Digital Social Hour - Generation Z and the Decline of Intimacy | Rollo Tomassi DSH #879
Episode Date: November 11, 2024Explore the fascinating dynamics of "Generation Z and the Decline of Intimacy" in this captivating episode of the Digital Social Hour with Sean Kelly. Join the conversation as we dive deep into modern... relationships, dating, and the myths surrounding romance with our insightful guest. 🚀 Discover why intimacy is waning among Generation Z and millennials, and how technology and globalization are reshaping the sexual marketplace. Our guest shares personal anecdotes and expert insights that will leave you rethinking love, dating, and societal norms. Packed with valuable insights and thought-provoking discussions, you won't want to miss this episode. Tune in now and join the conversation! 📺 Watch now and subscribe for more insider secrets on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube. Hit that subscribe button and stay tuned for more eye-opening stories on the Digital Social Hour with Sean Kelly! 🌟 #redpill #moderndating #datingadvice #datingapp #datingapps #thesoulmatemyth #postwallwomen #redpill #modernrelationshipsanalysis #oneitis CHAPTERS: 00:00 - Intro 00:40 - Women and Pre-Marital Sex 04:20 - Decline of Sexual Activity Today 08:00 - Globalization's Impact on Sexual Marketplace 13:49 - Belief in Soulmates 18:17 - Understanding the Soulmate Myth 18:34 - Importance of Meaningful Sex 20:00 - Cosmic Significance of Sexuality 22:40 - Learning from Bad Sexual Experiences 24:56 - Spiritual vs Physical Aspects of Sex 27:45 - Parental Influence in Daughter’s Marriage 29:25 - Advice for Daughter’s Husband Before Marriage 31:05 - Ripple Effect of Marriage on Relationships 34:24 - Happiness as an Approximate Outcome 37:07 - Role of Emotions in Life Change 41:20 - Instinct, Emotion, and Reason in Decision Making 44:20 - Defining What Makes You Happy 46:54 - Upcoming Book Projects 54:46 - Finding Rollo Tomassi Online APPLY TO BE ON THE PODCAST: https://www.digitalsocialhour.com/application BUSINESS INQUIRIES/SPONSORS: Spencer@digitalsocialhour.com GUEST: Rollo Tomassi LISTEN ON: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/digital-social-hour/id1676846015 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5Jn7LXarRlI8Hc0GtTn759 Sean Kelly Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/seanmikekelly/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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like stuff I've written in my first book about like you know plate plate
spinning and date which is really just a euphemism for
dating non exclusively. And what that does, it sort of insulates
you from what we call oneitis or catching feelings or being like
getting really kind of wrapped up in what we call the soulmate
myth. And, and essentially giving you a sense of abundance
as opposed to a sense of scarcity.
All right, Rolo Tomasi here, author of The Rational Mail
and a few other books, thanks for coming on, man.
Good to see you, finally.
I know, you've been asking me to do this for a while.
Yeah, no, I think you're really interesting
because we differ on a lot of stuff, you know?
Oh, is that broken?
No, I got it right now.
All right, cool. Perfect.
Yeah, so I was telling you in the green room,
I've been with the same chick for seven years,
only slept with one girl,
so you're like the total opposite, you know, yeah, I'm total opposite
but it's funny is like like my my notch count is like public domain, I guess but I can remember when I was
I would be on Pat Campbell show
He was my my old partner from back in like 2017 2018 and he had a terrestrial radio show
It was a syndicated show in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
So, the buckle of the Bible belt. And I remember one time I said that, I said that,
yeah, my notch count's like 41. And you could hear this collective gasp from all the women that were
in the production staff and that was high about them. And they were like, they were like, oh,
he's a man whore. And I'm like, but what's funny is like,
then I'll meet other guys who are sort of in the space.
And if you're not in triple digits,
you're like, you got to get those numbers up.
You're looked down upon.
Yeah, and so it just kind of depends.
It's all contextual, really.
I mean, I would not necessarily disrespect somebody
such as yourself for making that choice.
It's a lifestyle choice. Yeah
And like for me, that's just where it was at and you have been married for 28 years now. Wow, nice
Myron made an interesting tweet the other day. He said he recommends people sleep with at least 50 woman
Yeah, that's you got to remember. That's an abstraction too. So like that
Make the case for Myron again
When he says stuff like that, it just means like get enough experience under your belt so that you understand
So that you understand women's name female nature and you understand your own nature as well
So it's not like it's not like okay
So if that's the case then I got to get at least another night more girls before I'm like cool with Myron
I think a point so but so that's not what's, that's not really about so much the number as it is.
So it get experience more than anything.
And that tracks back to like stuff I've written
in my first book about like, you know, plate spinning
and date, which is really just a euphemism
for dating non-exclusively.
And what that does, it sort of insulates you
from what we call one-itis or catching feelings
or being like getting really kind of wrapped up
in what we call the soulmate myth.
And essentially giving you a sense of abundance
as opposed to a sense of scarcity.
So for instance, if I've got a guy who says,
I've only slept with one or two or three women
and you know that I met my wife, whatever.
If the guy is approaching us from a position of abundance,
then that's a different context than if the guy's like,
well, she's the only thing,
and she's the only thing I ever had going,
and I really wanted to be with her, and da, da, da, da, da.
That's a different context with that guy.
I get that, yeah.
Yeah, because some guys are limited with their options,
whether it's looks or money or whatever.
Yeah, and most men are.
I mean, most, I've recently,
I've been trying to stop using the word
or the term beta these days,
because I think it really, it's almost,
it almost hits harder if you say average.
Average men, X, average men are like so.
So because most average men tend to be more beta, right?
They tend to be in what we call the 80th percentile,
the 80 percenters, right?
They're the guys who are just basically invisible to women
and they have to do something to get out of that percentile
and get into the 20 percent or into the higher,
you know, four or five percents, right?
And so I'm trying not to use the term like beta too much
or simp or incel.
And I hate the term incel is like completely meaningless
right now.
All it is is just an invective.
It's just an insult that people use if they don't like you.
Anybody they don't like is an insult.
So I'm trying not to use those things,
but I'm trying to put things in more objective terms.
And so that's why I use average, the average guy.
I couldn't believe the stats on average guys
and how many girls are sleeping with.
And I think 33% of them don't even
get laid at all that are in their 20s.
Those are statistics from the GSS studies,
the general social survey studies from 2018.
But they still track even right now.
