The Dylan Gemelli Podcast - Episode #40 Featuring Robby Sansom, CEO and Co Founder of Force of Nature Meats! The impact of Animal Protein, Grass Fed Vs. Grain Fed, The TRUTH abo...
Episode Date: July 28, 2025Episode #40 Featuring Robby Sansom, CEO and Co Founder of Force of Nature Meats! This interview takes a deep dive into how proper care and production of meats should be done!! Get an inside look into ...one of the most well known and popular brands of Grass Feed Beef, Force of Nature goes about business!! CEO Robby Sansom discusses the impact of Animal Protein, the differences between grass fed and grain fed, the TRUTH about chicken production, Navigating through different food claims, an understanding of many different types of exotic meats, why ancestral blends are so healthy and what exactly they are, overcoming the many challenges in the food industry and so much more!! Dylan has made discussing animal protein and their importance a top priority and he went out to get the very best to bring this discussion to everyone!! DO NOT MISS THIS EPISODE! CHECK OUT Force of Nature Meats Homepage: https://forceofnature.com/?srsltid=AfmBOoo6-xuHRab8pRWMTJDmtd86GRJr_2du024G7z54DjU9XbSWEThW Follow Force of Nature on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/forceofnaturemeats/ Buy Force of Nature at Whole Foods: https://www.wholefoodsmarket.com/products/brands/force-of-nature-meats ______________________________________________________________________ Today's episode is sponsored by Apollo Neuro! Get the Apollo Neuro for $90 OFF!! USE CODE GEMELLI to save https://apolloneuro.com/gemelli _______________________________________________________________________________ To PURCHASE MITOPURE visit Dylan's landing page and use code DYLAN to save 20% OFF!! https://shop.timeline.com/DYLAN TONUM supplements for the MIND AND BODY! USE CODE "DYLAN" to save!! https://www.tonum.com/DYLAN THE BREAKTHROUGH MIMIO HEALTH FASTING MIMETIC SUPPLEMENT! 20% OFF with code Gemelli https://mimiohealth.sjv.io/c/6588260/3323599/30611 TRULY Increase Your NAD LEVELS with WONDERFEEL NMN: https://getwonderfeel.com/?utm_source=DylanGemelli&utm_medium=podcast MESCREEN: The world's first and only at home mitochondrial efficiency test Save $100 with CODE DYLAN https://mescreen.com/cart/47561239626013:1?discount=&ref=DYLAN HIRE DYLAN ON THE MINNECT APP HERE: expert.minnect.com/@DylanGemelli Follow Dylan on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter and Tiktok @dylangemelli and PLEASE SUBSCRIBE and leave reviews!! MAKE SURE TO GO TO DYLAN'S YOUTUBE CHANNEL for MORE video content!! https://www.youtube.com/@DylanGemelliBiohacking Email Dylan for booking, collaborations and/or to apply for the Dylan Gemelli Podcast DylanGemelli@gmail.com Visit Dylan's Homepage https://dylangemelli.com
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discount. Take control over your health today with Apollo Neuro. All right everybody, welcome back to
Dylan Jameli podcast. Now, today I have a very, very special guest who's had a major impact on my
overall life and well-being. And so I'm beyond excited to bring him in front of you. My friends,
this is the CEO owner and founder of Force of Nature Meets. This is Robbie Sandsom. Robbie,
thanks for joining me, man. I appreciate your time today. Thanks, Dylan. Appreciate you having me on.
Absolutely. I'm going to go really, really briefly just into how I found you and
the impact you've had on me, and then I'm going to let you take over and just explain everything.
And so basically, I've kind of, as I explain to you, Robbie, I've struggled with my eating most
of my life, which is kind of wild considering I'm a nutritionist and an athlete.
And I've basically been starving myself for 15 years going against the grain on everything I
teach people to do, but fighting with this low fat and scared of eating certain foods and
kind of succumbing to things that I don't even believe in. And finally, I went into my
one day and said, I'm done with this. I'm just going to try this and do what I teach and what I know.
And so I immediately, you know, went to adding tons of healthy fats into my diet. And I said,
you know what I'm going to start eating meat that I haven't eaten ground beef in 15 years?
And long story short, I started with just like grass fed ground beef. And then I found your products
at Whole Foods. Because my wife, it said, well, why don't you try some different stuff now?
Try some bison or try something else. And that's when I found you.
when I was looking for different types of meats.
And now at this point, I'm eating 110 more crams of fat than I was prior
and probably a thousand more calories.
And I haven't been this cut up, shredded, or felt so good since my 20s and my blood markers
and everything that you would think would be so bad.
You're eating this, you know, higher fats, desaturated fats and all of this animal proteins.
And what I found is exactly what I already knew is how important they were.
and going with your products and seeing how well that you do them and how well they taste and that
you market them and that you show your care and how you go about it. I had never had elk, venison,
bison, or anything of the sort my entire life, not once. Never. Now I eat it daily. I eat half a pound
to three quarters of a pound daily and it's all force of nature. And that's why I sought you guys out
to interview you and find you so I could talk about it and get your story and everything. So first,
thank you because it's essentially saved my life finding your product in a sense because it's
drastically improved my health and my just my general state of well-being. And then secondly,
thank you for what you do for everybody because it's very impactful. So I just want to say
that first before we kind of get into you and your company. I appreciate you saying that.
I mean, obviously it's it's encouraging to hear a testimonial where we're making a difference.
You know, it's important for us. You know, the big part of the reason we're doing this is to improve
the lives and well-being of people and consumers.
And we'll probably get into it.
But there's a lot of folks out there that are being underserved and misled by the industry.
And then some of the peripheral industries that have created some messaging and herded people down a path that has led them astray.
And you're not alone, which is why I'm grateful for you kind of coming out and not only reaching out to us, but telling your story.
I mean, obviously, you know, there's been a war on animal proteins and we could get in.
into why that might be and I could tip into conspiracies and a lot of different things,
but it doesn't really matter why. What matters is, you know, if we're eliminating animal
proteins and our diet, then we're eating more calories and more carbohydrates and are winding
up more nutrient deficient in the absence of that most critical, legitimate nature's evolutionary
superfood. And people that are deficient and eating enough meat tend to have a variety of issues
that can be addressed from physical to mental to emotional to, you know, so many other factors
in life. And so I love getting the chance to talk about some of the mids, some of the misnomer,
some of the latest and greatest learnings and really seeing it translate into benefits
that people live and experience in their health and wellness. I couldn't agree more. And I've made
this such a passionate topic of discussion for me to convey to people now. And,
And I mean, I even have gone so far as to switch from regular way isolate to really only having beef protein isolate and beef collagen and things in my general, you know, normal protein routine that I do on top of my regular foods and supplementation.
So I am a massive, massive believer in all of this.
And so we're going to have a damn good conversation today about all of this.
Did you tell me that at one point you were on the vegetarian plan or did I?
You know, it would appear that way because I didn't eat meat.
for so long. It's not like I was, you know, don't want meat or anything. I'd have chicken here and there,
but I was so consumed by just eating vegetables and oatmeal and eggs. And like I got into this,
you know how it's hard once you get into a habit and couldn't break it. And in my head was like,
oh, if I eat this, I'm going to gain all this way to look bad or be unhealthy and all of this.
But the thing was is I was teaching my clients the polar opposite. So it just doesn't make any sense.
