Mostly Wise: Matt McCusker, Andrew Huberman & Tom Segura - #1102

Mostly Wise: Matt McCusker, Andrew Huberman & Tom Segura - #1102

Every man over 40 should consider low-dose tadalafil daily — Stanford's chair of male sexual health says it boosts prostate perfusion, brain blood flow, and even androgen receptor sensitivity, not just erections.

May 25, 2026 2:41:50 Difficulty: Beginner Played
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4 / 14 cited (29%)

Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.

Stanford's chair of male sexual health, Dr. Mike Eisenberg, recommends that nearly every male over 40 take 2.5–5 mg of tadalafil per day for prostate health and brain vasodilation.

Andrew Huberman Dr. Mike Eisenberg, Chair of Male Sexual Health and Urology, Stanford Universit…

Low-dose tadalafil upregulates androgen receptors, allowing the body to respond more effectively to circulating testosterone.

Andrew Huberman no source cited

Seeing a positive sleep score improves cognitive and physical performance the next day even when actual sleep was poor; seeing a poor score worsens performance even after good sleep.

Andrew Huberman no source cited

Alex Jones was ordered to pay approximately $1.5 billion in damages related to his false claims about the Sandy Hook school shooting.

Chris Williamson no source cited

Cannabis can cause permanent psychosis in people predisposed to psychosis or bipolar disorder.

Andrew Huberman no source cited

Regular cannabis users get almost no REM sleep and experience intense dream rebound when they stop.

Andrew Huberman no source cited

The Secret Service was originally created in 1865 to combat counterfeit currency, not to protect the President.

Andrew Huberman no source cited

In the original Stanford marshmallow test, no child waited the full 15 minutes — every child eventually ate the marshmallow — but duration of waiting still predicted better life outcomes.

Andrew Huberman Dr. Kentaro Fujita, Ohio State University, expert in self-control and motivatio…

Long-wavelength light (infrared and red) from sunlight is critical for mitochondrial health and can penetrate through clothing.

Andrew Huberman Glenn Jeffrey, University College London; also referenced a Nature magazine rev…

Randy Gardner, a 17-year-old California student, set the world record for staying awake at 11 days and 25 minutes (264 hours) in 1964, with no obvious long-term damage recorded at the time.

Chris Williamson no source cited

Violent crime detection has accelerated dramatically due to Ring doorbells and ubiquitous private cameras, making long-running criminal sprees effectively impossible.

Tom Segura no source cited

A 21-year-old college student in Austin made $43,000 running a fully AI-generated OnlyFans account using Claude Code, Flux, and Eleven Labs, with top fans paying nearly $2,000 in messages.

Chris Williamson no source cited

Johnny Depp's entire reported $650 million fortune is gone according to Rolling Stone, including $75 million on residences and $3 million to blast Hunter S. Thompson's ashes from a cannon.

Chris Williamson Rolling Stone magazine investigation into Johnny Depp's spending habits

Jeffrey Epstein's hyoid bone fracture was described by certain forensic pathologists as more consistent with homicide than suicide due to the force involved.

Tom Segura no source cited

TL;DR

Chris Williamson sits down with Dr. Andrew Huberman, comedian Tom Segura, and comedian Matt McCusker for a freewheeling roundtable that swings from the science of tadalafil and sleep optimization to retardmaxxing, conspiracy theories, AI clones of exes, Johnny Depp's spending habits, and backyard ultra running. The most useful single takeaway: Huberman explains that deliberately long exhales activate the vagus nerve to slow your heart rate, and combined with a hot shower (which paradoxically drops core body temperature), are among the most effective non-pharmaceutical ways to fall asleep after a high-stimulus event like a live show.

#tadalafil benefits #sleep optimization #retardmaxxing #cannabis psychosis #AI voice cloning #conspiracy theories #Backyard Ultra running #marshmallow test #sunscreen endocrine disruptors #serial killers surveillance #OnlyFans exploitation #pornography and dopamine #nostalgia vs present #comedian psychology #cat echolamine arousal #tadalafil #Cialis #comedy #Love Island #AI clones #sunscreen #fap nap #Johnny Depp #Backyard Ultra #Epstein #Secret Service #Eleven Labs #OnlyFans #Marc Andreessen #prolactin

2 minute taster

Technology
Eleven Labs Built Its Default British AI Voice on Chris Williamson

Mostly Wise: Matt McCusker, Andrew Huberman & Tom Segura - … · May 25, 2026 Technology

Eleven Labs' flagship British AI voice 'Archer' is — based on a side-by-side comparison — trained heavily on Chris Williamson's voice. It's already being used in unauthorized product ads. Eleven Labs told his team the similarity score was too low to act on. Huberman says he has IP lawyers who can fix this.

