Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 925: The Best Mind Pump Interviews of 2018
Episode Date: December 17, 2018In this episode, Sal, Adam & Justin talk about their favorite (& least favorite) interviews of 2018. Discover who surprised them, who disappointed them and who you can expect to see again in the futur...e. Review/Behind the Scenes of Mind Pump Guests 2018. (3:10) Recap: Interview Sam Parr of The Hustle. (5:50) The Interesting Life of Kourtney Olsen. (8:40) The crazy life story of Luke Story. (10:29) Their impression before and after of Bedros Keuilian: Teaching trainers how to monetize the RIGHT way. (12:12) The authentic nature and delivery of Chris Kresser. (17:07) The carnivore diet expert: Shawn Baker. (19:40) Fantastic and welcoming human being: Lisa Bilyeu. (22:02) The alarming nature of glyphosates with Zach Bush. (23:54) Fixing your gut with Mikhaila Peterson. (25:00) All things Shrooms with Tero Iskauppila. (28:35) Talking all things sex with Emily Morse. (32:56) Dr. Drew & "Psycho Mike" Catherwood of Swole Patrol. (34:25) Being a man with Ryan Michler. (37:40) A unicorn in the industry: Max Lugavere. (39:37) All things gut health with Dr. Michael Rusico. (45:18) Touching the third rail with Bishop Barron. (47:08) The Dad Edge with Larry Hagner. (54:32) The Steve Jobs of Fitness- Mark Mastrov. (57:15) The realness and legacy of Joe DeSena. (1:05:54) Bringing out the red carpet treatment with Flex Wheeler. (1:06:50) The great shit talker: Shawn Ray. (1:09:15) Stan Efferding: The World's Strongest Bodybuilder. (1:10:20) The value of being a father with Dr. Warren Farrell. (1:12:42) Functional Medicine Guru: Dr. Stephen Cabral. (1:17:30) Struggling to communicate with Michael Wood. (1:19:19) All things supplements with Rich Gaspari. (1:23:22) The Transgender Athlete Advantage Debate with Chloie Jonsson & Bennett Kaspar. (1:25:20) All things sports performance with NBA Superstar Coach Paul Fabritz. (1:32:19) The outgoing personality and charisma of Hunter McIntyre. (1:35:30) Unconventional programming with Cory Schlesinger. (1:37:57) The dark side of bodybuilding with John Romano. (1:41:02) The future of interviewing guests on Mind Pump. (1:44:30) Reaching new levels with Ben Greenfield. (1:46:52) Building the team and acquiring the tools: The transformative 2018 moving into reaching the masses in 2019. (1:48:00) People Mentioned: Ben Greenfield (@bengreenfieldfitness) Instagram Paul Chek (@paul.chek) Instagram Dr. Michael Ruscio (@drruscio) Instagram Sam Parr (@thesamparr) Instagram Kortney Olson (@kortney_olson) Instagram Luke Storey (@lukestorey) Instagram Bedros Keuilian (@bedroskeuilian) Instagram Chris Kresser M.S., L.Ac. (@chriskresser) Instagram Shawn Baker MD (@shawnbaker1967) Instagram Lisa Bilyeu (@lisabilyeu) Instagram Zach Bush (@restore4life) Instagram. Mikhaila Peterson (@mikhailapeterson) Instagram Jordan Peterson (@jordan.b.peterson) Instagram Tero Isokauppila (@iamtero) Instagram Emily Morse (@sexwithemily) Instagram Dr. Drew Pinsky (@drdrewpinsky) Instagram Mike Catherwood @mikecatherwood Instagram Ryan Michler from Order Of Man (@ryanmichler) Instagram Max Lugavere (@maxlugavere) Instagram Ben Pakulski  (@bpakfitness) Instagram Bishop Robert Barron (@bishopbarron) Instagram Larry Hagner (@thedadedge) Instagram Joe De Sena (@realJoeDeSena) Twitter Flex Wheeler ® | Official (@officialflexwheeler) Instagram Shawn Ray (@shawnrayifbbpro) Instagram Stan "Rhino" Efferding (@stanefferding) Instagram Warren Farrell, PhD (@drwarrenfarrell) Twitter Dr. Stephen Cabral (@stephencabral) Instagram Michael Wood Jr. (@michaelawoodjr) Instagram Robert Oberst (@robertoberst) Instagram Rich Gaspari (@richgaspari) Instagram BJK (@mx.kaspar) Instagram Chloie Jönsson (@chlojonsson) Instagram Paul J. Fabritz (@pjfperformance) Instagram Hunter McIntyre (@huntthesheriff) Instagram Cory Schlesinger (@schlesstrength) Instagram Dr. Jordan Shallow D.C (@the_muscle_doc) Instagram Products Mentioned: December Promotion: Enroll in Any MAPS Program – 1 Year of Forum Access for FREE! Mind Pump Episode 682: Sam Parr of The Hustle Email marketing engagement and response statistics 2018 Mind Pump Episode 735: Kortney Olson- Fitness Entrepreneur & Watermelon Crusher Mind Pump Episode 740: The Fascinating Story of Luke Storey Mind Pump Episode 727: Bedros Keuilian- Self-Made Trainer of Trainers Mind Pump Episode 620: Chris Kresser RHR: The Importance of Strength Training—with Sal Di Stefano Mind Pump Episode 712: Dr. Shawn Baker- Carnivore Diet Advocate Mind Pump Episode 730: Lisa Bilyeu- Quest Nutrition Cofounder & Media Mogul Mind Pump Episode 680: Dr. Zach Bush on Restoring Gut Health Mind Pump Episode 725: Mikhaila Peterson's Personal Account of Treating Debilitating Disease through Diet Mind Pump Episode 777: Tero Isokauppila- The Magic of Mushrooms & the Real Story of Santa Claus Mind Pump Episode 815: Going Deeper with Sex with Emily Mind Pump Episode 812: Dr. Drew & "Psycho Mike" Catherwood of Swole Patrol Mind Pump Episode 817: Ryan Michler on Toxic Masculinity, What it Means to be a Man & Fatherhood POLITICAL CORRECTNESS, TECHNOLOGY, AND CAPITALISM Mind Pump Episode 847: Max Lugavere of The Genius Life Podcast The Genius Life 19: How to Lose Weight and Get in Shape | Sal Di Stefano Genius Foods: Become Smarter, Happier, and More Productive