A Hot Dog Is a Sandwich - How Much Protein is Too Much Protein? ft. Dr. Mike Israetel
Episode Date: March 19, 2025Today, Josh and Nicole are joined by Dr. Mike Israetel to answer the question, how much protein should you be eating every day? To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: htt...ps://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This, this, this, this is mythical.
I just had a huge protein shake, an entire rotisserie chicken,
and I mixed Greek yogurt with cayenne tuna.
Nicole, that's still not enough protein.
Says who?
Says me.
This is a Hot Dog is a Sandwich.
Ketchup is a smoothie.
Yeah, I put ice in my cereal, so what?
That makes no sense.
A hot dog is a sandwich.
A hot dog is a sandwich.
Welcome to our podcast, A Hot Dog is a Sandwich, the show we break down the world's biggest food debates.
I'm your host, Josh Scherer.
And I'm your host, Nicole Inayati.
And today we have a very special guest.
He's a nutrition expert with a PhD in sports physiology and he co-founded the diet coach
and hypertrophy app, Renaissance Periodization.
He's easily the tallest, richest and handsomest Dr. Mike on YouTube.
Dr. Mike Ezertel, welcome to the show.
That was a very rough intro, I feel,
in a very diminutive position,
and I tend to react negatively to such things.
Kind of like if you poke a miniature dachshund
gently with a stick, you're getting the teeth.
My favorite dog!
My favorite dog is the long-haired miniature dachshunds but they can be mean that's okay I don't mind Mike you
can do your own intro entirely how would you like to be introduced oh my god I
was totally kidding them the fact that there are two very fit very successful
very smart Russian Jewish dr. Mike's on YouTube I know I love it is pretty
incredible we love that for representation We sure do I'm not
What you're not Russian
Savsky all Jews are Russian then the pogroms put them out all that's not what we're here to talk about
Meg is the only other Russian to hear
Yeah, Russian, you crazy know that yeah
What we are talking about Mike today the podcast, the podcast is called How Much Protein is Too Much Protein,
but I wanna tell you how we're getting into that
because we were talking about all the silly diet trends
that say 20, 30 years ago,
looking back at all the zero fat raspberry vinaigrettes
that are on shelves or the snack well devil's food cakes
that we grow up eating.
Story of our lives as children.
In the name of the low fat diet trends of the 90s
and every era that humans have existed in
was the smartest era of that time, roughly speaking.
So we were thinking about, what are the dietary trends today
that we're going to look back on in 20, 30 years and cringe at?
And the only thing we could really think of
was the incredible proteinification of the entire grocery store.
But what do you think about that?
I think I can't say much because I don't want to call it a conspiracy,
but if I speak out of turn, big protein will squash me under their chicken
and Greek yogurt scented globalist thumb.
They'll find you.
And I just want to say very nice kind things about big protein scented globalist thumb. They'll find you.
And I just wanna say very nice kind things
about big proteins so that they don't disappear me
in the middle of the night.
That's how bad this trend has gotten.
They are fully in control.
You guys have no doubt heard the political assertion
that there is a deep state underneath the actual democracy
that we have.
There is a deep protein state as well.
And it's 10 times bigger than the deep state itself. Think about that.
What are we really up against?
Well, I'm curious.
Is there actual truth to what you're saying?
Or are you...
No, absolutely not.
Well, no, no, no.
Because I think...
He's a little stinker. I like him.
I think they're...
Not to give validation,
because this is how this happens with conspiracy theories.
But to me, if we are talking about...
I heard you and Dr. Mike Varshawsky talking about
the GLP-1 agonists and how that's going to affect
the food industry, and you talked about how
they're gonna see new opportunity in creating these
very hyper-palatable but macro-friendly,
which is to say, high protein foods,
and we're seeing so many of those.
Every magic spoon cereal I'm a big fan of,
the macros are incredible on it for a bowl of cereal,
and it tastes pretty good.
Now every cereal company has come out
with a macro-friendly competitor to that.
Like a proxy of that kind of cereal.
Kellogg's, Post, they're all doing this,
and it's all just soy protein isolate.
And the markup on it is incredible.
So the way that they can combat falling consumption of food
is to mark things up with excessive protein content
So I think there kind of is a protein deep state out there
There is
It is a very good point. The good news is that there is zero conspiracy and there is 100%
Reflexive adjustment to market demand
There's 100% reflexive adjustment to market demand. Companies are profit-driven enterprises, and they generally, especially over the long term,
and especially as an aggregate, as a whole industry, will respond very sensitively to
their demands of their consumers.
For example, if tomorrow everyone who went to McDonald's was a health nut and they just
demanded healthy food.
This is a joke, but the day after, used as an analogy,
as soon as possible, McDonald's would re-architect
their entire supply chain to bring you healthy food.
There's nobody at McDonald's staff,
anyone on their board, anyone in their company,
that when they discover that McDonald's wants to serve
healthy food, they're like, you know what? that just absolutely degrades the tradition of our company selling
junk food that's how I brought up that's my America and I'm gonna I'm gonna go down fighting
they don't care they care that the customer is happy and the customer receives what they want
and so when human beings in the world essentially with their dollars and their opinions tell all
sorts of companies hey protein is important to me. I want more protein.
