Modern Wisdom - #1070 - Louis Theroux - Is The Manosphere Really That Dangerous?
Episode Date: March 12, 2026Louis Theroux is a journalist, documentary filmmaker, broadcaster, and author. What is it really like inside the Manosphere? Online spaces for men have exploded in influence, shaping how millions of ...young men think about success, relationships, and masculinity. Supporters say it helps men improve their lives. Critics say it’s dangerous and toxic. So what’s the truth, and is the manosphere as harmful as mainstream media says it is? Expect to learn why Louis is so interested in investigating the Manosphere and what’s driving the growing trend, if it’s possible to speak to issues that men face without being a part of the Manosphere, if Louis agrees to anything that Manosphere has to offer, why looksmaxxing is becoming a growing trend in the Manosphere, if more traditional gender roles are actually desired by women, what the future of the Manosphere and the route young men are going and much more… Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Louis, you've got three sons, 20, 18 and 11.
Why were you interested in doing this documentary?
Well, for reasons closely related to that, I mean, yeah, that's obviously part of it.
As a dad, I saw my kids were consuming, I mean, consuming maybe sounds more active than it was.
They were being exposed to influencer content, Manosphere-type content,
specifically Andrew Tate back in the sort of post-COVID era when he first blew up.
And I remember kids saying, you know, the boys saying, oh, Andrew Tate said this or that.
And think like, well, who is Andrew Tate?
Like, that's not ever, wasn't someone I'd ever heard of.
And then the content obviously turned out to be things like, oh, women can't drive or shouldn't be allowed to drive or women shouldn't be allowed to vote.
And it was hard to, you know, that they were sort of saying like, well, he just says it as a joke.
like everyone's freaking out about this
and but you know we know what it is
like it's clearly
click bait or rage bait
but nevertheless
its level of virality
was kind of
I
it would be too far as
say at this stage it was concerning
but it was kind of weird
it was just weird to see
someone blow up like that
that quickly
and to sort of
commandeer swathes of the internet
so purposefully
like he kind of hacked
he figured something out
about the algorithm
them about Twitter and social media in general, TikTok really specifically, doing podcasts,
saying outrageous things, having an army of clippers repurposed those into short snippets
and those being picked up by the algorithm so that everyone, literally millions were being,
worldwide were being exposed to his content. So fast forward a few years and he continued to
become famous. Other people in his stead or in associated contexts were putting
out similarly viral clickbait content and the whole culture felt like it was being inundated.
I say the whole lot like swathes of male skewing internet spaces were being inundated with it.
And then meanwhile, you know, as a program maker of 30 years standing, I'm always looking for
ideas.
And I was with, I was talking to Netflix about making a program and it seemed front and center of
what I should be covering.
as both someone, I mean, I've been joking that it's like the final boss battle of the Louis Theroux subject.
You know, like, as someone who specialised over the years, I've done stuff about racists, cults, sex workers of different stripes, people involved in pro wrestling and gangster rap.
The manor, this aspect of the manosphere, like this subset section of the manosphere, feels like all those things mixed together.
You know what I mean?
They look a bit like wrestlers.
They speak a little bit like rappers.
and the content is clearly highly dubious at best,
whether or not it's sincere is a different question.
So I was like, well, this is made to measure
for whatever my skill set is in terms of making documentaries.
I think the wrestling analogy is apt
because a lot of the stuff that we see online,
even from Trump sometimes, is this weird k-fabe?
Well, I don't know, is this a joke or is this real?
And if what nobody wants is to be accused of having pointed the finger at someone for telling a joke saying that it was real. And there's always the, you know, the sort of the comedian get out of jail free card.
Well, you know, like this is, I'm not, I'm not being serious with that. But at some points, the seriousness actually comes into touch reality.
Big time. You know, the wrestling metaphor is, as you say, is very apropos. We're in a culture now where everyone has access to the media. Like we, we, we,
We all have our own mini, you know, it used to be, I'm older than you are, but I grew up in an era of
three or four TV channels. Like when cable arrived, that was a big deal. Like, oh, wow,
you've got like 40 channels. Like, what? Mindblank. Now there's a, there's a real sense in which
we kind of have millions of channels. Like, everyone can have a YouTube account and broadcast
what they like. So we can all curate a media persona, and we all have, um, we all have access
to the airwaves of our choosing. And part of that.
is employing personas and, as you say, K-Fabe, alongside that, you know, as someone who, I mean,
I'm a fan of, in a sense, self-impersonation. I find all of that, it's not coincidental
that I go into these worlds where people take off-the-peg identities, like, my name is Waldo,
and I'm a wrestler, you know, and actually, no, your name's Louis Therun and you're a BBC documentary
maker or Netflix documentary maker, do you know what I mean? Or the worlds of adult film stars.
You know, a lot of these worlds I've gone into are places where you take a new name.
And the online world, which I was looking at, same thing.
One of the main guys I looked at is Harrison Sullivan's his name, but he goes by HS Tiki-Toki Online.
There's also a guy called just Nicholas Ballantazzi, and he uses the handle Sneco.
So it's another realm in which you're performing yourself and you can employ irony.
you can employ hyperbole, you can employ a sort of performative self-parody,
all of them obfuscating who you really are, but sneaking in the whole time.
I mean, I sometimes say puckishly like there's no such thing as a joke.
I mean, obviously there is such a thing as a joke,
but the sense in which all jokes contain a masked truth.
And so you can be racist as a joke.
up to a point, I guess, but there comes a time when actually you're just being racist.
Yeah, what's that line about any organization that starts out pretending to be a cult
or making a joke about being a cult eventually becomes a cult?
Very true.
And so there's this kind of double-edged challenge that I had in making a program
of wanting to take it seriously as a subject
and not wanting to take it more seriously than it deserved, right?
I think there's elements,
there's elements in all these kinds of stories
where you have to,
you can't fall into the trap of seeing it as a,
of being a part of a moral panic.
You know, there's a sense in which you have to keep things in proportion.
I do think that kids, youngsters are very often able
to read media in a way that is quite subtle, you know, and they can see the parts of it that
are performative. Like, I'm an old school fan of rap. Like, I used to listen to some of the lyrics,
if you took them literally, a horrific, they're literally about, you know, going around,
killing people and just committing violence and, you know, I'm talking about old school NWA and
Ice Cube EZE and then that whole era. And, you know, two,
to an extent, even to this day, like, I still like a lot of grime and drill music,
but you sort of learned how to read it as not completely literal.
So in the Manusphere, there's a similar issue, which is how, what parts of this,
you know, you don't want to, you've got to, I try and employ enough of my own irony,
enough of my own sort of sense of recognizing the parts of it that are playful and irreverent
and almost kind of enjoyably outrageous,
and then the parts of it that are just over the line, abusive, bullying,
and factually, wildly incorrect.
Because the flip side of having a world which everyone has a media channel,
it's not just, oh, we all have an ability to become celebrities
and perform ourselves in public,
but nothing is curated.
And so suddenly we're in a world where it's widely believed
by many young people that the earth is flat.
It's become relatively normal to say that the pyramids were built by space aliens.
They doubt whether we've been to the moon.
I mean, call me old-fashioned, but it's like I have limited patience for that kind of nonsense.
One of the things that makes me think of, do you remember the period,
the sort of the golden era of American comedy movies, stuff like Anchorman, Talladega Knights,
Will Ferrell, Stepbrothers?
And what me and my friends at university used to do, we'd quote,
those movies. You know, you make those jokes, I Love Lamp or, you know, like, wow, that escalated
quickly or rich mahogany and stuff. Those would be the quotes that we would make. I get the sense
that a lot of what you're seeing here is kind of taking the place of that. It's people who are
sufficiently engaging and viral and outrageous and signature in their style.
that creates this sort of meme culture below it,
where it's just thing,
it's catchphrases and ways of talking
and little artifacts,
little cultural artefacts that show that you watch this thing as well.
And I get the sense that that's,
a lot of it is that.
And the difference is nobody looked at Will Ferrell
and thought, well, that's how you should,
that's how a news reporter is.
supposed to behave. Well, that's what a news reporter is doing. But because the line between
entertainment and real life has now been blood so much, it's live streaming, but it's also
entertainment. So, well, is it live? Is this life? Or is it more k-fabe? I'd agree. I think,
you know, for me, it was both alternative comedy of the 80s who I looked up to. And then maybe
when I was a little younger, you aspired to be that outlaw archetype, whether it was on
something like the A team or the professionals or, you know, just a badass, a cowboy, a maverick
cop. And then, you know, pop music, for me, later on, rappers, people who impersonated or
affected a kind of an outlaw swagger of being unapologetically into fast cars, having big muscles,
flexing how much money you had.
You know, to me, YouTube, you talk to kids nowadays,
age 8, 9, 10, ask them what they want to do.
They'll say, I want to either be a footballer or a YouTuber.
Or I want to be either, you know, astronaut or a YouTuber.
But YouTuber is basically number one.
And, you know, it's kind of in a way, you know,
every generation comes up and things,
how am I different from my parents?
Like, what have I got that belongs to me that they don't really get?
You know, and, you know, that's part of cultural regeneration and actually, in almost Darwinian terms,
the sort of sense of like, you join the bachelor herd, you leave the family unit and you, you, you begin to birth an identity with your peer group that's independent of the one that you've evolved in the family setting.
And alongside that goes certain archetypes of role models.
and so this YouTuber community is like their version of punk, alternative comedy and rap all kind of rolled into one.
