Search Engine - How Peptides Conquered the Internet
Episode Date: February 13, 2026Two decades ago, bodybuilders on niche internet forums started injecting peptides. Now they're in the secret mini-fridges of some teenage boys. How did they get there? We track their crooked path from... Silicon Valley to jaw-smashing influencers. Check out Jasmine Sun's work (and her piece on peptides) Check out Ezra Marcus' work (and his piece on peptides) Support Search Engine! To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to Search Engine. I'm PJ Vote. Each week on the show, we answer a question we have about the world. No question too big, no question too small. This week, we are trying to understand the sudden surge in Americans self-experimenting with peptides, gray market Chinese peptides, injectable compounds that promise to change your body in all sorts of possibly desirable ways. That story, plus some help deciding how to feel about it after these ads.
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This week,
We are covering peptides, not as a medical story.
This is not about whether you, dear listeners, should take peptides.
Who do you think I am, Andrew Huberman?
We're covering it as anthropology,
meaning we want to know how so many disparate groups of Americans
in such a short time went from not having heard of these drugs
to buying them online from Chinese factories
and injecting them into their bodies.
This is a story about the Internet
and how it connected some unlikely communities.
And I heard it from two different reporters.
The first one you'll meet, she writes a substack I've been reading more and more these days,
as I continuously try to make sense of our evolving internet.
First things first, can you just introduce yourself?
Yeah, my name is Jasmine Sun.
I am an independent writer covering AI and Silicon Valley Culture from San Francisco.
AI and Silicon Valley Culture.
That's how you describe your beat?
Yeah, I mean, I also describe it with other words.
I say anthropology of disruption, I like.
because I'm very interested in sort of the very personal texture of what frontier tech and change feels like.
I'm really interested in San Francisco as a cultural phenomenon, both, like, yes, the tech industry and the technologies and the companies, but also, like, the weird trends in ideologies and subcultures running through this place as a result of tech and its influence.
I really enjoy your writing.
As somebody who's on the East Coast and feels like strange ideas are moving through San Francisco very quickly, sometimes,
Sometimes they make it here, sometimes they don't, but it feels like a laboratory for weird shit, like, not just technology, but just like ways to live.
Why are you drawn to that?
Like, why do you like being there for that?
I mean, I think you kind of said it.
Like, as a writer, as an observer, I want to be where the weird people are.
And, like, I've wondered, like, is there something geographic to it?
Because obviously, there's all the tech stuff, like biohacking and AI and whatever.
But even before that, like, lots of political ideas were born in the Bay Area, right?
like the Black Panthers came out of Oakland or the Sierra Club.
And so I feel like there's something about California and this sort of frontier ethic of people going west and getting as far away from the institutions and the emperor's view as they can.
There's a Chinese proverb about basically going to where the mountains are high and the emperor as far to be able to actually experiment with new ways of living.
And in China, they use that to refer to Yunnan, which is the southwestern province, which is their kind of hippie capital.
But in the U.S., it's probably San Francisco is where people go to experiment with new political, cultural, technological beliefs, and they're so extreme about it.
There's no sense of moderation in San Francisco.
There's a lot of cults.
People also now have so much money, which means that they can really realize every one of their crazy dreams to its fullest extent.
Like, I am going to construct a brand new city from scratch in California.
I'm going to go to space.
I'm going to hire a bunch of blood boys to, like, transfer their youths.
young blood to mine and see if that makes me live forever, right?
Like, it's not just people with crazy ideas now, but also with their resources to realize
them. And I just feel like as a writer, that's like the most interesting thing in the world.
So you're running around here talking to all these people, far from the Emperor's view,
one of the stories that has, I feel like it's been percolating for the past couple of years.
I had an awareness of it, but anything that involves science or medicine, I'm always like,
how long can I wait before I have to actually understand this?
you've been covering it really well. It's peptides. Like what is just at the generic sort of sixth grade science class level? Like what is a peptide?
Yeah, a peptide is a short chain of amino acids. So you can think of it like a mini protein. So they have very simple structures. A lot of peptides are naturally occurring in the body. So insulin, oxytocin, etc. Some peptides are modified by pharmaceutical manufacturers to behave a little bit differently. There are also synthetic peptides.
So it's actually a very broad class of drug and class of compound.
But when we start talking about peptides as a biohacking or health trend,
people are usually referring to particular experimental peptides
that are not tested or run through a clinical trial process
that people are purchasing from peptide pharmacies,
sometimes drug manufacturers in other countries like China,
and testing on themselves.
And so they can do anything from an oxygen.
oxytocin is the love hormone.
There's also growth hormone adjacent peptides.
