The Ultimate Human with Gary Brecka - 141. Max Lugavere: Seed Oils, LDL Cholesterol & Inflammation
Episode Date: February 18, 2025What if everything you thought you knew about “heart-healthy” cooking oils was based on outdated science and clever marketing? In this episode, I’ve sat down once again with Max Lugavere, and we...’ve had an amazing conversation about the metabolic chaos that modern seed oils are silently creating in our bodies, and why the food industry’s favourite oils might be driving the global rise in chronic disease. We also uncovered some actionable steps that we hope to see prioritised with the new government, and especially with the Make America Healthy Again movement. Ready to transform your understanding of nutrition and take control of your overall health? Hit subscribe and share this video with someone who needs to hear this message. Join Gary Brecka’s FREE 3-Day Morning Routine Challenge! 🗓️ LIVE February 19-21 👉 Sign up now Gain exclusive access to Gary Brecka’s proven wellness protocols: https://bit.ly/4ai0Xwg Connect with Max Lugavere: Get Max Lugavere book, “Genius Foods” Listen to "The Genius Life" on all your favorite platforms! YouTube: https://bit.ly/3X5fVQO Spotify: https://spoti.fi/4gJiBL8 Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/4gOCmAS Connect with Max Lugavere: Website: https://bit.ly/3XLOGdN YouTube: https://bit.ly/4eJc6r7 Instagram: https://bit.ly/3BsEf7y TikTok: https://bit.ly/3Y8ov2w Facebook: https://bit.ly/3Y4QkZr X.com: https://bit.ly/3ZMQgPk Thank you to our partners: BODYHEALTH - USE CODE “ULTIMATE20” FOR 20% OFF: http://bit.ly/4e5IjsV BAJA GOLD - USE CODE "ULTIMATE10" FOR 10% OFF: https://bit.ly/3WSBqUa EIGHT SLEEP - SAVE $350 ON THE POD 4 ULTRA WITH CODE “GARY”: https://bit.ly/3WkLd6E STRENGTH TRAINING EQUIPMENT - THE ULTIMATE HUMAN: https://bit.ly/3zYwtSl COLD LIFE - THE ULTIMATE HUMAN PLUNGE: https://bit.ly/4eULUKp WHOOP - GET 1 FREE MONTH WHEN YOU JOIN!: https://bit.ly/3VQ0nzW MASA CHIPS - GET 20% OFF YOUR FIRST $50+ ORDER: https://bit.ly/40LVY4y VANDY - USE CODE “ULTIMATE20” FOR 20% OFF: https://bit.ly/49Qr7WE PARKER PASTURES - PREMIUM GRASS-FED MEATS: https://bit.ly/4hHcbhc AION - USE CODE “ULTIMATE10” FOR 10% OFF: https://bit.ly/4h6KHAD HAPBEE - FEEL BETTER & PERFORM AT YOUR BEST: https://bit.ly/4a6glfo CARAWAY - USE CODE “ULTIMATE10” FOR 10% OFF: https://bit.ly/3Q1VmkC Watch the “Ultimate Human Podcast” every Tuesday & Thursday at 9AM EST: YouTube: https://bit.ly/3RPQYX8 Podcasts: https://bit.ly/3RQftU0 Connect with Gary Brecka: Instagram: https://bit.ly/3RPpnFs TikTok: https://bit.ly/4coJ8fo X.com: https://bit.ly/3Opc8tf Facebook: https://bit.ly/464VA1H Website: https://bit.ly/4eLDbdU Merch: https://bit.ly/4aBpOM1 Newsletter: https://bit.ly/47ejrws Ask Gary: https://bit.ly/3PEAJuG Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 04:11 What is Seed Oil? And Why Is It Bad For You? 10:21 Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids in Seed Oils 14:25 Awareness on Food Labeling 20:28 High Volumes of Oxidised Oils in Blood Stream Risks 25:55 Animal-Source Foods Play an Important Role in an Optimised Diet 36:00 Randomised Clinical Trials on Red Meat 38:48 Top 5 Sports Supplements 42:25 Supplementation for Vegans and Vegetarians 45:02 Actionable Steps the Government Can and Should Do 54:54 Nutrition for Brain Health 59:22 Final Question: What does it mean to you to be an “Ultimate Human?’ The Ultimate Human with Gary Brecka Podcast is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute the practice of medicine, nursing or other professional health care services, including the giving of medical advice, and no doctor/patient relationship is formed. The use of information on this podcast or materials linked from this podcast is at the user’s own risk. The Content of this podcast is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Users should not disregard or delay in obtaining medical advice for any medical condition they may have and should seek the assistance of their health care professionals for any such conditions. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Least healthy foods in the supermarket make the loudest claims.
It should be banned that ultra processed foods are allowed to make health plan.
There's such a large percentage of our public policy nutritional research is funded by pharma.
I think this has got to be partially responsible for an upside down food pyramid.
You know, Lucky Charms, My Nutrition System, Grass-Fed Steak.
I'm happy with products marketing how they've been produced.
If it wants to say organic, great.
But it's the health claim.
Just be a level playing field to inspire consumers to learn for themselves.
We're both connected to this Make America Healthy Again movement.
I'm optimistic that we can raise more awareness around this topic and call for better science.
We've privatized profits and we've socialized the expense. Medicare is picking up the cost of this
burgeoning, explosive era of chronic disease and morbid obesity.
Obesity has tripled over the past 50 years. Our genes have not changed all that much.
Our lifestyle, our food environment has dramatically changed.
In a perfect world, what are some real actionable things that the government could do to
make the biggest impact in the shortest amount of time?
The motivation is there to uncouple some of the many conflicts of interest.
I remain totally optimistic, but what can they do? You know, I
think for one.
Hey guys, welcome back to the ultimate human podcast. I'm your
host, human biologist Gary Brekka, where we go down the
road of
everything anti aging biohacking, longevity, and
everything in between. And a trip to LA would not be complete
without having Max Lugavere back on the podcast. It was one of
the best podcasts that we've launched. I mean, the the story
that you told about your journey with your mother and Alzheimer's,
and how you really became an advocate.
And I say this all the time.
I feel like I start every podcast the same way,
but I've truly found that people
that are the most impactful, the most passionate,
the most driven and purposeful
are people that solve the problem in their life.
And you really solve the problem when, you know,
your mother was probably the closest,
I'm gonna assume relative to you, you know, went
through that time and you just said I, I need answers. And so
if you guys have not watched the podcast that I do with Max on
the journey with his mother and how he became an advocate for
mental health, it's a really it's a phenomenal podcast, I
linked all of the research in the in the show notes and even
gave a link to the documentary that he did a phenomenal podcast. I linked all of the research in the show notes and even gave a link to the documentary
that he did with his mother.
