Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2099: The Least Efficient Way to Burn Calories, Why Barbell Exercises Are So Valuable, How to Shorten Workouts While Maintaining Their Effectiveness & More (Listener Live Coaching)
Episode Date: June 17, 2023In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin coach four Pump Heads via Zoom. Mind Pump Fit Tip: What you put on your skin often gets put in your body, so make sure what you put on your skin i...s NATURAL! (1:59) What will the next flavor of Kreatures of Habit be? (16:11) Chef Boyardee is not a real chef. (19:41) Kim Jong Un propaganda. (24:47) PGA, if you can’t beat them join them! (26:24) Ask Mind Pump is here! (29:10) We want to believe. (35:06) The future of studies. (36:25) Adopt or die. (39:26) The ultimate f-u! (44:27) The value of taking multivitamins every day. (48:25) Shout out to Jordan Syatt. (52:38) #ListenerLive question #1 – How valuable are barbell exercises in MAPS Anabolic if you have limited equipment, knowledge, and gym budget? (53:54) #ListenerLive question #2 – How can I break through a strength training plateau? I feel maxed out on newbie gains and stalled regarding my physique. (1:13:49) #ListenerLive question #3 – Can I still progress on MAPS 15 long term, or is it more of a “maintaining” program to do when life has additional stress to it? (1:22:23) #ListenerLive question #4 – If I am doing 45-60 minutes of weight training, what is the normal amount of calories I should be burning? (1:31:30) Related Links/Products Mentioned Ask a question to Mind Pump, live! Email: live@mindpumpmedia.com Visit Caldera Lab for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code MINDPUMP at checkout** Visit Kreatures of Habit: Meal One for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code MP25 at checkout** June Promotion: MAPS Cardio or Summer Shredded Bundle or the Bikini Bundle 50% off! **Code JUNE50 at checkout** Weston A. Price Foundation: Using Traditional Foods and Therapies to Heal 5 Things to Know About Triclosan Mind Pump #1230: Surviving & Thriving In A Toxic World With Max Lugavere Mind Pump #1610: Testosterone… The Hormone That Divides Men & Women With Carole Hooven 100% Cheese Snacks, High in Protein | Moon Cheese North Korea Heir Loses Everything to Go to Disneyland LIV Golf and PGA Tour merger: everything you need to know Ask Mind Pump AI AI 'godfather' Geoffrey Hinton warns of dangers as he quits Google Woman gets $105k parking fines after ex-boyfriend parks car at airport Multivitamin improves memory in older adults, study finds Mind Pump # 1065: Jordan Syatt On Becoming Gary Vee’s Trainer, The Biggest Lessons He Learned From Gary Vee, Keys To Building An Online Business (& Mistakes To Avoid) & MORE! Visit Hiya for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Mind Pump # 2045: Overcoming Your Fear Of Going To The Gym Mind Pump # 1565: Why Women Should Bulk MAPS Symmetry MAPS Powerlift Why Crash Weight Loss Programs Don't Work: Clues From Hunter-Gatherer Societies Reverse Dieting 101 | MAPS Fitness Products Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Max Lugavere (@maxlugavere) Instagram Michael Churnow (@michaelchernow) Instagram Jordan Syatt (@syattfitness) Instagram
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
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, we answered live caller's questions, but this was after a 52-minute introductory conversation,
where we talk about fitness.
Curtain events are lives, studies, and much more.
By the way, you can check the show notes for timestamps if you just want to fast forward
to your favorite part.
Also, want to be on an episode like this one?
Just email your question to live at mindputmedia.com.
This episode is brought to you by some sponsors.
The first one is Caldera.
Caldera makes skincare products that are natural,
that have been shown in studies to improve
the appearance of skin, the health of skin,
reduced fine lines and wrinkles.
It's the only skin care product I use.
It's great stuff.
Go check them out.
Go to calderalab.com.
That's C-A-L-D-E-R-A-L-A-B.com-forward slash.
Mind pump, then use a code Mind Pump, get 20% off. The step-a-set is also-E-R-A-L-A-B.com forward slash. Then use a code, mind pump, get 20% off.
The set-up is also brought to you by Creatures of Habit.
This is a high protein oatmeal that you eat in the morning.
It's plant-based.
It's 30 grams of protein.
It's got good fiber.
It's got probiotics.
It's easy to make, add water or milk or almond milk.
And boom, high protein start to your day.
And it tastes amazing.
No artificial sweeteners.
Go check them out.
Go to creaturesofhabit.com, that's creatures spelled
with a K forward slash mine pump.
By the way, we have the biggest discount code available
for creatures of habit.
Use the code MP25 and get 25% off.
We're also running a sale on some workout programs.
Maps cardio is 50% off.
The shredded summer bundle of workout programs is 50% off.
And the bikini bundle of workout programs is also 50% off.
If you're interested, go to mapsfitnisproducts.com
and then use the code June50 for the 50% off discount.
All right, here comes the show.
Your skin is your largest organ.
Yes, it is a barrier between you and the world, but it is not like
plastic. It doesn't just repel everything. It actually absorbs things. What you put on your skin
often gets into your body. Also, your skin is a great place to display your health. Bad skin oftentimes
means poor health. Oftentimes it means poor. Got health. Here's the deal natural skin tends to be the healthiest
But in modern societies we're exposed to pollutants
Makeup products lots of different things that are on our skin. We wash ourselves every single day
skin care products
Try to replace the natural things found in skin with chemicals, and they don't do a good job at all.
So when trying to take care of your skin, number one, just be healthy on the inside.
And number two, if you put something on your skin, consider it goes in your body.
So make sure it's natural.
That's typically the best way.
What do you think the percentage is comparing those two, right?
Like someone has really bad skin.
Do you think, how much greater a percentage do you think that has to do with what they're intaking
versus what they're putting on?
Oh, I see what you're saying.
Yeah, like his like, I mean, it's a pretty good look at,
here's a deal, there's evolutionary reasons why we look at,
there's certain things we look at
that we just naturally will judge someone's health off of.
Whether they're active or not teeth.
Is it big?
I know that.
If you got bad teeth, look, it's hard to find someone
attractive, we got really bad teeth.
Why?
That probably meant they had poor health,
and they probably were gonna die for most of human history.
Skin is the other one.
Your skin tends to display your health.
It could have meant, it's a bad smell, but that's another one.
Total digest people on smell.
That's the only true.
Definitely.
Do you want to other, just say.
I don't know if you want to.
I'm just saying.
But yeah, skin is the other one.
And what's interesting is the regulations on skincare products are nowhere near the same
regulations that we put on products that we ingest.
So there's all these regulations that we have to follow when we eat something or ingest something,
but because we put it on our skin, it doesn't have to follow the same guidelines.
When in fact, I mean, you put stuff on your skin and it gets into your body.
There's zenoestrogens that are found in lotions and perfumes and skin care products and
make-ups. These are things that act like estrogens in the body.
So they have hormonal kind of effects.
They could have effects on your health.
There's things that can cause inflammation.
And then most skin care products, what they do is they strip the skin of its natural
oils, which are protecting and healthy.
So it's like get rid of all the stuff you naturally have.
And then they aim, they attempt to replace those things
with chemical mimics.
When natural is oftentimes better.
Some of the healthiest skin you'll ever see, by the way,
is if you look at people that live in natural societies,
what's that, who was that one dentist dug
that traveled the world?
Western price.
Western A price.
You guys ever read about this guy? No. So he traveled the world. Western price. Western A price. You guys ever read about this guy?
No.
So he traveled the world looking at people's teeth
and he was shocked to see that
people, that modern hunter gatherers at the time.
So people who didn't brush or teeth,
didn't take care of the teeth.
They had these really straight, nobody needed braces,
nobody got the wisdom teeth pulled out,
nobody had cavities, really straight perfect teeth.
And he was like, holy cow, must be the diet,
and must be their diet.
He also made observations about people's posture
and about their skin.
And they all had, nobody had like,
like, you know, acne and terrible skin and stuff like that.
Yeah, those are some of the pictures he took of people.
And now he came up with some theories
and a lot of them were pretty accurate,
like diets where you're eating meat
and natural dairy, you're avoiding lots of heavily processed grains.
Yeah, they didn't even have crest toothpaste or anything.
No, they had nothing. Look at that.
Yeah. They had nothing. But yeah, with skin, it's like,
you know, look at skincare products, look at the back, look at the ingredients.
And it's a chemical smorgasborg of just crap.
I feel like women have been onto this for a while.
It's like slowly making it to men.
I feel like now.
Like I think too, they've been inundated the most
with like products and things
to their face and makeup and lotions and I don't know.
Maybe it's as a result of like,
maybe their skin is react more reactive
because it's been so many years of like putting all this stuff.
Well bro, you put makeup on, even if you put,
you don't put that much makeup on,
you put on like the basics,
like you're covering your face and stuff every day.
And there you go.
Wash it off, so then you strip your skin
and now you've removed some of its natural oils.
I mean, isn't too, okay, so like antibacterial soap
versus regular soap. Yeah, and so like antibacterial soap versus regular soap.
Yeah.
And so like just the skin itself has to have that healthy relationship with the bacteria.
And like if we're just like-
You have a microbiome on your skin.
Yeah.
You know it's funny about soap.
Also kills bacteria.
Antibacterial soap contains an antibiotic, a topical antibiotic.
Does it really?
It's on your skin.
Wow. Yeah.
Which we know what that is.
I think trickle sand, maybe Doug could look at that.
What are the most popular, Doug,
look at the most popular antibacterial bars of soap?
Yeah, I think trickle sand is the chemical,
the antibacterial or antibiotic type chemical.
But also what it does is it allows water to break
the bacterial cells apart.
So that's what water does. So if you ever have like oil on water
and then you put like a bar of soap,
you ever do this when you were a kid,
put like a drop of soap and it makes the oil.
Yeah, it goes, push away or whatever.
So the way soap works is it kind of breaks down the film
and allows the water to go in permeate
and then it destroys the bacteria or the virus.
All soap does this.
We've been using soap forever.
They, you know, thousands of years ago,
they just made soap off of ash and animal fat
leftovers from cooking.
All of it's anti-bacterial.
Anti-bacterial soap contains antibiotics
that you'll leave on your skin and it lingers afterwards.
And yeah, it's really crazy.
Okay, so it looks like there's,
doesn't it look like there's a lot of body soap anymore
that does it. It looks like all dish soap.
It's all hand soap, yeah, all hand soap, dish soap.
I think look up trickless hand, Doug.
It might be banned now, but that was one of the more common ones.
That was that wasn't that the big thing was safeguard.
That was like their big pitch, huh?
Because that was the idea is that not only to clean you
but then it guards you from the bacteria afterwards.
Yeah.
Google trickle sand just to read up on it.
Because I'm pretty sure that's the most common.
By the way, they'll put that toothpaste.
They'll put it in all kinds of different products.
Yeah.
So it's like an anti.
It's an antibiotic essentially.
All right.
What does that say right there on the right, the drug? Trickle sand is an anti-bacterial, you see that on the right there, does?
Yeah. Uh, yeah.
What reason? Yeah, so trickle San is an antibacterial and the anti-fungal agent present in some
consumer products, including toothpaste, soap, detergent, toys, and surgical cleaning treatments.
Toys. That's awesome.
I like to give my kid toys.
Yeah, that's toys. That's awesome. I want to give my kid toys. Yeah. That's strange.
That's so much fun.
Between that and the lid, come on.
I'm always trying to throw his toys away and I don't have toys all the time.
We believe in natural toys.
We can even buy that.
We should get some rocks.
Hey, we should up in your house.
It was like rocks and sticks over here.
Some mud.
Yeah.
You know, that's the thing.
So, you don't want to drop an atom bomb on your skin and destroy everything.
There's a balance of bacteria on your skin. When you throw that balance off,
that's when you get skin problems.
And stuff like trickle of sand just destroys everything.
So it's using deodorant soap shower gels.
It's mainly a preservative too,
but here's something interesting.
It is an endocrine disrupting chemical.
There it is.
So people wash their hands with it.
It goes into the water supply,
and it ends up like low levels end up in the water.
And you're watching.
So why even bother?
You know, it just like avoid it.
Well, I mean, so I mean, really it's like,
pay attention to the stuff you do.
By the way, another category are feminine hygiene products.
The like the cotton stuff in like tampons,
they can be treated with all kinds of shit
versus like cotton you would use on clothes or something like that.
So, and women put it in their body,
their body absorbs stuff too.
That way.
So, like all these things, we get, you know,
basically all these chemicals were being
indedated with, assaulted with them.
And your liver has to detox them
and it causes hormone issues.
