The Truth About Women & Relationships - Neil Strauss, World's #1 Pickup Artist

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Chris Williamson

Chris Williamson

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 712
@ChrisWillx
@ChrisWillx 3 ай бұрын
Hello you savages. Get 5 Free Travel Packs, Free Liquid Vitamin D and more from AG1 at drinkag1.com/wisdom Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period from Shopify at www.shopify.com/modernwisdom Get up to 32% discount on the best supplements from Momentous at livemomentous.com/modernwisdom Get 20% discount on Nomatic’s amazing luggage at nomatic.com/modernwisdom (use code MW20) Here’s the timestamps: 00:00 Neil’s Perspective on Relationships 03:25 Co-Parents But Not Partners 11:23 Letting Go of the Pickup Artist Identity 18:38 Our Current Mating Culture 23:10 Priorities of the Black Pill Community 31:32 The Current State of Men’s Mental Health 42:36 Can You ‘Game’ Love? 50:17 Advice to People Failing to Connect 58:45 Three Steps to Resolve Your Past 1:08:00 Asking Why Emotions Arise 1:19:05 Chris’s Therapy Experience 1:25:50 Explaining Enmeshment 1:31:54 How to Know Who You Really Are 1:40:02 Becoming More Self-Compassionate 1:46:33 What’s Next for Neil
@ExcitedHockeyHelmet-ud3ii
@ExcitedHockeyHelmet-ud3ii 3 ай бұрын
1:19 ....... 😅 1:19 1:19
@AlexM-kj4yr
@AlexM-kj4yr 2 ай бұрын
😊000p
@AlexM-kj4yr
@AlexM-kj4yr 2 ай бұрын
00p😊😊😊
@Andhroidxavier007
@Andhroidxavier007 Ай бұрын
7:25 So proud of you that you kept pushing him about the baby! @chriswillx
@VickiPeers
@VickiPeers 3 ай бұрын
Tuning out / turning off when someone says something you disagree with is the reason why so few people are able to think deeply. Only watching / listening to people you agree with creates an echo chamber and there’s no growth in there. Some really good stuff in here once Neil settled in and relaxed a bit.
@dolphin7860
@dolphin7860 3 ай бұрын
Great point!
@avrahamedery
@avrahamedery 3 ай бұрын
So valid. I really enjoyed the conversation. Was insightful.
@beckytroster4474
@beckytroster4474 3 ай бұрын
I'm confused as to the point of this podcast episode. His voice betrays his discomfort/dissatisfaction with himself. So sad.
@likemysnopp
@likemysnopp 3 ай бұрын
yeah took a long damn time before he relaxed.. I think many stopped listening due to his lets be real insecure voice haha
@John-us2ns
@John-us2ns 3 ай бұрын
This is the bane of the Internet and modern society right now. I hope it improves sooner than later, but I reluctantly think it will get worse before it gets better.
@kevindanielpg
@kevindanielpg 3 ай бұрын
When I heard "i'm having another kid with my EX wife" you lost me bro
@MoistBuddha
@MoistBuddha 3 ай бұрын
Some psychopath thinking on his part
@davidrizzo8530
@davidrizzo8530 3 ай бұрын
Same - anything he said after that lost credibility.
@JenniferMyers
@JenniferMyers 3 ай бұрын
Same.
@Freetoliveasyouplease
@Freetoliveasyouplease 3 ай бұрын
I think that's beautiful. Think outside the box guys. As long as things are consensual and everyone is happy, there are no "wrong" ways to live IMO. Why judge so harshly?
@kadengickling
@kadengickling 3 ай бұрын
Thanks for the notice and saving me time on this one
@tensevo
@tensevo 3 ай бұрын
i thought i had heard everthing, 9 minutes in, go on.... you did what now?
@segueoyuri
@segueoyuri 2 ай бұрын
his ex is also CRAZY beautiful too.
@dolcampb
@dolcampb Ай бұрын
World's all-time greatest pickup artist used a syringe? Can't get my head around this.
@segueoyuri
@segueoyuri Ай бұрын
@@dolcampb women aren't logical. You'd never be able to get around any of that. You're not supposed to either.
@Beekeeper8011
@Beekeeper8011 2 күн бұрын
​@@dolcampbit's almost like he was full of crap the whole time and can't be trusted...
@cozykarma1542
@cozykarma1542 3 ай бұрын
Listening to him dance how his Ex-wife became pregnant was painful.
@ImperialMindMusic
@ImperialMindMusic 3 ай бұрын
He didn’t even want to talk about it but hopefully realises no1 is bothered
@King__dori
@King__dori 3 ай бұрын
Bro so good he even tricked his ex wife into having another kid with him 😂
@ConservativeAnthem
@ConservativeAnthem 3 ай бұрын
It's called CHILD SUPPORT
@clarkparker4860
@clarkparker4860 3 ай бұрын
He took Game to a whole nother level.
@josephwilliamroca
@josephwilliamroca 22 күн бұрын
There you go. The ACTUAL biological imperative, with the Mommy of his choice.
@naumsennicov9388
@naumsennicov9388 3 ай бұрын
The thing about his 2nd kid with his ex has people checking out too fast! It's a great listen and gets super deep and even has Chris open up about his therapy experiences... keep listening after that strange kid thing, you won't regret it
@julesfalcone
@julesfalcone Ай бұрын
I don't have a problem with him having a baby with his ex.
@Kate-rv6kx
@Kate-rv6kx 3 ай бұрын
I appreciate Chris continuing to bring up the idea of love, as opposed to the "Mating Marketplace." I think the language we use about these things and the focus we have on the worst aspects is contributing to people feeling cynicical and hopeless. Maybe step 1 is changing the question from "how do I gain access to females?" to "how do I find love?"
@cj3420
@cj3420 3 ай бұрын
Easy to judge Neil here, but I’d invite some of you to look at it at a deeper level. He and his wife no longer had the same chemistry after a long time of being together. He has the maturity to say that he still loves his wife and wants her to be the mother of his kids, whilst realizing that there is no longer potential for a long term relationship between them. “You’re a great mom and a great person, but we’re at different phases in our life now.” He’s not experiencing craving and attachment, but real love for his ex-wife, as a person. Most of us would get bitter, backwards rationalize a bunch of our behavior, etc. But this man can love another human being whilst not needing that attachment. I respect that a lot, personally. It may not be everyone’s preference or expectation for what they want in their life. But there’s seasons to life and life throws curve balls sometimes. Sometimes it’s not meant to be with someone else. Big respect to Neil. A nuanced perspective and life experience that many won’t be able to let land due to their ego and attachment to the external.