There are copper peptides that supposedly help with skin,
peptides that supposedly help with sleep like epitalon,
peptides like melanotan that promise to make your skin better.
And like, I think the term Chinese peptides is a memetic superweapon.
Like you mention it at a party and everyone instantly is like coming over.
Like, what is that? What's your stack? Can I try it?
Even when I brought it up,
this is the project I'm working on.
This is what I'm reporting about.
instantly everyone comes over and is like, oh, you found a way to like get hotter, get healthier?
Like, tell me, like, don't gatekeep. What's your stack?
Wait, and so when you say it's a memetic super weapon, you mean that it's like there are certain
topics that, depending on what community you're in. But if you raise them at a party,
it's just like everyone just sort of summons to the conversation, whether they have opinions or
they have questions. And it sounds like it's like the combination of everyone's always
looking for a fountain of youth, there's something risky and naughty about, like, Chinese
gray market chemicals. But, like, in a world where you have a culture of people who, like,
risk taking an optimization, this is just, like, catnip in a way that maybe it wouldn't even
be in New York. Yeah, I think so, basically. I think also, frankly, like, the fact that they are
Chinese at this cultural moment is very interesting to people. People are very aware of Chinese
maxing. Like, China is maybe winning the tech race, maybe not.
And so I think there's like an extra power imbued in the peptides from the perception that they are Chinese.
Wait, sorry, I have like three questions about that.
One, what is Chinese maxing?
Have you seen the memes that are like, I'm at a very Chinese time in my life?
Yes, but I don't understand them.
Send this video to a friend that you met during a very Chinese time in your life.
Like many of you, I recently found out that I'm Chinese.
Everyone's in a Chinese time in their life.
There's like a big social media trend.
mostly Gen Z in general, around embracing Chineseness.
I'm an American currently traveling in Shanghai, China,
and let me tell you, more Americans need to come to China.
This place is crazy.
If you go on TikTok, there's a lot of China inspiration travel content.
Like, look at this cyberpunk city, look at this flying car,
look at these robots.
It's the idea that there is a country where things work that is far away from here.
Yes, I think so.
I think that it's sort of hand in hand with nihilism about the U.S.
and being really bummed that America's falling apart
and like our government isn't working.
And, you know, I think to a lot of people,
it looks, I wouldn't say that this is accurate,
but it's kind of like a paradise of everything's functional
and people are happy and it's so high-tech.
China has to be at least 100 years ahead of everybody else.
Every city is beautifully designed
with thousands of skyscrapers, incredible architecture.
But anyway, I think like as folks have warmed up
to the idea of China as being potentially,
more technologically advanced, the fact that the peptides or Chinese probably gives them some
extra power. And just from a manufacturing point of view, like at what point does China enter the
fray? Like, how does China just become the U.S.'s sort of peptide supplier? So I was looking into this,
I think it's actually quite a similar story to how China dominated manufacturing in so many other
industries. The Chinese government gave subsidies in like the 80s and 90s to a lot of local governments
that we're willing to invest in the drug supply chain.
And they start at the most basic elements of the supply chain.
So, like, very simple compounds and drugs,
and I've slowly been climbing up to, like, pharmaceutical manufacturing.
And then now they're doing a lot of biotech innovation.
But a lot of it is low labor costs,
a high concentration of, like, chemists and science
and medical talent concentrated in the same place.
These industry towns where, like, everybody in this one town
is some part of a drug supply chain.
So China is actually the world's peptide manufacturing hub.
And even if you are getting peptides from a lot of American companies,
they are getting their raw materials from Chinese factories
and then, you know, testing and processing
and, like, putting them into, say, the insulin pens or the syringes or things like that.
But people realize, basically, that if they wanted to cut out the middlemen
and do their own injection and do their own mixing of the peptides,
they could go straight to the Chinese factories and buy them.
Let me give you the advice that I wish I had when I first started,
and that's not to buy from the U.S. sites.
they're upcharging you like crazy.
All they do is buy their peptides from China,
slap a label on them,
and charge you 10 times the amount.
And do you know, like,
there's like this funny strain of U.S.-China relations in this,
both that Chinese laboratories are the supplier in many cases
and also that the idea that this is like China branded
is enticing to people.
In like China's tech scene,
are people taking peptides as far as you know?
I don't think so.
I mean, to be clear, like I didn't like go to China.
for the reporting. But I asked some family friends who are in China. I have some other friends
in China who have been poking around. And they seem to think the Americans are freaking crazy.
You guys are insane. I don't know why you're doing this. But, you know, China manufactures a lot of fentanyl,
and they're not doing that either.
