Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1496: The Best Deadlift Variation, the Importance of Rest Times Between Exercises, the Dangers of Eating Too Much Red Meat & More

Episode Date: February 24, 2021

In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answerPump Head questions about the different deadlift variations and the benefits of each, the importance of rest times between movements, “behin...d the scenes” of creating a MAPS program, and issues with eating too much red meat. #StrongWomenDeadlift (4:41) The most effective exercises for your body. (8:56) The commonality of magnesium deficiencies and a new product from Ned to help combat that. (17:25) Fun Facts with Justin: What websites will you get the most computer viruses? (24:29) How we label everything a disease these days rather than address the root cause. (30:28) The Government versus Big Tech, the battle rages on. (41:54) Magic Spoon is now available in Canada! (45:45) How to appear honest. (47:08) #Quah question #1 – Can you talk about the different deadlift variations (traditional, sumo, touch and go, Romanian) and the benefits of each? Should you vary them up? (51:08) #Quah question #2 – I understand the importance of rest times between sets, but what about rest time between movements? Sometimes it takes a little longer than I’d like to get from the squat rack to an open bench in a crowded gym. Does this throw off programming or anything else? (57:46) #Quah question #3 – What does the “behind the scenes” of creating a MAPS program look like? For instance, how long is the writing process, common stumbling blocks, trials on multiple people, etc? Which program was the hardest to create? (1:02:05) #Quah question #4 – I hear a lot about how bad red meat is for your health, but you guys often talk about eating it almost daily. Are there any actual issues with eating too much red meat? (1:11:51) Related Links/Products Mentioned February Promotion: Phase II Bundle Visit NED for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Magnesium Deficiency: A Commonly Overlooked Health Issue 7 Signs and Symptoms of Magnesium Deficiency Mind Pump #680: Dr. Zach Bush On How To Restore Gut Health Religious Sites Carry More Malware Than Porn Sites, Security Firm Reports New drug that controls your appetite shows promising results in the fight against obesity Mind Pump #1494: What To Do If You Neglect Training Important Body Parts, How To Build Strength When You Only Have Dumbbells, Pre & Post Birth Workout Strategies & More The AspireAssist | Aspire Bariatrics Targeting Big Tech, Maryland becomes first state to tax digital advertising - CNN Apple wins victory as North Dakota votes down bill that would regulate app stores Three states will use Apple, Google coronavirus tracking tech Amazon Acquires Shopify Competitor Selz Visit Magic Spoon for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! People may lie to appear honest Mind Pump TV - YouTube MAPS Fitness Products Mind Pump #1360: Carnivore Vs. Vegan With Dr. Will Bulsiewicz & Dr. Paul Saladino Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Zach Bush MD Dr. Spencer Nadolsky (@drnadolsky)  Instagram Robert Oberst (@robertoberst)  Instagram Amelia Boone (@arboone11)  Instagram Ben Pollack, Ph.D. (@phdeadlift)  Instagram Justin Brink DC (@dr.justinbrink)  Instagram

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Starting point is 00:00:00 If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go. MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts. Saldas, Defenow, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews. In this episode of Mind Pump, by the way, we're the number one health and physician. Hey, look at that. Entertainment podcast in the world. Okay, so this is a quad episode Q&A where we answer fitness and health questions, but the way we open the episode is with an introductory portions, where we answer, excuse me,
Starting point is 00:00:28 is where we talk about current events, we bring up studies, we have a lot of fun. Today's intro was 46 minutes long after that, we answered the fitness and health questions. We open up by talking about the hashtag, Strong Women Deadlift. Go check it out on Instagram. These are Mind Pump listeners, women who are lifting amazing amounts of weight
Starting point is 00:00:47 Strong women and they look amazing Then we talked about the most effective exercises for your body I talked about magnesium deficiencies. They're really really common which led me to talk about a new product from one of our sponsors Ned it's called mellow. It's got three forms of magnesium, one of which is the only proven form of magnesium to cross the blood brain barrier to help you relax, reduce anxiety, improve your energy levels. It also has GABA and Theonine. So this is a relaxing supplement.
Starting point is 00:01:16 Go check it out, go to the website, helloned.com, that's H-E-L-L-O-N-E-D.com, forward slash mine pump, and then enter the code, mind pump for 15% off your first order. Then we talk about computer viruses, what type of websites give the most viruses? You'll be shocked to find out. Ooh, surprising.
Starting point is 00:01:33 Then we talked about a post by somebody on Instagram talking about the new fat loss drug and we kind of disagreed with their take. Then we talked about how Maryland is looking to impose a digital tax. and South Dakota is passing a bill targeting the big tech companies. So we talk about the government versus big tech. What's gonna happen? It's getting spicy. Then some good news magic spoon cereal. This is the high protein low sugar low calories. It's way protein by the way
Starting point is 00:02:01 cereal tastes like the cereal grew up as a kid really really good stuff It's now protein, by the way. Serial, tastes like the cereal grew up as a kid. Really, really good stuff. It's now shipping to Canada. So all of you people up in America's hat, America's hat, you guys can get Magic Spoon cereal now. Just go to their site, magicspoon.com, forward slash, mind pump, use the code, mind pump, get free shipping, everything is guaranteed.
Starting point is 00:02:22 They have a happiness guarantee. And then we talk about how to appear honest, some studies that talk about what people look for when you're talking to determine whether or not they should trust you. So I'll read this a lot. Then we got into the questions. The first one, this person wants to talk about,
Starting point is 00:02:36 wants us to talk about all the different deadlift variations, traditional sumo, touch and go, Romanian deadlift, and such. The next question, this person says,go, Romanian deadlift, and such. The next question, this person says, look, I know it's important to rest in between sets, but what happens between exercises, like when I'm going from bench press to squat,
Starting point is 00:02:53 which of the rest period would be there? The next question, this person wants to know what it's like to create one of our workout programs. I want to know what it's like behind the scenes. So we get to do a visit down memory lane, talk about how we created some of our most popular maps, workout programs. And then the final question, this person says,
Starting point is 00:03:11 look, I've heard a lot about how red meat is bad for you. What's the deal? Can I eat it every day? So we talk about red meat in that part of the episode. Also, we're still running our promotion, our phase two bundle, which includes two of our most popular workout programs. Maps Performance, which is an athletic-minded workout program, and Maps Esthetic, which is bodybuilding-minded. Both programs about three months long, combine them
Starting point is 00:03:39 together, you get a wonderful marriage between function and aesthetics. Now normally if you buy both programs that cost you close to $300, but right now you can get both in the Phase 2 bundle for $79.99 plus you get a three-day money back guarantee. Go check them out, go research them, and sign up. Go to the site, mapsfebuary.com. That's M-A-P-S-F-E-B-R-U-A-R-Y dot com.
Starting point is 00:04:07 Teacher time! And it's teacher time! Oh shit, Doug, you know it's my favorite time of the week. Oh yes indeed. We have two winners today, the one for Apple Podcasts, one for Facebook. The Apple Podcasts winner is the Phi Zeke. And for Facebook, we got Joe Sloanaker. Both of you are winners, and the name I just read to iTunes at mindpumpmedia.com, include
Starting point is 00:04:35 your shirt size and your shipping address, and we'll get that shirt right out to you. How amazing are the deadlift videos that are getting posted right now. Oh, I'm so great. I'm so impressed. What's the hashtag? I love to watch it, man. Strong women deadlift. Okay, some of these ladies are pulling some serious weight.
Starting point is 00:04:55 Did you see that? There's a chick bone pulling 400 pounds. 400 pounds, dude. Yeah, oh my God. No, that's impressive. It's really, really cool to see. You know, I mean, we talked about this, you know, Choki and I talked about this almost a month ago about doing something for a woman's day,
Starting point is 00:05:10 which is March 1st, right? So National Woman's Day is March 1st. And we wanted to come up with something really cool, like some sort of a cool giveaway, just for women. And we talked so much about the benefits of squatting and deadlifting and that, you know, more and more, more and more now more and more now, we see more women doing it than before.
Starting point is 00:05:26 I mean, we saw nobody doing it just 15 years ago and then men started doing it in the commercial gyms and now you're starting to see more and more women and I'm just blown away by the response. You know, I anticipated us to get, you know, a little bit of people that were like, oh yeah, I love the deadlift and here's videos, but boy, it's hundreds and hundreds of people. Yeah, they're flooding in right now were like, oh yeah, I love the deadlift and here's videos, but boy, it's like. Oh, hundreds and hundreds of people.
Starting point is 00:05:45 Yeah, they're flooding in right now. And so I'm super, super pumped. It's, I don't know, you know, how much, I don't know how many people who are listening have been in gyms as long as we have, but it's, this is one of the most amazing swings that I can think of in fitness. It's okay, this is no joke.
Starting point is 00:06:05 When I first started working in gyms, even five years into my career, if I deadlifted, a man, a trainer, deadlifted, inevitably, a member would come up to me and tell me that I don't, what are you doing? You heard yourself. You're not supposed to do that. I told the manager.
Starting point is 00:06:19 Tell the manager, nobody deadlifted. Not men, not women. There was in these gyms, some of these gyms I managed were, you know, 30, 40,000 square foot facility. So they're big box of gyms. 2000 workouts a day. Yeah, and there was one, and this is not an exaggeration.
Starting point is 00:06:35 There'd be one squat rack in the whole place, and it would be dusty. Nobody would do anything in there, except for the occasional person doing barbell curls, you know, in the squat rack because occasional person doing barbell curls. Yeah. You know, in the squat rack because the other whatever stations were taken up. Nobody did these things. Then little by little you started seeing, you know, guys do it.
Starting point is 00:06:54 Women never, they wouldn't even touch them. And I remember when I would train clients and I would have them do some of these lifts, it was a process of convincing them why they need to do it, why is this so beneficial. Luckily, I can be pretty convincing. I know you guys are as well. But it only took about a month of doing it before I had to stop, I didn't have to convince it anymore. It would start doing it and they'd be like, my butt, oh my god, my back, everything looks amazing, I feel so good.