But the danger is that the stage is no longer just a literal stage, like on the set of top of the pops or whatever.
The stage is now the real world.
And unlike in the old days where there were supervisors, like in the BBC, you know, watching.
like something on the BBC, a TV show or whatever, an alternative comedy show,
you had old men in suits saying, like, actually you can't make that joke.
And, you know, this bit's going to have to be cut off.
And, you know, this is going up before 9 o'clock.
You can't have people in scantily clad outfits.
Like, everything was invigilated and scrutinized for its appropriateness for a specific,
vulnerable audience, right?
But that's all gone out of the window.
And so kids are on their phones watching endless scroll of stream of content that's maximized
for engagement, you know, it's the opposite of how it used to be. It's maximized for audience
engagement so that if it's women who are half naked and guys with muscles and inappropriate
jokes, that's pushed to the top of the algorithm. And it's, I don't want to sound like an old
fart, but maybe, maybe that's okay. Like, you know, it's just a weird, maybe, you know,
yeah, I mean, it's, and parts of that are exciting. You know, I really, there's parts of the kind of,
the new media landscape that genuinely, like as a fan of pranks,
like there's some of the pranks are funny, as a fan of like documentary,
like fact-based interactions.
I enjoy that, like stuff that goes viral because it's a weird encounter or something's
awkward or, but there's no guardrails that I can see.
And the people who are rising to the top of the heap are people like Andrew Tate's,
Nico, HS.
And the last thing I'll say on that is, and behind all of that, and maybe this was the discovery going into the documentary, behind all of that is an upsell, is an attempt to convert your eyeballs into sales for some crappy product, like a highly dubious online university, a questionable crypto project, an FX trading platform.
and because these are your heroes, these are the people you admire,
then you end up, you know, some portion of those viewers end up buying these crappy products.
What do you think is driving this trend?
Why around men's issues?
Why not around something else?
Well, I think it exists among women as well, but in a different form.
I mean, it's not something I've studied, but my instinct would be that there's a kind of
Kim Kardashian, maybe even Bonnie Blue, sort of adjacent realm of induced insecurity about looks
that involves the upselling of sponsored content and questionable beauty products.
Like, you know, I'm not a huge fan of the whole Instagram look.
Like, I feel like that there's a whole new female archetype that's being hatched,
that is, I don't, it's like, I quite like people to look, you know, natural for one of a better term.
But I get that I don't get to set the beauty norms. I think for men, well, they say Instagram is a way for you to compare your insides with other people's outsides.
So if like a lot, you know, like I joke that I was an insult before it was fashionable. Like I can relate.
you know I can relate to the feeling of like wow why am I the only one with a dance card with no names on it you know
I was saying to someone earlier today like that Morrissey lyric there's a club if you'd like to go you
could meet somebody who really loves you so you go and you stand on your own and you leave on your
own and you go home and you cry and you want to die from how soon as now like that's like the
that could be the in-cell anthem so I understand why men especially young men because I think
that's important. Like it's not, for the most part, this isn't guys in their 30s and 40s.
This is teenagers, 14 through 18 and 20. And I'd say that based on hanging out with, spending
time filming with HS Tiki Toki, Sneko and others, and seeing like, this is like sometimes
even nine years old, 10 years old, coming up and saying like, oh, mate, I love you. You're the
best. So they're kids.
some of them, and certainly young men who are trying to figure out where they fit in in life.
And in a world where many of the old entitlements and certainties have been eroded,
and in which they don't know, you know, they're looking for some sort of parasocial relationship
or sense of connection, and they want big muscles and a big fast car and lots of money.
And that sort of speaks for itself, right?
Yeah, it's a good point around the age. I don't really think about it that much. The audience for my podcast, which is many of whom are men, is there's basically nobody below 18 and a big, big, big chunk of them are sort of 20 to 40. So I don't really think about those young kids, but I guess what's interesting is, yeah, maybe if you talk about the removal of previous role models, the paths toward legitimacy that men would have been able to hold on to in the past that are no longer.
there, socioeconomic imbalance between women's performance and men's performance. I don't know how many
of kids that are 11 years old of thinking about that, factoring that in. So I don't know that
explanatory mechanism does work if you're 22, but I'm not convinced, and you've had time to
kind of be rebuffed by a world that you felt you were promised but never got delivered to you.
but I'm not convinced that that's the same.
So maybe it's more entertainment, but there's less ability to discern whether this is something that's turned up to 11 joke or it's exaggerated or caricatured for comic effect or is completely not meant seriously or something else.
You know, it's a good point.
I suspect it's a little bit all of the above.
I do think that in one sense, if TikTok, if TikTok,
had it existed in the 18th century, or let's say 19th century at a time when there were jobs
in factories and kind of traditional gender norms and archetypes.
And I still think actually people would be, kids, young men would be enormously beguiled by it.
Like there's a sense in which none of the messaging, you know, you go Andrew Tate's messaging.
A lot of it seems to be derived from books like Iceberg Slim's books where it's about the
pimp culture of the 50s and 60s, you know, it's this sort of sense of which I can, the idea is,
I can teach you how women think and actually you can't take women at their word, they've got a
different, they've got a whole different vocabulary. It's sort of like erroneous notions of like,
oh, breaking people's spirit and, you know, ugly, dark stuff, but it's gone viral as a side
effect of an algorithm. So I think partly, you know, even without the collapse of
manufacturing in the West, you know, parts of the West, and even without the entry of women into
the workplace, and even without an attempt to be less prescriptive about what gender roles look
like, it would still be enormously enticing. But then you add in some of those other things,
and clearly it's even more the case. I mean, I don't know, like, if you're 12 or 13,
you may not be thinking about entering the workplace,
but you obviously are thinking about in some way
aspiring to be more than you are,
in fairly basic ways.
Trust really is everything when it comes to supplements.
A lot of brands may say that they are top quality,
but very few can actually prove it,
which is why I partnered with Momentus.
They make the highest quality supplements on the planet,
and their way protein is literally the cleanest on the market.
It's fast-absorbing, isolate, sourced from grass-fed European.
cows, which means no hormones, no antibiotics, no GMOs, plus it's NSF certified, meaning that even
Olympians can use it. And unlike most proteins, it's designed for gut health. No fillers, no junk,
low in lactose, and it mixes amazingly. This is fantastic. Clean protein usually tastes awful,
and this is unbelievable. Best of all, there's a 30-day money-back guarantee so you can buy it
completely risk-free, plus they ship internationally. Right now, you can get 35% off your first subscription
and that 30-day money-back guarantee
by going to the link in the description below
or heading to live momentous.com
and using the code Modern Wisdom at checkout.
That's L-I-V-E-M-O-M-E-N-T-O-U-S dot com
slash modern wisdom and modern wisdom at checkout.
What do you think the manisphere that you saw
is trying to remedy in the world?
What are they seeking to achieve?
Well, I mean, I think you might be
giving them a little too much credit.
Like I think they're trying to remedy their pocketbooks to a great extent.
You know what I mean?
They're trying to achieve wealth for themselves.
And you could say that doesn't explain everything.
Like, well, they could do that by, you know, I don't know, going out prospecting
or trying to find sunken ships.
But they clearly have found a way of connecting by, in a sense,
appealing to the parts are, I would argue, the less evolved, the less meritorious, the more
primitive parts of our identities, right? There's a sort of, what we're living through is a time
which our most primal urges, you know, our kind of evolutionary strategies, our drives towards
whether it's sexual or tribal, you know, those parts that are controlled by the amygdala,
like deep inside the reptile brain
have been connected to the most high-tech
forms of technology
and so
you know we're defenseless
I don't want to sound super
kind of neo-Darwinian
but you know the senses which we are still
living with our own kind of
software
which was involved on the savannas of Africa
and it's adaptive
to certain situations there
fight and flight and whatnot
and then so when
someone, when those are deployed and weaponized against us on social media, we are somewhat
defenseless. I would say what, I suppose you could say, well, what do they say that they're
attempting to remedy? They would say they're attempting to remedy an overly woke culture,
a culture in which men have lost touch with what it means to be a man, in which women,
I mean, to quote Myron Gaines. One of the main people I speak to is a guy called Myron Gaines. He
familiar with him? Yes. So he's part of a double act called Fresh and Fit. They have a podcast in
Miami. Their content is very extreme. And Myron Gaines wrote a book called Why Women Deserve Less.
And his whole message is that women have been pampered and they are over-entitled. And as men,
we need to recognize that and give them less. And everything will go more smoothly. And so
his message would be actually men can hack the game of life. I can teach you the cheat codes of life.
A lot of it based on old PUA, pick up artistry supposed hacks, you know, negging women,
recognizing that women are in their words or in their view, status obsessed. And then you can
build the life that you would like and would deserve by,
employing his techniques.
I mean, there's a lot more that could be said about that.
I mean, I found it so inimical to the way I think about it.
I mean, I was raised by a feminist mom, you know,
and in South London in a world where, yeah, the idea that, you know,
my mom was a working mom.
I grew up in the 70s of South London.
So these ideas are so alien to me that I had to kind of get my head around.
I think a lot of it seems to be based on his interactions with cam girls and only fans models.
Like, in his world, he's like all, when he's talking about women, he only really seems to be talking about Instagram models and women who do a lot of social media.
Like that gets you some way down to understanding, like, what his mindset is.
But within his sample group, he's in this world where there's this competition in which all women, one of his big things is like women can't.
It shouldn't go on social media.
And if you have a girlfriend, you've got to keep her off social media.
