Club Random with Bill Maher - Andrew Huberman | Club Random with Bill Maher
Episode Date: March 23, 2026Bill Maher sits down with neuroscientist Andrew Huberman to explore how smartphones, artificial light, and social media are reshaping how we think and connect. Huberman explains why morning sunlight a...nd dark nights are critical for sleep, metabolism, and overall health. The two also dig into biohacking, peptides, and Big Pharma incentives, separating what’s real from what’s hype. They tackle shifting behavior, shrinking attention spans, and the future of health—from mRNA cancer treatments to CRISPR gene editing—along with more unsettling territory, including Jeffrey Epstein’s connections to the scientific world. In the end, they land on a striking truth: “We don’t relate to each other anymore—we relate through a screen." Support our Advertisers: High blood pressure can’t wait. Get 20% off at https://www.120life.com and use code RANDOM Subscribe to the Club Random YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/clubrandompodcast?sub_confirmation=1 Watch episodes ad-free – subscribe to Bill Maher’s Substack: https://billmaher.substack.com Subscribe to the podcast for free wherever you listen: https://bit.ly/ClubRandom Buy Club Random Merch: https://clubrandom.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices ABOUT CLUB RANDOM Bill Maher rewrites the rules of podcasting the way he did in television in this series of one on one, hour long conversations with a wide variety of unexpected guests in the undisclosed location called Club Random. There’s a whole big world out there that isn’t about politics and Bill and his guests—from Bill Burr and Jerry Seinfeld to Jordan Peterson, Quentin Tarantino and Neil DeGrasse Tyson—talk about all of it. For advertising opportunities please email: PodcastPartnerships@Studio71us.com ABOUT BILL MAHER Bill Maher was the host of “Politically Incorrect” (Comedy Central, ABC) from 1993-2002, and for the last fourteen years on HBO’s “Real Time,” Maher’s combination of unflinching honesty and big laughs have garnered him 40 Emmy nominations. Maher won his first Emmy in 2014 as executive producer for the HBO series, “VICE.” In October of 2008, this same combination was on display in Maher’s uproarious and unprecedented swipe at organized religion, “Religulous.” Maher has written five bestsellers: “True Story,” “Does Anybody Have a Problem with That? Politically Incorrect’s Greatest Hits,” “When You Ride Alone, You Ride with Bin Laden,” “New Rules: Polite Musings from a Timid Observer,” and most recently, “The New New Rules: A Funny Look at How Everybody But Me Has Their Head Up Their Ass.” FOLLOW CLUB RANDOM https://www.clubrandom.com https://www.facebook.com/Club-Random-101776489118185 https://twitter.com/clubrandom_ https://www.instagram.com/clubrandompodcast https://www.tiktok.com/@clubrandompodcast FOLLOW BILL MAHER https://www.billmaher.com https://twitter.com/billmaher https://www.instagram.com/billmaher Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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I mean, Clinton, supposedly spent time with it.
You've got to be kidding.
You're supposedly spent time with it, right?
Whatever think of.
But he's not...
I would want to invest in doing that kind of work.
What are we going to get out of it?
Okay, well, you're asking me to justify something for which I'm...
No, I'm not asking you to join.
Thanks for coming by.
Yeah, thanks for having me.
Beautiful place you have here.
It is.
Well, it's not serious.
Let's be real about it.
To me, that's what's great about it.
I mean, this place was like a mess when I bought the house,
and I was like, everybody said, tear it down.
I was like, no, there's something about this place.
Just the crooked door.
Look at the, you know.
How could you tear that down?
Right.
And I don't know, are we allowed to say that there's a body in the bathtub?
That is not a body.
Mr. Hoberman, that is Whitney Cummings.
That's right.
I recognize her.
That is, she's got quite a body.
But yeah, that's a very expensive.
She gifted that to me.
I'm very grateful.
It's, you know, a couple hundred thousand dollars to make that a dollar.
You know, they can make, you know,
She did it for a special, like, audit, electronic, what's the word, version of her.
I remember going to the World's Fair, and they had the, you know, back in the day, Lincoln,
hello, you know, it was kind of like that, but this is much more realistic.
It's very realistic.
I'm friends with Whitney, and I've walked in, and there was Whitney in the, this Whitney, the Whitney.
Yeah, we put her in the bathtub.
We had her sitting over there, but every time I walked in the room, I was like, oh, fuck, what?
It's a person here.
It is a little shocking because it's so accurate.
It's so accurate.
There's no hair on.
Well, I mean, we're close to having sex robots, aren't we?
I mean, I'm not making that.
There's a movie I just saw it's pretty good called Companion.
Okay.
Have you seen it?
No, I haven't seen it.
It's interesting.
It's, you know, and Megan Fox did one about sex robots.
There's going to be a lot of sex, trust me, Cindy Sweeney, it's going to be playing a sex robot.
point. I just think that's inevitable. But, you know, and in the movies, this is, of course,
a little bit in the future at least, you know, the robot is indistinguishable physically from a real
human and it's just someone who is programmed to adore the person who bought her.
I know she's at her, so this assumes that no one will have a male sex robot.
I think it's different in the woman's brain. I think that's why men want, you know, the
male fragile ego and everything probably wants, you know, someone who adores them.
Who doesn't really want to be adored?
I'm sure there are going to be guys out there that are going to be paid for the robot that
insults them and all sorts of things.
But that seems like an entirely different deal.
Yeah, those are the guys who now are having pay someone to dig their high heel into them.
Isn't that bizarre how some of, like when those cases have been unearthed, I don't know,
something about ultra-powerful people.
Maybe they have never been told no, and they crave that?
Odd.
I don't know.
I don't know.
We're speculating here.
Well, on that score of people who, men who like it in, shall we say, the reverse,
somebody once told me a story, it probably was a stripper in a club,
about this guy who had a really small dick.
So his way to deal with it was he wanted the women.
to humiliate him.
And apparently that's like a thing sometimes.
Whoa.
You know,
well,
it's like making a virtue out of it.
Like,
at least it's getting attention.
Whoa.
Yeah,
the AI relationship thing,
maybe not,
is not as,
you know,
as edgy as what we're talking about now,
but it does seem like it's already happening.
People are having relationships with AI.
Exactly,
but it's not physical yet.
As far as I know,
I'm just hearing.
Well,
it can't be.
We don't have it.
yet. Right. I'm guessing if it's physical, it's unilaterally physical. The, yeah, it seems that you can,
you're in love with your phone. I mean, they've been doing this in Japan and the movie her was like
almost 15 years ago. That's, I mean, it's like a crystal ball. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, that's where it was
going. But there was no, remember in the movie, he like hires a surrogate, like an actual woman while
he's on the phone with the thing so we can like feel face like he's really having sex with the phone
that he's in love with.
It's like taking all the functions of the human brain
and compartmentalizing them into different actions
and trying to interleave them.
It's so bizarre.
I used to ask this in my act.
Doesn't anybody just fuck anymore?
I mean, is it really, are we that jaded?
That this, you know, it just seems like people do,
everybody has some crazy kink.
I feel like I'm the last member of the land that time forgot.
I don't do anything.
I don't even fantasize about kinky shit.
It's not like, oh, I'm not fucking anybody in the ass,
but I'm thinking about it.
I'm not thinking about it.
What used to be vanilla is now, you know,
is not even on the page for, it seems, you know,
one thing, it seems like with these different generations,
you know, we hear like, I'm Gen X, right, I'm 50.
So we hear like Gen X, Gen Z, Millennials,
and this sort of thing.
But it does seem that there was an entire generation
that was raised so deeply in these short video social media landscapes that they're almost like
an experimental group, right?
I mean, inadvertently, they're the experimental group and nobody knows how this is going to work out.
I did hear that there are data that people won't hire kids of certain generations because
their inability to have, you know, generate eye contact, have a conversation because they're just
so used to staring in a little box all the time to watch.
And, yeah, and I mean, we know how much this affects their sex life.
They don't relate on a one-to-one basis.
You know, you see video, or people, or you could go to a bar,
and they're all looking at their phone in the bar,
even though the person is sitting right across from them.
Even people out on dates.
Yes.
It's wild.
That's common sense, that that's, we've,
Now, could it in the future turn out?
I mean, anything's possible that that isn't so deleterious?
I don't think so, but what we do know is it's different.
You can't deny that.
That this is a difference not just in degree, but in kind,
of something that we never saw before, where we're not relating directly,
where we're putting some filter between everything.
Look at a concert.
You know, I watched.
as much as they could
of the Taylor Swift concert
because Nikki Glazer made me
and
she did
well she's a giant
Taylor Swift fan
and like everybody
throughout the whole concert
anytime they cut to the crowd
they're all watching through their phones
I mean everybody is like this
what is that about
because I mean that image can be
you know
they could get that image after the show
exactly
I guess it's to project oneself into the on-stage experience somehow, but it's very bizarre.
What do you mean?
You're here as the expert.
What are you asking me for?
I don't know.
You tell you.
This is what I want to know from you.