Starting point is 00:07:17 I'm eating more calories and burning more body fat, what's going on? I'm like, you're doing the most effective exercises. Yeah, yeah. You know? Now it's really cool to see. It's super, super cool. I love seeing it. And, you know, of course, kudos to, I think CrossFit
Starting point is 00:07:29 had a play to roll in that as well because when they came on the scene, they had a bunch of, you know, fit, great looking women doing these lifts. And I think that kind of broke the stereotype a little bit. Well, that's great to see now. That's what's even more exciting than I felt, like watching these videos. There's obviously there's a handful of women that are competing, that are powerlifting.
Starting point is 00:07:51 You can even see some of these girls are training in probably a crossfit type of gym. But then there's just a lot of just normal ass clients that are deadlifting and it's freaking awesome to see. That's to me. You don't have to be a powerlifter. Right. A really important foundational lift that gets you strong overall. And then you build upon that and you can sculpt and you can do whatever with your body
Starting point is 00:08:13 in terms of training. But it's such one of those crucial lifts that I love to see people come back to. Dude, when Doug hired me years ago and we first met, he hired me because he had back problems. And I remember when I had him deadlift for the first time, the look on his face was like, I have back stuff, for sure. I'm like, yes, don't worry. This will make your back pull-up proof. Today, Doug's back is pretty much bulletproof.
Starting point is 00:08:35 The guy never hurts. But when he came to me, he had back problems. Among other things, deadlifting was part of getting his back. So, of course, I progressed improperly and we did everything appropriately But he got to the point where he was you know pulling more than twice his body weight and back never had a problem at all Yeah, just one of those things so it is really really cool to see and I also you know you're seeing too a lot now Adam is in the the female bikini
Starting point is 00:08:59 Competition world which you know they're they're trying they're not really trying to get super buffed or whatever. A lot of them in the off season now are powerlifting. Because they're seeing the gains that they're getting especially their butt and hamstrings from some of them. I've watched that change just in the last five to six years. That's changed a lot. When I first came on the scene and I was getting ready to compete, even though guys and girls,
Starting point is 00:09:21 you didn't see deadlifting. Deadlifting was a thing that supposedly made your waist bigger so everybody avoided it. I remember like feeling so like, here I am, in the gym that we were at, there were so many competitors. There's probably, at all times that I was lifting in there, at least three to five other amateurs and pros in the men's category, and probably at least seven to 10
Starting point is 00:09:40 bikini girls that would always be the gym. So we'd always be around each other, and I'd be the guy by myself over there squatting and deadlifting, everybody looking at me, all crazy why I wasn't wearing a squeam and not concerned about my waist blowing out. That's squeam. Yeah, dude, I still can't believe that.
Starting point is 00:09:54 That's what I like to do. I caught on with dudes, you know. It's still a thing, man. It's still, and you know what? You guys know, it's funny, because I, at one point, I thought it'd be a funny thing to create other accounts and like false accounts. Oh yeah, I remember that. Dude, I ran across'd be a funny thing to create other accounts and false accounts. Oh, yeah, I remember that.
Starting point is 00:10:05 Dude, I ran across this. Like, it was suggested to me. I'm like, it was my own creation. It was, I called it like, hourglass dudes. And I just took all the pictures on the internet and I could find with these guys, like wearing those waste trainers and trying to, you know,
Starting point is 00:10:22 just to follow with them and just to find them. I'm just like, this needs to be on front. There are less, you know, how can we to, you know, just to fight with them and just to fight. And I'm just like, this needs to be on front. They're like, you know, how can we make, you know, bodybuilding and physique something that people can make fun of even more? Oh, I know. Let's wear a corset and make our muscles at your feet. Let's just, around our waist.
Starting point is 00:10:38 Do you remember Adam when you, because I know I'm pretty sure Justin learned the lifts, like the big compound lifts because he was in football, in which case, luckily football, they never, you know, it was always in to squat and do those lifts because they were so functional. Yeah, just not deadlifting, but yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:53 Yeah, you guys, it cleans. Yeah, we do. A lot of pile, yeah, so you're still getting that. Still getting it. Yeah. Adam, do you remember when you first really got introduced to like dead lifts and in barbell squats, when you first were like, huh, this might be something.
Starting point is 00:11:05 Well, okay, so barbell squats, I was introduced to early, but still avoided them might de-plake. So I was like, I was probably two years into my training career as a trainer, and I had, I was lifting with these old school, like, you know, old school body builder, power lifter type guys, like just Jim rats. They were good 15 years older.
Starting point is 00:11:26 How old were you? 22. Oh, okay. You know, and I remember, and I've told this story before where he'd stack like three plates, you know, I mean, at that time I could barely squat like 135. I was like, I want you to feel the weight. You just hold it. Yeah, he just had me hold it or they would spot me all the way down and back up but he would be totally carrying me the whole way
Starting point is 00:11:46 but he wanted me to feel the way. And anytime that I would do it on my own, it would just, my back would flare up so bad. And I knew that they were good for me and I was being told that I needed to do it but I would, honestly, I rarely ever squatted. I was a leg press and lunge and machine gun. You just didn't know how to really work
Starting point is 00:12:04 on mobility in the issue of. Yeah, I just, you know, at that early years of my training career, I just, you know, bothered me and that's why I didn't really train it with my clients. I was like, well, man, I'm a fitness trainer and it bothers my back. So I would fall for the excuse for my clients,
Starting point is 00:12:19 my clients would say, oh, I have a bad back. Okay, so we didn't squat. Yeah, because you're like me too. Yeah, me too. That's how I felt about it. And I never deadlifted. Deadlifting, and I think bad back. Okay, so we didn't squat. Yeah, because you're like me too. Yeah, me too. That's how I felt about it. And I never deadlifted. Deadlifting, and I think it was a certification. And I don't remember what sort I was going through
Starting point is 00:12:30 reading the benefits of it and the programming of deadlifting. And then I began to start to do it. But even then, back then, I was such a form and technique guy that I would never like push the weight. I never deadlifted less than like 10 reps. I was doing it, I was a 10 rep guy in dead lifts, real lightweight, 135. Maybe I pushed 225.
Starting point is 00:12:51 It wasn't until you and I did I start to push the weight in deadlifting. So I never really try to get strong in the deadlift or really strong in squats. They were very sporadically put in my program. Even when I kind of knew that I should be doing it, I still kind of fell prey to the, oh, it bothers my back and I'm not very good at it.
Starting point is 00:13:12 It wasn't until later on until like we met, which was about seven years ago when we first started talking, that I started to really start to push the weight and deadlifting and get, and then also address why it was bothering me, like when I squatted. Like I didn't really care about.
Starting point is 00:13:27 Yeah, it's crazy, because you turned yourself into a good squatter. You didn't just fix the issues. You're actually a really good squatter now, which is a huge change. I wouldn't say I'm a really good squatter. You're a really good squatter. When you, you know, before you really worked on mobility,
Starting point is 00:13:40 you had squats cause problems for you. Yeah, yeah, and it was, it was, I definitely was an awful squarer. I mean, I look back at the pictures of like how I was squatting and stuff before and it looked painful. And it took a long time, it took a lot of work on working on the mobility. And I would definitely say I've made a ton of progress from where I was. But that's also what has now made me fall in love with those movements is I
Starting point is 00:14:05 have put a tremendous amount of work in both those movements for the last seven years or so. And I still feel like there's so much more for me to get out of it because I'm constantly adjusting and tweaking and improving the mobility and the control. They're the exercises that keep giving. And it's one of the biggest myths in resistance training in general, is that exercises are all relatively equal. This one works your back. So does this one pretty much the same.
Starting point is 00:14:34 Just pick one you like or whatever. Not true exercises are not equal. Some just produce tremendous results while others take a lot longer to produce results. And I feel, so for me, I feel very blessed because at a young age, 16 years old, working out at the YMCA, seeing the big powerlifter guys using the one squat rack and just watching them. And then they took me through a workout.
Starting point is 00:14:57 They taught me how to squat. They taught me that I did lift back then. I did lift it sumo because that's the way that they taught me as a kid. And that was the summer before either junior year or sophomore. I think it was junior year, right? And at this point, I'd already been lifting weights or working out for a couple of years. So I started as a young kid. That summer, I gained almost 15 pounds of muscle.
Starting point is 00:15:16 I was like, I got stretch marks. I blew up. My legs grew, my back grew. Went back to school and all the kids were like, oh man, you know, first time ever, anybody ever said, I looked like I worked out, and it was because I did those lifts. Well, you know, you guys are both like strength guys, right? You guys talk a lot about that, and I cared more about how I looked,
Starting point is 00:15:34 and so I did so much of the body builder isolation exercise for so long. What I think really sold me on forever after this, squatting and deadlifting, being the foundation of my training, was that I realized I was doing way less, and my body looked better than what it was when I was, I mean, I was a seven day a week hammer,
Starting point is 00:15:55 tons of exercise, tons of volume in the gym, but I was doing the leg extensions, the leg press, the lateral raise machines, and the shoulder press machines, and I was that guy, I was the bodybuilder guy, and that's what I, and then all of a sudden, I started to really focus on the four big lifts, and then no workout ever did not include at least one,
Starting point is 00:16:16 if not all of them in the training, and I felt like that's all I had to do, and I had as good or a better physique, then all this other shit, that's what sold me. Yeah, so funny, it's the irony of it, is I was completely focused on the strength aspect, and I had as good or a better physique than all this other shit. That's what sold me. Yeah. So funny. It's the irony of it is I was completely focused on the strength aspect and just following coaches orders
Starting point is 00:16:31 and like going through the workouts with the team and just trying to produce as much strength as possible. Meanwhile, the first time I actually take my shirt off and I'm playing basketball, you know, I get a girl to compliment me on my chest and my abs and all this stuff. And I'm like, what? Like, I had no idea that, you know, my body was transforming so much. And that actually is what led me into like bodybuilder style training. So then I started to actually go, well, I can, you know, I can get compliments. This is cool. When you're a, you're a teenage guy or one in your 20s and a girl gives you a compliment
Starting point is 00:17:05 You're gonna like you ever have a guy remember I remember a girl complimented my cologne What do you think I wore forever after that? Yeah, yeah, the single girl said she liked the way I smell Oh, this is the cologne I'm gonna wear now I like your shirt, you know mom can you buy me 10 of these shirts? Yeah, because someone compliment me anyway Yeah, I was so I did some interesting reading yesterday. I wanna talk to you guys about something I wasn't fully aware of. So you know how we had a call with the founders of Ned,
Starting point is 00:17:33 the other day, right? They were talking about, they have their brand new product. They have their new product. I can't remember the name of that. Melo, thank you. And it's good to relax the body, maybe before bad, all that stuff. And you know, it's good to relax the body, maybe before bed, all that stuff. And they talked about magnesium.