Anyway, I'm going on a bit of a tangent.
But their message is an unrecon-
It's too kind to call it old school, I think.
It's a sort of almost a pastiche of, maybe a k-fabe of,
but certainly a parodic sort of hyperbolic version of some old-school masculinity
in which men should be able to have a sex with as many women as they like,
and women should really only be virgins until they marry and then just sleep with their husbands.
Maybe old school, but Genghis Khan old school.
Yeah, maybe you take it about it.
Genghis Khan would be probably, that would be their ultimate alpha.
Look, I think it's interesting for me having this conversation because I'm accused of being a part of the
Manusphere very regularly. I got in trouble at the start of this year and a lot of the,
I got called, for the first time ever I got called a Lux Maxer. And I realized, when that happened,
I realized that Lux Maxer had taken the place of this sort of catch-all term for some guy
that we don't like and probably has icky beliefs. It would have previously been maybe some
sort of right wing, maybe it would have been like, like, yeah, like pickup artist or something else.
And it's interesting watching your perspective from me as someone who the Manosphere has got a huge problem with, and I've never claimed to be a part of it.
And we disagree on a lot of things.
And the only real alignment that we have is that men watch our content.
But I think what I'm taking from your perspective is that it's not necessarily, you don't see this content as being mission driven.
even if it's framed as being mission driven,
you see it as being self-serving,
primarily for accumulating more fame and wealth for creators.
But it's done under the guise of this is part of a bigger mission,
that this is a grander plan and that that appears to be an effective exploit,
kind of like in a computer game,
that there's been a
hack that's been found
and if you couch your pursuit
for fame and money
under a
bigger
desire for systemic change
that seems to be
an effective way to sort of camouflage it.
Is that?
Yeah, that's a representation.
Definitely that. I mean, even to go further
I think there's parts of it.
where it isn't even so much that it's camouflage as mission driven, although it may be, but also
that it's exploiting vulnerabilities or maybe deliberate parts of the algorithm in order to
draw more eyeballs. In other words, I don't even, it's, even Myron Gaines would say a lot of
what he says to be, is to be outrageous, you know, to get people's attention, to awake
them up. Like, they do sort of walk back. Some of the things they say are so horrific, I don't even
want to really repeat them, but, but, you know, so sort of horrific in terms of seeming to endorse
sexual assault or certainly minimize it and saying things like, as I said, like the women
shouldn't vote. I think he said at one point, you thought gay people should be rounded up and
put in special camps.
So I don't think, I don't know, like, I don't know that he necessarily believes that.
And if you talk to him, sometimes you'll start walking those back.
So, so he'll be like, oh, well, I'm not literally saying.
What I mean is they start parsing it and sort of making it sound more acceptable.
But then you're right, there is a part of it where they are advocating a return to a certain more male
centered version of society. But actually, it would be wrong to say that that's their signature
because there's plenty of people, conservatives, let's say, who might take a similar position.
So that's not really their identifying characteristic. Like, really what singles them out and
defines them as extreme manosphere is the willingness to embrace a kind of paranoid,
conspiratorial mindset
to employ outrageous
I would say utterly cynical
clickbait based
content creation
and then all of it with a view
to grift
like that behind it is a
is an angle
it's an attempt to reach a market
and someone like
HS Tiki toky
he's Essex born
is
like a lot of these guys
single-parent home, a home in which, certainly for Tate,
like the chaos in Tate's household growing up,
he talked a lot about how his dad would come by and beat him up.
You grew up real quick, one good ass whipping is one of his quotes.
Like the idea that there's a massive educational value
in being beaten up by your dad is kind of extraordinary
and probably some kind of a compensation by him.
him, right? Like some attempt to
extend you've got this line. You've got
this line in the doc. You say, the romance,
the confidence, the wealth were all
either illusory or out of reach and the
anger seemed a compensation for
the fear of being exposed.
Yeah. Well,
because actually
they're saying
if you follow my part,
if you take my advice, I'll
give you the cheat codes to life.
And you will be rich like me.
But the way
they teach you to be rich is generally not the way they got rich, if they are rich. Because the other
part of it is, it's not clear how much of it is even real. I mean, there's so much false content,
there's so much misleading advertising, in my opinion. You know, the idea that, oh, if you want to
be a multi-millionaire, just do what I did and go on this FX trade. And, you know, the idea. You know, the idea that, oh, if you want to be a multi-millionaire,
just do what I did and go on this FX trading platform.
And you're thinking, actually, I'm pretty sure HS Tiki-Toki made his money by streaming for 10 hours a day,
you know, and taking a cut of the products that he's selling, not by trading on FX.
You know what I mean?
And so there's a sort of a bait and switch going on.
And then with Tate specifically, he came up.
kind of as an offshoot of the PUA community, the pickup artistry community,
and then using this sort of Neil Strauss, the game adjacent techniques,
in order to say that I can teach you the psychology of women,
and then you can run cam girls, and you can be a pimp.
You know, one of his first products was the so-called Pimp in Ph.D.
Pimp in Hose degree.
He's tried to walk that back now, but obviously the whole.
whole paper trail is there online and, you know, describing how you have to get a girlfriend and
have sex with her and then she'll fall in love with you and then you introduce her to camming
and then you take her money. Meanwhile, I just tried, can I add one thing to that? And then he'll say
in other interviews, oh yeah, I did this thing where I taught people how to make money by being,
quote, a pimp, but it doesn't really work because you have to be like me to do it. Like you can't
teach that. So the level of cynicism about their own products is obviously extreme as well.
A quick aside, if you've noticed your energy isn't quite what it used to be, even though you eat
well and stay active, there might be a reason for that. As we age, our mitochondria,
which is the parts of our cells that produce energy, become weaker and make less energy,
which is why I'm such a huge fan of timeline. They developed this pill right here that helps clear
out damaged mitochondria so your cells can actually renew themselves. And this isn't just theory.
In clinical trials, people saw mitochondrial renewal increase by more than 40% in just 16 weeks,
along with improvements in their overall energy. Timeline is backed by over a decade of research.
It has more than 50 patents and is the number one doctor-recommended mitochondrial supplement
on the planet. I started taking it nearly two years ago because it was recommended to me by my
doctor, and that is why I've used it for so long. Since way before I knew who made
the product, and that is why I partnered with them. Best of all, there's a 30-day money-back guarantee,
plus free shipping in the US, and they ship internationally. So right now, you can get up to 20%
off and that 30-day money-back guarantee by going to the link in the description below,
or heading to timeline.com slash modern wisdom. That's timeline.com slash modern wisdom.
What's the link with childhood experiences here? You mentioned sort of some patterns of
fatherlessness or strife in the upbrow?
ringings. Yeah, I mean, I hesitate to play armchair psychologist, but let's do it anyway. It's
definitely the case that of the people I interviewed, the ones whose backgrounds I looked into,
that was the business guy, business guru and friend of the Tate's Justin Waller, and also H.S.
Tiki-talkie. And Tate is obviously Exhibit A. There was this sense in which there was no father
the figure present in the home, you know, as a sort of like self-identified progressive,
like, you know, there's a part of me, it's like, actually, I think all kinds of flavor of
family can work, but it's noticeable how much trauma there was in the homes of these people
and also, yeah, just unpredictability. You know, it might even be that, you know, the first go-to would be
like, oh, I guess a dad in a home would be good.
Like, I think, I tend to think if it's an option, you know,
dads bring a lot to the table, you know, the risk of staying in the obvious.
But just stability, just some sense of like knowing that there's some regularity
and some kind of sense of security in the home, both financial and emotional.
And, yeah, it goes without saying if your dad's coming around beating you up,
that's going to kind of create an almost apocalyptic mindset.
Like I've said in the past that there's parts of the tape message,
this message where you can't trust anyone.
Only you can depend on yourself.
You've got to be a warrior, a warrior, and go out there
and then women are at risk of being attacked.
And that's why you can't let your wife out on her own
because you've got to be a warrior and she could be.
Actually, if you were living in the time of Genghis Khan, maybe,
or maybe like there'd been a complete collapse of society
and marauding bands of warlords were taking over the streets,
you know, the tumbleweed-strewn streets, you know,
and we were sort of foraging in cracks in the gutters.
Like, okay, yeah, I guess you would have to be like a warrior.
But that actually isn't, not yet, anyway,
the society that we live in.
But I do think that if you come from a somewhat apocalyptic home life,
and you have to evolve this sort of warrior strategy
in order to make sense of it,
you know, where your dad is marauding into the house every now and then,
then you can see how that would be an appealing mindset.
And here in his brother, you get the sense of them being trauma bonded
and in a world where nothing outside their tiny unit
is solid or quite trustworthy.
And then you roll that out and kids are like, yeah, I wouldn't be a warrior.
It sounds kind of cool.
Like it sounds badass.
And it becomes an all kind of all encompassing model for how society should be.
If that's the case, if it's so common that a lot of guys who are growing up to talk in a
vociferous manner about how to survive the world, about self-sufficiency and sovereignty
and not being able to trust and standing on your own two feet.
And that's come out of difficult childhood experiences, fatherless homes,
maybe some neglect or dysfunction or abuse.
I don't know.
You know, in many situations, you'd say, well, that deserves sympathy.
Oh, I agree.
Yeah.
And in fact, I do think that I've attempted to extend empathy to,
You know, I tend to think like those categories of victim and perpetrator can be too binary.
Like, you sort of see ways in which these guys, these influences are, I mean, I feel bad for what Andrew and Tristan Tate went through.