@dant3175
@dant3175 3 ай бұрын
This comment section is so depressing. It makes me really angry that conservative influencers have deliberately turned young men into such arrogant, judgemental, dogmatic fools.
@polysaturated
@polysaturated 3 ай бұрын
I think you’re right, he handled the break-up very well and actually stayed friends with his ex which is often just a platitude. that’s a lot better than bitterness, jealousy or trying to get revenge by “winning” the breakup. And I don’t think staying together for the kids is that healthy of a dynamic either, kids will pick up on that and some parents who do that might even end up resenting their children. Imagine how you would feel if your parents divorced the moment you move out, wouldn’t you ask yourself if they stayed miserably together for your sake and even resent them a bit for making a sacrifice you wouldn’t have asked for?
@overthewebb
@overthewebb 3 ай бұрын
@@dant3175 You actually think it's 'cpmservative' influencers and people who are conservative making these comments on here? I would wager it's a broad spectrum of people from all sides of the political divide making negative comments. Those on the left who support modern feminism, both male and female. Men who can't get women on the left and arrogant on the right. Maybe step back, and stop seeing everything through your own your political biases
@majagorsic
@majagorsic 3 ай бұрын
If you can get through the part about having a kid with his ex wife, this conversation gets awesome. Just some words I wrote down for myself: Concept of connected detachment - just brilliant Self compassion: talking to yourself like the parent you needed not the parent you have Unspoken expectations are premeditated resentments Thanks Chris! 🙏
@Avidire
@Avidire 3 ай бұрын
Believe it or not, I read his book in high school and because of it I had my first girlfriend. Everything he laid out made sense and it still works to this day.
@AdamMc192
@AdamMc192 3 ай бұрын
The game was one of the first books I read out of high school. I even learned off many of the lines. The problem was that it taught inauthenticity and pretending to be someone you weren’t. Mark Mansons Models was an eye opener. Neil’s an awesome guy though , got to meet him in 2015.
@tensevo
@tensevo 3 ай бұрын
most people never finished "the game" but it does conclude with, actually all these manipulation tactics are no substitute for being a better person and sorting your life out. or something like that.
@sxshihab7258
@sxshihab7258 3 ай бұрын
Models by MM is the best. I think he should rewrite it and release it again.
@Arcazjin
@Arcazjin 3 ай бұрын
​@@sxshihab7258MM is in the mainstream now and probably doesn't want to have to relitigate the topic into today's environment. Rewriting it implies doing so might avoid the previous problem but I don't see how it would.
@Arcazjin
@Arcazjin 3 ай бұрын
​@@brianmeen2158Models is about being the best version of you and being comfortable in discomfort (rejection over and over). I thought it was the most valuable at the end of the day. Mystery will get your ass laid tho but it's a charade by design.
@ErikLiberty
@ErikLiberty 2 ай бұрын
Neil said in the interview that you learn the rules and say the lines to women as training wheels until you get to the point that you can throw out the rules. Neuro-divergent people like Neil need the lines to get a handle on interacting with women.
@tjbroussard3524
@tjbroussard3524 3 ай бұрын
Although I agree with the continued service part.... he basically Jedi mind tricked his child by framework. "You get two houses" lol this man is playing with fire and trying to make it sound cool till someone gets third degree burns which will be the average person.
@sethxxm
@sethxxm 3 ай бұрын
well put
@tsoupakis
@tsoupakis 3 ай бұрын
I will disagree with you.i follow him on instagram/ twitter for a couple of years now (probably more) and his threads are by far a huge school for good parenting. Like dude I studied psychology for 6 years and he still makes me think.
@tjbroussard3524
@tjbroussard3524 3 ай бұрын
@@tsoupakis I know his page well and he isn't saying anything that hasn't been said before on several other platforms. Some you don't even need a degree to understand. Psychology is an interesting field, which I do enjoy, but even its practitioners can be challenged by outliers much like any science. He can still be a good parent but let's acknowledge that he starts from a position of study and manipulation (framing) but that is a tricky game we play as humans and many don't play that well for various confounding reasons. He admits that himself. Now primarily I hold concerns about his situation with his ex-wife. Glad he has managed a way to make it work but let's not push it. That's why he was uncomfortable talking about it 😂
@missABR1
@missABR1 3 ай бұрын
I couldn't agree with you more. This guy is a master manipulator - perhaps he is not even particularly aware of it himself but his manipulates others to control the narrative. This narrative is that is he is great parents - he had a great marriage and a great divorce. But he maintains this by making this the narrative - make your kid think that is it cool that he has two houses rather than let him have an authentic reaction to the news of his parents separating. Good parenting is allowing your children to feel what they feel about this change rather than to make them feel a certain way. He is gaming his child the same way he gamed women. Good luck to him - but I don't think this will work out as well as he believes it will.
@tsoupakis
@tsoupakis 3 ай бұрын
@@missABR1 you sound bitter. You do understand that there is the possibility someone to have a healthy divorce. Right ? You do get the possibility that a person can be happy alone right ? I mean you are so sure in your statements that everything he say are lies, but , somehow this is what his wife also say and also what his friends say… I mean are you sure that he is liying ?
@joaofraga7
@joaofraga7 3 ай бұрын
The World's #1 Pickup Artist is not Neil Strauss. It's Mystery -- the legendary man that taught everything Neil learned about pickup. Strange that Neil Strauss owes so much of what he has become to Mystery and still hasn't acknowledged him in this interview...
@alchemical.fitness
@alchemical.fitness 3 ай бұрын
Ross Jeffries is also ahead of this guy
@JackBusiness89
@JackBusiness89 3 ай бұрын
I read The Game as well as The Red Queen and I don't think Neil is trying to disrespect Mystery - who knows maybe they did have a falling out but this is Chris's podcast so Chris was the one who came up with this title. It just sounds more appealing if you haven't read The Game and don't know the whole story Chris is just trying to reach people from a sales perspective it makes sense, right? I do love that you're pointing out Mysterys huge influence on Neils philosophy on dating. Good comment but at the same time I don't see these guys in competition with each other. Shout out Ross Jeffries, the pioneer of NLP (Neuro-Linguistic Programming.)
