Hodgetwins Podcast - Stem Cells Are The Medical Industry's Big Secret | Twins Pod - Episode 27 - Eric Stoffers
Episode Date: August 23, 2024Eric Stoffers is the CEO of the world's number-one Stem Cell Company, BioXcellerator. Eric is using stem cells to make ALL KINDS of medical breakthroughs! Permanently fixing chronic injuries, regrowin...g tissue, growing back your hair, and even reviving your dead peepee! BioXcellerator is working miracles. Y'all can't miss this info! Educate yourself about Stem Cells and understand why the pharmaceutical companies don't want you to know about them! Get your Twins merch and have a chance to win The Iconic General Lee! - https://officialhodgetwins.com/ Get Optimal Human, your all in one daily nutritional supplement - https://optimalhuman.com/ Secure your financial future today - https://prepperbar.com/sp/landing-page-copy-3/ American-made, top of the line knives - https://dmoknives.com/ Want to be a guest on the Twins Pod? Contact us at bookings@twinspod.com Download Free Twins Pod Content - https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1_iNb2RYwHUisypEjkrbZ3nFoBK8k60CO Follow Twins Pod Everywhere - X - https://twitter.com/TheTwinsPod Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/thetwinspod/ Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/twinspod TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@twinspod YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCX8lCshQmMN0dUc0JmQYDdg Rumble - https://rumble.com/c/TwinsPod Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/79BWPxHPWnijyl4lf8vWVu?si=03960b3a8b6b4f74 Apple - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/twins-pod/id1731232810 03:50 - What Is Bioxcellerator 05:24 - Why Is There Not More Funding Going Into Stem Cells In America? 06:24 - How Do You Harvest Stem Cells? 08:24 - You Can Not Advertise Stem Cells In America 10:56 - No Babies Were Harmed In Extracting These Stem Cells! 14:08 - Stem Cells Really Save Lives 19:45 - What Are Stem Cells and How Do They Work 21:45 - Pro Athletes 27:05 - Stem Cells With Everyday Aliments 30:30 - Cure For Parkinsons 33:05 - Twins Got All Kinds Of Issues 35:01 - Twins Fans Are Crazy 38:09 - C19 Talk 42:00 - Do Americans Work Too Much? 47:18 - What Is The Process Of Getting Stem Cells With BioX? 51:40 - Stem Cells For EyeSight? 1:00:12 - Are Stem Cells A Miracle? 1:04:12 - Stem Cells Grow Your Hair Back?
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Yeah, welcome to episode 27.
Tell us about your company, Bio Accelerator.
Yeah, bio accelerator.
So I'm Eric Stauffers.
I'm the founder and CEO of Bio Accelerator.
We're a stem cell company.
But because of the FDA and the horrible medical system here in the United States,
good companies like ours are forced offshore.
How do stem cells work?
Yeah, what are the stem cells?
Yeah, so stem cells are the cells that are in our body.
We all have them.
They're building blocks of life at the beginning.
There you go.
They stay with us for our entire lives.
But just like everything in our lives, as we get older, they slow down.
You know, when you get a paper cut, you watch it and it bleeds at that moment, it scabs over.
The next day, it's, you know, maybe a little bruised and scab.
And by next week, it's gone, and you forget about it.
It was everywhere there.
Those are your stem cells healing.
Can you do this here in America?
Yeah, you can do it.
It's very low-level science.
A lot of our patients are people that have tried it here in the U.S.
And then they end up finding the best.
You have to go to Panama or to Colombia in clinics like mine.
It's actually illegal in most countries because if you had like tissues or,
organs or things that were for sale that you could pay people for, well, then you have people
disappearing for their kidneys. Oh, so you incentivizing like black market stuff. Exactly. The main
reason why this hasn't been approved in the United States is because it's going to hurt a lot of
pharmaceuticals, bottom line when it comes through their business. I don't have any insight into
the inner workings of the FDA and whether or not they've actually said that out loud and I doubt
they ever would. But in my opinion, that has a major factor in why it is very slow going through
regulation. I am not allowed to advertise like a traditional business. So I can't just buy a Google
ad word or put up on Facebook like, hey, I have a business and we're doing stem cell and we're
helping thousands of people. We just shut down. That is nuts. I got a lot of, I got authorizers,
got backprodite discs. Yeah. Dick don't work. We do a lot of cheese. I heard y'all stick a needle
in your peepee. Yeah. Yeah. It sounds worse. Now, I haven't had it done, but now I know a lot of
dudes that have done it.
You stick a tuba now.
Hell no.
Just a single injection.
It's easy.
Yeah, stick a tube in it.
I was joking.
Hey, shut up.
On the way over, my Uber driver, and he was like, man, I love one of those guys tell
each other, shut up and they yell at each other.
No shit.
Yeah.
I'll tell you more about my Uber driver.
He told me specifically, like, he's going to be killed by the government.
Oh, he's one of those QAnon fuckers.
He's definitely what I'm saying.
Yeah, he's definitely a friend of us.
Yeah.
Welcome to episode 27.
Yeah.
We got Eric Stof.
in the house today.
He's going to make us the bionic man.
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slash hogs twins get your free kit today yeah let's get to the episode yeah yeah welcome to episode 27
we got eric stofers in the house yeah where did that come from anyway that sound uh we used to
watch a lot of gay sex sounds like the gay randyman macho macho you know what every every guest
we bring on our show and he does the introduction, people's like, what's about to happen?
I was ready for it, but when I hear you guys doing it, I'm like, where did that come from?
Yeah, yeah.
I don't know. Where did that come from? I don't know.
I have no idea.
I guess started doing it, and people liked it in the video, so I guess the point.
Yeah, yeah.
Man, all right, so tell us about who you are in your company, Bioaccelerator.
Yeah, bioaccelerator.
So I'm Eric Stauffers. I'm the founder and CEO of Bio Accelerator.
We're an Arizona-based stem cell company, but because of the FDA and the horrible medical system here in the United States, we're good companies like ours are forced offshore.
So we are our main treatment facilities in Medelline, Colombia.
We say Medellin.
You know, most people know it as Medelline, but the locals call it Medelline.
Medelline.
Medelline.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, what are stem cells?
Yeah, I know stem cells by watching.
the family guy, maybe got the stem cell?
He had a stroke, right?
Saw that one.
And he got the stem cells and he was like, why is this band, you know?
Yeah, he had like a stroke and he walked into the stem cell place and he came out perfect.
Right, right.
FDA, why is this band?
Right, exactly what he said.
How long was I in there?
About five minutes.
Why are we not funding this?
When that came out, I had a shitload of friends that sent me that meme.
So I had it in my text inbox.
for like weeks.
Yeah.
It's a great question.
A lot of people don't know,
like if something could be that helpful,
why does it so much pushback?
I mean, I have the answer,
and a lot of it gets in,
it's kind of conspiratorial,
but, you know, I'm still scratching my head over it.
It's something, when I look at it from a personal perspective,
I'm like, you know, I got into this business
to help people.
Now, I'm not a doctor or scientist.
I'm the business guy and the founder,
but I got into the business to help people
to serve our community,
I saw that this technology was available, and it just wasn't being administered here in the United
States. So, and every day when we help thousands and thousands of people a year, I still look at
and go, why the hell is this not available? But really, I mean, the truth is, is that there's
a regulation within the FDA and the Health and Human Services Code that say you can only do, like,
basically the low, minor manipulation, the lowest level science. But really what I think is that
there's no financial benefit for the people that run the FDDA. And,
and the FDA is somewhat compromised in the way that most of their budget comes from private industry,
pharmaceuticals.
Yeah.
That's done pharmaceutical companies.
There's going to.
Where do you get your stem cells?
Because I always hear the bad side of it.