Like, it's quite painful.
We have a little picture of him age four years old.
You think, what did that kid go through?
And then similarly, we meet someone called Ed Matthews, who's a friend of HS Tiki-Ti-Ti-Ti-Ti.
He's another streamer who gives Ventus some conspiracy theories.
But you also see him when he's, I think, nine or ten years old going online.
Yeah, eating marshmallows.
Yeah, eating marshmallows doing like talking in a site of YouTube, Mid-Atlantic accent.
Can you say Fuzzy Barney or something?
And you just see like he's a guy who grew up more or less online, raised by YouTube, you know?
Like, they used to say like kids raised by wolves in the woods.
He's been raised by an algorithm.
And what does that do to you?
Well, it turns out it sort of turns you into Ed Matthews.
So yeah, I think it's appropriate to have empathy.
And I think the part that we don't really dig that deep into is the tech side, the ways in which, like, who's behind this?
Because it's kind of gray engineers and business people who've programmed social media platforms in order to keep us online for as long as possible.
But we're all defenseless.
I have no superiority when it comes to my algorithm.
them has me by the short and curly. I go on to
Instagram to send a DM to someone and then 20 minutes later I'm looking at
videos of a woman playing the piano with her breasts. That was a real
one that came up. Not naked. She wasn't naked. Someone sent that to me. I'm like,
what the hell? Don't send that to me. These platforms are really good at hacking the bottom
of our brain stems and yeah, I guess it's an interesting challenge to think. I had this
guy in the show, Stuart Russell, and he wrote the book on artificial intelligence up until probably
about six, seven, eight years ago. And he explained to me about how these algorithms work, these
black box algorithms. If you ask a YouTube, the YouTube engineer, let's say there was just one,
so what is the algorithm? What does it do? Can tell you what the output is, but no one can tell you
how it works, because it's self-training, right? It's trying to maximize largely click-through rate and time on
site. It's like get people to press a thing, and once they've pressed a thing, get them to stay on
the thing. That's kind of it, maximize time on site. And what he taught me that was really interesting,
and I think adds a really cool flavor whenever you're watching anything on the internet,
especially if you see this kind of runaway escalation effect of any type of content, is
the algorithm can do two things to make you more likely to click on a piece of content. First one,
which most people understand, is it can become better at predicting your preferences. I know what you like,
and I am able to deliver that to you in a good way. The second one, which is way more pernicious,
is it can nudge your preferences to be easier to predict. So if it's able to engineer you,
and typically, if you're out on one end, either right or left or up or down, based on whatever,
you know, ideological map you want to use, it is far easy to predict how you're going to behave,
because if you're in the middle, you might fall one way, one time and then another way the next.
And I realized, as he was talking, oh, well, there's also an implication here for the people making
the content, because if the algorithm is training the feedback mechanism of the preferences of the
people who are watching, it's also doing it to the people who are incentivized to maximize the people
that are watching because we, me and you, you've got podcasts and stuff, you've got metrics,
you can see what you're doing that is effective. There's a retention curve. Oh, I said this thing.
Oh, that was an, we should, we should do more segments like that on the show next time.
I don't know what reporting Netflix gives or has or whatever, but in a documentary,
people screen test movies and stuff, right? Like, that's kind of the same thing. Why are you
screen testing a movie? Because you're trying to be shaped by the audience. But this is now being done
en masse with metrics all the time, 24 hours a day, with an algorithm. And you know, you bring up the
sort of dynamics of live streaming and how that sort of contributes. I saw for the first time ever,
I was at a Mr. Beast, Beast Games 2 premiere in Hollywood at the start of the year. And for the
first time ever I saw a live streamer in the wild. And I'd only ever seen it this side of a screen
before. And to hear someone, unironically say, W cameraman in the chat,
But to hear that in real life, to me, kind of felt a little bit like seeing your school teacher at the supermarket.
You're like, what are you doing here? You shouldn't be here.
You should, Mrs. Henderson, you're supposed to be in history class.
But yeah, this algorithm thing, it's becoming better at predicting users' preferences, but it's also shaping the preferences of those users to make them easier to predict.
and it has to be shaping the incentives of the creators.
And this is what audience capture is, right,
that you just begin to throw more and more red meat toward the audience,
to do the thing, to say the thing that they are going to agree with,
that they're going to respond to.
So, yeah, the algorithms are warping,
but they're not just, they're warping in kind of all directions,
including kind of vertically integrated backup the production.
production stack.
100%.
And imagine if as well,
like you're putting out content that is maybe feels authentic to you,
you know,
maybe some of it is stunts and pranks and some of its skits or interactions with
people in the public,
but some of it's just monologues or you just talking about stuff.
And you're in this continuous feedback loop of being rewarded for some things and not
for others.
What that does to your identity?
And, you know, if your main relationship in life is with the chat, like a virtual community, the ways in which you would start to second guess who you are.
And especially in this realm where we talked about K-Fabe, this sort of sense in which there's this unacknowledged fictional dimension that's never really spoken about.
You know, how confusing that would be.
You would start to think, I don't even know who I am anymore.
You know, there's this sort of existential burnout that takes place.
I'm really curious, though, when you said the thing about, how would they be able to, in that idea of nudging your preferences instead of just pandering to them?
How do they do that?
Do we know?
Just by giving you more extreme content?
The algorithms.
Stuart didn't explain the dynamic to me, so I'm just going to bro-sign-sit and pull it out my ass.
but I think it would be probably to do with a reliable escalation of a pipeline.
I hate using that word because it's always thin end of the wedge.
You know, you start off watching Jordan Peterson and before you know it, you're at a KKK march,
which I don't think is necessarily true.
But I do think that if you were to come up with a way to imagine that the algorithm was able to see,
because what it's doing is it's using the preferences of other users that are like you,
and it's using their path to help predict your path, right?
Because you're a new user, you sign up, Lou, you sign up with a brand new YouTube account.
How does it know what humans like generally?
Well, he clicked on this and other users like him also clicked on this.
And then they clicked on that, and then they clicked on that, and then they clicked on that.
And if you can become more and more reliable over time, I can't think of a better word for it.
It does create a kind of funnel.
it creates a sort of path that reliably takes somebody toward a more predictable version of themselves.
And this is why the biggest videos get the most plays, beyond the fact that typically they're the best, right?
Or they're the most effective, whatever, keeping us on site.
But also that they're the ones that are most reliable from the algorithms perspective, being able to get people to click on it.
And especially if you've preconditioned them, like Darren Brown or something, it's a big Darren Brown game where you're trying to sort of
lay the
scenario so that these beliefs
over time become and also
are bucketed. People are bucketed into
more easy
to understand groups and I think typically
that pushes people out toward the edges.
What I observed was that in the streamer
community, and this is self-evident
there's this pull towards
obviously engagement and that
That involves antisocial behaviour.
So one thing that we filmed was HS Tiki Tiki
setting up what he called a Pred sting.
This was a big trend, I think, last year,
where people would set up dates with someone
pretending to be underage,
and then the person would arrive,
the alleged predator,
and then the streamer would humiliate the person,
say, like, you're a filthy pred, you're a filthy pred.
and in the case of the one we watched, they beat him up.
And it was really dark.
It was really dark.
It was a bit, it felt like, you know, we used to say, you know, back in the day there
was this vision for what dystopian society would look like where this sort of top-down
justice, public executions or hunger games.
And my episode was like, we've kind of created a million hunger games that are self-inflicted.
You know, there's these sort of, yeah, individual.
curated reality shows where anything goes. The other part of it was that in the chat,
because you've got these people kind of, it's not like they're not quite your friend.
Often they're like trolls, right? And with HS, because he started questioning, I mean,
I should wind up and say, I should wind back and say that in filming the documentary, I was
aware that they would be filming me. And that was both a price of entry, but also kind of an
opportunity to tell the story in a slightly different way where we'd they'd be filled i'd film them
they'd be filming me we'd incorporate some of their content into the filming then after i leave they go
back on stream saying like i don't know what louis game is i think he might be trying to fuck me but i'm
not sure anyway and then all these comments come in saying like uh bro he's gonna finish you
you're cooked bruv uh h s l major el for tiki toky furoo's
going to dunk on you, brov.
And then he starts talking back to the chat,
and it becomes this sort of spiral where he starts questioning his decision to take part.
And we were kind of whipped up almost like a kind of gladiatorial scenario by the crowd.
Like, come on, finish him.
Like the crowd is like these comments that come in the chat,
and they're egging us on to sort of ramp up the aggressiveness and the tension.
So there's this natural tendency towards everything becoming combat, you know, like
whether it's a zero sum approach, which is entertaining, you know, and goes back to what you
said at the beginning about this sort of metaphor of wrestling, but I mean, ends up being, I think,
rather exhausting and it's obviously a very limited way of observing life.
We'll get back to talking in just one second, but first.
If you have been feeling a bit sluggish, your testosterone levels might be the problem.
They play a huge role in your energy, focus and performance.
But most people have no idea what there's are or what to do if something's off.
Which is why I partnered with function because I wanted a smarter and more comprehensive way
to actually understand what's happening inside of my body.
Twice a year.
There are lab tests that monitor over 100 biomarkers.
They've got a team of expert physicians that analyze the data and give you actionable
advice to improve your health and lifespan.
Seeing your testosterone levels and dozens of other biomarkers charted across the course of a year
with actionable insights to genuinely improve them gives you a clear path to making your life better.
Getting your blood work drawn and analyzed like this would usually cost thousands and be a nightmare.
