Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 847: Max Lugavere of The Genius Life Podcast
Episode Date: August 30, 2018In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin speak with author, podcaster and friend Max Lugavere. Would you like to be coached by Sal, Adam & Justin? You can get 30 days of virtual coaching from them for FREE ...at www.mindpumpmedia.com. What would the guys “LGBT” name be? (4:18) The Hugh Hefner of the health world. His dating life and thoughts on open relationships. (6:28) Where do his views on marriage come from? (12:14) Why the grass isn’t always greener on the other side. (15:15) How has the reaction been from health professionals/practitioners since the release of Genius Foods? Had any debates with them? (17:25) His take on Nutritional Psychology. (24:10) What’s the deal with coconut oil? How the dose makes the poison. (30:54) The myths behind saturated fats. (33:40) Is protein the magical macronutrient? (40:00) What has been the strategy behind his podcast? Enjoying the long form format? (45:09) What are the bits of knowledge he has picked up in the last year? Implemented recently into his life? (50:45) Does our cognitive fate fall into our own hands? He talks on his documentary Bread Head. (56:15) What concerns him the most about our future generations? (59:04) How to follow your bliss. (1:03:30) Why we all may have ADD. (1:06:30) The misconceptions behind taking omega 3 supplements? (1:08:28) The differences between grass fed/grain finished vs. grass fed/grass finished? (1:13:10) What are the top things people should AVOID in their diet NOW? (1:14:35) How happy is he right now? (1:19:45) His excitement going into his first Burning Man experience. (1:23:22) Featured Guest/People Mentioned: Max Lugavere (@maxlugavere) Instagram Podcast Aubrey Marcus (@aubreymarcus) Instagram Mikhaila Peterson (@mikhailapeterson) Instagram Shawn Baker (@shawnbaker1967) Instagram Ben Pakulski (@ifbbbenpak) Instagram Joe Rogan (@joerogan) Instagram Ben Greenfield (@bengreenfieldfitness) Instagram Satchin Panda (@SatchinPanda) Twitter Related Links/Products Mentioned: Mind Pump Episode 732: Max Lugavere- Genius Foods Max’s documentary Bread Head Mind Pump Episode 725: Mikhaila Peterson's Personal Account of Treating Debilitating Disease through Diet Autoimmune Disease Statistics Mind Pump Episode 712: Dr. Shawn Baker- Carnivore Diet Advocate Randomised trial of coconut oil, olive oil or butter on blood lipids and other cardiovascular risk factors in healthy men and women Vegetarian diet, change in dietary patterns, and diabetes risk: a prospective study Effects of Two Different Dietary Patterns on Inflammatory Markers, Advanced Glycation End Products and Lipids in Subjects without Type 2 Diabetes: A Randomised Crossover Study Ancel Keys - Seven Countries Study Regular walking breaks prevent the decline in cerebral blood flow associated with prolonged sitting THE GENIUS LIFE 22: HOW TO EAT AND LIVE LIKE A ROCKSTAR | MATT NATHANSON THE GENIUS LIFE 13: THE POWER OF TIME-RESTRICTED EATING AKA INTERMITTENT FASTING | SATCHIN PANDA Felix Gray’s Women's, Men's and Kids' Clothing and Accessories | UNIQLO US Butcher Box Get our newest program, MAPS Split, an expertly programmed and phased muscle building and sculpting program designed to get your body stage ready. This is an advanced program and is not recommended for beginners. Get it at www.mapssplit.com! Get MAPS Prime, MAPS Anywhere, MAPS Anabolic, MAPS Performance, MAPS Aesthetic, the Butt Builder Blueprint, the Sexy Athlete Mod AND KB4A (The MAPS Super Bundle) packaged together at a substantial DISCOUNT at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Make EVERY workout better with MAPS Prime, the only pre-workout you need… it is now available at mindpumpmedia.com Also check out Thrive Market www.thrivemarket.com/mindpump! Thrive Market makes purchasing organic, non-GMO affordable. With prices up to 50% off retail, Thrive Market blows away most conventional, non-organic foods. PLUS, they offer a NO RISK way to get started which includes: 1. One FREE month’s membership 2. $20 Off your first three purchases of $49 or more (That’s $60 off total!) 3. Free shipping on orders of $49 or more You insure your car but do you insure YOU? If you don’t, and you are the primary breadwinner, you will likely leave your loved ones facing hardship and struggle if you die (harsh reality). Perhaps you think life insurance is expensive, but if you are fit and healthy, you can qualify for approved rates that are truly inexpensive and affordable. To find out if you qualify for the best rates in the industry, go get a quote at www.HealthIQ.com/mindpump Have Sal, Adam & Justin personally train you via video instruction on our YouTube channel, Mind Pump TV. Be sure to Subscribe for updates. Get Organifi, certified organic greens, protein, probiotics, etc at www.organifi.com/mindpump Use the code “mindpump” for 20% off. Go to foursigmatic.com/mindpump and use the discount code “mindpump” for 15% off of your first order of health & energy boosting mushroom products. Add to the incredible brain enhancing effect of Kimera Koffee with www.brain.fm/mindpump 10 Free sessions! Music for the brain for incredible focus, sleep and naps! Also includes 20% if you purchase! Please subscribe, rate and review this show! Each week our favorite reviewers are announced on the show and sent Mind Pump T-shirts! Have questions for Mind Pump? Each Monday on Instagram (@mindpumpmedia) look for the QUAH post and input your question there. (Sal, Adam & Justin will answer as many questions as they can)
Transcript
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
Max Lugavir.
Love this guy.
He's one of my favorite people.
I just fucking love him.
You say that a lot.
No, no.
Well, I have a few favorite people.
Yeah, no, you say that too much.
No, no, no, no, no. I, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no stay in contact on almost the daily for sure weekly basis. That's what I said.
That's one of them.
He's one of the guys that we're that close with.
And just because off air, we've connected on home.
I mean, no matter what, the guy professionally is incredible,
is books incredible, he's on TV now.
He's got a great podcast.
Got a great podcast.
But just for sure are people outside of even the podcast.
I wish that he lived close by
because I think that him and Mike, both guys that live
far away from us that I think that we would probably
hang out with on a regular basis if they were new.
He's just a super cool guy.
He's got great guests on his podcast.
His book has done exceptionally well.
Dude's brilliant.
Yeah, he's a very, very intelligent guy.
It's funny that he said that he had trouble
in school growing up. Yeah
That's interesting. Well, I think that says more about school than it does about you know about him
But I mean again, we love Max. I was on his podcast a while ago had a great time. He's been on our podcast before that before his book
You know genius foods came out and now that it's been out
It's been selling very, very well.
He started his podcast afterwards.
He mentions the documentary that I guess he's been working
on his phone.
We have a great conversation in this episode.
We talked to him about his personal life,
which is kind of funny.
I think about his dating life and what that's all I have.
Right, how the gates.
Well, he's a good looking bachelor, you know what I mean?
It's a successful, good looking dude.
So of course we're gonna ask him about that.
We're just trying to dig a little.
Yeah, we also, I brought up the blue blockers with him
and he's a huge advocate of that,
which I was excited to introduce him to Felix Gray,
which is one of our new sponsors.
Yes.
And one of my favorite new sponsors that we have.
Yeah, if you go to Felix Gray Glasses, that's F-E-L-I-X-G-R-A-Y,
glasses.com-for-sl-I-X-G-R-A-Y glasses.com-foreslash-mind pump. You could check out all their stuff.
We did talk about meat quality.
Here's something that's interesting.
He did talk in this episode.
We did a YouTube video afterwards where he clarified even deeper.
Grass-fed meat, the profile of grass-fed meat, is of the fatty acid profile of the human brain.
When it's corn-fed or grain-fed, it's much higher in omega-6s and not quite as healthy for you.
And that's a big problem is that balance of fatty acids. And we did mention our other sponsor butcher
box because all their food is grass-fed. And grass-fed. Everything. Yeah, all the way through.
Which was the other part of it that's sneaky.
You get some of the grass fed,
but then I aren't grass fed.
That's where a lot of these grocery stores,
that's the hustle that people don't know,
is they people are starting to get savvy with organic,
they're starting to get savvy with grass fed meat,
and then now the hustle is grass fed,
but then what they do is the final two weeks,
they fatten them up with the grains,
and they can still legally say
Grass fed on the label
So you're what's neat about butcher boxes. You know that it's getting grass fed and grass finished
So there are other sponsors if you go to butcherbox.com forward slash mine pump
You'll get free bacon
Two ribbys your sold already ten dollars off and free shipping on your first order.
So max, you can find max, his podcast is the Genius Life podcast.
I highly recommend you go over and subscribe to it.
He's got great guests on their great conversations.
His book of course is Genius Foods.
You could buy that at any bookstore, you could buy it online.
You got to check out too, his documentary that he's working on too.
You can go look at the teaser at breadthemovie. it's bread head head oh bread head not bread that bread head movie
dot com and that's it man without any further ado here we are talking to our good friend Max
Lugavier Max Lugavier so we're we're on the podcast and we're we're talking about the
the different names that gay people call each other for,
stereo type.
Like, that's a good thing.
Gays, stereo type.
Yeah, gay, gay,
gay stereotypes that other gays call each other.
And we're talking about what would each of us be.
And so instead of us speculating,
because we know nothing about this,
let's reach out to our audience.
I'm sure somebody has some sort of,
knows these terms.
And so they sent over the list,
which by the way, it's way longer. Oh man. Yeah, it's like, there's like no idea. There's like 30 names. It's a bunch of dudes,
right? Guys name that's what we do. We name things things so. He's a twunk. He's a twunk. It's like a
mix between a hunk and a twink. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, because he has a he has a girly face but then the
muscle because I have muscles like I can see that. Yeah, right? Yeah, he's got a profile. And then he's, Sal was a silver fox and a daddy.
He was a combination, so a fox and a daddy.
And then Justin is a muscle cub.
A muscle cub.
A muscle cub.
A cub is like a bear, right?
So like, like big, burly, hairy,
but he's younger, so he's a cub.
And then muscle cub.
Not even hairy, so you know, like, it's flawed.
I mean, that's a misconception.
I like the terms.
I feel like we should lay claim to them ourselves.
That's where, every picture I say going forward
on Instagram, I'm hashtagging muscle teller.
I mean, it's in my handle now.
I mean, the muscle teller.
I mean, what I'd be.
You?
Yeah.
That's a tough one.
Do we have the list?
You remember?
Yeah, actually, this go over that.
It could be a silver fox, but you're too young,
but you don't have any silver yet.
No, they seem to be. Yeah, a little bit of silver silver yet. No, they said, in fact, they said,
Yeah, a little bit of silver.
A little bit, a little bit.
