Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1788: Exercises to Build a Thicker Neck, the Muscle Building Benefits of Training to Failure, the Truth About Building Muscle on a Keto Diet & More
Episode Date: April 8, 2022In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about exercises that build a thicker neck, the advantages to sometimes going to failure, the best way to keep the butt fr...om shooting up on the deadlift, and building muscles on a keto diet. Mind Pump Fit Tip: The MOST important factor when it comes to your exercises is form and technique. Without it, your workouts are FAR less effective and WAY MORE dangerous. (2:38) Orangetheory’s new clever marketing experiment. (9:01) Where does Mind Pump stand on plastic surgery? (13:20) Justin’s “cursed” art piece. (19:56) Elon Musk is a gangster! (24:10) Adam recommends Undercover Billionaire on Discovery+. (31:05) A bold idea to stall the climate crisis by building better trees. (42:07) New flavor alert from Magic Spoon! (48:40) The guys on Logan Paul’s debut at WWE’s WrestleMania. (50:43) How Sal has been using Organifi’s red and green juice while cutting calories. (57:00) #Quah question #1 - What are some exercises that can build a thicker neck? (1:00:46) #Quah question #2 - Are there advantages to sometimes going to failure? (1:07:44) #Quah question #3 - What’s the best way to keep your butt from shooting up on deadlifts? (1:12:38) #Quah question #4 - Thoughts on bodybuilding and building muscle on a keto diet? (1:16:50) Related Links/Products Mentioned April Promotion: Get MAPS Anywhere, MAPS Prime and Prime Pro all for $99.99! Stop Working Out And Start Practicing – Mind Pump Blog Orangetheory Brings Steve Aoki on as Chief Music Officer Madonna raises eyebrows with "unsettling" TikTok video Elon Musk Buys 9.2% Twitter Shares in Passive Stake; TWTR Stock Rises - Bloomberg Undercover Billionaire | Discovery House passes bill to decriminalize marijuana HumanProgress A Bold Idea to Stall the Climate Crisis—by Building Better Trees Could 7 billion people live in a Texas-sized city? - ZDNet Visit Magic Spoon for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Logan Paul Breaks Down WWE In-Ring Debut at WrestleMania, Knows He's Good at This Logan Paul walked to ring at WWE WrestleMania with $5M Pokémon card Six Major Automakers Agree to End Gas Car Sales Globally by 2040 Visit Organifi for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code “MINDPUMP” at checkout** Visit LivON Labs for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! 3 Tips for Better Muscle Growth – Mind Pump Blog 4 Cues To Improve Your Deadlift With Eugene Teo – Mind Pump TV Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Steve Aoki (@steveaoki) Instagram Grant Cardone (@grantcardone) Instagram Tony Robbins (@tonyrobbins) Instagram Logan Paul (@loganpaul) Instagram
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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.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump, right in today's episode.
It is a quack, a Q&A, so we answered four health and fitness questions.
On the back half of the show.
The front half though is an intro portion.
We'll talk about current events.
Scientific studies that we mentioned are sponsors.
Here's what went down in today's show.
We opened up, I talked about the most important exercise factor.
Then we talked about orange theory.
Now working with Steve Aoki.
Then we talked about plastic surgery.
Talked about Justin's art piece that may be haunted,
talked about how Elon Musk bought a big portion of Twitter in Sainte.
Adam brought up a show called Undercover Billionaire.
I talked about genetically modified trees that can capture more carbon.
Then we talk about our sponsor, Magic Spoon, New Flavor, Honeynet.
So remember, this is cereal that is almost zero sugar.
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Then we talked about Logan Paul moving to the
WWE. And then I brought up Organifies Green Juice and Red Juice. I love mixing them together.
Great energy. My joints feel less stiff. By the way, the Red Juice, good replacement for
caffeine. If you're trying to get off caffeine, go try them out. Organifies one of our longest
running companies that works with us. Go to MindPumpPartners.com. Click on Organify Use the Code MindPump for 20% off.
Then we got to the question. The first one, this person want to know some exercises to build a
thicker neck. The next question, this person want to know if there were advantages to training
to failure sometimes. The third question, this person wants to know the best way to prevent the butt from lifting
during a deadlift and then the fourth question,
wanted this person want to know if building muscle
was okay on a ketogenic diet.
Also, all month long, we're running a huge promotion.
You can get maps prime, maps prime pro and maps anywhere.
So three programs, which normally would retail for $361,
get all three of them for $99.99.
Okay, huge promotion, huge sale.
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The most important factor, by far,
when it comes to your exercises is form and technique.
Without it, you work out so far less effective and way more dangerous.
So focus on your form and technique above all.
That's a strong statement to say most important.
Yeah.
Well, think about it, right?
Think about all the exercises that someone can do and think about someone doing them terribly.
It's your reps, your sets, your intensity, doesn't matter at that point because it's way less effective
and you've made them so much more dangerous.
And this really came to me because I'm working out
in a commercial gym these days.
I haven't worked out in a commercial gym for a long time.
You must be seeing a lot of wild form out there.
I do, I see a lot of, and I'm watching people go hard
or go easy, but the technique in the form is so bad.
I'm like, I know you're doing squats,
but you're not doing squats.
What you're doing is you're gonna hurt yourself
at some point, or I see you doing rows,
but you're making your posture worse
with the way that you're doing them, type of deal.
So, and as trainers and coaches, I would say,
I mean, there's a lot of things that we coach and train on,
but I would say that's probably the thing you really focus
on the most from, I guess, a mechanistic standpoint.
Right.
To argue this quite a bit, just mainly for what are you building upon?
Like what, what's going to carry you further into, you know, years down the road?
And I'm not going to have to go back and undo everything that I was working towards
because my form was so off and I was building all these bad patterns
that I was gonna carry with me.
So is it really worth losing weight
and doing things immediately right now
without really paying attention to the form technique?
I would have to say that you can make a definite case
that it's...
Oh, I think it's high up there.
I think it's 100% correct.
At least for compound lifts and, and, and,
and complex movements, hard to make that case,
I think for machine, bicep curls, machines, things like that
that are single joint movements, that there's not a lot
of risk involved.
It does, it does make them less effective though.
Oh, it does, it does make them more risky.
Is my point. Maybe not super risky,
but it's just more risky than they need to be, even though they're very safe extra-sounding. No, no, no does make them more risky, is my point. Maybe not super risky, but it's just more risky
than they need to be, even though they're very safe
extra-sounding.
No, no, no.
I mean, the statement is most important, right?
The factor, I don't know if that would be the most
important factor for those types of movements.
I definitely see that with a barbell complex movement
for sure, because there's so much risk involved
and to your point, Justin, you're laying this foundation.
And if you bad patterns, if you create those, then everything else going forward is going
to be terrible.
I would say that, you know, obviously compound lifts require more attention to form a technique.
But man, have you guys seen a barbell curl done with terrible technique or a lateral,
you know, done with terrible technique?
Oh, yeah, the arching back in, oh man, it's ugly.
Yeah, it's not even the same exercise.
You know, what makes exercise is good at what they're designed to do
is the form of technique.
So I don't care what exercise you pick,
it could be an abduction machine, right,
which has a little bit of value mainly maybe for correcting
and balances.
If you do it wrong, there's the value, it's gone now, right?
All exercises are like that.
Like we talk a lot about squats,
they're so effective for the lower body.
Do them wrong, are you really doing the squats anymore?
Are you really deriving any value?
And then a lot of these lifts, it's to your point Adam,
especially the compound lifts,
they'll get a bad rap because people do them wrong.
And so I'm sure you guys have seen this,
where you'll do a deadlift and someone will come up there.
You shouldn't do that.
Yeah, I hurt my back doing dead lifts
or I hurt my knees doing what's going on.
We make the argument sometimes for exercises,
like the Jefferson curl, for instance,
but there's certain people that have proper form technique
and strength in that range of motion to pull it off.
But that's everything.
It's the technique, it's the strength,
it's the control that really determines
whether or not it's a valuable exercise for you.
Yeah, it's just like, if you lack,
of course there's obviously I'm being very black and white.
Of course there's a spectrum here.
Your form can be off a little bit.
That's gonna be different than if it's off a lot.
But if you're doing a workout and your form is off
on every exercise that you're doing, and you're not is off on every exercise that you're doing,
and you're not really focusing on the technique,
and you continue to work out,
you might not get hurt for a year or two years or three,
then you start to get these overuse kind of injuries.
And then you can't do those movements anymore.
And that becomes a big problem.
And then if you're one of those really consistent,
disciplined people who's like,
no matter what I'm working out, no matter what,
then you run into this, which I used to see all the time in the gym, which was the guy
or girl who's been working out for 10 years and I can't bench anymore.
Yeah, I don't do overhead presses anymore.
It's like, they remove all these really effective exercises because they've developed these
overuse injuries, which come from, you know, poor technique and form.
So, and that's, especially with strength training, it's like, technique and form. So, and that's especially with strength training.
It's like technique and form is what makes those exercise
so valuable.
And so like, even with low intensity,
if you just practice the exercise and practice technique,
you'll get great results versus, you know, terrible techniques.
I just wanna make that point, you know?
Yeah, no, I think that people,
we've been trying to make this case for a long time, right?
That go into the gym to practice
versus always going in there to work out or exercise. I think that we're trying
to shift people's mindset. I think for the longest time, health and fitness people are always
pushing the motivation part of workouts, you know, to go crush it and beast mode and you're
gauging your workouts based off of how much you sweat or how tired you are
or how sore you are the next day and trying to get people away from that conversation and more
into the form and technique. That's the factor everybody thinks is the most important,
is intensity. In fact, they people readily trade intensity for technique because they think
it's the intensity that's the most valuable thing.
So they go off, there was a class I was watching the other morning, again at the gym, and I want to
keep talking about it because they're good people there, okay? I don't want to say anything negative.