I was, you know, before every podcast,
and I know you so well,
and we just had a great time at the Maha ball,
which was awesome.
We had a great time at the turning point ball,
which was a great time, other than the weather.
It was like a freaking nine degrees.
And all the women were walking a mile in open toed heels.
I know it was like being in a cryotherapy chamber like
Yeah, I didn't think about it that way.
I should have turned that into a positive and then like, I'm
getting all this vasoconstriction and brown fat
activation and dopamine but but I was actually pissed off so
maybe the dopamine didn't work.
I know we're constricted you're wearing a tux it's like
But I ran into a great clip that you did. And I think it was either during a congressional hearing or when you're on
Capitol Hill not too long ago, and you made a comment and you
said, if your grocery store has a health food section, what does
that tell you about the rest of the grocery store? And you know,
as obvious as that is, it just made me go, you know, it's it is so true.
And it's so interesting how, you know, we're both connected to this Make America Healthy
Again movement.
And we're both committing time and resources and our platforms to it.
And it's astounding to me how bad it's really gotten.
And, you know, just how far away from the basics, you know, eating whole foods and nutritious
soil and and getting back to the basics, the war on saturated fat basics, you know, eating whole foods and nutritious soil
and getting back to the basics, the war on saturated fat,
the promotion of seed oil, the allowance through grass
that's generally regarded as safe guideline
that the FDA has that we can actually take micro toxins
on a regular basis.
And so I wanna kind of roam around that with you
because I consider you an authority on that. And, and
maybe we should start with one of the most controversial topics,
which is seed oils. And I think that a basic explanation of what
is a seed oil? Why is it bad for you? And so pro
inflammatory, we had an awesome discussion before the podcast
started about, you know, its impact on LDL cholesterol.
And I thought that your viewpoint on that was really good because you talked about the
house of cards collapsing on LDL cholesterol.
So I wonder if you might expand on that.
Yeah.
So seed oils are a obviously very controversial today.
Everybody's talking about them.
I actually, I think was very prescient in my, you know, diving into this topic in my book Genius Foods, which came out in 2018, which I the manuscript I
wrote around 2016. And there have been other people sort of broaching this issue. I mean,
Weston a price I think was one of the earliest people.
Paul Sandino has been big on it.
Talk about it. Yeah, Kate, Dr. Kate Shanahanahan You know, the evidence is kind of all over the place and I think it's a little bit
we have to talk about seed oils not as a monolith but with with nuance and
You know when discussing these kinds of oils there are the culinary oils like sesame seed oil
Which have been used in various traditional cuisines for millennia
been used in various traditional cuisines for millennia, which I think can be perfectly healthy and add great qualities to certain recipes.
I think those are fine, but the oils that are in question, particularly today, are the
what are sometimes referred to as RBD oils, which stands for Refined, Bleached, and Deodorized
oils. These are the highly marketed cooking oils that have only
really had a presence in the human food supply for the past
couple of decades. And the issue with these and even within the
refined, bleached and deodorized seed oil category,
first of all, when you say for refined, bleached and
deodorized, I mean, that you should come to a full stop right there,
because there's no mechanism in nature for something
to be refined, bleached, or deodorized.
Correct, yes.
So I mean, we've now, I think, many of us
in the nutrition community are placing
an emphasis on awareness around ultra-processed foods, right?
We generally want to minimize our consumption
of ultra-processed foods, which now make up
60% of the calories of your average adult.
But what about ultra-processed food ingredients?
And these refined bleach and deodorized seed oils
are ultra-processed.
By definition, a food that is ultra-processed
is something that you couldn't possibly make in your own
kitchen if you tried.
You could make sesame seed oil in your kitchen, right?
To make sesame seed oil, you press sesame seeds. You could conceivably make extra virgin olive oil in your kitchen, right? To make sesame seed oil, you press sesame seeds.
You could conceivably make extra virgin olive oil in your own kitchen.
Humans have been making and consuming extra virgin olive oil for centuries at this point.
I'm a huge fan.
Me as well.
I actually start the morning with a shot of it.
But you couldn't realistically create one of these RBD oils like soybean oil or corn oil in your kitchen.
They often require industrial machinery, chemical solvents like hexane. So right
off the bat these oils are ultra processed. We know that. The ultra
processing designation comes from the Nova paradigm out of Latin America and so
it's a little bit unclear. I think the technical definition might not necessarily place corn oil and soybean oil
under that in that category.
But they are, there's no question you couldn't make them in your own kitchen.
I mean, you would need some serious chemistry to do so.
Right.
Plus most of us don't have hexene and sodium hydroxide just lying around.
Exactly. There's actually a, there was a viral video on Instagram by a really wonderful content
creator and I forget his name, but I'll send it over to you and you can perhaps include
it in the show notes.
It was actually a guy who seems to, who appears to have a chemistry background, attempts to
make a refined bleach and deodorized seed oil in his home kitchen.
And it's pretty terrifying.
Really?
Actually. Yeah, yeah.
All the myriad production steps.
But nobody's doing that at home for the most part.
I'm going to try to dig that one up.
Yeah, yeah.
Callie just did it.
Callie Means is another good friend of mine.
And someone I deeply, deeply respect
just did a post on the sequence in the manufacturing
of seed oils.
I thought it was really good.
Yeah, they're often exposed to high heat.
But it should be said that processing doesn't necessarily
make a food unhealthy, right?
Even within the bucket of ultra-processed foods,
ultra-processed foods are not a monolith.
Some are better for you than others.
So what is it specifically about refined bleach
and deodorized seed oils that make them, that should ought
to inspire caution when over consuming them.
Well, for one, they are novel fats.
So again, these didn't exist in the human food supply prior to 50 to 70 years ago.
So right off the bat, I think we should embrace by default
what's called the precautionary principle.
So the less time a food or an ingredient or product is,
humans have been exposed to it,
the more skepticism, the more caution,
the higher the burden of proof should be on that food
to prove itself as safe.
As opposed to the burden of proof being on the consumer
or the researcher to prove it guilty, right?
It should be guilty until proven innocent.
And that's what's referred to as a precautionary principle.
It's something that actually in the EU, that seems to be the norm for food additives and
the like.
Here, the burden of proof is usually on the consumer to prove something, to prove that
something is unhealthy.
And usually that occurs years, if not decades,
after many, many people have been exposed to it.
And we've seen that with red dye three, which was just banned.
Yeah, that was a good move.
After decades.
And just to start, we need to go through the other 40
and some of the other ones.
There you go.
So I think the precautionary principle is super smart.
It's something that we don't generally
abide by here in the United States.
And I think that's unfortunate.
So these ultra processed oils are novel, right?
Now again, that doesn't necessarily make them bad, right?
