Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2248: The Truth About High Intensity Training, the Benefits of the Meat & Fruit Diet, the Best Time to Drink Water & More
Episode Date: January 12, 2024In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer four Pump Head questions drawn from last Sunday’s Quah post on the @mindpumpmedia Instagram page. Mind Pump Fit Tip: Get the type of bo...dy you want for overall health in the new year. (1:50) The psychology of exhaustion. (25:25) A losing business strategy vs. brilliant publicity stunt. (28:32) Comedy gold. (31:52) Why does a company have to be everything? (35:13) How the MLM model is distasteful. (37:50) Beating Tetris. (49:29) Billionaire bunkers. (51:08) The importance and value of sodium for health-conscious individuals. (57:21) Shout out to Mind Pump’s 3-Day Trainer Series! (59:08) #Quah question #1 - In Episode 2239, you discussed the timing of Protein consumption. Do the same principles apply to water hydration? I typically hit my water intake goals by consuming half a gallon before noon. Is that adequate for hydration if I’m only drinking a few cups for the rest of the day? (59:48) #Quah question #2 - Is there much evidence for the benefits of the meat and fruit diet? Especially now considering the new research on max protein utilization. Have any of you guys ever tried it? (1:04:51) #Quah question #3 - For people just getting started like myself, what makes MAPS so effective? How do we understand when to change it up? I’d like to know the science of why it works. (1:09:11) #Quah question #4 - What's your guy's opinion on high-intensity training like how Mike Mentzer preached and then how Dorian Yates perfected it? (1:16:22) Related Links/Products Mentioned Personal Trainer 3-Day Training – Starting Jan. 15, 2024 For a limited time only, Mind Pump listeners get a free LMNT Sample Pack with any purchase: Visit DrinkLMNT.com/MindPump January Promotion: New Year's Resolutions Special Offers!! New to Weightlifting Bundle | Body Transformation Bundle | New Year Extreme Intensity Bundle Body | Transformation Bundle 2.0 Mind Pump #1835: Why Resistance Training Is The Best Form Of Exercise For Fat Loss And Overall Health Mind Pump #2197: Five Positive Changes In The Fitness Industry Mind Pump #2105: How To Become A Muscle Mommy The Complete Book of Running Mind Pump #2140: How To Choose The Best Gym For You Mind Pump #2232: Age-Proof Your Muscles, Bones & Brain With Dr. Gabrielle Lyon Report Shows A Decade of Growth for Health Clubs, Gyms, & Studios Southwest Plus-Size Policy Offers up to a Full Row for Free Watch Dave Chappelle: The Dreamer | Netflix Official Site Lululemon Founder Sparks Backlash After Declaring Brand Is 'Not for Everybody,' Doesn't Want 'Certain Customers' Who WON? Infiltering An MLM SCAM: Coffeezilla VS Patrick Bet David (Valuetainment) PHP Insurance! 13-year-old boy becomes first person to beat original Tetris Mind Pump #1612: Everything You Need To Know About Sets, Reps & Rest Periods Mind Pump #1827: The 3 Best Rep Ranges To Build Muscle & Burn Fat Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Dr. Gabrielle Lyon (@drgabriellelyon) Instagram Dave Chappelle (@davechappelle) Instagram Shane Gillis (@shanemgillis) Instagram Matt Rife (@mattrife) Instagram  Patrick Bet-David (@patrickbetdavid) Instagram Layne Norton, Ph.D. (@biolayne) Instagram Â
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
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This is Mind Pump, right in today's episode.
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All right, it's January and a lot of you are just getting started on your fitness journey or maybe you're restarting
We'll check this out. What kind of body do you want? Do you want a soft body without much muscle?
Flabby
hormone imbalances, slower metabolism, do tons of cardio.
If you want a body that's hard, chiseled, sculpted, a faster metabolism and hormones that
are balanced, lift weights, strength training is superior in a head to head competition when
it comes to aesthetics and even overall health.
Now I am oversimplifying, but if you're only going to pick one, make a string training. What if you're hard and also a little soft? Yeah, I mean, yeah. Huh?
I don't know where to go with that. Pass me. And the other half. It's gonna be huggable,
but also hard. You know, every, every gym owner or anybody who's worked in gyms for years,
knows this. You can see this. You, I could could I could tell by somebody let's say you have two people that come in they're both
fat both are fit both are both are in good shape good diet good diet slow body fat
percentage and I 100% can see and they can be like they said same way they can look very very
similar in size and weight or what I thought. But it's very obvious to which
one has achieved that body through doing lots of cardio versus the person who's achieved
it through strength training. It's like they look completely different.
It's told, I remember as an early trainer, I mean, I thought for a long time, I thought
the way to get lean was cardio, the way to build muscle and strength was to lift weights.
This is what we all thought in those days.
And, you know, when I started to work in a gym, you know, you're there a lot, right?
Especially I was there all all the time.
I loved it.
So I was there, you know, seven a.m. I'd leave it nine p.m. six, seven days a week.
And you just start to see patterns.
And I noticed these like regular members that would come in that would be on cardio.
And I mean regular like clockworkwork, 6am, same people
on the treadmill or on the elliptical,
four or five days a week,
these were the consistent maniacs.
And then I saw the consistent people
that would lift weights, both men and women.
And it started to become very obvious to me.
I'd see these, we call them cardio bunnies back then.
And they were typically women,
but you'd see this with guys too,
where they would just hop on cardio,
they would do an hour and an half.
Some of these people were in there running straight
for an hour, five days a week.
And their bodies looked,
like their body fat percentage wasn't that great,
they kind of looked flabby,
they had great stamina.
Obviously, they were really good at building stamina.
And then the strength training crowd looked so different.
They were chiseled.
They had good shape and structure, better posture.
They looked, and I dare I say younger,
because there were a lot of these people
wearing their 40 plus, 50, a lot of them.
They looked younger.
And this became very obvious.
The longer I worked in gyms,
the more I could see the difference in training.
Now of course, you have to compare apples to apples.
Like, can you be fat and lift weights?
Can you be lean and do career?
Absolutely.
So all things being equal though,
the strength training promotes lean body mass
and burns body fat.
Cardio promotes stamina.
Actually also can promote the reduction
of lean body mass to become,
so that you could become more efficient with calories.
There was a recent study that came out that compared, I've already mentioned this twice,
but it's a crazy study.
They compared strength training to cardio, to cardio and strength training.
So they actually made three comparisons.
It was strength training, alone, cardio alone, and then cardio plus strength training.
Strength training, burn the most body fat and build muscle. Cardio alone,
lost muscle and some body fat. Cardio put strength training, lost body fat and lost less muscle
than the cardio alone, but it didn't build muscle like the strength training.
It's interesting, and I'm glad a study like that was conducted, but we didn't need that.
We saw that first time. You're talking about, and I really do see that as we didn't need that. Like we saw that first time. Like you're talking about, like in, and I really do see that as like,
we don't put enough weight and value in just being
in the gym environment and being able to see
how all these methods play out.
Like this literally is right in front of us.
I know it's anecdote and I know it's like,
doesn't hold that like high scientific standard,
but it's just, that's why I've always had,
I've always had an issue
with like some of these isolated studies that like really try to like pinpoint one of
those like factors of like, you know, cardio versus lifting weights. It's like, well,
let's see how this plays out long term and you can see this a lot with all the members
right in front of you.
Yeah, I mean, we didn't need that, but the general, I mean, the general public, yeah,
like we, we knew better and so with that, but I was gonna ask, what do you think you guys has led?
So we obviously saw that, right?
We saw tons of these cardio bodies
and we're probably a higher percentage of people
than the strength training bodies, right?
What do you think the major contributor or factor to that is?
Like why?
I know it's multi-faceted.
I know it's not just one reason why that is,
but what do you think are like the major contributors
to what caused that?
Do you think it's just purely uninformed?
Do you think?
Why more people?
Why more of it?
Yeah, because it made a good point right now.
It's like, let's just look at, we don don't need a study look at it over a year's time
It's very obvious. Okay, if it's very obvious and we didn't even need a study do that why
Why did so many people go that how was how was fitness portrayed a fit healthy body? How is that portrayed in media?
Hmm. It's not lifting weights. Yeah, so you're going the direction that I think yeah, I think it's a cultural
100% yes 100% it was it's a cardio is what you do to be fit and lean and healthy and it's
been promoted that way. The only time you see strength training in media was for meatheads
or extreme steroid bodies or bodybuilders or whatever. It was never like the kind of like
especially for women by the way, the kind of body that women want, fit, lean, sculpted, nice glutes, hamstrings, like not overly masculine, whatever.
That's the body you achieve with strength training.
That's the body they display on media that they attribute to cardio.
They'll show a body like that on a movie, and it's the woman running long distance.
And that's what she, that's, oh, that's why she's looking.
I think initially too, in gyms, like was sort of that subculture within the gym where
it was like the crazy meathead guys only in the way you're in.
And so there was a little bit of that idea that like, well, this is just for them.
I'm trying to just be healthy and do things that promote health.
And I think that walking and running and reducing calories and things like that were ideas
that were promoted culturally that are healthy in comparison to these crazy, they're taking
drugs and they're like all football players and all bodybuilders.
It does feel like there's been a major culture shift.
Huge.
I mean, the fact that we, it wasn't even,
but a few months ago, heard the term muscle mommy
for the first time, you know.
And heard it multiple times in one day.
It was just like, oh wow, this is interesting.
Like this is not something that I'm used to hearing
from clients that are inquiring about getting in shape
or losing weight, like that, oh, I want to look
like a muscle mommy.
Like you never heard that before.
Like, in fact, I remember clients actually like being like,
no, I don't want muscle arms.
Yeah, afraid.
Yeah, afraid of the point.
I don't want muscle arms.
