If Books Could Kill - The Game
Episode Date: December 1, 2022Neil Strauss's "The Game" aimed to teach any man how to hook up with beautiful women. All he needed was a little bit of sociopathy, a lot of misogyny and a fanny pack full of props.Supp...ort us on PatreonWhere to find us: TwitterPeter's other podcast, 5-4Mike's other podcast, Maintenance PhaseSources:He's Simply Resistable  Pickup Artists Are Still A Thing. And They Want You To Know They’ve Evolved.Misogynist Incels and Male Supremacism Would the Pickup Artist Stand a Chance in the #MeToo Era?  Thanks to Mindseye for our theme song!
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Michael. Peter. I know that you've you must have heard of the game. Yes, this is the book that taught me how to neg.
You know, one of the books I'm reading for this podcast is The End of History, a book
about the ascendance of liberal democracy after the fall of the Soviet Union.
But first I thought it was critical to discuss the game by Neil Strauss, a book about how
to get the most pussy.
About how do you get in theiricks wet in LA in 1990.
The subtitle of the game is penetrating the secret society of pickup artists.
How did I not notice the penetrating thing?
Yeah, that's that's search engine optimization, baby.
So the basic gift is that it's this story about how the author joins a group of so-called
pickup artists, guys who study the art and science of picking up women.
Yes.
The aesthetic of the book, quite interesting.
The OG print edition is leather bound.
I forgot.
And it's got one of those like built-in ribbon bookmarks,
like a bright red one, like the Bible.
My God.
There are many quotations throughout the book
from famous authors and thinkers.
Can you guess, Mike?
Who the first quote comes from?
It's gonna be someone horrible, like Tony Robbins or something.
No, no.
You're going in the wrong direction, my friend.
The first quote is from Betty Friedan.
What?
The Betty Friedan quote is,
men weren't really the enemy.
They were fellow victims, suffering from an outmoded masculine
mystique that made them feel unnecessarily inadequate
when there were no bears to kill.
That's actually, yes, that's a good quote.
I'm telling you, there are some great feminist quotes
all throughout this story of banging
as many chicks as possible in LA.
So have you read this book?
Have you read the game?
So I actually read this.
I think shortly after it came out
or a couple years after it came out,
when I was in kind of a pickup artist curious phase,
I've always been slightly fascinated by this
because first of all, I always struggled to get laid.
And second of all, this whole thing always seemed
very like straight dude to me.
Like this was always wrapped up in this weird,
the dating norms of straight people,
which I genuinely find fascinating and totally baffling,
where for gay men, it's like 90% attractiveness.
So there's not a lot of like game to be done in like my world,
whereas in street world, it seems like there's this dance
of confidence and kind of the vibe that you give off.
And I was kind of fascinated just because it seems like it's harder
to date as a straight guy than a gay guy somehow?
Yeah, I think that's right.
Unfortunately, women, they've got all kinds of standards.
You know, and-
I think so.
The first problem.
It's a big downer for dudes.
Which actually, my memories of the book
has been a very long time since I've read it,
is that he seems to toggle back and forth
between a kind of anthropological dissection of this world.
Like, look at the men and how they are broken
and how they are dealing with their brokenness.
And then like one paragraph later,
he'll switch to basically advice.
How to be one of these pickup artists.
And it seems like the author himself couldn't really decide
or was trying to have it both ways.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
He, it's exactly right.
It's very clear that he goes into this adorky guy
that struggles to get laid
and he finds out how to get laid, right?
He finds these techniques that help him get laid
and they work and part of him is smart enough to know
that this is weird and manipulative
and demeans women.
On the other hand, he is very impressed with himself
and very happy about these developments.
And he constantly, it's the struggle of two kneels
all throughout the book.
Did you ever have a pickup artist phase?
No, I have never had any sort of phase like this.
I definitely had a phase where I was dorkier and not doing well with women.
I've never enjoyed even when I was better at it, like going out to bars and like talking to random
women and trying to hook up with them. I don't have like a ton of interest in being like, oh,
could I sleep with that random stranger? But no, I was never intrigued by this. I certainly, when I was in college and had a couple years
where I wasn't super successful with the ladies,
I think that it was probably loosely intriguing to me,
but never enough to be like, I'll read the book.
So this was your first time diving into this?
This was, yeah.
I hadn't even, there's a whole bunch of pop culture that descends
from this.
And I hadn't really absorbed any of it until I did for this podcast and changed my brain
forever.
It's too bad.
I'm now locked down for the rest of my life because if you have put me in LA in 2004,
I can slay using the tactics I learned from Neil's style.
Now you're told up. Now you're equipped. Yeah. To trick some like out of work actress into
having sex with you. And then both of you waking up feeling bad about it the next day.
That seems like the the experience that he's trying to replicate in this book.
So let's let's sign up kind of set the table here.
Nail's a journalist, right? And he, as part of his job,
first dives into this online community of pickup artists.
And we're in the early 2000s here.
They use all sorts of like cult-like lingo.
Sarging is going out and picking up women.
Groups of girls are called sets. So like, if there's three girls going out and picking up women.
Groups of girls are called sets. So like if there's three girls, that's a three set.
I-O-I's are indicators of interest.
So it's never like, she seemed like she liked me.
It's always, I was getting some I-O-I's from this girl.
Right.
Number closing is when you get someone's number?
Peacocking.
Do you know what peacocking is?
Oh, this is from that fucking TV show
where it's like you're supposed to wear
at least one very flashy item of clothing.
Like bright purple sunglasses in a bar or something.
And isn't it so like people will comment on it
as like a conversation starter or something?
Right, that's right.
So yeah, you're wearing like intentionally over
the top loud things in order to
attract attention and pretend that you're interesting or whatever. So Neil becomes fascinated by this stuff and he decides to meet some of these guys in person.