While Protecting Your Brain for Life – Book by Max Lugavere and Paul Grewal Mind Pump Episode 775: Dr. Michael Ruscio- Healthy Gut, Healthy You Mind Pump Episode 827: Bishop Barron - Using YouTube & Social Media to Demystify Christianity & God Bishop Robert Barron - YouTube Mind Pump Episode 837: Larry Hagner of the Dad Edge Podcast When a Father Commits Suicide Mind Pump Episode 842: The Steve Jobs of Fitness- Mark Mastrov Mind Pump Episode 917: Joe DeSena Mind Pump Episode 855: Flex Wheeler Mind Pump Episode 885: Shawn Ray Mind Pump Episode 865: Stan Efferding: The World's Strongest Bodybuilder Mind Pump Episode 872: Dr. Warren Farrell- The Boy Crisis Mind Pump TV - YouTube Mind Pump Episode 875: Stephen Cabral Mind Pump Episode 710: Robert Oberst is Stronger than You 3 Best Secrets - How To Live Longer (DO THIS!!) Mind Pump Episode 877: Michael Wood Mind Pump Episode 892: Rich Gaspari Mind Pump Episode 895: The Transgender Athlete Advantage Debate with Chloie Jonsson & Bennett Kaspar Australian CEO wants Kiwi transgender weightlifter Laurel Hubbard banned from Commonwealth Games Mind Pump Episode 900: NBA Superstar Sports Performance Coach Paul Fabritz Mind Pump Episode 905: Hunter McIntyre Mind Pump Episode 907: Cory Schlesinger Mind Pump Episode 922: John Romano Mind Pump Episode 867: Ben Greenfield on Anti-Aging, Minimizing Jet Lag, Starting a Supplement Company & MUCH MORE! Mind Pump Free Resources
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
So in this episode of Mind Pump, this is a fun one, reminiscing all the guests that we've had.
A walk down memory lane.
All year long, how many total guests have we had on our show this year?
So there's over 50 that we had just this year and we didn't obviously quite get through
all 50. I tried to drive us through ones that or their first time on the show ever and ones that
were probably more monumental for each of us or like you know changed our minds on something. So
that was you know as we go through this too, I had no idea where we were going to go. And I think
it will turn into a pretty cool episode for people that are maybe just now coming into
Mind Pump and wondering what are some good interviews you go back and listen to because
we give a little bit of insight on a lot of interviews. If you're that person, both on the
website and on the free Mindput Media app,
you can actually search any of these people's names
that we talk about right now,
and it'll populate that episode.
I mean, we talked about our favorite interviews,
we talked about the ones we didn't like so much,
we talked about stuff behind the scenes,
you know, and of course what these episodes were all about
and how we met these people. It's sort of like a director's cut if you will
Yeah, it was it was a lot of fun reminiscing with you guys with all these guests funny how many of them
Just because there's so many and you forget and then you bring up the names and right away. Yeah
Yeah, yeah, right away. I'm gonna myself right there
So you guys will enjoy this episode and also I want to mention everybody that this month only this month
We're gonna be giving away free access to our private forum for a full year to anybody who enrolls
in any of our maps fitness programs.
Now we have maps programs for everybody.
We have maps programs for people who want to speed up their metabolism and build muscle
and strength.
We have programs for people who are advanced and want to train like bodybuilders or who want to sculpt their body like bodybuilders.
We have programs for people who are athletically minded or like functional training.
We have correctional exercise programs.
If you have pain, knee pain, ankle pain, hip pain, back pain, shoulder pain, we have programs
that help correct those issues.
We have programs that are fun.
We have strong man inspired program.
Anyway, we got a lot of programs.
You get the just programs for clowns.
If you go to mind, if you go to mapsfitinistproducts.com,
you can check out our maps, fitness programs.
And again, if you're enrolling any of those programs,
you'll get a free year access to our private forum,
on our private forum as personal trainers,
fitness enthusiasts, other
podcast hosts, and then of course I am on there, Adam's on there, Doug is on there, and even
I'm sold if you're on there, so even Doug is on the forum, you can always tag us and ask
us questions on there and you get access for free free.
You are in the house.
So it's really cool again, check out our programs, all maps, fitnessproducts.com. So that's it. Here we go
If people are wondering why we sound a little bit different
Are we on right now? I kind of feel like a like a little like scraggly like like
Gravelies and
Edgerton, I think it is I think probably yeah, maybe gravelly gravel like there's gravel in your throat
It's it's because we're on the road. We're actually out here in should I say we're at sure Pahar Odoons. Yeah, let us know
We actually met someone today at one of the restaurants. We ate what was his name again Adam Adam
Yeah, you should remember love that guy anyway
No, we're out here doing some fun stuff
Surprise stuff, but anyway, so if you wonder what I was doing. We don't wanna tell them that we're going to work on. Do that breakfast place.
We're going to the next programmer now.
Yeah, well now they know.
Yeah, there we go.