Most companies don't even really do the work of seeing, you know, is this like optimal nutritionally or whatever?
The downside is like they don't do that work because they're not so incentivized to do that work.
The upside is companies in a large capitalist society like ours just generally really trust their
consumers and they're not going to assume they know better than their consumers. If
you tell me you want a red Ferrari, I say yes. If all of a sudden a poop brown Ferrari
is in vogue, Ferrari is going to make their cars poop brown because that's what people
want. And so the protein over consumption situation, which isn't really a big deal, and I can speak
to that at length and I'm sure I will in a sec, but it's like why is there protein in
foods?
It is not top down at all.
It is entirely bottom up.
People want more protein and I'm sure we'll cover this, but sometimes they don't know
why, but it's one of those flexes.
It's kind of like organic or GMO free. Those terms are loaded,
unfortunately, in other ways, but they communicate something to the consumer.
They communicate, I want to be a healthy person and I care. And now, recently, high protein has
also stood up to that pedestal and said, hey, if I'm a consumer and I care for my health, you know,
I had a late night at work. I'm just trying to buy some breakfast cereal for tomorrow.
I get in, I'm red-eyed, I'm looking around the shelves,
and it's, ooh, new high protein cereal.
I'm like, you know what?
I looked in the mirror earlier today,
I do care about me.
I care about longevity and health and whatever else.
And you know, high protein seems like it checks that box.
And enough people doing that,
a lot of the cereals are high protein.
And that's how it happens with protein products. Yeah, it's interesting even seeing the way that it shifted
Cuz I remember something like Kodiak cakes. Maybe those were so hot what seven years ago?
Yeah, I remember them on target and you look at the macros and there's maybe an additional five grams of protein per serving which is a
Reasonable amount of protein to add to a food, but then especially in the morning. But then now, that actual macro breakdown isn't competitive.
It's been escalating like crazy because I think people are so obsessed with this intake
of protein.
Mike, what would you recommend for people, say general population, people who aren't
interested in hypertrophy as far as like protein consumption per day?
What should they be eating?
Great question, Josh.
Because I want to know too.
Because we both have the same protein goals despite living wildly different lifestyles.
Nicole I'm gonna give you the worst answer ever. It's gonna be all nuance and fluff and zero anything you can pin to.
It's just gonna, you're gonna hear 20 minutes of me rambling and you're like, I don't know what that means.
I'm gonna use a combination of metric and imperial units in the conversion. It's going to be terrible.
Fantastic.
Yes. All right. So for folks that are not trying to keep a high level of muscularity
on their bodies, for folks that don't resistance train consistently throughout the week, two
to four times a week and even more, as a little as half a gram of protein per pound of body
weight per day can fulfill all of your health and protein needs.
That means if you happen to weigh, let's say, 160 pounds, even 80 grams of protein per day
will keep you healthy and upright and everything's going to be totally fine.
That's the answer there,
pretty straightforwardly. Much less protein than that is going to probably you're going
to be okay until you drop to much, much less and then you'll have some issues. But much
more protein than that can be very, very beneficial if you would like to maintain a more muscular
leaner physique. And if you want to benefit greatly from the upsides of consistent
resistance training, more protein is a good idea then, and I can speak to how much and
what's too much in that whole situation.
For me, I've seen Josh consume at any given meal time, 50 to 60 grams of protein, right?
Is that fair?
I try and have, I don't even like the term meal anymore,
but I try and do-
Feetings.
Four protein feedings.
Feetings.
At roughly 50 grams of pop, sometimes splitting them.
But then sometimes when you're in a rush,
it just involves you grabbing fistfuls of lunch meat,
weighing them on a baking scale.
I've been there too.
But I've been told that the human body absorbs,
quote unquote, only what, like
30 grams of protein, 25 grams of protein.
What is the actual stats on that?
That's a great question.
That's one of those myths that's been with us for a very long time.
Right, right, right.
I grew up with that in the 24 hour fitness.
Oh, yes.
That's very classic.
So it turns out those studies were done generally not after resistance training.
And they were done with whey protein only which digests really quickly and so there's only so high
the spike can go until your body just can't use it enough.
It's almost like saying, okay, I have one minute to tell you about a topic.
How many words can I use?
Well, if you're talking to ChatG GPT 4.5, in a minute
it can crap out like a million words. You can't read that fast. So you can't utilize
those words. And in just the same way, if you take whey protein, which is incredibly
fast digesting by itself, which is what almost all the studies did. Yeah, man, anything above
30 grams of protein for most folks who don't
resistance train, the rest of it just gets burned as fuel for the rest of your day for
calories. Your body can't incorporate it because it digests so quickly it skyrockets into your
blood and your muscle cells are like, listen, we can only incorporate this so quickly. So
that amount changes if you have a meal that's slower digesting. If you have some lunch meat,
if you have some turkey, if you have a mixed meal of carbs, protein, fats, and protein, all of a sudden
your body can quote unquote use double that amount of protein.
And if you are larger, if you have more muscle, and if you're actively resistance training,
the demand for protein goes up.
And then it's like three times that number.