So Chinese peptides are not mostly being taken by Chinese people. They're being taken by Americans.
And what I wanted Jasmine to map for me was the path of cultural contagion that peptides followed.
The bodybuilders to the Silicon Valley execs, how the Maha movement picked peptides up,
how teenage looksmaxers had gotten in on this.
I wanted to understand what had motivated these different tribes to experiment with peptides.
So it turns out you can find posts about people seeking peptides on the internet as far back as 2005.
That's when the denizens of the message board Anabolic Minds.com, users with names like Morpheus and Beowulf,
were trading tips on how to source peptides.
So if we really go back to the early, early adopters, the earliest adopters are actually like the bodybuilding and fitness community.
Oh, yeah.
It's a good day today, gentlemen, because today we are discussing my top three peptides for muscle growth.
You want to gain some muscle, but this is the video for you.
And so this is, like, pretty separate from tech world.
It's like guys doing steroids in bodybuilding gyms together.
I'm going to show you what I'm doing for my peptide stock right now to grow.
I'm using three peptides and using them all post-workout.
First one is TB 500, 5 milligrams.
So when I was in the very earliest stages of my research
and I was looking up peptide guides,
I would just end up on these crazy bodybuilding forums
and weird subredits and discords.
And, you know, one of the guys I talked to Jaden Clark,
who has popularized sort of the peptides in San Francisco,
he also is a bodybuilder and kind of a self-described Jimbrough.
And so he said that like back in Australia,
where he's from, all of the gym guys are constantly recommending each other peptides because
it's sort of a spinoff of the interest in steroids and in growth hormone and things like that.
Yeah, I have like only ducked into bodybuilder forums when people there are getting dunked on.
Like it's not a part of the internet that I have so much time on.
But that's my understanding.
It's like there was an earlier version of reality in which this idea of medical self-expermentation was kind of like cordoned off.
And it was cordoned off among people where they were self-researching and doing a lot of work,
whether they were getting to the right answers or not,
to figure out, like, they were sharing information about molecules.
They understood the risks they were taking.
Sometimes it was working, sometimes it wasn't.
But it existed in this kind of, like, confined space.
How does it start to break containment out of the bodybuilding community?
So bodybuilding has this big overlap with the biohacker community broadly,
where there is a common practice of experimenting on yourself like Labra
and importing research chemicals.
Non-FDA-approved drugs are under the banner of research.
chemicals to then self-inject and just frankly see what happens, share with your buddies at the gym,
tell them what works. And so biohacking is sort of the way that that crosses into the tech mainstream,
since a lot of tech folks are also very interested in body hacking, can new forms of science,
like improve my fitness, my productivity, whatever. And I think because a Zemphic was such a
craze and has worked really well to help a lot of people lose a lot of weight, people think,
oh, if there's this magic shot I can take for weight loss, maybe there's a magic shot for
everything else. And so I think the ozempic boom and the gLP boom is what has precipitated all of this
interest in other experimental peptides. So you feel like ozambic kind of like opened the door because it
introduced more people to the idea of peptides, like the idea that at home you would just put a needle
into your skin is just like up until very recently for most people something they won't do, still
something a lot of people won't do. But GLP ones broke that seal for a lot of people. Yeah, I mean,
that's basically what a lot of the doctors I spoke to said, because I was speaking to,
doctors in San Francisco in Southern California and other places, New York. And I was asking,
when did you start hearing about peptides from your patients? When did people start coming in and
asking about them? And the turning point was a Zempic. It was people starting to think,
you don't have to be a druggie to be injecting yourself.
GLP1 injection sites ranked by someone who's tried them all. Let's go.
This here's Epitite Thursday. I haven't done a step-by-step in a while, so we are going
and go ahead and do that for you guys today.
If you're new to your GLP1 journey, whether you just started or you're about to start,
this is the exact jab day routine you need to follow to mitigate side effects.
Even among the gray market peptides, like the most popular peptides are in the GLP
category.
So it's either GLP1s or it's GL2's terseptide or increasingly most common in the communities
I spoke with was Reda Trutide, which is a GLP3, is the sort of next generation weight loss
drug that's even more effective and is still in phase three human clinical trials, but that people
expect will get FDA approval. And yeah, basically, like, I remember I saw this tweet that was like,
oh, it's so funny how Chinese peptides hit San Francisco and then everyone developed self-control
at the same time. Or another woman was telling me she's on one of the GLPs and she is a startup
founder and she said, I noticed all of a sudden that in all these launch videos I'm watching,
none of the founders are overweight anymore,
and I started to feel self-conscious about my own weight,
and so she ended up getting on Reda Trutide as well
through gray market sources.
