The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Most Replayed Moment: The Truth About Protein Intake and The Simplest Way To Lose Fat
Episode Date: March 27, 2026Alan Aragon is a leading nutrition researcher and one of the most respected voices in evidence-based fitness and diet science. In this moment, he breaks down one of the most misunderstood topics in n...utrition: protein. How much do you really need? Does it influence fat loss? Alan unpacks the science behind what actually works, and answers the most common questions DOAC listeners ask about losing weight. Listen to the full episode here: Spotify: https://g2ul0.app.link/M6j8NDlbn1b Apple: https://g2ul0.app.link/gFsOz5sbn1b Watch the Episodes On YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/%20TheDiaryOfACEO/videos Follow Alan: https://www.instagram.com/thealanaragon/ https://www.facebook.com/alan.aragon.796/
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One of the most successful conversations we've had this year on the show was with a guy called Chris Kona who talks about ways to make money on the side.
And it got me thinking because our show sponsor is Airbnb, a brand I love, I've used all over the world for the last decade or so.
And this is an unbelievable, untapped opportunity to make some money on the side if you currently are a homeowner.
Let me explain.
So many of us go traveling.
We go on holiday to see in-laws or to go on ski trips or whatever it might be.
And our home sits there, usually actually cost us.
costing us money because of bills, what most people don't realize is that you can put that
house on Airbnb very simply and very easily. If this sounds interesting to you and you
currently don't list your property when you go away, your home might be worth more than you
think. Find out how much at Airbnb.c.ca.ca. slash host. That's Airbnb.combe.combe.
slash host.
One of the things that I'm particularly intrigued by,
which kind of dovetails into both of those subjects of fat and muscle gain,
is the subject of protein.
And because there's been so much said about protein,
you know, when I was growing up, they said you have to have protein right after you eat your meal,
you have to have this much protein, you have to have it before you eat your meal,
it doesn't matter when you have it.
So I want to do a bit of myth-busting on the subject of protein.
What are the biggest myths that people currently believe?
leave about protein consumption?
The biggest myth is that they have the hierarchy of importance all screwed up.
Like, everybody's worried about how much protein per meal you need to have for this or that
goal.
When do you need to time protein relative to the training bout or waking or sleeping or all that
stuff?
The main thing they need to be focused on is how much protein do they need to eat by the end
of the day?
because when you hit that goal, you've basically won the whole game.
The relative placement, the distribution and the doses of the protein, the timing of it,
oh man, it rarely matters.
It rarely matters beyond getting that protein in in a way that's comfortable and convenient
for you and in such a way that you can stick to in the long term.
Some people are more like grazers.
some people are more like gorgers.
They're both fine, as long as you hit the total by the end of the day.
So the hierarchy is of utmost importance, get your total daily protein.
And then of secondary importance would be what is the distribution of the constituent doses of that protein total through the day?
And then a third importance down here is like when specifically are you supposed to time that protein around the training bout?
So, yeah, the way that I put it is like this.
The daily total for protein, that is the cake.
The distribution of the doses through the day, that's the icing on the cake, and it's a very thin layer of icing.
And how do we know that?
How do we know that it doesn't really matter what time you have the protein and that the most important thing is just making sure you get the protein?
That's a great question.
And the reason that we know that distribution doesn't matter as much as the total is through a couple lines of evidence that I can think of.
So there's Yasuda who compared a three-meal model with a two-meal model.
And the three-meal model had superior effects for muscle gain.
But there is a study that was just published, gosh, within the last month.
it was better from a methodology standpoint because they fed the subjects an abundance of protein.
So Yasuda and colleagues who tested the two versus three, he totaled everybody out at 1.3 grams per kilogram of body weight per day.
That's a total daily protein dose.
And so we know now that that's a suboptimal total if you want to push muscle growth.
So for pushing muscle growth, we know you should be at 1.6 grams.
per kilogram of body weight, which translates to 0.7 grams per pound of body weight.
That's where you really want to be if you want to maximize muscular adaptations to resistance
training, like muscle size and strength gains.
So, this latest study, they compared three protein feedings versus five protein feedings.
and the totals of protein intake in the day, in both groups, were around a gram per pound.
So right around a 2.2-ish grams per kilogram of body weight.