So if I give a strongman competitor, yeah, somebody who weighs 280 pounds, who's
very muscular, very big, and I give them a burrito that has tons of carbs, tons of fats,
and tons of protein, I mean, they can fully utilize for muscle growth, 100 grams of protein
at a time. No problem. But if it's just whey protein, if they are 160 pound, recreationally trained 18 to 22 year old collegiate male,
and it hits the blood really quick by itself,
then anything more than 30 or 40 grams isn't bad for you,
but it's just gonna get burned for fuel
because your cells can only absorb it so quickly.
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on the Odyssey app or wherever you get your podcasts. So the concept of how much protein is too much protein, there's never an example where
like that extra 25 grams that your body doesn't absorb, doesn't like go into the ether, right?
Your body just uses it as fuel.
So what if you have like issues with like your kidneys and stuff and too much protein
can like give you a kidney stone?
Because again, I'm just regurgitating stuff that I've seen online again. I don't have any like
Medical training or stuff. I'm just
Regurgitating what I'm seeing on the internet people like if you have too much protein be careful with your kidneys
Like is there any basis in that?
There is if you have diagnosed kidney disease
Donating it to someone, then you have very
special instructions that are quite different from everyone else.
Outside of that, high protein diets, even very, very high protein to the point of absurdity,
which they've tested for months on end with folks and some number of seminal studies back
about 10 years ago, there just aren't really any measurable downsides and there's no theoretical
downside.
Got it.
So the biggest downside of eating like 400 grams of protein per day is really can be
a few.
One of them is you have to miss out on all the other food because if you eat a lot of
protein plus the rest of your food, you just eat too many calories and then you're just
going to gain fat.
And so you say, okay, if I want 400 grams of protein a day, that means I have to low carb and low fat to fit it into my
lifestyle. And then it's all of a sudden, like, you know, you go out with friends
and they're like, oh my god, like, what are you gonna order? And you're like, um, do
they have just slab-o meat in here? No, this is a normal restaurant. Like, well, I
can't have anything on the menu. So it's not great from there. Another thing is,
especially if it's from meat, like like at some point, and Josh might relate
to this a little bit, as we've all done wacky stuff in our lifting history, you try really
high protein diets and it's like chicken and steak.
And at some point, three weeks in, you're like, if I have to chew anymore, I quit everything
about this.
No more chewing.
And also, let's be honest, I wasn't informed in the lead up, this is a family podcast,
so I'll put this as mildly
as I can, pooping and farting are somewhat related
to your protein intake.
And if you like having friends around,
then consider very high protein diets might not do so well
with your friends, at some point there's a couple of phases
of your friends just fart too much from protein,
there is shock, then amusement, oh he's so funny with his bodybuilding.
Then there is confusion, like why is this still happening? At some point you get into the resentment
phase of like seriously this isn't cool anymore. And then anger, grief, sadness, and then maybe
recapitulation of that cycle. Hopefully at some point you catch wind of this so that your friends
don't leave you. That's definitely a concern. No this this actually happened to me
And it's not a problem, but like I'm dead serious
It's because I don't work all the time like you don't like pass gas
No, you you're meeting a very moderate version of me and my life when I was 21 years old
I was doing some German volume training 10 by 10
Okay, can you explain to the to the people that don't know what that is?
What what that is, what that is. German volume training. Mike, forgive me if I'm stepping on some toes here.
To me it is a system of exercise that only works if you are on copious amounts of Eastern
block steroids where you just do 10 sets of 10 reps.
And me as a 21 year old shot putter, I was like, maybe I am a perfect candidate for this.
So I was eating 450 grams of protein a day.
How many calories in that 450?
There's no tracking when you're dirty bulking.
And I was doing something called carb cycling where one day a week I would just drink two liters of Mountain Dew.
I don't know.
What? This is dirty. Okay, dirty bulking.
Bodybuilding.com.
I love this, Josh. We've all got some wacky diets.
This is great. This is ethnographic.
Truly. But also when you're talking about the people around you
just being, they were at first amused
and then they were like disgusted with the parts.
And I remember my roommate, Andrew Rickards, you met him.
Oh, Rickards, yeah.
Just watching me eat a two pound slab of skin on salmon,
like an animal.
Skin on salmon.
And still being a chef, I put like caramelized fennel
and like roasted tomatoes on it.
You're such an an edge one.
And he still brings that up to like 15 years later.
And so, yeah, we've all done some wacky stuff.
My question as far as like a general population is concerned,
I think it was Michael Pollan who said,
never before has such an unhealthy society been so obsessed with health.
Fair.
Is this large amount of protein intake actually causing large-scale health gains for the general population?
I know it's too early to tell and there's no studies, but what's your prognostication on that?
No, it's not. And I can explain why.
But it's like too much sugar equals diabetes, right? Too much fat equals heart disease.
Too much protein equals question mark.
So I can remind you, too much sugar does not equal diabetes.
Too much fat does not necessarily lead to heart disease
and it mostly doesn't.
And too much protein leads mostly just your friends
having to sit you down and keep you
seated because if you stand up, the farts just continue and just try to talk some sense
into you.
The thing is, there is a, so just to quickly to the sugar thing.