But with Function, it's just $499 and now you can get an additional $100 off,
bringing it down to $399.
Get the exact same blood panels that I get and save $100 by going to the link in the description below
or heading to functionhealth.com slash modern wisdom.
that's at functionhealth.com slash modernist.
Well, what I saw with my live streamer in the wild was it's kind of like permanently edging
your audience with no orgasm at the end.
Because if there's a payoff, that is a lull and that means that your numbers are going to go
down.
The live stream numbers are going to go down.
So there was always, it always felt like a cliffhanger at the end of a TV show.
Because we were stood in the line for the right.
red carpet five, ten yards away. So I was, and I was fascinated. So I'm just like locked in
watching this guy. And it was, we don't know what's going to happen next. I don't know if we're
supposed to be here. This is the thing that's coming up. There was always anticipation. There was
always this thing's going to happen and this thing's going to happen and this thing's going to happen.
And yeah, it is a, I think it's maybe a little different when it's not IRL stuff. If it's not,
If you're sat in front of a computer,
typically the pace is a little slower.
You're reacting to things as it comes up.
You're able to converse a little bit more with the chat.
But yeah, if you're in the real world,
now we're going to go and go down the strip in Marbea.
Now we're going to go on the back line.
Now we're going to go.
So, yeah, there is this ever escalating sort of dopamine spiral
that needs to be played.
And if not, then the numbers go down.
The numbers going down is bad.
And the chat says that it's, you feel less.
You're literally, it's not like in the old days, oh, how are the ratings last night?
They haven't come in yet.
We'll get them in a couple of hours.
This is constant.
You can literally see how many people.
This second.
Every second.
Every second.
And also, meanwhile, meanwhile, as they're going, some guy, some clip, there's a team of clippers
who are taking short clips, each one about, you know, five to 20 seconds long with a little
headline, like Theroux finishes H.
Or H.
H.S. wasn't expecting Theru to say this.
or H.S.'s' mom is having a pop at Theroux, like, almost like, you know, tabloid headlines,
and then they just put them out.
Like, so there'd be 50 or 100 or 200 of those clips based on a conversation of a few hours,
and then whichever ones perform well.
Like, we're so, you know, I have a, you know, podcast.
We put out social media content.
We'll put out like two or three clips.
I mean, we're probably still in the dark ages.
And then, oh, one of them did well, or maybe none of them did well.
But what we should be doing is pretty, like, these guys,
put out like a hundred and then one of them gets picked up and then that that gets turbocharged
and it's seen I had the dubious privilege of coming back from location this is the first time
this has happened and arriving back and my kids would be like dad what were you doing with
h s like why were you like I saw that what what were you thinking when you said that thing or
why did you like not answer his question about such and such or they had seen it all already not
like on a live stream it had just been fed into their service
media feeds. I've never had this weird sense of being eavesdropped upon all the way through the
film process. You were surveilled, but it wasn't by some secret police or a private investigator.
It was by the camera team. Yeah, it wasn't you with escorts in Middle America. It wasn't you with some
fundamentalist religious cult. It wasn't you with whatever. And then you coming home. I have to
imagine that probably your kids brought up more questions to you about what was.
was going on there than they do if they've watched your documentaries because it feels live and
emergent and it's going on in this way. Yeah, I think it's, I'm curious to see what they make of it.
Like, well, I say that, I'm already second guessing that. I am curious, but I also, one of the things,
I grew up with a dad who had a public profile. He's an author called Paul Theroux and, you know,
it's something, I don't know if you had this or not, but it's something when your parent is,
famous, they have a dual persona and you're very conscious that the public one feels false.
Like I just remember thinking like the dad, the version of my dad that existed in newspaper profiles
or as a kind of character in his books wasn't someone I particularly recognized.
And I imagine it might be the case with my kids.
And I'm obviously very keen that they should see me as dad and not like.
Louis through
quirky documentary maker
and definitely not
Louis through like
Stoge or a Patsy
or kind of
sort of
butt of
HS Tiki Tiki Tockeys
humiliating jokes
you know but that being the case
they see what they see on social media
they've been
they've been surprised
not surprising but they've been
a kind of reassuringly
relaxed about
me appearing on their streams.
I've been joking this.
Dad, you got cooked by H.S.
I don't think they actually ever said that.
Yeah.
Not to me anyway.
The fact that you're in this sort of weird panopticon of,
what was it that Stuart Lee referred to it as,
Starzy for the Angry Birds Generation,
it's state surveillance run by gullible volunteers.
That's a great,
Now that's panopticon.
You had me at panopticon, actually.
I'll keep, I was shamelessly re-refer.
Should we tell the people like, yeah,
Panopticon, a term I think coined by Jeremy Bentham,
the utilitarian philosopher and social reformer,
which was the idea that a prison of like 10,000 people
could theoretically be staffed by one or two people
who were in a central kind of lighthouse
that surveilled the entire structure.
But you're right, we're in this sort of mutually,
well, I can't really do better than what you just did with the Stuart Leakwo.
We're in a self-created kind of all-facing panopticon.
Yeah.
Well, look, a typical panopticon.
I tell you what's interesting for me.
The strange thing, at least a little bit, is I know pretty much everybody that was in the
documentary in one form or another.
I've either spoken to them, texted them.
I haven't published any episodes at anybody.
But, you know, I've been for dinner and I've been tangential, I guess.
I think the thing that's weird for me, or that's a little bit of a challenge for me,
is that it's difficult to speak to issues that men face without being lumped into this very broad term
that sort of concept creeped out to include Manusphere.
I mean, you know, feminism includes maternal feminists, someone like a Louise Perry,
who campaigned against rough sex, killings, and is very pro-family,
and sort of the most anti-natalist, super-liberal, super-progressive woman.
Like, you know, feminism is a very big broad bucket term that includes everything.
And I think that Manosphere is basically meninism was just too weird of a term.
So Manosphere is sort of the online equivalent of what feminism is.
And shared audiences don't really indicate shared motives.
But I can say is somebody that I think I do good work.
I think I do, I try to create a balanced approach for helping men and women to understand each other and improve their lives.
But it's a difficult needle to thread to just talk to men at all.
And, you know, you use a small clip, I think, of Scott Galloway at one point in the documentary.
Richard Reeves as well from the American Institute of Boys and Men is sort of tangential.
to him or Arthur Brooks. Like is Arthur Brooks and Scott Galloway? Are they really the
fucking cutting edge of misogynistic content online? And then I see someone like a Scott Galloway
talk about guys should be strong or they should go to the gym or young people should go out
and have experiences and make mistakes. And he's concerned about the decline of alcohol.
He thinks that people should be going out and getting drunk when they're young and whatever.
I think it's difficult, or I found it increasingly difficult to be able to speak to the issues of men and boys.
And what's happening with gender relations and sex and declining coupling and all that stuff,
it's becoming increasingly difficult for me to do that without being, yeah, lumped in with audiences that may cross over,
but ideologies that don't really have all that much in common.
It's made it, it's, it's been a really interesting challenge because obviously people are pointing at lots of the same issues.
But their diagnosis and then treatment plan diverge an awful lot.
So, yeah, it's, it was very interesting watching the documentary.
I hear that.
And I'm really curious to know, Chris, because you mentioned earlier that you felt you'd had a bit of flack for something or other.
Are you able to share anything about that?
Yeah, I mean, it's more general flack. It's kind of rain rather than atomic warheads. But yeah, there's disagreements around. Typically, it's that I'm too blue-pilled that I don't see, I know the truth about how men and women are supposed to relate, but I'm not prepared to be sufficiently militant or,
harsh in my presentation of it.
I thought you meant that you'd had
flak from the legacy media.
Oh, I've also got that. I've also got that.
For being two Manosphere adjacent.
Oh, that's correct.
So, yeah, the Manosphere think I'm a blue-pilled cuck
and the Guardian think that I'm a misogynist's right-winger.
So I get kind of ideologically spit-roasted from either side.
I've got sort of one in the front and one in the back.
But, yeah, the start of this year was tons and tons.
Manosphere influencer Chris Williamson talks about this, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And that's interesting because the term Manosphere has now been inflated to encompass so much that it basically, it doesn't really mean anything.
If I am the same as, if me, Richard Reeves, Scott Galloway are the same as Nick Fuentes and Myron and Justin,
and Andrew and Sneco,
well, I mean,
it doesn't seem to be a particularly granular or accurate presentation.
And I don't think that they would agree,
that they agree with much of the stuff that I say,
if you were to put it to sort of laid at their feet.
Agreed.
I mean, the term is highly in exact.
And actually, you're right.
And I've been on Theo Vaughn and I've been on Joe Rogan.
And I like those guys.
And I know those have been.
characterized as Manosphere.
Jordan Peterson would be the same.
Andrew Huberman would be the same.
And in fact, as you say, there's a huge gulf.
There's a huge spectrum within the so-called Manosphere community.
We debated it a lot in the process of making the film.
I said many times, like, I'm not about to make a film where it's like, look at these guys,
they like to have big muscles and they want to make a lot of money, you know, hustle bro culture
and whatnot. That's not, I don't find that interesting. I don't find it particularly. It might not
be my lane, but actually I like working out. You know what I mean? And I, and I feel like self-reliance
can be super important. And it's healthy to have a kind of mixed diet of kind of media
intake. And so my thing was like, oh, and we do try and clarify in the documentary, like,
this is the extreme end of a certain world. And they are a self-identified,
community, the ones we look at. They very much see themselves, you know, Sneco,
Justin Waller, Myron from Fresh and Fit, they are all quite tight, those three,
somewhat adjacent to Nick Fuentes, in fact, and certainly Andrew Tate is tight with them.
