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A
Where you guys welcome, everybody. This is the perfect doctor Drew first appearance on the Scott Adams School. You have no idea. It took a village. And here we are. Look at Dr. Drew. So, you guys, welcome to the Scott Adams School. We know we're late, but we've technically been live and reminiscent of Scott. There were technical glitches, needless to say. Right, Dr. Drew?
B
It was fun, and we patch things together. We're half on the phone, half on Rumble Studio, half going out on the international web. It's great. We made it work.
A
We did it. We did it. So, just so you guys know, I can hear Dr. Drew in my ears. So can Owen. But Dr. Drew, his hearing capacity through Rumble Studio wasn't working. So he's listening to me on my phone where I have conferenced in Owen. So he's going to hear us through his earbuds in the phone. But listen, it's the dream. We're doing it. So we're going to take a deep breath, we're going to have a simultaneous sip, and let's do it.
C
Because we've learned that coffee is even healthier than we thought. How about that, huh? Yes. The recent science New York Times reports says that coffee is really, really good for you. So not only do we have the delight of the simultaneous sip, but we're all going to be healthier in a moment, those of us having coffee. And all you need to participate is a cup of mug or a glass of tanker, gels or stein, a canteen, jug of flask, a vessel of any kind. Fill it with your favorite liquid. I like coffee because it's so healthy. And join me now for the unparalleled pleasure. The dopamine. End of the day, the thing that makes everything better, the simultaneous sip. Go. Yes. Science confirmed. I feel healthier, don't you? I think you do.
A
Oh, and we have a doctor in the house about feeling healthier. So do you feel healthier, Dr. Drew?
B
Oh, yeah. Coffee. I've been watching the literature on Coffee for 30 years because I'm a big coffee drinker, and it only gets better. Looks like a healthier and healthier move. And I want to thank my wife for bailing us out this morning. You got to meet her a little bit. She produces this whole studio, and she's the one that got us to this point where we could actually do this in about three minutes. So thank you for that, but I want to talk about something real quick, because Scott always talked about dopamine, and the dopamine hit. Can I start with that, please? So people have grave misconceptions about the dopaminergic system in the brain, like almost everybody. And I want to clarify this, and this is not by way of being critical because everybody has this misconception. The brain has two systems that are completely separate. A liking system and a wanting system. Okay? The liking system is primarily the endorphin system. We like it, it's yummy, we get rewarded. It's where the opioids work, it's where the endorphins work. And it secondarily goes into the dopaminergic system. But the dopaminergic system is the wanting system. And what addiction is is a usurpation of the wanting system. So that even when you don't like the thing you're wanting, you keep wanting it. Cocaine is the crack is the ultimate sort of example that people go psychotic, they hate it and they just keep doing it until they, you know, end up, you know, doing crazy things. But they don't like it anymore. They don't like it after the first hit. They only like the first hit and they know they're not going to like it after the second, third, fourth hit. And yet they, the wanting, they'll describe it as chasing, you know, chasing that high. You know, they're not going to get back to that. They've tried it a million times. But the dopamine system is the part of the brain says do that again and you don't feel anything else except a motivational state. Do that again, do that again.
D
But that can be healthy too, right?
B
Well, of course. It's where, you know, survival and reproduction and eating and going to work and doing, doing all the things that are priorities in life. You need that dopaminergic system creating the motivational states and people don't talk. Sky used to talk about motivational states. One of the few people that would talk about that. But motivation is a key thing in humans. And by the way, something that, you know, Corolla and I always say, people that are left leaning have completely left out of the equation of policy. They, they, it's like they don't understand human motivation. And the other side is saying, no, let's create policies that motivate people to do the right thing. No, no, no, no, no. That, the motivation, you're a tabular raza. It's only what society puts in that matters, which is all bs.
A
So, so I am chasing some dopamine today, that is for sure. We, we do, we do. So much coffee news on this program which, you know, Scott always did. So, you know, we're like, all right, let's keep it going. And Dr. Jude, do I have to take the creamer out of my coffee to get the benefit of coffee?
B
No, no. There is some thought of that, but no, I don't. I don't believe that. And. And by creamer, I hope you're not using all that, you know, stuff that crazy, you know, coffee mate and stuff like that.
A
I used to. I used to use coffee mate, and that's the only reason I drank coffee when I started, like, in my 40s, because I'm like, ooh, this is good. And then I've now switched to chobani. So that's like a. A regular, like, cream, but it has flavor. But it's like, Chobani is more natural.
B
Okay. Because most of those coffee additives are sugar, corn syrup, God knows what else. I remember I was in medical school. They were. They were, you know, saying, hey, don't let your diabetics use this stuff. They don't realize how much sugar is in it.
A
Yes, for sure. Owen puts all sorts of stuff in his coffee. He's my coffee hero. Tell Dr. Drew about your coffee, Owen.
D
I. I put in L Theanine and cinnamon and creatine.
B
Approve of all of it. I take theanine almost every day. And I take creatine every day. And the cinnamon. I get that. That's a good one. Nice additive. Well done.
D
Yeah, I mean, I think from what I understand, the L. Theanine is supposedly something that'll kind of even out the caffeine. Like, it'll not make it peaks.
B
Yeah, exactly. And that's the reason I don't take it every day. I kind of like the high.
D
You need the spike. I supp good to leave it out. And then creatine is kind of unrelated to the coffee. It's just healthy for you. I think that's the one that has, like, the most solid research that almost everybody should really be taking creatine.
A
All right, so what does it do, Owen? Is it good for women?
D
I mean, Dr. Drew could probably tell you better than me, but I think my understand. It's good for muscles. It's good for the brain. It's all everything.
B
Exactly, exactly. Muscle and brain and aging. So. But the controversy is how much, and I'm not clear on that yet. How much do you take?
D
I think it's half a teaspoon each time, but I might do it a couple times a day, so maybe a teaspoon. I mean, it might be like 5 grams. But I know for the brain effects they tell you you should have like 10 or 20 or something more than that.
B
Yeah, they get up towards 20. I take 10. I, I don't know about 20. Or maybe I'm taking, I think I take, I take, I actually take the pills because it's more, I don't know, even the powder, I like the powders, but they, they really stir me up a little bit.
A
Okay, now we have a question happening in the chat. What about decaf coffee benefit, but not,
B
maybe not as much. Look, you're, you're using chemicals to take the caffeine out. Why not just leave the caffeine in? I mean, it's, it's. Caffeine's harmless and that might be part of the benefit. So there's no doubt that the flavonoids and the antioxidants, they're a big part of the story. So I'd rather you do decaffeinated than none. But, but I think, I think caffeine is going to prove to be a benefit as well.
