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Home » Transcript: How to Survive a World of OnlyFans and AI Girlfriends: Chris Williamson on Tucker Carlson Show

Transcript: How to Survive a World of OnlyFans and AI Girlfriends: Chris Williamson on Tucker Carlson Show

Read the full transcript of Modern Wisdom Podcast host Chris Williamson’s interview on The Tucker Carlson Show episode titled “Advice to Men: How to Survive a World of OnlyFans and AI Girlfriends”, Premiered November 3, 2025.

The Questions Young Men Are Asking

TUCKER CARLSON: So you’re in the middle of a nationwide tour, speaking live before big audiences, and there’s a Q and A component in every gig, every performance. And you’re getting questions directly from young men. What kind of questions are you getting consistently?

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: A lot of them around directionlessness. I’m out of full time education, I’m in my early 20s, or I’ve just left a relationship, or I’ve worked for a while and got myself to a state of success that felt unfulfilling to me and I don’t know where to go. And I think that this speaks to the lost archetypes, the train tracks and the examples that would have previously been laid out for young men. And directionlessness is a huge one.

Trying to find a balance between drive to improve and gratitude and self love for the moment. The sort of “you are enough” versus hustle bro blend. Guys want to be able to go and conquer. They want to really achieve things in the world. But also they realize if they’re permanently looking over the shoulder of the present moment, waiting to see what comes next, they might miss their lives.

You know, there’s this idea called the delayed happiness hypothesis, which is basically that as people move through life, they always promise that happiness will arrive when. Once I have got the graduation, once I have got the next job, once I have got the girlfriend, once I have got the house, once I’ve paid off the mortgage. And what you realize is that this idyll that you are running towards is actually your death and you’ve just speed ran your entire life.

I think that they’re becoming increasingly more aware of that, which is good. It’s a balance between wanting to be more and being enough already. And it’s the tension that exists inside the mind of everyone. But I think men especially, and those are two big challenges. I’m stuck in terms of direction, I don’t know where to go. And I’m trying to balance high standards with self love.

The End of the Train Tracks

TUCKER CARLSON: I don’t know where to go. So they’ve completed the task set before them. They made it through in the US 16 years of school and they get all their little merit badges or whatever, they’re graded along the way and everyone’s so proud. And then they graduate and they kind of have no idea what to do.

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: I felt this. I did two degrees, a bachelor’s and a master’s at university with a year in industry as well. So I was at uni for five full years. I was in full time education for 18 years. And it’s kind of like being in a set of train tracks for a long time. And yeah, you’re sort of a passenger and you get to move up and down the carriage and contribute a little bit, but the destination that you’re going toward has been prescribed for you.

And then it’s kind of like being thrown off the train into a car with no roads, just saying, “hey, good luck, try and find your way.” And I think that the challenge is a lot of the rules and the advice that would have worked for grandfathers and maybe even fathers of these guys. The archetypes and the roles that they would have previously stepped into aren’t there in quite the same way.

There’s been a lot of structural changes that have adjusted the landscape that men and boys exist in over the last 50 years. And that means that a lot of the role models and examples and well-trodden paths don’t feel like they’re there in the same kind of way. So navigating those structural changes as a young man is not easy.

TUCKER CARLSON: So what did you take your degrees in? What did you study?

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: Bachelor’s in business and a master’s in international marketing. I can’t remember either of them.

TUCKER CARLSON: And then did you go into international business when you left school?

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: Not even remotely.

TUCKER CARLSON: What did you do?

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: I sat down in my first ever seminar the week after Freshers week, in the first week of university, sat next to a guy and I said, “I’ve spent all of my money partying in my first week of university. I’m skint, I’ve run out of cash, I need a job.” And he’s like, “well, I’m going to go and hand out flyers for a nightclub. Maybe you could come and see if you can get a job doing the same thing.”

That guy that I sat next to in my first seminar for quantitative methods, 15 years later was still my business partner. I was groomsman at his wedding. We did a million lifetime entries throughout nightclubs together. So that one thing, that chance meeting that we had, I started running an events company and then got to the end of my 20s and had a change, an existential change that meant that I started doing my podcast, Modern Wisdom.

The Value of University Education

TUCKER CARLSON: Before that change happened, did you ever pause and think, hmm, I got a master’s degree in international business, but in real life, I’m a nightclub promoter and I’m succeeding. You succeeded in the business, correct?

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: Yep.

TUCKER CARLSON: So the disconnect between your training and your work couldn’t be more profound.

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: To fly the flag for the nightclub promoters out there, it’s a wonderful training ground for people to go into business and be successful in business because you get a very broad perspective of how a business needs to operate. HR Management, B2B, B2C, Customer Complaints, Marketing.

TUCKER CARLSON: Oh, for sure.

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: That being said, I had a lot of fun.