
Photo: Phil Whitehouse from London, United Kingdom / CC BY 2.0 (source: Wikimedia Commons)
My Take
Scott Galloway is one of the few public intellectuals I genuinely look forward to disagreeing with. His background — a UCLA kid who built and lost companies before settling into NYU Stern — gives his commentary a scar tissue that most academics lack. I appreciate that he names things plainly: big tech's monopoly instincts, the crisis facing young men, the absurd economics of higher education. He can be theatrical, occasionally wrong, and always quotable, but underneath the bravado is a moralist who actually wants institutions to work. In an era of hedge-everything punditry, his willingness to make falsifiable claims is rare and valuable.
Overview
Scott Galloway (born November 3, 1964) is an American academic, author, podcast host, multimillionaire, and entrepreneur. He is a clinical professor of marketing at the New York University Stern School of Business.
Summary adapted from Wikipedia, licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0.
1. Profile
- Name (English)
- Scott Galloway
- Name (Japanese)
- スコット・ギャロウェイ
- Reading
- すこっと・ぎゃろうぇい
- Born
- November 3, 1964 (age 61)
- Zodiac / Chinese zodiac
- Scorpio / Dragon
- Blood type
- Private
- Height
- Private
- Agency
- Private
- Occupation
- professor / orator / entrepreneur / university teacher / economist
2. Background
- Elementary school
- Private
- Junior high
- Private
- High school
- Private
- University
- University of California, Los Angeles
3. Relationships
- Spouse
- Private
- Children
- Private
- Parents
- Private
- Siblings
- Private
4. Personality
Motto
Private
6. Links
- Official sitehttps://www.profgalloway.com/
- Instagramhttps://www.instagram.com/profgalloway/
- Xhttps://x.com/profgalloway
- Wikipedia (Japanese)https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scott%20Galloway%20(professor)
7. About this entry
Tags
- Last updated
- 2026-06-11
Facts are limited to publicly available information up to 2024; non-public items are marked "Private / Unknown". English text is machine-assisted (facts translated by Sonnet, "My Take" written by Opus 4.8). The Japanese page is the source of record.