Modern Wisdom - #783 - Johann Hari - Is Ozempic A Miracle Weight Loss Drug Or A Secret Killer?
Episode Date: May 13, 2024Johann Hari is a journalist, a writer and an author. From fad diets and fasting to vibrating plates, the quest for easier weight loss has been endless. The recent emergence of Ozempic and similar drug...s promises a no-strings-attached solution to achieving the body you've always wanted, but is this actually a new miracle drug or a bundle of hidden side effects? Expect to learn the biggest impact Ozempic is having on people’s lives, why these drugs work so well, what it's like taking Ozempic, the potential long term side effects, whether Ozempic is different to weight loss drugs of years past, how these drugs interact with our modern diets, the potential problems for people with eating disorders and much more... Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get 10% discount on all Gymshark’s products at https://gymshark.com (use code MW10) Get the Whoop 4.0 for free and get your first month for free at https://join.whoop.com/modernwisdom (discount automatically applied) Get a Free Sample Pack of all LMNT Flavours with your first box at https://www.drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: http://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: http://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: http://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hello friends, welcome back to the show.
My guest today is Johan Hari.
He's a journalist, a writer, and an author.
From fad diets to fasting and vibrating plates,
the quest for easier weight loss has been endless.
The recent emergence of Azempic and similar drugs
promises a no strings attached solution
to achieving the body you've always wanted.
But is this actually a numerical drug
or a bundle of hidden side effects?
Expect to learn the biggest impact
Ozempic is having on people's lives,
why these drugs work so well,
what it's like to actually take Ozempic,
the potential long-term side effects,
whether Ozempic is different
to weight loss drugs of years past,
how these drugs interact with our modern diets,
the potential problems for people with eating disorders,
and much more.
I think this is probably one of the biggest changes
that we're going to see to society
from a health perspective over the next decade.
Johan says that it is similar to the introduction
of the iPhone 10, 15 years ago,
and I am inclined to agree with him.
I think that this has the potential to be a huge step change
in how people live their lives,
and it is very important to assess it with requisite care.
And Johan has definitely done that.
So lots and lots to take away from today.
If you enjoyed this episode,
share it with someone that you think would benefit.
There are a lot of insights,
and this is a entire new world that basically no one knows
anything about.
So yes, share it with someone that you think would love it.
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that's www.drinklmnt.com.com modern wisdom. But now ladies and gentlemen
please welcome Johann Hari How are you?
You've lost a lot of weight.
I have, I've lost what I believe the technical term is a shitload of weight.
I've lost three stone. I'm good. I'm the technical term is a shitload of weight. I've lost three stone.
I'm good.
I'm cheerful.
Life is good.
I can't complain.
Talk to me about where this weight loss has come from.
Well, I remember the exact moment it all began.
It was the winter of 2022 and I got invited to a party and it was that moment.
I hadn't been to a party in whatever it was a year and a half, two years,
cause the world was shut down and I thought, fuck it, I'm going to go to this party.
And I was in the Uber on the way there and I felt a little bit self-conscious because I'd gained a
load of weight and I was quite fat at the start and I'd gained a load of weight. And the party was
being thrown by an Oscar-winning actor. I'm not saying that just to name drop, it's relevant to
what happened next. And on the way there, I was both feeling this kind of like, bit schlubby and embarrassed, but I also thought, oh wait, everyone I know gained weight during
lockdown. This is going to be fascinating. It's going to be super interesting to see these
Hollywood people with a bit of podge on them. And I arrived and it was the weirdest sensation.
It's not just that they hadn't gained weight. Everyone was gone, right?
Everyone had lost, visibly lost weight.
They looked like their own Snapchat filters.
Do you know what I mean?
They were like sharper and clearer.
I was stumbling around in a bit of a daze and I bumped into an old friend of mine on
the dance floor.
And I said to her, shit, it looks like everyone really did take up Pilates during lockdown,
huh?
And she laughed at me. And
I didn't know why she was laughing. I must've done a kind of strange face. And she said,
well, Johan, you know it wasn't Pilates, right? And she pulled up on her phone an image of
an ozempic pen. So I did not know at that point that we now have a new kind of weight
loss drug that works in a totally new way that causes people to lose 15% of their body
weight. For the next version of this class of drug, Moonjaro, to lose 15% of their body weight. For the next version
of this class of drug, Moonjaro, you lose 21% of your body weight. And for the next
one, Triple G, that will probably come online next year, people lose 24% of their body weight.
And when I started to learn about this, I don't remember any subject in my whole life,
actually, where I immediately felt so divided about it. So I could obviously see the
importance of it straight away, right? I knew even then that obesity is really bad for your health,
it makes over 200 diseases and complications more likely. And this wasn't an abstract question for
me. I'm older than my grandfather ever got to be because he died of a heart attack when he was 44.
My dad had very bad heart problems. My uncle died of a heart attack.
Men on both sides of my family. So I thought, okay, if there's a drug that reverses or massively
reduces obesity, that's a big deal. I also thought, come on now, can you really have
such a thing as a free lunch? I guess with those, then pick it up a smaller free lunch.
I thought I've seen this story before, right? Every 20 years or so, going right back to the first world war, a new miracle diet drug
is announced and people stampede to get it. They take it in huge numbers and we always
discover it causes some horrendous dark side effect and it has to be yanked from the market,
leaving a trail of, you know, devastated people in its wake. And I was worried about lots
of things. So really to get to the bottom of this for a year, I took the drug and I went on
a big journey all over the world from Iceland to Minneapolis, to Tokyo, to
interview a huge array of people on this, the biggest defenders of the drugs,
including the people who made the breakthroughs that made it possible.
The biggest critics of the drugs, everyone in between.
And it's a weird thing that I'm sure will come out in our conversation,
Chris. I learned a huge amount about the extraordinary benefits and the 12 disturbing risks of these
drugs. I learned about the incredible effects it's going to have on the culture, including
for people who don't even want to take these drugs. But I'm still pretty conflicted. It's
actually a pretty complicated picture where people are gonna have to weigh for themselves
the benefits and the risks.
And you still on it now?
I decided to carry on taking it.
After going, after looking very closely
at the benefits and risks,
for me, the benefit that was just overriding
is if you take these drugs and you had a BMI of 27 or higher
when you start, it reduces
your risk of a heart attack or stroke by 20%.
So although I am very worried about some of the risks, including for myself, and I'm very
worried for a lot of people I know taking them for various reasons, for me, that benefit
just outweighed the risk.
And for me-
So it's a cost benefit analysis.
Absolutely.
All the way through this, we've got to be doing cost benefit analyses between two things,
really. The risk of continuing to be obese, which for me, realistically is what would have been the
case. I had tried dieting and exercise loads of times. I'd lost weight and it'd always come back
versus the risks of these drugs. That won't be the choice for everyone. Clearly, if you can lose
weight without these drugs, you should. It's obviously better and there's a minority of people
who can and all credit to them's a minority of people who can,
and all credit to them. But for the people who can't, that's basically the choice we face. Now, we can make big changes as a culture so our kids don't face these choices. And I went to places
like Japan that have made those changes where, you know, there are almost no obese people and
they don't have, they're not in this fucking shitty trap. But for the rest of us, that's the
choice we've got at the moment.
You mentioned the fact that every 20 years or so there is a numerical
anti-obesity weight loss drug that gets released.
Just how different is the GLP-1 agonists to what we've seen before?
Well, it works in a totally different way, but I think it's worth just
give an example of one of those previous drugs.
There's a lot of them, but let's think about one in the mid-90s called Fenfen that was
talked about in exactly the way Ozempic is talked about now. Literally the front page of Time
magazine was the new miracle weight loss drug. So by 1995, 18 million prescriptions were written in
the United States alone for this drug. And it was a combination of two things. It was an appetite suppressant called flexfluramine, which had been around for a long
time, but made you very drowsy. So it was never that popular with an amphetamine called
Fentramine, which had the advantage that it made you wake you up and also caused a bit more weight
loss. And this drug was hugely popular and massively widely used. And then it was discovered,
it caused a series of horrific problems. It
caused a horrific lung disease problem and caused heart defects. It had to be yanked
from the market. It led to the biggest compensation payout in the history of the pharmaceutical
industry at that point, $12 billion. So obviously you come at this and all the previous diet
drugs have that trajectory, right? So you come at this with a lot of
rational anxiety. So these drugs work in a completely different way to all previous
weight loss drugs. One of the things that's weird about it is there's actually a big debate about
what these drugs even do, which is a bit disconcerting, but here's what we know for sure.
