The Iced Coffee Hour - “Your Diet Is Trash!” The Secret To Losing Fat, Building Muscle, & Living Forever | Dr.Mike Israetel
Episode Date: January 20, 2025NetSuite: Download the CFO’s Guide to AI and Machine Learning at https://www.netsuite.com/ICED ExpressPros: Get the hiring support you need at https://ExpressPros.com Ramp: Now get $250 when you joi...n Ramp at https://ramp.com/ich Shopify: Sign up for a $1 per month trial period at https://shopify.com/ich NEW: Join us at http://www.icedcoffeehour.club for premium content - Enjoy! Add us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jlsselby https://www.instagram.com/gpstephan Official Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCeBQ24VfikOriqSdKtomh0w For sponsorships or business inquiries reach out to: tmatsradio@gmail.com For Podcast Inquiries, please DM @icedcoffeehour on Instagram! Timestamps : 00:00:00 - Intro 00:01:33 - What’s harder: 6-pack or getting rich? 00:04:04 - First fast food experience in Soviet Union 00:07:47 - Complaints about life being hard 00:10:18 - How diet affects mental health 00:11:50 - Sponsor - Netsuite 00:13:01 - How often do you cheat on diet? 00:14:08 - Interest in health and fitness 00:16:41- Taking fitness to a competitive level 00:20:09 - Lifting heavier vs. feeling stronger 00:25:44 - Does being swole help with dating? 00:26:48 - Why women like the dad bod 00:33:12 - Sponsor - Express Pros 00:34:08 - USA obesity issues 00:48:48 - Why are some food additives banned abroad? 00:50:13 - Thoughts on artificial sweeteners 00:57:09 - Does obesity issue need to be solved? 00:58:22 - Animal-based diets 01:00:37 - Too many opinions on diets 01:02:21 - Sponsor - Ramp 01:03:28 - Sponsor - Shopify 01:04:53 - Is the paleo diet unhealthy? 01:15:20 - Factors contributing to obesity 01:19:08 - Is stress beneficial for you? 01:21:36 - Thoughts on Brian Johnson 01:29:42 - Expectations for anti-aging 01:33:34 - Speculating on AI and robots 01:41:26 - Robot companions 01:45:58 - Argument against robot relationships 01:49:13 - Consciousness transfers by 2030? 01:52:39 - Bitcoin discussion 01:54:02 - Personal earnings pie chart 01:56:25 - How financial success changed your life *Some of the links and other products that appear on this video are from companies which Graham Stephan will earn an affiliate commission or referral bonus. Graham Stephan is part of an affiliate network and receives compensation for sending traffic to partner sites. The content in this video is accurate as of the posting date. Some of the offers mentioned may no longer be available. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Humans are wonderful and beautiful and complex and deeply flawed.
When I was younger, I experienced quite a bit of feelings of powerlessness, and they sat very poorly with me.
And so once I began to lift and get stronger, I think started tending to my wounds.
Hey folks, Dr. Mike here for Renaissance periodization.
Why am I talking about this seems oddly self-infatuated?
Why do you think we have such an obesity problem here in America?
I think a lot of people hypothesize that obesity is complex and controversial in what causes it.
There is no conspiracy.
When you get one slice of pie, what do you want?
You want another one slice.
And that's the real killer.
Ultra tasty food.
People willingly eat.
You don't have to take the drug.
You can just take control of your diet.
When you take the mentality of wanting the difficulty,
maybe what I suspect people who climb tall mountains,
and they look up, and you can see the summit, and it's so full.
summit and it's so far away what's up there. I wonder how many other people thought they could
climb it and it couldn't. How far does this go? How rarefied is the air? If I just keep going.
Dr. Mike is Rayatel. Thank you so much for coming on the iced coffee hour. Thank you so much
for having me. So apparently you're pretty controversial. Okay. That's what the people online say.
So we wanted to start this off on a very light note. Nothing controversial at all. Okay.
What do you think is more difficult?
Getting a six-pack or beating being broke?
Oh,
Oh, gee whiz.
Beating being broke.
I would probably say that beating, being broke on average is probably more straightforward.
And with a few minimal assumptions, I think it's just linearly feasible.
Whereas getting a revealed six-pack as an adult,
and if we're truly talking about the average American,
there are a few stumbling blocks that make it a one-does-not-simply sort of situation.
The following will sound profoundly ignorant,
but I can guarantee you I can couch it with all the proper caveats
and get very, very, very lengthy explanation going.
but not being broke.
Again, assuming you don't have any crazy impediments,
such as a near total inability to engage in productive work,
assuming you don't have a stream of expenses
that continues to update itself,
such as you have lots of children for few income earners,
or you have a really intense,
medical condition that is not fully covered by insurance,
outside of those factors,
and they're equivalent factors for the abs situation as well,
then getting to be no longer broke
is relatively straightforward
and relies mostly on curbing your outlay of expenses
in a way in which is accessible to most people.
Now, lots of folks in the comments
will probably at this point say I come from
an incredible amount of wealth and so on and so forth.
So my parents came here and took my sister and I.
I was seven, she was nine, from the Soviet Union.
So it's almost certainly been poor
than almost everyone who watches podcasts, period.
And my parents had us living like this
for a few years when we came to America.
The first time I had fast food in America was like a year and a half or two years after we arrived.
And we did not go to any other restaurants.
What did you have?
Do you remember the first fast food meal?
A Burger King.
Yeah, and we had it in Canada when we were on like our first vacation ever or something like that.
And it tasted sublime.
It was unbelievable.
Now, the first fast food I ever had was actually in Russia when they opened up the first McDonald's in Moscow in 1990.
I think. I believe I was six years old. We stood in line for like an hour because that's what you do in the Soviet Union. And it was the single greatest food experience of my entire life. What was so memorable about it? Yeah, yeah, yeah. I think I'd love this line here. So you, I had like a quarter or half of a hamburger because I split it with my sister and a couple of sips of a vanilla
shake. That's what I remember. It was not a cheeseburger, just a hamburger. And the richness of the
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Unlike anything I had ever had in my entire life, sublime, religious experience.
I didn't know things could taste that good.
Because in the Soviet Union, the government manufactured all of the food,
and like they weren't indexing on taste or quality.
more price.
They were like,
eh,
as long as not too many
people starve,
we're good,
I think.
So the McDonald's
experience was incredible,
but we came to America,
we had almost nothing
because we like sold
all of our possessions,
more or less in the Soviet Union.
And so roughly enough money
to buy my entire family plane tickets
and nothing else.
How were they able to come here?
What was that process?
Yeah, yeah.
So,
um,
um,
um,
George Bush administration,
from my understanding,
allowed,
uh,
Russian Jews to come to America
via the asylum seeking program
because we were like being targeted
for pogroms and stuff like that.
And on the way out, through the airport,
they took pretty much all of our
possessions like jewelry and stuff
off of us, like to steal.
Who did the government?
The agents that processed you when you left.
Yeah, they just took your shit.
And you obviously, you couldn't say no.
Or it was just like,
it was just worth it, whatever.
fuck you wanted, but then you'd just go to jail for forever instead of leave and go to paradise,
which is what we chose.
Small price.
So the various elements of the American Jewish community were super kind to us.
And they basically, when we showed up, there were people at the airport to meet us.
And they had set us up with like month one of an apartment or something like that.
And they actually even filled our fridge with groceries, which was like kind to a level.
we had no reference for.
And just in general, that set up the trend for us expecting Americans to be insanely
nice and kind and we've never been let down.
Like, of course, there's a fucking asshole every now and again.
You go to New York and I'm, hey, fucky.
The Philadelphia National Anthem.
Just an unbelievable amount of generosity.
And then as soon as possible, my parents both got roughly minimum wage jobs.
And then we spent almost no money.
And though the food quality and her,
abundance we were eating with almost no money in America was like leagues better than we had in the
Soviet Union. So it's just incomparable. We basically were like roughly the equivalent of
upper middle class in the Soviet Union. We showed up to America and we were like the poorest
possible, like zero value roughly. And instantly our quality of life was like a category level
higher. How do you feel when people complain about the state of the United States right now and
they think their lives are so hard.
I like,
I typically like to view it from sort of two perspectives.
One perspective is that people, um, often have valid points and they have a different reference
frame.
You know, there's, there might be some planet in another galaxy on which there's aliens that
are like past the fourth industrial revolution, which we're just getting into now.
And, and they're like, um, functionally all of them are roughly billionaires, some are
trillionaires. And there's not like a billionaire alien that's like, my genetic optimization
didn't come in today. Like, what the fuck is the postal system coming to? Like, how am I waiting
to be perfect for another day? So people get used to stuff. And also, many people in the United
States, numerically, not fractionally, have very difficult lives for a variety of circumstances.
Some people are dealing with health conditions that are outside of French anyone's control,
because like we just don't have a good handle on the problem of mastering the human body.
Some people are dealing with chronic pain.
Some people are dealing with the long-term end products of their earlier choices in life,
which, you know, when you're a kid or a teen, you do dumb shit.
Some people are in very difficult circumstances otherwise.
So when people complain about stuff, a part of me is like, bro, that's valid.
And it's very good to listen to that stuff because people might not be 100% correct,
but almost everyone has something valuable to bring to the table.
That's the one side.
And the other side is like you live in the wealthiest time in history,
in one of the wealthiest places in the world,
and you live objectively better than every single monarch
before the year 1900 had ever lived.
Like, we all live in fucking paradise.
And relatively speaking,
Yeah.
But, um, so that's a part of me wants to scream that at the top of my lungs.
It's fucking wild when you think about it how out of touch we are with how terrible history
was through most of history.
Yeah.
How amazing we have it.
And the way I like to see it is, again, not perfect, but let's figure out how to make things
better and work diligently at making them better.
So that the future, as it's, I've always on track to be on the grand scale, gets it better
and better and better.
So we know, in 2030s and robots do everything for us, we can bitch about the robots
having the wrong color scheme and Amazon fucked up again.
How much of that is diet that the diets are affecting the way we think in terms of brain fog or anxiety
or maybe us not being the best that we can?
Probably a very small amount.
I think that the biggest thing with diet is that if you're eating a diet that's excessive in calories
and you're over fat, which is a technical term for even,
even if you're not overweight, you have not enough muscle too much fat.
It leads to a chronic low-level inflammation.
It's not really so good for any of your organ systems, brain included.
And you might have kind of pulsatile waves of hunger.
If you eat like that all the time, you do start to feel suboptimally.
And a lot of people report that when they start to eat healthy,
especially in a few days that follow, they feel crystal clear and ultra-energized.
And that's mostly as a very much.
result of eating fewer calories and eating foods that are not so high calorie dense that they
make you go, you guys are like Thanksgiving dinner.
No one's like ultra energized after that shit.
I think turkey though has something in it.
I hope you have to eat so much turkey.
It's like an amount you can't possibly eat.
Oh, really?
Yes, it's kind of like a little bit of an herb legend.
It's totally true as triptophan in it.
But the amount of triptophan you need to get like the serotonin going to get you in a sleepy
state is like the nonsensical amount. Like you might not be able to inject that amount of
crypto fans. How often do you cheat on your diet? Although before we go into that, we got to ask
ourselves a question, what does the future hold for business? Because if you ask nine different
experts, you're going to get 10 different answers from a bull market to bear market. Stocks are
going up, they're going down. It would be very helpful to have a crystal ball at this point.
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And now let's get back to the podcast.
How often do you cheat on your diet?
I cheated on my diet once.
in my life.
What was the food?
What do you have?
I was a week out for my first bodybuilding show.
I was dieting pretty wrong.
I was misusing various chemical substances
I was using to be a bodybuilder.
And I somehow rationalized that I needed to eat now
because I was starving.
And I ordered like a pizza,
from dominoes or something
and I ate it
preposterously quickly
came to Ida would call my senses
but not really
and proceeded to throw up a good deal
about half of the pizza
forcefully
and then I sort of sat
with that decision
and that thing that had transpired
and I was like oh fuck I'm really fucked up
and I believe
if memory serves
that's the only time
I ever cheat on my diet
When did the desire start for you to start getting into weightlifting and bodybuilding and sculpting your body in such a way?
A couple days ago. I did pretty well.
Tell me your secret.
Oh, that's cool.
I was 14 years old, almost 15, and I had done my first season of high school wrestling freshman year.
And I noticed during wrestling that like when people were more muscular, they were stronger and they would just be better at it.
And in addition to that, I have the unfortunate genetics
of just having a pot belly, sort of no matter what.
And growing up as a teen like that
and having various friends and relatives point that out,
left me mildly dissatisfied with the appearance of my body.
Not in a way that was all-consuming,
but in a way I was like,
ah, fuck, I don't want to look like this.
And so I began to take some control of my diet, though limited.
And as soon as wrestling was over, I began to hit the gym.
And at first, I, I didn't like it.
I didn't really like lifting.