A
Will I ever be able to smoke cigarettes again and it'll be good for me?
B
No, but, but people have grave misconceptions about nicotine.
A
Yes.
B
Right. They, they get there because we've done such a good job from the public health standpoint, which is a whole other topic for me, of making people fearful of cigarettes. They therefore believe that nicotine must be damaging. Nicotine is harmless. Harmless. It's the addictive component of cigarettes. Gets you using the tobacco, which is the dangerous part of the cigarette. The tobacco, not the nicotine.
A
Oh, so. Oh, okay. I never heard it explained that way. So the tobacco, do they add nicotine to it?
B
I'm sure they enhance. It's like what they're doing with weed. They enhance the effect to get you to get addicted to it so they can more of it. Of course.
D
I mean, I think it was always in there, but yeah, they probably have like, bred it, bred it to have more and things like that and the
A
paper and the filter. And then if you're smoking Newports and all that stuff, and they were like, oh, you're getting fiberglass in your lungs. I'm like, all right, all right, I'm done, I'm done. So that was forever ago, but I miss it. I still dream about having a cigarette.
B
You smoked. I didn't, we didn't know that.
A
Oh, my God. A thousand years ago, when everybody smoked, when it was like, do you want smoking or non smoking?
B
You don't look old enough to be a smoker. But. But, but be that as to be in that world where there was a smoker versus a non smoker world. But, but be sure, talk to your doctor about it because you do. You screen things differently even with a 10 or 20 pack. Your history in your. In your past.
A
Well, so I'll reveal my age. Okay, you guys ready? Here comes 56. So I'm 56. And yeah, so I was around long enough for the smoking sections and the airplanes and the whole thing. It was. It was a vibe.
B
You were a teen smoker?
A
Yes, of course.
C
Okay.
B
I'm 67 and I. I know, I know of when I speak. I saw that too. And then I took care of all the people with the emphysema and the vascular disease and all that stuff. It was just terrible.
A
Yeah. Yep. For sure.
D
I grew up with a whole family that smoked. My brothers and sisters smoked when they were teenagers and my parents both smoked. But my dad did quit. I think he put staples in his ears or something. I don't remember exactly what that was, but I think that was one of the treatments that helped him quit. And my mom, I think quit and started again a number of times. I'm not even sure if she's fully quit yet, but she probably has at least cut down a lot, so she's still around.
B
I want to. I want to thank you guys for. I forgot two things before I forget a thank you guys for being Scott Adams School. I know he would be so delighted with all this. It's a gift and I thank you for doing it. And I know the amount of dedication and work it takes to do this and then to try to approximate what God gives us, I know, is just impossible. I get it. But thank you for doing it. And the other thing I want to bring up, just make sure I don't forget. Those of you in California, make sure you vote for Michael Gates for Attorney General. He's our only hope. Also the controller. What is his name? Somebody's going to have to look up what the controller options are. And I'll tell you the guy, he's got a name like Bud, but he has got an exceptional plan for getting the budget right here in California. These are. They call it the golden ticket. They're our only hope. We got. If you can't get the rest through, please, those two guys through, because.
A
Wait, tell us more. So this is for Attorney General, but
B
tell us the controller. Give me the. Give me those options and I'll tell you who the guy is. You should be voting for, but general.
D
So.
B
So I was in. I. I had. I had so. Because I worked in a psychiatric hospital all those years, I've had so many frivolous lawsuits you can't even imagine. And this one was another crazy one where it was a patient I had never seen. Not my patient, but. Because when the patient was discharged, the patient, the nurse peeked her head in the door and said, patient's been discharged. And the doctor who I happened to be sitting with, said, great, thanks. And she documented in the chart, Dr. Blum and Dr. Pinsky aware of discharge because I was sitting in the room. Now I'm in the lawsuit. And the lawsuit was completely frivolous. It was a wrongful death for a guy that died in hospice. Explain that to me. Any event, it was. It was dismissed quickly, but I had to go through many, many, many, many, many hours of depositions and all the crap that disrupts your life. So I'm sorry that Marcel is not here today. I would love to.
A
We are, too. Yeah.
B
But my attorney was this young guy who was really good, and I kind of got a relationship with him. Fast forward 20 years, he shows up. I do a show that my wife produces called Ask Dr. Drew at 2 o' clock on Pacific on Tuesday and Thursday and 4 o' clock on Wednesday. So we're doing it at 4 o' clock today, and this guy turns up. He's the city attorney for Huntington Beach. He comes on my show because he's been suing Newsom like 30 times, successfully, for all the overreach of government. And Huntington beach is just like this, this oasis in California and turned out to be the same guy. And so we developed this. This friendship. And about two years ago, he goes, I think. I think I can get attorney general. I think we can do that. Bontus is a nightmare. He's not even doing lawyering. He's not even doing his job. We got to get him out. And now he has a very good chance of getting in.
A
Wow. So, you guys, I posted about him last night. I think it was. Please share the post tag your California people. You know, reshare it. Get the word out there. Dr. Drew knows. He. Listen, the doctor has spoken.
B
Go ahead and look at what Bonta's wife is doing who's in the assembly. She's proposed a bill to make it illegal for investigative journalists to investigate fraud in California. Are you aware of this bill? Wow. Oh, and you must be aware of this.
D
It's amazing that they can even propose things like that. I don't understand. I mean, how can you come out in favor of fraud? Like, just blatantly. I don't understand it.
B
It's like Newsom did Newsom. As soon as the fraud was exposed, he went, it's racist against Armenians. You're being racist. Not there's fraud going on. It's. Armenians, by the way, are. They're certainly not a minority around here.
A
They're.
B
All of our friends are Armenians. There are more Armenians living in Glendale than in Armenia by a long margin. And so, you know, that's not racist.
D
It's just so out of control. Like, the, you know, the stat that came out that Somalia's fraud is bigger than their GDP and in Somalia and like, but just for, like, you know, you hear about the president of Mexico being in the pocket of cartels, but, like, at least she's smart enough not to say, yeah, I am. Like, at least. At least she says, no, no, that's not happening. And, you know, with the things that Newsom and this other person is doing, it's like what you're literally saying you want to prevent people from stopping fraud. What exactly is your agenda?
B
What possible logic could you have?
D
I don't think anyone buys that it's racist.