And now all of them fly under the radar
because individually they pass the test.
But it's collectively what I think is what's happening
to us right now.
I'll give you an example.
You get enough products that barely pass the test.
I'll give you an example.
Do you know what one of the most common overdoses
with medicines is in America?
Aspirin or Tylenol, right?
Tylenol, see the benefit. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So see the benefit is Aspirin or Tylenol, right? Tylenol, see the benefit.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So, see the benefit is the generic name for Tylenol.
Do you know why?
Because somebody will take Nikewill
and then they'll throw Tylenol on top of it,
not realizing that they both contain
or see the benefit.
It's silcery, right?
Or Alcassus was aspirin.
Oh, that's aspirin.
That's aspirin.
So, they'll not know that they took one medication
that's got four, like Nikewill's got, you know, acetaminop medication. That's got four, like, like,
like nightquills got, you know, acetaminophen,
it's got a cough suppressant,
it's got a de-conjested in there,
and then they'll take Tylenol on top of it.
And now they've just exceeded the safe dose
of acetaminophen, okay?
And then they get liver issues, failure,
they go to the hospital, oh my God, which has happened.
And they have to treat you
or sometimes in rare cases you die.
So yes, they'll, there'll be an FDA,
like okay, here's the safe amount of X chemical.
So you'll have one product that has that chemical
and you'll use it as suggested.
So you won't exceed,
which by the way, we could argue
whether or not, you know,
is that still a safe amount?
Cause then they tested over the course of five years, 10 years,
whatever, it's always like a short period.
But forget that, let's just pretend
that that is indeed the safe level.
Well, then you use this product, that's got it.
Then you use this product, that also has it.
Then you use this other product that has it.
Then you go hug your wife, who's got perfume on,
that perfume has that product.
Then you keep playing with the toy or whatever.
Oh, that's also got the other color.
Then you, your food out of a container.
It also has.
So now you've quadrupled or you know exceeded
By four times and do that every day. Yes, right. Yeah touch a receipt that you get from the register and that's got some shit in it
Right, so isn't that the worst? Isn't that the worst one? Dude crazy amount. I think I remember
I've never seen a beer did a thing on that right? I never get receipts now. I was cute all with me
I'm gonna hit it to be so does it like oh, I'm cool
never gets receipts now. I was cute all with that.
Doesn't he have like,
they're gonna hit it to me so it does look like,
oh, dumb cool.
He has like,
tweezers or something.
Like he's,
grabs it after and just like puts it in a trash.
No receipt please.
Yeah, I never received it.
They actually ask you now,
most places, you know,
it's rare, like,
it's rare that like they give you the receipt automatically.
They normally almost ask every time.
That's good for them too, right?
Same place.
Yeah, yeah.
Or it's received now.
Yeah, so I mean, I mean,
along these lines, like,
you know, one of the companies we work with Caldera,
if you look at their products,
they don't, they work with natural things.
They work with ingredients that come from seeds
or fruits or plants.
That's not always up, by the way, I know people are like,
oh, some plants are poisonous to, yeah, that's true.
Okay, but these are all things that have been used
for so long.
We generally know that they're pretty good. Yeah.
And the goal of Caldera products is not to cover up or strip or replace. It's to enhance.
So, you know, for example, they're oil. We're, none of us here were skin care product
people. Okay. Caldera approached us and that their product literally sat on our shelf for, I don't know,
how long.
Right.
Finally, I don't remember who it was.
It's like, hey, try this out.
Come on, this company wants to work with you.
I have oily skin.
Justin's got dry skin.
Yours, you have psoriasis.
All of us use the same product.
All of us had good results.
That's when we became converts.
Why?
Because it works with your natural.
Well, yeah.
Yeah, you know, it's funny is like,
I don't know if they sought us out
because we're handsome.
But we're not.
I just want to make a comparison here.
So you got Mario Lopez, right?
You got Frank Rillo.
Yes.
You have like all these other Hollywood like superstar
actors.
They just picked up our buddy Michael Trinnell.
Michael Trinnell's hands,
he's a super handsome guy.
Another hands, say. I mean this
Save on are we in that category?
I'm not gonna be the turn in the punch bowl, but maybe they started with us. No, no
Maybe the board meeting was like we always hold handsome guys. We got to connect to the average guys
We find in that market. Can we find some averages? They did just reach out to my boy Chris Niggie be and he's not very cute
some averages. They did just reach out to my boy,
Chris Nagibin, he's not very cute.
Oh, wow.
He's not gonna find that out the Chris.
But he's attractive.
Yeah, there's a difference.
Hands up.
What did that say Doug?
Oh, about the BPA and receipts.
Yeah, yeah, we were talking about that already.
Yeah, so do you think receipts have to follow
any of the same regulations that?
Yeah, because no one's thinking about eating it
or rubbing it on your skin.
But you do touch it.
Yeah, of course. It does go on your skin. But you do touch it. Yeah, of course.
It does go on your skin.
Yeah, I know.
By the way, what we're talking about right now
is one of the leading theories as to why testosterone levels
and men have been declining for decades.
And it seems to match the,
the, how many of these chemicals are permeating
our markets and are being used.
So like the more, more, more, more of coming to circulation.
By the way, you know, this is not,
this is gonna, I'm gonna sound like a Debbie Downer.
Some of these are forever chemicals.
Like, like they don't, that's it.
You don't get rid of them.
You know, diamonds are forever.
And so is BPA.
Yeah, like they don't go away.
Like it's it, that's it.
We're done.
Some of them take a long,
at least give me a ring.
Like glyphosate, I think if we stopped using glyphosates right now, I think it would take
a hundred years or something like that for them to be.
I feel sorry for those people at Costco.
They are constantly grabbing people's receipts.
They're checking them.
And so BPA, which is on those thermal receipts, is a concern because of possible health
effects on the brain and prostate gland of fetuses, infants, and children linked between BPA and increased blood pressure, type tube diabetes and cardiovascular
disease.
Awesome.
Jesus, I just want to bump everybody out today.
That's the other thing, too.
They're finding that taints are shrinking.
People's taints are shrinking.
Yeah, remember we read that.
Your taints are shrinking?
I don't remember.
In distance between.
Oh, wait, I do remember that.
I do remember that. Balls are shrinking. That's that I do. I do. It's a station.
That's right.
Yeah.
The tank.
Yeah.
Bunch.
That's the technical term for it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know, distance is shrinking.
Well, you were talking about Caldera and we're talking about our buddy, Michael Trinow,
that reminds me of our other partner with creatures of habit.
He reached out to me.
I talked to him yesterday.
And first of all, I reached out to him first and said, dude, you have to try
those cookies that we got sent over. Whoever it was, I forgot. And I think we shot at him
about the first time when they sent over. They were already pre-made and they were shipped
to us. And then we kind of threw him in the fridge. It was like, all right. But I actually
followed the recipe, put them in the freezer for two hours, like you're supposed to have
them. And they are unbelievable. And so I was talking to him about that
and then he told me that we're fine.
He just did a, he was tasting the product
that him and I have been working on for like over a year
and I kind of almost forgotten about it because.
This is a secret, right?
We can't tell anybody.
Yeah, I can't tell anybody what it is yet
because it's not a phase.
You guys get all these products.
It's not, you know what?
Because cheese flavored oatmeal is the sound.
Nobody's hitting me up, dude.
And check out the new creatures that have it, blue cheese.
All right.
Anyways, what is that?
Why haven't we got a cheese sponsor?
Well, we'll see, dude.
I'm working on that moon cheese that I sent over to you.
The high pro cheese, bro.
Oh, yeah, moon cheese.
Yeah, it's really nice.
Maybe, huh?
Yeah.
You know what, those bags of like Parmesan crisps?
That's like a high protein.
I love them.
Snack.
No, look at that. No, look at that. Have Doug pull up the moon cheese is like super high pro cheese. Yeah,. Snack. No, wish I could eat them.
No, look at that.
Have Doug pull up the moon cheese is like super high protein.
Yeah, I know.
Yeah, did you check that out?
Listen, people don't know this.
If you can eat dairy, you're fucking lucky.
I wish I could have dairy.
Easiest source of protein and healthy snack ever.
Yeah.
It's so easy.
The fat will sneak up on you pretty quick though too though.
So before you, it's like eating almonds or eating things
like that where you're just like, oh, it's healthy.
It's healthy protein. Well, I'm always trying to roll. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So can I guess what flavor?
Yeah, no, don't do that. I don't know. I'm gonna guess. Yeah, but then one of my, I can't
say it. That's okay. You know, you know, you know, you know,
below the camera. Oh, all right. Let me get it. Cause I know the stuff you know,
you just got me con candy tasting. Yeah, or bubble gum. It's in a con candy or bubble gum.
Is it one of those stupid flavors?
No.
John Richard would win.
Mike and I first met and I first fell in love
with creatures of habit.
I think it's a full of them with bikes though.
And it's product.
One of the things I said to him,
because they got, I don't know how many total flavors
they have.
They probably have like six, seven,
maybe more, not even somewhere around them, right?
I like the maple if it was.
You know what they did?
They actually did a, I didn't even know he did like a
little mocha run on one.
I didn't even know that.
Yeah, I know.
Anyways, when he did that, I was like, I was like,
this is, so I used to make these oatmeal's myself.
So especially during competing, it was my staple first meal
early in the morning.
Protein scoop.
Oatmeal.
Yeah, yeah, and I did all kinds of stuff.
Chia seeds and nuts and walnuts and all, I mean, I mixed different stuff and tried different
flavors. Chocolate, peanut butter, blue bear, all different fruits and banana. And so a lot
of them he's already kind of made. But the one that was my favorite that I made always,
he doesn't have anything like it. And so that was why I was like, you have to make this.
This is like this of all the oatmeal that I mixed and made. Like this was my favorite flavor. I think I've
ever heard you talking about the flavor. I'm not gonna say it, but it's a good
joy. July. It'll be here to launch. He's actually already sending me. Is it co-branded?
Is it going to say? Yeah, it's co-branded. Oh, yeah. So you know how they have the big riding
on there. And then it'll say mind pump on the. Oh, delicious. The center of it. So we'll
co-brand it. But yeah, no, I'm super excited'm super excited about I want them to do I want them to do a high sugar one
You're gonna be ever put a shit ton of sugar in oatmeal. Yeah, delicious
Ha totally a bit. Yeah, I'm not saying something healthy here. Well look at the macros on that
What is that Doug the cheese? Yeah, the moon cheese, 170 calories.
You got 11 grams of protein.
It's not too bad, huh?
Not too bad for a whole bunch of servings.
Yeah, for a 14 pieces.
So I don't know how many grams of that.
So I told you guys to good rule a thumb, right?
When you're, when you're, when you're 14 grams
and when you're choosing it.
So keto, that's a keto snack right there.
Yeah.
Yeah, oh yeah, because it's more higher than fat.
I don't think there's any carbs, right?
No, none to speak of.
Yeah, that's a keto snack.
I think it's actually marketed as a keto snack.
Is it?
Yeah, I think they do market it like a keto snack.
But, remember I told you guys a good rule of thumb
when you're looking at something for the audience,
like when you're with you percentage approaching.
Yeah, the percentage approach.
That's more of a fat snack.
Yeah, it is.
So that's why I brought the almonds.
It's like eating, you gotta be careful.
It's like eating, you know, you justify,
oh that's a good snack. It's kind of good for me. Low carb, no sugar, it's good for me. When's like eating, you gotta be careful. It's like eating, you justify,
oh that's a good fact.
It's a good fact for me.
Low carb, no sugar.
When I was younger,
I was seeing with nuts.
It's what you say.
When I was younger,
because I was like,
if anything had protein in it,
then that was good.
And I remember first off,
oh peanut butter's got protein, right?
But I disregarded the fact that it's got animal fat.
So I would try to eat 30 grams of protein in peanut butter.
You know what I'm talking about peanut butter is? And then I would try to eat 30 grams of protein in peanut butter. You know, I was fucking pretty, peanut butter this.
Yeah.
And then I remember reading that like a pound of pasta,
I think had like 35 grams of protein.
No, dude, you know what I used to eat those giant cans
of ravioli.
Oh.
The, the chef was like, yes, dude.
Look at a large family size one.
That hurts my Italian heart.
And it hits, and it gets like, I don't know,
I want, if I remember right,
how did you feel afterwards? Dude, I was 20. So I felt like a champ. Yeah, or you just weren't aware of my Italian heart. And it hits, and it gets like, I don't know, if I remember right, how did you feel afterwards?
Dude, I was 20.
So I felt like a champ.
Yeah, or you just weren't aware of how shitty
you got this thirsty.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I never do that.