I actually wanted to do something a little bit different today.
Is it special?
We're gonna do something special?
Yeah, no, we're gonna do something special today.
What I wanna do today, it's a middle, almost,
you know, we're getting close to Christmas time, right?
And are you getting us presents?
Justin, we're gonna get presents. Yes, it's a key city gift, give it.
I love it.
I'm more of a giver than a receiver, that's for sure.
Are you really?
Yeah, definitely.
Well, Justin was telling me about that.
About you.
Yeah, you're so sure.
I love receiving your gifts.
They're big and great.
Okay, no, that's enough.
So I was talking to Ann the other day,
and we're going over the list of all the people that
We've had this year and oh, I mean it's guess. Yes, guess on the show and I didn't realize that we'd seen over 50 people
Just this year now some of those were returned guests like we had a few people that returned like you know
Ben Greenfield who came back
We saw check Paul check
you know, Ben Greenfield who came back. We saw,
Paul Czech,
Paul Czech,
Rusio came back on.
So we had a handful of those that were friends
of ours that came back another time.
We saw a lot of new guests.
And so what I wanna do is I'm gonna try and get through
as many as I can,
but because I bet you guys have forgotten
damn near half of them by now.
I bet, yeah.
And so I wanna bring the guest,
I'll tell you who they are,
and then you guys tell me,
I wanna know what's your impression of them
before they came on the show was?
And if you even had one,
because sometimes we have a guest
that we don't know anything about sometimes, right?
So your impression of them before they came on the show,
and then your impression of them after.
What a great question,
because I can't tell you how many times I have,
it's completely different.
It's super underestimated.
Totally different after I meet somebody, you know, for the first time,
which is a treat for me.
So I'm going to.
That's my favorite.
With that being said, I'm going to start off with one I completely forgot about,
but I'd be interested in here.
Your guys is take Sam Parr with the hustle.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
You know what's crazy about that episode
was me and Taylor had gone to CES
and we were basically late.
We had to catch like a flight just last second
for me to even make it to that interview.
I don't know if you guys remember that.
Oh, I don't remember.
I showed up like the first quarter,
you guys started going into it.
And then I just, I tried to be like as ninja as possible
to like kind of just sit in on the podcast.
I'm like, game.
I've forgotten about that.
Do you remember how much you missed?
I probably missed, I would think like 15 minutes.
Yeah, it wasn't much.
Yeah, it wasn't like, yeah, I felt like
you were there the whole time.
Just started talking and I thought,
oh my God, it was,
it was like mayhem for me to get that came.
So now did you, did either one of you know
who the hell he even was before he really came to show?
No, so I didn't know.
No Taylor was freaking out because it was his lead.
All I knew was what I discovered,
just the short research that we did beforehand,
because I knew we had a guest coming in.
I knew, you know, it was the CEO of this company
called The Hustle and then Taylor kind of
let me in on what they did.
And so I had no expectations whatsoever.
I had no expectations.
I thought, okay, it's a CEO.
We'll talk about business, that's always cool.
But what blew me away about him was, he was a great guest,
but really what blew me away was realizing the power
of one segment of new media that I had completely written off,
which was email.
And I don't mean in terms of email marketing,
I had known that that was powerful because, you know,
we had learned that earlier on when we met with Mike Matthews and he talked about how it's such an important aspect
of business.
It was how he compared email to newspaper.
Yeah.
He's like, this is how you get, this is a great, it's like you're getting a magazine or newspaper,
treated it totally different and created a...
Like, it was its own platform, in a sense.
Yes.
Everybody else was, you know, he's like, everybody's hanging a sense. Yes, everybody else was you know
He's like everybody's hanging out here on Facebook everybody's hanging on Instagram. They've been saying on Twitter
Like email. Let's make it entertaining to where people actually look forward to these emails and want to open it up
And his open rates are we're insane
I think what's the normal? What's the average open rate of an email is like 8% or so?
Four less than that like two to four would be like the average really and his was like 30% 40%
And then he sells advertising on these emails and so I thought of course obviously that's got to be it's a new
Media just the email, but I completely wrote it off. So yeah, he was a treat for me for that exact reason
I mean we we were in the in the middle
Really starting to get aggressive with building our list and so to get a guess like that to come in and be able to talk to me
We got we talked about the business behind the scene. So it was pretty cool. I really enjoyed that that was a surprise for me
How about
Courtney Olson the watermelon girl. Oh, yeah, remember we met or you and I met her we met her
So Sal and I were down in LA and we were speaking
Yeah, we were speaking at the LA convention and
One of our listeners brought her up to us. I said, right? Yes, I said. Yeah, it's why it was I said I love her
So she she brought her up to us and was excited to collapse to us. She didn't know who the fuck we were and
We we said okay. Well, let's get in contact.
We'll have her on the show.
And she had told us, my episode's gonna be the biggest
episode ever on your podcast.
So that's been this girl, this chick's coffin, this is cool.
She has a lot of charisma.
And when you see her, you can't miss her.
She's definitely a big personality.
But then she's like, I'm the girl that smashes the watermelons
between my legs.
I'm like, oh, now I I remember because it was a viral video
Remember at that point that I'd gone and I remembered her. Yeah, and she's she's very built very
She was very like no holds bar. Yeah, like she
She came in hot with some of her stories. I was like wow. I actually
She actually was exactly as I expected her. I agree. I agree too. I think from what I perceived from the little bit of time
that we met at the LA convention and then kind of digging
through her social media, looking at all her business stuff,
I think I got exactly what I thought was coming.
And I'll leave it with, that was a very interesting episode.
So different.
Different than what we'd normally ever do.
Yeah.
And I think she did have a lot of great energy and tell some good stories.