They're actually better than most gyms, but there was a class of strengths training class going on,
and one of the reasons we've talked about why we don't like classes so much is it's
it's in almost impossible to be really specific and watch technique
when you've got 30 people.
But you're watching the people in the form
is going out the window because they're all chasing intensity.
And they're trading it happily
because people have no idea that the intensity
is not nearly as valuable as the former technique.
So again, I'm watching them,
I'm just like, oh my gosh.
Speaking of classes, did you guys see OTF
that rolled out the Steve Aoki thing?
What's that?
So they have higher, his executive title is chief
a music officer.
So he's like a famous DJ, right?
That spins a lot and like, you know what I'm saying?
I mean, I'm just trying, like, I don't think everybody knows.
He did the comic book with Tom Willey.
Most people should have, has to know who Steve Aoki is.
He's one of the most famous, for sure, one of the most famous.
So they hired him.
I believe that's the right title.
Maybe Doug can fact check me.
I think it's CMO and I think it stands for Chief Music Officer or something.
And I believe that, which is, I think this is really clever and super smart, very smart.
I don't think it's going to improve the workouts by any mean, but I think that I love that they're doubling and tripling down on the
experience aspect of the business, although as a trainer, I would like to critique
and say, oh, better workouts. But at the end of the day, it's a business, that's what
they're trying to do, a scale this thing. And I think that, you know, playing right
into that and like, check this out, our music is custom-ly made.
Oh, that's good.
My Stevie Otis, smart, I think that's pretty cool, right?
Is that what it says, Doug? Was that right?
Yeah, Chief Music Officer.
Well, do you guys remember...
See, what he got paid if he can?
Do you guys remember, it might have been crunch at one point,
but there was a gym chain that was famous for the classes
and they were always packed,
but it was because of stuff like this,
like there'd be like live, like reggae
or there'd be a DJ spinning in the class
or there'd be like some kind of different.
Cycling classes were notorious for that,
yeah, having like crazy music,
going at the same time.
Super intense.
I mean, as a selling point, people love it.
I think this is a really smart move
because if people go in there and listen to music
that's special to OTF, I'll be right.
Right, right.
You know, laser light shooting.
Well, I wonder too if they're gonna get him.
You know, and I would have this.
So early on, I worked at one of the first ones
on the West Coast, right?
Florida was really big first.
I doubt we were the first ones to do this.
We definitely were the first ones in the West Coast,
and in our area that did this,
I'm sure somebody in the East Coast did this, but we used to have a live DJ come in.
So I think it was on every other Friday or something like that. I bet those will pack those classes.
Oh yeah. Yeah. Yeah. No, people just, it just brings a different energy in there. You know what I'm
saying? So it's exciting. The classes are all about energy. Yeah. Yeah. And you feel like you're in
a nightclub and I mean, and you actually feel the speakers because the DJ comes in with all their
stuff. I used to have DJs come into the gym when we would do closeouts.
And I would get some complaints, the older members didn't like it because it was loud as
shit, but I would always sell more memberships.
All people don't like music in general.
They're just loud.
Now.
To be loud.
Exactly.
It's very process food-esque though to me.
I'm saying it's like focusing on the crunch, the smell,
and the taste of the workout.
First of all, the exaction.
Yeah, versus the effectiveness of the workout,
what we're gonna do, but so again,
I'm committing them on the business side,
less of a fan on the programming than that side of it,
because I still think that they have a share.
Sure, their sign ups will increase.
Oh yeah, no.
Because that's a big selling point.
It's funny because I
always had this idea of like having like a crazy dungeon kind of gym that I had live metal. Oh
like a live dude. Can you imagine a crazy I'd be hitting peers all day. Oh I hurt myself in an
instant. That would be dangerous. That would be a deal. That's working. Awesome. Yeah no I have to
literally tailor my music based off of what I'm trying to do.
Yeah.
If I'm like calories low and I'm trying to get leaner
and I'm not gonna be strong and I gotta go get a pump,
it's like I'm not putting metal on
cause the work on the change right away.
Yeah, you definitely have to do the right setting.
Yeah.
I wonder if you'll actually show up and drop in.
I don't know if that's part of his contract or what
but it'd be really cool to see if he like will tour around and drop into the
places.
Well, didn't Madonna do that with her hard candy, Jim's? So remember hard candy?
I forgot.
Yeah, she was part of that.
She still knows. I don't know if she didn't that didn't he didn't she partner with
master off?
I want to say so. I know that Apple was was running some of them. In fact, I got invited
to the hard candy one in Rome.
I guess it's across the street from the Colosseum.
But these gyms were like that.
Life classes and Dan, you know, and she would actually show up,
I don't know if they're doing this anymore,
this is when they first started.
She would show up just as publicity things, right?
Yeah, I would.
Yeah.
Speaking of which, did you see her TikTok?
Oh my God.
Everybody's talking about it.
She showed me just really.
She does not look the same, dude.
Why is everyone talking about it?
Because it doesn't look like her anymore.
She's had so much work on her face. Yeah. Definitely. She's gotten so far to
where it's like unrecognizable. It's bad. When you're a celebrity like that,
I feel bad because is there a name for that? Well, you were we were we talked
about this all the time about how these celebrities that become famous and
they're famous for the way they look and stuff. So it's really common with actors and actresses.
And is there, is that a syndrome or is there a term for that
where like an addiction to plastic surgery in general?
It's just a term for that.
It's just when you're, when you're loved and valued
for your image, aging has got to be the worst possible
thing that can happen here.
Cause you're not going to look the same.
Yeah. You're getting older.
You want to stay relevant.
So I mean, I feel for people like that because I can't imagine what that would
feel like.
Now, where are you guys at?
Like what?
I mean, obviously our wives all take care of themselves.
They're fit and in good shape.
But at one point, there'll be 65, 70 years old also.
Um, what if, and if the wives came up to you and wanted to get stuff done,
where do you stand on that?
Like, how would you have that conversation?
God, I mean, look, it would depend.
Yeah, I think it depends.
And I think it would depend on what?
What it is.
Like what the procedure is.
So there's how big?
Are there certain?
No.
No.
It's mostly.
You know what?
Approved.
Approved.
You've proved it.
It's got to, it's money.
We're talking. You know what? It's what causes someone to want to go far. That's the real thing like if you're if you're feeling really bad about yourself and
insecure and
It's like anything right it can turn into this thing where you're trying to fix yourself all the time
Yeah, at some point you have to accept
That entropy happens right you have to accept that you age and you know, that's the deal
I get like hormone therapy if you age and that's the deal.
I get hormone therapy, if it's monitor,
that's fine, keep inside of her.
I mean, a bit of Botox.
I think it's the wrinkle stuff that you know,
is like, I've talked to Courtney a bit.
It's just that kind of stuff,
like kind of comes in, I don't have a problem.
So I'm on a small side to this, right?
Because I've seen the abuse of it.
I've seen someone go down like they start
with something very basic like Botox
and then it just escalates, right?
But then I've also seen conditions where you have someone
who's, and I have family, right?
That's they've done this.
And they're north of 60 years old.
And after I saw the surgery one,
it was so subtle that most people wouldn't
know, I know because I see her all the time. But I also noticed how it impacted her life
afterwards. Like she was going out more and she seemed to be happier. And so you have
to ask yourself, okay, well, I know it's superficial. I know like for that don't do it and aren't fans of it,
there's that initial like,
oh, why would you do that and be kind of judgy about it?
But then there's the other side
where I've seen someone do that before
and it kind of turn around their life positively.
So it's kind of,
I feel like there's ways of like the subtle ones,
I think too, where it's like it's,
you know it's not an addiction to it.
Like I think there's a difference
when you see somebody that has had like everything,
you know, versus like just some subtle things
to just kind of slow down the aging process.
Yeah, but let's be honest,
but what's considered, you know, excessive changes
all the time.
That's right.
Okay, if we went back a hundred years,
so we go back to the early 1900s,
1920s, breast and plants would have been weird, right?
People were like, what the hell?
Coloring your hair 150 years ago would have been weird, right?
I was so bad we're bringing this up,
because I was in Bakersfield, dude.
There was like poster boards everywhere for like butt lifts
and boob jobs and like I was like
Wow, I didn't know this was such a plastic surgery place to go, you know like a bankers field
You know really holding down
Yeah, yeah, and I saw like in a couple of the
Coffee shops or it's like lady that visibly had you know regular legs and then just this this you just slapped his butt on there. Wow it was just totally
off. Well how far is that from what's the what's the town south that's like yeah
yeah it's really kind of not very hills no the the famous porn city what what oh San
Fernando Valley yes I know I know I know just just so quick on that one. It's a little detour.
No, how far is San Fernando Valley from Bigger's Fill area?
It's not too far, is it?
Probably too close.
Oh, so maybe that's what there is.
Yeah, that's my theory is that Bigger's Fill is one of the kind of cheaper places to
live from the San Fernando and LA area, so I'm wondering if like, that's why you see
so much of that.
That's smart.
It's like, you work and do your plastic surgery, you live and you do your plastic surgery,
you make your field and you commute
over to San Fernando.
And so far, because there's some big houses we drove by,
but then there's just like all these like,
oil rigs and barbed wire,
and like, look, like people selling crack.
What is it, Doug?
It's like 91 miles.
Okay, so it's somewhat close.
It's like people who started selling shovels
with the gold rush.
Oh, it was a huge man here, guys.
Let's open up a shovel store.
Yeah.
Well, I've seen that more now than I ever have, too.
Like, when just when we were younger,
obviously, breast implants was already becoming popular,
but I didn't know anybody who had button plants.
I've seen more of those in the last, like, 10 years.
That's a hard one to do.
That's a really hard one to do because it's a muscle.
Maybe to the average person they can't tell, I'm a trainer.
I mean, you have to have built hamstrings to make that work.
Otherwise, it's like nothing and then butt.
All of a sudden, you can only tell if I'm a trainer.