So he signs up for a pickup artist workshop put on by the most prominent guy in the community mystery.
put on by the most prominent guy in the community mystery. Mystery, the now famous mystery.
That's right, made famous by this book.
Mystery's real name is Eric Horvett Markovich.
For some reason, he has a legally changed
to Eric von Markovich, which I guess he just
sounded cooler.
He's a prolific writer online about picking up women.
Well known within the community,
his aesthetic is just fully chrysanjial.
Right.
Pale, dark hair, soul patch, nail polish, big earrings.
He embraces like a aggressive form of peacocking.
So he'd be wearing large top hats all the time.
He's six five and wears boots with six inch platforms.
No way.
You throw in the top hats and this guy is like towering in the club well over seven feet
tall.
He's like the fucking Chrysler building everywhere he goes.
He wears vests and large coats and numerous watches on each arm at a time.
Also, my memory of this guy from the eventual VH1 show is that he's also quite like
conventionally attractive.
You know, it's interesting.
Neil describes him as like a very mediocre looking dude.
I think he's a pretty good looking guy.
He's got like, you know, tall cheekbones.
He's tall.
He's in decent shape.
He's a good looking guy. It's got like, you know, tall cheekbones. He's tall. He's in decent shape. He's a good looking guy. It makes you wonder. It makes you wonder why he needed everything
else. Yeah.
When they first meet, mystery hands, Neil and Manila envelope containing pictures of
the hottest girls he's ever dated.
Wait, really? That's a real detail in the book. Yep.
Yep.
Imagine having that. Imagine having a Manila folder. Really? That's a real detail in the book. Yep. Yep. Ha ha ha ha ha. Ha ha ha ha.
Imagine having that.
Imagine having a Manila folder.
To be clear, that wasn't like at the workshop.
Neil Spots mystery like in the hotel lobby
and mystery just hands him beyond the local.
Oh my fuck.
So Neil is like reasonably self reflective about all of this.
He describes signing up for this workshop as,
quote, acknowledging defeat in theory already
and inadequacy.
So like, you know, he's starting from this place of like,
yeah, like I'm a big loser who can't get laid
and I'm gonna sign up for a workshop
and pay someone $500 and I understand
that that is pathetic.
So I guess I should teach you some strategies, right?
Yeah, teach me, give me the wisdom and the knowledge.
A lot of it is like very stupid icebreakers.
Like my friend was invited to be on Maury.
Like should he go on or is it gonna be too embarrassing?
Okay.
Some of them are things that you do to sort of like build a little artificial bond between
you and the gal.
So one of them is you're in the middle of a desert in a box.
Describe the box to me.
Well, well, let me describe your box, Michael.
Wait, what?
I don't even understand this one.
Yeah, me neither.
But the point is that when someone will describe their box,
they'll be like, okay, it's like big. And they're like, oh, big. That means you have like
a large ego. Oh, right. So it's almost like a palm reading thing, but it's not, yeah,
you don't grab it. It's a little fake psychoanalysis thing. Most of this is just ways to sort of
make people confident in what are traditionally the most awkward parts of a conversation.
Yeah, yeah.
Another part of it is just a recognition
that women have a sex drive and like want to hook up.
But again, it's like less socially acceptable for them.
You know, they're these artificial barriers
that you need to sort of work through.
What can I tell a story?
Yeah, yeah.
I was in a bar with a female friend of mine
and we were hanging out and I left to go to the bathroom when I came back,
and there was this guy talking to us.
He had come up to her and said,
Hey, me and my friends are trying to name all of the oceans.
And we got Pacific, Atlantic, Indian.
I feel like there's another one.
Isn't there another ocean?
She's like, oh, Arctic.
And then sort of before she knew it,
she was like in a conversation with this guy.
Yeah. And then the next day, I like Googled,
like something felt fishy to me about it,
and I Googled around, and there was literally like an article
of like pick up artist strategies,
and one of them listed was, pretend you don't know
the names of all the oceans.
I don't think that's in the book,
but it sounds exactly like a ton of their openers.
Yeah, you're just sort of engaging someone off the bat in a really natural sounding conversation.
Right.
Another thing they do is a little sleight of hand magic tricks.
Oh, yeah.
So, mystery is like a magician as like one of his little gigs and Neil like spends a
fluff, a couple of like plain flights learning little sleight of hand things.
You know, it's basically what it sounds like.
Like check this, like I can make this beer bottle levitate.
Okay.
There's something called soul gazing,
which is when you're a few minutes into a conversation,
you just have a girl stare into your eyes
and you stare into hers.
And you sort of, you know, you give it a little intro.
Like, oh, there's, there's like technique I'm trying.
So like, let's try, let's try it out.
And the whole point is that there is research showing
that if you stare into someone's eyes for long enough,
you start to feel more comfortable with that.
That sounds fake, but sure.
There's also the prop bag.
I'm gonna send you a couple of screenshots.
And the prop bag is literally what it sounds like.
Many pickup artists carry around a bag full of props
that they use in the course of picking up women.
Wait, like literal physical props?
Like, carrot top?
You'll see, not to that level.
All right, I just said let me know when you get it.
Okay.
And feel free to read out your favorites.
You've sent me a page, you've sent me three pages
of this fucking book.
The prop bag is very full.
So one of them is a pack of gum, Riggly's big red, a pack of condoms.
It's starting off somewhat normal.
A piece of dryer lint for the lint opener,
walk up to a woman, stop,
wordlessly remove lint hidden in the palm of your hand
from her clothing, ask,
how long has that been there,
then hand her the piece of lint? Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha Take a photo of yourself and a girl smiling, then another one striking a serious pose,
and finally one kissing.
In the final photo, say, we make a good couple, don't we?
If she agrees, you're in.
Oh, that's a high risk, that's a high risk strategy.
Master of psychology, if you take a picture
of you kissing her and she's like, yeah, that was fun.
We make a good couple, then she likes you.