I just, I want them to look, believe it or not,
thin and skinny.
People don't even realize how much it's already changed.
I mean, when I was in gyms in the late 90s, early 2000s,
I would actually get men that would say that.
No, no, no, I don't want lift weights.
I don't want to get too big.
I would hear that on lap.
Whoa, whoa, whoa.
Okay, buddy.
No, I'm not, I'm not, I don't want to look like a bodybuilder.
Listen, bro, you're not going to look like a bodybuilder.
Go lift weights all you want, but it's definitely cultural.
Now, culture media really plays a big role in what people believe to be true.
And the whole cardio revolution, I mean, it's really clear what started that.
I mean, you had this kind of perfect storm, right?
You had we need a documentary.
You had that book.
What was that book?
I always mentioned it.
I was running, not running.
No, it was the born to run.
No, it wasn't born to one.
It was like the running.
I don't remember.
Anyway, it's got a new revolution. Yeah, you'll find it. The fix was his name, I think. Yeah, look it up. It was like the running. Yeah, let me look at it. Anyway, it's got a running revolution.
Yeah, you'll find it.
You'll find it. It's a fix, which is his name, I think.
Yeah, look it up. It was 1970 something, right?
And it was a picture. It's like a red running shoe and a foot.
The complete book of running.
Thank you.
James Fakes.
That book became the best seller.
At the same time, one of the biggest cultural icons of a movie
was released, Rocky.
And what does he do?
He runs, and that just inspired everybody.
And you had this running revolution.
Marathons exploded, if you look up the history of this,
like Marathons exploded, running shoes exploded.
It wasn't just people in LA that were running,
all of a sudden people were running all over the country.
You think Rocky really played that big of a role?
Huge.
You don't think so?
I don't know, I just think that you find a way
to tie everything to Rocky.
I do, but this part's true. I think think that you find a way to tie everything to rock I do but this part true
I did great
Your romance movie in the world that was the greatest running movie for all time man
What else bro?
First of all greatest act movie greatest love story and now it's greatest running movie ever made Doug look up look up
Rockies influence on the on the running
You could put up running
reference. This doesn't count if it's an article you wrote.
We got to throw in the drinking like rock.
Acrosser does that, sites all their own articles.
I know.
You're sure to. We'll make our own study.
Yeah.
According to me. No, so, no, I did a lot of reading about this. And if you look at the
popularity of like running shoes and just culturally it kind of exploded. Strength training is having that movement now. Strength training, you
know, you had muscle beach movies in the 60s, which literally depicted people who lift their
weights as idiots. Like, not only idiots, narcissistic body obsessed idiots. You ever watch those old
movies? Have you ever seen them? Literally, it shows them flexing,
oiling themselves up, like,
bondering idiots.
And then looking in the mirror,
and looking at each other,
it was almost like a,
it was hilarious.
There was that,
and then pumping iron,
which is like, it's pro body balance,
as extreme as you can get.
And that was it.
So there was no,
and then in the 80s,
what was it?
Arnold,
Sylvester Stallone,
you know,
and you know,
those are extreme bodies.
So, and that might have got some guys that left way do for me, but it wasn't the, you know, the
cultural shift that strength training needed.
And now, luckily, we have studied them.
Andrew Duck, and you guys, I'd love to see the stats on Jim attendance the last decade.
Like, what is Jim attendance look like in the last 10 years?
Yeah.
Are we trending up or are we maintaining? Well, is it like what we see in our business where it's like like in the last 10 years. Yeah. Are we trending up or are we maintaining?
Is it like what we see in our business
where it's like you kind of find this place
where you're hovering and as many people
are falling off or coming back on,
is it, are we just kind of maintaining
the amount of people?
What do you think?
What do you guys think?
I think it's gone up.
Yeah, Jim membership's gone up.
I think it has.
But that's not Jim attendance. Yeah, so I don't know about attendance.
But memberships are gone up.
So you know why members sell you more people?
But they've made it also really inexpensive.
I mean, I mean, you could make what's it called?
What's the purple one?
What's it?
Plata fitness.
Plata fitness is damn near responsible for that by themselves.
Listen, in 1998, I think when I really started in the gym,
I worked at a 24-hour fitness.
At the time, they had 74 locations.
They had just merged with Ray Wilson's family fitness.
So they weren't 400 locations.
So 70-something locations is a lot.
You could, the all club, and remember, it's 1998,
not control for inflation, I'm giving you the 1998 dollars.
If you bought an all club membership,
24-hour fitness, I remember it, like it was yesterday,
because I sold them, it was $249 to join,
a $49 processing fee, $45 a month.
That was 1998.
That's why, yeah.
Planet Fitness, all club members was like $9.
They had like a zero enrollment, zero everything.
Yeah, super cheap.
Because they sell memberships and they expect people to keep them from not showing up.
No, it's like one of the most brilliant business models ever.
Terrible for...
Yeah, it's so funny.
It's like how do you...
How do you rally your team right now?
You get all these GMs going like, all right, you guys,
let's go change lives, but really, we're not trying to,
you're gonna say like, really what we're trying to do.
I've talked about this.
Eat them some pizza, keep them going.
Bro, I can't tell you that I had this like,
the irony of that, right?
Well, so I've talked about this so many times before,
but I remember the moral struggle.
It was like this internal,
because as a young kid working in the gyms,
we were also very motivated to produce and sell. It was like this crazy environment. You
guys know, you know, you guys know this. It was insane, especially.
It's high football supplements. Yeah, especially late 90s or 2000s. It was like boiler room.
It was crazy. Yeah, very car dealership life. But there was also the training side. The
fitness side was also very like we want to get people fit. I came from the fitness side, moved into sales, but back then nobody crossed over. So I moved
into the sales side and it was all about the money there. The trainers still handle the
fitness, but the sales guys were trying to sell. So now I'm on the sales guy side and
I remember going to a meeting, I've talked about this before and it like, so I was so torn.
Yeah, it was like such an integral struggle. They literally listed what kind of members we profit off of
and what kind of members we lose money off of.
And I remember I'm sitting there and I'm like, okay,
you know, my initial thought would have been like,
oh, the members that use the gym the most
are gonna be the profitable ones because whatever.
And I even think about it really.
If I thought about it, I think I would have figured this out.
And I remember them saying, people that use the gym three or more days a week consistently cost us money because
they wear the equipment down, they pay their monthly dues, and that's it. The ones that make
us the most money are the ones that pay their dues and don't show up. And then I remember
this feeling inside of me like, part of me was like, whoa, good business idea. The side
of me was like, wait a minute. Well, think about that. That's weird.
Instead of actually helping you're you're You're selling people the dream of getting in shape,
being consistent, but you're also betting
that they won't follow through.
Yeah, you're betting on it.
We're also be a terrible business model.
Right.
So you're, so how could you?
You be at mass capacity.
So think about that for a second.
It's like, well, we're gonna create this business model.
The idea is this is we're gonna,
we're gonna rally people,
we're gonna motivate them to come
and try and change their lives and be consistent
and use our gym, but secretly we know
they're probably not going to,
and that's why we're gonna be successful.
That's, that's,
I'm not a fuck to what you think about me.
I used to try to make this case,
and I don't know if I'm right or not,
but I saw this with training,
and you guys went through the same thing.
I remember thinking to myself, God, if I really taught people, early days, I remember thinking,
like, if I really taught people, like, truly had to do this for the rest of their lives
on the wrong, they're not going to work with me anymore.
They won't need me anymore and I'll lose clients.
But then I thought, you know what?
I care about people so much.
And, you know, over the years, I got better at it.
And then what I learned was, is that if I actually help people in real ways,
I become more successful as a trainer.
It's not what you think.
So I think if gyms really,
if there was like, we need a leader,
we need a leader in the gym industry to be like,
here's a deal, it is expensive.
Here's all our success story.
But we're gonna get you there.
Like we're not just, we don't want you to not show up.
We want you to show up, we want to really make,
and I want them to prove that that model can work.
Cause right now, the opposite is true.
The model is the planet fitness model, which is like, you know, here's your membership.
It's so cheap you won't cancel, but we don't want you.
And we know you're not going to show up.
You know, it's so nice.
I think, I don't know, like, we still, you're still relying on human behavior and like,
and it would be a lot of work.
Yeah, it just wouldn't happen.
It's here. You're the house in Vegas.
Doesn't matter how good you learn about counting cards,
and if you teach everybody the secrets,
like human behavior will show that people will give in,
will mess up, will be inconsistent,
will not follow their rules,
will eventually the house always win.
And I think that that model, the gym model,
is built on that.
As it's sad, but it's true.
And the way you can prove that is that literally,
if just the people, every big box gym right now,
if just the people that they currently have,
not getting anymore, or just currently have,
showed up to the gym, they would shut down.
Yeah, the Fire Marshall would come in
and say, you cannot operate your business. You were five times capacity because you have, you have five
times the memberships that you have of people that could be allowed in this building. You
do not have a building big enough to support the customers that you have. The irony of
that. It's crazy. I know. I know. You know, it's funny, Chesh. I think about it. It's
like this, it's a negative feedback loop. The gyms, sign people up, people don't show up.
We could charge less, get more members,
and not be too busy, and it's like this cycle
that just continued to feed itself.
It's the point now where you have nine dollar.
Dude, I know, and that's why I always liked
sort of these smaller gyms, and like the ones that,
like all the attention was around the trainers over there,
and like, I don't know, like if there was just like this explosion of those in comparison to the big box, Hugh Mungus, Mega,
Globo Jim, sort of franchise out there. If there was just like a lot more pockets of these,
I guess, what do you call those like smaller type of, I think I'll tell, I'll say this all
day long, okay?
If you want, if you're gonna get started in fitness
and you want your best chances of success.