So we have to peel back the layers of the onion
even further, right?
The problem with, I think one of the major problems
with these oils is that they're predominantly comprised
of polyunsaturated fatty acids, which are
the most chemically unstable.
So among the fatty acids that predominate our diets, you've got unsaturated fatty acids, which are the most chemically unstable. So among the fatty acids that predominate our diets,
you've got unsaturated fatty acids
and you've got saturated fatty acids, right?
Those are the two major categories.
Saturated fats are the most chemically stable.
They tend to be solid at room temperature.
And under the bucket of unsaturated fats,
you've got your polyunsaturated fatty acids
and your monounsaturated fatty acids.
Polyunsaturated fatty acids and your monounsaturated fatty acids.
Polyunsaturated fatty acids are very prone to a chemical process known as oxidation,
where essentially the oils go bad.
They go rancid.
And that process is catalyzed by exposure to light, heat, and oxygen.
And so these refined bleach and deodorize seed oils are, they tend to be predominantly polyunsaturated in nature.
And that's not the case for all of them
because there are seed oils like high oleic sunflower oil,
which I actually think is fine
because it's mostly monounsaturated fat,
which has a degree of chemical protection.
It's less prone to this oxidative process, but polyunsaturated fat, which has a degree of chemical protection. It's less prone to this oxidative process.
But polyunsaturated fats are essentially
naked because they're the most prone to oxidation.
And they're extracted from the food matrix, which often
coincides with antioxidants that protect those fats.
In fact, in nature, where you see higher levels
of polyunsaturated fats, you also
see higher levels of certainunsaturated fats, you also see higher levels of certain antioxidants like vitamin E, whose role in nature is mainly to guard
these polyunsaturated fatty acids against oxidation.
So in foods where you have higher levels of polyunsaturated fats, you see higher levels
of vitamin E, which is why nuts are one of the primary sources of both polyunsaturated
fats in the, in the diet
as well as vitamin E. Okay. I didn't know that. Polyunsaturated fats are not inherently
unhealthy. And vitamin E is super important from a brain health standpoint. The problem
is when we extract these fats from the whole food matrix and we expose them to these, you
know, caustic chemical solvents like hexane or others. And then we expose them to these caustic chemical solvents like hexane or others.
And then we expose them to heat, which often occurs during the deodorization process.
And then we further use them to cook them, to cook with, which ironically is what they're
marketed as being ideal for.
Then you're further catalyzing this oxidative process to these polyunsaturated fats, which
are very
vulnerable.
And, you know, oxidation occurs when we ingest these fats in us, you know, but it can also
occur in the external environment when they're used in the fryer setting, when they're used
to, you know, create ultra-processed foods.
And so that's potentially really harmful.
The other problem is that there are byproducts of oxidation.
So it's not just that the fatty acids themselves become oxidized,
but all of these other nasty compounds are generated.
When a high polyunsaturated fatty acid dominant seed oil
is exposed to high heat and reheated in particular,
you're not just damaging the fatty acids,
but you're generating all of these noxious compounds
like acrolein and four-hydroxynoninol,
which have been shown to be cancer causing
and be associated with conditions like Alzheimer's disease,
four-hydroxyn nonanol in particular.
And this doesn't exist in the seed oil. Initially, this exists when the seed oil becomes oxidized. And I think the oxidation process, which is also a pro-inflammatory process in the human body,
when you have oxidative free radicals in the human body, you create inflammation. And you see, again, it's not causal, but it's correlated.
You see significant increase, dramatic increase
in the consumption of things like refined sugar,
but also the consumption of C2Ls.
I mean, you really can't get away from them.
I mean, even if you go to, you know,
and my favorite thing is that most of them
have a heart healthy label on
American Heart Association says beautiful picture of a heart with a smiley face and and there and and the bright eyes
that's on the on the bottle of seed oils, but the
Amount of their consumption too is well people go well
I don't grab Weston oil off the off the shelf
But you know you start spinning around the labels
of your, you know, your salad dressings and and most, you
know, a lot of your seasonings and, and even some extra virgin
olive oils, you know, and until Paul Saladino brought this to my
attention was a few years ago, I actually thought extra virgin
olive oil was extra virgin olive oil. And then when you spin the
label around, it's like extra virgin olive oil is extra virgin olive oil. And then when you spin the label around, it's like extra virgin olive oil,
palm oil, cottonseed oil, canola oil, and it's right in the
bottle that and all it says on the label is extra virgin olive
oil. And it's and you know, part of I think, the issue and what,
you know, hopefully we're going to help solve with this maha
movement is that, you know, the average consumer
doesn't stand a chance. I mean, I can consider us to be pretty
woke and educated in this arena. And, you know, just getting to
the grocery store and just getting through that as it's a
task. Right. And so you think about the middle American mother
and fathers trying to do the right thing by the family and
trying to raise their kids and trying to eat healthy. And, you
know, as I'm cruising down the aisle,
I see things like fortified, enriched, heart healthy. Okay.
Those are the things that I'm going to grab and throw in my, you know,
in my basket. Right.
It's a bit, it's a, it's a huge problem. And yeah, you know,
I'm, I'm optimistic that we can raise more awareness around this topic and call
for better science.
Because again, the science is a little bit all over the place
and this is a controversial topic.
I mean, it's actually very,
this is a very unorthodox perspective
that we should be avoiding seed oils.
I mean, I'll say with all transparency
that like if you were to ask your average dietician,
for example, what they think about seed oils,
they'll say that they're not only benign,
they're not harmful, but they're actually good for you.
And so I think, you know,
this is something that we're gonna need a lot more research
to say with certainty,
but based on this line of thinking that I've, you know,
at least begun to lay out,
I think that we should all have a little bit more skepticism
around them.
And, you know, like linoleic acid, which is the form of polyunsaturated fat that dominates
these seed oils is also found in extremely healthy foods, like again, nuts and seeds
and things like that.
And you find linoleic acid in animal-sourced foods, egg yolks and things like that.
And so a lot of the observational data on this, like when they'll correlate blood levels
of linoleic acid, for example, to certain health outcomes, it actually seems positive
from that perspective.
But there are a lot of confounding aspects to that observation.
For one, nuts and seeds and other foods, as I've mentioned, that are high in this fat
are healthful.
And then also there is what's called healthy user bias,, you know, these oils are adorned with the heart
healthy logo on them. So a health conscious person might be
more inclined to consume oil and corn oil and soybean oil. Now is
their health good because of these oils or perhaps in spite
of these oils? I mean, that's a health conscious consumer,
right? Maybe they're more inclined to take a multivitamin
or maybe they're less likely to smoke or drink
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Now let's get back to the ultimate human podcast
Well, you know anything you see such a parabolic rise in nearly all forms of chronic disease, autism, ADD, ADHD, OCD, panic, depression, bipolar, schizophrenia, and then also the
more physical characteristics, obesity, multiple chronic disease in a single biome, all of
which the United States is leading the world in. As we drop to 66th and like 66th
in life expectancy, you know, we are leading in these areas that we don't want to lead,
especially after spending four and a half trillion dollars a year on health care. You think
if we spend four and a half trillion dollars, man, we should all be flying around with a cape.
