Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1026: Bison Squat Bar Review, the Truth About the Food Pyramid (My Plate), Celebrity Transformations & MORE
Episode Date: May 8, 2019In this episode of Quah, sponsored by Organifi (organifi.com/mindpump, code "mindpump" for 20% off), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about tips and tricks to help reduce marijuana use, t...he bison squat bar, the good, bad and ugly of the United States' Food Pyramid (now My Plate), and their thoughts on celebrity transformations. Why people are interested in new information + how Seed stands out from the rest. (6:01) There is another new addition to the Di Stefano Household. Why you just can’t have ONE guinea pig. (10:27) How Santa Cruz has become the hub for ‘furries’. (12:30) New media starting to ‘cross pollinate’ into popular TV shows. (14:26) Adidas shares hit record high after profits beat expectations: The power of having a big star ‘rep’ your brand. (18:49) Are Trump's tariff ‘Tweets’ doing the markets a big favor or not? (21:20) Why everything PornHub touches erects to the stars. (25:40) The link to social media platforms and phone companies. (26:50) Adam gets a speeding ticket + reminiscing on old photos. (30:15) The maximum benefits of switching up your sets and rep ranges. (33:35) Justin getting a little ‘too involved’ in his coaching duties. (36:18) Drinking just one energy drink is enough to cause heart problems, study warns. Will the Government start to regulate this market to kids? (43:26) #Quah question #1 – What are some tips or tricks to help reduce the amount of weed I’m smoking? (48:34) #Quah question #2 – What are the uses for the bison squat bar? (1:01:29) #Quah question #3 – What do you think of the USA Food Pyramid? What’s good about it and wrong about it? (1:09:19) #Quah question #4 – What do you guys think about celebrity transformations? Inspiring or dangerous? (1:20:18) People Mentioned Jocko Willink (@jockowillink) Instagram Tim Ferriss (@timferriss) Instagram Layne Norton, PhD (@biolayne) Instagram Related Links/Products Mentioned May Promotion: MAPS HIIT ½ off!! **Code “HIIT50” at checkout** Visit Seed for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout** Visit Ned for the special offer for Mind Pump Listeners! Mind Pump 1022: Raja Dhir- The Truth About Probiotics Billions on Showtime Adidas shares hit record high after profits beat expectations Trump's Tariff Tweets Do the Markets a Big Favor - Bloomberg Trump: The Art of the Deal – Book by Donald Trump and Tony Schwartz Economy added 263,000 jobs in April, unemployment falls to lowest level since 1969 Tumblr’s long, strange tumble from the top Facebook Bans Alex Jones, Louis Farrakhan And Other 'Dangerous' Individuals Consumption of caffeinated energy drinks rises in the United States Mind Pump Free Resources
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salta Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
Hey guys, guess what?
Well, it's mind pump time.
Look, for the first 50 minutes, we just do our fun introductory conversation.
After that, we get into the fitness talk.
But here's what we talked about for the first 50 minutes. We mentioned the probiotic company seed. They actually
make a probiotic for women and for men. And believe it or not, the science says there
is a difference. Now, we are working with this company. If you want to get a discount,
here's what you do. Go to seed.com forwardsash-mindpump and use the code MindPump for 20% off your first month
of the daily symbiotic.
Then I talked about another new pet for me.
I got another guinea pig to play with the other ones.
Pretty cool.
And the name, by the way, Millie Friedman.
So, people know what that means.
I like that.
Then we talked about the show Billions.
I don't watch that show,
but Adam and Justin and Doug all love it. Doug! And apparently, Jocco and Tim Ferris were on there. That's kind of cool.
Yeah.
Then we talked about Trump's tariffs. He did a tweet which caused the market to
draw, but there was also some good economic news before that.
That's added again.
Adam brought up Adidas and how they're crushing because they signed
Beyonce. Who would have saw that coming?
Then we talked about Tumblr and how their value is tumbling.
Boom.
And how?
And how?
Fantastic.
Port hub, Port hub is gonna buy Tumblr
or talking about it.
And we'll see what happens.
We talked about Facebook and censorship and liability.
Adam got a speeding ticket, you crazy driver.
We talked about my workout variation.
You might want to hear that part
if you're trying to change things up with your workout.
Just then talked about how he cheated
at this weekend's little league game.
Yikes.
Damn it.
And we talked about how drinking one energy drink
may actually cause heart problems.
You hear that lane?
Monster, don't drink them.
Oh,
before before we get into the fitness questions, I do want to remind everybody we are doing a live
event May 10th at 6 p.m. in insanitas, California, there's like five or 10 tickets left. Hurry up
and go to mindpumplive.com. It's this Friday. So get your tickets now. When they're sold out,
they're done. We're not going to sell anymore. Yeah. All Friday. So get your tickets now when they're sold out. They're
done. We're not going to sell anymore. Yeah. All right. So here's the fitness part of
this episode. The first question, what are some tricks or tips this person can use to
help reduce the amount of weed that they're smoking? So we give our strategies for reducing
cannabis consumption. One of those strategies was to employ full
spectrum hemp extract in order to mitigate some of the side effects of reducing cannabis
consumption. Now our favorite company for full spectrum hemp is Ned. Ned makes the best
that we've ever found and they're verified by independent laboratory tests. If you go to
helloned.com forward slash mine pump, you'll get 15% off your first purchase. The next question,
what are the uses for the bison squat bar? We all give our input on that. Justin, what did the
father bison say to his son as he was going off to college? Okay.
What is it?
Bison.
Wow.
Next fitness question.
Thank you.
Is that off the cuff right there?
Yeah, dude.
Was that off the cuff really?
Wow.
I hope I get that good.
Yeah, you will.
You're going to become a father.
That doesn't puns.
The next question was.
Did you see all his likes that he got on you?
That stupid thing he said on my Instagram?
No, I didn't see that.
You said the dumb poop.
I did that.
Oh yeah.
And he did make a camping pooping joke.
And like 250 people like to bring washed all you guys.
I'm on a roll.
Then we answer the question of what we think about the current USA food pyramid or food
plate.
I go off on a rant on what I think the government should be doing
instead of what they're currently doing.
And the last fitness question, we give our opinions on celebrity transformations.
Are they good?
Are they bad?
Or are they just so inspiring?
Stupid.
Also, check this out.
It's May.
You know what that means?
Next month, it's summer time.
Do you want to look sexy with your shirt off?
Yeah. Or do you want to look sexy with the bikini on? Yes, it's summer time. Do you want to look sexy with your shirt off?
Or do you want to look sexy with the bikini on?
Justin, where's the bikini sometimes?
And he looks quite attractive.
Well, look, you have some time to get in shape for summer.
Our program, that is the best short term program
for burning body fat.
The highest calorie burning program that we have
is our maps hit program, hit stands for high intensity
interval training.
And we program this professionally.
It incorporates barbells and dumbbells.
There's three versions of this program from beginner, intermediate to advanced.
Use this program to get ready for summer and to make it easier, we made this program 50%
off.
Half off.
Here's what you do.
Go to Maps Hit. That's M-A-P-S's MAPS H I I T dot com and use the code hit 50 H I I T
five zero no space for that discount. You want if you want to check out our other maps programs, you can also go to the site
maps fitness products dot com. Oh, yeah. I've got to try a few reviews this week. We have three winners with iTunes. We have FittyWap, logo 17, honestly, Haley.
And for Facebook, we have four review winners.
We have Dene, George O. Megan Parsons, Ronnie Cheyot,
Felicia Murphy, all of you are winners. So then they might just read to iTunes at
MindPumpMedia.com's and your shirt size, your shipping address, and include your Instagram
handle. And we'll get that shirt right out to you guys.
Do it guys.
Champions.
Hey, Matt, the Raja seed episode. Fire. Did so much better than what I would have ever anticipated.
Well, you know, it's, there's two reasons for it.
I think, I knew it would do great.
I thought it was gonna be too nerdy.
No, really?
No, no, no, no.
I really enjoyed that.
I knew people were gonna do that.
I did too, but we're, we're a couple nerds too.
Well, I sure, I understand that.
But it was always that.
It was well received.
Well, he's a, first off, the information,
I think a lot of people are interested in.
It's new information too.
And yeah, people are interested in probiotic science
because it's an emerging science.
It's impacting every other science related,
every other scientific field, in fact, biology, psychology,
they're looking at inflammation over the place.
Oh, it's crazy.
But he's also, remember, he was a,
like champion debater. Remember, he got, he had scholarships for
that's so he's just a good speaker. So it's a compelling.
No, he's a great, he's a great, he's a great
community. Yeah. You know, I had a question for you though.
So after that episode went up, I have quite a few of my old
clients that still listen, or that listen to the show.
And one of them was asking me about the difference
between, because seed actually has a male
and a female probiotic.
And I actually didn't have the answer for her.
Do you know what the major difference is between the two?
Yeah, so they have the leading researchers
on probiotic science.
In fact, one of the, I think, one of the guys,
people that works with them was one of the people
that coined the term.
And coined the term, he, probiotics.
And he was also on the board for the World Health Organization, right?
Yeah, so they're on the leading edge.
And what they're finding with the current research is that
there is a difference between female, human,
and male, human microbiome in a few different ways.
First, the gut microbiome, they're finding there are some differences.
Then, of course, the female, and he talked about this on the episode, women...
The vagina.
Yeah, vaginal microbiota, excuse me, vaginal microbiomes are fascinating, quite unique, and the health of that really helps in terms
of reflex hormone health that helps with pregnancy or ability to get pregnant, your ability
to prevent certain types of infections, disorders, whatever.
So there is a clear difference between men and women, and they are at the point where they
can actually determine if they get a sample, they can generally say
where it came from and if it's a male or female.
So it only makes sense that you would,
to more individualize these probiotics,
make a whole segment for women.
So it's a big one for men.
So is it like actually different bacteria strains
that you're getting for the female?
Different concentrations of strains.
So yeah, very similar because we're all obviously
the same species, but different in terms of percentages
and who gets more of what.
That makes way more sense than shreds,
blue and pink for multi-videos.
Yeah, yeah.
No, but like I said, they're the leading edge
because it's an emerging science.
It's one of those sciences that there's new stuff
coming out all the time.
And so you wanna be with the company
that are the ones that are pioneering all this science
because it's kind of a new,
because to be quite honest with probiotics generally,
it's kind of like they're like,
okay, we think this is good.
Let's give it a shot.
But with C, they're able to figure out
what really works, how to really make these things effective for people.
I thought the clip that Rachel shared
on the Mind Plut Media page was really cool
about how people try and say that probiotics are,
you know, gimmick or bullshit
and like by definition, that can't be true.
Did you read, did you read, did you?
No, I didn't see that.
Well, you didn't even listen to that.
Yeah, no, he was just talking about that.
The definition of a probiotic is that it has something
that you intake has to fundamentally change.
Oh.