A lot of people are saying that they're
kind of outdated,
outdated statistics.
If you look at like 2020, obviously during the COVID,
you know, pandemic, people are either sleeping more together
or they're not at all because they simply aren't getting out
and going and doing it.
Or if you're already in a relationship,
how's that going to affect that?
So they've been doing these sort of follow-up studies
right now from like 2021 to, well,
probably at the end of this year, it'll be 2024,
to see where it tracks.
And it's still on a downward turn.
Most, like Generation Z and the latter half of the millennials
are simply not having as much sex as, say,
like the boomers and my generation, Gen X,
did at the same age.
Interesting.
So you gotta remember that a lot of the statistics
that get thrown out there,
you can't just take one data point and say,
this is how it is.
You have to take it in correlation to other data points.
So if you wanna look at a dynamic in a more broader sense,
you can't just look at one particular set of data,
you have to look at other data and then say,
oh, does this correlate with what
we're seeing in the other one?
And then maybe compare that to even stuff that,
you know, a third set or a fourth set outside of that
to understand the whole dynamic.
Got it.
But do you think overall that people in their 20s
are having less sex?
Yeah.
Well, that's already on pretty much.
That's been a statistic since like 2016, 2015, 2016.
So since they started tracking. Well, you've 2016. So it's a lot of factors.
Well, you got to remember what's a, what's generation Z is in there in their
coming into their late twenties now.
So I'm going to be interested to see what the generation is that follows
generation C and see how things pan out.
I am in my, uh, my fourth book in religion.
I make the case for, um, uh, I am in my fourth book in religion,
I make the case for the different generations that have sort of come up prior to year 2000,
prior to the internet, prior to cell phones,
prior to social media.
And then you look at like say the latter half
of the millennials and pretty much all of generation Z,
they have never known a society that hasn't had cell phones
or the internet or high-speed internet.
Or they've never had to go through a dial-up modem
or anything like that.
Or really kind of go through the,
for lack of a better term, the analog years,
like then into the digital years.
And so like I can remember where,
like when I was probably in my early 20s,
I still had a dial-up phone,
or not dial-up, but push button phone.
Right.
And so how do you compare that
as far as the sexual marketplace
of say the late 80s and the early 90s
to what's going on today?
Well, human beings are still human beings. It's just again, the context of that particular era and wherever
you happen to be geographically as well. So my sort of experience throughout the years
is not only colored by sort of like the analog years, the 20th century years, and then there's the 21st century years.
And so for instance, my daughter was born in 1998.
She's never known a world that hasn't had, you know,
iPads and cell phones and the internet.
And now we're seeing technology advance
at such a rapid rate that we're having trouble keeping up with it now
So but once I think once generation X is gone
That's gonna be the last generation that was really experienced life before the 21st century for technology
Yeah, yeah, that's why it's interesting though because there's so much access to a woman now and dating but the the rate of sex is down
You know what I mean? There's all these dating apps, Instagram.
That's sort of like,
that's sort of part of an ongoing theme.
You gotta remember that globalization
is not just about economics and immigration
and things like that, it's also about the sexual marketplace.
Globalization that has taken place
from like, say, the 20th century
then into the 21st century
You probably had Mike on here. He's talked about the differences between say the local sexual marketplace and the global sexual marketplace
And this is something out of like my it was my second or third book
I made the observation that in sort of the 20th century you were kind of of stuck with what your social circle happened to be then
because there was no cell phone.
If you wanted to go hang out with your friends,
you would call them up on the phone,
hey, we're gonna meet at this club tonight,
be there, blah, that's it.
Now you can go put it on Instagram
and people you don't even know will show up
because you wanna go see a new DJ or something like that.
So just the technological side of things in the 20th
century was more of a localized sexual marketplace. You had a you know a much
broader pool than ever before but still there was it was just a pool of friends
and social your social circle that hey I know this chick I know that girl maybe
happened to be at the club and she would happen to be there as well.
I mean, that's how I met my wife, basically.
Oh, at the club?
At the club, yeah.
At the place they tell you you're not supposed
to meet your wife, right?
And so, and I was, it was just a social,
you know, you're in this localized
sociosexual environment, right?
Now we have the global sexual environment,
so any girl that's on Instagram
can see any other girl on Instagram and that girl
her ego is measured in likes and and you know little heart emojis and else and so
but it's it's that the at least the perception is that the potential for
becoming intimate with somebody say in a foreign country is a
distinct possibility and if nothing else it certainly is a source of attention
that feeds into other things.
So like when, I hate to run Fresh up the flagpole again
for this, but there was a time where people were asking,
you know, how many girls at college really think,
how many girls at college are getting flown out to Miami
to go on a yachtacht party with Drake right and of course fresh on something like 30% and I'm like dude no no no
It's definitely not 30%
But the perception is what he should have focused on because if one girl sees one one single girl gets flown out to a
Yacht party all of her friends that are in that global sexual market on Instagram, and again, it's exponentially, you know, goes out.
The perception is that I'm cuter than this girl and I could get flown out too.
So therefore, my sexual market value, my estimated, my self-perceived value goes up because I'm
cuter than this girl and this girl got asked to go out to a yacht party. So it's based on perception rather than the actuality of getting like flown out to,
flued out to Miami and go on a yacht party.
Right, comparison. Are your friends flying a lot of girls out?
No, not really. I'm trying to think who I would know that would do something like that.
I think it's kind of looked down on right now.
You have to be careful because I know that like,
say Myron and Fresh have sort of fostered,
let's just say, relationships with women
who are like, say, on the West Coast.
And whether or not they flew them out or not,
I can't say for sure,
because I don't have the receipts for that.
But the idea is that the possibility exists that they could.
So like when they are sourcing women from say like
seeking arrangements or from Tinder or from anything,
you gotta remember that this is like,
it's their sourcing process.
I'm not just saying fresh in general,
those guys in general, I'm just saying like guys in general.
Their sourcing is almost like spamming approach.
It's almost like funnel marketing is what it is.
In fact, Instagram is basically funnel marketing for women.
Yeah, I was surprised they got banned.
Seeking arrangement is an interesting,
my friend was on there,
I couldn't believe how many matches he was getting
because you just input your salary
and then start getting hundreds of matches.
I think what's funny is people think that it's just sort of
this side of digital prostitution.
And in some senses, I could agree with that.
But at least if you're going on a site like that,
it doesn't even have to be seeking arrangements.
There are other sites other than seeking arrangements.