Or are you younger than Sal, right?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, so you couldn't,
because Sal was too young to even technically be a silver fox
is what this guy said.
Oh, it's like, there's like an age.
Yeah, you wouldn't be a gibster,
because that's,
No, he's not a gibster.
He's not too hipster.
I'm gonna find the list here,
but that was one of them.
And not necessarily a twink, you know. No, no, it's not gonna fly. You guys give each other hand jobs where I find this list here. But that was one of them. And not necessarily a twink, you know.
No, no, I was not gonna lie.
You guys give each other hand jobs
where I find this real quick.
I'm just, I'm rolling through them all.
I'm rolling through them all.
Bro, every time I get a joke, kind of a mix.
Every time I see you, I gotta say,
I have to make a comment on this, Max.
Every time I see you, in person or in the story or Instagram,
you're always with an attractive young lady.
Oh man.
A bunch of different.
Are you just rolled you into the bus?
He's kind of like the Hugh Hefner of Health.
You're like the wellness, like, uh,
most brain foods paying off.
Yeah, most eligible bachelor of the wellness world.
Are you dating someone?
Are you single?
No, I'm not.
I'm not.
I'm not.
I'm not putting on this spot.
I don't know.
I'm definitely not.
No, I'm single. I'm not, I'm not formally in spot. I don't know. I'm definitely not.
No, I'm single.
I'm not formally in a relationship with anybody,
but I do have close ties with, you know,
with a few females, but I'm.
Is this your politically correct way of trying it?
Are you like, are you in the, the on it thing
like where you like, it's the open, the open obry mark, yes, I do,
do you subscribe to the sex at dawn?
I do struggle with the philosophy of monogamy,
but it's never, I mean, you know,
just from speaking from personal,
like actual experience, I've never,
you know, when I was in monogamous,
when I've been in monogamous relationships,
I've never cheated, and I've never really felt the need
to make it an open relationship,
because I've always personally felt that
when I've ever felt strongly enough about a girl
to be in an exclusive relationship with them,
I wouldn't really wanna watch them get it.
So this is why all the girls like them.
So, well, you know, what you,
sounds like you're the type of guy that,
which I always tell guys to be like this,
which I think some dude struggle with this,
and I think you get the bad rap
when they become the shady guy who's lying to all the girls,
just to hook up with all of them.
It sounds like you're very blunt in up front.
So, like if a girl meets you and you guys are hanging out
and whatever happens, you probably laid that foundation
or you're someone like that,
you communicate that pretty well.
This is kind of way to do foundation.
Communication honesty, I think they're integral parts
of any solid relationship.
I just don't believe that it's possible to maintain,
a sexually appreciative relationship
with somebody for the entirety of your life.
So, I'm not marriage, the concept of marriage,
I struggle with, long term monogamy, I struggle with,
but when I'm with somebody, and I'm honestly committed
to that person, then I don't think it's,
I've never felt it appropriate to sleep with.
Now, I compare monogamy to,
because I've heard people make arguments about,
what is it called, polyamory or open relationships.
And they make the evolutionary, you know, arguments
and all that stuff.
And the way I talk about it, look, you know, we all have cravings
for eating whatever the fuck we want.
But we don't, like, why don't I go just eat a bunch of cake
and a bunch of candy and a bunch of whatever all the time?
It's not good for me.
And I think monogamy has proven itself to be,
if you can do it and you can do it in a meaningful way,
is proven to be a superior way of living. Doesn't come without its challenges.
Of course.
I think it's the ultimate expression of humanity in a sense and executive function,
because one of the cognitive abilities that would fall into the umbrella of executive function
is being able to delay gratification and think altruistically. And so, you know, obviously when you initiate a relationship, I think it's
always going to be in the compassionate stage, you know, where it's like very sexual, very physical,
but then eventually those relationships transition to companion it love is something I learned in,
you know, I majored in psychology and college and I think that that has benefits too, you know, especially
as you age.
I mean, it's something that is really helpful.
I mean, there are benefits to that.
Absolutely.
And then there's been, we've known this for a long time and since this is your field of
study, maybe you can correct me if I'm wrong, but when we do observational studies on
societies, monogamous ones versus ones where there's husband and many wives,
monogamous societies are far more peaceful,
much more violent in the societies where people own multiple wives.
And they think it has to do with the fact that
the wealthy men at the top hoard all the,
whatever you want to call it, sexual resource or whatever,
and then men at the bottom or left without any
Options and they become violent and whatever as humans aren't we designed to seek novelty as it is right and then do you think that
Starts to decline as we get older so maybe that's it's it's probably a more natural thing to wait to set all the way down
If for a long-term relationship, which your thoughts on totally. Yeah, I mean, I think people sex drives change
But I agree with that that idea about monogamy as it being sort of something that actually favors
men. It guarantees sort of one sexual partner for every guy, even if that guy doesn't happen
to be, you know, at the top of the dating pool, so to speak. But yeah, you know, for somebody,
I think, I think where monogamy really becomes difficult is for men with options. I mean, it sounds kind of crude to talk about it that way.
No, no, Chris Rock says it best, man.
Your guys are only as faithful as their options.
You always hear the guy who's bragging about,
oh, just me and my wife's like,
motherfucker, ain't no one trying to fuck you.
Saying like, it's real easy to be fucking faithful
when nobody wants to have sex with you.
Try being the guy who's walked down the street
and pussy's getting thrown at him every five minutes.
Total different story.
I mean, yeah.
For Tiger Woods, am I right?
Yeah.
Hence why Max is like, no, I'm cool, I'm not.
Well, I, I mean, I'm curious,
because you know, when you said that
and even the way that you articulate it,
it really, it sounds similar,
because I'm the same way too.
I'm not like against one way or the other way
or I feel like I stand on one side.
But I do have my own personal views. I think that I think many people's perception of what love
is, I think is distorted and confused with lust. And I think that a lot of my personal experience
in life and growing up like, you know, I'm still learning to love myself fully. And I don't think
that you can love another partner fully until you've learned to love yourself
And so you know I have different views on marriage and when to get married and things like that
Where where do your views like that come from?
Does it stem from childhood? Did you have a good or a bad example with your family or like where where does that come from?
I had a good question. By the way, I love how sensitive you guys are like it's really cool because
I love how sensitive you guys are. Like, it's really cool.
Because I'm a certain,
a few woosey players.
Well, okay, fair.
But you're in a balance as well.
But you're able to volley between, you know, like,
you know, really sort of like, male, you know,
locker room sort of conversation,
but then also like you guys have like a soft center,
which is which I appreciate.
Okay, so my upbringing, my parents had a pretty bad marriage.
And so that's sort of the template that I'm trying to unwire
and rewire and sort of fix.
You know, my parents were together for 18 years.
They had a business together.
They were great parents, but their relationship was totally crappy
and they were both very poor growing up
and they reached a level of success together
with the business that they created.
And the minute they became successful my dad
You know became kind of a woman not a womanizer, but he
Definitely loved like boats cars
Hot women and he cheated on my mom all the time and
you know that's
Well, you know sort of well known in my family, but nonetheless were both kind of, my mom's a very codependent woman,
and, you know, they stayed together for a long time,
and then finally, when I turned 18, they broke up,
but they're both still,
they never got remarried, and my dad's, you know,
in Miami, he's kind of alone by himself and my mom,
sort of has a significant other,
but somebody who she's not in love with,
and certainly not attracted to sexually
and still I think kind of longs for my dad
and it's just, you know, it kind of screwed me up
in many ways, I think.
Yeah.
Because, yeah, I mean, I just, you know,
I don't have that template for what.
Were you the youngest?
I'm the oldest.
Okay, so you turned 18 and then they?
Yeah, when I turned 18, I went to college.
My parents got a divorce and, yeah I turned 18, I went to college.
My parents got a divorce and yeah, just never, never great.
My mom was like, you know, she had this like weird relationship with her mother.
Her mother was always around, probably drives my dad nuts too.
I mean, it wasn't all of my dad.
So yeah.
So when I was, you know, I didn't start to put this together.
I loved psychology and college.
And I didn't go all the way through college and finish
But I that was my first
Experience in taking a psychology class and a lot of the books that I've read as I got older isn't that field
And that's really when I started to learn all this like I started to unpack and go
Oh, this is where this comes from because a lot of people would say to me or especially girls that I'd be dating that
Because I wouldn't commit I wouldn't settle down
I wouldn't give you like I'd get these girls that were great and we'd have this great chemistry and I'd be dating, because I wouldn't commit, I wouldn't settle down, I wouldn't give you, like I'd get these girls
that were great and we'd have this great chemistry
and they'd be like, you know, they wanna lock it up
and I'd be like, no, and I'd be very honest,
I'd be say, hey, you know, I really like you
and joy spending time with you and we can hang out,
but I just, I know where I'm at in my life right now
and I'm just not ready to give.
We sure, honest.
Yeah, and I was, and it got me,
it actually, I did really well for myself
as far as like relationships, like I don't have a lot of women out there that hate me or anything like that because I was truthful now
It might have hurt their feelings when I first said it
But they always respected me later on for that
Do you do you remember what that was like for you like going through college?
Like was that when you started to like kind of unfold all this or did you have similar situations in relationships?
well, I mean
I when I when I went to I went I went to school at University of Miami in Florida, and I, as an undergraduate, I think my junior year of college, I met then who was the most beautiful girl who I'd ever
seen in my life, and I began dating her.
We broke up after four months because she was a bit younger and she was sort of like
immersed in the craziness that is South Beach and being young and hormone fueled and being
attractive in one of the most superficial cities on earth.
And so that, the relationship back then was kind of a nightmare, but we ended up getting
back together a couple years later.
And you know, dating and it kind of continued to be on and off
for a couple years after that.
And it's kind of a pattern that I kind of think maybe
is a little bit illustrative of like the pattern
that I saw my parents growing up.
But I've dated many girls, but always sort of,
I guess burdened with the grass's greener
on the other side.
Sure.
You know, mentality and, you know, my fear is that all,
you know, one day, 20 years from now,
I'll look back and I'll be like,
look, the grass was greener because it was fucking fake.
You know? Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh You split your time between East and West Coast. Quite a bit, right? Is there a big difference in the people
and dating between those two coasts?
It's hard, man.
I don't really put a lot of energy into dating.
I'm just not good at it.
Like I don't, I'm not on any of these dating apps.
Every time I try to go on it because I've heard,
anecdotally, some friends are really successful at it.
I always find it to be a major waste of time.
I'm just not good at it. And yeah, I have, I don't know, anecdotally, some friends are really successful at it. I always find it to be a major waste of time. I'm just not good at it.
And yeah, I have like, I don't know, commitment issues.
I can't even commit to a city.
Like, I'm, you know, I don't even honestly know
how to describe where I live.
And, but on the other hand, it's allowed me to filter
kind of that angst, I guess, about it into my career
and into my work and into my, you know.
