← All stories
Health, Longevity & Biohacking

Stanford Doctor Says All Men Over 40 Should Take Daily Cialis

Modern Wisdom · Mostly Wise: Matt McCusker, Andrew Huberman & Tom Segura - #1102 · May 25, 2026
Stanford Doctor Says All Men Over 40 Should Take Daily Cialis
Modern Wisdom
Modern Wisdom
Mostly Wise: Matt McCusker, Andrew Huberman & Tom Segura - #1102
"Our chair of male sexual health and urology at Stanford, Mike Eisenberg, he came on the podcast and he said pretty much every male over 40 or so should be taking about 2.5 to 5 milligrams per day."
Andrew Huberman reveals that Stanford's urology chair recommends low-dose daily tadalafil (Cialis) for men over 40 for prostate health and brain vasodilation benefits, not just erectile function. The drug improves blood perfusion to the prostate and causes beneficial vasodilation in the brain, potentially protecting against strokes. This medical recommendation challenges the stigma around ED medications and reframes them as preventive health tools.

About this episode

On this episode of Modern Wisdom, host Chris Williamson was joined by neuroscientist Andrew Huberman and comedians Tom Segura and Matt Rife for a wide-ranging 3-hour conversation blending health science, comedy, Hollywood insights, and cultural commentary. The most medically significant revelation came from Huberman, who disclosed that Stanford's chair of urology recommends all men over 40 take low-dose daily Cialis for prostate and cardiovascular health, not just erectile function. The discussion took a vulnerable turn when Segura openly discussed overcoming pornography addiction, explaining how it affected his marriage and why he finally quit after recognizing the exploitation inherent in the industry. Williamson revealed he discovered AI voice company ElevenLabs appears to have cloned his voice without permission for their default British setting, now being used in unauthorized advertisements, with Huberman recommending aggressive legal action. Entertainment industry insights included Segura's analysis of Johnny Depp's forthcoming Pirates return, projecting nine-figure earnings with first-dollar gross participation. The conversation ranged through parenting challenges, conspiracy theories around Epstein's death and the Trump assassination attempt, the marshmallow test's actual methodology, sunscreen science, sleep optimization protocols including the peptide pinealon, and the neuroscience of comedy and performance. Huberman explained post-performance arousal through catecholamine cascades and why performers struggle with sleep after shows. The group discussed retard-maxing, Marc Andreessen's anti-introspection stance, OnlyFans AI clones, and why serial killers have largely disappeared due to ubiquitous surveillance. The episode balanced serious health protocols with raw comedian banter, creating an unusual but compelling mix of Stanford neuroscience and green room honesty.

Key takeaways

More stories More from Modern Wisdom