The School of Greatness - Why 63% of Young Men Have Stopped Trying | Scott Galloway
Episode Date: November 24, 2025Scott Galloway doesn't hold back about the crisis facing young men today. Four times more likely to die by suicide, three times more likely to be addicted or homeless, 12 times more likely to be incar...cerated. While women's ascent has been remarkable and necessary, society stopped asking what happens when an entire generation of men loses access to the traditional pathways that once helped them become providers, protectors, and partners. Scott challenges the comfortable narrative that young men just need to figure it out on their own. He shares raw truth about what actually motivates men to level up, from his own shame at not being able to afford a nurse for his dying mother to watching his students struggle to find any venue to demonstrate excellence beyond a dating app profile. This conversation will shift how you think about manhood, relationships, and what we owe the next generation.Scott’s books:The FourThe Algebra of HappinessPost CoronaAdriftThe Algebra of WealthNotes on Being a ManIn this episode you will:Discover why men benefit four to seven years more from romantic relationships than women do and what this means for building a thriving societyUnderstand the concept of surplus value and how becoming a man means generating more than you absorb economically, emotionally, and relationallyBreak through the myth that professional success alone creates fulfilling relationships and learn the three qualities women actually seek in partnersTransform your approach to relationships by putting away the scorecard and deciding what kind of person you want to be regardless of what others give backMaster the hidden crisis facing young men as big tech monetizes loneliness and sequesters an entire generation from real-world connections and skillsFor more information go to https://lewishowes.com/1854For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Gabor Maté – greatness.lnk.to/1849SCLewis Howes [SOLO] – greatness.lnk.to/1819SCJerry Wise – greatness.lnk.to/1747SC Get more from Lewis! Get my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!Get The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Men are struggling. Four times as likely to kill themselves, three times likely to be addicted or homeless, 12 times it's likely to be incarcerated.
If you're going to a morgue and there's five people who died by suicide and four men.
If it was any other group, I think we weigh in with programs and empathy.
I think more and more of them are going to be alone in a room with a screen.
Scott's the host of the Prof G-Pod and co-hosts the Pivot and Raging Moderates podcast.
He's a bestselling author in his latest book.
Notes on Being a Man is now the number one bestseller at Amazon.
Please welcome Scott Gallag.
biggest fans are young men, my biggest supporters are mothers.
Because they see what's going on.
The greatest alliance in history is the alliance between men and women.
Why would you go through the effort, the expense, the potential rejection, humiliation, effort,
when you have synthetic, life-like porn at home?
How do they survive?
If you're not doing anything except for consuming all day?
Just having men in your life that can give you a little bit of advice.
And not only that, just give you the sense you have value.
I've been investing in stocks since I was 13 because of Cy, Sarah.
Wow.
I've made tens of millions of dollars investing in stocks.
It taught me this incredible life skill around investing.
What would you say are three things you would leave behind if this was the last day on
earth for you many years away?
The biggest unlock in my life was the following.
Welcome back.
Everyone in the School of Greatness.
Very excited about our guests.
We have the inspiring Scott Galloway in the house who is the number one, your time's bestseller
of notes on being a man.
welcome to the show Scott thanks so it's good to see you man excited that you're here
congrats on the book nice we were talking beforehand about that I wrote a book called
the mask of masculinity seven years ago yeah that I think was ahead of its time but I think
people really need to hear what you're talking about today because there's so much confusion
with men in society and so I'm going to give you a layup question okay to start what is the
role of men in society today well I think that's the issue I think that
The role was pretty clear.
It was sort of provider and procreator.
And now that a lot of the on ramps into a middle class lifestyle,
a lot of the traditional jobs,
we've basically torn up the script for women
and said, you can be anything.
And women are ascending, and that's fantastic.
Twice as many women have been elected
to some sort form of parliament globally
in the last 30 years.
More women are now seeking tertiary education globally than men.
women in urban areas in the U.S. are making more money than men own more single women own
homes than men and these are all amazing we should do nothing to get in the way of that but I think
sometimes the role of men is a little bit confused now like what is my role and men you know
there's just no getting around it men are struggling four times is likely to kill themselves
three times likely to be addicted or homeless 12 times likely to be incarcerated so I think the
the question, what is a man's role in this society, is a little bit up in the air right now.
And I think that's part of the issue is a lot of men don't feel like they have a code.
They're not clear.
Yeah, I think some of them lack purpose, and that is, you know, a lot of the natural attributes
they would lean into, whether it's vocational work, whether it's being the provider, whether
it's initiating romantic interest.
I don't want to say being the aggressor, but the initiator, a lot of those things are
they're not available, harder to attain, or being frowned upon.
So what is their role?
And, I mean, what happened to auto, metal, and woodshop, gone, right?
If you think about what people are looking for in terms of more women in medical school,
more women in law school, and those are wonderful things.
But typically the job, remember that guy in high school who was never going to go to college
or a lot of them, but could fix your car.
Sure, yeah.
And we'd go on and actually make a pretty decent living.
Yeah.
We have, we've essentially replaced all those classes with computer science.
We've kind of gone all in on the guy who goes to Harvard,
drops out and starts a tech company.
Kind of the nation's been optimized for that person.
And the majority of men aren't that, aren't that dude.
In addition, fewer men are going to religious institutions, playing sports,
connecting to work, remote work.
I think it's been terrible.
Connecting to relationships.
And then they're up against the deepest pocketed companies with Godlike Tech
really trying to sequester them from the offline world and relationships. And as a result,
I think you have a cohort of young men who feel a little bit untethered. Their path is not as clear
as it once was, don't have the same level of opportunities that my generation had. And some of it, to be
clear, was unearned advantage. I had too much opportunity relative to other groups. But if any other
group was if you go into a morgue and there's five people but died by suicide and four men if it was
any other group i think we'd weigh in with programs and empathy but because of the under advantage of
my generation there is a lack of empathy and the stat that i remind people of i understand the gag
reflex when i talk about this and that is from 1945 to 2000 a third of the world's economic growth
was registered by the five percent of the population in america so we had six times the prosperity
or the rest of the world. So 6x. And then you take all that prosperity and you cram it into the
one third of the population that was white, male, and heterosexual. If you were, I was kind of born
on third base. You know, my rap till I was about your age was, check me out. I've overcome,
you know, I didn't have some of the same advantages as my peers, but what I've acknowledged
now is that I really was born on third base, my kind of identity, demographics, and when and
where I was born. But unfortunately, I think society is holding young men.
accountable for my unfair advantage. And they just don't face the same opportunities.
They don't have the skills also. Right. It's like they don't have the skills to face that
unfair advantage, I guess, or to manage it all. 100%. So, you know, I had to go into work. I had to put
on a tie. I had, you know, I had guardrails set up for me. And I think that, I think remote work
has been an absolute disaster for young people, especially men who, cry frankly, mature later.
and my first job was in downtown L.A. at Morgan Stanley. If I didn't have to get up at 7 a.m., put on a tie, act a certain way, learn to behave. I was constantly pulled out of meetings by my boss, who was a real mentor. And he would say, just like, don't say that. I don't, and I needed that. And I learned how to interact with people senior to me, more successful to me, learned how to interact with a boss, learned more about how to interact with a woman in a professional environment. It was great seasoning for me.
And while I think remote work is an unlock for people who are caregivers, I think it's really a negative for young people.
And something we don't talk about, one in three relationships begin at work.
So where do people meet and develop friendships, mentorships, and romantic relationships?
And the reality is men need young men need romantic relationships or benefit more from them than women.
If a man hasn't been married or cohabitated with a woman by the time he's 30, there's one in three.
chance he's going to be a substance abuser. There's this cartoon of a woman in her Thursday, 30s
who never found romantic love. The reality is she's okay. Women when they don't have that romantic
relationship oftentimes pour that energy back into friends and their professional life. Men tend
to pour it back into more negative things or less productive things. Online, gaming, porn,
oftentimes, unfortunately, conspiracy theory. So quite frankly that gambling or something else.
Drugs, whatever might be.
That it takes on and manifests itself in worse ways.
So a woman in a relationship lives two to four years longer than a man, I'm sorry,
than a woman not in a relationship, but a man lives four to seven years longer.
Widows are happier after their husband dies.
Widows are less happy after their wife dies.
So oddly enough, men benefit and accrete more advantage in a relationship than a woman does.
us, which isn't to say, nobody owes, you know, it's no one's responsibility to service men
or provide them with romantic comfort such that they don't become poor citizens. But the reality
is, I do think society and men of my generation have a debt to pay, and that is to try and get
emotionally, logistically, and economically involved in young people's lives and level them up
such that they have some of the same opportunities that my generation had. Yeah, it's interesting
because I saw this article on Vogue, the headline says,
is having a boyfriend embarrassing now?
Yeah.
And, you know, hearing these stats, if I'm a woman hearing these stats,
that essentially I live longer without a man in my life,
you know, who knows the context of all these things,
but I also, I'm fine without a man in some ways.
Why should women get in a relationship with a man?
if there's also benefit for women being single.
Yeah, so there's, unfortunately, I think that there's...
Besides having a family and raising children and, you know, providing for society in a different
way, obviously, and not being alone your whole life.
There's, there's, I think in online media, especially, but all media, there's a romanticization
of the independent feminine strong woman.