Now, I'm not saying you can't succeed
in one of those mega gyms paying nine bucks a month.
You totally can't.
They've got equipment, it's good equipment.
I've seen a lot of these gyms, they're great.
Some of them are even clean for nine bucks a month.
I don't know how they do that, but they really figured out you'll have access.
That'll work.
However, a big part of your success is going to be the kind of guidance you get, the environment
that you're in, the community, you know, CrossFit Prove that, right?
The people you're around, your best odds are not, I hate to say this.
And I hate to say this because I'm sure one day these big bucks shims are going to
want to work with us and they're going to listen to that. But you can do it differently though.
It's the smaller places. Like if you want your highest odds of success, you're talking
about from the perspective of the client, yes, hiring, go to a more expensive, smaller
place with training. I think that's less to do with like the blaming the big box or saying that the boat. It's just that the boatique is going to attract a trainer
who is more qualified, more experienced,
charges more money, gets paid more money,
and therefore you just get a higher quality of service.
I'm just saying even if you just paid to work out there,
when I used to have my studio, I didn't do a lot of this,
but every once in a while,
it would allow someone just to pay me a fee to work out there.
And they were always super consistent.
Why?
Because it was tiny, they'd come in,
everybody would know them, we'd all know the person,
and we'd all say, I don't know if I agree with you.
Oh.
I thought it was interesting when we had Dr. Gabriel Lyon
on it, she was talking about all of our different personalities
and stuff like that.
Well, you're a fitness fanatic, it's totally different.
These were everyday average people.
They were not fitness fanatic.
No, I mean, we'll take out the Finis-finatic part of me.
I think she was describing more personality,
like executive minds of people,
that people that are like the performers that,
like, what percentage of population is that?
Oh, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know what the percentage is,
but I think you're also making an overgeneralization
assuming that that people would be more successful
in a boatage gym.
I don't think that's necessarily true.
I think there's a lot of people that knowing that people
are watching them are more motivated for accountability reasons.
It's the same reason why a lot of people post and share things.
They know that if I put it out there
or if a lot of people know I'm doing it,
I feel committed now to doing it.
There's a difference though between a lot of strangers
and like the same faces.
That's what I mean by the small gym.
Oh, I don't know. Really. Oh, I don't know.
Really?
Yeah, I don't know if I agree with that.
I don't think that.
I don't think there's too many people out there
that go, you know what?
Because I'm in this small little boutique gym.
I think I was more consistent
than if I would have been able to do it.
I would bet money on that.
I don't know, man.
I would bet a lot of money on that.
That someone going in, look, CrossFit proved it. What do people go to CrossFit? These are warehouses. They were shit
gyms in comparison. They didn't have paint half of them. And people go, I mean, CrossFit
attracted everyday people who should not be doing CrossFit. Well, that's a class, right? So,
we're talking about two different things. If you're talking about that, I'm talking about like a
gym that Justin worked out, where 15 to 20 trainers worked out of it. It's a small boutique gym.
How consistent were the members in there compared to?
Oh, yeah.
Well, they have to have an appointment to come.
Oh, you guys have to have to do it.
Yeah, yeah.
There was no, yeah, members that were just there by themselves.
Yeah, and then classes are different, right?
I mean, the CrossFit and your Orange Series and your F-45.
If you know what happens when you go to a small,
you know, like 10 you go to a small,
like 10,000 square foot gym is that you start to know
everybody very quickly.
You show up, it's the same people.
What's up, John, what's up, Susan?
Hey, what's going on?
And people like that.
I think that plays an important role
with fitness for a lot of people.
I'm not one of those people.
I mean, I always felt that in a big box gym too though.
If you come at six o'clock in the morning
at 24 hour fitness down the street, you will see the same third ham. Yeah too though. If you come at six o'clock in the morning at 24
of fitness town of the street, you will see the same third.
Six a.m.
Yeah, but not at five p.m.
You'll see a say, I mean, you'll see a bunch of other people too,
but there's always a core group of consistent people.
Yeah, you worked there.
You saw them all the time.
Yeah, yeah, I don't know.
I mean, my point is, I think there's a million ways
to skin a cat.
Yeah, I think you can have success,
but I think if you want your best odds of success,
work with a trainer, obviously a good trainer
is gonna get you there.
The odds are far higher than doing it on your own.
And then if you're not gonna work with a trainer,
going to a place where the people there know you
and care about you, and you can do that in a big box.
We did that in a big box.
But a lot of big boxes don't have that environment.
They just don't.
The smaller ones tend to, you know?
Yeah, I mean, that's a cultural thing
that's happened to the gyms for sure.
But one thing's for, you know, back to the strength training,
the gyms, even the big boxes are changing the footprints,
they're dedicating way more space now to strength training.
I love that shift, you know, of focus.
And I think that that's gonna help a lot in terms of people,
you know, like the culture moving more towards like strength training.
And too, and I think that the emphasis
on having coaches and trainers in these big gyms
was definitely a decline.
And I think if they bring that energy backwards,
like we incentivize the coaches, we're paying them well and everything else
to actually help the members.
You can accomplish what you accomplished in the smaller gym setting in a bigger box, as
long as the access and availability is there.
All about culture.
Hey, who pulled this up?
Who pulled this up?
Andrew?
Save that.
That's good information for all of our trainer stuff that we're doing right now.
This is great.
This is from Ursa, huh?
Yeah.
You see all this stuff?
So it says that since 2010, that the amount of people that go to gyms has gone up 27%.
Is that 63 or 6.3?
No, despite 6.3% of Americans never using their gym membership, the number of people visiting
gyms at least two times a week is an impressive 50%. Is that how do they get in that? I've seen other statistics.
Yeah. For example, I got another one that says 38% attend multiple times a week.
How do they figure that out? I mean, I would probably be one of the best places to get this.
Earth is a little bit biased. Yeah. Well, I mean, I said the fact.
Earth says a little biased, by the way.
That's the International Health, the Racket and Sports Club Association.
I know, but I feel like they're not there.
I've never seen them put out anything that says that the...
Oh, you mean that?
Oh, you're saying that.
It's like that conversation about real estate agencies.
Yeah, yeah.
Great time to buy.
Yeah.
It's a good time to buy.
So anyway.
That's a lot though.
I see. That's impressive lot though, that's impressive.
Hey, talking about fitness,
I just read this hilarious study
that you guys would appreciate,
especially you Justin,
because you coach young athletes and stuff.
So there's two, okay, after being exhausted,
you have your kids run or whatever.
There's two general postures you see
where people try to catch their breath.
Yeah, arms over the head or hunched over.
And they already, they already pushed over the knees.
They proved that, they proved the hands over your head
was a false, a false, was false.
We talked about this.
Yeah, hands on you did.
Yeah, superior recovery.
We used to recover in greater, greater time of life.
The theory used to be that your coach used to tell you
to don't, don't bend over to put your hands over your head to open up your coach used to tell you to don't bend over, to put your hands over
your head, to open up your lungs so you could breathe better.
And that was proven false.
That was propaganda, dude.
It was proven false.
Really they were trying to promote that because it was show weakness, you know, and you
want to like present yourself as like, yeah, I'm fine.
Yeah, I'm not.
I'm fine.
Because like if you're the opposing team, what looks over and you're silent, everybody's
over,
just dog tired and like trying to catch their breath,
what kind of signal is that sending out?
So I think it's derived from that.
100% agreed, that's why I don't think it'll change.
I think if you were to go watch a football field
or a basketball court, I could think of coach.
I was telling you right away, and I knew this
because when I was trying out for San Jose State,
it was the most brutal, like for walk-ons,
like they put you through the ringer.
And I had to, I had to pass this one test
that was like, you do liners and so you do,
it was 10 yards, 20 yards, 30 yards,
for all the way to like 100 and back and it was timed.
And like you had to make it under a certain amount of minutes.
Otherwise, you had to come back at 6 a.m. to do it again.
And I'm just like, dude, fuck this.
I haven't put everything on the line with this.
I don't not want to do this again.
Ran is hard and fast as I possibly could.
I felt like my my heart exploded by the end I was done.
And the coaches were there and they're like, everybody's doing a put your own like and I was like no
On the ground getting all the air I could and it that was the only way I could get air and then they made me stand up
And I seriously was like almost hyperventilating. I couldn't get my breath
Yeah, and I knew it like being down in that hunch position. I'm like this is all bullshit
Yeah, that's psychological piece is important And I knew it like being down in that hunch position, I'm like, this is all bullshit. Yeah. Completely.
Yeah, that psychological piece is important.
Yeah, for sure.
If you got to think like, imagine,
no, that makes so much sense.
Yeah, you look across the field or across the core
and your opponents are all hunched over.
I did this.
Oh, we got them.
They're on their heels.
I did this as an adult in a Jiu-Jitsu tournament.
I only competed a few times, but one of the, I won,
I went against this dude and he was like,
he was not in my way class, but whatever.
That's another story.
And it was brutal.
We were going at each other.
And when we would have to stop because we go out of bounds,
I would run back to my starting spot.
And I was fatigued, but I wanted him to think like,
oh, this guy's not getting tired, but I was dying.
Because I've that psychology.
I mean, yeah, there's such a psychological warfare going,
especially sports where you're going heads up
against something like that, right?
Yeah, because you get scared, you feel like
you're showing weakness.
Then you're done.
Yeah, I wanted to, you remember when we brought up,
you guys a little, a little change of direction here,
but I want to bring it up because I just saw it
and I want to have dug in them confirm it,
but I thought it was interesting.
So you remember when we brought up the Southwest, their policy, they'll give a free seat to somebody who's too big to see.
Yeah, now when we had that conversation, we were kind of speculating like,
oh, what's this going to be?
One of the theories that I had is like, this is just a publicity stunt.