Starting point is 00:17:46 And I'd heard that magnesium deficiency was relatively common, but I wasn't really familiar with- Was it like 60% is that what it is? So 75% of Americans probably don't meet the daily requirements for magnesium. As much as a quarter of Americans, probably meet the standards for a true magnesium deficiency. Now, you ask why, why is that?
Starting point is 00:18:12 A lot of it has to do with the fact that the soil is, yeah, it's so depleted, right? So the way we use soil to grow things, we figured out that we could throw things in the soil to make it grow plants, but we don't do anything else to the soil. So it's still lacking lots of nutrients. So eating magnesium rich foods today versus, I don't know,
Starting point is 00:18:32 50 years ago, it's still going to have like 50% or more or less magnesium than it did 50 years ago. It's just, we just don't have a lot of in it in our food anymore. Not only that, but if you win your under a lot of chronic stress, your body depletes magnesium and a lot of stuff. So 75% of all of us are probably not meeting our minimum requirements. Do you guys know what the signs of magnesium deficiency are?
Starting point is 00:18:56 No, too. So I'm gonna pull them up because I thought this was fascinating. And a lot of us have muscle twitches and muscle twitches and cramps, which, you know, I'm not gonna lie. This happens to me You know all the time like my eye will twitch or I'll you know I'll get an exercise and muscle cramp a little bit. So that's one that's common all kinds of mental disorders are a result from lack of magnesium including an especially anxiety. So a lot of times people feel interested. Physical anxiety can come from not having enough magnesium.
Starting point is 00:19:29 Of course, bone issues, osteoporosis, magnesium is important for that. You have fatigue and muscle weakness. So people who are tired can't figure out why they're so fatigued. Oftentimes, it could be just a lack of magnesium. High blood pressure is another one. Asma, this one I didn't know, which is kind of interesting. Irregular heartbeat, that's another one that sometimes I'll get.
Starting point is 00:19:50 So supplementing with magnesium can make a big difference. The thing with magnesium though is it's not all forms are very easily absorbed, right? So in the product that Ned has, they chose three forms of magnesium, one of which crosses the blood-brain barrier. So it's really good for relaxing, for anxiety, that kind of stuff. So really good stuff. Really interesting. When they do studies like this, and they take things like soil, and then they say that it's deficient in magnesium. Are we not also taking an account how many farmers those supplement with that?
Starting point is 00:20:29 So like, I mean, my experience is mostly with marijuana and tomatoes and things like that, but that's a common supplement that you actually have to put in a tea for the plants because it's not getting enough magnesium. So they're testing the food and the soil when they're ready to grow. So not before, right?
Starting point is 00:20:47 But even when you supplement, it's still not the same, because they'll put the minimum required to cause the plants to grow. It's not like it was before. But nonetheless, at the end of the day, you know, again, and this is health line that I'm raising these statistics from. A good chunk of us are not getting enough magnesium,
Starting point is 00:21:04 and it's subtle, right? So you just say, I don't feel so good. I'm kind these statistics from a good chunk of us are not getting enough magnesium and it's subtle, right? So you just say, I don't feel so good. I'm kind of anxious or you know, I feel kind of tired or whatever. And magnesium, if you supplement with it, you get the right form can produce a pretty good effect. Yeah, I just remember hearing like with farming and like rotating the crops and different like areas
Starting point is 00:21:21 of the land like was like the super crucial. And I don't know if that was like a lost thing with industrial farming or not, but like somewhere along the lines, like we started to kind of lose a lot of the nutrients from the soil and keep reusing the same land over and over again, but we're punishing it.
Starting point is 00:21:38 I saw a thing one time that was like, they showed like a potato or a tomato from like the 30s or something like that, and they compared the nutrient value a potato or a tomato from like the thirties or something like that. And they compared the nutrient value of it. And it's like ridiculous. I mean, it's less than like half of what it was just like the topsoil like runs off and goes into the, you know, rivers and all.
Starting point is 00:21:55 You talked about this with Dr. Bush, right? Yeah, yeah. So they've, we've also are basically spraying the ground with anti-biotics in essence when we spray them with glyphosate. So glyphosate are chemicals that kill weeds, and then we modify plants to resist these particular sprays, so we can spray a bunch of corn crops, kills the weeds, the corn survives, but the glyphosate actually can kill bacteria. So we're actually killing lots of the natural bacteria as well.
Starting point is 00:22:24 I've never heard someone say that like antibiotics. Is that is that something that is widely known? Now like I mean I feel like more and more people are privy to antibiotics and are gut and how it's not an ideal thing right? Just maybe what 10, 15 years ago everybody was on that bandwagon, something goes wrong, take antibiotics, kill it all. Yeah, when I was a kid you go to the doctor, the doctor's throw antibiotics at you. Right, but I feel like the audience and the masses are privy to that. Now, is that widely known with what's going on with?
Starting point is 00:22:53 Well, so I'm using the term antibiotics very, very loosely. So it's not like an antibiotic, where it just destroys all bacteria. But it does interfere with a pathway that bacteria need to, excuse me, that bacteria need to survive. I think it's called the, I don't remember the name of it, sicka-madi, or something like that. It's a weird name, but it interferes with bacteria. And so it can start to kill the bacteria over time. And we're spraying, you know, the ground with like, you
Starting point is 00:23:20 know, millions and millions of gallons of the stuff all the time. It's like stig muddy. So the ground is just becoming more and more sterile. And then on top of it, we breed plants to be higher, to be tastier. So they typically have more sugar, less nutrients, right? So if you look at like an apple today versus hundreds of years ago Apples back then were like full of seeds and fiber, not very much flesh. Now it's like a big sugar bomb apple. It's like this big or whatever.
Starting point is 00:23:51 So it's like, we're changing things to the point where supplementing, I used to think if you ate really well, then you probably don't, you need to supplement. But I'm starting to realize that in some cases, you might still need to supplement, like vitamin D or to realize that in some cases you might still need to supplement like vitamin D or magnesium for example, just so common. Well, do you think that because we're continuing to do that and it seems like the soil is becoming more and more depleted over time that it's More it's gonna be more common that people are having to sodala for a lot of these totally
Starting point is 00:24:19 Absolutely, we'll have to for it. We'll fortify food like we do with you know like salt you know, they put iodine and salt You know, so they fortify everything these days. You know, they put iodine in salt, you know? So they fortify everything these days. Yeah. Before they put it in the market. I got a fun fact for you guys. This is just like a real quick, fun fact. What do you think is the website or I know what your guys'
Starting point is 00:24:36 answer is gonna be, but what do you guys think? The website that you go to that you are most likely to get a virus from. A virus phone? Porn hub. Of course. Yeah, so that's what I would think. Oh, like get a virus from. A virus from? Pornhub, of course. Yeah, so that's what I would think. Oh, it's not. Porn sites, no.
Starting point is 00:24:48 Yeah, no, religious sites. Oh my gosh. Can you believe that? Is that true? It's a fact. No way. Right, check me. I was, my mind was blown.
Starting point is 00:24:58 Now, is it the religious sites themselves were created so that people could spread viruses or because they're just not super secure? And so- That might be a part of it. I don't know how like honestly I don't know what the inner workings are, you know, the story behind that, but that just blew my mind. I was like, wow.
Starting point is 00:25:13 I always thought it was porn. Where did you read that? That's super interesting. Yeah, I was wondering on those like weird, you know, fun facts that like a lot of people don't know- I would never guess that. Yeah. Well, you know, it makes sense if you think about it. Yeah, what's your theory on that?
Starting point is 00:25:24 Well, I mean like the established porn sites, probably it's like in their best interest to not, because the stigma, right, the... Well, I mean, I would still bet porn hub is number two. Yeah, I'm sure it's up there. Yeah, because anytime I've, if I didn't, I tell you what, Apple is the only thing I could watch porn on,
Starting point is 00:25:40 because if I watch it on a fucking, on a PC, you're getting a virus. Have you ever talked to any IT guy like you're bringing your laptop in? And like he fixes like, oh, you had a porn problem. Yeah, he never said where you search your church sites. Yeah, he never says that. So I don't I didn't know that. That's so random. That's strange. So what's your theory on that?
Starting point is 00:26:02 I don't know. I feel like maybe their sites just, they don't spend a lot of money on securing them or something. I have no idea. Yeah, but I mean, the virus means that somebody is, is, is, is actually taking the time to put bugs in that, right? And we're gonna do that. I don't know if it's bombing it with the, yeah. I don't know where or whatever.
Starting point is 00:26:16 Yeah, do you think, I don't think it's the actual, like people who made this site. Yeah, I don't think so. Unless they're like fake sites. No, no, no, that'd be other people, right? Isn't that what even does on the board? And it's not like, porno, is the one that. Dude, that, that, that, no, that'd be other people, right? Yeah. Isn't that what even does on the board? It's not like porn hub is the one. Dude, that's like a cyber attack.
Starting point is 00:26:26 That reminds me, when Doug and I made some of our first sites for, was it Maps and Abolic that this happened, Doug? Yes. So when we first created Maps and Abus, it was a before mind pump, right? We created a website and somebody hacked it and it was porn. So you type in whatever the site was. I remember what it was. Maps and Abolic, I I don't remember what this program just got awesome. Yeah. And you know how I found out I sent it to my aunt. She'll know. Check out our new website.
Starting point is 00:26:51 And she's like, did you mean to send this to me? And I clicked on it. I'm like, don't I text the dog? I'm like, what the fuck? Don't you guys remember when we first started my impump my my Facebook page was bigger than anything else. Oh, yeah. And they got I had just let it go. Remember in case he tried to figure it out, he tried to get it all off and we couldn't. So I just let that page go. I could not. That's right, there's a Facebook page out there with your picture on it.