I mean, she told us about her life and she has a crazy life story.
Yeah.
I mean, some good stuff and some bad stuff.
So.
And I love that about, I love that, you know, she does, she was very radically honest, right?
We talk about trends.
I might be jumping ahead, but Luke's story,
like I remember him having like a very crazy story
like that, like his childhood and then,
where that led him.
He's number 12 on the list right here
that I'm going through and that is like,
just because she was, it's a similar type of an interview,
but I thought Luke's stories was even more crazy.
Well Luke, I like, I like, I like, I like was even more crazy. Well, Luke, I liked it.
I liked it.
I liked his vision a bit.
I liked his better.
Yeah.
Because for that reason though, what Sal's saying is,
I totally didn't expect that for him.
And Sal and I met him.
He interviewed.
He interviewed Sal and I one time went down in LA.
Super friendly, totally liked him, seemed a bit nervous
when we first were doing the interview.
But I wasn't really, be honest, we didn't stay around and hang out and talk to him that
long afterwards.
I wasn't really drawn to do much with him.
And I think he was, he stayed in communication with us afterwards.
And I really liked the way he was business-wise.
And I thought he didn't expect anything back from us.
I just like people that are liked that do good solid business.
I felt that way.
I do know.
And so there was an opportunity for him to get on our show when he came into town one weekend.
I can't remember what it was.
And he was just in the area and we agreed we liked him said, hey, let's have him on the
show, but had no idea what was coming and what a crazy.
I was an entertaining episode.
Well, he's also a podcaster, so he's really good
at telling stories.
Very good story.
Yeah, so it was a very entertaining episode.
Crazy, crazy childhood.
I think he was telling the stories about eight years old.
Yeah, doing cocaine and crazy shit
because of the way he grew up and I was like,
you were a baby.
Who's insane.
Right, so that was number two, right?
And then we jumped over to 12.
Number three was a beijros.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
What was your impression of him before you met him?
And then what was your impression afterwards?
I had known of beijros and actually went
to a few of the fitness summits.
So I knew him as far as like how he presents himself
on stage. And I knew him as far as like how he presents himself on stage and I didn't really
know him like on you know more of a personal level in terms of like what drives him, what motivates him,
all that kind of stuff. And so I thought that he was pretty much what I expected in terms of like
I could see why he's so driven you, based off of his backstory and everything else.
And I just love his, I've always followed him
and liked him and liked what he's doing
because he's really helping to fit a massive need
in the industry that nobody was really servicing
and he was putting himself right there.
Like here's, you know, sort of a blueprint
to help you with your personal train business.
Yeah, we should tell the audience
if you don't know who he was.
He's like this.
He helps fitness professionals build their businesses
in essence through social media,
through different marketing strategies.
So I don't know of him.
You guys both knew of him.
I had no idea who he was.
And then I looked into him before we had him on the show.
And he reminded me of the old school fitness sales guy,
marketing guy.
That's who you're reminding me of.
And when I met him, it was pretty accurate.
He's kind of that old school kind of guy,
but he's adopted it towards the new school way
of doing things.
And the guy's got a great reputation.
He works with a lot of our friends,
and they all seem to like him. I wasn't, it wasn't like I was blown away with them. I wasn't,
it wasn't bad. I, we had a great conversation. A lot of energy, very honest. But he entered into a
space where nobody else was doing that, you know, especially when he did it. He's been doing it for a
while, I think. Long time. Yeah. I, I absolutely loved I knew a little bit of him, like you said, Justin, I paid attention to what he was doing,
but I never took any of his courses, I didn't pay for any of his stuff, so I was, Justin
actually probably knew even more than I did about him.
I just knew of him, but I was excited to meet him because in our space, especially when
you talk about making money.
And when I came into fitness, this was something that I kind of pieced together really quick for myself.
I knew I wasn't the most educated trainer.
I wasn't the most experienced trainer. I didn't have the greatest physique.
But I did have this natural gift to sell. I love numbers. I love business. I loved all that stuff.
I've always loved that. And I felt like there wasn't a lot of people teaching trainers
how to monetize, how to make more money. Like everyone was talking about how to be a better trainer or looking.
Yeah, technique, all things that I think are extremely important to be a successful trainer.
But nobody was really pushing the business side of it and the money side like Beidroose was.
And I think that's a really challenging thing to do.
I mean, we've avoided that like the plague
in our own business.
We know there's lots of money
and teaching others how to make money
and we know that and we know that there's people
that wanna pay us to help them build their business
and we really don't wanna do that.
At least not right now.
Because I think we all have the same hesitate.
I don't want that's not what I want to always be about.
I think what we are mission is different than that.
Although as a business, it makes a lot of sense
to do that for us.
So I think that's a very hard thing to have to,
if you're somebody in our position,
or his position, to have to juggle that,
and then he's made that full commitment
to teaching others how to make a lot of money.
And a lot of times those guys can be very grease-bally
and just slimy.
And because that's all with their teaching,
how to make more money.
But I get, I got such a great genuine feel from him.
And that's what I really liked about him.
In fact,
it's exciting to watch what he's doing now.
Yeah, and almost all our guests, you guys know
that I do my best to try and stay in contact
and talk to and stuff.
He's one of those ones that treats me the same way,
like that, and anytime I get that back for some of him,
the Tom Bill use, Jordan Shallow's, Roussios.
There's guys that are very approachable and professional.
And he also seems to take pride in maintaining those kinds of relationships.
Yeah, definitely.
Yeah, so I believe that he does it in the right way.
He does a lot of things the right way
when you talk about that.
And it's really easy to cross the dark side, I feel like.
So I think that's what I like.