What else?
One set of wooden runes in cloth bag for rune readings.
Okay, I'm not gonna ask you what that is.
Well, I'm not sure I could explain it,
but for some reason, just like I said,
there's a lot of magic going on.
Yeah.
There's a lot of astrology for boys.
Wait, holy shit.
Okay, now I'm at the end of the list.
One small black light for pointing out
Lint and Dandruff on girls clothing, a neg.
Yeah, that's only if you forget your lint,
you should blaster with a black light.
This is something you would do to someone you fucking hate.
Right.
This is like someone in college who you just absolutely loathe
and you wanna humiliate them as much as possible.
Like, I'm gonna bring a fucking black light
because like Emma's gonna be there.
And I also feel like any part of you
that might be successfully nighed
would be outweighed by the part of you
that's like why do you have a black light?
Right?
Are you gonna ask that question?
And then the guys like,
oh, what's your line?
Where's the explanation for why you have a bag
full of shit including runes and a black light?
And like a 20-sided die.
Yeah.
Some of these strategies are just gratuitous.
Like, there's one bit where a guy explains
that when he has a girl back at his place,
he'll ask for a massage and then tell her
that she's doing it wrong.
And then tell her that he'll give her a massage
to show her the right way,
and then he sort of like transitions that into sex.
And it's like, bro, she's at your place
giving you a massage.
You don't need tactics anymore, right?
Like this guy is experiencing one of like life's
great pleasures, you know, getting a massage
from someone who's attracted to you
while sexual tension builds.
And he cannot enjoy it because he's like turned all of human interaction into this weird manipulative game.
And that's an ongoing theme throughout this where they cannot process human interaction
except through the lens of the game. At one point, mystery has a conversation with a girl he likes
and he calls it comfort building. Oh my god. As in like trying to make her comfortable with him. I'm like, yeah,
that's what getting to know someone is. That's just like literally, you're having a conversation.
Yes. Right. This has always been my like deep melancholy whenever I hear about this stuff
because it's hard to find connections with other people. It's just hard, like as a human being,
and it's the thing that all of us want the most,
but you can't just come out and say,
like, I'd really like to form a connection with you.
Everything has to be done in this kind of between the lines way,
but your game of finding it to the point
where you're not even participating in these conversations,
it feels like.
It's just how deep the insecurity runs, right?
Like, they have to imagine everything as part of the game.
Because if it's not, then there's sort of like, laid bare.
There is another guy, Ross, who's primary game is, quote, technology, which is a word
for like psychological techniques.
It's like hypnosis adjacent.
He believes that he is a master of hypnosis. So he does things like try to get women to associate positive emotions with him. At one point he's talking to a
waitress and he's like, picture someone that you're attracted to and like look at me.
And then later he tells Neil like, yeah, now she's associating attraction with me.
Oh my f**king f**k.
You made her picture someone attractive, like someone else. associating attraction with me. I was like, oh my f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f**king f There's an incredible bit where Neil is saying something that the hypnosis guy does not like and the guy goes stop and
Neil is like this was a hypnosis technique to interrupt your train of thought
I was like, yeah, man a master of human psychology using the advanced hypnosis technique of screaming stop when you want to interrupt someone
So obviously there are many things these guys do that are just scumbag shit, just
terrible things. There are systems for getting around women who have spouses right, who are
getting around the spouses, you can hook up with the women. There are a lot of tactics
that involve like ignoring the person you're interested in or being mean to them in some
way. Wasn't this the thing, if there's a hot chick,
you should hit on her less hot friend?
Yes.
Because like, she's used to being the center of attention,
but all of a sudden, Sheila is getting the guy
hitting on her and it makes her feel weird
and then you can like scoop her up later or something.
That is correct.
That's a big part of the book.
There is one part of the book where there's like diagrams
that are drawn out like fucking war plans.
Like there's two girls at the bar and like I will move in
from this direction.
Oh my god.
I'm gonna send you a diagram.
Are you sending me the actual fucking diagram?
Jesus Christ.
No, no, no, not that one.
Okay.
This is a different diagram.
The book is full of diagrams.
Wait, what the fuck is this? This is from Mystery's Workshop and it is a bunch diagram. The book is full of diagrams. Wait, what the fuck is this?
This is from Mystery's Workshop, and it is a bunch of nags.
Should you explain what a nag is?
Yeah, I guess so, even though it's such a part of the culture now that I assume everyone knows.
But a nag is when you intentionally say something rude with the idea being that they will be a little bit offended and therefore
it sort of want to win your affection.
Right.
So it's a female diagram, like a woman and then next to each, I guess, body part is like
a neg.
So like a neg associated with each feature.
Is that a wig?
Oh, well, it looks nice anyway.
I think your hair would look better up.
What do you call that hairstyle, the waffle?
I like that skirt.
Those are really popular these days.
Those shoes look really comfortable.
And then another one is you kind of have man hands.
That one's just mean.
Yeah, some of them are like way too mean
where it's just like you look like a stupid bitch.
I don't understand how that's working.
I, a big theme of, of nagging is that,
I don't know if this is a 2005 thing,
but they're very convinced that telling a girl
that another girl at the club is wearing the same thing
will just devastate her.
Oh yeah.
I don't, I don't know if that's true or not,
but they, they seem to believe very much that it is.
What's so frustrating about this is like,
there's a lot of people that really struggle
in these kind of interactions,
like talking to a person at a bar who you don't know
is just the worst form of human interaction.
And it sucks that this is what people have to do to date.
So I get that people would want to sort of
systematize this,
where have conversation openers that are more interesting than what do you do for a living or like
what's your name or something. I sort of get the need for it. But instead of
guiding people to like, okay, here's how to have like a meaningful conversation
or like, here's how to make somebody comfortable. It's like this shit where
it's like, here's how to manipulate somebody. Here's how to seem like you're
giving somebody a compliment, but you're actually denigrating them
and establishing dominance in a conversation.