Health & Fitness
Andrew Huberman's Full Non-Pharmaceutical Sleep Protocol

Mostly Wise: Matt McCusker, Andrew Huberman & Tom Segura - … · May 25, 2026 Health & Fitness

Hot shower before bed lowers core body temperature via compensatory thermoregulation. Long deliberate exhales activate the vagus nerve and slow heart rate. A magnesium-saffron-apigenin stack handles the supplement side. For advanced users: pinealon peptide, 3 nights a week, from a compounding pharmacy — Huberman calls the REM sleep effect 'spectacular'.

Look closer

Chris Williamson hosts comedian Matt McCusker, neuroscientist Dr. Andrew Huberman, and comedian/actor Tom Segura for a wide-ranging roundtable covering men's health hacks, conspiracy theories, retardmaxxing philosophy, AI clones of exes, sleep optimization, and the bizarre world of celebrity spending.

Chapter list
Tadalafil
Generic name for Cialis; a vasodilating drug originally developed for prostate health, later approved for erectile dysfunction, and used off-label at low doses (2.5–5 mg/day) for cardiovascular and urological benefits.
Vasodilation
The widening of blood vessels, allowing increased blood flow; in the episode's context, the mechanism by which tadalafil benefits prostate health and brain perfusion.
GLP-1
Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist; a class of drugs (e.g., semaglutide/Ozempic) used for weight loss by suppressing appetite.
Catecholamines
A group of neurotransmitters — dopamine, norepinephrine (noradrenaline), and epinephrine (adrenaline) — released during high-arousal or stressful situations.
Prolactin
A hormone that surges after orgasm, creating the refractory period by raising the threshold for sexual arousal.
Refractory period
The recovery time after orgasm during which a person cannot be re-aroused; governed largely by prolactin levels.
Pinealon
A peptide derived from pineal gland tissue, used experimentally to enhance REM sleep; mentioned by Huberman as a non-nightly advanced sleep tool.
Apigenin
A flavonoid compound found in chamomile; used as a supplement ingredient that promotes relaxation and is part of Huberman's sleep stack.
Clang associations
A symptom of psychosis where a person links ideas based on the sound of words rather than their meaning; used in the episode to critique pseudoscientific health reasoning.
Pareidolia
The tendency to perceive meaningful patterns (faces, shapes) in random stimuli, like seeing animals in clouds; Huberman uses it to illustrate loose associative thinking.
Retardmaxxing
Internet slang for deliberately not overthinking or introspecting, just acting on what needs to be done; popularized online and endorsed by Marc Andreessen.
Lookmaxxing
Internet slang for optimizing one's physical appearance through any available means; the concept that 'retardmaxxing' is built off as a parody.
Circadian rhythm
The body's roughly 24-hour internal clock that regulates sleep, hormone release, and other physiological processes.
Respiratory sinus arrhythmia
A natural variation in heart rate tied to breathing; deliberate long exhales activate this mechanism to slow the heart and promote calm.
Orexin/hypocretin
Neuropeptides that promote wakefulness; drugs called Doras (e.g., Quivivac) block these receptors to aid sleep.
Spurious correlations
Statistical relationships between two variables that are coincidental rather than causal; the episode references Tyler Vigen's website cataloguing absurd examples.
ICU psychosis
A well-documented phenomenon where patients in intensive care develop psychosis due to disrupted sleep, constant light exposure, and irregular schedules.
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
A laboratory technique used to amplify DNA sequences; central to forensics, medical testing, and genealogy — legend has it the inventor conceived it on an LSD trip.
Rayleigh scattering
The scattering of sunlight by atmospheric particles; when the sun is low, more UV is filtered out, making early morning and late afternoon safer for sun exposure.
Endocrine disruptors
Chemical compounds that interfere with hormonal systems; certain chemical-based sunscreen ingredients (benzene-based) are considered potential endocrine disruptors.