And I think a lot of that is really positive.
but I also think it's created a culture where it's sort of women are encouraged to kind of be
one strike you're out as a man. Oh, he doesn't get along with his parents, red flag. Like every yellow
or magenta flag is a red flag. And you're the strong, independent, beautiful woman and you don't need a man.
And whenever I ask for a dating advice, the advice I give to men is, the first thing I ask is, would you
want to have sex with you? Are you in shape? Do you have a plan? Are you kind? Do you demonstrate
artisanship and interests in different things, you know, how do you demonstrate excellence?
And the advice I would give to women is what I call a second coffee. And that is, I think women are
celebrated for exiting relationships, you know, inspiring Carly Simon songs about walking out
on that man and you don't need a man. And when surveys, when men are said, when men are
asked if a woman had 80% of everything you want, would that suffice for you? 75% of men say,
Yeah, that'd be great.
When women presented with the same metric, 80% of everything you want, 75% say that's not enough.
They need like 95% or 100% of what they want.
Well, and again, I think that, let me go straight to the solve.
The solve is for men to level up.
Yes.
But if you look at kind of the content of what algorithms like, it's a lot of women saying,
like a basic standard metric is because, and I think it's happened because of online dating,
where the metrics get distilled down to some very base crude things.
six feet six figures like that's not a lot to ask right six feet six figures if you take out
married men obese men under the age of over the age of 50 it's 2% of the population wow and if you
talk to people who've been married longer than 30 years 80% of them say one was much more
interested in the beginning than the other and it was almost always the man the reality is this
we're less choosy if you have a room with a hundred
people 50 men and 50 women and there's alcohol involved the majority of the men would agree to have
sex with the majority of the women the majority of the women would sleep with none of the men
women are choosier and typically what's happened in these relationships where people end up together
is the woman says I wasn't initially that interested but I like the way he treated his parents
in church we hung out with the same friend group and I found he was funny I like the way he danced
I like the way he smelled I found that he was really kind I was so impressed with him at
work. He was outstanding at what he does. Where does a man, what venues now does a young man
have to demonstrate excellence, right? If they're not going to church, they're not going to school,
they're not going to work, where do they have the opportunity to develop the skills and then
demonstrate their strengths and skills over time? And instead it's kind of been consolidated now to the
one medium where most people are mating or finding dates, and that is online. And anytime you
digitize any market, it does become a winner-take-most environment. And then they're up against
this almost indomitable foe, and that is 40% of the S&P by market value now is related to AI,
the Magnumson 10. And their objective, they're not malicious, but unwittingly, the algorithms
have figured out, for every second we can take someone out of the organic mammalia world
and put them on a screen, we can monetize it.
And the person who is most susceptible to arbitraging their real life to an online life is a young man because of a less mature prefrontal cortex, the executive function, the susceptibility to addiction around constant dopa.
So ground zero for our economy right now, are monetizing our young people to drive trillions of dollars in value is essentially trying to sequester young men.
from their relationships.
So I worry that at the hands of this godlike technology
regulated by paleolithic instincts
and medieval institutions that were evolving
a new species of asocial, asexual males.
And my prediction is unless we weigh in with programs
and regulate big tech, when you go to malls,
I'm doing a live podcast tonight with 2,000 people,
I think you are gonna visibly see fewer
and fewer young men.
I think they are-
Going out or going to events?
Going out in the real world.
I think more and more of them are gonna be alone
in a room with a screen.
And why go through the pecking order
of trying to establish friends
when you have Reddit and Discord?
Why put on a tie, show up,
try and navigate the difficulties
and complexities of the workplace
when you think you can trade stocks or crypto
on Robin Hood or Coinbase?
And why would you go through the effort,
the expense, the potential rejection,
humiliation, effort, perseverance, willingness to endure rejection, involved in establishing a
romantic or a sexual relationship when you have synthetic, lifelike porn at home. So I think we're going
to have essentially, I mean, there's now one out of seven men are called NEETs. They're
neither in education, employment, or in training. They're literally doing nothing. And 63% of men
under the age of 30 aren't even trying to date. How do they survive?
If you're not doing anything except for consuming all day and you're not developing skills
offline or even online skills to create value in the world, how are you surviving?
Is it just you're getting checks from the government or your family or people paying for
them or how's this work?
It's a really good question.
There are government services, you know, everything from SNAP to unemployment to welfare
to Medicaid.
They, you know, they got, they, you know, had stimulus tax during COVID.
one out of three men under the age of 25
is living at their parents.
One out of five under the age of 30.
At 30, one in five men are still living at home.
So I think that some part-time work,
some government assistance, their parents.
But yeah, a lot of men, and I wouldn't even say man
because kind of my Yoda around all of this is Richard Reeves.
If you had Richard on your podcast?
So Richard brings like the data and the actual rigor.
I'm just louder than him.
But he has this great litmus test
when a male becomes a man because I do think a lot of males die never really having become
men. When do, when does a male become a man? I love this term uses, a surplus value.
When you approach relationships from a generative viewpoint. So growing up, I say to my boys,
you're negative value right now. You got a school spending a ton of time and resources on you.
Your parents are giving me more love than you're giving us. Society is providing you with roads.
If you call 911, someone's going to pick up. You're not, you're not generating.
any tax revenue. You're not adding value. You're negative value everywhere. And at some point,
I think when you become a man, it's not when it's not age, it's not some sort of religious
ceremony. It's when you are generating more economic value than you're absorbing. It's when
you're noticing people's lives and absorbing more complaints than you're making. Quite funny,
it's when you're giving more love and more cloud cover for other people than you have received.
you're adding surplus value
is the term that Richard uses, right?
Yes.
And I think a lot of
a lot of males never get there.
Never get to, I still have,
I still know people who call their parents
and complain when their parents are 80.
And it's like, okay, at some point
it needs to flip where you're
taking care of your parents.
And also, I came to this conclusion
recognizing I didn't really, by that standard,
become a man until I was in my 40s
because I used to be that guy
that approached every relationship of,
if I wasn't getting more joint camaraderie
from a friend than I was giving,
it was like, I'm on the wrong side
of this capitalist trade
and I'd exit the friendship.
Interesting.
If I spent time with my girlfriend's parents
when they were in town,
I would expect her to spend as much or more time.
If I felt an employee wasn't giving me
a lot more value than I was paying them,
you know, I'm thinking, okay, this isn't working
and I'd let them go.
I was all about this mindset
of relationships as a transout.
action. And then what I've come to realize is like that's the opposite of what it means to add
surplus value and be a man. The ultimate kind of limitless test is first you got to take care
of yourself. You got to fix your own gas, you know, oxygen mask. Then you take care of your family.
Then you take care of your community. Ideally take care of your country or protect your country.
And then the ultimate expression, I think, of manhood is you plant trees, the shade of which,
you know, you'll never sit under. So it's been a, it's been a kind of a journey for me. But I
like the idea, this notion of surplus generative value in relationships. I love that. I used to think
that you become a man, and maybe it's more emotionally or spiritually, when you have a child and when
you lose your father. Like you have to step into some type of spiritual breakthrough. But then I was
like, okay, well, anyone could have kids, they could just have lots of kids, but not really be there
as a father, as a dad.
So, and when I lost my father a few years ago,
I really felt like, oh, something shifted in me.
And I almost, I lost him mentally 20 years ago
when he went through a brain injury, he had an accident
and he was alive physically, but emotionally he wasn't available.
Yeah.
And he wasn't a provider anymore with spiritual, emotional,
or financial support.
Yeah.
So it was more like I had to support him and our family had to support him.
But then when he fully passed,
physically it's like something also shifted at a whole other level of like oh i really need to step
into this spiritual or psychological way of being now because i can no longer rely that my father's
got to rescue me yeah even though he was here like maybe he could have bailed me out some way
but no longer can my father bail me out yeah and now having twins it's like oh i have to
i get to continue to step up as a man continue to step up as a man continue to step up as a
a leader to myself, a leader to my spouse, a leader to our extended families, and provide
emotionally, spiritually, physically, financially, and continue to evolve.
I can't be, I don't know, I don't have the ability anymore to act like a child.
You know what I mean?
I can be childlike energetically, but I have to be able to provide a space to serve.
and serve beyond me.
Obviously, I need to take care of me.
But the goal that I'm hearing you say is how can we add way more value than we're
taking?
And I think that is part of it.
So I don't know what my definition now is like or when you truly become it.
I don't know if you can truly step into like manhood if your father still alive and
if you don't have kids.