You know. Wow, there's that there's that ingrained conditioning just based off of living in this society with what, with what gets beaten into us that I think, yeah, we'll get into some of that and how we can hopefully break some folks out of the pattern and be better, be better champions for themselves.
You know how scared I was like when I was like, okay, I'm just going to have like cooking butter now and, you know, good grass fed butter and I'm going to, you know, have these fats every day. And I was eating like 15 grams of fat a day. And I'm up to about 125 now.
and I had net felt this good, and I don't know how long,
because in my 20s I was partying,
so I can't even say I felt this good at my 20s.
You know, like, it's amazing.
So let's get into first a little bit about your backstory with the company
and just kind of what you even did before you started the company
and why you decided to go the route that you've gone.
Yeah, well, my co-founders and force of nature, Katie and Taylor,
you know, the three of us initially joined forces, you know,
prior to this one with a company called Epic Provisions.
And the roots of that company were actually,
that started as a vegan energy bar.
And that story arc probably isn't very different from what we were just kind of touching on with yours, right?
I mean, certainly back in the early 2000s and early teens,
it was, hey, like, there's a conversation that's amplifying and crescendoing in the market that says,
you know, animals are bad and vegan and vegetarian diets are good.
and if you want to live a healthy life yourself and you want to feel good about the impact
you're having on the environment and for the welfare of animals and other creatures on the earth,
there's only one answer.
And that's vegan and vegetarianism.
And any animal livestock production is evil and awful in every imaginable way.
And you get this inflated set of dogmatic justifications for those arguments,
which are, you know, largely disproven, debunked.
And now I consider the mids that we're having to address.
But look, those are not the wrong reasons to try to pursue in what you do and consume.
It's important that you have values.
I agree that we want to eat healthy and be healthy and live healthy and have a positive impact on the world around us for our choices,
especially on food producing communities, especially on the animals and the other creatures that exist on the planet,
especially on the wild places that we love and cherish and want to see thrive for future generations,
absolutely.
And so that same ethos and idealism translated into what became epic when those realities
kind of collided and we recognize that that diet and those programs and those offerings
weren't serving our health like we had intended, weren't delivering on the promises
for the environment and welfare.
That journey was a long and interesting one, which eventually led to, you know, that company,
we sold it and then we took that same mission and set of values and ideals and evolved it into
force of nature or we could impact animal agriculture and make those necessary improvements more
broadly. I think a different way of looking at and saying that is there was a period of time
where plant-based agriculture was given a free pass. An animal agriculture, the worst example
of animal agriculture was correctly identified as challenging and problematic and in need of
change. But it was also incorrect to assign that reality to all of animal agriculture. And I think
what we're doing in the force of nature is saying agriculture is broken. Plant-based agriculture in
its worst instance, which is the predominant instance, is just as bad as the worst case of animal
agriculture, which is the most predominant instance. And we need to create transparency and awareness
into both of those things, educate consumers so they can be better advocates for themselves, and then
offer up paths and products that better deliver on what consumers are looking for and introduce
solutions. And we always say replacing a vicious system with a virtuous one. So that's kind of a
little bit of how we got from where we were to where we're going today. So you have some pretty
nice product selection. Kind of talk about why you picked the certain products that you have
and if you have had any struggles like with your shipping or because I know they're frozen and how you go about it and how you've kind of grown from where you're talking about where you started to now where you've become because it, you know, I see it in many, many places now.
And like that like the good health food stores here where I live, it's fresh time, but I believe it's probably sprouts and other locations and then obviously whole foods.
And so how was that like a challenge for you to get into those places and, you know, what's it been like the journey here?
It's a great question.
You know, again, this is the extension of something we've been working on.
We had been working on for over a decade prior to starting this company.
And I think one of the realizations that we had was, or a few of the realizations that we had, actually,
were that we could build these systems.
We could scale impact on the front line on the land.
But we could create products that was remarkable and could deliver on all the things consumers were already looking for.
but consumers weren't keyed in.
They weren't aware.
They didn't know what was going on,
how they were being deceived and fooled,
and what better options might be out there.
So we were like, okay, we got to create a company
that we can actually scale demand.
And by doing it simply by creating, like I said,
awareness of these key issues
and then access to an alternative
that better delivers on what consumers are already looking for.
Now, how do you do that from ground zero
when you're entering into a commodity category
with some massive players that is at the intersection of big food, big ag, big chemical, big pharma,
big petroleum, and big healthcare.
Those are not small complexes with a passive interest in fighting for maintaining status quo.
They are aggressively out there trying to continue to perpetuate the incentives that improve
their financial outcomes at the expense of so many other stakeholders from human health to
the impact on land of the future and so on and so forth.
So for us, there was, you know, kind of a phased strategy.
Yes, we started by introducing things that were both incremental to the category.
So you see some of the exotics that you noted.
You see some of the innovative and novel and disruptive things we did by incorporating
organ meats into the ground meat product and our and what we would call our ancestral blends.
We didn't just do those things because they're cool and good for you.
and, you know, the year we launched the company was the first year that the generation being born
had a shorter life expectancy than their parents. That was certainly part of it, but we also knew
that in a category that had long thrived on the commodity mindset, which is price above all else
at the expense of all else. And in that race to the bottom, you pursue cheapness by trading off
value. So we knew we had to put something on the shelf at a price point that would work.
so we could get an initial foothold for the series of moves that we needed it to make to follow.
If all we did was launch with the most expensive beef on the shelf, we would never get a start.
We never cracked that first door, but by putting products in the market that didn't necessarily have a cheapness mindset or that didn't necessarily exist, it was incremental, it was new.
We could get a little bit of space so that we could prove that consumers cared about this stuff, that there was opportunity and interest.
and we could establish the brand, the reputation,
create some loyal consumers,
and then begin to introduce more things outside of the freezer section,
into the fresh section where there's less shelf life
and a little more challenge from an operating perspective,
more traditional proteins where we can really disrupt supply chains
and drive change and mission at scale.
And you do these things phased over time
where we're biting off pieces in a methodical way
to build towards a company that can ultimately have a massive impact directly
and more importantly indirectly.
I mean, we're talking about meat industry.
This is multiples of hundreds of billions of dollars.
It's a massive industry.
And if we can impact one percent of it, is the ripple effect that we could impact 10% of it?
I hope so.
You know, I want to be a part of something that drives change and meaningful, positive outcomes
far beyond our own size and scale and creates a rising tide that lifts all boats for other good actors,
whether they be farmers or ranchers or brands that are out there trying to justify doing
things differently and better in the force of headwinds that are maintained by these large
industry incumbents, again, trying to hold us all down. I love it, man. I absolutely love it.
Thanks for the explanation. Will you quickly tell everybody, because I didn't notice at first when I first
started, and I've switched completely all to the ancestral now. So everything I have is ancestral
because of the added benefits there. Would you just kind of tell people what that means and what's in
there that's extra that differentiates it just from the regular, like regular. Regular.
venison or ancestral venison, regular bison versus ancestral bison. What's the difference? And why,
why is it such a good option? So just, you know, to clarifying that distinction, we have ground beef,
we have ground bison, we have ground chicken, ground, you know, we have a lot of ground meats. These are
common popular. They're necessarily common because you get more ground, you know, trim that turns into
ground products and any other cut off the animal. So you have to move a lot of ground items. That's why
we create burgers and sausage and all these different things. And that's from me.
We also created what we call our ancestral blend line.
We coined the term ancestral blend.