A
I know, but the racist card seems to work for a lot of people still. They're very br. Very brainwashed. Which, actually, I wanted to ask you about, Dr. Drew. Like, seriously, how. This is a big, loaded question, but how do we cure these people with tds? Because we know whoever the next Republican president is, it's going to be that syndrome. It's not. It's not a Trump thing. This is. This is a political thing. Because I always say if there was social media and all this stuff going on when. When George W. Bush was president, it would be the same exact thing. But we just have a bigger reach now, unfortunately, with. With the social media, so. But it is a problem because we've, like, just put our sanity aside and are just believing any nonsense. And you can't break these people of their addiction to hating Republicans and politicians. What do we do?
B
Owen, didn't you address this, like, last week? Weren't you trying to talk about how impossible it is? Yeah, and I. This is why I love Scott. He would calm me down on all of it by giving me strategies to look at it and think about it. And it would seem so much more manageable the way he presented it, by the way. That's why if you present little. Not just the whiteboard stuff that Scott did, but present the little pieces of Video of his, his. His previous pods. It's a public service to have just got cull through and find the gems and play them for us. I mean that we need more of that.
A
We have.
B
We need more of him. Number two, I used to watch listen to a podcast called you are not so smart. And it was about. It was kind of the first thing I was ever exposed to as it pertains to persuasion. I at the time was several years ago, I became obsessed with flat Earthers. I'm like, how would I, how would I deal with that person? How do you. How frustrating. Little did I know that the whole half the world would become effectively flat earthers in regards to many things. Covid and TDS and all these things. And that podcast was making the case. They talked about the backlash syndrome, which may or may not exist, where you can convince somebody on a narrow topic, but they'll backlash in other areas. Like you can convince someone that a measles vaccine may be a good idea, but then they'll double down on their anti vax beliefs for everything else. So he made the case that the only option is to discuss people's worldview. Because if you, if you really go at these things that are sort of organizing principles for how they see the world, including their social relationships, it's really hard. It's really hard. And I, I use a lot of what's called therapeutic wonderment. Just. You don't, you don't come at people. That's when all the force fields go up. You just use lots of wonderment. Like, I wonder why. I wonder. Is it. Is it possible? I wonder what you're thinking. Of course you know the answer in your head, but you just, you just still ask questions and people can't help but expose things about themselves when you use. That's why it's called therapeutic wonderment.
A
But it, but this is like an actual disorder. Don't you feel like this, like. I feel like the TDS is like you look at someone like Sam Harris, you know, so you're. I don't. We always go to him as an example because you're like, here's someone who. Sam seems like they're so smart and whatever, but he can't see what. What happened to him right in front of his face.
B
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I, I have been reading extensively about mass psychosis, true believers, behavior of mobs. I started when social media came around. I started seeing the mob action and, and I kind of predicted it in my book on narcissism, which I wrote. God I don't know, 12, 14 years ago, it was kind of a follow on to Christopher Lash and some of the other things that had been, you know, sort of predicting the narcissistic turn. And this book was based on some research that I did with a friend of mine where we showed that, yeah, indeed, particularly celebrities are terribly narcissistic. And the narcissist and the celebrity, ness seeking celebrity was an attempt to heal the narcissistic injuries of childhood. Of course that doesn't work. But we also showed that there's been a narcissistic turn everywhere. Like, we are all much more narcissistic than we used to be. In 1850, it was debated whether narcissistic personality existed. Now we know it exists, there's no doubt about it. But we all have some of it now, right? And one of the things that narcissists do is to manage their aggression. They collectively form little big or little mobs and focus their aggression outside of themselves on a scapegoat. So this, this is something that Rene Girard talked about, although he didn't have the narcissistic piece in there. The, the scapegoating mechanism is real and it is a function of mob behavior, and that's the mob formation. And the gratification of mobs is to some extent, in my belief, related to the narcissistic turn. You, you see it when there's a lot of narcissism around. So I'm, I became obsessed with 1790, you know, 1789 in France, because that's where this all really got going. And same old stuff. Same thing we're seeing now. Same phenomenon. Precisely.
D
I think the problem, part of the problem with TDS is just that it continues to be reinforced all the time by media and by politicians and all these things. So it, I think it is a mass psychosis, but I think it's really hard to crack either individually or at a population level because you're fighting this continuing wave of propaganda that's against.
B
Well, let me, let me, let's go back to that because I totally agree with you. But the way, you know, using Matthias Desmet's frame on mass formation, there is about 20% true believers. So it's important to understand who the true believers are, and they're the problem. And there's 10% of people like us who raise their hand and go, hang on a second, whoa, whoa, whoa, what's going on here? And the true believers have to crush the, the dissenters. The question marks. Our job is to get that 70% in the middle that just want to keep their head down and be left alone. We need that group. You're not going to the true believers. You're. You're not going to really get on board, but the people just want to get on with their life, be left alone. That's your target. And I'm noticing with the Spencer Pratt thing that they've been hard to get because the Overton window has been so narrow. And Spencer Pratt just kicked open the Overton window and started saying things I've been saying forever. And literally people went, oh, you. You can do that. Oh, why aren't we doing that? If you can do it, why aren't we doing it? And that pertains to everything that, that screwed up in our, in our. In our governmental systems. And we have people elected now who are not interested in governing. I think you mentioned this is it yesterday. Somebody said this in the show yesterday or, or maybe last week. They're not interested in governing. They're interested in representing. They want to represent. They want a place at the table. They want to. Representing good, but not going to help us when we're in really, really serious trouble. And in this town, it's gone to the point where it's negligent manslaughter. Let's call it what it is. We lose six people a day in the streets here, and it increases every year. And these are people that could be treated, could be saved. It's negligent manslaughter. And Karen Bass's solution was, we need social workers and we need to give the meth addicts teeth. Social workers, they are not. Social workers are doing the work with the homeless. They are not. I can't say this loud enough. They are not trained to do this. It's like asking a physical therapist to do surgery. These are the sickest psychiatric patients. As sick as you get. It needs psychiatrist, neurologist, infectious disease doctor, internist. People have trained for years to be able to manage these cases. Not social workers. They don't even know what they're looking at because they've not been trained. And this. I said this in a, in a big national meeting of county representatives about two years ago, and the whole room went, oh, they just, they just gave me social workers. It's always how we've done it. I go, yeah, well, stop, stop. They. They don't know. They can't do it. The scariest things that these people say to me is, you got to meet people where they are. Are you kidding me? Like, I'M gonna. What are you talking about? Meet people where they are. You got to get them where they need to go immediately or they will die. Meet people where they are. It's a strange. It's like, like, oh, you need an. You have abdominal obstruction. Well, let me meet you where you are. Let me. How's your nonsense? This is total nonsense. And it is. It is captured the governmental agencies.
