The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - No Mercy / No Malice: Slow Dopa
Episode Date: January 3, 2026Notes on Being a Man is out now. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Support for this show comes from Odu.
Running a business is hard enough,
so why make it harder with a dozen different apps that don't talk to each other?
Introducing Odu, it's the only business software you'll ever need.
It's an all-in-one fully integrated platform that makes your work easier,
CRM, accounting, inventory, e-commerce, and more.
And the best part, Odo replaces multiple expensive platforms for a fraction of the cost.
That's why over thousands of businesses
have made the switch, so why not you?
Try O-D-U for free at O-D-O-O-O-O-com.
That's O-D-O-O-O-O-O-com.
Support for this show comes from O-D-U.
Running a business is hard enough,
so why make it harder with a dozen different apps
that don't talk to each other?
Introducing O-Doo.
It's the only business software you'll ever need.
It's an all-in-one fully integrated platform
that makes your work easier.
CRM, accounting, inventory, e-commerce, and more.
And the best part, O-DU replaces multiple expensive platforms for a fraction of the cost.
That's why over thousands of businesses have made the switch.
So why not you?
Try O-D-U for free at O-D-O-D-O-O-O-com.
I'm Scott Galloway, and this is no mercy, no balance.
Buy Now Pay Later is booming.
American consumers this past holiday season were expected to spend a record $20 billion using these services,
in many cases snapping up electronics, clothes, and other products that they otherwise couldn't afford.
But the Buy Now Pay Later mentality extends far beyond retail.
Getting a dope a hit now and dealing with the consequences in the future
has become the default mindset for millions of Americans.
We're raising a generation of addicts, as tech, gambling, finance, and other companies tap into our craving for now.
In particular, we need to help young men understand the value of slow, compounding gains, not just financial returns, but the kind that pay family, friendship, and career dividends.
The rewards that really matter.
In my new book, Notes on Being a Man, I call this Slopa.
Below is an excerpt.
Growing up, I was drawn to novel, crazy experiences, in other words,
attracted to doing a wide variety of insanely stupid shit.
So were most of my male friends.
At age eight or nine, we would build ramps and jump with our bikes over one another's motionless bodies.
I would skateboard down Wilshire Boulevard, not on the end.
elbow with a sidewalk, but on the actual boulevard. The third and fourth grades of our schools look
like an ER waiting room, casts, bandages, crutches, eye patches. Then I got older, my incredible
maturity obvious to everyone. In high school, I distinctly remember deciding not to study for the
upcoming SATs, too boring and time-consuming. That same year, my mom had to sign a release
so I could play on the high school baseball team,
but I forgot to give it to her,
which meant I wasn't allowed to play the first game
and was eventually cut from the squad.
At UCLA, after my freshman year,
I applied immediately for financial aid for the next year.
I got a shit ton, too, including Pell Grants.
Then a year later, aware that my junior year was coming up,
I decided not to apply for financial aid,
and, you know, whatever, take my chances.
Incredibly fucking stupid.
Other highlights from that era include never checking my car's oil level
until the dashboard screened with yellow and red symbols
alerting me that either the engine was about to explode
or a comet had just collided with Earth.
When this car was later towed to city impound
encumbered under the weight of dozens of unpaid parking tickets,
I thought, fuck it, and never saw it, the car again.
Later, during my first real job at Morgan Stanley,
I was given the profoundly complex task of hand-delivering a
proposal to a client. All I had to do was board an AM flight to San Francisco. I missed the
flight. Among other things, the brain's prefrontal cortex helps us get the easy stuff right.
Until 25, I got more than my fair share of easy stuff wrong. Didn't take responsibility. Most of the time
had no ability to plan and continually messed up. A tendency for risk-taking mixed with poor impulse
control, renders many young men helpless against a torrent of on-demand dopamine provided by
the world's richest tech companies and makes maturity a hard sell for teen and college-aged
boys, at least relative to girls and young women. You almost never hear about people named
Laura and Elena eating tidepods or blowing off their final exams. Why? Male and female
brains are more than 99% identical. There are variations. There are variations.
though. Men have more than double the brain space and processing power devoted to sexual drive.