Well, there are some interesting studies.
I think the one that's probably most relevant to everyone is this study that looked at people's
ability to focus when their phone is off and turned over in front of them versus in their
bag turned off underneath or behind their chair.
Right.
Versus in another room, separate room.
Right.
And the interesting thing is that the ability to focus was the same essentially across those groups,
but it took a lot of extra cognitive resource to work and to focus when the phone is on the table
or even in a bag underneath or behind your chair.
How do they measure that?
They can measure how much, essentially how much energy people devote to focusing
versus to generating new sort of creative thoughts into, you know, flexible use of the information.
And so it takes a lot more work to focus when your phone is in the room.
That's just the simple takeaway.
So when the phone's out of the room, you see what looks like a boosting cognitive performance.
It's actually just getting people to baseline.
And this is something that reminds me of, you know, David Goggins, the guy's former Navy SEAL.
He's always running around and, you know, shouting and this kind of thing.
And it's super high performer in the physical domain who's out actually studying to become a paramedic.
And he said it perfectly.
He said it's never been easier nowadays to outperform your peers.
But it's mostly a function now of what you've done.
don't do, right? Just putting your phone away gives you what looks like a cognitive boost,
but it just puts you on par with all the generations before you that didn't have phones in the
room, right? So, you know, to succeed now as a young person, it's much harder unless you're able
to abstain from interactions with short form video mostly and the phone generally.
So speaking of outperforming your peers, I'm always interested in like why something wins.
I mean, and that's like, take Mr. Jesus Christ.
I mean, there was many religions that were prevalent
besides the old Greco-Roman religions
which were kind of dying out at his time in the Mediterranean.
It wasn't just Christianity.
Why did that one win?
You know, why did MySpace go away?
And, you know, Facebook, you know.
Is MySpace the Heaven's Gate of Cold Warland?
Now I'm really dating myself.
Heaven's Gate, I think it was a cold.
I think they castrated themselves, shaved their heads in war.
Oh, the Heavensgate cult.
The Heavensgate cult.
Right.
Right.
That was sort of the my space of cults.
It's self-destructed.
In the occult world, that's when you win is when you kill yourself, I think.
Yeah, that's right.
Branch.
I was going to say, in the field of, like, you know, medical advice, so crowded.
What is your own assessment of why you became prima interparis in this field?
What is it?
Now, I think you're great, so I'm not going to prejudice.
the jury. I mean, I listen to you, and I feel like it's great information delivered in a way
I can understand, but what is your thing? Because this is a very, very crowded field. I mean,
half this country is, like, too poor to be able to even worry about their health and what they
eat. And the other half are like, fucking paranoids. Maybe that's because I live in L.A.
No, I think. We're just like doing every fucking cold plunges, and they're tanning their asshole.
Remember that one? Tucker Carlson, wasn't he tanning his asshole?
Was he? Yes. Oh my goodness.
There was taint tanning. Like he was saying, I think it was, I'm pretty sure it was Tucker Carlson, who was like, yes, you got to get sunlight on your taint.
You didn't remember, you didn't say that. I remember that fad. I didn't realize Tucker was associated with that.
I think of him now as the nicotine guy. He's like really bullish on nicotine, which we can also talk about.
And hating Jews. It's tanning your taint or hating Jews. This guy is.
I'm telling you a little all over the map.
He's definitely taken a turn in...
Oh, yes. Oh, yeah.
He's taken a turn for sure.
So, but really, why you?
Yeah, so...
Why you?
Well, thanks for the kind of words.
I'll say, you know, some of it was a matter of circumstance.
We launched the podcast during the pandemic,
and there was a lot of discussion about vaccines, right?
And that's obviously where the major debate was,
besides the lockdown issue.
And I decided at the time, in part,
because Stanford had a very strict
rule that we weren't supposed to talk about vaccines publicly because early in the pandemic,
if you recall, there were documents, like word documents circulating on the internet,
people claiming to be affiliated with certain universities and having protocols for dealing
with COVID. And, you know, universities, including Stanford, said, listen, you know, we need
virologists and public health experts to talk about this or no one else. So on the podcast,
I chose to talk about all the things that were universal, how to manage your sleep, how to keep
your anxiety down during the lockdowns as best you could, how to maintain some level of physical
fitness, if you can leave your house, what, and then I just started teaching. And I think in large
part it was because I wasn't selling a book. I didn't have a podcast. I was just giving away
information. I will say also if you look at a lot, not all, but a lot of the top podcasters,
including yourself, including Rogan, Lex Friedman, and there are others. A Jocco Willink, for instance,
most of them did something else very well first.
They were credentialed someplace else, right?
Lex's, most people don't realize this, Lex is a PhD, right?
He's very versed in computer science and artificial intelligence and these kinds of things.
Joe obviously had a prior career.
You had a prior career very successful in addition to the other things you're doing.
I was running a lab at Stanford up until a few years ago.
Now I still teach at Stanford, but I shut my lab down because of the podcast.
So what you find is that often the most successful podcasts are from people,
that sure, entered the field at a certain time.
There were fewer people in the podcast game then,
but who also were very fluent in a particular subject
and were ready to bring that to the world.
So it wasn't like, I want to be a podcaster.
It was, I love science, I love learning and teaching.
I have an interest in health.
I have a longstanding interest in health and fitness
in addition to my neuroscience background.
So I'm going to talk about all of that.
And I think the connections that one has,
like your colleagues, like the people that I bring on my podcasts
are, I'm honored to say
and so privileged to have the opportunity.
These are the top, top neurosurgeon,
chair of neurosurgery at UCSF, Eddie Chang,
Robert Malenka, the expert in dopamine,
Anna Lemke, the expert in addiction medicine,
you know, Sean Mackey, the expert in pain medicine,
and on and on.
And, you know, we include other people, creatives,
you know, David Cho, Rick Rubin, et cetera.
But to be able to put those people in front of the world
was not really happening before.
The only person who had really done it before was Charlie Rose, and he had taken a pretty swift exit in the previous years.
I'd never met him, but that's where you saw the neuroscience series.
He was great at neuroscience, bad at coming out of the bedroom with a bathrobe on.
I don't know what the circumstances were.
Oh, that's what it was.
Coming out of the bedroom with a bathrobe on.
Well, so I think that was it.
And then I like to think it's also because, you know, I do the things I talk about, right?
I get morning sunlight.
I've long been interested in resistance training, and I believe, of course, in modern medicine,
but I also believe that lifestyle factors and the things we can control
fundamentally shape how healthy or unhealthy we are and how many medications we need or don't need.
Look, about 2003, I switched from Western medicine, not that I abandoned it,
because, of course, Western medicine is wonderful in many ways.
Sure.
But to a much more holistic approach, meaning prevent.
And I feel like I, you know, I got with a doctor I respect very much, who I think knows a great deal.
We don't agree on everything.
And, of course, you also need an MD.
But I feel like until that point in my life, I did not really understand how the body worked.
I read different books.
I, you know, I don't want to like go through the whole holistic Bible, but.
you know, they more are of the notion that there is really only one disease, which is cellular
destruction. And it has two main causes. One is deficiency of nutrients, and the other is toxicity
getting into the cell. And we label things a million ways, there's a million names for many diseases,
but it all comes down to not just all that, because I think genetics is really important.
Yeah, some people who have Huntington's, for instance, they could be doing everything right and still be...
Right, genetics.
Eventually, eventually get seriously ill.
Although doing as many things as possible right in terms of lifestyle will greatly extend their lifespan and health span.
There's no question.
Do you subscribe?
Would you say that is your overarching theory also that it's just...
It's all about the cells, winning the battle on the molecular level and our cells.
I mean, there's so much in society that is, you know, fatigue, like chronic fatigue.
kind of things and irritable bowel syndrome and even allergies maybe even asthma
but just this stuff that like says it's because we're not treating ourselves right
they're getting too much toxicity and they're and they are deprived of nutrients
because what they're being given is processed food you know sugar corn fungus
love to get into fungus with you I'm a big fungus person we talk about
psilocybin.
Which never, no, no, not that kind of, but that's fungus too, a cry and I used to do it.
But no, just how harmful fungus is and how much we always go to germ theory.
It's always the bacteria.
And sometimes it's a fungus.
I mean, it's, fungus is everywhere.
Sure.
Yeah.
I mean, so I absolutely subscribe to the idea that when cells get sick, organs get sick.
When organs get sick, you get systemic breakdown eventually.
I think that when you talk about toxicity, I think it's very clear that you can have, for instance, toxicity from too many calories, but it's...
Affluent malnutrition, they call it.
Too many calories, but not enough micronutrients, perhaps, right?
Or just too many calories, energy load toxicity.
And when you don't get the right nutrients, even though you're eating more food, your body is still asking for those nutrients.
Which is why you get fat, because you're eating more food.
But you're not getting what the body needs, so it wants more.
I think the two things, I mean, there are many things that are making Americans and others
including lack of physical exercise and so on.
But I think two, at least two of the important ones that aren't discussed enough
are being divorced from our natural circadian schedule.