I don't know if there's still some like childish boy energy until one of those things
happen but I don't know what are your thoughts on that yeah I think there's a lot of people
become men who never have kids so the way you talked about kind of birth and death are tremendous
points of inspiration to kind of grow up and start behaving in a way that makes you man but I think
a lot of people have kids and never become men that's true and a lot of people you know who
have parents live well into their 50s or 60s never never become a man but what you say
resonates in the sense that I think of kind of the two, I would say what motivated me to be a better
man and or get to manhood. And they both involve women. And one's more virtuous than the other. And that is
when my mom, I was kind of sleep blocking through life, didn't get my act together until I was
about 25, 26. And my mom got really sick. And I didn't have the money. She called me from
graduates. I was in graduate school. She'd had her second mastectomy and got just charged
early from the hospital, you know, because hospitals are expensive. And she was at home
and she called me and said, you need to come home. I'm really in a bad way. My mom was not
dramatic. So I got on a flight back from Berkeley. And I walked into the situation, Louis,
I just didn't know how to deal with it. And I, and there's just certain things a son can't do
for his mother. And I remember, I need to get her nurse. And I called, the nurses were 35 bucks an hour
and I had about $700 in my name. And just the shame, it's like, okay, I'm the only, I'm the only,
son, the only child of a single immigrant mother, taking care of me my whole life, she's really
vulnerable right now, and I can't live up to my expectations. Yeah, that's tough. That was really
upsetting. And at that moment, I decided, look, you can't decide to be economically secure,
but you can decide to kind of go all in. And that's when I really got my act together and said,
okay, you can't control them. The market trumps individual dynamics. And there's some exceptionally
talented people to work really hard their whole life and take risks and never get there. So you can't
control that but the things you can't control I decided I was going to work really hard that was
very motivating for me and then the other thing is less virtuous I noticed early that guys who had
their shit together professionally and economically they attracted more women seem to be attracting
a broader selection set of mates and I even saw it through UCLA the freshmen were interested in
guys that were funny and cool and dressed well and by the time they were seniors they were very
interested in that guy going to medical school. And we don't like to talk about this, but women are attracted
to men for three reasons. The first is to signal resources. And you don't have to show up with a
rangerover or panorai. You can just be someone who has to fit together. It's like, this guy's going to be a good
provider. The second is humor. We talked about this in the last one, or intellect. And then the third,
and this, I think, is the most under leveraged secret weapon in mating for a man is kindness.
and that is women instinctively believe
at some point they'll be vulnerable
because of gestation
or they're physically smaller.
So they're very drawn to men
who demonstrate kindness
and that is acts of generosity
with no reciprocal expectation.
So, and that's the most,
people, most men understand one and two,
but what they don't understand
is they need a kindness practice
because I do think you can learn kindness.
It starts with manners,
but if you try to, you know,
small acts of generosity every day,
I do think it starts to become second nature.
but I wanted to take care of my mom and quite frankly I wanted more dates and that was those both
those things were very motivating for me to try and be a better man and then what you talked about
having kids how old were you when you had kids I started late I was 42 yeah me too you're 42
oh you're 42 just just had kids yeah you had 42 is a different look than me of 42 anyways I
But when my kid came marching or had the poor judgment to come marching out of my girlfriend,
it was 2008, and I had lost everything.
Right at the housing crisis, yeah.
I had gone all in.
I kind of came a professional age in San Francisco where you were supposed to go all in,
borrow money against your stocks.
And you were kind of taught if you're really talented, you're in it to win it,
and you can, you know, I'm so awesome that if I throw myself at something 100% it's going to win,
not recognizing again the power of diversity so i've been wealthy three times which means i've lost it
twice and i lost it in 2000 then i crawled my way back had had a kid and literally at that moment
lost everything because i was too stupid to diversify you're in the book on money i hadn't learned
the power diversification and when my kid entered the world it wasn't bright lights and angels
singing i literally felt anxiety and shame i'm like not only have i screwed up from
me, but now I've screwed up for someone who is totally dependent upon me. And granted, I struggle
with depression, so I have a tendency to see dark things as black. But I remember I was so nauseous
and so anxious that I had to sit down. They weren't worried about me, I think, than the mother
of the kid at that point. And I couldn't say, I feel failure. I feel like I've already let
this thing down, you know? So for me, that was very motivating. I think having kids is stressful.
I'm not saying it's for everybody,
but it definitely has made me a better man
because I want to model good behavior.
I take being a provider and a protector
much more seriously now.
So I do think, you know,
this kind of the three legs of the masculinity stool,
provider, protector, procreator,
I do think those are decent legs of the stool
and what you, the skills and strengths
and attributes you want to develop
to be all three of those things
are loosely spinking,
what I believe it means to be, you know, quite frankly masculine.
But the book is really more about where I screwed up
and what I learned from it and tried to evolve around it.
But yeah, my first encounter, I know you just had twins,
you're doing much better than I was at that moment.
But I felt a ton of stress and anxiety,
but it also is very productive for me.
And one of the things I worry about with my kids
is that I didn't grow up with a lot, at least not economically.
And I always say if I had what my kids have, I wouldn't have what I have.
And a lot of what I think about is how do you instill that sense of grit
and a little bit of fear is probably good in kids?
Because the things that really motivated me, if I had what my kids have,
the only things I know I would have engaged in is like a rangerover and a cocaine habit.
I'm a fundamentally lazy person.
When I was younger, I didn't want to save the world.
I wasn't kind.
I wasn't trying to add value.
I wanted economic security because an absence of it had caused so much anxiety in my life.
And I think that if you grow up with money, did you grow up with money?
No.
If people have money, I think they can sympathize with people who don't, but I don't really
think they can fully empathize because it's as if my mom and I had this ghost following us
around saying you're not worthy.
Like you screwed up, you and your mom screwed up.
When I didn't get into UCLA down the road,
they had a 74% admission rate
and I was one of the 26% that didn't get in.
I remember people, I went to my friends, parents,
and they knew I didn't get on a plane tomorrow
and go to Michigan and show up with the admissions office
and you're so smart.
And I'm listening, I'm like, go to Michigan.
I don't have a credit card.
I don't, I've been on a plane like twice.
we don't have that kind of money.
I can't afford to spend two or $300 to go and show.
There's just a lack of confidence,
a lack of contacts, a lack of, quite frankly, a sophistication
that people with money can't even relate to.
And the anxiety, I remember like this,
I don't call it trauma, people have worse trauma.
I'm one of those people that's always five minutes away
from losing your keys.
I lose everything.
And my ex-wife used to say,
If my dick wasn't attached, we'd find it on a card table in Soho next to a Goodfellus script and a Nirvana album.
And I lost two jackets in one week.
And jackets were 30 bucks or some reason.
It was like a monopoly or a cartel in jackets.
And I remember just the fear and anxiety.
I purposely spent the night at my friends two nights in a row because I just couldn't face telling my mom I'd lost another jacket, you know?
Because I knew she was going to melt down.
My mom was in a very vulnerable place.
and she would just lose her and that was very distressing.
So I've been so focused and some of the critiques of the book is that,
and it's actually an accurate critique,
it's that I'm too focused on money.
And then I think money will solve a man's problems.
And that's actually a really accurate critique,
but that comes from a place of not having it.
And things just got so much easier and better for me
once I had economic security.
Well, I think it's part of it for sure, like you said,
but also if you're not kind and you have money,
you're going to just ruin people's lives
if you're just like mean.
Okay, I have all the money.
I have resources.
I'm funny and I'm intelligent, but I'm mean.
That is a disaster for any person coming into a relationship with them,
whether it be a business partner or a team member
if they're running a business or...
The president or a finance...
I say that.
I don't know the political leanings of you or your audience,
but I find that some of the role models for masculinity
that we should naturally look up to,
the wealthiest man in the world, he's one capitalism and the president.
And I don't think they're very strong role models for young men.
I think they've conflated masculinity with coarseness and cruelty, you know,
being sued concurrently by two women for sole custody or child because you haven't seen that
child.
That couldn't be any less masculine.
Cutting off aid to HIV positive mothers, I just can't think of anything less masculine than
that.
It's like these guys have recognized tremendous prosperity.
That's really impressive.
But the whole point of prosperity is you can move to protection.
That's the whole shooting match, right?
What's the point of prosperity if you can't get off your heels and onto your toes
and protect others after you've protected yourself?
And I think some of the most powerful men in the United States
have just missed that whole part of their journey towards manhood.
I think it's really disappointing.
Even if you look back at the Gilded Age, some of these men who were just rapacious,
kind of once they got there, they did feel a real obligation, a civic obligation.
And that's where I think some of the individuals in big tech and in our government right now,
I feel as if they've kind of skipped that whole protection part of the masculinity stool, if you will.
Procreation, protection, and providing, are those the three stools?
Provider.
Provider.
And then move to protection, operating system around OS protecting, not just physical.
You know, guys like your size breakup fights at bars, they don't start them, right?
But emotional protection, psychological protection, all these things, right?
When you hear someone talking shit about someone behind their back, your default operating system should be to weigh in and a minimum not participate and ideally protect them.
You may not agree with the transgender community.
You may be like me and think it's ridiculous that firms have to have legally mandated third bathrooms.
I don't think that makes any sense.
I think it's ridiculous that we allowed a transgender woman who's 6'5 to show up to an NC2A swim meet.
I think that's just irrational.
It starts from a good place, but I think that's irrational.
But at the same time, I just don't see any reason why people want to demonize this community
and start kicking them out of the military when they're served honorably.
When we start passing laws in states that say there can't be any transgender athletes in high school,
and then someone actually says, are there any transgender athletes in high school in South Dakota?
And they can't find one.
That's just demonizing a community.
This is less than 1% of the American population.
So, yeah, have Democrats or people on the left gone way too far, yeah, but then to weigh in with just being mean and demonizing a community.
So women should be able to cross the street because they see men on that side of the street, not avoid them.
That's really, that's heartbreaking that women say they don't feel safe around men, right?
I think we have to teach our young boys from a very early age.
Protection is really a key component.
And then the last one is more controversial, is procreation.
And that is, I think men wanting romantic and sexual relationships has been pathologized and demonized.