You're taking like embryos from babies or just aborted fetuses.
I think a lot of pushback was for, like, Republicans, right?
Pro-life?
Yeah, there was a big pro-life push and Republican push back in the George Bush presidency.
So back in the early 2000s, he even,
did this speech about, you know,
scientific research specifically relating to stem cells.
And he was right about the unethical sourcing.
Nobody wants that.
Right.
That's crap.
You know, nobody wants that.
No reputable companies do that.
No good scientists do that.
You're not doing that.
Hell no.
No, no, no.
That's a relief.
Yeah.
This is going to get real awkward.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, no, no.
No, no.
That's horrible.
No.
But, you know, there's still a confusion because where we do get our stem
themselves are from the umbilical cord. And so people that don't really think it through might think,
oh, that's unethical. No, no. These are healthy moms that go home and they live healthy lives
together with their healthy babies and their whole family unit is intact. They just plan for a
C-section in which we know that they're going to go out and we're going to be able to go and
extract the umbilical cord, which usually they would just throw away. Yeah, right, right. But now we're
able to help hundreds or thousands of people with that umbilical court. Yeah, not only they create
in life, they help saving other people.
lives. Exactly. Why the hell is this not a proven in America?
I've got a very bad business model. That's why. It's not a pharmacological
business model in the sense of like I want to treat a patient once and never see it again.
I want to get to a systemic root cause and have people go home and be healthy.
Yeah, pharmaceutical companies just want to cover up the problem. Yeah. They put just a
bandaid on it. That's it. And then that bandaid causes a rash and, you know, another.
Now you get another feel. Exactly. Yeah, creates more problem. That's how.
they'll be able to benefit from it financially.
They can't financially benefit from this.
No.
No.
That's corruption.
At the deepest level, I would say.
Yeah, because it goes so deep in the sense that the best way for me to get that message
out is to have long-form podcasts like you.
So thank you for the invite.
I appreciate it.
Oh, thank you for coming.
Getting in front of the audience.
But I am not allowed to advertise like a traditional business.
So I can't just buy a Google ad word or put up on Facebook like,
hey, I have a business and we're doing stem cell and we're helping thousands of people.
We get shut down.
We get, really?
Yeah, we get shut down.
We're not allowed to use to advertise.
That is nuts.
Yeah.
It is nuts.
How do you think I feel?
Yeah.
I did, I did, we're, our company did this clinical trial during the COVID times.
And it was on a symptom of COVID.
It wasn't for COVID.
It was for ARDS.
A lot of people were dying for acute respiratory distress syndrome.
And that was a pulmonary issue.
And so we were doing this clinical trial saying to see if stem cells would help.
And we just put out a blog on our own website.
It wasn't like we even paid to boost it or anything like that.
We just put out a blog that announced that, hey, we're having some preliminary,
decent results in helping these people that have ARDS.
And the FTC sent me a warning letter, and they shut us down immediately and said that
we had to stop all communication and they were going to send their lawyers to come sue us.
And we kind of said, well, wait a minute.
We're just telling you exactly what we're doing.
This is all fully approved through our government, regulatory body.
Yeah, all the medications they provide has got a side effect.
It often ruins people's lives through addiction and it leads to down a dark road that makes things worse.
This actually help save people's lives and improve their lives.
When you gather in the stem sales, do y'all pay the person that's donating it?
No.
No, it's just a donation.
Just full donation.
They just want to help people, just like we want to help people.
Right.
They throw it away anyway.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, you're taking about $500.
About $500.
Well, it's actually, it's actually illegal in most countries because I'm sure at some point in the past, probably in Medellin even, where if you had like tissues or organs or things that were for sale that you could pay people for, well then you have people disappearing for their kidneys.
Oh, so you incentivizing like black market stuff.
Exactly.
Okay.
They got, oh, but listen to the CEO.
Listen to the white man.
You got everything figured out.
Wow, man.
I mean, I had a lot of misconceptions about stem cell.
I thought it was embryos, and I thought it was, you know, me being pro-life.
I was feeling uneasy about it if he was getting from an embryo.
But this sounds, I have no problem with this.
We're not only pro-life, but we want to continue to help life.
Part of our mission is to help alleviate suffering and alleviate suffering, you know, leave suffering,
but also improve the quality of people's lives.
Yeah.
And we do that through, you know, the most advanced stumpsill therapy.
And no fetuses are harm from this.
Of course not.
Yeah.
There's no lobbying for you guys, like, create some new legislation so you can do this here in America.
Can you do this here in America?
Yeah, you can do it.
It's very low-level science.
So typically a lot of our patients are people that have tried it here in the U.S.,
and then they end up actually getting and doing a deeper dive and finding the best.
And then they find, oh, you know, the best, you have to go to Panama or to Columbia, clinics like mine.
But so you can do it here.
It's just very low-level science.
And a lot of times what they do is they take it from your own body.
So they're kind of, the thought process was that there wouldn't be that ethical concern.
Even though there is no ethical concern.
This was a smoke screen from the pharmaceutical companies.
But, you know, but that smokescreen turned into, okay, well, let's source it from your own adipose tissue, which is like fat or your bone marrow.
so they like take this big needle and they puncture your Iliac crest and they suck out a bunch of bone marrow and then they
sounds painful it's horrible it's horrible yeah but then it's very low level science because they can't manipulate those cells and they can't do the
scientific work which is really part of the magic of what our treatments are so yeah you can do it here I never
recommend like if it was my family or friends I'd say don't waste your money at all right because really you can
get it for the same price and have a nice wellness vacation out of it right yeah you have to fly three hours from
Miami to Columbia, but it's a beautiful city. You get a nice vacation. It's a sweet vacation.
And then you do it for less than you would pay here anyway. Right. So correct me if I'm wrong,
but the main reason why this hasn't been approved in the United States is because this is going
to hurt a lot of pharmaceuticals, bottom line when it comes to their business. I mean, I don't have any
insight into the inner workings of the FDA and whether or not they've actually said that out loud
and I doubt they ever would. But in my opinion, that has a major factor.
in why it is very slow going through regulation.
Like part of the reason that I got in this business was,
you know,
I was in a relationship with somebody that was in the pharmaceutical business
or more specifically the medical device business.
So she was selling total hips and, you know, knee replacements.
And they, you know, those products, a lot of times,
in many, many cases have never been tested in a human.
Now, they take a kind of a loophole
where a product like it was tested maybe 40 years ago
and now they just put a different name on it
or they put another different screw in it
or put a different color on or whatever.
And then they're using it in humans
without any trials.
And then you guys have seen what happened
with Operation Warp Speed and the COVID vaccine.
If they're motivated,
you can pass it through regulation.
We know it can.
Especially if you're going to make billions of dollars off of it.
Especially.
So I know that it is possible for the FDA
to focus on something and get it passed
or put together some regulation.
They're just choosing
not to do it in this case.
They don't have any financial incentives.
As for those knee replacements and hip replacement,
I know a friend, he couldn't walk.
He went to your facility.
He says he can run.
Ah, cool.
Yeah.
Oh, very cool.
That's crazy.
Yeah, look, we do that every day.
It's the blessing of my life where I have people calling me all the time telling me this,
and so I'm kind of more immune to it now, but it's a miracle.
So STEM said, so he told us that his cartilage was really low in his leg,
because bone on bone.
And it's, I think it's been like a year now.
Yeah, I think so. He's been down there twice.
Okay.
And he's telling us that the stem cells regrow the cartilage in his knee.
If there is cartilage left to regrow, we can improve and regrow.
If there's nothing left, like when a doctor tells you or an image, more importantly, tells you that it's bone on bone, then there's no regrowing.
But there's still potential to help because it would help reduce the inflammation, maybe have, you know, a little bit, you know, more fluid in between.