So it's like the fact that you're to say that it's bunk
or it doesn't work is so funny because
but what's happening is a lot of companies are bastardizing
it or taking on that little science and information
and then running with it.
That's what it's happened.
Some science will come out and people are interested
and the marketers will take it and spin it
in two different ways.
So that now you have cereal with probiotics.
And I saw probiotic water.
I don't understand.
And they don't have the right bacteria,
the right concentrations, it's not surviving,
where it needs to survive.
So it's just a waste.
It's a lot of risk.
Anyway, so how was you guys weekend?
Did you guys watch Jessica's story?
I saw that there may be another creature
in your household.
You know, the day's the thing.
You know, I didn't see what happened.
Oh, yeah, she showed the new.
Really?
Like a second guinea pig, so it has a buddy or what?
Yeah, we have. Starting a or what? Yeah, we have...
Starting a little family.
Yeah, we have, so,
somebody, people have been sending me these articles
showing that, I think it's Sweden
that makes it illegal to buy one guinea pig.
You can't have just one.
What?
Yeah, because there's,
there's really social creatures,
and apparently they get real depressed,
and it's just not good for them to be alone,
unless you're gonna play with them all the time.
Nothing's worse than an emo guinea pig.
You got close.
Yeah.
The one I had started growing her hair like in her face.
It's got like face paint.
She had an attitude.
I was like, what's wrong?
She's like, you don't know me.
Purple hair.
I ran back in the house.
I'm like, what the fuck?
No, but she started having kind of,
you're out.
To my own thing.
Behavior and I was feeling kind of bad
and then people were sending the articles making me feel worse. The guinea pig was having erotic behavior. Yeah, like it
What does that look like she she was like she just didn't look happy, you know, it made like a different noise
Yeah, just when I think you couldn't get any nerdy
Yeah, yeah, you run out get another one. Yeah. Well, we got another one now their friends
Yeah, they're little buddies they hide in the house together
It's a good time.
Chase after each other.
I tell you, it's funny that there's a whole community
out there of people who are like super into,
I get all these messages from people.
Yeah, well, there's communities of people
that dress up like rabbits and fuck each other too.
There is, wow.
I saw those this weekend too.
You didn't?
I did.
There was another furry.
First of all, I figured out there's like two spots
I always see them downtown Santa Cruz and like now I know where to avoid. You did it. Yeah, I did. There was another first of. First of all, I figured out there's like two spots
I always see them downtown Santa Cruz
and like now I know where to avoid.
There's one that's like this restaurant
that's right near the parking lot
and then this other one was like this open,
this new restaurant area that just opened
and so that's their two hangout spots.
We drove by and saw them again.
Well, you remember when we were up in,
I don't, this was a long time ago
when my pump first started.
We were all up in Santa Cruz together
and the one time we'd all been up there together
when we were at the coffee shop and...
Oh, you guys saw him while we were there too?
We were all together.
Wait a minute, is that,
Santa Cruz like a hub?
Yeah, like they're there, dude.
I can't, I captured it on my story one time
and like highlighted it.
You'd see people like look at them
and then their face was just like,
ah, like just horrifying.
So like all the time, like you'll go to these certain areas
and they're just chilling.
Yeah, they hang out.
I don't know what they do later,
but yeah, apparently they eat together
and they serve them like they'll...
At a bowl?
Yeah, dishes in a bowl.
No, they don't.
Water, shut your face.
Yeah, that's probably two places that they do that.
Dude, I was having a conversation yesterday and I was talking about how when I was a kid, so he figured
the late 80s, early 90s, right? When I'd go out to dinner with my parents and somebody
would be walking around with like purple hair or like spiky hair, like they had the
Mohawk. My dad would always shake his head like, oh, crazy kids look what they're doing, isn't that?
Now, if somebody has colored hair, it's like,
hey, you're a, you know, you must be super conservative
because you don't have kids.
Yeah, because you're not dressed like a furry.
You're not dressed like a fox.
Dude, and it's like, come on,
man, when am I supposed to tell my kids,
like they're, and then they try and like interact
with my kids, I walk by and like, dude, beat it.
You know, like, I'm not, I don't trust anybody with a mask on and it's being all like, you know, like like interact with my kids. I walk by and like, dude, beat it. You know, like, I'm not,
I don't trust anybody with a mask on
and it's being all like, ew, like,
to your kids.
It's like the equivalent of,
so I hate.
Yeah, do you want some candy?
Yeah.
Now, how do they interact with your kids?
Do they act like the character?
They like, they just like, they move all weird
and they like come up to him like,
hey, hey, and like all cartoony.
Dude, I just wanted to like kick him.
I was gonna say to your dad and stick kick me.
Oh yeah, yeah.
My arms got up, you know, and I was like,
creating space and then I was like, look,
I was like, back off.
Of course you're gonna do that.
Can't even see, you can't even see the person
that's like, no, I don't know who that is.
Is this some crazy pedophile that's like,
we're in a suit?
Yeah, hey, completely.
No, you're not here.
That's weird.
You're gonna get beat up.
Now I know you don't sell.
You don't watch the show. I know Doug does. And just, did you Yeah. No, you're not here. No, you're gonna get beat up. Now, I know you don't sell. You don't watch the show.
I know Doug does.
And just did you see last night?
Well, last night is when I watched it,
released on Saturday night, right?
The new billions episode.
And Jocco and Tim Ferris both were in it.
I saw that, dude.
Crazy, yeah.
Crazy, right?
Now, was it just like a quick cameo?
Yeah, it's just a cameo.
I think Jocco had a couple lines.
There's a few scenes though.
I mean, they were like helping train these two employees
from like the different capital firms or whatever.
And so they were like both on the training side of it.
Is billions a HBO cinema?
It's a showtime.
Is it showtime?
Yeah, not necessarily.
It's like the new media space is starting to get into that whole
You know popular space. It looks like they want to bring in that audience. Oh, I mean you mean podcasting story to move into there
Yeah, I don't remember what movie it was that I watched that was a mainstream movie and the dude I think it was a guy
It was listening to Joe Rogan and was watching his right
Well, I know you're talking about that. Yeah, I mean, obviously the creators are smart.
I would take a guess at a good portion of people that listen to Tim Ferris and listen
to Jocco are also the same type of people that like the show Billions.
And so I think that was just a play on cross pollinating maybe, because it was really kind
of weird.
Tim Ferris, the part, Jocco like I understood, like the scene cuts
and like Justin's saying they were training for a fight.
And you know, Axelrod gets up
and like four o'clock in the morning,
he wakes this guy up and standing next to him is Jocco.
And it's like military training.
Yeah, like Y'all Adam is running stuff.
Yeah, so he's trying to hype him up.
So there's a couple of lines in there and and he's playing he's playing his personality.
Although they don't introduce him, but he's in there and he's playing that role.
Because you obviously know who he is. Right. Yeah. But then Tim Ferriss was there. It was
kind of weird. Like, yeah, I was like, what was he doing? Why he would be there. He's like
training him on some weird kettlebell snatch. Like, you know, that was it. Yeah. And
and I don't know what and boxing. Like and I don't know what, and boxing,
like I don't know what he would be doing there helping,
he wasn't necessarily helping him box,
but that was the whole thing they were training for.
Is he known for any of that?
No, he swims.
Well, he's done a lot, like he's got the trains
from all kinds of different people, but I don't know.
He stayed at a holiday.
Yeah, he did.
He has stayed at a holiday.
Is it like a motivational?
He's supposed to be like a informational
motivational. Who Tim? Yeah. Have ever sent him first. No, he, he, he, he always like tries
to learn as much as possible. He turns like hyper to learn all these different skills and stuff.
So he brings people on to teach him. Really? Yeah. Like a gym, he had this like famous
gymnastics coach on the Tadamolus, you know, gymnastics style fitness training. And yeah.
So he's just like,
he's hungry to learn all these skills. Yeah, he does it about it. He does a good job of exactly
that bringing bringing in somebody who is an expert or a professional in a arena in a field. And
he he he learns himself and he shares that journey on his on his podcast. Yeah, now I mean,
look at his tools of tightness. There it is right there. There's a clip. See, I now Doug, I mean, look at his tools of Titan. There it is right there. There's a clip. See, I, now Doug, I was looking up this morning
before I opened my mouth and talked about it
that I didn't read anywhere where it said Tim Ferris.
I did read where it talked about Jocco,
but you guys both confirmed that you were confident
that it was Tim Ferris also.
So it'd be weird that all three of us thought that
and it wasn't.
Yeah, well, it says Tim Ferris down there.
Oh, you found it. Yeah. Okay, cool. All right, good It's in there. It's in there. Oh, you found it.
Yeah.
Okay. Cool. All right. Good. Yeah.
Thankfully.
I know. I just, I mean, I've seen him before.
And I know he's kind of short.
So yeah, look how little he is.
Yeah.
See what he's, he's, he's, he's, it's not a great shot of him
right there.
But that's him standing there.
Well, is Jaco a big dude?
No, I guess that's Tim Ferriss.
Oh, I know that.
Yeah.
Is he next to a big dude?
Yeah.
Jaco's a bigger guy.
I mean, he looked bigger in the, in the clip when they, they had him and he was in a couple more clips. Jaco kind of looks like Tito Jaco's a bigger guy. I mean, he looked bigger in the clip when they had him.
He was in a couple more clips.
Jaco kind of looks like Tito or T's a little bit.
He's just kind of like he's looking great episode though.
I mean, so I'm watching that right now.
So when you saw that, we were like, oh shit, this is.
Why I paused it.
And I said something to Katrina.
We were watching it last night together.
And I was like, that was Tim Ferris and Jaco right there. And she's like, what? And I'm like to Katrina, we were watching it last night together. And I was like, that was Tim Ferris and Jocco right there.
And she's like, what?
And I'm like, yeah, I never wound it.
I'm like, that's for sure Jocco.
And I'm like, I'm pretty sure that's Tim Ferris.
And then in the morning time I got up and looked it up.
And I couldn't find this article right here
that Doug just found that where it talks about Tim Ferris.
But I confirmed it was Jocco.
It looks like it was both of them.
Interesting. Space is growing, man. Starting to make ito. It looks like it was both of them. Interesting.
Space is growing, man.
Starting to make it through.
Yeah, talking about stuff that's growing right now,
Adidas had like a record quarter last month,
or last quarter, I think they increased by like 16% overseas.
They had like 40% over profit.
Like it was crazy.
The numbers all from signing with Beyonce.
You're kidding me.
Yeah.
So that was gross growth or was that profit?
Yeah, I mean, I took notes on the actual numbers
if you wanna hear what.
I don't know Beyonce signed with the Deedas.
Yeah, she just did.
So Deedas making quarter one online sales jumped 40%.
China sales grew 16% and profits grew by 17%.
That's huge for a company like Adidas.
No, big time.
No, that was crazy.
Well, yeah, they've always kind of had their hand
in the hip hop community, though, right?