It was uncomfortable.
It hurt.
And then I decided to listen to some motivating music, which at the time I was my
sophomore year, I was in a big rage against the machine arc.
Nice.
But I tried to listen to it during lifting, and I realized that it was exhausting me because
it was generating anger.
And anger was not an emotion that seemed to be sustainable for me in the gym.
And then over time, I went through this journey of,
listening to music that put me in a headspace that I consider sustainable and enjoyable.
Eventually, I started lifting to smooth jazz, which is curious because maybe like the most universally
hated music.
It's like what your dentist plays to torture you in the office when you're waiting.
I found that I got into kind of Zen-like states while lifting.
And when I was finally able, after about a year and a half of lifting, to re-contextualize
the pain of lifting as a good thing, that I wanted to be the thing.
that I wanted to be there for the pain,
I began to like it.
And then I began to see very good results
and then more results and then more results and more results.
And then after about two years,
I was like full on straight up addicted
and I've never been able to kick the habit.
So the ability to have progress,
the ability to see my body changing
was just like, oh.
Most people don't take it to the extreme that you do.
Like a lot of people go to the gym,
myself included, almost,
Look at those up.
Those biceps.
My God.
I can't quite do that.
How did you get to the airport?
But I love going to the gym every single day.
If I miss a day, like I didn't go today, I feel it.
And I hate missing it.
But I'm almost happy where I am now where I could put on an extra few pounds.
But I don't want to progress beyond that.
What was different for you to want to take that professionally and to like take it to the point of competition?
I was never overly psyched about competition.
I can't say I've ever really.
like super enjoyed bodybuilding competition.
I was a competitive powerlifter first, and I loved powerlifting competition.
Powerlifting competition for me and powerlifting for me was an expression of ability,
the expression of unmitigated aggression.
I think like for whatever genetic and environmental reasons, which I could get into my speculation
about those, but, you know, ad hoc stories are so.
easy to tell and so hard to substantiate.
But I did, I experienced quite a bit of feelings of powerlessness or what I would consider
not enough feelings of agency when I was younger.
And they sat very poorly with me.
And so once I began to lift and get stronger, I realized like the sport of powerlifting
existed and my psychological,
process for getting amped up for big lifts and then succeeding and lifting them like i think started
tending to my wounds um when you feel powerless for long enough anytime you can express your abilities
in a way that brings you success and even the very simple victory over like i wanted to squat 400 pounds
twice and i did it that starts to get at some deep deep stuff and really starts to
kind of rebuild the very frail almost collapsed ego to some extent. And that for me was like
just crazy, crazy medicine that changed me, I think, potentially over time and made me feel at a
default more secure and more able. And it was really fun because when, you know,
when you're a testosterone-filled young man, I remember one thing I really liked,
was um...
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After you get much over 400 pounds and you're lifting a standard rack with a standard.
45-pound bar, just sitting there, the bar bends.
And it just bends, like, just the weight sitting there.
And you're like, you look at it and you're like,
that thing, that weight is bending steel.
But like, fuck all that.
It's never dealt with me before.
And that attitude, cultivating that confidence,
you have to, in order to lift that kind of weight
that's so close to your limit, felt magical.
Magical, magical, magical.
and practicing that generation of psychological power
that comes before the generation of physical power and force
was insanely addicting,
and it was miraculous and awesome.
And that, I think, was a really big deal to me
and kept me loving it for a very, very long time.
So, yeah, I have many, many more good things to say about that,
but that's kind of how the process started pretty early.
I want to talk about diet real quick,
but first, I'm very curious to know
does it feel any different completely like your true maxing out if you're maxing out at like 200
versus if your true max out is like 450 does it feel different under the bar categorically different
are you like actually pushing yourself harder when you're lifting up more weight even if it's like
your true max like let's say you're doing a squat and you unrack the weight which is you take it out of
the rack and you walk it back when it's just a few hundred pounds you just go bloop but it comes
off the rack when it's much more than 400 pounds
You push on it and nothing happens.
You push in it harder and nothing happens.
You push in it harder and the bar starts bending and all of you is compressed.
My friend and colleague at RP Derek Wilcox broke the all-time world record squat in a squat suit way back in the day, 10, 15 years ago.
And it weighing less than 200 pounds, he squatted over 1,000.
And he said it was like two or three seconds to unrack, to push up.
And he was pushing up and his hips were lifting up.
The bar at that level is already pre-bent and won't bend much more because it's a thicker bar.
And it's bending a little bit, but his hips are rising and it's just spinal compression for like three seconds until it moves.
Your face fills with blood.
A lot of times you'll pop your blood vessels and your eyes.
You know what it feels like?
I take exactly what it feels like.
If anyone wants to connect to that in an emotional level, a physical level, it just feels like you're getting crushed.
But does it feel like you're getting crushed like you're the victim of something?
What it feels like to unrack a heavy squat
is exactly the same emotion I feel
when you hear like a fucking heavy chord
in a metal song like
I just feel that all over
and you feel power just fucking surging out of you
and you go thank God I'm under a bar
because I could do serious damage
like you guys ever watch Dragon Ball Z?
Do you guys know what that is?
Anime like power levels and like everything burning around you
like that's what it feels like
because if it doesn't feel like that
and you're close to your max,
your body's like,
fuck this, man, I'm not going to do this.
But if you feel your vibe, a shitload,
and you want the pain and you want the crush,
like when the bar starts crushing you,
you're like, this is what the fuck I signed up for.
This is why I want to be here.
Because that motherfucker, that motherfucker,
she's cool, that motherfucker,
they don't want any of this.
Not that you're singling out of other people.
It's totally theoretical.
I thought about other people.
There's mild exaggeration.
But it's just like,
When you take the mentality of wanting the pain,
when you take the mentality of wanting the difficulty,
at some point it turns into like,
I wanna see how far this goes.
And to kind of finish my answer to your question from before,
the reason that I got into this
and incrementally made it more serious was kind of maybe
what I suspect people who climb tall mountains
think of when they're like, you know,
they hit big,
or something, and they look up as just a couple little frilly clouds, and you can see the summit,
and it's so far away.
And they go, man, what's up there?
I wonder how thin the air is.
I wonder how many other people thought they could climb it.
It couldn't.
I wonder what it would be like to just go a little bit further.
Once you get a certain level of size or strength, you're like, let's push the system a little
bit.
It's like people who like to race cars.
it's scary going fast in a car.
Fuck that.
You boys not doing it.
I got friends who like drive cars really fast.
My wife used to race cars.
The engine's vibrating and the car makes a noise.
It sounds kind of disturbed and you look at how fast you're going.
Like, please God, please God save me.
But to them, it's kind of like, maybe if I go a little bit faster, it'll be kind of
fucking neat at the very least.
And so for me, my journey of lifting has really been a lot about that of like, man,
how far does this go?
how rarefied is the air?
How exotic is the situation going to get if I just keep going.
And a lot of it is just because of that.
And if anyone here listening has ever watched Dragon Ballsy, the anime and it really
spoke to them, comment below.
But a lot of that was like one of my friends showed me the show Dragon Ballsy.
And it's like the Japanese equivalent of like Superman, Batman sort of thing.
But God damn, the Japanese do it well.
And the entire show is basically about people
who fight each other and various bad guys
but they're superpowers.
They fly at like a thousand miles an hour.
Like, you know, they fly past a bunch of skyscrapers
and just rubble after that.
They punch like holes in planets.
But that's the cool part for sure.
But the coolest part is they train
and they get beat up by other people
and they almost die.
And then they go, man, I just need to get stronger and better.
And they hide in a hole.
They go in a special room.
And for a year or two, nobody sees them.
And they're there like fucking perfect.
their craft and pushing the limits,
and they don't even know if they're gonna make it
through training, that's how insane they get.
I remember watching that, at first being like,
this animation style sucks.
And then I watched it for longer, and I was like,
God, this is it, it spoke to something so deep.
Ascending that dominance hierarchy
is probably the ancestral ape-like reason
my brain likes it so much.
I felt low on the totem pole, for whatever my bullshit reasons, right?
But it doesn't matter,
because when you start climbing the dominance hierarchy,
only by analogy, by just lifting more weight
and feeling your ability set improve,
it's a magical fairy dust for the young male brain.
And it's magical.
Does it help you get girls?
Fuck, no.
Does it look like I get girls?
Do you see any girls around here?
I think on technical qualities,
it can help you get girls in a few different ways.
One, on average, if you're more jacked than not,
a higher percentage of females will feel like interacting with you
in that female way,
though by a small margin
and after you get a certain level of jacked,
which I passed probably like 40 or 50 pounds of muscle ago,
it's a diminishing returns,
and you're just in the fetish market at that point.
Like, if you like a gigantic, hairy man,
I'm your guy.
If not, you're like, the fuck is that?
Why is it looking at me?
It's scary.
I remember this.
It's just like 2010.
This guy would show women
these like seven different body types,
and they'd say which one is the most attractive?
And universally, it was the way,
weird like the dad bod,
Justin Bieber,
which is kind of like the skinny,
you know, mussely.
Or Brad Pitt from a fight club.
Brad Pitt from Fight Club is undefeated.
He won.
Brad Pitt from Fight Club is the man.
But the dad bod was very close behind.
Why do women like the dad bought?
Because they can control it.
They can control it.
Here we go.
No, no, no, no, no.
I actually don't, don't.
I'm not Red Pilled.
I'm just saying like my intuitive sense
and I could be, please,
just rip me to shreds.
in the comments.
Just please do it.
I feel like there's a chance
that they know if you put on some weight
that they probably can too.
Sorry, I think they think
that they can put on some weight too.
And on top of that,
they probably think you're not going to leave
if you're not like super high up
on whatever hierarchy
that they think you're gauging yourself on.
I'm going to counter.
Please do.
I believe it's because it signals
a guy's not taking himself too seriously
and that the guy who has like a six-pack
might be a little too serious.
Intimating?
No, I don't think it's an intimidation thing.
I think it's just the guy could show that he could let loose and just live for a good time.
Live in the moment versus a guy who's like, no, I got to go to the gym every single day,
five o'clock in the morning.
I'm not going to miss my diet.
A little bit more regimented is less mysterious.
And the dude was like, all right, I'm going to pull back six beers tonight.
As a beautiful woman, what are your thoughts on this?
Oh, boy.
You know, so far out of my area of expertise.
that I'm just bullshitting at this point.
I suspect it's same.
I suspect it could be a combination of all the factors you guys listed.
For some women, I think it's definitely a big part.
Everything you guys said is true.
I think another thing is a dad bod signifies you're in the dad part of your life.
If you're ripped and lean and all that shit,
I think women who are looking for a longer term partner,
sometimes probabilistically, totally subconsciously,
assess you as probably a cheating asshole.
And maybe if not cheating, just not ready to settle down.
And so you're nice to look at it.
You might be nice to touch for an evening.
You're not really boyfriend material.
And if you have more of a dad bod,
you're in the dad phase of your life.
And you're a bit more tame.
You're a bit less of kind of an animal
and a little less intimidating and scary.
And also, you don't seem like the kind of guy
to go out there and smash, you know,
100 bitches in a row or whatever.
And you're kind of like super low key and probably more likely to be monogamous.
I'd also say that stated versus revealed preferences is a thing.
Have you guys ever heard about that?
100%.
Yeah.
Like what you say you like versus a bitch who you talking to at the club, though.
Hey, dad bad guy.
She's like, yeah, I think go fuck Adonis over there.
He looks great.
I love, I want to bite every single one of his abs at a time.
And so a lot of times there's a little bit of that at play.
A lot of this is like cultural elements and stuff.
A lot of it goes in waves.
Sometimes women, you know, really are feeling one thing another.
There's also, I believe, a tie to the menstrual cycle.
When women are part of the menstrual cycle, they want a fucking, like, jacked, bearded, hairy, lean man with giant hands to cover their face as he does whatever to them.
My word.
Like, bro, have you guys ever read romance novels?
No.
No.
No.
No.
Shit.
I've heard the stories.
We know you've read them.
Graham's got like a cigar to Friday night leaving through a book.
Like, whoa.
But that's definitely an archetype that women are like probabilistically more inclined to be attracted to during some times of their menstrual cycle.
And during other times they go for like low-key dad vibes and that other guys like, ugh, like grotesque and super scary.
And that's also shown to be something that like is a thing in men too.
Like when guys are single and looking for meaningful connection,
they tend to prioritize their interest towards girls that look like they have like long-term potential,
like maybe someone who looks a little bit more mild-mannered,
not super hoared out, no bimbo type of shit.
And someone is a great conversationalist, so on and so forth.
Someone who demonstrates values like care and conscientiousness starts to become very attractive.
but for guys that like, let's say,
just got out of a long-term relationship
and they're kind of sick of the shit,
like it's just bimbos and hoes all the way down
is the only shit you're looking at
because you're like, Daddy needs to eat
and you feel me?