A
I've been hearing you talk about this situation, this crisis for years. You were the one that clued me in about the plague and everything else. I'm like, what are we doing? And you said, these people don't want to live inside. They're add. This is where they want to be. Like, they can't even help where they want to be. This is it. So I have a question. So it's multi part first. The way I see Spencer is I keep saying 2015 Donald Trump. It was just like, he's just, yeah, I'm not a politician. There's problems. I know how to solve them. I'll put the people around me to do it. So my first question to you is, if Spencer asked you to help him head up how to fix this problem, would you accept?
B
I would advise happily. It's not that hard. One of the biggest problems we have is a deficiency in resources embeds. Because here's another thing I think people need to understand. And let me tell you a little story here, speaking of derangements. There is a derangement as it pertains to the history of the state medical hospitals in this country. Reagan did not end the state hospital system in this country. The way it went down is, you understand, psychiatry was in the grips of psychoanalysis for 50 years. We were the only country in the world that did that. Vienna, Austria. They did it for like five minutes and then they abandoned it. This country trained medical doctors as psychoanalysts for 50 years. And as such, the psychoanalysts started believing they knew the solutions to all society, all ills and all everything. And the first three heads, the National Institute of Mental Health, were psychoanalyst, two of which had never set foot in a state hospital or even a psychiatric hospital. And one had set foot in one summer, but really had no idea what he was looking at because he wasn't even a doctor. He was an entomologist, if I remember right. And so here were guys that had no understanding of chronic psychiatric illness who had never been in a psychiatric. Chronic psychiatric hospital setting. They decided much in the line of this post, post structuralists, which are read about the post structuralist and their impact on everything academic and political. Now they, they just. The French from 75 years ago, who. The French today will have nothing to do with. The philosophers from 75 years ago destroyed our academic system. But look, look at what's her name that wrote that book, Sexual Personae. She talks about this a lot. You can find her online. Talk about Amen. So Michel Foucault took the position that psychiatric hospitals cause mental illness. And these psychoanalysts grabbed onto that and decided their job needed to be to dismantle the state medical system, which was a system that had built over 150 years, was terrible in some states, but was excellent in others. And the reason the states had to do it is because the Constitution doesn't provide any provision where the. The federal government should have anything to do with mental health services, particularly back in the day. So they. They found a sympathetic ear in a new senator who had a sister with chronic psychiatric illness. His name was John Kennedy. And when he became president, they really went at him. Rosemary had had a frontal lobotomy. It destroyed her life. It was Joe's pushing doctors to do it that got it done. Remember, lobotomy was much like it was psychosurgeries. I could tell you a whole story about how that stuff gets carried out. Whether it's the opiate crisis or Covid or vaccines or psychosurgeries, there's always an evangelical physician who gets a hold of the regulatory system and the medical societies and professional societies and then the reimbursement systems and on it goes. Think Deborah Birx. That was a good example of that. I keep digressing because these are such big stories for me. So when he becomes president, they throw down in front of him the Community Mental Health Act. That act was to dismantle the state health care system and replace it with community mental health centers whose stated goal was preventing mental illness, not treating mental illness, preventing. Which is something we don't know how to do to this day. The last signature he put before his fateful trip to Dallas was for the Community Mental Health act, which set the state hospitals on the path to destruction.
D
Okay?
B
The communal mental health centers which replaced it were abject failures. And in the meantime, hundreds of thousands of patients were disgorged from these state hospitals with no plan for them. They went to the streets, the prisons and the nursing homes. The community mental health centers did nothing for them. They were completely unable to manage this because they were busy doing prevention, which they couldn't do. And Reagan ended the funding to the abject failure of the community mental health system, which was not the state hospital system.
D
So it sounds a lot like the setup of the Joker movie, right?
B
Exactly, exactly. So that's that story.
D
By the way, I think the person you were looking for for a sexual Persona is Camille Paglia.
B
Camille Paglia. Go listen to Camille Paglia and some of her talks. Listen to her talk to Jordan Peterson. The two of them together, it's magical.
A
Oh, nice. Okay, good. So do we need to bring back mental institutions?
B
Oh, absolutely. We need. We are. That's. That was sort of what prompted me to tell you this long story is we have a deficiency in the capacity to manage these cases and we have to. We have to create acute settings, chronic settings, residential settings. I know RFK has been flirting with this for a long time. I've talked to him about it many times. He wants to set up these sort of work farms for the next one to two years of rehabilitation after people are stabilized. He doesn't quite get how far gone we are and what's going to be required to get people in condition where they can tolerate going to the work. Work camps that he imagines.
D
And do you think people would go to those facilities if they were available?
B
Sure. I mean, you got. You have to. You have to motivate back to the motivational thing. Addiction is a usurpation of the brain's motivational system. It. Survival, everything else takes a second, goes down in orders of importance relative to the use impulse. The addict is not aware of this. They have something called anosognosia. Anosognosia is literally a biological block of insight. They don't see what's happening to them. You have to. It's the same thing that dementia patients get. It's the same skin schizophrenics get. Same thing that stroke patients get. You have to take them and you have to motivate them. Well, what motivates addicts? Well, one thing is to go, hey, you can't stay here. You have to come over here. That's all you have to do, and they'll follow you. I've got a nice place for you. Sorry, you cannot stay here. Let's go. You have to motivate them to do something or they will die. The usual motivations are loss, loss of a child, you know, a loss of their health. They believe they're going to die, which if they're lucky enough to get through that inevitably happens. Loss of freedom. That's a very big motivator for people. And we don't do that anymore. And. And a. A period of time where they at least clear sufficiently, the anosognosia settles down and they can start to see what's happening to them, and we can start to work on their motivation to get better. But it takes work to do that. It's very time consuming, it's very slow, and you have to have a unified front of people saying, you can't do that. You can't keep doing drugs. It's. I'm sorry, you can't steal. Sorry. You can't slide on. If you're sick enough that you want to lie down on the sidewalk and stay there. No, no, we gotta. We gotta help you. We'll take you on if you don't do that. For a dementia patient. Let's say a dementia patient is running around in the streets, you're guilty of patient abuse. If you take a schizophrenic with the same symptom complex running around the streets and you take them by the hand and say, come with me. You've now just kidnapped someone. So California has got to change its laws so we can do. That's the other thing.
D
Well, I mean, that was my concern is, as I understand it, in many states, if not all of them, there's pretty strict limits about involuntarily committing someone to an institution. That you can do it maybe for 24 hours or 72 hours.