For four and a half trillion dollars, we should be the healthiest, you know, nation in the world. But and, and,
you know, I'm only cautious to say the pandemic of obesity or
multiple or chronic disease is directly related to seed oil
consumption. I think it is multifactorial. This is
certainly a factor. You know, I don't think that the jury is out
on, you know, oils becoming't think that the jury is out on, you
know, oils becoming rancid at high temperatures. And
therefore, you know, at least, you know, to be prudent, if you
were to wipe seed oils out and add things back in, let's say
room temperature oils, like extra virgin olive oil or
cooking in high smoke point oils, like, you know, coconut
oil or grass fed butter, ghee butter, you know, coconut oil or grass
fed butter, ghee butter, tallow, some of these oils that actually
can withstand those temperatures. Quite frankly, I
think things taste better. Personally, when you cook in
those oils, and they're the only things you really need to have
around your kitchen. But process process of oxidation in seed
oils, what are some of the outcomes of having these
oxidized oils in high volumes in the bloodstream?
Well, one effect which they've so people can look up. There are
two, there, there's a lot, there are many different researchers, you
know, working on this, but there have been some really interesting papers, clinical trials
by a researcher with the last name of Ramsden and then Taha. And there was one paper in
particular that I often cite, it's actually a review, so it's pretty easy to read by Taha,
single author paper published in 2020, looking at linoleic acid and its impact on the brain, which is
obviously a topic that I'm incredibly passionate about because my mom had dementia from a young
age and I'll never know what caused her dementia. I don't know if it had anything to do with,
you know, her exposure to these, her lifelong exposure to these kinds of fats. But yeah,
it doesn't seem that consuming excessive amounts of linoleic acid,
which again, predominates these oils in question, linoleic acid has easy access to the brain.
And it's a fat that's incredibly prone to oxidation because of its, you know, its polyunsaturated
nature. And the human diet is now, I mean, saturated with
this with this type of fat. I was reading a study that came out in 2023. And it painted
the picture very plainly that you know, in 1910, more than 90% of the fats in the human diet were of animal origin, 90%. Wow.
Yeah.
And now that figure is like, it's less than 15%.
I mean, it's way lower.
And the bulk of those fats have been replaced
by these grain and seed oils.
Like most of the majority of fats in the human diet today
come from soybean oil and corn oil.
Yeah, and canola.
Yeah.
Yeah. It's like, and canola. Yeah. Yeah.
It's like, it's shocking.
So the fact that these, you know,
the idea that these fats are benign
and not having some kind of physiologic effect,
I mean, it's just that that doesn't even pass
like logical muster, you know?
It's like, of course they're doing something.
We just have to figure out what that something is.
One thing that they do do,
and this was actually shown in a paper by Ramsden, I forget which year, but people can look this up, is that they increase
in the blood something called oxalams, oxidized linoleic acid metabolites. And these have been
associated with Alzheimer's disease. I mean, these compounds.
Aflerosclerosis.
Yeah.
Yeah. Narrowing of the arteries. You find a lot of these oxidative species, you know, at the site of inflammation and also, you
know, at the site of, you know, where cholesterol coalesce into,
you know, these plaques. And I think, often we, we blame
cholesterol for crimes, it's not committing. You know, I often
refer to cholesterol as a fireman, you know, your house
catches fire, the fireman shows
up to put the fire out. But it didn't just show up randomly,
right? I mean, if this Airbnb never caught fire, firemen would
never show up in the driveway, right? But if it did, they would
show up to extinguish the fire cholesterol is usually called to
the site of inflammation. And I think it's something that goes
lost on a lot of folks, They just think because of the presence of LDL cholesterol, especially, especially if
LDL cholesterol is in higher amounts, then I have a higher risk for narrowing of the
arteries or arteriosclerosis.
But that's, that's like making the argument that if there were more firemen, we would
have more fires.
But you know, that line of thinking is not not true. And I think it is about
to be majorly disproven. But one of the things that I liked that
you were saying before the podcast started was, we have to
understand that, you know, these these polyunsaturated fatty
acids are built on the backs of this entire house of cards built
around LDL cholesterol.
And if one of those cards like polyunsaturated fatty acids
falls apart, the house of cards starts to come down
because you're like, well, if the fact that these,
because the, the, the, the pro seed oil discussion is,
well, they lower LDL cholesterol
and is an LDL cholesterol, and is an LDL
cholesterol terrible? Is an LDL cholesterol bad for you? Is an
LDL cholesterol the genesis of all heart disease? I mean,
shouldn't you if you have high LDL cholesterol, lower it as
low as you possibly can. And if seed oils lower LDL
cholesterol, then the arguments over there. They're not bad for
you.
Yeah, I mean, I've said that LDL cholesterol
isn't just a biomarker, it's an industry.
And it's not just one industry.
Yeah, I love your one liners, man.
It's like, I like the health food line.
I'm gonna borrow that.
You can see it start creeping up in podcasts.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, feel free, use it, use it, credit me.
But, or don't, I don't know.
Be cruisin'. So it's an industry, this LDL cholesterol is an industry.
Yeah, and so this notion that seed oils are good for you,
refined bleach and deodorized seed oils are good for you. It's true that seed oils reduce LDL cholesterol
relative to certain saturated fatty acids.
And so you have to accept that as being a benefit because if that's not a benefit, then
suddenly animal source foods are not the dietary villain that they're often made out to be.
And suddenly statins, their LDL lowering effect might not necessarily be of benefit. Stat has have pleiotropic effects. They're also anti-inflammatory, but
exactly. Yeah. Yeah.
Very interesting podcast, uh, with Dr.
Gundry on that, um, in talking about the,
the research on, uh, the minimal impact that, uh,
you know, that statins had on life extension, which was very, very minimal
and the impact that it had on cardiovascular disease coming from the anti-inflammatory
effect, not actually from the LDL lowering effect.
Yeah.
So I mean, it's the house of cards that you referenced is something that I think it's
really important.
Like that seed oils are heart healthy is a card in that house of cards.
And for us to challenge that assumption,
well then that might lead to a reassessment of all of these other
assumptions that we make about what causes heart disease,
maybe saturated fat isn't the dietary villain that it's, you know,
often for decades made out to have been so
so yeah, that's why I think it's
It's been a real challenge to to actually address this stuff because there's so much commerce
Yeah, I to it and I'm not saying that LDL cholesterol is unimportant that able be is unimportant. But the
But you know heart disease is multifactorial
important. But the but you know, heart disease is multifactorial.