So you want bright days.
We've talked about this before, but I'll just briefly reiterate.
Bright days, meaning sunlight in the morning, bright days as best you can,
getting sunlight through a window.
There's a recent study showing that if you work near a window, it actually can help with blood glucose
management and dark nights. And, you know, for some people going to bed late and waking up later
is best for them. For other people, waking up early and going to bed earlier is best for them.
People have to figure out what's ideal for them.
Oh, I'm so glad to hear you say that. Oh, absolutely.
Because there are some hardcore people who insist that the healing only happens between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m.
No, that's nonsense.
Thank you.
That's nonsense.
Thank you, sir.
Because I, you know, 2.m. 2 a.m. is when I'm just getting to sleep.
Okay, so you're a night owl. And there are what we call chronotypes. And some people do best on a late to bed, late waking up schedule.
And nonetheless, getting bright light, ideally from sunlight in your eyes in the first hour after waking.
I listen to you on that. And the first thing I do is go over to the window. And it's always like, oh, I feel like a vampire, you know.
Because I force myself to, you know, all from eyes to that.
And also I'm very, very aware that light in the eye at night, you know, it's the worst thing for you.
It wakes up the penal gland, right?
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Yeah, so your pineal gland makes melatonin, which makes you sleepy and makes you fall asleep.
Light inhibits melatonin, right?
Right.
Right.
Right.
I should point out that it's clear that some people can tolerate screen light and fall asleep with no problem.
But what bright light does in the morning is it increases cortisol, which we know is a stress hormone.
But in the morning, you want your cortisol high.
This is the foundation of health to have your morning.
cortisol high, yes, high, and then to have it taper off into the afternoon and evening.
This is true for men, for women, perimenopausal, menopausal, pregnant women, kids, everybody.
This has been, it's called the healthy cortisol curve.
And if that curve flattens, meaning if it's not a big enough peak in your morning, whatever
time that happens to be, and if you have too much cortisol in the evening, you're going
to have problems with sleep.
You're also going to have problems with blood sugar regulation because cortisol has been
labeled a stress hormone, but we need to think about cortisol.
as a glucose, as an energy mobilizing hormone.
So it turns out that even if you can sleep just fine
after being around a bunch of bright lights at night,
it will elevate your morning blood glucose.
Now, is that going to make you pre-diabetic or diabetic?
Over time, it actually might.
But kids nowadays, they've done a beautiful experiment
where they had kids sleep in a room with 100 lux,
that's very dim, 100 lugs light overhead,
eyes closed, and they saw significantly elevated
morning blood glucose levels.
So dimming the lights at night is important.
Now, there's a lot's been said about blue light,
and for some people wearing blue blockers can be helpful, et cetera,
but just dimming the lights.
This environment that we're in here is actually quite dim.
It's bright enough for us to see each other,
but this environment is not nearly bright enough for the morning,
what we need in the morning to spike cortisol,
which is what we want,
but it's plenty bright to spark cortisol at, say, an hour before sleep.
So just in the first hour, make the first hour of your day
as bright as possible, ideally from sunlight.
make the last hour of your day as dimmer as dark as safely can.
I do start to lower the lights, but, you know, there's only so much you can do.
Sure.
But when I go to bed, I cover up all these little things.
Everything in fucking America now has to have a little fucking stupid light that you don't need.
I cover them all, like with like wash claws.
I'll put things all over the...
I bring duct tape and I'll cover a little bit.
Exactly.
Or get a great, a soft eye mask is one of the best investment.
I don't like that because I feel it.
It's onerous, but I have blackout curtains.
No, when I go to sleep at night, it is so, it is as black as Stephen Miller's heart.
It is black in there.
I'm telling you, when I open my eyes or close them, I see the same thing.
Great.
That's dark.
Great.
You know what, stupid?
And I don't mean to knock this product.
I'm wearing it right now, these rings that I'm sure you're buried.
I wear a wood band where I measure my sleep with innate sleep, the cooling mattress.
Okay.
Well, this is the same.
idea and I'm sure look I've just started it up and it blinks I had to you know what I did and by the way I was
That's why I don't wear one of those. That's why I measure my sleep I figured it out and I'm gonna I'm gonna give you
Here's a life hack we'll be life fucking hackers. Okay so yes it blinks at night. It's supposed to be about your health and it does the one thing you're not supposed to do
Which is have light on in when you're sleeping bright green light or yellow light. Okay. So what I
did was I took a black surgical glove. You know, like the thin rubber gloves and we gave out a
zillion of them during COVID and now they're polluting the entire country and world. So great on that
one. But I just cut off a little piece of it and I put it on as a fucking ura ring cozy at night
and then it blocks it off. So there's your life hack for all the people who wrote in like I did
and said, this is so silly. We're trying to do our health here.
I know. So I think the emergent theme in our conversation already today is technologies that we use to improve convenience or improve our health inevitably have some sort of side effects that we run up against.
Everything does. It's true. So this is wild. So the long wavelength light, red light, infrared light, etc., that's the heat from the sun that you feel. It's part of that.
That long wavelength light is not the light that burns your skin. It's not the wavelength of light. And it was present in incandescent bulbs. So incandescent,
are, you know, even if you see a white incandescent bulb, it's got short wavelength, so it's got blue,
it's got green, it's got yellows, all the way out to red, and in some cases even infrared.
That infrared and red, we're just called long wavelengths. Believe it or not, beautiful data
on this from Glenn Jeffries Lab, University College London, it can go into and through your body,
and it actually helps, this is a loose term, as I'm using it, charge your mitochondria. The mitochondria,
there's water in that area, and the water absorbs the red light. If you've ever gone swimming,
and you've gone down, you know, snorkeling or something below a certain depth, you lose the reds,
okay, because the reds get absorbed.
Oh.
So your mitochondria function better.
You increase ATP production.
Your metabolism increases in the presence of red-lit, long-w wavelength light to the skin.
This study has been done.
Shine long-w wavelength light on somebody.
Watch blood glucose levels in a blood glucose test, and it's blunted.
Now, the LED lights that are commonly used now, or most everywhere,
they are truncated so that it's all short-wave length and medium-wave length.
And that short wavelength light in the absence of long wavelength light has been shown to damage the mitochondria.
There's a kind of a niche group online different from the butthole sunners.
So that are very bullish about this idea that the switch from incandescence to LEDs and not just screens, but general lighting, is causing disruptions and mitochondrial function.
This used to be considered crazy. This was like chemtrail crazy, right?
But now we're starting to see from animal studies and human studies from Glenn Jeffrey and others
that people's vision gets better when they get in front of an incandescent bulb once a day.
If they get sunlight, which also has long wavelength light, your vision improves because of
improvements in mitochondria.
You can, again, better blood glucose regulation.
This study just came out eating near a window or working near a window.
It improves blood glucose regulation.
So, you know, I'm not paranoid.
I have LEDs in my home, right?
But if you can get outside and get some long wavelength light from the sun without getting a burn, that's the trick.
I do it every day.
You don't watch too much UV.
Yeah, and you look extremely healthy.
I'm not just saying that.
I'm all close.
So I'd be in a position to gauge, right?
Oh, finish your thought.
Well, it's absolutely true that we-
I owe it all to clean living.
Right.
So I don't want to say that short wavelength light is poison.
That's not quite right.
It's short wavelength light in the absence of long wavelength light.
And if you would ask me about this, you know, eight, ten years ago, I'd say,
my colleagues in the sleep lab at Stanford, you know, one of the preeminent,
at sleep labs in the world. They're really big on morning sunlight, afternoon sunlight. That's
actually where I learned it from, from the sleep biologists at Stanford first. But you start to
look at our environment is becoming very short wavelength, rich, long wavelength diminished.
We're having darker mornings, people straight onto the phone. In the evening, it's too bright.
And then we can make it generational and say this younger generation that seems to really be
struggling. Let's set aside the content they're looking at. What's actually on those screens,
it may be that we've made them sick.
And so while I am a fan of modern medicine...
The light itself.
What's that?
It's the light itself is what you're saying.
I'm saying it's the light itself and the timing of light.
It's such an important message that it's not just the fact that it's a bunch of stupid
TikToks.
Well, it's that too.
That are poisoning your mind.
It's the light itself, even if it was transmitting the smartest, wisest messages throughout
history.
The light itself.
The light itself?
It's just not natural.
That's right. And incandescent bulbs and firelight and candlelight, all these things were very healthy for us. And I actually think it's hard now to get incandescence. There's some people think it's illegal. They're just very hard to get. They are less energy efficient than LED. But when you talk about going to the hotel and everything is like this bright, intense blue, when was the last time someone had to change an LED bulb? You never have to do that, right? So it's like idiot proof and it's, you know, power efficient, but there's always a cost on the back end. There's always.
And you mentioned TikTok, but as much as I'm a fan of Instagram, I teach on Instagram and YouTube,
they've really migrated towards shorter content.
They promote three-minute or shorter reels on Instagram.
They tell you if it's longer than that, it's not going to get shared as broadly.
