Nikki Glaser: Foreplay, Fetishes, & Face Lifts

Summary of Nikki Glaser: Foreplay, Fetishes, & Face Lifts

by Alex Cooper

1h 18mApril 8, 2026

Overview of Call Her Daddy

This episode of Call Her Daddy (host Alex Cooper) features comedian Nikki Glaser. They cover Nikki’s career surge after the Tom Brady roast and Golden Globes hosting, her new special Good Girl, and wide-ranging, frank conversations about sex, comedy, beauty/aging (including facelifts and injectables), relationship dynamics (including an “open” or “hot-husband” fetish), and industry double standards women face in comedy.

Key topics discussed

  • Nikki’s career path: St. Louis roots, moves between LA/NY, rise after the Tom Brady roast, Golden Globes hosting, new stand-up special Good Girl.
  • Origins of her material: why she focused on sex early in her career and how that changed over time.
  • Sex, masturbation, foreplay and toys: personal experiences, how talking about sex built confidence, orgasm challenges, use of vibrators, views on anal and kink.
  • Drinking, hooking up, and sexual confidence: alcohol’s role early on and changes after she quit drinking.
  • Relationships and boundaries: long-term on/off relationship with Chris, rules around breaks, “hot husband” fetish/open-relationship dynamics, emotional vs. physical cheating.
  • Beauty and aging: Botox, filler, facelifts—benefits, recovery, stigma, and the double standard around women’s appearance.
  • Comedy industry sexism: accusations that women rely on writers, differing standards for men vs. women, imposter syndrome.
  • Culture and outrage: comment culture, celebrity obsession vs. larger issues (e.g., Epstein files critique).
  • Girls’ group dynamics: Nikki’s close friends (“Angels” group chat), candid support, and private humor/advice.

Main takeaways

  • Nikki’s frankness about sex is both a career brand and a personal tool: talking openly made her more comfortable sexually and comedic material more authentic.
  • Foreplay, communication, and toys are central to many women’s sexual satisfaction; she encourages using toys and clear communication about needs.
  • Plastic surgery/facelifts are increasingly normalized but carry significant recovery and risk; choose experienced surgeons and understand recovery realities.
  • Women in comedy face a persistent double standard (e.g., being discredited for using writers) that affects reputation and self-doubt.
  • Nikki practices a nontraditional relationship setup: she’s comfortable with her partner having sexual experiences with others so long as emotional boundaries are respected—she defines emotional cheating as more damaging than physical for her.
  • Online comment culture and celebrity gossip often prioritize trivial outrage over systemic abuses; Nikki urges redirecting energy to more meaningful issues.

Notable quotes & lines

  • “I just want to be a whore.” (on sexual expression)
  • “Feeling light, tight, easy-breezy, beautiful vagina.” (self-deprecating/sex-positive humor)
  • “The cobwebs have formed and my pussy feels like it's sewn shut.” (on sexlessness between partners)
  • “If a guy freaks out [about you getting Botox], that’s a red flag.” (on partners’ reactions to cosmetic work)
  • “You have to settle—there could be someone better for you.” (on commitment and soulmates)
  • “I don’t believe in soulmates.” (on long-term relationships and realistic expectations)
  • “It’s tiring that when women have writers people use that to discredit them.” (on industry sexism)

Practical advice & action items

  • Sexual satisfaction: prioritize foreplay, communicate specific needs, and consider incorporating toys—together they can meaningfully improve sex.
  • If you’re considering cosmetic procedures: research thoroughly, pick highly experienced surgeons, and factor in recovery time and risks (facelifts require significant downtime).
  • Relationship clarity: set clear emotional and physical boundaries; decide what constitutes emotional vs. physical betrayal for you.
  • For women in entertainment: be aware of unequal standards (e.g., scrutiny over writers) and proactively own your creative contributions.
  • Media consumption: be critical of comment-driven narratives; seek reliable sources for major issues rather than social-media hot takes.

Episode & special notes

  • Nikki’s new special Good Girl is tied to themes of sexual expression and shame; its title references a porn trope (“good girl”) and explores forced-orgasm content as part of her comic territory and sexual candidness.
  • The interview mixes humor with candid personal disclosures (masturbation history, squirting, anal, relationship arrangements).
  • Alex and Nikki also criticize comment culture and celebrity spectacle, urging attention be paid to more serious abuses and systemic problems.
  • The episode includes multiple sponsor reads interwoven with the conversation (standard podcast ad breaks).

If you want a quick shareable summary: this episode is a blunt, funny, and vulnerable conversation about sex, fame, beauty choices, and the complications women face in comedy and relationships—useful for listeners interested in candid takes on sexuality, modern dating/relationship boundaries, and industry sexism.