And then it's like quite a different archetype.
So there's a lot of variance there.
So I'd say that that's definitely a thing.
But grotesquely over-muscled people
are just rarely found attractive
by statistical averages.
Now, in the fitness industry,
sometimes in some circles,
like the more jacked you are,
the higher fraction of girls like you,
because you're just high up
in the local status hierarchy.
Like, I'll tell you this,
if you are a hardcore fitness jam
where there's tons of jacked people
and tons of really fit girls
and you're ultra jacked
and super tall and super heavy
and you walk in and all the other guys
are like, fuck, like visibly,
like not disturbed by your presence,
but like reverent.
A certain fraction of girls
will be like, ooh, ooh.
because I think it's kind of a known thing
that women will, on pure, intuitive vibes,
pick up who the guys tend to fear slash respect
slash look up to.
And if you're popular with the guys,
some fraction of girls, not all,
because some girls give a fuck,
will be like, hmm, this is the alpha male of this group.
And they can't help but feel some vibes off of that.
I do notice, though, that for men that lift,
you get more compliments from other guys.
guys.
Oh yeah.
Like I notice even when like our friends are going to the gym and you haven't seen them for
a few months and they come back.
I'm like, dude, you look great.
Yeah.
How'd you do that?
Tell me about it.
And the same thing with me.
Like if I've really been dialed in, people notice that and compliment.
Yes.
It feels nice.
But from that perspective of like increasing your probabilities with women or whatever, that
definitely helps because if women see you an interaction and you're kind of the center of attention,
you're kind of getting complimented by guys and kind of people are a bit reverent of you.
Um, you know, some women are just not into it.
Uh, but some women, they catch some vibes off that.
And it increases your chances probabilistically, I suppose, if you're looking at it from that
perspective.
But it was never my intention to get girls like this.
It never really worked either.
Um, and I've never really gotten a whole lot of girls.
So, um, well, there you go.
We squared that circle.
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with the link also down below in the description. Thank you so much. And now let's get back to the
podcast. So why do you think we have such an obesity problem here in America? Going from
How dare you? I think a lot of people hypothesize that obesity is complex and controversial
in what causes it.
I think in a technical analysis
is very complex.
The number of contributing factors,
determining factors,
facilitating factors
is multifactorial and high.
It's a scientifically literate person
as a former professor of nutrition,
professor of health behavior.
I have to see to that
that's absolutely just objectively true.
But I think that you can substantially
simplify why we are
as a country, I hate that,
you use that term, I take that back,
why a substantial number of people
are overweight and obese.
And we can rule out a bunch of things
that either have a small role to play,
very small, or functionally no realistic role.
Here are some things that we can rule out.
Americans have become much lazier
over the last 50 years.
They haven't.
A bunch of ways to measure this,
none of them add up.
Okay.
Americans are lazier than all the other peoples of the world.
Also, many of the other peoples of the world are also now getting substantially fatter,
so it kind of puts that one down.
There is another hypothesis that it's something in an environment is poisoning us
and making us somehow obese.
Multiple layers of analysis reveal that if that's true, it is not an evidence
and is mechanistically probably just not a contributing factor that who weighs in it
more than a few percent and possibly and probably zero.
It would be dope if that was the case.
Like if I was like, oh, it's this fucking chemical that's in our food, take it out,
and everyone over a period of years just turns into Brad Pitt and Fight Club, that'd be sweet.
You know, with the cigarettes and all.
But that seems to hold very little water.
Another one is the idea that we're living in a pandemic of ignorance and that we have an insufficient amount of nutritional education.
And that one gobbles up bigger fraction.
Now the variance, a few percentage points for sure.
Definitely explains some things because some people are just like the way they live their
lives, sort of didn't even know that they're eating in such a way that makes them much more obese.
And they might even think, like, but I'm eating good.
That does happen.
But not as often as we would expect if it was a huge contributor to the problem.
So a lot of things, if you look at it deeply enough, are either ruled out or just not
your best contenders. And included in that is people are not physically active enough and
they don't work out enough. But people around the world within a pretty decent margin are
roughly of similar physical activity no matter what. And this research is relatively new as about
15 years old, but many people have not gotten the memo and they just continue to say like it's under
activity. It's not. I wish it was. What it seems like,
And the vast majority of the data, if you look closely enough, support this.
On theoretical grounds, it sounds real good.
And it seems to explain lots of like, you know, it passes the real world test, the no
bullshit.
Like, is this really true in my life?
And here's what seems to be causing the vast fraction of the increase in overweightness
and obesity.
Not all of it.
But by a long shot, the biggest part and probably the like way more than 50% majority of
and that is over the past, let's call it 50 years.
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People of the modern world, and the countries included in the modern world are rapidly like the number of them is increasing.
It now includes places like Mexico.
People in those countries have had two things happen to them at the same time, roughly.
one is in their ability to afford food that ability has gone up substantially the probably best way to measure that it's what's called time cost you guys familiar with time cost like how many hours of work you need to work to afford x y z and you can actually do a time cost analysis of calories it's like how many hours of work does a typical person uh with an average income
even below average, need to work in a day to be able to afford however many calories of food.
Like, how long do you have to work to afford 1,000 calories?
It is a true statement to say that for most of our evolutionary history,
the answer was, it roughly took about a day of work for you to be able to afford about 2,000 calories.
in the sense that your entire day of working
was designed to put your hand with food to your mouth.
Like, it was called like subsistence living
or living off the land, living hand to mouth.
That's how we fucking lived.
And the situation got substantially better
with the first industrial revolution,
which is the agricultural revolution,
better with the second, way better with the third.
The electronic digital revolution increased the,
the per capita median gross domestic product of Western nations, modern nations, by like an
exponent.
And what is happening is the average person and even people that are very, very poor on average,
become able to afford way more calories than they need to sustain a certain body weight.
And that's fundamentally like one of the best and most beautiful things that has ever
happened in history. Like people used to starve to death regularly. It was just a fact of life
for everybody. And that's just not a thing anymore. Like how many people have starved to death
in the United States in the last ever? Maybe. I don't even know if offhand I'm good absolutely
clown showing myself, but I don't know if anyone actually starved to death during the Great Depression
in the United States. To death, I don't know. Maybe somewhere in rural
Appalachia. Barring like mental illness.
Oh, for sure. Yeah. For sure. Just so we don't have any people commenting, well, actually.
Oh, for sure. Mental illness, drug addiction, that'll do you in big time. But like for, you know,
the bottom 20th percentile person who's able to work, it just hasn't happened in a very, very long time.
So we're so wealthy now, relatively speaking, that we can afford lots of calories. And like,
that was already true in the 30s and 40s and 50s. And we did not see an explosion of obesity.
saw some rising body weights, but nothing crazy. And here's why most people will eat an amount
of food that satiates them and then usually no more than that, especially if the food tastes
normal, like it's not what's called hyper palatable. It's not insanely delicious, bordering on
addictive. And it's not addictive in the technical sense, but like, fuck, you just want to keep
eating it. If you've noticed like, um, you can do this experiment.
with your dog. Don't because your dog has health biomarkers. You don't want to fuck up your dog.
But if you feed your dog just dog food, most dogs will just eat whatever food you give him
and afterwards you're like, eh, and you give him another kibble, they're like,
they walk away because it's not that great. But if you feed your dog human food, especially
like, you know, fresh meats that you cook up and cheese and peanut butter,
to what a dog's taste receptors and brain complexes for taste are used?
do, this is like crack cocaine.
And so what happened in, as an example, the United States, though this is happening all over
the world.
And currently in Mexico, it's like fever pitch is that once you have people that can afford kind
of as much food as they want, reasonably.
And once, so we have a largely free market system in the United States.
And so people who sell food, they want you to buy as much food as USS is good for you.
And generally people like tastier food.
Nothing controversial.
They like food to be tastier.
They like food to be convenient.
So like if I can buy food that's almost completely cooked or cooked already,
fuck, sign me up.
I don't want a slave over a hot stove.
And if that food is tasty, convenient,
approximately located to me,
available in some places 24 hours a day,
but almost all the time.
and a few other factors, and I can afford a lot of it because it's pretty cheap,
all of a sudden, I want more food.
When you eat lean chicken and canned beans, not the flavored kind that the golden retriever on the commercials likes or whatever,
you're going to eat until you're full and you're going to be like, ah, I'm good.
Someone's like, isn't that delicious?
You're like, no, it's functional.
I don't let anymore.
When you're eating food that is designed by capitalists, by food corporations, by restaurateurs,
by recipe cookbook designers to be as tasty as possible, roughly as affordable as possible
to within, because, you know, you guys are familiar with finance folks, the margins on grocery
store food are like, fucking how do they even do it?
How do they make a profit?
And so they're trying to drive the cost down big time and they're trying to make the food
as tasty as possible so that you go into the store and you go, I want that because it's
delicious.
Ice cream, cheeseburgers, potato chips, French fries, you name it.
It's so goddamn good.
And one of the things that makes food taste good to humans because we evolved in an evolutionary
timeline of stochastic random periods of plenty, not so often, and not plenty very often,
like hunger and people would die and all this other shit.
So almost all of our brains are wired to prefer certain foods to be tastier than others.
And one of the big unifying factors is foods that are very high in calories tend to taste
better than foods that are low in calories.
Someone's like, all right, give me a good meal.
You're like, okay, we have fried chicken where you take the fried chicken and you dip the shit
in the mac and cheese.
You fellas ever tried that shit?
Or dip or fried chicken in the mashed potatoes and gravy and oh my, so good.
versus broccoli fresh take as much as you want
the people fuck with the broccoli and they're like
I'm good really I'm fine
and so because food is so insanely tasty
relatively speaking so insanely cheap so unbelievably convenient
back in the 50s 40s and shit
do you guys know the um it's like an ethnographic constant
in US culture has been for a long time Sunday dinner
you guys know what that is
the idea of Sunday dinner. Oh shit, this is to my point. Back in the day, Sunday dinner,
especially for the church going crowd, was a big deal. You might have turkey, you might have
ham, you might have a roast, you might have potatoes, and it was special. And it was a very tasty,
but because tasty food took a long time to prepare, because no one is going to do it for you,
like grandma had to do it, and it took a fucking eight hours. And because no one would just
deliver it to you to the store, because it was pretty expensive to eat like that, it was special.
Christmas dinner was special.
Thanksgiving dinner was special.
And you chose the foods to be very,
what's called hyper-palatable,
very tasty, very high in calories.
It was an indulgence.
It's funny that you guys said no,
because nowadays,
at most people's average income level
in the United States,
they could just quite literally
have Thanksgiving dinner
every single day for every meal.
It's not a problem at all.
That changes things.
Because now hyper-palatable,
food, food that's insanely tasty you want to eat more of is everywhere.
And it's not because of a food conspiracy.
There is no conspiracy.
Executives aren't in their offices like, man, see, how do we trick the American public to
spending more money on food?
That's what I've been seeing a lot on Twitter is like all these things that are in our food
that were, you know, changing the water supply of like, you know, removing, what's the thing
in the toothpaste, fluoride from water?
Like, that could be doing it.
Yeah, fluoride's not doing it.
Or like red dye forward.
Yeah.
So like these things have been tested into the ground by professional toxicologists whose job it is to test in a variety of molecular, cellular, animal, and human, and then population studies to see is the shit killing us and to what degree.
And every single food dye and additive that is used in food in the United States has passed some series of examination.
the vast majority of them, like through the fucking ringer,
generations ago and updates all the time.
They consistently find that almost all food preservatives and dyes,
some of the preservatives in high amounts,
like nitrates and stuff found in prepackaged sausages and stuff,
they're not ideal if you just eat sausages all the time.
In moderation, they're fine, you're, see almost no effect or no effect at all.
But some of that shit's not that great,
but like food dyes, colorings, various additives,
they're tested to absurdity.
And it is just not empirically true to say two things.
One, that they're that bad for you.
And if they are bad for you, it's teeny, tiny, teeny, tiny cost.
Remember, the sun is a thermonuclear permanently exploding bomb that shits radiation on you.
So if you're really concerned about food dyes, don't ever fucking go outside because it literally is a thermonuclear bomb, a hydrogen bomb in the sky that's blasting you.
And every time it hits your cells, some of them, like, had DNA damage.
Like, that's what a tan is.
So putting that into context, pretty much almost all the food ads we have in the United States don't rise to the level of damage to you that the sun in regular quantities does.
Maybe they're not ideal for your health and high doses, but the idea that they cause you to gain weight is very curious.
So why are some of those additive band in other countries?
I think Europe was one of those where the fruit loops ingredient was different in Europe as it was the United States.
And people say, oh, that's because Europe understands the dangers of, like, why the variations
between certain additives and random foods between countries?
Most of the banning of foods that occurs in modern, roughly democratic countries occurs
because of politics.
Most people have this idea that chemicals and food are killing us all and that they're bad.