There's nothing inherently wrong with sugar, but sugar is really tasty.
And so when people eat a lot of it, they tend to overeat on their calories and the extra
calories put on extra fat.
And then people get very, very overweight
for a very long time.
That causes all the bad things.
Diabetes, the whole lot of it.
One of the interesting things about this
is that the primary model for inducing diabetes
in laboratory animals is overfeeding of saturated fat,
not sugar.
Interesting.
As long as they gain a lot of fat weight,
they just get diabetic.
And so fats, especially if you have healthy fats like monounsaturated fats, polyunsaturated
fats, olive oil, canola oil, nuts, nut butters, avocados, then you can eat like almost all
of your diet and fats and just be the healthiest person that's ever lived.
It's awesome.
Too many saturated fats aren't great, but you can eat a lot of them if your calories
aren't overdoing it.
Right.
Then you're good to go. The problem is you go to McDonald's and each burger has 50 grams of fat in it and you have
three of them.
It's the calories that end up kicking you.
No one's saying hypothetically you could overeat like green salads and veggies and get fat.
But no one's doing that.
Nothing hypothetically.
Theoretically it's possible, but nobody's going to do that because they're so filling
and so low in calories.
The sugars and fats are so not filling and so high
In calories and so tasty we tend to overdo it. That's really the problem with protein
Now the good news is protein doesn't have that problem
So if someone's gonna be overeating sugar overeating fat or overeating protein
I would prefer the overate protein because there's unlikely they're gonna be able to gain weight Josh something
You can probably speak to is when you're having a high protein diet,
it's actually harder to get in a ton of calories
because you're like, I could just do this with Taco Bell,
but I have to labor through this three chicken breasts.
And after that, your rice is like,
they don't even wanna eat anything else.
This is terrible.
And so protein, it tends to be pretty satiating
compared to most of the other foods you could eat.
It's not the most satiating because green veggies and fruits are actually more satiating
calorie for calorie, but it's not excessive.
There's not like, you know, no one's like, you can imagine meeting someone who's just
morbidly obese and you're like, how did it come to this?
Like she'll all these protein shakes, you know, what really?
Like, no, I'm kidding.
It's, you know, uh, milkshakes that did this.
So protein at least isn't very palatable in that sense, I'm kidding. It's you know milkshakes that did this so protein at least isn't very
Palatable in that sense hyper palatable so what that's cool
but the problem is as if you're a resistance training very hard and
You are really organizing your diet super well
You can get up to about a gram of protein per pound of body weight per day
So if you ate 200 pounds 200 grams
to about a gram of protein per pound of body weight per day. So if you ate 200 pounds, 200 grams,
there is a theoretical and somewhat literature based
argument that up to maybe about 250 grams,
1.25 grams of protein per pound of body weight per day
can have additional marginal benefits.
Anything beyond that has no upsides.
And a lot of these, not no downsides, but no upsides.
And so a lot of the folks that end up doing this thing
where they eat a lot of protein foods
off the shelf at Kroger when they go shopping,
but they're not resistance training,
they don't have a lot of muscle,
they're like more protein's good, right?
And you're like, you passed the good part,
like 80 grams of protein ago.
And while that's not bad, there is this illusion
to your guys' kind of suspicion
that there might be something wrong with it
that to me the biggest problem is is people have this sort of idea,
kind of vibe in their mind that their health behavior,
the things they do to support their health,
is like a little list on an iPhone
with little green check marks next to it,
little boxes you can check.
And people generally tend to have an idea,
is that there may be three to five of those,
like I'm active, I resistance train, I get good sleep. I have good stress management
I eat healthy and if I check all those I take the medications doc says I should take I'm good to go and the problem
Is because that context window is real small for most people well for many people
It just doesn't exist because they're like what's health behavior like you know never mind
But for those that does exist what they get from that eating super high protein
way beyond their needs vibe
when they go to the grocery store
and all the cereals are protein cereals,
they get to have this green check mark,
take one of those slots.
They go, see, I'm eating protein.
And then they don't fix their calorie intake.
They're still eating too many super tasty foods.
They're still underactive.
They're still eating a lot of crap.
They don't eat enough fruits and vegetables.
They don't pay attention to their sleep or their stress levels.
They go to the doctors two years later and the doctor comes back with their blood work
like, listen, Phil, you're just not looking so good.
And what's the first thing you hear?
But I've been eating the protein cereals.
And it's like, it's just a dud.
It's kind of like if you have, let's say 30 bullets in your gun and you're shooting it into battle and you're killing bad guys and stuff. And then you run out of bad guys
to kill, but you still have bullets and you just shoot them up into the sky. Someone's like, what
are you doing? You're like, I'm helping. I'm shooting bullets. Like, what's it? But they're
not going anywhere. And so after a certain while enough protein is just like, but you feel like
you're doing stuff. So when your video game stats are like, you shot 50 bullets, but only 25 of them went somewhere.
So I don't want people to feel like
I'm eating a lot of protein, this is great.
It's awesome.
But after very, not so much protein,
you could be using that health behavior elsewhere.
Yeah, it's- Does that make sense?
Of course. 100%.