B
I'm not talking about that. We do need to in order. I'm talking about, well, two things. I'm talking about motivating people to get better, to be much nicer environments than they're staying in, and to expand the category of gravely disabled, which we've actually done in California. I was advocating that, like, eight years ago, and they actually did it. It's unfortunately not being applied properly yet, but you have to, you know, say, if you're so ill that you don't know where you are, you can't. We don't know what's going on. You're. You're lying on the street with an open wound, and you don't want help, we're going to have to help you. Mm. You're gravely disabled. Greatly disabled. Used to be the main reason we held people against their will, because it was a broad category that let us help people that got closed to really nothing where you couldn't even use it. It's being expanded again, but that's got to be expanded so, again, we can keep people long enough that the anosognosia settles down and the inside clears and it takes time and it takes time
A
and they're also creating a public hazard to everybody else. So, you know, you can't, you can't be sitting there with like open wounds and laying in feces and rats running around and you know, it's. What are we doing? It's just so weird. Like, you never thought you'd see this. I mean, I, I saw something similar back in the day in New York, like in the 70s. It was pretty rough until Rudy. Yeah.
B
Way worse here than that was.
A
Yes. Oh, yeah. And I just can't even believe it. So I, I also think if you can enforce laws. Okay, so I was thinking about night. You know, how everyone's being let out of prisons and this and that. They're like, well, our prisons are too crowded. And I don't know, this is just my free floating thought. And I'm like thinking, well, aren't they also crowded with a lot of illegal immigrants also? And don't they need to go back to where they came from so we can open up the prison cells for the actual criminals that are citizens? So everything's just so broken. And I love just hearing common sense of people that are, you know, follow the laws. If you're not here legally, you gotta go. And if you're sick, you gotta get off this. You can't do drugs out in the street in front of people. And by the way, now I'm gonna sound like a little ninny, but New York with everybody that goes there now is like, it just smells like weed everywhere. You're not free in New York from not breathing that smell in. And I just feel like we're just like run amok with drugs everywhere. And I don't know, we didn't grow up like that. We didn't see this like that. We heard about it. So I just feel like, follow the laws on the books. Why is this so hard to do?
B
Well, it's legal to, it's legal to do drugs and traffic drugs here, just
A
so you know, and traffic them and,
B
oh, as long as you do certain amounts, it's legal. And up until recently it was also legal to, to steal up to 900 a day to support your habit.
A
Oh, they stopped that now where they've
B
closed, slowly closing some of that stuff, but, but still, it's still dumb the way we do it. Yeah, it's, it's, it's dangerous, it's killing people.
D
I'm just always baffled by the policies in California and the theme I use for that is it seems like California's government is hostile to its citizens. It's like everything they pass seems to be like, what can we do to make people's lives worse here?
B
Caroly used to always say that he'd go good on homeless, bad on taxpayers would say that all the time. Yeah, the taxpaying particularly, I mean, 10% of this. This state pays like 90% of the taxes, and those are the ones that are treated absolutely the worst by the state.
A
Wow. All right, so we got problems, you guys. And I know President Trump is very much on board with opening mental institutions. He said it for years.
B
And listen, listen, let me say one other thing. You keep saying mental institutions. Let's call them what they are, psychiatric hospitals. They're a hospital setting. Right. And they are not one flu over the cuckoo's nest. Ken Kesey wrote that book in 1959. Were coming in on 75 years ago, that is. And people thought they were watching a documentary when they watched that movie. They were not watching a documentary. And psychiatric hospitals are nothing like that today. They are lovely. They're like hotels. You would love to stay in one. And many of them have grounds and facilities. And we take residential settings later. Believe me, it's a vast improvement from where they are living. And once they get there and sort of involved with it, they. They usually engage it. I did it for. I did this for 30 years. I ran treatment programs. It's not hard. It's. You just gotta put the right structures in place and off you go. It's not hard. We just have to do it.
A
And Dr. Drew, as someone who has consumed your media forever, going back to, you know, Loveline and all the way through Celebrity Rehab and all of that, you are. Have always shown yourself to always be the same, which is caring and compassionate and authentic. And that's amazing that through everything you've seen and been through and fame and, you know, people knowing who you are, you have just remained the most. I tell people what you see is what you get. That is Dr. Drew. And you're very.
B
You're very kind. But. But I want to say something about that, which is that that was largely built on how much I loved the profession and how important we thought my generation thought this job was so important. Covid blew that all apart. Covid changed me a little bit because I watched my peers behave in ways that were just astonishing. And I'm seeing the system, particularly primary care type, with the most important kinds of caretaking just being eviscerated and decaying and falling apart. And the physicians don't seem to care. And they're all employed, and they're just doing what the employees tell them. I'm really worried about what's happened to this profession. I don't at all see the calling that we had, My peer age, my peer sort of cohort. We talked about how important the job was. We thought we were doing the most important job in the world. It's not that anymore. It just isn't. And then public health has completely run amok. Who knew that There's a wrinkle in our constitution that gives them fiat authority in an emergency that's got to be closed. That has to stop. Most of the public health officials are either not doctors or haven't practiced medicine or pediatricians and trying to make decisions about adult medicine. They are not in a position to do so. And here we have Francis Collins on the record saying, well, we made. We made no consideration of the harm we might do. Oh, my God. And indeed, public health has no mandate to do no harm. That's shocking to me.
A
Shock. I agree. And that's part of watching you through. I remember when Covid started, how you were, and as things went along, and I watched you. I say this every day. It's a superpower. When the information changes, when you get new information and it's not aligning, you have to change your position. And Dr. Drew did it in real time. I watched the whole thing. And again, it just makes me love and appreciate you even more because I watched you do it. You didn't, like, hold on to a position because you didn't want to be embarrassed. You're not that guy. So I'm gonna just make a strong pivot for a second, because I cannot believe how fast this hour is going. I have to play this clip. This was on. This was on Locals, and this was when you and Greg went to visit Scott. And it's just a little clip. Jay Plummons me. But let's just watch this together, and then we'll.
B
Erica, full, full disclosure. I can't hear the clips, so I won't. I remember going up there and stuff, so. But go ahead and play it.
A
Okay.
B
And you mentioned this morning that Trump could be blocking Clinton. I mean, protecting him. And I thought, oh, that makes perfect sense to me. And I, I had this feeling like, oh, I'd want to protect him, too. You know what I mean?
C
Really?
A
Would you?
B
I, I, I would want to. I would know if I would. I would want to.
C
I would feel if. If Clinton had not come after me.
B
Yeah, exactly. I would repay him. It wouldn't be just that, though. I, I thought. I, you know, it. Oh, boy. I'm gonna say something pretty controversial here, which is that if you, something like, if you, if you separate him from Hillary, you really see how awful Hillary is relative to him.
C
Oh, my God, yes.
