Scott Galloway joins to discuss his new book Notes on Being a Man and the growing crisis facing boys and men—from loneliness and addiction to the influence of Big Tech—and offers solutions to help turn it around.
✅ What I observed
- The video features Scott Galloway discussing what he describes as a “crisis” among boys and men.
- It appears to include data and commentary on educational attainment, employment, mental health and social outcomes for males, especially relative to females.
- He uses the phrase “the numbers are stark” — suggesting the statistics he shares show clear, perhaps alarming, gender disparities.
- The format looks like an interview or talk, where Galloway shares insight and possibly policy or cultural reflections.
🤔 Reflections/Highlights
- It’s interesting that many societal discussions tend to focus on disparities affecting women and girls — this video shifts focus to boys and men, which can be less highlighted.
- Considering education: If boys are under-performing in school or dropping out at higher rates, that can have long-term effects on career and life outcomes.
- On employment: Economic shifts (automation, service jobs, etc.) may disproportionately hit groups with fewer credentials or less adaptation to change — potentially boys and men in certain socio-economic brackets.
- Mental health & social norms: There may be discussion on how traditional expectations of masculinity affect boys/men (e.g., reluctance to seek help, pressure to “be strong”).
- The tone “crisis” invites considering what interventions might help (education reform, mentorship, career training, mental-health awareness, changing cultural narratives).
🧮 Things to Look Up / Verify
- What specific data does Galloway cite? E.g., graduation rates, unemployment/under-employment, suicide/mental health, incarceration.
- How he defines “boys and men” (age ranges, socio-economic background, regions) — are we talking U.S. only or global?
- What solutions or recommendations he suggests — are they policy oriented, education reform, private sector, community level?
- Whether the data is recent and robust (sometimes “crisis” framing can overstate or simplify).
- Counterpoints: What do other researchers say about these trends? Are there good signs or successful interventions already at work?
If you like, I can summarize the full video (key data points, arguments, recommendations) and also pull in external research to assess how accurate or representative it is. Would that be helpful?
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