With like run DMC start out with like all Adidas
and then you had Yeezy like sign that.
Well, this is just, this is the new model right now.
In fact, I was talking to my buddy
and he's like, you know,
been paying attention to what we're doing.
He's like, man, you gotta get,
you guys gotta get like a professional athlete
to, you know, rep your shit.
I'm like, you know, it's funny.
We're in a different era now.
Like that when we were growing up,
that's how you did it.
Like you get this pro athlete.
But.
They not have nearly as much power as this.
Yeah, they just, pro athletes just don't have as much power as like these mat.
Now mind you, Beyonce's like, you know, she's transcendent all of that.
She's super, super, uber famous.
But for the most part, like these influencers have just as much pool.
And that's what Adidas did a really good job.
I'd say, I don't know, it was right when they signed Kanye from that moment on
that they went on this tear of just getting
all these different influencers instead
of dumping so much money into pro athletes.
Like Nike's done forever, right?
That's been a staple move for them is to swoop up
all the biggest names in basketball and football
and whatever.
And it's not that they're not,
like it's not that Adidas doesn't have like the Messier
and like some of these other big name athletes,
but they're more focused on these like influencers
and signing them, which you would have just known.
Well, it makes sense because athletes are typically terrible
at that side of their business.
Yeah.
Whereas Beyonce, you go on her Instagram,
you go on her Facebook,
she's always entertaining.
And she's connecting to people
and she's influencing through that.
So it's crazy how it's becoming so much more employee seeing Kevin Hart like it's sponsored
by Nike.
Then you see, you know, the rock by under armor.
So I think that, you know, these other big companies are on to it.
It's just a matter of like who's, you know, like crazy.
They're sponsored.
Yeah.
Do you guys speaking of markets, do you guys see the, the, the Dow this morning?
Oh, from Trump's news.
Well, yeah. So actually, I'll check it right now.
So we got a little live update,
but the market opened and just did dived.
It looks like it's climbing back up a little bit.
It's still in the negative.
But we had two bits of news.
So last week, we had news that trip, trip of this,
the lowest unemployment numbers we've had since 1969
Wow and record unemployment numbers for minorities. Oh man. The left just hates to hear. Oh
Dude I'm angry about crazy right and it's gonna be very hard to be Trump if this kind of
If this kind of news keeps coming out because
If there's an economic downturn
or something really crazy happens,
he'll be beatable.
But if it keeps this pace,
I don't see them coming near him at all
because that's crazy.
That's not just a great number.
Do you think it can keep this pace?
I think, well, no, it never does,
but we have the election coming up.
So it's like, can it keep that pace
and can the good news keep coming till that happens?
You know what I'm saying?
Well, what do you think is gonna happen right now
with the market was just happening with China?
So we're gonna take probably a dip.
We did, we did take a dip.
Trump is talking about slapping on new tariffs
on Chinese goods, and he's very open now
about the fact that this is his bargaining chip.
He's like, look, this is what I can do.
I can do this by myself and come to the negotiation table.
Otherwise, I'll keep doing this.
And here's the deal.
The better our economy looks on one end
with unemployment and GDP and all that stuff,
the more poll he's gonna have for that kind of stuff.
Because here every time he raises the tariffs,
it costs us more money to buy products and goods,
but with us getting the kind of information,
good news that we just got with unemployment,
it emboldens him.
So imagine now, here comes this guy who considers himself
the master negotiator.
He wrote the book, something about the deal,
the art of the deal, right?
So it's the case thing, right?
So now he goes to the table with the Chinese leadership.
He sits down and goes, hey, look, I've been raising your,
I've been charging, you know, tariffs on your goods.
And so far, our unemployment went down and this and that.
And the American people support me.
And I'll keep doing this unless you guys do what I tell you.
I should give them a lot of power.
Yeah.
It's gonna be really interesting to see,
but the market did take a big dump today
because he tweeted that he would,
and it's funny, just an individual tweet from the guy,
you'll see the market react,
up or down, which is kind of crazy.
He's created that for me.
If you're a smart investor,
like I'm on a tech thread with my cousins
and my brother
who are all, this is what they do for a living.
And you should have seen them yesterday.
They're like, oh fuck, you know, Trump just tweeted this
and you know that the, you know,
futures are looking crazy because people are,
you know, it's gonna be crazy.
Drop, if you know how to work the market,
you can short the market on stuff,
on just office tweet, you know, and make money off of it.
So is it buy, buy, buy for them right now?
I mean, is that what they're,
that's what they are doing.
Yeah. So as the market's taking a dump,
they're buying shit that they consider to be on sale.
But it's, I mean, it dropped 400 points at the open.
And as of right now, which is what time is it right now?
It's almost 11 o'clock.
It's only 200, it's went up another 200 points.
Still in the negative button.
Really interesting.
It's a crazy times, man.
We'll see what happens.
My, here's my theory.
Here's what I think's to happen, my prediction.
Not necessarily, you know, the guy I would necessarily vote for, but I think he's going
to be on, if the economy continues to do well, and I'm looking at the lineup that the
Democrats have, he's going to be untouchable.
No one's going to be able to touch him, he'll win again, and then because it's the second
term, usually presidents in their second term,
they'll do the unpopular shit that they were afraid to do in the first term because
of fear not getting reelected. So I think, just like Obama did, like first term talked
about, Obamacare, second term, forced that shit through, probably would have lost them
the second election, but he did the second time because he can't run a third time anyway.
I think what Trump will do is if he wins,
I think the next step he'll take is he'll cut
government spending and eliminate a lot of this bureaucracy
which will piss off a lot of people
because you're talking about a lot of people are getting
laid off.
That's what I think will happen,
but we'll see what happens.
Anyway, really interesting stuff.
So, yeah, do you guys,
either one of you guys use Tumblr at all?
The, it's like a blog hosting app or whatever.
So it's really popular.
In 2006 is when it launched and in like 2013,
Yahoo bought it, Verizon bought Yahoo,
but when they bought it,
they made this decision to pull all the adult content off of it.
So it used to be a place where you could-
There's free.
Free.
Say anything you want, talk about whatever,
and it exploded originally.
And then when Verizon or Yahoo took it over,
they pulled the adult content.
And since then, it's been-
I'm just tankin'.
Yeah, tankin'.
But there's one company that's been showing a bunch of interest
in it, and rumors are that they're gonna buy it,
and that's Pornhub. interest in it and rumors are that they're gonna buy it and that's porn hub
So I thought that was kind of fascinating that that porn hub might swoop up. You may turn that ship around
Right, I think that obviously everything they touch
Turns into gold. It's a
D. Rex to the stars
That's that's hilarious. You know, it's funny about all that so Facebook just pulled
Larry, you know what's funny about all that? So Facebook just pulled several big influencers
or whatever you wanna call them off their platforms
because they deem them, you know,
have hate speech and stuff like that.
So Louis Ferrican, they booted him off,
pissed off Snoop Dogg, whatever, nobody cares.
He, they pulled off other people
and a lot of people are up in arms about it.
Other people are like, you know, they're a private business.
They can do that, it's up to them.
I agree they're a private business.
They can pull whoever they want.
But here's the other thing.
I heard this angle a while ago, and I thought this was brilliant.
So the reason why the phone companies were never liable
for anything that was ever said over their phone lines
is because they way they positioned themselves
was all we do is provide the lines,
what's set on the lines, we don't regulate, we don't look at, we don't talk about, we don't
touch.
So we're not liable for if somebody like makes a phone call and like organizes a crime or
whatever, right?
Facebook and all these social media platforms have been so far untouchable because that was
originally their model.
Like, hey, we don't, we're just a platform, just like the phone company.
Here's the problem.
They're starting to regulate and censor and take people off their page,
which now opens them up.
And I heard this from a, that's interesting.
I heard this from a lawyer, a prestigious lawyer.
And I can't remember where I saw it,
and he made the case, and I think he's right.
If somebody says some shit and it causes some problems,
somebody may be able to make a case to sue Facebook,
and if Facebook comes back and says,
hey, we're not responsible, but like, you sure are.
Right, you do this.
You pull these things out.
Yeah, and you guys failed to do this.
It's really crazy position.
They placed themselves.
That's interesting.
Think about that.
I didn't think about that with the phone companies, right?
We just, we grew up with it.
So you don't really think about what was it like
when it evolved and it first started like the disability.
Now that anybody can call anybody
and talk about whatever they want to talk about,
it's really not that different than social media, right?
Yeah.
And that was, and people don't realize that.
That was a big, like discussion
when phone companies first came onto the scene.
Yeah, because there's nothing that stops me
from calling your phone number and harassing you
and saying, put saying shit and doing,
being crazy, no different than somebody coming
on your Instagram page and saying shit like that.
Like, that's right.
Your option is to block them or hang up the phone, right?
So it's pretty much the same thing.
It is never thought of that. Except now they're totally censoring they're totally regulating.
So now it's more like a magazine or a newspaper. So let's say a magazine from 20 years ago or
you know 20 years ago printed an article that was all kinds of crazy hate speech and it incited a
riot or incited someone to kill someone, they probably could have been
held liable or at the very least the case could be made.
Well, now these companies are setting that precedent that they're not like the phone company.
They're more like a publication in which case, yeah, they're editing everything.
So that therefore it is a publication unless you get your hands off and you let people
just have discourse amongst each other. Yeah, that therefore it is a publication unless you get your hands off and you let people just have discourse amongst each other. Yeah, dude
Then then they're definitely like all
Dude all it takes is one case to get taken to court and to win and then that's it. That's gonna change it off
I mean sometimes I think that they're making so much money. It's just like a speeding ticket
It's like you know so what some case happens and they're like,
I'm suing for 100 million, what's 100 million dollars
to Facebook?
Well, think about it this way.
It's all about the precedents.
So let's say somebody sues,
speaking of speeding ticket, I got one this week.
Did you really?
How fast were you going?
Actually, I was, I was doing it while we were doing more
in 85.
I was coming home from, we went up.
In school zone?
No, no.
Come on.
Bad guy like that. We were actually coming back from. We went up. No, no, no. Come on, bad guy like that.
We were actually coming back from up where I grew up
up by Don Pedro Lake and it's all country roads
that I drove since I was a kid and, you know,
I'm were flying on our way.
We were actually flying back to the world.
It was like a country sheriff pulled you over a lot.
No, it was a highway patrol and he was actually cool.
So he pulled me over.
But he was upset at first and he like, fuck, really? Come on. We're out in the country like this and you're going to get
you're going to get me on a speeding ticket. There's like two cars on the, you know, on the road.
And we're more mobbing down. Pulse me over. But he ended up giving me just a fix it ticket for my,
my, we're at our, my driver's license doesn't have our new address on it. So it was cool. Like,
he could have nailed me for like,
they can give you a ticket for that?
Yeah.
For not having the right,
because you moved.
Yeah.
And you haven't updated it on your driver's license.