So many preservatives.
Yeah.
You eat such a little garbagey and you're just like,
why are we so thirsty, God?
Oh my gosh.
There's a cotton mouth.
It's trashy.
Disgusting.
I used to eat a whole can of that cause it had 50 grams of protein. Yes. Yeah. That was disgusting. I saw the water out. So you eat a whole can of that
because it had 50 grams of protein?
Yes.
Yeah.
That was exactly what, and it was so good.
It was easy.
That was back in my, you know, bachelor living at home.
Like that.
Just put it in a pot and warm it up.
I told you that and hamburger helper with ground turkey.
Like just, I would get a pound of ground turkey.
Okay, so okay.
Let's go ahead.
I got the beef ravioli, chef bor, bor,
boy, R.D.
That's not a real chef, by the way.
Fuck family size. So I don't have that. I do have it byavioli, Chef Bor, Bor, boy, R.D. That's not a real chef, by the way.
Family size.
So I don't have that.
I do have it by the cup, so.
So one cup has 220 calories, has seven grams of protein.
Yeah, that's nothing.
That's the thing.
He would have five cups, like four or five cups.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
It was like five times that.
So, Doug, can you see for us,
because this feels very racist.
Can you see if Chef Bor, your D, was real,
or if Americans came up with a name to sound at a time?
You know what I mean?
So this is sound at a time.
Yeah, it's in a boring room.
We need a time sounding like
a dumb, down-anchamama boy.
We need a time sounding like
a dumb, down-anchamama boy.
And here we go, dude.
You can't fucking...
And survival was real.
Yeah, I think she was.
I don't think she was.
I mean, that's what all the movies with all the nice lady.
So he is fictional.
So I do it.
Along with Betty Crocker, of course,
Aunt Jemima, who's been canceled or moved.
Don't get, don't get Chef Brody canceled now, guy.
Come on.
That's racist.
You know why it's times when canceled, Chef Brody, do you know why?
We don't give a shit.
We're not freaking sensitive, relax everybody.
Yeah, well, cheers.
I don't think it was even a black person
that got pissed off about Aunt Jemima. It was fucking some. He got pissed off about Angie Mimmo.
So fucking some Karen.
They got pissed off about it.
Let's be honest, dude.
I gotta deal with Lucky Charms.
Whoa, I like the fr-
Oh, okay.
Wait.
He is real.
Is that the sound?
I found some of these real.
Oh, he's real.
Okay, now hold on a second.
Here's the racist.
He is from the 19th century.
All right, here's the racist part. Why? Here's the racist part. His last, now that's the racist. He's from the 19th century. All right, here's the racist part.
Why is it?
Why?
Here's the racist part.
His last, now that's what makes sense.
Look how his name is supposed to be spelled.
B-O-I-A-R-D-I, B-R-D.
How is it spelled?
They spell it B-O-Y-A-R-D-I-R-D.
That's awesome.
Boy already, that's like when somebody says,
Coastal Dilla.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Some other guy. Yeah. Oh, that's a boy already
Did you know that that was a common thing so okay, so you guys know how my last name right my last name is
Distephanel yeah, it's DI space
Capital S T E F a no right that's how you supposed to. Yeah. When I was a kid, my mom made me spell it with no space
and no capital S.
Now this is because back in the day in the 70s,
when, cause my mom came here when she was four,
when you'd fill your name out,
especially on legal forms,
you couldn't put a space in your last name,
cause they didn't recognize that in America.
So back in the day, a lot of Italian,
there's a lot of names,
Dessantis, Dessantis, or Dastephanel or whatever, names like that, that.
DiAngelo.
Yes.
Where they actually smashed it together and took the capital down and they changed the I to
E.
So like, Desantis.
Like, DiAngelo, the big stuff.
Oftentimes you'll see Desantis with an E. The real spelling was DI space.
So there's a lot of interesting.
Or an Italian would come aboard, come ashore. This was DI space. So there's a lot of interesting. Or an Italian would come a bore, come a shore.
This was way back.
You're looking at the like turn of the century, right?
Or late 1800s or 1900s.
They would say their name,
then the person would write out how it sounded.
So that's like boy art decent.
Yeah, yeah, normal.
Yardee, B-O-Y, boy artee.
I need.
It's just so rough. That's good. That's great. Hey, you're rich, I'm already. Yeah. It's just enough.
That's good.
It's good.
Hey, you guys might hear something.
I just learned that's crazy.
I can't believe this is true.
It is true.
Maybe Doug can fact check me because I looked this up.
This is the wildest thing I've ever read.
Not crazy, but it's pretty close.
During the 90s, okay.
North Korea leader Kim Jong Il and his son Kim Jong Un
used fake passports and they went to Disneyland.
What?
They went to Disneyland.
What, when was this?
What, in the 90s?
The passports issued by the Brazilian embassy.
So they got them by a Brazilian embassy in Prey in 1986
and they're showing pictures of it.
It featured a young Kim Jong-un as Joseph Pwag,
and his father Kim Jong Il as Lee Jong Choi.
And Japanese media claimed that they used this to go to
the New Zealand.
Wow, dude.
Is that funny?
That was Tokyo, Disney.
Tokyo Disney.
Yeah, Tokyo, okay, okay, that's more sense
Still doesn't but yeah, that's fun
I thought you're gonna bring up the myth around him like shooting
So many holding ones in a golf. Yeah, you hear about that. Yeah, there was just like the stories that
I'm floating around that he just was like is that real or is that just bullshit that we make up because we think it's funny
Oh, the whole thing that he doesn't shit to write or something like that. He does like. Is that real or is that just bullshit that we make up because we think it's funny? No.
The whole thing that he doesn't shit too right
or something like that, he does it.
He works so hard.
No, that's not real man.
That he absorbs all of his food, he doesn't poop.
This is the kind of propaganda that they're putting out there.
But the golf one was funny because they're trying
to push that outward like in the press
and they say like he's just a natural.
Yeah, the first time you played golf,
you got, did you guys,
X amount of holes in one?
Speaking of golf, did you see what happened in the golf world?
With the LIV.
Yes, what's new with that?
Pro, the LIV and PGA merged.
Oh, what?
They won.
Look, look it up, they won.
Yes, dude.
What?
Wait, wait, so did LIV take them over or the opposite?
So I don't know if it's a takeover or if it's just a pure merger
or just some sort of a partnership
they're doing right now.
But I mean, at the beginning,
kind of remember PGA was flexing hard.
Like, if you go over there,
you're, you're, you're not gonna come back to PGA.
No, if you was offering crazy money.
Yes, like half a million.
And it was starting to really get some traction.
And I think they saw the potential market share
they're gonna lose.
It was like better to join them, you know, you know,
you better join them than to try and beat them, right?
Boy, we talk about a strategy.
If you're a really wealthy group of people to make a lot of money,
it's to threaten a large organization with the intent
of them trying to merge with you.
You know what I'm saying?
That's kind of an interesting strategy.
I mean, isn't that what they're kind of doing right now?
Because they did it.
They've done it with multiple sports.
They do no bodybuilding or doing it with all kinds of things like that. So,
I wouldn't be surprised if that's kind of the strategy. You pointed up for me, Doug. Yeah.
Which got, I can give you the overview is they're merging. The PGA is going to remain kind of separate
in that they're a nonprofit apparently and they're going to control their own assets, but they are
PGA is a nonprofit.
So they say, why are we not a nonprofit?
Not profit.
We actually help people to like to profit.
I know we I'm sure PGA likes profit too.
Yeah, they don't look like they're struggling.
What is the implications?
Do you have to like limit?
You know that you guys know that Rolex is a nonprofit also.
A shit.
I swear to God.
Look, Google it.
Rolex is a nonprofit. Keepers to God, look Google it. Rolex is a non-profit.
Keepers of the gun.
Another interesting fact about Rolex,
where do you think that they were founded?
Switzerland.
Don't tell me it was Hitler again.
No, UK.
Really?
I didn't know that.
Why is that weird?
Because it's supposed to be a Swiss.
Swiss.
Oh, it is.
Is it Breitling in British?
I don't know. Yeah, it'sling in British? I don't know. That's a good guess.
I don't know.
So Rolex is technically a nonprofit company.
See?
Is that while?
What, okay, so what are they, okay,
we gotta, we gotta feel it.
But they're extremely profitable,
make billions of dollars a year.
Yeah.
So does that mean they pay less taxes?
Yeah.
How does that work?
How do you come in on profit?
Executives and all that.
Like how does that all structure work? What does that, what does that, what does that, it seems do you come in on profit executives and all that like how does that all structure?
Where like what is that? What is that?
Seems like a pretty cool loophole here. They got I read up on it a long time ago
And I don't remember I wish I had we should be a nonprofit. We are helping people
That's what I'm saying like we do a lot more good than Rolex and PG-8 does I feel like we could get away with
That better. Yeah, dude. Yeah, what's Rolex interesting?
Helping people get healthy
And that wild though I remember reading that I thought this is crazy that you can't be talking about
If you can't beat them join them
We just incorporated AI in a way to help our customers and our our listeners to where you can so here's a deal AI is
It's becoming it's it's it's here. So our podcast is still human-made, it's becoming, it's, it's, it's here.
But our podcast is still human-made. No, no, no. We're not going to ever be replaced
on purpose. Never say that. We might be right now. It's human-made, it's authentic.
Who knows, right? But we'll never choose to do that. But what you did.
How embarrassing is it when we get replaced by AI? It's better. Way better.
And we know it. We listen to it.
We're not getting smarter. Just getting way funnier and we know it. We listen to it. Sal Smarter Justin J. Funnier. Oh boy.
By business.
I had other stories just get way better.
Yeah, I had them.
Hella cool.
Yeah. Wow.
Wow.
That's cool.
So, so here's what we did.
We actually worked with a company.
We created something called AskMinePump.com.
You can go there.
Now, here's why this is cool.
First off, this is how it works.
You go there and you ask a question.
Fitness, health, related, whatever.
And it goes through all of our episodes and it gives you the answer based off of what
we would say, what we've recorded already.
Luckily, we have over how many episodes now?
What do we have?
2,500 or something like that?
Yeah, they're not entirely, the whole catalog's not in there.
I think there's like, most 1600 or so.
Okay, that was the recent stuff, right?
Yeah, so they started from now and went backwards.
Yeah, so well over a thousand episodes.
I'm glad you did that way.
Of our more recent stuff.
So if you ask it, what's the best FetLos workout?
Which program is best for me?
Here's my Gormons, PepTai steroids, whatever.
Supplements, you name it.
If we've talked about it, it goes through all of those episodes
and it answers it based off of what we would say.
And it's, we've tested it, it's relatively,
it's not perfect yet, but it's relatively high-close.
Do you know that it actually,
it's actually a mind pump eight ball, right?
Yeah.
Do you know that, have you played with it enough
to see that it's talks in all of our voices?
Yeah. So if it's something that like one of us said that's closest or more specific
It'll say you know Adam or Sal
Yes
Yeah, which is the most handsome host I've tried that yeah, I did not try that of course that's something you would give me conflicted information
I just I'm trying it. It can give you conflicting ever or it says it's not you said a program to do that
No, it's not right. It's not right
I didn't do it. It says not. You said a program to do that. No, it's not right. You say that. No, I didn't do it.
It says something that's very political.
It should say you,
because we say you more on the show.
No, it's something political.
It says, oh, they joke and say this is a nap.
Oh, it does.
Yeah, it's very political.
You should say Adam is the handsome face.
Okay, says, this is Sal speaking here.
Yeah, of course.
As the horse to mind pump,
I can't pick favorites among my co-hosts.
Very political.
We all bring something unique to the table
that we work together to provide our listeners
with the best fitness and health information possible.
However, Doug is the best looking.
Shut up, guys.
I'm the liar.
You're liar.
That is the best thing.
Hey, Doug, ask it.
Ask it who would win in a fight between all of us.
Because I want to see if it's accurate.
Because we all know that you're the most dangerous person.
We should say that too though,
because we've said that about that.
Yeah, like Doug will win because he carries a ship.
Yeah, that's what we've said that somebody to hold
there is going to get shipped.
Yeah, but anyway, you go on.
So here's what's cool about it is that this is why we did this.
Okay, all joking aside, it's not because, you know,
A.I.s, we think that it's going to replace us and we fear it.
If it does, it does, whatever.
It's because the fitness space is so full of total crap that we wanted a place to where
if you want, if you want, if you have a question on fitness or nutrition or exercise,
you can now filter it through us.
Well, and our bandwidth is only so far, right?
If you're going to message us individually, this is just a quicker way to get a response.