The male amygdala, home to fear, anger, and aggression, contains testosterone receptors that make
males lose their cool faster and more easily. But where the male and female brains diverge most
sharply is in their development, especially during adolescence. By age 14 to 16, male and female
brains have stopped growing. With the exception of the prefrontal cortex or pfc, girls attain peak
values of brain volumes earlier than boys do, which is Latin for girls get their shit together
way sooner. Basically, the female prefrontal cortex matures up to two years before the male
prefrontal cortex does. The prefrontal cortex is the grown-up in the room, the CEO. The brain
is a network. For example, overlap is a feature, not a bug. No single brain region governs one
instinct, but science agrees that a healthy prefrontal cortex regulates impulse control,
decision-making, good judgment, reasonableness, emotional regulation, and planning, prioritizing
between the stuff you have to do versus the stuff you'd rather be doing, getting drunk or
high, re-watching family guy.
At the start of puberty, boys are basically marinated in testosterone.
Team makes them more monosyllabic than usual.
They're socializing, never strong to begin with, narrows to sports, physical activity, depending on the kid, and thinking about sex.
With their thicker, denser muscles and deeper voices, boys may look impressive and imposing, but behind the forehead, girls have lapped them.
By 14 to 15, girls have greater volume and complexity in their prefrontal cortexes,
and thus, theoretically, more maturity than boys.
They're better decision makers and problem solvers.
They can overcome their brain's reward circuits with a good counter-argument
or simply by deploying common sense.
The male prefrontal cortex catches up at around age 25,
when many young men get their act together.
Until then, they're at a huge maturity disadvantage.
Waging war against a young man's unformed prefrontal cortex is like trying to wean a kid off salty snacks in favor of carrots and radishes.
With my two boys, I do my best to illustrate the difference between the feverish, relentless dope hits they get from TikTok and Instagram
versus the slower incremental results that are more valuable and satisfying from reading, working out, or spending time outside.
Slow Dopa, or Slopa, as I call it.
If tech-dopa hits are like shoving endless handfuls of Cheetos or Snickers into your mouth,
that is, they don't fill you up, you hate yourself, and you want more,
Slopa more closely resembles the salad you order that makes you feel healthier for a week.
When my boys were little, we spent a fortune on Legos.
If Slopa ever hires a celebrity spokesperson, it should be Lego.
Building a model out of 1,300 pieces of lightly-hued plastic requires one or two hours daily, plus focus,
but then two weeks later you have a really cool Millennium Falcon or Blacktron Renegade to hang in your bedroom.
On weekends, my oldest son, Alec, likes to cook with his mom.
They spend two hours chopping and prepping, the dish goes into the oven for an hour,
and or sits out overnight until it's ready to eat.
Delayed gratification.
That is Slopa.
Children today are overprotected in the real world and underprotected online,
an observation made by my NYU colleague Jonathan Haidt.
At age 13, I flew from LAX alone to visit my dad and stepmom in Ohio.
Looking back, the 1970s may seem lax, negligent, and flaky, but parents were on to something.
Nowadays, if, say, my 14-year-old son wants to have a party, no, I won't go out and score a case of tequila for him,
but I won't hover, snoop, or get into the way of his plans either.
I recently showed both boys a TikTok by some ex-finance guy.
What he said was basic, obvious, and great.
Success comes when you put in small, consistent amounts of effort
every day and every week.
It doesn't matter whether you're investing,
filming two minutes of video content, or lifting dumbbells.
Small, deliberate, regular efforts accumulate,
and in time pay off.
In other words, the most powerful force in the universe,
Einstein knew this but kept his mouth shot,
is compound interest.
Slopa.
Life is so rich.