Like this is where it goes from like,
oh, they're helping people into just like,
okay, you're a huge piece of shit
if you're telling people to do this.
You know, there's tons of like little shitty tactics they do,
but more than like any given tactic is offensive.
There's just this general sense of sociopathy
running through everything.
Like they have zero interest in the joy of other people
except as a way to get things, zero concern
for the pain or discomfort of other people
except in so far as it interferes
with their ability to get things.
Sometimes it feels like they're maybe humanizing women
but then you quickly realize it's like incidental.
Like they'll say things like, don't pressure women or make them feel unsafe,
but it's not like, don't make them feel unsafe because they're human beings.
It's like, don't make them feel unsafe because then you might not hook up.
It feels like the original sin of all of this is a lot of people are just not
well suited to pick people up and fucking bars.
Right. It's an insanely difficult environment.
Yes.
I don't consider myself someone who has terrible social skills
or whatever, but I have, I, like, the idea of just walking up
to a stranger in a bar and trying to, like,
become their friend.
Nightmare.
Yeah, total nightmare.
Like, a lot of these guys should be, like,
taking a cooking class,
or, like, learning French or something.
Don't give them new angles.
Don't give them new angles.
Think of all the opportunities for negging
in a cocaine glass, a burned another one, huh?
I guess he just didn't let approve enough.
Yeah.
You know, and it's also not women alone who are treated poorly here.
Like, these guys are all hanging out
and a couple of them seem to be friends,
but their social dynamics are riddled with jealousy and mistrust.
It's likely replicate all the toxic masculinity of like a 1980s high school football team in a movie.
But with none of like the male bonding.
Yeah, because some of these guys would be better off just like making male friends.
Like some of these guys need intimacy.
The last thing I will say about like the strategies is that it's hard to divorce them from like the
age and type of the girls that they seem to be pursuing. So they love the idea of like the hot
Miami LA club girl like blonde and big fake boobs. I love fake boobs for some reason.
Okay. This is the early to mid-auts.
So they're always being like, bro,
this girl is so hot.
She's got the flattest hair I've ever seen in my life.
You know?
But like, the main thing here is that a lot of these girls
are super young.
And it's a thing where you're like,
are these great strategies for picking up women? Or are these great strategies for picking up women?
Or are these great strategies for picking up 21 year old women in LA, right, in 2004?
Also, should we mention the fact that because most people are drinking, there's also like a level of genuine questions of consent here too?
It's weird how little he mentions about that.
Yeah.
At no point, is he like, yeah, this girl was a little bit wasted.
And yet, they're all at clubs, you know, all the time.
Yeah.
They're partying, they're drinking.
Obviously, that's part of what's happening here.
I would be a lot more like of a charming Lithuario
if the person I'm trying to pick up has had seven beers.
You don't have to have like a black light with you
to get somebody like that to go home with you.
Imagine blood.
You know, some poor girl is like at the end of her night
just raging drunk and you just blast a black light interface.
Just like, wow.
What a lit here.
Oh, no.
Okay.
So mystery and Neil hit it off at this workshop, right?
And mystery sort of like makes him his protégé.
They grow close.
They ultimately end up traveling doing workshops together.
And at one point early on, mystery is like,
you can't just be Neil, bro.
You need to have a seduction nickname.
Why don't we call you style?
This meal, I guess, was moderately well dressed,
whatever that meant in 2005.
Okay.
All these dudes have stupid nicknames.
You've got mystery and style.
There's sin, juggler, two-timer, grimble.
That's a hobbit name.
Yeah, not everyone has a cool nickname, right?
Some guys just have stupid nicknames and you're like,
is that getting you laid?
Then it also makes it extremely funny
when someone involved doesn't have an insane nickname.
You'll have a dozen dudes with these crazy nicknames
and they're like, and then also there was Ross.
That's like how you two is Bon bono the edge and Larry and Adam. They weren't there that day when they were doing the names.
So are these guys? Do you see themself like when they meet women at clubs, are they saying hi? I'm style?
Sometimes they do, sometimes they don't. But for the most part, they are supposed to. They are like girls
throughout the book, no kneel as style. These guys are like trying to have
these entirely separate personas and it's something that you like present to
the chick. Oh my God, you know what this is? You know how they deliberately
write the Nigerian Prince emails to be like really bad
so that they don't waste their time with people
who are like gonna check it.
And you wanna get the real dummy on this, right?
Oh yeah, I was shit, you're right.
Part of this feels like this is fulfilling the same purpose
that like there's a huge number of people
who the minute you introduce yourself as fucking
high I'm grimble at a bar.
I just like, okay, have a good night.
Right.
If you, if some guy introduces himself as juggler after taking Lint off your top and you
don't break into a full sprint in the other directions, then maybe you're a little more
susceptible to the tactics of the game.
That's the thing.
And then it's the like, survivorship bias where like,
anybody who makes it past the Grimble stage
is like, you don't actually have to be that charming
at that point, because they're just like open
to sort of whatever weird experience
is gonna come next.
It's true.
And they are, you know, they are pretty explicit
that although some of like the real experts are like,
I can get any girl.
A big part of actually doing this is just like,
you approach a lot of girls.
Yeah.
And a lot of them are like, fuck off.
And eventually you find someone
who enjoys rune readings.
Right.
Right.
I mean, a lot of it is just numbers.
It has to be.
Oh, yeah, for sure.
So we should probably talk about mystery himself
because his personal troubles are a big sort of B story
in this book.
He is a huge piece of shit.
He pressured his last girlfriend into getting a boob job
and becoming a stripper, then dumped her
when she wouldn't have sex with other girls.
If you guessed that perhaps someone like mystery is more interested in controlling women,
then attracting them, congrats.
It is, it is you who is in fact the master of psychology.