You can only tell if I'm a boobs O too, right?
Not always.
Plus boobs, but you know that boobs aren't muscle.
So I think I'm maybe a little biased because I'm a trainer.
No, I'm coming on your point.
Your point is that you could tell the difference.
I'm like, well, you do it.
How often do you see fake boobs? I think it'd be more specific. I think because I'm a trainer. No, I'm coming on your point. Your point is that you could tell the difference. I'm like, well, how often do you see fake boobs?
I think it'd be more specific.
I think I'm a trainer.
If anything that has to do with a muscle,
because I know you could build it,
maybe it, because I build muscle for,
later on that's what I do for living.
Well, no, I get it.
If someone has huge glutes,
what comes with huge glutes is hamstrings,
developed hamstrings,
because you're working that backside
and just it complements it.
It's going to, you're in it without it.
If you build a really big strong butt,
the hamstrings are gonna come up with it.
That's just part of it.
So when you see like those like absolutely no definition
in hamstrings at all, which tells me
they haven't done a single squat in their lives.
And then diaper butt.
And then this huge butt.
And yeah, no, I get to be your own.
Yeah, it's your part of Matt.
But it'd be like getting bicep in plants
but having no triceps, you know what I mean?
Like just this big bicep in the front.
Everybody would know.
Sure, so I'm gonna use all the trainers with that.
So what else did you do down there?
You guys were, we were there for the kids,
Jim Nasty, and so we kind of made a weekend out of it
because we messed up.
It was nice to go to the up. It was a scenic.
It was scenic.
We even went to the sites.
I loved your picture.
You took it.
That was right outside.
It's really offended.
You know what was great was you did that.
And then I even saw somebody who lived there was just like, yeah, I wanted to defend it,
but I couldn't think of any way to do that.
I'm like, you guys like produced corn, the band.
So that's something.
I did that.
Yeah. I think he made a big deal. that's something. Oh, did they? Yeah, they came out of Biggest Village.
That's legit.
They're good, man.
But yeah, that was like right outside my hotel, dude.
It was gnarly, just to say the least.
Well, not a whole lot of great things
going on with a five star hotel's there.
Yeah, not a whole lot.
I mean, we drove back and tried to make a trip out of it,
went to like San Luis Obispo.
And so we're on this hunt to like find a lot of items for the house.
And there was this really cool furniture store.
And we bought this like mirror,
and then we bought this other piece that was like a nine foot piece of wood
that somebody had carved these two like bowls in it.
And apparently it was like some tribe in India
and it was part of their like
warding off evil spirits or whatever.
And it's like kind of their thing.
They had this whole backstory behind it
is like 300 years old.
And I was like, oh, do this thing.
It's cool.
You know, we're all stoked on it.
We shove it in the car with us like right
between all of us and we're driving all the way home
like three hours with this big old fucking wood like like smashing into us the whole way home
We get home and there's a maiden China tight. Yeah
No, no way, it's worse. No, that would be the worst thing ever
No, this was expensive too is like it was like a total conversation'm like, oh, cool, because we got all these blank walls
and stuff in my house.
Like, lame.
So I bring it inside and I put it against the wall.
I wanted it to be near the door.
I'm like, this looks cool here.
And so I didn't think anything of it.
And we're just kind of walking around.
And then right before I'm going to bed, Courtney's like,
you know, the boys kind of came up to me
and they're like, you know, we're scared.
We're scared of this item that you brought in the house.
And I was like, what?
You scared, what do you mean?
So I just, I turned the lights on and go over,
that was just like messing with my head.
I'm like, why are they scared of this?
I'm looking at it and it's like,
it's these two, so it's bulls,
but they'd look like just demons.
Like when you start looking at it
without all the distraction of things
in a different setting and it's just by itself,
it was like you're walking past it and it's just like,
this old ancient evil fucking relic
I just put in my house.
Had you brought it into your ghost house?
Into my ghost house, it's already tried to set itself
on fire and flood itself.
What are you trying to do? I don't know
It's attracting. I don't know. I was like, why did I breathe in my house?
And I put it outside my house for the night and I'm like now I have to fucking sell it
No, dude. I can't have it in my house
I didn't realize like I was like how do I not see this?
What is it? Yes, I drove all the way that like bang
I don't know you know, I sent a Doug a picture of it.
If you guys want to check it out, let me see what it looks like.
Dude, I mean, it's super cool, but it was like, dude,
this thing is, how much you pay for this?
It's got a little bit of evil vibes to it, dude.
I drew it in there, I drew it in there.
You break a thousand on this, you didn't spend a thousand dollars on it.
Oh, yeah, that's for sure I did, dude.
Oh, we're gonna use old, bro.
We're talking about this thing.
It's 300 years old, yeah.
Dude, I, this thing?
Let's see.
Yeah. No, no, not that good. Oh, that's cool. No, Yeah. See it. I this thing. Let's see. Yeah.
No, no, not that. Oh, that's cool. Oh, no, no, no, no, that is. No, I texted to you. Oh, yeah.
Okay. Oh, I see. Here we are. Yeah. No, it's a plank.
So you have a your house is haunted. We've already established 300 years old.
And you brought in some where else and you brought in some cursed sculptures. Yes.
Yes. So you're trying to cross the ring.
I watch too many shows where like somebody brings
in this old piano that like demons come out
and they fuck with you.
Or, hey, remember the Brady bunch when they brought back
the lava rock?
Oh yeah, they're all white.
Yeah, it's probably fine, but it's just
it got in my head that the kids were scared of it.
You know, I think that's it really like served
necessarily.
Kids see spirits, bro.
Are you having technical difficulties over there?
Of course, of course. Of course. Well course well you know we can see it later hey you know before you as he's
trying to work on that we have to talk about one of the most gangster moves ever that someone
did Elon Musk what do you do gang you can't believe you don't know you hear this no oh my
god I thought for sure no wonder you weren't talking about it.
No, no, okay.
So remember how Elon did that pull about
if he were to start his own social media?
Yeah, okay.
You know what he did?
He did something?
No, no.
He did something that's so gangster, it's amazing.
He bought 9.2% of Twitter.
He is the largest shareholder now of Twitter,
the largest.
Just for reference, Jack Dorsey, who founded it, owns 2%.
So Elon Musk now is a majority shareholder.
He now owns more shares than any single person of Twitter.
He has now serious influence and power.
And by the way, by the way, he bought that many shares,
I don't know how many billions of dollars
or whatever he bought.
He's just a shit ton of shares.
Immediately, Twitter exploded.
He's already made $750 million as of right now.
If you go on and look at the caught, the whatever,
he's already made $750 million off of his investment.
Oh, wow.
Now where is shareholders excited about him coming in?
They can't say shit.
Okay.
They can't say anything.
I'm gonna say, because this is,
so now he's shaking it up.
Let's talk about this, right?
Because he, one thing that he tweeted
that got a lot of controversy was he said,
do you think that the algorithm
that Twitter operates off of should be open source?
Because there's all this controversy, right?
Are they censoring?
These people, why isn't it fair
with these people over there?
You kick this guy off, you don't kick that guy off.
We have the, you know, the people, you know,
running the country of Iran, who obviously support,
they're still on there, but, you know,
our ex-president is off there and whatever,
it's all this controversy.
He said, we need an algorithm that's open,
so people know what's going on.
I'm very interested to see what kind of influence he has.
Wow.
Now, did this come, had to go on crazy. The press has got to be all over.
That's what he was talking about it. I mean, did he come out and say his intentions?
Yeah, I didn't say anything. No, not yet. That was just the big, great.
I think it's pretty clear was in what his intentions are based off of how he's,
you know, what he's always said. I got to look at the shares right now.
Well, of course, you're going to see from the conservative side, people are like,
yeah, bring truck back on.
You know, I don't know how much power you have at 9% still.
You're not a, you're, you're not the CEO.
Yeah, and you don't even have majority, right?
So you have, you're the largest holder.
So you do, you can manipulate stock, right?
So you could be a dick and sell off when they're already crashing
and then that would hurt them really bad.
So you do have some power.
I'm sure it comes with a board seat with that much money.
I think one of the biggest simple things
that I can think of is they can't kick him off or censor him
because there's always been a little bit of the threat
because he pushes it a little bit.
Why?
Because he owns, what if he retaliates?
Cool, I'll dump all the stock. Boom.
You guys all tank, you know, it's very interesting. And I'm not sure what the
shareholder meetings would look like. Obviously, he's not the, he doesn't own a
majority in the sense that he has that, that kind of power. Right.
But a single person owning that many shares would mean, I don't know how many
other shareholders would have to come together to overwrite him is my point.
He owns so much because it doesn't sound like it's not the shareholder. It would just be the board. The board would have to. I don't know how many other shareholders would have to come together to override him is my point. He owns so much. It doesn't sound like. It would just be the board. The board would have to,
I don't know how many people are on the board. And even if he has a seat on the board,
he would have a majority vote. He would have to have a majority of vote to really impact any real
structural trains. He's definitely in the meetings now. To the company. Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
He's on the board, maybe. Yeah. Is what I's what I'm saying. He's on the board maybe. Yeah.
Is what I would assume that he is.
But it's like just a foot that he got in, right?
Like I don't know exactly where that's gonna go.
Bottom line is interesting as shit.
Like it's interesting that he's made a play like that.
You know, you wonder what he's, what he's actually doing.
And that's after he tweeted, you know,
I'm thinking about starting my own,
basically essentially starting my own social media platform.
I mean, that's wild. if you could go about it.
Yeah, that just came out.
I didn't even see this.
This just happened.
Wow.
I mean, Twitter, I mean, exploded.
They're share price exploded right afterwards.
And again, if you see how much he invested
after he bought it, the rising stock,
he's already made $750.
I just love all the moves.
Hey, love or hate him.
You have to at least appreciate watching him.