I mean, all of the platforms have shifted towards shorter video.
At the same time, longer audio is still on the rise.
I've said this many times.
I don't understand the American public.
Their attention span seems to be eight seconds or three hours.
If I do a podcast that's less than 90 minutes, they feel very cheated.
And yet what you're talking about, that seems also prevalent in our culture,
that people have no attention's meant at all.
And you've got to get it in there in two minutes or less or just forget about it.
It's wild.
What do you make of that?
Is that a generational thing?
I think it's a fundamental difference between the auditory system and the visual system
where the visual system can tolerate a lot of fast updating.
Right.
If you had to hear something different every 90 seconds or every three minutes even, it would be chaotic.
It's just like, this is crazy.
That's interesting.
This is crazy.
I mean, it's like shorter than a Ramon's song.
It's how we're taking it in.
Exactly.
It's right.
Visually because we're so used to movies for, I don't know how many decades now, quick cutting and just, you know, we can, we can, they can, subliminal advertising.
Remember when that was a thing?
Oh, yeah.
It would be, you wouldn't even notice.
The controversy was they put a skull and crossbones into subliminally, into cigarette ads because the theory was people really want to die.
Are you serious?
Yeah, I am absolutely serious.
Whoa.
They subliminally put a skull and crossbones in there.
Whoa.
I would have thought they would have done the opposite.
Right, no.
You know, put it like a beating heart.
There's like a robust beating heart.
No.
That's how evil they are.
nude woman or something like that.
No, that's how fucked up we are.
But, you know, when you said, like, a few years ago,
it was like chemtrail-level conspiracy theory,
that's why I get a little nervous when people say,
oh, the ultimate expert in.
I'm sure they are.
Sure.
But you know what?
Science, it's no final answer.
I mean, there are, you know, but it takes time.
like evolution.
When it first came out, people didn't just sign on.
It had to go through the testing period.
Okay, we're past that.
And we're past that with global warming too.
I was saying about Tucker would argue this.
Yes, okay, we're past that.
Right.
You know, we can argue about what to do about it.
But we're past, you know, humans aren't causing it.
Yes, they are.
And, you know, maybe that's whatever, you know.
But, you know, this idea.
Well, it's interesting. It seems like there's bipartisan support for the idea that we're contaminating water sources and food sources. You know, I think, I guess more closely to what you just raised, it's beyond me why artificial lighting environments might be damaging us in some way and certain medications like antibiotics can be beneficial. Like we are living in the land, with respect to health, we do seem to be living in the land of whatever experts,
Certainly is not how I try and pitch things,
but whatever expert is speaking to us
seems to think that the things they're talking about
are the only things that are important.
Like, I'm not saying it's only light.
I'm saying light is foundational.
Circadian biology is foundational.
Cortisal rhythms are foundational.
Nutrients and food, not excess calories,
are getting enough micronutrients.
But when you look online, what you find
is that the people couch themselves as the,
it's all sunlight or it's all food.
And I think this is what's really damaged
the Maha movement, frankly,
because I think most people are really
Most people across the board would say, okay, getting food additives out and reducing processed foods.
Surely that's a great thing.
But then the vaccine debate, for instance.
Actually, I have an update on the vaccine piece that I spoke to NIH director today to get you an update.
Because last time when I was on your show, I talked about it.
And it's about these MRNA vaccines.
Oh, yeah.
Because I said, and I still think, that to cancel the research for MRNA vaccines for cancer would be utterly foolish.
I think that's a three-neuron decision.
Agreed.
Okay.
So I talked to Jay, and he assured me that Jay Badachari, a director of NIH, and now actually currently
also director of CDC.
Let's give people some background who during COVID, and I was one of the people who took a lot of
shit during COVID.
I feel very vindicated, by the way.
But I'm sure not nearly as much as the people who are in charge of health now.
And Jay Batichari was one of those people who was thrown off.
Twitter or wherever because, you know, like he's a nut because he had an alternative view of how we were handling COVID.
He was largely opposed to lockdowns at certain phases. I know this because he's my colleague at Stanford.
He was right. We didn't treat it overarchingly. We just didn't treat it the right way, which was to protect the most vulnerable population, but let society go on.
because it wasn't the bubonic plague.
It killed mostly very old people and obese people.
I know that's politically incorrect to say.
It's just the truth.
We didn't need to overreact the way we did.
We didn't need to spend more money than we did on World War II.
Is that right?
Yes, it's right.
Well, of course, we told everybody to go to your room and hide under your bed.
And we'll make up your salary.
Where do you think we got that money?
Where we always get it out of thin air, that's going to come home to roost, and that's going to affect your health.
Yeah, well, the mental health...
There's pot bad for you in the lockdown.
Before I...
Before we talk about vaccines.
Because it makes you do this.
I have an update for you on this as well.
I don't know what this is, but...
Oh, yeah, what is it?
So, okay, so the MRNA vaccine update is Dr. J. Batachar, who now is also acting director of the CDC, by the way.
He's juggling both roles.
And a smart guy.
And a very smart guy and somebody who listens.
You know, I'm not formally associated with Maha, despite what you might read out there.
I'm not formally associated with any political group.
I'm neither a double hater nor a double lover when it comes to politics.
I am a issue-by-issue person.
That's me in politics.
Great. Okay. Appreciate you. Thank you.
You too.
Thank you.
So he assured me that the, his words, that the NIH funding for MRNA vaccine research for
oncology for cancer has not been cut. What was cut, he said, his words, it was the $500 million
put towards MRNA vaccines for upper respiratory illnesses that was set aside from Project
Warp Speed, which people forget was a Trump initiative. I'm not trying to, you know, what do the
the kids say, glaze or glow up or what? I'm not trying to, but we should remember that that was a,
that was part of the Trump administration. Absolutely. And I think that the, the mRNA vaccines,
the label has caused a lot of people to say, I don't want anything to do with those.
But I just had an oncologist on my podcast.
The potential to eradicate cancers using technologies like those or others like CRISPR is so exciting.
And the way this is going to work is not by testing on humans.
It's going to be by harvesting a T-cell.
Let's stop on CRISPR because I remember first seeing it on 60 minutes.
Gene splicing, right?
It's gene editing.
Gene editing.
So you can actually go in and add genes and modify genes.
A Nobel Prize was given.
Why is it called CRISPR?
The CRISPR cast system is an enzyme system that can get and insert and cut and repair DNA at specific locations.
Okay.
But yes, I've been hearing about CRISPR ever since that 60 Minutes report, but that was like seven or eight years ago.
I feel like, hey, I'm 70 now.
Where's CRISPR when I need it?
So CRISPR is being used?
I mean, I'm not saying I need it, but I'm thinking I'd like it.
CRISPR has been used to successfully treat certain childhood cancers.
CRISPR. Now, I should say that's by taking cells, modifying their genes and reinserting those cells, which works very well in the immune system.
But it's not a cure for cancer.
Well, it holds...
Sometimes it is.
It holds the potential to cure many forms of cancer.
So cancers are all generally...
And it's done it sometimes, right?
It has...
Sure, yeah.
I mean, it's not in widespread use because there are a lot of ethical issues.
I will tell you, there was a guy.
He actually trained as a postdoc at the same time as I did in the United States.
then went to China. He did. He made CRISPR modified babies. Okay, this is a well-known, yes, he announced at a
meeting that he had taken some kids that, from IVF. The report was that the father was HIV positive.
He modified the receptor for HIV in these embryos. And two kids were born with modified genomes.
Now, here's the twist. From what womb? They were inserted into the guy's wife, I believe. You know,
So they took the eggs, her egg, his sperm, modified the embryos once the embryos were in a dish using crisper.
She carried.
So targeting a specific gene.
And I should say when people get really worried about genetic selection, when people partner select their genetic select.
Right when they go, oh, that person's attractive or successful or kind or whatever.
But she carried it to term and they had a baby shower.
Two babies.
Yeah, two babies.
I'm not asking about the shot.
Chinese baby shower.
I want to know about the shower.
Yeah, Chinese baby shower.
I don't know what that looks like.
Is it different?
I imagine it is.
And these babies were born.
Now, here's why it's controversial.
First of all, he didn't get any approval from the International Ethics Committee.
There is no International Ethics Committee.
There was no International Ethics Committee on this at that time.
International ethics.
And there is rumor that this HIV receptor may actually not just confer some susceptibility or resistance to HIV,
but that it also might be involved in brain circuits involved in memory.
So the story became that he used CRISPR to generate these, you know, super babies or something like that.
The Chinese government claims that he was punished.
We don't know if he was punished by being put in jail or given a laboratory.
We don't know.
It's all very mysterious and cloaked.
But when this happened, the international community paused.
And it was very unclear.
I was watching this very closely.
It was very unclear for a few moments, whether or not he would be given a Nobel Prize or whether or not he would be thrown into a cell.
The world didn't know how to deal with this because he was way ahead of the curve.
I guarantee that there are countries now where people are using CRISPR own embryos.
I'm certain it has serious ethical concerns.