It's a certain, so there's, I think the more we can avoid a conflation of,
you know, everyone who happens to have a male audience or everyone who advocates for some sort of sense of like,
there's certain things that are helpful for men tend to find helpful and it's good for their mental health,
you know, as opposed to, oh, the world's run by a shadowy room of, you know, like these kind of, it's very,
there's a conspiracy mindset in the world that I was looking at. There's a, it is quite a specific,
rather paranoid
I would say
narrow
understanding of how the world works
and narrow understanding of what men and women
are narrow sense of what achievement and success
look like
and that was very much the precinct
that I wanted the film to take place in
yeah I mean you're right to say that men's self-improvement
often gets lumped in with this stuff
but you know male forms of self-repair
are often treated with suspicion, it's as though any attempt by men to rebuild themselves
outside of approved therapeutic and ideological channels is contaminated in some way.
If you are, that's probably the best example I can think of, and I'm sure that he's been
accused of it, Andrew Huberman, Dr. Andrew Huberman of Stanford, is part of the manosphere.
Because what he talks about, like, evidence-based ways to sleep better or gain muscle or
how much caffeine you should have per day or something.
It seems to be that there's sort of two things happening at the same time.
One is a big push, of which I am unapologetically a part of,
that I think that the issues of boys and men need to be spoken about more,
that I don't think that we need to do this ideological land acknowledgement throat clearing
before where we identify the problems that all other groups are facing
before we can turn our attention to men
because we don't have to do the same in reverse.
We don't have to acknowledge how many men take their own lives
or addicted to drugs or are involved in violent crime
or go to jail or end up home, et cetera, et cetera,
before we can then talk about the problems of girls and women.
So one thing is happening, which is,
I think that there's been some upending
of previous routes toward a sense of belonging
and fulfillment and status
that men would have previously relied on.
And I think that that puts them in a kind of a very uncertain world.
A lot of the rules that they would have learned from their parents' generations,
certainly their grandparents' generation.
It's been such a huge generational shift.
We've now grown up, generations grown up on the internet,
relying with online content creators,
a changing socioeconomic landscape where women out-earned and out-educate men
up to the age of 30.
All of this.
okay, so how am I supposed to navigate this as a man? I don't know. We've got the most fatherless
homes that we've ever seen. So the previous patriarchs that would have probably stepped into those
shoes and would have filled those sorts of roles. They've now vacated. Okay, so who do we turn
to? Well, I've got the internet and there's things on there. Now, again, all of that is, I think,
important to be addressed and that young boys and men need to be given some really great
role models, archetypes, game plans, blueprints for how to do this. I'm sure that you would
even as a present father, it would be like, the more good information that my boys can access on the
internet, the better. That seems like a good, very pro thing to do. And also at the same time,
there is a massive moral panic around extremist vociferous content online that is pipelining
boys and men to believe in these sorts of crazy things. And it seems like the legitimate
concerns about the second one are used to sort of smear,
everything from the first one.
That as soon as you start to talk about male self-improvement,
that the term, I mean, again,
the fact that I was accused of being a lux maxer,
a term that's been around as far as I can see for about three seconds.
Who accused you of being a luxemaxer?
Some news article, luxemaxer, Chris Williamson.
I mean, that feels a little bit like telling somebody,
it's a little bit of a strange sort of insult, I suppose, given that I haven't tried.
So, you know, I just sort of that I just woke up like this lux max a thing.
It's just interesting.
These two worlds exist at the same time, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I think that's really well put.
I think you broke it down beautifully.
And just parenthetically as well, have you been following the whole clavicular phenomenon?
I was going to ask whether or not you have an intention of maybe looking at the world of lux maxing in future.
Claricular, as they said, like after, because we finish filming our documentary, which by the way, it's on Netflix.
We're going to do a brazen plug.
I don't know if it's, it'll be out.
Yes, it's out now.
It's out now.
It's out now.
And which is exciting because I've made stuff mainly for the BBC and this is my first for a, as a Netflix, as a maker of a Netflix original.
It's crazy to think how many, like, well, I don't know how many people are going to stream it, but it's available worldwide.
But we filmed it until about late last year, like maybe August, September, having started
early in the year, like January, February.
And then in the following few months, I remember one of my kids came down as like,
Dad, check this out.
And it was some piece of clavicular content.
And I did not think he was going to blow up the way he did.
I just thought, oh, well, he's kind of very good-looking guy who he seemed, I don't know,
like he was just doing what he was doing.
but and then Ed Matthew's comment was like oh he would have been in the documentary but he spawned into the game too late
I just like to say it's true it's true it's kind of true it's kind of true they're all avatars of some sort of social media game
the the clavicular thing is is I think different and the reason that I think that and I actually think that we're seeing the
what could be if it takes hold the beginning of sort of the new phase of the manosphere so I had
this conception, I'll see if you agree with it, that the Manosphere kind of had three waves,
kind of like feminism. So the first one was pickup artistry, and that was Neil Strauss in the game,
it was negging, and it was basically completely whitewashed when Me Too came along, because there was
no way that this sort of brazen, we just want to have casual sex with women, use them and discard
them thing, could have survived Harvey Weinstein. It just, it straight up couldn't, couldn't have existed
anymore. It was seen as too unsanitary. So then what comes out next is more red pill. And that's
alphas and betas and cucks and soyboys. And, you know, that's kind of the world that you
inhabited. And then it seems to me that the next one that might be coming online is actually
a disregarding of women. Like if you listen to what clavicular talks about, he's not bothered about
women. It's actually much closer to the black pill than it is.
to the red pill. It's not about maybe to some degree it's about gaining money, but I don't even hear
that as a stated goal. It's literally about male male intracultural competition. That's what
mocking is, right? It's about I am the most formidable looking, even if I'm not the most formidable.
I'm not seeing people talking about actually becoming fighters, actually becoming sort of hard men,
but just looking like hard men. It's actually a really feminized way of becoming supermassive.
It's using cosmetic surgery, it's using beautification and enhancement. It's using different
clothing. It's spending a lot of time thinking about sort of the way that you look, not necessarily
what you can do. So it's a focus on appearance rather than competence. And it's not in any way
concerned with women. The approval of women, you know, there is a world in which you could have
said that the red pill was the romantic pill because regardless of whether or not it was particularly
typically romantic. It was still very much concerned with the approval of women, even if it was
in their disregard, the relationship between women. And I don't think that we're seeing that.
I don't think we're seeing that. That's interesting. Yeah, it's reminding me a bit of mug towel,
men going their own way. And, you know, which is sort of, as you say, like the ultimate black
pill where you sort of think, you know what, women, I can't deal with them. You know what? I was also
thinking about, because I think in addition to the message, you have to think about the means of
delivery and so much of this, as I said earlier, with like Iceberg Slim versus Andrew Tate,
the message might be similar, but the means of delivery makes it something else. Like I think
Andrew Tate in many respects with a side effect of kind of the TikTok algorithm. You mentioned
PUA, the pickup artistry community were communicating largely through books and seminars. Like come to
Las Vegas for a three-day immersive in how to pick up women. You think about the red pill that was
communicated in podcasts and YouTube.
but whereas this new iteration is a live streaming phenomenon and specifically clavicular,
he's not the first looksmaxer at all, but he's the first looks maxer that live streams that I'm
aware of. And in that live streaming environment, you're not really convey, it's not like a
how-to as such. It's a much more fluid experience of kind of forming an attachment to someone
and seeing them exploring the world and getting into scrapes. So he sort of has the luxury of not
really needing a message. His message seems to be, other than the fact that if you're really good
looking, you can kind of hack the system, right? That's, there's not, you know, he seems politically
ambiguous. He seems to say almost anything, I mean, I always hesitate with almost anything,
but, you know, his whole thing, like he supports Gavin Newsom over J.D. Vance because Newsom's better
looking and Vance looks like a hobbit, right? Subhuman. And everyone, and everyone, all the Red Pell
community, it was kind of a, you know, a weird way of a G.
move as a way of distinguishing himself from the red pill, right?
He's like, I don't really care about, I'm so empty, I'm so utterly amoral that I'm going
to endorse the person who embodies a sort of kind of California progressive mentality,
right? And everyone's like, what the actual, like, that was the most outrageous thing he could
do at that point. You know what I mean?
Yeah, but he's better looking. Yeah.
In other news, you've probably heard me talk about Element before, and that's because I am frankly
dependent on it. And it's how I've started my day every single morning. This is the best tasting
hydration drink on the market. You might think, why do I need to be more hydrated? Because
proper hydration is not just about drinking enough water. It's having sufficient electrolytes to
allow your body to use those fluids. Each Grabbinger Stick Pack is a science-backed electrolyte ratio
of sodium, potassium and magnesium. It's got no sugar, coloring, artificial ingredients.
or any other junk. This plays a critical role in reducing muscle cramps and fatigue while optimizing
brain health, regulating your appetite, and curbing cravings. This orange flavor in a cold glass of water
is a sweet, salty, orangy nectar, and you will genuinely feel a difference when you take it
versus when you don't, which is why I keep going on about it. Best of all, there's no questions-ask
refund policy with an unlimited duration. Buy it, use it all, and if you don't like it for any reason,
they give you your money back and you don't even have to return the box. That's how confident they are
that you'll love it. Plus, they offer free shipping in the US. Right now, you can get a free sample
pack of elements most popular flavors with your first purchase by going to the link in the
description below. I'm heading to drinklmnt.com slash modern wisdom. That's drinklmnt.com
slash modern wisdom. So I think one element, what do you agree with them on? What do you
Okay, good question. And by the way, and I also want to say, like, I think your point about people
talking past each other, like, one of the things I have observed.