Dude, he's, I mean, you gotta appreciate that. You know why I like the guy. I don't know him. So I don't
know if he's a good guy, bad guy or whatever. He's gangsters hell though, because he puts his money
where his mouth is all the time. Exactly. They talk crap about it, not paying taxes. He pays more
taxes than anybody. Then he donates billions of dollars in charity. Now, how are you going to talk
to it? Part of it. Okay. So, you know, we. So once we're dulled down here, there's the bowl smelling his farts, right?
What was this year's picture?
Oh yeah, now you can see it.
Yeah.
That's my computer did not like this thing.
Oh, see?
See, it's definitely got some evil spirits or something.
Yeah, but like your first glance, it looks cool
because it's just like bowls, but I don't know what it was.
Like in the certain lighting in my house,
in my self, without doing the trucky studio. Yeah, like it's it's it's cool
It's like a totem kind of poll looking at first. I want to I want to like see what it was really stoked on it
And then it was like I'm not about to put that somewhere if it means something exactly
I don't have a whole lot of like
Protective type of symbolism in my house yet, So it's like, I don't know if I'm gonna add this up
and be done with it.
Yeah, there you go.
Well, I'm just gonna get a priest in it
to do a little thing.
You know, back to you guys smelling as far as is,
you know, Elon is one of the better CEOs out there,
especially when we talk about the billionaire CEOs,
as far as talking to the press
and doing a good job of promoting himself.
You have to remember that as you guys talk
about how of his brand.
Yeah, he's not afraid to say that when he's smoking.
He does interviews, he tweets,
he does all this stuff all the time.
Like he's also brilliant in the way of self-promoting.
Totally.
So part of our allure to him and stuff like that
is he does that better than many,
there might be somebody who's a badass billionaire
or a hundred millionaire that you like even more,
but you don't know it because he's not self-promoting.
Oh, sure.
But you know what, it's not even so much that for me,
because remember how much criticism
he got for smoking a joint on Rogan?
Remember Tesla shares, crack, they went down like,
like 4%, 5% something like that.
Yeah.
It's not even that, I don't really care about that that much.
He's kind of weird when he talks,
he's obviously very smart dude.
I think he's even said on Silent Live
that he's, what is he, a high-functioning autistic.
So he's not like super smooth when he communicates.
Yeah.
He just puts his money, where his mouth is.
That's it.
He talks shit about Twitter.
He's all action. Yeah, what does he do? Billions of dollars. That's it. He talks shit about Twitter. He's all action.
Yeah, what does he do?
Billions of dollars.
You're now on 9.2%, you know, percent.
Like that's putting your money where your mouth is.
That's the part that I,
because I don't know if I would do that,
but that with that many billions of dollars.
Like that's a big risk.
The opposite could have happened.
He could have bought it,
and people could have sold their shit,
and he could have lost.
Yeah, well, he's not the money.
No doubt, he's playing 3D chess for sure.
But you know what, speaking of billionaires,
oh my god, this is actually just an endug,
you guys will appreciate it
because I know how much you guys like billions.
And what a shit show that's become, right?
It's terrible season.
So unfortunate, there's not a lot of,
so we had that conversation.
This was on Friday, the three of us were talking
and we're all disappointed in the trajectory of billions
and stuff.
So I was on a hunt for like,
because I made that comment,
like what are their billionaires shows? Oh, there's not like other cool billionaires shows that I can watch other than succession and stuff. Yeah. So I was on a hunt for like, because I made that comment, like, what are their billionaire shows?
Well, there's not like other cool billionaire shows
that I can watch other than succession and that.
Like, what else is there?
Yeah.
So you know what show I found
that I'm like going down the rabbit hole right now?
Undercover billionaire.
Grant Cardone was on him.
Is this like undercover boss?
Is it the same?
Yeah, because I've seen undercover boss.
So it's a reality show like that,
but the premise is nothing like that. So undercover's a reality show like that, but the premise
is nothing like that. So undercover boss, they, oh, you texted us about this. So this thing,
okay. So, and now I like Grant Cardone even more. I kind of like the guy before, but I didn't
know him very well after watching him do this. And I guarantee you once you guys watch it,
you'll have some more feelings. I'm not all the way through. I haven't seen the finish
of it, but it's got me sucked in. So check this out So the premise of the show I went right to so by the way
I went to disclaimer I went right to season two because I really the way I got hooked in was I was curious about
Grant Cardone's episode. I wanted to see his episode his episode is in season two
So I started at season two
The show is about three three other billionaires Grant Cardone being one of them, so two other ones.
And they tell them, they strip them of all their money,
their name, that they change their appearance,
they get a cell phone with no contacts in it,
and a hundred dollars in their pocket,
they drop them in a random city that they don't tell them about
in like literally bum fuck Egypt type of towns
in the middle, everywhere in the country,
the three different places.
And then they have 90 days to build a million dollar business.
Oh wow.
Fucking cool.
No, are they, I mean, just more alert.
Do they actually do it?
So I know they do because I looked ahead,
but I haven't seen it unfold and happen.
Supposedly grant builds a 5.5 million dollar business.
That's the real companies that like, yes.
And the hundred bucks.
So the best part of the show already.
I bought some cocaine.
That's a good job.
Immediately I'm going to drugs.
Yeah.
They can't, they cannot use their likeness.
So even when they're having conversation with these people,
they have to pretend they're somebody else.
They can use anything that they have.
Yeah, they have no leverage.
Zero leverage at all and no power with money.
They have a hundred100 to their name.
That's fantastic.
And they give them this beat up truck.
So they each have like a beat up vehicle
that's worth maybe two grand and $100 to their name.
And they got to pay for food in a place to live and stay.
So they all got to get jobs right out the get.
They got to find a place to live for super cheaps
and say, it is cool.
That sounds so hard.
And what it is, it seems crazy.
It seems crazy hard.
And the thing that I'm most impressed with
is all three of these CEOs are like totally different people,
but you start to see some characteristics
that I wish the show actually elaborated
or highlighted a little bit.
Like commonalities.
Yes, that people need to understand.
Like you got these billionaires, and I know a lot of times
like billionaires that get this you know, pretentious and their ass. Oh, these guys are fucking the first to get there.
But that's right. And you watched the way they interact with
strangers and people and the way they build relationships and how every every bit of communication, they're always thinking two, three steps ahead
on relationships and building those first.
The money will come.
They all say kind of the same thing.
Like, I have no idea what I'm gonna build.
I have no idea the opportunities.
And they all kind of have the same similar strategy
of my goal is because they have no idea where they're going.
It's like, when I get into this town,
is to go find the movers and shakers.
Who are the most powerful people in town town and they all end up getting connected
Wow to people and the way they get connected is really really cool. Oh, it's very interesting
I did I had no idea about the show and I thought it was such a cool premise, right? Yeah, I mean to build to build I mean to build any
It's really good. Any business sounds impossible is I mean it sounds impossible. Yes
Here's a hundred bucks. Go make a million dollars and 90 days Well, any business that sounds impossible. Yeah, I mean, it sounds impossible. Yes.
Here's a hundred bucks,
it's gonna make a million dollars and 90 days.
Yeah.
You know, it's cool about that is if it's real,
which it sounds like it is,
I think you watch that, you can realize,
there's a lot you can control.
You know, there definitely is.
I mean, I've worked with some very successful people
as clients and you do find these,
you find that some pretty interesting commonalities.
One of them is they're typically very good
with people.
You know, one of my favorite parts
without like ruining the show,
this is just a small part in what made me like Grant Cardone
so much because I know very little about this guy,
is part of his strategy is to get to a place
where he can make two, he set a goal,
two to $3,000 in the first week and a half,
so he can pay for his family to be there because he
knows if he's got a grind like this for 90 days, that he needs his family.
He's never been more than like four days without his kids.
And so he's so determined to hustle up three to five grand so he can then pay for them
to come out and stay and be near him so he can finish.
So none of them went to town about $100 worth of scratch or tickets?
No, but yeah.
And everybody found a way to end the stuff that some of these CEOs are doing, like this
one girl, like she find like $100 will not even get you a night at a motel.
No.
Like so she found like this like shit hole in and ends up making a deal for one night.
And then she ends up, I mean the place is disgusting, finds out the guy who's managing it needs like all this help
and decides to like scrub bathrooms, clean kitchen
and just remodel the place on her free time
to get trade for staying in the end.
So they all use ways like that to leverage,
like there, and the jobs that they're willing to do
to make a couple of bucks, like nobody's like complaining that they're getting minimum wage, no one's, they're just, they're and the jobs that they're willing to do to make a couple of bucks like nobody's like complaining that they're getting minimum wage no one's they're just they're doing everything they
can right now to just establish a really and that's where I'm at in the show like so I haven't
seen it's called billionaire undercover undercover billionaire yeah it's a discovery plus show I'm
watching that yeah that's right we brought up Elon's smoking weed. Is it true that at the federal level,
they're passing the house voted
to decriminalize marijuana?
But I think it still has to go through the Senate
or the Senate might have shot it down already.
At this point does anybody care?
I know, yeah.
I know, that's ridiculous.
Yeah, it's been out.
By the way, that's not legalization.
I have cousins who are like texting. Woo, it's gonna be legal. Now it's not the same, that's not legalization. I have cousins who are like texting.
Woo, it's gonna be legal.
Now, it's not the same dude.
Yeah, yeah.
It just means it's decriminalized.
That doesn't mean it's gonna be legalized.
But yeah, they need to decriminalize it,
or at least not treat it the way that they treat it,
which is pretty good.
I mean, it really is not gonna impact anybody
at our level who's just a consumer right now,
because right now almost any state you're in,
you can go crazy.
Yeah, it goes decriminalization,
and then if it goes legalization federally,
then what you'll see is these established cannabis companies
in states where it's legal like California versus Washington.
What's the delivery?
Oh, then they'll start to go grocery stores,
or safeways, and I mean, that'll be interesting to see.
So that's what I'm most curious to see what happens is like,
are we going to see in the next few years,
you know, you'll be a national brand.