Executive introductions is just basically
a matchmaking service for very rich men
and the women there are looking for very rich men.
So at least you know what you're getting into.
There's no pretentious bullshit.
Oh, I was on here to meet a nice guy.
It doesn't matter how much he makes.
Now you're on seeking arrangements.
So obviously the context when you're on there
is these are good looking women who are looking for men
who have men of means.
At least you know what you're getting into.
Now, if that's not something you want to get into,
don't go on the side.
No, it's straight up honest.
They know your salary, you can't lie about it,
you got to verify it.
So, I'm not pointing to you.
Show me your 401k.
No, I think they asked for that
Show me your credit rating. Yeah, pretty crazy. You mentioned soulmate myth earlier
So do you not believe your wife is your soulmate? I don't believe in the soulmate as in general now
I have this is a right straight out of my first book. It's actually the first chapter of my first book
Is there is no one and people keep using the term like,
oh, I think he's the one or she's the one.
Even guys will use that now.
And it's this idea that there's one perfect person
out there for you and you just haven't met the one just yet.
And which on the surface of it, from just, you know,
pragmatically thinking and rationally thinking,
it's kind of ludicrous to think that
because there's how many people on planet earth.
I mean, there's, there's people you will click with for sure.
And there's people who are, who you won't click with.
And maybe you're in a toxic relationship with.
Um, but as far as the idea of the soulmate, the soulmate is,
the soulmate myth is really a story or mythology that we tell ourselves to
support, um, socially enforced monogamy.
So we have to have, if we're going to get people
to just pair up with one to one,
and we want a society that is built on,
like I said, socially enforced monogamy,
or just like straight up monogamy,
a one man, one woman in a heterosexual relationship,
and there has to be some sort of unitary belief set that goes along with
that.
And part of that comes from what I, again, this is out of my fourth book, but there's
the idea of what's called the romantic ideal, meaning one man, one woman, and the man will
do anything for his lady, and it's, you know, he's the knight in shining armor, and he'll
go to war for her and die for her, and it's this sort of, he's the knight in shining armor and he'll go to war for her and die for her
and it's this sort of noble ideal
because they are two star-crossed lovers
and they met out of, you know, beyond all chance
and so therefore they're soulmates together.
Your soul belongs with my soul
before we were even born kind of thing.
And it becomes, you know, part and parcel of religion.
It becomes part of this sort of ideological belief set.
In the book, in my first book, I relate,
in the very beginning of that chapter,
of this experience I had where I was in college,
and I was at a behavioral psychology classes,
and the teacher asked, say, how many people believe in God?
And very few people actually believe, they're most of them were atheists. And then I say, how many people believe in God? And like, very few people actually believe, most of them were atheists.
And then I asked, how many people believe that there is a perfect person out there for them,
that there's a one or a soulmate? Every damn hand went up. And I'm like,
how can you believe in a soulmate, but you don't believe in God? Because there's this, just this
endemic want for that to be true.
And that was really what set me off on the soulmate myth
and the fallacy of the one, which is there is no one.
There are some good ones and there are some bad ones,
but there is no just a one, right?
And I was kind of like springboarding that off
of what the old school pickup artists would call oneitis.
So you catch feelings for one person, you think it's the one, one she's the one right? So she's the one I'm gonna marry
She's the one I'm gonna have a relationship with so is my wife my soul mate
We are a very good match. God just put it that way and we have been so for a long time
Do I feel like there's some sort of spiritual element between my wife and I yeah, but it's I
Refuse the the idea of the mythology of the soulmate myth
because what happens is then you get over-invested.
And so it leads to a scarcity mentality
and it leads to losing your identity.
And quite honest, and this is speaking
from like 28 years of being married,
a good marriage is built on polarity, not on similarity. It's built on polarity.
It's built on maintaining your identities and not having one or the other
try to
reinvent their personality because they think that that's what the other person wants. Because if they lose that person, that's their soulmate.
And if you lose that soulmate,
you know, it's like a Michael Bolton song, you know, how am I supposed to live without you? Something sappy,
you know, saccharine sweet like that. So it doesn't, honestly, I think it's probably one
of the most debilitating beliefs that there, especially, not so much now, but like when
I was writing the books in the first play, like the very first book, that was something
that every guy was like, I want to find the in the first play like the very first book I was that was something that every guy was
Look, I want to find the one I want to find some, you know, perfect relationship
Who's gonna be just who's gonna be as much into me as I'm into her right? It was just this
There's there's a lot to that and the that's actually the reason why I made that the very first chapter in the book
Because I thought if somebody reads this book, what do I want? Like they only read one chapter. They go, okay,
I'm going to read this and throw it away. Right? If they read one chapter,
what's the most important message? And that was the most important.
Really? Yes. Wow. Yeah. I don't like when people use that as a crutch,
but at the same time, here's where I differ from the red pill stuff.
I think sex is more than just a physical experience and they're just racking up
bodies. And you know, I think it's pretty spiritual, honestly.
I would only part ways with that in the sense
that I understand the visceral side of it.
I understand guys who want to apply
a cosmic meaning to sex.
And usually it's guys who don't have a lot of experience.
So that's another reason why I encourage,
but I understand the necessity for spinning plates
and dating non-exclusively,
because it gives you a better perspective
on what actually, at least the physical act of what sex is.
So whenever I'm talking to guys
who have sort of a limited experience with sexuality,
they always tend to sort of spiritualize,
and it doesn't even have to be that,
it doesn't even have to necessarily be religion.
It could be, I've never, meaningful,
I have meaningful sex, meaningless, meaningful.
Meaning, the word meaning is a container word,
and you can put anything you want to into that container.
So if meaningful sex to me is getting a blowjob
every two weeks, that has meaning for me.
Why, who are you to tell me that that's not?
Well, it's because we can contextualize that
and put that into that container,
and then we can use that as sort of our justification
for anything else that we want.
Now, is there some sort of cosmic significance to sex?
I mean, if you look at it from just a physical side of things,
what is the ultimate,
see, there's the proximate goal or the proximate outcome,
and then there's the ultimate outcome.
So the proximate outcome is when I saw my wife
in the club that night, I wasn't thinking,
hmm, I wonder if she'd be a really good mother for my child.
I wonder if we would be a really good fit together and she would make a good wife and
everything else.
That wasn't what I was thinking.
I was like, I want to tap that ass.
How do I tap that ass is what I was thinking, right?