@t-man8411
@t-man8411 3 ай бұрын
@@alchemical.fitnessRoss Jeffries is an insecure clown
@robinhooduk8255
@robinhooduk8255 3 ай бұрын
if you read the stuff from the people that were there and saw both mystery and style at their hollywood mansion peak times(i was on those forums at those times), everyone said that style/strauss was by far the best, as nobody could see the witchcraft he was pulling off but it worked every time, where as mystery was alot clearer for people to see what he was doing and you could somewhat try and replicate it or at least get into his mindset, where as strauss was functioning on a whole other level.
@RS-chino
@RS-chino 3 ай бұрын
I think you missed the entire point. Neil doesn’t look backwards. He doesn’t think of himself as a pick up artist so why would he shout out to anyone that is a pick up artist? He isn’t attempting to advertise that community. The only thing is advertising is growth and curiosity.
@josephwilliamroca
@josephwilliamroca 22 күн бұрын
Doesn’t NS seem like a humble guy? He knows that he wants things, what he can do, but seems totally aware that there’s so much he can’t do, doesn’t wish to do, that others want and do those things and that’s ok. I really love that.
@ssbarlow2424
@ssbarlow2424 3 ай бұрын
Justified or not, I’ve never seen a 2-hour pod in which a guest disqualified himself so hard with an audience within the first 5 minutes.
@bazstraight8797
@bazstraight8797 3 ай бұрын
It gets way better further in.
@Fab666.
@Fab666. 3 ай бұрын
It’s telling how so many have this viewpoint. Who gives a fluk about his private life when it’s not hurting anyone else. You want to automatically miss out on a unique life experience of stories because of getting triggered astonishingly easily inside of 5min 😂..adapt
@doctorcatnip2551
@doctorcatnip2551 3 ай бұрын
@@Fab666.If he doesn't want people to judge his private life, he shouldn't give an interview about his private life ...
@michaelregan427
@michaelregan427 3 ай бұрын
I've noticed a lot of dating advice experts aren't in long term relationships.
@SportCampTirol
@SportCampTirol 3 ай бұрын
What on earth are you talking about lol?
@philipwong5665
@philipwong5665 3 ай бұрын
Read " The Game" and loved how well it was written as Neil is actually an author by profession. The problem with guys who delve deep into pick up and make it their identity is that they genuinely aren't very impressive individuals, they are just good at at temporarily attracting women. I remember his chat with " natural" Tom Cruise who is definitely impressive and doesn't need to fake anything, he attracts women just by being himself. It's definitely better to just have the ability to pick up women then make it your life purpose.
@billusher2265
@billusher2265 3 ай бұрын
so if you want to get better at dating don’t bother and just become a handsome famous millionaire movie star.
@slickrick8046
@slickrick8046 3 ай бұрын
Tom Cruise is a movie star which makes him a horrible example to use.
@Smc-gm2nx
@Smc-gm2nx 3 ай бұрын
I think he means 33 secrets pua guy as natural Tom cruise 😂
@Smc-gm2nx
@Smc-gm2nx 3 ай бұрын
@@flyaway6671 what do you think are the most important traits to demonstrating charisma that Tom cruise does. Eye contact Tone of voice Bosy language Etc
@slickrick8046
@slickrick8046 3 ай бұрын
@@flyaway6671 Tom Cruise is 5’7. If he was a construction worker instead of a movie star do you think millions of women would still be fawning over him…???
@Landmeinz
@Landmeinz 2 ай бұрын
Fuck i love that the show just starts.. no bullshit.. no dumb intro, just boom here’s an interesting place to get sucked in. THANK YOU
@JackSmith-gv5yw
@JackSmith-gv5yw 3 ай бұрын
Strauss was number 2, Mystery was number 1.
@kylekermgard
@kylekermgard 3 ай бұрын
Nah brah Tyler Durden was the best
@Awbskure3am
@Awbskure3am 3 ай бұрын
All children of Ross Jeffries
@JackSmith-gv5yw
@JackSmith-gv5yw 3 ай бұрын
@@kylekermgard Nah, Mystery was Tylers mentor, Mystery was a natural....Tyler wasn't.
@SL-vv3xy
@SL-vv3xy 3 ай бұрын
Julien was the best in my opinion
@KennethKoronya77
@KennethKoronya77 3 ай бұрын
@@Awbskure3am i learnt a great skill from ross jeffries, which is being genuinely curious about the other person
@BMC__
@BMC__ 3 ай бұрын
I read The Game back when I was in my early 20s, it was a fun read that gave me confidence in a way, not because I was able to put these things into practice but because I understood how powerful it can be to play on human psychology. I'm 38 now and (hopefully) a fair bit wiser in many regards. 3:30 into this video and this is the first time I've come across another person who had a second child with an ex partner that they weren't with at the time of conception. My example was a bit more haphazard than Neil's, we really wanted our first born to have a full sibling from the same two parents and, in hindsight, we don't regret it, but I doubt we'd go through it a second time. Respect to Neil, he sounds so well balanced and thoughtful when he speaks.
@disparato
@disparato 3 ай бұрын
What a highly intelligent, articulate and thought provoking manchild.
@erindeerhart5538
@erindeerhart5538 3 ай бұрын
Why call him a manchild?
@trevorm9551
@trevorm9551 3 ай бұрын
Judgy
@adrianabetancourt5861
@adrianabetancourt5861 2 ай бұрын
😅
@AndiAlexander1
@AndiAlexander1 2 ай бұрын
THIS!
@victormaravi1115
@victormaravi1115 3 ай бұрын
I like and respect Neil Strauss for raising the bar even more, we can’t see it yet, but he’s truly building for legacy.
@parker-mother-of-fur-beasts
@parker-mother-of-fur-beasts 3 ай бұрын
This guy skeezes me out. I’ll tune in for the next!
@beanwithbaconmegarocket
@beanwithbaconmegarocket 3 ай бұрын
Yeah he's a creep. That's why he taught himself go be fake and con women into bed. Prior to that girls rightfully just viewed him as a creep
@benjaminholt6640
@benjaminholt6640 3 ай бұрын
​@@beanwithbaconmegarocket that's right he was. He outlines that in his books. He had very odd parents who raised him a very strange environment. He's not conventionally attractive in many ways probably neurodivergent and with minimal social skills. What do you to find love in that situation? You go out and you try your best to learn to become attractive. What other choice do you have?