Starting point is 00:27:12 Yes, not you. Yeah, and it's all it is, it's like porn videos. All it is, you open it up and that's all it is on that entire. We tried so hard to hack back into it and to clean it all up. And I just said, effort, forget it. But at one point, that was bigger than Instagram or anything else. So I had like a, I don't know, I want to say 20, 40,000 followers somewhere in that range
Starting point is 00:27:34 on Facebook. And I was doing Facebook first before I was doing Instagram. And that was my main source of contacts. And then it got hacked and it was like, oh shit, so I'll never get that back. What a, you know, so many people build businesses now off of like one Instagram page or one Facebook page. Yeah. When it gets hacked, you're pretty much screwed, right?
Starting point is 00:27:54 There's no, who do you call? Yeah, what do you do? Like what do you do? You can just happen to our buddy, and we can just go on. And he just got it back. I saw he got it back. So you have to file with like Instagram or Facebook and then tell them, hey, somebody else has got control.
Starting point is 00:28:07 I mean, wow, they could just destroy your audience in the short period of time. Yeah. Well, and so what I noticed, so speaking of who you're talking about, Justin, I've been watching to see like his and his engagement is like through the floor now because in that small window that somebody had hacked him and they were trying to promote what was it. They were promoting some there was some supplement. You know, they were trying to promote what was it? They were promoting some... There were some supplementarism? You know, they were selling... Was it like cryptocurrency stuff? Yes, it was like crypto mining.
Starting point is 00:28:30 That's right. Yeah, you know, give us $800 and we'll help you mine 3,000 Bitcoin sums, yeah, some shit. So they were using his page for like a week or so to do that and then now he's got it back, but then I look at when he does a post and it's like terrible engagement. So I'm sure he lost a majority of the people that were paying attention. Oh, that's
Starting point is 00:28:48 And then I also don't know what the algorithm what happens to the Instagram algorithm because that thing's all automated So maybe it picks up what they're doing in the now I said and it kind of shadow bands him a little bit So yeah, just it's crazy. Yeah, if you especially if you get that popular in one platform And then you get excited about that and you want wanna put like a lot more effort in just that direction, but then you're at the whim of something like that happening and then now what do you do? You don't have a backup already. I don't know if it was us being a bunch of older wise guys
Starting point is 00:29:15 or just dumb luck, just paranoid. But it was something that I think that we were really cautious about when we built this. I remember that was part of the motivation of also doing all the other. Like, remember when we first get going, like having YouTube channels, having the podcast place, having all our individual Instagrams,
Starting point is 00:29:33 just so we have a foot there. Yeah, and just in case something happened to one of them that we weren't like married to that one channel as our outlet to get to people. So I'm glad we did because, you know, that's tough. The smartest thing to do is if you build your business off of one platform to somehow capture your audience in a way that's secure.
Starting point is 00:29:51 So emails, you know, something, because if that goes down, or if you get, if they change the algorithm, or you get shadow banned, or you hacked, at least you can email your list. And they're like, hey, this is what happened. Right. You can come find, well, otherwise you're screwed. You can come find, otherwise you're screwed,
Starting point is 00:30:05 they can't find, they don't know how to find you. You have no way of getting in contact with them and your business is dead. And even though emails can get hacked too, they say that's one of the safest bets for you to do, is to just get it, get on, which member of the beginning we didn't think that either, without email was dead.
Starting point is 00:30:18 I know. Ironically email is most valuable. You know, it is, and to this day for the business of all the things that we do, email is still the most valuable part of it. It blows my mind. So crazy. I wanted to revisit a conversation
Starting point is 00:30:30 that we were just having to their day. I told you guys, you had brought up the supplement cell. Oh, you mean the drug, the fat loss drug. And I had told you that I remembered a post that just a couple of days before that I had seen the doctor, Spencer, and Nidalski, I think is how you pronounce him. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:30:49 And I said that you guys have gone back and forth, I think I've gone back and forth with him a few times because there's some things that he says that we don't agree with. There's a lot of stuff he does say that we do agree with. And I wanted you to read his post. Did you get a chance to read it? Yeah, so I have it in front of me. So he's talking about the drug. I don't know if I'm saying it right. It's a semi-glutide. And it is the first like really effective weight loss drug that we've seen.
Starting point is 00:31:14 I talked about the statistics in a previous episode, but a significant portion of the people who took this drug lost weight. And the reason why they lost the weight is it effectively controls appetite. So they just ate less is what ended up happening. So he did a post about the drug and he's talking about how it was introduced as a type two diabetes treatment and it's been studied for obesity
Starting point is 00:31:38 due to its powerful appetite suppressing effects. And then he says, I know there are many out there who feel these drugs are not needed because all people have to do is eat less. Of course, we need if you are calories and we burn. However, there are many with obesity to where the appetite drivers are too strong when trying to lose weight. To combat this, we have medicines like this to help. They're a tool, just like anything else. And he says, also, many ask if they need to be used long-term and if you stop when you get in the way back, the answer is usually yes. Think of obesity as a disease.
Starting point is 00:32:06 We wouldn't stop blood pressure medicine just because someone has normal blood pressure after starting the medicine. The same with obesity. Of course, there are lifestyle behavioral changes which may occur while using the medicine which can combat the appetite drives. But many will have the continued appetite drive
Starting point is 00:32:20 after stopping. By the way, this medicine is now the most powerful one we have. So we talk about that. And then at the end, he says bottom line, if this new medicine makes you uneasy, you may have an anti obesity bias. No, I'm not a fan of that statement. That's it. It's a very bold statement. There's a couple of things here. I have a problem with obesity as a disease. I don't know if I can, I don't, I think we label everything a disease nowadays because it encourages... It's not easy to create a drug for it.
Starting point is 00:32:53 Yes, if it's a disease, well, now we have a drug that can solve it. The other thing too, with drugs like this that blunt your appetite, we've talked about this, actually we did bring this up on when we talked about it. Yes, you'll eat less and you will lose weight as a result. But the reason why you were eating the way you did doesn't go away. Right. So if you're 60 pounds overweight, I used to tell this to clients all the time. At some point, you were 15 pounds overweight, overweight, another point you were 30 pounds overweight, 40 pounds, 50 pounds.
Starting point is 00:33:26 Now you're at 60 pounds overweight. You ignore the signs because you're using food as a way to self-medicate for something, whether it's anxiety, depression, bored, maybe you just don't know how to deal with the feeling of cravings, whatever, that may be. And if you don't solve that problem, it's still there. So now you're appetite's down, but you're still sad or bored or whatever,
Starting point is 00:33:55 you tend to replace it with other things. Or you just don't become happy. I lost weight, but I'm still, you know, feel the same way I did before. Yeah, one of those, so he also made another statement in there. It was like, you know, there so he may also made another statement in there. It was like, there may or may not be behavioral lifestyle changes that occur,
Starting point is 00:34:17 going through taking this drug. To me, it's almost like an afterthought. It's not on the forefront of pursuit of really addressing the behavior and the lifestyle leading into this. Here's the solution, and then, oh it's, here's the solution and then, oh yeah, this might happen along the way, which would be great, but also you could just stay on this drug, which to me creates this dependency on something exogenous to bring in instead of really addressing the real. Well, I would love to see how many people actually make behavioral changes while using a drug like this.
Starting point is 00:34:44 I would like to see that. I would like to changes while using a drug like this. I would like to see that. I would like to know they'll never do a study like that because it's not going to support the drug. It's not going to show. I mean, I can just guess and be probably pretty accurate that more than 80% of them are not going to change. It may be higher than that. You're going to see people using the drug to get down that weight and and that's gonna be something they become dependent on the rest of their life because they never addressed. Well, because here, you guys remember training these clients.
Starting point is 00:35:10 How many of them, like you just told them, hey, there's a reason why we're here, what is it? And they were like, oh, this is the reason why. And I'm working on it, and I'm going to therapy for it. Like, that never happened. No, no. It rarely ever happened. It's been a long time for them to divulge it.
Starting point is 00:35:23 Yeah, and even get to that place, or what they a lot of times think, it's the weight that's making them feel so depressed. And how many times we talked about this on the show that you're never gonna be happy if you don't address what made you feel the way. It's not the weight. It's not being 60 or 80.
Starting point is 00:35:37 That's a symptom. Yes. And so you throwing drugs at this, I'm just, and I'm with you, Sal, I'm not a fan of the obesity thing being a disease. I don't subscribe to that. And I know why the medical community does. Obesity causes diseases, it's a symptom of your actions, it's not something you catch, it's not it, it exaggerates.
Starting point is 00:36:01 And you can say this and be empathetic at the same time. Because what I don't like is the defense right away. Oh, you guys are shaming these people. And no, no, that's ridiculous. No, get out of here with that. No, anti-obstitial bias is ridiculous. I've worked my entire career helping people with obesity. I care very deeply about helping people through that process. So that's ridiculous.
Starting point is 00:36:21 Look, I don't think we should take the drug off the market. But you know, here's what Western medicine does really well. It reminds me, I'll give you guys an example. I had a client that illustrated this so beautifully. She was older, I think she was at the time in her late 70s, and I was gonna start training her, and I wanted to get clearance from her doctor because she hadn't worked out ever,
Starting point is 00:36:42 and she had some health issues. And so whenever I have a situation like that, I like to work with the doctor personally. So I had the doctor send me a list of medications that she's on and tell me what she shouldn't do and all that stuff, right? I get this list of medications, okay? Not exaggerating.
Starting point is 00:36:58 It was two pages long. You're talking like 20 different medications. Now here's the crazy part. Half of the medications. Now here's the crazy part. Half of the medications counteract all the symptoms. They were they were to other other drug. If you take this drug, you have constipation. So you can take this drug to help you poop. Half the drugs were there to fight the side effects of the other drug. Oh, this one makes me drowsy. So I'm taking this one to help me stay awake. This one makes me constipated. I I'm taking this one to help me stay awake. This one makes me constipated. So I have to take this one too, help me poop.
Starting point is 00:37:27 This one hurts my appetite, this one helps. It was insane. And so this is what Western medicine tends to do, is we're gonna give you a drug on top of a drug on top of a drug. So what's the problem? The problem is we have just totally distorted eating behaviors, we have bad relationships with food.