If you ate something now, Chris,
don't matter what it is, after a while, your pancreas would produce a hormone called GLP-1.
And GLP-1, we now know, is just part of your body's natural systems going, hey, Chris, you've had
enough, stop eating now, right? But that natural GLP-1 only stays in your system for a few minutes
and then it's washed away. And then obviously you can just carry on picking out if you want to.
What these drugs do is they inject you with an artificial copy of GLP-1 that instead of
sticking around just for a few minutes, sticks around for a whole week.
So it has this weird effect.
I'll never forget the second day after I injected myself with Ozempic, I woke up, I
was lying in bed and I thought,
oh, I feel something really weird. What is it that I'm feeling? And I couldn't place it. I felt
nauseous, but I knew it'd feel like almost everyone feels nauseous. It wasn't that bad.
So something else, and it took me a while to realize, shit, I've woken up and I'm not hungry.
Every day before that, going back to being a kid, I
used to be woken up with a raging hunger. I went to this cafe just up the road from where
I live and I ordered the thing I used to get for breakfast every day, a massive brown roll
with a shitload of chicken and a shitload of mayo in it. I had three or four mouthfuls
and I just felt full. I couldn't eat anymore. It was almost like how you'd feel after Christmas or Thanksgiving dinner. Imagine you'd eaten the whole dinner, you were stuffed,
then I turned up and said, hey Chris, mate, I've got you a KFC bucket, right? You'd just be like,
no way. I felt like that after about three or four mouthfuls. And then for lunch, again,
I went to this Turkish restaurant next to my office. I used to go to every day. I ordered a
big Mediterranean lamb, which is what I used to always order. Again, like three or four mouthfuls, I felt full. So what we know
is the drug makes you feel full very quickly, very fast. It was initially thought because
that's a hormone that's made in your gut, the effect is probably primarily in your gut
that it slows down gastric emptying, for example. We now know there is definitely an effect
on your gut, but we now know that there are GLP-1 receptors not just in your gut, but in your brain.
And from interviewing the cutting edge neuroscientists and really looking deeply into their work,
it's increasingly clear that these drugs are not actually primarily working on your gut.
They're primarily working on your brain.
They're changing what you want.
There's a huge debate about what that specific change is, what it means, the additional benefits
and risks that might flow from the fact that this is a brain changing
drug, but those are things we know for sure.
There's a huge amount we, we don't know and a huge amount of detail, obviously,
in everything I just said.
What is it like mentally, physically, energetically, psychologically
to take these drugs?
How does it feel?
Different people have different effects.
So there's a few effects that most people get.
So almost everyone gets nauseous at first you start off on a slow dose.
Um, it's partly because what these drugs do is they produce a feeling of satiety,
the feeling of being full and the human body isn't very good at distinguishing
between satiety and nausea.
So why often if you, you know, when you're really full, you actually feel a little bit sick even just without these drugs. So you feel nauseous,
you start on a low dose, gets you used to it. For about 5% of people in the clinical trials,
the nausea was just so horrific, they stopped taking the drug. And they interviewed some people
who had really terrible experiences with the nausea. For me, I think I was pretty normal. It was
unpleasant, but if on a random day, like three years ago, I had felt that nauseous, I wouldn't
have stopped going about my day. Do you know what I mean? It wasn't so bad that it would
have made me go to bed or anything. It was just not nice. You feel nauseous. A lot of
people get constipated. Various other side effects. For me, actually, those side effects
didn't bother me that much, although I got them a bit. Actually, weirdly, I got a side
effect, some more minority side effect, but is in the warnings, it's not uncommon. It
makes your heart race a bit faster, a fair bit faster for a minority of people, which
is hard to not feel a little bit anxious if your heart is racing. You're a bit like, shit,
what's wrong? What's going on? Then you go, oh no, it's hard to not feel a little bit anxious if your heart is racing, you're a bit like, shit, what's wrong? What's going on? They're just going, oh no,
it's just a side effect. Right. Although as professor Correll LaRue, one of the scientists
who developed these drugs said to me, there's two kinds of drugs in the world.
There's drugs that don't work and there's drugs that have side effects. Right. So the initial,
the initial science, those are the kind of normal feelings, but the main sensation
initial, the initial silence, those are the kind of normal feelings, but the main sensation is a bizarre feeling of satiety, a feeling full, a feeling really full, really fast.
And that doesn't go away, right? It's why you eat dramatically less. And it's why, you
know, you lose on average a shitload of weight to use the clinical language.
How common is this?
How many people are taking it and famous people and all the rest of it?
Absolutely massive.
47% of Americans in a recent poll said they want to take these drugs.
It's really worth pausing and thinking about a lot of my book is exploring how the fuck did we get to this point where almost half the population feel they need to drug themselves
to eat less, right? That's an extraordinary moment in human history. We actually know
why it happened. So there's far more people want to take these drugs than can possibly
take them, partly because every person who takes them then becomes a walking advertisement
for the drug. I think, for example, about a guy I interviewed called Jeff Parker. He's
a 67-year-old former lighting engineer in San Francisco, super nice guy.
And he was very severely overweight.
He was a pretty bad way.
He had gout, he had kidney problems, liver problems.
He was finding it quite painful to walk every morning.
He had to swallow fistfuls of pills from the doctor.
He started to take Moonjaro, which is one of these drugs, and very rapidly lost a huge
amount of weight.
His doctor took him off almost all his pills.
Now every day he walks his dog over the Golden Gate Bridge.
He told me, I feel like I'm going to enjoy my retirement now.
Now everyone who knows Jeff, when they see him goes, shit, what happened to Jeff?
What's going on there?
And he goes, oh, I'm taking Moonjaro, right?
So partly what's happening, the reason why they keep being these chronic shortages of the drugs is that the drug companies are racing
to meet a finish line that keeps getting further and further away because everyone who uses it
inspires another five people to want to use it. And then they demand it and it's going up and up
and up. So this is massive. If you want to know how huge it's going to be. Um, and we're talking
obviously a lot here about the benefits quite rightly. I'm also quite worried about the risk, but if you want to, you want to know how influential this is going to be. We're talking a lot here about the benefits, quite rightly. I'm also quite worried about the risk. But if you want to know how influential this is going to be,
I actually think the best people to look at are the financial analysts who've been looking at this.
So Barclays Bank commissioned a very sober-minded financial analyst called Emily Field to go away
and investigate these drugs, figure out what's going on, to guide their future investment
decisions. Right, so obviously they're making huge investment decisions the whole time.
She came back and said, if you want a comparison for the effect these drugs
will have, you got to look at the invention of the smartphone, right?
So look at this, me talking now, not her.
Look at so many of the effects this is already having on the economy.
Krispy Kreme donuts, their stocks have gone down.
Nestle, the CEO, Mark Schneider,
making a lot of worrying noises about ice cream. Jefferies Financial just did a big report for the
US airlines saying they're going to have to spend a lot less money on jet fuel pretty soon
because it takes a lot less jet fuel to fly a much thinner population. There's a company that
makes hinges for knee and hip replacements. Their stocks have tanked because the main driver of knee and hip
replacements is obesity.
And there's going to be a lot fewer obese people, right?
Even think about jewelers in LA.
Jewelers have had a huge run because people's fingers are shrinking.
People have had to have their wedding rings refitted, right?
Wow.
Wild situation.
So if we had been talking in whatever it was, I think it was April 2007 when Steve Jobs
first unveiled the iPhone, you and me would not have been able to game out, you know,
TikTok and Uber Eats and Hinge and all these other things that have transformed our lives
right as the result of that moment.
But I think we can begin to see some of the ways, I mean, we're going to have a situation,
especially since 10 years from now, these drugs will almost certainly be a daily pill that costs
about a dollar a day.
I, my anticipation is if we don't discover some horrific side effect, and
we might well, if we don't, I would anticipate half the population of the
United States will be taking these drugs and it will have incalculably huge
consequences for the way we all live.
Why has society become so much heavier then?
It's crazy to think about this.
I was actually stunned when I looked at the evidence on it, right?
You're younger than me, aren't you Chris?
How old are you?
36.
Right.
So you're a little bit younger than me.
I'm 45.
I'm going to pretend that's a little bit younger.
Um, so look at a photo from just before we were born, right?