@beanwithbaconmegarocket
@beanwithbaconmegarocket 3 ай бұрын
@@benjaminholt6640 plenty of weird people find love. Strauss' issue was that he was jealous of men with super attractive gfs and pined after these women. but instead of developing himself and being authentic and finding a woman who really cares about him (as men have for decades), he concocted a fake persona to con women into bed. even worse, he taught other men to do it and did all kinds of harm to the dating environment in America. Other PUAs like Roosh have expressed regret at what they taught. Strauss doesn't. And he's still a neurotic weirdo which is evident from his current relationship with his baby mama.
@benjaminholt6640
@benjaminholt6640 3 ай бұрын
​@@beanwithbaconmegarocket Everybody wants to get the most attractive partner they can that is completely normal. Trying to learn what behaviors are most attractive is what men have to do.
@beanwithbaconmegarocket
@beanwithbaconmegarocket 3 ай бұрын
@@benjaminholt6640 yep and bc Neil is a creep, he took the creep's path
@AscendedMasculine
@AscendedMasculine 3 ай бұрын
Get Owen Cook On Chris
@brettwagner8955
@brettwagner8955 2 ай бұрын
The GOAT of social dynamics and pushing past Autism
@vvolfflovv
@vvolfflovv 3 ай бұрын
Spot on about men becoming all the more disenchanted with dating after learning the game
@billusher2265
@billusher2265 3 ай бұрын
1:47:00 what bothers me about Chris is lately he swerved every interview to the dating crisis. In this talk Neil mentions reading classical literature and interviewing a Russian agent who used techniques like what he wrote about in the game, I would have been more interested in his perspectives on those.
@billusher2265
@billusher2265 3 ай бұрын
@@themacocko6311 no, we can hear people wax eloquent about male dating issues anywhere. What we could hear unique to him is how the Russian agent uses techniques like the ones he popularized.
@ssbarlow2424
@ssbarlow2424 3 ай бұрын
To keep saying “I’m fine with it” makes me feel like you’re not ok with it.
@tensevo
@tensevo 3 ай бұрын
we are losing healthy examples of what a model relationship or family looks like, to the extent a royal family has value, is the extent that they are able to model what a functional family looks like.
@dant3175
@dant3175 3 ай бұрын
You and I don't know shit about what goes on in other families. So much happens in private. Which is why it is ridiculous to base your relationship or family on what the Royal Family does in public.
@polysaturated
@polysaturated 3 ай бұрын
Which is the royal family of the USA? The Bidens? The Kardashians? Honestly you might as well pick a family from a sitcom…
@neight123
@neight123 3 ай бұрын
A great divorce and having another kid with the ex wife? And they are best friends? And the divorce was a positive experience? This guy is an idiot. If it is all so great then don't get divorced.
@Samuel-vw2wy
@Samuel-vw2wy 3 ай бұрын
The marriage wasn’t great but the relationship after it was. It really is not that hard a point to comprehend my man.
@creativepoda9737
@creativepoda9737 3 ай бұрын
He sounds like he has used his own brainwashing on himself a bit too much.
@Pikawarps
@Pikawarps 3 ай бұрын
@@Samuel-vw2wyif that was the case they’d get re-married. As is they can walk away whenever
@Michaelh76
@Michaelh76 3 ай бұрын
@@Samuel-vw2wy It’s not a comprehension problem…lol
@CG-fx9bl
@CG-fx9bl 3 ай бұрын
@@Pikawarpsthey work well as a team, they trust each other, they have similar values maybe and most importantly they both wanted another kid. They just got fed up of each other 😂 or being married even. Easier said than done finding someone else with all of the above criteria.
@mikeleaptrott
@mikeleaptrott Ай бұрын
Neil is my hero! Great books! Great journalist! Such an honest person. He saved my life! I owe him more than I could ever pay back!
@jeroen8890
@jeroen8890 2 ай бұрын
Thanks for the interview! I think it might have been better if we saved the big, personal questions about divorce and co-parenting for later--Neil still seemed like he was a little uncomfortable haha. But great to see that Neil is as rational and insightful as ever!
@dolphin7860
@dolphin7860 3 ай бұрын
You better have Owen Cook on here to give his side of the story on the Game LOL😂
@mcpartridgeboy
@mcpartridgeboy 2 ай бұрын
owen is the master with women
@ilovejettrooper5922
@ilovejettrooper5922 2 ай бұрын
I thought Owen swore off Pick-up and went the self-improvement direction...?
@franciscoferraz6788
@franciscoferraz6788 2 ай бұрын
@@ilovejettrooper5922 He still pedals his pickup stuff every now and then
@redman958
@redman958 2 ай бұрын
​​@@mcpartridgeboy both Owen and Neil have children with woman they are not in a relationship with. They may be good for learning how to get out there and meet women but in terms of long term success with family they haven't been successful.
@mcpartridgeboy
@mcpartridgeboy Ай бұрын
@@redman958 Not true, they chose to stay outside a monogymous relationship, they could easy gett one if they could, whats intereting is that i was heavily abused anbd manipulated by a woman and i realized because chatbot told me, and a lott of what she did was the same as piuck up[, im wondering if pick up is basically just abuse ! whats sad is ifg it is and i feel its at least similar that anyone not abusive like me because im autistic and dont know how to be even if i wanted to be is that you might not be able to get a gf without being at lewast a little abusive !
@ZorshaAndHerPharaoh
@ZorshaAndHerPharaoh 26 күн бұрын
I was naturally a very positive person and my partner constantly accused me of cheating and never changed
@someforeignguy
@someforeignguy 3 ай бұрын
I'm genuinely perplexed at how the author of 'The Game' and 'The Truth', has such an uncomfortable, palpably anxious vibe. It makes the interview damn near unwatchable.
@charliefox9573
@charliefox9573 3 ай бұрын
Wouldn't surprise me if more than half of his conquests were three shades to the wind.
@BlakeBaker5
@BlakeBaker5 16 күн бұрын
@ChrisWillX DUDE, Amazing Episode! Love Neal's Perspective. Thanks So Much For This One. 🙌
@thomasd1544
@thomasd1544 3 ай бұрын
Great example for kids? So, you both are identifying as a healthy relationship?
@geosmi0
@geosmi0 Ай бұрын
🔥 @1:41:19 - "Most of us who lack self-compassion are being the parents to ourselves that we never had"
@dpause10
@dpause10 3 ай бұрын
36:30 The whole victim narrative thing. Strauss couldn't be more right and this is a point that should be at the center of any conversation about social justice and human progress. Victimization is a real thing. But victimization cannot be a quasi-religious thing or else it will lead to a perpetual cycle of tribal conflict. The goal of any society should be to rehabilitate both victims and perpetrators as best as possible and then MOVE ON!