Like in all the years of making documentaries is very often people who are disagreeing aren't
really disagreeing.
They're just sort of selecting a different data set and then arguing past each other.
You know what I mean?
And none of them's particularly disconnected from the facts.
Like they just, you know, there's some truth in that concept of alternative facts.
Like there can be different groups of facts and then you select the data set that supports
your argument.
So I could identify toxic Manosphere figures and then call you Manosphere and then suddenly you look toxic, right?
So I think the conversation has become characterized by a little bit of bad faith in terms of attempting to stigmatize anyone who expresses relatively uncontroversial opinions about, well, maybe there are some differences between many men and many women that are worth considering,
while never allowing that to kind of be overly prescriptive
or lock people into preordained identities.
The part that I agree with, I think in general,
well, I think I've answered the question.
I think in general it's helpful to recognize
there are differences between most men and most women,
without privileging them or reifying them.
You know, it would be, but again, it's kind of crazy
that I have to be careful how I say this, but...
This is the throat clearing thing.
This is the sensitivity around this discussion.
And that actually I'm a fan of, I tend to think, you know, so in terms of their content,
like, I like self-reliance.
Like, I like exercise.
I think the idea of aspiring to be the best version of yourself is valid.
I think attempting to fix yourself first.
Think about ways in which you can kind of attain some kind of mastery over your life, right?
Don't spend your hours.
endlessly looking at the internet, playing video games, looking at adult content, you know.
You know, it's a paradox of the world that many, much of the, you know, much of the Andrew
tape messaging is around like, stop, you know, stop playing stupid video games and stop looking
at internet porn. But I sort of agree, I agree with both of those points. Do you what I mean?
But actually, the thing, the thing I disagree with is, well, the fact that it comes packaged with a bunch
of toxic or, you know, just degrading and demeaning content.
If you separate, like, I follow Joe Wicks.
Like, I'm a subscriber to, you know Joe Wicks?
He's like a fitness.
He's a fitness guru in the UK.
And I subscribe to his app.
He doesn't pay me anything to say that.
And so five days a week, I'm not a gym bunny, you know, maybe one day, but I've got three
kids and a business and whatnot, you know, making excuses.
But I've got 20 minutes or half.
hour in the day and I switched the phone on and I watch Joe and it leads me through a workout,
not live. They're obviously, they're recorded. And that makes me feel great. So, yeah, all of that
I'm fully on board with, but what I'm not on board with is, is the horrific content that's being
amplified and the ways in which it's become so small. And they're role playing, they're sort of
role-playing as multi-millionaire oligarchs,
and it's so paper-thin, you know.
And this idea of chasing money,
and I'm just not a fan of what they call flossing.
Is that, is it, like, the idea of like showing off your, like,
flexing.
Flexing is the more conventional term.
I think flossing is something.
I'm not sure what it is.
Okay.
You familiar with flossing?
The dance, I thought.
I don't know.
Okay.
Anyway, okay, so you agree.
You fall granddad.
But you know, that whole thing about, oh, I'm better than you because I'm on a yacht.
I find that so cringe and it just rubs.
I mean, I get that like if you're, you know, I just think that actually we should be better
than that.
And I also think that, you know, the idea, like, how can I make a ton of money?
Like, do just follow your passion.
Like, don't sign up for a seminar on how to be a millionaire.
Just find something that you're good at.
Well, it certainly becomes self-selecting that if you're trying to find, quote,
and quote a good woman who isn't concerned with your material wealth, but what you spend most of
your time doing is flexing your material wealth, you're going to attract the sort of woman that is
picking up what you're putting down. And it just reinforces, I don't know, it's like every
interaction just further confirms what your priors were. And every time that you step further
into that world, it just continues to reinforce it. Big time. I couldn't have said it better myself.
but they're in this village
and the other thing is
there's this world in which you think
oh well you're looking for
I'm looking for
you know what's your body count
oh my body counts 150
what's your body count
my body counts like
780 I mean first of all that's
that whole I find that whole thing
really cringe and embarrassing
but then it's like
but you're you should really marry
a woman with like
a really low body count
ideally a virgin
I mean, that's already really annoying and objectionable,
but then they surround themselves with only fans, girls,
and then they're like, oh, you know, they're like,
women are just involved, you know,
they'll characterize women as overly,
either mercenary or overly sexually active.
And then you're like, but what, so,
but you're in this world, you're in this world of adult content creators,
like, you, none of this is matching it.
If you want to be traditional values, head up to Utah or Idaho or something because Miami is not for you.
Miami is a hotbed of the opposite of whatever you're looking for. Yeah, that's a good point.
Look, I think, again, it's really strange for me to be thinking about sort of talking about this from the outside, given that so much of my content crosses over.
But I think that much of the hunger for what I'm talking about, and these guys too, is a sort of reaction to a felt lack of sympathy and sort of denial of male pain.
And I think if there was more of an acceptance of guys are having a tough time of it at the moment through pretty much any objective metric, I don't think that any group has fallen further faster than men.
that's Richard Reeves line from the American Institute of Boys and Men.
If it wasn't for the fact that there were no places to go,
I think fewer guys would go to the internet.
And that creates both kind of the cause.
It creates an opening in the market.
What's that line about if there are no role models,
if you can't propose any?
And I think that this is a really great question.
In fact, for you, who do you think of some good examples of sort of genuine positive role models
that you would say to your boys, you should, this would be the sort of man that you should emulate?
Well, I mean, the answer that gets bandied around a lot over here in the UK is Garrett Southgate,
like the former England manager.
I think he embodies a certain sort of dignity and, and so,
sets of fair play. And obviously in a pursuit that many boys aspire to excel in, many girls
too. I mean, how long? Should I come up with a couple more? Like, you know, there's clearly,
in the pantheon of program makers, my field, David Attenborough, you know, an adventurer, a world
bestriding colossus of naturalism, a sensitive human being. I mean, I think it is worth saying
in that scenario that you've depicted of
kind of male failure, if you like,
like, you know,
men despairing,
like that thing of deaths of despair,
like suicides and drug overdoses.
We should also, like as a father of boys,
I often remind myself that, you know,
the two things that matter most to my kids
at various times have been football,
English football, obviously,
Premier League football,
and rap, grime and drill.
and those are both worlds in which most of the preeminent world famous, highest paid, highest achieving exponents are men.
And worlds in which, in fact, homosexuality is considered still rather questionable and taboo.
Like not many openly gay footballers, not that many openly gay rap artists.
So there are, I guess I'm pushing back ever so slightly in the sense that there are still realms in which, you know, most are the most successful,
comedians are probably still men?
There are still realms in which
not just men, but a kind of traditionally masculine
presenting man is still
ascendant. No, I would agree.
I think the difference is between
where do the guys who
raise to the top and where
does the mean the average man
end up sitting? Because the average man
is not going to become a Premier League football or a Ricky Jervais.
The average man is increasingly slipping away from
going to university, increasingly slipping away from
getting a high-paying job, increasingly more likely to be addicted to drugs or video games,
or porn, or weed, or whatever. And you're right. You're right to say that men dominate the extremes,
but they dominate the extremes at both ends. And it's a denial of the slipping back. I think that
this is my read that if it wasn't for the case that I am struggling as a man, well, look at
your privilege, look at all of these CEOs, look at all of the football players,
is look at how well and he's goes, yeah, but, but I'm, I'm struggling and maybe many of my friends are too,
and there doesn't seem to be a sympathetic place to land for that. Yeah, I totally agree. And I think
I'm not a fan of like the casual disparagement of men. And I think very occasionally, maybe more
than occasionally, that happens. Like typical man or, you know, step back as a man,
um, check your privilege, especially as a father to,
boys, I never want to be in a world in which boys have kind of inherited an original sin by dint of being boys.
You know, it's like, oh, well, you have to, you know, as a boy, you've somehow, your bequest is the fact that men have tended to run society for hundreds of years.
Like, no, he's like five years old, like seven years old.
Like, don't put that on him, but you know what I mean?
I know, I was joking the other day.
Like, I remember growing up and they were like, you remember that nursery rhyme?
what are little girls made of
and it's all like sugar and spice
and all things nice and what little boys made of
like pigs and puppy dogs tails
I'm like, remember it was like seven years old,
why am I made of puppy dog's tails?
Yeah. You know what I mean?
And that's kind of trivial, but I don't like
that sort of
like frivolous
denigrating of
of maleness. And maybe I'm being
oversensitive, but I think it kind of
it's a little unfair.
So maybe I'm agreeing with that.
But I think the other thing I'd say is if I want to say a really apocalyptic
We are all both men and women
But now
Inhabiting a world in which technology's upended so much and promises to upend even more
Because God knows when you know in a world where I know a lot of it's traced back to the decline of traditional manufacturing
Also birth control
Women entering the workplace
Globalization of the economy
You know and the fact that a lot of like
manufacturing jobs moving to places like China and then actually most of the jobs like
now can be done equally well or better by women but in a world where AI is going to eliminate
most of the jobs that involves sitting in front of a screen as is sometimes promised there's
going to be this whole other ruction like it's going to play out really interestingly I think
to say the least in terms of how how men and women interrelate like whether
that, you know, how sustainable, I know I'm taking as a bit off tangent, but I sometimes think
like, you know, male mental health versus, you know, and how it figures in wider society
will be subsumed by some vastly bigger social crisis. Wow. Yeah, do you know what it is I hadn't,
I hadn't drawn that part of the path down the circles of hell, but you're probably right that it's all
well and good talking about the issues that both men and boys and women and girls are facing.