So let's talk about that for a second because the last time
You had we had you on the show great interview by the way love talking to you
Yeah, you were had just or would just about to release your book genius foods. Mm-hmm since then blown up. We've seen the everyone
Yeah, we're gonna watch you on Dr. Roses
I think we're in the hotel room. I was like, oh my god. Look, it's Max
That was awesome because we just flown into LA.
We were there for something else, right?
Yeah, and Justin and I had a room, and we,
as soon as we turned the TV on,
it was like literally Max was on the TV on us.
Oh, it's so crazy.
So now you're like, you're like one of the guys,
or one of the people in this wellness world,
which is riddled with a lot of false information.
There's some great information there.
There's a lot of snake oil.
And there's a lot of what seems to be contrary information.
What's that been like for you?
Now that you've blown up, how have things changed for you?
Are people coming after you?
Are people starting to try to debate you and discuss your ideas and say,
well, that's not what this literature says or what,
what's that been like?
It's a really good question. I mean, I think one of the coolest things is just the fact that the book that I wrote genius foods has gotten out there
It's really, you know, I get I get dozens if not, you know, a hundred messages every single day across different platforms about how
You know, some way in which the book is helped improve the life of another person, you know people
Health care practitioners their patients are, you are, some of them dealing with cognitive problems,
they literally recommend my book to their patients,
which is incredible.
So awesome.
I mean, I have a background in journalism,
but I obviously did the homework,
but it's just amazing that my book is actually
having such an impact on people's health.
So that to me is great.
I get, you know, in certain areas,
I'll get like recognized, people coming up to me
on the street, like telling me that they love the book.
That's insane.
That's weird, right?
In terms of debating me, yeah, I mean, I get,
I'm in it for the truth.
So for people that don't know of here,
if you're listening, I wrote genius foods,
which I consider to be the definitive care manual
to the human brain.
And I wrote it without any preconception,
without any bias.
The reason why I wrote it is because
my mom has dementia, and she has a sort of rare form of it. And
it's fucking horrible. Like I, you know, I was just in New York for the past two weeks,
spending as much time as I could with my mom. And it is unbearable to see the person
that you love most in the world descend into, you send into this condition that is whatever the stereotype you have of
a person succumbing to the ravages of dementia.
That's what my mom has right now.
And it's horrible.
There's no way out.
There's no light at the end of the tunnel.
There's nothing good to come of it.
So I really am dedicated to putting this truthful message of science and nutrition and how lifestyle
can affect brain function out there in a way that's like accurate and free of bias and
without marketing attached to it and any of that stuff.
And as you mentioned, there's a lot of crap advice on the internet, especially like,
you know, I've had a decent amount of success on Instagram, lately on Instagram, I mean,
you name it, like it's like the worst, you know.
There's obviously a lot of people putting out,
or I would say, handful of good, you know,
people out there putting out good advice,
but generally speaking, I mean,
there's tons of misinformation.
Whenever I post anything about meat, for example,
I get, you know, hordes of, you know, plant-based vegan,
you know, and I love vegans.
I have nothing against, you know, nothing against making that carefully considered moral decision.
You're about to go speak to probably a bunch of them in this week.
Yeah, possibly.
Yeah, that is a good chance.
But yeah, they always come out.
They're so militant.
You know, and it's just like...
It's their religion, that's why.
Yeah, I get kind of tired, like batting them off.
And people just posting blatant pseudoscience
on my profile.
And at first I was like trying to like debate everybody
but I mean at this point I really can't.
And but yeah, I mean it's,
I think it's really cool.
We live in an amazing time.
We have a lot of answers.
There's still a lot of unknowns.
So I don't ever purport to have all the answers I don't.
But there's like cool people,
citizen scientists out there doing their own research,
providing insights, adding to this sort of tapestry
of knowledge that I think it's amazing.
We live in a time that we all have access to,
because I sit in Drs. Offices with my mom on the regular
and mainstream medicine man,
like you don't wanna get to the point.
Like we are so poorly equipped in this society to...
For chronic disease, for chronic disease.
It's, I mean, I know, I don't wanna just talk,
you know, badly about the medical profession
because I have a ton of respect for medicine.
Actually, deep down, I love medicine.
I love the practice.
I was pre-med for the first two years of college.
And I know some doctors that are phenomenal, but the vast majority of experiences that I've
had with my mom in the traditional medical system has been disgusting, like just horrible.
Doctors operating according to script, keeping my mom on drugs that are indicated for her, but not, they're probably making her worse,
or likely contributing to her symptoms,
as opposed to actually alleviating any of them,
because of course none of them have a disease modifying effect.
So it's basically just, it's a nightmare.
And also, when it comes to my mom,
I feel like in many ways she was victimized
by not just the medical system,
but medical or I should say health misinformation
that's been out there.
My mom was from a generation where they didn't have the internet.
Whatever she knows about health, she got from media,
the media of her time, not social media,
not clickbait, websites and things like that,
but like, like, maxi-dye-gest websites and things like that, but like...
Maxi's largest.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, that's why I have a real vendetta against anybody putting out nutritional misinformation
because it's actually doing harm.
More harm than anybody with a social media account can possibly realize.
Well, I think that's the same thing that we felt about fitness advice.
I mean, we see the same thing that we felt about fitness advice.
Like, I mean, we see the same thing
in the fitness industry as, you know, these people,
and a lot of people, I think, felt like,
when we first came out, thought it was like,
hate, and it's like, no, it's not,
but it's the same vendetta that we have.
If, you know, you guys don't realize that,
a lot of this information that you're giving these people,
we're doing more harm than good.
We're supposed to be these health and fitness professionals. When you're advising people, and you think you're giving these people out, we're doing more harm than good. We're supposed to be these health and fitness professionals.
When you're advising people and you think you're motivating them with the, you know,
beast mode, the all out, the no days off, and the, you know, this push shit, it's like,
you know, the average person sees that and they just try and emulate what you're doing
and what you don't realize is you end up setting that person back potentially, a long
years potentially to get out of that hole.
And we saw the same thing.
I do see a little bit of light at the end of the tunnel here with the, with person back potentially, a long years, potentially, to get out of that hole. And we saw the same thing.
I do see a little bit of light at the end of the tunnel here
with Western medicine in regards to nutrition.
We're now seeing fields like nutritional psychiatry
starting to come out, which 10, 15 years ago,
if you went walked into a psychology class
or you talked to a psychiatrist and you said,
hey, I think you could treat depression with diet,
they would laugh you out of the room.
Today, they're now studying the effects
of how nutrition can affect the mind,
and they're giving it a lot of credence with science
and study, and it's difficult because science
takes a while, I think, to catch up.
But because of the internet,
one thing that I'm seeing now, Max is,
so I have a god son who's got Crohn's disease,
and when he first got diagnosed,
something like seven or eight years ago,
and there was very little in terms of,
I mean, there was symptom control,
and some of that was terrible,
some of it was basically low dose chemotherapy
to kind of shut down as immune system,
but there wasn't anything that,
dietary that they really recommend.
Basically they're like, well,
I'll just stay away from things that bother you.
So my aunt went online and in the past,
you could never listen to anecdote
because it was one person or two people telling you,
this is what worked for me.
But when you go online and you have forums
that are dedicated to Crohn's disease
and you see thousands of anecdotes in people saying,
hey, this diet called the carbohydrate-specific diet, I think is the name of it,
is helping all these people with Crohn's. My aunt, who is a registered dietitian,
who was way like pro-Western medicine, when this happened, she went online and she's like,
let me try this and it worked. Totally put them in remission. What do you think about all that?
When you're looking at some of this information
that's coming out with nutritional psychiatry.
Yeah, well, I mean, the perfect example of that
is an anecdote from people online,
but I mean, specifically who comes to mind
is Michaela Peterson.
Oh, yeah.
So what you guys have talked about.
We had it on the show.
Oh, you did, oh, amazing.
Yeah, I mean, I think like, you know,
the carnivore diet is super interesting, right?
Like on first glance, when I first heard about it,
I was like, what is this bullshit?
Like in light of everything that I know about, like,
the microbiome and, you know, the value of fiber consumption,
polyphenols, like all that stuff,
I couldn't believe that a diet so extreme
could be doing anybody any good.
But then I thought about it,
and I actually have a pretty good, I think, working hypothesis as to what it may be doing anybody any good, but then I thought about it and I actually have a pretty good
I think working hypothesis as to what it may be doing.
I feel like for most people, you know, for most, if you, when we were tribal, right, and
living as hunter-gatherers, you could almost assume that everybody in the tribe had a similar
if you made a past childhood without, you know, getting killed off by any number of pathogens, you probably had a fairly robust immune system, right?
Very much so.
Like you were born vaginally, you were breastfed, none of that formula crap, right?
You were not over prescribed antibiotics.
So you had a robust enough immune system and there was genetic heterogeneity.
So like you were, or homogeneity, I should say, rather, you were all probably of the same
gene pool in that tribe.
And so you can get away everybody in that tribe, probably ate a similar diet, right?
And probably felt fine.
Today, the problem is we have widespread immune dysfunction.
And everybody is struggling these days.
I mean, rates of autoimmunity are on the rise.
And that's what it's like.
Yeah, so it's like exploding.
People have dysfunctional immune systems
to the point where their immune systems
are attacking their own enzymes and tissues and proteins and things like that, right?
People have sensitivities and allergies and conditions defined by chronic inflammation and things
like that.
So, we all have these dysfunctional immune systems fed by the fact that the microbiome has become
basically an afterthought, right?
Like some of us are born via C-section, we're not breastfed, we're over prescribed antibiotics, we have
an obsession with sterility and things like that.
And so for people with a dysfunctional immune system, I feel like it's one of these
like context specific end of one like no one size fits all dietary approach cases where
you know plant compounds that initiate what's called molecular mimicry in the body may
basically further confuse an already confused immune system. So for anybody
with autoimmunity, Crohn's disease, any of these like sorts of conditions, it
actually makes a lot of sense to me that by cutting out all plants at least for a
little while that you're going to see a reprieve from symptoms. Well the way
the way and that's very similar to the way I kind of explained it because we
had Dr. Sean Baker on who's the guy that's popularized the Carnivore diet.
And this is, we went a little back and forth with a little bit debate and I basically said
the same thing.
And what people need to understand is the immune system, when you say robust immune system,
I think people think this super strong hyper vigilant immune system.
That's not what a healthy immune system is.
Healthy immune system is an intelligent immune system
and knows when to react and when not to react.
It knows not to overreact.
An immune system that's unhealthy tends to either be super, super depressed
in which case you're probably going to die of the common cold or some other virus.
Or what we're seeing a lot of is an immune system that doesn't know the difference between
friend or foe and it starts to identify foods as foreign invaders and it mounts these immune system responses.