At one point they are in Belgrade and there's a little story about mystery getting a girl
at the bar infatuated with him and she starts calling him and stuff like that.
And I think you're supposed to be sort of impressed that like this girl met him for a brief period of time and is now obsessed with him and she starts calling him and stuff like that. And I think you're supposed to be sort of impressed that like this girl met him for a brief
period of time and is now obsessed with him.
It is later revealed that she is 17 years old.
Oh, yeah.
Mystery for reference, I believe in his late 20s at this point, maybe a little older.
So yeah, I would say that it's actually not impressive to get a 17 year old to be a little bit obsessive with you.
In fact, every 17 year old is a little bit obsessive
with everyone they have a slight crush on.
That's the whole point of being 17.
It's a big part of why it's so fucking gross
to hit on 17 year olds.
Yeah, it's one of the reasons we don't do that.
At one point, Neil is asking for advice on hooking up
with a girl that he actually likes.
And Mystery's advice is to get her alone
and take his dick out, just like take your dick out
and start jerking off.
So.
Is there a prop for that?
I feel like that's probably the bag.
Like a little puppet.
Only the props God gave you for this one.
this one. Mystery is also very clearly emotionally unstable. The book opens up with a flash forward
of a mental breakdown he's having. There are scenes where he references his abusive father
in ways that make it clear he is like not well and could use some therapy.
At one point he snaps, don't tell me what to do.
My dad used to tell me what to do.
And he'll also say things that are like so on the nose
that it's hard to believe you're reading it.
He, at one point he says,
I feel really bad about myself
and then a girl sleeps with me and I feel good again.
But, well.
That is sort of what I suspected, mystery.
You're in the right line of work, mystery.
Dude's will.
Literally invent a system for seducing women before going to therapy.
Yeah.
Let's talk about some of the other teachers, the other pick-up artists' teachers in the
community.
Of course, they call themselves gurus.
Obviously.
Now, style expressly says that they all have one thing in common, which is that they are
obsessed with the idea that they're the best at this
and that the other teachers are not as good.
Oh, nice.
And Neil describes this as a competing group of cults.
And each centered around one weirdo.
Yeah.
I'm going to read you a quote from Ross, the hypnotist guy,
when he's trying to bring Neil into his crew.
You are being led into the inner sanctum of power
of my young apprentice, and the price for betrayal
is dark beyond measure of your moral mind.
Keep quiet and keep your promises,
and I will keep opening the door.
This man is like 29.
This man has a college degree.
Why are you talking like this?
So that guy is even older, I think.
Ross is one of the older guys in the community.
It's like, it's very Fedora era.
You know, these dudes who are trying to be like,
I am a master of the Dark Arts.
It's like you're sleeping with buzzed 21 year olds.
And you know, there's a running theme that a lot of these gurus, not all of them, but
some of them are fraudulent and are like only good at picking up anyone in very limited
conditions.
Again, namely like very young and impressionable women in clubs who have had five drinks. There's a point where style takes Ross,
the hypnotist, to a fancy Hollywood party
where Ross just embarrasses himself repeatedly,
including when he crawls around on all fours,
pretending to be a dog, sniffing Carmen Electra's ass.
Oh my God, wow, that's quite the 2004 cameo as well. Yeah. So the bulk of this book is just like
tales of him trying to pick up girls or observing other guys trying to pick up girls in various settings
insanely boring. I mean, just super boring. And he keeps it interesting in in part because they're in LA and his Neil's profile is sort of rising as the book goes on,
not just within the community, but also like with his journalism because he's writing about this
as it goes. So he starts getting invited to cool parties and shit. So at one point he has a pickup
competition with Heidi Fleiss, the Hollywood madam. Okay. At one point Neil nearly gets his target
the Hollywood madam. Okay.
At one point, Neil nearly gets his target intercepted by Andy Dick, and then Andy Dick expresses some
interest in Neil himself.
Okay.
There's a night where everyone at a party is being super nice to Neil and telling him
that they love him and stuff like that, and he's like, sorry, what's going on?
And then someone reveals that everyone thinks he's moby.
Hahaha.
Hahaha.
Hahaha.
Hahaha.
Hahaha. Hahaha. There were only two bald white dudes in LA at that time, so I'm sure that happened a lot.
He's doing interviews as his part of his job as a journalist and he's interviewing celebrities
like Britney Spears.
What?
And he's using like pickup artist techniques to get them to like open up.
Okay.
And it's sort of working. Brittany Spears likes him.
He's like, is that lint on your overalls?
It's just like, I love you, Neil.
Let's tell you everything.
He meets Courtney Love for a piece.
They end up hitting it off and she comes and crashes
with him and his friends for a bit.
And again, this is like 2004.
So I don't know if you recall,
but we're talking about like the dead center
of a very public struggle with addiction
and mental health in 40 loves life.
But again, for the most part,
the book is just countless variations
of the same basic dynamic.
Like they show up somewhere.
There's a blonde hottie with fake boobs
and someone tries to pick her up
with varying degrees of success.
There's also the thing where clearly Neil Strauss is like a charming, intelligent guy.
He starts off the book saying like, I'm a, I'm a dork who can't get laid, but he's also,
yeah, I think a very likable, intelligent, educated guy with a cool job.
People will be interested in someone who's like confident and accomplished and all that,
right? Like, it's not like a total mystery why Neil is good at this after a bit.
Right, and it's not like the magic tricks that are doing it or the sort of like the gimmicky things or even like the manipulation.
It's probably just a little bit of maybe practice or like little tips with like how to make other people feel comfortable and build rapport? Yeah, I think that's a huge part of it. And the rest of it is just replicating confidence
until it turns into actual confidence. And that's really all there is to it. It never feels like
there's a science here. Yeah. So as the book moves on, the pickup artist industry is booming,
right? Like tons of different workshops are springing up,
it's becoming more popular, techniques are becoming refined.