It is not allowed in the United States, but it's coming.
In fact, you can deep sequence embryos now from IVF,
and you can isolate the embryos that you think have the fewest disease genes
or that you think have the most genes that would confer whatever traits that you...
You think we're always late on getting to some of these things.
I know from a friend who had cancer
that he had to go to Mexico
to do the thing where they take the stem cells out
and put it back in your body
and it worked, by the way.
Yeah.
Why do we have to go to Mexico to do that?
Our regulatory bodies here are much stricter
on certain things than anywhere else.
I mean, if you're dying, what do you have to lose?
Yeah, well, there's this weird inverse stringency.
So when it comes to like sunscreen, we'll talk about sunscreen, for instance, you know, or food additives.
Europe bans certain things that we allow very readily here.
Formaldehyde.
Also, yeah, and certain pesticides.
And in Europe, alcohol, no dis, is classified as a world health organization classifies as a classification.
Do as you like, but know what you're doing.
Here we don't classified as a carcinogen, even though we know it increases.
Cancer risk, you're fine, you're healthy in other ways.
I wasn't freaking out about it.
You're very calm.
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You know that feeling when you're at the gym doing the exact same routine,
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So that, but on the other side, when you think about which drugs we allow doctors to provide
or what's allowed over the counter.
Here, there's a lot more stringency.
For instance, right now there's a huge battle over peptides,
which I'm happy to talk about,
because the GLPs are so popular, which are peptides.
What are peptides?
Peptides are small chains of amino acids
that have a biological function.
Insulin's a peptide.
GLP1 is a peptide.
You make these things naturally,
but these can be synthesized
and put into the body and they can have an effect.
And typically when a drug, like a GLP1 drug,
like Ozempec, Mungaro, or the,
big one that's coming. This is going to be a trillion-dollar drug, and it has huge implications
for the sorts of things you and I think about the interaction between politics and health
is red at trutide. It's a gLP-3, meaning it hits the glp receptor, GIP, and glucagon.
It can cause up to a third of loss in body weight and some degree of muscle sparing. Some.
People should still exercise. Now, Eli Lilly holds the patent. It went through phase three,
very successfully. Eli Lilly does not want.
compounding pharmacies selling red at Trutide. Why? Because it's far cheaper. And we had this
this recent thing where Trump argued for lower drug prices, right? Yeah. Do you think the drug
companies were like, oh yeah, sure, let's just lower drug prices? No. It was a deal, right?
I won't say how I know this, but it was a deal whereby the administration kind of did a wink
nod that drugs are going to pass more quickly through R&D to market. So they're going to make up
the cost differential on the research and development end, right? Less money invested in research
and development, less time to market, and happy to lower prices. This is my understanding. Someone will
probably tell me I'm wrong, but that's my understanding. Now, Eli Lilly wants to protect the patent
for Red of Trutide. But I'll tell you, in Los Angeles County right now, there are a lot of people,
mostly people that get in front of cameras taking red at true tie because it works so spectacularly well
at a fifth of the prescribed dose or the recommended dose from these trials and at a tenth of the price
if you get it from a compounding pharmacy now compounding pharmacies aren't supposed to make it
but this is another area where the FDA would like them to not do it but it's pseudo-regulated
the gray market as I'm referring to it is the when people can buy this stuff online for research
purposes only okay and then the black market
people refer to as Chinese peptides, which are peptides that probably don't contain what you think
they do, and there's very little stringency, and you have to really worry about contamination.
It's a little unfair to China. I want to be clear. These could be coming from Belarus for all I know.
I mean, they could be coming from anywhere, but people refer to them as Chinese peptides, which is not fair.
We should just call them black market peptides. So the FDA would like to protect its relationship to
pharma. Pharma wants to protect the patents for drugs where there's a lot of money. Red of Trututide stands to be a trillion-dollar drug.
So here's the weird split.
I want to make sure I close the hatch on the FDA piece.
Right now, the key is to prevent harm, right?
We don't want people taking black market or gray market peptides that could hurt them.
At the same time, these compounding pharmacies have made many drugs, not just GLP's,
but many drugs much more affordable to people in a landscape that don't even have to justify, right?
People are really struggling for health care or self-directed health care, are peptides that be all end all?
Well, no, not necessarily lifestyle factors and drugs in some cases or lifestyle factors and, you know, other things.
But the key here is that if a drug stands to make a company a lot of money, then there's an incentive to regulate this stuff.
So we're in this weird landscape where I really think you have two populations of slightly overlapping populations of people.
you have people that their level of astringency is if it's not FDA approved from a traditional company, you know, from pharma, multiple randomized control trials, I don't want to take it. I'm not putting it anywhere near my family or anyone I know. And then you have a separate category of people, which is quite large, who say the fact that something is from pharma, the fact that it's associated with the FDA is the major reason why they do want to take something. And this is where I think I'm so tired of looking at,
Traditional media coverage of like peptides is where they throw it out like a dog's breakfast of all these different things lump in just say
Peptides don't do anything really insulin doesn't do anything for a diabetic really the GLP's don't do ever anything
The root of all of this is control of the patent and financial pipeline which is not to say that I don't understand
You can't relate I mean Lily I have no stock in Lily
Kind of wish I did I mean it's over a thousand bucks right now. It was a couple hundred bucks a few years ago
Lily invested hundreds of millions of dollars they stand
to make trillions of dollars.
It makes every bit of sense
why they would try and shut down
the red at Trutide compound.
It's so funny that it's so similar to politics,
which is you can't trust either half fully.
When the argument is like
their peptides are all bad.
It's like Trump is all evil
or the Democrats are all evil
and it's like you have to read both sides
because nobody tells you the full truth.
They only want to forward their narrative.
And it sounds like it's a situation.
same thing in medicine as it is in politics.
It is. I mean, as a research scientist and friends with many, many physician scientists
and physicians, I do think, at least at Stanford, most all physicians and scientists,
I do believe, want to solve problems correctly and provide good for the world.
Stanford seems like it's a super woke place.
No.
Stanford?
We have the Hoover folks, right?
I mean, that's like a libertarian think tank, basically.
Connie Rice runs it, I believe.
Is that at Stanford?
Yeah, it's at Stanford.
The big tower, the tower, you know?
I'm not that familiar with the campus.
No, I would say Stanford on balance is very balanced.
Because I read somewhere like this is going back, you know,
sort of peak woke time five years ago or something,
that they had 10,000 administrators.
It's a big place.
It's got his own zip code, you know.
Okay, but it just seems like that's all.
We're not talking about professors.
and when I'm talking about students.
We're talking about bureaucrats, kind of.
But there is a hospital, a children's hospital.
I mean, it's one of the most modern.
Look, I...
All right, maybe, you know...
You know, I have this podcast...
I don't trust anything until I get both sides of the story.
I'm just saying I read that, and that I concede right away.
That is forwarding somebody's narrative
that elite colleges are out of control,
which, by the way, I do think there is absolute truth in that.
What's the other side of it?
Well, there's another side of it, too.
Yeah. So I'm anxious to hear you tell me.
Maybe we need 10,000. Maybe they do need 10,000 administrators at Stanford.
Well, with the caveat that I can already hear the voices saying, oh, you know, he's just trying to protect his job.
Look, I'm tenured. You know, Jay kept his job during the pandemic.
You're a celebrity now. You can't be fired.
Yeah, I mean, I have this other gig, so I'm comfortable.
Oh, you can't be fired.
So, you know, but I will tell you, I'll give you the positives. I'll give you the negatives.
I'll be real direct with you.
I've been many places in my academic career.
And I will tell you that while there are many other excellent places,
there are very, very few, if any, places in the world
where you find people who are just absolutely focused on bringing their science,
which often impacts health care,
to the next level with the utmost degree of rigor.
My colleagues are amazing.
I'm telling you.
I mean, I've got colleagues like Carl Diceroth who developed ways to image a modify cellular activity,
across the board, everything from humans, rat cat, monkey bat for research purposes.
People who are blind are seeing again as a consequence of that work.
I've got colleagues building artificial retinas.
I've got colleagues who are figuring out in the psychology department that are really parsing
this notion of like Ali-Krome mindsets, which is a setting for the mind, how to navigate stress,
not just thinking that stress is going to dissolve you into a puddle of tears, but how to harness
stress into performance.
She's a D-1 athlete, clinical psychologist, and runs a major research lab and mom.
and happily married.
I mean, these people are like on a whole other level.
Okay, it's also a place where people are very collegial.
Now, are there a lot of administrators?
Yes.
Are there a lot of beautiful lawns and palm trees?
Also, yes.
But I'll tell you the real strength of Stanford.
You know this woman, this freestyle skier who ended up skiing for China in the thing?
Oh, like, go.
Yeah, okay.
She's Stanford.
Okay, I will tell you, the real prize at Stanford is the students, right?
everyone who works there knows that the intellect of the students and the ingenuity of the students
is what sets it apart. And again, there are other places. Now, the downside, doing research is very
expensive, very expensive. And in the current NIH climate, one of the first things that happened
when HHS got revised, and I was very bullish about pushing back on this, is they wanted to cut
the indirect cost, the support of the university, not just the labs, to 15% across the country.