So we have the optimized daily total, and we're testing three versus five protein feedings.
We're doing progressive resistance training.
And this is the key.
This happened in resistance trained subjects.
There were no significant differences in muscle size and strength.
between the three protein feedings a day versus five protein feedings a day.
And this is the best design study to date on the topic.
Because when I grew up and read stuff about gaining muscle, it said you had to have like five or six meals a day.
It said that's what bodybuilders do.
Whenever we talk about any kind of physical goal, any sort of fitness goal, we have to address two main things.
who's the population and what goal are we talking about?
And maybe a third thing we need to address is what is at stake?
So what level are we talking about?
So population, goal, what level?
What's at stake?
So with bodybuilders at elite levels, it is, most of them consume five, six meals a day.
Some of them do like even seven or eight in the off-season.
And these are individuals who are enhanced.
And so their ceiling for muscle growth and their rates of muscle growth are significantly
higher than people who are, in quotes, natural.
And the amount of food that these individuals can process and use productively is significantly
more.
And so with that population, I can see it being
pretty standard for them to be consuming at least five, six meals a day.
Since they tend to have, since they tend to be eating double the amount of the average person.
And so, but the interesting thing that happens is that the guidelines from this very sort of
fringe elite population, that's what trickles down into the general public.
And then they're stuck thinking, okay, maybe I need to eat every 2.5 hours or some such.
but yeah with the with the general population and even um recreational athletes and people who are
hobbyists and and stuff you really the impact of actual protein distribution is
inconsequential compared to the total so how much protein should i be eating a day because
i think you disagree with the recommended daily sort of allowance that they suggest we eat as a
I think I'm 90 kilograms.
Mm-hmm.
How much protein should I be eating to gain muscle, lean muscle mass?
Okay.
So we're going to apply you to the population and the goal and the stakes questions.
So what would you say your training status is?
You're obviously not a beginner.
So you're somewhere between intermediate and advanced.
Mm-hmm.
Right?
Yeah.
So what is your goal?
Just to reduce fat and gain muscle.
Okay.
Familiar story, I'm sure.
Okay.
The way that I do it is I go 1.6 to 2.2 grams per kilogram of target body weight or goal body weight.
So that's the range that you would be looking at.
Now, with you in particular, I would go more towards the upper end.
because you mentioned that you part of your goal is to decrease body fat to a to a minor degree
but you're still you're pushing the envelope because you're already lean so there's an
interesting thing about high balling protein that facilitates that reduction in body fat
if i have a lot of protein it helps to reduce body fat yeah yeah it does and the way
that we know this is because there have been several studies now, four trials, one case study
by Joey Antonio and colleagues, and they examined the effect of very high protein intakes
anywhere from about 3.3, all the way to 4.4 grams per kilogram of body weight. Roughly, gosh,
you know, a gram and a half to 2 grams per pound.
Is that because you're eating less carbohydrates? You're sort of substituting it for something else, essentially, in terms of you feeling hungry. So if I'm having 3.3 grams of protein, I'm probably not going to be having something else, which is more fatty. Yeah, that's right. That's right. So this particular line of research was done on people who were resistance training, and it was done in free living conditions. And they just gave them the assignment to essentially increase.
their protein intake by 50% and literally add 80 to 100 grams of protein on top of their existing
habitual dietary intakes. So what would you say to me then? You'd say push even higher
in terms of grams per kilogram of body weight. What is your goal body weight? I don't actually
have a goal body weight, to be honest. I just have more of a goal in terms of like strength.
How about this? Were you ever in the shape that you are wanting to be in?
Yeah.
And what was your body weight at that time?
I was around 90. I think I was just a little bit below 90 kilograms. So I think I was about 88.
Okay. So you know what? Let's take 90.
Yeah.
And multiply that by 2.2.
90 times 2.2.
There's your protein target.
198 grams of protein a day.
So if a protein shake gives me 20 grams of protein,
I need to have basically 10 gram, 10 protein shakes a day.
That seems like a lot of protein.
That is a lot of protein.
I would give a little caveat here.
You can probably achieve your goal with 1.6 grams per kilogram of body weight.
So that would be the lower end.
So multiply 90 by 1.6.