So in Silicon Valley, it seems a bunch of research-minded nerds have spread these drugs,
largely through word of mouth,
after having been inspired by peptides earlier adopters,
the online bodybuilding community.
The next places peptides go, though,
are both a bit seedier and a bit more concerning.
After a short break, we follow peptides into,
two internet neighborhoods that I did not realize were at all I joined.
Maha and the looks maxers.
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I'm Robert Smith, and this is Jacob Goldstein, and we used to host a show called Planet Money.
And now we're back making this new podcast about
the best ideas and people and businesses in history.
And some of the worst people, horrible ideas, and destructive companies in the history of business.
We struggled to come up with a name, decided to call it, business history.
You know why?
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Does this show about the history of business?
Available everywhere.
You get it.
Welcome back to the show.
So this is what we charted before the break.
Peptides first appear online in the early 2000s on bodybuilding forums.
one more obscure chemical that the bench pressers are trying.
They stay there more than a decade,
but in the late 2010's biohackers,
Bay Area tech geeks who wanted to experiment on their bodies,
they'd started getting into this too.
At this point, peptides have left message boards.
They're now being discussed also on self-optimization podcasts,
podcasts famously, a gateway drug.
But peptides remained essentially niche until just a few years ago.
2020 is when OZMPIC changes everything.
After OZMPIC, lots of people go online looking for off-brand, gray market OZMPIC, from compound pharmacies and Chinese labs.
Some of these places, in addition to selling generic GLP-1s, also sell other peptides.
And these other peptides are now being advertised by a rising class of influencers who will spread them to new communities.
I talked to a second writer about this phase of the peptide spread, reporter Ezra Marcus,
Ezra spends a lot of time on the internet's margins.
What he helped me see was how an unregulated algorithmic marketing machine was spun up for these peptides,
made up of a patchwork of influencers on TikTok and Reels.
I think only in the last two or three years did the kind of social media e-commerce meets algorithmic hype cycle start to take place.
So help me see, like, what does that internet look like?
Like, as a person whose algorithm is not tuned towards persuading me that I could be thinner,
handsome, or younger, whatever, like, what are people who are seeing that seeing?
You're seeing a lot of really prominent influencers, you'd call them, kind of in the maha space,
alternative wellness, people that are in RFK's orbit.
There's a guy named Gary Breka, who's a really prominent anti-aging life extension influencer
who sells peptides on his web,
peptides might sound like the future of health, but they are already here.
Here's how they work to heal your body.
Peptides are sequences of amino acids, and why is that important?
Because your body recognizes these.
It can break them down.
They're called metabolites, and it can get rid of the waste.
When we put chemicals...
He's just like a jacked 50-something guy who sells supplements and peptides and all this stuff
on his website.
He's quite prominent.
He's like millions of followers, and it's just like a big deal in that world.
Talk to your doctor about peptides.
peptides and how a peptide might help you improve your gut health, improve the tone, texture of
your skin, reduce fine lines and wrinkles, possibly restore your hair, raise your natural growth
hormone levels, balance your hormones, and even reduce anxiety.
Peptides are the safest wave of the future when done.
So I think there was also this sort of like larger phenomenon over the last few years of people
rejecting the traditional medical establishment in a perhaps politically coded way where it was
about independence from the regime and the establishment and this, that, and the other,
peptides were a way of taking your health into your own hands with this sort of maha valence to it.
Hey, guys, welcome back to the Ultimate Human Podcast.
I'm your host, human biologist, Gary Brecker, where we go down the road of everything
anti-aging, biohacking, longevity, and everything in between.
He had RFK on his podcast a year ago.
And I'm joined by a very prominent figure in the space, the leader in the head of the
Maha movement, none other than Mr. Bobby Kennedy Jr. himself. Thank you for coming on the podcast.
I'm happy to be here with you finally. I'm happy to have you. And RFK was talking about, you know,
we're going to end the war on peptides of the FDA. And, you know, I thank you for what you're doing
and we're going to end the war at FDA against alternative medicine. Thank you.
The war on stem cells, the war on chelating drugs, the war on peptides, the war on anything that, you know,
it is not going to make big harm.
It's like, other war on vitamins.
It's funny, I look at RFK
and I think, like, I don't want
whatever he's taking. Yeah.
I mean, he has that, like, Sean Penn in one battle
after another kind of leathery.
It's like it was microwaved in a youth machine.
Yeah.
But other people see it differently.
I mean, clearly, if you look at the news
of the last few years.
Obviously, we've all been living on the same internet,
so I don't have to explain to you
that COVID caused many people
to have a permanent loss of faith in the medical establishment.
