way I treat her. I
(01:27:01)
think that's going to create much more
(01:27:04)
healthy relationships for them. I think
(01:27:06)
that's the best thing you can do for
(01:27:07)
your boys is just treat your even if
(01:27:09)
you're divorced,
(01:27:10)
>> just be really good to the mother. Uh uh
(01:27:14)
cuz my dad wasn't and I think it really
(01:27:16)
quite frankly damaged my relationship
(01:27:19)
probably with women or maybe maybe I'm
(01:27:22)
just like a lot of people looking for
(01:27:23)
trauma from my parents and I'm just a
(01:27:24)
selfish person. But I think I could have
(01:27:26)
been kinder to women when I was a young
(01:27:28)
man. I don't think my dad was a great
(01:27:29)
role model for that.
(01:27:30)
>> Yeah. You mentioned earlier and we got
(01:27:32)
to wrap it up here in a few minutes for
(01:27:33)
you, but you mentioned earlier
(01:27:35)
>> that your dad used to watch Bill Bill
(01:27:37)
Maher all the time. All the time,
(01:27:39)
favorite show. And you're going to go on
(01:27:41)
there here in a couple hours, you know,
(01:27:42)
right down the street.
(01:27:44)
>> Um, and you said every time you go on
(01:27:46)
there, you get a little nervous but also
(01:27:47)
excited because you feel like he's
(01:27:49)
watching.
(01:27:50)
>> I almost get a panic attack every I do a
(01:27:52)
lot of TV. I do a lot of speaking in
(01:27:55)
front of, you know, I'm flexing
(01:27:57)
thousands of people. I freaked the out
(01:28:00)
on that show, Lewis, because I think my
(01:28:02)
dad's watching.
(01:28:03)
>> Wow.
(01:28:03)
>> And my dad watched Premier League
(01:28:05)
football and Bill Maher. That's it.
(01:28:08)
>> What is the What is the message? You
(01:28:10)
know, you're about to go in there, so
(01:28:12)
I'm going to ground you for a moment.
(01:28:14)
What's the message
(01:28:15)
>> that you really want to make sure you
(01:28:17)
land no matter where Bill takes you all
(01:28:19)
over the place. What would you really
(01:28:21)
like to land that if your dad's watching
(01:28:24)
you feel like will be really special
(01:28:26)
that you get to share a specific
(01:28:27)
message?
(01:28:29)
>> Well, the message I would want if I
(01:28:31)
could wrap my arms around all young men
(01:28:33)
and just just give them a mission and
(01:28:38)
and just trust me on this. Trust me, you
(01:28:41)
know, search your feelings. You know
(01:28:42)
this to be true. it would be really try
(01:28:45)
to resist the temptation
(01:28:48)
to live your life on a screen with an
(01:28:49)
algorithm and that at the end of your
(01:28:53)
life or even in your 20s and 30s
(01:28:56)
>> Mhm. The anxiety and loneliness
(01:29:00)
you're going to you're going to feel
(01:29:03)
without establishing relationships and
(01:29:05)
taking those risks
(01:29:07)
is going to be so much greater than any
(01:29:10)
fear you might have around what lays
(01:29:14)
beyond that room. And that is there is a
(01:29:17)
there is an enormous correlation between
(01:29:20)
the amount of the ratio of time you
(01:29:22)
spend in the presence of other people
(01:29:24)
versus the time you spend on a screen.
(01:29:27)
>> I don't think we've really come to grips
(01:29:28)
with the fact that young men are up
(01:29:31)
against an indomitable foe, a big tech
(01:29:34)
that literally makes billions for every
(01:29:37)
additional minute they can get you on
(01:29:39)
your phone and away from friends,
(01:29:41)
mentors, and mates. Get out of the
(01:29:44)
house. Take risks. Express friendship.
(01:29:47)
Express romantic relationship. Apply for
(01:29:49)
jobs you're not qualified for.
(01:29:52)
>> You know, take as many shots as you can,
(01:29:55)
>> but get, for God's sakes, get out of the
(01:29:57)
house.
(01:29:58)
>> Yeah. Get out. Notes on being a man.
(01:30:00)
Number one New York Times bestseller.
(01:30:02)
Make sure you guys grab a copy right
(01:30:03)
now. Uh follow you on all of your
(01:30:06)
podcasts. You're all over the place, but
(01:30:08)
you've got podcasts on money, on
(01:30:10)
everything, life, politics, all these
(01:30:13)
different places. What's the best place
(01:30:14)
to follow you specifically?
(01:30:16)
>> I'm like AOL in the 90s. I'm I'm You put
(01:30:18)
your hand into a cereal box, you're
(01:30:19)
going to grab me. So, um, to resist is
(01:30:22)
feudal. I am overexposed at this point.
(01:30:24)
I have, as you mentioned, I have
(01:30:26)
podcasts. I have a newsletter called No
(01:30:27)
Mercy No Malice. ProphetGalloway.com.
(01:30:29)
You'll see if you're interested, a ton
(01:30:30)
of ways to get my content.