It's not we were the first people to incorporate organs in,
but we were the first people to brand it in a comfortable way
and mainstream it at scale.
And so we take generally kind of the natural fall off of the animal,
meaning about as much heart and about as much liver as you'll get from an animal,
we incorporate into about that much ground meat on the animal.
And so you end up with about, you know, between,
depending on the protein line, somewhere between 5 and 10 percent,
organ meats incorporated into the packaged product.
Now, there's a few reasons for that one.
There's, you know, you only get 10 or 20 pounds of organs for every, you know,
two or three hundred pounds of ground meat.
And also there's the, you know, the fact that the modern palate isn't one that
celebrates organ meats or at least is intimidated by them, even if they would otherwise like them.
We've lost touch with that evolutionary reality that both ourselves and our animal ancestors
would have first sought these cuts because they're the most nutrient dense and valuable.
That's why we call it our ancestral blend because our ancestors.
new, this fundamental truth.
And so what do you get?
Well, you get a product that consumers are familiar with
that tastes just like what they've always known
and can be used in every familiar way from a cooking perspective.
You can treat this ground meat, just like any other ground meat,
but it has the added benefit and boost of these organs in it,
which are superfoods.
They are massively dense.
And those priority micronutrients of need like iron, zinc, folate,
vitamin A, calcium, B12.
I mean, there's just a laundry list of things where they're the most dense.
I mean, it takes like 11 calories of liver to deliver on what a full pound of chicken
or 1100 calories of chicken would take to deliver on on some of those that are critical nutrients.
So a little bit, as we have incorporated into these blends, goes a very long way.
And net net as a, from a palate and eating experience perspective, you won't really know the difference.
So yeah, I'm like you.
I eat a lot of the ancestral blends because like why would I not take the boost on all that added benefit?
There's no downside.
You know, if you would have told me like a year ago, I would have been eating like organs like liver, heart and things like that,
I would have looked at you like you had lost your mind.
And I'm telling you when I was, I remember going in there one day and I hadn't really paid attention.
And I said, what is that?
And I looked and I saw it.
And I said liver and heart.
And I was like in the mode where I'm just like.
going to try anything and everything.
And so I had it and I was like, I couldn't believe how great it tasted.
So you know what I did?
Then I made one of my meals and I said, you know what?
I'm going to cook the regular one first and I'm going to cook the ancestral one after
and see which one I like better or if they're the same, any difference whatsoever.
And I'll be honest with you.
I don't know if it's because I started eating the ancestral one or not, but I preferred that
one over the regular one all day.
And now I only buy the ancestral one generally.
I bought the regular venison when it had a nice sale.
other day, but generally speaking, I actually think it tastes better.
Just me personally.
And like you said, for that added boost, I'm taking that all day long, realizing and
understanding what you get from it.
So it doesn't intimidate me.
I shouldn't intimidate anybody.
I would at least say try it.
You know, I think if you have a refined palate, you may be able to know it.
But when we rolled it out, my litmus test was I made the hamburgers for, you know,
my five to nine year old nieces and nephews and lightly seasoned the hamburgers with
salt and pepper and then told them, oh, no, I forgot.
all of the condiments. So here's a hamburger steak. What do you think? And didn't tell them there was
organs in it. And they were like, oh, this is really good. We like it. And so I knew, you know, the kids would
eat it. It was the right blend. And then, you know, and again, kind of going back to the, you know,
some of the benefits, you know, we're on the cusp of doing tons of nutritional research. And so learning
more about, you know, not just the macros and micros, but all of the phytonutrients and the
crotenoids and polyphenols and all on these other elements and the co-cutems and things that
you'll get in increased levels from these organ meats. But a guy named Ty Beal did a study called
Priority Micronutrients. I kind of listed off what some of those were. But the reality is
most of the world, including the developed world, is deficient in those micronutrients. And if you
look at the foods that are most densely packed with those specific nutrients of need,
It takes 11 grams of liver to get a third of the daily allowance versus 1,100 grams of
calories of chicken.
It would take 1,800 calories of nuts, 2,400 calories of refined grains.
Even some of the other things that we consider, like, healthy, like quinoa, still 800 calories.
So, I mean, it is red meat.
It is organs, and it is bivalves that are packed with these bivalves, like oysters,
mussels, and cams.
These are the absolute superfoods.
Even eggs are on that list, you know.
it takes 281 calories of eggs versus 275 calories of just beef.
So, you know, again, like, that's a dense superfood, but, you know, nothing compares
to like liver, heart, spleen, these organs.
And so if we can incorporate those in, again, it only takes a small dose.
It's such a massive benefit to consumers.
So we're really proud to be doing that and rolling not just those.
We are talking about, like, roughly one pound ground meat bricks that are branded in the store,
but we're putting ancestral blends into other products.
well like sausages and some other really cool stuff coming out.
We actually have a line of meatballs that's already out.
So for the parents that are convenience-minded and you want something that you can just,
you know, take out of the freezer and heat up in a couple minutes and serve to your kids and make your kids happy.
You know, again, this is part of the creating awareness and access.
We've got to make it easy for consumers to be able to action and, you know, supporting a better system
and better serving themselves and their goals and wellness.
Would you talk about, because, you know, this is something.
where some of us like in that are that just know might take it for granted but a lot of people
don't know what is the difference between grass fed and grain fed and why is grass fed so like
popular or kind of pushed in the health space so much more a lot of people don't they'll take the
option they'll go all just take the cheaper one not really understanding the difference can you just
touch on the main difference there and why grass fed is so superior to the like grain fed or other
way that the cows are raised and fed. Yeah, I mean, this is, you know, getting into conversations
around claims and standards and regulatory and, you know, all of these things is, it can be
really complex and convoluted. I'm hopeful that we'll get into that and be able to, and be able to
demystify and break down some of the misconceptions. But specific to what I would consider to be, I'm
going to answer the question slightly differently than grass fed. And I'm going to say, you know,
the standard that force of nature has for sourcing versus a more conventional system.
You know, because the more conventional system is going to be grain fed and there's going to be a few other considerations.
And then what we're doing is not just 100% grass fed, but it's pasture raise.
There's a bunch of other things that I think consumers kind of commonly bundle together because it's hard.
And we're trying to simplify something that's complex and in doing so that some things are lost.
So when you look at, you know, where typically meat is coming from, and again, it varies by chickens.
versus pork versus beef.
We were looking at largely industrialized systems.
You know, back into the turn of the last century with the Green Revolution,
we were trying to look at how do we create more food, more abundance, and do it as cheap
as possible, not recognizing, which we now have the benefit of 75 years later, looking back,
what are all the tradeoffs that we're going to make and the externalities and the decline
and so many important components?
So we succeeded at industrializing animal production, treating chickens like,
widgets and the same thing with pork and cows and trying to control and dominate our will
onto these things to get them to express, you know, in the case of chicken, very large breasts
and white feathers, in the case of beef making them docile and produce a lot of intermuscular
fat, which mind you, is a sign of chronic disease. And ultimately to get really big, really
fast on really cheap diets of corn and soy, which we overproduce and sell into the market at less
than the cost of production very often because we have a farm bill that supports our capacity to do
that. So all in all, we've geared everything towards some of those attributes. And the, and the result is,
you know, sick, sedentary, unhealthy animals and unhealthy environments becoming the foundation of our
food system. And when you look at what that actually conveys, you know, we can talk about the
health consequences. We can talk about the environmental consequences. We can talk about the welfare
consequences. And they're, they're obviously awful. There's so many other.
other things that are in directly and indirectly spitting off, you know, challenges to our
pollinators and soil and dead zones and oceans and, you know, weather pattern issues, too much
rain leading to flood, not enough rain leading to drought. I mean, there's just a myriad of
global catastrophes taking place because of how and why and what we've done to agriculture to
produce food. Again, when you get down into these systems, you are left with animals that are fed
basically corn and soy, very limited diet. So if you think about like what is convention
health guidance to humans. It's like eat colors, eat a variety. You are what you eat. You,
you know, all of these things that we don't take as even remotely questionable are obvious.