I'd urge people to Google, if you're in the US, Google, photos of Americans on the beach in 1975, right? Or for Britain or
Australia, whatever country you're in. When you first look at it, it seems really strange to us
when you look at these photos, because everyone is what we would call skinny, right? Everyone.
And you're like, well, where was everyone else on the beach that day? What's going on? Was it a skinny person convention on the beach? What's happening?
And then you look at the figures, that is what people look like in 1975. So I was born in 1979.
Between the year I was born and the year I turned 21, obesity doubled in the United States. And then
in the next 20 years, severe obesity more than
doubled again, right? Britain, the country we're from, very similar. Year I was born,
6% of British people were obese. By the time I was 45 now, it's 27% of British people.
And it's put to understand, you've got 300,000 years where human beings exist and obesity is exceptionally rare.
And then literally in my lifetime, this unprecedented explosion, the World Health
Organization says obesity is more than trebled in the world, right? In my lifetime. Obviously,
I'm not blaming myself. I'm not like some Antichrist figure that caused it. So what's happening here,
right? I looked at the science and it's actually on this pretty straightforward. Obesity
explodes in every single country that makes one change and one change only. It's where people
move from mostly eating fresh whole foods that they prepare on the day they consume, to mostly eating
processed and ultra-processed foods that are constructed out of chemicals in factories in a
process that isn't even called cooking, it's called manufacturing food. And it turns out this new kind of food,
which our grandparents wouldn't even have recognized and no humans before have ever eaten,
affects our bodies in a profoundly different way. And it actually comes back to the word
that we've been associating with these drugs really importantly, satiety. These drugs undermine your, sorry, this food undermines your satiety,
undermines your ability to feel full and to know when to stop eating. And there was an experiment,
there's loads of evidence for this. I go through the seven reasons why this food undermines our
satiety, but there's an experiment that to me just totally distilled it. There's a professor,
brilliant professor called Paul Kenny. He's
having a podcast, this brilliant person who's the head of neuroscience at Mount Sinai in
New York. And he grew up in Dublin and Ireland. And in the nineties, he moved to San Diego
to continue his scientific research. And it quickly clocked Americans don't eat like British
people, right? Sorry. Fuck, don't offend the Irish person. It quickly clocked that Americans
don't eat like Irish people did at the time, right? They ate much more processed and ultra processed
food. They ate much more sugary, salty food. And like many a good immigrant, he quickly assimilated.
I see you haven't done this, Chris. And within a year he gained 30 pounds. And he started to feel
like this food he was eating
wasn't just changing his gut, it was changing his mind. It was making him want different things.
So he did an experiment to test this, which I have nicknamed Cheesecake Park. It's very simple.
He raised a load of rats in a cage and they had nothing to eat, but the kind of healthy whole
foods that rats evolved to eat over thousands of years. They got it in pellet form, but it's the
food they're used to. And when they've got that food, the rats eat when they're hungry
and they stop. They never make themselves fat. When they've got the kind of food they evolved for,
they have some kind of natural nutritional wisdom that kicks in and says, all right,
mate, enough. Then Professor Kenny introduced these rats to the American diet.
He fried up a load of bacon,
he bought a load of Snickers bars,
and crucially, he got a load of cheesecake.
And he put it into the cage,
and they still had the healthy food if they wanted it.
The rats went apeshit for the American diet.
They would hurl themselves into the cheesecake
and literally eat their way out,
emerging just totally fucking
smothered with cheesecake. And all this nutritional wisdom they'd had when they had the kind of food
they evolved for disappeared. The way Professor Kenny put it to me was within a couple of days,
they were different animals. They ate and ate and ate and ate, and very rapidly they were all obese.
Then Professor Kenny tweaked the experiment again in a way that as a former junk food addict seems pretty cruel to me.
He took away the American diet and he left them with nothing but the healthy food and
he was pretty sure he knew what would happen. They would eat more of the healthy food than
they had before and this would prove that the kind of American diet expands the number
of calories you eat every day. That is not what happened.
Something much fucking weird happened. Once they've been exposed to the American diet and it was
taken away, they refused to eat the healthy food at all. It was like they no longer recognized it
as food. It was only when they were literally starving that they went back to properly eating
it, right? Now, this fits with a much wider body of evidence in human beings as Gerald Mand, Professor Gerald
Mand, who's at Harvard, who designed the food label that's on all food that's sold in the
US.
As he put it to me, there's something about the food we're eating that is undermining
our ability to know when to stop.
For a long time, I was investigating that question, why have we gained so much weight?
I was also investigating how do these drugs work, right?
And I thought they were different topics that would meet up at the end because obviously
we've got fat and that's why we want the drugs.
But actually it's much more densely interconnected than that.
This processed food undermines our satiety.
And what these drugs do is they give you back your satiety, right?
In fact, one of the scientists says what they give you is satiety hormones.
But when you see it that way, suddenly you realize as professor Michael Lowe put
it to me, these drugs are an artificial solution for an artificial problem, right?
Processed food digs the whole of hunger that I've had inside me my whole fucking
life and these drugs fill that hole in, but come with their own set of risks.
Yeah.
So these drugs are rebalancing the scales of a novel food environment that we've only
recently created.
That's a brilliant way of putting it.
Exactly right.
But it's adding more tension to the system, right?
It's not like it precisely rebalances.
Well, it does rebalance the scales, but it rebalances the scales by adding weight on
both sides.
You're now still probably eating the same hyper palatable stuff, just less of it. And
you're having to take the drug to improve your society level satiety so that you don't have the
problem. Yeah, that's a good way of putting it. I mean, some people do more radically change their
diet. I actually was eating smaller portions of the same old shit for a long time and I have now
changed a bit. I wouldn't want to overstate it. Does it make you want to eat different sorts of
foods? Does it make hyper palatable foods less palatable?
Yes, but interestingly, there's a range of experiences in this. So I was unusual. So
I just want to preface this by saying my diet was unbelievably shit before this, right?
One of the lowest points of my life was, I could tell you exactly when it happened, Christmas
Eve 2009 at 1pm. I went into my local branch of KFC in East End of London,
where I used to live. And I went in, I said my standard order, which is so disgusting,
I'm not going to say it in front of someone who looks as glowingly healthy as you, Chris.
And the guy behind the counter said, Oh, Johan, I'm really glad you're here. I was like, all right.
He went off behind where they fry all the chicken and everything. And he came back with all the
other people who were working that day
and a massive Christmas card in which they'd written to our best customer.
Everyone had written like personal messages for me. And one of the reasons my heart sank is I
thought this isn't even the fried chicken shop I come to the most. It was a bad day, right? It was
the second worst moment in my life of being fat.
The worst was when I was fat shamed by the Dalai Lama, but that's a different story.
Turns out he's a total fucking bitch.
But who knew?
But the, so this, this for me, you know, that was my diet, right?
Going right back to when I was a kid, I was raised by my mum and my grandmother who
were working class Scottish women whose way of giving love was to give you shitty food, right? And God bless them though, were amazing people.
And a lot of people, the worst effect of the drug for them is it kills their pleasure in food.
So think for example about J. Rayner, he's a brilliant British food critic. I'm sure you've
read him. He writes for the Guardian and the Observer.
He, um, he started to take OZempic and he describes going into like the best Michelin-starred restaurants in Paris.
And to him, it was like a lump of wood, right?
A lot of people report this problem.
What, what is, is that a down regulation of the way that your taste buds work?
Have you got any idea what the mechanism is?
No one knows.
You ask the experts and they go, oh, we don't know. I mean, there's different
speculative theories, but we basically don't know. And this is a big worry. Jens Jules Holst,
who was one of the scientists who designed these drugs for Novo Nordisk said in an interview with
Wired magazine, you know, this is going to make these drugs unsustainable. People just can't live
without the pleasure of food. After a couple of years, people are like, this is too boring, I'm gonna give it up.
Weirdly for me, and I wanna stress, I know I'm an outlier,
it had the opposite effect, but for a slightly weird reason.
So I grew up eating shit, right?
And I ate huge amounts of shit.
And I grew up in, we've talked about this before,
but I grew up in a family where there was a lot of addiction
and mental illness and kind of craziness.