(01:30:32)
>> Awesome. This is an awesome book and you
(01:30:34)
got a great show and great content. I
(01:30:36)
want to acknowledge you, Scott, for
(01:30:37)
taking on this subject because I know
(01:30:39)
it's not easy and there's a lot of push
(01:30:40)
back on talking about vulnerability and
(01:30:43)
masculinity and all these things. I felt
(01:30:45)
it for years when I started to open up
(01:30:47)
about this stuff. So, I acknowledge you
(01:30:48)
for doing it because
(01:30:49)
>> I think we're even more at risk now than
(01:30:51)
we were seven, eight years ago with
(01:30:53)
younger boys not having the tools to be
(01:30:57)
out in the world
(01:30:58)
>> to develop relationships, to look other
(01:31:00)
people in the eye and just have a
(01:31:02)
conversation, let alone build a
(01:31:04)
relationship.
(01:31:05)
>> And so, I acknowledge you for speaking
(01:31:07)
up, for taking on the criticism you take
(01:31:09)
for sharing these things as well,
(01:31:12)
because we need more great male leaders
(01:31:15)
sharing this information. so younger men
(01:31:18)
can be inspired and hopefully take
(01:31:20)
action. And I hope everyone gets a copy
(01:31:22)
of this book and and gives it to a young
(01:31:24)
man in their life as well or an old man
(01:31:26)
who needs some lessons and learning as
(01:31:27)
well. Um, I asked you these two
(01:31:29)
questions before. I'm just going to ask
(01:31:30)
one of them. I asked you before the
(01:31:32)
definition of greatness. So, I'll have
(01:31:34)
people go back and watch that
(01:31:35)
>> from our previous episode. But this is
(01:31:37)
uh a question I asked you as well called
(01:31:39)
the three truths.
(01:31:40)
>> Mhm.
(01:31:40)
>> After writing this book now and being at
(01:31:42)
this stage of life
(01:31:44)
>> where your father has recently passed.
(01:31:46)
Mhm.
(01:31:46)
>> What would you say are three things you
(01:31:49)
would leave behind if this was the last
(01:31:51)
day on earth for you many years away and
(01:31:54)
we would not have access to any of your
(01:31:56)
content, but you got to leave behind
(01:31:59)
three lessons to the world. What would
(01:32:00)
those three lessons be that you would
(01:32:03)
leave behind?
(01:32:05)
>> Well, I I I it's it's sort of an
(01:32:08)
indirect way of answering, but I think
(01:32:09)
of the tombstone test. What three words
(01:32:11)
would you want on your tombstone?
(01:32:13)
Uh, I'd want to be known as a generous
(01:32:15)
person who created more value than I
(01:32:17)
absorbed. That's the whole point. Like,
(01:32:20)
if you leave the world having provided
(01:32:21)
more love, more economic opportunity,
(01:32:24)
noticing people more than maybe you
(01:32:26)
absorb through your life, that's the
(01:32:27)
whole point. You've won. So, I'd want to
(01:32:29)
be known as generous.
(01:32:30)
>> I'd want to be known as patriotic. You
(01:32:32)
know, smartest thing I ever did, Lewis,
(01:32:34)
was to be born in America. M
(01:32:36)
>> I want to reinvest in America and help
(01:32:39)
make sure that many of the amazing
(01:32:40)
things that helped me, state sponsored
(01:32:42)
education, PEL grants, I got assisted
(01:32:45)
lunch, uh you know, America loved
(01:32:48)
unremarkable people when I was growing
(01:32:50)
up and I worry it's falling out of love
(01:32:51)
with the unremarkable. So I I would like
(01:32:53)
to be hopefully seen as someone who's
(01:32:54)
patriotic. And then the final thing I
(01:32:57)
just want to be seen as, you know, a
(01:32:58)
dad. I was that I was really into my
(01:33:01)
sons
(01:33:03)
>> and and that it was clear that later in
(01:33:05)
life I saw my purpose as raising
(01:33:08)
patriotic loving men. That that was, you
(01:33:10)
know, so
(01:33:11)
>> generous, patriotic dad. That's what I
(01:33:13)
aspire to.
(01:33:14)
>> Love it.
(01:33:14)
>> I still got some work to do.
(01:33:15)
>> No, man. Thanks.
(01:33:16)
>> Thanks, brother. Congratulations on
(01:33:17)
everything.
(01:33:18)
>> Thank you, brother. Appreciate it, man.
(01:33:19)
>> I had this mentor, [music] John. One of
(01:33:21)
the things he did to me that was really
(01:33:23)
strange. He says to me, "Dan, you're
(01:33:24)
going to be on my sales team. [music]
(01:33:26)
you need to be making a h 100red grand a
(01:33:28)
year or I'm going to fire you. So I had
(01:33:29)
this kind of like weird [music] look on
(01:33:31)
my face. He goes, "You're not going to
(01:33:32)
make 100 grand a year. You're not going
(01:33:33)
to succeed. You think 50 grand is out of
(01:33:35)
your reach. So 100 grand's like you
(01:33:37)
haven't even considered that. You've