It gives you better range of motion and less pain.
And really, that's what everybody's looking for.
Right.
And if you have less pain.
Just to feel better.
Yeah.
But the truth is, yeah, we can.
So the mesochymal stem cells that we use are great for reducing inflammation and then stimulating repair.
So they'll focus in on what they need to repair and they'll start to do that.
Wow.
I got back problems.
Yeah, I got a lot of problems.
I got arthritis, got back problems.
I got herniated discs.
Yeah.
That's one of the-time my dick don't work.
We're weak.
I got a pill for that.
No, no, we do a lot of cheese.
I heard y'all stick a needle in your peepee.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It sounds worse.
Now, I haven't had it done, but now I know a lot of dudes that have done it.
Yeah.
And almost every time afterwards, they're like, oh, shit, that wasn't that bad.
Okay.
But like the mental thing going into it, you're like, oh, my God, somebody's going to stick with.
What does it do for the male?
It helps with blood flow mostly.
So it helps sustain erection mostly.
Yeah.
Oh, I don't have that problem.
No, but we have guys with like serious ED problems.
Like what?
Yeah.
I'm probably not supposed to tell the story about, uh,
yeah, yeah.
One of my nurses, um, for years.
So her, her name was magic hands.
Like her nickname was magic hands.
Oh, wow.
How'd she get that name?
Well, okay.
We're getting there.
So I had her do my IVs every single time because I was like, she has magic hands.
She gets the vein every time.
It doesn't hurt.
She's amazing.
Oh, okay.
So for years, I was going around calling her magic hands.
And then I,
I ran into this guy in my lobby and he said, oh, yeah, I've been down here.
I came down here a couple of years ago and I had ED.
I hadn't had an erection in years.
You guys gave me the male enhancement shot.
And it's been amazing.
You know, I'm just going to keep it up as a preventative now.
So I'm here, you know, two years later.
And he said, I'm the one that gave your nurse the name Magic Hands.
I'm like, oh, really?
I'm like, yeah, because she does the needle thing.
He goes, oh, no, no, no.
She's the first one that saw me finally get erect after two years.
And I was like, you have magic hands.
So, anyway, my staff is going to be pissed at me for saying that.
That's a great story.
How successful is stem cells when you have, like, herniated disc and stuff like that in your back?
That's one of the things we specialize in.
So, you know, even though there are other clinics out there, this is something that we specifically focused in on.
And so we have two neurosurgeons, one of them that's a fellow in spine, and he's an incredible guy.
But he focuses on interdisc and interfacet.
cell injections. We'll also do the surrounding
tissue, soft tissue, but mostly
we do go invasive, so that's something that sets
us apart. And we have, I would say, hands
down, the best results that we get out of
all of our treatments is spine and disc.
Wow.
I'm about to go home with you.
Jump on the plane with you.
Let magic hands fix it.
I get to see magic hands.
How successful is it
when somebody has heart problems?
Like this guy, he's like Mike. She's like,
mid to the late 40s.
I think he got that shot.
And ever since that, his legs,
he's after he got it,
I don't know what caused it,
but I put two and two together
and I'm a conspiracy theorist.
So his legs turn red,
swowed up, he couldn't walk,
goes to the doctor and says,
his heart's failing.
And he hasn't had any brother.
There's no history of, you know,
heart disease in his family.
But anyway,
now he needs some stints put in his heart.
How successful would stem cells help him at all?
I don't know what his exact diagnosis is, so I wouldn't be able to say specifically,
but just like in general what you're telling me, yeah, for sure.
We treat a lot of people like that, especially people that are having major adverse reactions
and long-term reactions after that shot.
We treat a lot of those people, and it doesn't help all the symptoms, but it helps a lot of
them.
But specifically with stem cells, they are very good for pulmonary issues and cardiac issues.
That's what I was saying about the clinical trial.
that we had before, we were specifically targeting cardiac issues.
And one of the things that we noticed that even for the patients that we're not treating
cardiac issues, when you get just a systemic IV, it goes through your lungs and through
your hearts first.
So that's the first place that the stem cells essentially target.
And then it starts circulating the rest of your body.
Oh, I thought you was just taking a needle and sticking it right in the heart.
I'm not a doctor, so.
All right, I got to put it in your heart.
Don't move.
We've got Uma Thurman is one of our nurses that are Pulp Fiction.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Don't move on the count of three.
Yeah.
That's crazy if it could help heart problems.
It's stem cells.
They put...
How do stem cells work?
Yeah, what are the stem cells?
Yeah, so stem cells are the cells that are in our body.
We all have them.
They're the building blocks of life at the beginning.
There you go.
They stay with us for our entire lives.
But just like everything in our lives, as we get older, they slow down.
They slow down in their ability to replicate.
They're the only cell that continually divides,
and it divides to help heal our body as we go old.
But you see it on every level from professional athlete
to just somebody getting a paper cut.
You know, when you get a paper cut, you watch it,
and it bleeds at that moment, it scabs over.
The next day, it's, you know, maybe a little bruised in scab.
And by next week, it's gone, and you forget about it was ever there.
Those are your stem cells healing.
So your body has the regenerative properties
and ability to heal yourself.
But as we get older and as we are exposed to our environment,
So, I mean, that could be being an athlete,
and yeah, your joints are all messed up
because you're always using them with heavy loads
and high level.
Or it's just being exposed to the toxic food
that we have here, or whatever that environment is,
the stem cells just have a hard time keeping up with that
as we get older.
So what we do is we do high level doses.
We take these fresh umbilical cord stem cells,
and then we take them scientifically,
and we manipulate them.
It's basically just multiplying them
to be hundreds of millions of times more potent.
And then when we inject them, you're able to keep up with the degeneration and start healing again.
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Yeah.
Does it help?
You have a lot of professional athletes to go that I would imagine.
Tons, yeah, yeah.
There's not a UFC fighter with a championship belt that we haven't treated,
and all throughout the organization, including, you know, the administration and the administration
in the organization.
And same thing with NFL.
I mean,
you have NFL.
All high-impact athletes,
those guys found us first.
Yeah.
And then from there,
they talk about it in the locker room,
and then all other sports
started coming to us.
All.
Baseball.
You know,
we don't have as many NBA.
We have,
but that's not as many.
Hmm.
Yeah,
some football players,
they'd be getting tapped.
Maybe the NBA's too woke or something.
Say what?
There's something about it.
Honestly,
there's not as many of them.
The niggas are woke.
I was thinking it had something to do with the organization and the way their doctors were.
But maybe it's sad.
Yeah.
So the treatments you all provide with stem cells, what do y'all get the most?
I know you said back, knees.
What else is it helpful for?
So one of the things that, you know, we definitely see all orthopedic issues.
So any joints, that's hands down the best, the back and the knees and all that.
But autoimmune disease.
autoimmune disease is...
Sickle cell?
Yeah, there are...
He said autoimmune, not sickle cell.
That is a part, yeah.
Oh, that is? Okay, I'm stupid over here.
Of all people, you should know what sickle cell is.
You're black?
I don't know what sickle cell is?
Yeah.
I don't have that.
It plagues black people.
Yeah.
Well, I'm not that black.
Maybe that's why I ain't got it.
Shut up.
Autoimmune disorders?
Yeah, one of the companies out there that I know of focuses on sickle cell.
So I know it has great results.
We don't treat that.
necessarily. That's not like it hasn't been one of our focus. But, you know, many, many
autoimmune disease. And so things like rheumatoid arthritis to diabetes to...
I think that's what I got in my damn fingers, man. This shit like ET figures now.
Yeah. What kind of arthritis? I got my fingers, see? Yeah, both of you guys.
He looked at you like, you're a freak. Yeah.