Or that one of those people somehow now leads health and human services.
But the anti-medical establishment internet
has continued to grow bigger and stranger since 2021.
Reporter Jasmine's son has also been paying attention to the evolution of that world.
So the podcast, the sub-sacs, the blogs, the forums,
a lot of these exploded in popularity during a time when people were really scared about their health,
where they felt like they were getting inconsistent information
or what they perceived to be misinformation
from official sources.
And so it led to this flourishing of an all-medic ecosystem.
So like some of the same people who are ivermectin guys
are now becoming peptide guys.
All right.
I've been looking forward to this conversation for a while.
This is a conversation with a guy who I first heard of
when he was rumored to be in the running for head of the FDA
under Trump in his first term.
I was listening to my very first episode of the Truth podcast by Vivek Ramoswamy,
where he was podcasting with Balaji Srinivasan, who was the Coinbase CTO and a very influential investor and executive in Silicon Valley,
who at one point was being considered for FDA commissioner.
Balagis Srinivasa, welcome to the podcast.
Good to be here, Vic.
And Bollaghi and Vavak were, you know, talking about their frustrations with the FDA,
with the way that COVID was handled.
because even if people believe in vaccines,
I think there's a lot of controversy in Silicon Valley
around slow approvals or school shutdowns and things like that.
And there's this great line that Apology said
that was like, just like the SEC is trying to keep you from getting wealthy.
That's right.
And so we can see what the SEC is protecting you from getting wealthy.
We will now soon see that the FDA is protecting you from getting healthy.
The FDA is trying to keep you from getting healthy.
Huh.
I thought that was like hilarious because there is,
is this mindset that sort of developed that our regulatory institutions are actually trying to
keep the little guys down. And that's why you need these like crypto guys on podcasts to tell you
what to buy to get rich. You need these like podcasters to teach you what peptides to take to get
healthy. So I think COVID is a weird time for online information. What do you make of that
quote though? Because like, do you think that there's just a wide swath of people who really have
become paranoid enough about institutions that they think, like, for instance, that peptides are
being gate kept from them because, like, the pharmaceutical companies are greedy and they don't...
Oh, absolutely.
That's how they view it.
Yeah, I mean, I think so.
You know, like, a lot of it comes from this sort of idea that people should do their own research,
and rather than having the paternalistic institutions decide what the boundaries of your
action are, as an individual, you should be empowered to.
research your own shit coins and to research your own peptides, and they shouldn't be making these
risk tradeoffs for you, you know? And so, yeah, the big pharma stuff was a big complaint that I heard
from a lot of peptide users was like, especially with the people who started off with the
GLPs, the way they'd put it is like, I'm spending over $1,000 a month to be on prescription
GLPs, and then I find out that you can get literally the same substance for $100 to $200 a month
from a gray market Chinese source. And then they start to go, wait, like, that doesn't make any sense.
Like, why is Eli Lilly making me pay 10 times what I could be paying for the exact same thing?
And so, first of all, I think like a lot of anger with just like health care costs,
makes people go, like, there's something bad going on. Or even when you ask, like, why haven't
most peptides been approved. Why haven't they had any clinical trials done, right? Like,
why are there no clinical trials for BPC 157? It's basically because it costs hundreds of
millions of dollars to run clinical trials and get something FDA approved. And unless a drug is
targeting a disease and it's easily patentable and you're going to have a moat as a farmer
company, most pharma companies are not going to invest in extremely, extremely expensive clinical trials.
And that is like a reality of the incentive. So when people hear that, they sort of feel like
it is rigged, and the FDA, by requiring this $100 million process,
is not going to allow me to take the things that I want.
So I think that's probably my best, like, steel man of the place that people are coming from.
So that's what peptides have meant for Maha,
not just exciting drugs making exciting promises,
but a way to boycott big pharma,
to spend your dollars in an anti-establishment,
do your own research kind of marketplace.
If the government says it might not be safe,
order two before they ban it.
2024 is when peptides online became unavoidable.
Unavoidable because their newest, most fervent converts
had begun making testimonials about these drugs,
testimonials that were everywhere on social media.
In 2024, members of one of the scariest online communities get on board.
People who are hot and young.
Here's Ezra Marcus.