And so what you have with some people is they're so hyper reactive, their immune systems
are so hyper reactive to the foods that they're eating that they feel much, much better
by eliminating almost everything except for the one food that probably has the
lowest rate of, I would say, food intolerance, which also, I think, points to the fact that
that's probably the food that we relied on the most for lots of period of time, because
you could just eat meat and survive.
I don't think it's ideal, but you could just eat meat.
It has everything that you need in it.
You don't need much vitamin C when you're not processing carbohydrates and all that, but it's not an ideal diet
But for someone like Michaela Peterson, or Sean Baker or all these other people, you know
Let me tell you something the immune system is a fingerprint. Yeah, it's very very unique
And I think that's the reason I would I would say that that's the number one reason why diets are a work so differently for so many different people
Yep, you know because I've had clients. I'll tell you what, when I first became a trainer max
at, you know, I was pro omnivore, right?
And when someone would come to me and say,
I'm a vegan, I'd be like, oh,
you can't get all the nutrients you can't.
And scientifically speaking,
I could make a pretty good case against veganism.
And then I had this one client who,
he used to track everything, write everything down,
he was super like, he would do everything I told him.
And he always had kind of gut issues.
Didn't really feel good.
He was a doctor and did one of those doctors
without borders, you know, trips or whatever.
And the tribe that he was staying with was vegan
and because of their belief system,
he came back and said, I feel amazing.
Started eating vegan and he felt great.
You know, I kind of had to swallow it a little bit
and say, okay, well, everybody's a little bit different.
And I think that may be why we get so much
conflicting information with nutrition, you know what I mean?
Speaking of conflicting information right now,
what is this that's going out again with the coconut oil?
Yeah, there was some Harvard professor that said it was
like pure poison.
Yeah, it was the quote.
Back in the news again.
Oh my God, totally hyperbolic click baitie.
I mean, that's not even a scientific phrase,
like that kind of noise.
Pure poison because it's just not.
I mean, there are communities that
they're co-general as a staple in their diet.
Look at anybody from Thailand or the Philippines.
So yeah, it's not poison. It's just that this was, you know, unfortunately another example of like, you know, something
that this German Harvard professor, which means less and less by the way these days, I feel
like, you know, went viral on the internet and, yeah, I mean, you know what they say, the
dose makes the poison.
I don't think that coconut oil is, in any way, poisonous,
but I also don't think that it's like the miracle food
that many health gurus on Instagram,
you know, make it out to be.
Like, people are putting coconut oil
in their fruit smoothies and things like that.
I don't use any coconut oil.
I mean, sometimes I'll use MCT oil.
I'm actually a fan of MCT oil,
but in terms of coconut oil and what I use that for,
I mean, like, very seldom. I don't even cook of MCT oil, but in terms of coconut oil and what I use that for, I mean like
very seldom, I don't even cook with it honestly because there are other, you know, oils that I prefer to cook with.
But um, yeah, I mean the concern about coconut oil really stems from the fact that it's predominantly, it contains mostly saturated fat,
but the latest meta-analysis that I, you know, that I've seen, a really robust study of studies
published in BMJ Open, I believe is the the journal found no clear association between saturated fat consumption
and heart disease risk.
And there were some studies that showed
that people ate more saturated fat,
were actually healthier in some cases.
Yeah, there's a small study that adding saturated fat
to the diet I've found can improve health.
There's another, I mean, it's all nutrition research, you kind of have to like mix and match,
but there was a cool crossover study that I looked at, actually I was looking at today
where they gave, they put people on these like Mediterranean style diets and it was a crossover
trial.
So they had, they had to, they meet these Mediterranean style diets and on the first
iteration of the diet, they
had to meet very low red meat, low amounts of red meat.
Because of the dietary pattern as a whole, they were consuming more extra virgin olive
oil, more plant material things like that.
They had an improvement in their cardiometabolic risk factors and risk markers.
In the crossover version of what basically the diet that they adopted,
they told them to add more meat,
like double the recommended amount of meat.
And what they found was that their numbers continue to improve.
So it's really not about any one particular food.
It's about the dietary pattern as a whole, you know.
Let's talk a little bit about the myths surrounding saturated fat
because for a long time, for most of my life in yours,
we were told that it was the devil avoided at all costs.
Actually, fats in general were the devil.
And let's talk a little bit about that. How did we develop that policy?
Why did that even, why was that even a thing? Why did they become government policy to tell us all the void fat?
It stems from one guy. I mean, that's sort of how I understand it.
A pathologist named Ansel K at the University of Minnesota, who basically at a time when nutrition
science was just being born in this country, and we really kind of were the flag bearers
for the rest of the world in terms of nutritional research.
There was an epidemic of heart disease in this country. And Ansel Keys was this pathologist who embarked
on a number of epidemiological studies
looking at large populations,
and presented a graph showing a perfect correlation
between saturated fat consumption eventually.
At first it was just total fat consumption,
but he narrowed it down to saturated fat consumption
and deaths from heart disease.
But the problem is that he showed this perfect linear
correlation.
The seven study, seven countries.
Isn't this the same one that he teased out?
The ones that like, or...
He took two countries out of that, right?
Yeah, two that countered his argument, right?
What?
France with the, with the, on what he was trying to do.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, it was, that study was heralded
because he went around the world drawing blood labs
and things like that.
And so he did like a fair amount of work on it.
He stationed himself in Crete
where he got to look at the Mediterranean dietary pattern.
But the problem is that he omitted data
that was available from other countries
where there was no clear association
between heart disease risk and saturated fat consumption.
But nonetheless, he was apparently a very charismatic person.
He landed on the cover of Time Magazine.
And again, this was at a time where there was a immense pressure
on these academics to come up with a solution
to the nation's heart disease problem.
So when there's that kind of pressure
and people were really looking for answers,
and it was just a vacuum of nutritional information
at the time that it was a neatly enough package story
that he could sell it to both doctors and the public
and that really became, I mean, it became,
it became government policy.
Yeah, it became government policy.
People don't know this actually,
but he implanted that idea into the American Heart Association
at the time, which was this little known professional organization,
and then Procter and Gamble invested about a million dollars into it. Procter and Gamble
they produced Crisco and unsaturated vegetable oils and fats and things like that. Weird.
No conflict in the sense of it. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, always corn oil by the stove, my mom was always terrified of eating eggs,
and she never ate red meat or anything like that,
because we have this idea that saturated fat clogs our arteries.
Now, we now know that that's not true.
Okay, so what happens in the body is a lot different
than what happens when you pour grease down a cold drain.
But still, that being said, saturated fat does have
an interesting effect on the body.
And in my book, which like, and work, I focus on brain health, preventing Alzheimer's
disease, cognitive decline, things like that.
There's really no evidence that eating lots and lots of saturated fat benefits health
on the other side of the coin.
So in terms of just like hedging your bets and which I think is smart when
it comes to your health, you know, I'm not one of those people that's like putting, as
I mentioned, coconut oil on everything and butter on everything, like people have different
genes, they have different ways in which they respond to saturated fat. Again, it's about
the context in which that fat is being consumed. So if you look at your diet, you know, if
you're consuming a lot of polyphenols and plant materials and things like that, you know, I'm almost positive that the saturated
fat is going to be better tolerated. But they've done studies, I believe in pigs, but, you
know, the mammalian digestive tract is pretty strongly conserved. And they find that, you
know, pure saturated fat leads to a translocation of this endotoxin stuff. Basically, this bacterial,
these bacterial fragments that are really powerfully inflammatory
From your gut, lumine into your circulation. So it's basically like saturated fat consumption. You can increase inflammation. You can increase inflammation. Yeah,
Interest certain people. It also
One of the things that it does, you know, we all know that it raises cholesterol whether or not that's good or bad that's debatable
Actually, we probably don't even know the full picture, but it does tend to raise LDL
cholesterol and HDL cholesterol.
One of the mechanisms by which it does that is it reduces the amount of LDL receptors
on the surface of the liver.
This is a really important thing.
The liver basically serves hundreds of functions in the body.
One of those functions is recycling lipoprotens and lipids, right? And it does that by popping these like LDL
receptors up to the surface of the liver liver and then taking in the LDL particle before
it gets, you know, they're all sort of shipped out from the liver initially when they're
large and buoyant. They're like the large dense.
The big fluffy ones are what? Yeah. Or not large dense, large and buoyant, fluffy LDL particles
is like the sort of, you know, the cardiovascularly favorable pattern
of like the LDL particle.
And before they get too small, they're supposed to be sucked back up by the liver.
But saturated fat, what saturated fat does is it basically reduces the amount of LDL receptors
on the liver, which I don't think we want, especially for people that are genetically perhaps less effective at that
recycling process.
Very interesting.
So what I've noticed, this is for me personally, what I've noticed is if I eat a diet that's
high in saturated fat and a diet that's higher in carbohydrates, I personally notice more
inflammation.
Now I have a very, very obvious sign and that's gut issues,
but I'll also notice stiffness in my joints.
If my saturated fat and takes high,
but my carbohydrates very low,
and I'm eating more of a keto style diet,
I notice my inflammation is quite low,
and it may have to do with
the anti-inflammatory effects of ketones themselves
or something like that.
Now let's talk about protein.
In our space, protein is the magic macronutrient. You can't have too much of it. or something like that. So now let's talk about protein.
In our space, protein is the magic macro nutrient.
You can't have too much of it.
Just as much protein as you possibly can,
because you're gonna build more muscle and a lot of the stuff.
What about protein's role in overall health,
or even in brain health?
Are there studies that show that there's ideal amounts of protein
or is it a huge range?
Yeah, I mean, I sort of like to walk that line
between body composition.
I learned a lot from you when you were on my podcast.
I appreciate it.
Yeah, but no, protein's important.
It's the most satiating of the macronutrients.
I think as people get older, especially, you know,
I like to kind of talk to people of all ages,
but sarcopenia is a real thing.
People do begin to lose muscle mass.
As you guys are well aware, it becomes begin to lose muscle mass. As you guys
are well aware, it becomes harder to gain and maintain muscle as you get older. Having
stronger muscles is directly related to better brain health and better brain function. For
many reasons, it's a great way to maintain insulin sensitivity by having stronger muscles.
It's also one of the least or lesser appreciated roles of having more
muscle on your body is a greater ability to dispose of glucose. Glucose is highly damaging
in the body. And it's one of the reasons why we have such conserved homeostatic mechanisms
to get your blood sugar down whenever we decide to spike it, right, with like sugar, sugary
foods and carbs and things like that.
But we only have like, we have limited places in our body with which, you know, in which
we're able to store sugar, right, we've got our liver, which can only, you know, store
about 125 grams if you're a big person.