B
You know, and because he was a great administrator, interesting dude, you know, sex addict, alcohol, whatever, good for him. You know what I mean? But he, but he really. But he, but he ran a great administration and he's a super bright guy and he wanted to do all the right things, and he's not going after Trump. And he's, you know, being a statesman, he's really a consummate statesman, and he just like to bang the chicks he did like as he likes. He likes the chicks. He likes chicks. They got. He got into it for the chicks. He's just like,
A
he is so nuts.
B
Oh, my God. Thank you for playing that. I'm. I'm surprised at how clearly I said that. And I agree with myself about, about Bill Clinton. And Greg and I, we speak all the time about our, Our, Our gratitude that we took the time and we found the time. We went up there and we did this thing. It was. I don't want to say it too strongly, but I. It was kind of life changing. I mean, it was such an important moment for the three of us, Greg and I, Our friendship tightened up. I felt like I reached out to Scott in a way that was meaningful to him by coming up there. And I get deeply, you know, grief. I grab. Grief grabs me when I see that clip. You know, Greg and I, our relationship formed around Scott. He used to do a one night a week show on Saturdays, and I started doing that a little bit and actually pulled the producer aside of that Saturday shows years ago. And I said, hey, this is a hit five nights a week. We got it. You got to roll it out. I'm telling you, it's gonna, it's gonna work. And about two years later, they did. And we were on that show. We was on a break, I think we used to do it live. And Scott goes, I, I had mentioned Persuasion or something, and I had found Scott's on various podcasts talking about it. And, And Greg goes, did you. You ever. You know he does a periscope Every day at 7 o'. Clock. Periscope, isn't that funny? Every day at 7 o'. Clock. You watched it? I go, no, I'm sort of like, what's a periscope? And I made sure I figured that out and went and Listened. I'm like, oh, my goodness, this is fantastic. And that's where I started with Scott. I can't even remember how I got to meet it. Galvanized, graphic Greg and my relationship. But I can't even remember how I met Scott. I think it was through Corolla. I think I met him at Corolla Studios because I, I, I made an issue of him with Adam and he goes, oh, he's coming in. I went, I gotta meet him. And then he. Have you heard my crazy story about our trip to Greece?
A
Yes, yes. You can tell it, though, that a lot of people may not have. Yeah.
B
So he, he's, here's Scott every morning and I would listen to the show. 7 o' clock is sort of when I'm showering. And so I would have the show always going in the shower. And I hear him talk about how he's going on the trip of a lifetime. And he sort of vaguely told, you know, the what time of year, like what time of the month, Vaguely gave some dates he didn't say specifically. And I thought, and I just had this deep thought where I just went, he's going. Where I'm going. We're going to the same place. It was like, I just was like. Then I was like, no, come on, style, you can't be. Let me. So I DM'd him or something. I go, hey, where are you going? And you go, santorini. Oh, really? We're going to Santorini. When? Exact same dates. Exact same date. On the same airplane. On the same airplane. So it was. So we spent several days together. We had several dinners and stuffing. He and Christina were there at the time and we had a great time and that's where our relationship really formed.
A
Oh, yeah, he told us all about that. He's like, you'll never believe this, you know, and we just, we're like, we were with Dr. Drew. That's so fun. So it's like it was just a way for you to get together to have that time, which, you know, is always so precious for everybody. Everybody. You know, your time is precious, you know, you just don't know it.
D
I think Scott's life was somehow designed to convince him that we're in a simulation.
B
Well, you know, and sometimes I would call him and I go, I'd go, I go, scott, you're doing something. I feel it. What are you doing? And he'd go, I'm always doing something. I'm not gonna tell you. And I go, well, you're up to something. I Can feel that. I can feel the tectonic plates moving. What are you doing? And, you know, inevitably, he would bring us somewhere with his persuasion, and I.
A
I would laugh and be like, you know, you're like running the universe from your garage or from your computer, you know, and like, he would be workshopping something, and then, you know, two days later, you're watching the news, you're like, oh, I would just, like, turn to my husband. Like, just FYI, Scott did that. And he'd be like, really? I'm like, yep, he did that two days ago. You know, it's crazy.
B
I think he .invented the term TDS. I mean, certainly the acronym. I first I heard Trump Rangers was from him for sure. Maybe he heard it somewhere.
D
I think he was also the one who came up with 3D chess. And people still use that either, you know, positive or making fun of it, but they. They still use that term, like 4D chess, 5D chess. All of came from Scott.
B
Yep.
A
Oh, I love that.
B
And, you know, he. Owen, he used to refer to you a lot for. Did. Would he call you? Would he. Sort of. Would you guys communicate regularly or.
D
Honestly? Mostly it was just online. I was sending him stories all the time. I mean, we did chat and, you know, from time to time. And I did go to visit him in person once before he passed, and he was, you know, on the way down, but not nearly at the end of that. So he was pretty healthy, relatively speaking, But a lot of it was just, you know, I. I started trying to get his attention online, and some of that was hit or miss based on the technology. And eventually I got him to give me his DM so I could send him stories that way. And that's mostly how we communicated.
B
You and Naval were people that he really relied on for. For insight.
A
For insight. Wow. Owen, you and Naval. When do you hear that?
B
Well, maybe he offer. He kind of bring you guys up in the same way, at least, if not at the same time.
D
I'm humbled to hear that.
A
Heck, yeah. That's beautiful. So, Dr. Drew. What, everybody? So what. What are the things that we have to do as a takeaway right now? Oh, and I do want to mention, just so people know, that Ken Paxton won yesterday in Texas. And so now who is it? Owen? It's that. But they have to get out tall.
D
Something like that.
A
Yeah. So that's the guy they want to get out now. So. So. And we have to focus on California, you guys. We have to make it better for Dr. Drew and for Marcella to be living there. So, Dr. Drew, whenever you want a message to get out, like, this is a. This is a group of your warriors. Also, we're all Scots to bridge, so let us know and we'll amplify. Okay, We'll. Okay, whatever you need.
B
Did we. Did we find it? Let me. I'll have to look it up because you guys didn't tell me who the controller we gotta get. I did.
D
I did have that. It's Malia Cohen on the Democratic side.
B
And.
D
Yeah, Herb. Herb.
B
I always want to say, bud. Herb. Herb is the guy. Herb. I've talked to him. I interviewed him. I met him. That's your man. That he. He will. He. The controller, turns out, can really do things. We just don't. We don't have government officials that govern. It's just an extraordinary time. We either have incompetent or unconcerned with government.
A
Yeah, it's insanity. What and what other things? I'm just trying to read the chat. I know you guys have questions for Dr. Drew. They're going by so fast,
B
I can't quite see it, or I would help you with that. It's across the room for me.