You're seeing a lot of videos of young, ripped,
athlete-wearing gym influencers telling you that, like, you know, a better living through chemistry
is possible, and all you need to do is take the shot, and they're happy to give you the information
if you, you know, go to the link in their bio and buy a course or buy from the vendor-affiliate
link in their bio. It's just like straightforward e-com marketing, only in this case it's an injectable
of maybe dubious provenance. Then there's a kind of other layer of it that's really gone
more viral more recently of the kind of looks-smaxing type of people, and that's its own sort of
discrete niche of, let's say, black-pilled, kind of right-wing adjacent, in-cell, adjacent
culture of mostly young men talking about how the only, you know, way you can achieve success in
life is to rise to the top of the heap physically, because otherwise nobody will ever respect
you, and so these are people who are willing to try out pretty extreme interventions,
whether it's leg lengthening surgery, jaw surgery, steroids, you name it,
these people kind of adopted peptides,
and I think became some of the most visible figures driving engagement on it.
And it stopped just being like 20 and 30-something gym influencers
and became just like 18-year-old high schoolers being like,
here's my peptide stacked so that I can mog at school,
which I think is a pretty new and shocking development.
So wait, I want to watch, can we watch, like,
I kind of just want to see the internet
that a 15-year-old boy could land on.
I just want to watch one of those videos
because I feel like they feel pretty different.
Yeah, let's do it.
Today's guest has redefined the meaning of self-improvement.
I maximize all metrics of my life.
I've just come to the conclusion
based on anecdotes, based on numbers.
That looks are the most important metric,
and it would be insane to not prioritize them.
Okay, what are we watching?
This is a guy named clavicular,
and I mean,
Clavicular looks like an AI cartoon of a handsome person.
Yeah, yeah.
Like he's got like rosy cheeks and curly hair and high cheek bones.
It began injecting testosterone at just 14 years old,
claiming that natural puberty wasn't optimized for the modern world.
I started with 300 milligrams of testosterone, and I did that for a while.
Up until I was 16, I'm 100% confident that I made the right decision in my life.
I'm so glad that I look a little bit more mature.
Today at 19, he's garnered a massive audience online,
where he says that everything in life is determined by one thing.
So it's $35,000 for a double jaw surgery with full facial implants.
I know the amount of money that I'm investing.
And clavicular is, I think, the first explicitly, like, looks maxing aligned figure
to go kind of properly viral into the mainstream where, like, kids across the country know who this is.
So it's like before that looks maxing is like a more fragmented movement of, like,
teenage boys giving themselves horrible body dysmorphia.
He's like the first person who becomes,
I would say at this point,
mainstream famous as a looks-maxing influencer.
Yeah, I think that's about right.
This principle follows Wolf's law that a bone is going to grow back stronger.
You know, after you reduce these localized micro traumas,
so you're going to lay in your bed to brace your head for CTE
and you're going to bone smash.
You're going to lay in your bed and brace your head for...
CTE is, isn't that like brain damage?
Well, no, so that's why you lay in your,
okay.
And that's gonna grow your facial bones.
You smash, like you punch yourself in the face?
Yeah.
Clavicular is a big advocate for bone smashing.
Clavicular is a big advocate for bone smashing
as a sentence I could have happily died without ever knowing.
I mean, that's how I feel about a lot of this.
Like, I've just seen, I've seen so much clavicular content.
And I'm just, every time I see another video, I'm like,
what crucial fact of world history did I just lose?
There goes the capital of Poland or something.
But, yeah, I mean, I think it's all just part of this kind of like
Patrick Bateman persona he has adopted for himself,
where he just is doing sort of like shock jock kind of stuff
in this very flat, affectless way.
He's always saying the N-word.
He hangs out with Nick Fuentes.
He says all this sort of completely over-the-top,
misogynistic stuff, you know, he's using sort of looks maxer jargon.
What are we talking about by hot, like good looking, like some people think that like
Sidney Sweeney is extremely attractive.
I would say, I don't want to scandalize anybody, married man, I would say Sidney
is very attractive.
I would say that she's pretty malformed.
Her upper maxilla is extremely recessed, right?
She's got the eyes of doom with no in for orbital support.
She's really not that much of a looker in her face.
Talking about how this disgusting woman
has recessed cancel tilt and her maxilla are suboptimal.
And that's why she's-
Weird phrenology speak to describe some woman
as not being hot enough.
Yeah, but it comes out of this sort of 4chan,
chock, racist, in-cell mode.
But then clavicular has sort of taken that
as the sort of baseline posture,
but then added this entire other layer of like,
to be fair, really deep
researched, like looks maxing ideas on top of it where he knows, like, he can talk about what
peptides do what? He can talk about steroids. He can talk about what surgeries can make your
jaw more appealing. How do you look like that? With peptides and steroids.
Wait, so what peptides do you take? I think Redisuton, G.H., something called Milano Tand2,
which helps me get a little bit more tan without having to go in the sun too crazy. And that's
I might need that.
Yeah, that's a really good one.
It also makes you get crazy boners.
Like, it's fun as fuck.