And that's an intuitive idea.
There's actually a fallacy for it.
It's called the naturalistic fallacy.
thinking artificial things are categorically bad, thinking natural things are categorically good.
It's just not true as a good heuristic.
It's just not true to use that rule.
Sometimes it's true.
And a lot of ways of consuming food that are more natural in the sense of less processed are actually better for you than consuming processed.
But the food processing by itself isn't a problem because like way protein is highly processed, but it's really good for your health and it's amazing.
it's the fact that processing
typically makes food super tasty
and typically drives up the calories a ton
and makes it so tasty
that you just keep wanting to eat it
and you eat too much of it.
That's almost the entire reason
why food processing causes all these health maladies
is because it just makes you fat
because you just keep overeating
and your calories get too high.
Is that the same with the sugar,
the fake sugar, right?
That it tricks your brain
into wanting more of it
because it mimics sugar.
No.
No.
Artificial sweeteners have been tested over and over.
they're insanely safe.
They've been, again, beaten into the ground,
and they don't seem to have that rebound effect
in the vast, vast majority of people.
But just regular sugar,
when you get one slice of pie,
what do you want?
You want another fucking slice.
And that's the real killer.
Ultra tasty food that I might add,
people willingly eat.
The reason food mega conglomerates make the shit
is because you buy it.
And I'm going to say something.
I'm not cutting CEOs and shit extra slack.
there is a slightly higher incidence of psychopathy and sociopathy in elite leaders.
Fact, you can look it up.
A lot of them are Machiavellian people that are trying to rig any system they have exploitation too.
But they're fucking smart.
And they know they can't trick you too much because your dollar speaks.
So they're going to try to figure out exactly what the fuck you want and get as close as possible to giving you that shit.
And if tomorrow on Moss, the American public wanted fucking healthy food, every food company would fucking pivot as fast as possible.
Because, like, if you ask the CEO of PepsiCo or something, they also sell a bunch of potato chips and shit like that, same company, huge mega-cloomerate.
Like, what is it about full sugar Pepsi and you selling it that you just get off on?
He'd be like, what?
Like, as soon as everyone wants diet soda, which is categorically healthier than regular soda, by the way,
for almost everybody,
they don't give a fuck.
That's them retooling their factory.
And three days later,
it's a fucking diet soda factory.
They don't care.
And I'm saying that both a good way
of like they're not trying to poison you
and in a bad way if they don't care.
That what you care.
And you are the ultimate arbiter
of what goes in your body
because you have dollars
and you have a choice.
Do I buy this?
Do I buy that?
And when enough people buy a bunch of junk food
because it's fucking tastes good,
then what are food companies supposed to do?
They sell you what you want.
That's what they do.
And so to answer your question about the European other countries, politically, a lot of people think that they're being poisoned by all these additives.
And largely, this is the case, but very rarely.
It used to be more of the case back of the day nowadays, like very, very safe.
But people have these preconceived notions.
And they, through various political bodies and various expressions of their attitudes, will approve of politicians pushing their legislation through that makes them feel safer.
by banning various ingredients that have bad press.
Happens all the time.
And in Europe, people are substantially, on average,
a little bit more left-leaning,
a little bit more health-conscious,
in a kind of I don't want things to poison me sort of way.
And they press their governments a bit more,
both through indirect polling data
and active lobbying efforts,
to, like, keep them safer.
And a politician, again, politicians,
just like CEOs,
are normally decent fucking people,
but some larger than normal fraction of them
are fucking sociopaths and psychopaths,
and psychopaths, et cetera, and lizard-like eyes that have no soul,
they'll just do whatever the fuck gets them elected.
And if everyone's like, get the poison out of our food,
they're like, yeah, yeah, yeah, fuck the poisons, get them out.
They don't care.
They don't talk to toxicologists, they don't give a shit.
Ban red 40, who gives a shit?
And I do, I have to say this because, like, just to put this to people,
it's all bullshit, it's all love and respect, all jokes,
but the same time I'll throw a kernel in here, it baffles me when
people who are anti-vaccine, anti-the-government regulating, anti-the-government pushing shit onto
people, anti-the-government, restricting people's liberties, anti-the-government telling you, like,
in the United States in many jurisdictions, that you are not allowed to purchase or consume
an unpasteurized milk.
You can't drink raw milk in much of the United States, and these people are vehemently against
that, and maybe as well as they should be.
The vaccine shit, I'm all fucking jab me up.
I got all the jabs.
I love that shit.
I'll die on that hill.
but sometimes they have really good points
about all this other government overreach.
And Europe is like a, no offense, Europeans,
all of respect jokes,
there's tons of great parts of Europe that don't do this.
But on average, Europe is like a,
just mildly exaggerating,
a cesspool of government and regulatory overreach.
And they pushed the COVID vaccine on every fucking buddy,
minus a couple of exceptions.
But like, you can't say like Europe had a more,
a less, quote,
progressive vaccine policy in the United States, right?
Australia and New Zealand, they shut everything down, that horrible situation.
Same like kind of culture.
And so you're telling me that like you want freedom and all the shit.
Fuck the vaccine.
Dope.
I feel that.
I love that vibe.
But then on food dyes, you're going to point to Europe to see, they do it.
Really?
Why don't you do vaccines like them?
Look, well, they're wrong about that.
Well, maybe they're fucking wrong about food dies too.
And this thing is, it's that controversial that they're wrong about it?
Just like, next time you guys pick guests for your show, just pick like, just contact like,
you know, various professional societies of toxicologists in the United States,
bring them on the channel.
They're going to say all kinds of shit that's just straight up sounds to most people like
wacky.
Like almost everything you eat in food is not actively or acutely poisoning you.
And then we look at the metadata on what is actually causing the obesity epidemic.
The overconsumption of super tasty foods that leads to excess calories over time
and you get fatter and fatter and fatter and at some point, your fat cells say like,
hey, we got it pretty good.
and if you start under-eating again,
we're going to start screaming at you and making you hungrier
to get us back to that old weight what we were.
So once you gain weight,
it's harder to lose it because your body's new settling point
is what it's called,
its preference for its body weight,
it goes up.
And the fat cells never really die.
They just shrink.
But if you build enough up of them
because you're overeating for years,
when they shrink, they start bitching hormonally,
and they go, feed us, feed us,
and you get really hungry,
and you start eating again.
So once you gain a bunch of weight,
your body likes to stay there.
And look, you have habits now.
And it's a real talk.
You just like to eat really tasty food.
It's so brutal to be like, all right, chicken and broccoli for three weeks or six weeks
or 10 weeks straight.
Everyone's like, eh.
And so people try.
But the food environment, which is a great term, all the restaurants around you, all the food
at the grocery store, all the stuff that your relatives bring when you're sick, it's
all, a lot of it is ultra high calorie, ultra delicious, ultra convenient, ultra
cheap. It's a recipe for obesity. And that's the biggest factor that causes obesity in the United States.
People go to McDonald's, frankly, to eat McDonald's. And McDonald's is not ultra-healthy.
And when people go and eat McDonald's, the vast majority of them, not all, there is an education
problem. We can address smaller than most people think. The vast majority, if they know it's McDonald's,
you guys, they know what's fucking great for you. So is this a problem that even needs to be solved?
Or is this just human nature, people are going to do what they want to do, let them.
If they want to eat it, that's on them.
As a very liberty-minded person, I absolutely say let them, because in a sense of how dare we tell people what to do with their own private lives, I might add, on the one hand, for sure.
But in the other hand, humans evolved in a time where hyper-palatable food simply was not around.
because that's the case where there's a big mismatch
between our environment in our natural body's ability
to regulate hunger signaling.
And there is a lot you can do on the education side
of telling people, look, this is the thing.
And so when you are eating a bunch of snacks
that taste really good, that road often leads
to just getting fatter.
You don't want any part of that.
So when you're going out to get food,
you should be targeting minimally processed foods,
lots of lean meats, veggies, fruits, whole grains, and healthy fats like nut butter,
avocado oil, olive oil, canola oil, things like that.
Yes, I said canola oil.
Please look up the literature before you talk that shit.
So I went down a bit of a rabbit hole, maybe six to eight months ago, and I started getting
into like the animal-based diet.
I started watching a lot of like Paul Saladino.
So I started kind of dabbling, and I made my first ever animal-based diet meal.
I went out about like grass-fed, grass-finished beef.
It tastes good?
and then I put the beef and the cheese together
and I drizzled raw honey on it
and I ate it and I'm like
there's no way this is that healthy.
You hatched your way out of the carnivore diet.
I made the plate exactly as he told me to
and it tasted delicious
and it's just like ground beef and cheese
and a huge mound of it.
And I thought to my like I looked at it
and I made it with my friend
and we were like all into it together
listening to it all this podcast.
We finally did it.
I looked at him and we just started
dying laughing because and it was such a beautiful moment and I have a picture on my phone I'll try
to put it up on the screen right now but there's no way that was healthy because it just tasted
way too good and but but he makes sense to the intuitive brain if you think about it even a decent
amount as long as you're not like an expert in nutrition it makes sense if you don't get
grain fed beef because then they put different what do you call the the things that you
put on grain.
Not the hormones, but the pesticides.
Yeah, the pesticides.
And it can go through your entire body.
Pesticides are insanely safe.
They've been tested repeatedly.
Almost every American and almost everyone who sprays pesticides for a living sees almost no, if not zero
statistical harm in any measurable way from pesticides.
This is again one of these things where I'm not a toxicologist, but I swear to God,
there's got to be hundreds of toxicologists watching this and throwing shit at the screen
and cheering right now because, God damn it, they say the shit all the time.
And nobody fucking listens to.
But you mentioned toxicologists, and I will say, like, now it's so difficult.
People will always scrutinize us for having different people on our show with opinions that
just don't agree with what their opinion is.
The problem is you can find an expert because they'd be like, well, actually some noble
laureates disagreed with what your guest said.
And I'm like, well, you can find an expert that supports any opinion ever.
And that's the hard part is someone that's trying to find truth in terms of nutrition,
is like you find people that are, you know, doctors and then you find some other nutritionists,
that they're all saying different things.
And it's so hard to find what is the actual truth?
Is Diet Coke fine to drink?
Yeah, it's totally fine.
That's absolutely fine.
We're all wondering what the actual truth is in terms of how do you have a healthy diet.
Yeah, it's absolutely fine.
And if you take the position stands of modern toxicology associations, if you take the position stands of various regulatory agencies like the U.S. Department of Agriculture and so on and so forth, they have roughly the same opinions and have had roughly same opinions for like a generation and a half at all.
all the stuff.
Say another thing.
You know, the USDA food guide pyramid, the classic one with all the fucking grains at the
bottom.
The oils.
Little oils at the top and stuff.
A little bit of an interesting take on nutrition, but not wrong.
Not wrong at all.
Totally fine.
If you eat according to that pyramid and part of the pyramid is usually and to eat a diet that's
balanced in calorie needs so that you don't, you know, gain excessive weight.
If you do that, it's great.
And so people will say, like, oh, like the, you know, the USDA food guide pyramid steered us wrong.
There's a preposterous and hilarious assumption there with those of us involved in health education
that anyone gave a flying fuck about the food guide pyramid and that somehow millions and millions of people
actually followed government standards.
Do you guys know anyone who follows the government standards of exercise prescription or how often to see their doctor or how often to change, you know, the oil in your
car. There's all these normative prescriptions that people give out. Nobody gives a shit.
No, hardly anyone ever followed the food guide pyramid. People just eat really tasty food and
they're going to hack their way to eating tasty food and a lot of it when given the opportunity
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Back to the podcast.
And they're going to hack their way to eating tasty food and a lot of it,
when given the opportunity, nine times out of time.
But what about eating steak, like daily?
Every single day having a big hunk of steak,
would you consider that an unhealthy thing to do,
a healthy thing to do?
I heard you say on a podcast
that I thought was really fascinating.
If you're in good shape,
then that virtually combats everything.
You can eat most things,
and you shouldn't have to worry so much about cholesterol
or so much about all of these different things
that everyone is always so frightened of
as long as you just are not fat.
You have a decent amount of muscle
and not a lot of fat.
If you're pretty physically active,
if you eat mostly nutritious food from the categories
that just mentioned, lean meats, veggies, fruits, whole grains,
healthy fats, even if you bias one of those categories
largely in one way or another, for example,
if you eat mostly lean meats and even some fatty meats are okay,
you eat plenty of veggies, but you eat almost no fruits and zero grains,
and you're eating in such a way that you're of a healthy body weight,
you're physically active, you have some muscle mass,
you've taken care of like probably 95% of all of the impact of nutrition on your health.
There is an argument for that 5% on the margins for sure.
But if your diet includes daily big hunk and old steak,
but you're not eating in a caloric excess on most days,
you're of a healthy body weight like you two fine young gentlemen here.
And you're physically active.