@polysaturated
@polysaturated 3 ай бұрын
It gets even more pathological when the victim status is not seen on an individual level but on a group level. It creates a sort of caste system where the members have no agency which is deeply demoralizing.
@savascc
@savascc 3 ай бұрын
Would love a podcast with Mystery as well!
@trisymphony
@trisymphony 3 ай бұрын
Paraphrasing Jordan P: How about No, I don‘t buy your bullshit
@Bren3000
@Bren3000 3 ай бұрын
You forgot the listening part
@nkatekodouglaszitha787
@nkatekodouglaszitha787 3 ай бұрын
I can imagine his voice as he says it. And you forgot "bucko"😂
@J77199
@J77199 2 ай бұрын
Jordan Peterson is the biggest bs artists alive
@segueoyuri
@segueoyuri 2 ай бұрын
@@J77199 by telling the truth, telling people they should tell the truth and helping them to be better? Sounds like a heck of a bs artist doesn't it...
@williammaxwell5985
@williammaxwell5985 Ай бұрын
​@@segueoyuriHe can't admit he does not believe in God because he loves money and his employer is Daily Wire. He used to be able to talk about important the Left are. But he lacks the integrity to do that now. And is a bit thick or a liar if he cannot talk about the value of environmentalism, animal rights and ethics. So yeah JP is the ultimate bs grifter, giving clueless opinions on things like Ukraine and things he lacks knowledge of. He often makes up psychology as he goes along.
@GBriser
@GBriser 3 ай бұрын
There are many contenders for PUA GOAT. Style brought us in, but he doesn't take the #1 spot.
@kerryannhayes1476
@kerryannhayes1476 3 ай бұрын
Wasn't really interested in listening to this BUT what an interesting human! His capacity to see things differently was really fascinating.
@denzlefenz
@denzlefenz 3 ай бұрын
I actually thought he was a great guest with quality insights. I was also surprised at the beginning but being open-minded was worth it (like it almost always is).
@AndiAlexander1
@AndiAlexander1 2 ай бұрын
I think there is room for whatever type of family situation works for people. Good for them for being great co-parents. Sad that after all this time he still hasn’t found what he’s looking for.
@sethxxm
@sethxxm 3 ай бұрын
this guy makes me feel not great inside when hearing his voice and cadence
@likemysnopp
@likemysnopp 3 ай бұрын
yeah.. dude sounds completely broken inside
@testowykana1763
@testowykana1763 3 ай бұрын
I felt completely the opposite, that he is a very skilled speaker.
@erindeerhart5538
@erindeerhart5538 3 ай бұрын
In a world of empty posturing, genuine humility is refreshing.
@1970broncoman
@1970broncoman 3 ай бұрын
lol another “vibes” critique
@erindeerhart5538
@erindeerhart5538 3 ай бұрын
@@1970broncoman "Vibes" are what keep us churning out new humans.
@heatheryvng
@heatheryvng 29 күн бұрын
I'd like to say that I had no idea who Neil Strauss was at all until I started listening to this video. I didn't listen to the first segment too much because I felt a little uncomfortable about it but I might go back and listen to it later. But so far I think it is very insightful and I think he's brilliant. He does not at all seem like someone that I reckon he was in the past. I haven't actually looked at comments for Chris Williams interviews very much in the past, but looking at the comments I was very surprised because again, objectively, as someone who doesn't know who this person is at all, I think that he's making a lot of great points and bringing up ideas that I've never thought of just like other guests have in these interviews. And I think he's brilliant. So, I'm going to listen more and try to understand and find out my own opinion, but unfortunately now I'm a little biased since I read some comments. I'll try to put that aside. But I think that many people who are commenting negative things, and who are not really open to listening to him, I don't think that speaks to intelligence (if you're not willing to be objective and hear this person). But at the same time, if I started listening to an interview of someone who I've always really hated or thought poorly of I'm sure it would be hard for me to be open to what they were saying even if they were a completely different person now. I wonder if many of the people who are leaving negative comments are biased because they are well aware of his past and the atrociousness of his book The Game (which he wrote when he was a completely different person almost 20 years ago). Out of curiosity I only just looked up the book and tried to get more specifics on the kind of advice he gave, only just looked it up within the past hour or so. I would agree that it's terrible advice that encourages toxic behavior on the part of men. Anyway, never mind, so far I think he's very smart, and worth listening to and hearing his ideas and perspective. But I do think it's very sad that that book was so influential probably to a lot of men, and they may not have put a lot of thought into the advice and how it could seriously affect them mentally. Worse, how it would affect whoever they were pursuing mentally / emotionally too. Didn't think about whether the advice was healthy. Whether or not it was right or just plain wrong to do. Rather, I'm sure a lot of guys who read it, well at least maybe some of them, wanted to just feel/be attractive and have someone who liked them too. Seriously though: who can really deny that someone who's had such a unique experience like this and who has a positive attitude and seeks to learn now --who can deny that he would not have fascinating knowledge to share from his experiences? Considering everything he's been through? I mean do you only want to listen to and learn from the insights and treasures of normal people? Or even normal but also very intelligent, brilliant people? And/or people who never made terrible mistakes before? Hmm.. to each his own. Wouldn't be for me.
@CJ-sm1sp
@CJ-sm1sp Ай бұрын
Enjoyable interview. Amazing insights and when they talked about traumas, attachment, self compassion and tools to help oneself to navigate the healing were invaluable.
@tensevo
@tensevo 3 ай бұрын
if you detect manipulation but the person is not being upfront about their interest or intentions, then it is dark and they are insecure. if the person is upfront about their intentions, they are secure.
@erindeerhart5538
@erindeerhart5538 4 күн бұрын
@@tensevo And yet it's often the air of mystery that attracts.
@hongkongkev3941
@hongkongkev3941 3 ай бұрын
Enjoyed this very much as it unfolded, because it offers some great insights. It's interesting how the comments here are quick to judge the quest story. Chris is a great podcaster.
@imoretullv243
@imoretullv243 26 күн бұрын
Good stuff. Will always reaspect Neil Strauss. One of my role models.