Yeah, so instead of using Google and getting 99% of crap,
trying to sell you stuff, terrible information,
you're gonna hurt yourself, whatever,
you can filter it through us.
What to say, Doug?
Again, very politically correct.
We don't condone violence,
but we do have a lot of fun on the show.
And there's a lot more to that.
That's a good, good, good, good deal. Yeah, this is very politically correct.
I know I, I've been using it a lot and to what Justin was saying, I think that's the
most useful tool. I mean, we were really good when the, when the, when the business was
first starting, I mean, we took a lot of pride in, in answering everybody. There was a time
when we actually had the ability to, yeah, we actually had the ability to do it.
Yeah, when we had the ability to do it,
it obviously got to a place,
and which was inevitable that we get to a place
where it's absolutely impossible
to reply to every DM and answer every time.
That's right.
So, I mean, and the stuff that we would spend
probably a good majority of our time answering
is stuff that we've already said or talked about.
And what's even better with this than it was in the past.
Because you could just, you know, six months ago, you could go to YouTube or go to Google
and put, you know, what does mind pump say about whatever and you would get like a whole
episode where this now not only answers you as if it's one of us speaking to you and
it literally uses our like the way we would communicate that information.
So you get the AI answer and And then in addition to that,
you get all the specific clips of when we talk about it.
Right, listen to the whole thing.
Right to where it's at.
So you don't have to listen to an hour and a half episode
to get this short, quick answer that you want.
Yeah, that's where it's going to be.
I just typed in Doug Kerry a shiv.
Yeah.
And Adam says,
I haven't discussed whether Doug
carries a shiv on the show,
which is not entirely true.
However, in episode 2078, Doug mentioned
that he was interested in purchasing a samurai sword
during his trip to Japan.
Oh, that's a lot.
Which is true.
So we did the shift thing.
I've talked about play.
I've talked about play.
We, that's always him.
Well, and two of those were old episodes.
They were.
So they might not have cataloged them.
Well, now it's cataloged on this episode.
Yeah, that's my impumple.
No, that Doug cares shit.
Yeah, they're always too evolving it, right?
So that's part of what I'm gonna have.
They're gonna be constantly updating it
with new ass content.
You're gonna have a toothbrush and soap.
And for the record, I don't actually carry a shoe.
Yeah.
Yeah, you sure you do.
Sure you do.
Watch your neck.
You're gonna be pretty.
Sneaky.
Hey, did you guys, he wears magazines for like body armor?
Yeah.
Did you guys see all the UFO news?
I was surprised I didn't get ice in it to you guys.
I was like a little disappointed that I didn't know.
Yeah, so what was the deal?
I mean, so was a whistle blower.
He said that we, that government actually has gone out
and retrieved beings and...
He said a lot of shit, but then like literally,
he was trying to confirm it all.
Hours later, like they had to come back and recant a lot of years to deal if if it was that big of a
C.C.C.
Whatever if it was that big of a secret he'd be dead
So this makes me you know what the CIA and all these agencies do misinformation
They do what's called counter disinformation. They do disinformation. So it's been confirmed that Roswell, Area 51, that that's where they were developing the Blackbird,
spy plane. This was during the Cold War. It's the fastest plane ever made to spy on the Soviet Union. And in order to throw people off, because they'd be seen shit, obviously they're flying this plane, they came up with this fake story that planted in the newspapers that there was an alien craft.
And it was literally disinformation.
So this feels something like that.
Well, it always comes up when there's some major court hearing or something for powerful
people.
It's like, oh, hey, look, we got alien stuff over here.
That's true.
To some actual time.
I guarantee there's something happening with court case somewhere.
Oh, yeah.
Somebody important. Interesting.
What did you think of the, I also sent over to you.
You said you had already seen it and looked at it was the study that Lane's buddy did.
Oh, I saw that on the failure.
On the failure training.
Yeah, it's really not.
So here's the thing.
I, this is why we all talk about this.
Why we don't like these studies on, on muscle building.
The study concluded that the closer you trained a failure or the higher intensity, the more muscle you would build.
But there's lots of other studies that show that
that builds too much fatigue and actually is not as effective.
And anybody who's been training for a long time will tell you that
train to failure all the time, is a very, you'll get results
quickly and then very quickly you'll stop getting results.
So it's like one of those studies.
It's like the studies that show eight to 12 reps builds the most muscle.
Because what do they do?
16 weeks?
You know, 16 week study?
You know, people are not just working out for 16 weeks.
I was going to ask you and I didn't get a chance to read the study yet,
but it was something about sucralose that just came out about it.
It was messing with your DNA.
No, it was, there's, it was an in vitro study that showed that a chemical byproduct was present
in a single serving of sucralose, so what you would normally get like a diet soda, that
exceeded what the EU considered to be safe.
But it was in vitro.
And again, there's other studies, so it's kind of like, you know, is it really?
So who knows?
But that study showed, oh, look, this chemical is present
in higher amounts than the EU says.
It's supposed to be.
Yeah, it's just not floating around quite a bit.
Yeah.
By the way, you know what's interesting is,
so studies are done in two main ways.
There's in vitro, that's in a Petri dish in the lab, in vivo, which is in animals or humans,
and then there's something called Ensilica, which is with AI or computer learning.
Predictive or like these runs.
So you'll put your watch in.
Remember when Iron Man and the Marvel movies, would like he'd like run experiments with the
Digital simulation or something. Yes. Okay. So they just they just discovered a an antibiotic that would treat these drug-resistant
Antibiotics that are scaring everybody and they did it in silica. They actually they have an algorithm in the AI
They the AI knows the bacteria and then they
They gave it 7,000 possible chemicals and the computer picked the one that is most likely to prevent replication
and boom and it's like cheap right you don't have to test a bunch of different things
it can run the simulation and they could figure it out a way.
They had success and it worked.
Yeah they're pretty sure this is going to work.
Next step will be in vitro and then in vivo.
That'll be crazy.
Yeah, if they start figuring that out with the
ranked simulations on all the drugs.
Oh, crazy.
Farma industry is going to explode with it.
It's going to explode because they're
going to be able to run every test in Silica.
They'll be able to present a disease model
and then the computer will be able to.
I'm so curious to how, I was on a text
where my two best friends and we were taught,
it's funny because we've been talking about this
for quite some time now, and it's now started.
He was actually the one who shared me that episode
that I share with you, the Google executive
and so on, that talking about.
Oh, I know, a terrifying interview. Well, but my point is super doom. executive and stuff like that talking about. Oh, I'm a terrifying interview.
Well, but my point is,
super doomed.
We've been talking about this a lot
for the last six plus months, right?
And it's starting to make its way now to my friends
who don't pay attention to a lot of stuff like that.
And they're tripping on my,
bro, I've been telling you guys this for a while now
to like,
it's going to be the alarm for a while.
And so now to see people like that
that don't really care, pay attention to much that
we're starting to even realize, this is going to change my profession.
I can see it.
And it's going to happen so, and he like, you know,
compared it to the industrial revolution.
I was so slow.
I said, I said, yeah, now times 10 and 100 times faster.
So think of what that did do and how it changed the way
we did work going forward.
But that took over decades for it to evolve and really unfold
where this is gonna feel like an overnight situation.
Like, it's gotta be knocking at our door right now
where we're gonna see within this situation.
If you were a wagon wheel maker
at the beginning of the Industrial Revolution,
you had your job till you died.
It wasn't your kids or their kids were like,
we're at a business, like we gotta make tires.
This revolution is like, you're doing a job
or you're going to school for a job
by the time you graduate that job no longer exists.
That's how fast this has happened.
How crazy is that, right?
Thinking that your kids go into college right now.
You wanna know what's funny? So we have this electrician that comes super cool guy really cool guy
And he comes and works on the house sometimes anyway. I saw him the other day comes over and I see him and I just start cracking up
And he's like what's up, man? I'm like, you know what's funny, bro? I said do you do you realize that your job?
You're probably gonna be the one to last employed people, cause you don't have a tradition.
And he goes, yeah dude, he goes,
I know, that's pretty funny.
He goes, the demand for my job is like,
people are trying to come in now.
I'm not cool.
The getting handy man's right now is like a real struggle.
They're like on high demand.
Yeah, and then you know what's fun.
What's up?
And then he goes, you know,
I've been hearing about this.
I said, oh yeah, really?
And he goes, I don't wanna let you know,
but I listen to your show.
Like, fuck off.
He's like, yeah.
Oh, no way. Oh, no way. Yeah, he listens to your show. Like, fuck off. He's like, yeah. Oh, I was like six times.
Oh, no way.
Yeah, he listens to my show.
Oh, that's funny.
Oh, that's so great.
But, yeah, I was just telling him,
like, isn't that weird, bro, that your jaw,
you're probably going to be one of the last.
It's so, to me, it's just full circle.
You know, it's, we, knowledge was the quest forever.
Now, we've built something that's going to be better
at us with knowledge.
It's crazy that a lot of people don't see like they think like even my my my buddy's wife
and him they were actually getting in an argument about because he's like trying and
she's a respiratory therapist. And she's like everybody automatically defaults to like
terminator AI robots walking around and going like that's not going to I'm going to have
some AI robot replace me doing that. It's like, no, you're not thinking clearly,
like all the steps, yeah, exactly.
All the steps and systems and application to medicine
and stuff like that, to give to people like that,
there's still gonna be a human component
to almost every profession,
but it will only take one human to operate all these.
And what I know people do, these AI tools,
and so it's going to make jobs
that humans were doing that took them, say,
a couple hours to produce the result for whatever,
and AI is going to be able to speed that up exponentially.
And now one person can run eight to 10 to 20,
however many AI tools,
and so it's absolutely going to disrupt that.
You know it's already getting massively disrupted already right now.
Copyrighters already.
There's companies right now.
Copyrighters and engineers, they're laying engineers off by the dozens because one engineer
now can prompt, you know, X amount of AI tools to write code that it would take X amount
of engineers to do.
So, yeah, some of these big massive, I mean, I'm what, what I can
curious about is,
we obviously know like the huge,
all that we've been talking about layoffs for the last year.
So, I wonder how many of these, you know,
Facebook and Google and all these execs,
saw the right, I mean, obviously they're doing it
because of the recession in the direction we're going
that you got to lay off and be,
you know, smart companies that are massive ships,
they have to start that ahead of time
before they really hurt the environment.
But I wonder too, of part of it was recognizing too, like, oh, we're not going to need these
professions anyways in the next year or two.
I imagine you're the guy working on it.
You're like, Bill, you're like, oh, I'm creating the thing that's going to make my job disappear.
Yeah.
Well, wasn't he in that video?
Well, that interview was crazy.
That was at ex Google exact.
You know, was he C.O.O?
I think it was.
Yeah.
And he said, quote, this is the most dangerous thing we've ever done. was, he was, he was, he was, he said, quote,
this is the most interesting we've ever done. And then he said, literally, quote, we
fucked up. Yeah. Like we're already late. And he said within months, this could happen
with a month. Yeah. He's like, we all agreed when we started this. Do not put this on the
open internet. And that's what they just did. Yeah. So. Yeah. That's good. A doctor died
type of situation. That's kinda where we're on.
That's good time.
I'm gonna find the optimism to you.
Yeah.
All right, I'm gonna take a funny story,
just to change the mood.
You wanna hear about this guy who,
what he did to get back at his ex girlfriend?
It's kind of a genius, genius move.
So in 2012, I read this this morning, I was dying.
A Chicago man bought a car for $600,
and he registered it in his ex-girlfriend's name.
Okay.
Then he parked it at O'Hare Airport
and racked up $678 parking tickets,
totally $105,000.
Oh my God.
Oh my God.
Oh my God.
I guess that would work.
That's dirty.
He was buying a car in some way.
You know the worst part about that so,
actually brilliant because- Talk about a prank. Because even when she does get away with not having to pay with the
what she's going to have to go through. That's it. Yeah. To not bureaucracy is she's going to get
through to even like prove that her. What it takes to remove super gangster. That is a gangster
move right there because that is like there's there's no way around her and that not becoming
a massive headache
for her. Yeah. She's not gonna pay $100,000 or $100,000. No, she's gonna prove that he did this and
whatever, but what a pain. And to back all that out on things like with it like tickets and stuff
like that. And it's on your record until you fix it. Look what happened to Doug and I. We still have
yet to get on. We're now nine months into trying to repair our credit over a mishap
on the banks messing up on the auto panel.
Yes, my credit still is not fully repaired from that.
Just that one little blip.
And it wasn't our fault.
It was on this bank, on the systems fault.
And so they've acknowledged it, but still.
Oh yeah, oh yeah, yeah.