It's going to piss off a certain part of people.
Other people are going to be supportive of it.
It's going to create, and it's all just a big way to spread their information.
That was kind of my theory on it. I couldn't prove that,
but I just saw something recently that said that that has been a rule of for 30 years for
that sub-west.
Yeah, I knew that.
So 100% that was a publicity stunt.
Yeah, no, it was a rule, but they started to put it out more, you're right, maybe like,
no, we're going gonna start to do this.
So I don't know why,
so the promoting.
Charging for two seats.
So that was, so that you could do what they,
what you've heard recently,
you could have done that 20 years ago.
But they did it very quietly.
So yeah, and, and so the theory,
the theory is that they're doing it
to put pressure on all the other airlines.
But at the end of the day, it was all publicity stunt.
It's, if it's a rule that they've had for 30 years. You know that, and now it's making its way in articles end of the day, it was all publicity stunt. If it's a rule that they've had for 30 years,
you know that, and now it's making its way
in articles all over the place, it was brilliant.
You know that, and looking at demographics,
we get all the big people over here.
You know, I mean, we're in a crowd.
No, I think it was purely,
I mean, because no matter what,
it's a losing strategy for any airline business model.
It's not a smart business strike,
no matter how you draw it up. That's true.
So the only thing that makes it smart
is if it's a massive publicity run.
And that's exactly what it was.
They've been doing it for 30 years.
I wonder though, did they?
What's free marketing?
I gotta think about this for a second.
Did they put it out or did somebody drum it up
and make a click baity article?
And then it circulate.
Yeah, was there an incident?
What you got, Andrew?
Yeah, so basically viral tiktok
Was a plus-size style content creator self identified fat solo traveler
My name is Kimi Lee Garrus. She's the one who detailed the policy and basically brought attention to it
See it wasn't in Southwest. It was someone else trying to drum it up
You think she works for someone she got paid. I mean if I'm Southwest I have that and and I'm a marketing guy, and I go, hey, here's what we want to do.
It's like, do you remember with the iPhone,
remember the old, I think Apple was one of the first
people to do this, that was so brilliant,
when they supposedly somebody who was working with Apple
left their new generation at the bar.
Yeah, too much vividly.
Yeah, it's like, that Apple apples behind that. But you use somebody
else as the decoy of like they fucked up. There was a movie that did that with that.
It's a picture of that girl with that really weird smile and stare and they had her go to
to professional sports. Yes. That was for that was for the scary movie. The smile. Yeah.
They paid up. They paid a bunch of people to stand
in just,
just, just,
just, just,
just,
just, just,
just,
just,
just,
just, just, just,
just,
just,
just, just,
just, just, just,
just, just, just,
just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just, just Yeah, I think that one was actually like a, I think it was a comedy show on Comedy Central.
It was like these guys from Australia.
I'm pretty sure that they were the ones responsible
for that, but yeah, it was a total publicity stuff.
Speaking to comedy, what do you guys think of Shepel?
Did we talk about this yet?
I haven't seen it.
I'm with Doug, I don't think it was his best.
You know what, Shepel, I think this is why I think
he's the go.
Not because, although some of his specials
or some of the fun he's ever seen, he's so smart.
He takes you on such a ride.
And it's hard to, I like it when I can't really guess
what side he's on.
Yeah, what their opinions are.
Because they so eloquently, he does that very well.
He'll paint, he'll create a story.
So I think that's why I think this was like a subpar one of his.
I only felt like he did that once
Maybe twice and the thing where I feel like some of his shows it feels like you're on a ride the whole time He's pulling you left. He's pulling you right. You think he thinks this way then he hits you with it
It's like the whole thing is that where I felt like he came out the gates with the the transgender joke
Ralphie gates and he so he opened with fire like I thought oh that was you had no idea
He was going there. Yeah, I had no idea he was going there
So he took you on a ride rather and you're like oh, yeah, but then I to be honest
I felt like the rest of it was kind of was flat compared to that like that was like oh
I'm like we should continue and I started I was like all this is gonna be so good
This is like off the chain and we just started the first three minutes
So I was like oh he he opened with his fire like that was his best like ride that he took you on
I felt like everything always I mean
He's I'm getting I remember you liking his name shame Gillis
Yeah, shame Gillis dude. He is kills me. I watch some of his older stuff kills me
I like Matt rife right now. I'm on his stuff right now a lot. Is he the guy that plays the audience?
Yeah, he works the crowd so good. Yeah, he works. He's that young kid
He's also the guy who got he got he got called out for some like sexist memory
He made a joke about a girl having a black guy and something like that
So he made like a you know domestic violence like joke
Yeah, so they came after him and then he did a fake or he did an apology and then linked it to like special special helmets for people
Like
So he like doubled down on it. So so I like him so I'm all about it
I feel like yes to these comedians coming up are definitely more emboldened now
It's always like yeah kind of pushing back against some of the cultural thing
You know what people don't realize how important comedians are super important to culture
They start it and then it allows everybody else to get a little more comfortable with it
That's what's so great about it is like they're the ones that can get away
with really pushing anything,
saying anything and pushing the edge
because they're under the umbrella of comedy.
Society's need that.
And what's great about that is it slowly eases people
into like, okay, this isn't as bad as this crazy thing.
Well, it has to point out the absurdities
and the inconsistencies and, you know, like
sort of like in a shocking way for you to build, except a lot of people don't want to hear
it from certain voices and certain outlets, you know.
And so if you hear it in a way that's somewhat cheeky and funny and, you know, a lot, it's
received better.
And so it really is. It's a masterful craft when you can,
when you can get somebody,
normally wouldn't listen to certain ideas to,
what's the saying?
What's the saying?
Like, we know when the king has gone mad
when he kills his gesture.
Because it's such an important,
like the gesture was the one person
that can make fun of the king.
Yeah.
It was very important that that person existed.
Well, because the propaganda arms right now are so strong.
We're just getting inundated from everything else that wants to just entrench you in
like just one way of thinking.
It's real.
It's real.
It's real.
It's a secret of that.
Did you see?
So what's his chip Wilson?
Is the chip Wilson?
Yeah, chip Wilson, I think, is the founder of Lou Lemmon.
He got some pushback lately for publicly talking about their, you know, Lou Lemmon's recent
move into like more diversity inclusiveness for the brand and stuff like that, like really
talking shit about.
Now he's no longer the founder, like he sold a big part of his shares.
What was on it?
What was not inclusive about the stuff before?
Was it just the size of it?
Yeah, the sizes, they're marketing everything.
It was literally like he had decided like we're going after, you know, thin, fit, healthy, you know, eight, you know, 18-year-old
to 32-year-old women is like, that's, well, that's our demographic and we're all in on that.
And obviously it's grown to be a billion dollar company over the last decade or whatever. And
he's, he exited, I think, at 213.50. He still has, I think, I don't know if he has majority shares.
I know he has a lot of shares.
And so he has some say, but not much.
And so the company's came out and like said,
we don't stand by anything he says,
but he's been taking shots at them for.
He's saying that they should be more serious.
They shouldn't be there.
Yeah, like, what are you doing?
Like this is, like, your commercials aren't representing
the healthy fit people.
That's our market.
That's who we would have to write.
See what it says.
Oh wow.
He called out the company ads for featuring people who he said appeared unhealthy, sickly, and
not inspirational.
Yeah.
They're trying to become like a gap.
Everything to everybody.
And I think the definition of a brand is that you're not everything to everybody.
You've got to be clear that you don't want certain customers coming in.
I mean, he's not wrong.
Yeah.
That is kind of what a brand is supposed to,
I mean, because if a brand doesn't do that,
this way of competition too,
to serve others swaths of the population,
and other demographics, it's like,
otherwise you get to wander down.
Why does a company have to be everything?
You know, I can't, they just,
whatever happened to people doing this.
I don't like that company, I'm not gonna buy from them. Exactly. Yeah I can't, they just, whatever happened to people doing this,
I don't like that company, I'm not gonna buy from them.
Exactly.
And also like, okay, there's a need for this group of people.
Let's provide them.
That's why I always think it's funny when somebody,
I mean, I guess this is the entrepreneurial brain, right?
Like when somebody gets mad about that,
I'm like, did that's so dumb to get mad about it?
That should be, if it's opportunity.
Opportunity, Go create one.
I'm so glad Lulu's not gonna dominate that space too.
Now I can go offer it to people that are plus 24.
So that same person is gonna complain about monopolies.
You know, it's like, it's so inconsistent.
That's, yeah, that's interesting to me.
Everything's gonna be fine.
The same person would complain about monopolies too.
It's same, how funny is that?
But you have to do it for everybody.
Yeah.
They're selling too many. You guys are trying to sell to everyone, but you can't have everybody. You're gonna try to sell to everybody it's like. But you have to do it for everybody. Yeah. They're selling too many.
You guys are trying to sell to everyone,
but you can't have everybody.
You're gonna try to sell to everybody,
but as soon as you get to everybody,
then we're gonna cut you off.
Speaking of which, you sent me that video
of that dude trying to break down Patrick Bet David.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
How has a lot of you brought that up?
Because I thought that.
How has insurance company they had before was a scam?
And the evidence that he used was how small of a percentage, the people that made like
$800,000 a year was versus the people that made up them.
So I'll have to make sure Andrew you get the clip from me because in this video, he actually
clips the breakdown.
So someone got a hold of it.
So if you don't know, he had to just, he sold it or something.
No, no, no, he still has that company. Oh, yeah, he, but had to just, he sold it or something. He had to.
No, no, no, he still has that company.
Oh, yeah, he, but big part of how Patrick Patry,
he makes his money is through insurance sales.
Right.
Okay.
That's a majority of his, I mean, he's made value,
tame in and his podcasts and the else,
he's made millions, but he made hundreds of millions
of his insurance business, right?