And I feel like,
I thought that all of this protein debate
was a very, very new thing, but I've been reading a great book called revolution at the table by Harvey Levinstein
Going through how America ended up with our sort of dietary predilections
Back in the 1860s. I think Justice von Liebig the one who discovered macronutrients effectively
Are you looking at me for confirmation or mostly he's also the guy who?
Remember when we made Uruguay the quick aside Uruguay's national pasta dish pasta Caruso
Remember that has that very specific meat extract. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That was also invented by Justice von Leibig the father of macronutrients
Also the father of Uruguay's national pasta dish. But anyways, um fletcherizing does that mean anything to either of you?
Fletcherizing fletcherizing in the 1880s. It was a dietary trend
Fletcherizing? Fletcherizing, in the 1880s, it was a dietary trend.
It was chewing your food for so long
that it physically broke down to sugar in your mouth.
You chewed every bite for 100 times or whatever.
It wasn't called Fletcherizing,
but I literally remember my mom saying,
remember to chew your food on 25 times this side
and then 25 times on this side.
So it digests well in your stomach.
Yeah and Mark Twain, he had a lot of intellectuals, but he would also, part of his thing was consuming
less protein.
Because at the time they measured all the health markers of like their biggest lads
in the 1800s, which were all upper class people and they were eating a lot of beef and bread.
So they sort of retrofit the idea of, well, it looks like a grown man should have 150
grams of protein per day. Meanwhile you also had the vegetarian movement that you know
Battle Creek Sanatorium and Corn Flakes coming out to try and get people to eat
vegetarian. So you had this sort of vegetarian carnivore dichotomy back
then and then people debating proteins but my dad I remember eating low
fat Cheez-Its because at least he was eating a low fat food, right?
He, I mean, just had, you know, uh, he was
pre-diabetic, had heart disease, but at least
he was eating low fat cheese.
It's in it.
Like it gave him that thing.
It was like the write-off, like people saying, at
least I'm getting my protein, which is why I'm
generally dubious of, um, you know, one of the
problems today is that we've just made food taste
too good with science, hyper palatable ultra
processed. We've made it taste so good with science hyper palatable ultra processed
We've made it taste so annoying it goes down easy like Mike said when you're just chewing a massive
Steak or piece of chicken you get tired of it. It doesn't taste that good
But I never get you get quest you get quest protein ships
if you have the taco quest protein if I could read what are you asking me if I if I could eat a rib eye or
Quest protein ships that eat the rib eye sureye or Quest protein chips, I'd eat the ribeye.
Sure, but the Quest protein chips go down easy.
Nicole, you may think that this is what you want.
Tell me what I want.
About 18 meals straight later,
it doesn't taste the same anymore.
I totally agree.
I think just like keen instinct,
I'm like, yeah, I'm obviously gonna pick the steak.
But in reality, if I'm sitting at my desk, if I'm at my job,
if I have a lot of work to do, I'm not gonna take out the steak knife and a fork and get to it, you know?
Grab a fistful of lunch meat, you know you wanna.
But my question is, are we just the same evolutionarily,
and we have the same wants and same needs as all of our ancestors and all of our future ancestors. We all just want to eat carbs and salt and we're just sort of kicking the can down the road with new dietary trends every couple decades
and humans are just sort of doomed to eat ourselves to death.
Wow, that take got dark. I thought this was a family program.
I guess I could just see, you know, Lindsay, the eight year old being like, mommy,
are we doomed to eat ourselves to death?
Like no more Josh and Nicole's podcast.
No more of this.
What you're saying resonates and has a lot of truth in it.
Absolutely humans are largely the same that we were 100,000 years ago and 10,000 years
ago and 10,000 is when agriculture started to kind of become a thing slowly but surely.
And agriculture was the first time in which humans were able to industrialize the process
of the production of food.
Before that, it was like you found food in your environment
in the literal sense of you stumbled upon it
while searching for it, voraciously hungry.
And so we have all these neural network subsystems
in our brains that are designed to nearly instantly
adjudicate whether or not a food is a good idea
or bad idea to eat, and it also grades it
on how good of an idea it is to eat.
And so when we have foods that are hyper palatable
and very high in calories today,
it's like in evolution,
something we've basically almost never seen.
It's like an extremely amazing thing.
It's like if someone was to come up to you and say,
hey, I have a mansion and trillions of dollars for you.
Are you interested?
You'd be like, who says no to this thing?
But other than it being definitely a scam,
let's say it was like Elon Musk literally came down,
the real Elon Musk, a press crew,
and they're like, you want to sweepstakes, here you go.
You wouldn't be like, oh, well, you know,
money doesn't buy happiness.
You know, we're pretty wired to think, yeah,
like value is a good thing.
And just the same way we're wired
for an ancestral environment
of mostly pulsatile starvation and plenty.
When there was plenty, guess what you did with it?
You ate as much as you could
so that you could develop as much body fat as possible.
So when inevitably starvation was the next cycle,
maybe for days, maybe for weeks, maybe for months,
then you would have a high probability of survival.
So we're in this environment now
where capitalism and industry have made food like,
I don't wanna say free, but mostly demonetized, like-
Compared to all of human history, certainly, yeah.
