James Altucher interviews the world's leading peak performers in every area of life. But instead of giving you the typical success story, James digs deeper to find the "Choose Yourself" story - these are the moments we relate to... when someone rises up from personal struggle to reinvent themselves. The James Altucher Show brings you into the lives of peak-performers: billionaires, best-selling authors, rappers, astronauts, athletes, comedians, actors, and the world champions in every field, all who forged their own paths, found financial freedom and harnessed the power to create more meaningful and fulfilling lives.
A Note from James:
In the first episode with Dr. Nicole McNichols, we talked about chemistry, myths, and why communication matters more than performance. This episode goes deeper—into biology, anatomy, dopamine, desire, and the mechanics of pleasure.
There are a lot of myths around sex. Some are cultural. Some are Hollywood. Some come from bad science. And some just come from silence.
This conversation gets specific. We talk about orgasm, desire, scheduling sex, the so-called “missionary problem,” novelty in long-term relationships, and why so much of what we assume about men and women sexually just isn’t true.
If Part 1 was about mindset, Part 2 is about understanding how sex actually works.
Episode Description:
What actually happens in the body during orgasm? Why does anticipation sometimes feel better than the act itself? And why are so many of our beliefs about sex simply wrong?
In Part 2 of this three-part series, Dr. Nicole McNichols breaks down the biology of desire, the science of orgasm, and the myths that quietly sabotage long-term relationships.
She explains why dopamine peaks during anticipation, why consistency—not intensity—is often key to orgasm, and why “missionary” might be underrated. They explore the anatomy of the clitoris (including research only fully mapped in 2006), the orgasm gap, responsive vs. spontaneous desire, and why scheduling intimacy can actually increase desire.
This episode reframes sex not as performance, but as collaboration—an evolving, communicative process rooted in curiosity and growth.
What You’ll Learn:
- Why dopamine spikes during anticipation—and how to avoid the post-expectation letdown
- The difference between spontaneous and responsive desire (for both men and women)
- Why consistency is physiologically critical during orgasm
- The science behind the orgasm gap and what actually closes it
- Why scheduling intimacy can increase frequency and desire—not kill spontaneity
Timestamped Chapters:
- [00:02:00] No One Craves Bad Sex & The Myth of “Boring” Positions
- [00:03:18] Previously on Part 1: Porn Myths & Feeling Wanted
- [00:04:00] Chemistry, Pheromones & The Role of Safety
- [00:06:00] Sexual Growth Mindset & Compatibility
- [00:08:00] Fireworks vs. Communication
- [00:10:00] Anatomy, Diversity of Touch & The Clitoris Explained
- [00:12:00] Scripts, Feedback & How to Talk During Sex
- [00:17:00] Novelty, Micro-Novelty & Preventing Boredom
- [00:19:00] Wanting, Liking & Learning: The Pleasure Cycle
- [00:23:00] Expanding the Definition of Sex
- [00:25:00] The “Sex Recession” & Frequency Myths
- [00:27:00] Planning Intimacy & Scheduling Sex
- [00:31:00] Why Missionary Deserves a Rebrand
- [00:34:00] Internal Anatomy, the Clitoral Complex & Size Myths
- [00:39:00] What Is an Orgasm, Physiologically?
- [00:45:00] The Orgasm Gap & Why Fingering Matters
- [00:47:00] Consistency vs. “Faster & Harder”
- [00:49:00] Masturbation Myths & No Nut November
- [00:51:00] Refractory Period & Aging
- [00:55:00] Multiple Orgasms & What Research Shows
- [01:00:00] Love, Orientation & Novelty in Long-Term Relationships
Additional Resources:
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