And I think he never tries to put on a front
like he's this badass smart trainer.
Like that's not his message.
He's not like,
I'm fact, even said he wasn't on our podcast.
I'm on the interview.
Yeah, so I love that.
I love that he's not trying to claim
like he's the baddest trainer ever.
He's keeping it real.
Like listen, ain't nobody out there teaching you guys
how to make good money.
Like let me show you, right?
Yeah.
I really liked,
I liked it.
I liked it.
I liked it.
I liked him a lot.
That is somebody who would be around
I think for a long time with us.
How about Chris Cresser?
Oh yeah.
Oh yeah.
So did you guys know Cresser before he came on the show?
Very little.
Okay.
So for me, Chris Cresser was some of the, I've read so many of his articles.
He's been online for a long time writing about wellness, writing about health.
He's a, you's a functional medicine practitioner.
And back when I had my gut issues and all that stuff,
his information was a lot of the stuff that I would read.
And he's just excellent at what he does,
very, very good at what he does.
One of the first guys to do so,
so I was very excited to meet him
and I really enjoyed talking with the guy.
Later on, he had me on his podcast
and we had a great episode.
That was a really good interview.
We had a really good time.
But I really, really enjoyed talking to the guy because he's just super smart with how
to approach wellness from all the different angles from Western medicine to aerovetic
medicine. Chris Cresser's just he's one of those guys, you know, he you're reminding me the same feeling
I got when we met Rob Wolf. I just I was really pleased by what they were like off air when we were talking to them
Very down to earth very intelligent not dogmatic, you know
That's something that I whenever I meet the the people that tend to be kind of on the woo woo side or they come, they're teaching a lot of all natural everything.
Super dogmatic.
Yeah.
And I didn't get that at all from Kim or Rob Wolf.
And so Cresser was a really nice treat for me.
I didn't know much going into.
He was actually surprising to me because I had listened to him on Joe Rogan's podcast,
previous to that.
And so I knew a little bit about him and his delivery and how he's got this really like quiet, you know, laid back delivery. And so I was like, oh, this
might be kind of a boring episode to be honest with you. But his story and, I mean, obviously
is brilliant. He's a brilliant guy who is among the best in the wellness space. But yeah, I just, I enjoyed his story of why, you know,
and what led him to become, you know,
on this quest to heal himself.
Yeah, Chris Crestor is one of the people,
I would say, who is responsible for the mainstream,
you know, mainstreaming, if you will, of wellness.
He's one of those people because he wrote so many did awesome
blogs and articles has a great site
That people found his stuff and you know, it's his information is just phenomenal. So yeah, that was a really good one
I'm gonna go over the ones that we've had on our show the previous years even and we'll circle back if they were really good interview
I want to hit people that we know.
How about Sean Baker?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
You know, you're a controversial,
he's really making his rounds these days.
Yeah, so he's the carnivore diet doctor.
He's a surgeon, and he's this guy that talks about
just eating meat and how it cured a lot of his inflammation
and issues, health issues.
Now, before he came on the show,
I had heard him on a podcast and I thought he was obviously
his surgeon, right?
He's a smart guy, but I was pretty sure I was gonna go after him
with some of his claims with his carnivore diet.
His social media can come across as dogmatic,
but when you talk to him on a podcast,
he isn't, besides all that, he isn't. No.
Besides all that, he's a cool guy.
I really like him.
I really like him.
He's like one of us, you know what I mean?
It's a very cool guy.
Yeah, a very cool big dude.
That was the thing that surprised me.
He's done a lot of bad ass things in his life.
Well, remember when you walked in, I did not anticipate
a giant, his hands just like engulfed my head.
Yeah, I'm like, oh, this guy's a giant.
Yeah.
He's a big human being.
Yeah.
But that was a good show, but I tried to challenge him a little bit.
With his approach, I don't think eating carnivore diet is great.
I think it's just the ultimate elimination diet, and I think at some point you need to come out of it.
I had a great time with him.
He wasn't very firm in terms of everybody should do this.
That's where it gets hard to really debate somebody is when you know that the lane,
if you point things out.
Well, it's interesting.
It reminds me of like when we have like lane on the show or someone without.
Sometimes these guys on social media, they do things to get more, we all do, right?
I mean, that's part of it.
Sure.
We do, you do the headlines or the Shokinaw approach to get attention
and then you try and communicate and build your network.
Well, he goes after vegans like,
it's a strong, right.
It's super inflammatory.
Right, and he does it because I think it caused,
but you get him in a room and you start talking
about the benefits of it and I don't think he would.
You know what I think it is, honestly.
I think it's less of him trying to get attention
and more of him firing back because that guy gets so much
to hate from vegans.
It's good point.
It's insane.
And you know, some of the really like militant vegans
can be with attack people.
So how about Lisa Bilu?
We actually had Tom's wife on the show this year.
She, we'd met her before. and Lisa is just a great person.
She's a very, she's a very welcoming person, very giving.
The hospitality that her and Tom give us whenever we're there is, it's unexpected.
That's how good it is.
You know what I mean?
Like, you expect your friends to be hospitable?
They're phenomenal.
And she's just an exceptional host
and a great person to talk to.
When I meet couples that have things in common
with Katrina and I, like, I connect with them, right?
I feel like Tom and her are kind of a mirror of themselves.
They both have, and they're really good with people.
And they take, and that mean relationships mean a lot to both of them.
And you can see by just the way they treat others.
They both give a lot.
Yeah, and I'm very impressed with that when you have to do that at such a high level.
I mean, we met Tom very early on.
I mean, Tom came on the show.
Tom was actually one of the bigger guests to come on the show before we were even that big. And I remember liking him from the very gikgo, just the way he was.