Oh my God, oh my God.
And so, when in our nation,
in almost every modern nation of the world, the poorer Oh my God, oh my God. And so, you know, when in our nation and in almost every modern nation of the world,
the poorer you are statistically,
the more likely you are to suffer from obesity.
This is something that would,
can you imagine going back to Benjamin Franklin's time
and explaining to him like, you know,
our poor people are actually the fatter ones
and he's just gonna be like, what, how?
You're like, well, you see food
basically costs almost nothing.
It's really weird.
But we have other problems.
He's like, like what?
Social media disagreements.
He's like, what?
And that's just to say, we really are out of our time.
We evolved on biological time scales.
The new paradigm of evolution is technological.
And technology evolves orders of magnitudes faster.
But because technology evolves so fast, we're in a hyper palatable food environment and
we're sinking instead of swimming because it's really hard to resist all these super
tasty super convenient foods, mostly because we want them.
Like imagine if it was really bad for you physically to spend amazing time with your
closest dearest
friends, family, and children.
You'd be like, well, okay, so I'm supposed to resist that?
I'm like, uh-huh.
When grandpa calls and he's like, do you want to gather around the dinner table and share
wonderful stories and the kids will be laughing?
I'm like, sorry, grandpa, no can do.
It's bad for my health.
Oh my God, it would feel like someone is ripping a part of you away.
But that drive to be social
is actually newer in evolution than the drive to consume calories.
Starvation is a known entity from the time when we were just DNA fragments swimming in
the soup.
It predates everything.
Fighting your ability to eat food that's delicious is just so uphill of a battle.
It can't be exaggerated. That being said, technology adapts so quickly
that it can help us get completely out of this entire mess
in the next probably 10 years,
will lift all of us entirely out of it.
That transformation has already begun.
Do we think it's only technology that can lift us out of it?
Or is there any cultural play at this point?
Because I make fun of Italians a lot for having very hard and fast rules about food right
don't mix cheese with this but but but I think there is something within having
these cultural norms around food it's the reason Starbucks is not in Italy
because they would get run out of town because they have the cultural norm of
going to their local coffee shop it's the reason that if you try and stand up
and eat a meal in France, people
will shout you down because they're culturally.
Really?
How the French are so rude.
You gotta sit down.
They are, but, but I think something about these cultural norms rooting people to
some sort of behavior that is objectively healthy and also slightly, at least
slightly impervious to specifically American industry and capitalism, as in
Italy shutting Starbucks.
I think there's something to that,
but is that just like shooting BB guns
at the tank of American industry,
putting a KFC into your town?
I think we should take over the whole world
and install puppet KFC governments.
Oh, Jesus Christ, not the Colonel, not the Colonel.
New currency, fried chicken.
No, you're totally right, Josh.
It's a tough battle.
Can cultural practices gain traction?
Yes.
Can they have marginal effects?
Yes.
Does hyper-palliability adapt faster
in the consumer environment than culture takes root
or can even at maximum sustain itself?
Yeah, by like a factor of 10.
And so
there are differences that you can instantiate right now into
your own cultural practice that will 100% help you resist being
you know, over overwhelmed by this. And there's an even more
powerful tool in cultural practice. It's called knowing
what your body needs and nutrition and just not buying
everything at the store. I mean, the dark side of capitalism is
like, if you want it, they're gonna give it to you.
And it could be toxic for you,
but you got dollars and they got the product.
The really wonderful thing about capitalism
and very different from most other systems,
nobody forces you to do anything.
People will say the junk food industry is this crazy thing.
Guys, have you ever seen a junk food pusher
or a junk food dealer? Someone's like,
hey, you're going to try this Pepsi? You're like, well, no, sir. With a coat. He's like,
nah, see, I've got it all. He's got like Pepsi's regular full sugar Pepsi's on one side and full
fat Cheez-Its on the other. And you're like, I went to school. McGruff, the crime dog told me,
I should be talking to you, but that does look tasty. Although I guess cheese, it's inside of a man's coat.
It's kind of like, I don't know.
They're going to get steamy in there.
But at the same time, other countries, I think in fact, most other countries in the world
do have strong regulation against junk food marketing to say children, which America doesn't.
So I think there are practices that we've let in that do.
I honestly don't understand that because children don't have purchasing power.
Children don't have money.
It is illegal for children to acquire money because we have child labor laws, which I
think are very good laws because exploitation of children in the workforce is crazy.
That's the thing is mom and dad make the choice.
If the children are screaming about they want McDonald's, guess what you can do mom and
dad? You just don't get a McDonald's because if your kids don't learn today that they don't get everything they scream about
How is college gonna work? I mean my god, we not well
I mean gee right like at some point you got to grow up to the idea that there are things you want
There are things you need in the intersection of those is contextual
Sometimes the intersection is like, yep, and sometimes it's like, this is not how this works.
And I do feel for parents that have a lot going on
and the extra noise of their kids clamoring for McDonald's,
so sometimes it just shuts them up.
And the thing is, there's nothing wrong
with a few days a week taking your kids to McDonald's
and getting them a happy meal so they can be happy.
It's when it's happening three meals a day,
the, I don't wanna say excuses,
but the reasoning for that starts to become
a little bit wacky.