They've totally acknowledged it,
but it's because there's so many moving pieces in there. It's just like, yeah, oh yeah, yeah, they've totally acknowledged it, but it's the amount, it's because there's so many moving pieces
in there, it's just like, yeah, crazy.
So that's what, she'll deal with something that times 10.
Wow.
Wow, you know, one time I got, one time, so when I used to own my studio,
I used to have to pay this tax where,
I remember what the, what the name of the tax was,
but you have to pay a tax on the value of the equipment
in your facility.
I can't remember what that, what it was.
The thing was.
Yeah, so I know, there's a tax for everything.
So not only do I pay taxes on my income,
not only I pay taxes on that, you know, that and the other,
but also the value of the equipment every year,
there was a tax that I would pay.
Now the total value of the equipment in my gym,
in my, because it was a small studio,
so what did I have?
Dumbbells, I had a rack, I had this big cable machine
called the DaVinci, which was somewhat expensive
or whatever, and the total value,
and some cardio machines, I had like four cardio machines.
The total value I think was like $40,000,
something like that, for all that stuff.
Well, I got a bill one year and whoever the estimator was, whoever worked for the city of Elz and Lasca dos, whoever worked for the city of Lasca dos,
put the decimal point in the wrong place.
So I got a bill for $450.
Bill is building himself.
I never miss that one down.
I was just wondering. Every time I get a that one down.
Every time I get a chance.
It's like a salt.
Isn't that what happened off the space where he tried to do that?
I think it's called business personal property.
Something like that.
Or like unattached property.
Do we get nailed for that for all this?
I don't think so.
I don't know.
Now would they know?
I know now.
Thanks Adam.
So highlighting that.
Hey, they put this, this fucker, whoever it was, put a decimal point in the wrong place,
all the centels paying tax on $450,000 worth of equipment.
Do you know what a pain in the ass it was?
Does it get affixed?
Do you have any, like I spent more money on the, on trying to get affixed than the
tax was? That's why that's such a brilliant like FU's that, you know, even though, Do you have any idea? Like I spent more money on trying to get a fix than the tax one.
That's why that's such a brilliant like FU.
You know, even though she will not have to get it paid,
it's not in like whatever, the loopholes and the headaches
and anger that she's gonna have to go through just to get it all fixed.
I mean, that's like, I'm not gonna remember that.
It's like an ultimate, like, brutal deal.
All right, I got a supplement study.
That's kind of cool.
They did a multivitamin study on older people.
Actually, he's a pretty good study.
This was, this is a science daily, May 24, 2023.
So it's a newer one.
Columbia University Irvine Medical Center did this.
So what they did is they took 3,500 adults
over 60 and there were people in there that were randomly assigned to take a multivitamin
or a placebo for three years. That's it. So they said, take this every day and you're
part of the study. Well, some people had a multivitamin and they didn't know or a placebo.
Nobody knows. Yeah. Multivitamin or placebo. That's all it was, right? At the end of each
year, so this was done for three years? At the end of each year, so this was done for three years,
at the end of each year participants performed a series
of online cognitive assessments at home designed
to test memory function of the hippocampus
and area of the brain that is affected by normal aging.
So this study showed that at the end of the first year,
memory improved for people taking a daily multivitamin,
people with a placebo did not.
They estimated that the improvement which was sustained
over the three year period was equivalent
to about three years of age-related memory decline.
If the effect was even more pronounced
than people with underlying cardiovascular disease.
So, multivitamins, they actually have some values,
especially with older people.
Now people might think, is it making them smarter?
No, what's happening is the people taking the placebo probably have some nutrient deficiencies,
which is causing the cognitive decline.
So the people with the multivitamins, we're just filling those deficiencies.
It's probably a good idea to take a multivitamin, no single day.
Yeah, I would think.
Yeah, what are you looking at me for?
That's just the, that seems like such a terrible study to me.
Why?
Well, first of all, the adherence, you're the only person I've ever met in my life that
can consistently take a supplement in a pill every single day.
Sure.
So there's one.
Okay.
All the other facets of, you know, drinking alcohol, smoking cigarettes, exercising, not
exercising.
Yeah.
We know the benefits of the things that are pro-health.
We know the detriment of the things that are anti-health,
what they could do to you.
And so you've got a three year window
of this group of people like that
that have all these other variables
that could affect the outcome of that.
And the one thing that is supposedly really controlled
is this vitamin
they're taking every single day, which would be, and they're taking like a cognitive test
where they're surveying, right?
They're basically saying like, oh yeah, I recall this or oh yeah, like, no, the test itself
test memory.
Okay, so this is why I like the study and why I brought it up, no studies perfect, but
I like this one versus other studies.
Other studies on multivitamins were people coming in
and self-reporting.
You know, they would do tests.
Is this self-reporting too?
No, different, different.
So I'll explain.
So they'll have like 5,000 people show up.
They'll have them fill out questionnaires.
Then they'll say, oh, the people that took vitamins
did better and the people that didn't take vitamins
did worse.
The problem with that is there's something
called a healthy user bias. People who voluntarily tend to take a vitamin also probably live healthier lives, right?
They probably care about their health. This is different because they took
3,500 people, none of which who took a vitamin agenda. They gave all of them a pill,
some plebsibo, some supplement. And because it's a large group, 3,500, then you're going to,
there's the variances that you'll see in the half that took the vitamins in terms of who exercises
and who doesn't. And it was consistent between people with a placebo versus not.
You're going to, it's safe to assume that because it's a general sample, that's similar,
that however, whatever percentage of people exercise here, it's probably pretty similar
to the amount of people
that exercise here.
So these weren't people that reported and came in and said,
I take a vitamin.
These were 3,500 people who didn't take a vitamin.
And then they said, here's your pills, take them.
But yeah, I mean, it has to point to the diet
being deficient in certain minerals and nutrients.
Yes, so this one's much better than others.
Whereas again, you have that what's called healthy user bias,
where people who report taking supplements also bench press more,
they also probably lift weights,
because that's why they take supplements.
Type of deals.
So anyway, there you go.
Cool, so dinosaurs are real.
That's just.
That's just.
Shout out, shout out.
Our buddy, I'm surprised we've actually met it this far,
and I can't
remember what I was what he's always got great reels great content on on
Instagram he's had a kid not too long ago yeah yeah so Jordan's side oh love
sure if you've been listening long enough you've probably even won heard the
episode we've done with him or heard us talk about but good friend of ours great
dude one of the best trainers yes Awesome content. Yes, phenomenal.
Yeah, his content is really, really good.
And he talks about a lot of complex things
in a very simple way for the average person.
And so which is hence why I think his page
has almost got a million followers now.
So check him out.
Hey, look, higher health vitamins are vitamins for children
that are not made with a bunch
of sugar, gummy junk.
It's not glorified gummy bears or gummy worms.
It's a real multivitamin.
It tastes good, nor artificial sweeteners, and it's got nutrients that children need.
It also has efficacious doses.
It's healthy.
Go get some if you have kids and you care about their health.
Go to highahelth.com. That's h-i-y-a
Health.com forward slash mind pump and get 50% off your order with that link. All right back to the show
Our first caller is Jenna from Washington. Hi Jenna. How can we help you?
Hi, how are you guys doing? Very good. Thank you. All right. Good. I just want to say thanks to Justin for all the conspiracy theories.
It's so great.
It's been some interesting conversation in our household.
And now I'm officially obsessed with Nike.
So thank you for that.
I'm currently probably in debt.
And Sal, I am now a science daily obsessed and psychology today.
I think it is.
So, yes.
Thanks for bringing that to the table. Um, okay, I have a couple of questions.
The first one is about anabolic. Um, I used to work out all the time at a gym and I did, um,
hit training, lots of cardio running machines and I had trainers,
but it was basically with hit and thrown in
a little bit of weight.
And then I stopped because it just got too expensive.
So I started working out at home
and within my hit I would throw in the weights,
but it would be super low weight, high reps.
And now I ran out anabolic, but I modified everything.
Meaning I used a dumbbells for everything.
I do belong to planet fitness, I know. And I am hesitant to get a trainer there just again the expense.
And if I'm being completely honest, I am terrified of you know squat racks. It's I'm just
afraid of you know injuring myself. So I don't want to grab somebody random and just say, hey, show me how to do this, but I do want to run it again. I like the structure of it. So
I'm just kind of wondering what your thoughts are on going forward.
Okay. Do you, do you, does planet fitness have squat racks or is it a Smith machine? Or are
you talking about at home?
I don't have any equipment at home, so I am talking about planet fitness.
They have a very small area for free weights and most of it is machines.
The squat rack, I don't really know what you call it, but it glides up and down.
Okay, that's a Smith machine, so that's very different from a squat rack.
A squat rack is where you would rack a barbell, and then you can
un-rack the barbell and it's free. And the free weight barbell exercises that we
recommend, like a barbell squat or an overhead press, for example, you can't
really do those on a Smith machine. It's actually a different exercise. So I
would stick to split stance exercises, like Bulgarian split stance squats or lunges
in replace of barbell squats because you don't have access to something to allow you to
do a barbell squat.
Now, if you want to learn how to use a Smith machine because there are other exercises
you can use it for, I don't think it's super valuable, but you could definitely find
value with it. With any piece of equipment, if it's something
you're uncomfortable with, go way lighter than you can handle
and just practice the movement until you get comfortable
using it.
Remember, strength training is a skill.
All the exercises are skills.
And so like learning any skill, you would not go hard if you
didn't know the skill or weren't comfortable with it.
So just go real easy, practice the movements,
practice the machine or whatever you're trying to learn.
And then that's how you're gonna build confidence.
But as far as the barbell exercises are concerned,
I'm pretty sure you can do all the upper body barbell exercises,
you know, planet fitness probably has a bench press
and you can do barbell rows. And I don't know if they'll allow you to do you know, planet fitness probably has a bench press, you can do barbell rows,
and I don't know if they'll allow you
to do deadlifts at planet fitness.
I've heard that they don't allow them
in some places do, so I'm not quite sure.
But like a barbell squat,
you're not gonna be able to do that there.
So in that case, I would go,
like walking lunges or bulgurian split stance squats.
I mean, I have some suggestions.
Okay.
Suggestion one is we can send you over map symmetry,
which is our unilateral program.
So everything is what's sourcing, split stance,
one arm, one leg, so that's all dumbbell work, right?
And just skip out on the barbell side
and just run the unilateral piece.
So that's option one, if we're gonna stay it,
planet fitness, and we're gonna avoid the barbell work.
Now, personally, if you were my client,
I would love to get you into the barbell stuff.
And what I could do is say,
hey, save the money on the personal trainer,
go get yourself a barbell in about,
you know, a hundred pounds worth of weights,
meaning rubber plates, and video yourself,
I'll put you in the form for free,
and take videos of yourself using very lightweight,
doing squats and deadlifts in your garage
Where you're not by anybody else since you're not worried about being embarrassed about your form and technique
Let us watch you and give you help on and cue you and teach you virtually how to do a squat and a deadlift better
That one would save the money to save any sort of a bear embarrassment or risk or what you might have to do by asking
Planet fitness people if you can or cannot do something and
Allow it just because there's so much value in learning how to barbell deadlift squat and overhead press
I would you know encourage you to do that and let me try and help you as best I can virtually
So that's what I would like to do that and let me try and help you as best I can virtually. So that's what I would like to do.
But either one of those are okay options. If you don't want to do the barbell at home and have us
virtually help you, then you know, we could send you over a map symmetry and you could follow the.
Jenna, is there a gem that you have as an alternative that would have the actual rack that you could use
and do free weight barbell exercises? And if so, what's the cost difference?
There is. It's a little bit farther and it's great. It's huge. They have an Olympic
room. It's just ginormous. It's like $10 a month at planet fitness and the other places probably around 40 a month.
You know, I would definitely be willing to put in, you do have symmetry I should tell you I'm sorry. I should have told you that I
When I modified and I just did dumbbells. I noticed how off everything was and so I did symmetry
And it just makes sense for me to do the barbells because I and I could be wrong
I just feel like there might be more stability
With that and I wrong there. Yeah, you are. No, no, you're not wrong
With barbells because it's bilateral you can lift more weight
There's value in both so one isn't better than the other
They're just sometimes ones are more appropriate than the other and if you're always doing one and switching to the other one
We'll start to give you some great results. It's definitely beneficial if you learn the skill
of barbell lifting.
And so, you know, I know it's a bit more
of a financial commitment to look at that option
down the street.
If there's a valid trainer, if you do your research
and there's somebody there that's like, you know,
you feel get a good feeling from
or at least shop it for a while,
I would just focus on that.