And I think it's a feature, not a bug.
Because if men want to have relationships and, quite frankly, sex, I didn't see my partner at the pool at the Raleigh Hotel in South Beach and think I would like someday to have a relationship with her to get lower rates on auto insurance.
I saw her and thought, quite frankly, I would really like to have sex with that woman.
And that desire, that fire, can be destructive.
Yes.
But most of the time, it's fire that's captured in an engine and creates progress, progress
towards being fit, being a better dresser, having a rep, being a provider, having
perseverance, and developing what I think is the key skill in life across multiple
dimensions, and that is the ability to endure rejection.
You know, all the shit that you built here, this didn't just happen.
The only thing I know that was involved in this was a lot of knows.
And the ability to get hit in the face, beamed in the face, get up, dust up, and get back to the plate.
And I think a lot of the skills men develop pursuing relationships are not only informative and educational, but really key to developing skills across the rest of their lives.
And if you ever see someone, you think, oh, they're talented, but they seem to have made more money than I would have guess.
or they're with someone higher character
and more attractive in them,
I can almost guarantee you that one skill set,
and that is the ability to get out a spoon and eat it.
And every great yes in your life,
every great yes in your life will involve one thing,
and that is a ridiculous number of nose that come before it.
And there's a scary stat that just came out
that 40% of men 18 to 24 have never asked a woman out in person.
Wow, really?
So if you're a dude that's willing to go up to a woman,
figure out a way to express romantic interest while making her feel safe,
you're almost already in the top half of men.
But men aren't approaching women.
And this is anecdotal evidence.
I don't have data on this.
But when I go out to places, on a regular basis, when I speak to single women, they'll say,
I'm here, I'm single, I'm ready to mingle.
Look at me, I look amazing.
They're signaling it, yes.
And no men approach me.
And regardless of what the Atlantic, the New York Times will say,
80% of women still say they want the man to make the approach.
Yes.
They don't want to be approaching men.
It just doesn't feel natural for four out of five women.
And I worry that men are being tempted, have been getting mixed messages.
No guy wants to be that guy, right?
Makes an approach, inartful, doesn't go well, awkward.
Just laugh, dad, or gets rejected.
Or it ends up, we both work at Google.
and now I'm that guy.
And there's actual professional ramifications.
I mean, the moment a woman says at work,
fairly or unfairly,
oh yeah, that guy, he hit on me at a bar, he's a creep.
That is not.
So I think that men wanting to pursue romantic and sexual relationships
is a feature, not a bug.
And we've demonized and pathologized it.
And I think we're now getting to a point
where people realize that,
men being initiators, and I don't want to say aggressive because that has negative overtones.
But when I coach young men, one of the things I tell them is they need to put themselves in
the agency of strangers. And then we have a practice called no, get to know. Express platonic
friendship. Hey, do you want to grab a beer and watch the game? And then also maybe romantic
interests, would you be interested in grabbing coffee? First you got to open, establish some sort of
rapport, where you're from, you know, et cetera. And then the key is no.
Because what you're going to do is you're going to call me the next day.
And I'm going to say, how are you?
And they're going to say, oh, you know, I'm fine.
And that's the key is developing those calluses.
I'm alive.
Yeah, I'm fine.
I'm alive.
And by the way, she's fine too.
Yeah.
She's fine too.
And if you don't know the difference between expressing platonic and romantic interest and harassing someone,
you've got much bigger problems.
But where do men even have the venues to do that right now?
So provider, I think you've got to be economically viable in a capitalist society.
I think your own self-esteem, the way society judges,
you is unfairly. It's unfairly based on the economic viability for men. It's unfairly based on the
aesthetic qualities of women. And I'm not saying this is the way the world should be, but it is the way
the world is. And then two, immediate move to protection. I think that's the most rewarding
thing about being, having some prosperity. That's when I feel most at rest and most of purpose
when I feel like my kids are safe. My partner feels noticed. I feel I can get involved in great
charities. I'm doing a lot of virtue signaling right now, but it's true. But that gives me a sense of
purpose. It makes me feel strong. And then finally, I think we've got to celebrate young men's
desire to be in relationships. I think it's a, I think it's a feature, not a bug.
What I think society is better when men learn to improve themselves so they can attract a female
partner or a partner where they can be a better human being. They can provide to that partner.
They're less selfish, hopefully. They're more thoughtful about how they can serve their friends,
their family, their community.
If you find a man like that
who can improve their life
to attract a healthy, conscious woman
that wants to be with them,
you're gonna have less war,
less suffering, less pain,
less aggression, less anger
and less men hurting other people.
And I think that's what we need as society.
And I saw you go on the view
and there was a reaction video
that someone said, you know,
okay, Scott, so you need women to come rescue men
because unless men are with a great woman,
then they're going around the world hurting people
and just like causing a mess.
And now we have to go and save men.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, when they've been oppressing us
or hurting us for years and pushing us down,
like that doesn't work for me.
So what are your thoughts around that?
Sure.
It's like women feel like they're already working so hard.
Why do they have to come rescue the man now to be a better man?
Yeah, so it's not, nobody has an obligation to service
or save men, especially women.
I don't, you know, men have to level up.
Women don't have, I don't think women need to lower their standards.
You know, I tell women to agree to a second coffee
because traditionally, as we've referenced before,
sometimes it takes time to find that you're interested in this man.
But I've never, ever in any way connoted or intimated.
And I think, feel like some of these comments are on fair,
they say, these men are just entitled and feel like,
and women are, as you said,
supposed to come save them. I think unless men level up and unless we put in place fiscal
programs that restore more economic viability to all young people, women, you can't tell women
to lower their standards and save men. I get it. I 100% get it. So my, I have three parties
that I think need to weigh in here with help. One is a society, I think we need to stop the transfer
of economic power from young to old. We transfer $1.2 trillion every year, the biggest transfer
in history of money from working age people to old people who are the wealthiest generation
in history. My generation, people my age are 72% wealthier than they were 40 years ago. People
under the age of 40 are 24% less wealthy. This has a disproportionately negative impact on men
who are falling behind women because men are still disproportionately evaluated based on their
economic viability. Beyonce could still marry Jay-Z if she worked at McDonald's. The opposite is not
true. And the reality is men are evaluated as romantic partners disproportionately based on their
economic viability. So men need to, we need fiscal policies that put more money. I don't
think in men's pockets, but in young pockets. But is that women who are looking, they don't,
they don't feel safe if a man doesn't have money, or is that women who are attracted to men
with money? Is that? I don't know if it's, they don't feel safe, but 75% of women say economic
viability is key to a partner, only 25% of men. I mean, you've seen the state. Men made socioeconomically
horizontally and down, women horizontally and up. And when the pool of horizontal and up,
because women keep getting taller economically, which is wonderful, don't do anything getting
in the way of it, the pool of horizontal and up keep shrinking. And so what do you do? I don't think
we want economic affirmative action for men. I think what we want is to stop the transfer of wealth
from young to old.
The two biggest tax deductions in America
are mortgage interest rate and capital gains.
Who owns homes and stocks?
People my age.
Who makes their money from working current income
and rents young people?
And when a young group of people
does not have money,
you end up with a group with women
who are two and three women
under the age of 30 in a relationship,
one in three men.
Now, why is that?
I think that's mathematically impossible.
It's not because women are dating older
because they want more emotionally
and economically viable men.
So, look, I think that we need to weigh in
with policies that level up young people again.
Raise minimum wage, more progressive tax policy.
Corporations are paying the lowest tax rate since 1939.
The 25 wealthiest families are paying about 6% tax rate.
We just transfer massive economics.
There's a sucking sound from young people to old people.
I think it's taken an especially damaging toll on young men.
And then the second group is I think men my age
really need to lean in and get involved
in a young man's life or a boy's life
because we have a debt.
To mentor young kids.
Well, we had unfair advantage.
And I understand the gag reflex
because they see a guy of my skin color,
sexual orientation, gender, and age and think,
dude, you had a 3,000-year-heard start
and you're complaining about men now.
And I'm like, I get it.
but should a 19-year-old male pay the price for my advantage?
So we have an obligation,
especially men of my generation,
to get involved and try and lift them up.
And then I also think women play a role
because I do think there's an unhealthy zeitgeist
in our society where women and progressives say to young men,
you don't have problems, you are the problem.
And the answer is you need to act more like a woman.
And I don't think that's the answer either.
I don't think it is.
But I feel like sometimes, and I hate this term,
people take this stuff out of context and say,
you're expecting now women after finally getting some progress
are responsible for saving men.
No, they're not.
Our society is responsible for creating a healthy next generation,
which means continuing the progress of women
and also lifting up our young men
who by any standard are really struggling.
And empathy is not a zero-sum game.
We can still acknowledge the huge,
obstacles women just faced.
Your wife just had twins.
When women have kids, they go to 77 cents on the dollar.
We have not figured out a way to maintain a woman's professional trajectory when she has
kids.
That's a problem.
Black and Latino families have an average household net worth of 22,000.
White family is 160.
There's still an economic apartheid in the U.S.
But we can acknowledge those problems still exist and work on them.
But at the same time, also realize the country and women,
are not going to continue to flourish if young men are flailing. Full stop.
So again, empathy is not a zero-sum game. Gay marriage didn't hurt, heteronormative marriage,
civil rights didn't hurt white people. Helping some of our young men, and specifically with programs
for young people economically, that's not going to hurt women. It doesn't come at the cost of women.