And he is somebody who I've remained in contact with. And he was the one who kept telling me,
like, hey, you should get lease on the show. And I loved the way he did it too, because he kind of
like he recommended it to me like a year and a half ago, and over two years ago, in the first time
we met him. And I was just like, ah, it just wasn like a year and a half ago, and that was two years ago, when the first time we met him.
And I was just like, ah, it just wasn't on my radar, all the things that we have,
everyone's got a ton of people that want to be on the show, right?
And, you know, after a couple of times of us getting connected and seeing each other,
I was like, you know, we need to have Lisa on the show.
I think we could have a good conversation.
And it was really good. It was really, it was fun to talk to her.
There's some great relationship tips in that episode.
Yeah, yeah, no, I thought that was that was refreshing and fun.
So I thought that one was really cool.
How about Dr. Zach Bush?
Yeah. So Zach Bush was just, I think that was just me.
That was just you. Yeah.
Very interesting. I'm trying to remember it was he, he talked about using
those glyphosate. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. He freaked me out a
little bit. Yeah. Super. Super. Super. Super. Super. He scared me
because I were you scared me that you came back and you talked
about like to basically even you're like it's in everything.
It's organic. Or it's not even organic. He's such a smart. No.
Such a smart guy, but he really broke down what happens to the
gut from some of these compounds
like glyphosate.
And I mean, he did.
He really solidified a lot of things that I was already believing, but then I became
much more fervorous about.
But that was one of the few interviews that we weren't all on.
So it was just me and him kind of nerding out.
So if you're like somebody that's really into
fascinating information, you like to nerd out on things,
that's an episode you should check out.
What was our new Mon Santo campaign?
It was like life is it's fine.
It's fine.
You're fine.
It's fine.
How about Michaela Peterson?
Yeah, Michaela was great.
I found Michaela through obviously Jordan Peterson,
who there was a stint there where I was really just learning a lot from the guy
and then learning from the things that he was recommending.
There's certain books in people and I started reading Carl Jung
because of Jordan Peterson and I found other people like Bishop Barron
through Jordan Peterson.
And then I found an interview where he was on a news show and I think it was
like an Australia or something. And it was him being interviewed with his daughter and it was about
her terrible autoimmune issues, which included psychiatric issues but also included terrible, terrible
rheumatoid arthritis where she had to have joints replaced at a very young age
And she talked about how diet
Changing her diet kind of cured her and the reason why it perked me up is because you hear that all the time right if I go online
I can find a million or one different diets that cure pretty much anything
But the reason why I liked it was because Jordan Peterson came across is so honest. He's a psychologist
The professor he's sitting next to his daughter saying,
I don't have to take antidepressants anymore.
So he's like vouching for it.
And I'm like, this is fascinating.
So we invited her on the show.
And she's a very, very sweet girl.
When I went down, where were we?
Was it paleo-fx?
And I went to that dinner with Ruscio.
And there was a bunch of people there.
And I didn't know too many people.
And her and I ended up talking the entire time, which is a really cool person.
So what did you guys think about her?
I thought she was great.
I mean, I saw a little bit of first stuff because you were the one that first mentioned it.
I was already like you.
We were all reading Jordan Peterson like crazy around that time, right?
I think, I think right around that time was going through 12 roles.
I just finished watching all of his DVDs that you would turn me on to.
You mean YouTube videos?
Yeah.
That's a DVD.
DVDs.
DVDs.
You watch DVDs, dude.
Does he watch all the VHSs?
So old.
So much.
So much.
Yeah, so I was doing it through his YouTube.
So funny that that comes more natural.
Is that the LR?
Be kind rewind.
Yeah.
You don't have to rewind a DVD.
I know that.
But you can.
But we were like, I mean, balls deep in his information.
I mean, we were all reading and listening to his stuff.
And I remember you saying, like, oh, you got to check out what's going on with his daughter.
And I had no idea.
And then we started watching.
And I think too, because she was taking the approach, we just finished up with a shambh baker.
And so like she was eliminating
going through that elimination process
and kind of found carnivore diet to help with it.
Well, dude, Jordan Peterson now follows it.
And now here's the thing with a carnivore diet.
It's the ultimate elimination diet.
And if you have a hyper reactive immune system,
because you gotta keep in mind,
yes, there's food allergies,
and food allergies we identify very quickly.
That's very easy to identify.
But then there's immune responses that are harder
to identify like depression or blurry vision.
Jordan Peterson talks about that
or he said he used to have bleeding gums.
That was one of his other things.
Inflammation, rheumatoid arthritis pain whatever these are could all be the result of a hyper reactive immune system
That is reacting to food as if the food is really fighting you from within. Yeah, and so and it runs in their family
Obviously, so now Jordan Peterson he eats carnivore and he's like I feel better than I've ever felt
He doesn't recommend it to everybody
But of course he feels better because when he eats any other food,
he gets an immune reaction.
So I thought that was just,
oh, I thought it was fascinating.
It's why I wanted around the show.
Yeah, that was good.
So we were a part,
I think this is right after that,
then we headed down to LA and we did a trip
and we hit a lot of people for the first time.
And one of the interviews that we did in LA,
this was actually talking about Lisa Bilyu opening
her home to us.
She actually did that right after this,
where we went down and we interviewed Tara.
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and storytelling or any of that, I didn't think a lot out of the interview.
So I first met Tero at Paleo Effects. So this was, one was this, maybe the year before,
we'd all gone to Paleo Effects, and this point, mind pump was, it was growing,
it wasn't big, big yet, but it was growing and really we weren't bringing in a whole lot of
revenue from sponsors. At that time, it was just our programs and I remember when we got that,
I don't know if you guys remember, I told you guys, I said, I want to start talking to sponsors,
I think we're ready. If it works with us, let's start. I'm gonna, my goal is to go to PaleoFX
and look at all these companies
and see if any of them match with us.