And then our muscle tissue, and muscle we have, you know, a much larger amount, but if you
are, if you don't have a lot of muscle tissue, then your ability to store sugar is pretty limited.
I would think, you know, and that sugar, when you consume it, has nowhere to go, especially
if you're chronically sedentary.
It's a bit of a positive feedback loop because I just read another study that showed that
sitting for long periods of time reduces blood flow to the brain.
We also know that, you know, BDNF, which is a wonderful, I don't know what you want to call it, chemical
or whatever, that's released in the brain, helps improve the function of your neurotransmitters
and your neurons in your brain.
And it's very, it's like bathing your brain in some field of control.
Yeah, there you go.
Miracle grow.
And movement does that.
And so there's this kind of positive feedback loop where older, because I've seen this in
my career as a personal trainer where someone gets older, they hurt themselves so they can't
move.
Their mental degeneration accelerates rapidly, very, very quickly.
I have personally seen this myself where I've trained people in their 70s and 80s and
I, you know, for 10, 12 years,
and I'll see like, maybe a barely subtle decline
in mental cognitive function, and then they'll get hurt,
and they'll be bedridden for two months,
and then I'll see them, and it's like,
we accelerated it by like 10 years.
It's like, boom, because they couldn't move,
and then there's that positive feedback loop,
so it's like, not have enough muscle,
don't have a lot of strength,
increase your immobility, maybe hurt yourself.
That's not good for your body, so in your brain,
so indirectly protein just to help build muscle,
may help with that.
Protein super important.
And I also think that we have a biological imperative
to not be wasteful and eat the whole animal.
Certain amino acids found in certain parts of the animal
help us better metabolize amino acids found in other parts of the animal help us better metabolize amino acids found in other parts of the animal.
So they've done really interesting studies in rats where they've fed rats, high
methionine diets, methionines, amino acid concentrated in muscle meat, and we're getting a pretty
high concentration of that if all we do is eat muscle meat like the steaks and things like that that were
that we tend to eat in the modern world.
But glycine, which is an amino acid found in collagen.
Cardolid, connective tissue, right?
Yeah, actually when they fed those mice
as high, methionine and rich diet,
it actually shortened their lifespan.
But that shortening of their lifespan
was abolished once they started supplementing the mice
also with glycine.
So I think when it comes to eating lots and lots of protein,
I think it's also really important to wear
all the proteins coming from, right?
Yeah, yeah, to get like a broad array of...
It's your organ meats, and all that other stuff, you know?
And also, occasionally maybe take breaks
from protein consumption, you know?
Get that endocrine taste.
You know, they have studies that show that you,
when you take it, when you fast from protein
or you go low protein, you actually increase increase what they say is increase your sensitivity to protein
and utilize it more efficiently for what we want it for, which is repair
and rebuild. Now I noticed this as a somebody who's trying to build muscle
and I noticed this when I would fast or when I go I used to have vegan days
where I would just eat nothing but vegetables for one or two days. Then I go back to eating protein
and I feel like this get this rebound effect. go back to eating protein and I feel like this rebound effect.
When I'd work out and I feel like I build more muscle.
And I brought this up to our friend Ben Pekolsky, who was a pro, you know, was a pro, I have
be bodybuilder, massive human being.
And he totally loved it.
And he's like, he agreed.
He's like, oh no, I have my athletes do the same thing, which I'm like, oh shit, you're
a bodybuilder.
And you said that.
That I never thought he would have said that at all.
I want to talk to you a little bit about your podcast, Max.
I know that you just started this,
like what has been your strategy going forward with your podcast?
So it's a different, it's a different platform entirely.
Do you have like, you know, a goal with it?
Is it different than, you know,
talking about your book?
Yeah, we're kind of guests of you at all that kind of stuff.
My strategy, my goal is to be a fraction as good
at podcasting as you guys.
Oh god, that's tough.
Oh, stop it.
Oh, stop.
Thank you for that, Andrew.
Thank you.
I'm almost finished.
You do a fucking great job,
I'm a good fucking thank you, man.
I'm a great fucking.
Thank you.
No, thank you.
I like people, people have really responded to it,
but it's one thing that I'll definitely tell you that I
do is I edit a little bit to make sure that, because I come from a school of thought where
I used to work in TV, and everything I put out, in the back of my head, I'm like, is this
in the service of the audience?
So I'm always trying to cut down and make more concise and more clear and things like
that. And so if there's like, if I ask a question
that's not as clear as I wanted to, you know,
all like cut out the, you know, whatever is distracting
and all like work on the intros and things like that.
But I also think that there's like an amazing thing
about just putting the raw stuff up
and like being really present and just putting up,
you know, a conversation as it happens,
which like, I feel like you guys do.
Well, there's definitely, we're seeing this happen right now in our space.
And it's really fun and interesting to watch is there's a place for both of those, right?
There's definitely, you know, a place for the Joe Rogan, the Mind Pump style of podcasts,
where we could potentially carry on for three hours and bullshit about topics that have nothing
to do with brain health.
You know, we're talking about your sex life in the first half of this, which, you know,
somebody who's tuning in just to hear Max speak
about brain health could give two shits about.
But somebody who really wants to know more about you
may really appreciate that.
So I think there's places for both, for both types
of podcast.
Long, long form seems to be growing quite a bit.
I think part of it is the bandwidth was limited
because you came from, you
do a lot of old media and new media, right? The TV radio, you are in that space. Now you're
in the new media space where we're not limited with bandwidth. So we don't have to make
our point in 10 minutes. We could just go for three hours if we wanted to. And it was
a bit of a gamble, but people seem to appreciate it. Are you having fun having these long
conversations with people?
I love it.
It's just another platform for me.
I used to have a TV show, and then I was, you know, and I still am working on a documentary.
And I reached out and interviewed a lot of researchers for my book, but many of those
interviews were untapped.
They were just kind of like me taking notes.
So the podcast is an amazing way for me to be able to,
just connect with people that I find interesting
and have conversations with them, tape them,
learn more about topics that I'm interested in.
I think what's different about my show,
The Genius Life, compared to my book,
is that my book is really a deep dive into nutrition.
And The Genius Life really is about,
you know, my goal is for it to be broader than just
nutrition.
So I've been talking to a lot of people,
anybody who can offer a crumb on the sort of scavenger
hunt trail to truth for me, like I want to have them on.
But one of my favorite episodes that I did recently
was with a singer songwriter named Matt Nathanson,
who's very well known in the singer songwriter space.
He's had a number of hit songs.
And he was on the road recently
with the band OAR who you know, a lot of you will know.
Matt's is a great guy who I was actually a fan of his music long before I became friends
with him and I got to meet him and we became friends maybe 10 years ago.
And aside from being an insanely talented artist in singer-songwriter, he's just a brilliant
guy.
And I was like, you know, this guy, you know,
has tons of wisdom to drop.
And I want to be able to have a platform
where I can just have conversations
with people that I find interesting.
You know, so that was a great episode.
I had you on sale.
Obviously that was great.
I had Dr. Setchan Panda, who's one of the leading researchers
in circadian biology.
That was, yeah, that was an amazing thing.
Was there anything on there that kind of blew you away from what he was talking about? Dr. Setchan Panda, who's one of the leading researchers in circadian biology, that was, yeah, that was an amazing thing.
Was there anything on there that kind of blew you away
from what he was talking about?
Man, I just think it's, you know, it's just so cool
how complicated we are.
It's intimidating, but at the end of the day,
it's like, it's just amazing that like evolution really
has thought of everything, you know?
And we're just trying to figure it out.
We're like just scratching the surface.
Well, because you have that knowledge,
it's also, you also deliver a message,
and I really appreciate how you deliver that.
You don't speak in these certainties
that a lot of people...
They're not dogmatic.
Yeah, you're not dogmatic about anything that you talk about.
And I feel like that's something that we all share
that's in common.
I think why we've had a lot of success is because of that
is like, you know, we kind of present the information
that we've learned in our journey,
and it's not this is the way where I think there's a lot of people out there that tend to do that. They learn a little bit of knowledge,
they get a little bit of information and then they form a camp and then it's all about that.
They get a lot of attention. Because you get a lot of attention when you're dogmatic.
It's much more difficult to say it depends. We have this unfortunate cognitive bias
as humans. The less we know, the more we feel like we know. And the more we know, the less we feel like,
well, it's so true.
And it's really unfortunate, but it's true.
Like most experts that I would interview in the space,
I mean, look, I've been called an expert.
I wrote a New York Times best song book.
Like, I'm, you know, I'm, I get,
I brought onto these shows to talk about,
you know, nutrition topics, health topics, and things like that.
The word, the word expert to me, me, I don't even like it honestly,
because there's so many more unknowns,
and I'm so excited to learn more and ask questions.
And I think a real expert really kind of just knows
the right questions to ask.
That's what it's all about.
When you look at this past year,
what are some of the things that you think you've learned
recently?
What are some of the things you've picked up? I know you mentioned, I know you had Sal on it, I'm sure he dropped some great fitness knowledge for you and so about that. When you look at this past year, what are some of the things that you think you've learned recently? What are some of the things you've picked up?
I know you mentioned, I know you had Sal on it.
I'm sure he dropped some great fitness knowledge for you
and so on that.
But when you think about all the guests and your learnings,
I know your guy is constantly growing and reading
and learning, what are some of the bits of knowledge
that you've picked up over the last year?
Man, I mean, I think, you know, learning more about
circadian biology, it's definitely become really interesting.
The natural inclinations of our body during the specific times of day, you know, in the
morning, the fat burning window that we have at night in the kitchen closes, so to speak
in the body.
And just sort of honoring, talk about that. Go a little bit deeper than that,
like how you've started to apply some things in your life.
Are you subscribed?
You use the blue blockers at night
when you're on your computer and things like that?
Like what are some of the things that you're doing personally
because you've this newfound knowledge?
Well, I'm a big fan of blue blockers.
I wear those, especially if I'm doing work
or watching TV into the wee hours.
I always have those on.
Blue light really does send a signal to our brains
that it's daytime.
It's been one of the biggest game changes that I've done.
We recently got a sponsor.
It's a silly, but it was.
Felix Gray and what I love, so I've always tried
the Blue Blocker thing and in the past,
when I would do Blue Blockers,
the one thing I would hate about them is they're so orange
that it distorts the television and the computer.
Well, these ones that Felix Gray has,
they're like clear, but they still block out the blue light.
So I can sit there and enjoy a movie
or be on my computer and not feel like my colors are stored.
And I notice a huge difference when,
if I just notice as soon as the sun goes down
and I'm in the house, lights are all on still,
I'm on computer or watching TV, I just throw them on,
and man, my sleep has been night and day difference.
And so, yeah.
Conversely, I would often realize, and only now,
can I sort of identify why I would feel this way,
but I, you know, when I'm in New York,
I spend a lot of time with my brothers,
and they have more traditional jobs.