And the advertising problem is,
well, mom and dad, you're the people going to the store.
You have 100% purchasing power.
One of my, well, geez, my partner in crime,
co-founder of RPCO, Mr. Nick Shaw, he was messing around with his son,
he has little kids, they're growing up now,
but a few years back, he was like,
hey buddy, how much money do we have?
And the kid started speculating and he's like,
no, you don't have any money, I have the money,
mommy and I have the money, it was hilarious.
But that's really the thing.
And so at the end of the day,
it's really tough to have a regulatory environment
that prevents people from accessing what they want
and what they're gonna buy anyway.
Like there's one interesting fact in economics
of this kind of thing,
which is that as you raise junk food prices,
the elasticity is actually such that a lot of people
just keep buying it even though it's
more expensive and they complain that it's more expensive but they're still
gonna buy it. Obviously if you made Cheetos a thousand dollars a pack no one
would buy them anymore except Elon Musk or something but within normal boundary
layers of what is politically feasible to regulate as far as price controls
this stuff has very much less of an effect than you would think.
At the end of the day, we're dealing with just brutal evolutionary drives. Like this
is how humans are wired. And luckily, the way to fight those is through, this is going
to get creepy, I am the evil Mike of the two Dr. Rikes after all, pharmacology, now obviously education and
determination to eat well are always going to work. Cultural factors are amazing. They
need help. They need help. Machine guns are cool. Little cannons are cool. But when the
main battle tanks roll up, you're like, all right, now we're in the war. The main battle
tanks and the super fighter jets here are going to be
pharmacology and
Eventually genetic engineering and that's gonna be a huge deal because with genetic engineering
We're gonna be able to modify ourselves to be more reflective of our modern environment
Instead of having to struggle desperately against an environment that just kind of left us behind
You want to move off the grid go to a commie and raise some goats? I've been telling you I want to do this for months.
That's the only move.
I think that's fair.
And now you tell me you want to do it?
Well, thanks for spurring us on Dr. Mike.
Are they going to be genetically engineered goats that you could,
they're hyper intelligent?
You have no idea how many.
You want to do that part?
18 nipples.
18 nipples on these goats.
The cheese will be incredible. Alright, Nicole and Mike, we've heard what you and I have to say.
Now it's time to find out what other wacky eddies are rattling out there in the universe.
It's time for a little segment we call Opinions Are Like Casserole.
Alright, first up we have, she's making me say this, at Lana Condor, the number one
fan of a hot dog is a sandwich has written in, keto isn't as healthy as people think.
Dr. Mike, what say you?
There's a lot of truth in that.
Keto is plenty healthy if it's in a calorie controlled context.
And if you're eating mostly healthy foods, you can eat very low carbohydrates and be
very healthy.
The thing is, it's that same thing we were talking about earlier.
People say, I'm eating keto and it's this magic checkbox.
But for a lot of people, the magic checkbox is like, it's not just one checkmark.
It's like three of the five or four.
They think keto is a panacea.
So once I'm doing keto, I just have to care about anything.
So you'll see them eating like, well, literal hot dogs
and dipping them into like cheese sauce.
And someone's like, no, I don't know much about nutrition,
but like that seems not like the best thing to eat.
And like, no, no, it's okay, I'm keto.
You're like, okay, well, I think keto says
that carbohydrates is kind of a unique poison
and they're not.
For some folks, can keto be an excellent way
to manage their hunger signaling and make
sure they don't overeat?
Absolutely.
And if you eat mostly healthy foods and get some greens in there for the vitamins and
minerals, keto is amazing.
But is keto one of those things that you're just going to do it and it's going to be magical?
Like, it's not enough, man.
You get rid of your carbs, you've just got rid of your carbs and accomplished almost
nothing outside of that.
Were you carbphobic?
Would you consider yourself carbphobic?
I think we have all,
I think we all have internalized carbphobia,
especially growing up in Orange County
and literally a soccer mom in a yellow H2 Hummer
after a basketball game
drove us through the in and out drive through
and she ordered a four by four protein style
and looked at me like a nine year old
and said, a fat nine year old by the way,
and just said, the bun's the only bad part for you. Yeah, she had a southern
accent in Orange County because they're just kind of like so Republican that they talk
like they're Southern.
Excellent.
But yeah, but that's, that's the thing that I think we all grew up with in our era.
Yeah. I don't know. I feel like whenever I was doing keto, I was, what was it? I would
say I'm keto, but I drink. I, which was-
Yes. Isn't that great? It was great.
It did help me, like you said, surprisingly, it helped me realize what hunger was,
which I wasn't aware of before I was doing it.
So I don't think it's quote unquote healthy, but for someone who, you know,
is in the food industry and is constantly surrounded by the most ridiculous, crazy foods,
literally our tagline of Mythical Kitchen is
dreams become food.
Literally the Disneyland of food is where we work.
I think doing keto made me realize, of course,
it made me realize what hungry Nicole and satiated
Nicole was.
So it helped me a lot, but I will agree that
it's not necessarily the healthiest thing.