Like we need a lot of different things from a lot of different places to round out a good healthy
diet. Well, cattle aren't getting that. You know, again, they are sick. They are sedentary.
They are oftentimes exhibiting characteristics of chronic disease and comorbidities at the time that
they're going to become our food, you know, not to mention oxidative stress and, you know, all of the
other negative energy and mental and all of the stuff that, you know, would come from being
probably tortured your entire life. Like that is, that's a system that is failing those animals,
making them unhealthy and then creating, you know, taking an unhealthy product and turning it
into food for us. Then you look at, you juxtapose that with the systems that we're supporting,
which I would call the claims that you might see associated with that were 100% grass fed,
pasture raised, regenerative. Again, these are all technical things that individually are probably
short of a desire, but really what we're trying to do is create systems that mirror
nature, animals, being healthy, having a symbiotic relationship with the land, eating the
diets they evolved to eat, having a keystone relationship where they're imparting critical
ecosystem services and part of a healthy, thriving, functioning ecosystem. That being the
foundation of our food system, where you are what you eat, and they could be eating 60, 70 different
varieties of plants and a pasture at any given time of the year, in upcycling all of the positive
nutrient and benefit and good energy from that. A guy named Stefan Van Vleet did a study and showed
that there's 2.3 times more phytonutrients in the meat of pasture raised animals than
unconventional animals. You're getting less oxidative stress. All of those nutrients are passing
through anti-inflammation, anti-cancer, anti-aging. I mean, it's like a new frontier of understanding
nutrition. All of that is coming through in animals that are actually healthy, that are actually
thriving that are actually having positive impacts on a broader constituency and stakeholders around
them. So these are really the two systems that we're comparing when we say, what does one look like
versus the other and the why? Again, healthier for the consumer, healthier for the land,
healthier for the animal, healthier for farmers. And ultimately, as I noted before,
replacing a vicious system with a virtuous one. One is racing us towards a cliff and one is course
correcting where we're actually healing, addressing, and mitigating all of these challenges that we need
to overcome in order to make sure that there's hope and prosperity in the future for all of those
stakeholders. So you're focused so much on all the different aspects of being the healthiest as
possible and the people that are worried about the animals being mistreated and how cruel you guys
take it to the max step to ensure the animals are living a healthy and happy life on top of the way
that you feed them and everything else, correct? Yeah, it's pretty difficult. I mean, our first core
value is feed others as you wish to be fed. Yeah. And we started this as a passion project. So it's
hard for us to leave meat on the bone when it comes to the things that we do and what we pursue to
drive change. We have to recognize we can't let perfection be the enemy of progress. We're not perfect,
but we're trying harder than than most to do things at a real monumental scale. So, you know,
for example, our sourcing process, you know, again, we can juxtapise, juxtapose that with maybe some
well-intentioned alternative. There are a lot of companies or brands out there that look for
ingredients by, they go to, they look for the claims. Is it grass fed? Is it whatever? And then they
collect affidavits. And somebody just signs a piece of paper saying, I do this. And you just hope
they're not crossing their fingers when they send over the affidavit and that you're getting what
you expect. And that's kind of it. That's like, that's largely how the systems operate. For us,
that's the starting point. But we have our own protocol, which lists from fees,
to living conditions, to how the animals are treated, to what they are treated with from a
healthcare perspective, to how long they travel and the logistics and all of the steps along the
way, what is and isn't allowed within our system. And then we go and visit and we meet the people,
we see the animals, we get an understanding of their why. Are they telling us what we want to,
what we want to hear? Or is this an extension of who they are and what they believe in? And it's a
partnership of like-minded and values-appropriate parties. Then we do monthly calls. Then we do
annual reviews and we're trying to figure out where to raise the bar and how we can improve
and what's going on with them and their team and the impact they're having on their community.
So everything we do, we take above and beyond and go a farther.
I mean, look at poultry.
You know, one of the top things that people look for is an antibiotic-free claim in chicken.
And if you look at the USDA, at least 20% of the poultry in the market that's labeled
antibiotic-free contains their antibiotic residue.
And for folks that don't know, antibiotic residue in the meat conveys to you and has some similar form and properties of taking antibiotics.
I mean, if you want to avoid the perpetuate or the overuse of antibiotics in yourself or in the system,
I'll take your benefit of the doubt and I'll take your word for it isn't good enough.
So for us, we send samples from every production run off the labs to confirm there aren't antibiotics and bad actors.
I mean, every step of the way, we're trying to introduce more rigor and more diligence to ensure that not only we're raising the,
and what's happening on the land, but we're raising the bar for consumers and what they're getting
and how they can have trust and faith and confidence that the brand and the products they're
getting from force of nature are the best. Excellent, man. Excellent. Great explanation. I appreciate
the breakdown, and I'm sure a lot of people will as well. Okay, so I want to get into some of the things that
you said you were hoping to get into just some myths and things of that nature. But I do have
another question for you about some of the different options that you have. Like, you know, the more
exotic meats like you said, like elk, for example. My first question is, do those become difficult
to source? And, you know, because it's just not something that you see commonly. I just don't see
elk everywhere. It's not very easy to find. Bison is kind of hit and miss. You see some, but not like a
ton. Are those scarce? Are they hard to find? Are they hard to source? Like, what's the whole drill when it
comes to the more exotic choices that you have? And why the ones that you picked? Great questions. A
handful of reasons. First, I'll start off a brief history lesson. Cows and the domesticated pigs
that we see today and the chickens that we see today aren't necessarily natural creatures. The cow of today,
and it's not dissimilar from dogs. You know, dogs are the descendants of wolves and other wild dogs.
Like, pugs didn't evolve in nature. Hairless cats didn't evolve in nature. These are domesticated animals
that through selective breeding, we've changed the biology and the characteristics of. And that's exactly
what, you know, these East Asian jungle foul that turned into chicken or these European
arix that turned into cows or these pigs, you know, that turned into what we consider
pigs of today. So we bred them for certain, you know, characteristics. Bison were the largest
herd of megafauna since the last ice age on this planet roaming from Mexico to Canada.
And bison are bison. There's some nuance to that, but, you know, they're a wild animal.
They were hunted to near extinction a few hundred years ago and then slowly brought back and
their numbers are somewhere between, you know, 250,000 to half a million animals.
And they're really exclusive to the United States and Canada.
That's their, that's where they always would have ranged.
So they're a pretty interesting and unique in that capacity.
And there is a relatively decent size supply chain built up for them.
I mean, again, nothing compares to to chicken or beef.
But where the, you know, there's nine billion chicken slaughtered every year to about 50 to 60,000 bison or 30,000.
or 32 million or so head of cattle in the U.
And this is all in the U.S.