And one of the things I hate about the manosphere, what people traditionally think is the
atmosphere is they believe there is an inverse correlation between women's assent and how men are
doing. And the reality is without women's assent, we wouldn't have won World War II. Hitler wouldn't
let women get into the factories. He thought they needed to stay home. And we let women build
P-51 Mustangs, and we sent a lot of them overseas to be near the front lines. That literally
won the, or was a big contributor to the war. Women entering the workforce in the 70s,
and 80s in the United States is probably the biggest driver of economic growth for the United
States. And in a capitalist society where our expectations keep going up, you know, having dual
income households is really important. So I think women's assent has been accretive to men.
I think it's been great. Yeah. And we need our young men to recognize that when they really
lose the script is when they start blaming women for their romantic problems and immigrants for
their economic problems, that women's success is great for them.
At the same time, I do think that we need to stop this demonizing of, there's this thing
online, this trend where women say they're not dating any longer because they could be
unalived, which I guess is a politically correct term, killed, murdered, unalived.
Unalived. Yeah.
If they were dating someone, they would be killed?
Well, no, that one of the reasons they're no longer dating is they feel that they're taking
physical risks being in a man's company because men are violent.
Oh, okay.
And 2,500 women every year are murdered.
That's a huge problem. 70% by the way by people they've known for a while. But if you look at the actual data, if you go on a date with a man, he's 16 times, 16 times more likely to go home that night and hurt himself than hurt you. Why is that? I think men sometimes get very, look, men are engaging in a lot of self-harm. You're going to a morgue and there's five people died by suicide for men. And you're four times more likely to get hurt on the drive over or choke during dinner. So we've decided, I think, the
have decided let's portray young men as quite frankly as a danger to society and the reality
is men who are dangerous and the vast majority aren't but the small minority that are are dangerous
towards themselves they're much more likely the majority of gun deaths are suicides yeah and so I think that
I think that we also need my biggest fans are young men my biggest supporters are mothers
because they see what's going on they see I have two daughters
and one son, one daughter at Penn, one daughter in PR,
and my son's in the basement playing video games and vaping.
So I think that recognizing what I call restoring the alliance,
and that is the greatest alliance in history is in NATO
or between democracies, the greatest alliance in history
is the alliance between men and women.
I think a combination of masculine and feminine energy
in a household makes the happiest, most productive households.
And by the way, sometimes two women can bring that chemistry
or two men can bring that alchemy, right?
But that combination of masculine and feminine energy, I think, is a wonderful mix.
And what the genders have done a great job of is convincing themselves that it's the other
gender's fault, right?
Men got to stop blaming women.
That just doesn't hunt, right?
And at the same time, I do think that some women and feminists, well, it's actually not
feminist, I'll call progressives, liberal versus illiberal thought, just need to look at the data
and think, okay, lifting up our young men is going to be good for everybody.
Yes, it is.
Do you think, you know, I'm here you share that it's great that women are earning more
and are constantly progressing in their careers and getting more opportunities than ever.
And we want to continue that thriving.
And we also want to see men continue to improve, especially young men who maybe don't have the skills
anymore, the tools to become financially successful or they haven't figured it out yet.
Do you think, is there any data around the majority of women being able to
earn more than men and still be attracted to them in a long-term romantic relationship.
Or is there any data that you've seen around that that women can make more and still be
attracted to the man they're with long-term?
So 17% of households now, the woman is the primary breadwinner.
And so I do think over time society is becoming...
But are they attracted to their partner still?
Well, okay.
So this is...
Just because they're together doesn't mean it's happy.
Like the data is not...
I'm going to, there's the way the world should be and the way the world is.
The way the world is is the following is that when the woman in the relationship starts making
more money than the man, the likelihood of divorce doubles.
Really?
The use of erectile dysfunction drugs triples because the man feels, has less self-esteem and has
problems.
So the honest answer is, I don't know how to get past.
We're going to have to figure out things and we're going to have to train our.
Is that biology?
Is that like psychology around?
that that causes these things to these challenges to arise when women earn more than the men
they're with? I think it's very anthropological and that is women feel inal that their job
or one of the things they need to be focused on is how to protect offspring and they need to
partner with someone who's strong and can protect them in their offspring and in a capitalist
society's strength is conflated with economic power. So there's just no doubt about it.
So if the woman is stronger financially, emotionally, physically, then it's like, why do you need
the man then, right? Well, so 70% of divorce filings are by women. And actually, the increase in
divorce rates is probably a good thing because women no longer feel economically indentured or
dependent upon a man. Not trapped anymore yet from that. But there's just no getting around it.
So men need to continue to figure out how to earn more than the partners they're with in order to have a
happier marriage, it sounds like based on the data. But also, at a minimum, if a woman ascends
economically, relationships at the end of the day are somewhat of a transaction. If a woman is
ascending economically, what you see is men aren't stepping up logistically and emotionally and
domestically. They're not keeping pace without assent. And so at some point, the woman in the
relationship does the math and says, okay, I'm the provider, on the procreator, and you aren't stepping
up at home, then I'm definitely out of here. So there's a difference between, I think, working on the
relationship and trying to evolve the relationship, which I think a lot of couples where the woman
is the primary breadwinner, I think they can work through it. There's no reason they can't have
happy marriages. But there's just not getting around it. The data shows that innate sexual attraction
is at risk when the woman is the provider. Wow. And I'm not saying that that can't work,
but there's just a lot of data that women lose sexual interest in a man when he fails as a provider
or diminishes as a provider.
The cocktail or the afterburner, the fuel on top of that division or dissent is that
when men don't step up in the other parts of the life.
They don't own their role.
They're not generous or they're not kind.
They're not contributing to a whole, whatever it might be.
I think being part of a provider is, quite frankly, sometimes getting out of the way and
being more supportive of your partner who might be better at that whole money thing.
And I think we're going to have to figure this out and train our boys to step up emotionally.
and logistically and domestically,
because the reality is more women are in medical school,
more women are law school.
We're probably gonna have two to one female to male college grads
in the next five years.
And so women, more and more,
that's 17% number's gonna grow.
So we have to figure out a way to train our boys
to say, okay, part of being a provider
is contributing on a lot of, you know,
a lot of different dimensions.
But also, there are a ton of mainstream,
Main Street jobs and vocational programming.
13%, 11% of LinkedIn profiles in the UK and Germany say Apprentice.
It's 3% in the US.
We don't have an apprentice culture
and we have shame vocational jobs.
I don't know if you've seen all these articles,
but there's now a bunch of juniors and 17 year olds men
in high school who are learning,
like how to install HVAC energy efficient heaters
and making 80 or $90,000 a year by their senior year.
great for that. There's actually a lot of vocational jobs, ready. And we hate to admit this,
but men seem to enjoy, and quite frankly, on average, not always, be better at these types of,
this type of vocational work that require sometimes strength. They're working out. Men seem to
enjoy outside. Yeah. And so we need to help men level up. Because I don't think it's, what I don't
think it is, I don't think the descent to the anxiety or the lack of sexual chemistry, the sexual
diffusion, if you will. Nestle happens once the woman is making a dollar more, it's quite frankly
when the guy, okay, economically, maybe you're not there with me, but you're not contributing.
You're not adding that surplus of value in other ways, yeah. You got to bring something to the
table, right? And traditionally the roles were very defined. The female offered kind of more empathetic,
understood how to create a healthy, loving household better than the men, kind of what we call
the emotional labor that they that's been undervalued yes men aren't stepping up around that so it's a
very honest conversation it's like okay your wife's doing great you want to be supportive of her
because you need money you need that kind of a household but quite frankly boss what do you bring
into the table do you feel like in some ways i'm going to give an example and this is just one example
but do you feel in some ways that women have been lied to around the need to you know be career driven
and earn as much as possible and delay having kids and delay getting married as long as you can
until you're financially stable.
And I'll give you a context around this.
And maybe it's just case by case.
There's someone I know, I'm not going to call them out, but there's someone I know who is
very career focused and driven on their career for probably the last 12 or 13 years and since college
and just always seemed a little frustrated, always seemed a little unhappy, just always seemed
like a little, I don't know, something was always off around the energy of this person.
And they just had a child, you know, maybe six months ago.
And I've never seen them happier.
Every time around, it's like something transformed.
Yeah.
And there's, and it's like, she loves being a mother.
She's like, it is just changed her world in a positive way.
Energetically, it's like, it's like she's on purpose.
And she hasn't stopped working.
She's gone back kind of part-time, but it's like, I can just see her come alive.
And do you think there's in any way women have been lied to about delay having kids as long as
possible, make as much as money as you can, be financially stable first, develop yourself
in your career, don't rely on the man to do this.
Otherwise, you get it screwed over where I just saw someone have the most joying the last six
months of like stepping into this role as a mother.
Maybe that's just one case, but what are your thoughts on that?
I think the sort of you've been lied to, you worked hard, you became Ebola professionally,
now you're miserable because you didn't take the time to find a man or have a family.
I think that's a little bit of this trope or this myth from the far right that wants to take
women back to the 50s and 60s.
because, okay, what if that woman also wasn't able to find a romantic partnership and was also
economically insecure?
True.
So I don't, I find sometimes that's an excuse to try and take, to regress and repeal women's rights.