But when 50% of the workforce is displaced by AI, I don't know whether that's going to happen,
when some percentage of the workforce is displaced by AI and people don't have meaning and certain
jobs have jobs and other people don't feel like they've got a path forward. But it does
loop back to what I said before, which is that if anything, if it requires anything, it requires
sympathy. You need to be sympathetic. Wow. The world changed really fucking far, really fucking fast.
That's hard to navigate. That's hard to navigate. But because at least at this iteration of it,
the men were part of a previously beneficial group. They were part of one that seemed to be afforded
privileges in certain domains, not the privileges to go to war and die and etc. But, you know,
opportunities that weren't afforded to the women, it felt, and I think it feels to a lot of young men now
like they are being made to pay for the sins of the advantages that their fathers and grandfathers
had. They're accused of being part of a patriarchy that they no longer feel a member of,
when they're looking around and saying, well, where is my privilege? And I think that it ties in with,
you talk to these two guys, and there's a line that they say,
in life as a man, you're born without value. And I think what they mean with that is it feels to me
like there is a kind of love and belonging and acceptance and pedestalization that's given to
women and girls that I haven't felt has been afforded to me. I haven't felt as special. I haven't felt
as cared for unless I do something, unless I make myself big and impressive. And again, with
that sympathy to go, fuck, yeah, you know, previously it probably, there would have been a pretty
linear progression for you to have found a place in society and done these things and cost of
living and uncertain turbulent times and all of these different stimulus that can cause you to be
addicted. And if you believe in life as a man you're born without value, that probably requires
some sympathy too. Yeah, you're talking about Matty and Chris who come up to Justin Waller,
Justin Waller, the business guru, and we're just walking around the streets of Miami.
And you can see they're in awe of Justin Waller.
And they're like, you're our biggest role model.
And we aspire to be like you.
And they talk about, yeah, they feel that they've been born without value, which I think is a red pill talking point.
Just to say in passing, like there's a book, I haven't read all of it, but I've read in it by
Susan Faludi, a feminist writer published in the late 90s, I think, called Stift, that talks about
that they're kind of manufacturing and the struggle for male identity in a kind of post-manufacturing era.
But I would also say, though, that, you know, in what sense he says, like, well, I say,
what do you mean you're born without value? And then Justin Wallace says, like, you know,
if you're a beautiful woman, you get invited onto a yacht. Who's going to invite these guys onto a
yacht? It's kind of a funny moment. It wasn't intended as such. But actually, though, I'm then,
later on, I was like, yeah, but what if you're not a beautiful woman? What if you're just a
normal looking woman. Like, then you don't get invited onto a yacht. And also, it's a kind of
Instagram, it's a kind of Instagram paradigm. Miami currency. For value, right? It's like,
you sort of say, like, if I put my picture on Instagram, no one's going to click on that. But if you're a
beautiful woman, they'll click on that. Like, dude, like, you have the, whatever value you have
from studying hard or becoming a professional or apprenticing in a, in some kind of occupation.
He's just talking about the value that a certain kind of Instagram beautiful woman will accrue.
But that's a very narrow lens through which to view life.
Well, it's no coincidence that much of this has sort of been born out of Miami in Vegas
because it's the caricature of that culture.
It is kind of skin deep, at least in terms of what's supposed to be traded around.
Yeah, it's kind of like,
First you're like, oh, I guess.
And then you're like, well, what, Mary Curie?
Like, did she do her Nobel Prize winning scientific work based on having a big Instagram following?
Like, did she like, oh, she's hot?
Mary Curie's really hot.
Like, you know, that's such a weird kind of way of understanding how women achieve success in general.
Even think about who you want to spend time with.
You know, when I think about, when I think about the sort of people that I want to,
to hang out with a dinner on a night time.
Some of my friends are horrendous in the way that they present themselves.
They are not fashionable, but they're like smart or thoughtful or really interesting or really
interested.
And every time that I walk into a room, I just feel like I'm lit up to find out what they've
been working on or what they've been thinking about, what's been going on in their life.
They're really patient, a super patient, and they're able to sort of sit with silence and
or they hold space for someone who's going through a good time or a tough time or whatever.
You know, like, all of those things are impossible to flex online.
All of those things are.
And yet, when I look at the people that I spend my most time with, I'm surrounded by people
who are, some of them, most, many of them are successful in the real world too.
But that's as a byproduct of being an awesome person as opposed to doing this.
it's almost like a
if you took it to the extreme
it's almost like a self-bimbobification
of the most extreme versions of masculinity
Louise Perry calls it a male-to-male transsexual
procedure
where you sort of parody the most masculine traits
that you can. I mean you could say that for clavicular
that it really is almost like a male-to-male
transsexual treatment where you start off being a man
and make yourself as much of a man as you can be
through cosmetic surgery and beautification and enhancement.
Big time. I mean, I like that.
I mean, the other part of it is, and it's reminded me of the game as well,
this idea that, oh, you can win at life by using these hacks.
And then you realize, actually, if you've been around those guys
who are using sort of life hacks like that,
it's quite a weird experience.
You don't feel good afterwards.
You know, that feeling of whether it's being negged
or someone who's deploying certain forms of,
whether it's neurolinguistic programming, you know,
and then you think like something a little off,
like there's something a little off about this encounter.
Like, or if you were in a situation where you'd have,
you'd slept with someone like that.
That's got to feel afterwards quite dark, I would have thought.
Like it feels like a very, like a quite a limited strategy for succeeding at life.
you're performing masculinity, you're not embodying it.
It's your reverse engineering, what would a man who is this sort of a man do?
And rather than make myself into that man, I'll just pantomime his actions.
And, you know, this was the problem.
Don't forget, I'm sure that you did this as part of your research, but the red pill was born out of the PUA hate.
Right.
Right.
Like that was the beginning of both red pill and black pill.
was PUA hate. And the reason that these guys had PUA hate was that they had gone through the
pipeline of pickup artistry and either found themselves unsuccessful in that I am such a genetic
dead end that it doesn't work at all. Or, and I think that this is way more common, because I grew up
kind of tangential to the era of the game, guys realized that they could be successful with women
by following neurolinguistic programming and, you know, manipulating social mores to be able to get a woman into bed.
But what they found was, look at how much of a different person I have to contort myself into in order to achieve this.
This further reinforces my own perspective that I am unlovable as I am, that I need to perform in order to be able to be cared for, that I am not enough.
and I have to do this strange, you know, like Cinderella and the pumpkin thing in a desperate
attempt to make me sufficiently likable to bed. And then I wake up the next day and realize
I did it successfully, but look at the contrast between who I am and who I need to be in
order to get love from a woman and therefore love from the world and love from society and be able
to belong. And yeah, you're right. If you, and I think we're going to see this increasingly,
and you saw this with Neil Strauss.
I had Neil on the show two which years ago here in Austin.
And Neil has now gone through almost a full horseshoe 180 to be completely family-pilled.
He's got no desire to be sort of in that world anymore.
He's writing books with Rick Rubin about creativity.
He's co-parenting with his ex-wife, which I'd never heard of someone doing this,
that he says that they're a bad couple but great parents,
so they decided to, after their divorce, have another child
that they would co-parent together.
And I mean, that is...
Wow, that's interesting.
Isn't that fascinating?
But that's the guy that wrote the game.
And I think that when guys that are socially awkward
or feel like they've got a chip on their shoulder
or they weren't recognized in the past
or they've got some daddy issues or some trauma
that is either conscious or subconscious,
or unconscious,
then they achieve everything
that they thought the world
was going to give them
that would fix the void inside,
they've done it,
they realize the void's still there
and they go, oh shit,
that now I'm really fucked
because when I was poor and miserable,
I had hope,
but when I was rich and miserable,
I was despondent.
The thing that I thought
was going to fill that void,
I've now gotten the void still there.
And I guess there's two paths after that.
One is, I need to look deeper.
It's evident that my gold medalist syndrome indicates that the gold medal wasn't the answer.
And the other path is, ah, it was two gold medals, or three or four or five.
That's the solution.
I just need more.
The dose wasn't high enough, not that the medicine was the wrong type.
Chris, I need, I can have to make a move in a second.
I've got a child to pick up.
But I've really enjoyed talking to you, man.
It's been, I hope you're happy with the chat.
I am very much indeed.
Where should people go to keep up to date with every.
Oh, Netflix.
People can go and watch the documentary on Netflix.
We've got our film dropping on, well, it's already out on Netflix worldwide.
I've got a podcast I do for Spotify.
And I make documentaries through my company, Mind House, and other stuff swirling around.
Wherever you happen to be watching this, if we're in the UK, it's a lot of stuff on IPlayer.
In the US, there's something called BBC player, I think, which no one subscribes to.
and then some
pirated content on YouTube
which is fine
go and check that out
Louis I appreciate you man
I'm looking forward to seeing what you do next
all right thank you Chris
I'm really glad we could hook this up
it was
it would have been even better in person
but we made it work
that's the important thing
it's a privilege to be on
thank you for spending the time
and for a great conversation
appreciate you
thank you man