So, you know, we're talking really small supply chains,
but really, really cool, really cool animals and programs
and in terms of what they, what they mean,
it's the national mammal, what they represent in terms of,
there are human populations that for millennia,
followed herds of bison around,
sustain themselves, or megafauna on all continents,
if you look at Africa and even Europe and Asia and elsewhere.
As far as the wild boar, as an example, those are all truly wild captured largely in Texas.
And it's an invasive species that wreaks havoc on environment and ecosystem.
And around the time, we first introduced that program, the Ag Commissioner in the state of Texas had said, hey, I have an idea.
Wild pigs are a problem.
They cause hundreds of millions of dollars in damage to agriculture crops.
So we're going to mass poison through chemical warfare, the landscape of Texas, by putting this,
blood thinner out called warfarin and hope that we don't have this negative cascade run awry of
animals then eating the the poor i mean it's just like it's just a horrible solution and we're like well
look these these pigs don't deserve to suffer they're a problem maybe we can find a system a
commercial system where we can help mitigate the impact they're having reduce the numbers
and they taste really good and they're really they're actually healthy animals not coming out of
struggling sick systems, but are thriving wild and really tasty. So that was kind of just a really
unique and interesting program. The venison and elk are a little different. Those are farmed
programs, not dissimilar from bison. Bison aren't running wild. These are farmers and ranchers
that are raising these animals and, again, to our standards and to our protocols. And the venison and elk are
no different. We can't actually in the United States go out and catch and sell wild venison and elk
as one might traditionally think. But we can create farming systems for them, not
dissimilar from what is done with bison. And then, you know, when you look at the type of
farming and the practices that have been championed historically and what and where the incentives
lay to cut corners that we don't want to cut, there's not a lot of options for finding those
animals in the U.S. So we actually partner with farms in New Zealand for the for the venison
and elk specifically. And they're doing some really cool things and have built some programs over
the years that make them, you know, one of the best purveyors of elk and venison. And, and, and, and,
the world and it was why we chose them because, you know, first and foremost, I think, putting the
best products in the market and aligning our values with our producers and ultimately serving
consumers, what they're looking for is priority number one. And those are some of the best folks
out there doing it with those two proteins. But again, we're looking at, you know, between wild boar
and venison and elk, we're looking at, you know, less than 10 percent, single digit percentages of
what we do as a business overall, the overwhelming majority of what we do today is beef and bison.
And then, you know, obviously with the recent relaunch of chicken that we're really excited about what that program is doing, that will become a significant part of our business in the future.
He's going to ask you, but you answered what was your top selling or your most popular.
I will tell you this.
Every time I, me and my wife laugh because she'll go, is that your favorite today?
Because when I switch, like I'll have vice and I'll go, man, I think this is my favorite.
And then I'll do the venison.
I will say I think the elk is my favorite.
honestly. I think if I had to pick one, if you said you can only have one of these forever,
that's probably the one that I would go with. There's just something about it. It's just a little
different the way it tastes. But that's personally my favorite one. Do you get feedback from anybody
on like what their favorite exotic may be or is it just kind of everybody's different?
I think everybody's a little different. I also think that we're not part of this big
reductionist commodity homogenized system.
So you're going to get some tarot war, you know, seasonality,
regionality, and we're sourcing beef from hundreds of different farms.
And, you know, some from Australia, but mostly from the United States,
all over the place, all year round.
So you're going to get some variety in there.
And that is like, for some reason, we try to homogenize that out and an animal protein,
but we celebrate it and everything else from wine to whiskey to olive oil,
to vinegar and so on.
I think I love the ancestral bison because.
that's like as historically accurate, honest, and evolutionarily consistent as you're going to get from a protein that was designed through millions of years of evolution to sustain humans.
But I think from like a comparison standpoint, I think, you know, the wild boar and pork that we offer because of these programs is exponentially better than the conventional stuff you get on the shelf.
And the chicken as well, if you taste, you go to the store and you buy whatever version of ground chicken you may have historically bought and you compare it to this.
is there's no comparison.
I mean, the animals, they're healthier, they're older, they're fed a better diet,
they're a better breed, they're living in better conditions, they're living a more natural
lifestyle, all of that imparts into the quality not only of the nutrition, but the flavor.
I mean, it's, look, here's what we know in how and why our palate and taste buds evolved.
Like, things that taste good are generally good for us, unless, of course, they've been engineered
to hack that fundamental reality, you know, like, how you're right?
for processed foods are engineered to short circuit what we evolved to do to understand the
things that are good for us taste good.
But generally, if we can take that malicious behavior out of the equation and we look at
whole foods, the better they taste, the better they are for us.
And I don't think that the items that we're offering there are any exception to that.
I mean, like the nutrition is palpably present in there, empirically in the testing,
and in the experience of the consumer who gets to enjoy them.
Would you do this because it may seem obvious, but it may not to some?
Could you just quickly say, so what is venison, what is boar, what is elk, and what is bison,
and just kind of give an example of what these animals are?
Because like venison's deer, basically, correct?
Yeah, venison is deer.
There's a class of animals that all, you know, technically venison is deer and elk and antelope
and a number of different ruminants that are browsers.
that are, they're called servids, they got hooved.
Anyway, point being, yeah, they're typically what you would think of here
stateside as deer from venison.
Elk, you know, the big horned animals that are the big brothers of venison,
not to be confused with the even bigger brother and the moose.
And then, yeah, wild boar are, you know, effectively domesticated pigs
that are gotten into the wild.
And because there's no natural predators for them,
and because they're incredibly intelligent and incredibly resilient,
and can be nocturnal and have very short gestation periods and are fertile at a very young age.
They've become a major nuisance, not just to industry, as I noted with agriculture, but also to wildlife.
You know, they ground nesting birds and sensitive waterway riparian areas and, you know, devastating habitat and out-competing
native and indigenous animals.
So there's a lot of reasons why they're a challenge.
But again, they're basically domesticated pigs gone wild.
All right.
So I want to talk to you about the chicken real quick.
So I've actually kind of stopped eating chicken because I just found the way that it's fed and produced.
And the more that I've learned, I've been really turned off by it.
And I used to, that was one of the meats that I did actually used to eat a little bit.
But I really have kind of stopped until I saw you guys were coming out with it.
And so it gave me a little bit of new hope.
I learned some things about just verbiages out there like air chilled or organic and how little that actually truly meant in terms of how it was done and made.
Tell me why yours is different and why it's so much factually superior than the way that it's generally sold.
What is your methodology on how you produce it and why is it different than something that we generally see?
Because I know it's more expensive the way that you're doing it.
I have no doubt that the care.
It's quite getting more expensive.
Yeah.
I always say that, you know, just for reference, today we eat about 86% of the red meat that we, you know, that we did a generation and a half ago.
We've actually significantly declined our red meat consumption.
We eat about 350% of the chicken that we did.
Really?
We've almost quadrupled on a per capita basis, our consumption of chicken.
And again, when you look at industrialization, the reason that is is because the chickens took well to industrialization.
They have smaller lifespan.
They can, they breed more.
you can selectively breed traits and attributes into them more rapidly through that because of that
short life cycle. There's a lot of reasons they can be confined in, you know, 50,000 animals in a small
barn where you curate and only feed them cheap corn and soy laced in agriculture chemicals and
create this synthetic environment and, you know, basically control it through, you know, in human
engineering and a domination mindset to turn a chicken into a widget. And we produced these birds
that have lost some of the evolutionary, like biological imperatives that I call them.