So one of the things that they love to do
is binge watch, like Netflix shows,
when they get home from work
So I would do this too with them and you know for a while
I was like game of thrones things like that and I would always notice that you know on then on the
Mornings after the nights where we would just watch like show after show after show up until the point
You know that we would go to bed. I would always feel hung over the next morning
You know, I would have like a light hangover and I couldn't describe
Why that would be because I'm not a you know, I don't really drink. I'm not a big drinker.
You know, I certainly wasn't drinking on the, you know, nights before I had these hangovers.
But at a certain point, I realized it was the light. But the light was affecting my
ability to have rejuvenating sleep. And I started wearing these blue-lyblocking glasses,
amber-colored glasses. And it was like a sort of night and day, no pun intended, like difference.
I would feel much better the next day, rested, rejuvenated, and yeah, and I also don't,
I don't eat for two to three hours before I go to sleep. I feel great the next day when I don't do
that. It also helps my body. I feel regulate, you know, signals related to hunger. When I do sort
of break that circadian inclination and eat late at night, you know, I related to hunger. When I do sort of break that circadian inclination
and eat late at night, you know,
I'm counterintuitively more hungry than next morning.
You would think that wouldn't be the case
because I had maybe an extra head of calories,
but I think it just throws everything out of whack.
And then in the mornings, I don't eat for an hour,
two or three after I wake up.
You know, in the mornings, we have that amazing cortisol spike,
which is the body's like top fat burning hormone.
It's the body's chief catabolic hormone,
and that's elevated when we wake up.
So I try not to mess with that.
And I also definitely don't eat
if I have to wake up earlier than my natural time
in which I wake up.
Oh, interesting.
Yeah.
Oh, that's interesting.
So our buddy Ben, he does, he's big
because he flies back and forth like yourself too a lot.
So I'm curious if you've tried this, he's big on,
as soon as he gets in, he says this is,
if he's flying across country or even across the world,
he'll, as soon as he gets into town,
he looks up an infrared sauna and does an infrared sauna
and supposedly that's supposed to reset your circadian rhythm.
Do you know anything about that?
Or have you ever tried that?
No, I don't, but I have a theory that using cold water, like showers, because it's a stress
around the body doing that first thing in the morning, could jumpstart.
That early morning cortisol knew you, but I don't know.
That's just a theory.
One thing I do know, and that I learned when I interviewed Touch and Panda,
which is super cool to know,
if you have to wake up, you know,
due to an alarm clock, so before you would naturally arise,
your body is melatonin, probably has not yet come down,
and your cortisol certainly hasn't spiked
if you're waking up due to an alarm clock,
which I did today to fly in for this.
So, you know, melatonin, when melatonin is elevated,
we have less insulin sensitivity,
because melatonin is the body's sleep hormone.
So once melatonin starts getting going
in the evening hours, that's when the kitchen is closing.
So that's when metabolism is slowing down and things like that.
The problem is you can also have elevated melatonin
in the morning if you wake up really early
due to your alarm clock because you gotta get to work.
So eating in that window, especially sugar and carbohydrates and things like that is like the worst idea
Wow, and now what about like coffee too? What if you were to have because it wouldn't be ideal to have coffee in that situation either
Well coffee would get the cortisol up that wouldn't well. Yeah coffee does get the cortisol up
So then it would be advantageous and coffee also helps to reset the body circadian
Okay, yeah coffee sort of has a similar effect on the brain as bright light.
So, interesting.
We can use coffee.
It gets that a dino-sign to circulate or whatever.
Yeah, dino-sign.
Dino-sign there.
I said it wrong, didn't I?
But can you talk about this documentary that you're working on?
You used to said that earlier, and it got my interest
perked up a little bit.
Yeah, so the first project that I ever decided to do
in the health space is a documentary called Breadhead.
And we're still working on it. But in the very beginning of 2015 I did a Kickstarter
campaign for it.
And people can go to BreadheadMovie.com if they want to see the Kickstarter teaser.
But essentially, it's the first ever dementia prevention documentary.
And it really follows me going to talk to the top researchers in the world that are proving that our cognitive fate is something that falls within our control.
And I've, you know, have filmed my mom over the years and it's a sort of a more, there's a lot of science in it, but it's also a very personal look into what it's like to have a loved one, you know, a mother specifically with dementia.
And my goal is to really awaken people
to the notion that dementia is a potentially preventable
condition for most people.
I don't think a lot of people realize just how much of an,
we're already seeing explosion of Alzheimer's in dementia,
how much worse it's gonna get with all the diabetes
that people are getting.
Because don't they call it type three diabetes?
Yeah, I mean, if you have type two diabetes, your risk for developing Alzheimer's increases
two to fourfold.
So, I mean, it's like, it's just crazy.
And right now, five million people in the US have Alzheimer's.
That number is set to triple by the year 2050.
So it is going to explode.
And Alzheimer's is just one form of dementia.
So I mean, like, my mom doesn't have Alzheimer's.
She has another form of dementia.
There's a lot of people out there that I've loved with other forms of dementia. So I mean, like my mom doesn't have Alzheimer's, she has another form of dementia. There's a lot of people out there that I've loved with other forms of dementia and there's
virtually no research on, you know, like, I mean, the Louis body dementia, Parkinson's disease
dementia. There's, you know, frontal temporal dementia. There's like, all, there's all these
little different variants and all the money is going into Alzheimer's disease because it's
the most common form of dementia. And so, you so, I can tell you that we have a lot of information on diet and lifestyle and how
it pertains to these more common versions of it.
Alzheimer's disease, maybe mild cognitive impairment, things like that.
But for people that have these more niche forms, it's like literally grasping its straws.
And so, I think we're in trouble. And that's why my passion really has become
to get this message of prevention out to young people.
And also to try to like figure out how to make it more
enticing for them to start thinking about their brain health
and things like that because I know,
and I was guilty of this before I was directly affected
because of my mom.
Most young people think of Alzheimer's disease
as like an old person's condition.
You know, like something that's not gonna affect me.
Way down the road, not gonna affect me.
Maybe it's an inevitable part of aging,
maybe if my grandmother had it, it had it,
it's sort of like baked in the cards for me.
But these are all misconceptions that I'm trying to dispel.
When you look, you know, with your knowledge
that you have, especially in this arena,
and you look at the younger generation coming up,
you know, with the video games, the processed foods,
the high sugar diets, the lack of movement,
what are the things that concern you?
Like, what do you think,
or what are we gonna be dealing with in the next 15, 20 years?
I mean, definitely circadian disruption, you know,
that's something that today we have disruption you know that's that's something
that today we have you know all different types of entertainment digital
devices things like that to keep us entertained 24 hours a day. It's taking
it's you know making rest really difficult and it's affecting sleep where more
stressed out than we've ever been you. I think that we have fewer and fewer healthy ways
of dealing with that stress.
Exercise, leisure time, recreational activity
is at an all time, or exercise activity
is at an all time low.
Diets, our diets have become so mangled.
Our food supplies become so industrialized.
Most of the calories that we now consume
come from ultra processed foods.
I don't really see it getting any better.
I mean, I think people are becoming more informed,
which is a great thing.
But at the end of the day,
I think people need to take more accountability
for their own health.
And, you know, I don't know.
It is, I mean is the biggest producers of foods are found in market
economies. And those markets will follow the consumer. So I
think if people are more educated and start to make
decisions that are different, then you'll start to see the
market follow. But right now, what people are going for is
the convenience. And then the, you know the, for lack of a better term,
addictive properties of processed foods, because they're engineered to be so hyper palatable
that, you know, and they're easy. So it's like, if you have kids and you don't got time and,
well, they don't eat this, but they'll eat that. So let me buy them and they'll eat whatever I get.
You know, Netflix, baby, so don't. Yeah, exactly. And so I think that tends to be a problem.
We have friends in our, in this fitness and health space that get really angry when
people say things like process sugar is bad and they say no no the evidence
shows that if the calories are low and the macros match or whatever yeah sugar is
not bad would you would you well it's but the thing is it's not just it's not
just about marketing and the onus isn't just on the food manufacturers. I mean, I think we live lifestyles today that are so disharmonious with the kind of environment in which our brains
evolved, that they're literally leaving them whether or not we're conscious of it, screaming
out for help. I mean, people that sit behind desks for nine hours a day, literally like
zero dopamine over the course of your workday, right?
They get home from work, all they want to do is emotionally,
you know, get a tiny hit of dopamine from the kind of food
that brings them the most pleasure.
Sure, right.
It's like a way of relieving stress.
I mean, I was having this conversation with one of my brothers
the other day who does sales for like this tech company.
And his job is so difficult.
It's like suited for his personality,
but it's literally like no dopamine.
Whereas us, we have these entrepreneurial lifestyles
that thankfully we've had the mental
and emotional fortitude to go and pursue
these kinds of jobs that we have.
But my brother, he works nine hours days at this desk,
zero dopamine, zero pleasure, zero joy,
having conversations with people about,
we were joking about meeting,
the kinds of phrases that people use in meetings all the time.
Like, let's circle back on that.
I don't know.
Like, these phrases that everybody has in a meeting,
they just have them sort of on like,
they press buttons and it's like,
let's circle back on that.
I'm gonna loop this person in. I'm gonna keep the S reports out
I keep the S reports. Yeah, or like I'm gonna fuck and so
that's basically
For most people's lives what they have to sort of wrap their brains around so that by the time they get home
Or you know by the time the weekend comes around. It's like they go overboard with escapism
You know, it's either escapism through food or escapism
with drugs or going to a concert
and blasting out your eardrums
to feel a sense of connection
with the people that you're standing with
and listening to music together with.
So it's just like, we've become really at a balance.
And I just think it's...
So when you help somebody like that,
and I can't imagine what your DMs look like.
I know a mind look like it, and I don't post it
as good of information as you post on yours.
So I imagine you get flooded with questions,
and I know how hard it is for us to answer questions
because there's so many variabilities.
Do you have like big rocks that you tell someone
in that exact situation like where to start?
Man, you know, I've been pretty lucky in the sense that my parents always kind of
pushing me to follow my bliss. And so that's, you know, that's, I would start there. I
would start, you know, kind of listening and kind of hearing the message behind the message.
And I don't know, I think, I think many people don't live the lives
that they've imagined for themselves out of fear, maybe.
And I feel like once you're able to, I don't know,
shed the fear and do a level of introspection, I guess,
and to kind of put yourself out there and to discover,
to try to discover what it is that you're that you're into.
You know, it might take a little bit of experimentation.
Malcolm Gladwell calls this concerted cultivation, but really kind of like opening the door to
enough experiences where you can allow yourself to feel what it is to come alive.
You know, I think once you have that, you should go in that direction.