Did you get the new ID, the real ID from the,
what does that look like?
Pretty, like, I don't know when it happened.
Same thing just has like different badge on it.
Yeah, so in order to like fly in the country,
you have to have a real ID soon. Oh, no in order to fly in the country,
you have to have a real ID soon.
Or you'll have to use a passport.
Yeah, no, I have a passport already.
But I didn't get, what does it look like?
Does it look like something different
than the driver's license?
It looks a little bit different.
Yeah, but like a little thing, so.
California Barra.
Hold that second.
Why is so hard to drive a picture, bro?
I'm happy, right?
Yeah. It's a good, it I'm happy, right? Yeah.
It's a good, it's a happy day right there.
It's a good day.
Is that your original, no, original?
No.
The one you still have here, the adult, you got a drive
like who cares?
I'm excited, dude.
Excited for a new picture.
Look at this smile, bro.
Do you have one that had to try?
The one I had before this.
I don't know if I still have it in the, I should see.
Well, you guys saw my old, my old one with my glasses. I
would I would I had to do it face you remember I had to do it for so I was
a refinancing my house and I needed to get I needed my driver's license and
it was expired and so like I had to go down and just so happen to be I got
nailed with like the flu and so I went down and took the picture this is like
years ago this is over 10 years. So you had a flu picture. Oh yeah. So the picture before some of that's why and took the picture. This is like years ago, this is over 10 years.
So you had a flu picture? Oh, yeah. So the picture before, so maybe that's why I'm so happy
because I was like, for years, I had this like, I mean, just look terrible. So I did my
hair and, you know, I made it happen. I'm gonna look good. If I get pulled over, I'm gonna
look good. It's a little awesome. Yeah, yeah. I've never known. We're now in the limelight.
She liked that. If my post might, you know, I don't't want like my criminal picture if something bad happens. I want a good image
I think it'll be great if they did that didn't we do that to each other a long time ago. Oh, yeah
We staged it didn't we no, no driver's license photo. Yes, if you look way back on the mind pump
It's already on the internet bro. Yeah, we did that just like blocked out the information
I think that was the old one. I think you got really old
Yeah, I think you got an old one am it this is relatively new like it's not the it's not the old old one
Yeah, I had the flu I looked terrible and then we all look horrible the one before that was still
I think my original one from when I was 16 and I had like bleached tip tear and
Weight like a shaved head weight like a hotter and a 35 pound timer.
I get pulled over, try to go to clubs,
so I thought, look how you ate this guy.
This is not even right.
That's why I look at my 16, you know what I'm saying?
This is your son.
Dude, so this morning I was working out in my garage
and I kind of was in a hurry,
and you know, it takes time to switch exercises
with free weights, right?
And I had to finish my workout in like 45 minutes, but I want to do high volume. And I revisited an old technique that, I mean, we've
probably talked about it a few times on the show, but I'm like, I should bring this up on the podcast.
So it was a high volume workout. So what I was doing, I was doing between eight to nine
sets per body part. And typically the way I do this is I'll do three exercises, three sets each, right?
Nine sets.
Instead, what I did was one exercise,
nine sets all the way through.
So rather than doing a lot of variety on the exercises,
it was just a shit ton of volume on single exercise.
I love to do that.
And I forgot about-
I like the simplicity of it.
I'll do that with squat or bench on some days
where it's just like, I'm just gonna do like all of that.
Keep going.
Well, you know, here's every time I do that,
I feel that that workout, it feels different
than when I change a lot of different exercise.
I think it's just because it hammers the angle of pull
at hammers that particular specific movements,
and you just squeeze out the maximum benefits of that,
whatever particular exercise you're doing.
Yeah, well, I feel like I hone in on that movement a lot
when I really just stay in that same movement
and for multiple sets in a row,
you really start to feel the effects of it.
Yeah, it's like what we talk about.
Our bodies are adaptation machines.
And I haven't done that in a while.
Yeah, and if you always train in the three
to at most five, you know, set range,
and you're never doing more than about five sets at most,
nothing better than to fucking shock the hell out of your body
and do 10 sets of an exercise and watch what happens.
And what I try to do, my aim is I'll pick an exercise
and I'll do a rep range and the goal is to be able
to maintain that exact amount of reps for all nine or 10 sets
or whatever.
So it's like the first few sets are kinda easy,
but man, you can tell that I can tell
that I typically train three to four sets per exercise
because after setting number four, I'm like,
oh shit, my body's like getting weaker all of a sudden.
I'm pushing through.
I go to, I mean, when I take breaks where I've been off for a couple of weeks from training
in my first day of back, it was, I used to always, first day in the gym, it was 10 by 10
of squatting 135.
That squat, 135, 10 sets, 10 reps all the way through.
And it doesn't sound like very much, but it's, you what?
Oh, yes.
So sad.
Oh, yeah.
No, absolutely. Did you guys get your back in you? Because I remember last week, you guys are talking about how you both, but I tell you what. Oh, yeah, so sad. Oh, yeah, no, absolutely. Did you guys get your back in you,
because I remember last week you guys were having a,
both either one of you had worked out for a whole week.
Did you guys get any exercise in there?
Yeah, I did.
Yeah, I got in a couple workouts this week.
And in between my coaching sessions
for all my kids' teams.
Oh, what's going on with that?
Dude, so this week I was busy.
We had like a couple of double headers.
And like I was out there on third base, doing my third base coaching.
And this is where I do most, I help the team out the most in terms of coaching.
And so the kids are like, now they can steal and they can do all these new additions,
they can bump, they can do, they're doing kid pitch and stuff. So it's been this evolution of
they can do, like they're doing kid pitch and stuff. So it's been this evolution of like,
you know, double A, they kind of introduce new variables. And so, uh, so of course, something happened with, with, you know, Ethan again, my kid, where, uh, like I was coaching
third and there was a play in a situation where he hits the ball and it sort of goes towards first
base. He makes it the first base. There's an overthrow. There's two people on base already before he starts running. So there's two runners
potentially ahead of him. So one of them makes it all the way. I'm rounding him to home base
because there's all these over throws. And so the first guy scores. Then the second guy is
kind of running. And then he gets the third base and he starts running back because he thinks he's gonna get thrown at home.
Meanwhile, my son's running as fast as he can towards third and then he's rounding third.
Now they're both together like running me like this.
I'm like, oh shit.
So I'm telling the other guy to run home and I'm telling my kid to go back and he's not going back.
He's almost lapping the other guy.
So my instinct was boom, grab him, I closed line him.
No, no, wait a minute.
I don't know what happened, dude.
Is that illegal?
Yes.
Yes, like he should have been out and I totally like,
like just annihilated my kid.
Hold on, your own son.
Yes, you reached into the game.
Yeah, because he kept running and I'm like, no.
And like I just stuck my kept running and I'm like no and like I just
stuck my arm out and he's like and like landed and I picked him up putting back you know real quick
and like like my hands went up in the air like it's not me you know because technically he would
have been out and then they would have got out of the the ending and this was a really intense tight
game with like this team the Yankees that were like you know they have our number so I wanted to
play so bad he just had to play.
Yeah, I was like, into it.
So what happened, you getting trouble?
No, they let that go.
Parents didn't freak out.
Nobody freaked out.
There was nobody that saw it,
except for all the parents on our side.
From that angle, they all saw me totally close-by.
And somebody took a video, I'm gonna try and find it.
Oh, no.
Yeah, so I did your sunset after you did that.
He's like, Dad, did they win?
Yeah, we won that game.
So that was like, we just barely squeaked it out
by like two runs.
Oh, that's hilarious.
Yeah, so that one mattered.
Like if they would have caught that,
we probably would have either tied or lost.
So how many games, how many games
you play this weekend then?
So we've played four games.
Oh, shit.
Yeah, it was a crazy weekend, dude,
cause my youngest had some games too.
So yeah, they were doing all these makeup games
because of the rain.
So I'm like, I'm, I got one tonight, too.
It's crazy.
Is that considered cheating that you did that?
Yeah.
You're not supposed to get involved.
Yeah, I remember when we first started talking about
the you and the training with your oldest,
you, because the youngest is like the born athlete.
Like he's more, most like you.
And I remember when your oldest was first starting
to get into baseball, you were kind of concerned
if he, how's this progression been?
I mean, you guys, it's getting better.
I mean, it's been a real transformation with him
in terms of like what I've seen him hitting wise
and what I've seen him like mechanically.
Like there's, there's points where I think catching
is something we really need to work on
because he still has that flinch kind of reaction.
Exactly.
I think when he gets older,
he'll be more comfortable with,
but that's his first reaction is to be like,
ah, and it goes right past him or it hits his glove
and he doesn't squeeze down.
There's so many little nuances
I have to like stay on top of it though like he he just needs all those coaching cues like all the way through
It's crazy, but it does make a difference. I want to come watch a game. I would love that
Yeah, so I've got I've got two two nephews little nephews that played well one of them is already out of college
And he played in college and then we have a young one that's coming up right now and he's only 12 years old. And he just,
he doesn't quite have the athletic abilities is like, he, the older one has. And he had a,
we're, we're just discussing this like the week before. And I'm like, really, are you sure,
you know, like, he's like, no, you can just tell by this age, you can just see if he's got or not.
Well, one of Katrina's family members, friends comes over and he's got like a nine
year old, right, that comes over. And this kid is throwing the ball with the kid that went
to college playing, playing baseball. And they're playing this game that I never played.
I forget what he called it, but it's the baseball heading towards your face is two points in your in your chest
or stomach is one point. And then it's like, if you catch it, there's a point. So it's
like, so imagine Justin and I being about, I would say 20 to 30 yards away from each other.
And we're we're whipping it at each other back and forth. And every time I throw it at
Justin, if he catches it right in front of his head, I get two points for that. For being
right on, right? Right on point. If he catches it right in front of his head, I get two points for that. For being right on, right on point.
If he catches it off to the side,
I don't get any points.
And it's like the first person to 21.
And he was playing with this,
he got beat by this little nine year old kid
who was just fling in the ball at him.
Yeah, it was crazy to see.
There's some skilled kids like that.
Oh man, I didn't realize what a difference
until I saw that kid playing.
He's like two years, two, three years younger
than the one that my other nephew.
I'm like, oh, shit.
Dude, I used to have a client who had a grandson
who's both the kid's parents were college D1 athletes.
The father was soccer and the mom was volleyball.
And this kid was three years old
and he used to have a plastic baseball and a plastic bat.
Three years old, he throw it up, boom, throw it up, boom.
Every time, never miss, you pitch to the kid,
boom, he'd knock it every single time.
As that kid grew up, he was just,
the challenge that they had with the kid
was how to teach him to not be so cocky
because he was just just he was always the
best. He was just so yeah so so so when I would train this lady she was like I would talk
to her about him and I'm like how do you do and she's like well you mean she's like he's
doing good. She's like he's becoming a little shit. I'm like what do you mean she's because
you talk shit the whole time and about this and that she's like I'm trying to figure out
a way to knock him off his podium so So, you know, he learns how, which is an interesting challenge if you think about it, right?