Right. Yeah, I don't think it's directly causal for LDL cholesterol or directly causal for seed oils. Yeah, either. But
I think the more of these things, you know, it's
interesting as I sort of travel the world and talk to experts
like yourself and other experts and PhDs and MDs and researchers
and are leading minds in the field. Yeah, so we're we seem
to be coming full circle,
you know, and just getting back to the basics,
you know, a lot about what you talked about,
how a lot of these polyunsaturated fatty acids
weren't even in the diet in the 1900s.
And you also saw significantly lower rates
of cardiovascular disease.
Cardiovascular disease is a relatively new phenomenon,
especially in younger ages.
Not, you know, in older ages it was certainly
a phenomenon but it's becoming younger and younger and so is metabolic syndrome.
I read a really interesting article and had a discussion with Dr. Gondry about this, about
you know the metabolic syndrome which we were discussing before the podcast, you know, abdominal adiposity, hyperinsulinemia, hypertriglyceridemia, you
know, elevated or suppressed HDL cholesterol and high blood pressure.
We really tend to think of these things as these are older age problems, right?
Like we think Alzheimer's, dementia, cognitive decline.
I'll start worrying about that in my late 60s, my early 70s. But all of
these things have a genesis that's decades earlier than then
they manifest themselves. And obviously diet plays a huge role
in that now I know you're a meat eater, like I am. And I've
often heard you dispel a lot of the vegan vegetarian.
Yes.
And not saying attacking vegans and vegetarians, but just just dispelling the myth that you
you can't be healthy unless you're eating an entirely plant based diet.
Yeah, definitely worth pushing back against because there's so much money that goes into
the promotion of plant basedbased diets, right?
But yeah, no, I'm an unapologetic omnivore. I think that people are best suited eating both plants and animals and
You know, there's like the ethical question that always arises and I think that's a good, you know, these are important questions
animal treatment in this country particularly in the CAFO system is like
Really aberrant and it's not great for the environment either but from a
nutritional value I think it's you know should not be controversial that animal
source foods are can play a really important role in in the optimized diet
there they comprise some of the most nutrient dense foods on the planet
red meat in particular I think it's think it's a repository for not just really high-quality protein,
the highest quality protein, but creatine, carnosine, vitamin E, you got a tiny amount
of omega-3s in grass-fed, grass-finished red meat, taurine even.
There are carnit nutrients, nutrients that are found exclusively in animal source foods
that I think we shouldn't be neglecting. And so, yeah, I take a really
unapologetic stance. And the epidemiology surrounding red meat is really terrible. It's
most of the time I find can't be trusted, you know, barely scientific uses called food frequency questionnaires where, you know,
within the category of red meat, you'll see hamburgers,
you know, at the population level, people who are eating
more hamburgers or eating more fast food.
And it's like, is it the bun?
Is it the high fructose corn syrup ketchup on the burger?
Is it the French fries that, you know?
Exactly.
Is it the shake that came with it?
A hundred percent.
So, you know, observational research tends to paint red meat as a dietary boogeyman.
You know, those observations, those associations are easy to find.
Red meat associated with increased risk of colorectal cancer, you know, all this stuff.
But the question, the issue is really diet quality.
Randomized control trials do not bear out those observations.
And those observations also,
those increase in risks that you tend to see,
tend to be very small.
They're increased, the risks are relative risk,
increases in relative risk.
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Interestingly, we, I didn't mean to cut you off, but we talked about this yesterday on
a podcast that a pediatrician on and we were talking
about statistical data. I have a background in probability and statistics and mortality
modeling. And by asking a different question, you can get a completely different answer
from the same data. And one of the things that we were discussing was if you have, you
know, 100 people in a population, for example, and one person is helped by,
let's say a pharmaceutical intervention. And you tweak
that pharmaceutical intervention, and now 1.5 people
out of 100 are helped. Well, that's a 50% increase in the
efficacy. And so now, you know, you know, consumer sees, well,
there's a 50% improvement in what you would think, well, it went from
one to 50 out of 100. But it didn't, it went from one and two
one and a half out of 100. The stat claims a 50% improvement,
which I guess, hyper technically is true. But you know, when you
when you're looking at the data, it's misleading
and that's a lot of what happens with epidemiological studies.
Yeah, 100%.
It's like if you are, if they take a group of, I mean we'll just say like 100 people
and you know they see four of those people getting a negative health outcome related
to a certain variable like red meat consumption, you know, four of those people out of a hundred and then, you know,
another cohort that, you know, maybe is meat avoidant, you'll see three people, you know, have the same health outcome. The headline will be 25%
25% reduction, risk reduction, right? But it's just going from four to three. And it's like red meat maybe was assessed via these food
frequency questionnaires, which are notoriously inaccurate.
And there's all of these other variables.
There's healthy user bias.
There's multi-colinearity.
There's all of these other-
Multi-what?
Colinearity, which I got into a fight.
Multi-colinearity.
Damn, I've been in the industry a long time.
I never heard of that.
I got into a debate on the.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I got into a debate with with one of these like vegan science communicators.
Their whole shtick is like promoting, you know, their their activism around that diet,
that lifestyle.
And yeah, and you know, there was a they can be so pedantic, you know, and we got into
this debate about semantics and
healthy user bias versus multicoloniality.
They're related concepts.
But yeah, so that's why those kinds of studies, I think, are really not trustworthy.
They're useful for generating hypotheses.
But the randomized controlled trials don't really tend to show any negative health effect
from the consumption of red meat.
In fact, one meta-analysis of randomized control trials was just published that found that
of all the cardiovascular biomarkers that were assessed across myriad randomized control
trials using red meat as an intervention, the only potentially negative effect to come from red meat consumption
up to about six ounces of,
or on average six ounces of red meat consumed per day
was a tiny, tiny, tiny bump in LDL cholesterol.
And it's like, is that bad?
No, probably not.
Yeah, so.
No, it's not.
I did a whole podcast on this with Dr. Arseen Mahotra,
he's a cardiologist out of the UK.
He's up for a cabinet position in the new administration.
It's not the American Heart Association,
but it's another cardiovascular society.
And running the Health and Human Services.
And he said, the very first thing that I'm gonna do
is I'm going to de-correlate LDL's direct risk for cardiovascular
disease. And we saw this in our mortality tables where we used large data because when
we were determining mortality, we used voluminous pools of data because we were putting people
into a cohort of a thousand lives lives and we didn't use randomized
clinical trials.
We used actual data, day, date, time, location and cause of death and triangulated that back
into the record.