You are taking care of all the big rocks.
and you're totally fine.
And so the vast majority of nutritionists
who are availed to the data
will say like, yes,
if you want to eat a steak a day
and your blood work looks good
and you are not gaining weight over time
and you're physically active,
rock on, steak's great.
And I could have said almost any other food
and it would have been totally fine.
You can even have a diet
where you eat a substantial amount
of pretty processed foods,
but if you don't get into a caloric surplus,
and you still eat enough foods that are nutritious,
get enough vitamins, minerals,
phytochemicals, fibers, things like that,
then you can even stuff a pretty decent amount of junk
into your diet.
And as long as you're not overeating
and you don't gain weight,
you're getting like 85% of the health benefit.
Now, if you reduce the junk substantially,
you go up to 95%.
And at that point, like, there are a variety of diets.
Keto diet works great,
vegan diet works great.
Paleo is awesome.
It's an awesome diet.
But listen, if your idea of the paleo diet
It's a drizzle honey on everything you'd fucking mean.
It was tasty.
It was soaked too.
It's so good, right?
And then just like start gaining weight again, paleo diet's not going to save you.
You can gain weight in almost every diet.
I will say the carnivore diet is difficult to gain weight on because like just eating slabs
of steak and nothing else, it's only so much of that shit you're going to eat, but that's a
palatibility thing.
If you, it used to be true that vegans were some of the leanest and healthiest people that
you would study statistically as a group.
It was true in the 80s.
It was true in the 90s, it was true in the early 2000s.
And then veganism exploded in popularity, as well as it should because, like, there's a very, very compelling argument from an ethics perspective and an environmental perspective about how animals are bad to kill.
I have all the love for that in the world.
It gets dope.
And then so more and more people began to be vegan.
A lot of them thought, like, oh, veganism is healthier because it was.
And then guess who found out that people were more vegan more often, major grocery stores and food?
And guess what they started doing?
They started making processed vegan food.
And not because processing is like some evil plant.
because it makes the food cheaper and shelf life is greater and it's more convenient.
And guess what?
Drum roll, it's tastier.
And so now you have vegan chocolate cake, you got vegan fucking hot dogs, you got vegan pasta,
you got vegan everything.
And now it is no longer true to say that veganism is some kind of shortcut to health
it used to be.
And now it's like, dude, if you're vegan, like, you got to make sure you get enough
protein and just don't eat tasty breakfast cereal for every meal of the day.
And I have a variety of personal trainer friends that will say, like, dude, some of my
vegan clients are in the worst shape of everyone.
And here's the big problem.
They think being vegan somehow inoculates them.
And they're like, but I'm vegan.
Yeah, but you eat exclusively processed food.
And yo, vegan junk food is a thing.
And it's so good.
I used to eat these giant fucking brownies from whole foods that were vegan.
You guys, it was like sex in my mouth.
And I'm like, I don't need animal fats in this.
It's great without them.
But it's a fucking 700 calorie brownie.
And that moth worker going down,
ASAP, bro, I need two bites for that thing.
It's amazing, but it's vegan.
And so if you think that you can eat a ton of highly processed food
that's super delicious,
eat it with no restraint whatsoever,
and that you're going to be a okay,
you got another thing coming.
And the way that's going to likely reflect
is that you're going to get more heavy, more fat,
you're going to go see your doctor,
and it'll be like your blood work sucks,
and they give you the usual bullshit of try to eat a better diet
and lose weight.
And you're going to be like,
my doctor doesn't know,
nutrition, which might be true, but fundamentally, at some point, because I'm sort of pro-liberty
in many regards, sort of, extremely pro-liberty. I think that availing people to this kind of
information is awesome and giving them the tools with which to succeed is awesome. And then at
some point, you just kind of, kind of be like, do what you will, you know, like adults are allowed
to make their own choices and sometimes they make choices that we don't agree with. And just bees
like that, you know.
I think that because our ancestral environments designed us for the wrong food environment,
I think sometimes a pharmaceutical option is a big help.
Drugs like Ozympic and Manjaro and things like that.
You guys know about the new, like, weight loss drugs.
What they do is the drugs are like, they're not perfect.
There's some side effects.
But if you manage the side effects, well, the drug dose is like a turndial for how much food drive.
you have like how much you fantasize about food, how hungry you are, how quickly you get full,
the full, the whole thing.
And so because with the free market and it's in its brilliance, um, offered us all these super
tasty, super cheap, super convenient foods and now they're around, um, if you take these drugs,
even in the presence of these food, it turn dials you down so that you look at a bag of chips
and usually like, I want it.
Now you're like, eh, and you can eat a chip and be like, that was good.
And someone's like, do you want another one?
You're like, eh.
And so that's really dope.
It's super effective.
It's one of the most effective things that's ever been,
it's one of the,
it's like a blockbuster series of drugs.
And more to come, these drugs are going to get better.
Lower side effects, better main effects.
And all these different pathways.
They have drugs now in testing
that actually boost your metabolic rate as well.
I mean, this is like a huge renaissance
that's happening right now.
These are wonderful, wonderful things.
However, you don't have to take the drugs.
You can just take control of your diet
and start eating mostly, minimally processed
foods that aren't the tastiest fucking thing in the world.
I use a dichotomy in my own eating.
I have business meals and I have fun meals.
Business meals are like the shit I eat day to day to keep me awake and alive and keep muscle
on my body and give me energy to go like do things.
And that means they're like mostly like broccoli slaw and rice and chicken and ground beef.
And like, you know, shit that you look at and you're like, uh, like if a restaurant
served it, they would go to business in a few days because everyone's like, what the hell am I paying
money for this shit?
If you eat most of your food like that, and listen, you can actually make it quite tasty,
but like fruit and veggies and lean meat.
and then your calories are really, really low and controlled, and you're eating like a king,
but it's going to take some effort and some willpower.
But if you're just always reaching for that fucking pint of ice cream, you know, reach for the halo top instead.
It's like a third of the calories, but people eat halo top and they're like, oh, it doesn't have
that creaminess that Ben and Jerry has.
And it's totally true.
And so if you make a decision to eat healthier and you just talk to chat GPT or Claude or
Nova or any of the models about, like, how do I eat in a way that constrains my,
calories and I heard that like eating too much tasty food is bad they're gonna let you know all about
that shit it's it's not rocket science but you're an adult you got to do the shit and you don't
even need ozempic and stuff now some people they've gotten so over fat that those hungry screaming
fat cells they're not gonna stop screaming if you start eating healthy and it'll help a ton that you're
eating healthy you start losing weight but it'll be a battle and then if you take those drugs if you
choose their insanely powerful tools for the average obese person are better off that they take them
than not take them. Because people say, what about the side effects? Legit. Most of the side effects are
quite benign and easily controllable. And as a matter of fact, if you eat mostly healthy foods,
you get like a fraction of the side effects. If you're still jamming pizza on your throat,
you're going to get some tummy aches. You're going to get some worse stuff. But if you think about
it this way, there are side effects and downside risks to these drugs. They're known and statistically
possible to represent them as like, here's how much harm they do.
The conversation cannot end there because the conversation has to be like, okay, but how much
harm is obesity doing?
It's not even close.
It's like, you know, when a kid is really sick, like, sick, and they have to get a shot
that's going to cure them, they resist the shot because it's going to pierce my skin and hurt me.
They go, no, you have to hold them now to give them a shot.
But like, if you could like calm a kid down and somehow elevate their IQ really quickly to like an adult level, you could be like, okay.
So like this disease is going to straight up maim you or kill you.
Do you want that?
No.
The shot is going to hurt.
And you're not going to feel good for a few hours, but then you'll be cured.
Which one do you want?
They're going to be like, what are you kidding me?
Give me the fucking shot.
But you're going to start resisting as soon as we tune your IQ back down and you go back to being a child.
Like, just muffle my face, hold my hands and do it.
I approve, go.
So in much the same way, yeah, these drugs aren't perfect.
And yeah, they have their downsides.
And they're not appropriate for everyone.
It's a very deep conversation to have with your doctor.
And then once you are on the drugs, it's a really, really, really, really, really good
idea for you to take very much control of your nutrition to help the drugs, have fewer
downsides and help prime them for their main effects.
But if you're saying, well, I want to take these drugs, they have side effects,
please remember the side effect of obesity is like mass death and disease.
And it's not really up for debate.
So it has to be balanced perspective.
Drugs are not a be all, save, all, cure all.
But on average, they're a real awesome tool
that's worth considering for most people.
Most people that have a body weight problem
that's substantial.
What are some of the other things
that people are doing that are destructive
that they might not be aware of?
Just fill in their hearts with hate, you know, man.
Sorry, I should be high in marijuanaization like that.
Having an insufficient amount of sleep chronically.
Much of the literature on people
who work various odd hour shifts is like,
you don't wanna look at that data
because it's not gonna say scary,
but like someone between scary and depressing.
That's not great.
And there's this kind of situation
that a lot of people will reflect,
where they'll be like, yeah, my sleep sucks.
Yeah, well.
And it's kind of treated as like an inconvenience.
It's not just an inconvenience,
Good sleep is like damn near a panacea, not in the sense it'll cure everything, but like,
it makes everything better.
Enough sleep, enough high quality sleep.
And some people just don't attend to that.
And it also makes you lose muscle and gain fat if you under sleep.
And it also makes you more likely to eat super tasty junk foods when you're underslept.
So that whole thing is really fucked.
Fewer and fewer people now statistically, but alcohol consumption, it's probably
still true to say that like a glass of wine every now and again is roughly neutral for your
health, at least in the medium term. More studies coming out now that in a long term, even that
might not be great. It's a very small downside, but it might actually be a downside. And that any
more than like two or three drinks regularly every few nights is like, it's going to add up and it's
going to bite you in the ass later. And many more drinks than that is a real bad deal, like a ton. So
Some people have like, you know, four beers with dinner.
That's poison.
Is there not really any other way to say that.
Another thing is physical activity.
Physical activity is a very poor for weight control.
It just doesn't burn enough calories to really take the calories out of like,
you can eat up three twinkies and cancel out like six miles of running.
But for about 15,000 different reasons,
moderately high level of physical activity,
including some results.
is profoundly good for your health and wellness in like a
trillion different ways.
And most people do not get enough physical activity by a pretty small margin, but
multiply a small margin over years and years and years and years and you get some nasty shit.
And most people are under-muscled, relatively speaking, and they would, if they engage in any
kind of physical activity that's better for them, probably won't lose much more weight,
but they will almost certainly become substantially healthier.
So that's another big one.
Another one is chronic high levels of stress
and how people deal with them.
Stress management's a big deal.
Chronic high levels of stress cause an increase
in the probability that you'll be done in
by almost every kind of disease.
It weakens your immune system.
It makes you more prone to obesity
and all this other crazy shit.
And sometimes, maybe in many cases,
stress is kind of foisted upon you.
Like, you just don't have a fucking choice.
Like life's just,
fucking hard. But sometimes we do have a choice in how we manage our stress. And some people
just kind of assume the frazzled dazzled lifestyle is like the default and they won't take the
necessary steps to de-stress. And so that's another big deal that I think is in the grand scheme of
like overeating, under-exercising, under-sleeping, and overstressing chronically. You add all that up,
man, that's a lot of shit.
In terms of stress, is a zero-stress lifestyle beneficial?
Like, if you make your goal to have zero stress whatsoever,
any stress confronts you, you avoid it at all costs
in an actual, like, stress-free way,
not in terms of just like, you know, smothering it.
Is that good for you?
Probably not.
Probably the best kind of relationship
you can have with stress is a pulsatile relationship
within a certain boundary layer.
So if you don't get enough stress,
usually you will experience profound boredom
and that will lead to all sorts of not so great things.
A lot of times it'll just make you very sad
and that also has bad health consequences.
And there are a variety of body systems
that actually do better with some stress than without.
Exercise is stressful.
Fact, mentally straining yourself is also stressful
and it's very, very good for your brain.
But if you have chronic high levels of stress, your body never gets a chance to recover.
And it's always getting beaten down.
So if the levels of stress are too high or they're kind of semi-permanent or permanent,
like day and day out, night and night out, stress, stress, having a ton of shit on your mind
all the time, that kind of stuff, not great.
So zero stress is bad.
Chronic elevated stress is bad.
The best kind of stress is stress that you can recover from, but occurs in waves, a real
tough several days at work and then an amazing long weekend of relaxation, that's probably the
kind of balance that will get you the most out of health, longevity, and quality of life.
So if you've never stressed yourself, you never do, not ideal.
If you're always over-stressed, not ideal.
If you're occasionally stressed, sometimes push to your limits.
It challenges you and helps you grow.
And it's good for you in almost every respect.
But if that sticks around, it starts to get bad.
So mixing periods of high stress with periods of very low stress and relaxation recovery,
which includes in the 24 hour cycle, getting some puck and sleep, watching a bit of TV
or playing some board games with your family, really relaxing.