And that's where you can start.
So if that 198 number seems kind of far-fetched or even a little bit like,
hmm, how would I even achieve that, then start off at the lower end.
Do women have a different prescription in this regard?
Is there a different approach if you're a woman?
Yeah, if you're a woman, you would almost always start at the low end
because women have a higher proportion of body fat.
And by default, they have a lower proportion of lean mass.
So with women, it would almost always be, all right, let's.
start at 1.6 grams per kilogram of target body weight and see how you do with that.
And we can always ratchet it up if needed.
Is there any such harm in eating too much protein?
It's rare.
You would have to have a pre-existing chronic kidney disease and then it's generally not a good thing to be high-balling the protein.
But even people with chronic kidney disease have to realize the trade-off that they're
they're incurring with a low protein diet and older age, sarcopenia and stuff.
How are they going to mitigate that?
But for the general healthy population, there have been many studies that have rolled out
looking at effects on kidney function, liver function, bone health.
And there is virtually zero threat to those organ systems that you would think might
be threatened by a high protein intake.
So the human organism, perfectly well equipped to metabolize and handle high protein amounts.
And not all protein is equal, I guess, because you've got these animal proteins and then plant proteins that come from things like eggs and so on.
What is the best type of protein do you think? Is there such a thing?
I think that the best thing you can do is get a mix of different types of protein.
it is true that gram for gram
generally speaking animal proteins are more in quotes anabolic
than plant proteins meaning that they stimulate a greater
growth response at the muscle level so they stimulate muscle protein synthesis
more potently than plant proteins
and there are there's maybe one exception to that that we know of which is
micoprotein, which is a fungus-based protein, that actually outperformed milk protein for
stimulating muscle protein synthesis. So there's interesting exceptions like that. But generally
speaking, animal proteins are better for muscle protein synthesis than plant proteins. Now,
with that said, Stephen, once you consume a certain amount of total daily protein, then it doesn't
appear to matter how much of your protein is animal-based versus how much your protein is plant-based
if we're looking at things like muscle size and strength gain because this has been actually
compared in controlled interventions where vegan group has been compared with an omnivore group
and total daily protein was optimized at 1.6 grams per kilogram of body weight per day or
0.7 grams per pound in both groups. Progressive resistance training for 12 weeks. No significant
differences between groups in muscle size and strength gain, whether it was an omnivorous protein intake
or whether it was a plant-based protein intake. And we have two studies showing that now.
You must have so many moments where you're working with someone through your career who's got a goal
and he feels like they just can't accomplish it, where you find yourself saying the same thing over and over again
to people about how to lose fat or to gain muscle mass.
Is that same thing just to have more protein?
It's a common thing with the general population, with the lay public.
My protein target is at least 160 grams a day.
So I just make sure that I have four meals with at least 40 grams of protein per day.
And it's so easy to do.
It's incredibly easy to do because two of my meals per day are just real whole foods.
And then two of my meals per day, two to three, are protein smoothies.
And so it is just so incredibly easy for me to get my protein intake through like two scoops of protein.
Bam, that's almost 50 grams of protein right there.
So you have two of those a day.
I've got more than half my protein covered.
But if I have all of my protein in one meal,
is that going to impact my ability to gain muscle or lose fat if I have it all in one meal,
if I just have like one massive protein shake, if I put like five scoops?
Now, if you were telling me, hey, Alan, I want a place really good in the Nationals this year.
The NPC Nationals, classic physique or, you know, classic bodybuilding,
or just any one of the physique divisions, I would say, you know, you are not going to want
try to get all your protein in a single meal because what we want to do is we want to maximize
the number of microanabolic events in the course of the day. We want to maximize the amount of
times you maximally stimulate muscle protein synthesis in the course of the day. And just from a pragmatic
standpoint, you could probably do that at least three or four times. And if you're able to do that
three or four times in the day versus once with that one big banger of a meal, then you might actually
over time gain more muscle than you would have. And this could make the difference between placings
at the end of the prep period. So, but as somebody in the general population, theoretically,
you could. I am going to challenge you to do something here. I asked my audience about weight loss
and ask them for their 15 most popular questions that are currently unanswered for them about weight loss.
The first one was, how do I lose weight fast?
Ha!