I mean, we're only here for like a blip on the radar.
So when you talk to your brother,
is that kind of like what you're nudging him to do?
Is like, hey, bro, like, I have.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, I have.
I mean, I think, you know, especially for, you know,
one of my brothers had, he has like ADD,
which I think we all have ADD.
Um, what did you say?
ADD. That I think we all have ADD. What did you say? ADD.
That's cruel.
Yeah.
But yeah, I mean, there's a disproportionate amount
of entrepreneurs that with ADD, and I think it's
because an ADD brain is essentially a brain that's hardwired
for novelty seeking, and would have been the ultimate hunter
gather.
I mean, you would have been like a tribe leader,
if you had ADD as a hunter gatherer.
It's essentially a brain that rewards you
for seeking out new foraging opportunities
and bridging new connections
and maybe doing a little more exploring
than the average person.
And today, that person, I feel like,
is gonna struggle under the constraints of,
a desk job.
So.
I read an interesting article on that
where this author was, he was speculating
as to one of the reasons why there ADD is so much higher in a country like America.
And one of the speculations he had was well, you know, this is a country made up of totally of immigrants, bunch of people who left countries in safety and came to a totally unknown place.
It's like, I bet a lot of them had ADD and about a lot of us are from these people with ADD.
Totally, totally. I mean, I think we've path them had ADD, and about a lot of us are from these people with ADD. Totally, totally.
I mean, I think we've pathologized ADD,
but I don't think it's a problem.
I think it's a context-specific problem.
It's a problem if you're trying to fit yourself
in a nine to five job,
where you've got to sit in a cubicle all day,
answering phones and doing things like that.
But for somebody who's like me,
like getting, every day is different,
I mean, it's amazing.
Right.
It's also amazing what a difference, I have two kids,
and so I look at, you know, I look at how they behave
and the friends behave, and then I do a lot,
read a lot about children behavior,
and it's funny how much you can control
or seem to get rid of ADD symptoms or ADHD symptoms,
by having kids go outside and play and exercise and then
feeding them a good diet.
It's incredible.
The difference you see in them.
100%.
I mean, there's really, there's some small studies using omega-3s and kids with ADD seems
to improve executive function.
ADD is considered a problem related to executive function, which is sensory gating,
attentional control, tuning out distractions, delaying gratification, all prefrontal cortex stuff.
And they're mediated, it seems,
according to the literature that I reviewed,
by in a significant way, by our diets and our lifestyles.
Exercise, I think, so important.
Eating a healthy diet, really, really important.
I never had good grades growing up in elementary school.
My grades always suffered.
I was always a favorite of the teachers because I always asked good grades growing up in elementary school. My grades always suffered. I was always, you know, a favorite of the teachers
because I always asked good questions,
but when it came time to actually doing my work
and preparing for the test and whatever,
I just like always came up short.
And so my grades were always extremely mediocre.
And that's one of the reasons why,
despite always really being fascinated
by the human body and health and nutrition,
I didn't go into medicine because I just didn't think that I'd be able to keep up in medical school. And I also grew up
consuming things like corn oil, not eating any fish ever, eating only lean protein and not
really eating too many eggs because my mom told me that eggs could clog my little arteries. arteries, you know? And so I'll never be able to, you know, prove with, you know, any
kind of certainty that my academic problems were caused by my diet growing up, but certainly
they were related. And ever since I changed my diet and started eating moral megathreys,
fewer megacixis, more vegetables, things like that, I mean, my brain I feel like has turned on.
Can you speak to the benefits and maybe the misconceptions
that people have with taking an omega-3?
Because there's a lot of information out there
in regards to taking omega-3 supplements.
You've got some doctors that just tell every patient,
just take it and you should take it.
Everybody needs it.
We don't get enough of it.
And then I've read literature that,
you know, if you're over consuming six and nine,
six and nine's will outcompete the threes anyways.
You may as well be flushing the fucking pills
down the toilet anyways.
Then I've even heard some people say
that they're worthless completely.
I think I just saw an article floating around Facebook
just recently just that said,
oh, new study comes out.
It says that, oh, mega, out says that omega taking omega 3s
Is a waste of time. Yeah, where do you sit in all this?
I'm a big fan of omega 3s
And I've definitely seen many many randomized control trials that have used
Omega 3 is to positive
result
I think you know
Not everybody is gonna need an omega 3 supplement if you already have an optimized
Omega 3 index they look at the ratio of omega-3s to omega-6s
and the plasma membrane.
If you're eating a diet that is biologically appropriate, it has a comparable amount of
omega-3s to omega-6s, taking an omega-3 supplement is not going to help you.
If you already have a condition, an inflammatory condition, I don't think that omega-3s are
going to be enough
to fix that condition.
But if you're eating a standard American diet, I think most people are going to see dramatic
improvement in many things once they write the ratio of omega-3s to omega-6s that we
are meant to consume.
So, that kind of confirms what I think I teach or I say, because I think that was the best
information that I ever came across in red, which is, you know, if you're lacking
in it, and so this is kind of how I supplement, I pay attention to my diet.
You know, I'm pretty consistent with eating fish.
And so when I'm not consistent with it, I tend to supplement with my omega three.
I also pay attention to how much red meat and beef I'm consuming.
And if that's really high, I'm trying to bring that back.
And then I try to cycle in like white meats
and fishes and things like that into my diet.
So is it true that if I have extremely high,
you know, let's say that's all I eat is red meat,
like a carnivore type of diet
and then taking an omega three,
it might take,
consuming too many of the six and nine's
that the three won't even matter out competing
because that's what I've heard.
Is that true, do you know?
I mean, no, I would speculate that that would help.
If all you're doing is eating red meat,
I mean, I don't eat red meat if it's not grass-fed.
I just, I think it's, you know,
it's not worth the additional iron that you're getting.
You know, we, we, guys, we can accumulate iron.
I just found out that I have this polymorphism
that, that, that makes me absorb more iron.
And so I've become conscious of that. You know, you don't wanna overdo it on the, absorb more iron. And so I've become conscious of that.
You don't wanna overdo it on the iron.
I can get toxic.
I can get toxic.
Yeah, and we don't have our periods like we don't period,
so it's like we don't lose iron.
And it's obviously concentrated in red meat.
You can also get a significant amount of iron
from just from using a cast iron pan.
I started using a cast iron pan. I started using a cast iron pan
because I wanted to adopt a healthier coach.
We just switched to that.
Yeah.
Katrina came in the other day
and we've got in there,
fucking heavy.
Heavy shit.
Yeah, you had to do it heavy.
That's why it cast iron's the best.
And you don't even,
like the way you clean it's different.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, we don't use dish soap or anything
or a patina.
Yeah, you just scrub it with what wichima colo or whatever,
and you just leave it, you just leave some.
Yeah.
How did you find out that you had that polymorphism?
Was it a test, like a blood work that you did?
I had kind of high levels of transfer and saturation,
so like iron saturation.
My iron was within a normal range,
but, and I'm not, you know, I literally just found this out,
so I haven't done like two deep a dive,
but one interesting thing that I discovered
in the couple of hours that I spent researching
is that you actually can,
like the only known compound to significantly block
iron absorption when taken concurrently
with food as calcium.
So if you have one of these polymorphisms,
because the risk is that you can develop something called
hereditary hemochromatosis,
which basically is an excessive accumulation of iron,
and people that have that actually have to,
I think once a week or once a month give blood
to get rid of that excessive iron.
Well iron oxidizes, obviously.
Yeah, rust.
What's what happens to your body with too much of it?
Crazy.
It ages faster and the way oxidizes faster.
Isn't that weird?
So, yeah, so I mean, just, you know,
I've become a little bit more conscious of that.
And so when it comes to red meat,
I really look at it as an amazing way
to get in a broad array of nutrients.
But if it's not grass-fed,
then I don't think it's worth it,
because a grass fed piece of meat
has an omega-3 to omega-6 ratio
that mirrors that of a healthy human brain.
Whereas when you get grain fed meat,
it's much higher skewed in favor of omega-6s.
You get less CLA, you get vitamin K2,
so it's just not as nutrient dense.
Are you familiar with how different it is?
So we're sponsored by Butcherbox, and one of the things I love about this is their grass-fed,
grass-finished.
Is there a major difference between grass-fed, grass-finished, and then just grass-fed that
you're aware when it comes to the nutrient balance?
You definitely want grass-fed, grass-finished, because if it's grain-finished, that really
is what moves the needle on the healthiness of the meat, because they essentially fatten
it up with grain, and that dictates the healthiness of the meat because they essentially fatten it up with grain.
And that dictates the healthiness of the fat that's going to be in the meat.
So it is important because I think that's one of the hustles that you see in the grocery
stores now is, you know, they're advertising it as grass fed within the final week or two.
They're still pumpin' it full of grain to fatten it up.
So it still tastes amazing too.
Yeah.
I saw beef turkey the other day and it was like, it said 100% grass-fed beef and then in smaller fonts
that used 100% grass-fed beef, grass-fed beef used,
which means that they could use grass-fed beef,
but that doesn't necessarily mean that it's all grass-fed.
Oh.
You know?
It's just like, these, wow.
So these are the ingredients.
You can get away with it.
All right.
Oh, we use grass-fed beef.
Yeah. For like 10% of our.
The grass-fed beef that we use is 100% grass-fed.
Yeah, that's cool.
That's cool.
Oh, wow.
We're always getting hustled.
That's such bullshit.
What are the top, what would you say are the top things?
People generally should avoid in their diets.
Like, what are the big, you know, bad, evil things,
and most people's diets that they should probably avoid?
Man, I'd, I mean, you know, we've,
I think we've talked about like the grain and seed oils,
those are pretty bad for you.
They are.
Like the hydrogenated vegetable oils or?
Well, they're not even hydrogenated,
but canola oil, corn oil, grape seed oil,
they all have trace levels of trans fats.
Five up to five percent trans fats found in, you know,
organic non-GMO
canola oil that you buy at Whole Foods
is gonna have trans fats due to the deodorization process.
Well, and then that's what they actually use
when they cook in their little, oh fuck.
Yeah.
Oh, that's why I don't need, I don't need it.
That's toxic.
Coconut oil is not toxic.
That's because there's no safe level
of trans fat consumption.
What a bummer, that's Whole Foods.
We trust you, Whole Foods. What a bummer. That's all foods. Yeah, we trust you whole food
Yeah, we can't anymore. I mean, you put all your trust in corporation. No
I mean you guys know that's the brain. That's the oil they use the
I don't ask. Yeah, I don't know why you know why food that's our
Prisbee. It's cheap because it's subsidized right it's so cheap. It's a subsidized oil
Just like all the things that we like court, like why are they used? Corn syrup on you whole face.
I know, it's not what, yeah.