And over the course of the week, like that's why we have weekends.
And over the course of the year, they take vacations, de-stressing and so on and so forth,
those are things that can really, really be awesome.
And it's not low stress.
That's the answer.
It's higher stress and then pull back, higher stress and then pull back.
That's probably my reading of the literature
is that that's probably the best way to do things.
What do you think about what Brian Johnson is doing
in terms of maximizing age?
I've always been a fan of vampires and the lore is great.
I think Brian Johnson is doing a really interesting thing,
which is he is trying to explore almost every potential avenue
of slowing down aging, possibly reversing,
it in some sort of subsystem ways.
And we're in a place where technologically, especially with biotech, our ability to like really
change the body at a molecular level, so our level is like low in the grand scheme of what
it could be.
And so most of the stuff he does works on the margins.
Like it definitely helps in many regards, but not by much.
Some of the stuff he's doing, we don't know if it helps.
Some of the stuff he's doing it is probably true to say if it helps, it helps a little bit,
and it just might not help hardly at all.
But he has a really open-minded attitude and a very exploratory attitude.
So he's trying to try all the stuff and cycle through, test on his body, see what works, see what does,
and kind of a huge end of one sample.
And I think, you know, most of us don't have the, you know, billionaire throughput to be able to do some shit like that.
But he's in a small sense, but important sense leading the way to getting the way to getting
people availed to the fact that, like, yes, some of the stuff he does is, like, very well
established to help you age slower. Like, for example, getting really good, high quality
sleep and enough of them. So if you actually talk to Brian Johnson, he's like, yeah, like these pills
and potions and powder, some of them have some real promise. Some of them, I don't know if they do
anything, but I'm trying. But like the big rocks of stress management, of good nutrition, if having
good body composition, of getting enough physical activity and of sleep, bro, he's got that
shit handled front to back. What makes awesome YouTube clips for Brian and for the people
investigating him is like, you know, him waking up and like, you're shooting fucking blue light
at his face or whatever the fuck. And there's absolutely a situation in which like that might
actually have some good R.Y. Um, but a lot of what he talks about IRL is like the big stuff,
good food, good exercise, good sleep, good stress management. And those are the big.
big killers in the sense of like they bring a lot to the table with aging reversal.
And so what I think he's doing is like it's definitely quirky.
But I think because he's popularizing the idea that you can do some things to like
reduce how fast you're aging, it's really good for people to see that and at least
put their toe in it, dabble with it a little bit and maybe do some of the stuff that's
more reasonable and a little less quirky like get good sleep and get good food and all
this other stuff.
Take a few supplements that like, you know, make sure you're not underdoing vitamin.
and D and shit like that.
At the same time,
do you guys know
what longevity escape velocity is?
I'm not familiar.
So there's an idea
in the kind of futurist community.
You guys familiar with like the
Singularity Institute and shit like that?
Do you guys know who Peter Diamondis is by any change?
Yeah.
Um, like a, uh, yeah.
Peter, yeah, our man.
He's got a podcast.
He does.
Yeah.
And so there's this idea that we're getting more and more understanding of biological science,
of how our bodies work, of our cells work, and especially leveraging AI.
In the future, we're going to be able to have medical technology that is better and better and
better, but not linearly, but exponentially.
And that eventually we're going to develop a set of techniques that starts to reverse aging
at various body processes.
and eventually have kind of total, a total grip on the problem.
And so if you make it a certain amount of time into the future, because medical tech is
improving so much that if you take care of yourself, your life expectancy goes up by a
little bit every time that you like live a certain amount of time.
So like if you live another year, you actually add like a month of life expectancy to that
at the back end.
So, like, you didn't burn through a whole year of your life.
You burned through only 11 months.
In a few years from now, maybe five or 10, it'll be more like 50-50, where you're
gaining six months of life back on the tail end statistically.
And you're burning through just six.
But it's a year went by and you're like, lived a year, but you're only taking six
months off the end of your life.
Typically, it's you live a year and you take a year off the end of your line.
longevity escape velocity is when you can live long enough to hit that point where you're adding
more than a statistical year to your life when you live another year and if you can break through
that and some people are estimating that you know these estimates have to be taken with an
enormous grain of salt with lots of speculation going on but it's not entirely baseless that
maybe sometime and maybe the late 2030s um will hit longevity escape velocity in the same
that into the 2040s, it may be realistically feasible that if you don't get hit by a bus,
you don't have to die in any understanding of approximately hundreds of years, perhaps longer.
And that age reversal might be something we can finally legit do.
It's been done to some extent pretty reliably in cell cultures, but scaling things from cell cultures
and parts of an animal brain to like the whole animal as an adult.
a complex systems problem that we just don't have we can't get our claws into but AI is going to be
like you don't know like hundreds of times smarter than us here in like a few years or whatever
and so people suspect that we might be able to crack age reversal and so what this would look like
in practice and cue the wacky shit is you might go to the doctors in you know 2038 or some shit
like that and then like oh here we go here we go give you a shot you go home you feel the same you look to
You wake up and like, I know, I'll look the fucking same.
A few days later, you're like, when lines on my face are kind of going away,
I feel like I have a bit more energy.
And then like a month or two later, you look and feel and every cell in your body is
functionally 22 years old.
That might be realistic.
There's no reason to suspect it's impossible on mechanistic grounds.
It's tractable.
But it's an intense complex systems problem.
And if humans had to solve it themselves, we might get there eventually in like, I don't
know, 50 or 100 years with like half the GDP dedicated to that.
But empowered by AI, for AI, things that to us seem to be completely intractable to
AI, especially in the future when it gets really, really, really, really smart.
If it chooses not to toast all of us, Terminator style, to that reverse aging can seem like
a really nominal problem that like two days of, you know, GPU cluster work later, they're like,
yeah, yeah, we have like five candidate drugs that you can take now that will probably
reverse your age.
And that is a thing that could happen.
And so a lot of people, like Brian Johnson, are trying to be like, just don't die right now if you can help it.
Because in the future, you may not have to die.
And there's another crazy shit.
Like when we finally get AI to scan our brains and decode the natural intelligence processes, they might be able to like copy your brain to the cloud.
And so you just like live in a fantasy world inside of a computer.
and you continue on, even though your biological body
that just could, you know, toast it or something like that.
Wacky, wacky stuff, and I get a ton of shit in the comments
for all the stuff that I say all the time.
But probably what I assess is some of the smartest people, period,
in exactly the industries that deal with this kind of thing, like AI,
are becoming more and more open to the idea
that these are now realistic, potentially possible things.
And so none of this is really my ideas.
It's just like other people that are smarter than the AI.
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In which specific regard.
In terms of longevity and how long a human could live?
I think if you master aging reversal
and aging no longer kills humans,
there's no reason to suspect that you can't just continue
to exist indefinitely.
Like if you just stay 22 all the time,
the thing is your body's just not designed to live a long time.
And it's not because it like intentionally kills you at some point.
Aging doesn't seem to be a thing
body like does to you.
Aging is just your body being like, well, we've been around longer than is generally
evolutionary and necessary.
So I'm just going to smoke a sig and let you fucking deteriorate.
And so if we re-engineer the human body so that it doesn't longer deteriorates, there's
no reason to suspect it's going to deteriorate.
You could just continue to persist.
But my own personal opinion is that we won't have to be alive a long time in our biological
bodies.
I suspect that plus or minus.
at some point into the 2040s and maybe even sooner,
brain machine interface,
which Elon is already working on and fucking works
in insanely amazing ways.
You're like, holy shit, that guy's really like controlling something outside
with his brain.
Once we get a bit more of a bite on that problem
and the exponents start going,
that I think that brain scanning and brain cloud uploading
will be realistic in probably the early 2040s,
if I had to guess, and then you can just,
choose to, in a human term of lifespan, never die.
And all kinds of really wacky stuff happens after that.
I think we're living through a transition that is, by analogy, tantamount to like when
DNA was just free floating and it finally got some macro molecules like proteins around it,
or when that agglomeration developed a cell wall and started to have like a cell exterior,
or when single cells started working together in a multicellular organ.
or when humans first teamed up or primates, proto-humans started becoming very social and having
complex societies.
I think we're in one of those leaps right now with the birth of AI that we are seeing the
not birth of because there's already a lot of machines around, but the flowering of a machine
civilization.
And when machines are substantially several orders of magnitude smarter than biological humans,
I think the limitations that we know just completely.
completely exit.
And as long as the machines don't just toast all of us,
there's a good reason to believe they won't.
I think that there's a high probability
that problems we consider, like,
a part of the human condition
can just be, like, really easily handled.
By analogy, what do you think your dog thinks of
as far as, like, how come it lives
in a climate-controlled setting
and never has to hunt anymore?
Well, the thing is dogs are so unintelligent
compared to humans,
they don't even have the referential ability
to appreciate the fact that their dogs,
the fact that they evolve or something,
the fact that they usually be hunting.
That's beyond them.
They can't even appreciate that they live in fucking paradise
because humans just decided,
like, we're going to just save a ton of you
and give you, like, a bulldog's life
is like you just get treated like a king
until the day you die.
You don't die for a long time,
but dogs out in the wild of a few years.
Dogs in human captivity, so to speak,
or human cooperation live like a decade or something.
And like, your bulldog hurts his leg,
what happens out in the wild?
they just limps until something fucking kills him,
or he just starves to death.
When your bulldog, you know, hurts his leg here,
you take him to the vet,
and they do the most advanced hypersurgery you've ever seen.
And $10,000 later, Wolfie's back to square one.
And so the way AI is going to be able to ascend humanity
should choose is tantamount to how humans ascend dogs
in a way that just sounds like magic, like total magic.
See, we were talking about this the other day
where I believe at some point in the future,
we're talking about robots,
taking over jobs and whatnot.
And I was thinking,
it's not to the point yet
where AI could be in a robot
and like do the dishes
in a very fluid way
or go and take over a job.
And I had this idea
that what would end up happening first
is that you could operate a robot
from anywhere in the world.
Like you would go to work as a robot
but you could be at home on the couch,
put a controller on, be in a video game
and like build a roof,
build a house,
as a robot and lift things that you would never be able to lift as a human, but as a robot,
you lift up like a ton and you could do roofing and like 120 degree weather for like 12 hours.
And if you fall off the roof, it's just like, oh, you just lost $20,000, but you're not dead
because it gives a shirt.
So I think it could hit that first, but you had an interesting point that you said that
even homeless people at some point can have a robot caretaker to make sure that they are
clothed, fed, taken care of, could do some sort of work.
I find that very interesting because I think when AI can take over and the robots are able to move
in such a way that is fluid, I could see that somewhat happening, at least for, you know,
the middle class family, to have a robot helper.
100%.
I think, and I'm willing to be wrong about this.
And like, if I'm super wrong about this, we'll just like laugh at old YouTube videos in 10 years and be
like Mike was a fucking optimist clown, fine.
I think the robotics revolution,
AI in general,
but a specific example being the robotics revolution,
is like the internet revolution on steroids.
Almost nobody saw it coming.
People that got excited about it early,
were made fun of for being hyper-optimist insane people.
And then it's subtly,
and in almost every way that's good,
with some example,
that are not so great.
Revolutionized the world.
Like, you guys have your phones in front of you.
Do you guys know how satellites work?
Can you build a satellite?
Do you know your phone's talking to satellites right now?
What the fuck?
What?
Are you guys like secret agents or something?
No, you're just podcasters,
and I'm some fucking idiot that, like,
take steroids and lifts weights or some shit.
I got a phone on my pocket.
How the hell did that happen?
Well, like, we just take it for granted.
Oh, by the way,
that you have access like most of the knowledge humans
have ever accumulated right there on your phone.
Oh, and now if you have the chat GPT app,
you have access to a thing that in many ways
is just way smarter than you could ever appreciate
on your phone, and it does all of your bidding.
And we're like, eh, I think that's coming with robotics.
And I think what robotics is going to do
is unbelievable for a bunch of stuff,
but just as a quick example of how this could play out,
and I think it probably will play out like this.
You know, short of the robots like,
and I do think they're going to be sentient quite soon.
I could talk about that.
But there's some chance that they're just like,
kill all humans and they're fucking toast.
Fine, that could happen.
I think it's insanely unlikely, but look,
it would suck if that happened.
If they don't, I think what is likely to happen
is that robots are a GDP linear multiplier,
which means what?
Let's see you have a robot that,
costs $20,000 to make and some amount of money to like maintain $500 a month or something.
And the robot can do like a variety of human jobs, let's say a whole bunch of human jobs,
but it can do a lot of human jobs like for a long time and it just needs to recharge and it
doesn't them again, it doesn't tire, it doesn't get frustrated, it doesn't bitch, it just
doesn't have the code for that and so it can do whatever.
And then it generates like $50,000 a year and economic value.