And so we were walking around,
we were super hyper that day.
It was hilarious.
We had some really, really fun times.
Weird, yeah.
And I saw the four-signatic booth.
I remember this.
And I loved their products.
This genuinely products that I used,
they were one of the only companies,
supplement companies that really gets it when it comes to making
supplements and they specialize in mushrooms. And so I see for
Sigmatic, I make a B line to it and it's Tero working the booth. I had no idea who
he was. Oh, I didn't know that it was Tero. I had no idea who I had no idea that
it was that who he was or that he was the owner. So I go up to him and I'm
looking at him, I'm like, man, I love, I love for Sigmatic and I shake his hand.
I'm like, my name's Sal the Steffano.
I said, I host the Mind Pump podcast and I started throwing off our stats
because I'm trying to like, like, the dazzle.
Yeah.
Because what I wanted was, I wanted, I wanted.
Here's what I got.
Yeah, I wanted a connection to the people who we talk to.
I hope it's of his trench.
Yeah, so I'm like, this is us and this is what we do, this and that.
I love your product that said, Hey, who can I talk to about talking to sponsorships? It's like, you're talking to me because I we talk to. I hope it's up his trench camp. Yeah, so I'm like, this is us and this is what we do, this is that. I love your product.
I said, hey, who can I talk to about talking
to sponsorships?
It's like, you're talking to him because I'm the owner.
So I'm like, oh, perfect.
And that was it.
That day, right away, I texted it.
It's really cool about him.
And he knows like, he was one of the first adopters
to podcast advertising.
Yes, he was.
And he said that on the show too.
And I thought, oh, he covered that in the show.
Forsegmentic was advertising on podcasts
when a lot of people were like, wait before everybody.
He just saw it as, you know, be decentralized
and like all this like free information out there,
he wanted to help promote it.
And he's, he just does stuff like that.
Like he did that tour just to raise awareness
of like the benefits of mushrooms.
And I just think that, yeah, he's, you know,
he's a little ahead of everybody, you know,
in his thought process.
Oh, no, it's just cool.
I'm with you on the sleeper.
It was a total sleeper interview.
I'd be honest.
I mean, I already talk about,
I'm the one who hardly ever uses force magnetic.
You use it the most.
I mean, I sporadically try stuff that you throw my way.
If you're going for taste in the coffee we had,
I was like, okay, I don't know, dude.
Yeah, so I was not, and then I didn't know anything
really about going in it, but what a,
it was actually a really
interesting interview because of fascinating,
because if you've ever had any questions
or want to know something about mushrooms,
I mean, he talked about the history of mushrooms
and all the different families and types
and what they do on earth and what their benefits are
and the fascinating, fascinating random facts about them
that I had no idea.
And he's also just a truly brilliant person.
We meet a lot of smart people, but some of them are brilliant.
Um-hum.
Taro is, is, is, I guess he's ahead of his time in a lot of directions.
But if you're the kind of, if you like to learn about these things and you want to learn
about mushrooms, because honestly, up until relatively recently, when we look at foods,
we learn a lot about fruits and vegetables vegetables, and fish, and meat.
And for some reason, we forget that mushrooms
are belonged to none of those categories.
They're their own categories.
I'm gonna add something to the question I ask you guys,
because I think the audience that listen
would want to know those two,
because I feel like sometimes a lot of these interviews,
even if we really like the person
and all the great things we're saying,
sometimes the flow just isn't there.
That was one that flowed really well too.
Like it's interesting.
It was educational, but it was also interesting to listen. Like it's an interesting, it was educational,
but it was also interesting to listen to it.
It's not gonna bore you to death.
I thought our conversation flow was really good
with that one.
So from tarot, then we went over and we saw
Dr. Emily Morse.
She came to us.
Sex with Emily.
Oh yeah, that was the first time you're right.
Yeah, because we interviewed her twice. So Emily from sex with Emily. Oh, that was the first time you're right. Yeah, cuz we interview
You're gonna talk. Yeah, so sex so Emily from sex with Emily. She's been podcasting long time. She's very long time
What she does sweet?
Just a sweet woman very open very intelligent very bubbly
I
felt like she was visibly
nervous or something for that podcast you remember. Yeah, this is a Tom's house
Yeah, she was like hyper. She was on it man nervous or something for that podcast. Do you remember? This is a Tom's house. Yeah.
She was like hyper.
She was on it, man.
But we had a great conversation.
We had a really good conversation.
I think she said no idea.
Like we're going to take it.
Yeah.
It goes three guys.
And she admitted that in the second time that we met
and because we asked that about it,
because she was talking really fast, I remember.
And she said, you know, I didn't know what you guys
were going to talk about. She said, I'm not really a fitness person or anything like that. So we give, I remember. And she said, I didn't know what you guys were talking about.
She said, I'm not really a fitness person
or anything like that.
So we give, I forget sometimes.
People just think we're gonna talk about fitness.
Right, and that can be intimidating.
Three dudes that are sitting here talking to you
about fitness, it's supposed to be their expertise
and you don't know very much about it.
Like that's kind of an intimidating conversation
to have to possibly be in.
Where the fuck is this gonna go?
No, but she's a sex expert and that's what we talked about.
There was a lot of fun.
It was fun.
It was fun and I thought there's little nuggets in that.
Plus we're not afraid to explore topics.
I think she was like, oh wow, you guys want to talk about it?
She's a great, I love her.
I love Emily.