So essentially you can engage what could be classified as a protein sparing modified fast.
You're basically crash dieting.
I don't love doing that, though, honestly.
Listen, I've got a wedding.
I need to lose weight fast. How do I lose weight fast?
Losing weight fast. So you would basically do an aggressive caloric deficit.
So anywhere, I would say, 20% below your maintenance needs, 20 to possibly 40, depending on the individual, percent below your maintenance needs.
And then keep the protein high.
And this is going to default you to relatively low carbohydrate.
relatively low fat and just train regularly.
Don't hurt yourself.
Protein high, you said.
Yeah, protein high.
And calories-wise, so for example, if you maintain that,
we'll just take a round number, 2,000 calories.
So you would just lop off about a third of that and then just go.
And see if you can maintain your fat loss.
while maintaining strength levels relatively.
It's almost inevitable to crash diet
and lose some strength in the process.
But, I mean, we're talking about
something that's not an optimal process.
But, yeah, that's the game.
Basically, aggressive caloric deficit,
key protein very high.
And then you just go,
and the deficit could be anywhere from 500 to 1,000-ish calories
below what you normally take in.
The second one is, why do I regain weight after stopping a Zempeg Wagovi, etc?
All right, so those GLP1RAs, the GLP1 receptor agonist drugs like Wagovi,
they have at least three different mechanisms that all converge towards almost nullifying your hunger and your appetite.
response. And so when you cut out the drug, then your normal appetite comes back. And an unfortunate
reality for a lot of GLP1 users when they get off the drug is they just don't have the habits
and they don't have the skills necessarily to maintain their weight loss. And of course,
once again, they're fighting their appetite. So I would say perhaps try a weaning off process.
instead of just a jumping off process, a weaning off process where you are reinforcing
countermeasures to overeating, where you are reinforcing good training habits and good dietary
habits, and where you're also progressively learning how to live with and deal with
sensations of hunger between meals and just train those habits in.
and it can be done.
I'm not one of the people in the camp who says it's impossible to get off of weight loss drug successfully.
So number three, again, is my metabolism damaged after dieting?
And they're asking a question here about something called adaptive thermogenesis.
Yeah.
Okay.
So this is not really a short shot here.
Okay.
So the process of metabolic adaptation is kind of complex.
And it happens in both directions, whether you try to.
gain weight or whether you try to lose weight. So earlier we talked about an increase in non-exercise
activity thermogenesis or NEET, an increase in neat in response to an increase in calories.
So that occurs. And across studies, I gave an example that showed a 336 calorie increase in
neat when a thousand calories were stacked on top of people's maintenance. But there are other
studies where the caloric increase was not quite that aggressive. So on average,
increases in neat or non-exercise activity thermogenesis are about 2 to 300 calories. So you
increase your energy expenditure about 2 to 300 calories if you're overeating. Yeah. So your body
will start to twitch more and move more burning more non-active calories when you're overeating,
yeah? So that's an adaptation. That's the adaptation. That's the adapt.
in the caloric surplus side.
So in the caloric deficit side,
it's just the opposite thing,
just the mirror of it.
So people decrease their non-exercise activity thermogenesis,
or their neat.
They decrease it on average like two to three-ish hundred calories
as a result of dieting.
So this is part of a metabolic adaptation that occurs with dieting.
Is this why people don't think,
the calories in calories out system is working for them sometimes because they don't realize
that if they're in a calorie deficit sometimes, they are subconsciously moving around less,
which means that they're burning less calories. So actually they're not in a calorie deficit.
Yes, that's correct. So with the dieting side of things, which is much more of a public health
issue, weight loss is much more of a necessity than the weight gain. It's,
It's tougher for most people.
Because in addition to the decrease in non-exercise activity,
that'll cost people 2 to 300-ish calories that they're no longer burning at the end of the dieting cycle.
Then you've got what's called adaptive thermo-reduction.
Okay, so you mentioned adaptive thermogenesis.
Technically, there's non-shivering adaptive thermogenesis,
and there's shivering adaptive thermogenesis.
but that all has to do with increases in energy expenditure in response to cold environments.
So, technically, that's what adaptive thermogenesis is.
It's an increase in energy expenditure.