It's the same reason why corn oil,
not health foods.
Corn syrup is used instead of what was it called?
Sugar, subsidized.
Yeah, yeah.
I would take food, my food,
sauteed in butter, coconut oil,
any day over canola oil.
It's really unhealthy.
And you know, people tend to think that canola oil is healthy
because it contains omega-3s, but omega-3s are actually even more vulnerable to the oxidation
process than omega-6s. These oils, they undergo extraction using harsh chemical solvents,
heat, machinery, then they go through these other industrial steps.
One of them is deodorization, makes them tasteless.
I mean, taking oil like extra virgin olive oil, it's got a very distinct flavor, right?
These, conversely, like corn oil, can oil, soybean oil, they're engineered to have no flavor.
And manufacturers love that because it allows them to use them in anything from
salad dressings to mayonnaise, which I've heard you guys talk about, to granola bars.
They use it as a varnish to coat roasted nuts and dried fruits and things like that.
So it's like, you know, they're pretty unhealthy.
And so I would say that that is definitely one of the things that I've like,
I don't, you know, if I'm traveling I'm on the road,
I'm getting some canola oil, I know it.
But when I'm home and I'm cooking,
you know, you're never gonna find anything made
with canola oil in my house.
Yeah.
What about sugar?
Sugar's bad.
You know, it's funny when I talk about...
That's a sound bite we're gonna use right there.
Yeah, that's it.
Just a sugar's bad. Just stir some shit right there. Well, but the thing is, okay, so funny when I talk about... It's a sound bite we're gonna use right there. Yeah, that's what I'm talking about. Just a shirt's bad, just stir some shit right there.
Well, but the thing is okay, so we talk about like on Instagram,
I feel like there's this thing,
there's the whole like calories and calories out.
Yes.
And so I know many people in the fitness community are like,
sugar isn't bad.
If you're eating more calories than you're burning,
that's bad.
Yeah, I have a way of, bro.
It's like the calories in calories outmodel,
but I'm, you know, having chronically elevated levels of insulin
in your body, which occur as a result
of chronic sugar consumption is no bueno.
It's not good for anybody.
Whether or not you're trying to gain muscle or lean out
or whatever, so I eat a low sugar diet,
I eat a very low grain diet, and the only times
that I'll really eat sugar or grain
is in the post workout window.
When I know that that sugar, those carbs, that glucose is going to serve me by refilling
my muscles with glygogen, you know.
Not to mention 90% of the population walk around 90% of the time in a fucking surplus.
So, exactly.
When you look at it, I mean, we're doing both.
Because if we were all in a deficit and if everybody was equally in a deficit and we're
having a little bit of sugar here and there we'd all be fucking skinny
Exactly. That's not the case. No, it's like these Instagram fitness gurus. They're like pizza doesn't make you fat
Eating more calories than your burning makes you fat. I'm like well obviously. Yeah, but are you telling people you know in a nation where
50% of us at least are either pre-diabetic or diabetic
and way more are hyper-insulinemic,
that pizza is okay.
And plus we all we look at is obesity.
And yes, obesity is a risk factor
for all these chronic illnesses.
However, a sizable minority of people
who have things like diabetes
and dementia related stuff in chronic disease
are normal weight.
There's a decent, there's millions of Americans
who have diabetes who are never overweight.
There's millions of Americans who get a heart attack
who weren't overweight.
So, the whole focus on being overweight,
I can't base it on your physique.
Yeah, no, that's the only thing.
In fact, sometimes I think it's probably a gift
for some people to become overweight because at least they have an outward sign. Yeah, no, that's the only thing. In fact, sometimes I think it's probably a gift for some people to become overweight
because at least they have an outward sign.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm like, oh, maybe I should clean up my diet.
Exactly, exactly.
Sadly, that's the incentive for most people, right?
That's a side.
Not going to the doctor and seeing that you've got,
an A1C of 5.8, almost, it's just, it's crazy.
So I'm gonna take a left with you right now
because we could talk nutrition all day long with you.
I love it.
But I like talking about your sex life
and things that are off like that.
So I mean, you're on TV, you've just got
a New York Times bestseller, you got a podcast
going, you're traveling all over the world,
you got beautiful women around you all the time.
How happy are you right now?
First of all,
I don't know.
I don't know.
All those things are fucking
just training you in awesome pictures.
Yeah, yeah.
Most of the beautiful,
I don't have beautiful women around me all the time.
Just every time we see you.
Every time I see you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Every time.
I do have a number of female friends who are very,
who are brilliant, who are kind, who are attractive.
Most of them have boyfriends and or husbands.
But no, I'm, you know.
We're teasing you.
No, I mean, I'm very, I would say I'm mostly happy.
I'm still very, you know, like, I'm very happy that I've been able to channel what's going on in my home life with my mom
into something positive and that makes me feel like
I've got a career that's going well,
that makes me feel really good.
But I'm upset by the fact that my mom is very sick
and that is horrible to have to contend
with. I mean, I'm with her, like I was just yesterday, I spent a lot of time with her.
She has like this stomach pain that's like non-specific and her ability to communicate
is like extremely limited. She's becoming, you know, more catatonic by the day. And, you
know, she's still, my mom has pigments in her hair, she's blonde,
like it's just horrendous to see what she's having to go through. And I'm the point person
in my family, I'm the person in the family, obviously that has to, not has to, but that's,
everybody loves to. That's equipped to take her to these doctor appointments and so,
but at the same time, like, I also want own life. I'm super happy to be out here.
But it has to be fucking so hard.
Yeah, I'm going to Burning Man for the first time this week.
I'm gonna be out of town for a while.
Ultimately, I wanna be back in LA,
like most of my friends, girls and guys,
like my dating life is in Los Angeles.
It's not in New York, in New York.
I don't date ever, because I'm just so wrapped up in my family.
I live with my brother in this tiny little apartment.
It's really difficult.
I would be in LA.
I would have a normal life.
I would have a car.
I don't have any of that stuff.
I'm back and forth.
I can't.
So that, to me, is stressful, and that's not ideal.
So one of the major reasons why my dating life sucks
Do you struggle with that decision sometimes of like doing that?
Where I'm sure you're constantly being reached out to like you said because you're the point man. Yeah situation where you're like
I mean, well when people reach out to me it makes me feel so good that it like
It makes it all worth it right like I mean, that's the fact that I've kind of like
sacrificed in many ways my life for the family,
but I also don't wanna,
I also am cognizant of the fact that I could easily
10 years from now look back at my life
and say that I regret not living more of it for me.
So I'm trying to sort of strike that balance
and spend more time doing what it is I love.
But the sole reason why I spend time in New York
is because my family, I wouldn't be in New York
if it wasn't for that.
It wasn't for that.
You're such a good person man, very, very likable
and a very, very good person.
And I think your family's blessed to have you.
But I do wanna ask you about Burning Man, you excited?
To whom I'm so excited.
I've never been.
Yeah.
Either of we.
Oh man.
We need to get back in.
We can't get us to go and we're like, ah!
Are you going to remain sober while you're out there?
Are you going to do what's going on?
Because everybody out there apparently,
I've never been out there.
Yeah.
But I know you don't smoke weed.
Just give us a wink.
You don't drink.
You don't do anything.
You're just going to go on and watch everybody get weird.
I'll tell you what, I do have lots of electrolytes.
I brought lots of electrolytes.
Oh, you're electrolytes with me. That is important, sir. You nerd.
You nerd. I'm thinking about it. I got literally like a fucking
vial of real salt in my backpack. I'm like I'm gonna be pounding that shit, putting it
in my camel back. No, I, I'm super excited. First of all, there needs to be a mind pump camp
at Burning Man, I feel like that would be epic.
Oh, wow.
But no, yeah, I,
like I have, you know, I would say,
I don't really enjoy alcohol all that much.
I definitely don't like weed,
but I have experimented with, you know, mushrooms
and I do find them to be like a powerful Neuotropic.
And they enhance my executive function.
So I'm like, you're talking about micro-dosing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'm thinking of mega-dosing, gonna do that.
No, no, no, no, no.
I don't like chemically induced anxiety
and once I experienced like a little bit of anxiety from them
and I definitely don't want that feeling.
But like, yeah, I don't like,
I don't like ever losing control, ever.
But I do feel like it's, you know,
they've done these like really interesting FMRI studies
where, you know, it, you know,
creates connectivity between disparate brain regions
that I'm normally talking to, you know, one another.
And to me, that's really cool.
I definitely have noticed that, you know,
and I've tried them.
And I don't endorse trying them publicly
because they're, you know, but the research
out of Johns Hopkins and NYU,
super fascinating, we've talked about this, yeah.
And yeah, I mean, just, you know, personal experience,
like definitely have,
who are you rolling out there with?
What's your own secret?
And what it sounds like.
Big group or by yourself, what are you going with?
Going with two close friends and then we're part of a camp
and then just having lived in a life
for such a long time, I have.
Gonna know a ton of friends.
Yeah.
Did you bring like weird,
are you gonna wear like steam punk clothes and shit?
No.
I went, I'm such a like neurotic, like,
I just don't wanna die.
I wanna like make that.
Yeah. Like zinc oxide. I'm like, I neurotic, like I just don't want to die. I want to like make that. Yeah.
Like zinc oxide.
I'm like, I need my electrolytes.
I'm like, should I bring like protein powders or like,
but no, I went to this place, like uni-close,
I don't know if you've heard of uni-close.
We all were big fans of it on the East Coast
because they make super high tech.
It's a Japanese company.
They make super high tech like functional clothing that keeps you warm.
And so I bought all this like warm shit to wear at night.
So does that say no to you?
So does that say no to you?
No, no, no.
Maybe next year, maybe the second year.
All right.
This year I'm just, I'm literally-
You're observing this year.
All right.
I'm excited that you're going because I feel like you're one of our buddies that we connect
to what you do in the last-
You're like a version of me going to Burning Man.
Yeah, exactly.
I'm saying, so I'm gonna wait for you if you come back okay.
Maybe I'll go.
We got you in, I think you're at podcast hard, right?
And at the end of September, we'll see you out in Tahoe.
Won't we?
Are you out there?
Yeah, that'll be a fun event too.
We're excited for that.
We're just gonna be a party on Saturday.
That's gonna be cool.
Well, I tell you what, if you haven't listened
to Max's podcast, the genius life,
you gotta listen to it.
Excellent, excellent podcast.
You are definitely one of our favorite people, so we'll do this again at some point.
Absolutely.
Either we'll see you down in LA or we'll have you back up here.
Have a great time in Burning Man.
Please don't die.
Yeah, yeah, don't die, man.
Stay alive.
We like you.
We like you a lot, man.
We like you a lot, man.
And that's it, brother.
Good to see you again.
Thank you, man.
Sam, you guys rule.
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