Because that was my proximate goal at that time, right?
The ultimate goal, of course, or the ultimate outcome of all of that was I reproduce with
her.
I have a child with her who's a wonderful kid and who has married herself now as of last year, just celebrated her first anniversary. And we both are
on the same page spiritually, we're both on the same page sort of like life plan-wise, we're both,
we're very compatible, but we also respect each other's individual identities too. So the things
that I want to do, like people always ask me this, they'll say like, Rolo, why aren't you
married? Why are you hanging out with these maxim models or these
FHM models? Well, you know, I'm sort of vicariously living a
lifestyle that they think is in some way counterintuitive to
what they would expect from like, say, someone who's been
married for 28 years. And the thing is, is that's how good a match I am
with my wife, is that it's okay for me to be doing this.
It's all right for me to be doing these things.
Because she trusts me.
And she knows that there's no way in hell I'm gonna cheat.
I've never cheated on my wife.
And I never would, right?
But again, it's, you know, when you're looking at sex
from a spiritual side of things, and you have
that as sort of your base ideology, for lack of a better term, it starts to become, that's
when I get those guys who will say, well, how can you do this? Well, because you don't
understand that I have come to the relationship I'm in with my wife right now
because I did all those other things,
because I had those experiences.
I'm not saying all of them were great.
Right.
You know, I don't necessarily,
of all of the women that I've been with
over the course of my life,
maybe I regret one or two.
Oh, that's it? Okay.
You know, something like that.
And usually it's just after the fact.
I wasn't regretting it at the time,
but it's usually after the fact
because you're kind of like saying,
oh, that was kind of a mistake.
I could have used my time more efficiently.
And especially when you get into your 50s,
you look back and you go,
how could I have done that better?
And then try to relate,
and of course nobody listens to you anyways,
but like, how would I have done that better?
How could I have made that more efficient?
How could I have made that a better decision at that time?
And it wasn't that it was hardly ever the sexual experience. It was all the fallout that came after that. Mm-hmm. So
So if I'm like in a relationship with a borderline personality disorder girlfriend, which I had when I was in my mid twenties, I didn't realize it at the time.
I thought it was great fucking sex, but the thing is, is that, um,
but she was crazy in bed and crazy out of bed. And so it wasn't the sex part of it.
It was everything else that was outside of that.
And so going through that and understanding that and learning all that stuff is
what really helped contribute
to a lot of the stuff that I write in my books,
or at least it motivated me to do the things
and have the interests that I do.
So I can remember being in college
and I was going, I think it was the first time,
I was just a grad, or yeah, undergrad at that time,
and I was looking at the DSM,
the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for like psychology and of course it's like this
basically it's this big giant you know catalog of all these like personality disorders and
they tell you like when you're reading this thing don't like take it with a grain of salt
because you'll see all of these like symptoms all your friends, and they all say, everyone, oh, you're schizophrenic,
and you're bipolar.
You'll overdiagnose it in the beginning.
But there was one part where I came across the Cluster B
personality disorders, and one of those
is borderline personality disorder.
And it was exactly, I mean, every single symptom
was what my mid-20s girlfriend had
at that time.
And I was just like, and I got chills.
So when I finally realized that there was actually
a diagnosis for that, that's when I began to think that,
just to understand how important it was for me
to have gone through that and get out of it.
So that when I'm talking to guys who are in that position
right there, here's what you can look for and here's what you're dealing with and here's
the decisions that you're probably going to need to make to get out of that, extricate
yourself from that situation.
So when it comes to whether it's a spiritual thing for sex or if it's the physical side
of sex, because I tend to look at... I've written a book on religion, it's called Religion, the title of the
book is Religion, the Rational Male Religion. The very last chapter in that book, I go into,
and I'm not going to give it to you, I hope people will read it.
We'll link it below.
It's chapter 14, it's the last chapter, because people want to say,
well, Rollie, you're the rational male, how can you believe in God? Right? And I'm like, well,
I do, and I come to it from a very rational perspective.
Oh, yeah.
Jared Slauson And I think the very fact that I do that,
like I come to that belief through a series of saying, like, sort of if-then logic. When
I get to that point, I think the people who are like atheists hate my guts and the people
who are religious hate my guts too because I'm coming, I kind of destroy the magic for believers
and then I kind of like throw like the more like atheists
kind of readers off track because they tend to think of me
as being like sort of like way more logical
or they demand like Mr. Spock levels of like,
cutting off your emotional side, right?
Which I think is emotion is part of the human experience, right? So if sex is some
cosmically significant act for you, I mean, that's still part of the magic for
you. At least you haven't lost that magical side, right? But the thing is, is
that really what's the, what is the visceral side of it? What's the physical
side? What's the material side of it, which is essentially it's for reproduction.
You wanna have sex because it's fun and it feels good
and you're making a connection with your wife
or your girlfriend, I guess you're married, right?
About to be.
About to be married, congratulations.
Thank you.
We'll dive into that after this.
I'm not saying you shouldn't necessarily
dissociate spirituality from it, but I'm just saying,
I think we do ourself a disservice when it's just about the spiritual or it's
just about the physical.
No, I think it's both.
Yeah, coming together, right?
The thing is, is like the people who throw me off, like who want to say, you're married,
how can you be with these girls and these porn stars and everything?
They are all coming from like a strictly spiritual perspective.
Whereas then there's the other guys who are like,
who want to say, well, it's, you know,
it's all about, it's all about just a notch count
and everything is like, and by the way,
I don't see it like that either.
I think that that's probably a misperception
that a lot of people have about the red pill
that it's just about getting your dick wet
and it's measuring your ego by your notch count.
It's not that, but there's that contingency of guys who want to say that.
I think it's, there needs to be sort of this understanding or mutual appreciation of the
visceral, the animal side of us and the spiritual side of us because usually we tend to live
in one or the other.
And I think that there can be a balance between those two.
Agreed.
I love that.
You mentioned your daughter just got married.
How much say did you have in the husband?
Did he have to get your permission?
How much, he asked me for my permission actually, yes.
And I'm glad you asked that because I have this conversation
with him and of course I'm Rol Tomasi,
you're asking for my daughter.
Okay.
So.
He must have been shitting himself.
Yeah, well, it's, you know you're in for a monologue.
So just like sit down, here we go, you know you're in for a monologue, so just like sit down, here we go.
The main gist of it was,
I said, do you know what you're asking me?
He said, well yeah, I want your daughter's hand in marriage.