And if elevated LDL cholesterol was correlated to decreased mortality, we would have had
it as a risk factor, what we call morbidity factor or co morbidity factor, but it wasn't in fact, it was it was oppositely
correlated in older ages that the higher the LDL cholesterol,
the more it was correlated to longevity. We didn't, at the
time that I was there process death claims on centenarians,
which we would see from time to time. Sometimes in life
insurance, the policy does what they call endows. So if you
actually make it to age 100, the death claim
pays. So kind of fun to like screw your children and make it
to 101 years old. Dad just got his life insurance. 101 I'm
going on a bender. I just got 10 million tax free. But what was
interesting about these death claims is many of them died in, you know,
hospital or scared living facilities or, you know, other kind of areas where we had blood
work.
And universally across the board, they had what we would consider to be, you know, elevated
levels of LDL cholesterol.
And yet these are the centenarians.
And great longevity.
Yeah, and great longevity.
So he and I went deep down the rabbit hole with this.
If you want to check that podcast out,
it's Dr. Asim Malhotra.
But I saw a tweet of yours that I want to dig into
because I happen to agree with it.
Agree with most of your tweets.
Aside from being funny, you've got some great one-liners.
But you tweeted about the five best sports supplements,
creatine, beta-alanine, nitrates, caffeine, and protein.
And I wonder if we might discuss that.
I mean, obviously, I think protein is pretty well vetted
and discussed.
I don't think anybody considers protein to not be excellent
for sports nutrition.
But what about beta-alanine, creatine, nitrates, caffeine?
Why did those make your top five list?
Yeah, well actually that was a review that just came out
and it sought to elucidate the five top sports supplements.
So the five top sports supplements,
according to this new review, was creat creatine which was sort of the king
Mm-hmm, I would by the way agree with that. Yeah, I think is the most underserved nutrient in
40 plus year old females. Mm-hmm, you know, especially perimenopausal
Pre menopausal postmenopausal women. Yeah. Yeah, it's the bomb. I mean it has a really
long historical track record
for safety and efficacy. And they're now starting to,
research is starting to mount showing
that it has a cognitive benefit, supplemental creatine.
It can improve cognition when people are under-slept,
which is a great thing.
Pretty much everybody.
Yeah, right.
It might have a cardiovascular health benefit.
So I think creatine is amazing.
I take about five grams a day and it seems to be, I mean, save for people with kidney
disease and other medical conditions.
It seems to be very safe.
In what form of creatine?
Monohydrate by the monohydrate or the HCl?
Yeah.
Most of the research is on creatine monohydrate.
Yeah, so creatine HCl might be as efficacious and safe,
but I don't think we know.
And monohydrate is super cheap, and it's very easy to find.
Most of the research centers on that.
And how does beta alanine play into that?
That's a good question.
I mean, beta alanine is not something
that I'm all that familiar with, actually,
which is part of the reason why I was reading
that research review, because it's not something
that I currently use.
But it did seem to make the list.
And there is this interesting thing.
It does give you tingles when you take it.
Right.
Like a niacin flush or something?
Yeah, something like that.
It does feel very similar to that.
But yeah, the fact that I made the top five,
I mean, that's very interesting.
Yeah, and then nitrates, because we classically
would look for nitrate-free meats
and consider nitrates to be things that are embedded
in highly processed meats.
Yeah.
And are these the same nitrates?
Same.
Wow.
Yeah, same. So maybe we're coming full circle on the well nitrates and basically support your body's nitric oxide pathway, which which
Normal normalizes blood pressure can reduce blood pressure
And also increase blood flow. Mm-hmm
So, I mean everybody's familiar with the certain pharmaceutical that works to increase blood flow in a region of the body, right?
That's you know the certain pharmaceutical that works to increase blood flow in a region of the body.
That's you know, facilitative of sex.
But interestingly, there have been some reports and actually some research on people taking
that same drug Viagra, if you haven't guessed, in the pre-workout setting.
And it seems to actually improve muscle protein synthesis on par with one to 200 milligrams of testosterone
in a small study.
So nitrates, yeah, might have a really powerful effect.
I mean, not least of which you're going to probably see a better pump from it, but it
might have an enduring impact on muscle protein synthesis.
Yeah.
And just so we don't leave the vegans and vegetarians totally out of the conversation, like what are some
important things for vegans and vegetarians to pay attention to?
You know, I often just to highlight the fact that, you
know, there's a widespread assumption that if it's not meat,
it's healthy. But you know, if you look at Beyond Burgers and
non burgers, and, and you read the list of ingredients in
there, the number that I can't even pronounce
and don't even recognize.
You know, polysorbate 80 and there's just all kinds of binders, fillers, gelatins, thickening
agents, you know, things that are put in there for for consistency that you do not find anywhere
naturally in nature.
But for vegans and vegetarians, what are they particularly depleted in? And what do they
need to replace that a meat, you know, diet is getting?
Yeah, that's a good that's a good question. I mean, you know, vitamin B12, we all know
is is most easily obtained from eating animal source foodsourced foods. But if I were gonna go vegan,
which I won't be anytime soon,
but I would say a nice omega-3 supplement,
like an algal-based omega-3 for DHA fat, very useful.
I don't think we can rely on plant-based forms
of omega-3s to adequately support our needs
from an omega-3 standpoint.
So, you know, I would definitely be supplementing
with preformed omega-3 fatty acids.
Algae is a great option there.
I would also supplement with creatine.
You know, at this point, the evidence is pretty strong,
strongly in favor of creatine.
Yeah.
So I would definitely take that.
Creatine is found exclusively in animal-sourced foods.
Yeah, I agree. And it's synthesized. So it's vegan. You know, you definitely take that. Creatine is found exclusively in animal-sourced foods. Yeah, I agree.
And it's synthesized.
So it's vegan.
You know, you could take that.
Those would be my two, you know, supplemental, I guess, like the high leverage, you know,
nutrients that I would look into.
There are a lot of other nutrients, though, that I think are valuable that vegans likely
under-consume.
I would put choline in there which is really important for brain health.
You can find choline in plant-based foods.
Choline does exist I believe in soybeans and cruciferous vegetables but in much lower concentration
than animal-sourced foods.
So you can supplement it from a vegan source or from a vegetarian source.
I think so. Yeah, there's like- Well, you definitely it from a vegan source or from a vegetarian source. I think so.
Yeah, there's like city.
Well, you definitely could get a choline supplement.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, you're right.
Yeah, like City Choline and stuff.