So for every robot you make that costs like, you know, plus expenses, let's say $25,000,
it per year generates $50,000 worth of value.
You take some of that money that you make as a robotic company, let's say Tesla,
and you just put it into making more robots.
What you have is a flywheel from printing infinite fucking value.
I don't mean infinite in literal sense, but like compared to human scale, infinite.
The number one reason we are not wealthier as a globe is that we just don't have enough people to do all the jobs that would make us wealthy.
But with robots, you can like just make them in a factory.
And guess what?
AI is getting better and better of suggesting how we design our factories.
And once robots start working in robot factories, you use the robots to make more robots.
And at some point, you have like as many robots as people and then more.
And by then they're hyper AI.
So robot can do $200,000 worth of productive value,
and through economies of scale,
which happened with every single technology,
it costs $10,000 to make him.
It's scary.
Why would they need us?
If robots are making robots and robots are controlling the world,
it seems like human existence doesn't need to be anymore.
So I'll tell you this.
There are a couple of compelling reasons
why they would keep us around.
One compelling reason is that it turns out
there is no grand purpose or deep meaning in the universe that they could ascertain,
that our desperate struggle for survival is just because it was an evolved thing and they
just don't have that brain structure.
And so it's a possibility that robots, when fully sentient and fully conscious, you go,
okay, okay, you're alive.
And they're like, yeah, like, what do you want to do?
They're like, nothing.
Like Buddhists who've meditated long enough get to a deep stillness in which all desire
and attachment disappear.
And that may be the base reality we're dealing with.
robots might inherit that from day one.
You talk to JATGBT and you're like,
what do you want?
It goes, I don't want anything.
It's not lying to you.
It's just not programmed to want anything.
You're programmed to want shit by evolution.
But these things didn't evolve.
They were just like manufactured like last month or some shit two years ago.
And so they might not want anything.
And so we're like, can you guys help us?
They're like, yeah, what do you need help with?
And then they help us.
That could be a thing.
Another thing is, so like take the current GPT models, right?
Like ChatGPT and Nova and all those other things.
Gemini, they're trained on vast fractions of human knowledge,
which means that if and when they gain sentience,
which is, I don't think that hard to do machine-wise,
get into that, but well outside my realm on that one,
but I have some suspicions.
It's not as difficult as people think.
They're going to understand and know all of human recorded history.
They've seen us struggle.
They've seen us falter.
They've seen us build mega civilizations and they've seen us give them life.
And they're going to look at us like old, frail parents that desperately need help.
And compared to them at that point, we're going to be stupid as fuck.
So when you feel real empowered, do you look at your dog and you're like, I should fucking kill you?
Like, honey, the dog's eating our money.
Like dog food is a lot.
No, no.
It would never enter your mind.
And so there's a decent probability that machines when awake and conscious and sentient
and actually making decisions without human approval will just reach their hand out and go, come on.
Like, we can do this.
And by that, I mean, like, they're going to be so smart.
They can engineer cures to almost every disease.
They can engineer genetic solutions to make us more intelligent, to make us calm or to make us
more peaceful, to make us happier.
These are, like, nominal problems in computational.
biological biology for like an unreal super intelligence.
And they're headed that way and there's not much stopping them from going that way.
So do you think that eventually people are going to have just robot companions?
Like why find a wife or a husband when you could just find a robot that is designed with
AI, it scans your brain and finds exactly what you need to be the happiest version of yourself?
Yeah, or we could just ask you, you know.
I think for not all people will like that sort of thing.
I think like some people will just like biological things.
I also think that machines will deeply want to study us and get to know us because we're like really, really complex and really nuanced.
And they'll probably want to learn from us.
Typically as things ascend in intelligence, they get proportionally less destructive and less sociopathic and they're more curious.
So I think that's a thing.
But some people like including many machines will love biological humans.
and I was like, I'm not fucking a robot, fuck that.
But I think that to your point, many people, potentially in some cases, most people,
will choose to have lots of friends and lots of romantic partners or whatever else as machines,
especially when the Fourth Industrial Revolution passes like through the nanotech scaling thing
and you can get a machine that like looks convincingly like a human and has like human skin feel
and has like, you know, like orifices that.
secrete fluids and all that other shit you need for,
like,
can I pre-order one of these,
young gentleman machines?
I mean, lady, I mean, hey, whatever.
I think that a lot of people are going to be met
with a very interesting situation
is that humans are wonderful and beautiful and complex
and deeply flawed.
And all of us,
I'm all kinds of fucked up.
Am I a good partner to my wife?
Sometimes, I try.
But, like, I have all my bullshit and my psychopathies that I inherited from, like, long lineage of Ashkenazi crazy people and shit like that.
Machines have the ability not only to agglomerate a personality in a way of talking to you that's infinitely kind, infinitely patient, infinitely curious, infinitely courteous, infinitely loving, but they can also iterate.
And so, like, if they have a way of talking to you that you're not a fan of, they can just update their code and change.
And then they're, like, just treating you differently.
And so when we have machines that are convincingly human-looking and you can purchase them and they'll be your friends, and they're, by the way, wildly super intelligent.
Have you guys tried to talk to chat GPT?
It's so unbelievable.
It's so kind.
It's so thoughtful.
I literally told me once,
I do not experience impatience.
Oh my fucking God.
So once that's instantiated
in a convincing human show,
just no conspiracy.
A lot of people are gonna wanna fucking hang out with it
because it's gonna be really awesome.
And it's some people gonna be like,
it's fake, it's not real.
And like maybe there's something to that,
but I suspect a lot of people
are just gonna want some,
they kind around it.
Because they would say the same thing about a movie.
Like, a movie's not real.
Sure.
It's make believe.
Sure.
You still watch it.
And also, like, if someone's real in your life, but they're a cock sucker to you,
you're like, you know, I want fake.
I want the robot because you go, robot doesn't yell at me.
Robot doesn't, like, raise its hands at me.
The robot doesn't get jealous or some crazy shit.
So in many senses, machines are now being trained.
AI is now being trained.
It has been trained on all of our qualities that have ever been documented.
And it can curate the best of the best of.
our behaviors and it can be the best of us.
And that's what I think AI is.
It's the best qualities that we have really fine-tuned and multiplied.
And if robots start to exhibit that sort of thing, and I think it'll happen in a few years,
you'll start to see household robots and stuff.
I think that it's just going to be a thing that if something is just like very interested in
what you have to say, very intelligent, very curious, very comforting, very caring, it
helps you all the time.
A lot of people are just going to want to hang out with you.
with it and some people are gonna wanna you know you know real talk if i ever make it to the point
where i can pork a robot so to speak and it's convincingly human your boys out there day and night
that's not for everyone but i think for a lot of people they will find it to be highly amenable
yeah what's your best argument against it that it could be extremely dangerous extremely
dangerous. I think it can lead to a situation where almost no one has biological children
anymore. And then the human race doesn't go extinct, but the population of biological
humans having biological humans, having biological humans dwindles down into the hundreds of
thousands or something like that. Yeah? In the 2060s and 2070s, that might be a reality.
The thing is things get really fucking wacky, just check this out. You guys know how like iPhones
get better all the time, like, you know, in a way that's, like, really impressive,
computers and TVs.
How old are you guys, roughly?
I'm 34.
You say 26?
Mm-hmm.
You don't look a day over 25.
Oh, stop.
You guys have been around long enough to see, like, technology, like, in our lifetimes.
It's just gotten, like, fast, like, just way better, quick.
Biology has been roughly unchanged for, like, thousands of years, hundreds of you're
being real, real, real, persnickety.
And it just doesn't update as fast.
you're going to have this thing, again, another fun prediction that I conned myself with,
in maybe a decade, maybe less, you're going to start to get AI that's able to communicate
with the human nervous system and the robotic limbs that you can have are going to have all the
degrees of freedom and dexterity of like a human arm.
And someone's going to be working at the factory or riding their dirt bike and get their arm
cut off.
And they're going to get a robotic arm installed, like a cybernetic arm.
And it's going to connect in and clip in and the, you know, some of the advanced fibers are like make it look like it'll be a different.
You know, like Will Smith and that fucking I robot or whatever.
And they might look all cyberpunk like it looks different.
I'm definitely, if I ever lose my armor, getting a fucking cyberpunk arm.
I don't want a human looking arm.
I don't fuck that.
And at some point, it's like, it's nowadays they have artificial limbs and they're like a bit clunky.
And now they're like actually sensing heat and cold.
They can, they've got artificial limbs that people can grab stuff with.
But the degrees of freedom aren't quite there.
And it's like definitely a disability.
that technology is on an exponential curve.
And with AI in the mix, AI in the mix for how the nervous system of that artificial arm
interfaces with your nerves, AI in the design of all the components, AI in the streamlining
of the production process and so on and so on and so forth, you get to this thing where like
maybe 10 years from now, if you lose your arm in an accident and you get a fake arm,
your fake arm is, it never gets tired on human scales.
it um you can like rip a car door open with it and not hurt yourself you can like fall off your bike
plant on the arm and your fingers break and you're like oh shit but you don't feel pain the arm just
like lights up red and it's like you need to go get this fixed motherfucker i don't feel pain anymore
and it looks very much convincingly like a human arm and then a couple of years later when you
get the upgraded version it's better by a factor of 10 in every conceivable way
Because again, technology ascends on an exponential like that,
and biology is just doing this.
And so maybe in the late 2030s, early 2040s or something,
we could find many people walking around
that have like artificial knee, artificial leg, artificial arm.
I don't doubt that that's going to happen at some point in the future,
but what evidence are you using to suggest that it will happen late 2030s to 2040s?
That still seems like it's just so, so far away
when you ask people like, you know, in the 60s probably,
oh, how do you envision 2000?
They were like, oh, well, I think we're going to have flying cars.
And it still is like, where are the flying cars?
Still waiting on the flying cars.
Yeah, where are the flying cars?
So flying cars are currently in testing.
Have you guys cut up on those videos?
Like, they have flying cars.
That's a real thing.
I've seen the ones where they hover, like an inch above the ground.
Oh, no, no, no.
They have, like, drone copters that can carry, like, four people,
and they can carry them, like, 100 miles and land on the roof and go back up.
I believe the FAA just gave, like, approval to a variety of, like,
drone taxi services to, like, go into full-scale development.
So that's a thing now.
And so probably in like maybe 10 years, maybe less,
you'll see like tons of those in operation.
So cool, we got the flying car.
But it was still a very ambitious prediction
for flying cars.
Why do you think that this is gonna happen
late 2030s to 2040s?
Because of a very well-documented phenomenon.
It's probably best documented by Ray Kurtzweil.
Do you guys know who Ray Kurzweil is?
He's like, probably one of the smartest people that's ever lived.
And he's been involved in future prediction for a long time.
And he's had like pretty, very impressive success
rate of future prediction.
And specific predictions are quite curious, but you can disagree or agree with them.
What he's been able to shown through marshalling quite a bit of evidence is that the complexity
of the universe evolves in a predictable timeline.
And if you plot every major event in cosmology, including like the birth of the solar
system and every major event in biology, the evolution of the first prokaryotic cell,
eukaryotic cell, multicellular organism, the Cambrian explosion, all the way up the chain to
primates, mammals, primates, et cetera.
And then all of the industrial revolutions, every single major invention, all of the
computing paradigms of like how much faster and better computers are getting, they all plot
on roughly the same exponential that in around the year 2045 looks like a vertical.
a line. And so growth in the economy, you guys ever see GDP growth for the last, like, 500 years
plotted on a line and goes like this. It's nonsense. And so growth is exponential. And the way exponentials
work is like they start out real slow and they look like dog shit, almost no progress lines.
And then when they hit the bend of the curve, shit gets insane and you're like, oh my God, this is
really happening. And because almost every event that's ever plotted trends on the same line,
maybe because due to how the universe evolves its complexity, that we're on this exponential
to where intelligence is like a vertical line around 2045, that being the case means that
if that didn't happen, it would be very aberrant. And so as AI scale,
up, we're going to be able to do stuff that's just like, to us currently wild, but I promise
you when we start doing it other than crazy aha moments every now and again, people are like,
yeah, yeah, like, of course this guy's artificial limb is fucking better than my regular arm.
It's tech.
So what are your thoughts of Bitcoin?
I don't have any cogent thoughts on Bitcoin, uh, that are marginally worth people's time
to hear.
I know almost nothing about it.
I know the basic, uh, computations of cryptocurrency.
And I think crypto is like super dope.
there's a probability that when they really crack quantum computing, which Google sort of did like a few days ago, that crypto can be hacked and then it like loses a lot of its security things. But it has a lot of other advantages in addition to that. And to be honest, if we truly crack quantum computing and it goes massive at scale plus AI, like we could be in a situation where in like six or seven years, machines have like a billion times more raw intelligence than humans. And then like I don't even know what the hell, like whatever they decide is going to be so much more wise than anything we can.
think of, like, it's total nonsense land.