Starting point is 00:37:43 We don't understand this at all, we're very inactive. Here's a drug to help with that. I guarantee the drug will cost something, they're gonna have to give them something mouth. Hey, my depression is still here, I lost the 30 pounds, but I'm still depressed. Well, here's an antidepressant. Well, now it's hard for me to get a boner
Starting point is 00:37:57 because the antidepressant, oh, here's something to help you with your boner. Oh, well, now, it just keeps going. You know what it reminds me of, as far as a visual, in cartoons cartoons, when they're like at a dam and you see a crack and you see like one stream of water coming out and then they plug that one stream of water. Now another one comes out and then they're plugging that one and then bunch of them over here
Starting point is 00:38:17 and they're just constantly plugging holes when all they had to do was reinforce the dam. Yeah, and I want to make it clear too that we, and we talked about this last time, but, you know, if you were somebody who's in a life or death situation, of course, I'm all four things like this. If I've got a client who's at 400 pounds and Doc says, listen, you've got a less than a year to live unless we address this and we've got to get this off,
Starting point is 00:38:38 here is this incredible job that has lots of research behind it that shows that it's going to work and this is going to help us get that first hundred pounds off, and then we could start working on your behavioral stuff. I understand there, but what I know ends up happening in Western medicine is anybody that's capable to prescribe that to gets prescribed that, and we're gonna have the same thing that we have
Starting point is 00:38:58 with people doing the stomach staple. It's like, if you are at this weight, you automatically qualify it, forget the fact of trying to adjust the behavior stuff first and really getting to the root cause, let's just throw a drug at it right away. That's the way it works. It's what's the symptom, create a drug to solve the symptom.
Starting point is 00:39:16 Oh, your head hurts. Here's medication to make your head go away, but I'm not gonna ask you why your head hurts. Who knows, you can be banging your head against the wall every morning, and I have no idea, but here's a pain killer for your headache. Do you guys remember what was the first thing
Starting point is 00:39:28 that we disagreed with him that he was promoting? I do. No, was it a meal replacement? Yes, it was shakes. It was the whole protein shakes instead of eating. Yes, instead of eating. And I remember training clients like this. It's like, that never fucking lasts.
Starting point is 00:39:40 This is a person that has a, you have a person that has a behavioral issues with eating and you throw shakes at them for a while. Very common weight loss clinics. I mean, that's how they treat a lot of these things. It's like, yeah, let's reduce the calories down to basically nothing, but it's managed by doctors and whatnot. But, yeah, it's just like really aggressive intervention where, you know,
Starting point is 00:40:00 like this stuff just takes a lot of time. Here's what I'll say. And I'll make this statement. I'll stand behind it. I will, you take the Western medicine medical community and their track record against obesity is shit. They have a terrible track record against obesity. I'm talking about long term, not just getting them
Starting point is 00:40:17 to lose the weight, that's easy. They'll, like you said, Adam, they'll, here's your shakes, it's 1200 calories a day. You can lipose, that's what I have them to. No, no, no, I'm talking about long-term success. The Western medicine medical community, terrible, terrible, terrible track record. Now let's take them and let's,
Starting point is 00:40:31 let's have them compete against good trainers and good wellness coaches. And let's see you as a better track record. Now which one uses drugs, which one uses all the latest technology and medicines, and which one uses behavior, which one works with exercise, and which one, again, has the better track record.
Starting point is 00:40:47 So if you have a weight loss, if you have a weight problem, if you're dealing with obesity, and this is something that you've been challenged with for a long time, who should you go to? The doctor who fails almost every single time long term, or you can go work with a coach who has tremendous success rates in comparison. Now, again, I'm not going to lie, the success rates are not 90% in any category, but they're far better. And again, the Western medicine approach, terrible. And we're still dealing with it today.
Starting point is 00:41:14 obesity is still a big kill. Here's more evidence. They had, what was that company that came out with that procedure where they attached a tube to your stomach? This is a real, look this up. This is a real look this up. This is a real thing. Maybe Doug can find the name of it while I'm... Aspire assist, I believe.
Starting point is 00:41:29 Aspire assist. I don't remember that, huh? Literally, this is a approved treatment for obesity, and this is what it is. It's like stomach bulimia. It is a tube attached to your stomach. After you eat, you go to the bathroom and you empty the stomach out into the toilet.
Starting point is 00:41:43 So rather than making yourself throw up Yeah, you open the tube up and this was approved. Yeah, who makes that decision and how can you sleep at night? I don't know. Come on. Yeah, that's crazy serious. Hey, I wanted to I Total terrible transition, but I brought up the the Maryland thing the other day and then there's also right So Maryland what was the deal with Maryland? They're gonna do like a tax on them. Yeah, they wanna do like a 10% tax on any sort of digital advertising that goes through their state, right? And now you have, you also have South Dakota's in a battle right now with Google and Apple
Starting point is 00:42:14 that don't wanna give up 30% of their app sales that are going on. So right now, if you have, So if you build a business in, where is it? South Dakota. Then you have to give them 30% in there. Well, that's everywhere. Right now, if we built an app right now and we put it out, we is it? South Dakota. Then you have to give them 30%. Well, that's everywhere. Right now, if we built an app right now,
Starting point is 00:42:26 and we put it out, we sell it for $3.99, and you put it out on Apple or Google's platform, they get their 30% cut. That's just how it works. You use, and it's been like that for everybody. You're starting to get states now that are starting to try and pass bills to push back on that and say,
Starting point is 00:42:41 they don't want to give their money. So Apple can't get the 30%. Is that is okay? Yeah, it's interesting. Yeah, and what I, Who gets it then? Are they saying they don't get it so we can tax it later? Ah, no, they get it.
Starting point is 00:42:53 They get it. Yeah, they get it. Oh. So I think that's, I think what we're seeing is happening is just a big pushback from all the states against it. I mean, we've seen like, it's just, I mean, here's the pendulum swinging back, right?
Starting point is 00:43:04 Tech has gotten away with so much and they got so much control and they're influencing so much. Now you're starting to see some of these states push back and here's an example how they can push them. Yeah, I saw Florida too, trying to, you know, create laws and legislate for social media in terms of like what kind of content they're putting out
Starting point is 00:43:21 and like how they're like, you're going through that and making sure it's fact checked and all these types of things. The, yeah. So first off, if it makes money, well, if it moves, if it breathes, if it walks, if it exists, they'll find a way to tax it. That's just the way government works.
Starting point is 00:43:37 If it makes money, at some point, they're like, how can we figure out a way to take some of this, to this money? So that's number one. Number two, and we also have this on the podcast, How can we figure out a way to take some of this money? So that's number one, number two. And we also have this on the podcast, the era of free kind of open social media, it's over. It's totally over.
Starting point is 00:43:53 When you see both political parties go after them, when you see the accusations of them influencing elections and corruption, all this other stuff, you know what's gonna follow, because what they're doing is they're drumming up public support, what's gonna follow our strong controls and regulations. So it's just better time. So it's just nice now.
Starting point is 00:44:09 Look how big these companies got. It's insane how big they are and how powerful they are. Of course that makes the government like shudder and they wanna do something about it. Yeah, so it's like they're gonna fight against them apparently. Yeah, this is gonna be interesting. Yeah, Amazon just bought a sales SDLZ, which is, Spotify's competitor too now. Oh, really?
Starting point is 00:44:29 Yeah, I mean, that's the thing too about these, they're so massive, they can buy up these other companies that are just other gateways and just control more avenues of revenue that are coming through. Yeah, but, you know, the thing too is, when we look at this, it's, and this happens with any big industry, you, we forget or we look at this, it's in this happens with any big industry, we forget or we take for granted what they've provided, and it just looks like a big company now that we need to, you know, attack or whatever.
Starting point is 00:44:54 Right. Attack has revolutionized the economy. It's created. Well, we choose the opportunity. We choose to use it. That's right. And it's created opportunities that would have never existed. Could you imagine the most jobs?
Starting point is 00:45:06 And could you imagine a pandemic shutdowns without a door dash, Amazon, you know, without all these companies that were making life okay while shutting, you know, stores down telling you you can't go anywhere? It would have been impossible, right? So I mean, they've brought some amazing things, but they're big, and so that makes them a target. Speaking of that, Insta, you know, you talk about the pandemic and the things that we wouldn't have able to survive with Insta Cart is probably one of the things I use more than anything else, and they have an IPO in this quarter coming up, so keep your eye open for that one right there. That's gonna be huge. I think so too.
Starting point is 00:45:40 Then, and then what was the other one, Coinbase? Yeah, Coin base. That's a good one, dude. I got some big news. Uh, uh, magic spoons now available in Canada. Oh, finally. I saw the DMs if you got in about it. Like I've always felt like my heart breaks a little, you know, it's like, oh, you guys are missing out. Yeah. You know, all you can X.
Starting point is 00:45:58 Yeah. So I think, and I believe that we're one of the, I think we're formally announcing it first because they didn't, they emailed their audience that is from Canada, right? So they emailed, any email they had from Canada, email and let them know personally, but I don't think there's been a public announcement. So we have a ton of people in Canada that listen to show that we've all been getting personal DMs going, when in the hell are you guys going to be able to carry both butcher box and magic spoon, don't go up there
Starting point is 00:46:25 Well, magic food does now, so they're gonna crush. Yeah, and I think they're obviously are crushing It's probably they're they're they're they're spreading their growth is exploding right now with their product I am they made it into the fitness influencers to now you know that when we I which I know people try and throw us in that category I absolutely hate that category know, people try and throw us in that category, I absolutely hate that category. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it.
Starting point is 00:46:46 I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it.
Starting point is 00:46:54 I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it.
Starting point is 00:47:02 I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. I hate it. to like, hit your macros and eat like good, you know, delicious cereal. Like, of course, it's gonna explode. You know, with all that. Yeah, who doesn't like that? Yeah. Hey, I read a cool study on how to appear honest when you're talking.
Starting point is 00:47:13 What? Yeah, so they did this study, I'm gonna pull it up. You need someone to tell you how to do that. That's already a record for me. And you're supposed to add up here when you're lying, is that what it is, or is it like? No, no, so. Is this like those authenticity masterminds? Well, so there's a couple of things. So when you, and, is that what it is, or is it like? No, no, so. Is this like those authenticity masterminds?