Because I think what you know, you and I are both involved
in really, as we discussed at the beginning,
putting our platforms behind this Make America Healthy Again
movement, which I'm super excited about,
and hoping that it can coalesce into, you know, more of a well organized
movement. A lot of us are trying to do that. In a perfect world,
what do you see as, you know, what are the biggest threats
right now to society because of our, you know, the corruption
in our nutritional research and the corruption in our, you know,
food supply chemicals in our food supply. Like, there's so
much, you know, like banning red dye three was amazing. And then
everybody, of course, everybody crawled out of the woodwork and
said, What about a red dye number 40? And what about, you
know, yellow 90? And I agree with that. But in the perfect world, where do we start? And and what
are some real actionable things that the government could do
public policy wise or, you know, to restrict certain corruptive
practices to make the biggest impact in the shortest amount
of time?
Great question. Yeah, I mean, I'll preface by saying
I'm not formally involved in any way in the administration.
Right, I'm not formally involved in the administration.
We're kind of like tangentially at this point supporting.
It's a fantastic initiative.
I remain totally optimistic.
I know you are as well.
But what can they do?
I think for one, RFK Junior's,
the motivation is there to uncouple
some of the many conflicts of interest
with our regulatory agencies, whether that's the FDA.
Almost 50% of the FDA's budget
comes from what are called user fees, which are
predominantly from the pharmaceutical industry.
So getting the food and drug administration's budget comes from user fees.
What is a user fee?
So user fees are basically the application fees that these, you know, and other forms
of fees that the pharmaceutical agencies pay into the FDA to, you know, I believe look
at data with regards to drug trials and things like that. So sort of like administrative fees
that the pharmaceutical companies pay into the FDA. A proportion of that comes from the food
industry, but most of it comes from the pharmaceutical industry. Yeah.
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And what other areas could this movement really make big
pendulum swings with, you know, small
amounts of action? I've heard Kelly Means talk about ending the direct, you know, advertising
to the consumer because that allows the control of the narrative and stops anybody from speaking out.
Yeah. But what are some other areas where this Make America Healthy Again movement can make big
strides in short periods of time?
What are the muscos in the food supply?
Yeah.
Well, I think that getting pharmaceutical ads off of TV, that's easier said than done
to be fair.
You know, a lot of these networks, I mean, if you watch the nightly news in America,
I mean, most of the ads are for pharmaceutical
drugs, you know?
So I don't know the proportion to which the revenue of those companies, those conglomerates
come from their advertising.
It's as high as 74% that I've read.
Yeah.
And, you know, but the crazy thing is that those ads are not even necessarily there
to influence consumer spending, which is what we would,
which is what even I assumed, you know,
prior to Callie coming on to my show
and pointing out that, no, they're actually
spending that money to influence the platforms.
Right.
You know, if you look at every GV share.
To control the narrative and control the media.
Exactly.
As you've said.
Yeah.
So I think uncoupling that would be amazing.
I think getting the conflicts of interest out of the USDA,
which I don't know how that's going to unfold.
I mean, it was just announced that Trump nominated a former
seat, I believe she was the CEO of one of the largest C2L
lobbying groups to be the chief of staff for the USDA.
So I don't know how it's all gonna shake out.
At the point at which we record this,
RFK has not been confirmed either.
So I feel like there are a lot of moving parts.
And once he, if he gets officially confirmed,
we might see major sweeping changes,
but I personally would really love to see
something that I would love to see.
I think it should be banned that ultra processed foods are allowed to make health claims.
I think it's really screwed up that you can, you know, that the least healthy foods in
the supermarket make the loudest claims.
Whereas the healthiest foods in the supermarket don't make any claims. You know,
most of the healthy, the healthiest foods in the supermarket, the grass-fed, grass-finished
red meat, eggs, you know, extra virgin olive oil, like very, very seldom will you see any,
even in avocados, like you don't see health claims on those foods, berries, you don't
see health claims. Where do you find the health claims? On all the ultra-processed garbage foods,
the seed oils, the commercial cereals,
marketed towards children, of course.
Yeah, wow, I actually never thought about that.
That's a really good angle.
I mean, there's such a large percentage
of our public policy nutritional research
is funded by pharma.
And I think this has got to be partially responsible
for an upside down food pyramid, you know,
Lucky Charms more nutritious than grass fed steak.
And if there's any mechanism to flip that pyramid, or to be a little more truthful,
I'm of the same mindset that you are, we shouldn't restrict free choice, right?
Like people buy cigarettes, they obviously I don't think anybody buys a
carton of cigarettes and doesn't know what the risks are, but they're an adult and they know
what the risks are, they can grab that off the shelf. I think what you're pointing out is
intentionally misleading, you know, heart healthy, fortified, enriched, and, you know,
high fiber and then on the back says high fiber diets are related to improvement in cardiovascular,
reduction of cardiovascular disease,
and improvement in a reduction in colon cancer,
and things like that.
And leading you to believe that that box of cereal
reduces your risk of colon cancer.
I'm happy with products marketing
how they've been produced.
I think if it wants to say organic, great, you know,
but it's the health claims.
And I'm happy to say, you know, across the board,
no health claims on even foods that I would consider healthy.
You know, I think it should just be a level playing field
to inspire consumers to learn for themselves,
to seek out their own sort of education around this topic.
But it's like, once we start allowing foods to make health claims, that's actually, it
sounds like on the surface that would be a good thing.
You know, like a ranking system for foods and things like that.
But there's just too much money involved.
It's like, who's to say what's healthy and what's not?
Right.
You know, so I think just just across the board banning health claims, I think that
would be great.
And then leaving it up to consumer choice.
Yeah. Yeah, I would be great. And then leaving it up to consumer choice. Yeah.
Yeah, I would agree with that too.
I mean, I have high hopes for this movement to just create less leverage and more transparency
because I think one of the major things that's gone wrong is we've privatized profits and
we've socialized the expense.
And when I say socialize the expense, Medicaid, Medicare is picking up the cost of this burgaining,
you know, explosive era of chronic disease and type 2 diabetes and morbid obesity.
I know you've been outspoken about classifying obesity as a disease and certainly about it being genetic.
So talk a little bit about that. about disease and certainly about it being genetic.
So talk a little bit about that. I mean, you think that obesity should be considered
a disease?
Yeah, I think it's a, you know, I mean, it's highly
responsive to our diets and our lifestyle.
So it's not something that we can, that we, that we're,
that we're unable to address with our own agency in the world. But I push back, what I push back primarily against is the notion that it's genetic.
There are certainly genetic influences, but this idea that it's primarily genetic, that's
BS.
I mean, obesity has tripled over the past 50 years.
Our genes have not changed all that much, you know.
But our lifestyle, our food environment
has dramatically changed.
Absolutely.
And so...
And from a mental health perspective,
what do you think is most,
because you're a huge mental health advocate,
but what has most dramatically impacted our mental health?