So he's grown his, and maybe Doug can look up
how many employees he has, or how many people are,
are quote unquote, underneath him, and his insurance business.
But the, so this guy, and it was coffee zilla, did it first, well, I'm not, I'm like, this
guy sometimes does good stuff, but sometimes he annoys me, did a breakdown on him and basically
showed, you know, you know, what percentage of people make, you know, what, how much money, right?
And he tried to show that it was a scam.
It was a pyramid scheme.
That was a pyramid.
And here's a definition of a pyramid scheme
when, you know, 99% of the people make no money
and only 1% of the people make most of the money
and it's like all these people are starving
or making less money than a McDonald's
employee. It's a terrible pain. It's a really nasty picture of how the business model is. Now,
I sent it over to you because we've talked before about, okay, if we were ever to scale beyond
what we're currently doing and we were to open this up to coaches and trainers and we were to do some
sort of an affiliate program, that's exactly what our model would look like. And it would be inevitable.
If you, if we allowed,
yeah, because our trainers, the contract.
Yeah, right.
If we allowed trainers and coaches to sell our programs,
and they made a percentage of that,
and then we get a percentage of that ourselves,
and we did some sort of a tier.
Less than 1% would do 90% of that.
That's right.
Most, there would be a very, very small percentage of outliers that actually make a lot of money doing
that and then the most people would try and do it and
would make a little bit of money here and there and so you
could totally look make it make it look like oh these guys
are running a pyramid scale.
No that's just how a lot of that sell a lot of this
insurance business in general like that.
It's crazy how he was trying to use that to paint.
I was thinking I was going to show like crazy how he was trying to use that to paint. I was thinking
I was going to show like crazy evidence. That was his evidence. You know, 0.1% makes this
much. I mean, I would guess it works for people though, because people see that and how
much money people make does not tell you whether or not or don't make does not tell you whether
or not they're bad or good. We didn't see that. So it is an MLM and they have 20,000 licensed agents.
So I don't know a lot about this company,
but if you're doing an MLM,
you're probably offering an opportunity.
So sign up with our company, you have to become licensed.
You can sell our products and then you can make a commission.
So it is an MLM, bro.
So.
But MLM is not, is a legal, very heavily scrutinized.
Well, let me make a point here. Let me make a point here with that. So, but MLM is not a legal, very heavily scrutinized.
Well, let me make a point here.
Let me make a point here with that.
So you get 20,000 people who go out and get an insurance license.
Most of those people are not even going to try to sell.
They get sucked up into the excitement about how much they could make, but they don't
actually go out and do anything.
A bunch of people are going to go out and do it, and I've been in the life insurance business myself for like 20 years. I actually when I was like 27 years old, I went and I got a
license for life insurance because somebody told me that it was a great way to make money.
I went out, I talked people, I got these leads. I mean, I tried to sell life insurance, I couldn't
do it back then. And so I didn't make any money, but I made a choice that I was going to try to
build my own business. So I went and got licensed and I tried to sell life. And so I didn't make any money, but I made a choice that I was gonna try to build
my own business, so I went and got licensed,
and I tried to sell life insurance,
but I didn't make any money.
So I failed at the business.
Since then, I went and had created a life insurance agency,
and I had success, but I tell you,
if you work for a life insurance company,
in fact, regular life insurance companies,
like New York Live for any big life insurance company, they're going to have, I don't know about New York life, but
a lot of insurance companies have independent agents. So you can come, you can be an independent
agent, you have to get licensed, that's on your own dime, you can sell for the company, but
you only make when you actually bring in business. Yes, all too.
And the vast majority people for all these massive insurance companies
don't make anything.
And so his thing's no different
than any other insurance company,
except he's in the public eye.
Yeah, yeah, like,
so is Appearamid scheme same thing as the Ponzi scheme?
Is that the same thing?
Well, no, no, no, Ponzi scheme is different.
The Appearamid scheme is the same thing as an MLA.
Oh, okay.
Well, no, no, no, that's not true.
Appearamid scheme is more like a Ponzi scheme.
Yeah, that's what I thought.
MLM is actually a legitimate business structure.
Yep.
So, think about a pyramid scheme or a puzzle.
So, what are you in over now?
No, no, no.
It's very different.
No, a pyramid scheme.
No, a pyramid scheme.
The people at the top get paid because people from the bottom
are bringing in money.
And you have to keep bringing people in.
And typically, there's no real value
of a product being offered, okay?
Right, see look, here you go.
So the reason traditional MLM programs are legal
because there's a real product
that's being sold through the channel.
Fraudulent pyramid schemes, like Ponzi schemes
are legal, but often try to disguise themselves.
Yeah, but they're not really selling anything.
It's all just to get people in.
Yeah, so a classic one would be like,
hey, Adam and Justin, give me your money.
I'm going to guarantee you a 20% return.
And you're like, done.
The way I give you a 20% return.
I mean, it's a very fine line.
You're scurting here.
They're not that far off.
The difference with the MLM is you're actually offering a product
in a certain state.
That's a big difference.
I think a massive difference.
I mean, it is.
I mean, think about like, I wouldn't look pretty made off. Yes. Right. So he had these fake securities. That's a pyramid scheme. Yeah, that's a
total Ponzi scheme that you're totally you are blatantly robbing from people. This is structured
in a way. Well, you could make money and there is a product. Of course, but it's still a it's still a
it's a tear. I wouldn't I wouldn't go into. I some people make a lot of money. I've I've met guy a guy who made like $200,000 a month from like new skin
Newskin yeah, new skin. I knew somebody made a lot of money with amway
So you can do it you get by toothpaste
But these businesses typically thrive on bringing in recruits. That's exactly how you do it.
And that's the part that's so distasteful about it.
Is that?
I agree.
I agree.
Like, the model is structured where it's like,
I really don't give a fuck to Justin doesn't sell any of my programs.
I'm always trying to.
As long as he gets 10 other trainers bought in,
because they got to pay $500 to get in through our certification,
they get all these things.
And so as long as he goes and recruits a 10 of those people who think they're gonna go
sell one program or, you know, like,
this is why I've always had all of us closer.
This is why all of us have had a bad taste
with the, you know, coaching programs.
You know, we're gonna make trainers this and that
and whatever.
And they, you know, you go into these rooms,
you see, that's how these masterminds are built.
Exactly.
By the way, it's like MLM.
It's not a Ponzi scheme, it's legit.
They get a service, they get some with that.
But they're very much so structured in an MLM type of structure.
I fucking hate that.
I know, did I tell you?
And by the way, I'm a big fan of Patrick Reddiv.
I love the content he puts out.
I love this book.
I have a lot of nice things to say on him.
Not a fan of that.
Not a fan of the MLM.
There's a lot of ways to make a lot of money.
And you just doesn't feel right.
So I told you in Doug and I, we went to an internet marketing kind of like this.
I don't know what you would call it, but it was similar to that.
And we signed up for a mastermind.
We paid a lot of money for that mastermind.
And I remember when we sat with this small group of people that paid a lot of money.
I remember I looked around and I said, oh my God, everybody sucks.
There's like two of us here who probably are gonna do something and everybody else
is just paying the money to one of the apartments.
But in the defense of the mastermind,
they didn't know who was gonna sign up.
They didn't know if they're gonna be successful or not,
and we got value.
So we paid for value through the mastermind.
Yeah, but a lot of them are structured in a way
where it's like, I get the thousands of dollars from you to come to a 10-mile mastermind
Then let me teach you how to make your own masterminds. Yes, let me teach you how to do the same thing that I just did to you
And that's just this vicious cycle of and and they all justify it because when you get these groups of 10 50 a hundred people that are paying for these
Mastermind groups is there's always one other
Hungry entrepreneur who's willing to invest in themselves,
i.e. the two of you, knuckleheads,
who meet another one, who is the same way too,
and it's like, and you justify, you go,
I made connections.
I made a connection with Doug.
Let's just look at the structure of the twin flames.
Cool.
Yes.
And you will see like a direct parallel to what you're talking about.
Well, that is an MLM right there.
Yes, but that's another level.
That's a cult.
When that's what these are.
They're getting that's where it's people.
Yes, if you look, if you watch these videos saying,
okay, come on.
It's really the same.
This is why I couldn't do it because.
Here's the line.
I'll tell you what the line is.
If you go to an MLM and they have a real product,
this is how you know you're an occult.
When the leader starts to have sex with everybody.
He has every time.
That's fair to me.
Hey, fun one.
But also the twin flames, it was legit,
just MLM style, but then he realized
he has a tax advantage if they turn themselves
into a religious entity.
That's right.
And so, and they deliberately said that, you know,
and I've shared this multiple times with you guys.
This is where my conundrum
and other people that have talked about the business
and that have tried to get us to move this direction.
None of us would ever want to do this.
And there's literally somewhere between six
and $9 million a year on the table for us
to hold these types of events.
But when you know the statistics on the success
of the entrepreneur and when
you sell this dream, I just the part that I couldn't handle would be the and how they all
do these, okay, including PBD and all these other MLMs is you host these massive events
where 100 200 people get there and you're hyping them all up about what they need to do
and what this and the reality is if've got a hundred people in that room,
less than 10 of those fuckers
are ever gonna make the money you're talking about.
And would they have done it with that?
Anyways, yeah.
And all it really does is pull,
the 10 that would have actually done it,
just all you did was you got those 10 people
who would have found a way anyways.
And then you highlight those people as they had success
for coming through your group when the reality is,
even if they never met you, they would have figured that
since it's not in their recruitment.
How much respect that would have for an event like that
if I sat in a crowd and the guy got up there and said,
all right, here's the truth.
There's a thousand of you.
You're gonna make it.
Three of you are gonna make it.
You're gonna make it.