Right, right.
Because if you're, you see, you can.
I will, you spend so many years of building him up and building his college.
Well, he would just like that since he was two and three.
Turn him into a Deon Sanders or something like that.
Well, well, think about it.
Let's say the kid grows up and he's always just crushing people.
Yeah.
At some point, he's going to hit an obstacle.
If he never learns how to do that,
it could be great, though.
It would be great and humbling.
Hopefully he didn't happen.
He's a Tiger Woods bro.
He's just, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's,
he's never seen videos of Tiger Woods.
And now he's here amazing.
Yeah, same thing.
And probably really cocky and arrogant for most of his life.
Then you get caught sleeping with a bunch of hookers.
Oh, you know, he's a humble pie, right?
That's what, that's what, that's what, that's what,
that's what always happens.
Just get here.
Speaking of kids, did you guys see the study that was or the article that's making the rounds
on energy drinks?
No.
And kids.
So they do this.
Yeah, scared us right now.
No, I'm not going to scare you.
Always fine.
I'm not going to scare you.
This one goes out to length.
So what they found was people who drink energy drinks a lot at a 85% increase in cancer.
No, I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding with you Adam.
It's freaked everybody out.
No, no, but they found what this, so this is a study that came out that found that energy
drinks could trigger nasty side effects like heart problems and seizures in half of the kids
that they studied.
And so now these energy drinks, caffeine is the issue.
And you guys know as well as I do caffeine is a I
mean, it's a potent drug. It's one of the most it's the most used and potentially abused drug
and put on the legal drug, right? It's it's well, well, the the LD50 on it's not even that high like abused. Yeah, so it doesn't take
a whole ton of caffeine to become toxic in fact and you know
It's not regulated at all any kid could go to Starbucks and buy super strong coffee and can go back and get a second and third
One and a fourth one and potentially cause problems, but that's okay. We've all learned kind of had a mini
You know how to manage this kind of stuff well energy drinks because they're kind of advertised to kids like I was at
Target and I saw
They have a gaming energy drinks now.
Have you seen these by Mountain Dew? Yeah, no, they're going after the gamers now. And you can
tell by the flavors and the colors, you know, that who they're kind of targeting. Well, what's more,
dude, remember when you had all the different gums that were just like like cigar cigarettes,
yeah, chewing tobacco. Yeah, What are we teaching these kids?
But they didn't have nicotine though.
That's true.
It wasn't like a big distinction.
It wasn't like gum candy cigarettes with actual
pictures still actually giving them caffeine.
So what I think this is starting to show,
just because of the popularity of them
and that so many kids are drinking them,
is you're gonna start to see some,
already some places are passing loss
and you can't sell energy drinks to kids.
Well, I mean, when did Starbucks come around, Doug?
I mean, we were already out of high school
or close to leaving high school
when Starbucks even became a thing.
Nobody's like, yeah, going to school.
Well, now if you're in high, I could just imagine,
because I know if I was in school.
That's like a place to hang out.
Well, we didn't, nobody drink coffee when I was a kid.
Yeah, coffee was what adults do.
That's what I'm saying.
But when now that Starbucks is there,
I think probably, I don't know,
what's the percentage of high schoolers
you think they're drinking coffee?
Oh, it's at least a quarter, right?
It's at least a quarter more than that.
I would think more than that.
I don't know, but it's at least that in my estimation.
Yeah, I guess it's become a thing.
Yeah, I mean, when I go into a Starbucks now,
you see all ages now. Yeah, and's become a thing. Yeah, I mean, when I want I go and do a Starbucks now, you see doll ages now. Yeah. And what about the energy drinks that they weren't when we were kids, there was
jolt cola. Yeah, that was like 50 milligrams of like Chinatown. Yeah, it was like 60 milligrams of
caffeine. It was like nothing. And Red Bull wasn't even a thing. No. And then Red Bull came out. And so
now it's becoming this big thing. So I think what's probably going to start happening is you're
going to start to see some regulation
and some backlash with some of these energy drinks
because some of these energy drinks are silly.
They're just silly.
Like there was one the other day that I saw it was like
300 milligrams of caffeine in a drink
that was flavored, I think it was like cotton candy flavor.
So it's gonna happen.
That's fucking, that's too much for me.
We're gonna see like, you know, like the tide pod challenge.
It's gonna be like some stupid challenge around like drink 30 rock stars
in a 30 in 30 minutes.
I'm so sorry.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Right.
It'll be something stupid like that.
That'll get a bus.
That's interesting theory.
Like, I don't know what will happen with that.
If that's something that we'll see, you know, backlash.
It'll take one big national headline, you know,
some kid or whatever.
And then that, that'll start the legislation
with, you know, politicians trying to.
Definitely, yeah, yeah.
Something to be concerned with.
There was a kid, there was a kid not that long ago
who you used to be able to, and I'm pretty sure it's illegal now,
you used to be able to buy powdered caffeine.
Yeah.
So like, you know, you could buy powder alcohol.
Yeah, well, that's another story.
But at least powdered alcohol, you have to be 21.
Can you snort it?
I mean, it's a good question.
People snort it.
Stopping you.
That's a good question.
Imagine that.
You might be able to.
That's a good question.
Well, anyway, so what happened?
That's a burn.
This was made national.
This made national headlines.
Anything will burn.
I think you should put it up your nose.
Yeah.
This, there was powdered caffeine in people would buy in bulk and they'd put like a little bit in there,
they're, you know, to make their own pre-workout
or whatever they were gonna do.
Some kid bought it and his friend dared him to eat
a tablespoon of it, which turned out to be like 2,000
or 2,500 milligrams of caffeine he died.
Oh wow.
And then they made it, I'm pretty sure you can't buy
powdered caffeine anymore.
Pretty sure it's illegal, so. This Quas brought to you by Organify.
For those days you fall short on getting your organic veggies or whole food nutrition,
Organify fills the gap with laboratory-tested certified organic superfoods to help give
your health a performance-the-added edge.
Try Organify totally risk-free for 60 days by going to organify.com.
That's O-R-G-A-N-I-F-I.com and use a coupon code MindPump
for 20% off at checkout.
The first question is from Bear Bowen.
What are some tips or tricks to help reduce
the amount of weed I'm smoking?
Mm.
Cannabis, you know, it's because of the legalization efforts, which I applaud. I don't I think
people should be able to do whatever they want with their bodies. I think there's there's
just been this also this message because of it that cannabis is totally totally harmless.
Yes, like fair game now. Yeah, like it's harmless and do as much as you want. I think it's important
to note that in this question is highlighting it,
anything can be abused, anything.
And cannabis is no different than anything else
that can be abused.
It might not have necessarily the same
acute negative effects as alcohol,
but I've seen what too much cannabis can do,
and I've also felt it.
And what tends to happen to me is I start to feel,
first of all, if I get the less of the benefits
of the cannabis, and then I also notice I feel less motivated and overall down.
It's like my overall level of energy and enthusiasm and all that stuff, motivation, just
kind of comes down a notch and so I'm not as sharp.
So I actually recently reduced the amount of cannabis that I was using significantly.
And I paid attention to how I felt while I was doing it. So the first time I did it, I said,
I'm going to go off completely for about three weeks. But I did notice I had issues with sleep
for that first week or so. And I had these really fucked up dreams, like really vivid, crazy
dreams that I've read that that's a common side effect.
But I went through the process, then I started going back and started using a very low amount,
and then after that I tried to reduce it again, but I did something a little bit different.
There's two things that I did, and this is kind of the strategy I do with caffeine as well,
which I think caffeine is way harder to come off
than cannabis, at least it was for me.
What I'll recommend to people with caffeine
is I'll tell them to cut their total caffeine intake
by a quarter every week.
And so by the fourth week or by the fifth week they're off.
Does that make sense?
So if you're doing a full cup of coffee, what week one you'll go down to
three quarters of a cup and then fill up the rest with decaf. By the fourth week it's all decaf
and then you're off and that you still feel you still don't you can tell that you're going off
or you're going down, but it's not this huge boom, big difference.
With cannabis, I've found that, and I've had a couple of clients I've helped through
this process as well.
As I'll tell them to the same thing, take your total usage, be honest about it, reduce it
by a quarter each week until you're down to none, and then one other thing that I've done
that seems to have helped, and this is my anecdote.
I don't have any studies to support this. This is my own anecdote.
Is to, as you're reducing the amount of THC
that you're consuming, to increase the amount of CBD
that you're consuming.
I've done that too.
I have you.
Yeah, it's weird that you mentioned that.
That was like, I mean, I kind of, you know,
I'm relatively new.
I'm not like, you know, super super big user of cannabis or anything,
but over the last year or so,
I've loved to intermittently use five milligrams
and it's helped me relax and also be more creative.
But I have found that I'll get on these runs
of a couple of months where it's reoccurring.
It's five, six times a week.
And then I start to get a little bit addicted to that
where I start to then introduce more CBD
and then start scaling it out by keeping the amount of CBD
high while reducing the amount of...
Well, what are you guys using, the Ned dropper?
Or what are you guys using?
That's what I use.
Now in the past, what I would do is I would go to the dispensary and I would get
Extremely low or know if I could find it's hard to find
THC cannabis and I would just use CBD cannabis
But I like this a lot better because I'm not smoking anything and it's it's a tincture
You know you just the dropper or whatever and here's a thing with CBD. So here's why this might be a good strategy,
at least it's my theory.
First off, it's the intoxicating effects of cannabis
that people are wanting to reduce
when they're trying to reduce their cannabis usage.
You know what I'm saying?
It's like they don't wanna be high as much.
That's where they're noticing the negatives.
And that's probably where they are getting
some of the negatives.
CBD isn't psychoactive. It's not going to get you high, and it doesn't interact directly
with the two cannabinoid receptors that THC does, but what it does seem to do in the body
is it seems to improve your body's ability to use its own endocannabinoids.
So in my opinion, this is a smart strategy, excuse me, because you go down on
this phytocannabinoids or exogenous cannabinoids, meaning your body's not making them.
You're reducing that.
Your body's probably trying to boost up its own natural endocannabinoids, but they're
not quite high yet.
CBD makes your own cannabinoids.
And maybe even the phytocannabinoids that you're still consuming, more effective in the body, so it kind of lessens the blow of going off of cannabis.
So I found this personally and for a few people that I've worked with, they've gotten
the same thing like really good results from it, kind of mitigate some of those negative
side effects.
That's interesting.
I've never tried.
So you had gotten me a long time ago and that's just how I use my net is
Anytime I smoke I just I drop I think a dropper of the net at the same time to try and make even out the THC to CBD ratio
And I that just makes me feel better period. So I but I've never used it like as a you know tapering off
off a marijuana, you know, and I really think this is very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very very and the same thing with caffeine, right? So I've learned over all the years of using caffeine,
using cannabis, that there comes a point
where it starts to affect other parts of my life.
