Now, he says online videos of his squirting have collectively garnered over a million views, and more men are joining him in the pursuit. When he finally did, he says he received a number of “positive responses” that fueled him to publish more clips. He shot a video of the act, but waited until 2016 before posting any such content online. Those rounds of practice prior to perfection lasted a couple months, the pleasure a more psychological one than physical, since it’s not an orgasm. The researchers were able to watch what happened inside the guy’s body while he performed his magic. In a 2018 study out of the Kawasaki Medical School in Japan, doctors inserted an ultrasound probe into the rectum of a 25-year-old male volunteer subject who claimed he had the ability to penis squirt. Some guys execute the squirt after they jizz, and we’re seeing footage online of women performing the act on male scene partners as well, taking their own palms and running them around the cockhead tips. Just when you think they might cum, a lighter, clearer liquid squirts out instead. The way squirting works for guys is this: As they pump their johnson, à la masturbation, they switch gears and rub the palm of their hand in a circular motion around the very tip of their head. With online tutorials explaining how guys can execute the trick popping up, there’s also been a rise in video clips of dudes showing off their newfound skill. (Though, the actual composition of female squirt is hotly debated. Similarly to what female urethras are thought to shoot, the liquid that launches out of penises when men squirt is more or less urine. In fact, it’s recently been confirmed by science that, like women, men can squirt as well, their dick heads making it rain with a fluid that appears to be entirely separate from cum. But apparently, guys (and other people with penises) couldn’t allow them to retain such an advantage. For pretty much since the beginning of time, it appeared that only people with vaginas had the ability to squirt.