Yes, you know what I got it from? Lifting weights. Lifting weights. I used to pick up dumbbells like
this. I used to squat with them.
just messed my fingers.
Ah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, systemic inflammation.
So, I mean, there might be something.
You know, there's a lot of NFL guys that come in with drop foot and all sorts of hands and food issues.
Drop foot is serious.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Stem cells helped tremendously with that.
Wow.
We've gotten a couple guys back in the league because of that.
Yeah.
Like, once you get drop foot, that's like career ending and that actually improves it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm telling you, we had guys that were out because of that.
And they were trying every last thing.
and they finally came to us.
A name comes to mind.
He was a linebacker for the Dallas Cowboys.
He was in some bowl game, and he had dropped foot.
Yeah, it was from a knee injury, though.
It was from a knee injury.
I forget his name.
He got traded.
He got traded.
Damn, what's his name?
You know, I start to notice a lot of these athletes.
Like, when I grew up, I used to see whenever you saw somebody
toward the ACL or had an entry to the Achilles, it was career-ended.
Now I saw these athletes, they're coming back in, like,
Like 10 months.
No, less.
Toron Armstead, he was at the time, yeah, he was with Miami Dolphin still.
He had a terrible Achilles issue.
Right.
And he came back to us and he was back in the next season.
Right.
And then he also came to us with another minor injury while he was on IR just last year.
And so instead of taking six weeks, we got him back in four, they said he was probably
not going to make it six weeks.
Right.
He's going to be out.
But his career should have been over.
Yeah.
A lot of times before, that was a career ender.
So, like, I know a professional athlete like Bo Jackson.
Mm-hmm.
I'm not sure what his injury was, but I think he broke his hip.
He shattered his damn.
I can't remember.
He blew his hip up or something.
I just remember that cool baseball card where the black and white one.
Yeah.
We had the football pads and then baseball that.
Right.
Right.
You think stem cells could have saved his career?
I don't remember what he...
Yeah, I forget what it was.
He played football and baseball.
He got tackled and somehow he, like, ripped his whole damn hip out of something.
Yeah, he needed a hip replacement.
Yeah, after that.
We alleviate surgeries for a lot of athletes.
We completely alleviate it or in a lot of cases, and what they're hoping for,
is that we at least prolong it enough to get into the next season,
which might be their last, or the next season might be their,
you know, their re-up on their negotiation for their next deal.
Right.
And so we do that a lot, but with shatters and surgery is still a miracle
and it still has to be done in a lot of cases.
But what we'll do is we'll work with the surgeon and we'll complement it with stem cells.
So now they heal faster.
they do get back to the season or they're back to their optimal health right away.
Right.
Oh, that's correct.
How about if you have something like stomach issues, headaches?
Not headache specifically, but whatever the symptom is of that.
So if you're having stomach issues, Crohn's and colitis are something that stem cells
help very well with because it's an inflammatory bowel disorder.
So the stem cells, they systemically look for inflammation.
So the minute we inject them, they have this quality called homing where they will just go
and find the information.
But that's your whole body.
That's where you have inflammation,
is your body is signaling your own regenerative process to come and fix it.
See, I ain't got no stem cells left with my finger cells.
So what's some common ailments that everyday people go through and but stem cells
could change their life?
A lot of chronic pain.
So, you know, it depends on where it stems from, whether or not we can help.
But a lot of people are walking around with chronic pain because they were, you know,
they were athletes or they, you know, they lift,
barbells the wrong way.
Yeah, I lift them in the wrong way.
But you don't always have to be a professional athlete.
I mean, there's just, you know, people are walking around, for one, eating the food that we eat every day.
And so they're starting to suffer from not only degeneration, but also, you know, chronic
inflammation and autoimmune disease potentially.
But then there's also, you know, just guys that want to be out on the golf course or they just
have nagging injuries.
So those are things that we help every day.
I feel horrible when I wake up.
My damn feet feel like they're going to break.
What?
I mean, man, my feet, man.
My back bothers me.
I guess my hands.
My knees, I know.
We're supposed to be going down there.
My feet, it's just like, sometimes I just want to say, fuck it.
It's just like, man.
Because we're going to be 50 this year.
Yeah.
I'm going to be 50.
I'm out of years.
I'm 48 this year, this month.
But my whole staff threw me a party last year,
and the whole theme was like,
happy 50th birthday.
Oh,
these.
Come on, guys.
I've still got two years.
A couple years, yeah.
Hey, so,
um,
Hey,
so I'm,
I'm going,
let me ask you this.
All right,
so the embryos,
that's banned.
What could you do
with embryonic stem cells?
Embryonic stem cells,
are they that much better or?
No,
I don't know that they're better.
There has been some scientific research
in the embryonic stem cell.
And the thought process is that it could be more potent
in the ability to change into something specific.
Right.
So like if we want to regrow your heart and say,
you need a heart transplant,
but you know what, instead of a transplant,
let's take some stem cells
and let's just manipulate it to regrow it with embryonic stem cells.
And then so we're growing a brand new heart for you guys.
That's the theory.
And we may get to that.
I don't know.
We meaning the industry, not us.
We don't mess around with embryonic at all.
But the thought process for the industry is like, okay, they have more potential to differentiate into anything.
The problem with that is that they have the more potential to differentiate in anything.
So once you put them in your body, what are they going to change into?
Are they going to, instead of growing a heart or fixing your heart, are they going to fix, you know,
are they going to grow a heart out at the side of your back?
Or they're going to.
Might grow extra dick.
We could cure that problem.
We'd be a billion dollar company right.
Yeah, right.
You got with two cots.
But they banned that research.
Yeah, but really what was happening is in Vivo and in Vitra,
they were showing in like petri dishes that they potentially would like turn into tumors and cancerous type cells.
So now it's like proliferating cancer instead of the good.
So it's turning, it's completely opposite of where you're trying to achieve.
You know what might happen.
Don't even say it.
No, you remember that move with Will Smith?
I am legend.
they thought they had the cure for cancer.
Yeah.
Turned everybody in the stuff.
Oh, yeah.
I forgot the premise of that.
I just remember I'm walking around by himself all day.
Yeah, it was mainly the movie.
Michael J. Fox, I remember back in the day,
he was begging for this research to take place in United States.
Like, I forget what his condition was.
Parkinson's.
Parkinson's.
Do you think that's a possible cure for Parkinson's?
I would never use the term cure.
You know, the industry is too young right now, and we still are considered to be experimental,
even though it is, you know, much better with less side effects and many pharmaceuticals
and surgery and all that stuff.
Right.
But it's still somewhat experimental.
But so the truth is, there are many companies that treat Parkinson's with stem cell therapy.
The problem is that Parkinson's is very progressive, and it goes quickly, and the symptoms are not always the same for each individual.
So the biggest problem is that you would need to really...
redose somebody with stem cells on a very regular basis.
And this is the most expensive medical technology on the planet right now.
Right.
You have money for that.
So, I mean, unless it's a billionaire that's just like, hey, look, I want to get
stem cell every six months or every four months and I can afford $20,000 every four months,
then it's not really worth a try because one dose is not going to be enough.
One dose every year is probably not going to be enough.
And then, you know, they're probably still going to...
How many doses is too much when it comes to stem cells?
There is diminishing return. So there's, you know, there are some clinics that I see out there. And sometimes we even lose business to people. They're like, oh, yeah, but this clinic's promising me like five zillion stem cells and for the same price. And we're like, yeah, go ahead. That's not even safe. But, you know, sometimes we see in some indications that we treat that more is not better. More actually causes a different immune response that you don't want and it's counterproductive. So we do everything 100% scientifically evidence-based.