Now, I think, now, the reality is, if a man focuses on his career and is out of shape, not as
especially nice, but a baller professionally,
he's still going to find a mate.
And that's not as true for women.
Right.
A partner at a law firm who's a male,
who's maybe just modestly attractive
and not that nice and not that nurturing,
he's going to find a wife.
I'm not sure.
I mean, it's just a little bit unfair, quite frankly,
because we put the same economic responsibilities
on women and the same expectations,
but we don't reward them romantically and sexually
with the same currency as we reward a man for that focus.
So quite frankly, but I don't think,
I think women wanting to be economically independent
and enjoy having strangers applaud for them
on a stage financially and professionally,
I think we need more of it.
I do think that both men and women
need to make a real effort
to approach people,
be approachable say yes put yourself in situations where you might meet somebody maybe if there's not
sparks on the first date give a second coffee a chance but this notion i don't like the rights
trope or this narrative around women been lied to and they should be home barefoot and pregnant i just
think that's that's kind of inadvertently saying this is not me politically saying these things i'm just
curious about like frankly this is what charlie kirk said uh that women are miserable and here's
The data flies in the face of that because you know who's really miserable is the dude that wakes up in his 30s and isn't in a relationship.
The data is pretty clear.
Men need relationships more than women.
One of the things I say in the book that's gotten some pushback is, you know, I try to be very honest.
I tell my boys that if they're ever in the company of women, they pay.
People say, well, that's sexist.
I think it's sexist.
I think it's generous.
It's adding value.
It's being courteous.
It's being thoughtful.
That's right.
it's like why is that sexist well the what the way the land offer to pay if they say no then okay
you don't have to I don't know you offer I think you just pay yeah and I'll get my land
acknowledgement now so the rationale that I try and propose is that men benefit more from
relationships than women there's just you know widows happier after their husband dies
widowers less happy a woman's fertility window is much shorter than a man's the downside of
sex for a woman is much greater than a man's. Bigger risk, yeah. So when you look at the fact that
on average a man's going to benefit more from the relationship, that the woman is taking more
risk in terms of downside of risk, when her fertility window is shorter, and when you also acknowledge
that almost every mammal has some sort of courtship ritual, it makes sense for one way that you
recognize that asymmetry, one way you step up and say, I value your time, I value this situation,
if you will, one easy way to recognize and acknowledge that asymmetry is to pay. And also
innately, regardless of what someone might say, what I've told my 18-year-old son, is anytime you
split the check with anyone, it means they are never going to kiss you and you are never
going to kiss them. That's the bottom line. And I think those genes are wired into us for thousands
of years. And regardless of what we say, well, it's who asked who out. I'm just saying to my
boys in my view that if you're in the company of women you pay yeah to guys like you would
do are in great shape is not necessarily because of the aesthetics of being in great
the discipline it says you show up it says you can commit to something yes it says that you're
on your game it says you're not getting fucked up every night it says that you know how to show up
every day and do something and commit to something so but anyways my point is that going back to
I don't think, I think women's professional assent
is great for them.
I think over the long term, it's great for society
and great for men.
But we also have to recognize
there's just some externalities
and some knock-on effects
when we're in a society
where men are falling behind women economically.
Don't get in the way of this, right?
Fix this.
Get men back on track.
And I don't even like any program
that specifically targets men economically
other than investing more in vocational programming,
expanding freshman seats.
What I'm suggesting is a series of public policy programs
that would lift all young people up.
Because it's not about the guy making,
if the woman's in the relationship is making 80,000,
it's not about the guy needing to make 81,
but the guy needs to be sort of in a way contributing.
He needs to be in that weight class
where he's contributing.
And I think a lot of, unfortunately, a lot of men right now,
young men are seduced by having a reasonable fact simply of life online and then show up with
no skills and no ability to contribute to a relationship and I think that's and again when a woman
doesn't have a romantic relationship she pours that energy into her friends in her professional life when a
man doesn't have a relationship not always but often he pours that energy destructive things right into
yeah you know into conspiracy theory online goes extremely online um you know all these mass shooters
I did some research on political violence and the far left wants to bring the far right
far right wants to blame the far left and it's a totally hollow argument 98.6% of mass
shooters are men. Almost all political violence is committed not only by men but young men
and these guys are less politically engaged and probably you or me what do they have in
common they're young men on attaching to work not attaching no relationships no
relationships economically strained they go extremely online find these
conspiracy theories they get radicalized online and then they have access then they have access to guns and
again I feel I have to do another land acknowledgement I'm not suggesting that it's women's responsibility
to solve this problem no I'm suggesting it's a society if one group is struggling we can focus on
lifting them up yeah and that's why I love that you wrote this book notes on being a man and it's one of
the reasons why you know eight years ago I wrote the mask of masculinity because I went down my own
path of realizing and coming to the awareness that all of these, you know, shootings, the
domestic, most of the domestic violence in the USA and the world, and just any destruction
happening in the world is typically from men who haven't healed their traumas or haven't created
a healthy, conscious respect about themselves and having more tools on how to navigate
society and the world better. And the mass shooters that you're talking about, they have
of traumas that they haven't healed yet. They haven't processed the wounds of whatever they've gone
through. They don't have good relationships. They're isolated. They're alone. Or at least that's how
probably they're feeling. And they don't have the tools on how to navigate their mind or their
emotions on how to get beyond those things that are destructive. And I think that's what you've
been talking about and notes on being a man is how to overcome the loneliness feeling, the sadness,
the lack of resourcefulness, and having the courage to be in the world.
dealing with failure over and over and over again and not going back into a cave in your
your parents basement saying this girl rejected me or this guy made fun of me I'm
worthless now I'm traumatized and I'm gonna go destroy the world around me and I think
when men especially younger boys because I was very internally destructive most of my life
I said a lot of mean things to myself I'd physically hurt myself I was never like cutting
myself or like going into alcohol but it was more like how can i get into as many fights as possible
to be destructive to inflict pain on myself and other people thankfully sports gave me a safe
outlet to do that where i could do it in a constructive way but i was still destructive in the
process of wanting to inflict as much pain on myself and others because i just felt like i was
bad and wrong i felt shameful growing up dealing with sexual abuse from a man that i didn't know i felt
felt like I was worthless.
Yep.
My brother was in prison for four years when I was eight.
So just the stress of that on the family dynamics, my parents going through divorce.
Listen, I was a white man born in Ohio and America.
So I was born on third base in some ways.
But that doesn't hold back the psychological stress and mess that I had to deal with.
And a lot of people have to deal with.
So I could have been completely destructive.
But there was different moments in my life and different mentors.
Like you mentioned, there's a lack of now that came to me and gave me a high five,
that put their arm around me emotionally, spiritually, physically and said, why are you so destructive?
Why are you trying to hurt yourself so much?
Why are you reacting this way?
Like, why are you getting so angry of the littlest things?
Yeah.
Like, come over here.
Yeah.
And I had mentor, and I allowed myself to be coached by mentors.
I didn't push them away.
I seeked it out as well.
And there were different seasons in life and stages that I had to fail over and over again
and realize, oh, this behavior is not supportive to me or other people.
It's hurting the people around me, friends, family, girlfriends, whatever might be.
And I never ever physically hurt anyone, but just like my behavior, my reactions when I was
younger, it wasn't conscious, it wasn't healthy.
And it was based on a wound or multiple wounds that I didn't know how to navigate.
I didn't know how to heal.
And it wasn't until I was.
30 when I opened up about sexual abuse for the first time to anyone.
Yeah. And I finally was able to release some of the shame.
Yeah.
And then I went down the rabbit hole of studying why I was behaving this way most of my life.
Yeah.
How I could start the healing process and how I could be a better person in the world.
It's the same time when I launched a school of greatness because I was like, I need to humble
myself.
I need to learn from great men like yourself who have mastered this or understand the science
of this. And how can I start to apply this to myself? How can I be a student of life? And I feel like
that's where a lot of young men are struggling. They don't know how to manage the emotional,
psychological, spiritual, physical traumas that they've been through. And listen, it may not be as
traumatic as what a lot of people are going through in the world, but still you've got to learn
how to overcome it. And when we have the tools like your book on how to navigate the wounds
that we've all been through, men and women,
I feel like we can become more peaceful internally.
And when we're peaceful internally,
we're usually better externally.
But most men don't know how to have peace in their heart.
Yeah, a lot there.
What do you hear me?
What opened up for you there?
Well, no, there's a lot of, I like a lot of that.
So I would reverse engineer a lot of the world's problems
to old men who won't leave.
Really?
And they're cleaning to power.
and they move to autocracy,
and then they weaponize young men
who have a lack of economic or romantic possibilities.
The middle class in America,
which I think is the greatest innovation in history
is an accident.
The natural state of being in our species
is that a small number of men,
through luck, inheritance, brute strength,
accrete a disproportionate amount of power
and then get a disproportionate amount of the economics
and the mating opportunities.
80% of women have reproduced through modern history
and only 40% of men.
And what happens to the 60% of men who can reproduce
is that the older men who won't leave
weaponize their anger for war or for nationalism, right?
The most unstable violent societies in the world
have a disproportionate amount of one thing
and that is young men with a lack of romantic
or economic opportunities.
They're very easily weaponized.
Interesting.
And we're producing way too many of them in the United States.