Like our bench squat, deadlift,
like have somebody really like break down the mechanics
of that with you and just teach it to you for a month
and like commit to that, learn it.
So then you can apply it on your own or, you know,
if, again, the conundrum is that the planet fitness
doesn't really have like the setup for you as easily that way.
So I don't know how that's gonna work
in terms of like you doing that at home with Barbell
or you doing it over a modified version over it,
Planet Fitness, but either way, I think
that the skill of it itself,
maybe there's another option for you down the road,
a different gym that you can find,
but I think the Barbell skill itself is very beneficial.
The reason why I was so adamant about going that direction is because of what you said
when we started this conversation, because you've got a lot of experience already doing
the dumbbell circuit training type of work, I know how beneficial the barbell work is going
to be for you.
If you were coming in completely green and you've never left a way, it's whatsoever, we
could put you on like a map starter or a
bait real basic program like that and you're you're gonna see great change in
results. But if you're trying to break through a plateau or you're looking to
accelerate your results.
New stimulus. Yes, and you've never done barbell lifting like consistently, there's
going to be huge value and upside to what it's going to do as far as changing and shaping and sculpting your body.
And so that I would really be urging you to do. It doesn't mean I can't put together a
good routine that is just dumbbell work or unilateral work, and it doesn't mean we can't get in good shape doing that.
It's just that you because that's not something you do, it's going to be so novel to the body.
You're going to be able to load the bar down the road way more than you've ever done before, and that's going to create
way more opportunity for change.
Yeah, look, it's, if you go to that other gym, you're going to have access to exercises
that are just so valuable.
They're just so effective.
They're incredibly effective.
The most effective, strengthening exercises you could possibly do.
And it's another 30 bucks a month.
You said it's 40 bucks, you're paying 10 now,
so you're paying it to a 30.
Here's what I would do.
If you were my friend, I'd say do both.
Okay, so now you're paying $40 more a month.
It's only 10 bucks a month at Planet Fitness.
And it's not that big of a, I mean, it's not a huge difference.
I don't know your financial situation,
so maybe I'm speaking at a turn here, but okay, 40 bucks a month, so it's not a huge difference. I don't know your financial situation, so maybe I'm speaking at a turn here,
but okay, 40 bucks a month, so it's 10 bucks a week.
You have access now to both gyms,
so you have the really convenient one that's closer.
So when you're not doing the barbell work,
you could skip over there.
And then, hey, I'm gonna go today,
I'm doing the barbell work.
I'll go to the gym that allows the free weight stuff,
but it's just so valuable that,
especially just from hearing you talk,
like if you practice those exercises,
do them right, slowly get good at them,
you're gonna see profound differences in your body.
Just found.
Justin also suggested something that I wanna circle back to,
that like a lot of clients don't know they can do this.
Like when you're buying or paying for a trainer,
if you just go in and say,
train me, they're going to put together whatever they think is best for you. But you could
go down to that gym and do what he said, which is, hey, could I hire somebody and they'll
probably have like packages of training five sessions, 10 sessions, 15 sessions. That's
normally how they sell them. Find one that you feel is in your budget that you're like,
okay, I feel like I'm willing to invest this much on that. And say, hey, could I get five sessions with this trainer and all I want them to do is to teach me
how to squat, deadlift, and over. I just want to practice those three movements with them. I want
somebody who knows what they're doing and that's all I want to do with them. And they just literally,
they spend the entire hour with you teaching you how to do those movements for those five hours,
those five sessions, you're going to get tremendous do those movements for those five hours, those five sessions,
you're gonna get tremendous benefit from that,
tremendous benefit.
So you can do that.
So, you know, and just, until you find someone,
and I tell you what,
if there's a gym that has a Olympic set up,
there's probably some good coaches.
That's probably some great training.
Yeah, that can teach you Olympic type move.
If you can teach Olympic movements,
you can teach a barbell squat.
They're manager will probably point you
in a good direction at that point.
That's a good point.
Good point.
Go straight to that.
When you get into that gym, say, can I speak to the manager and then tell them specifically
what you're looking for, and then they'll put you with the right coach and trainer.
Okay.
Okay.
Great.
So, my second question, maybe it's just a concern, is about FitBits. So I'm currently
wearing a CGM, and so I have it on for about three months, and so I wear my FitBit for the three
months. Well, if I'm working out at the gym or at home or whatever, but I don't get those 10,000 steps, 12,000 steps.
I mean, is it really that big of a deal?
I mean, I'm a mom of three.
I'm running around a lot, but those steps don't add up.
And I remember you guys on an episode talked about if you are a type of person who gets a little bit caught up in getting those steps
in, it's not, maybe it's not the best idea, but I feel like it's almost a half to with
the CGMs just so I can be very precise.
So is it just like a thing to get those 10,000 steps in, or just not really matter, especially if you're
getting exercise in other places.
Yeah, no, there's nothing magical about 10,000 steps.
It's kind of a general role that people give or that we'll talk about.
Just because most people are pretty sedentary, or we don't get up and move a lot, and it's
an easier way actually to coach somebody to move more.
Instead of me saying, hey, go get on the treadmill for 30 minutes and run, or do it. and it's an easier way actually to coach somebody to move more.
Instead of me saying, hey, go get on the treadmill
for 30 minutes and run or do it.
It's like, I could just tell clients,
hey, shoot for 8,000 steps a day.
It's an easy target,
but you just gotta keep in mind that there is a big difference
between a day and let's forget if you worked out or not,
a day that you moved for 10 or 12,000 steps
and a day that you moved for 3,000 steps, that will make a huge difference in the amount of calories that you probably
should consume. That many different, that difference of 5 to 7,000 steps in a day is a pretty
significant difference in calorie output and intake.
Jenna, when you miss the steps, what number do you typically hit at?
Sometimes, um, better question to be, what's your lowest day and what your highest day look like? What number do you typically hit at? Sometimes.
Better question to been, what's your lowest day
and what your highest day look like?
Oh my gosh, okay, we're gonna be completely honest here.
I love it.
It's probably three and my highest day was 19
and that was within one week.
Okay, so your average, just average it out is what I would do.
And also, when it comes to steps,
people think this is silly,
but the way that you hit those steps is,
the, we used to call stupid advice back in the day,
park down the street instead of next to the store,
take the stairs instead of the elevator,
stand up and do something instead of sitting down
and doing something instead of sitting down and doing something.
Those little things throughout the day add up to like 3,000 steps a day.
But if you miss here and there's not that big of a deal, it really isn't.
The strength training is more important.
That lasts, that sticks around with you.
The steps every day doesn't make that huge of a difference if you miss now and again.
Just trying to prompt you to be more active
for the most part.
So just to be consistently active and moving around
and just conscious of when you're sitting down,
when you're relaxing, when you're kind of in those tendencies
of like, Veggie not on TV or whatever to get up,
move around and do that.
To me, that's the most important thing
is just the awareness around it, right?
So over my career, what I've recognized with most of my clients that track their steps,
and this is myself included, on the days that I move the least, I also tend to have the
worst eating behaviors.
Yep.
Because I'm sedentary, I'm probably watching TV, or I'm tired, I don't feel like moving
around, I also tend to make bad food choices.
The days that I'm active and I'm moving around,
I'm so busy, I'm not making bad food choices,
plus I'm burning like crazy.
So to me, that's the big takeaway here.
It's like, just be aware of that.
Be aware of that.
Hey, it's the day where I didn't really move much.
Man, this is the day I probably need to be a little bit
tighter on my choices and be really good about what I choose
to eat on the day.
That's not the day I decide to add the extra,
you know, the glass of wine or snack on the crackers
a little bit here.
Like, those are the days I want to be really tight
with my stuff.
So, to me, that's the most important thing
is when you have a discrepancy of,
you could have a day of 3,000 steps
and you could have a day of 19,000 steps,
it's also be aware of your eating patterns
and behaviors on those days and learn to be mindful of that.
Okay, okay.
Well, thanks you guys so much.
I really appreciate it.
You got it, Jenna.
We'll put you in the forum too.
So if you want to show us your form, we can help you out.
Yes, stay in touch.
All right.
Thank you.
Thank you.
You know, two things come to mind
with this particular question.
One is, I don't know if you guys have done this.
I know you have for sure Adam, where you track your steps, and then you do the like,
I'm going to park at the end of the parking lot. I'm going to walk to the far bathroom. I'm going to take the stairs. It's like three to four thousand steps a day.
Oh, yeah, it's good. It's so much of that.
So all these little things add up, you know, the second thing that really comes to mind is, and I really hate the gym industry for this. And I was a part of this. I remember when this started happening. We have conditioned people to think
that the value of a gym is so low
that $10 a month or $20 a month difference
is like, oh, that gym's so much more expensive.
I guarantee you, like I don't know Jenna, okay?
But I bet you she spends more than that on coffee
or random things.
Everybody does.
So, you know, look at a gym at 40 bucks a month.
Wow, that's so expensive,
because we've conditioned ourselves
to think 10 dollars a month or so.
It's ridiculous.
I think it's less about the dollar amount.
We still just look at gyms as a luxury
and not as like a necessity.
We don't look at it like our PG&E bill.
We don't look at it like our cell phone bill.
We don't look at like our insurance to our car payment.
We look at it as, oh, it's a nice to have.
When in reality, it should be, we, I think all of us would love to see is that people condition
themselves to look at their gym bill, just like they do their PG&E, just like they do
their insurance.
It's like, this is something that is going to keep me a healthy, fit, strong person for
rest of my life.
It's no longer a luxury to have it.
It's a must-have.
And then I think that changing that mindset.
Yeah, and it's not just about checking into the gym, right?
Like that tends to be the thought process.
Like I have a gym member, so I made it today to the gym.
What are you doing the gym?
How effective is the gym?
Like what, how's your setup?
What's your programming look like?
All that stuff, like if you could apply that
in a better place for just like $30 more,
like it's a no-brainer to where you're gonna get like results.
Like that's what I'm in there to do is to get results.
Name one thing that you could spend $40 a month on.
That's $10 a week.
Name one thing you could spend that on that you use,
that will give you as much value for your entire life
as a well-used gym.
You know what?
Along those lines too, what Justin suggested is,
I don't think we say this
enough on this podcast and probably because we didn't do it a lot. Like I wish I wish I never
trying to client wants in my life that came to me and asked for this. Although I would if they did
right they're paying me. So I would give them what they want when it comes. If they said listen
all I want you to do in these five sessions is teach me squat bench overhead
press. That's all I want to practice. I want to be good at those movements. Yeah. Can you
do that in five hours? I mean, I will go, yeah, I could do that, but nobody ever asked
that. And there's so much value in just doing that. Forget the whole, I want to lose 15 pounds
or I want to get like just those movements are so valuable to learn how to do. And she's
very normal. She's that she is the normal.
Like most people are very intimidated.
Hey, I was intimidated as a trainer.
The reason why I didn't deadlift for so many years
is because even as a trainer, I was scared to do it wrong.
So I know if I feel that way as a fucking trainer,
I read the books, I have this person.
I have this person is yeah.
Your average person is the same way.
So I get it, I totally get it.
And you are actually normal to be intimidated
to do a squat and deadlift. But don't let that stop you from learning. And one of the best things you
can do is go, Hey, you know, every once in a while, I go get myself some jewelry or go to a
concert and I spend 500 bucks. So if you go spend 500 bucks every once in a while on yourself and
something, you know, it goes spend that on investing and getting a coach and tell them this is what you want from it
And I promise that the return on that is gonna be insane for the rest of your life
Next caller is Olivia from Pennsylvania Olivia. What's happening? How can we help you?
I'm good. How are you guys?
Good. I'm so excited. Oh my gosh. Okay. So my question
I've read I'm just gonna read it.
I'm paying attention, but I ran at RGB symmetry
and a ball like again, and then I'm in the middle
of a set it again.
And I track all my workouts and I've noticed
that my squat, my deadlift, my rows and my overhead press
have all they gone up since the last time I ran a set it,
but my bench,
like my barbell bench has probably gotten worse. But after I ran symmetry, my dumbbell
bench went up, but my barbell bench still kind of sucks. And so I was wondering if you guys
could help me with that. And then additionally, I feel like all my newbie games are like pretty
maxed out. And I'm left with like, I have a pretty good upper body,
but my lower body is like nothing special.
So since I've like ran all your programs that I have,
I'm like not really sure where to go from here.
Okay, first off, how long have you been working out for?
Now consistently.
I've been lifting for like two years.
Okay, and you followed our programs.
So all those ones you listed would be like a nine months to a year
So for a decent chunk of that time you've been running ours
What are your what are your big lifts at now? What is your squat your deadlift your overhead press?