But so, like, we're in this phase of internet
where most of the internet seems to be run by provocateurs.
It's hard to actually suss out their attentions.
Like, do they actually believe all the edge lord things they're saying?
Are they playing up their edge lordiness for attention?
Do they actually know the difference?
Whatever.
But if you just look at it as a business model,
it's basically like you have this guy
he behaves in
provocative ways to get attention, which works.
You're a teenage boy, you're scrolling
TikTok, you're scrolling reels, you see
this guy like saying the N-word,
you're like, oh my God, what an asshole.
And then the second thought you have
is his face looks better than mine.
And so it's like he's bringing you
to the car crash of his behavior,
but then the thing you get curious about
is his advice about how to be a giga-chat.
Yeah, I think that's exactly it.
and this guy is just, like, extremely good at playing the internet in a way to get attention by being provocative
and being around other provocative online people.
And, you know, for this new generation of streamers, it's just purely about it's a numbers game.
And then you go in Clivocular's bio, and he's selling a course for Clivocular's Guide to LuxMaxinger,
you can pay for one-on-one coaching with him.
They're, like, convincing a person who's 18 to have the anxieties.
of a person who's middle-aged.
Absolutely.
It's so dark.
Try 15.
Oh, God.
You know, I had a source at a New York City elite private school telling me that students at these schools are taking peptides and GLP1s and they're getting mini-friges and, you know, buying peptides from TikTok influencers and hiding them from their parents in their mini-fridge in their room.
And they're 15, 16 years old.
That's insane.
It's so confusing for me because, like, I'm both more disconnected from this internet than the last one, but also the main way that I experienced teenage boys is, like, I have stepkids and they have friends.
I'm constantly, like, driving them places or they're, like, doing sleepovers or whatever.
And it's weird.
I look at this stuff, and I'm like, oh, my God, that seems horrible for, like, an average 15-year-old kids, like, ideas about themselves, ideas about race.
ideas about women.
But then I see the teenage boys at my life,
and like, they seem self-conscious.
They don't seem, like, hateful.
Yeah, I mean, I think that with something like
clavicular and even Andrew Tate,
there's the adult way of assuming that kids are taking
all this stuff at face value and being like,
oh my God, our young men are being radicalized.
And obviously, just to some extent,
that's happening with some kids.
But I think for the most part, like,
the kids are seeing this stuff as ridiculous.
They might, like, on some level,
be sort of more sympathetic to edge lord ideas than adults are, as all teenagers are.
But I think that for many of them, clavicular is like just another kind of meme, basically.
And the same as Andrew Tate, same is a lot of the stuff.
Like they get that it's inherently ridiculous.
Even if maybe they might, to a certain extent, buy into the, like, looks maxing stuff,
they're also just like watching this stuff because for them it's entertainment.
But I, you know, my sense is that there's a sort of adult way of freaky-old way of freaky-old.
out about it that doesn't give teenage boys enough credit for their ability to laugh at stuff
that is inherently ridiculous. I think that's right. The other thing I'm curious about it is just
do you feel like with peptide marketing, do you feel that it is aimed just in your experience
of the internet? Are you seeing it more aimed at men? Are you just seeing that it is equal opportunity
in a way that cosmetics wouldn't have been in the past? I think it's more equal opportunity.
I think that a certain sector of like looks maxing, gym-focused peptides marketing is more for men,
but I do think there are all sorts of people selling this to women as well.
It's weird to draw a line from somebody figuring out finally how to make video for social media work
to teenagers that have mini-frizes with injectables in their bedrooms.
Totally.
After the break, we leave the kingdom of clavicular and head back to Silicon Valley,
where our story will resolve on, I promise, a less doomy note.
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Welcome back to the show.
I have to say, as a person trying to come to my own internal verdict on peptides,
I noticed my view of them changes based on where I encounter them.
A tech CEO trying some compound I've never heard of, fine.
Some Adonis young man with a syringe convincing teenagers online to buy
his stack? Obviously not fine. It's the issue so often with any drug. That is not just the inherent
riskiness or safety of the substance, it's the context around it. As a general rule when it comes
to drug reporting, I try not to ask reporters whether or not they've taken the drugs. The late,
brilliant, Mark Kleiman, who wrote a lot about drug policy once said, quote, if you do drug policy
and you're asked whether you use drugs, you've got two choices. You can say, yes, I'm a
lawbreaker, please come arrest me and ignore everything I say because I'm a bad person.
Or, no, actually, I don't know what the hell I'm talking about, end quote.
So I try not to ask reporters about their drug use on air.
But in this case, I broke my rule.