And I realized now, looking back, I never really ate
for like much, very little of my motivation in eating, not nothing, but little of my motivation
in eating was actually the pleasure of the flavor and the texture. I was eating to kind of stuff
myself, to calm myself down, to manage my emotions. I wasn't not totally consciously, not totally unconsciously either, but you know, um, and with these drugs, what happened to me, I remember
going out for dinner with a friend of mine and she said to me after I'd started taking
them and saying to me, you know, so it's been a bit weird eating with you because you eat
so much so fast, but you don't really seem to enjoy it very much. Now you're eating so
much more slowly. You do actually look like you're enjoying your food.
So for me, I've actually gone from very low pleasure in food to a little bit of pleasure in food. Right.
I think that's something that people don't often think about that many people don't eat food to enjoy the process.
They do it to just have that sense of being full in their stomach.
It's almost like, you know, topping off your esophagus with a little
bit more food in the end. And that's kind of the sensation that they're chasing.
Totally. And it was fascinating to go through. So in the book, I explained there's actually
five reasons why we eat. Only one of them is the one that is the most obvious, which
is feeding your body, right? Like staying alive, the need for sustenance. Actually,
and I realized how little of my eating was about that.
I mean, I used to eat 3,200 calories a day.
Now I eat about 1,800.
I would have sworn I ate that food to sustain my body, but here I am, you
know, better than I was, right?
Still living.
Exactly.
Certainly not dead.
Right.
Um, so what else is going on?
And one of the really interesting things is one of the fascinating things about
these drugs that I was
not prepared for is because they interrupt your eating pattern so radically you can't carry on
eating the way you did before. What they can do for some people, not everyone, is they bring to
the surface the underlying psychological drivers of why you were eating. Now that can be a good
thing. It can come to the surface and you can deal with it. But at first it's quite painful. So I remember
very vividly a moment I had an epiphany about this. It was seven months into taking the drugs and I
was in Las Vegas. As you know, I'm writing a book about a series of murders that have been happening
in Vegas. They've been researching for a long time and I was researching the murder of someone
that I knew and loved. So it's a pretty unpleasant thing to do. So I had a rough day and
totally on autopilot, I went to a KFC I've been to a thousand times for people in Vegas. It's the
KFC on West Sahara, which I maintain is the grimmest KFC in the whole world. And believe me,
I've been to very many of them. But anyway, and I went in and I ordered what I would have ordered
a year before, just a bucket of fried chicken, right? And I sat there and I had a
chicken drumstick and I suddenly, I looked at this chicken and thought, fuck, I can't eat this.
I'm just going to have to feel bad, right? And Colonel Sanders was on the wall there,
like he's an all KFCs. And it's like he was looking down at me going, hey buddy,
what happened to my best customer, right? So it definitely surfaces these strange and unexpected emotions. Now that can be very
dramatic. We know. So one of the best ways of thinking about what these drugs do for us,
both the benefits and the risks, is actually to look at a parallel area of science, I think.
These drugs have only been used for obesity for a couple of years. We've got a fair bit of evidence,
but we'll know a lot more as the years pass. But actually, it's a very good comparison point,
I think. Not perfect, but good. It's actually bariatric surgery. So up to now, it's been hard,
certainly not impossible, but it's been hard to lose a huge amount of weight very quickly and
keep it off sustainably over the long term, right? The best comparison point is bariatric surgery,
things like stomach stapling, stomach gastric sleeves, that kind of thing.
So we can look at, well,
what happens to people when they have bariatric surgery? Now, some of it is negative. Think about
what we just said about comfort eating and the other psychological factors. We know that if you
have bariatric surgery, your suicide risk almost quadruples in the years that follow. Quite shocking
right now. I think that maybe some of it is that the surgery is actually pretty rough and you have
horrible physical effects afterwards for some people. That'll be a factor maybe some of it is that the surgery is actually pretty rough and you have horrible
physical effects afterwards for some people. That'll be a factor for some of them. But I
think most of it is, look, by definition, if you needed bariatric surgery, you were severely overweight,
so you were very heavily eating. A very large number of those people will have been using
food to numb their emotions or comfort themselves or regulate their emotions.
And if that's taken away from you, you can't do that after bariatric surgery. For a lot of people that
will, at least for a while, manifest as just profound psychological distress. But you also
see if you look at bariatric surgery, the staggering benefits, right? So it's a really
rough operation. One in a thousand people die during the operation, right? It's no joke.
But if you survive it, why does anyone do it? It's because the benefits of reversing or reducing
obesity for your health are staggering. If you have bariatric surgery, in the seven years that
follow, you are 56% less likely to die of a heart attack. You are 60% less likely to die of cancer. You are 92% less
likely to die of diabetes-related causes. And it's so good for your health that you're actually 40%
less likely to die of anything at all. That's how good it is for you. So you begin to see,
again, that very difficult cost-benefit analysis. You get huge benefits to your health from
reversing obesity,
but there's psychological costs and they're also of course with these drugs, physical risks
and dangers that you don't get with bariatric surgery.
What about the people who say this is all bullshit, can't you just diet and exercise?
Yeah, I mean, I kept thinking that to myself the whole way through. I remember
few months into taking them, I'm sitting, I was having dinner with my friend Dave. He was eating a massive chicken
schnitzel and I was talking to him about benefits and risks. I'm going, oh, there's benefits
of drugs, benefits of risks. And Dave said, what the fuck are you talking about, Johan?
There's a third option. I've seen you do it. Go on a fucking diet, right? Like exercise.
I've seen that when you do that, you lose weight. And I had done that
many times and it had worked, right? So I spent a lot of time looking at the science of dieting
and what we actually know about it. So a few things we know for sure. If you understand the
laws of physics, you know this is true. If you burn more calories than you consume, you will lose
weight, right? No one dispute or no sensible No sensible person disputes that. So you hear that,
and yet you look at the evidence, most people on diets over time do not lose weight. And you're
like, what's going on here? So I went and interviewed the leading expert on diets in the world,
from my point of view, brilliant professor called Tracy Mann, who's in Minneapolis,
who's done, I think, some of the most important and cutting edge research on effects of diets,
particularly on the long-term effects of diets. And when she started to study this in the year 2000, the science was
very clear and gave very solid advice. Diets work. So she looked at this and there were
many thousands of studies demonstrating this, but she noticed something a bit weird about
these studies. They followed people for three months. So you massively cut back your calories,
you exercise more, you lose a shit load of weight. And at the end of those three months, it just
assumes well, now you live happily ever after at this lower weight. And there were a few
thousand studies that also looked at people for six months and they found broadly the
same thing. But Professor Man was like, well, I know quite a lot of people who've been on
diets and a while down the line, they're fatter than they were at the start. What's going on here? So she looked at, well, what do we know about people who diet for
longer than that, for two years, for example? At the time, there were 24 studies on that.
And when she looked at their results, it was completely different. If you diet for two years,
you are at the end of it, two pounds lighter than you were at the start,
which is not nothing is statistically significant, but it's shockingly low, right?
So it's like, well, what's going on there?
What's happening?
It's like 10 grams per week or something across the space of two years.
Exactly.
It's, it's, it's not a lot, right?
She's like, what's going on here?
And to understand this, uh, broad diet failures, what's going on here? And to understand this broad diet phallus,
when you look at the wider evidence, there is a small subsection of people who diet and lose
significant amount of weight and keep it off. I've got someone very close to me and my family like
that. Everyone knows someone like that. But the evidence is pretty clear as well. In the longer
term, they are statistical outliers, right? They exist, they're very real. It's certainly worth trying to be one of those people, but they're about 10 to 15% of people,
right? Who try dieting. And pretty much every fat person has tried dieting though. It's very rare
you get one who hasn't. So what's going on with the others, right? What's happening?
And to dig into this interview, loads of experts on it. And this is contested, much debated,
but I think the evidence is
pretty clear around one set of things. So if you go back to the seventies, before the
obesity crisis happened, people were pretty sure they knew the science of this. They thought
that when you were born, you had what was called a biological set point that determined
your weight. Basically, your genes say what you're going to be and you can go a little
bit above it or a little bit below it, but not by much. If you think about your body
temperature, you get a good analogy. Your body really wants you to be whatever it is,
40 degrees centigrade. It fixes your temperature at that. If you go above it, say you go to
the Sahara Desert, it will make you sweat like a fucker to bring your body temperature
down. It will make you crave shade. If you go below it, like you go to the Arctic, it will make you
shiver like a fucker to get your weight back up. Your body works extremely hard to keep
you at that biological set point for your temperature. And they thought there was something
similar for weight. You can try and go outside it, but your body will fight to bring you
back to that set point. But then the obesity crisis happened and the whole thing went out the window because if
you had a fixed set point from birth, how could it be that, you know, obesity more than
doubled in 20 years, right? It makes no sense. But then what scientists began, some scientists
like Professor Michael Lowe began to argue is something a bit different. You do have
a biological set point, but as you gain weight, your biological set point rises.