Like they won't often evade predation.
They won't.
They can't or won't breed.
They are very, their biological feed conversion machines.
They sit at a trough and they don't do anything but eat as much as possible in order to grow really big breasts
because that's what the industry wants to sell.
And oftentimes it comes at the expense of the development of their immune system, their organ systems.
their bone and skeletal structures where at the time of harvest,
many of them can't even walk to water or feed at that point.
And if they were to continue on that path,
they would just die of natural causes.
There's actually a gene that's been bred into that bird,
not just to select to make them white so we can't see the little tiny feathers.
So folks won't know that they had feathers on them at one point.
But there's a gene that's like akin to dwarfism that makes them get, you know,
it's like gigantism.
It makes them get really big, really fast.
And it's a terminal gene.
but we bred that in in order to make them grow fast.
And then even if you look at the most recent data, folks, you know, just for reference on how perverted this industry is, you know, if people are noticing, you know, avian influenza, bird flu is making the news and the impact that it's having on supplies of eggs or chicken or other things like that.
Well, they don't, what people don't realize is like there's only a few two or three big breeders out there that make all the eggs that produce all of the chickens.
And they're always tinkering with the biology and the genome of these animals.
and we made a little oopsie a couple years ago,
and all of a sudden, all of the chickens that are being produced
are a little less fertile,
and the survivability of the chicks are a little less viable.
How crazy is that to think about?
You know, like, we made a tweak in a lab somewhere,
and this living sentient being is made a little less healthy.
And again, like, I don't know all the science.
I don't know all the details.
I think it's coming out and emerging,
but something about things that are more detached
from a biological reality,
that, you know, whether it's in their genes, in their lifestyle, in their raising conditions
and feed, or on and on are probably, there's probably some unknown unknowns in there that we're
trading off. So anyway, we eat a lot more chicken than we used to. The part of the reason is a
marketing campaign to suggest that this product that we can control much more easily and want to
offer you more of is better for you, which it's not, is better for the environment, which it's not,
is better for the animal, it's definitely not. So all of the promises, not unlike, not
similar from the vegan diet, well-meaning, well-framed, seemingly worthy values to want to promote
are offered as components or promises with them that they're offering you that they're falling short
of, or just not. Red meat is way healthier. We just talked about that. The Ruminant animal is
actually keystone in an ecosystem. It's important. Plain systems and so much of our native wild
places evolved symbiotically with these animals to live. Humans evolved chasing herds of
megafauna. Humans did not evolve chasing herds of chickens around. All of these different things
are going on there. So I always say, you know, here I am launching chicken and then railing on chicken.
I'm doing that because I always say people should eat less chicken and pay more for it.
I think there's a time and place for chicken. I think it can be a part of a diet and there's sometimes
as we want to enjoy a recipe or the experience or the flavor of chicken, that's great. In the
1600s, it would have been seen as a sign of affluence. And even I think it was, was it FDR and the
depression that said, you know, I aspire for a chicken in every pot as a sign of abundance and
prosperity to be pursued because that's what we would have had. A few chickens and a lot of other
stuff. And I think that's, that's where it should be in our diet. It's just been commodified
and cheapened to where, you know, we can offer it as much as we do.
It's become the cheap protein instead of the expensive protein.
And it's been marketed in a campaign to, again, convince people that it offers these benefits
that it doesn't.
And as a girl dad, I'm particularly sensitive of the fact that women have been driven
towards eating poultry and staying away of red meat for some reason, which I don't fully
understand, but it is definitely underserving them.
Again, I just listed off those priority micronutrients.
Those are particularly deficient in women.
Yeah.
And the thing that, you know, like if you grew up with an experience that many others have,
and not everybody, but certainly many, where you go to a restaurant and a guy gets a steak and a girl gets a salad and maybe puts a little bit of chicken on it, the girl should get the steak.
Right.
Right.
That's the food you need.
But here we are.
You know, we slaughter nine billion of chickens a year in the United States.
It's becoming the most popular protein, more than red meat.
I want to rechampion red meat.
I want it back in the corner.
We've been working on that for years,
but I can't change the fact that there's momentum behind chicken.
What I can do is say, hey, you know what?
I can't, I'm not going to stop that,
but I'm going to do exactly what we've done everywhere else with meat and in agriculture
and create transparency.
And we're going to talk about the problems of chicken.
We're going to talk about the animals and the farmers and the nutrition and the lifestyle
and all of those things that affect the people on farm,
the consumers at the other end of the equation,
and we're going to create a system that actually delivers on the values
that consumers are looking for and is a better chicken.
And we can't do that if we're not in the game.
We don't have a player on the field.
We can't change the score.
And so we're launching into it so that we can course correct that
just like we're doing with beef.
Excellent, man.
It gave me a little bit of hope when I saw you first were advertising and it's coming out.
And I have some here that I'm thawing out, that I'm ready to try.
So I'm really looking forward to it.
And I appreciate the innovation.
and the actual care that you have.
So I know we wanted to get into some of the myths
and we're kind of getting towards the end.
So let's cover those that you've had to deal with or overcome
or things that have become more prevalently discussed
or hyped or misled, whatever term you want to use.
Because I see it daily.
I battle it daily.
I'm sure not as much as you.
But I'm very curious.
Let's kind of spitball back and forth here,
what you're dealing with and what you see
and kind of debunk some of these so-called myths.
I probably just for the sake of time, I think I'll probably want to touch on two topics.
One is cost and price and one is claims and give somebody, give folks a call to action to better
understand how to navigate this environment.
You know, the ideal is, hey, let's have some third party, some government agencies and maybe
some third parties help consumers make better choices and we'll come up with claims and regulate
them and audit them to ensure that what is.
marketed is legitimate and do some of the work for the consumer. So they don't have to be experts
and everything and they can delegate that trust to us. That sounds good and that is well-meaning.
There's no doubt about it. But like many things that are based on good intentions, the ultimate
outcome isn't always as desired. And that leaves us to an environment, leads us to an environment
where things like natural, which should be the most fundamentally obvious claim in the world.
None of us, no consumer, no person listening to this or neighbor needs to be told, hey, what does natural mean?
It's like, I know what natural means.
I walk outside and I see it in the birds.
I see it in the squirrels.
I go to the beach and I see the dolphins.
And I know what natural is.
It's like as close to source.
And again, that biological reality and that evolutionary existence.
But bureaucratic technical language does not mean the same as common language.
Jenin and in the world that we're in, natural just means it's been minimally adulterated after
it's been slaughtered. Again, all the things we talked about with chicken, what the genes are,
what it was fed, how it lived, what it was raised, it just means it's been minimally processed,
whatever you wanted to find that. And so like we've co-opted and hijacked to misrepresent to us
what these underlying products actually stand for. And then it becomes for profit enterprises
to jockey for position and who has the best claim and which claim represents. And even you
asked me the question, what is grass fed versus versus not? It's like grass fed just means an animal
was fed, you know, had access to eating grass or cow particularly had access to eating grass at one point
in its life. It doesn't mean it didn't eat grains. It didn't mean it doesn't mean it was finished on
grass. It doesn't mean it was raised in pasture. It doesn't mean it wasn't given hormones or
vaccines. It just means it ate grass. And so you take these very complex systems and realities
that are again, the food that we serve ourselves, the fuel for our life, longevity and health,
we're approaching it with the most reductionist mindset when we come to claims being the end-all-be-all.