@nikeisagreekgoddess4135
@nikeisagreekgoddess4135 3 ай бұрын
I actually appreciate the having a child with his ex story. It goes to show that it's possible to transition people out of a specific role in your life without a grotesque display of dysfunctional emotion. It creates a space to think about how different removing a woman from a "partner" role is from removing a woman from your life completely. This is such an important thought exercise because it helps you create more realistic expectations that turn into a more appropriate reaction in a breakup, which is just such a highly likely event in everyone's life anyways, many of those with children involved. I guess it takes some self-awareness and definitely realizing how the Western religious framework for monogamy creates so much suffering when people stay in or hop out. Even evolutionarily speaking, the behavior exhibited by both parties in that breakup is SO ADAPTIVE that it lead to MORE offspring within a socio-cultural context defined by consent, enthusiasm and willing personal investment by all the involved. If you don't want to validate or believe. That's your problem. Who cares.
@jaredmello
@jaredmello 3 ай бұрын
Parentification is when there is a role reversal between parent and child. The child becomes responsible for meeting a parent’s needs. Enmeshment is when there are blurred, weak, or no boundaries between individuals in a family. In enmeshed families, autonomy is not allowed. Kids who grow up in enmeshed families, grow up and become over reliant on needs their parent’s approval to make life decisions.
@tomasosangmuir754
@tomasosangmuir754 3 ай бұрын
Parentification is probably a subcategory of enmeshment, where as enmeshment is not always parentification
@gcjproductions6789
@gcjproductions6789 3 ай бұрын
I gave this one a few chances and gave up about a third in. This has the vibes of someone out of touch, especially with majority of society. I barely heard any wisdom spoken but more of a selfish take on the questions. Not a good pick for an interview with a channel like this.
@Shannxy
@Shannxy 3 ай бұрын
​@@brianmeen2158 Also his view on judging his own books prospectively instead of retrospectively. When releasing he's confident that the quality of the book was the best that he himself could produce at that time, and no reason to later on dwell on the things you could've changed in hindsight
@ssbarlow2424
@ssbarlow2424 3 ай бұрын
I think he’s lying to himself in a lot of areas to convince himself he’s good with it.
@5.dot.connector
@5.dot.connector 3 ай бұрын
I enjoyed this conversation. Don't have to agree with evrything to have it stimulate my own thinking. Thanks Chris for doing this steam roll of interviewing interesting people.
@dant3175
@dant3175 3 ай бұрын
This comment section is filled to the brim with arrogant young men who seem to understand very little about life or love, but are extremely judgemental nonetheless. I find it sad. You guys should read some literary novels. Switch up your cultural input.
@joeycorcoran4763
@joeycorcoran4763 2 ай бұрын
Something about the flow of this conversation feels “clunky”. Neil so often says “yes great question and I’ll get back to that but first let me finish this thought”, but then goes on multiple other areas of tangents that feel too big picture. While I think the idea of progression in relationship is helpful, this did not connect for me.
@Jack_of_Hearts4
@Jack_of_Hearts4 3 ай бұрын
I read the Game and never understood Neil's appeal. What really broke the pick-up artist spell for me was when Neil was preaching in a video about how men need to work on having a masculine-sounding voice. Meanwhile, he was still speaking in the same weaselly-sounding voice that he always has. That's when I really realized that these fuckers weren't practicing what they were preaching. It might not have started as a grift, but it became one very early on. I don't think Neil has learned his lesson. He got older, didn't want to put in the work to improve himself, and is pivoting to a different lane.
@EbonyPope
@EbonyPope 3 ай бұрын
You can't change your voice at least not fundamentally. That is not a criticism you can really bring up.
@everObvious
@everObvious 3 ай бұрын
@@brianmeen2158 Many years ago Strauss wrote a whole book where he essentially disavowed The Game in great detail. Beyond addressing his claim to fame, it wouldn't make much sense to focus too much of the interview on something several books and years into this guy's past.
@Ryuker16
@Ryuker16 3 ай бұрын
@@EbonyPope yes you can, actors do it all the time.
@matthewnorris203
@matthewnorris203 3 ай бұрын
When the host is describing his sensitive side, I can relate a lot.
@Supergsk0302
@Supergsk0302 Ай бұрын
Chris, I relate to you! You should be your own guest and invite yourself to the podcast sometime :) Peace & Love
@julesfalcone
@julesfalcone Ай бұрын
I don't have a problem with him having a baby with his ex.
@danielwalley6554
@danielwalley6554 2 ай бұрын
Woo boy, that first 9 minutes... I'm speechless. As a man, even if I put my own ego and pride aside, I don't think an arrangement like that is what I would want to model to my sons AT ALL. It just feels weak through and through, as if Neil went along with it out of some kind of desperation to hold on to something with this woman. I don't know, maybe I'm just being judgemental.
@ThatGuy-pb6wb
@ThatGuy-pb6wb 3 ай бұрын
This gets a "like" because I respect Chris and love the different view points he brings on. But this guy. This guy seems like a tool. I made it 45 mins in and just had to ask myself, "do I value anything Neil is saying" and my answer was "No" so I'm going to go find an older episode to occupy my time today.
@danielfleckenstein7107
@danielfleckenstein7107 Ай бұрын
this conversation is really interesting!
@DrKaill
@DrKaill 3 ай бұрын
Ah interesting interview, think Chris was very patient with Niel. Though in terms of insight into the world of pick up and dating, he's to outdated to be relevant to the current experience of men out there. Good historical perspective on what things used to be like though.
@dant3175
@dant3175 3 ай бұрын
The only change I can think of in that time is dating apps. I don't get why you would imply dating has somehow changed fundamentally?
@JanKowalski-th5re
@JanKowalski-th5re 2 ай бұрын
Can you be more specific and give some examples why ideas presented in The Game are outdated?
@ErikLiberty
@ErikLiberty 2 ай бұрын
Female psychology hasn't changed in the last 20 years therefore neither has the game.
@dant3175
@dant3175 2 ай бұрын
@@JanKowalski-th5re I haven't even read the book, but when I hear people who have talk about dating, they sound like they're playing StarCraft or something. It's ridiculous to me. It seems like some guys bootstrapped dating and then drew a lot of wrong conclusions based on their experiences. If you want to truly understand dating, just read the evo psych studies. Or read What Women Want by Geoff Miller and Tucker Max. Or listen to their podcast "The Mating Grounds".
@dant3175
@dant3175 2 ай бұрын
@@ErikLiberty Those guys never understood female psychopathology to begin with.