So let's imagine that you gained like three stone now, Chris. Right, please don't. It would be a
tragedy for gays of the world over. But if you did, your brain in this theory would then fight
to keep you at that higher weight. And there's a lot of evidence for that. We know that if you
gain weight and try to lose it, your metabolism slows down, so you burn calories more slowly. You crave more sugary, fatty, salty foods.
You're more lethargic, so it's harder to exercise. These things are not impossible.
You can overcome them, but it's a whole strain of obstacles. And the evidence for that is
really clear, particularly metabolic slowdown. But I remember scientists kept explaining that
to me. And after a while I said to a load of them, this doesn't ring true to me because
why would evolution endow us with such a maladaptation, right? That's obvious. Why would evolution
make us want us to be really, really fat when that kills you, right? And Professor Lo and
lots of other people explained to me, you've got to
think about the circumstances where human beings evolved. In the circumstances where
human beings evolved, the situation we now live in, where there are just a massive number
of abundant excess calories all around you all the time for your whole life, never happened
or would have been extraordinarily rare. It certainly would have lasted over your whole
life. So evolution didn't prepare us for this scenario because it never
happened for the first 300,000 years we existed. What evolution prepared us for is a very different
situation that existed frequently, which was the risk of famine, right? So you weren't
at risk of being surrounded by calories, excess calories the whole time. You were at risk
of calories running out at any moment and you being fucked. And you think about a famine, in a famine, the fattest guy at the start will be the last
man standing, right?
Timothy Chalamet will die in week one and me at my fattest will cry over his corpse
and still be alive a month later, right?
So you can see when you see it from that perspective, the circumstances of our evolution, why as
Dr. Giles Yeoh, one of the leading obesity specialists in Britain put it to me, your brain hates it when you lose weight and will fight to drag you back to your highest weight.
It's preparing you for a famine. But in our case, it's preparing us for a famine that will never
come, right? Now, some people argue that in the huge debate about... So I think that's why diets
fail for most people, right? It's interesting to think about, well, what's going on with that minority who do manage to break it? We can talk about that. But for me, that also is
an interesting debate about the drugs because there's a huge debate about, given the drugs work on
your brain, we now know that, right? You give the drugs to rodents and then you cut open their brain.
What you see is these drugs go everywhere in the brain, right? Every part of the brain.
And there's a huge debate about
what they're doing in your brain.
It's slightly disconcerting to interview
the leading neuroscientists and they kind of go,
well, we're not really sure.
Dr. Clemence Blouet at Cambridge University said to me,
you know, the brain is the most complex object
in the whole universe.
It shouldn't surprise you that we don't entirely understand
how it works, but one theory, and I stress it is a theory
and there are other theories disputing it,
is that what these drugs do is it basically lowers your biological set point.
It's the equivalent, to put it very crudely, of taking your iPhone back to the factory settings,
right? It makes your brain stop fighting to bring you back to that higher weight.
Yeah, that's very interesting. I think, you know, it's an easy criticism, and we've had
an unlimited number of people
on the show talking about the benefits of diet and exercise and digging into the real
nuances of exactly how you need to be timing your protein and what's the reps and sets
and recovery and periodizing and meso cycles and stuff.
But the research suggests that most people who start diets and try to lose weight through
diet and exercise don't. And you know, you can say, and many people probably will, these people just need to
be less psychologically weak, they need more willpower, they're not working hard
enough, it's like, that's a fine rationale, a narrative to push forward.
But like ultimately the evidence doesn't show, I don't know how much you can
castigate or shame people into trying to lose weight.
I don't know if that's going to work.
Yes. Is diet and exercise a very reliable route out of this?
Yes.
Would it be best if everybody could do it through that?
Yes.
But does it seem to be a like reliable route to it not working over
a two year plus time span?
Also, yeah.
And, uh, I, I kind of get the sense that given that we're in such a novel food environment,
hyper-palatable processed foods, it has become an unfair fight for many people who perhaps
40 years ago would have been able to lose weight through diet and exercise, but the
environment that they find themselves in now, their particular orification psychology is
outgunned.
There's a really smart analogy.
I mean, actually what we know is that 40 years ago they wouldn't have become fat in the first
place and if they did, they would have found it easier to get it off.
But I think in terms of the willpower argument, I really like how you just frame that Chris,
it has a willpower.
So there are people who deny that willpower exists or can be used for weight and that
just obviously wrong, right?
Willpower is a real phenomenon.
It exists.
Everyone listening will have exercised willpower at some point in their
life in relation to food, right?
Of course, sometimes you turn down dessert or whatever, even if you're the
fattest person in the world, sometimes you say no to something, right?
Um, but the way I began to think about willpower because precisely because it
is real and it is important is the way I think you have to look at, precisely because it is real and it is important,
is the way I think you have to look at willpower is the environment in which willpower operates. I think you just framed it really well. So the kind of fancy way of putting it, the technical term,
if you look at what causes obesity and actually lots of other problems like depression, anxiety,
a whole lot of other things, is what's called the biopsychosocial model. It sounds technical,
but it's actually very simple.
There's three kinds of cause of this problem, like obesity.
There's biological causes, right?
Your genes can make you more sensitive to these problems.
More importantly, there are biological changes
that happen as you gain weight,
they make it harder to go back,
like we've been talking about.
So those are biological causes.
There are psychological causes that drive eating.
We talked about comfort eating, for example, that's just one of them. If you're a man who loses his job,
you're way more likely to gain weight and that's partly like just feeling like shit
because you've lost your job and haven't got another one, right? And your sense of purpose.
But there's lots of others. And then there's social causes like the fact that we live in
this completely, as you say, a completely unprecedented food environment, right? So
you think about the biopsychosocial
model explains why we became obese. Where does willpower fit into that? Willpower is one sliver
of the psychological component to it. It's very real. People with strong willpower, I really admire
them. They deserve a lot of credit. It's a good quality to have as a human being, not just in
relation to food, but generally in life. But the way I think
of it is it's like an umbrella in a really powerful storm. Some people are going to hold
that umbrella and they're going to be able to get through the storm and get to their destination
and be dry. But because the storm is so bad because of all these other factors, for most people,
the umbrella is just going to break. And you canag them off and say, it's your fault, but I don't know that gets us very
far.
I think you're right that we've got to live in reality.
We have tried just chiding people for 40 years, right?
There will not be a single fat person listening to this who's not had a million times someone
say to them, use some willpower, you fat cunt, right?
That message is every day. If the solution
was to just urge fat people to have more willpower and pull themselves together, there wouldn't be a
fat person left. In fact, you look at fat women in particular, women with a BMI higher than 35,
42% of them get insulted every single day. So the issue here is not the lack of insults or even the lack of well-meant
advice about willpower, right?
And I'm actually separate, separate that because there is genuine well-meant,
there is shaming and stigma and all of that.
Actually, lots of people are just genuinely kindly say, my friend Dave
wasn't being a cunt when he said, he's a lovely guy, right?
He was, he was being nice.
So I don't want to act like it's all, all of that advice is just stigma.
It's actually not a lot of it is very well meant and a lot of it is useful.
Right.
It, it, there's some truth in it, but it's one truth among a much more complex picture.
The only thing I object to about that advice is if you act like it's
everything that's going on, it's not everything, right?
It's one small part of a bigger picture.
that's going on. It's not everything, right? It's one small part of a bigger picture. Will Barron Talk to me about how GLP-1 agonists have
effects on other behaviors, addiction, drugs, behavioral stuff, screen time, those stuff.
Jason Vale This is massively contested of all the areas
that I write about in the book. This is the one where there's the least agreement and that's
saying something because there's a lot of debate about almost everything attached to these drugs.
There's one thing we know for sure. These drugs have an extraordinary effect in animal studies
on reducing the consumption of alcohol, cocaine, heroin, and fentanyl. So I interviewed the
scientists who've done the cutting edge research on this, give you an example. Brilliant scientist
at the University of Gothenburg in Sweden called Professor Elisabeth Jarl Haag has done cutting edge research on this
for 10 years now. So what you do is you get a load of rats and it turns out rats fucking
love alcohol, right? They drink it, they'll wobble about their cage, they look very happy.