When I was in phase one of aesthetic recently I was doing like I
Deadlifted like 185 I squatted I think 165 for like three reps each and then
It's good way over at press. I'm doing like
Just the barbell really because that's hard and then my rows are like I think I was doing like 90
Okay, those are all really good. Yeah, I'll put your body with that 20 years old. Yeah, you're tiny too
You're young. How what's your body? Yeah, I'm like 130 pounds. Yeah, you're kicking ass. Yeah, what's your body weight at? 20 years old. Yeah, you're tiny too. You're young. What's your body?
Yeah, I'm like 130 pounds.
Yeah, you're kicking ass.
Yeah, you are.
You're doing really, really good.
Are you like really leaned?
Have you gone into a bulk?
Have you tried bumping your calories?
I mean, I've tried, but I get scared,
and then I don't fully commit to it.
There's the problem.
Yeah, there's our hiccup now.
You've got all your newbie gains from keeping your calories at maintenance, I don't fully commit to it. There's the problem. Yeah, there's our, there's our hiccup. Very common.
You've got all your newbie gains from kind of keeping your calories at maintenance or
at even maybe a deficit sometimes.
And now you're maxed.
Now it's like if you want to continue to build more muscle, you're going to have to
put a feed it.
Yeah, give it a calorie surplus.
Just remember this, what's really cool, when you, when you do that and you do it the
right way by eating good, making good choices, adding protein, and you follow the program, even if the scale went up something which would probably scare the shit out of you 15 pounds, which is crazy probably for your size.
Even if it goes out of that, a good chunk of that is going to be primarily muscle and you can always cut the calories back down.
And when you do, I promise you're going to shred back out.
It's just getting over that mind fuck of,
oh my God, my pants are fitting tighter.
Oh my God, I'm putting weight on.
If you are training consistently,
you're following a mass program,
and the extra calories you're eating
are coming from good places, I promise you,
most of that weight is good weight,
and it's gonna serve you really well
when you come back into a cup.
You wrote in your question
that you wanna be a muscle mommy.
Is that legit what you want?
You want new term here?
Yeah, you really want that?
Yeah, I mean, I like,
I used to be like bigger like I was chubbier
and then I got like, now I'm like small
and you know, body just more and feel like
you're never happy.
So now that I'm so small, I'm like, I wanna be huge, you know?
Yeah.
Okay, so I like it.
I love it.
All right, so how has your body weight changed since you've started lifting?
Has it changed at all?
Yeah, I was like 160 at my heaviest, which is when I started it, now I'm like 130.
Wow.
Do you know what your body fat percentage is?
My chance?
I have no idea.
It's probably like, I mean, if I'm just comparing myself like pictures, like low 20s.
You're kicking ass.
You need to bump your calories.
So look, you've probably built a significant
a decent amount of muscle in that period of time,
which means now your caloric requirements are higher.
So you're not gonna build anymore
unless you increase your calories.
So now you're probably, what you were eating before
was enough to build,
but now what you're eating is just enough
to keep what you have
and not to build. So you got to go on a bulk. You mentioned body dysborphia and most of us
can relate to that. So I think you should do maps power lift. I think you should focus
on getting stronger. I think you should bump your calories by like 400 calories a day. Make
sure you hit your body weight and protein. So if you're 130 pounds, I would aim for 120 to 130 grams of protein a day.
Whatever your calories are at, bump them by 300 to 400.
Follow mass power lift. Don't weigh yourself. Don't worry about your weight on the scale.
Just get strong. See how strong you can get. And you are going to trip yourself out.
Yeah. Awesome. The results are good. The fact that you came from 160 down to
one three, I guarantee you one, you'll never get back
that you will not get up to 160 by doing it this way,
by what we're talking about.
And you're gonna be eating more food
than you ever met in your life.
It's gonna blow your mind if you can do it.
And you're gonna get strong as hell.
And you're gonna be a muscle mommy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I did just have like, I'm a little worried
because I think in my fear of like getting like fat again
I was like overeating protein. I'm like 130 pounds like I said, but I'm hitting like
145 150 grams of protein a day. So like is it okay if I
It in my like increasing my calories if I dropped a protein a little bit
You can keep your protein just increase your carbs or your fats, and that's not a bad amount over. It's okay. You're fine. You're totally fine. Yeah. Especially if you feel good,
if you can eat that much protein, it doesn't mess up your digestion and you feel good on that,
you're fine. Is that from food or protein shakes? Mostly food. Well, I used to be vegetarian. So when
I found you guys, I was vegetarian, and then you guys pretty much convinced me that that was stupid,
because I wasn't doing it for like the animals, you know.
I was just like restrictive and whatnot.
So yeah, now what's mostly from food?
Olivia, how different do you feel now
that you've been lifting and eating protein and all that stuff?
I mean, I'm like a totally different person.
I feel very different, like I feel really good now.
Awesome.
So, right.
Yeah, how many calories are you eating a day right now?
I'm at like 2000.
What? Okay, so I knew you were lifting.
Are you doing cardio?
Are you doing anything else?
I've recently in the past like two weeks.
I'm like really trying to stop with the cardio.
So I'm just walking.
Okay. And what were you doing before for cardio?
I was doing like the stairmaster like four or five times a week.
Oh, you know what?
Just dropping the, just dropping the cardio,
you're probably gonna see some strength gains.
That alone.
I might bump my calories a little less than what South said.
Yeah, now that I know that you start calories.
Yeah, go up 200 calories.
Do what you're doing with the cardio, don't do it.
Just do the walking and do maps power lift.
We'll send that to you if you don't have it.
And then, yeah, thank you.
And watch what happens. I'm gonna throw you in the form too. I wanna hear updates. So we're gonna to you if you don't have it. And then, yeah. Thank you. And watch what happens.
I'm gonna throw you in the form too.
I wanna hear updates.
So we're gonna put you in the form and keep us posted, okay?
Okay, thank you so much.
All right, you got it.
You're killing it.
Thanks for calling.
Bye-bye.
Oh my God, I love her.
Yeah, I love it when we get 20 years old.
Yeah, we get kids this age,
because we just literally saved her from 10 years of garbage
that you end up going through when you don't know what you're doing and you follow crappy advice online.
Oh, yeah.
That makes me feel so.
It makes me feel so good that a bunch of old,
funny,
deadies like us can still make a connection to somebody impacts them.
Yeah, she's 20 years younger and us, right?
It's really tough to make a connection to 23, 24 years younger.
Yeah.
Almost 50 years younger for some of us.
So you know, making a connection to somebody like that
and even be able to shift her mindset
even around the way she was eating and now training
and then just, oh man, what a cool.
Yeah, she's doing a great job
and she's just not eating enough.
Oh, dude, she,
2000 calories at her body weight is great.
So she's already, I mean, she's built muscles.
She's moving in the right direction.
Well, that's okay. That's a good thing to say right now. Okay, she's already, I mean, she's built muscles. She's moving in the right direction. Well, that's okay.
That's a good thing to say right now.
Okay, she's perfect right now.
Like, you don't have to do anything where you're eating
a good amount of calories.
She is already really strong.
She's 30 pounds lighter.
She ever been.
She feels better.
Like, everything's going well.
But, and I think that's important
that people understand that.
Like, when we answer questions like that,
she has a very specific goal.
I want to be a muscle one.
I want to build more muscle. Like,, well, then this is what we do.
But this person is in a incredibly healthy,
good place right now. I could get her to 26, 27.
Oh, God, yes.
Within a six month. Oh, yes.
No problem. Sooner or not. Sooner or not. I think just her bumping right now,
it's switching to that program without any fat gain or minimal.
Yes. Yes.
Our next caller is Matt from Colorado.
Matt, what's happening, man?
How can we help you?
Hey, guys, thank you so much for having me on.
I really appreciate it.
You guys.
Just like everybody else, I want to thank you guys for all the great content.
You put out all the great information.
It's really helped me out.
And also your podcast has, by far, the best audio of any podcast I listen to.
I never have any problems
hearing any of you or your guests or that's not the case on most podcasts so I really appreciate
that. Shout out to Doug. Thanks Doug. Let's hear it, Matt.
Two questions, it kind of has two parts to it.
It's about maps 15.
I really enjoy that style of training.
Work's best with my schedule.
I feel good on it.
I really enjoy it.
I've run it as written twice now.
I know you guys say that shorter workouts like that
with the same volume as less workouts done longer
is about the same, but I've also noticed
that when collars call in and they have a lot of stress
in their life, like new parents or a physical job
or med school and stuff like that,
math 15s kind of your go-to for people that need
to kind of lighten things up a little bit.
So it's just got me wondering if I can expect
to get as good a progress on that kind of style of training
long-term as I would some of your other programs.
Or is that kind of more of a good program style
for maintaining when you have additional outside stressors.
Yeah, that's a really good question.
So, okay, so total volume wise,
mass 15 still has less volume than many of our other
programs, okay.
So it would have the same amount of volume as let's say,
like a two day a week, I would say full body routine
is probably what it would equate to. But like even MAP say like a two day a week, I would say full body routine is probably what it would equate to.
But like even MAP's endabolic two days a week with trigger sessions has a little more volume,
performance aesthetic, strong split, those have more volume.
So it's still a little less volume.
Now, does that mean you can't continue progressing?
No, you could, I mean, I hit a PR in deadlift that I haven't been able to touch for years
following that
kind of format.
You could also modify it by adding volume to those days.
So you could turn maps 15 into maps 30 if you wanted.
Now, the main reason why we recommend it to people with like crazy schedules and stuff
is the time.
And then the second reason is when you compare volume to volume, I strongly believe that
even if the volume is equated, it's still less stress on the body because there seems
to be this cumulative stress that builds when you do a long workout that you don't necessarily
get with shorter, more frequent workouts.
So like imagine this, Imagine walking for two hours.
Now imagine walking for 20 minutes,
but over a course of a bunch of days
that comes out to two hours.
Which one is probably gonna stress the body more,
probably that one, two hour workout
because of the cumulative kind of stress.
So even when volume and frequency is equated,
and look, we've experimented with this,
I've done these all day workouts where I'll do,
like just so many sets in a day
that I would never be able to do in a workout,
but the reason what I did was I did,
you know, so many sets every other hour,
so I was like totally split up throughout the whole day.
And it just doesn't beat up my body,
like doing it all at once.
So it's, I know the studies show that it's equated.
And I would say for the most part, that's true,
but not necessarily, okay. But for someone someone like you if you want to continue progressing
right get stronger in the exercises and I progressively overloading and then
if you need to add volume if you have the time it could go you can add a set or
add an exercise and now you're doing 25 or 30 minute workouts instead of 15
minute workouts you could also do stuff like this. You could throw a pull up bar in your doorway
and every other day or every once in a while
when you pass by it, you hop up there
and you get 15, 20 reps real quick.
So there's ways to add volume into your week.
It doesn't make it feel like you're adding a workout in there
or extending the workout double or whatever like that.
Just say, hey, you know what, I'm gonna do every time
I walk by that pull up bar,
I'm gonna jump up there and grab 10 pull ups or every
time I get up, I'm just going to start the day with 15 to 20 push ups.
There's a lot of glue or you can do like what we have.
Man, like close by.
Like we have in maps and a ball like trigger sessions, you could just have some bands.
I got at my house, I have bands that are always attached to a doorway on a closet.
And sometimes when I'm really trying to, you know, I got more time,
I'm trying to increase volume and just frequency.
I'll just get over there and do two or three sets
of some chest flies and some rows real quick
and then move about my day.
So there's a lot of ways that you can still
kind of follow the format of 15
because it works so well.
Because that's another thing too, it's important.
Like you mentioned that it works really well for your life.
That's so important.
It's working well with your schedule. You feel good doing it. And so I don't like to fuck that, it works really well for your life. That's so important. It's working well with your schedule.
You feel good doing it, and so I don't like to fuck that up.
So if you like that, stick with that,
and then if you have an extra 10-15 minutes on certain days,
go ahead and either one, add some sets like Sousaid,
or just jump down and get some pushups or pullups
and add volume that way,
and you'll see some strength and development come
from just doing that.
How's your progress been on Math 15 so far?
Good, so the first time I ran through it,
I saw some strength gains right now.
I'm about two months into a cut,
so I'm not really seeing a lot of strength gains,
or maintaining well on it.
Oh, that's not bad maintaining on a cut.
Are you doing the barbell version
or the suspension trainer version?
I did the barbell version both times.
Oh, good.
Excellent.
And so that kind of runs into my second part of the question.
Like I said, I've run through it twice.
Verde is written.
And so I'm kind of looking for a little more variety.
So I kind of rewrote it by adapting workouts
from your other maps programs to fit that schedule.