Everybody else is not gonna make it.
I would do that. If I ever did something like that,
I would 100% come out the gates with like,
and you still get by in because people are like,
that's me.
I'm the third.
I'm the one who's going to make it.
Yeah.
I mean, to me, that's the way the only way
you could have integrity and doing something like that
is literally coming out with it.
I would.
I would come out with it and just be like,
here's the deal.
Like there is 100 of you.
I'm 99% used to. Yeah. There's three of you that are actually going to take what I it. I would. I would come out with it and just be like, here's the deal. Like there is a hundred of you. I mean, I'm presenting.
Yeah. There's three of you that are actually going to take what I have to teach today and
are actually going to excel with it.
And I hope I get to sit down and meet each one of you, but the rest of you are going to
fuck off.
That's what's going to happen.
You're going to have burgers, $10,000.
It's just right.
I like there's everybody thinks they're the three.
Yeah.
Oh, that's me.
Yeah.
I feel bad for at least half the movie. That's so funny. That's me. It's so good. Dude, I got me. Yeah. I feel bad for all these assholes. Yeah. That's so funny.
That's me.
Dude, I got to tell you, so we're going to take a turn here, but did you see that this kid,
hold, is he 13 years old, just broke the world record on Tetris?
What?
Yeah, so did you know Tetris?
I love Tetris, dude.
Okay, so do you know that that Tetris speeds up?
That gets hard, man.
It's speed, not only does it speed up
But there really isn't a last level. Do you guys know this? I just learned it keeps going indefinitely
It keeps going until the it's a 13 year old 13 year old broke the world record
It keeps going until the algorithm so it's faster faster faster until the algorithm
gets overwhelmed and then you get what's called I think think a death screen, where the screen freezes.
And this kid did it, it's-
He got to the death screen?
They call it a kill screen,
and it was like level 157 or something like that.
What?
Yeah.
How fast does it?
I've gotten, like, I don't even know what level I've got.
How do you do that?
Even the music speeds up, it busts me like, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, beep, that? So he did a level 155, I think he did it.
And it took him, I don't know how long it took him.
Oh, wild.
That's wild.
You know, talk about the genetic gift of your brain
to do that kind of math that fast.
Cause you're, that's all it is, right?
It's math.
Geometry, yeah.
What's his job gonna be?
I mean, hopefully he finds a way to put it to work.
Architecture.
Draw an operator.
Oh, yeah. drone operator. Yeah.
Yeah, I know what kind of math.
I mean, what kind of skill
kaleidoscope job would require that kind of skill?
What'd you say kaleidoscope maker?
I don't know.
All the shapes.
Oh, my God.
Come on, guys.
Too many levels.
They would be.
His jokes are way so far ahead.
It's too far ahead. I bet I stand up. Sorry. I give up. All right. So, Jess, I want too many levels of air. Yeah, this jokes are way so far ahead. It's too far ahead, I'd have to stand up.
Sorry, I'll give up.
That's crazy.
All right, so Jess, I want to ask you about this.
Did we talk about the billionaire bunkers that are being built?
Did we bring the stuff?
We brought up Zuck.
Zuck's bunk.
Are there more?
There's a hundred in something.
Where, where are these little things?
You guys see, you know that?
There's like a look up how many billionaires in the last like three years of Bill bunkers. It's like a lot
Does it like the middle of the country or like all?
Zealands that was like a whys and white. Yeah, he's in like quite a place to build your bunker. Right. No
I think it's a safe place if there's a really a club on the
Meania. I would think in the middle of Montana or like Oklahoma or something. Did you bring up the meteor?
No, no, no, no, no, no country who's looking to take us over
or bomb us is gonna go like, hmm, Oklahoma.
Yeah.
Well, I don't think it's weird about it.
There's two people out in the middle of the war.
I don't know, he might know something we don't know,
but there's a lot of bunkers being built.
Yes, look at how many?
I thought I heard like 120 or 130.
Well, here's another thing.
The bunker business is booming. Well, here's another thing. The bunker business is booming.
Well, here's another thing that'll scare you yet.
So, you know, an election season,
we're in election season right now, election year.
In October, there's always what's called the October surprise.
This is when they each side will drop
their heaviest hammer to try to mess with the other side
because it's not enough time.
Right, last one was supposed to be Hunter Biden's laptop, which didn't pan out.
Yeah, that, yeah, they blocked out.
But anyway, there's always this like October surprise.
The messages came out.
October 5th, we're gonna get,
there's an asteroid that we lost track of.
That's gonna be really, I swear to God.
Armageddon, October surprise to Jesus.
Oh, meteor.
What you got, Doug?
They say 15 billionaires have started building bunkers,
but apparently that's not true,
according to some fact checker.
Who, is it some of the snow?
Some of the snow, some of the leaves.
But, you know, I never believe these fact checkers.
It might have been just million,
how many bunkers are being,
or how many of these guys are building these bunkers?
I don't know if it was billionaires.
Could you imagine, though, you ever thought,
you would do like a full thought process of this.
Like if you had a bunker,
let's say you had an amazing one, right?
And you set it up. Like it could filter air,
there's nuclear fallout, you're fine, you're underground,
nothing touches you, you've got enough food and water,
and you got sewage system and everything,
that'll last you six months.
Okay. Okay.
So now you survive for six months.
Yeah.
And you get out of the bunker.
Really?
Now what?
Now what?
Like, would you want that?
Think about that.
All right, kids, now that we've been going crazy for six months and whatever, who knows
what that's going to be like.
Well, now it's throughout the top.
I guess you're hoping that like it wasn't as much of a catastrophe.
Like maybe it was just the fact that society lost its mind.
Everybody was sort of going back and reverting back to where there was looting and there was
like, you know, like pandemonium.
Or we thought about this like chaos and then you were able to weather that and come back
out.
We talked about this off air, right?
Like your hope is that it's just like a nuclear bomb, right? That went off and then in 30 to 60 days or what I thought it back out. That's what we talked about this off air, right? What you, your hope is that it's just like a nuclear bomb,
right, that went off and then in 30 to 60 days
or what I thought it clears out.
It's all out clear, so yeah.
Yeah, yeah, I mean, that's what you got to hope, right?
It's that it's something like that, not something crazy.
I don't know, man, I'd be like,
would I want to be that guy in there?
First of all, you're locked in there for six months,
three months, even then 30 days.
I mean, you'd rather be that guy who caught the bomb, you know?
You'd rather be that guy than the guy who caught the bomb.
I mean, I feel like it'd be torturous.
Imagine living in this room for 30 days.
Just us right here.
Oh no.
30 days, I'm not even saying six months.
A full month, just us.
Oh, Murray, you guys.
Yeah, we could rather die, yeah.
Yeah.
I love you guys.
Yeah.
I love you guys.
But after five days, it would be good.
You can find.
No, I don't know about that.
I guess you know, it's funny.
You say that we kept from our position of where we're at now,
but if it was life or death,
you probably have a whole new perspective.
You'd be so grateful that we bonded together,
we survived, I bet you you would have a whole different.
We're all married.
It's stupid.
No, but I think three, three days in, right?
I mean, out day four.
So what do you guys do for three days?
I was, I was talking about it really.
Yeah, we got to get it.
I mean, your perspective is coming from a place of privilege
right now where you have all these amenities,
all this luxury, all this nice stuff,
but it's like if the whole world is under fire
and you happen to be with three or four of your friends
who happen to be smart enough to build a bunker and we survived
and we're a very small percentage of people that survived. I bet you would have a different.
What would you need in your bunker to not lose your mind?
A gym. Yeah, for sure. Oh, for sure a gym. That would be the only one. So I don't even think that. Okay, think about this again.
This the whole world is getting burned up in flames right now.
What we're probably spending 99% of our time is like,
when we get out, how are we rebuilding our families,
our society, what's the first thing we do?
Do you know how to build this?
Can I build like where are we gonna get, I mean, planning?
That's what I think, I think.
30 day, 24, seven, you go crazy.
I think I would need all the books. I have a big skills of like, okay.
At that point, I know how to crusher things.
You know, I get whatever.
Hopefully we have access to YouTube still.
Just to be the one.
I'm needing everybody sweaters.
I just learned this, you guys.
That's some data on bunkers.
Oh, yeah, sure.
So this guy, Gary Lynch, just a CEO of a company in Texas called rising S company
And they started in a warehouse in 2018 with a built bunkers and he said after
Year 2020 the sales of spike to 1000% and he went in mid 2022
Fielding less than a hundred inquiries a day no in a month to fielding thousands
In a month he sold five bunkers in a single day in February.
Oh, the price ranges aren't bad.
70 to 240 grand.
Yes.
That's not bad.
No.
Wasn't there the service that was like a,
it was like a religious apocalyptic service
and they said, what?
They said something like, you give us this money
and then when the world ends, we'll come and help you.
And you write a contract like literally,
that's when the world
man's that's a party ski right there.
So wow.
Because it's a world and the contract.
We'll avoid there.
Sorry.
Go find a lawyer.
Take me to court.
Yeah.
I'm saying.
I mean, I'm saying anyway, I got to tell you guys of all the partners
that we work with,
the one company that my family uses the most
to the point where, I don't know if I should say this on here,
Elemente sends us a lot of product.
A lot of that goes to my family.
I, as soon as I get people a box of that, they are like,
give me more.
Well, share the story about your sister.
So my sister was doing Whole 30,
which is basically a Whole Food Diet, right?
She cut out a lot of processes.
All of us are big fans.
And she messaged me, no, FaceTime me,
about two weeks into it.
She goes, oh, when does this detox period come out?
I'm like detox.
All right, what do you mean?
She's like, well, I got, I'm dizzy,
I got any headaches, it's got low energy.