And so she gets these rats and gets them to use alcohol for quite a long period of time
until eventually their cage looks like a really rough dive bar in North Las
Vegas. And then she comes along and injects them in the nape of their neck with a GLP-1 agonist.
And what happens is that alcohol consumption massively reduces by 50% in most of the studies.
Quite a remarkable decline. And interestingly, the rats who drank the most, these are very rough
terms, but the closest you'll get to an alcoholic in a rat are the ones rats who drank the most, that kind of is a very rough terms,
but the closest you'll get to an alcoholic in a rat are the ones who cut back the most, right?
But at first, with these studies, people thought, okay, maybe it's obviously we know these drugs
reduce your desire for calories. Maybe it's because alcohol has a caloric component that,
you know, that's why the rats drink less. So this was tried with drugs that don't have any calories in them.
So Professor Patricia Grigson, who's the head of neuroscience at Penn State University,
who I interviewed, did this with rats with heroin and fentanyl.
Again, massive decline in them using those drugs, self-administering those drugs. Ditto Dr. Greg Stanwood at Florida State University
did cocaine with mice, got a load of mice to use loads of cocaine. I imagine they
went on long boring monologues, gave them GLP-1 agonists, 50% reduction. And one of the things
that's really striking about this, as Professor Heath Schmidt put it to me, is what's crazy is
it works with all drugs. That's very unusual. We have treatments for methadone that reduces heroin
use or whatever, but to have something that seems to reduce all drug use across the board,
that is unprecedented. The human research on this is interesting. So we have a lot of anecdotal
evidence. So for example, I interviewed a woman called Tracy, a mental health nurse in Canada who had been a very heavy... She had a problem. She
basically broke up from her ex-boyfriend and went on a kind of spending binge. So she would obsessively
like buy clothes she wouldn't wear, buy books she'd never read. She was just spending. She got that real rush from clicking buy, buy, buy. She started taking Ozempic for her weight
and just noticed all this compulsive shopping went away. So lots of doctors are having lots
of patients report similar things.
The actual studies in humans we have so far are very small and they're a bit of a mixed
bag surprisingly and a bit disappointingly actually. So we know they do reduce cigarette smoking, but only if you combine them with
a nicotine patch. No one knows why. We know they do reduce alcohol consumption, but only
in people who had a drinking problem in the first place. There's a shitload of studies
going on now looking at these drugs in addiction. So we'll know a lot more soon,
but the most optimistic way of interpreting this,
and we should say it with a lot of skepticism,
this is quite speculative,
but if you want it to be really optimistic,
some people looking at this evidence say,
actually, this isn't a weight loss drug.
This is a drug that boosts self-control across the board.
Now we need a lot of evidence to back that up. That's a big claim boosts self-control across the board. Now we need a lot of evidence
to back that up. That's a big claim, but I wouldn't rule it out. It's not impossible.
It's likely, but it's not impossible. I have a friend who is a huge,
huge evangelist for all of the GLP ones. He's on this, is it tizepatide? I think.
Yeah, tizepatide, yeah. Which is the second generation.
And he told me a couple of weeks ago, uh, it turns out, it turns out that
willpower is just a drug and the dosage is around about 0.5 milligrams per day.
So he's a, he's seen fantastic returns, I guess, from taking it, but.
Talking about the light side, what about the dark sides?
What are the main risks of taking these things?
Well, there are 12 big risks I go through in the book, but I'll give you an example of one.
So when you talk to experts about the safety of these drugs, the first thing most of them say is a very good point that should give people some level of reassurance.
They say, look, actually we've got loads of evidence about what these drugs do to people because diabetics have been taking them for 18 years.
because diabetics have been taking them for 18 years. So for people who don't know,
in addition to having these effects on your appetite,
these drugs also stimulate the creation of insulin,
which is obviously what diabetics,
both type one and type two need.
So 18 years ago, we started prescribing them
all over the world.
Hundreds of thousands of diabetics have been taking them.
So a lot of the experts say, look,
if these drugs had some terrible short
or medium term effect, we would know by now. If
they gave you horns, the diabetics would have horns by now, right? But what some other experts,
and that's a very good point. There's a lot of legitimacy in that point. But what some other
experts said, okay, if we're going to base our conviction on the safety of the drugs, largely on
the diabetics, let's dig a little bit more into what's actually going on with the diabetics.
So I'll give you an example. There's a brilliant scientist called Professor Jean-Luc Failly,
who's at the University Hospital in Montpellier in France, who I interviewed. He was commissioned
by the French Medicines Agency to investigate the safety of these drugs for the French market.
So he looked at what's called the preclinical evidence, the experiments on animals first,
and was quite taken aback by something, which is if you give these drugs to rats,
you really significantly increase their risk of thyroid cancer. And we know that you have GLP-1
receptors not just in your gut and in your brain, but in your thyroid. So there's a plausible
mechanism of causation there that, oh, if you're fucking
with GLP-1, you might fuck with your thyroid, right? To put it in slightly unscientific terms.
So he went to the French medical databases. They have really good medical databases because
you basically can't opt out of them in France. They don't have the equivalent of HIPAA.
And he compared diabetics who've been taking these drugs between, I think it was 2006 and 2016,
if I remember right, with a comparable group of diabetics who were similar in every other
way but had not taken these drugs.
What he found at first is pretty eye-catching.
He calculated with his colleagues, if you take these drugs, you are increasing your
thyroid cancer risk by between 50 to 75%. Now, he said to me,
don't misunderstand that. That doesn't mean if you take the drug, you have a 50 to 75% chance
of getting thyroid cancer. If that was the case, we'd be having bonfires of Ozempic all over the
world. What it means is whatever your thyroid cancer rate was at the start, if he's right, and this is highly disputed,
it will increase by 50 to 75%. Now, thyroid cancer is fairly rare. 1.2% of people get it in their
life. 84% of them survive it. Nonetheless, it's a pretty big increase in a relatively small risk.
But against that, you have to weigh, and this always comes back with all these risks,
But against that, you have to weigh, and this always comes back with all these risks, to what is the cancer risk just from being obese and continuing to be obese?
I have to say, of all the things I learned for the book, I'm a bit embarrassed to say
this.
The thing that most shocked me was the thing I thought I had known since I was a little
boy.
I'm pretty sure at any point in my life, if you'd said to me, if you're obese, is it
bad for your health? I would have said yes, right? From when I was like five or something. But I was stunned
by the evidence for how bad obesity is for your health or just being overweight, nevermind obese.
Right? So think about it in relation to cancer. As Cancer Research UK, the biggest cancer charity
in Britain explains, if you carry excess weight,
it doesn't just sit there in your body, it's not inert,
it's active, it sends signals throughout your body.
And one of the signals it can send is for cells
to divide more rapidly, which can cause cancer.
This is why obesity is in fact,
one of the biggest causes of cancer
in the United States and Britain, right?
But it's quite shocking the figures when you look at them.
And that's just one of an
enormous array of effects of obesity. So whenever you're looking at the risks of these drugs,
and that thyroid cancer is very alarming, risk is alarming. And it's why if anyone listening,
if you have thyroid cancer in your family, I don't think you should take these drugs.
If you have any reason, or certainly if you've had thyroid cancer before, you definitely shouldn't. Anyone who has any reason to believe they're at risk of that,
I would say it should weigh very heavily on you, that risk. But again, you've got to weigh it
against what for a lot of people realistically will be the risk of obesity. As Dr. Sean Allevy,
who's an obesity specialist at Tulane University School of Medicine in New Orleans said to me,
we don't know the long-term risks of you know, we don't know the long-term
risks of these drugs, but we do know the long-term risks of
obesity and they are shocking.
I'm, I think I'm right in saying that rats on mice have a special type of
receptor on their thyroid as well.
So that some of the studies that are done on them aren't necessarily
portable across onto humans in the same way.
That was something that I learned while I was away a couple of weeks ago.
What about muscle mass?
What does it do to muscle mass?
This is a really big issue.
Um, so any form of weight loss on average causes a loss of muscle mass.
Weirdly that hasn't happened with me, but I think that's cause my muscle mass
was so fucking puny at the start that we'll get you in the gym.
We'll get you in the gym.