I'm like, well that's a very nice romantic gesture,
and I'm sure if we lived in the age of courtly love
that that would be, like in the high Renaissance,
we would be, that would be awesome, right?
But what you're really asking is there is a function to asking a father's permission
to marry his daughter because it's, I actually, once again, wrote about this in religion,
the idea of prearranged marriages. Now, of course, this isn't a prearranged marriage, but the
of prearranged marriages. Now, of course, this isn't a prearranged marriage, but the notion of asking for a father's, for your daughter's hand in marriage, you're not just
asking me to marry my daughter, you're asking me to blend my tribe with your tribe. And
if you look at like the ancient Scots and you look at the, just a lot of different ancient
cultures, they have rituals that are like like if you're gonna ask permission,
you have to jump through a lot of hoops.
You gotta trial by combat.
That's what I should have said.
You're gonna have to defeat me in single combat
before you can do it.
Like that would, like if we lived, you know,
just a few hundred years ago, that might have been part of it
depending on the culture, yeah.
So, but fortunately we don't have to do those things.
There was one stipulation that they named their first child,
if it was a male child, I wanted to name the child.
But other than that, I told them, I said,
you're asking me to blend my family with yours.
I said, as a son-in-law, I would love to have you,
because I think you're a great guy,
I think you're a perfect fit for my daughter,
but I also have to take into consideration your family,
and your family's family, and the fact that any children
that's produced as a result of this marriage,
their goal, how is this gonna affect them?
How have you thought about any of this kind of stuff?
And I wish I would have talked to James Sexton
before all of this, and James Sexton, the divorce attorney guy,
because James was saying this,
and he gave me some insight about stuff
that I hadn't even thought about.
We know more about our home mortgages and our titles,
and the stipulations and the legalities
of buying a car title,
than we do about marriage and what's entailed in marriage.
Like, this is what you're signing up for.
And he was suggesting, and now this is never gonna happen,
but it was funny as hell, he was suggesting
that there needs to be like in the marriage contract,
you have to have like all, you know,
you have to get sign here, sign here,
initial, initial, initial, initial,
I don't know if you're gonna buy a house or something.
And just so that you understand
and you have read all of these sort of, you know,
legalistic stipulations. We don't do anything even remotely like that. And I thought that was kind
of a, that was interesting because I think we need to have not just a like pre-marital counseling,
we need to have post-marital counseling as well. And that was part of the conversation I had. But
well. And that was part of the conversation I had. But the main gist of the conversation I had with my son-in-law was that you're asking me, and I told him I'm happy to have my clan
mixed with your clan, of course, but I wanted him to understand what was going on because
a marriage is not just about the two people involved in the marriage. It's also involved with the in-laws
and the friends of the in-laws, my friend.
For what I do, there's probably some people
who wouldn't want to be associated with me
because they wouldn't want to marry my daughter,
I wouldn't want to marry off my son to them
because of that.
Because maybe they had a bad,
they just didn't have a misperception, right?
I would love to have the opportunity
to sort of clarify that,
but the idea of mixing families
is really what marriage is about.
And like a lot of people wanna say like,
oh, the real purpose of marriage
was to like strengthen alliances
and like sell off your daughter, like chattel and everything.
It's like, no, it wasn't.
I think for the nobles and the aristocracy of the time, sure.
But you know, there was a lot more people
who are the lower classes that were getting married
than the aristocracy, just simply because of numbers, right?
So marriage served a much different purpose
than just what, just like solidifying alliances
with Spain, with France, or something like that.
And so when I was telling him this, I said,
I'm happy to have my family be commingled with yours,
but I said, you're creating a ripple right now.
And what that ripple effect is gonna be is you
and my daughter coming together
and you're gonna have children.
And those children are gonna have children as well.
And when I married my wife, my parents are gone.
They're already deceased,
but my wife's parents are still alive.
And I singularly take care of her mother,
my mother-in-law, okay?
That's part of marriage.
I married my wife, and so, you know,
and I was taking care of my mom,
I was taking care of my dad, you know,
in their last days, right?
But they're gone now, and I'm glad I don't have
to take care of my father-in-law,
because he's pretty much set,
but my mother-in-law has lived with us for a long time
and I've always had, like right now,
I'm buying a house in Vegas.
I have to find a place that can accommodate my mother-in-law
in a certain room where I know what she does,
I know what she likes to do.
And because it's like, what is it, in the mafia,
what is it, dutia familia, right?
That's me, like you're not my blood relative technically,
but you're my married relative.
So when I married my wife, that was part of the deal.
And when my son-in-law and my daughter get married,
I told her, I said, you might have to take care of me.
You might have to take care of my wife.
Maybe I'll be gone,
but you might have to take care of my wife.
Or something of the same nature. Like if you have grandchildren or grandchildren
that are produced as a result of this,
what is your relationship, the quality of your relationship
is going to affect them as well.
So it's seeing the force for the trees
because when you're asking for someone's hand in marriage,
it's like you're just mooning over the girl.
Again, proximate outcome versus ultimate outcome the ultimate outcome of
is I'm taking care of my mother-in-law I didn't see that coming when I got
married in 96 yeah that's good to think about people don't think about like the
family speaking approximate outcome you should think about that before the ring
on it I like her parents so I wouldn't mind taking care of her parents yeah I
would do that for her you tweeted out happiness is approximate outcome mm Mm-hmm. It's not an ultimate outcome. Mm-hmm
And a lot of people think it is an ultimate out. Yeah. Yeah, it's probably one of the worst lies
We sell particularly to women right now. I would say if there's a particular gender that that
Social myth hurts the most is it's women
Because it sells us on this idea of some sort of permanent contentment and happiness.
Or I'll read these, you'll see this constantly, it's this back and forth, you'll see one article
that says, single childless women are the most happy demographic, right? And then two months later,
there'll be another one, single childless women are more miserable than ever, or women are just
more unhappy than they've been
in the past generations, right?
It's always this back and forth,
it's like these conflicting messages.
And the reason why it's so confusing and conflicting
is because happiness is an emotion.
And that emotion, it's part of it.
I can, if I give you some tequila right now,
it's gonna alter your mood, You're going to be happier,
right? If I give you SSRIs, if I give you like antidepressants, that's going to... I
can affect your emotional state through chemicals. So emotions can be controlled. They're not
magical, you know, things like pixie dust or light from heaven that shines down on you,
right? That includes love, that includes depression,
it includes anxiety, it includes anger,
it includes happiness.