If you're eating cheese and bacon and hot dogs
every day, you're going to have a bad time. But if you know
you're incorporated, like you said, your veggies and your proteins and a
little bit of fat and avocado every now and then, I loved it when I was doing it.
To me that's any diet, right? Like I've known people who are
jacked and fit, who are keto, who are vegetarian, who eat eight times a day, who
eat one time a day, and I think anytime you change a stimulus
and do keto, lean gains diet,
God, that's a throwback, paleo, any of these,
when you change the stimulus on your normal diet
of I'm just eating whatever,
you learn what it actually means to think about your food.
So I think any of these diets could have had
that same effect for you.
I totally agree.
Yeah.
That's very well put.
I have another opinion here.
Galutin says, everyone is obsessed with protein
when they should be obsessed with fiber.
This is resident fiber dad, Noah Galutin.
We love him.
Oh, you know, obsessions are maybe worse than casseroles.
So fiber is awesome and it's super healthy.
And it's amazing because a lot of the high fiber foods like whole wheats, veggies and
fruits come stocked not just with fiber, which is awesome, but with tons of vitamins, minerals,
phytochemicals, which are certain kind of plant chemicals that are really good for you.
And they're really very filling for very few calories and very satiating for a long period of time. So if you're getting your fiber through those foods, I think a
little junior league fiber obsession is a wonderful thing. If you're coming home every
day with a can of metal mucil and a can of, you know, Jack Daniels and getting to get
into work on getting through that can one way or another, then gee whiz, you know, fiber's
like protein. At a certain level, you've had enough. And unlike protein, when you have
a lot, a lot of fiber, the digestive situation becomes, you guys familiar with the term gastric
motility, like how speedily things are going through your GI tract.
I can like kind of pick out the words and what they mean.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Imagine those commercials for like a Draino where they show the visualization of the clogged
pipe and the Draino makes it all sparkly clean.
Well, fiber is like super Draino.
And at some point, guess what happens to the Draino?
Goes out the other end.
And so if you overeat fiber, you can actually experience bloating, farting, pooping,
which scares people who are sitting in stalls next to you
because they think World War III began.
You gotta do it with headphones
so you don't hear the noise.
That's what I do.
You just have like classical music on
and everyone else is suffering.
Oh gosh, terrible.
La la la la la la.
Yeah, that's how I do it.
So fiber I think is almost exactly like protein.
Now to the gentleman's point who commented that,
more people should get more fiber.
And if it's through whole foods, I think that's wonderful.
But obsession, gee whiz, you know,
maybe we have too many obsessions nowadays
and not enough concerted efforts to do better.
But that's just me being an old curmudgeoning man
and shooting people's dreams down.
Do you remember the TikTok trend, quote,
internal shower where people drink a bunch of chia seeds?
This is the thing that...
Well, I know it from the girl that did the protocol
with the cabbage water.
That's what she called...
Do you know what I'm talking about?
The Dr. Phil lady?
No.
She would make a cabbage solution out of cabbage salt and water
and she would call it internal...
Yeah, she would literally feed people sauerkraut,
and it would make internal showers.
The one that I saw was just a ton of chia seeds,
which are just loaded with fiber, and then people would just get massive diarrhea,
and they called it internal shower, which is way grosser than gastric motility.
And it was the USDA, I think, had to like put out,
or the Department of Health had to put out a warning, like,
please don't do this.
Yeah, I like fiber. I mean listen do I take an apple eat some blueberries
Do I take more fiber supplements than I do like protein supplements? No
Like I have more protein shakes than I do a bento fiber
But I still like sometimes have a bento fiber just to like remind or like a or like an apple
Like you're watching me transform into the old curmudgeon
in real time because my solution for almost everything is
if you could just be 40% more normal about everything,
that would be really, really cool.
I think that'd be really, really cool.
Well, that's our time.
Dr. Mike, man, I cannot thank you enough
for coming on the show.
This is an absolute pleasure.
Thank you so much.
You were great.
Thank you so much, guys. This was a wonderful experience. Where can people find you got anything to plug?
Yeah, so we have a new product actually
Plug away. It is called the genius shot. It has 23 grams of protein zero grams of fat zero grams of carbs
It is really tasty
It doesn't go bad for months and months outside of refrigeration and it passes TSA clearance so you can travel with it.
It makes pretty much anything including soda and juice and it is wonderful in every single
way.
So check that out.
Genius shot.
Just shoot it at Google.
Something should come up and also Renaissance periodization.
If you can't spell that because I can't RP strength on YouTube.
You'll see my giant ugly head and click on my head. And maybe I'll say factual things,
but we are not a family show.
So make sure the kids are in another room
because holy crap, some of the stuff I say,
I wouldn't have said holy crap if you know what I mean.
That's right, ladies and gentlemen, click on his head.
God, I'm gonna rip so many of those genius shots.
On that note, thank y'all for listening
to Hot Dog is a Sandwich.
We got audio only episodes every Wednesday,
video version out on YouTube on Sunday.
If you wanna be featured on opinions or like cast roles,
hit us up at 833-DOG-POD-1. hit us up at 833-DOG-POD-1.
Our number again is 833-DOG-POD-1.
And for more Mythical Kitchen, check out our other videos.
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See y'all next time.