Just like you see alcohol and cigarettes at a grocery store,
will you now see a section that's dedicated to cannabis products
and you'll just have to be used?
I think so.
Where I think they'll screw up.
Where I think they'll screw up is they'll tax the shit out of it,
which will keep the black market vibrant.
You know what I mean?
That's what I think that's the for sure natural progression anyways, like they're going
to make sure they squeeze every dime they can.
And then I think over time, you got to think that they would loosen up on it.
There's a dumb straddle.
There's still moonshineers that exist, right?
Yeah.
And there will always be somewhat of a black mark. It's mostly novelty though, yeah.
But right now, to Salis Point, which is true,
they're taxing it so heavily that if you have a connection
to a farmer right now, like you have a relationship
with growers, I don't go to cannabis clubs, dude.
The cannabis clubs are so overpriced
and it's be grade marijuana that's in there.
Because the guys can still get killer prices
on the black market.
So most of these guys that have been due
to end girls, whatever, that have been doing this forever
are not taking it into cannabis clubs
because they can sell it on the black market
for a higher price.
And consumers will pay it
because they're getting a better quality product.
Here's what I think.
I think if it goes national,
if it becomes legal federally,
companies like Marlboro,
or companies that own Marlboro,
I forgot what the name of it was,
an outtree or something like that.
Philip Morris.
No, it's not anymore.
They think they change the name, but they will crush
because they have everything set up already.
Yeah.
Everything already set up.
Get all the fields and everything.
And they'll just boom, jump in and just,
in fact, if I'm not mistaken, they were already
positioning themselves to be ready
for something like that to happen, because it will happen. So I always wonder, like, if that's not mistaken, they were already positioning themselves to be ready for something like that to happen.
Because it will happen.
So I always wonder, like, if that's how it's gonna happen,
because imagine when like alcohol,
and I wish I remember the history on alcohol better,
like obviously it wasn't around at the time,
but like what companies were already doing it illegally,
and then that transition into going legal,
versus other companies that were doing something completely
different, but just had a lot of power
decide to get into it because that's the one thing that
Cape Philip Morris has been doing cigarettes for a long time. Well, growing tobacco and farming
tobacco is not the same as farming marijuana. No, but aren't there a lot of
there is no real. There's more commonalities with a tomato plant than there are with a
a tobacco plant. So if someone grows tomatoes and they have a massive tomato farm,
and then they want to make the switch over to marijuana,
they have a better chance of hitting it out the park
and dominating.
I'll call my dad.
But no, you're telling tomato.
You have to factor in, there's got to be a growth curve on,
no, I mean, Philip Morris has the money to go out
and buy the best growers and then eventually attract all that.
So I do believe that at one point,
they'll eventually dominate,
but do you really think that they'll come out the gates
right away and be able to mass produce a better,
cheaper version of what's out there?
I read some articles on this a while ago.
I'm trying to find what company owns them.
I guess they're manufactured, I guess you're right,
Philip Morstel.
But I was reading an article and I can't find it
about how they were positioning themselves and what it looked like. And they were saying that they, but I was reading an article and I can't find it about how they were positioning themselves
on what it looked like, and they were saying that they,
but you're right, I actually don't know as much
as I don't know a whole bunch in terms of what that looked like.
I think they have the distribution channels,
I think that makes a big difference.
Yeah, and I definitely think,
I definitely think they're going to go make millions upon
billions of dollars doing it.
Will that eliminate black market completely
or other producers?
I don't know.
I think there's gonna be a market for connoisseur cannabis
still and until, and I don't know if Philip Morris
will even try and be that.
Maybe they'll just look at the bigger pie and go like,
listen, we just wanna get 80% of everybody,
the main, the people that are all thinking about trying it
or they dabble in a bit.
It's like the high volume, high heavily processed version.
Yeah, exactly.
And then there's gonna be the people that have some
very particular, they want to work.
I mean, I have grown, they want the highest,
whatever.
You have your bud light, right?
And then you have your other expensive
I.P.H.
It's a lot of down version.
Yeah, so that, so I, I think it's gonna look like that.
I think we're gonna have some big players like that,
but they're gonna have a lot of these smaller IPA,
like locally type of grown type of stuff. lot of these smaller IPA, like locally type
of grown type of stuff.
Speaking of plants, I read, by the way, I just want everybody to know this, humanprogress.org
is a phenomenal site.
If you want to read really interesting current stuff on science and, you know, new studies
and stuff like that.
So they came out, so check this out, right?
On humans, I read this article about
trees being genetically modified to capture more carbon from the air.
Really, really crazy stuff.
So they have a, they are able to genetically modify
through using genes that you find in algae.
They'll put them in trees, and the trees will grow
50% faster and capture far more carbon.
That's crazy.
Far more carbon actually.
The environmental things.
To clean the environment.
Now instead of just talking about it, throw money in the air.
Yes.
Now, when I was thinking, I'm trying to figure out where I actually posted it somewhere,
but I'm trying to find the article.
One thing that I found that was very interesting is I'm like, okay, how's this going to work?
Where are they going to plant them? Like, how's this all going to happen interesting is I'm like, okay, how's this gonna work? Where are they gonna plant them?
Like, how's this all gonna happen?
What they would do, and oh, by the way,
they were also genetically modifying these trees
to not produce pollen because of the fear of
contaminating the other trees everywhere else.
So you'll own these trees, they'll plant them
only if you plant them while they be there.
So I thought that was pretty fascinating.
But then they'll let, and they're very resilient.
They're gonna take less water,
like all the stuff that they're into.
How long is their lifespan is that?
They just grow super fast.
So you could just produce, wait,
and they live a long time, like a normal tree.
So I was reading about like what this business model
will look like, and apparently what they're talking about
was going to private landowners
who would allow them to grow these trees,
then you get what are called carbon credits
from the government because it's capturing so much carbon.
And then they would share the profits with the land owner.
So you own a bunch of land,
this company comes on, grows all these trees,
government gives them money and you share it with them.
It's actually actionable steps in that direction.
And so just taxing it.
Was it Bill Gates who bought a bunch of land?
He did.
And he's just sitting on it right now.
He did.
He bought all kinds.
That's interesting because I was watching some show
and it was one of those,
oh, you know what it was?
Like, what do you call those places that are like a homestead?
You've heard of homestead?
Yeah.
So there was like these guys that go in and they help these people
improve their homestead and they do all this kind of renovations and stuff.
But Vermont was where they were at.
And I didn't realize it like, I guess over the years, like 80% of Vermont is all like
forest now.
Like since there's not that highly populated, like there's so many trees that grew in that
state alone.
It's like, it's so much of an effective of population,
whether or not we have like this dense forest
in places like that.
Now, do they have things to show like the quality of air
and stuff of like a way better?
Yeah, of course, right.
Yeah, exactly.
It's just like, it's kind of one of those interesting things.
Like if we left everything else would just flourish, you know? Wow, that's what I was, what I was, you know, about these trees, my big concern was,
what if it, what if it's so sturdy and so fast growing that it takes over?
They're just like, oh, I know, it's just, yeah, pervading.
But they were talking, again, they were talking about how to prevent, you know, stuff like that from
happening. So I think this is brilliant. It's absolutely brilliant. You're growing a tree. Yeah. It's capturing more carbon.
They don't die. They don't, they don't produce as many like falling leaves and shit which ends up releasing more carbon.
It's a trading company. No.
That's the thing. So we have that. And we're like algae makes a huge,
it converts a carbon, doesn't it? And it filters it out for oxygen. So it's like, there's simple solutions to all these things.
And there's also like, I mean,
didn't they develop some kind of bacteria
that eats oil in the ocean for oil spills and things like that?
This just doesn't get like promoted in this.
Innovation is how we're-
Innovation.
Is that, was it at Tony, were you talking to Robbins
who said that about how he, like, for every,
like, like, he's done the math on flying his jet or doing
and those things like what it would it, what it,
planted that many trees to basically negate.
Top set of mouth.
Yeah, to offset his footprint.
Yeah.
I think that was, I thought that was pretty cool.
The current tech nuclear power is pretty remarkable.
They can actually use the waste from old nuclear power plants
as fuel and they produce a tremendously small amount of waste compared to the amount of power that they produce.
Isn't it funny how we're just in and data with we're just such bad organisms?
No, we're doing so much bad stuff. There's this movement. I don't know if it's an actual
movement, but I've seen posts about it about people who are trying to tell other people not to
have kids to save the earth. Like, who's going to enjoy the earth if it's known actual movement, but I've seen posts about it about people who are trying to tell other people not to have kids to save the earth.
Like, who's going to enjoy the earth?
There's no one here.
Also, it's also based on a lot of false information.
For example, the whole like we're running out of space.
Did you guys know that we could take the entire population of earth, the whole population
of earth, put them in Texas and we would have population density in New York City.
We don't have a population problem.
That's true.
Yes, that's true.
That can't be right.
That's 100% true.
Ian, you could take the entire population of the world, put it in, put it in all the way
into Texas.
I don't realize how big Texas is.
And it would be, it would have the population density of New York City.
Whoa.
Yeah.
That's a crazy step.
Yeah.
That is a crazy step.
We also have more oil available to us today than we did in the 70s or even 60s. Why? Because
the new technologies have reached that oil. So they actually scientists thought we were
going to reach what was called peak oil in the 1980s, meaning the amount of oil we're
going to produce, the cost was going to offset the energy and all whatever. But because
of modern technology like fracking, they're able to access more oil.
So this is all, not saying it's perfect,
but when you go on that website, it breaks things down
and you can start to see like,
oh I love that website, yeah,
it's like what is actually happening
and what kind of advances innovations are out there?
Plus it's a good news site.
Every other site's a bad news.
Everything's bad news, man.
Dude, I am still tripping out
on the whole world to fit in Texas.
That's wild.
Do you think like China and India alone,
like that'd be impossible right?