Happiness is the one we focus on the most
because we think, we have this idea that we can just,
if we could just find this perfect balance
of self-help books and healing and therapy
and all this other stuff, that we're gonna find
some permanent solution to living a
permanently 100% content life. And the fact of the matter is that the human condition is defined by discontent, not by content. And that's a good thing. That's actually a feature, not a bug,
okay? Because God forbid, because if we were all content all the time, we wouldn't grow,
we wouldn't want more, we wouldn't build more, we wouldn't do more.
But happiness, and by the way, I got this,
I was made aware of this concept through a book
called Positive Evolutionary Psychology,
and I was looking for some more like A plus
kind of good news kind of stuff about evolutionary psychology
because I think a lot of people really,
when they look at
Evo psych they think of it as oh, it's just about guys trying to justify getting their dick wet. Okay
Well, this book is not about that. Okay, but the other thing is evolutionary psychology is not just about sex. Okay
It's also about consumerism. It's about economics
It's about other things too
But everybody the sexy stuff the fun stuff the the stuff that people post tweets about, that's what they go for. That's what goes viral.
That's what goes viral.
But so the concept is this, is that happiness
is a proximate outcome, not an ultimate outcome.
So we can't be happy, but we can do things
that make us feel happiness.
So if I'm playing guitar and I come up with a great riff
or something like that, it's intrinsically rewarding to me.
And I feel happiness as a result of doing something
that makes me feel happy.
Okay. When I'm not doing it, it's not that,
oh, I wrote this great song.
It's so awesome.
The awesome song is great.
And I'm glad people dig on it,
but it was the process of writing that song
that made me happy.
It's not the actual outcome of it that made me happy.
Okay. So when people say, well, what, you know, are you happy? Well,
that's a sort of a subjective term because I'm,
am I doing something right now that's making me feel happy or do I have some
sort of overall, well, let's see on an overall scale, do I really feel happy?
You're going to give an answer based on what your emotional conditions are at
that particular time. So, um So when we talk about happiness,
it's not something that is a permanently maintainable state,
although we believe it is.
That's why we get addicted to drugs.
That's why we have SSRIs.
That's why we prescribe this.
We prescribe antidepressants to women
because women believe that they're unhappy
and they're unhappy and they're unhappy because
they're not doing anything. They're just simply, they're not doing the things that would make
them feel happiness. Because our emotions, evolutionarily speaking, our emotions are
meant to drive us from one state to another. And usually those predicaments are reproduction
or survival. So if you're, have you ever been hangry before?
Yeah. Really? I pissed off. Well, that's a reaction because what that anger and that frustration are reproduction or survival. So if you're, have you ever been hangry before?
Yeah.
When you're like, ah, pissed off and,
well, that's a reaction because what that anger
and that frustration and that urgency does
is in our evolutionary past would have driven us
to go run down small prey and go and kill something
so that I can eat something.
I always wondered where that came from.
Yeah.
So, but that's the prompt, that anger, that hungriness,
that emotional state drives us
because we're hungry, we need survival, we need to eat something or kill something or
find some food and get out and get off our asses and do something.
We don't have to worry about that in the 21st century because we can just go down to Taco
Bell and pick up Taco Bell Grande, right?
But the idea of a permanent happiness
is something of like say a goal state.
And I think more so for women,
because women tend to be more focused
on long-term security than men are.
Men are out there like doing stuff.
And not to say that women don't,
but if women are unhappy,
or I have like some of the girls that I work with
or that I talk with, they'll say,
oh, I'm so depressed, I'm so this,
I'm like, get off your ass and go to the gym.
You will be happy when you're at the gym.
Happiness, the happy place is the gym, go there.
So that quick, you can just flip the switch.
Or I can say like, well, what do you enjoy doing?
Well, I like doing this, I like going to the library,
I like going and hanging out with my friends,
like usually it's something really,
like I wanna go drinking.
That, the urge to go drink is a chemical escape
that will prompt, like I said,
you can prompt your emotions through drink.
Like when you break up with a girl
or a girl breaks up with you or something like that,
what's the first thing guys do?
Go down to the bar and get drunk, right?
The reason why they're doing that is because the happiness,
the feeling, like the euphoric feeling of being in love
or being in lust or having sort of like that infatuation,
it triggers a chemical response in your brain.
And what happens is when you take that chemical response
away, now you have to go find something to replace it with.
You have to perform novel behaviors.
I'm gonna go work out, I'm just gonna focus on my work.
I'm gonna go work out more, I'm gonna go get drunk.
What those are is it's trying to fill that sort of
dopamine endorphin chemical cocktail
with something that is close, like chemically close to it.
So that's why guys go get blackout drunk
after they get through a breakup.
It seems like the easiest way to go and feel good
because all of those good feelings are now gone.
The generator for those is gone.
And so there's this vacuum of that good feeling.
So what do they do?
They replace it with drugs or alcohol or whatever else.
And so when we're talking about happiness,
really I look at it as like say contentment,
as I was saying before, that's a little more philosophical,
but like from a chemical perspective our emotions are
Part of a process where we interpret our surroundings. So if we have like instinct we have emotion we have reason
Okay, we can look at these through the brain as well. It's called the the triune mind theory and
Which is a theory that was supposedly debunked back in the 70s
But now I think a lot of people are kind of taking a new look at it because we know more about like our
Neurology. So if you look at like say the lizard brain or the hind brain, I'm sure you've heard those those terms thrown out there
That's your instinct. That's like at the base like your your brain stem, right?
And that's like if I threw something at you right now, you'd instinctively like, you know flinch or whatever. It's this autonomous kind of
instinctual reactions. And so that's a way, it's the most immediate, fastest way of interpreting
our surroundings. If you're in a dangerous situation or like a fly's...
Right, fire flight, right?
Exactly. Those are the instinctual, that's the instinctual way of processing stimuli from
outside. Then there's the emotional way. How does this make me feel?
Am I pissed off?
Am I angry?
Right?
Am I happy?
Am I, do I want to get laid?
I'm like, I want to get laid.
What's the emotional processing that goes along with what I'm seeing?
How do I feel about what I'm seeing, what I'm hearing, what I like through the senses,
what I'm smelling, what I'm tasting, that kind of stuff.
And that's, it's slower than instinct, but it's faster than reason,
because reason requires a lot of time and learning.
So you have to learn karate.