And for those folks that are listening,
we just gave five of the top, you know, supplements for, for fitness and for sport. What about for good mental health for cognitive health, we've actually started the discussion on nicotine.
yet. We had this discussion in Baja, but I'm on the precipice of it because I've heard Huberman talk about it, you know,
Ben Greenfield's big on it. Dave Asprey and I spoke about it
on his podcast, you and I have spoken about it. I love to
because I think as soon as you say nicotine, people think
cigarettes vaping, you know, we're obviously not right, you
know, talking about those things. But
nicotine. Yeah, nicotine is a, I mean, I, there's no such thing as a free lunch. And
I think nicotine has some benefits and it has some definite downsides. The benefits
are that it improves cognitive function. It's a well studied neurotropic. It might benefit
mental health. Also with fear extinction and things like that,
there are studies that have shown that.
I've actually seen some of the cancer binding site research,
which seems to be very promising with even some oncologists
recommending pure nicotine patches for patients
that are going through oncology treatment.
I don't purport to know the science behind that.
But if we just stick into cognitive function, you know, as a cognitive enhancer, I would
say the majority of people over 40 would say I have some level of brain fog, some level
of short term recall issues or some level of focus and concentration issues.
So if we're just isolating, you know, cognitive function and in neurotropics,
where do you fall on what you feel are the best long-term
for our brain health?
Aside from maybe the short-term impact of nicotine.
Generally speaking, like aside from nicotine,
I would say, you know, choline is definitely important.
I try to, you know to prioritize choline in my diet from eggs,
red meat, fish, things like that.
I think collagen plays an important role
in longevity and systemic health.
I think brain health probably too.
I think the problem with collagen is people think
that we can target direct collagen, right?
If you eat collagen, it shows up as collagen in your skin,
but I always use the analogy that we don't eat our nails to grow our nails or eat our hair to grow our hair.
And collagen is going to provide, you know, it's an incomplete protein.
It won't really build muscle, but I think it can become amino acids which can then become
collagen, alacin, fibrin in the skin.
Do you take it?
I don't take collagen.
I take these.
I take these perfect aminos because that's all eight of the essential amino acids and these actually have nucleotides in them too.
And I take it because that's such a low caloric impact, less than two calories and but it
provides the equivalent of 29 grams of whey protein.
So especially you know working out in a fasted state, you know I find that the essential
amino acids,
they're essential for a reason. And if you look at metabolic
processing conversion, as soon as you're deficient, and even a single one of the essential amino acids, the balance of those
are going to become fat or sugar. So the eight essential
amino acids in the right ratio is critical.
And obviously you can get them from high protein sources.
But I think that...
Way better than BCAAs alone.
Yeah, yeah.
You want the full complex.
Yeah.
Because the branch chain amino acids are just leucine, isoleucine, valine.
And usually they're in the right ratios, that 2 to 1-1 ratio.
But the branch chain amino acids are only three of the necessary
amino acids.
And I think the old adage used to be, well, BCAAs are either metabolized at the muscle
level or they're the most commonly used at the muscle level.
So we should take branch chain amino acids prior to a workout or during a workout.
I think you should take full spectrum of the essential amino acids prior to workout or during a workout. I think you should take full spectrum of the essential amino acids
prior to workout or during a workout so that you can build anything from that complete protein.
You build natural killer cells, you build collagen, you can build muscle.
You can build you can build anything from those essential amino acids.
Well, this is amazing, man.
I'm super excited about, you know, anything that we can do
and our peers can do to have a positive impact
on this Make America Healthy Again movement.
I'm also not directly involved with the administration,
but tangentially, you know,
and significantly supporting that movement.
So as you know, I ask all my podcast guests,
and you can't give me the same answer
that you gave last time.
Should we look up his last answer? Ooh, I wonder what it was. all my podcast guests and you can't give me the same answer that you gave last time.
Should we look up his last answer? I asked them all the same question at the end of the podcast. Before we go into my VIP community and after you answer this, we're going to go into a private room.
If you're interested in becoming an ultimate human VIP, you can go to the ultimatehuman.com
and just sign up to be one of my VIP ultimate humans, we do
private podcasts, I do a lot of one on one in group settings,
answering questions, we do challenges, where we're just
building an incredible community of like minded folks, and I get
discounts on all of the products that that I endorse. But before
we go into the private podcast for my VIP community, I ask all
the guests the same question, you know, what does it mean to
you to be an ultimate human? Damn.
I was the shortest answer we've ever had. Great. Thank you, Max.
I forget. I completely forgot what I how I answered it the
good time. I don't know, forgot how I answered it the first time.
I don't know.
For some reason, my brain is going to like James Bond.
To be really good at karate and shooting with a gun.
Like strong in body and in intention and in values
and to be a high integrity person, to be a self-sufficient
person.
I think that's, you know, and obviously health I think is a crucial one to embody, making
sure that you're strong, that you're, you know, taking care of your body, that you're prioritizing
self-care.
And then I also think it's important to show up in the world presentable, and to have respect
for not just your body and your mind, spiritually, your relationships and all that stuff, but
also how you're perceived.
Some people scoff at appearance and things like that.
Like it doesn't matter, it's shallow.
But I think like because my mind went to James Bond,
I'm also thinking about, well, he's a person who dressed really well
and he showed up really well and he was always presentable.
And I think that's why he's such an iconic character.
I happen to be a big James Bond fan.
I think everybody growing up was a big James Bond fan.
Favorite Bond?
Who's your favorite Bond?
Who was the English Bond?
The heavy accent English actor.
I'm having a brain.
What was it?
Sean Connery.
City OG.
Well, it was actually Sean Connery.
He just faked the British accent.
Did he? Oh, yeah, I guess.
Yeah, he did. He faked a really thick British accent.
But I love the Sean. Mine is Daniel Connery was like
he was a badass at seventy five. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, he was an old Eastwood, you know, like kind of like tougher
and more chiseled at seventy five than at forty five.
He was, yeah.
Daniel Craig for me is the goat.
Yeah.
Roger Moore?
Roger Moore is your favorite.
Cool.
I'm so interested to know who the next bond is.
Maybe it'll be you, Gary.
Hey, I'm in.
Universal Studios, I'm here if you guys
want to send me a contract.
Well, guys, as always, I'll put the links to any of the topics
that we talked about below to the extent that they're research.
I'll also try to dig up the studies
that you referred to if you help my team get those,
so I can link those in the podcast below.
Where can people find you?
My audience, for the most part, is familiar with you.
But where can people find you?
Yeah, my podcast, The Genius Life is my pride and joy
so come over and listen to that if you're into podcasts
as I'm sure you are if you listen to this.
And I'm also very active on X and Instagram
which I know you are as well.
Very, okay.
Well, VIPs, we'll see you in the private room
and the rest of you guys until next time,
that's just science.