I think they have a role.
I think the claims that I like to look for in my beef, for example, would be 100% grass-fed, pasture-raised, regenerative, with the welfare standard.
But again, like, that's only in a pinch.
Got it.
That's only if I'm traveling and I'm going to wait and there's just no option to understand where my food's coming from.
I'll give you an example.
If I was to bring you to, you know, my co-founders, Katie and Taylor, they have a ranch called Rome Ranch.
Kind of consider it out our home farm.
If I was to take you there and if I was to put two products in front of you, excuse me,
and I was to say like, hey, this one, this turkey is organic and this turkey does not have an organic claim.
But the one that doesn't have the organic claim is like 30% more expensive.
And you don't know anything else about them.
You're going to buy the organic turkey.
That's what we're trained in a condition to do and think.
We're going to feel really good about it.
Now, take a step back from claims, that organic turkey came from a factory that if you walked inside the door, you'd probably get sick.
You would definitely need potentially a respirator.
The animals would be suffering.
The diets would all be corn and soy that are organic.
It would be awful.
The one that's not labeled organic, you go to my co-founder's ranch and you see these turkeys where there's wild turkeys volunteering in.
They're running around next to the bison.
Yes, they're eating chemical-free feed, but they're not.
but they're living like turkeys and playing a role
and having an impact on the environment.
Now I put the plate back in front of you,
you choose the turkeys that represent what you think
is truly the most natural,
most evolutionary consistent,
most aspirational, highest value.
And you don't bat an eye.
You know in your heart and soul fundamentally,
without a doubt, what the right choices for you.
You don't see that in claims.
They shield that, and so many claims are deceiving.
Think about a vegetarian-fed claim for pork and poultry, right?
These are omnivores.
We get a vegetarian fed claim
is if you've confined them their entire life
inside of a building
and prevented them from being able to
exhibit their behavior to go forage for a diverse diet.
And you curate their diet exclusively
of grains to ensure that you can make a vegetarian fed claim.
But we're conditioned to think vegetarian fed is better
so we can put it on the pack
as a positive attribute that will drive
purchase behavior when in reality
it should drive consumers to see a red flag.
So I think it's very important for people to recognize that there is a time and place for claims,
but no single claim tells the whole story.
Claims add cost and confusion.
At the end of the day, to the extent it's possible for you forming a relationship with your food,
if it's a brand like force of nature, go to our website, look at our blog, look at our Instagram.
We're not going to put a claim on a packet and then hide.
We're going to be outspoken, screaming from the rooftops, trying to convey how we differentiate ourselves,
because we're so proud of what we're doing,
want you to see that fundamental truth and connect with us.
Don't buy from force of nature.
That's great, too.
Go to the farmer's market, talk to a farmer,
understand them what they're going through, what they're doing,
how they're raising food.
Those are the people that are going to be serving you,
not serving themselves,
by shielding the reality of what's going on
and the system behind them,
behind some claim that they can technically,
through a bureaucracy, get away with promoting,
even though it far under delivers
on what the consumer expectation is.
So that's about as brief as I can be
to just warn consumers that claims aren't everything.
Do I buy organic? Yes, of course.
I think it's an important milestone
in the evolution and the movement
to create more and better food and systems.
But I look for organic in addition to a bunch of other things.
I want my food to be chemical free.
I want it to be healthy.
I want the farmers to be served well
and the animals and the ecosystems.
And I want the most nutrient dense and healthiest food
with the most presence of those good things
and the absence of the metals and the toxins
and the ag chemicals and all the rest of it.
So there's so much more that we should be aware of and empowered.
And if we put all of our faith and trust
and delegate everything that's the cornerstone of our health to claims,
we will be underserved and it will fail us in the end.
So that's my caution on claims.
I'll pause there if you have a question
or I'll transition over to some commentary around price
and the cost of food.
No, I mean, it's just like with eggs and everything else
that you get confused by what's caged fruit.
and what's this and what's that and it's very deceiving. That's why when you look at labels for
natural flavors and every point you brought up is well received and totally understood. And I appreciate
the breakdown in terms of the meats and everything for other people to start looking for. I've
done deep studies and discussions on the eggs aspect because I'm very troubled by it and I know the
importance of pasture raised. And so I really appreciate the meat breakdown because that clears up
a lot of things, especially just because it says grass fed, for example. So it's appreciated, man,
the deeper dive into it truly.
Yeah, the cage-free, free-range pasture on the poultry front.
I could spend an hour talking about that.
It's one example of many where you just have to, I love to say, assume positive intent
and give the most generous interpretation in life.
But unfortunately, when it comes to claims, you know, I think that you need to approach
them with skepticism.
And regardless of what the claim is, you know, going one layer deeper and doing a little bit of
research to prove that it's delivering what you are looking for is going to be,
going to be the path forward. And yes, there's some, like, basic fundamental claims that, like,
are the starting point, but not the destination. On the true cost of food, you know, I do think it's
just an important note for people to recognize because, you know, we talk about, like, our chicken
is expensive, you know, our B is expensive relative to the industry. But what is the industry, but something
that has traded off value for cheapness? So one, I think we get, you know, we got to understand, like,
what value is represented and, and, and, and what is the actual cost of those cheaper items?
And we've talked about, you know, you're getting a nutritionally inferior product as you go to the most commodity cheaper item.
They're certainly imparting, whether it be antibiotics or agriculture chemicals laced on the food that they're fed, whether it be the health of those animals.
And then you got the externalities, the future costs, the hidden cost of food and the future environmental impact, your own future health impact.
The impact on, you know, I think now reports for that like 70% of pollinators are dying this year.
in the United States because of how we raise food and the dead zones and oceans and the loss of
soil and food security and food stability and all this kind of stuff. There's a real tangible cost
to each of us individually and collectively. I think the cost of preventable disease in the United
States is over $3 trillion, which comes out to like some absurd amount, like hundreds of dollars
onto everybody's weekly grocery bill if you were to actually be paying the true cost of the
consequences of your food and your daily purchases. So like I think there's a little bit of
like a real understanding that needs to take place there. But I think at the end of the day,
most folks have like, there's a number in your bank account and either goes in or it goes out.
And I also think on the actual cost, that premium meat is far less expensive than people recognize.
And there's a few examples that I'll give for that. If you look at, you know, where is the cheapest
stuff in the grocery store? It's at the checkout aisle. I know it's the cheapest stuff and it's,
and it's strategically the cheapest stuff because it's there for you to make an impulse purchase.
You'll look at it. The price tag is small. It's inexpensive.
You'll throw it in the cart and add one little, one last little bit to your total bill as you're walking out of the store.
Well, if you look at the price per ounce of what our super premium beef goes for, it's like 75 cents an ounce.
If you look at what the price per ounce of a Hershey's bar is, it's like $1.24 an ounce.
She's.
You know, Lays potato, or Ruffles potato chips are like $1.14 an ounce.
All of the cheap hyper-processed chips, all of the little candies, they're all more.
expensive on a price per ounce than the most expensive meat in the store that you could literally
live on that offers that will make you healthier that gives you all the food and the things that
you need juxtaposed with these cheap items that actually cost more and also will make you
unhealthy and sick and lead to other consequences that should should add to the equation so it is
actually cheaper to buy meat now not even to mention the fact that when it comes to feeding a family
okay, you can, with one pound of meat, we'll call that, like, I got some math broken out here.