That would devastate science across the country.
Now you could say, oh, Stanford's got this massive endowment.
It's as big as a country.
You're saying with Harvey, why don't they pull from there?
Okay, let's just take that argument and say 15% would take the University of Utah's,
which is a fantastic place, a fantastic place for biomedical research and many other things.
The UT Austens, the Wisconsin's, the wash shoes, and it would demolish them.
Fortunately, that cut didn't happen.
And I'm very happy to say, and I take no credit for this, but I've been very vocal on the phone
and elsewhere, getting in Jay's ear and other people's ear, you cannot cut the federal budget
for research in this country. It fuels companies. It fuels basically the healthcare exploration
and development for the entire world, and they just put a 1% increase on the budget. Now,
I think that's too small, but the problem that I have with big institutions, rich institutions,
like Stanford, Harvard, MIT, Caltech. Now, here's the other piece of it, is that 30% of the
the indirect money, meaning the additional funds that come from NIH, go to a very small subset
of universities across the country for big facilities, genomics facilities, proteomic facilities,
which means that the laboratories there have what many people view as a bit of an unfair advantage.
Okay, so if we really wanted to equally distribute intellectual growth and we want to
equally distribute scientific growth, we would distribute that money more equally across the country.
Now, my colleagues at Stanford and I hate me for saying this, but
It's kind of weird, right?
I mean, if you're at the University of Colorado Boulder
and you're a graduate student,
shouldn't you have the opportunity
to do the most cutting-edge experiments there?
And just because you're not at Stanford,
you shouldn't be hindered.
A lot of the country feels left out.
Yeah, and I think the redistribution
of some of these funds would be good.
It would be helpful.
A lot of the country feels like all the cool jobs
are in a few different places,
and they kind of look down on us,
and we're not all Hicks out here.
You know, I think something like this would go a long way.
Yes.
I mean, I don't know what the University of Boulder is like, but, you know, I've been to Boulder.
I played the city.
It's not a bunch of fucking hicks.
Very liberal.
Very liberal.
Great place.
Great science.
Yeah, I mean, they had some unfortunate incidents there.
I think it was like some sort of pseudo-terrorist attack.
No, no, no.
Someone threw a Molotov cocktail or something at some protest.
I mean, it's kind of crazy.
I mean, Boulder seems like a nice little peaceful town.
I think it was the place where the Batman, he dressed as the Joker or Batman or
something, this is like 2013. I remember, because I played the city like a couple of months
after the, it was in a theater. It was a, it was a shooting. Oh, I know what you're trying.
Yeah, that's right. I know what you're referring to. Yeah, yeah. I think that was,
yeah, I'm thinking of a separate incident, a more recent incident that was related to a public
protest. No, I remember because I donated the proceeds from the weekend in Colorado to that
fund. I know, I know. It was a, yeah, there was one at University of Virginia as well.
It would have looked bad not to.
Or Virginia Tech.
But yeah, it was...
Yeah, redistribution of resources across the country would be great.
And so I talked to Jay about this today, and he said that one of the initiatives is to start
creating national centers that get a large percentage of funding so that scientists and people
running clinical studies from anywhere in the country can go there and use the state-of-the-art
tools to be able to do their experiments anywhere.
I think that's a wonderful idea.
I think that that's going to ruffle some feathers
at some of the, let's say, wealthier institutions.
But endowments are very, you know, are thick at certain places, right?
There's a lot of money sitting in the endowments at these places.
And as you say, I think it's important for people to know
that some of the stuff that, and I agree with you,
that they shouldn't cut any of this money, it hasn't happened.
You know, people come up to me all the time when I'm out.
and Bill, what are we going to do?
Like their world is coming to an end, which it's not.
And I was just saying the Supreme Court stopped the president from his tariff thing.
You know, I'm sure you saw that.
That was kind of a big one that the Supreme Court, including two of his appointees, said,
no, I'm sorry, you know, we'll give you a lot, but we're not going to give you this.
Thousands of cases of local courts have pushed back on detaining immigrants.
and the budget that he asked for never got.
It's basically the same down the line
as it was the year before he took office.
So for people who think the sky is falling,
it's not quite falling.
You know, there still is a system that we have
that's definitely taking a stress test
we've never had before,
but it's sort of holding in this way
and this is part of it.
Like that money is still there.
This is still America and we're still, you know,
are we, do you think we're the leading edge in scientific research?
Holding in there with some other top places, like in Germany, Switzerland, Scandinavia.
And I will tell you, China is, in terms of brain machine interface,
inserting chips into the brain of non-human primates and humans to do, you know,
increasing memory, novel ways of using AI for cognition,
they are miles ahead of us.
What do you mean non-human primates?
Macaque monkeys is the typical model.
Very hard to do that work in the United States
because it's very expensive,
and it's dangerous.
Macaque monkeys carry something called,
it's a form of herpes that kills humans.
They get a cold sore.
People have died from this.
It was a woman in Atlanta had some monkeys.
How do you get a cult or from a monkey?
Well, no, the monkey splash urine in her eye.
And so it's, yeah, I mean, it was deadly.
She was dead within a couple weeks.
Is that right?
Yeah, so years ago, you know,
Just not that it's going to really affect my personal life, but which monkey is this?
The macaque monkey.
The macaque monkey.
The big one.
The big one.
The big one's.
No, no.
Yeah.
I fucked some chimps, but this is not, okay.
Oh, my goodness.
Wow.
So.
That's, yeah, so China is making strides.
You know, Switzerland shut down non-human primate research as far as I know it's very expensive to do in the U.S.
The national primate centers used to be a big piece of research in this country for everything.
the development of birth control was testing non-human primates.
You know, the closest model to us.
Now, I have to say, you know, I'm not saying this to protect myself,
I'm saying this because I truly feel,
I think the need for justification to do work on non-human primates
has to be very high.
They are very much like us.
I've interacted with these animals a lot.
Does it hurt them when they do it?
Yes.
It does.
They do what they can to minimize pain, but it absolutely does.
I mean, having a, you know, a stereotax implanted in the head, injections into the eye.
There's no way to do that completely painlessly.
And, you know, that's tough.
That's a, that's a, it wears on the soul, I will tell you to do that way.
I'm Peter.
I'm Peter, so.
So, so, so, so I'm, right.
So I am, I personally couldn't do that work.
You know, years ago, you know, I, I've worked on a bunch of different species.
And I'll tell you, one of the reasons I'm so happy to be doing what I'm doing now is I
hated working on animal models. But in many cases, animal models are what we have. But again,
non-human primates, we need a very, very high justification and threshold before one would want
to invest in doing that kind of work. As long as... What are we going to get out of it? That's worth
it. Yeah. So I think, okay, well, you're asking me to justify something for which I'm a little...
No, no, I'm not asking you to justify it. I'm just saying, what in the best possible scenario would we
get out of it where someone down the road could make the case and say, yes, I'm sorry the monkey
suffered, but now, you know, eight million, you know, children with Tourette's syndrome are free of
this curse. Yeah, it's, I guess it depends on the extent to which you believe that going from
mouse to human is a reasonable jump. It's been the intermediate species. It's either been mouse to
pig to human or mouse to a non-human primate to human for, you know,
dose lethality, infectious disease, you know, I mean, they are very similar to us.
You know, I'll tell you, I'm very happy to not work on non-human primates.
They are sentient as are dogs, in my belief.
And it's a really tough, tough problem.
I think one of the challenges is that now there's a lot of excitement about AI,
and I think you can do a lot with AI that you, you know, they couldn't do a few years ago.
But cells, as you were pointing out earlier, are that, you know, the foundation
building block of all organs and health, and oftentimes to understand human health,
you have to understand it in a model system that's similar. Let me give you an example.
This is as long as we're staying edgy. There's something new that's being done in Mexico and in
Europe called three-party IVF. It's illegal here. It's actually being done in the UK.
I think I had one here.
So we know that. Only one of them was Mexican.
We know that as women age, the number of sort of eggs that.
that can be successfully fertilized
and create healthy humans goes down with age.
We know this, right?
So one of the things that makes it harder
as women get older is the mitochondrial genes
that control some of the splitting of the egg
and the formation of more cells, et cetera,
turns out that people figure this out first in mice
and then in non-human primates
that you can take the DNA from the woman
who wants to be the mom,
the sperm from the guy,
that wants to be the dad. And you can take those and put them into an egg from a younger donor
where the DNA has been taken out, but the spindle and the things that pull it across with the
mitochondrial genes are intact. And you can end up with a healthy kid. How do we know this? Because
there are women who have mitochondrial genetic diseases. This was done in the UK. And all your
mitochondrial genes come from your mom. And so these people wanted to have kids. So someone said,
hey, maybe you could do this. So they did it first in mice, then in non-human primates. And now,
in Mexico and elsewhere around the world, people who are having trouble conceiving or by standard
IVF are starting to do this three-party IVF. It's not yet legal in the United States,
but this is a good example where it went from mouse to non-human primate to human. So you would say,
gosh, would you want to go from mouse to human? Like, that's a pretty big jump. So at the same
time, we're not macaque monkeys. They're not identical to us, obviously. So it's the way the
fields have progressed. And in terms of cognition and things like that, but again, I don't want to be,
I'm not arguing that more work should be done in non-human primates. I'm not making that argument.