So you have, and then going back to your experience,
you've been I think very brave and really helpful to a lot of men because you've been very open
about your own abuse but so two 15 year olds both abused right both sexually abused a girl and a boy
neither crime is any less or more heinous but the studies I've read is that the boy when he gets
older is seven to ten times more likely to engage in self-harm than the girl
because men don't usually have a forum of sharing you know it's
It's one in six men have been sexually abused, one and four women, I believe, unless I'm
reversing the stat.
But just going back to, so what it ends up is that while boys are physically stronger, they're
emotionally and neurologically much weaker than girls.
The moment a boy loses a male role model, at that moment, through death, divorce, abandonment,
he becomes more likely to be incarcerated than graduate from college.
What's interesting is that in single parents,
parents homes, girls have the same outcomes as dual parent homes. They're a little bit more
promiscuous because they're looking for male attention in the wrong areas. Same rates of college
attendance, same income. A boy, wham. So we just have to acknowledge that boys are weaker
and we need to create a societal norm where the moment a boy clearly doesn't have a lot of male
mentorship in his life. Even saying the boys needed men was triggering five years ago.
They do need the men. This dialogue has gotten so much more
productive and it's mostly been led by women who recognize i well single mothers without a man in the
in the home it's they can probably see their young boy struggling they struggle but also men aren't
stepping out because in new york uh and i think at the same approximately the same numbers in l.a
there are three times as many women applying to be big sisters as men applying to be big brothers
why is that are just men more selfish and just don't want to be as generous with mentorship
I think naturally they're not as nurturing and two, I think there's a taboo that say you're a guy
in your 30s and you like the idea of hanging out and helping young boy. You could provide
paternal and fraternal care. You're worried that people are going to suspect you of being a
pedophile. That's true. That's interesting. So when I was on Bill Maher, I said, you know,
we have an obligation to get involved in a teen's life. And Bill said, oh, if I get involved in a 15-year-old
boy's life, you know, no, no, no. And the whole audience laughed. I'm like, that's exactly
the problem because there are a lot of men out there that think well one i don't want anyone to be
suspicious of me and two i'm not an adolescent psychiatrist i'm not a baller that i can tell you as
someone who mentors young men it is so easy to add value just showing up and playing basketball
at the rec club like for an hour you have value yeah no no no you can't survive on pineapple juice
and creatine you know no you got to you got to spend less time gaming no your mom is
not your enemy come on man she's on your side she may not she may not get it right all the time but
she's on your side like oh you feel like what did you eat today right are you exercising yeah
you up to 4 a.m. right oh you're really upset you're not going to your prom did you ask anybody
did you ask anybody all right well then you're choosing not to go this is your choice right so it's so
I have found the easiest job I've ever had was mentoring young men they make
so many stupid decisions, Louis.
I made a lot of stupid decisions.
You just start asking them questions.
Why?
You got a good job.
You just got a job.
Your mom is sick, but you're going to move to Alaska?
Why?
I saw this amazing documentary on Alaska.
I'm like, have you ever been?
Why don't we do this?
Why don't you save a little bit of money?
Take a trip there and then decide if you really want to move to Alaska from Maryland right now.
Is that a good eye?
Just a couple questions.
And not only that, they will listen to you.
they don't listen to their mom and what's weird is sometimes or a lot of times a boy who's a
teenager will listen more to his dad's friends than to him yeah so i just think we need we as men
need to get involved in a boy's life that's the single point of failure is when a boy loses a
male role model and there's a lot of really wonderful men out there who maybe don't have their
own families yet have a little bit of spare time and think you know what i'd be pretty good at this and i would
enjoy it and it's really easy big brothers there's a ton of mentorship programs but for some reason
men aren't stepping up i've got a few final questions for you before we get you out on bill's show here
today um but what was your relationship like with your father and what was the biggest lesson he
taught you that you still applied today generous question look my dad my dad wasn't very sophisticated he got
pulled out of school at the age of 13. I think he got a lot of validation from attention and
affirmation from women. And I jokingly say, but there's some truth in it, that being a handsome
man with a Scottish accent in 70s, California meant that he could not only think with his dick,
you could listen to it. My dad was married and divorced four times. Wow. He started his,
that we know of. He started his third marriage while he was still with my mom. So my dad, quite
frankly was just really had a really tough time with monogamy and that wasn't the worst of it the
thing that really strained my relationship with my father is that he was not kind to my mom and when my
parents got divorced my dad how were you then i was nine okay my dad could have made mine in my mother's
life much easier with a little bit of money and he didn't and not having your dad around was
bad, but a mom who was financially insecure and it felt emotionally very damaged was just
created a household of constant sort of, it was like it always had high blood pressure.
It's like fight or flight always.
Yeah, and she was just very easily upset. She was a strong woman, but she was dealing with a lot.
So I resented my father for a long time. I used to go for long periods without speaking to
them. And then the big unlock for me and what I would recommend for anybody, the biggest unlock
of my life was the following. I was constantly keeping score. My dad wasn't a very,
it wasn't, we was an okay dad, not a very good dad, but I'm not, so I'm not going to be a good
son. And then what I realized is I would get a lot of joy in reward from having a good
relationship with my father. So the unlock is the following. Look at your relationships. And rather
than having a scorecard, put it away and say, what kind of partner do I want to be? What kind of
boss do I want to be? What kind of son do I want to be? What kind of brother do I want to be?
And maybe your sister didn't show up when your dad was sick. But do I want to be a loving,
generous brother? Yeah, I do. So put away the scorecard and just hold yourself to that standard.
And I decided about 20 or 30 years ago to put away the reason to resamming my dad and say, I really want to be a
loving, generous son. And I have been for the last 20 or 30 years. My father passed about
four months ago. And my dad mellowed as he got older. He got more generous. Couldn't get
off the phone without saying a couple of times that he loved me. And the first time I heard that
when I was 40. I'm like, wow. I'm like, dad, I don't need that. No, I could have used it when I was
eight. But then I leaned into it. And so what I would say is the big learning is people are flawed,
put away the scorecard, decide what kind of what kind of person you want to be.
in that relationship. And the other big learning was my dad evolved. My dad was a better dad to my half
sister, his daughter by his third marriage than he was to me. And that's evolution. That's cool.
He got much more loving and kinder as he got older. So, and, you know, I also just little things.
I've gone entirely the other way. My dad was so traumatized by money. He was so cheap. I've
gone the other way. I don't go out unless I can pay for everybody, not that I do. Yeah.
Because, you know, I'm at a point now where all my male friends are trying to show how big their dick is
and we're all fighting over the check.
But I also am very affectionate with my boys.
My father wasn't very affectionate with me.
I decided I'm taking affection back.
I kissed my boys on the lips,
which they stopped doing when I was 15.
But my best friend Lee, his father, was this guy,
Lee Lotus, Sr., who was this.
The guy looked like Bert Reynolds.
And when he'd come pick up Lee at college, UCLA,
he'd walk in to the fraternity or two, Lee's apartment,
and he'd roll up this big handsome guy.
And Lee was a big handsome guy.
and they'd kiss.
And it just seems so natural.
I guess it's Italians.
Yeah, just real quick a kiss.
And I'm like, wow, I'd like to be like, whoa.
And I remember thinking, if Burr Reynolds can kiss his kid, his son, so can I.
So I'm really, one thing I got going the other way was I got a lot of affection.
I decided to be very affectionate with my boys.
And two, that's cool.
I make my living like you telling stories.
And a lot of that is not my fault.
I got a lot of that DNA for my father.
My father can hold a room like nobody.
And so there's no reason not to be grateful.
Like, you're big and huge and good looking.
Like, there's no reason not to be grateful to your parents.
Even though they didn't go out of the way to give it to you, they did.
And so there's no reason not to be grateful.
Like, God, I got this skill from my father.
And you're alive because of him.
There you go.
You're going to be here.
Life helps.
But the big on lock for me was put away the score of card,
just be the man in the relationship you want to be and hold yourself to that standard.
Is there anything you wish you would have said or he would have said or any interactions
you wish you would have had with your father? No, the nice thing about my relationship with my
father, my father lived to be 95, nothing went unsaid. That's beautiful. We were very emotional
with each other, very emotive. He was constantly, couldn't stop telling me how proud he was
of me. That's nice. Yeah, it was really nice. It may have been
in a rough childhood, you know, didn't go with different women
and abandon your mom in that way.
Were your parents together?
Were they divorced?
They were together.
They got divorced when I was a teenager.
But they were, they never showed each other to love.
So they were there.
They showed us kids love.
I was the youngest of four.
But they were constantly fighting.
And it was very emotionally, it didn't feel safe at home.
I left home at 13.
I begged them to send me away to a boarding school.
They didn't want me to leave.
Right.
My brother just got out of prison from four years.
It was very traumatic going to a visit.
room of a prison every weekend.
I didn't have any friends for four years
because you're in a small town in Ohio.
Everyone knew in the neighborhood
that my brother had been to prison
so the parents wouldn't let their kids hang out with me.
My parents were financially struggling,
stress, they weren't showing, you know, affectionate love.
It was just anger.
It was sadness.
That's rough.
So we had a home.
It's not like I was homeless.
I was going to school, but it was like
it was just not emotionally safe feeling.
feeling. I didn't feel physically like I was under harm, but emotionally it just didn't feel safe.