Whether that be socially or it be sleeping at night
or my ability to podcast better,
like there's definitely a point that when I get there, I know that it's starting to give me diminishing returns and that's all you notice
What are the diminishing returns from the cannabis? So that I'm not as sharp on the podcast. So I'm also
less social less active so
I typically
Less motivated to lift and work out
I typically less motivated to lift and work out or even do things around the house that I need to get knocked out
and get done or be productive for work.
Just a, I'm a less productive person when I'm on it,
which is why I'm really good about waiting
to like the end of the night before I kind of,
when I'm winding down.
And that's when I have my, my, my,
and I haven't, for me, because I, you know,
I've shared on the show that, you know,
I smoke world joints, Katrina rolls me joints.
And I know that when I get to about
where I smoke a half a joint, that's kind of my,
that's like to my, what I would say,
my 300 to 400 milligrams of caffeine, those are my,
that's your number.
That's my number, right?
Once I, when I start hitting that, and then I find that I'm having to hit that just
to feel the positive effects from it, I know it's time to go back to the other direction.
And, you know, that's just been through years of trial and error and allowing myself
to go beyond that and seeing the negative effects or keeping it much lower and seeing where
I'm at.
And so anytime I reach that threshold on both caffeine and marijuana, and I
kind of been staying there for maybe a week or two, that's normally my sign that, okay,
it's time to wing myself off for a few days or something. And depending on how long it's
been to, if I've been really consistent days like in a row, I'll wing off for a whole
week when it comes to cannabis use. And caffeine very similar. And I agree with you,
so like caffeine will give me like the headaches and I'm really tired and caffeine very similar. And I agree with you, Sal, like caffeine will give me like the headaches
and I'm really tired and fatigued.
And so not having caffeine is way harder than cannabis.
Cannabis I find as long as I keep it,
that's my peak.
It's not really that tough for me to pull,
I can completely cut cold turkey from that point.
So from just somebody who has a half of a joint
at the highest in a day, I can all send just say,
it's not that hard.
Yeah, I'm not gonna have any for the next week
and it's not like, oh God, I need my week.
I think you definitely feel a physiological withdrawal
but it's mild and comparison to other substances.
But caffeine.
But there's a lot of people that are,
just like with anything, right?
They get this psychological addiction where it's like,
I need it just to, you know, because-
Well, it's part of a ritual.
That's probably actually the hardest part.
The hardest part for me is actually,
that's why it's really easy when I go like on vacation
or do something that I don't need.
So it's not there.
Yeah, it's not there.
I have a ritual that I do.
It's like, you know, once I wind completely down
and I decide to sit down and watch my Netflix series for the evening or whatever and it's seven, eight o'clock at night, you know,
I plop down on the couch. One of my favorite things to do is I reach over on my coffee table and,
you know, take a couple hits off the joint and then put my feet up on the couch. So
I find myself more addicted to the ritual than I am actually the substance. And so, you know,
if I, and that was so one of the hacks, I guess, for this person is pay attention if you have similar things like
that and create new habits around that time for a while while you're pulling yourself
off. So instead of me sitting down and watching TV, maybe that would be a good time for
me to like, oh, this week at eight o'clock a night when I would normally sit down and watch
Netflix, I'm going to discipline myself to read because I'm the, I don't have a desire
to smoke weed while I'm reading one of my books.
So maybe find a different habit or yet you can meal prep whatever, whatever it may be
that you would naturally want to go gravitate to smoke.
Yeah, and it's funny because you can find studies that'll show that when people, because
when you use a lot of cannabis, one of the big side effects of it is short-term memory
degradation.
People just don't, like you said Adam, feel a sharp,
not able to recall short-term memories as quickly.
This is with heavy use.
And anybody who smokes weed and denies it,
you're full of shit.
Like smoke a lot of weed, guaranteed you'll see
when you test that you're just not
going to remember stuff as well.
And what they find in some of these studies
is that when you do it with CBD,
some of that isn't mitigated, and they've shown this.
This other major side effect of a lot of cannabis use
is anxiety and paranoia that can definitely happen
in people when they go heavy, heavy use
and they're using an ideally basis.
Also, when you take CBD with THC,
they find, it doesn't cure it,
but it does mitigate a lot of the effects.
When they do these big, long studies,
they find people who use lots of THC,
the rate of anxiety and paranoia
and those types of feelings goes up a significant amount.
When people do use a lot of THC,
but also use a lot of CBD with it.
There's a difference.
And it's just funny to me because the old school cannabis
probably was relatively balanced.
They probably had.
No, it absolutely was.
And we just bred it to be super stale.
We have the, I mean, it was like 12,
12, 15% THC.
That was considered strong.
Yeah, no, no, that's what I'm saying.
That was like the peak was like 12, 15% THC,
where now we're pushing north of 25.
I mean, you're talking about it,
almost a double increase in THC levels
and the CBD, the ratio hasn't isn't the same, right?
So the CBD has been relatively the same, even when it was in the low 12 to 13%
So the the ratio of CBD to TC as was you know relatively high or better a better ratio
You should say and then when we went up to like 25. It's just not the same
That's you when you share that with me that was like that. That's how I use Ned majority the time for me is
Yeah, keep it then you know, keep it in the same place.
And you know, you put on your tongue
for about 30 seconds to a minute.
So I'm literally, the first thing I do,
drop the net underneath my tongue,
get my stuff already, I'll put on the coffee table,
get my show ready, and then I rinse it down,
and then I go right to lighten right after that.
And it's, I definitely feel better off of that.
Yeah, the main reason I see people using it
is EnzioLytic. That's where I keep getting messages. Like, the main reason I see people using it is enziolytic.
That's where I'm keep getting messages.
Like, it helps me with anxiety.
And these are people who don't use cannabis.
They just got the net because they wanted to see
if it helped them with those effects.
That's the biggest thing.
But the kind of sleeper is what we're talking about.
Because as cannabis use goes up,
I think you're gonna see more and more people realize,
like, oh shit, I should probably balance this out with something that's going to take away some of the negatives.
Next question is from Alejandro Sanchez takes photos.
What are the uses for the Bison squat bar?
That's our guy.
Yeah, it was that.
That's who just shot our last mine pump lives.
That's right.
And shot our Seattle mirror.
So the bison bar is that kind of curved bar where the
weights are lower than the middle of the bar that's sitting on
your traps. And there's different variations. I know the bison
one is specifically the curve one. But then you have bars that
are more jagged, right? They come out straight and they drop
down. And then they put weights. Yeah, when you originally picked
the question, I thought that that's what we were talking about.
I'm not even familiar with the name of that bar.
I've used that bar.
There's a few bars out there.
There's a safety bar.
There's a yoke bar.
There's all these different kind of variations of that,
but they all are, you know, the whole thing's about
like where they're loading the weight.
And that's what's interesting.
Now, I don't have a ton of personal experience
using these bars, but just by looking at them
and this little experience I do have with them, the big difference, really, if obviously
is the placing of the weight, which would change the lever a little bit.
So what I mean by that is, so if you took a broomstick and you lifted a broomstick by
the middle of it, it would be a lot lighter or easier to lift.
And if you grabbed the very, very end of it and tried to lift it out straight in front of you.
And that's just physics. The lever gets longer if you put weight further away from you on the
on a long lever. It's going to feel heavier than if you move it closer to your body. And so this
changes the lever a little bit in the sense that the weight is lower on the body. So you don't your
upper body isn't so long of a lever with the placement of the weights.
So it feels like there's less of that back involvement in extension.
It feels like there's more of your hips or more of your legs and less of that kind of
back extension.
It's interesting when you make it.
It's more centric.
It's interesting when you do it.
It feels weird.
So especially the bottom of the squat, because if you've
squatted a lot, and you're used to just a standard bar, Olympic bar, and then you go use
one of these bars at the bottom, which is why I like it, it just kind of throws it.
It's your little instable at the very bottom, and it's just more challenging.
You would think that-
Is it make you sit up more?
No, it's not that it makes you sit well. Yeah, it kind of makes you sit up a little bit more.
You would think based off of your theory,
you're saying that it would be easier,
but I don't think it's easier at all.
I don't think it feels the way,
I can't, at least I can't do more weight
on any of those bars
and I can't stand in a Olympic bar.
And based off of what you're saying,
you would think that you would be able to.
I just think it would be different.
I think it would be easier if that's what you always squatted with.
You know what I'm saying?
So I'm wondering if it's,
I don't know, like I said,
I don't have a ton of experience,
but just do you feel it more in the quads
when you're doing it with one of these types of bars
because the center of gravity.
I do feel it more in the quads.
I would feel like it would keep you more upright, right?
Because the weights are lower.
Well, what ends up happening as your torso is,
because again, when you've trained a squat,
over and over and over and over,
I mean, the mechanics of it,
the hinging and the breaking at the knees,
your timing is a certain way,
and you get good at that, right?
And just like any other skill,
and it's like if you were to use your knowledge,
if I was hitting
with a baseball bat that was the same weight, the same size, always and also you gave me
something that was a little off like.
Throw things off.
Yeah, definitely throws things off.
And so that part of it I enjoy and I, I, it's kind of a way that I would throw a curveball
in my training.
If today was a normal back squat day, I happen to be at the golds gym that has all these
variations of bars.
I loved it. It, it, it, it, it, it, it these variations of bars. I love to intermently inject them into the workout.
Every time I try one of those with a different like load where the plates are, like I always
feel my core get like very activated.
Oh, really?
Yeah, because it's trying to make sense out of the, you know, the new way to stabilize,
you know, the weight because it's like, it's different.
Yeah, it's just displaced different.
Yeah.
So it's very active, like, especially, that's, that's a, that's a, a pendulum effect.
I would assume, right?
Is that what you guys are talking about?
The weights start to move back.
Yes.
Yeah, especially on the one that were, and I don't know the name of it, but it's the
variation that I thought originally was where it comes out and then goes down,
goes way down.
So it's like the weights are by your hips when you're standing. And when you squat down, it really feels like
it's going to swing back and forth. So I would say that would just and just said over all
the things like as far as quads, glutes, what do I feel the most in? I probably feel the
most core activation because it feels so foreign and the weights display differently, that
that's really having to fire. And that's how I like to, that's how I like to use it is what I'm trying to incorporate that more.
Well, what's interesting about this is that highlights how specific your adaptations are
with strength training.
You get this general adaptation.
What I mean by that is if you do a lot of barbell squats, your legs do get stronger.
And so generally, you'll probably be stronger
at other leg exercises as well.
But the vast majority of the strength gains
that you're gonna get are very specific
to what you're practicing.
And so a slight variation,
because to somebody who's not experienced,
if they see someone squatting with a bison bar
or a straight bar, they'll look at and be like,
oh, what's the difference?