Starting point is 00:47:25 Well, so there's a couple of things. So when you, and if you study politics and you watch debates, and you study who is more effective, it's always the person that speaks and sounds more confident that wins a debate, even though they could be lying the entire time. This is what made Obama so famous. Yeah, well, one of the best speakers
Starting point is 00:47:43 always very stately and polished. Yeah, calm, one of the best speakers of all time, stately and polish. Yeah, calm and whatever. And if you can talk with confidence, even though you're full of shit, oftentimes people watching, they'll believe you over the other person. Well, also, when someone asks you a question, if you pause before you reply,
Starting point is 00:48:00 even if it's just for a few seconds, your answer is perceived to be less sincere and credible than if you had replied immediately. So if someone asks you if you ever try to get away with the lie, I guess, someone asks you a question, answer right away. Right away. Just top of mind. That's so funny because I'm trying to train myself to be the opposite.
Starting point is 00:48:17 I'm so quick to just respond, right? What's going through my head, which I've over time I've learned, that's when shit flies out that probably shouldn't. Yeah, yeah. So I'm in a place now where I'm like pause. Yeah. Just because you think you have the answer right away at them or you have something you want to say, pause. It's okay, long pause is okay.
Starting point is 00:48:33 So that's really funny that. It is because it's good, that's a good practice. It's a good practice to wait and measure your words and say what you mean, especially now that everything's recorded nowadays. A lot more likely to get an honest answer that way, which is hilarious that that's recommended to me, because it's like, well, also the telltale signs somebody like Lion, right? They're gonna kind of like look up, you know, to the side of, you know,
Starting point is 00:48:56 Is that true? I've heard that. No, they look up to Neural and Mystics. Have you ever read a Neural and Mystic book? Yeah, they talk about it's up until the left. That means I'm lying. Yeah. If it's up until the left. Just. That means I'm lying. If I look up to the left. So if I look up to the right, I'm telling you.
Starting point is 00:49:08 Yeah, I've tested this and it's definitely one of those things. It's held. It's because the side of your brain that's logical. Right? So you have the logical in the creative side and that's why it does. The eyes roll to the side that's the creative side because you're trying to close your eyes.
Starting point is 00:49:22 Because you're trying to come up with a new answer. Yeah, story. You're trying to make a story up in your head to give you an answer versus the creative side because you're trying to- Because you're trying to come up with a- With a new answer. Yeah, story. You're trying to make a story up in your head to give you an answer versus the logical side. So if it rolls to one side, you're trying to think of something and come up with it versus you. So I would tell you the time when I thought- I had a front desk staff member and I thought that they did
Starting point is 00:49:40 something they weren't supposed to and I brought them in my office with my operations manager and I set up before I asked them this whole conversation, but I must have made them so nervous. So I sat there and I said, you know, I really respect you. How do you like working here? I love it.
Starting point is 00:49:54 Sal, it's a great place. You know, we do develop a lot of trust in our team. This is what this team is built on. So it is whole talk, and they're sitting there sweating. And then I asked them, is there anything that you want to tell me? You need to tell me. And I was expecting them to say,
Starting point is 00:50:06 I don't remember what it was, but it was something silly like, yeah, I let people, you know, my friends work out for free or whatever. In this person sat there and just, they were selling babysitting for cash and the kids club. They were stealing protein bars.
Starting point is 00:50:20 And I'm sitting there trying to pretend like I already knew all the stuff. I'm like, yeah, well, I'm glad you're telling me. Thank you very much for, I'm sitting there like, holy shit. Whoa, this is coming out, it's coming out here. I remember the operations manager's like, man, you're like an interior, how did you get the down, I didn't have no idea.
Starting point is 00:50:34 You really broke them in there. That's terrible. This quas brought to you by Organify. For those days you fall short on getting your organic veggies or whole food nutrition, Organify fills the gap with laboratory tested certified organic superfoods to help give your health a performance the added edge. Try Organify totally risk-free for 60 days by going to Organify.com. That's O-R-G-A-N-I-F-I.com and use a coupon code mind pump for 20% off at checkout. First question is from Mr. Kennedy.
Starting point is 00:51:09 Can you talk about the different deadlift variations, traditional sumo, touch and go, Romanian deadlift and the benefits of each? Should you vary them up? Should you vary them up? It's not like you're going to see more stuff. Should you vary them up? Okay, okay. That sounds like you're gonna say more stuff. Should you vary them? You know, sometimes one of the challenges with exercises is that if they have a similar name,
Starting point is 00:51:32 or the same name, I'm glad you're going this way. Yeah, you end up thinking that they're all interchangeable. So like front squat, Bulgarian split stand squat, back squat, you think, oh, they're all squats, so I'll just pick one and do that one. The truth is, they're all different exercises. They're very different. Yeah, it's not even, I mean, some are like similar, but very, very different.
Starting point is 00:51:52 Yeah, and with deadlifts, it's even worse because the powerlifting community, which is the one strength sport that really emphasizes deadlifts more than any other strength sport, right? Because it's in their competition. They allow you to deadlift conventional or sumo doesn't matter. Those both count the same when you're doing your deadlift.
Starting point is 00:52:13 And so people have, you know, they've assumed that they're kind of interchangeable. The reality is they're all different exercises. Now, some of them are more similar than the others, but they're all different, right? A sumo deadlift and a traditional conventional deadlift, although both count and powerlifting, they are different on the body, they work the body totally different, just because you're good at one doesn't necessarily mean you're going to be good at the other one. And then they get very different, like a Romanian deadlift or a stiff legged deadlift, very different from a conventional deadlift and a sumo deadlift. So should you vary them? Absolutely, I think you totally should.
Starting point is 00:52:46 I think it's a good idea to get good at one, and then once you get real good at it, you can transfer and move to another one. It's okay to have your favorite. My favorite is conventional. That's the way I love to deadlift. But I'll throw in Sumo and trap bar deadlifts all the time, and I'll go through runs of training those
Starting point is 00:53:03 to get really good at those. Romanian deadlifts, that's a leg workout. That one I do in my leg workout, I don't do it in my back workout, like I do conventional. Well, and I think that something that we say at Nazim on this show is that the one that's going to benefit you the most is the one that you do the least. So if you're somebody who's,
Starting point is 00:53:20 if you deadlift consistently, but you always do conventional, sumo deadlifting for a while, is gonna be great, great for strengthings, great for body composition, great for fat burning. I mean, that is where you should go. If you train a certain way all the time, then mixing up the only time it makes sense
Starting point is 00:53:37 to do the same one all the time for me, is if I'm training an actual competitor. Yeah, they have to get good at that one. Yeah, like if I have so, and that doesn't mean I'll never intermittently still use the opposite. So if I have someone who pulls Sumo and that's what they pull at their competition,
Starting point is 00:53:52 we are gonna pull Sumo 90% of the time, maybe 95% of the time, still use some other way forms of deadlifting intermittently in there, but we wanna be good at that movement because that's what they're gonna go perform in. Everybody else though, if you're just trying to get strong or you want to be healthy and fit or you want to change the way your body looks,
Starting point is 00:54:11 the best thing you could possibly do is actually rotate through these. And how do you rotate to those? You know, there's no like one rule on how you have to do it. I personally like to keep one of those, for sure, always in my routine, if not one or two of those. And I'll stick to that for at least four to eight weeks before I rotate another one in.
Starting point is 00:54:30 Exactly, that's the best, exactly the way I do it. Yeah, and I think too, like there's, you know, if I'm going for different, like, adaptations, so if I'm going for something where I'm more power focused, I'm more speed focused, for instance, I'm gonna be more likely to do like a touch and go, and that's something that fits within my programming. And so I'll look at the options
Starting point is 00:54:51 of what types of exercises will fit best within the actual program itself, or if I want to move in different directions or really expose my body to different types of stimulus and movement, and I'll do something. Like if I never do sumo, then I'm gonna switch it up, and I'm gonna rotate that in the programming. But I wanna look at this as like,
Starting point is 00:55:07 these are all different types of tools that fit great within, you know, this sort of pursuit that I have. So I'm glad you brought up Touch and Go, because I would say Touch and Go is my least favorite of all these. That's the one you need to have the most control and best skill and technique.
Starting point is 00:55:20 And it also makes the most sense, I would say, in only situation that Justin just mentioned. Like, you're really trying to work on the speed of a movement versus the strength of that movement or getting good at that movement. Because touching go, there's so much more room for air in that than just a standard pull a wrap, gather yourself, pull a wrap, gather yourself with a pull a wrap. The point is the intent matters. Yes, exactly.
Starting point is 00:55:43 Like, evaluate that. Yeah, and the problem with touch and go is not that you're continuously deadlifting because that's okay, you can do that with any exercise. Here's the problem. You have a long bar in your hands and you're doing, I don't know, 10 reps, let's say, on one of those reps, the left side touches the floor
Starting point is 00:56:00 before the right one. Give it a split sec. Yeah, I'm gonna say it just a split sec. Yeah, and it shifts you to the right or left, and if you have a lot of weight, it can cause problem. So your technique needs to be really, really good. And you need to be real stable. Like, I'll never do touch and go with super, super heavy weight.
Starting point is 00:56:16 I've done it in the past, app hazardly, not a good idea. Yeah, and not to mention the benefits that you get from it from just doing a conventional way of deadlifting, where you actually have a little bit of rest in between, right, where you go and pull, you're not getting that much more benefit by doing the touch and go. So for me, the client has to be there.
Starting point is 00:56:36 They have to already be advanced enough, where they, like if I was training one of you two, maybe we'll throw it in there. And even then, I just still don't see a tremendous amount of value in touch and go dead lifts. So, I'm trying to think right now, who I've trained, where we have programmed that in. Most clients, I'm having them gather themselves.
Starting point is 00:56:56 You know, if you bodybuilders might benefit from touch and go, not going real heavy and focusing on the continual tension of the back and squeezing the lats, that might work. Here's another thing about deadlifts. Because of the influence of powerlifting, a lot of people deadlift with an alternate grip, one hand forward, one hand back, and that's because you can hold onto more weight, so I get that.