A
Okay. They want to know about the controller. Oh, what else, you guys? Sorry, they're going by fast for me. And Dr. Drew, what do you want to tell us about? Oh, I have a question. So your Ask Dr. Drew show, is that live?
B
Yeah, it's a live stream you can get. It's also up as a podcast and a YouTube channel, whatnot. But. And it's on Rumble. We do very well on Rumble, so, please. We love Rumble. Rumble was really. I was being canceled and Shadow banned everywhere for daring to talk to people that now run the NIH and the FDA and the hhs, for daring to quote platform these people. That's a word I never want to hear again. If you use the word host, eliminate the word platform. It's used as a pejorative and it means nothing. It. Platform. Like a dot. Two doctors discussing on a. On a live stream. Two doctors talking to each other about their opinions. That's platforming. Take a hike.
A
Somebody asked, is President Trump's health a concern?
B
He's. Look, he's old. He's. I. I pray to God I have the vitality and health that he has at his age. He.
A
I want it now.
B
Yeah, right. And. And the. The thing about men is the wheels start to come off the wagon in their 70s. It just happens. Stuff goes down. So stuff is going to happen to him as an older man. Is it going to impair him? Apparently not. I mean, he, he just performs at a level that's ridiculous. I wish I could not sleep like that. I, I remember his first, you know, I gave a talk at the White House about homelessness during the end of the first presidency. And I got to meet Azar, the HHS director, and he's a, you know, he's an accomplished guy, used to run Lilly, he's employer. And he said, you know, this guy is amazing. He goes, I call him at 4 in the morning for a decision and he will immediately give me that decision. And he doesn't care day or night, call him. If you need input or decision, call me now. And he said that's a kind of an extra superpower that he has as a, as an executive. Yeah, he will do anything, anytime, 24 7. And you kind of hear Rubio and Kennedy kind of talking about that and it inspires them and they perform better as a result.
A
Oh, I don't, I'm not going to relitigate Scott's health, but so, oh, so how are you feeling about, I hate talking about politics all the time, but moving forward, do you have a preference over Rubio or. Vance is kind of like the boxers briefs conversation.
B
I, I don't, I don't, I think Vance an extraordinary guy with an extraordinary story, but I'm so impressed by Rubio. I am so impressed by him. So, I don't know, we'll see. I don't, I'm not forming opinions yet. I'm just, I'm a, I'm really a Rubio enthusiast. I'm a fan of JD Vance, I'm an enthusiast for Rubio. Do you think his translates, do you
D
think his transformation is genuine in the sense that he used to be kind of perceived as sort of this deep state guy, and then under Trump, under this term, he seems like a completely different person.
B
You know, my wife has been a fan of his forever, as has her best friends who are Cuban. So I've been hearing a lot about him for a long time. I don't know what to make of that. I think he's just a good executive and he was a senator and dealing with the system handed to him. Look, if 10 years ago you were a senator, you'd have to be a part of the swamp. What are you going to do? You'd have to operate within it. I, I, I don't know. It's a good question and we'll see. I, I don't, I'm not making forming opinions yet. About, about any of that. But. But you did say something about Scott's health. I want to talk. At least remind Everybody. Get your PSAs, man. After 50 and after 40, you have. If you have a first year relative with prostate cancer. I have prostate cancer. I had a prostatectomy 14 year, 13 years ago. Something like that. It's a manageable illness when you get it early.
A
That's true.
B
That is an example of it getting away.
A
Don't be afraid. It's a simple test, right?
B
There's no digital rectal exam anymore. It's just a blood test. And black men, more than anybody, tend to present with more advanced and more aggressive disease. So it's really important. We do a horrible job with African American men. So it's really important to you guys and to the rest. It's equally important to not have to suffer with the illness because it's so manageable early. I, I'm the example of that.
A
That's great advice. One last question from Mike Burt. He wanted to know if you still give Susan daily foot rubs.
B
Give daily what?
A
Foot rubs.
B
I do. Yeah, I would. I. If your wife is into it, I recommend you provide such. It's simple. You lie there when you're watching TV and do the foot rub. It doesn't hurt anything. It's, it's. It's no sweat for me. Amazing shoulder rubs. It's easy. Just let, Just take the foot rub it. Big deal.
A
That was a great question, Mike. Bert. Yeah. And listen, everybody loves a good foot rub. Dr. Drew, don't avoid us because rumble's a pain in the neck, okay?
B
Okay. Yeah, no, I won't. It's really the time of day for me, and I, I've got so much going on right now. I can't believe we're so fortunate. I'm so grateful for everything in my life. A gratitude is an important emotion. It lets, it lets you know you're on the right track. And I, I have just gratitude up and down. And I've had this extraordinary. I, I just thought I'd be seeing patients in an office, in a hospital setting my whole life. And I had this extraordinary adventure. Never planned it. Never, never. It just happened. And I just would. It's all been a big improvisation where somebody goes, hey, we're gonna do a TV show. I'm like, how do you do that? Let's all walk in that room and see what that's all about and try to use media to do something good. And it's been a great privilege. And this is with being with you guys today is part of that privilege. So we're honored.
A
You know, you're part of this family for sure, as you know. So we. We hate having to give up this hour now. But, you guys, let's always be thankful to Scott and Shelley for allowing the show to continue. Did you want.
B
And thank you for bringing. And thank you for bringing Gad sat in here last week. That was one of the best Gad Sad appearances ever. And he's a. He's a friend.
C
He.
B
We meet in Laguna when we can. He's. He's an extraordinary guy, and he really was on full display. So listen to that pod if you haven't seen it yet.
A
Oh, we enjoyed him. Thank you so much for saying that. Yeah, we had a great time with him. So, again, thank you to Scott and Shelley for allowing this show to continue. And as always, you guys, we do a closing sip to our beloved Scott, who we miss so, so, so much. And I know he's beaming. Seeing you here with us today, Dr. Drew, it means a lot to all of us. So a closing sip, you guys. Be useful. To Scott.
D
To Scott.
A
Bye, guys. Thanks, Dr. Drew.
B
My privilege, you guys.
D
Bye.
A
Thanks, Owen.
D
All right, you too.