So our protocols, you know, even though somebody has the money to come in and maybe the knowledge where they say,
oh, I want a zillion stem cells and my shoulder hurts, so I want 10 billion stem cells, and I can afford it and I'll pay you for it.
We're still saying, no, that's not, that's not feasible. It's not necessary.
But so too many, there is a danger zone. Typically it's above 200 million per kilo per person body weight.
That's kind of like a generality without knowing your medical.
condition. But we would also look very personalized on your whatever we're trying to treat with your
medical condition. So for you like a perfectly healthy, you know, we have these big WWE fight wrestlers
come in or football players, linemen that come in. They're huge and they could probably take
500 million stem cells because of their body weight. But if they're suffering also from an autoimmune
disease, then we're going to adjust the dose. Oh, okay. Yeah, I have an autoimmune disease.
It's like, so my scape and I get it on my face. I look to the dog. I got some going right now.
Yeah, it's like I go to the doctor because I would have like this crust.
Uh-huh.
Build up on my scalp.
He called it, um, dermatitis.
Dermatitis.
I was like, what the hell is?
It's an autoimmune disease.
I said, well, that shit's coming on my face.
And he told me just to put a hydrochlorazone on, which it helps.
But if I don't lather myself down with that, like, lotion every day, it comes right back.
Like, I'll get like these red blemishes.
And he tells me as soon as I got a breakout.
That's autoimmune, man.
But yeah, I keep telling you, you're our patients.
The systemic IV helps so, so much, not just autoimmune disease, but skin disorders also.
So psoriasis, I mean, we see people that, they're not even coming to us because of that.
They're coming to us because of some other more major issue, chronic pain or whatever.
And then they get the systemic dose IV.
And then we see in their testimonial three or six months later, they go, yeah, and you know what?
My dermatitis went away.
And I didn't even care about that.
I cared about my back pain, but my, you know, my dermatitis went away.
Wow.
So y'all do all this to what?
Just an IV?
Well, for the autoimmune disease, yes.
But for joints, it would be interticular, like into an elbow or shoulder, that area.
So you just stick a tube and you get an elbow from, you stick a tube now?
Hell no.
Just a single injection.
It's easy.
Just a little needle.
Yeah, just a shot.
Yeah.
Stick a tube in them.
I was joking.
Hey, shut up.
On the way over, my cab driver, I told him where I was going.
or my Uber driver.
And he was like, man, I love one of those guys tell each other.
Shut up and they yell at each other.
No shit.
Yeah.
That was like the one comment he had about the podcast.
Right. Yeah.
Shut.
That is crazy.
So I had another question about it.
I'll tell you more about my Uber driver because he was definitely going to be on the next most wanted list of something.
Really?
Yeah.
Oh, sure.
Like he's setting up.
He told me specifically, like,
in 20 years, that's when he's going to be killed by the government for talking about the
conspiracy and, but he's going to be killed on stage preaching about the government.
Oh, he's one of those QAnon fuckers.
He's probably, yeah, he's definitely what I'm saying.
Yeah, he's definitely a fight of us.
For sure.
He's talking about the government could assassinate an Uber driver.
Yeah, exactly.
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Yeah.
I still like them better than them dudes and say they women.
Yeah.
Freaking crazy.
Yeah.
We don't see much of that in Columbia, I think.
Really?
No, no, it's not.
It's not anything, huh?
No, not.
Well, and I shouldn't say zero.
It's not zero, but it's not.
It's not proliferating like it is here.
No, no, no, not at all.
Yeah, I had so many great stories from Columbia.
He said the culture is so different.
Everybody's very polite.
He said a majority of the restaurants is very cheap.
Everybody lives a healthy lifestyle.
There's a jam on every block.
So you can go have, like,
a lot of people don't eat a lot of fast foods.
Like you go in these restaurants, like home-cooked meals.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's why I started really living there.
I was after the COVID pandemic, whatever you want to call it, you know,
where we were stuck in our homes for six months.
Yeah.
You know, so I was trapped here in the U.S.
And before that, I was back and forth, and I was able to go there whenever I wanted and
at least once a month or whatever.
You went to get the hell out of here, right?
Yeah.
And then I was stuck here for six months.
And I just started looking around.
I'm like, what am I doing here?
Right.
So that's when I really started missing.
And so that's when I ended up really moving there full time.
But it was for those reasons.
It's a super health conscious community.
They're not fed poison.
I mean, in the sense that they don't, you know, they don't spray all their wheat with glycosate.
And they don't have ready to round up seeds, whatever the Fonco seed is.
And, you know, and they don't have preservatives.
Their cows graze on grass.
They just walk around and eat grass.
Yeah, when I started to travel the world, and I went to Canada, I went to United Kingdom, Australia.
everything tastes different,
the meat tastes. Like, you go to a McDonald's,
it doesn't even taste like McDonald's. Yeah.
It's like, what are they feeding us? Well, because sometimes
even in those McDonald's in other countries, I think
we're the only country with McDonald's where they're
allowed to put in some of the same seed oils
that they put into, like, the French fries, and whatever they
fry things in, in most other countries, there might
be a McDonald's, but they can't feed you the same stuff.
Right. Right. Right. They're not allowed to legally.
Right. That's like, there's seriously
pausing us. They are, slowly.
The whole COVID-19
pandemic, which
your thoughts on that how I was handled and that shot.
How can you hide from a virus? I still don't get that. Yeah, just from a medical, well, I know
you're not a doctor, but, you know, you're in the medical field and you've spent a lot of
time around scientists and doctors. What's your viewpoint on that, how we handled it here in the U.S.?
We, the whole world handled it horribly. I mean, we handled it worse and with more money
motivation, I think. Yeah. So that puts us apart in a different bucket. You know, I think a lot of the other
world was scared and they did stupid shit because they were scared. But here, it was more money motivated.
So that for, I'm very ashamed for that. So I, you know, I try to tread lightly because I'm running a
company and I have all sorts of, you know, both sides of the aisle are my patients. But I'll give you
some insight. I definitely got removed from a plane from not wearing my mask by the police. And, and in
Columbia, it was the weirdest thing. They used to make you, like when you walked into a restaurant,
they used to make you lift up your shoes and they would spray down your shoes before you walked
into the restaurant. Really? And so I can't even tell you how many arguments I got in when I was like,
what are you doing? What is, what are you helping right now? Yeah. So all around the world,
it was crazy. It was weird. That is so stupid. I had to, I, I was, I was, I was, I'm a runner and I
would go into the gym on the treadmill and you would make me wear a mask. While you was running?
While you're running. I'm like, but I'm running a five.
Yeah.
Right.
That damn mass restricts your oxygen.
What do you have a heart attack?
Exactly.
Why even open if this vet, this...
Oh my God.
People are just stupid.
Yeah, they thought it was going to fix everything.
Hey, so I, like we...
They said America's the greatest country in the world.
Right?
That's what's been fed to us.
But I've never really lived outside of this country.
What's your perspective on that idea that this is the greatest country in the world?
I am an American guy.
I grew up being the Fed the same thing.
I grew up believing the same thing.
And specifically when I lived here my whole life and I really didn't spend any time outside of the U.S., I still thought that.
Now, oh my gosh, no.
I mean, in the sense that, look, there's so many things.
I'm in America.
My family's here.
There's so many great things about America.
So I'm not demonizing America in general.
But we have, there's a lot of things.
that we have not figured out.
And, you know, one of you, you touched on it yourself, you know, just talking about
Columbia, they're very health conscious.
They shut down the main street, you know, it's probably like 50 miles long, every single
Sunday so that everybody can get out and run and ride your bike and walk your dog and be out
in the sun.
And, you know, so in that aspect, they're just a mindset is correct.
But they're also very much more familial.
They're not, you know, they care about their family union.
they take real time to spend with their friends and family.