Starting point is 00:57:15 Do this. If you do that, make sure you switch hands in every other set, right? Do just as much work with your left hand supinated as you do with your right hand supinated. I fell into this trap. For years, I deadlifted and I was better with the right supinated than the left, so that's what I stuck with.
Starting point is 00:57:31 And I developed an imbalance in my back that probably still to this day I have a little bit. I took a long time. That's a necessary torsion in the back. Right, so either alternate them back and forth or use a hook grip. That's what I do now. I use a hook grip and now both hands are pronated.
Starting point is 00:57:45 Next question is from Brian Pata. I understand the importance of rest time between sets, but what about rest time between movements? Sometimes it takes a little longer than I'd like to get from the squat rack to an open bench in a crowded gym. Does this throw off programming or anything else? No. It doesn't throw off programming or anything else? No.
Starting point is 00:58:05 It doesn't throw off your programming. I mean, it's different, right? If you're moving, you know, if you're resting one minute in between sets and then you change exercises and you keep that one minute, that's gonna be a different workout than if you go one minute between sets
Starting point is 00:58:17 and then between exercises. It's five minutes because of setup or whatever. To be quite honest with you, I prefer to have a longer rest period between exercises. I'll keep the rest between sets faster, but between exercises, especially if it's a different body part. Like he said squat to bench. I'm gonna wait a little bit, five, six, seven minutes before I go into my back. I always lean on quality of reps
Starting point is 00:58:41 and performance of the reps. And so yeah, there's sometimes where you do get fatigued and you do need a little bit more rest between jumping right back in and doing the same movement. And I think that the reason why I picked this question is because this comes up a lot with the determined amount of time and the allotted time that's programmed in there. And you gotta listen to your body and you gotta pay attention to the signs and signals
Starting point is 00:59:04 of how you're breathing, like how fatigued you feel, like you gotta pay attention to all these things and determine that for yourself, but also this is sort of like a guideline that you can kind of shoot and aspire to, but really at the end of the day is gonna be determined specifically on the individual.
Starting point is 00:59:23 We're also talking about something that is a splitting hair difference here. Totally. So if you had said, if they did a study, and of course I'm just speculating here, but I feel pretty confident that if you did a study where somebody rested like Sal said, five to seven minutes between the exercises versus one, the difference after six months of them training that way, it would be very, very little. One of them would probably be more cardiovascular-adapted
Starting point is 00:59:47 because there's such low-res periods. The other one wouldn't the strength difference in the two? I don't know, maybe you would see more of a strength difference in the person that actually gave them some rest. I wouldn't, I don't think I would see much of a difference. I don't think this is one of those things that I'd have one of my clients worry too much about. Yeah, it's not that big of a deal.
Starting point is 01:00:01 And you know what, I'll say this even for some people. This is fun,, this is fun. Try this out, right? Because I know some people are so concerned with keeping the pace and I gotta get the sweat or whatever. If you have the time to do this, give this a shot. I guarantee you'll be one of your favorite workouts ever. Your hour workout, give yourself two hours, take your time.
Starting point is 01:00:21 Go slow, practice the form, lift a little heavier, take breaks and be liberated. Give yourself like a two hour window to do a one hour workout and spread it out. And I guarantee you'll become one of the best workouts around. I actually, I'll never forget the day that happened to me. So I was training with my buddy.
Starting point is 01:00:38 And this is the time I've talked on the show before. I don't like lifting partners. I had a lifting partner at the time. This was one of the reasons why I didn't like it. He loved to talk to everybody. We're in the gym one day and we must have ran into five or six right and he stops to talk every single time which draws me in.
Starting point is 01:00:53 We ended up being at the gym for like two and a half hours. I leave the gym going like that was a terrible workout. I didn't really get a solid pump. I really didn't feel anything. The next day I was sore as shit and didn't realize. I just had never trained that way. And because I had such long rest periods, I wasn't used to my body feeling that way in a workout. You're probably lifting heavier as a result.
Starting point is 01:01:12 Exactly. That's what ended up happening. And so, after that, I thought, man, anytime I have an opportunity where I don't have a time frame, I might stretch this thing out to 90 to two hours. Why not? I don't get to do it all lot because a lot of times I'm on a time crunch. But if I do have the opportunity, I'm gonna do that and there's tremendous bit of work.
Starting point is 01:01:28 And you can have fun with it. Right now I'm doing a split where I work upper body and lower body, so the upper body, lower body, and then I'll rest and then upper lower and kind of like that, right? So when I'm doing upper body, if I start with, typically I'll start with chest or back, and I'll do two exercises per body part.
Starting point is 01:01:45 But rather than doing the two exercises for chest and then going and then doing the two exercises for back, you guys have seen me do this. I'll do a set for chest, then I'll do a set for back, then I'll do a set for chest, then I'll do a set for back. And I'll mix it up that way, and it's a totally different stimulus. It's not superior, it's just different.
Starting point is 01:02:02 And I get my body to respond again. Next question is from Mr. Dave O.C. What does the behind the scenes of creating a map program look like? For instance, how long is the writing process, common stumbling blocks, trials on multiple people, etc. Which program was the hardest to create? This is probably some of my fondest memories of Mind Pump, this is creating programs. The first program was Maps and Obolic. I created that one. Every single one after that, we all wrote together
Starting point is 01:02:35 and we developed this process, which is really interesting. It started with the next program we created, which is the math performance, where we would rent a house, and it usually had to be like an hour or two away. And this became like in hindsight, we started saying, oh, this is the way we do it,
Starting point is 01:02:50 but we'd have a house one or two hours away, and we drive the house, and in the drive, we have this great debate and conversation about what the program should look like, things that we need to look out for, Doug would be in the back, and he'd have a pen and paper. Doug, have you saved these books with notes and stuff? Everyone.
Starting point is 01:03:09 Yeah. Cool. Oh, I can't, we got to look at these at some point, right? Yeah. And there's just, he's just scribbling in the back, right? And I'm yelling and Adam's yelling and just, you know, piping up and we're just having a blast. At some point, a joint comes out and we'll smoke a little weed.
Starting point is 01:03:21 And then the creativity really gets crazy. Then we get to the house and what we do is we sit and we write this program for, usually it's about a day of creating and writing the whole workout program. And it goes through a couple iterations before we're satisfied with the workout that we've written, but that's kind of the process. Well, and the, and the, and to address the part about trials on multiple people, that's all the years of experience for you individually. What was great is that we're all very different.
Starting point is 01:03:50 I mean, we train ourselves different, we've had different experiences with clients, yet all of us have trained tons and tons of people. So when we decide what an adaptation is that we're going to go after. So for example, like you're talking about performance. So, and a lot of times we would head up, not even certain on what it's gonna be. We just know, hey, it's time for us to create a program. The part of the conversation is, what is our audience looking for?
Starting point is 01:04:13 What do we think is the next progression from what we've written before? So there's a lot of that, and then all of a sudden, we figure out, okay, this is the direction we're gonna go. This is the avatar, the client we're thinking of that we wanna build this for. And I remember performance was really,
Starting point is 01:04:26 at that time, the podcast was early on, we were really hammering CrossFit. Yeah, that was an answer to that question. We were really hammering CrossFit, and the pushback we got was what people felt. Oh, my mobility feels so good, and it's such great functional training, and I love the challenging work.
Starting point is 01:04:43 And so this is what we are hearing from our audience. Like, okay, we wanna address this. If we had a client who wanted that type of an adaptation that you get from CrossFit training, but we were all anti the programming of CrossFit, how would we design a program? Maps performance was really an answer to that. That's how that program was decided.
Starting point is 01:05:00 Then the exercise order and what we, what days and all that stuff is like, that's the day of like arguing. Well, we all have our different backgrounds and strengths and like, what we've applied to our different clientele and that's one of those things you see in the programs. You see how each one of us consider very specific things that, you know, are sort of, you know, non-negotiables for us. And, too, this is what makes for the, you know, the quality of the programs go up because
Starting point is 01:05:32 there's more considerations that need to be had for your average person. And so, that's where we have a lot of the debate and discussion. Well, I had athletes, you know, that would do this. And I'd warm them up this way and have them do these type of mobility exercises. Then we discussed that and then while I used this and I saw a physical therapist use this and I thought that was brilliant. And then we all have this sort of discussion which then narrows it down to what's going to be the most effective introduction to that type of pursuit. It's a lot of talking, standing on tables, demonstrating exercises, arguing, graphs. Yeah, sometimes we would get stuck
Starting point is 01:06:12 on like I was like me. We'd get stuck on a phase or something and it would be like four hour, a four hour debate and discussion. We'd have to take a break and we'd come back and then Doug would write it all out and we'd look at it on the table and oh wait, this doesn't make sense, this has to fall. It's a lot of fun.
Starting point is 01:06:28 As far as the most challenging to create, it's a hands down maps prime. Hands down most difficult but most rewarding. Totally. Totally. And here's why it was so challenging. So, you know, we all trainers with lots and lots of experience, right? So we all train people for two decades or more. And we wanted to create a program where people could assess themselves and then determine
Starting point is 01:06:50 the best priming movements that they did before they worked out for their body. Now here's the challenge, it's extremely individual. So when you're writing a program for people to work out, it's fine if you write general workout programs that will work with most people. But when you're talking about an assessment and specifically training or priming your body for an exercise, that's very different from person to person. Now, we knew assessments because this is what we did
Starting point is 01:07:14 with clients, but I'm like, I can't, how can we possibly teach the average person or fitness fanatic how to assess themselves? This is like a whole class by itself. Like you, there's posture and movement assessments, and if the body moves this way, you look at this, and that, it was just so complicated. And we literally, I don't remember, I think it took us a full day and a half of just figuring that part out. We were like so stuck.
Starting point is 01:07:38 And then it hit us to create a compass where you had three movements, based off those movements, if you couldn't complete the task, then it pointed in the direction of certain extra sort of a flow chart. That's it, and then that all came together. I remember, Doug has the video, we put,
Starting point is 01:07:53 we had the papers that we wrote on, and we put them up on the window, remember? And then we sat there and explained it, and it was just, That's when we were up at the Atlantis, right? That's when we did that one. Yes. Yeah, yeah, so we were up at the Atlantis
Starting point is 01:08:04 and he had those big windows, and we had all this stuff all taped up on the Atlantis, right? That's when we did that one. Yes. Yeah, yeah. So we were up at the Atlantis and you had those big windows and we had all this stuff all taped up on the window. Those, and you know, and then after that, there's a lot, even when we decide, okay, this is the program, there's a lot of like minor changes along the way, right? As we start to shoot and film and we start to see it in place and then go through it, we're going like, okay, I like how this feels. Let's change this one.