You'll lure me there, Chris.
You're the one of the few people who could.
So what we know is most people shed muscle.
I know you know it's much better than I do.
Any form of weight loss generally causes a loss
of muscle mass, which is the total amount
of soft tissue in your body.
Obviously you need it for things like climbing the stairs,
getting up out of the chair, you know, movement.
And we know that this is risky.
It's not that risky if you're in your 30s or 40s,
but as you age, you shed quite a lot of muscle mass each year. If you're going into the aging
process with depleted muscle mass, low levels, it massively increases the odds that as you age,
you'll develop a condition called sarcopenia, which means poverty of the flesh, which is basically
where you just can't fucking do anything. You can't climb the stairs. You can't get out of a chair on your own. You're
much more likely to fall over. If you do fall over, you're much more likely to die. And
this is particularly why, because I would argue there's two categories of people here.
I mean, this is a very broad brush statement, but there's people who are like that guy,
Jeff Parker, I mentioned in San Francisco, there's people who are overweight or obese who are taking these drugs to come down to a healthy weight. I think that's very defensible.
Although plenty of people in that position look at the other 11 risks and think, well, it's not
worth it for me. But that's very defensible. Then you've got people who are already a healthy weight
or in fact are underweight who are taking it to be super skinny, right?
We can all think, fill in name of famous actress here, right? Think about people at that party
I went to. None of them were obese, right? At the start, far from it. They are particularly
incurring this muscle mass risk. That won't show up now, but it could really pose problems
for their health as they age.
And it could create a kind of ticking time bomb problem, a population where, you know,
half the people are taking these drugs that could have a real problem when people are
aging, if they're taking too high a dose or they're taking it to be super skinny.
What do you think the introduction of these drugs means in a world where people are more
concerned with their appearance than ever before.
It's a complicated question.
The worst moment for me when I was working on the book was a moment with my niece.
So she's, she's, I can't, I can't bear to say that she's 19 years old now, but she's
the baby in my family.
She's the only girl in her generation.
So in my head, she's fixed as a six year old, right? Whenever she has a boyfriend, I always want to go, get away
from her, you fucking pedo. But they're always sort of like, oh, well, she's an adult woman now.
And one day, I'm sorry, no, four or five months into taking the drugs, maybe, I was FaceTiming
with her. She was in a pub in Liverpool. And she was kind of teasing me going, oh, I never knew you
had a neck before, yeah, I never knew you had a neck before,
yeah, I never knew you had a jaw, right?
I was saying I looked good and I was kind of preening.
And then she looked down and she said, will you buy me some ozempic?
And I laughed because she's like a perfectly healthy weight.
And suddenly I realized she meant it.
And I thought, fuck, what am I doing here?
Right?
Am I counteracting all these messages I've given her since she was a little girl? And we know if you change the kind of the body,
the beauty norms, particularly women are vulnerable to this or men are vulnerable in a different
way. Cause men generally want to become bigger rather than bigger. Exactly. Which certainly,
of course, as you know, very well has all sorts of problems that you've discussed in your podcast, but that's
a different thing, right? So set that aside for a minute. I'm not worried that these drugs
don't affect that. Although the pertinent things to worry about in relation to that
with, with, with girls. So think for example, really weird fact between 1966 and 1968, the percentage of girls who thought they were
fat exploded.
The percentage of girls who were unhappy with their bodies.
It's a very short amount of time.
You're like, well, what happened between 1966 and 1968?
What happened is there was a famous model named Twiggy, who was just naturally extremely
thin, who was sort of presented as like the face of beauty, the face of the 60s.
And suddenly people looked at her and were like, well, shit, I don't look like Twiggy.
I don't like my body. Right. So we know when a body norm changes, a beauty norm changes,
it can change, well, it changes how people feel about their bodies. Right. So I'm, I'm
really worried for young girls in particular about what I think about just even like my niece,
all the actresses she likes or pop stars who were a little bit kind of broader range of body types,
they're all fucking bone thin now. And by the way, they all claim that they're doing Pilates or,
you know, I don't know, maybe there's been an outbreak of dysentery in Malibu or something.
But, you know, what's that doing? I mean, the biggest worry I have, if you said,
this is not a worry I have for myself, but if you said, what is my single biggest worry out of the
12 for these drugs? My biggest worry is what it will do with eating disorders, right? So
even before the pandemic, we had the highest level of eating disorders in the history of the
United States and Britain. And then during the pandemic, it actually rose. That's obviously overwhelmingly young girls. It is some young boys,
but it's mostly young girls. It's a complex range of reasons, but I would say social media,
loneliness, a whole range of things. People should read my friend Jonathan Ht's excellent book, The Anxious Generation, for more insight on that.
What these drugs do, anyone who's known anyone with an eating disorder knows they're in a
conflict. There's the psychological part of them that wants to starve themselves and there's
the physical part of them in their body that wants to stay alive and eat. And what these
drugs do is give you an unprecedented tool to amputate your appetite.
This is why eating disorders experts are extremely worried about people like Dr.
Kimberly Dennis, one of the leading eating disorders experts in the US, who I interviewed,
are extremely worried about this could produce an opioid-like death toll of very large numbers of
young girls who would not have been able to kill
themselves without these drugs. Now there's something we can do to massively reduce that
risk, which is at the moment, anyone listening, you can just go online and get these drugs
on Zoom. You see a doctor on Zoom. Well, that's how well is a doctor able to assess your BMI
on Zoom? Not very, right? So Dr. Dennis argues, I think very persuasively,
you should only be able to get these drugs
from in-person appointments with doctors who are trained in spotting eating disorders.
Obviously if you have a BMI lower than 27, they should not give it to you.
And if they suspect you have an eating disorder, they shouldn't give it to you.
Because people are basically enhancing their ability to access malnutrition.
That's a brilliant way of putting it.
That's exactly right.
And malnutrition is a huge, huge risk here.
Um, that that's exactly correct.
What happens if you stop taking it?
There's a bit of a debate about this and we don't have a lot of good evidence.
It looks like you regain all the weight pretty quickly.
Uh, there does seem to be a subsection of people who use it to interrupt their habits,
develop new habits, then come off the drug and remain at a lower weight. But people have
only been using this for obesity for a couple of years. We basically don't know. What the
drug companies are saying, and bear in mind they obviously have a strong vested interest
in wanting you to take it forever because they get more money the more you buy, they
say it's like blood pressure medications, it's like statins.
They work as long as you take them, you stop taking them, they stop working.
That does seem to be the case for most people.
I wonder how many people are going to be confronted with a bit of an existential crisis
when they lose a ton of weight by taking these drugs
and it's revealed to them that being
overweight wasn't the root of all of their psychological problems because you're now skinny
but still miserable. That's a really important question. Karel LaRue, I mentioned before, I think
a brilliant expert and a bariatric, he's done a lot of work on bariatric surgery.
He said he thinks that's one of the reasons why the suicide rate goes up so much after bariatric surgery. That a lot of people imagine,
what's wrong with my life is that I'm fat. And if I was thin, I'd be okay. And then they lose all
this weight and their husband's still a prick and their job's still shit and their life isn't what
they wanted it to be. And they're forced to confront, oh, actually, actually. While this may well obviously have benefits for their physical health, it's
not resolved all these problems magically. Right.
I do think there's, um, I, there's a lot of truth in that.
What about women who are either going to become pregnant, trying to become
pregnant are pregnant.
Is there a dangers for them?
Yes.
So what we know again in animal models is rats who get pregnant when taking these
drugs or given these drugs in the case of rats, I'm much more likely to have
children with birth deformities.
Um, you're advised to not take these drugs if you're trying to get pregnant, but
of course some people will just accidentally get pregnant or whatever.
I'm worried.
I'm quite worried about that.
And it could be that there's
some immediate short-term effect, but that seems unlikely because it would have probably shown up
in the diabetics by now. What people like Dr. Greg Stanwood at Florida State University
are concerned about, and he stressed this is speculative because by definition we don't know,
he said he has some concern that there may be a parallel. Look at what happens to pregnant
women who are exposed to environmental contaminants like lead, for example. When their babies
are born, their babies appear to be like everyone else. But when their kids become adolescent,
they seem to have poorer regulation control, poorer attention.
That it turns out that that exposure to lead in the womb has had an effect on
them that only emerges later.
He said, and he stressed it was speculative.
He said he is concerned.
We should keep an eye on the possibility that will be the case.