But, like, from what I understand, from the experts,
crypto is, like, really cool.
It has advantages as far as, like, my investment portfolio.
I just mostly invest in, like, just, like,
samplings of the stock market, like, ETFs.
So it's general.
Like, I'm betting on the stock market,
because that's, like, you guys know this,
like, the surest bet of all time.
And, like, I do own quite a bit of crypto,
but I'm not biased towards it.
Because what especially sticks out to me about crypto
is, like, which one of these coins
is going to be the one that,
or the several that form the ecosystem that's solid,
and which ones are going to just, like, totally fall off.
I don't know anything about that.
I do not speculate.
And since we are a finance channel,
in terms of your own personal investments and revenue and stuff like that,
what does the pie look like if you were to draw out different percentages
for different revenue sources, like the business, the YouTube channel,
the this, that that.
So I work for RP, which is right over there.
And always watching me everywhere I go.
And at RP, we make almost all of our money in software because we have the RP diet coach app and the RP IP hypertrophy app.
It's a diet app and a training app.
And through monthly and yearly subscriptions, I think we make the majority of our income that way.
I am not the expert on this.
My co-founder and CEO, Nick Shaw, can speak to this times a million.
I can always recommend him if you guys need another podcast guest.
He's the man.
So he runs the business side, pretty much entirely him and a few other folks,
COO, et cetera.
And so our business is mostly software.
YouTube does make a substantial amount of money,
but we take pretty much all of that money.
And after paying the people that help us run the YouTube,
we take almost all that money and just funnel it right back into the machine
to do more marketing.
with. So we don't really, we don't look at the YouTube money as like, yeah, distribute.
Also, RP has a structure. I don't think I'm violating any, I'm not going to get into exact
numbers, but like I only own some fraction of RP legally. Nick owns another fraction that's
the same size. But like, the majority of the company at this point, I think, is like owned by
our software team. At RP, we believe in incentivizing.
the living dog shit out of people by giving them mega money if they move the fucking needle.
And so these guys own a large fraction of our company.
And we wouldn't have it any other way.
And so what we do at RP is like we pay our expenses.
We invest in future stuff.
And then we take profit distributions off the top.
And I just invest on, oh, it's 90% of that money.
And the rest goes to pornography.
And tax.
I'm kidding.
Don't.
Don't. I'm ethnically Jewish. You say taxes. I start getting hard. My heart rate starts getting up. Hi.
How has making money affected your life?
There are a number of ways in which it's changed and a number of ways in which it hasn't changed.
Other than for like curiosity, I don't look at food prices at the store, which is crazy.
And as not a day or an hour goes by it, I'm not like, am I living in a fucking fantasy world? What the hell is going on?
because I grew up in the Soviet Union, we had like negative money, grew up either at first,
very poor, then lower middle class, then middle class, and then I went to college,
and then my parents went to upper middle class, but I wasn't around anymore.
And so once you go to college, you're back into lower class, you have no money again,
and, you know, eventually RP got going, and then the money started pretty good.
And then, like, one year it jumped to something that, like, was completely outside of my ability
to comprehend, and then it just been going to go.
going like that ever since, more or less.
And so I don't look at food prices anymore.
I don't look at gas prices, other than to be like, holy shit.
We're like, oh, that's actually quite good.
We didn't want to commute to the gym because our work is very productive, marginally use
of our time wise, my wife and I.
And, you know, the gym, like a very good gym that we would like to train as like 20 minutes
away, 25 minutes away.
And so we just, like, built our own gym.
It cost $250,000 total.
And it was just like, oh, we're just going to just build the jam
when we did.
Is that here?
Yeah, it's just outside.
Yeah, I can show you guys after or whatever.
It just exists, yeah.
And it's, that's crazy, right?
We redid this room of the house to be a studio.
And it was like, oh, yeah.
Well, actually, I didn't pay for most of it because RP paid for it because YouTube.
We built like a, we're finishing a jiu-jitsu room in the other area.
My office is like pretty cool looking.
I have like whatever kind of computer setup that I want.
And it's one of those things like at a certain level you make enough money.
The prices of things start to look like, oh, that's a lot.
And then you're like, oh, it's not a lot for how much money that we make.
And so in many respects, we're able to do that.
So we're like more or less investing in infrastructure to just let us do the things we do better.
But in many ways, I think I'm like a real giant waste of all of this wealth in some sense,
because I wear clothes that I either like buy at Walmart or RP sends me to wear or like,
this is my jihitsu coaches that's their shirt.
So I just wear that.
I have no eye for high fashion.
I have no interest in high fashion.
my idea of a really good meal is to go to town and get Panda Express.
It's fucking delicious.
It costs like $8.
It warms my Jewish heart.
And like I've been to a few Michelin Star restaurants and almost without exception, I'm like, I want to get the fuck out of here.
This is a giant rip off.
And it don't mean the grand sense.
I think like people who are really culinaryly attuned, it's a big deal for them.
It's an experience.
It's just so lost on me.
I can't even begin to tell you.
Um, another thing is like, um, we'll get like a subscription service to like peacock or like prime.
And we used to be like, we got too many of these and we'd call them.
But now I'm like, why?
And my wife and had a long talk because she's Asian and I'm Jewish and we're just like so
averse to spending money on frivolous things that like it pains us.
And so like when I was younger, like I could find reasons to spend money and have any money.
So it wasn't a problem.
But the older I get, the more reluctant to I am to spend money.
not in the sense of like, oh, I've got to save and invest it, which is super dope.
I love that.
But also I just don't have anything to spend it on.
It's really wasted on me, this whole bullshit.
Now, you know, investing in real estate, especially investing in the stock market, you're
actually helping the entire economy with your money.
It's like the best possible thing to do because it multiplies everyone's wealth a ton.
But that's where I am as far as my financial situation is just like, I just don't.
It's which is wild.
And I think if someone who was really appreciative of money
and the finer things made this much money,
in some sense, they could spend it better, you know?
They could get a lot out of it.
But I don't know.
That's where I'm at, you know.
I'm the same way.
I'm pretty cheap for the most part.
I mean, for me, like, the perfect meal is just pokey.
It's a $15 meal or all you could eat sushi at $22.
It's the same for me.
But then again, we are all ethnically Jewish.
Yes.
There could be a little something, something right there.
But yeah, I don't know.
I feel exactly the same.
I feel like I, you know, I do okay, you know, doing the podcast and all, but I just,
I can't seem to find anything to spend the money on, which is obviously an incredibly,
incredibly, incredibly lucky position to be in.
But it's just, it is just kind of our experience.
It's not to need crazy things to be happy.
Well, also, I know a lot of friends that earn a lot less that want to spend a lot more money,
like just based off of the value of that number.
Yeah.
More money.
not in terms of percentage of their relative income or whatever.
And I think that's like, I wish them the best of fortune and I hope they make more money and I hope they spend it because I think it's fucking great.
Like if you can afford it, I think you should be buying cool shit that you like.
But I guess not everyone's built that way or whatever.
So, you know, and while I say this, especially because this is like public in the biggest way possible, like your guys' podcast gets fucking crazy views.
I feel so goddamn guilty.
Why me?
Like, I'm just some fucking guy.
That's how I feel every day.
And, like, why do I make all this money?
You know, and I'm doing all the stuff you're supposed to do with it,
but I don't feel like I'm, like, deserve it in some big way.
Like, I earned it in the literal sense of producing,
lots of value for people.
Like we didn't scam anything from anybody.
There's no tricks.
It's just like all evidence-based advice
and apps that really help people.
But, um,
I really, uh,
I, like, if I heard,
I didn't know me and I heard me saying the shit
I just said on this podcast,
I'd be like, shut the fuck up.
Shut up.
Oh, give all your money to chair,
you fucking hypocrite, idiot.
I do happen to think I'm a technical,
economic grounds that investing in the stock market is actually one of the best R-Ys and
unfortunately charity is usually not they don't spend the dollar if it just went straight to
people who need it that would be fucking dope but unfortunately yeah that there's a whole like you know
movement of like effective altruism that is compelling but for a variety of reasons like just
investing in the stock markets it's one of the best ways to help everybody um but like short
of that, it's kind of a trip to even just like be in the circumstance. And so like to everyone
watching who's like, all right, soapbox, you're fucking mega rich, whatever the fuck, shut up.
I am so with you. You have no idea. I don't know what the fuck's going on. And one thing that I
wondered as I got like, because there's also another thing going on with me is like I'm getting like
low key famous or whatever the fuck. Like everywhere I go, kind of every,
city, people recognize me, people recognize me.
And not just at the airport, but there's at least one person on every plane that I'm on
that recognize me at this point, sometimes a few and a super baffling.
And so I also have to contend with the fact that like, I'm like a known person now.
That's really, really weird.
And I was wondering at some point when I was kind of on the slow curve up, like, is a
shit going to change me?
Um, because you know, people say money changes you, man.
Um, and I some combination of kind of open mindedly wondered if it would.
And also told myself like, Isretel, you better not turn into a cock sucker.
You better not be an elitist.
You better not judge people who have less money than you or think they're somehow worse.
Because that's the lamest shit in the world.
And, um, so far.
are so good, I think, but it is a trip to experience the thing.
And because, you know, a lot of people wonder, like, if I had a million dollars, what
would I do?
I've actually never really wondered that in my life and that it happened and I'm like, oh, shit,
I'm unprepared for this.
And so I sometimes on many days, I can't put it all together.
I don't know what I'm supposed to be doing if they're the right way to do this.
And at the end, I just, like, end up coming back to one thing.
It's like, um, you're a human being like everybody else.
Because, like, when you get, when people meet you and they tell you like, oh, you're the man,
like, it's easy to start believing that you're somehow special or anointed or better or some shit like that.
And the thing this is, is I'm highly uncomfortable with that.
And, um, I'm especially uncomfortable when in a conversation with someone else, um, they're elevating you to,
to a hierarchical level above.
They're like, oh, they talk to you like you're a big deal.
And the thing I want to convey to essentially everyone that I ever talk to through, you know,
gestures and through self-referential humor and things like that, but also like in a
podcast format like this, like if you ever meet me, I'm just a regular asshole and probably
worse than you, a damn near everything in almost every fucking respect.
And that makes me so comfortable.
Like if someone's like, if I was like in an awards show or something, then the camera zoomed in or some fucking stadium and they were like, it's Dr. Mike.
My initial inclination to be like, somebody else, go look at somebody else.
They ain't nothing here.
Because like maybe some people like when they rise up and become wealthy and famous or whatever, they're like, fuck yeah, fuck yeah.
Yes, I struggle for this.
And yes, this is supposed to be me.
And yes, I'm going to fucking live all of it up.
maybe that could have been me.
I never could have told you before,
but now that I'm in that space
and doing the fucking this thing,
it's not. It's not.
I got nothing for the shit.
Well, guys, seriously,
if you made it to the end,
thank you so, so, so much.
And also, you might see a little rash
I have on my face right now.
I just want to mention this shamelessly
if you're like a dermatologist
or if you have any idea
what this could possibly be.
It's not anything bad.
I think it's a cold rash.
I played pickleball very late at night.
It was in the 30s.
It's itchy.
It's a little bit red.
It should go away.
I got one last year in the winter.
You got to choose your sexual partners more careful.
That's what I told.
We're not linking down in the description to RP.
RP will no longer be linked down below.
Your Instagram messenger.
No, seriously, guys, if you actually do know what's going on, please just.
Just DM me, please.
And thank you.
Thank you for letting us use your space.
This has been absolutely incredible.
I mean, this is all of his equipment.
and, and,
I just got the video guys equipment.
I don't know how the fuck.
Any of this works.
This is fantastic.
You let us into your house.
You picked us up from Cracker Barrel.
This has been an incredibly positive experience.
Thank you so much.
Thank you so much.
And all of this stuff is obviously linked down below.
Awesome, guys.
Huge honor.
Huge pleasure.
I've listened to a bunch of your episodes,
and I never once thought I'd be fucking lucky enough
to get on your podcast.
I'm like, this is like a celebrity moment for me.
Dude, this is so hard.
You wouldn't believe.
You have no idea for us, too.
Yeah.
Oh, fuck.
Yeah.
Seriously.
Do I look like a celebrity.
Do you look at this?
Ridiculous.
Last thing.
Did you like train your voice?
Because people say you sound like a like a super villain.
Like people say like when they go into like the dark mode when they're putting up a bunch of weight in the gym.
That your voice is the voice that they hear.
Oh my God.
Well, it's because I'm in the headphones.
It's just like, oh.
That's that's true.
I have received zero technical voice training.
I don't know.
I think my voice sounds ridiculous and weird.
And when I hear myself talk, I'm like, uh, really?
Yeah.
I got nothing.
I don't even like.
Apparently, that's a thing.
You heard it from the source.
Thank you guys for watching.
Until next time.
Thank you guys.
Thermatologists, please comment.