A
Bye. Let's see if we can turn off Rumble. I have to hang up my phone calls. Oh, my God, that's so funny. Okay, you guys, that was so fun. Okay, let's hang on for one second, And let's see if we can go private with the locals. You guys, give me one sec. Hi, Stella. How does Stella know. Okay, let's see. Hi, guys. Do we love Dr. Drew? So good. I know. Yay. I literally, you know, Owen said, what's the agenda? I'm like, let's just riff with the doctor. What? Whatever happens, happens. And he's so sweet. I love him. And Marcela will be back tomorrow, you guys, so we want to wish her luck. She's in court. Not in court. You know, she's doing her job. She's an attorney. I love that he loved the Gad Sad interview. We almost did a thing where I was gonna sneak Dr. Drew in after we started the interview because he doesn't really get to see Gad or talk to him too much. So. But then it was like, no, let's. Let's have the hour with Dr. Gad said so we could just chat it out with him, which is good. Oh, Halsey, I love that. I love your wife. She is the cutest. Like, I would totally be hanging with you guys if I live near you. And we'd be on that amazing boat. Let me see. Oh, I can. Oh, Dr. Drew's calling. Guys, I'm gonna run. Okay? When the doctor calls. All right. Love you guys. Bye. Hi.
Episode Date: May 27, 2026
Guest Professor: Dr. Drew Pinsky
Summary Compiled By: [Your Name]
This lively episode of The Scott Adams School welcomes Dr. Drew Pinsky as guest professor for a wide-ranging and deeply engaging discussion. Dr. Drew, joined by regulars Owen and Erica, explores the latest science on coffee, the neurobiology of dopamine, addiction, public policy failures, mass psychosis in politics, the history of mental health treatment in the U.S., and the disintegration of medical standards post-COVID. The episode is a powerful blend of medical insight, political skepticism, personal storytelling, and a heartfelt tribute to Scott Adams.
[00:00–04:15]
Coffee Science Upward Trend:
Erica highlights new studies showing increased health benefits for coffee drinkers, leading to a “simultaneous sip.”
Dr. Drew Clarifies Dopamine:
Dr. Drew breaks down the dual "liking" (endorphin) and "wanting" (dopaminergic) systems in the brain, tying them to motivation and addiction.
"The dopaminergic system is the wanting system. And what addiction is is a usurpation of the wanting system. So that even when you don't like the thing you're wanting, you keep wanting it." – Dr. Drew [03:00]
He emphasizes motivation’s central role in human behavior, criticizing left-leaning politics for ignoring these basic drivers of action.
[05:05–07:50]
Dr. Drew and Owen discuss various coffee add-ins (theanine, creatine, cinnamon), approving their benefits. Dr. Drew cautions against artificial creamers loaded with sugar but doesn’t insist on black coffee.
Creatine is cited as beneficial for both muscle and brain health, though dosages for brain effects are debated.
[08:21–10:22]
Dr. Drew explains that while nicotine is addictive, it's not inherently dangerous; the harm comes from tobacco combustion:
He urges ex-smokers to inform their doctor for proper screening, even years later.
[11:01–15:22]
Dr. Drew uses his own legal experiences to advocate for reforms in California, urging listeners to vote for Michael Gates (Attorney General candidate) and Herb (Controller candidate).
The manipulation of the “racist” label to deflect attention from actual corruption is sharply criticized.
[15:25–21:19]
Discussion of Trump Derangement Syndrome (TDS)—expanded to general political polarization.
Mass psychosis and narcissism are cited as drivers of mob scapegoating (drawing from Christopher Lasch and René Girard).
Media perpetuates TDS by constant reinforcement, making it nearly impossible to break, especially among “true believers” (Desmet model: 20% true believers, 10% dissenters, 70% persuadable).
[21:19–38:08]
Dr. Drew’s powerful critique of LA’s homelessness policy: “We lose six people a day in the streets here, and it increases every year. And these are people that could be treated, could be saved. It's negligent manslaughter.” [21:19–24:45]
Social work is insufficient for chronic psychiatric patients needing multidisciplinary medical care.
Historical overview of psychiatric hospitals:
Advocates for return and modernization of psychiatric hospitals, not “One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest” as the public imagines, but safe and comfortable medical facilities.
Calls for expanded legal definitions (“gravely disabled”) to permit longer treatment commitment for those incapable of self-care.
Critique of legalized drugs, decriminalized theft up to set limits, and general legislative dysfunction in California.
[38:08–44:48]
Dr. Drew reflects on being true to his calling despite systemic medical decay following COVID.
He is alarmed by public health bureaucracy wielding emergency powers with no constitutional oversight or physician input.
Advocates for intellectual flexibility: “It's a superpower. When the information changes, when you get new information...you have to change your position. And Dr. Drew did it in real time.” – Erica [40:20]
[41:14–47:17]
Shared heartfelt memories and stories about Scott Adams, including serendipitous travel and podcast experiences.
Scott’s role in popularizing terms like "TDS" and "3D/4D/5D Chess" is acknowledged.
Owen notes his relationship with Scott developed mostly through online exchanges, sending stories and participating in Scott’s digital community.
[49:06–54:34]
[54:02–55:21]
Dr. Drew advises annual PSA tests for prostate cancer screening, especially for men over 50 or with a family history.
Lighthearted answer: Yes, he still gives his wife Susan daily foot rubs, recommending the simple ritual for relationship health.
[55:21–56:38]
Dr. Drew offers gratitude for his unplanned media journey, calling his career a “big improvisation” and stressing the importance of gratitude as an indicator of being “on the right track.”
Thanks Scott and those keeping the show alive, with Erica leading a closing simultaneous sip in his honor.
On addiction:
"The dopamine system is the part of the brain says do that again and you don't feel anything else except a motivational state." – Dr. Drew [03:00]
On mass psychosis:
"Little did I know that the whole half the world would become effectively flat earthers in regards to many things." – Dr. Drew [17:02]
On homelessness policy:
"It's negligent manslaughter...and Karen Bass's solution was, we need social workers and we need to give the meth addicts teeth. Social workers, they are not...trained to do this. It's like asking a physical therapist to do surgery." – Dr. Drew [21:19–22:01]
On psychiatric hospitals:
"Let’s call them what they are, psychiatric hospitals. They are not One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest." – Dr. Drew [37:11]
On gratitude & improvisation:
"A gratitude is an important emotion. It lets you know you're on the right track...It's all been a big improvisation." – Dr. Drew [55:21]
The episode is warm, witty, and intellectually stimulating—anchored by Dr. Drew’s blend of clinical authority and humility. The hosts weave personal anecdotes, political satire, and medical education with open skepticism about authorities and policies. The show is also a loving tribute to Scott Adams, whose legacy as a boundary-pusher in persuasion, terminology, and independent analysis is honored throughout.
This installment is a masterclass in connecting neuroscience, health, public policy, and the art of persuasion—highlighted by Dr. Drew’s candor and the signature Scott Adams School blend of skepticism, self-examination, and community spirit.