And so I'll tell you one of the things that drove me
freaking insane at the beginning of starting this business
is that I had that American mindset as an entrepreneur
where I'm like, work, work, work, let's go, we've got to grind.
And I'm still in that way.
I'll never lose that.
I love work.
I love what I do.
But, you know, I drove me crazy because in Colombia
they have 22 Monday holidays.
And I was like, that's half the fucking year.
What do you mean?
My business is going to be closed half the year.
Right.
And they're just like unapologetically, yeah, I'm going to go spend time with my family.
And then they come back and they work harder than I've seen anybody work and they're happier than I've seen anybody work.
And so I've kind of found that balance where I'm like, okay, yeah, that is actually something that we're missing that we push for in society.
And I know why it got that way and it's okay.
You know, that's why we have some of the biggest and best companies in the world.
We're very entrepreneurial minded and innovation minded.
And so you can't have that with a bad work ethic.
But families suffer because of it.
Yeah. Like, I used to work six days a week doing YouTube and stuff.
And recently, my coworker said, man, y'all work too damn hard.
Y'all running me ragged too.
And he recommended to us, hey, man, when y'all started taking some time off, you know?
And I started doing it. I don't work five days a week anymore. I work four days.
Take three days off every week.
Three day weekend. And it actually increased your productivity.
Exactly. Yeah. Yeah.
And you get to spend more time with your kids, your family wife.
Yeah, that's always a plus, right?
Yeah.
But there's this whole community outside of the U.S.
And they're all over the world that have found their little niche and their little pocket that they love.
But, you know, you end up gravitoring to Americans when you're traveling anyway,
because you hear somebody speaking English in the coffee shop.
And you're like, oh, hey, where are you from?
So you end up kind of finding those communities just by accident.
But there's a common theme where we all kind of roll our eyes and we're like,
yeah, you've got to figure out.
The Americans got it all figured out.
Yeah, we're the best country in the world.
Yeah.
And we just kind of roll your eyes.
You're like, yeah, you've got to get to.
take the good with the bad, but it's...
Right. Yeah. Yeah.
Especially things that's going on in our country.
Like, they say we live in a free country.
It's the best country. They talk shit about Russia.
We talk shit about Australia.
And then we have a former president getting convicted of 32 felonies.
Yeah. It doesn't make sense.
Yeah. Well, actually, we've been trying to pick up Spanish.
Ah, cool.
Yeah. Do you know any Spanish?
I've been trying to pick it up as well. Yeah. I'm taking lessons.
Yeah. It's kind of hard, right?
It's backwards.
it pisses me off
yeah the conjugating of the now
or the verbs right yeah
why would you make one verb one word
sound like six different words
that doesn't make any sense
it's walk or run
yeah and I don't like how to
like
masculine and feminine
yeah yeah that bullshit too
it didn't everything's
it could be masculine and feminine
yeah like
like the phrase
meas dicho it means you've told me
But in English is you have told me.
The pronoun is at the end.
But in Spanish, the pronoun a lot of times it's in the front.
Miaz Dichio, which means you told me.
I'm like, it's pissed me off.
Yeah.
But see, that's even harder because at the beginning, the May would always tip me off as like, okay, it's me saying something.
Right.
But no, it's them saying something to me.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I'm like, okay, now you blew my mind.
Right.
Come on.
Yeah.
I'm not going to give up, but man, that's complicated.
And they said it's one of the easiest language.
They say English is the hardest.
Yeah, I don't think so.
English is probably the easiest for idiots.
It is.
It's so easy.
Yeah.
Except for the pronunciation.
So now, you know, I live with a bunch of native Spanish speakers where English is their second language.
So I bitch about Spanish all the time.
Right.
So then they come back and they bitch at me about English.
So, okay, give me this word.
There.
Yeah.
There, there, there.
But they're spelled three different ways.
Right.
Oh, yeah.
I'm like, okay, that's, I get it.
That's tough.
but then there's a lot of words we have that are spelled one way and they're not pronounced that way.
Yeah, right.
So that's what gets them.
Yeah.
Because in Spanish, at least the way that it's spelled is the way that you pronounce them.
Right.
Almost every time.
Right.
Right.
We'll get it.
Yeah.
How long, what are you guys doing?
Like, Doolingo or one of those things.
I got an app.
It's called Pimsler.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
I did Pimzler.
Gave it up, huh?
Yeah.
In the past.
Fucking I'm going to Bible.
I went to Babel.
You said Bible.
What is it babel?
I started off with Babbel, then I went to Pinsler.
I like Pinsler because it's like a conversation.
Yeah.
And actually it makes you zone in on those words and you use it over and over.
Yeah, it's more than I act.
It's all over the damn place.
You don't even pick it up.
Pimzler is the one I did best with, but I just moved on to getting like a tutor.
So I have somebody that I talk with it.
Oh, okay.
He takes me through like slang.
Like, what are you doing specifically in Columbia?
You know, because there's, you know, I travel to Mexico a lot.
And some of the stuff I know from Columbia, you don't, in Mexico, they look at me.
They're like, what?
Right.
Excuse me?
I'm like,
Me regala servesa.
And they're like,
I'm not giving it you for free, stupid.
Oh, okay, yeah, yeah, I'll pay for it.
Sorry.
But in Columbia, it's normal.
Right, right.
So you actually try to go out and use it now?
A little bit.
I'm still embarrassed to do it.
Yeah.
I mean, it sounds good.
Sounds good.
Yeah, yeah, that sounds good.
Yeah, yeah.
Sound Columbia.
I don't know what keeps sounds like.
Shut up.
man.
Yeah.
We got to get down
Medelline.
Medelline.
That's what I said.
Medelline.
He said it in that
Randy macho man savage.
Yeah.
Medelline.
Yeah, we've been
trying to get out there.
It's magical, man.
I'm telling you what.
It's, you know,
they earned their reputation
back in the 80s and 90s,
you know,
with Pablo Escobar and all the narcos
and stuff.
Yeah, yeah.
Which is kind of cool going there now
because, you know,
their violence is gone
and they're really changing the community.
They've made some incredible changes
that are,
you know,
I think other cities around the world should look at actually.
You know, like places like in Brazil that have these favelas that are crime-ridden,
they should come to Columbia and be like, hey, how did you change that?
Because you guys were the biggest danger zone in the world.
Right.
But, you know, aside from that, so they're, you know, it's safe now.
But like I said before, the weather's perfect.
It's 75 degrees all year-round.
That's perfect.
It's amazing.
So if I wanted to go to Medellin and I said I wanted to get some stem cells from my back,
what would that process be like?
How long will I be?
Is it any downtime?
So if you're, like if you're a professional athlete and you're getting a stem cell injection in your back,
I would tell you not to go right back into, you know, heavy, like the game the next day.
Right.
But downtime for regular people, yeah, it's only like, I don't know, maybe a week downtime.
Okay.
You know, in the sense that we would tell you not to go and do like heavy lifting and squats.
And, you know, depending on who you are as a person, our doctors will make specific personalized recommendations.
But in general, there's hardly any downtime to these.
There's no pain or anything like that.
I mean, only the injection when you're getting shot with a needle.
There's a little bit of discomfort.
But no, in general, there's no real pain, no long-lasting pain.
I'll say that the knees are pretty tough.
We see a lot of professional athletes, and their knees are usually really bad.
And getting those injections creates a lot of inflammation.
So the knees for like 24 hours, it's a tough one.
Yeah.
So it's not zero pain.
I mean, you're in some discomfort for 24, 48 hours tops.
But to answer that the first part of you,
question. What it looks like is we would assign you a VIP patient concierge
where we basically just white glove it for you. So we'll have somebody that's there.