Yes.
And then to think that it would just be
as populated as New York City is.
That is crazy.
Well, the vast majority of the population
in most countries is concentrated
into very small areas.
America is a very generally,
we have big metropolitan areas,
but generally speaking, we have very metropolitan areas, but generally speaking,
we have very, like, the very wide. Yeah, there's so much space.
There's no way in wide open land. Well, that, and that completely highlights how crazed
is. I would have never guessed it's even closer. I know. I know. I had a great trivia
question. I know. I should have kept it that way. Anyway, speaking of good news, Magi
Spoon has a new flavor. Yeah, I like it.
Doug was munching on it.
What is it?
Honeynut?
Yeah.
Honeynut.
What does it taste like?
I don't know if it tastes like any other cereal I've had, but it definitely has a honey
flavor.
Have you ever had, you've obviously had honey nut Cheerios?
It's been so many years.
I have the honeycomb.
Honeycomb.
It looks like honeycomb, so it kind of reminds me of that.
Okay, that's what I thought it would be like.
I was, oh Doug, put the box in the frame.
I want people to see.
There you are.
And the reason why I want people to see
is because Magic Spoon, whoever designs the box,
they're like psychedelic, they're on mushrooms,
something like that.
There's always like somebody riding something weird.
Yeah, like, yeah, there's a explorer riding a bee.
Yeah.
I've actually never asked them why.
I appreciate that though.
Why that?
Why do they make me like that?
Because think about all those like Saturday, Sunday morning.
Yeah.
Yeah, those type of sugar cereals, they always have these wild
psychedelic two can and leprechauns.
Yeah.
Unicorn, where the fuck?
Hey Doug, read off the macros again on that for me.
What is it?
What's the serving size and what are the macros on?
Yes, one cup, 140 calories,
No, it's a chocolate.
Seven grams, total fat, 14 grams,
carbs of which one is a one gram of sugar
and 13 grams of protein.
For a cup of cereal,
For cup of cereal,
13 grams of protein.
I see you eat it dry a lot.
Is that how you normally do it? No. So today I didn't bring a lunch.
I completely forgot to bring a bunch while I just didn't take the time to make it.
So this is my go-to, you know, if I can't get food easily. So rather than go to a restaurant
and get something I don't end up eating too much of.
When I was a kid I thought I discovered a secret when I ate dry cereal for the first time watching TV.
I was like, this is a snack too.
I don't need milk for this and I just sit there with my hand in the box.
I love dry cereal.
Yeah, my mom would be like, I like it with milk too much.
Throw some milk in there.
Anyway.
Did you guys see this weekend was the WWE with WrestleMania, right?
I thought I heard it.
And did you say you watched it with your boy?
Was that the first time you watched WrestleMania with him?
No.
I watched it before.
I saw, is that the one with Ronda Rousey came out too and lifted
Triple H in the air?
I didn't watch that part.
Okay.
So she's strong as shit to do that by the way.
That's a big dude.
And she literally low
in Paul made an appearance. Was he impressive? Yes. Oh wow. Look at his clip, Doug. If you go to his
Instagram, he did a little 15, 20 second clip of his match and for sure practiced for a
while to get to the get to yeah, he looked great. He's winning me over. I don't know the guys.
So he's probably I don't know if he's a dick or what.
I like him.
I like him, man.
He's doing whatever they're not getting their hands.
That's why I like that.
That's what I'm saying.
Bro, he is his new drink or whatever,
with the prime or whatever it is.
He got, he partnered up with WWE.
Is it an energy drink?
Wow.
I don't, it's like a, I think it's like a low-cal or no-cal type
of drink, like hydration drink.
So I think it's like a, like a gatorade,
but like no-cal, I think, right?
Is that right?
Okay, thank you.
Yeah, I'm just guessing right now.
Oh, there he is right there.
Oh, with the WWE Suplex.
Wow, that's pretty good.
Who's he fighting there?
He did a stereo.
He got off the ropes.
He did so, he did.
Now, wasn't he a wrestler in high school?
Yeah.
Yeah, so he's, so he knows how to grapple,
but it doesn't matter, I mean, this is, yeah, I can tell that these are WWE moves. To the obviously practice them.
Yeah. There's, there's some pictures of him jumping in the, jumping over the dude's head.
Oh, look at that. And doing the splits. He jumped off the ropes. Like,
and he acts. Yeah. He knows that act. Wow. Good for him. Like a natural fit for him.
Yeah, dude. This, this guy's not going away. He's not going away. That's what I'm saying.
No, and he's only, he just turned like 27.
Did he really?
Yeah, he's 27 years old, man.
Oh, man.
I mean, I don't know what his, him and his brother's net worth
are up to, but boy, you know, before 30 years old,
these guys are in, in route to be, you know, billionaire.
He's not going away.
No, he's already made a lot of smart decisions
at this point.
At first, I thought it was like one of those flash in the pan,
you know, social media, whatever, but no.
You see his Pokemon card that he has?
You know the worth on that thing?
No, how much?
So it's a 5.5 million.
Shut your face.
Yeah, for a card?
For a Pokemon card.
No way.
So it's like the rarest Pokemon card that exists,
there's only like 34 in the world
and there's only one 10 meant or mint 10.
I don't know that order, I suppose to say that in, right?
The perfect card with no, it's completely like no
indentions, no scuff centered, perfect,
whatever that's what a perfect 10.
How much did he buy it for?
He paid five million for it.
No, he didn't.
Yes.
Wow.
Yeah, he paid 5.4 million.
I think it's what he paid for.
I have no idea what it's supposedly is for.
Can you imagine writing a check for $5 million
for Pokemon?
Pokemon of all cards.
Yeah, it's like, come on.
Yeah, it made it in the Gittysworld record.
I think it's like one of the most expensive cards
ever even purchased.
I just, what a crazy one.
Did he get burned on another one
that was inauthenticated or like it was on a box?
He bought a bunch of other boxes.
I heard that was, I heard that was fake.
Says that, okay.
Staying on this true stage before I was open to the word.
That's what I heard too, that it was staged.
Just to hype it up.
Yeah, I think that was,
I think that was all part of his thing to hype this up
was the show that he got screwed by like,
and I think he paid for that.
By the way, I think it was like $2 million or something
like that.
Oh, you know what I forgot to tell you guys?
Did you guys hear about what the auto makers
that agreed to end gas car sales?
Yeah, GM did it.
And so Ford GM Mercedes Benz and some others.
That's why I was so hard up on the Cadillac.
Yeah, because it'll be the last.
It'll be the last gas powered supercharged V8 engine that the GM GM makes.
So here's all of them.
It's Ford GM Mercedes Volvo Jaguar Volvo, Jaguar, Land Rover,
and then a Chinese automaker.
They're gonna eliminate gas car sales globally by 2040.
So I know it's better for the earth.
And I know that they may say I know, right?
So let's look at the data.
Just, so I sent you guys, did you guys watch that video? I sent
of the the electric truck that smoked the Raptor and the, uh, well, dude,
that's the thing. I mean, the torque and the fast. They're so fast.
Testless are ridiculous. And she's wrong. I mean, the, the, the second
clip, they pulled a boat. They pulled a boat and beat a Ford Raptor.
That is crazy. You don't need to wait to build a
Ford light. Power. It's electric. It's electric. It's combustion. It takes a bit. Yeah, no, this is instantaneous. Yeah, right now. Yeah, I mean you guys have been in a Tesla fast.
Have you guys been in the plot? Yeah, you've done that. You're stuck to your seat. You're stuck. Yeah, but it doesn't have the same sound. You know, like, you know, the feel.
We're all the guys, bro.
Our kids are gonna grow up like the smell and the sound and the rumbling, dude.
It's just like, you know, like, how do you say about that?
Exactly.
Yeah.
Like, weee.
You know, like, at cool, but it's not, it's not fucking something with balls.
Our kids, our kids are gonna, and their kids are gonna make fun of us. Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh with how our monsters would smoke them, but it's flipped completely. Like now you have these like little electric cars.
Here comes Grandpa Justin.
He's showing more polar bears and his fucking truck.
God damn it.
Get in there, little priest.
Yeah.
No, I'll leave the fuck you.
They're fast, dude.
It's because we grew up with cars being a particular,
you know how long it can't tell you something?
It took me so long to accept driving a sports car
that's not stick shift.
I hated that.
I'm like, why would you buy a sports car not stick shift?
I love it.
Now I accept it now because you can't find any other stick shift.
No, no one can drive them.
It's the best car theft insurance, right?
Like if you get a manual transmission.
It's totally true.
Yeah, that's a little.
That's my sister's boyfriend's a police officer
and he goes, okay, do you guys, if you have a stick, you can leave the car open. Nothing to take your car. That's true. Yeah, that's true. Yeah, that's true. That's true.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, that's true.
That's true.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, that's true. Yeah, that's true. Yeah, that's true. Yeah, that's true. Yeah, that's true. Yeah, that's true. Yeah, that's true. Yeah, I'm trying to work through this aging process
when I work out, be smart with my exercise
and my nutrition, whatever.
You guys know I've dropped my calories
because I just over 210 for me just isn't comfortable.
You're awesome.
I was pushing my gut health was good,
so I was pushing my weight and I was excited about that.
But then my sleep was crap and I was snoring
and was pissing off my wife and just didn't feel comfortable
So I cut calories and I've been doing a few things with supplements to kind of offset some of that stuff and you guys know
I've been mixing the
Organified green juice with the red juice. So I used to call that the Christmas blend, right?
And I mix that been drinking that pretty regularly and I do notice a difference in my
Joints when I drink it on a regular basis and I drink it during my workout
So I have it during my workout. So I have it during my workout
because the red juices got some stuff
that'll give you a little bit of energy.
It's not really stimulant,
but I do notice my joints are a little bit better
when I take it.
Now I haven't taken into this consistency.