Yeah. Look, they were doing their best. You know, it was like they only had the tools they had.
Yeah. And it's good at some point you just forgive them, right? If they tried, I think the box every
parent needs to check is to be a better dad or mom to you than your father or your mother was to you.
And my dad checked that box. And, you know, there's a lot, you know, that I, you know, that I,
took from that relationship. And also, when your parents get divorced, as mine did, you have a tendency
to sanctify once and demonize the other. You have a tendency to go, one was wrong, one was right.
And what you realize is neither is perfect. But the reality is, Louis, is that my dad, and was a different
age, my dad kind of left it when I was nine. He moved to Ohio. I didn't see him a lot.
And that was not ideal. Fortunately, I had a lot of men. I'm doing this live thing tonight.
downtown in LA and I've invited two of my men who got involved in my life randomly when I was a
kid and I reached out to them during their 70s and 80s and said well you come to this thing tonight
that's cool um you know one was a stock where I I my mom's boy gave me 200 bucks and said go to one
of those fancy I started asking about stocks and he said here's $200 going to those fancy
brokerages in Westwood and I walked him at $200 at the age of 13 like what do I do into Dean
Witter and I said hi I have $200 and they said wait here and this guy with this
Jufro came out named Cy Serro and he goes, I'm Cycero and he took me back to his cubicle and he gave me my
first lesson in the stock market. And he said, when there's more buyers and sellers, the sellers raise
the price until there's fewer buyers. He gave me the first lesson. And then I came back the next day and
he said, all right, let's look at some stocks. He's like, what are you interested in? I'm like, well, I love
the movies. And close encounters of the third kind has come out. And he said, okay, Columbia
Pictures is the company that made it. It's a stock. We bought 16 shares of Columbia Pictures for like
12 bucks a pop and every day for two years I used to go into the pay phone booth in Emerson put in my
two dimes and call to check in on my stocks and once or twice a week I'd go into the dean
widder Reynolds office in Westwood and he'd give me another lesson on stocks and he used to call my mom
and it wasn't trying to sell her we had no money and he would just say nice things about me to
my mom and I used to hang out with this guy at his office for a couple years until I went to high
school and this is a flex but I'll make it I've made a lot of money starting and selling
companies I've made tens of millions of dollars investing in stocks I've been
investing in stocks since I was 13 because of Cy Sarah wow so in addition to giving me like some
confidence that this nice impressive man liked me uh you know it taught me this incredible life skill
around investing so is he coming tonight is he coming tonight yeah he's coming tonight that's
cool. Yeah, first time I've seen him in 45 years. No way. Yeah, we stay in contact over text.
You haven't seen him? I haven't seen him. That's incredible. You're going to see him tonight?
That is cool. Send me a photo of it. Yeah, it's every one. That is cool. Send me a photo of it.
Yeah, it's everyone. But I was really lucky. I had this guy and his girlfriend noticed that my mom and I, you know, was just my mom and I, one day knocked on our door and he said,
there's your son want to come horseback riding with us.
And he and his girlfriend used to taking the horseback riding.
And just having men in your life that can give you a little bit of advice.
And not only that, just give you the sense you have value.
Yes.
I think is huge.
But anyways, back to, you know, it sounds like, when did your dad pass?
Three years ago, yeah.
Yeah, so look, I think as you get older, you try and focus on the good things.
Yes.
You try and forgive your dad.
and whatever you think he got wrong,
you try and course correct around for your own boys.
I think that's the basis of trying to be more human, evolve.
But the one thing, the one thing I would,
I mean, I've had five one things,
but the thing I really took away from my father,
his real flaw, it quite frankly was not great for me
and took some time to repair.
I think the best thing you can do for boys
is just treat their mother really well.
They just see it. I really go out of my way. I take some real arrows for my wife sometimes
in front of the boys. I really try to demonstrate emotional and emotion and affection around her.
I defer to her judgment in front of the boys. I just try to make sure the boys know that their
mother is really valuable and they see it by the way I treat her. I think that's going to create
much more healthy relationships for them. I think that's the best thing you can do for your
boys. It's just treat your, even if you're divorced, just be really good to the mother.
Because my dad wasn't. And I think it really quite frankly damaged my relationship probably with
women. Or maybe I'm just like a lot of people looking for trauma for my parents and I'm just a
selfish person. But I think I could have been kinder to women when I was a young man. I don't think
my dad was a great role model for that. You mentioned earlier, and we got to wrap it up here in a few
minutes for you but you mentioned earlier that your dad used to watch bill bill mar all the time all the
favorite show favorite show and you're going to go on there here in a couple hours you know right down
the street um and you said every time you go on there you get a little nervous but also excited because
you feel like he's watching i almost get a panic attack every i do a lot of tv i do a lot of speaking in front
of you know i'm flexing thousands of people i freaked the fuck out on that show louis because i think my dad's
watching. Wow. And my dad watched Premier League football and Bill Marr. That's it. What is the what is the
message you know you're about to go in there? So I'm going to ground you for a moment. What's the
message that you really want to make sure you land no matter where Bill takes you all over the place
what would you really like to land that if your dad's watching you feel like it will be really
special that you get to share a specific message. Well the message I would want if I could wrap my
arms around all young men and just just give them a mission and and just trust me on this
trust me you know search you feelings you know this to be true it would be really tried to resist
the temptation to live your life on a screen with an algorithm and that at the end of your life
or even in your 20s and 30s the anxiety and loneliness you're going to you're going to feel
without establishing relationships and taking those risks
is going to be so much greater than any fear you might have
around what lays beyond that room.
And that is, there is an enormous correlation
between the amount of the ratio of time you spend
in the presence of other people
versus the time you spend on a screen.
I don't think we've really come to grips with the fact
that young men are up against an endowment
foe, a big tech that literally makes billions for every additional minute they can get you
on your phone and away from friends, mentors, and mates. Get out of the house. Take risk. Express
Friendship, express romantic relationship. Apply for jobs you're not qualified for. You know,
take as many shots as you can. But get, for God's sakes, get out of the house. Yeah, get out.
notes on being a man number one new york times bestseller make sure you guys grab a copy right now
uh follow you on all of your podcasts you're all over the place but you've got podcasts on money on
everything life politics all these different places what's the best place to follow you specifically
i'm like a well in the 90s i'm i put your hand into a cereal box you're gonna grab me so um to resist
is futile i am over exposed at this point i have as you mentioned i have a podcast i have a newsletter
called No Mercy, No Malice, Prof.Galloway.com, you'll see if you're interested in a ton of ways
to get my content. Awesome. This is an awesome book, and you've got a great show and great content.
I would acknowledge you, Scott, for taking on this subject because I know it's not easy and there's
a lot of pushback on talking about vulnerability and masculinity and all these things. I felt it
for years when I started to open up about this stuff. So I acknowledge you for doing it because
I think we're even more at risk now than we were seven, eight years ago with younger boys not
having the tools to be out in the world,
to develop relationships,
to look other people in the eye
and just have a conversation,
let alone build a relationship.
And so I acknowledge you for speaking up,
for taking on the criticism you take
for sharing these things as well
because we need more great male leaders
sharing this information
so younger men can be inspired
and hopefully take action.
And I hope everyone gets a copy of this book
and gives it to a young man in their life as well.
or an old man who needs some lessons in learning as well.
I asked you these two questions before.
I'm just going to ask one of them.
I asked you before the definition of greatness.
So I'll have people go back and watch that from our previous episode.
But this is a question I asked you as well called The Three Truths.
After writing this book now and being at this stage of life where your father has recently
passed, what would you say are three things you would leave behind if this was the last day
on earth for you many years away?
and we would not have access to any of your content,
but you got to leave behind three lessons to the world.
What would those three lessons be that you would leave behind?
Well, it's sort of an indirect way of answering,
but I think of the tombstone test.
What three words would you want in your tombstone?
I'd want to be known as a generous person
who created more value than I absorbed.
That's the whole point.
If you leave the world having provided more love,
more economic opportunity,
noticing people more than maybe you absorbed through your life.
That's the whole point.
You want to be known as generous.
I'd want to be known as patriotic.
You know, smartest thing I ever did, Lewis,
was to be born in America.
I want to reinvest in America
and help make sure that many of the amazing things
that helped me, state-sponsored education, Pell Grants,
I got assisted lunch.
You know, America loved unremarkable people
when I was growing up
and I worry it's falling out of love
with the unremarkable, so I would like to be hopefully seen as someone who's patriotic.
And then the final thing, I just want to be seen as, you know, a dad.
I was that I was really into my sons and that it was clear that later in life I saw my purpose
as raising patriotic loving men, that that was, you know, so generous, patriotic dad.
That's what I aspire to.
I love it.
I still got some work to do.
My man.
Thanks, brother.
Congratulations on everything.
Thank you, brother.
Appreciate it, man.
Good.
I have a brand new book called Make Money Easy.
And if you are looking to create more financial freedom in your life, you want abundance in your life, and you want to stop making money hard in your life, but you want to make it easier.
You want to make it flow.
You want to feel abundant.
Then make sure to go to make moneyeasybook.com right now and get yourself a copy.
I really think this is going to help you transform your relationship with money, this moment moving forward.
I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness.
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And I want to remind you if no one has told you lately that you are loved, you are worthy, and you matter.
And now it's time to go out there and do something great.