Anytime you want to text them or call them and you're ready to talk and have a discovery
call, or if we get you to the point where you're like, okay, I'm ready to talk to a doctor.
They'll schedule the telemedicine consult. They'll also go to work for you calling your
previous physicians or wherever you might have MRIs or images that we might need to collect for
the telemedicine conference. So it's just a phone call or some text at the beginning.
but the most important is doing that telemedicine conference
where we will develop a specific personalized protocol for you.
We're also going to rule you out as a candidate.
In a lot of cases, we tell people, no, sorry, you're not a good candidate for us.
But that's where we're going to either accept you or deny you,
and then from there, you come to Medellin.
Once you're in Medellin, what we like to have,
and for your first-time treatment, we'll have you there usually for five days,
Monday to Friday.
Now, we deal with a lot of billionaires, celebrity, you know, patients,
you know, rock stars, professional athletes that don't have a week to be with us.
So you can shorten the protocol. We have a one day and a three-day protocol, but it's depending
on what you're being treated. But if you guys are like, I have back pain, it's my first time,
I want to get the IV. My wife's with me. She wants to get the face and hair treatment.
And so you'll probably be five days. Oh, okay. Okay. Easy. Yeah, it's a good wellness vacation.
Yeah. You know, and we put together tours and other ancillary stuff like massages and
physical therapy.
By magic hands?
No, for sure, not her.
Oh my gosh.
She's going to kill me.
It's going to get it.
Where's magic hands?
Yeah, exactly.
I'm here to see magic hands.
We do a bunch of other treatments, too.
So it's not just the stem cell therapy.
You're also getting other supportive therapies like hyperbaric chamber.
We're going to do ozone therapy, cryotherapy.
red light therapy and a whole host of other therapies that are complementary. So you're in our facility
every day. If you're there for a week, you're there for a couple of times, a couple of appointments
every day. Hey, y'all, three red flags that show you might have poop stuck in your coat,
random stomach pains and abdominal cramps like you on your period or something. Oh, man, think of my period.
Uncontrollable leakage and episodes of diarrhea. Oh, man, that's horrible. You got that mud butt.
Oh, God. You strain and struggling.
and pushing when you're on the toilet.
You're going to get hemorrhoids like that.
Trust me, I know.
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How about for eyesight?
Because my assites are starting to go and bad.
You know what's crazy is one of, like I was telling you, one of the good side effects that we see is like people get a systemic IV and then they'll be like, oh, I wasn't trying to clear up my psoriasis, but it's gone.
We see that with eyes a lot, too, where people go, you know what?
I was here for my chronic pain, but my prescription changed.
My eyesight got better.
So there are a lot of clinics that are specifically, like, injecting into eyes.
We're not doing that.
I hope magic hands are doing it.
I don't trust you.
Where's magic hands?
But we're not doing that.
But, you know, just with a systemic ID, I'll tell you, my prescription changed.
Wow.
It's, I don't know, I don't know if it's for the better or worse.
all I know is that after my first stem cell therapy,
I immediately needed, not immediately,
but like within the next month or so I needed new glasses.
Yeah, I just started using readers so I could read.
And ever since I did that,
my visions went downhill.
Same of you?
No, I'll stop using them.
Told you can be blind as a bat.
You keep using them damn face.
Tell me shit.
It just make the words bigger.
It's Kindle app, man.
Words of wisdom.
You know what?
Somebody told me the same shit,
and I said I did that for the longest time.
He was like, I don't want to rock glasses anyway.
That's nerdy.
Yeah.
You'd have come back.
Just stop using them and just make the words a little bit better.
You get used to it.
Bigger.
You said to make the words better.
I mean, make the words bigger.
With the app better, you need some stem cells.
Better if you can read.
You got some Joe Biden going.
Oh, thank goodness that's over.
Oh, no.
Look who we got now.
I think she's worse.
Yeah, for sure.
He's got an excuse.
That's true.
Stim sales.
He's just a freaking horrible.
Yeah.
I ain't going to get to that.
You're a CEO.
You don't need all that drama.
Yeah.
Right.
Hit your bottom line.
But, yeah, we're going to try to make it out there.
Hey, you got some nonprofit solutions for a better world, right?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
I've actually, I'm on the board of two of them.
One of them is actually is one that I've co-founded with one of our patients, actually.
And so I'll rather talk about that one just because it's such.
a remarkable story. There's this guy, Dustin Bunch, he was a California firefighter for a long time.
He kind of transitioned into helping the fire department after the major part of his fire career.
But anyway, the point is, is that he was at Lake Havasu, Arizona, which he did for 20 years with
his firefighter buddies and his family, and he had his boat out there, and he dove off of his boat,
and he immediately became a quadriplegic. He had a spinal cord injury.
And so he almost drowned. He immediately was a quad, and so thank God.
his firefighter buddies were there and they resuscitated him and they aerobacked him out.
But he was a quadriplegic and he came to our facility to get stem cell therapy.
And so that's where I met him.
I met him on his very first trip.
With spinal cord injury, you typically need to come many times per year and for several years.
Because, I mean, those are the most severe injuries on the planet.
And so I met Dustin on his first trip and, you know, just walking kind of through the hallway with him and chatting with him.
I was saying like, hey, what, you know, what do you know about stem cell?
How did you find our company?
Why did you come here?
And what are your expectations?
And he found us because Matt Hughes, former UFC fighter, had come to us and he was friends
with him.
And then, and then he talked about his expectations.
And he was like, you know, I just, I really, I've got this weird thing where I was like,
this productive member society.
I was helping people.
I'm 6-6, 250, you know, or 270 at that point.
And he's like, and I just had this little baby girl.
He's like, but it's so embarrassing.
Like, I can't do anything.
I have to call my wife when I'm thirsty for water.
I have to take my wife to the bathroom with me to help me, you know, do my business.
And then more importantly, I just want to hold my daughter again.
And so, you know, those are devastating stories.
And we see those all the time now.
But so fast forward to now, now Dustin is, you know, he's not out running marathons or anything,
but he got all that and more in the sense that he's able to use his arms.
He can use his arms to take a drink.
He can eat by himself.
He can go to the bathroom by himself.
He can hold his baby daughter again.
He's got limited mobility in his legs.
He's got more more strength in his core.
So he can do things like sit up and he can help his care takers, like get him out of bed.
So for him, it's 100% change in quality of life.
But so the charity is Merica Strong.
And what it is is it's focusing in on these families who are devastated by these
disease or by these injuries and it's not just the patient it's the family the whole family just
just turned upside down right because now they're 24 seven you know caregivers and um so it's
focusing on taking these spinal cord injury patients getting them into the right mindset to not give up
because most of their surgeons are immediately telling them that they're going to be bedridden
they may never be even in a wheelchair again because like for him he was a you know six five six
six guy big heavy guy
His surgeon said, oh, no, you're going to be in the bed for the rest of your life.
You're not even going to be, you're too big for a wheelchair.
You're nobody's going to be able to lift you and get you in there.
You're going to be in bed for the rest of your life.
And in his thing was he, he's got a potty mouth and he's like, no, no, no, I'm going to kick this thing in the dick is what he always says.
And he's like, fuck you, I'm going to get out of this.
And he did.
But so a lot of these guys, you have this immediate injury and you start getting like suicidal.
Right.
Because you're just like, you have this new life that you have.
never wanted and none of your family wanted and you can't get out of. But they also can't kill
themselves. Right. But so the point is their mental state of being is just horrible. So the first
part of his program is to get people into the better mindset to get up and to live the life that,
whatever life you can, but also to not listen to your, your doctors that you can do better than
what they've seen. Right. And so the whole charity is centered around that. And he's doing it by,
we're doing it by, by that first part of the protocol. But then we also take these, uh,
patients and their families onto this ranch where we have animal therapy. We have these,
these bison and buffalo that, you know, we help take care of. But then mostly it's to teach
people how to do normal things like open a door handle when you only have one like claw arm and
little things like that, how to eat. Wow. So he's got the use of his arms he can sit up.