Neil is himself becoming a bit of an icon
within the community, he's like writing
on their little message boards and stuff like that.
And he's just sort of having lots of sex
and writing about it and trying to make it interesting.
There's one bit where he like purports to be writing
a few paragraphs while having sex
and the writing like devolves into gibberish
and I was just like, I know you think this is cool
and the old but it is hack shit.
Yeah, absolutely hack.
Yeah.
Wasn't there also one of my few memories of this book
is that there's like an entire fucking chapter
of him having a threesome
and it's like really long.
And it didn't feel integral to the plot at all.
It was just like, you really wanted me to know about the threesome you had.
There are, there are several scenes where you're like, I don't feel like this is
driving the plot forward.
Neil, it really feels like you wanted to tell me about this girl that you had sex with.
There's a ton of that.
And there's a threesome scene.
It's not interesting. It doesn't feel like that. And there's a threesome scene. It's not interesting.
It doesn't feel like the girls really wanted
to have threesome.
It's like congrats, dude.
I guess you talked to girls into having a threesome
because they wanted to feel accepted.
Awesome.
Score.
Great.
So, and again, circling back to the age
of a lot of these women, at one point,
he's dating a 19-year-old.
He's in his mid-30s.
Nice.
And this is one of the more serious relationships he has in the book.
And I'm like, I can't even fathom this.
I talk to 19-year-old the same way I talk to seven-year-olds.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Are you having fun at school?
Great.
It's also, it's like, this probably isn't true,
but isn't there something that like,
if you're a black belt in karate and you get in a bar fight,
it's technically assault with a deadly weapon
because you have these like extra skills.
I'm sure that that's not true.
You're a lawyer, Peter, you should know every law.
This was something that kids said in like the school yard
and I was when I was growing up.
But if you're as good at manipulating people, especially women as Neil Strauss is by this
thing, it really feels like double an ethical to be dating somebody who's 19.
Right. Once you're this good at it, it's like your ethical requirement not to go after people
that are drinking or that are younger or that have like mental illness stuff
where they can't totally consent or whatever,
it just seems like there needs to be a lot more like thought
put into this or at least more than he was putting
into it at the time.
Absolutely.
I mean, this particular story felt like,
like the girl lives with her parents
and she has like a one year old baby,
the father's out of the picture
and you're just sort of like, is this, like Neil, are you?
Are you both in kidding me?
Are you fucking kidding me with this Neil?
It feels really gross.
But her shoes looked really comfortable.
That's how we got her.
So as the book goes on, the guys are becoming like
more and more consumed with the lifestyle of running game.
And again, it just keeps leading to all of their interactions
and experiences being viewed through the game framework.
There's a situation where he has a beef
with a guy nicknamed Papa.
And a mutual friend is like, hey Neil,
Papa's using tactics on you.
And tactics is just like slaying for psychological game.
And Neil's like, okay, well, what's he doing?
And the guy's like, well, he's telling everyone not to talk to you.
Okay. Well, is that what tactics is?
That's a high school, that's a high school complex.
Right, I'm pretty sure I saw some girls
at first grade recess running tactics in that case.
He's calling someone else, but you're on the line, girls at first grade recess running tactics in that case.
He's calling someone else, but you're on the line, but they don't know that you're on the line. It's really sophisticated stuff.
He and Mystery and some of their buddies set up a sort of clubhouse in LA, which they call Project Hollywood.
It ends up being like less of a party spot, which is what they envisioned and more of like a hub for aspiring nerdy pickup artists.
That all falls apart when a girl moves in
and she and mystery fall in love,
and they fall out of love,
and then she and another housemate fall for each other.
The ensuing drama destroys the household.
And that sort of brings us back to mystery.
We should put a wrap on his story, at least for now,
because the book is sort of following his ups and downs,
and they are, they are intents.
Like his ups are pretty wild, and his downs are pretty crazy.
I told you he had a sort of mental breakdown
that the book opens with when he is sort of entering
that breakdown.
He says that he plans to go to Eastern Europe,
find two young bisexual women, get them visas,
bring them to Canada to be strippers
and magicians' assistance.
And Neil is like, okay, well, you know,
my quest for self-improvement has led me to white slavery.
And that's where we are right now. Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, it's not great. And to be clear, just so everyone feels better, at no point
does mystery take any steps towards that plan. It's less of a serious plan and more of
a just a signal that he's falling apart a little bit. He starts giving away his possessions,
including his like bed to his sister. He's like, my sister needs a good bed. He's fairly openly contemplating murder suicide of his father. He does not do that because
Neil gets his family to intervene and put him in the hospital.
It is wild that VH1 read this and was like, let's give this guy a show.
You know what? I was going to say the producer who read this book and was like, you know what, let's take this guy who has an obvious wide array
of severe mental health issues that he's borrowing
inside a shallow pickup artist persona.
Let's give him a TV show glorifying that persona.
Right.
I mean, that guy is a psychopath unmatched
by anyone you read about in the pages of this book itself.
Yeah, because mystery on some levels
like kind of a tragic figure.
Yes.
But then the people who are like exploiting him
and are like, let's share his lessons with the world.
This like broken man.
Right.
That's so much worse because it's cynical.
Oh God, the fact that this book,
it sort of ostensibly wraps on this sort of like, well, you know what?
This wasn't very fulfilling, I guess.
You know, Neil falls for a girl who likes him
for like his actual self and is like not impressed
by this pickup artist shit.
And he's starting to doubt whether like pickup artistry,
the answer to his problem is right.
And so like the last like 40 pages of this book,
and it's a 450 page book. Yeah, it's absurd. The last 40 pages are so are just him being like,
you know, that was fun, but like it wasn't very fulfilling. And, you know, Taylor's all this time,
right? Someone feels a void in their life, and they try to fill it with some shallow pursuit or
another, and then they realize that they
misdiagnosed the void and can't find fulfillment in the shallow pursuits. It's tried to the point where it feels like hacky and really disingenuous because like his self-awareness again, it feels a bit performative at times.