And I'm glad I did because it led to some answers that helped me settle my thinking on these drugs, at least for the moment.
I asked Jasmine's son whether she tried peptides.
I've been tempted, but I haven't done it.
So that's the short answer. I haven't tried any gray market peptides, though I am interested because I think that most people, when they're telling you a story about how taking BPC-157 or retitutate or epithal and change their life, they're not actually trying to sell you something most of the time. They're telling what is a real experience that they believe that they had, and it did something for them. Now the doctor part of my brain says, I mean, I'm not a doctor, but the doctors I've talked to says, N of 1 is not a good experiment.
Just because it worked for somebody else in a particular context.
Maybe it's a placebo.
Maybe it only worked for them.
Maybe if you have different health conditions, you're going to experience something very different.
And so as this stuff goes mainstream, that's something that does concern me just because
there's a lot of young girls with eating disorders, young men trying to look better.
And I don't know that everyone has the ability or will do their research.
And so there is this sort of like the thing about do your own research is it offloads responsibility
from the person chilling to the person doing the drug,
and I think a lot of people are going to make mistakes.
But I think one of the things that this reporting experience did was it did make me more
sympathetic to actually the existence of a gray market, or it made me think about why gray markets exist,
i.e. things that are not illegal, but things that are not being endorsed, right?
I am a little sympathetic to the idea that people, adults, who are aware of the risks,
can run experiments on themselves, not telling everyone else to do it, just like doing what they do,
and writing up a blog post about how that went or even just in some cases solving a health problem
that they had struggled with for many years. And if that's what solves your health problem,
like power to you. So I think overall, I understood why you might want spaces of freedom
or spaces of experimentation that shouldn't hit the mainstream. I frankly don't want to hit the mainstream.
should not be legitimized, should not be advertised or marketed, but that allow people to
start poking around the edges. And, you know, with Silicon Valley in particular, one thing I think is
if this stuff really works, then someone is going to invest a lot of money and then taking it
through the rest of the process and figuring out the legal barriers and figuring out the
clinical testing. And if, like, one guy in his basement with some syringes is like the thing
that, you know, makes someone realize maybe there's a there and we're going to actually run the test
now, then I am happy for that to happen.
happen. It's funny. It's like your view is basically like the nice thing about a gray market is because
it's like it exists somewhere in between legal and illegal. You don't have like a massive
marketing push behind it. You have something that for the people who are willing to tolerate a little
bit more risk, it's kind of like putting something on a high shelf, ideally. And that while you
yourself don't want to be in like a single person research study with the only body that you'll
ever have in life. What is good about it happening in the culture that you're documenting is that
some of those people might find something useful and then they might put it through the normal
testing and regulatory hurdles where everybody else can benefit from it. I think that's right. Yeah.
I think we need some people who are more risk-tolerant than the rest of us who are on the frontier.
I mean, this kind of goes back to your earlier question about why covers San Francisco.
Like, I like living in San Francisco. Sometimes people are like, I can't believe you have to
deal with these people and talk to these, like, crazy tech people.
people all the time. And I'm like, I love it because I am not as risk-tolerant as a lot of these
people are. I am not injecting the peptides. I am not pouring all my money into crypto, et cetera.
But I think that sometimes when you have people willing to take crazy risks, including failing,
like, a lot of the time and screwing stuff up, the rest of us can learn from that. And again,
maybe we'll get something good out of it. Maybe we won't, but maybe we will.
Jasmine's son, you can find her work at her substack.
We'll have a link to that substack and to her peptides piece in the show notes.
And you can usually find as for Marcus at New York Magazine.
We'll have a link to his peptides reporting in the show notes as well.
This week, for the credits, something a little different.
One of our listeners, Ned Wilson, wrote in and asked if he could read them for us.
Ned works in film and television.
He's a longtime listener to this show.
He's also a finder.
one of our listeners who financially supports our show at the highest possible level.
When someone who is paying for your work asks if they can do your work for you,
what answer could you give but yes?
Take it away, Ned.
Search engine is the presentation of Odyssey.
It was created by PJ Vote and Sharifie Penameney.
Garrett Graham is our senior producer.
Emily Maltaire is our associate producer.
Theme, original composition, and mixing by Armin Bizarrian.
Our production intern is Piper Dumont.
This episode was fact-checked by Mary Mathis.
Our executive producer is Leah Reese Dennis.
Thanks to the rest of the team at Odyssey, Rob Morandi, Craig Cox, Eric Donnelly, Colin Gaynor, Moira Curran, Josephina-Ferun,
Josephina Frances, Kurt Courtney, and Hillary Shuff.
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Thank you for listening.
We'll see you next.
week.