Nobody wants to get into a conflict
and get punched in the face.
Most human beings are conflict-averse, right?
They don't want to put their face
in front of a flying fist, right?
But they will if they're trained for it
and they've learned and their rational, reasonable brain
says, okay, I've trained for this, wax on, wax on,
I know what I'm gonna do.
Or for instance, I drove my Camaro here, right?
Human beings didn't evolve to drive cars
at 90 miles an hour, right?
But we can figure it out after we learn certain things.
We know the rules of the road, we know what we're. We learn to anticipate things to turn, slow down here,
and that kind of stuff.
But we do that through a process of reason and rationality.
But that is the slowest part.
So that's why we tend to default to emotions,
and we let emotions make decisions for us
rather than our rational minds,
because our rational mind takes longer to learn things
that way.
And so when
we're looking at emotions, when we're looking at happiness, those are physical manifestations.
They're not like spiritual, emotional, you know, crazy woo-woo magic things. Those are
actual things that can be altered by your brain chemistry. So when we're looking at
happiness in particular, the happiness part of all of that
is what is intrinsically rewarding to you
and what do you do that makes you happy
as opposed to being in this nirvanic euphoric state.
The only way you get to that is drinking or drugs or SSRIs.
Yeah, I'm glad you wondered it like that
because for years I thought, this is a classic one,
that money would bring happiness.
Chasing money and then I got some money, nothing changed.
But you know what made you happy?
Getting the money.
Doing the things that got you the money.
Once you had it, you're like, what the hell do I do with this?
Yeah, once I had it, it was like.
When I can buy it, you can have anything you want.
I want more money.
Yeah, there's no way to.
Because you were enjoying making the money, right?
The process of making the money.
In fact, that's one,
you want to know the Tomasi secret of success? If you can find a way to be happy making the money. In fact, that's one, you wanna know the Tomasi secret of success?
If you can find a way to be happy making the money,
then you can make money.
You can do, if that becomes the process of doing that,
becomes intrinsically rewarding,
then that's the key, really,
the methodology anyways to success.
And that was hard for me to find, podcasting,
for you to write books.
I used to work for this guy,
his name was Dave Vandeveld,
and he used to be one of the principal founders
of Kettle One Vodka.
And then he left that place and then he started
and founded Van Gogh Vodka, which is where I came in.
I did all their bottles and I did all their art direction
for them.
But one thing I learned from him,
and sort of just like on the fly,
I mean I learned a lot of things from him,
but this was a guy who would like work all the time.
He would like literally park his RV outside
of the headquarters of our place in Orlando, Florida.
And he would have been happy as a pig and shit
just to just sit there in that RV
and just work all the time.
Now he had a girlfriend who ended up becoming his wife
later on who said, we need a house, you know?
But all he wanted to do was be there doing new projects,
new products and everything else,
because that's what made him happy.
That didn't real, I'm like,
how can somebody possibly work this hard?
And like, you know, he didn't do anything with his money
except channel it back into the business to make more,
because that's what made him happy was the actual process.
And I didn't figure that out until I started reading
the biography of like Steve Jobs or Elon Musk.
Both of those guys have similar kind of personalities.
Like, Elon Musk doesn't care about where, he'll couch surf with his friends.
He has no house.
He has no house.
Why?
He's got more money than God.
Why would he, if he's not the richest, he's the second richest.
I know, maybe Jeff Bezos is more richer than he is. But the guy will still, literally will couch surf
because he wants to be closer to the Tesla Gigafactory
or SpaceX or something like that so he can go to sleep
is an inconvenience for him.
He just wants to get up and go and do it
because that's what he wants to do
because doing it makes him happy.
So that's why he keeps repeating that process.
People go, oh, you're the most successful guy in the world.
Why is that?
Because my singular focus is making myself happy
by doing more shit all the time.
The same thing you could say was true for Steve Jobs as well.
Yeah, love it.
Are you working on another book right now?
I am, actually.
I'm working on a book called Reignite.
And it's going to be, I told everybody
I was never going to do another book for the series, but this is gonna be in the series
It'll be the sixth finale there. Oh
For now, I said the fifth book was the finale
But now reignite is gonna be a book that is specifically catered to guys who are between the ages of 45 and 65 years old
interesting because that is the prime demographic for male suicide and
And also I should say like the prime demographic for male suicide. And also, I should say, the prime demographic
for first divorce for men is 43, I think.
And so it was prompted by a couple of things.
I'm doing a program through Mike Sartain's group, the Men
of Action group, but we're focusing on 45 to 65-year-old
individuals.
And whether they're coming out of a bad divorce or they simply never got married, it doesn't
matter to me.
We're just helping guys sort of like reintegrate themselves into the global sexual marketplace
into a very confusing landscape that they don't really, they're unprepared for, they
don't understand.
Now there are guys who I have worked with in the past.
I'm very good friends with Robert Kiyosaki, my close personal friend.
And then his group, George Gammon, Ken McElroy,
and Jason Hartman, they're all real estate guys,
big bucks real estate guys.
But they all have sort of one commonality,
well with the exception of McElroy,
McElroy would not like me saying this about him.
But they want to be able to sort of navigate
the sexual marketplace.
And so they have read my book.
In fact, that's how I helped Robert Kiyosaki
through his divorce with Kim Kiyosaki.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, that's when he reached out to me.
And then we started having,
we had a sort of a professional arrangement first,
and then we just became really good friends.
I didn't know he got divorced.
No, he didn't.
Yeah, yeah, and you're not supposed to.
You weren't supposed to know that.
So the book itself is going to be sort of helping guys
sort of reintegrate themselves back into the sexual
marketplace after a bad divorce or maybe they came out
of a sexist marriage or something like that.
Those are common, I heard.
Because there's no support base for those guys.
Like when guys come out of a divorce and they're just
absolutely ruined emotionally and financially
and just like in every way imaginable,
they will, they're faced with a choice.
And the choice is I can either delete myself
or I can rebuild myself.
And the older that individual is,
the harder rebuild myself, that choice becomes for them.
Which is why that's the prime demographic for men.
Men kill themselves at like three and a half to four times the rate of women just in general.
But when a man is divorced, he is eight times more likely
to take his own life.
Holy crap.
And so that's why I'm actually doing something.
So not only do we have a group called Reignite,
I'm writing the book for these guys in specific.
I don't want to call it a primer
because I think it's general for everyone.
But the reignite book is to reignite your life,
like get yourself back into the game kind of thing.