I actually felt really the other day,
you accidentally stole my water bottle
and foot your shit in my water bottle.
No, I did.
But I actually did enjoy the drink.
It was actually kind of a good mix you did.
You did the, I think the red juice, the element tea.
Is that what else is that it?
It's a good little mix.
What flavors did you do to make it taste like that?
That was it.
No, what's the real tea?
Oh, watermelon element element.
Oh, so it's watermelon, watermelon,
and then the red juice.
Yeah.
It ended up being.
It was so mad.
I accidentally got his cup.
You know what I mean?
Not like, bro, it was our nice aluminum bottle,
your bottle's like mine.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Only have stickers on mine, so you know it's mine.
I know, so you know why.
But I don't put any,
I don't do any fruity, sweet taste in anything in those
because I want it to be fresh for the water.
And I'm so paranoid about it tasting off.
Like it's why I will never do shit.
But then you drink it and then that later on.
Later on, the drink was good.
Bains are busting out.
What's the amount?
I actually always, I really do enjoy the, the red juice.
It gives me a, a really, it's not a stimulant like,
like a pre workout.
It's got, it's got adaptogens in it.
So it's different kind of energy.
Yeah, it is different.
It's, and if you were to compare it to that,
you just, you're not going to feel the same thing.
No, that's what I feel like.
You feel like combined with caffeine. You know, when I find myself using it is when I, when I need
a little bit of pick me up, but then I'm doing it later in the afternoon work, because I do not want
to use great idea afternoon. If I'm working out at two, three, or four o'clock in the afternoon,
there is no way I'm doing like a legion pre workout or any other pre-or strong, too strong, and I'm
not going to sleep all that night
But I can do the red juice. Yes, I can do the red juice
It'll give me a little bit of an energy. I'll feel good afterwards and then I still can come down for sleeping
So I combine it with caffeine
But if I'm going off caffeine I take it by itself and it takes the edge off because you know what it's like going off caffeine
It's a terrible so like I'm like all right
Do I go cold turkey or I slowly go and I have right now?
I'm having to try to cut it back because my milligrams are getting too high
and the red juice takes the edge off.
Otherwise, you know how it is,
it's like a week of just, you just feel like dog shit.
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All right, here comes the rest of the show.
First question is from class A Fit Viking Shit.
Oh, I guess, I guess this is SHT at the end.
What are some exercises that can build a thicker neck?
A neck, you know why I picked this question?
Dic neck, because there were literally three people
ask the same question.
And this question always pops up every time we post on our Instagram, like, you know,
how to get a bigger neck.
And we never really talk about it.
So, and I'm sure there's not a lot of people interested in building a thicker neck.
However, in some sports, a strong neck is extremely important.
Football is probably the most common one.
If you're a grappler, it's very important.
And then, if you build a lot of muscle, I've seen this before with dudes,
where they build like big chest back
and shoulder and head this little skinny neck,
it looks really weird.
So I think there's an aesthetic component too
that goes with it a little bit.
But building the neck is actually rather simple.
It actually responds tremendously fast to resistance training,
like really fast.
Like if you strengthen your neck,
you'll notice the muscle gain pretty quick on there.
Some of the most basic exercises are literally you lay on a bench with your head kind of
hanging off the bench and you do chin to chest.
That's one.
You lay on your side, ear to shoulder is another one and then you lay on your stomach and then
you go in the opposite direction.
And a very basic exercise.
I think you should address the upper.
I think there is a misconception to building the neck, though,
because I think there is direct building the neck,
and then there is muscles that support the neck
that people would categorize as a thicker neck
or building a neck trap.
Yes.
Bigger makes your neck look like that.
Yeah, I think, and I think that's what most people
that want to build, unless you're those sports, right?
Because you're right.
Wrestling and football, and that's very sports-specific. You're unless you're those sports right because you're right. Wrestling and football and that's very sport specific.
You're a good one.
That's a good point.
There's more than that even.
There's a handful of sports where having a very strong neck makes sense.
But that's not somebody who wants to look like a thicker necker or the people that I think
that are like trying to look like they have a thicker neck.
That's more traps I would would say, that trap development
that is going to give you that aesthetically looking thick neck.
Yeah, I mean, when they say neck, I think neck because, I mean, it was on our Instagram
and people will typically say traps, but yeah, the average person, when someone has big traps,
the average person goes, they have a big neck, but it's just the traps. And that's, I mean,
that's, you know, farmer carries, and shrugs, and cleans.
That's a big part of the support system, though.
Yeah.
I mean, in terms of what we did in football,
I mean, we did a lot of isometrics for neck,
which I feel like is probably the safest approach,
because I don't know, I get a little weary
when people start trying to train their neck with weights,
because they can go over and do it it and it can be real problematic.
I'm glad you said that do not add resistance until you're already really good and really
strong.
And you don't need resistance.
Look, I tell you what, you take the average person, have them hang their head off a bench
and do chin to chest, 20 reps in their own fire.
They can't do anything.
Yeah, and I mean, we would be in quadruped and one person would be kind of, you know,
placing their hand in a position where they push against it and they resist it,
you know, up, down and like basically, you know, the, the main movements
that you're going to be responsible to your neck.
And then one product that's out there now that I do, I think has some promise in this
direction was the halo.
If you guys have seen that, it's around your head.
And it actually clips on to a rubber band,
and then you can go through a lot of the neck rotations
and things with resistance that's good resistance.
So there's a way to do it.
We used to just use a hand towel.
Yep, you used a hand towel like this,
and then holding it against, guys driving this way,
hold it down this way, guys lifting up, hold down.
That's a metrics are great for now.
Yeah, and then it's just,
you're doing isometrics on it.
That's what we used to.
I just really think that someone who asks this,
I think are looking for the way it looks.
And you can get a strong neck by doing all these things
we're talking about, but nothing is gonna make
the neck area look thicker than building traps.
Like building your traps up is gonna give you a...
That will do it, but let me tell you,
you get a thick neck.
You ever look at pictures of Mike Tyson when he was a kid.
He did so many neck exercises.
So he was a boxer that understood.
He really did.
He really did.
Yeah, they understood, if I have a strong neck,
I'm harder to knock out.
Cause I'm gonna get less snap, right?
To my head when somebody hits me.
And there's pictures when he's 18 and his neck is like this.
It's bigger than his face.
I used to do in grappling,
we used to do thing like neck bridges
and all the old school wrestling exercises.
But again, I caution people to use resistance
because like this, it's part of your spine.
So the spine goes all the way up.
And if you train end range of motion
and the end range of motion for you
is what your spine can handle, you're gonna cause problems.
It should be what the muscles can necessarily handle,
not necessarily with the segments of the joints of the neck,
don't let you go any further,
and some people will do that with resistance,
and then you can get some issues.
This kind of goes into some of the old timey lists.
I pay attention to a lot of these guys
that they get back to what an old strongman used
to do.
So there's some with chains and a bit that you basically fight on to and you do deadlifts
with your neck and your mouth.
Yeah, that's old school strongman.
It's crazy, but it makes sense.
I mean, in terms of like also really strengthening your jaw and your neck all at the same time, it's like, you know, there's a connection there, right?
There's a synergistic action there where in fact, when you're doing neck exercises, you
want to close your jaw and you want to press your tongue to the roof of your mouth and there's
muscles that get activated that help.
It's all connected there.
Yeah.
It's interesting.
Like, if you get to that level of, of a specification, not just like your major muscle groups,
like you get to the nuances, it all helps and contributes.
Now, I imagine you guys would never do this
unless it was very specific, right?
It has to be a client.
I only ever did neck specific exercises with wrestlers,
jujitsu guys, football players, I never did them with anybody.
Unless there was like a specific,
I got a physical therapist
to tell me, do this exercise with them for their neck.
Otherwise, we're okay for the most part.
But I mean, football alone, where a helmet,
people don't realize that you put a football helmet on
and wear it for three hours.
And then just wear it.
Just wear it for three hours.
Take it off your neck sores, hell the next day.
If you're not used to caring.
I actually, even the few athletes that I did train,
I didn't even mess with exercises like that.
It wasn't on the hierarchy of things I needed to do with them,
it wasn't even up there like,
okay, we need to definitely work on your neck.
It was like, there's so many other things
that I need to work on with them.
It's like that, we never even cross that.
I don't think I trained that with any clients.
I did it with my buddies that were in the football
and helping them out,
but I never trained a client.
Yeah, if you're just trying to get a bigger neck
to look better or whatever, no resistance.
Just hang off the edge of the bench, do it like that.
It's all you need.
And in my experience again, the neck responds very quickly.
It seems to have muscles that hypertrophy very quickly
in relation to other areas.
Next question is from Dam, look at her fat ass for 20.
What is going on?
I didn't pick that for the name, by the way.
That's the question.
Oh, no. Suspect right now.
Yeah, for sure.
For 20 it ends with like a 13 year old kid that wrote that.
Are there advantages to sometimes, but not often going to technical or even muscular failure?
Yeah, there is. I rarely recommend it though because people have a tough time with failing and
their form not going to crap. Also, it's a question because it's wordy little.
In other words, are there advantages to going to failure, technical failure sometimes?
Oh, okay.
Very rarely.
Yeah, and I would say there are ways to program it in.
In fact, I've been experimenting quite a bit,
and it's too early for me to comment
on what I'm finding with programming with this.
But, train to failure, first off,
you gotta make sure your form's perfect always.
It's a higher risk because as you fail,
your form wants to go down immediately,
but it is a very fast way to gain strength and muscle.
And now I hate saying that because some people
now watch this way, cool, I'm gonna go do that.
You're gonna overtrain real fast because if fries
a shit at your body more than anything else,
I mean, I could do 15 sets for a body part
or I could do two sets to failure and the fatigue you get from real failure is on a whole
Another level, but it does. There are some if you program it right there are some interesting
Effects including muscle building and strength gaining because it's more high risk
I mean these are usually techniques we save for advanced lifters.