Like he knows that he's too smart to be taking this all too seriously and he needs to show himself awareness.
So like, he'll talk about how shallow this is,
how this is all an outgrowth of insecurity
and doesn't address the underlying problems.
But like, yeah, you just wrote for like 250 pages
about all the posts that you got
and it was like very clear that you enjoyed yourself
writing about it, you know.
He's giving himself an arc.
But ultimately, he's essentially publishing a guide to how to do it yourself writing about it. He's giving himself an arc, but ultimately, he's essentially publishing a guide to how
to do this.
Yeah, and I think to some degree, it's hard to tell whether the arc was real or whether
he was like, well, I just wrote about how I turn myself from a dork into a cool pickup
artist.
Right.
You don't want to end the book with like, well, that was cool, and I'm cool now. See you later. Like, that's right. You have to have something a book artist. Right. You don't want to end it, and the book would like, well, that was cool. And I'm cool now.
See you later.
Like that's right.
You have to have something a little deeper.
And of course, like the marketing is all about just like, here's how you pick up chicks,
right?
Yeah.
And it gets glommed on to my pop culture.
And they, of course, skip over any life lessons or moral implications.
They glorify the pickup artist concept.
Mystery gets his TV
show.
Right.
The tactics that they talk about throughout the story become so popular that they're
like no longer effective, even in the course of the book.
Like there's one point towards the end of the book where they're in LA and they use one
of their stupid lines on some girls and it's like one of those dumb questions, like the, the, you know, name and ocean kind of thing.
And the girls are like, why have five guys
asked me that same question in the past hour?
Yeah. Nice.
So as we get into the 2010s,
a lot of this stuff ages pretty poorly.
And so Neil spent a lot of the last decade
distancing himself from the game a little bit and sort of half up apologizing
He didn't interview with the Atlantic in 2015 where he said obviously I was a journalist this community already existed
And I went into describe my experience of it
But because no one had even heard of this world and the techniques
Let's face it are so objectifying and horrifying
that the book became the Bible of what it was trying
to chronicle in a more neutral way.
He's trying to be like, I was just reporting, right?
It's like, bro, you wrote a whole thing
where you're like, I'm having sex right now.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's like, come on, man.
Not only that, but a couple of years later,
he follows it up with a book called The Rules of the Game,
which is just like a straightforward pickup artist manual.
Let's get all this stuff about how all of these men
are like emotional husks out of here.
Get rid of the filler.
I just want the tips.
Right, and look, I get it, right?
Like, there's only so many chances to cash in in your life
as a writer.
And you know some publisher was like,
Neil, I got a million dollars for you.
You're no Neil.
So maybe it's not quite an endorsement,
but at that point, you have to admit,
I sold my soul for this shit, right?
You can't try to walk the tight rope
if I was just a journalist or whatever.
Also, even if it was a journalistic account,
I feel like the journalistic thing to do would be
to actually follow up with some of these women.
Right, be like,
oh yeah, you know, you went home with mystery last night.
How do you feel about it afterwards?
Like, do you feel tricked?
Do you feel deceived or manipulated?
Like, I have friends who fall in for this.
Right.
And they sort of, they wake up the next morning
and they're like, that guy didn't need to feed his puppy.
He just wanted to get me to his house, whatever. Like, the manipulation, once they're like, that guy didn't need to feed his puppy. He just wanted to get me to his house, whatever.
Like the manipulation, once you're sober,
once it's the light of day,
you're like, that was not a good faith,
spontaneous hookup, right?
It feels like theater.
So like a journalist would actually
tell those fucking stories,
like really, really basic journalism.
Like what is the cost of this?
Yeah, but he was trying to tell the unspoken tale of the male, you know.
About how much sex the men were having.
So what's the vibe? I mean, we've talked about this as we went, but is your general vibe?
These guys are disgusting assholes, or these guys are just pathetic losers.
Or even there's a third way too. There's so much more sympathetic way, right?
You can say like these guys are just trying to better themselves, and it came out wrong,
or it came out bad.
I think all three are true.
It's impossible to ignore the misogyny at the heart of this.
You're basically tricking women into going home with you
and you're doing this not for the benefit of the women
in any way, you're basically doing this not for the benefit of the women in any way.
You're basically doing this to seek status among men.
I think that there's like a critique of the critique of this book
that's like, oh, you think pickup artists are bad?
Oh, I guess you think women shouldn't be having sex.
Right, right, right.
As a gay guy, I have had periods of my life where I go to bars
and I hook up with people,
and I also get on some level that like,
that's a fairly messy process,
and like a little bit of help to like fake confidence
or have a comfortable, fun conversation with a stranger,
I actually think is fine.
Like on some level, it's okay to sort of help people
get through these interactions,
but also that's not what we're talking about here.
We're talking about bringing a fucking piece of lint
with you to a club and putting it on somebody
and taking it off of them to damage their self-esteem
and make them vulnerable to you having sex with them
so you can brag about it later.
Yeah, I mean, I do think that you could potentially
veer into being a little bit paternalistic,
a little bit puritanical.
If you find yourself fretting that like, oh, these women are being manipulated into giving
up their honor or something like that, right?
Right.
You're right.
There's almost like a light and polite dishonesty that's part of hookup dynamics, right?
You puff yourself up a little bit.
You might make yourself a little bit more interesting.
You know, if someone, if you're not into hiking
and someone you're very attracted to,
says they love to hike,
you might be like, yeah, me too.
Yeah, Peter, I live in Seattle.
I do this all the time.
Yes.
Yeah, I think I was a month six of my relationship
with my now wife when she told me
that she does not like to work out, actually.