Like I know you're supposed to detox when you're like,
do you even listen to my show, you're my sister,
you should know.
I'm like, you're not, that's not what happens.
Detoxings not what happens.
I mean, there's a herximer effect
and I talked about dying bacteria.
So that's not what's happening with you.
I said, you're low sodium.
And she's like, what do you mean?
I said, well, you know, you were eating processed food
before, like tell me what you were eating before.
I said, here, let me send you a box.
I had Jerry mail her a box of element.
And she, element T, and she told me the next day,
the very next day.
Gone.
She's like, I feel so, she's like,
I feel so stupid that it was sodium.
I feel so much better.
Yeah.
So yeah, so I send her a couple more boxes.
That's why I think it's such a great partnership
is because I do think that the community that we talk to, like the general population, you probably don't need to add salt to your
diets.
Yeah, all the package things.
Yeah, if you're, if you're health conscious and you're, you're doing your best to eat
whole foods and very much so that could be a missing component.
You have no idea and, and it could be brain fog, could be headaches, could be low energy,
like you'd be surprised, like the symptoms that you might be feeling, you may have had no idea, it's just simply sodium,
you need to fix.
Okay, do you want to do a quick shout out?
Yeah, so the three-part train, the trainer series,
is gonna be coming out, starting the 15th of this month,
and we're still signing people up.
It's free, and we're teaching trainers how to build
more successful businesses.
We're not charging anything. We talked about this rolling in the pocket. It's not a Ponzi scheme trainers how to build more successful businesses. We're not charging anything
We talked about this rolling the podcast not a Ponzi scheme
That's a lot of Ponzi's and it's you are gonna leave with very valuable and for in fact
We picked the most valuable things in those three days that we're gonna teach you so sign up. It's mind pump trainer.com
All right another reminder in four days
I'm gonna be teaching trainers and coaches had to build better businesses. Sign up at MindPumpTrainer.com. All right, back to the show.
First question is from EberHeeamJ20. In episode 2239, you discuss the timing of protein consumption.
Do the same principles apply to water hydration. I typically hit my water and take goals by consuming
half a gallon before noon. Is that adequate for hydration if I'm only drinking a few cups for the rest of the day?
Okay, so I'll answer the specific question, but first let's kind of answer the general
one, which is, first it's reference to studies.
The study showed that if you consumed a large bowl-less of protein in one sitting that the amino acids would still get utilized
for things like recovery and building, even if you consume it all at once versus it's
a spread out throughout the whole day.
The argument used to be that if you consume too much at once, that a percentage of it would
just get turned into energy through glycolysis, right?
Like a neogenesis, sorry, which is turning it into glycogen.
Well, they found that the study showed that,
that's not true.
You could do a lot of your protein at once
and not have to split up.
Now there's limitations to that, like digestion
and how you feel.
So I don't think this is very practical for a lot of people,
but it did show you could do that with protein.
Protein is not water.
The water you consume, your body uses and utilizes very quickly,
and it's in and out of your body very fast.
Now, if you drink a lot of water all at once,
will it meet hydration needs?
Yes, because if you're slightly dehydrated,
you'll make up for it relatively quickly.
Although there is a limit,
and I know this because when you look at athletes
that try to make weight, and this is extreme, right?
But they'll dehydrate themselves in extreme ways.
In ways that people normally wouldn't, right? They'll put themselves in a sauna, they'll sweat,
you know, a bunch of weight trying to cut five, 10, 15 pounds even to weigh in to go do a match or
something like that. And when they rehydrate, they know they need to do it slowly. If they go all at
once, they could get sick, it can be really bad. So that, so there's a limit to what you can do with
that. Nonetheless, it'll probably happen if you don that, so there's a limit to what you can do with that. Nonetheless,
what'll probably happen if you don't drink a lot of water and then drink most of it,
is you're going to go through period of a little dehydration and then being hydrated versus
having it throughout the day. How does it work though that are because our muscle bellies are
massive storage of water also. So you're not, it's not, you'll be slightly dehydrated and then
hydrated, because it'll happen. You know, you know interesting is, we'll go back to evolution with evolutionary theory.
The protein study makes sense because the way we hunted, it was like you could kill a
small animal every three hours and eat it.
It was like, I killed a buffalo, we ate the hell out of it, and then we got away for
another successful kill.
Water is not like that.
Humans always live next to water, always.
We could not live far away from water.
It just didn't work for us.
You can only go how long without water versus food.
It's like a drastic difference.
So I don't think that's a good idea.
Now this person half a gallon before noon, then glasses
throughout the rest of the day.
The spring hairs.
You're probably okay. Yeah, yeah. But if someone's like, I need to drink a gallon a noon, then glass is throughout the rest of the day. The spring hairs. You're probably okay.
Yeah, yeah.
But, you know, if someone's like, I need to drink a gallon a day and I'll do that all in
a two hour period, probably not a good idea.
You're probably suffer negative, negative effects of both sides, right?
Of the drinking too much water, throwing off electrolyte.
It also would really depend on what you're doing in those periods of time too, to put the
demand on the high on the 100%.
Yeah.
That's very true.
Like what if before noon, they're sweating their ass off right a bunch of, you know,
right exercises.
Right.
Right.
Or you get your workout done early the morning, you drink your full half gallon, you
play fine.
And then the rest of the day, you're pretty sedentary.
Not going to be a problem.
Now I know people who do this on purpose.
So I, when I would train surgeons,
they, when they would do these long procedures,
I train them off the pee.
Yeah.
I train this one woman.
So this is, I mean, I try and do this.
Well, because that's why I don't like working out
at late at night was because it's so hard
to work out and not drink any water.
And so I really try and front load my water
and do as best I can to drink as little as possible.
Because otherwise you pee.
Otherwise, sometimes a night.
Yes. When you do that, you still wake up at night
to pee just once.
No, if I can discipline myself to really shut the water down
towards the back half of the night,
I can get a full night stress.
It's just hard.
It's hard for me to have no water,
say after five o'clock at all,
or any liquid whatsoever, that's tough for me to do that. And so inevitably five o'clock at all, or any liquid whatsoever, that's
tough for me to do that. And so inevitably I end up having at least a glass or two or something
of something. And then that will inevitably get me up at least once, maybe twice. And
then for sure, if I do like last night, last night I train later than I normally would,
like at five or six o'clock at night, and I drink like, you know, a liter of water or
what about that. And then I'm up three times to go,
but you need it because you're working out.
Yeah, like I said, I trained this one woman,
she was a remarkable surgeon,
she did what's called a Whipple Procedure,
which is like a 10 hour surgery.
So you're in, you don't leave, you can't leave.
And I'm like, what do you gotta do if you,
like what do you gotta pee?
It's like, oh, I don't drink water,
like leading up to it because otherwise you're screwed. You can't leave once you're scrubbed in Like, what do you got to do if you, like, what do you got to pee? It's like, oh, I don't drink water, like,
leaving up to it because otherwise you're screwed.
You can't leave once you're scrubbed in
and it's a very delicate procedure.
So, yeah, it's not really.
Next question is from Lisa Carr Lack.
Is there much evidence for the benefits
of the meat and fruit diet,
especially now in light of the new research
on max protein utilization?
Have any of you guys ever tried it.
These are the coolest paleo. I mean, that's what paleo used to be.
Used to be. Yeah. Was me. Maybe nuts in there, but you would throw some nuts in there.
Things that you can eat wrong. Yeah. And they throw sweet potato in there too.
That's later. It used to be no starch whatsoever. The original.
Oh, really? Yeah. It was just seeds, even. Yeah. No seeds either. Yeah.
It was like, it was like some nuts.
Okay, so here's the value of a diet like this.
And it's not for the average person,
but it's low in food intolerances.
So if you're somebody that suffers from lots of reactions,
maybe you have autoimmune issues,
so your body's a bit hyper vigilant
or hyper reactive to different foods.
The foods that you're least likely to be reactive to are fruits and meat.
Vegetables will be reactive to grains, you'll probably be reactive to dairy, reactive to
even eggs and eggs will be reactive. But meat is very low in reactive, especially red meat.
It's very bioavailable. Yeah, and fruit, because now people ask why, plants create defense.
Like an offering.
Yes, they want you to eat the fruit.
They want you to eat the fruit because the fruit is what's got the seed and you eat it,
you poop out the seed and then you make more plants.
Vegetables oftentimes, no, they don't want you to eat like the stock or the leaves because
that'll kill the plant. So they create, and there's a whorimetic effect, by the way,'t want you to eat the stock or the leaves because that'll kill the plant.
So they create, and there's a whorametic effect, by the way, those of you that can eat vegetables,
don't listen to what I'm saying and say, oh, I should not eat vegetables.
You don't react to vegetables when you're getting from those compounds that, like, these carnivore,
you know, advocates say, is bad for you.
You actually get a whorametic response. It's good for you.
The same thing with exercising.
Yeah. Otherwise, yeah, because honestly, the recovery is where you get all the benefits.
The actual insult is the exercise, but it's necessary for you in order to grow.
Now, for athletic performance, unless you're somebody that is hyper-reactive to food, and this is
what you can eat and not be reactive, in which case, case will be a great diet for you. But for everybody else, this is not a great muscle building or athletic performance diet.
Like, try to perform with the carbohydrates from fruit is tough.
Starches do a better job.
Like rice, potato, just does a better job.
You're going to have more glycogen, you can have more power, lots of studies have been
on done on this.
I've experienced it myself, clients have experiences.
So unless you're one of those people that's hyper reactive, I don't think this is a, now
the average person will get healthy eating this probably better than the standard American
diet.
It really has to do with adherence, right?
If it's all these diets, is this something that you can do forever?
Is it, and enjoy doing that.
And then the other thing to look at is,
whatever diet is that I'm following,
if it's limited,
what do I lose out on nutrient-wise
because I've limited to that?