I don't really even, I mean,
I don't even think about it otherwise,
unless I have athletes that specifically want to test out
for something, or I want to test them out on something
very specifically just to see how well the programming
is going, because they're going to be testing their body
to the limits as they perform.
But otherwise, for me,
it, there's just so much more value
in not going to failure and continually progressing
that why would I interrupt that process?
It's because we still measure the success
of the workout by the soreness.
And it is a great way to get really fucking sore.
And so I think that's, I mean, as a young kid success of the workout by the soreness. And it is a great way to get really fucking sore.
And so I think that's, I mean, as a young kid
and an early trainer, I used to train a failure
all the time.
Yeah, same here.
And now, I can't even tell you the last time
I did a set or an exercise to failure.
And I know you're programming it right now
and playing with it, but if you were,
you have to be very specific with it
and you have to be very judicious with it.
And I'm finding that there's a specific way to do it
where it'll work because very quickly does a friar body, very quickly.
I just, I answered a question on my live questions or what about that the other day about this
and just said, you could literally build the most amazing physique and never once trained a failure.
True. You could build the most amazing physique and never once trained to fail true you could build the most amazing physique and never once agree to failure
It's just for most people and that's including advanced people so even if you're advanced
I think it's it's a good it's a good
Principle to try and train by because it it most people overuse it
It's like it's like having a crazy amount of horsepower in a vehicle and you know taking and throttling it down in the corner
It's like you you you you are better off going into that corner slow and taking it
And yes because you have an extra hundred horsepower you could be using to get you through that you step on it
And you're more likely to spin out so you're better off taking it slow and coming out the other way
Yeah, no, I've been experimenting with some programming myself.
I've had Doug experiment with some of it.
Andrew, Doug, you notice the same thing.
Very fast, strength, muscle gains, but there's limitations.
Oh, very much so.
Yeah, you have to be very careful with it.
Definitely.
And that's the thing.
Like, first off, going to failure, you have to, there's more skill
involved.
It's not just the technique.
Yes, the form of technique need to be perfect. So you need to know how to fail with perfect
technique, which is a totally different mindset. You also, number two, it failures a lot further
than you think, especially with compound lifts. You're like, oh, I don't know if I could
do another one. Oh, shit, I can't, I don't know if I could do it. I need to do another
one. Failures usually like three or four reps further, sometimes on some of these lifts.
But also, here's a big one. You need to know how to dump the weight or the bar
or how to do it safely.
And a lot of people do not know how to do that.
I've seen people get pinned under bars
because they never practiced what happens
if I can't get up with this one.
Oh, I forgot about that until I was testing out some mice
because I'm like, okay, we're gonna spend time
just showing you how to dump the bars.
Yes.
How to be able to get out of a hairy situation, because people just don't, they don't get
educated on, on, you know, how to fail properly, which is a huge part of it if you're gonna
test yourself for the limit.
Next question is from Rich Ahabibi.
What's the best way to keep your butt from shooting up on deadlifts?
You know, one of the best,
now this is a training issue and you can train your body in a way
to strengthen that bottom position.
But one of the best cues I ever gave someone to help them with this
was rather than lifting the bar,
I told someone to imagine that they're pushing their feet through the floor.
Yeah.
And that's how driving your feet.
That helped a lot.
Because I think when you're just trying to lift, the butt comes up and then versus pushing
the feet through and it keeps you more grounded.
And that cue has worked pretty well for me with clients.
So I think the problem is you got to get the hamstrings tight.
So when you get somebody who their butt lifts up like that, they're loose.
They're still loose and they're trying to pick the bar up to kind of your point and the
hips just naturally rise right up.
But if you, so I like to get somebody and have them slide their hips back until they
feel their hamstrings super, super tight and then they're leaning over to grab the bar.
And then they're actually thinking about you say driving the floor, I think about
I'm thrusting my hips forward and it's like a lever.
But if you're, if you haven't got that hamstring, hamstring really tight. So the hips are sitting back here. And if they are at all, if they're
if this is loose, then and then you go to lift the bar up, then you have this kind of like
ask goes up first, then the then it gets tight. And then you pull up versus I load them by sliding
them back. Hamstring gets really tight. Then you grab the arms, make sure the arms really tight.
And then all I'm thinking about is those hips coming forward, not trying to lift the
bar up. I think the people squatting, that squat down to grab the bar in the deadlift position,
that's where you get in this position. And I also think, take the slack off the bar helps
with that. So rather than what that means is like, if you're down for the deadlift, you're
pulling on it enough to where you feel the bar
is giving you a little tightness,
then you get in position.
So there's already some tension there.
Rather than having zero tension then go right into it.
You're already lifting without anything
coming off the ground yet.
Yes.
Yeah, that's kind of how I've been trying to help Q
and what I've noticed is the ones where I'll see the butt
kind of travel up a bit, you know, unnaturally
like they're trying to rip with their upper body.
Yeah, trying to rip it.
Yeah, and so just to really focus on the legs driving everything up and like smashing those
feet.
Yeah, well, you want to do, you get down, you get in your position, you take the slack
off the bar, activate your lats.
In other words, you're tightening,
you're pulling the shoulder down,
activating the lats, a little bit of slack,
and then think, push my legs through the floor,
that usually does it.
Now, if you get stuck and your hips still rise, go lighter.
Go lighter and don't allow your butt to lift
until the bar starts to come off the floor.
And so you might have to slow the rep down,
you might have to go much lighter to get that,
because it's a bad habit to break.
Some people deadlift like that so often that they don't feel comfortable unless
their butt comes up.
Yeah.
I try to get them to look facing out to first before we go.
Right.
This is a lot of times looking down and then not noticing that their butts are already coming
up.
Yeah. This is kind of hard to articulate this on a podcast because there's so many moving parts here. Yeah. The secret is to be locked and stiff everywhere. Yeah. Yeah. If you're
loose at all is when you're going to see movement like this and the muscle that I think that needs
to be tight in the situation is the hamstrings. You need to be so you need to be sat back and your
hips need to be up high enough already that you can feel tension on the hips.
You should feel kind of a stretch on your hamstrings
and into the glute already before you're even pulling up
and then your point take the slack out of the bar
so your arms are stiff and rigid.
And then at that point, everything is stiff and rigid
and then all you're thinking about
is thrusting the hips forward and that'll pull that bar up.
If you're loose in the hips at all,
then the natural thing is to go up.
Yeah, I had a client once where this was just an issue
and we would go lighter and then anytime we go heavier,
it would start happening.
So I switched them to trap bar dead lifts.
And trap bar is, it's easier to stay low with the butt.
The weight is, you know, you're holding the handles
next to your legs rather than the front.
Favourite squat position a little bit better.
Yes, and then we practiced, we got good with the trap bar.
Then we went to the straight bar,
and then we fixed the issues.
That's another thing you can try to do.
Next question is from Landy Deon.
Thoughts on body building and building muscle on a keto diet.
It's possible, but not desirable.
Not a fan.
Very, very hard to do.
I've tried, I've eaten,
I've gone on an off keto diet a lot,
haven't done really a strict one a long time.
It's really hard to eat enough calories to bulk on keto.
It's like, so satiating and I get so,
like, oh, I end up eating tons of like avocados and,
you know, like just lots of fat to try to get those calories up there.
And I've done it and studies will show that you can build muscle doing it, but it's just
it's hard to digest all of that and it's very, very satient.
It's real tough.
Listen, building muscle is already really hard.
Yeah, trying to do it to fit in a very specific diet.
I don't care if it's keto or vegan or paleo.
Yeah, paleo, it doesn't matter.
Like, giving yourself even more restrictions
to do something that is already difficult
is just not a fan.
That's my thoughts on it.
And then go and it's not just keto.
I remember when we were...
It's so limited.
I remember when we were messing with that atom.
And back then you were...
I was all bodybuilder at that time.
Yeah, and I remember you eating, you were like,
dude, I have to eat like, how many grams of fat?
You're like, I have to eat like 200 or 300 grams of fat
just to do this.
Yeah, I was eating, I was like, this can't be good.
All I'm eating butter and avocado all day long
and macadamia nuts just so I could get to my calorie
and take in order to bulk.
Because at that time, my maintenance calories
were like around 4,045, and to bulk,
I need to be a 5,000.
And when I have this very limited menu to choose from,
I found myself just like eating chunks of butter
or eating just avocado after avocado or things of that.
I'm like, this is not ideal.
Like wow, and by the way, I didn't do that
like intentionally, I'm gonna try and bulk on a keto.
We were all just in our middle of our training careers
where everybody was at and we were talking about keto.
You just experimented.
And we were experimenting with keto.
And that was my critique.
I'd come back to the guys and be like,
man, for leaning out, I think this diet's not bad
because again, it's a restrictive diet.
So you're restricting down to only a few things you can have.
And so for someone who's trying to cut,
not a bad strategy to use this diet,
but for someone who's trying to bulk and build muscle,
I mean, to limit your menu is only gonna make it
that much more difficult.
Plus ketosis reduces anaerobic power.
This is a fact, okay?
So, study show this.
You're not gonna be as strong with heavy lifts.
Now, you can still have lots of stamina, low end stamina.
There's studies that show that people on ketogenic diets
are fine.
In fact, they might even be great at just long distance,
low intensity type activity.
But when it comes to strength or power,
there's a clear drop off when you are in ketosis.
And if you're trying to build muscle,
you kind of want that, right?
You want that strength, you want that pump, right?
It's also hard to get a pump on ketosis.
So I don't think it's a great bulking diet at all.
Now, who's it good for?
It would be good for the person who has the eketo
for whatever medical reason or whatever.
Fat adapted aerobic athletes.
Yeah, I've seen that work for them,
but it takes a long time to get fat adapted
and really be able to shuttle and use
that as fuel. So it's, again, it's, it's a difficult one to do anything performance wise
or gaining muscle wise. It's very difficult.
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