They're pretty much the same thing.
It's kind of the same thing.
But small changes make big changes
or big differences in the way an exercise will feel.
And it's all about that specific,
the specificity of the adaptation,
which is why I like these types of tools,
because especially for people who work out with free weights
or work out in the garage, you might not have all these machines and stuff to apply all
these different angles, but you can get different bars and they do feel very, very different
on the muscles you're trying to work.
And this is how I feel like I would use them is when I was really consistent with my
lifting and I was, during competing times, I was up to the point where I was squatting
405 on a back squat with just a limpic bar
Man, nothing was better than coming in on it What would be normally a routine back squat day and I throw one of these different bars?
I mean, I would be just it would break me at 315
So something that I could do before like 405 so they're just a little bit would just throw through a curveball on my routine
I see a lot like yeah, and I look at them as kind of novelty in that
curveball in my routine. I see a lot of it. Yeah, and I look at them as kind of novelty in that, the way that I look at chains and
bands and accessories like that, to be able to kind of break the cycle that I've been
in for so long, to where it provides a new stimulus, but it's still working and refining
that same skill with a different stimulus, a different loading, a different sequence
of events of the movement, just to be able
to then apply that back to that, you know, balanced load.
Now, that being said, I do think there's a hierarchy of this, right?
I think that you get really good at a traditional back squat and a front squat with an Olympic
bar, really, really good first.
And then, you know, once you've gotten that down really, really well, then I think tools
like this are great things to...
So, I have a lot of experience with trap bars, which, you know, you could do a deadlift
with a trap bar, which is similar to a straight bar deadlift, but obviously very, very different.
And there's two ways that I would use it.
One would be with the bodybuilder mentality, which is just different variety, different muscle
activation.
I'm feeling in different places.
The other was a strength athlete version
where I would just do track bar deadlifts
for a couple months to see how far I could push
that particular variation.
I like that version more mainly
because I've been deadlifting so long.
So if you're somebody who's been squatting
for a long time and you've got a straight bar squat down,
and you've been doing it for a long time consistently,
why not try using one of these variation bars
and do it for like a month or two,
and get really, really good at it and see what happens,
and go back to your straight bar and see if you have any carryover.
Could be fun.
Next question is from Lift Up.
What do you think of the USA food pyramid?
What's good about it? And what's
wrong about it? Could you pull it up on the TV screen? Yeah, that's why I'm asking. Could
you pull up the food pyramid? I remember the old one. Yes. I think it's lots of wheat and
soy. I think it's horn. I think it's still garbage. Yeah. So here's my issue with, to start
with my issue with food guidelines from the government.
He just a little biased.
He's been off.
Some of the biggest lobbies in this country are lobbies that are control these massive food
producers like wheat or soy or corn or dairy. And so there's going to be some influence in terms of, you know, what
they're telling you, you shouldn't, shouldn't eat.
That's a food circle, Doug. Yeah. And that's what they've replaced it.
Oh, they replaced the pyramid with the my plate. I think they come. Yeah. So now it shows
fruits, vegetables, grains, proteins, and dairy. So now they're making all the lobbies
happy. It's still allies happy. It's still.
It's still crazy.
Hard Chinese for sure.
Yeah.
If you got grains and fruits and vegetables all in your plate.
Here's my other problem with this.
And this is my problem with most food recommendations
for most sources.
Is they completely negate the main reason
why people have issues with food.
It's because of the behaviors around the food.
You can tell people what they shouldn't
and give them all the great information in the world,
but if they don't modify behaviors
and the relationships to food, good luck.
Yeah, see, there's the pyramid.
Oh, there it is.
There's the good ol' pyramid.
That doesn't look any different.
Yeah.
No, that's the 1992 food pyramid.
Yeah, that's the one where the grains are on the bottom.
I'm still not that much different though. I get oh, I guess I guess in if you were to translate that into the plate version
The plate would be a majority of the grains where it's not there. It's now vegetables. Well, I mean, it's better
I can mean if we're comparing it to what the food pyramid used to be to where it is today, it's better. We're heading in the right direction.
But I mean, I'm not going to get on board with the dairy and the grains portion.
Okay, look, this is just, again, this is my opinion, but I think this is, pay attention
to this because I think if you look at it the way I'm looking at it, it might make sense.
If you look at the way the obesity epidemic, or when it really started to take off,
it really coincided well with the mass production
of heavily processed foods.
And heavily processed foods,
I've said this a million times on the podcast,
most of the science and engineering that goes into it,
some science goes into making these foods
have a long shelf life.
Okay, that's important because food waste, I mean, you know, vegetables and fruits, for
example, one of the problems they run into is, you know, food goes bad.
They have to figure out how to get there, get it there in time, how to keep it from going
bad and they throw away a bunch.
But if you make something and you process it and you put it in a box or a bag, the shelf
life is a year.
And so that, that problems that problem is kind of solved.
But really most of the money that goes into heavily
processed foods goes into making them
as absolutely hedonistic as possible,
making them as palatable as possible.
And there's way more shit that goes into this
than you realize.
It's not just the taste.
It's also the mouth feel, the sound it makes
when you crunch on it, the color, the bag,
the way the bag looks, the way it's marketed, where it's placed on the shelf, the commercials,
so they create this different kind of context. They've done studies where they'll take different
colors of plates and they'll have people eat the same food in one color, makes people eat more food.
There's, you know, the environment that they buy it in, there's the, I remember years ago,
remember when Pepsi and Coke came out with clear?
Yeah.
Remember that?
It fucking tanks, right?
It's a disaster.
It tasted exactly the same.
Same with a ketchup, they made green.
Green or black or whatever.
Black, yeah.
People found it less appetizing,
even though it had the same flavor because of the taste.
They like blood.
Right, so most of the stuff that goes into processed foods
goes into fucking with your system,
making you wanna eat more.
And so they've done these studies,
well, they'll give people unlimited access
to whole natural foods, and then they'll get,
single ingredient foods or very few ingredient foods.
What I mean by that is like, it's meat, it's fruit,
it's vegetables.
Then they've given people access to unlimited amounts of processed foods, things that have
long ingredient lists and that come in packages and have long shelf-lifes. And there's a significant
difference in the amount of food people eat when it's heavily processed. And so I think that's
one of the big issues here that we're not examining is because think about it.
Anybody listening right now,
at some point you've tried to make your nutrition better,
you've tried to eat healthier.
And you had some good general information.
I think most people know that calories matter
and macronutrients to an extent are important
and you probably shouldn't overeat.
What's the obstacle that gets in your way?
Is it your lack of knowledge?
Or is it you fucking, it's hard, it's behaviorally,
it's hard.
You want to eat more, you start eating mindlessly.
That's the thing that they're ignoring
that nobody's talking about.
So explain what your suggestion is here with it.
Because you're talking about a visual, a plate,
like what do you want labeled on that?
I think they need to address the process food issue.
I think they need to address the hedonistic value of foods
and say to people, look, if you're trying to eat
appropriate amounts of food, then you need to eat foods
that are whole and natural and not processed
because it'll make it very, very difficult for,
because grains, what falls under the category of grains,
I could do like chips, whole grain chips or cereals or right, you know,
that kind of stuff. And that's going to change how that grain is presented. There's a big
difference between a potato and a potato chip or, you know, a fruit or a fruit juice. Fruit
juice is also more palatable than the eating the fruit itself. I think that's what they need
to tackle. I don't think these pyramids or these plates
are gonna help at all.
This is where I like the whole 30.
So if you like something generic,
like a food pyramid or a plate like that,
I thought the whole 30 did a really good job
as far as keeping it simple for people,
but then also addressing the processed foods.
Absolutely, I think it makes a big difference.
And then the schools, they're terrible with,
I think they were supposed to have vegetables,
serving of vegetables, and they counted tomato sauce
or ketchup as a vegetable.
So like a slice of pizza covered the dairy,
it covered the vegetable, and it covered the grain category.
So now- So now-
So now-
Somebody try and say that was a vegetable before,
I just shook my head.
Yeah, and then the fruit would be like a fruit cup,
that was, so let me ask you guys a question.
Let's say we took two groups of people,
and one group of people ate fruit cups,
which usually are half, like the fruit juice in there,
and they're cut up, and then you had the other fruit,
the other group just had fruit
with the peel on it and everything.
And you told them eat as much as you want,
don't worry about whatever.
Which group do you think is gonna eat more calories?
That's what I'm talking about.
And that's what they're not addressing.
And I think that's a bigger problem
than the knowledge of what's good and what's not good.
Cause I don't know about you guys,
but when I work with clients,
there's a lot of shit that they don't know,
but generally they know some stuff. Like, oh yeah, I know that's not healthy, but when I work with clients, there's a lot of shit that they don't know, but generally they know some stuff.
Like, oh yeah, I know that's not healthy,
but I eat it anyway.
And I know I need to be eating that.
And that's, so I don't think it's necessarily
like an information problem.
No, it's a good point.
I mean, we're already that far, right?
There's a lot of people that still like
get their nutrients from fast food, you know?
So they're trying to figure that out.
And it's like, we're trying to get them
to have these whole foods.
It's a giant step.
Sometimes I think, too, there's, it's information overload.
Totally.
There's so much counter information that it's like, what do you believe?
I mean, obviously, it's part of why, you know, I mean, we, we grew the podcast that we
did is just to help people with that.
I think there's so much information.
You could read one book that counters the other one and they both sound so smart
as they're all scientifically based, but it's like, so if you're a consumer, it's like, fuck, where do I go?
What do I do? Yeah, plus look at the individual variants. So they're recommending a lower fat higher carbohydrate diet,
but I know people who are far healthier and feel much better on the reverse, a higher fat, lower carbohydrate diet.
So that individual variance is huge from person to person, but what's the one big problem that
people have in modern societies with their food consumption? Too much. They just see too much.
That's what they're not talking about. We've talked about it on the show. And of course,
there's always going to be an individual variance, But in my experience, it's so, so much easier just to tell a client like, you can have almost
anything you want, just stick with whole foods. And I know that's like just a broad statement,
but a majority of people won't over consume if they do that. They really won't. It's
really tough to. Yeah, it is tough. It's tough to eat 3,000 calories
of all whole foods. It really is. So, I mean, that was, it took me years before I figured that out,
and that was just kind of like what I did with clients. It's like, listen, I'm open for you exchanging
these out. Here's your general meal plan that I want you to follow. But if you go, go off of this,
that's fine. Just stick with whole foods. Yeah, just not getting calories from liquids.
Yeah, drinking it, like that.
It's so funny, like that was one I brought up almost with every single client I've ever
had.
And that was like, you know, right away, that was like a, you know, a game-changing thing
the first month, you know.
It's easier to consume calories in liquid form to the point where I was reading an article
on, I think it was Brian Shaw, Strongman competitor. So this guy needs to consume 8,000 calories. So he's like, fuck,
what do I, so you know what this guy does? He makes, and I think it's him. I hope it's that guy.