So if you're gonna do a diet like carnivore,
or vegan, or paleo,
you want, okay, is this something I like and I could do forever?
Okay, check that box.
Yes, I like it.
I love just meat.
I can just eat that.
Okay, well, what am I missing out on
that could either hinder performance
or what micronutrients am I not gonna do?
Am I not, that might support my hair, my nails,
my energy, all these other things.
You have to look at the diet and go like,
what is it missing that I'm now not getting
and be aware of the potential downstream effects
of not getting whatever said nutrient is?
I think adherence in that are the two most important things.
What's interesting, what always fascinates me about this
is that for most human history,
the foods that people avoided eating
were the ones that would just kill them.
So a diet, and the most human history was poison, eat everything else.
As long as that poison, you're anything else.
But now we're in a place where we can get water.
I mean, it's drink beer.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's 100% true.
People would drink beer fermentation process just to kill off load.
It was less likely to have pathogens, but it's an interesting one for me.
You can get away with it,
but unless, like I said, you're one of those people,
for what, why?
Next question is from Devon B. Baker.
For people just getting started like myself,
what makes maps so effective?
How do we understand when to change it up?
I'd like to know the science of how it works.
Maps, programs are effective.
For the same reason why really good coaching,
programs that are developed by strength coaches
or other experienced coaches are effective.
And that's because it's based on a combination
of experience and science.
You have to have both if you're gonna write a good workout program.
I'll give you a great example.
A study just came out, Layne Norton just talked about it,
on strength training.
And in this study, they showed that training close to failure
resulted in less strength gains
than training way below failure, but doing more sets.
So the study was comparing strength.
And so he's like, and he's trying to explain it. And then underneath it, I commented, it said, the problem with these
studies is they're done for like 18 weeks. And within the realm of reasonable, most things work
with string training. Nothing works forever. So that's why you have so many contradictory studies.
Going to failure builds more muscle and strength. Wait a minute. This one over here shows that
going away from failure and doing more sets, and then this one says low reps, and this one says high reps.
This one says lifting with speed is better.
All this one says time and retention is better.
They all work.
The body stops at really responding if you do the same thing for a long period of time.
And you don't learn that from studies, you learn that from experience.
So the math programs, that's what we put in there.
But there's a lot of moving parts.
So we...
Well, you're really looking at,
I mean, imagine going to school and learning
from a teacher who has their degree
and is very intelligent, knows how to teach the subject,
whether it be math, language, whatever it is.
But his fresh out of college and is now teaching students for the first time, and then you
have a teacher who's been teaching for 40 years, that same subject and has taught it to
hundreds, if not thousands of students, and learned other things other than the formula
and what they need to know.
There's a lot of our peers that understand the studies and the formulas the same
way that we do. There's not as many trainers and of our peers that have not only understand it
from the studies, the schooling, but then also have trained thousands of people and have now learned
to tease out like behavioral stuff and go, oh well, we know what the study says that here's a range
of sets or reps or exercises that are ideal for the maximum ourselves.
But then we also know that 80% of people fall off here or don't do this or get hurt when
they do that or this is too long of a time period where people only have slotted this much
and they're you're only going gonna keep their attention for this long?
That's right.
So what you see with the mass program,
and by the way, this isn't a phenomenal just for beginners.
It's phenomenal for anybody who's never really
followed a good program,
or maybe have just followed their own program
or followed somebody else's program.
The reason why we've had so many successes
that everybody across the board,
no matter how experienced or not experienced you are, sees phenomenal results from us.
And that's just because we've trained a plethora of people in all age ranges, all experiences.
And when we create things and we write programs, we don't just factor the science in.
We also factor in our experience.
How are you going to feel after you're done accomplishing this workout and in the combination
of the exercises one before the other and then, you know, and that again, it's it's it's points back to like earlier in the conversation we're talking about, you know, like, uh,
predicting a lot of these things ahead of time.
I also think that, and this is why we knew we had a business on our hands is for some weird reason a
majority of the people in our space are
speaking to or writing programs for a very niche
population and a very small percentage of the population
They they they speak to themselves or other fitness professionals where that is not our experience our experiences with general population
And so we come from a place of like this is gonna help most people like when we write something we go like this is gonna be best for most people
Where a lot of the the fitness professionals in our space they have written what works for them or work for their athletes. In spite of their terrible programs.
Yes.
Okay, I'll stand by this all day long.
90 plus percent of the workout programs in the market
are neither science nor experience or pure garbage.
Just a slap together, exercise together, make it look cool.
And the goal is can we make it hard and make it exciting?
It's a bunch of ice cream flavors.
It's just,
yeah.
Yeah.
A little inside joke there.
Great.
It's, it's just pure garbage, okay?
Probably 5% I would say are based on real science.
And these are the ones that are popular in strength sports.
The reason why they're good is because you perform.
You're powerlifting, you're Olympic lifting,
or whatever, like, you program such.
It's tangible evidence.
Yes.
The other 5% are based off of science and experience.
Those are very hard to find.
There's very few of them that are out there.
So it wasn't that hard to write a program
that was really good.
It was better than the other ones,
because we're not competing with,
really good one, but I'll give you an example
of what you were talking about, Adam,
you were mentioning all the things you need to consider.
Okay, if you look at all the studies on
rep ranges, low reps, moderate reps, high reps,
and there's different ways to phase your workouts.
I'm just gonna stick to reps,
because you could also do it with time periods, sets,
volume, types of actually, I could go and run down a list and just confuse everybody.
But let's stick to our rep range, okay?
Let's compare workouts or phases with low reps, moderate reps, high reps.
You won't find a single study that shows that it's better or worse to mix the rep ranges
up in workouts throughout the week versus sticking to a rep range
for four weeks and then moving to another one.
Okay, it's all the same in terms of results.
However, it's not because here's what we've learned.
When you take people and you have them do low rep,
moderate rep, high rep, every single week,
they don't, there's a different mindset,
a different feel that goes into each of those rep ranges when I lift low reps
I'm not trying to feel the muscle. I'm trying to feel the movement
I'm trying to maximize force. It's a completely different feel than when I'm going moderate reps and feeling the muscle in too
He's getting lots of little shifts
Which is a very different feel the high reps where I'm trying to make it through the damn set and it's stamina and I'm breathing hard
It's a completely different mindset in the average, if you keep them in one of those,
because they learn it and by the week by the second and third week,
they're performing that rep range better. If you mix it up all the time,
they end up not really picking it up. It takes too long.
So yeah, the studies show it doesn't matter,
but we know through experience that it matters. So that's just one example.
Next question is from OMG. It's Danny D
What's your guys opinion on high intensity training like how Mike Menser preached and then how Dorian Yates perfected?
Oh great following question. I was talking about this a million. Love it. Okay. A lot of times.
Love this. Okay, so Mike Menser his program was called heavy duty during Yates in a program called blood and guts
Mike Menser's training was based off
of the teachings of Arthur Jones,
the inventor, nodalist equipment.
And the theory was that once you set the gears and motion
from muscle growth, once you set the stimulus,
any further signal would just impair recovery, slow down the process.
And so then the question was, well, how do we know we send the signal effectively?
Well, make it as intense as possible.
So what they did is they said, okay, instead of doing, because at the time when Arthur
Jones was studying this, it was in the late 70s, sorry, 70s, it was in the 70s, at that
time, the popular bodybuilding workouts were like high volume.
So like Arnold would do what are called double split routines, 20 sets per body part, get
a pump, you know, you know, he's going in there, he's doing biceps for 45 minutes to an
hour type of deal.
Arthur Jones said, no, one set to failure and beyond is what you do and then you leave
it alone.
So now the body can grow and build muscle into that stuff.
And he tested it.
And what they found was in short periods of time, it worked.
People built a lot of muscle, a lot of strength.
This is true.
If you follow this style of training in a short period of time, you'll see rapid gains.
By the way, this question feeds perfectly into the last question.
Correct.
I mean, because this is what you're explaining right now is a perfect example of where
just just valid for method. Yeah. And and then also that there's other
variables. And so yes, this is a tool. Yes, we could write a
program that's a 100% based off of that. But then there's other
factors that come to play. And even if that does work, it
comes to a point where it doesn't work as well.
Never. Three months later. Not even three months. So you'll
get really fast short term results, burn out real quick and then go backwards
That's what ends up happening when when most people
Train this way is very very rare outliers like Dorian who could continue training this way
But this just that's just how it is for this kind of this is why it's not the predominant way of training
But this is also why people will do it and then preach about it because they'll be like oh my god
I got more straight gains in three weeks than so
But in there by the way, it's not appropriate for most people taking a set to failure and beyond is
Such an inappropriate level of intensity for most people because their form breaks down and it's just stupid
I would never train
95% of my clients in this way even with me watching them, okay?
nonetheless
I
Figured this out and we all got together and wrote a program that utilized
and took advantage of this effect in a long program and it essentially alternates between
this style of training and other styles of training with de-load weeks to maximize its
effects and minimize its negatives.
So if you want to be able to maximize those short-term gains, but like stay away from what ends up happening,
which is you hit a wall and go backwards, maps and a bulk advanced,
utilizes failure training in this way, but doesn't away to where you do the program for three or four months,
and you don't end up experiencing what everybody experiences when they do this,
which is terrible, terrible burnout. Look, we have a training course coming up.
Three days starts January 15th for trainers and coaches.
We're gonna teach you how to get leads,
how to close big deals,
how to be more successful with your clients,
and more go sign up at mindpumptrainer.com.
It's totally free.
Mindpumptrainer.com.
You can also find all of us on social media, on Instagram.
Justin is at Mind Pump. Justin, I'm at Mind Pump.
The staff and I own Adam is at Mind Pump. Adam.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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