When people diet, there's something called adaptive thermo reduction.
And that is a, part of it is a decrease in non-exercise activity thermogenesis.
You're basically saying that the body changes when we're in a calorie deficit, it stops doing as much.
Yes, that's the activity part.
Yeah.
But then there's also the metabolic part.
So we've got a decrease in non-exercise activity.
Yeah.
Then we have adaptive thermo reduction, which has to do with a metabolic component
that has to do with the sympathetic nervous system and also potentially thyroid output as well.
So there's this metabolic change that goes on, and there's behavioral or activity change that goes on.
So when people say I've got a slow metabolism, they might be telling the truth.
When people say I have a slow metabolism, what's usually happening is they have a pretty massive drop in neat or non-exercise activity to the order of 2 to 300 calories.
Now, adaptive thermo reduction is another 50 to 100 calories.
Okay.
So we're looking at in the neighborhood of like possibly 3, 400 calories.
that they're no longer burning as a result of the dieting process.
Now, if you take somebody with clinically diagnosed hypothyroidism,
then their resting metabolic rate could be 7 to 10% lower than somebody without a thyroid
issue.
So you add another 1 to 200 calories less burned over here,
then you have the potential for 5 to 600 calories of energy expenditure that this person
is challenged with at the end of their dieting cycle. So I guess it is kind of true in a way
that people understand it, that if you overeat your metabolism, as far as they understand
what their metabolism is, is increasing. And if you under eat, then your metabolism is
slowing down. Yes, but I have to emphasize the major component that slows down is your non-exercise
activity. You're not moving around as much. Yes. The other component
like adaptive thermo reduction and potential thyroid issues,
that is the minor component.
The major component is a drop in fidgeting,
a slowing of the rate that you walk around,
and increase in the amount you sit around.
And you can control that?
Yes.
It's hard to put a finger on it.
But as long as you know that stuff goes down,
I'll give you an example of physique competitors.
They are, as they're cutting phase progresses,
they're literally lying around in between their cardio sessions and their resistance strain
sessions and their Tupperware meal sessions.
They're no longer tapping their heads, you know, tapping their fingers and bobbing their heads
and they're no longer have a pep in their step.
They're no longer doing non-exercise activities, basically.
Question four.
What diet actually works best for long-term weight loss?
Keto, low-fat, Mediterranean, intermittent fasting, and you've got to give me a
answer, yeah.
I'll say it in one sentence.
The diet with enough protein, enough total calories,
that is comprised predominantly of healthy food choices,
that fits the individual's personal preferences and tolerances.
How do I lose belly fat specifically?
Can you target the belly?
Targeting belly fat specifically is a matter of targeting total body fat.
You can't necessarily spot reduce the belly fat.
Now, if we go a layer deeper, it is possible for certain diets to be more conducive to
preventing visceral fat gain or maybe even accelerating visceral fat loss.
Visceral fat is the fat within the abdominal.
cavity around the organs.
And so it is possible for certain diets to be more conducive to reductions in visceral
fat.
And that would be diets that have a lower proportion of saturated fat.
What's an example of a saturated fat food?
Faddy land animal meats.
So land animal fats are going to be your saturated fats that are more conducive to visceral
fat gains.
So if you were to switch out, let's say, fatty cuts of meat, just trim that fat out.
And if you replaced it with something like avocado nuts, olive oil, seeds.
What you just listened to was a most replayed moment from a previous episode.
If you want to listen to that full episode, I've linked it down below.
Check the description.
Thank you.
One of the most successful conversations we've had this year on the show was with a guy
called Chris Kona who talks about ways to make money on the side.
And it got me thinking because our show sponsor is Airbnb, a brand I love, I've used all over the world for the last decade or so.
And this is an unbelievable, untapped opportunity to make some money on the side if you currently are a homeowner.
Let me explain. So many of us go travelling, we go on holiday to see in-laws or to go on ski trips or whatever it might be.
And our home sits there, usually actually costing us money because of bills.
What most people don't realize is that you can put that house on Airbnb very simply and very easily.
If this sounds interesting to you and you currently don't list your property when you go away,
your home might be worth more than you think.
Find out how much at Airbnb.ca.combe.com slash host. That's Airbnb.combe.com slash host.
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