@crowdcrux
@crowdcrux 2 ай бұрын
Epic podcast. Would be curious to see Neil speak on IFS - internal family systems therapy.
@manueliunker8417
@manueliunker8417 2 ай бұрын
I got to say, nice t-shirt. Their songs speaks at a level that is both deep, simple, truest and natural.
@RotoRooster
@RotoRooster 3 ай бұрын
My thoughts 1. Therapy is absolute horseshit and especially so for men. Women love it because for them it's all about being seen, heard, validated. It's the desire to talk endlessly about a problem as opposed to actually dealing with it. If I have a problem that I can't solve and no one can offer me a solution I have zero interest in "feelings talk" about it. I abhor this therapy culture we've evolved into. 2. This NVC manner of speaking comes across as an effeminate method of communication like the indirect communication women (and therapists, for that matter) use. It feels manipulative. Just be direct and make your point. Say what you mean/ mean what you say. The world of relationships would be so much better if we could teach women to speak directly instead of changing everyday communication into some kind of gross therapy-speak. Even worse, this NVC redefines what violence actually is - something that has nothing to do with confronting people when they're wrong. 3. This idea that society seems to have adopted that everyone has "their truth". No! There's THE truth which people often have a different understanding of. Using Neil's example of a partner telling me I don't spend enough time with her when I clearly do is really no different than some schizo telling me that their brain is being spied on by a Frankenstein radio-control gangster computer god. I'm not going to sit there participating in their insanity as a means of placating them.
@dant3175
@dant3175 3 ай бұрын
Yeah, you have it all figured out, dude. Lol.
@erindeerhart5538
@erindeerhart5538 4 күн бұрын
Yes, I understand that your truth is that there is only one truth. I don't really see that at being incompatible with someone else's truth that people can have different truths. One can subscribe to a monolithic model or a multimodal model. We don't all need to live in a skyscraper.
@everObvious
@everObvious 3 ай бұрын
Not even halfway through this and Strauss has at least twice answered a question by asking for Chris’ thoughts first?
@jislaaikrockadopolis2198
@jislaaikrockadopolis2198 3 ай бұрын
Yeah, it's a sign of humility.
@everObvious
@everObvious 3 ай бұрын
@@jislaaikrockadopolis2198 It's not. This may be effective as a conversational tactic, but in the context of an interview, the goal is to elicit a perspective. Pivoting the question *before even addressing it* comes off as fishing for the interviewer's opinion. It's a people pleasing move designed to filter for the "correct" response toward a targeted audience.
@Samuel-vw2wy
@Samuel-vw2wy 3 ай бұрын
@@everObvious >It's a people pleasing move designed to filter for the "correct" response toward a targeted audience. But that’s not what he did? He disagreed with Chris at one point.
@everObvious
@everObvious 3 ай бұрын
@@Samuel-vw2wy I'd be happy to reexamine my take if you were more specific...maybe a timestamp, alongside a synopsis of how Strauss' Q-before-A led to a disagreement?
@jaredmello
@jaredmello 3 ай бұрын
@@everObviousTim Ferris did the same. Tim and Neil are friends.
@ChrisTian-wx1rh
@ChrisTian-wx1rh 3 ай бұрын
I’d suspect his dating advice but the podcast was still beneficial for introspection
@matmosmac
@matmosmac 3 ай бұрын
Never going to be able to hear this guy's name again without thinking, "Mr. Turkey Baster".
@oheymario
@oheymario Ай бұрын
I’m proud of you, Mr. Strauss 🙂
@Zelielz1
@Zelielz1 Ай бұрын
He went completely nuts. I think this always happens with your heroes.
@gabikoyenov
@gabikoyenov 3 ай бұрын
I love Neil Strauss! Hope to get him on my podcast one day!
@CenturyOakWindStar
@CenturyOakWindStar 3 ай бұрын
Having a kid with your ex wife?!? 🤮🤮🤮 This just sounds like an open relationship garbage heap to me. Yuck
@chuck1052
@chuck1052 3 ай бұрын
They are Divorced.
@josephwilliamroca
@josephwilliamroca 22 күн бұрын
I still haven’t learned to listen to the whole thing before commenting either.
@josiprajkovic9707
@josiprajkovic9707 3 ай бұрын
Wisdom. Interesting view on how wars start or any kind of animosity starts from victimhood point - it's their syntetic "why"
@showcase0525
@showcase0525 3 ай бұрын
There is only a need for non violent communication since the initial communication is made 'violently' as you describe it. You shouldn't be making false claims, nor forever expect a lack of pushback for personal experiences. "i feel" is better than "you are". One is internally justified, the other is a claim that requires justification.
@rachelyoung2363
@rachelyoung2363 3 ай бұрын
When you have great guests that are just easy to listen to and they just make sense as well as being informative. That is all that is important for your podcast. 👏👏
@penguin9892
@penguin9892 3 ай бұрын
Serious question to all the women, WTF!? How is THIS guy so successful in picking up so many women!?
@Melaisis
@Melaisis 3 ай бұрын
Take it all with a BIG heap of salt. If you read the Game I think it's undeniable that he had some success, but there were a million different factors at play there, reflecting a particular place and time in mid-2000s LA. From memory a good third of the book was him trying to get with Courtney Love's guitarist. Also, there is nothing to suggest that he has practiced pick up for decades.
@dant3175
@dant3175 3 ай бұрын
He is smart, mature, and kind. All you guys ticking boxes to make yourself attractive to women just seem thirsty by comparison.
@Watercolordragon
@Watercolordragon 19 күн бұрын
Super weird, I dont like the idea for that child, but he is sharing his truth, and that is so important.
@CMVBrielman
@CMVBrielman 3 ай бұрын
3:22 And here’s where I checked out.
@lukebignell7846
@lukebignell7846 3 ай бұрын
i know it’s super weird 😂
@CMVBrielman
@CMVBrielman 3 ай бұрын
@@brianmeen2158 Nah
@Samuel-vw2wy
@Samuel-vw2wy 3 ай бұрын
Scientists have actually found people with lower intelligence shut down and stop listening if presented with something that conflicts with their worldview.
@WilcoxNotreallythere
@WilcoxNotreallythere 3 ай бұрын
What's weird about having kids? The old ways are dying. New family arrangements are gonna have to get adopted if the human race is to continue.