It was a, if it wasn't with him, it was another Strongman. He makes these chicken shakes,
where he blends, chicken breasts, and other stuff in a blender. And he brings like eight of these shakes to work.
And he's like, I can't fucking chew and eat all this food.
Go, go, go.
Because again, it's a way to hack the system.
And to be clear, humans have been processing food
ever since we started making food,
cooking it as a part of processing.
Adding seasoning is a part of a way to make food more palatable.
The difference is we didn't have modern science
where it's almost not fair.
You know what I'm saying?
It's almost not fair when you have something so fast,
so easy, so cheap, and they're able to combine
all these different flavors and things in ways
that just weren't normally possible.
Good luck trying to eat the right amount
when you're consuming these types of foods.
You're having, you're gonna have a tough battle.
It's gonna be very, very difficult.
So, and they don't talk about any of that at all.
They just say, eat your grains, your fruits, whatever.
And then this is broad type of,
you know, I think people have the information.
I just think they need to be taught.
Like, here's what works,
and here's what doesn't work in terms of behaviors.
Next question is from Busy2K.
What do you guys think about celebrity transformations?
Inspiring or dangerous?
Hmm.
I mean, dangerous? I don't know. I don't think most celebrity transformations disclose
everything that they did. And I don't even know. That's a good one. Yeah. And then I don't
even know if any of them even align at all with what they really did. Like, this was like
gastric bypass or something. I mean, typically with the celebrity transformation,
it's just, it's a, it's a, it uses a marketing tool.
Yeah.
It's, it's no different than how they would hire somebody like me
when I was competing, right?
So, and I didn't know this until I got into competing
that this is how this worked, but like all the magazines
and supplement companies, they hang around all the pro shows,
and they pick out of the like, you know, your top 10, you know, who looks the most marketable,
look great on a magazine, they find a guy like myself,
they walk over and they say, hey, listen,
we'd like to pay you $5,000.
And we'd like to shoot an ad for our supplement or our diet
or our, you know, transformation program, whatever the fuck
it may be.
And they pay someone like me $5,000 to get fat.
And then you just reverse the pictures. That's just so fucked up. Right. But it's like,000 to get fat and then you just reverse the
pictures.
That's just so fucked up.
Right.
But it's like, it's how, and when you do it that way, well, when you think about it from a
company standpoint, it's, it's safe, right?
Like, because they got the hard, yeah, you don't want to, you don't want to take a guy like
me when he's fat and out of shape and say, Hey, we want to pay you $5,000 to get into
the best shape you've ever been in your life.
That's hard.
And you know, you're going to look like right.
So what they do is they go find somebody who's already, oh, wow, look at that physique, $5,000 to get into the best shape you've ever been in your life. That's hard. And you know you're gonna look like. Right. Right.
So what they do is they go find somebody who's already, oh, wow, look at that physique,
look at that, well, they're marketable.
That's a nice after picture.
Right.
We want that guy.
It's a great after picture.
Go take the picture.
Now go eat like shit for the next.
Which is easy.
Yeah, which is very easy to not fuck up, right?
Don't exercise, go eat like shit.
Yeah.
And then they do this.
So this celebrity transformation transformation think no different.
So I don't think it's inspiring or dangerous
as much as it is bullshit.
I mean, most of the stuff that you see out there
is designed to market and sell you whatever set idea is,
whether it be a supplement or the greatest transformation
or their new program or an app or whatever.
So I mean, I don't see, here's why I don't like the celebrity transformation, or their new program, or an app, or whatever. So I mean,
I don't see, here's why I don't like the celebrity
transformation stuff.
And by the way, they only exist
because we keep buying their shit.
So that's fine.
They can, if people are reacting to it,
it's our fault that they exist.
But here's why I don't like them.
It's because people compare themselves to celebrities
and celebrities have almost nothing in common
with the average person.
So what do I mean by that?
Well, if you're Beyonce or you're, you know,
who's the dude that played Thor in the play Thor?
Justin's man crush.
Justin's man crush.
Yeah, just, just, I can't believe I forgot his name.
I wanna hug him.
Yeah, what's the name Chris?
Chris Hemsworth.
Hemsworth, thank you very much.
So he, it's someone like him.
So he wants to get in shape because he's going to play Thor
So the movie producers or whatever the big production company goes to him and says hey, you're gonna play Thor
We're gonna pay you 10 million dollars
You need to get in shape in three months. Here's your personal trainer. Here's your chef
And here's your stack of animal experience. Yeah, maybe the animal steroids.
And your job is that.
So now imagine this, imagine if you had no responsibilities,
you don't have a job, you don't have to worry about your kids.
Mostly celebrities have expensive nannies
that take care of the kids.
You, that's all you're gonna do.
We're gonna give you the trainer, the trainer's gonna live
with you, half the time these trainers will live with them,
follow them, then they have nutritionists.
Well, yeah, you're gonna have a fucking crazy transformation.
Awesome.
That is not you, that is not you at all.
So comparing yourself to these people is not fair to you.
I can't compare yourself to anybody's not fair, but especially not to a celebrity who's
gonna have all this insane.
And especially something that popped up on your Instagram feed or something that got
mailed to you or popped in your email. I'm saying like half that stuff is bullshit marketing tactics.
That's all it is. But imagine what do you think you could accomplish if for like,
it just, you know, it doesn't, you got three months, but you don't got to do nothing but work out
and we'll give you your food. One of the things that I don't share that much, we just don't talk
about it anymore that much, but when I did my fat to fit transformation and then went all the way to competing, I mean, I had set myself up in a place financially
where I didn't really have to work and my entire life revolved around competing.
This was a business strategy for you. Right. And so, you know, it's nice when you don't
have kids, you don't really, I didn't really have a job other than working out and training.
All of my decisions that I made on a day-to-day, my hardest decision I had to make is if I was
doing family stuff or Katrina and I were going somewhere where I'd have to bring my meals.
Other than that, everything was centered around my workout, my recovery, and making my meals
for the week.
That's part of the hack
of why I made as great of a transformation
as I did in the short amount of time that I did
was my complete life was dedicated to that.
Yeah, I mean, if you look at,
they have these camps that they send people to
where it's like, I'm gonna go here,
it's for obesity.
I'm gonna live in this camp for the next month or two.
They provide with all my meals.
I have structured workouts.
The success rate, if we were to measure it by how much weight people lost when they
went to those camps, it's incredible.
It's incredible success, but if you measure their long-term success, it's terrible.
People come home.
They can't integrate what they just learned because what they just learned
made sense in that crazy weird environment that wasn't their real life. So they go back to their
real life and they gain all the way back. It's like the biggest loser. Like they show up for this
TV show. Cameras are on them to train or beat the shit out of them. That's all they're doing
is losing weight. And they go back to their real life and a big percentage of them
all they're doing is losing weight. Then they go back to their real life
and a big percentage of them gain the way back.
So it's definitely don't look at these celebrity.
Is it possible?
Yes, under what circumstances, I think is what you need
to ask yourself.
And here's the second thing.
If you ever, anytime you compare yourself to anybody,
you're not doing yourself any good.
If you wanna make improvements on yourself,
all you need to do is be a little bit better than you were.
That's it.
And think about it this way.
Like if I take a laser beam and laser beams are straight,
so if I shoot a laser beam,
and from my end, I just move it one degree to the left,
and you follow that laser beam down for 50 miles. How off
center is that laser beam going to be? Potentially, it could be miles because the further down
you go down that line, the more of a difference that trajectory makes. So think of it that way.
If every single day you just change your direction, a half a degree off of where you were yesterday. It's all you got to do.
You're going to make huge changes in a year or two years or whatever.
And it's much more of a realistic approach.
And you're comparing yourself to the only person that it's fair to compare yourself to,
which is yourself.
Because again, you don't know all of the things that that person has gone through or what
they're doing and what their life looks like and how much money they spend on people
making their food and what their motivations are
and I ain't that shit.
You don't know any of that stuff,
so comparing yourself to those people,
super not fair to yourself.
And celebrities are just,
celebrities are just in their own crazy world anyway.
Did you guys see what Natalie Portman said about?
Oh, stop.
Veganism, just yet?
No, please.
She said that,
oh, you'll love this one. She, she's a hardcore feminist, right?
And she said, oh, I connected my veganism to feminism because I realized that the milk that we get
from animals comes from female animals and the eggs we get are from female chickens. And so, you know, being vegan is also, you know, good
for women.
Whoa.
Yeah.
It's.
Connecting the dots.
Exactly.
It's really all that.
They're in their own narcissistic, crazy, weird bubble. And so I wouldn't.
Yeah, I try to look at it.
I'm going to take you to celebrities and their habits and all that. It's great that they
get in shape for a movie or whatever. But, or whatever, but, I'm not going to hold that into my world of working out. It doesn't make any sense for me to
kind of bring that in. Well, I'm not to mention half of them don't really look like what you see,
either. Yeah. A lot of them are Photoshop. 300 was all Photoshop. Make uped up. It's like
at the peak of whatever their fitness and you seem in real life. And they're like, oh,
fuck, they don't even look like that. Yeah, it's weak.
And then lastly, of course, they know nothing
about most of them.
Don't know anything about fitness.
But they're free to give advice about it.
Yeah, it's always, it's always great.
There's a few celebrities that really make fitness.
That's always been a part of their life.
What's his name?
Walberg.
Oh, yeah.
Mark Walberg.
He's a cool J.
LL Cool. J. He's got a fight. He's another guy who's always been working out.
The strong physique. Yeah. Dwayne Johnson. He's been doing it for a while,
but most of them are foolish. So I wouldn't listen to them.
Anyway, if you go to mindpumpfree.com, you can download any of our guides for free.
They cost nothing. You can also find us all on social media.
Instagram is our social media channel of choice.
You can find Justin at Mind Pump Justin. You can find Justin at Mind Pump
Justin. You can find me at Mind Pump Sal and Adam at Mind Pump Adam.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump. If your goal is to build and shape your body, dramatically
improve your health and energy and maximize your overall performance, check out our discounted
RGB Superbundle at Mind Pump Media dot com. The RGB Superbundle at MindPumpMedia.com The RGB Superbundle includes maps and a ballad, maps performance and maps aesthetic.
Nine months of phased, expert exercise programming designed by Sal, Adam and Justin to systematically
transform the way your body looks, feels and performs.
With detailed workout blueprints in over 200 videos. The RGB Superbundle is like having sour,
adamant, and justine as your own personal trainers,
but at a fraction of the price.
The RGB Superbundle has a full 30-day money-back guarantee,
and you can get it now,
plus other valuable free resources at mindpumpmedia.com.
If you enjoy this show, please share the love
by leaving us a five-star rating and review
on iTunes and by introducing Mind Pump to your friends and family.
We thank you for your support and until next time, this is Mind Pump.