Wow. How long after his injury did he get the stem cells with like a year or so?
No, he was pretty quick. He had to be travel worthy and mobile.
So it probably took four to six months, I would say.
After his injury.
So, you know, in this particular case, speed is, you know, time is of the essence.
Right.
But we have people we've treated five and six years after their injury that we've seen results.
Now, they might not have been as good as results as Dustin's.
In some cases, they actually were, but they also weren't as bad of an injury.
It's all about the specific patient and the injury.
Wow.
So those stem cells are actually regrowing his spine.
Spinal herbs.
Yeah, we want to go.
more invasive actually. We're going to be doing some trials where we're actually repairing
some of the spinal cord injury and putting it together and then doing actual injections in there.
But for now, we do interthecal. So it passes the blood brain barrier to help the neuro part.
And then also, if there's any other specific injuries, but, and systemically.
So do you think you'll be able to walk again?
Dustin, if there's anybody that could do it, it would be him because of his mindset and his work
ethic because he's still out there doing physical therapy and getting out there. And like I said,
he always says, no, I'm going to kick this thing in the dick. And he's out there every day
living that lifestyle. So if there's anybody that could do it, it would be him. We've seen,
boy, Ryan, what's Ryan's last name? Ryan is a, he was a training partner. He was a friend of
Connor McGregor, just had a spinal cord injury. We just treated him as well. And so he's had a faster
recovery. We already see him moving around. We see him moving his legs and back up again.
Wow. He was paralyzed.
Yeah.
Soon as soon as you can get to his clinic, I mean to his location.
Yeah, yeah. We have guys that are out walking again.
I mean, they're not like, you know, you can tell that they either need assistance
or you can tell that they have a major injury.
But just that feet of walking is amazing.
Crazy.
It's amazing.
It is crazy.
Yeah.
Sounds like a miracle.
Yeah.
It is a miracle.
He's pro-life Republicans.
But that's part of the problem with the industry, too, is that like there's a lot of people
out there that are pitching it as this crazy miracle and it's going to help everything. And,
you know, and some of that is bullshit where, you know, we really need to be realistic. It doesn't
help everything and you have to be very specific. And we have to be very cognizant of the patients
that we take and accept the people that we really think are going to get results. There's a lot of
clinics out there that are just, they're not even hardly reviewing your medical records. They
don't even set you up with a doctor's consult before they accept you. They just say, yeah, give us,
you know, $1,500 and we'll get you on the schedule and come down and we'll inject you with
bunch of stem cells and then they wonder why half of their patients said is pissed off because they
didn't get results. Right. Right. Right. So are you working on anything new? That you want to plug or?
Yeah, sure. We, well, we, we combined our therapies with exosome therapy. And so exosomes,
exosomes are, it's an extra cellular vesicle that's secreted from the stem cell. So the stem cell is
still the brain and the brilliance and the kind of the highest level technology, but, but they
secrete these growth factors and cytokines and exosomes. And exosomes have this incredible
curative property where they also focus on inflammation and they regenerate. They tend to
kind of jumpstart the stem cell process. So we combined that together. That's something that we're doing
that sets us apart from a lot of the other clinics and that is somewhat new. But what the future,
I think, holds is more for longevity and health optimization treatments. So we're looking at doing things
in the advanced cell therapy space
that are going to help with senescent cells,
which is like the dead zombie cells in your body,
and what might help lengthen telomeres.
And telomeres are like the,
essentially the quicker your telomeres short,
and when they shorten and die,
that's when your cells die, and that's when you die.
So as long as they can stay long,
then you will have a longer life.
And so, you know, there's treatments out there like NK cells,
and CRISPR technology and some other stuff out there that we're going to be doing in the future.
We're just not doing right now.
Yeah, where do you see this technology going in the next 10, 15, 20 years?
I see it being much more preventative in the sense that we're getting very good at advanced diagnostics before.
So our health care system is not set up for this at all.
You can't go into your primary physician and ask for a blood panel and get a real blood panel.
you get basic stuff, you know, but you can't, you know, the insurer, big insurance does not allow you to actually treat, you know, your health condition.
They just want you to be sick. Imagine that. Oh, yeah, weird. I mean, big insurance controls the medical industry more than the pharmaceutical industry does. And they just do it in a, in a way that they, you know, they think that you're looking out, they, you think that they're looking out for you. But anyways, my point is, is that you, if you pay out of pocket and you pay your own money to get,
blood tests or hair test or cheek swabs, there's these great advanced diagnostics that can tell you
a lot about what either you're predisposed to or your epigenetic environment has been exposing you to,
and you can start being preventative in the way that you live your life. It is a lifestyle change.
But if you don't know, you don't know. I mean, you could be, you know, not as severe as like lactose
intolerant, but there could be simple little dietary things. Like you love eating almonds and they don't
seem to affect you, but what you find in some of these tests is that, no, they're actually
wreaking havoc. And over time, if you keep doing this for 20 years, it is going to catch up to you.
And you're not even going to know it's the root cause of your autoimmune disease.
Oh, so you can tell you'll, you can change your diet, tailor your life around.
Yeah.
Wow.
And you can start adding supplements, you know, like great supplements that you can just take
regularly.
So I think it's going to preventative.
And that's what we're doing, personalized and preventative.
Right.
Hey, I got some Baldwin going.
I'm starting to thin out of that.
Stem cells, does that have any effect?
Yeah, stem cells and exosomes are very good.
Now, if you're to like that shiny bald part...
No, it's just starting to thin.
They ain't got no shine going yet.
Good.
Because it's shiny, you can't.
There's nothing...
That's it.
It's gone.
But if there's a follicle left, then...
Yeah, I got twin in the follicle.
Follicles.
What?
Follicles.
You said follicers.
I said follicles.
So, I mean, I got still planning I have, but I noticed it's the thing because we're using rogain.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's definitely something that we see good results with.
You can start here in the States by getting PRP, which is basically just taking your own blood out.
And they put it in a centrifuge, the platelet-rich plasma, the viscosity changes,
and they take the heavy platelets, and they can put in your head.
And that actually helps slow down the process.
But the rocket fuel on top of that is stem cells and exosomes.
I'll do that.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, when you come down, go ahead.
I'm a...
I'll tell you what.
What?
You know, we were talking about the male enhancement shot before.
Yeah.
That does not hurt at all.
Uh-huh.
This one hurts.
Really?
Yeah, because we're doing like 100 injections.
Stabbing a shot of you.
Yeah.
Like a hellraiser.
Oh, that looks.
But it works.
No pain, no gain.
Yeah, I can deal with some pain.
Maybe if y'all promote magic hands, it wouldn't hurt so that.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Slide a hand.
You don't know what's going on over here.
You don't feel it up there.
Wow.
So how do people find you to get to obtain your services?
We're at bioaccelerator.com.
If you're looking for a really good deep dive on what patients actually experience,
our YouTube channel is really great.
It's Bioaccelerator YouTube.
But we're spelled B-I-O-X-C-E-L-L-E-R-A-T-O-R.
A lot of people spell it wrong.
But anyways, yeah, bioaccelerator.com, when you're ready, click around.
That's got a lot of science.
scientific information so it can go super deep into the science and medicine or it can be very
general and basic as well we try to cater to both right okay right yeah yeah i got uh i'm a
my asses up of the show hey man it's a pleasure yeah yeah thank oh man i appreciate you thank you
yeah yeah you guys are awesome thank you