And most of these guys are very confused.
They don't know how they don't know anything about style.
They don't know anything.
All of the things and all of the limited social skills
that they had to learn to get with their wife 20 years ago or 25 years ago
is not necessarily in play in 2024.
And so we're through a group of guys
who are just sort of getting together and doing things.
I'm of the opinion that when you can't give men
female therapy, that's not interchangeable.
That's the thing that really, really,
it's one of my biggest pet peeves these days, is women saying, oh, if a man's in therapy, it's so
sexy. No, it's not, because what he's doing is he's going and seeing a counselor that
is, has no earthly idea how to counsel a man, right? Or how men communicate. They're using
female therapy techniques on men. And from my perspective and from my experience, men
tend to communicate far better when they're they're all working on
something like doing, right? So some of the best conversations I've ever
had with my brother, my brother reconditions and restores like classic
muscle cars. Some of the best conversations I've ever had with him is
over the the hood of a Chevelle, right? And so, I thought about that and I go, you know, some of the best
tribes that I have, like my band is a tribe, my workout partners are a tribe, my, you know,
the people that I go fishing with, or like Mike is part of my tribe, you know, there's different,
men have little sub-tribes right now. Maybe it's your church, maybe it's your Bible study,
maybe it's your men's group, I don't know.
But men have little kind of sub-tribes, and the reason why they form those sub-tribes
is because they share a common interest.
So that's what I'm going to be doing with the group, but it's also something I'm going
to sort of dive into deeper in the book itself.
But the idea is that getting guys together over a common interest, maybe we go to the gun range,
maybe we go fishing like a deep sea fishing trip,
maybe we go play golf, I don't know, whatever guys do.
But those interests, I don't care, we can play chess,
I don't care.
That's where those conversations take place
because there's a mutual project.
Guys need to go and kill the wooly mammoth.
They need to have something, a collective project
that they're working on to give them a sense of purpose. And when men are united in a purpose, that's
when they communicate. And that's when you can have guys who are like, you know, maybe
it's better for me to not kill myself. Maybe I should rebuild myself because now I've got
guys who are dependent on me or I got guys who are like, I want to go back to my squad.
I'm going to go read and list because I can't leave my leave my people behind, right?
No
So and having those conversations and having those try like tribalism is another thing as I think a lot of people think tribalism
In a negative context. I don't see it that way at all
I see it as a feature and not a bug especially when it comes to men who are who tend to be more
Hierarchical we organize society and hierarchies and those hierarchies are formed around tribes.
So that tribe could be your work, it could be the military, it could be my band, it could
be whatever, right?
It doesn't make any difference.
It's that tribe is what gives men a sense of purpose.
And as I said before, I hear a lot of people saying, you know, you want to live a life
of meaning or purpose, whatever.
I think purpose is much easier to define than like some ephemeral definition of what meaning is, right?
So if that guy says, you know
My purpose is to finish this holly forbearer carburetor here and we're gonna we're gonna go and do this and this is our project
And enduring that part, it's intrinsically rewarding to to repair that thing
But we're as we're doing that we're having these really good conversations as a result of that.
And I think that if more therapists,
like you know, board certified APA therapists,
would use like even just simple techniques like that,
I think they would be much more effective
in sort of like helping men.
100%.
If I'm sitting next to my boy on the couch,
I'm not gonna tell him shit that I'm dealing with,
but if we're in the sauna, if we're playing basketball,
if we're doing activity, I'm going to open up a little more.
We don't need a drum circle, right?
We don't need to sit around and like, let's all sit and talk about our feelings.
Like if you do that with guys, it'd be like, that's cringe.
Like guys are like, what are you, gay?
But if you go say, hey man, let's go to the gun range, right?
And then as a result of you going out there and shooting and everything like that, and
you have these really great conversations.
Like I've had really great conversations
with my father-in-law that I never had before.
He's the, I'm not a gun guy at all,
but like he's the guy who made me a gun guy
because we had those conversations,
because he said, hey, come to the range.
And I'm like, okay, I've got a nine millimeter,
that's all I've got.
Okay, well, hey, you can shoot my black powder.
He's like all into this stuff.
If you're even slightly interested in shooting at all,
he's got you covered.
And so, of course, then what happens is
I start buying more and more, because I'm a collector.
And so now I guess I'm sort of like a hobbyist
is when it comes to that kind of stuff.
But as a result of having those conversations,
and I've never communicated with my father-in-law
like I have since we started going shooting together.
Wow, I love that. Rollo, where can people find you and find your books and your podcasts? father-in-law like I have since we started like going shooting together. So, wow.
Yeah, I love that.
Rollo, where can people find you and find your books and your podcast?
Sure.
My books are available, all five of them, soon to be six, are available on Amazon.
I also have, if you don't like to read, I know how kids are today.
You can get them on Audible as well.
And as Mike Sartain says, you can listen to them at 2, and 3, and 7 speed if you'd like to,
if you're impatient enough.
So they're all available on Audible.
They're all available on Amazon.
And they are in digital format as well as physical format.
And by the way, if you're from Vegas and you have the book,
I'm happy to sign your books for you whenever I, if you catch
me, I'd be happy to do so.
Oh, that's cool.
And then, of course, I have, technically, I've
got two shows right now.
My main show, of course, is The Rational Mail.
That's on 1 PM Pacific, 4 PM Eastern every Sunday.
That's my long form show.
My channel, of course, is The Rational Mail.
And then I also do a, I guess, every other week,
sometimes every week, a show called Access Vegas.
It's here locally in Las Vegas, and that's
with Mike Sartain and myself.
And we do a panel show, not unlike Fresh and Fit,
but our mission is not to kick the girls off.
Our mission is to have substantive,
constructive conversation so that we can sort of like,
you know, have a sort of a meeting of the minds.
And then we do interviews and we do debates
and stuff like that as well.
So that's Access Vegas.
And that's usually on Thursdays.
And in fact, today being Thursday,
it's today at 8 p.m. Pacific and 11 p.m. Eastern time.
We usually have anywhere between like
six and eight girls on the show.
And some of them are porn stars
and some of them are FHM models
and some of them are entrepreneurs
and some of them are real estate people.
So we try to get a broad variety, although it is Vegas.
So if we have more porn stars than we have real estate,
you can sue me.
Yeah, I love it, man.
Thanks for coming on.
That was awesome.
Yup, thanks for watching.
God, as always, see you next time.