@PhonkAttack4DX
@PhonkAttack4DX 3 ай бұрын
@@brianmeen2158 fr, people are so fragile
@arbaizac11
@arbaizac11 3 ай бұрын
Wow can’t believe you got Neil on here. Great episode
@jislaaikrockadopolis2198
@jislaaikrockadopolis2198 3 ай бұрын
I agree. Maybe the negative commentors here don't have enough background to get a sense of how Neil's messages have evolved.
@DavidMN-
@DavidMN- 3 ай бұрын
It is clinically fascinating but sad to hear how Neil is actively working so hard to go 'against the grain' of a traditional nuclear family. There is undoubtedly a 'best way' to conduct a family, backed by science, and incidentally, biblical. Praying for Neil to find people in his life that love him and speak truth into his life.
@Metrowhite
@Metrowhite 3 ай бұрын
How can you be actively pro nuclear family if youre mister pickup artist who plays these chicks like a piano and then his nuclear family breaks apart and he gets divorced, and splits custody?
@leeyatwan
@leeyatwan 2 ай бұрын
I like Neil. He is a gifted storyteller, has a fascinating mind, and is constantly self reflecting. Is he flawed? Absolutely, as are we all. Is he a role model? Definitely not. The Game was a deeply problematic book, and I think he acknowledges this. Is it a good idea that he turkey bastered his ex wife? Probably not, but then again who knows, it’s not for us to judge. He is interesting to listen to, just listen with discernment, as you would with anyone.
@segueoyuri
@segueoyuri 2 ай бұрын
what Style [sorry I can only think of him in those terms] pulled off in life is so amazing that Chris is just dumbfounded after his first complete statement and less than 5 minutes into the conversation hahaha
@johnguernier8030
@johnguernier8030 2 ай бұрын
A friend bought me one of his books many year's ago and I remember thinking, I'm short, ugly, broke and shy and completely invisible to woman so what am supposed to do with this.
@erindeerhart5538
@erindeerhart5538 Ай бұрын
Didn't you know? Women are most attracted to confidence! 😅
@MrKanrabat
@MrKanrabat 3 ай бұрын
Love the interview. The man grew a lot.
@CogSciEso
@CogSciEso 3 ай бұрын
Jordan Peterson would eat this up
@dant3175
@dant3175 3 ай бұрын
Jordan Peterson is smart but a bad person.
@charliefox9573
@charliefox9573 3 ай бұрын
Spot on. Two hours into a three way conversation and Strauss would be a blubbering mess on the floor.
@olemew
@olemew 26 күн бұрын
35:00 agreed with that, the virtual world is real, that's why many people use AFK instead. But more important than that, it's not just the internet. Young men experience that through government policies, high school teachers, and sometimes even their parents. It's not just a reddit/twitter thing.
@PeterBarber
@PeterBarber 3 ай бұрын
Great interview, Chris. Some really great stuff in here once you get past the first few minutes (apparently most of the people in the comment section didn't, unfortunately). I loved reading The Game, and it was cool to hear how Neil's identity (and life overall) has shifted so much since he wrote that book. Keep up the excellent work.
@ericvideos91
@ericvideos91 3 ай бұрын
This guy's philosophy is definitely *partially* to blame for how fucked up dating is now. "Game" is literally just simping. MIllions of men were trained to make interactions with women 100% focused on eliciting emotions from a woman. This was "the game" he and other PUA's talked about. Men were trained to not even care about their own needs or wants - it was all about female approval. PUA is a deeply insecure practice. Women were trained that men will continue to put up with whatever poor behavior they exhibited - as these men were trying to "win" the "game". Now - in present day - women expect men to cater to their every need - and men are totally disillusioned with the expectation that dating should be all about making the experience positive for the female. So many men have literally stopped trying Honestly, Neil Strauss sucks
@John_in_Oakland
@John_in_Oakland 3 ай бұрын
I listened for about 15 minutes (I forced myself for the last five minutes) then asked myself "Why am I listening to this?" Moved on....
@Beekeeper8011
@Beekeeper8011 4 күн бұрын
You lasted longer than me.
@SpunkeyMonkeyJess
@SpunkeyMonkeyJess 3 ай бұрын
It's very telling that the guy who has use pickup manipulations to get women can't even get the mother of his child to be sexually attracted to him. Attraction is innate
@Samuel-vw2wy
@Samuel-vw2wy 3 ай бұрын
that makes no sense, she was attracted to him which is why they got married.
@tsoupakis
@tsoupakis 3 ай бұрын
@@Samuel-vw2wydon’t feed the trolls. Someone commenting with that bitterness is either with no knowledge or with a lot of anger..
@GE0attack
@GE0attack 3 ай бұрын
game still works
@NoRegertsHere
@NoRegertsHere Ай бұрын
He cheated on her.
@austinbuchwald4587
@austinbuchwald4587 3 ай бұрын
Syringe in the bathroom (minute 8) is crazy.. Probably not taking advice from this dude
@laughingmoustache8809
@laughingmoustache8809 3 ай бұрын
I mean we all know he is not a seducer at all , just a good writer.
@JohnHobitakis
@JohnHobitakis 3 ай бұрын
Neil Strauss provides a fresh perspective.
@jimbarino2
@jimbarino2 3 ай бұрын
I remember reading "The Game" back in the day and wondering after I finished it, if Strauss had realized that he had written a tragedy. Looks, from the first few minutes, that he has gotten close...
@asad5067
@asad5067 3 ай бұрын
the thing is you are not ultimately in control of your own life the matrix trilogy teaches us this.
@yardy88
@yardy88 3 ай бұрын
As much as I feel Neil damaged the meta relationship between men and women by sensationalizing game, he also is the reason I got into it at all since his book was such an entertaining read, and such an interesting adventure. I even ended up meeting Owen Cook/Todd Valentine and a bunch of the people in it lol.
@1ZimZoom1
@1ZimZoom1 3 ай бұрын
A few of Neil’s books were engaging and interesting -liked the convo -a tad quirky and disjointed which contributed to the authenticity… that said, Neils thoughts , convos and disjointed tangents and pauses seemed as though not all cylinders were firing -hope he is ok & not on harmful , mind altering substance -or perhaps just nervous -thank you for the show , Chris and Neil, Best
@mhdkhaled5754
@mhdkhaled5754 3 ай бұрын
Amazing interview.....Neil is an adventurous guy...open to life and learning....what he has seen and experienced, many people would live and die and would not experience it...
@86Dynamix
@86Dynamix 3 ай бұрын
There’s way too many ads in this video. Even though I have KZbin Premium this video got interrupted every 15 minutes.
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