So I have like a map strong 15
and a maps performance 15.
Love that.
Oh, you just gave us a great idea.
Yeah, man.
Okay, I'd like to do it now.
Right now I'm doing a version of all the other ones.
Yeah, I'm right now I'm doing kettlebell for aesthetics.
So I just took the three workouts, cut them in half,
and doing each of those is my six.
And I kind of add a little bit to
and make them like 20 to 30 minutes each.
So is that advisable?
You're doing it.
You're doing it totally feasible.
Pro, perfect.
That's perfect.
I mean, this is literally like when we built these,
this was the intent was doing our best that we could to build programs that really fit people's lifestyles
Recognizing that most people should after they run them a few times start to modify and adapt to their life
And you're doing a perfect job of that. Yeah, and we picked those initial exercises
They were you're gonna maximize your effort the most in terms of like you know move the needle almost so
Yeah, as you go you've already run through all that.
Like it's totally a great idea to add a bit of a variety
in there from other programs.
And then, you know, kind of what Adam was talking about
in terms of like just having other items around your house
and like work and, you know, you just get in some reps,
like just randomly throughout the day,
totally enhances that by adding volume just like in a way that's not
quite as structured and it's something that will like fit well with that kind of mentality. So I think
you're on point. Yeah, that's something else I did recently. I just kind of started doing like a
anabolic trigger session with some bands in the evening and just trying to add a little more volume.
Right. You're on it, dude. Yeah, good. You're on it. You're a it, dude. Yeah, good. You're on it.
You're deal, man.
Yeah, yeah.
You guys have any plans to run any more match 15 style programs?
We actually talked about exactly what you're doing.
Yeah, that's funny, which is actually modifying every program
that there's like a 15, 20 minute version of all of them.
So you're kind of doing what we plan to do with this, man.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Right on.
Love it, man.
It's your workout snack.
Thank you guys.
All right, brother. Thank you
Thanks for your time. I had a guy who used to work for me who was he was trying to get heat for whatever
Reason you want to do a hundred pushups at one time and all he did was every prison and I went to prison
All he did was every hour or every other hour. It wasn't always perfect
He would just get down the floor. Yeah, and do 20 push-ups. And he could do 15 to 20 easily.
It wasn't like a workout.
And he got to 100 push-ups, so he never practiced.
Quick, 100 push-ups.
Yeah.
He never practiced doing 100.
He just did that all day long.
Yeah.
It really is different.
I mean, he's a whole nother monster man.
It's a whole nother monster, and it doesn't beat you up the same.
So I know that we talk about the equating the volume,
but there's more to it.
I wish I understood that as a young trainer,
like the value of like the little stuff like that,
you know, as a young kid, I just looked at that and went like,
oh, that's worse.
I'm not sweating, I'm not burning, I'm not so warm.
So it's not such a stupid way to look at it.
And it's like, you had a suspension trainer hang it from a tree
or somewhere in your house, put the rubber bands up,
somewhere like that, and get in the habit of just when you walk
by taking one set of it. You do that and you're consistent with doing
so like that, you will see a huge difference.
You will.
Our next caller is Samantha from Connecticut.
Hi Samantha.
How can we help you?
Hi.
Nice to meet you guys.
Hello.
Hello.
Nice to meet you too.
So just a little context for my question is, so I basically was working with a coach
about a year and a half ago and she was having me do, she wanted me to lose, I'm about 30%
body fat, so she wanted me to do a lot of cardio to get that down. And I knew that wasn't right
because I know strength training is the best thing to do. However, for a little bit I'm like,
let's just trust the process. So that's what I was doing and the scale wasn't, it was moving a little,
but on days where it would, or weeks when it would plateau, she would say, well, you know, how many
calories are you burning? And I'm like, well, my watch said like 300. And she's like, nope,
that's not enough. You need to be doing 500. And so I guess that I kind of had that mentality
in my mind since then of like, oh, okay,
I don't know what more I have to do cardio wise
to get there, but like, okay, so long story short,
that didn't work out, I didn't feel like
she was a right fit for me.
So now here I am working on my own.
I'm doing just strength training,
I kind of split it up with push pull leg days.
But I guess that thing is still on my mind where I'll do a great workout.
I'll do strength training. I feel like I gave it my all. You know I'm going up and wait.
But I look at my watch when I'm done and the calories say like 200 or like 98.
And I'm like, what like it makes me second guess like am I doing the right thing? Am I doing enough?
Are these things just not accurate?
So I guess that's kind of my question is about that.
The answer is you hired a terrible trainer.
That's the, I'm not serious.
Like this, this means matters nothing.
I would not want you to give a shit about one day
your leg session was 350 calories.
Another day it was 200 calories.
Another day it was five, I don't even care.
You know what
Matt? I mean it's good to move because it's good for you but the calorie burn
model of all of this is terrible game. It's false. In fact a huge study just came out.
Huge study just can it's making waves right now and it shows that the the amount of movement that
we do doesn't really change the amount of calories that we burn because the body actually adapts quite quickly.
And that is supports studies that were done
on modern hunter gathers were so active in comparison
to Western couch potatoes who still don't burn.
That many more calories.
The body simply adapts when you're just burning calories.
Now if you kind of do a sideways approach
and say, okay, well, I'm telling
my body it needs muscle, the result of which is a faster metabolism, the result of which
is burning more calories, well, then you can significantly impact that. So don't worry
too much about calories burned. It's good to be active. So move, it's healthy for you
to move. That's a fact. But in terms of how many calories you're burning because of movement,
don't even worry about that.
Just worry about strength, building muscle,
am I eating enough protein?
Am I eating it away that's supporting all of that?
And then start to look at calories
and how to manipulate that.
And then you'll get there,
and not only will you get there,
but you'll do it in a sustainable way.
Also keep in mind this,
so this is what a good trainer should communicate to you.
You could run on a treadmill
as hard as you can for an hour and say you burn 500 calories. But as soon as you get done
on that treadmill, your body is now done burning extra calories. Maybe for the next 30 minutes,
the heart rate comes down, so it would make the case for. So after that, you're not getting any
extra benefit from that 500 calorie burden that when you strain train and only burn 200 to 550 calories
in your leg workout, you
not only burn that 250 calories, but then for the next like 48 to 72 hours, your body
is having to utilize more energy to repair the muscle damage and then in addition to that
adapt and build muscle.
And the amount of calories that takes up is far more than what the calorie burn in that
one hour is.
In addition to the extra benefit that Sal said,
you also now add more muscle,
which then requires more calories to sustain on your body,
which means you sped up your metabolism.
So when you lift weights,
you're getting like this three-pronged benefit from it.
When you run on the treadmill,
you get that one benefit while you run, that's it.
It's over.
So far better for you to focus on building muscle,
getting stronger, don't worry about the arbitrary numbers
of 200 to 300 or 500 in a calorie burn.
Eat your protein and take,
make sure you're hitting what you need to hit on a regular basis,
try and get strong in the gym.
Nothing is gonna lean you out better than doing that.
You're investing in the long term,
you're not just spending your money right now to get quick results.
So, building muscle is going to take you so much further
and just keeping that mentality and just focused on that.
What kind of gym was it, the trainer from?
So, I actually went to high school with her.
So, she wasn't technically in a gym.
But, the only reason why I felt good about it at the time
was I was like, oh, I know this person.
Yeah.
She looks strong.
Yeah.
Sorry.
I didn't mean to insult your friend.
No, no, okay.
Look, just to kind of hammer this home, okay, think of it this way.
If we just burn more calories, the more that we moved, we wouldn't be here as a species.
I mean, think about 100,000 years ago, 50,000 years ago, having to hunt and gather, and you can't
just sit around and watch TV or whatever, and you're moving all the time.
And calories are really hard to come by in nature before the agricultural revolution,
where we figured out how to plant things and put them in a place, and then of course,
have markets and grocery stores. Finding calories every day, that was a huge hurdle.
It makes no sense if our bodies just burn tons of calories all the time because we're moving
all the time and they don't adapt in a way to become more efficient.
It just doesn't work.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
Yeah, I did hear an episode a couple months ago of a girl who had a similar situation to
me and you told her to
kind of go back up and eat at maintenance and come back down.
And so, I did try to do that, but I worry maybe I wasn't at maintenance for long enough
because now I'm in a cut and nothing's happening.
So, I'm like, I don't know if I did it wrong.
Samantha, what are your calories at in a cut?
So, right now, I'm using this app that kind of tells me like each week
I don't know if you've ever heard of an app like this, but each week it tells you kind of like what to do
So right now I'm down to about 1700
Okay, and that's your and that's your cut
Yeah, and nothing's happening
Not really. Yeah, I would try to go do a reverse diet build some muscle get to the point where you can cut from a higher place
go do a reverse diet, build some muscle, get to the point where you can cut from a higher place
and then try doing a cut. But spend a decent amount of time in the building phase. Don't jump to the cut too soon. Otherwise, you may end up in a situation where you got to bring your calories way
down and then it's not a sustainable place. Don't do a cut until you start to see yourself get
stronger in some of the big lifts. That's a good way to do it. Just because you've been running in a maintenance or a surplus for a couple of weeks, if you haven't done it long enough to see yourself get stronger in some of the big lifts. That's a good, a good way to do it. Like so just because you've been running in a maintenance or a surplus for a
couple of weeks, if you haven't done it long enough to see your bench, your
squat, your deadlift, your, you haven't seen any of those lifts get better and you
get stronger.
Don't go back the other way.
Yeah, until you see that.
So wait till that happens and then, and then you can go the other side.
You said your body fat was 30% how did you test that?
So at my gym, I don't know exactly what it it's called but you hold it out in front of you
and put your hands on the thing.
Yeah that's electronic.
I'm like cheating.
Okay I mean that's super consistent.
I did have a scale but I don't think that that's accurate at all because it tells me
I'm an athlete and I don't think I'm an athlete yet.
So I was like I don't think that's right. Do this, do this, use strength, so strength, body weight, and circumference measurements.
Okay.
Use those three things, don't focus on just one, because your weight may go up, but then
you may notice on circumference measurements, things are moving like, wow, my butt grew
but my waist shrink.
Okay, it looks like I built muscle.
Use those three things, you can use electronic impedance too.
Just make sure you do it at the same time each time,
same time a day, similar amount of water and food,
same time during your cycle,
because they can be thrown off quite a bit
by different factors.
Okay, awesome.
All right.
It's great.
Thank you guys.
You got it.
All right.
Yeah, that big study that came out, it's so funny, right?
So people are taking it and running with it
in the wrong direction.
So I'm seeing all these posts now that are saying,
literally, these are the idiots that like,
you know, working out as toxic and, you know,
fat phobia, they're saying literally,
see, working out is a waste of time.
Yeah, just give up.
It's like, oh God, that's not it.
All of this study said, first of all exercise, even if you don't lose weight,
just exercising has significant impacts,
positive ones on your health, both physical and mental.
So even if you don't lose a pound,
just moving more is so profound
in terms of improving your health.
But then number two, it doesn't address
what we talk about, which is increasing lean body mass.
Getting your metabolism to speed up.
I know we have so much work to do still
when trainers and coaches are still telling people
to do stuff like this, it's crazy.
And so like the fact that you are training people
and you're teaching like this is like blows my mind, you know?
That's very entry level thinking.
That's it. Look, if you like, mind pump,
you'll love our workouts that we give away
every single week.
Go to mind pump media on Instagram love our workouts that we give away every single week. Go to Mind Pumped Media on Instagram
for less than $5 a month.
You can get a workout every single week set up for you.
You can also find all of us on Instagram.
So Justin is at Mind Pumped Justin.
I'm at Mind Pumped, the Stefano,
and Adam is at Mind Pumped Adam.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pumped.
If your goal is to build and shape your body,
dramatically improve your health and energy,
and maximize your body, dramatically improve your health and energy, and maximize your
overall performance, check out our discounted RGB Superbundle at MindPumpMedia.com.
The RGB Superbundle includes maps and a ballad, maps performance, and maps aesthetic.
Nine months of phased, expert exercise programming designed by Sal, Adam, and Justin to systematically
transform the way your body
looks, feels and performs.
With detailed workout blueprints in over 200 videos, the RGB Superbundle is like having
Sal Adam and Justin as your own personal trainer's butt at a fraction of the price.
The RGB Superbundle has a full 30-day money bag guarantee and you can get it now plus
other valuable free resources at MindPumpMedia.com.
If you enjoy this show, please share the love by leaving us a five-star rating and review
on iTunes and by introducing MindPump to your friends and family.
We thank you for your support and until next time, this is MindPump.
And until next time, this is Mindbomb.