I think whenever possible, we should avoid the use of animal models, always, right? Why injure
or take a life when you potentially don't have to? But, you know, when you say whenever possible.
Yeah, I mean, there are cancer treatments that, I doubt humans unless they're dying and they're really
at the end of life. No, it's just saying, I mean, this is the, this is where the rubble
meets the road is whenever possible. Of course, I think everyone would say whenever possible.
Right. Or most people. And in this country, we don't tend to have cat and dog research anymore,
largely because of the advocacy groups. Because we like them because they were our pets.
And at the same time, the pig people tell me pigs are very sweet. I don't know.
But they're not our pets, so we throw them under the bus. They're bacon. And China's different.
China treats, you know, I think they treat this whole landscape of animal research very differently.
they have a lot of researchers in Europe keep their primates in China because of the lower costs and do the work there.
I mean, we're sort of going into the future of brain machine interface and kind of where that is.
And yes, China is really a kind of a hot seat for that.
But why couldn't, why do we have to use animals?
Why can't we just use humans that nobody likes, like, you know, Klansman or, you know, guys who are on Epstein Island?
Something like that.
I mean, they're huge.
So that's how they should settle the XTube.
Well, of course, because they're human.
It's going to be better research anyway.
Oh, my goodness.
Those files.
I couldn't help by going to those files.
And I was able to find examples of people saying, you can find this there, saying,
we should, too bad we can't experiment on kids or we should experiment on kids.
It's in those files.
Experiment what on kids?
They just are talking about wanting to do experiments on children.
Who is?
In the files.
But who?
Which people?
Oh, okay.
Bill Gates.
You really want to go down this?
Yeah, I do.
Yeah.
I'm fucking curious.
Right, it's all on the DOJ site.
Okay, yeah.
So here's what I think is...
Not Deepak.
Deepak?
I don't think so, no.
Oh, he's...
I think that's the worst.
Because he always was like,
oh, I'm the spiritual man.
I'm the healer.
I will tell you that you are part of the universe.
Yeah, part of the universe that went to Epstein Island.
And, I mean, his shit just...
I mean, I like him.
He's been...
I've never one.
I'm never one.
Okay.
I'm proud to say...
I'm proud to say.
proud to say I've never met. He's a sweet guy, but, you know, it was always a Halloween costume,
and I'm not that sorry that it got, the mask got torn off. I mean, it's just, look, I'm not a person
who's big on, you know, like people who say they're spiritual leaders anyway. So, like, you know,
his thing was always, I was winking, and I always was winking back. Like, you and I both know I'm
selling a book. Okay. You know, like that kind of thing. And it's the same book, like 45 times.
Yeah, that's weird when people publish the same book over and over.
That's just because what is that?
It's because people want to be reaffirmed of what the sunken cost fallacy.
You know what that is.
You know, like you say you believe the gypsy who's been telling you to give all your money to this person.
And you just, you're already out a million bucks.
You can't turn back on it now, even though something in your mind is telling you this is not right.
But it's sunken cost fallacy.
you just keep going with it.
I think that's what it is.
You're talking about the customers
or the people who write these things?
The customers.
Yeah.
I mean, for the people who write them,
it's just a gravy train.
But for the customers, yes, it's like,
you know, the latest version of,
yes, it's the same book over and over,
but it's telling them,
it's comforting to hear
what you already think you know
and believe and is helping you,
even though there's probably a mountain of evidence
that it's not.
Or maybe it does,
because the human mind is an amazing place that can convince itself of anything and a lot of success in life.
Somebody once said it a million years ago, if you think you're happy, you're happy.
Are you happy?
I am happy.
Right now.
Yeah.
I'm happy.
I quit being peaceful and being happy very similar.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, if you're not happy, then you have been fucking problems.
I mean, you're doing well, you're well-like, you're popular, you're a huge success.
I mean, I have my internal storms like anyone else where, you know, I see things out in the world that frustrate me.
But then I remind myself, you know, I'm striving and I'm, you know.
Yes, there's a lot of cognitive dissonance, I feel, between the top half of the country that is doing well.
You know, not the people are working three jobs and paycheck to paycheck, but the people, the ones will come up to me and say, Bill, what are we going to do?
It's just a distance between like their world, which is fucking awesome.
And I look, even if your world is awesome, I'm not saying you're wrong to be worried about the state of the country.
Absolutely.
I'm in the boat with you there.
I am.
But I also don't lose sight of the fact that my own world, no, I'm not on the edge of madness every day.
And maybe we'll get there, but we're not.
So let's not pretend we are.
Let's not to pretend, what are we going to do?
Go finish your dinner.
That's what you're going to do.
Yeah, well, I think that the numbing out and the rage that the Internet offers are incredibly
intoxicating for people.
I think, you know, to go online is to either forget what you would otherwise be surrounded by.
It's what every algorithm is built on.
It is built on that.
It's built on hate and rage and conflict.
Yeah, I mean, I think the Epstein files, to me, are an interesting.
I think people are going to be talking about this 100 years from now.
I think it's going to be...
Wow. Really?
I think it's...
Well, I'll say a couple things.
First of all, I never met him, never interacted with him, never corresponded with him, you know, and thrilled about that.
Thanks to all of us.
Yeah, great.
Nice.
Thank you.
Once again, thank you.
We'll start our own club.
He had deep pause in the scientific community and in media.
Every community.
And every community.
I'm very happy to know that, you know,
no one at Stanford was taking money from him.
That's great.
Actually, I remember in 2017 when that case first broke,
and I'm in touch with our development,
our fundraising office all the time.
And I said, please tell me that he's not funding labs here.
They said, no, he approached us.
We gave him the cold shoulder.
You know, they vet very carefully,
which is what MIT didn't do.
It's what Harvard didn't do.
It's what Columbia didn't do.
I mean, I consider him a colleague only
because he's in the field of neuroscience, right?
But Richard Axel won the Nobel Prize
for discovering the molecular basis of olfaction.
He shared it with Linda Buck in 2004,
and he had to step down as the director
of the Columbia Neurosciences Institute today.
You got this off YouTube?
No, I got this off.
Yeah.
So, you know,
and so...
Don't take me so seriously.
Okay, well, I'll try not to you.
You can have to learn to sit here.
I mean, he was a pillar of our field,
and to learn that he was, you know,
buddy, buddy with Epstein for so many years.
And, you know, I think that it's...
So here's one thing that's clear to me at the...
I'm not a psychologist, but I'm a human being with some degree of experience.
And what I know is that if you're in touch with your gut sense,
if you're around a guy like Epstein, you should want to get out of there.
So the fact that people with, now I understand how some people were manipulated by him
because they were too young or whatever to be able to navigate that.
But why anyone, especially these supposed high IQ folks,
would actively seek him out and try to, you know, embed themselves.
in his world. Well, I can answer that question.
Omnipotence. But before I do, who were you going to tell me about?
Richard Axel. Is that who you were talking about? Oh, before. Yes. Yeah, no, that wasn't what I was
going to tell you about. Well, tell me. Okay, so I've looked at this thing very carefully now,
because you and I are in the business of media. So here's the question that I think has not been
explored thoroughly enough. Why is it that in 2008, Epstein was convicted, then comes back to New York.
I mean, he's still traveling all over the place. And people continue to,
engage with this guy. Like people seek him out. People are taking funding from him. And yes, I got it.
He wore the Harvard sweatshirt, which doesn't mean shit at all, by the way. Anyone can buy that
anywhere. I can tell you why. Why? He's a pimp. I can't believe I have to explain this to everybody.
He's a pimp, okay? There are people in this world, a lot of them who are very achievement-oriented,
shall we say, and successful in their field,
which is either science or finance,
who have zero clue how to get a female human into bed.
So you think these guys were just too too wee to get laid?
Correct.
He's a guy, like any pimp, who can just get, I don't know what it is.
I don't possess it.
I don't want to possess it.
It's horrible if you do it.
But he could get all these women and they,
you look at the emails.
It's in the e-mails.
It's in the email.
I mean, some of them were certifiably dwee.
Well, they're saying things like Richard Branson.
Hope I get to see you again, but, you know, only if you're going to bring your harem.
So it's what he brought with him.
I accept your hypothesis.
But the, but may I do a yes and?
Yes, please.
Yes, and.
Yeah, or you can disagree.
And I've talked about this before publicly, actually, a couple years ago before any of this popped.
I was on Rogan and I, and we were talking about, you know, why scientists cozied up to Epstein.
And he provided either directly or by, you know, being the rabbi in certain introductions,
enormous amounts of funding to certain places.