Okay, so like I do, I like the ancestral blend.
You and I talked about that, and I eat more than most.
You know, a four ounce serving of meat as a standard serving gives you, you know, between 20 and 30 grams of protein and all of this incredible stuff.
I'm a guy.
I'm active.
I'm going to probably eat half a pound.
I just ways I can, and I like it.
So I'm going to be fair in how I attribute these costs.
I'm going to say, I'm going to eat half a pound.
So like half a brick, half a pound of our ancestral blend is $5.50.
And I'm going to take some organic stir fry vegetables that are frozen because I'm going to make this meal real fast because that needs to be convenient and easy for me.
So I'm going to take some frozen veggies and some ancestral blend and I'm going to throw them in a skillet.
And 15 minutes later, I'm going to have a meal.
So $5.50 for half a brick, $1.75 for half of a bag of organic veggies.
All in, I'm at $7.25 for like an insanely healthy nutrient dense meal.
And technically, that's two servings for $7.25, but I'm going to eat two servings.
50 grams of protein in there, all the macros and micros that I need, I got leftovers.
If I go to 7-Eleven, I'm like 229 for Doritos or Fritos.
You know, I can get two quarter pound disgusting things off of that roller, whatever those may be, for $3.50.
If I'm being healthy, I'll get a turkey club for $5.50.
You get a big gulp for $1.69, maybe an energy drink for $3.
You're somewhere between $750 and $11 for a lunch at a convenience store.
That is more expensive to the penny, but far less nutrient ends, far less healthy, far less good for you and appropriate.
The same thing goes for going to Chick-fil-A, getting a club sandwich for $10.29 or go to an e-burger chain and get a value meal for $10 to $12.
bucks. Like, we are conditioned to think that if you go to the back of the store and in the
perimeter and you buy the expensive, high quality, pasture raised, grassbed, regenerative,
high welfare, good for you meat. Oh, that's expensive. It's not. It is cheaper than the things
that we call cheap, whether that be fast food or convenience store food or candy and chips and crap.
And don't even, that doesn't even get into the fact that we pay absurd amounts of money for
bottled water for designer coffees, $30 a pound.
for almonds. You know, the list just goes on and on and on and on and on about the things
that we don't bat an eye at paving crazy, crazy money for. And again, the foundation of our
plate, meat, the cornerstone of our diet and our health, we have somehow this inflated
expectation that it should be monumentally cheaper than everything else. And especially when you
consider that it came from a living sentient being, why would we want to cheat in that?
Like, that is where we should be investing our dollars. That is where we've lost our
way kind of going back to the conditioning and the, you know, the herd mentality of how we've
been directed. In the U.S., the average person spends 8% of their income on food. And most other
developed nations, including in Europe, that number would be closer to 15 to 20%. Like, they
know where they should be investing their dollars. And if you look at the fact that we're
number one in obesity, number one in diabetes, number one in people with the most comorbidities at any
single time, we're taking money away from the thing that we should be investing it in and doing
it for the wrong reason. So I would say that our meat is valuable. I would say that it's actually
cheaper than you realize. And it's not just us again. It is the other, it's the farmers, the ranchers,
the brands that are like force of nature that are bringing this higher attribute, this more premium,
trying to break the chains of the conventional and commodity system and raise the bar for everybody.
Those are the folks that we should be happy to support. And if and if it's the cost of that,
concerns you or the confusion over the claims.
Like, follow us at force of nature.
Let us, don't buy it from us.
Just listen to our stories.
Read the blogs.
Follow on Instagram.
Educate yourself and empower yourselves to make whatever choice is best for you.
It's not for me to tell you what to do or believe.
I just want to connect you to the information so you can make better choices for
yourself.
I think more than not, consumers are going to recognize that what we are offering and what
we would consider to be allies in the space or offering are the choices they want to be
making and the systems and companies they want to be supporting. Man, well said, well said. I appreciate
all the info and the insight and really appreciate what you do. I, you know, to be transparent,
I've had the opportunity to meet, you know, several of the people on your staff. And I was just
blown away by how good a people they were and how polite and how knowledgeable and friendly and
caring and like listening to the things that I had to say and giving me feedback and, you know,
people with different sets of knowledge that you have. You've put together a really strong,
tight-knit, like family-type business, which is what I'm personally really drawn to.
I have a really good sense of reading that because I've dealt with so many businesses and
companies over the years. I've talked to so many like CEOs and your approach and your kindness
and the respectability that you have, it goes without saying it's far superior than impressive
doesn't give you anywhere near the accolade and what you're doing with how you,
run your company and the structure and the care. It's, it's, it's really refreshing, man. I have to tell you,
it really is. And I'm just thankful to have met you, to found your company, and to be able to
kind of spotlight you to other people to see and understand what it's like when you work with somebody,
talk with somebody or buy from somebody that actually cares. So I just wanted to throw that out there,
the appreciation and the well-deserved accolades. Thanks, man. I appreciate that. I am really proud of our
team. Everybody that's here really wants to be here. Folks aren't just doing it for the job. And we are
just a group of people trying to, trying to be passionate about making a difference in this space.
And so I appreciate you noticing that and sharing it. And again, thanks for giving me the
opportunity to answer these questions and hopefully reach some folks with some messaging that'll
serve them in a positive way and help them make better choices. And find, if needed, find themselves
on a path like yours, where they can be looking back in a few months or, or, you know,
years and really celebrating the change that they're helpably noticing in their life.
Can't do that without you.
And thanks for the opportunity.
Absolutely, man.
So you mentioned your Instagram to follow there.
And we have the Force of Nature website.
What other places can people buy from you like in the stores?
I mentioned Whole Foods, Sprouts, Fresh Time here in the Midwest.
Are there any other stores that you're in or any other ways to follow you or buy from you
and learn about you?
Yeah, the website's Forceofnature.com.
And we got a blog. I'd encourage you to follow that.
You know, Instagram is at Force of Nature.
We're putting some really cool videos on YouTube.
But as far as retail, as you noted, we have a store finder on our webpage.
So you can go in and you can see all of the places we're located and specifically which products are there.
But we're in over 5,000 stores across the country.
So wherever you are, we're not far.
And further, we actually have a pretty broad set of products on our website and we do direct to consumer.
So if you go to our website and find something that's not available near you in a store or you want to try, you can you can put in an order and we'll deliver it to your door.
Yeah, those would probably be the best places I'd say to figure out where to get us and what we have.
But yeah, again, you know, I just can't emphasize enough that whether or not you buy from force of nature specifically or somebody that we're working with or that's doing similar things in your area, you know, every purchase matters.
This isn't, you're voting and sending signals into a system for change.
And you can either be part of the solution or part of the problem.
We can't abstain.
We can't just say, I don't like my candidates.
I'm not voting.
We vote every time we make a purchase.
And so I hope that we can help connect you to, you know, finding the path that leads
you to the better answer that call and align with your values.
And again, if it's not us, I hope we can tell you a story and educate and help you get some
perspective on what's going on with your food and your agriculture systems, more.
broadly and get you on a path that serves you. That's our real objective, understanding that
in an industry this big, you know, there's more than enough to go around and ultimately we just want
empowered consumers drive and change. Awesome, man. Well, like I said, I appreciate your time,
but I also appreciate what you've done for me and so many other people. So thank you again.
And stay tuned for plenty more to come, everybody. Dylan Jameli and Robbie Sansom, signing off.
Thank you.