Starting point is 01:08:22 We were too creative with this one. Yeah. Well, prime, prime was like, so the thing, I remember, well, you know what's cool too, I'd like to talk about this, kind of, you know, fun going down memory lane here. You know what's interesting is, you know, Sal obviously, he wrote an abolk all alone.
Starting point is 01:08:35 So that's obviously his baby. Performance, I really feel like his Justin's baby. Yeah. You know, even though it was all of us together, it really, I think, pulled out a lot of his strengths that he had. And then aesthetic, I really feel as my baby, because I was right in the heart of competing.
Starting point is 01:08:50 Totally. And building a physique was all what was in my mind at that time. And so it's kind of neat. And then prime is really the culmination of all three of us. Yeah, that's a good way to go. And when you think about it, in a perfect world, we would have wrote Maps Prime first. Because prime first, but we also have a business,
Starting point is 01:09:08 we had to make money, we had to get this thing going to where we could support the team that we have and everything. We were forced to go the direction of, we have to give somebody something that can go apply and go in the gym right away, but we all knew damn well that prime is where everybody should start, because it's exactly how you started every single client. I don't care what your goal was, if you hired me day one and probably day one through like, you know, day 14 even, it's all assessing stuff. It's really figuring out that client so that you can really customize a program that's
Starting point is 01:09:40 curtailed to them. And that's why prime really should have been first. And, you know, here's another part, too, is when we wanted to create programs that were not in our realm of expertise, I mean, first off, we could create programs, I feel confident, for anybody, right? But are there realms where it would be better, or give us, be more, more integrity, to involve somebody who's got direct expertise in that field. And so this is what we did with a lot of our programs.
Starting point is 01:10:07 Like, map strong, we got Robert Obers to go with us. We're gonna create this program with an actual strongman competitor, and see what happens. OCR was a milieu boom, you know, she competes in OCR, she's a champion. We did Power Lift with Paulic, who's a powerlifting competitor,
Starting point is 01:10:23 and we were able to take them in, go through the, and really that was really fun, writing a workout program with people who competed and were advanced in those particular areas. That was a lot of fun for Dr. Brain for Prime Pro. Dr. Brain for Prime Pro, right? So yeah, I think that's, for me, there was some of the best memories.
Starting point is 01:10:41 I do, I missed that part of the business. It was a fun time because the company was really just starting and really starting to grow and I missed that part of the business. It was a fun time because the company was really just starting and really starting to grow. And there was a lot of, and back then, that was a lifeline for us to create another program, right? So there was that part of like we had to do this, we had to create it, it was a lot of investment to start.
Starting point is 01:10:56 It's expensive to build it. Like a lot of people may not realize, I mean, it's a digital program that you get, you must think it's really basic, but I mean, every time we write one of those, it's anywhere between 30 and $50,000 in investment on us from everything from the models, to the back-end support to it, to the videographer, to the editing of all of it. So, it's a, and then also the trip to build it and do it, and the time frame to get it all done.
Starting point is 01:11:16 So, yeah, definitely a major process to put it out. This is also why we felt okay with charging a rate that was significantly higher than average. We did our homework too. It's not like we just randomly came across this price point where we're at, when you look at digital programs that are sold online, the average price point is $27 to $57. And we had the audacity to go ask for 130 plus for a lot of our program, but we also knew
Starting point is 01:11:41 what we put into it and what they were gonna get. Yeah, how effective they were. One's that actually, it's not just the workout. This one's not something you find in a magazine. Yeah, it's way more. Next question is from John Fowbert. I hear a lot about how bad red meat is for your health, but you guys often talk about eating it almost daily.
Starting point is 01:12:01 Are there any actual issues with eating too much red meat? Okay, so I'll answer the second part, right? Are there issues with eating too much red meat? Well, you can eat probably too much of anything and it can cause a problem. That being said, is red meat bad for your health? Is it one of those foods that you should put in a category of, you know, unhealthy? No. It's one of the healthiest things that you can eat. I'm not talking about processed red meat. I'm not talking about sausage or salami or foods that you know, lunch meats and that kind of stuff.
Starting point is 01:12:35 I'm talking about like steak, maybe ground beef. Are those unhealthy? Absolutely not. There are some of the most nutrient dense foods you'll find anywhere, and they provide a very good source of protein. The fat in red meat, this is where they get the bad wrap, oh, they're high in saturated fat or they're high or whatever.
Starting point is 01:12:54 We now know that if you're otherwise healthy, those things really don't have a negative effect on the body. And if you get a source like grass fed red meat, the fatty acid profile actually is pretty damn balanced. For athletic performance and strength, I can't think of a single food that is probably more beneficial for strength and for athletic performance.
Starting point is 01:13:15 In fact, if I've actually had people just switch their meat, their source of protein to red meat, and see their strength go up because of it. Yeah, no, I think I probably eat red meat on the daily. I think it's a staple. It's also a staple in most clients. Unless I had a client that had a special condition or absolutely hating an outlier.
Starting point is 01:13:33 Right. Apsely hated red meat, then maybe it wouldn't be in there, but for most people, and that's so funny about the stuff that comes out to say that the negative things about red meat, it's all in these are the in context of people that are eating an absurd amount of calories over. And then we're cherry-picking data that's around the red meat. And if you have somebody in a in a calorie controlled environment, or you're writing a diet for them that they're falling and they're training
Starting point is 01:13:58 and exercising, red meat's like one of the best things that should be in the diet. It's they are irony is a lot of times you end up having to get your client to supplement for a lot of those nutrients and things that they would have got otherwise from red meat, like iron or even if their protein levels are a bit lower than they normally would be if they're including it a bit more regularly in their diet. So to me, it's just like the body recognizes it.
Starting point is 01:14:23 This is something that it is very efficient at utilizing. If, unless you have a special condition or you're, you know, your, your body actually rejects red. Yeah. And, you know, here's the other problem too, is because we've now had decades of misinformation demonizing red meat as an unhealthy food, when you do these these these observational studies and most nutrition studies are garbage because they're based off of surveys and asking people questions. I'm going to tell you something right now as a personal trainer. People almost they never accurately know what their calories are, they never
Starting point is 01:14:58 accurately know what their macros are. People are terrible at reporting their diets and so but so but that's most nutritional studies. So if you have decades of information telling you that red meat is unhealthy, what kind of people, because of that, will then eat more red meat, or at least not taking out of their diet, people who are not health conscious.
Starting point is 01:15:19 So now you've got this bias, right? Oh, look, these people over here eat more red meat, and they're also more unhealthy. Well, yeah, because for years we've been told that red meat is unhealthy. So now the only people that eat a lot of red meat are people that only think about their health and the people who eat lots of chicken or fish are people who read all this information, but they also exercise. They also don't overeat. You know, the people who read meat also eat lots of burgers. They eat lots of fries, they process foods
Starting point is 01:15:45 They don't exercise a lot. So it's very very difficult to to break it out But the best studies that we have that control certain things show that red meat is as a health food It's actually a health food. It's good for you those again those other studies put people in a category because of other Behaviors and the more we push this myth that red meat is bad for you, the more we'll start to see that. Because again, if you eat a lot of red meat today, you're probably somebody that doesn't care about your health because all the information you've been reading, or maybe you didn't read about your health.
Starting point is 01:16:17 Unfortunately, you have to consider the source. You have to follow the money. All these things have to be a consideration, especially any information these days. You have to actually do, you know, you do diligence and find out, you know, where this information is actually coming from because there are things within the diet that specifically that have been proven that there's been, you know, shenanigans
Starting point is 01:16:39 within the studies and things. And look at the pyramid, look at the nutrition pyramid and things that we've been taught as kids that are like, you know, healthy for us. And it's just, you have to be able to be open to, you know, like thinking that your ideas might be wrong. Yeah, well, here's a good example. Okay. If you went back into the 80s and maybe early 90s, and right, I was gonna say, and you studied people's butter and margarine consumption. Here's what you would have found.
Starting point is 01:17:09 People who ate butter were not as healthy as people who ate margarine. This is back in the 80s and 90s. Now, why is that? Because back then, butter was hammered as unhealthy and margarine was hammered as being healthy. So the people who were health conscious, who also exercised, who also watched their calories,
Starting point is 01:17:26 who also paid attention to that kind of stuff, ate margarine. The people who didn't pay attention to being healthy, they ate butter, like they always did. So now you've got this correlation, butter on healthy, margarine, healthy. Now we know, for a fact, it's reversed. Butter is good for you, margarine was terrible.
Starting point is 01:17:42 Margarine was these partially hydrogenated oils, these trans fats that are pretty much bad for you, almost any dose. We know now that butter is good. There's nothing wrong with butter and it was a marjoram that was bad. But if you had looked at those studies then, it would have looked like the opposite. This is what's happened with a lot of these, when you read these nutritional studies on red meat. But when they do the controls, again, red meat is a health food. It's one of the most nutrient dense foods that you'll find. Can you eat too much of it? Yeah, you can eat too much of anything. So of course, on the other end of the scale is if you overeat anything, you can cause yourself to grow. Which by the way, that's a lot of that. Like, just overeat red meat. You know, Justin, you've done the carnivore diet. Yeah. It's hard to overeat red meat
Starting point is 01:18:24 on a diet that's purely all red meat. I mean, your body gets so satiated from eating red meat. Where it's not ideal, is if a lot of your red meat comes from McDonald's and Burger King with the fries and the milkshake on top of that, that's where all of a sudden now red meat looks bad. Absolutely. Look, mine pump is recorded on videos
Starting point is 01:18:41 as well as audio, come find us on YouTube, mine pump podcast. You can also find all find us on YouTube, MindPump Podcast. You can also find all of us on social media, Instagram is the place to look. You can find Justin at MindPump Justin, you can find me at MindPump Sal and Adam at MindPump Adam. Thank you for listening to MindPump.
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