But you know, what makes the pickup artist strategies so gross? Is this like
complete embrace of inauthenticity and the gamification of social interaction? You know, it just
ensures that whatever relationships ensue, whether it's casual sex or something more,
there's this wall of inauthenticity between you. You're just playing a game, and the other person
is the dehumanized object of the game. And I think in a world where we are all constantly searching
for human connection, there's something like particularly awful and sad about that.
The whole idea of it is misogynistic to its core. On the other hand, I do think that like, there's a large reservoir of insecure dudes in society
who like don't really know how to do this stuff.
And our desperate for intimacy,
and we live in a culture that tells them
that like it's impossible to form intimacy with other men
because like that's gay, bro.
Yeah, you know, it's hard not to have some sympathy
for like the basic plight.
Yeah.
There's a lot of social pressure on men to have sex and to be cool, to be someone who
women want to be with.
And society views sex as like something men earn and women give up.
Right.
A dynamic that is like unhealthy for everyone involved and has caused untold strife from negging to wars.
And if you squint hard enough at this stuff,
you can see this group of guys who maybe got a raw deal
banding together and trying to figure out
how to work their way out of it.
And it's almost nice.
And it's just unfortunate that the only angle
they could figure out is latching on
to a mix of manipulation tactics and misogyny.
It's a little bit like I sort of get the people
who join the proud boys or whatever.
On a purely subjective level, it feels like an attack on you
that the world is changing and your position in society
is less secure than it used to be.
On a human level, I get it.
But also at the end of the day,
you join the fucking proud boys.
You're a huge piece of shit for doing that.
And I'm not, I'm not gonna retreat to being like,
oh, but they did the piece of shit thing for good reasons.
Okay, but look at the destination where they ended up.
A lot of other people have these concerns
and don't end up like tricking women into having sex.
Right, there's a difference between being like,
you know, I can see how these tendencies might develop
and being like, so it's okay that you join
to the Proud Boys to write.
Like, you're a irrational living human being.
Yeah.
You need to be able to recognize
when you're crossing those lines, right?
When you're like, I'm taking these frustrations and I'm stepping into something awful and
dangerous.
As you place your black light into your fanny pack at 10 p.m. and head out to the bar, you
should have a little moment of reflection.
Should we talk about insults?
I was just, because you mentioned the proud voice,
and I was gonna say, in a lot of ways,
as gross as some of this stuff is,
it feels really quaint.
I know right.
You look at like modern in cells.
I suppose male sexual frustration manifests differently
in like every generation, each has its own strategies
and philosophy about it, like unique to the times.
And the only thing they have in common is the steadfast refusal to envision women as living
breathing human beings, right?
Yeah.
I do think it's fascinating that that in cells began as a reaction to the pickup artist
community, right?
That it was like, PUA hate, pickup artist hate, was the original in-sell subreddit.
Yes.
The whole premise was that pickup artists are telling you
that you can change your lot, right?
That if you do this peacocking and negging
and all this kind of stuff, you can score chicks.
And then the in-sell response was like, no,
it's never gonna get better.
Right, the pickup artists are saying like, look,
we're dorks, but with some strategies,
we can move up in the social
pecking order. We can become cool dudes who get girls. And the in-sell generations nihilistic,
right? They are like accepting that their society's losers, and instead of trying to break out
of that, they just dwell in their rage about it towards women and towards society. It's
a sense of entitlement, right? It's like very literally there, they're saying like,
these guys are trying to give us these elaborate systems
for hooking up with women.
Why the fuck should we need that?
Like why do we have to do this, right?
Which by the way, it's like not the worst,
most unreasonable question.
It's not an unreasonable question
because men are entitled to sex.
It's more that like you're gazing out upon this bizarre,
social order that govern sex and relationships
in our society and being like, what the fuck is all of this?
And I do think that that's a normal reaction.
You just have to take it to a healthy place.
This is how I look out on straight dating norms.
I'm like, what is this?
This is a fucking nature documentary to me.
Yeah.
So yeah, I mean, both of these groups are holding out their lack of sexual success as
a grievance, but the in cells believe that it's an injustice, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And so their solution is not to improve themselves, to like develop some game or whatever, but
to lash out violently.
Yeah.
So you have Elliot Roger who murders women because he's an in-sale mad that he didn't get
laid and he writes a fucking manifesto about his like entitlement to sex.
He says that he deserved sex because he was a descendant of British aristocracy.
Sure.
And it's like, it's just incoherent
because they're grasping at anything they can
to like intellectualize this anger they're feeling.
Right.
They believe that they're owed sex and attention from women.
And yeah, no need for self-improvement.
All you do is just do in your anger
about not getting what you believe that you're owed.
It's really bleak that we're at this point with like relations between the sexes and especially
the crisis of I think like straight white dudes where it's like yeah I'll take the raging
misogynists because the other option is fucking mass shooters. Oh god, yeah, it's where, you know, you look at something like nagging and you're like,
wow, that is just an awful way to look
at like human communication.
And then you look at the in cells and you're like,
actually, maybe it's okay.
I don't know.
You have to keep nagging, guys.
You're fine up there.
Maybe we'll have a nag, I don't know.
I don't know.
The only truth is that whatever solution
men come up with for these problems, it will
not be good for women.
It's just a matter of where on the spectrum it lands.
Do you have a sense, Peter, of like why you never got sucked into this world?
I don't know.
I don't think that I was in the situation that a lot of the guys that are drawn to this
are in.
Were you in cooking classes?
Were you learning French?
That's the secret.
No, I had one move and it's,
you see a figirl likes to smoke weed.
And then you're like, do you want to smoke weed?
That's actually much more effective than most of the props.
No, I'm the classic dude where it's like,
I've got weed and I'm gonna make you watch
season three of the sopranos.
And if we don't hook up, it's because I got way
into the sopranos. And if we don't hook up, it's because I got way into the sopranos.
Ah!
Ah!
Ah!
you