Well, I mean, the natal, the natal environment is every time that I learned
something about it, it blows my mind.
Robert Sapolsky did this great study where I think some of his colleagues looked at women who enter poverty during pregnancy.
Poverty is a very reliable source of stress.
And it's crazy.
Like the other thing to consider is if a woman is pregnant with a female, she is
also pregnant with every egg that that female fetus is ever
going to be able to produce.
So you were inside of your grandmother at one point, which I'm sure is
something you've thought about a lot.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Who, who told you my web browser?
Who told you my porn hub?
It was such history.
Yeah.
You know, the, the, the cascade sort of carries and, and yeah, it's, um,
it's a concern. It really is.
So where did you come into land with this after taking it yourself, after speaking
to experts, after looking at the state of our diet and ultra processed foods and
science and all the rest of it, how have you come to weigh the scales of the GLP
ones?
Yeah, the book is called magic pill.
Cause there's kind of three ways these drugs could
be magic. They could just solve the problem, right? In a way that is so swift that it feels
like magic. And I've got to tell you, Chris, there are days it feels like that. My whole life,
I've eaten way too much and I've eaten shit. And now I inject myself once a week in the leg,
a tiny little mosquito bite-like feeling, and I eat radically less and I eat differently. That feels like magic, right? The second way in which it could be magic
is it could be like a magic trick, an illusion. It could be like a magician who shows you a great
card trick while picking your pocket. It could give you these benefits, but fuck you over in
the longer term. I don't rule that out. The third way, actually, because it's most likely,
if you think about the classic stories about magic that we grew up with, think about Aladdin, right?
You find the lamp, you rub it, the genie appears, and you get to make your wishes.
And your wishes come true, but never quite in the way that you expected, right?
Think about Fantasia.
You unleash the magic and it runs away from you in all these unpredictable and chaotic ways. I think it's probably going to be like that. It probably going to have
some good stuff and some bad stuff. In terms of personal advice, I have to say it's disconcerting
to have been on this huge journey, to have gone all over the world, to have interviewed
all the leading experts, to learn so much, to do we haven't covered, and still not be able to
give you all my other books. I've kind of come to a conclusion, like, well, dear reader,
I think we should do the following. You should do the following three things. And as a society,
we should do the following five things. And here's the stuff we can do. And here's how
we can solve this problem. I don't really feel like that. I end the book by talking
about five possible scenarios for how this could turn out now. And they really range very widely
from the super pessimistic, this could be like fenfen, the 90s disaster drug. We could discover
some catastrophic effect. I don't think that's likely, but I don't think you can rule it out.
Or it could be that the drugs work in the long term, the benefits outweigh the risks. We get them
to everyone who needs them. That's a
big shift because at the moment only tiny numbers of rich people can get them. Crucially, they wake
us up to go, how did we end up with this? How did we end up having to choose between a risky
drug and a risky medical condition? Is this what we want for our children? Or shall we look at Japan
where they never had an obesity crisis and there is no
market for these drugs because almost nobody is obese, right? And I went to Japan, I learned how
they did that. That's what I hope will happen, that final scenario. But I don't really know.
If you ask me for purely personal advice, and I want to stress I am not a doctor, I'm a journalist,
people should talk to their doctors. But having looked at all this evidence, and I give this
advice with a low level of confidence. So you might want to sue me in 20 years for giving it to you.
But if your BMI is lower than 27, I would say you definitely shouldn't take these drugs. You're
incurring all the risks to your muscle mass for no benefit apart from an aesthetic one. If your BMI is
higher than 35, if you were someone I loved, I would urge you to take the drugs. Assuming
that you've tried dieting and you haven't been able to keep the weight off. Because
for me, the evidence is so clear that the risk of being obese at that level is so great.
Even things like, I'm really embarrassed to say, I didn't know this. Think about diabetes. If you're obese when you're 18, you have a 70%
chance of getting diabetes in your life. But I always thought, all right, it's not good to
have diabetes. But if you live in a country where you get good healthcare, you get given insulin,
you're basically like everyone else, right? That is not the case. If we're interviewing doctors, like people like Dr. Max Pemberton, one of the most high-profile doctors
in Britain. Jesus, the facts are shocking. Diabetes knocks 15 years off your life. It is
the biggest cause of preventable blindness. More people in the US have to have a limb or extremity
amputated because they got diabetes than because they got shot. And you will have
noticed there ain't a shortage of people getting shot in the United States, right?
And that's just diabetes. I mean, Dr. Pemberton said to me, as a doctor, if you gave me a choice
tomorrow between becoming diabetic or becoming HIV positive, no contest. I'd choose to become HIV
positive. If you get HIV and you get treatment, you live as long as everyone else.
That is absolutely not the case with diabetes.
You die sooner and you're much more likely to have a horrific last few years of your
life where you are blind, demented, lose a limb, agonized.
I mean, it's really, and that's just diabetes, right?
So if your BMI is higher than 35, that would be my advice.
If you'll be, I'm eyes between 27 and 35.
I think it's a much harder judgment call.
And I would recommend you go through the risks of obesity in the book, the risk
of the drugs in the book, really think about which one is more likely to play
out for you and really what your risk appetite is, right?
Different people have different. I have great respect for people who come to very,
one of the things I've really liked about the reaction to the book so far is some people read
the book and go, I really like this book. You've made me be convinced that I must go out and get
these drugs tomorrow. Other people have said to me, I really liked this book. You've made me convince
you'd be fucking insane to take these drugs, right? It's a bit like, what was the dress?
Where some people saw it as what are they seeing?
The blue and green or the black and gold or whatever.
Exactly. I saw it as black and gold, right? The, um, it's a bit like that. I'm fascinated by how
people read the book and come to completely different conclusions and are absolutely convinced
that I shared their secret conclusion all along. So I feel it makes me feel like I sort of did my
job right. But the, I think we don't know. One thing I'm completely confident of is the stakes here are unbelievably high.
This is by some measures the biggest cause of death, preventable cause of death in our
societies, right?
Gerald Manto mentioned before at Harvard says obesity and food caused illnesses kill 678,000
people in the United States every year. That's all the wars of the 20th century
for American soldiers combined plus some, right? Every year. So whether we get this right will
determine whether lots of people live or die. I think these drugs are an interesting and important
tool. The way I think of it is for a lot of us, we're in a trap and this is the rusty, risky
trap door we're being offered.
We've got to change up the way our society works so we're not in this fucking trap and
we can change it so that our kids really won't be in this trap.
We can do that.
I go through how we can do it.
I've been to places that have done it.
But for now, we're facing a pretty shitty decision and we've got to think
it through in detail.
Johan Hari, ladies and gentlemen. Johan, where should people go? They want to keep up to
date with everything that you're doing.
Oh, they go to my website. It's j-o-h-a-n-n-h-a-r-i.com. If they want to know more about where to get
the audio book, physical book or ebook, you go to magicpillbook.com. I meant to say you
can get it from all good book shops, but meant to say you can get it from all good
book shops, but the truth is you can get it from shit book shops as well. We don't have
like a quality test. But yeah, I'm very glad. I don't know if I said this to you last time
I spoke to Chris, if it already happened or not, but I had this really unfortunate moment
at the end of a podcast. It must've been a couple of years ago, probably before we spoke.
I was interviewed by someone,
I won't say who, but it's quite a high profile podcast. And at the end of it, the guy said,
what's your Twitter? And I said it. And he said, what's your Instagram? And I said it.
He said, what's your Facebook? And I said it. And then he said, what's your Snapchat? And I said,
I am a 45 year old man. The only 45 year old men on Snapchat are certainly pedophiles, right? Why
else would they be on there?
And he didn't laugh at all.
And I've got a bad habit if someone doesn't laugh at my jokes, I lean into it more.
So I said, you know that TV show, To Catch a Predator, where they sort of catfish paedophiles?
I said, the next season of To Catch a Predator should be, they just go up to adult men in
the street and say, what is your Snapchat handle?
And if they've got one, fucking throw them in the van, right?
That's it.
Immediate imprisonment. He didn't laugh at that. I later looked him up, but he's quite active on Snapchat. So my goal now
with all podcast interviews is to get through it without accidentally accusing the host of being a
pedophile. So far, so good. Hooray. Congratulations. Thanks so much, Chris. I appreciate you.
Always enjoy talking to you. You ask really good questions. Thanks Chris. Thank you.