Like, you know, I mean, they're in the files, right?
I mean, I'm not trying to dodge a lawsuit here.
I mean, the Columbia Neuroscience Institute was not funded by Epstein, but there's a lot of record of sort of joint meetings around that.
And, you know, people in the leadership from Columbia meeting with Epstein and the people who eventually gave the money.
So here's the part that, I don't know, maybe I'm just too West Coast to understand this.
But here's the thing.
What's that?
Well, it's just, you know, this is a very New York story when you really think about it.
He had the biggest real estate footprint.
He had all, you know, an island and all the shit.
Like, honestly, like, I grew up in the South Bay.
I'm impressed by people that have discovered things and done things and, you know, creatives and things like that.
Like, I get it.
I understand Manhattan, where your real estate is, how big the real estate is.
But for people to...
otherwise intelligent people to blow past their understanding of his crimes, because that's what they were, against minors.
Wait, hold on. This means something. I know. Let's just take the example of the person who's not there for the women, who's there for the money.
Because a lot of people made a lot of money for their pet projects, their research projects, their technology projects.
I mean, the list of people that's in there, it doesn't look to me like they were all with him so they could, you know, get access to women.
and they wanted money.
And I think what he offered people
was a sense of omnipotence.
He has an island that's separate.
It was like a level above the level
that he offered other people
that turned out to be the level below everything else.
And we're somehow shocked now that this happened.
But I do think from 2010,
this was emphasizing before from 2010 or so,
until he was eventually arrested again
and was standing trial before it.
He was killed.
It's so obvious he was killed and didn't kill himself.
he was trying to be a member of the scientific community.
I mean, there are interviews in there.
He had a staff.
He hired people.
The guy who he hired, you want something interesting?
The guy who he hired to redo his web presence,
to kind of bury his sex offender status,
was a guy named Al Sekel.
I know because he came from the science community.
He wasn't a neuroscientist.
Kind of a failed scientist.
He ended up marrying Galane Maxwell's sister.
Guess what happened to Al Sechle in 2015?
found at the bottom of a cliff in France,
no one knows what happened.
Wild, right?
The woman that eventually came out
against Prince Andrew, right?
Virginia Gufrey
killed herself.
Said at some point,
if I die, it's not suicide.
And then, quote unquote, killed herself.
There are a lot of people that
apparently off themselves
or allegedly off themselves around this.
And one of them was the guy
who was in charge of his rebrand.
Okay.
So I don't, I completely agree with you.
There were people that were deweedy.
But that's a different issue.
It's a different issue.
I wish I do not disagree with you.
No, no, I think these are yes ands.
These are yes-in.
Yeah, it very well could be that these deaths are legitimately suspicious.
Yeah.
Because a lot of people have a lot to hide from.
Yeah.
But to the essential question, it's that no matter how big the big head is, there's some, you're right, some of the smartest people in the world.
No matter how big the big head is, it's the little head.
that is going to, this is the oldest maxim about men in history.
You're thinking with the wrong head,
and they will always do that.
But to the point of,
but to the point of,
the part that makes no sense to me is,
is overlooking whatever,
but not to the point of overlooking the fact
that he was a pedophile.
It wasn't that he was caught with a prostitute.
That's morals.
You think they fucking care about morals?
I guess I, I guess I, um,
first of all, they were able to,
they were able to just,
Because when he came out of that, what they said, what they put out there, was that she was like six months below the legal age.
That's what was online.
But that's not true.
Okay, but that's enough for them to believe it.
Which is exactly the part.
Enough for them to tell themselves, I'm not really engaging with a true pedified.
But how could they tell themselves that?
I would argue it was his web presence, which was very orchestrated, right, to make him seem like a rich guy who had gotten into some trouble, came back to you.
He had people actively working to build that persona.
I've spent some time in these files, and I'll tell you,
if his representation online had been closer to the reality,
maybe I'm naive, but I like to think it would have been harder for him
to pull so many people around him as layers of protection.
I would totally agree with that.
Okay.
So we're in agreement.
Yeah, we're in agreement, but...
But what about the other folks around him, like that visited his island
that clearly do not fall into the category that you're talking about.
I can't wrap my head around that.
Like who?
Well, I mean, I mean, Clinton, supposedly spent time with him.
You've got to be kidding.
He supposedly spent time with him, right?
Whatever think of him is all.
But he's not a, he's not a dweeb, right?
No, but.
Or let's say, as long as we're coming up with examples, I mean, you've got to be really careful here.
I just think.
Some of the folks that sat down to dinners with him, right?
Like, you couldn't pay me enough money to have a dinner with a guy where I had knowledge of that.
Listen, I'm far from perfect.
I'm not arguing that I'm perfect.
I'm not trying to draw a distinction.
And sure, I have.
No one says you're perfect.
Right.
I certainly am replete with flaws.
No one has been saying.
No one has been saying.
For years, I said I'm replete with flaws.
I like you.
But the problem is no one saying you're perfect.
So I'm certain.
But I just don't see a world where people who are otherwise intelligent.
don't have this issue with not being able to get laid,
as you refer to it, are sitting down with somebody
who's a convicted criminal for something like that.
I mean, pedophiles get killed in prison.
I mean, Epstein killed himself.
We know that.
But it's, I mean, other criminals kill pedophiles.
Dude, I explained it to you.
I mean, if you don't want to get it.
No, no, I get it.
I guess maybe.
I'm telling you that is exactly what it is.
All right.
That is exactly.
I trust your judgment.
I'm telling you, the urge, the urge
in men like that, these dirty guys who are like,
I created eight big companies, and, you know,
I've made $300 million dollars last week,
and no girl cares.
Some of these guys seem pretty happily married,
except for the money.
Beautiful women, like some of the big tech giants
are very happily.
You know, Zuck seems happily married.
I mean, Bezos is now happily married.
I mean, you know, I mean...
Well, Bezos is newly married, and I agree that.
Elon does, it seems to have, you know,
he's got a lot of baby momos.
Elon is on the emails
first he totally denied it, and he's caught being a huge liar.
That's who Elon is in the emails.
He's caught being a huge liar who said to the world,
oh, yeah, he tried to get me on his island, and I was not interested.
And then the email says, when can I get there?
What night is the wildest party?
You didn't see that one?
I missed that one.
I guess we read different emails.
I guess we read different.
Well, I mean, that's...
I was spending time trying to understand the sort of trajectory of this.
as it related to the academic and scientific community
and his media presence.
But, you know, people like that
who have access to do anything tend to do it.
You know, my friend has this theory about shark soup.
You know, you're not supposed to have it.
It's endangered the sharks, but they make soup,
and it's not supposed to be really good.
But you know what?
I can get it, and other people can't.
Wait, I thought you're PETA.
Your PETA.
I am.
I'm not supporting this.
I'm just saying people,
That's what people, they just, the point is that it's forbidden fruit.
So I'll, so I, and I'm a special person, so I'll indulge in that.
But that's, I'm saying, the essence of this, they think of themselves and they are so special in this many other ways.
And yet in this fundamental human need.
I mean, not to always be picking on Bill Gates, but obviously it was a sexless, passionless marriage at some.
some point, maybe not in the beginning. Most marriages become that. I know, horrible thing to say,
but it's true. And at that point, men are just living lives of quiet desperation.
But men who cheat, and I'm not condoning cheating, or women who cheat, certainly not condoning
cheating in either direction, they don't have to cheat with minors.
No. I mean, that's the part that makes no fucking sense. I don't think these guys were cheating
with minors. I think EPST.
had the miners. I think he introduced them to women who were masseuses or...
Do you think he was blackmailing them and keeping files?
That too, probably, yes.
There's this thing about the tiger with the camera eyes.
Even if he didn't have it documented, they knew he knew.
All right. Can I, can I, before we close it, we have to close on this?
We're going to close on this?
No, I just want to say, I know, there's a lot of, everybody wants you because you bring a lot of
So it meant a lot to me.
You would come here and I really appreciate it.
Oh, I'm delighted.
I'm always happy.
There's a million things I was wanting to ask you about my own health and health, but, you know.
Well, I always learn from you.
Seriously, I really enjoy our conversations.
Oh, we'll come back anytime.
I would love to.
I'll tell you one thing about cannabis before we wrap.
It's likely being rescheduled or has been rescheduled to Schedule 3, which means,
it's told this today, which means that now it can be explored.
more thoroughly for potential therapeutic uses.
I've been exploring it for 45 years, and I'm telling you it's fantastic.
It doesn't, I mean, it's, do you think...
Unless someone has a predisposition to psychosis, in which case it can be very dangerous.
Oh, for fuck's sake, yes, unless, unless, unless.
I mean, do you think smoking, like, a joint every few days is going to really hurt me?
You? No.
The kid with a predisposition to schizophrenia, yes.
Okay, well, okay, I'll keep it away from him.
Oh my.
All right. Well, thank you.
Yes.
Man, I got an education there.
I'm going to.
Oh, my.
I'm going to loosen you up, Andrew.
Over the years.
I was it.