I mean, then the second time when we met with her, that was all, that was...
Yeah, that was comfortable for everybody.
Here's a neat one to kind of talk about, because these two are on TV type famous people,
and we were in LA, we went and interviewed them,
and it was Dr. Drew and Mike Catherwood.
Yeah, yeah, I was excited to meet Dr. Drew,
because he's, I mean, love line,
and he's been podcasting forever,
and he's a legit, like, old and new media celebrity. So it was kind of cool to meet him
Great guy super personable
He had to leave I think it was like halfway through the episode if I wasn't yeah, and we were late
So that's that was also you know factor. That was cool. Mike seems like we late Mike was really cool
Yeah, we were we were a little bit late. Yeah the traffic traffic. Traffic. I forgot what it was unexpected. The flight was delayed.
Oh, that was.
That fucking hate LA.
Yeah.
It was a nightmare.
I could never live there.
No, I really liked, I thought Mike was, he was funny, like entertaining.
He had, you know, good perspective that he brought to.
So, yeah, I was actually pleased with both of them.
I thought they were actually cool.
They weren't just like, the celebrities.
I knew of them from TV. And you always like wonder, especially the ones on TV.
Like they're usually not very cool to hang out with, you know, off camera. So yeah, they're
actually pretty cool. Yeah, no, I like both of them. I liked Mike more than Dr. Drew, but I liked both
of them. Like when we met met we met both of them.
Well, Mike's are I mean, he's are people. Yeah, he's a guy. That's what I mean. So I
so I think I liked him more than I like Dr. Drew. I thought Dr. Drew was cool, but I you
could feel how busy he was and I can tell his mind was elsewhere. You know, but still
being polite to us at the same time. You know, I'm so, yeah, I kind
of have like a neutral feeling with him, like, I don't know who he would be two times, three
times.
Yeah, we didn't really get a good chance to meet him.
Right.
Right.
That's how I felt.
And, but I really liked Mike.
So that one was really cool.
You know, solid said something when we were putting this list together about, you know,
really feeling like the last,
like two or three months of interviews
have been a lot better.
And it's funny as I'm going through this list.
You can remember, like, as you go down,
so much better we got.
This is the year, I mean, since we're reminiscing,
every, I would say every 100 to 200 episodes,
we go through a kind of a growth period,
we kind of transform ourselves.
We level up, man.
Yeah, even from the very beginning,
it was like the first hundred episodes
and the second and it was totally different than it grew.
This was the year that we started to get good at interviews.
And it happened towards the back half.
Because interviews for us has always been kind of a challenge,
it's hard to bring people into the flow.
And it was towards the end
where I really feel now that we're having really good interviews, having a good time with the
interviews, and we're starting to kind of get it, you know, with that kind of stuff. And as you're
going through the guests, it's becoming apparent, right? Well, yeah, it's going to be interesting now
as I watch as I start to name these because I look at like I feel like almost here on out, all of these
were pretty damn good interviews. I mean, I even skipped over some back, you know, I was skipping over because I wanted to
make sure I get through most of the really good ones to tell people.
And of course, I skipped over names that we had already had on the show before.
But, I mean, the next guest up, this was a really, this was back home, so we're back in
town.
And we had Ryan Mickler from Order of Man.
Yeah, cool guy.
Yeah, I enjoyed that. Yeah, I really, he's one of those ones
that another sleeper for me,
where we met when we were in Tahoe.
That's where we first had a podcast.
Yeah, it was cool.
You know, we were cool.
It was the very first time we'd ever met before
and we podcasted and I thought it was a decent interview
and we were cool.
Since then, I feel like we've all kind of communicated via,
you know, Instagram and text and stuff like that.
And I've gotten to know each other more.
And I really like, I really like a lot of his principles.
And especially, he's very passionate about that subject matter,
which is great to see.
Right, I do it.
I really, he's a very intelligent, well-read man.
I think he takes his time when he articulates his points.
And I think what he's all about is a really good cause
at the core of what he's doing.
He's got a great personality for like radio slash podcast show.
You know, like he really delivers it in an entertaining way.
He, his, his podcast is Order of Man and he talks a lot about, you know, being a man.
What does that mean?
Fatherhood.
Yeah.
And I think this is an important topic in today's.
Yeah, this time.
I'm glad you're right now.
Yeah, this climate and so he talks.
He talks, he talks a lot about this stuff.
So if you're into that kind of stuff, you should go check out that interview.
It was really good. And then something surprising came, came out of stuff, you should go check out that interview. It was really good.
And then something surprising came out of that,
because he has a big podcast,
he wanted to interview me and not talk about fitness.
He wanted to interview me and talk about politics.
Politics and economics.
And I thought that was cool.
And we got on the podcast didn't know how it would go.
And him interviewing me,
that's one of the biggest responses
I've ever gotten on interview.
I must, I still get to this day messages from people who find that episode and tell me, you know, that they like...
Well, I passed over a name, which will now bounce there since you went there, that on probably one of the most viral episodes you do.
Well, there's two, I think, that were bigger than that.
One of them being when you were on Chris Cresser's Crusader.
Yeah, Chris Cresser's Crusader. Yeah, Chris Cresser.
When you were on Chris Cresser,
still this day, I still see leads, trickle-and-that,
or heard that episode.
And then the other one was, oh, Lou Gevere.
Oh, Max, yeah.
Yeah, Max.
Hold on a second.
Was our first time interview Max this year?
I, he's on my list here, but I thought,
I think it might be.
I think we just met in this year. Well, he's on number seven, this on my list here. I think it's crazy. I think I think I think we just met in this
Well, he's on number seven. This is the beginning of the year. You know why I
Doesn't feel like that because we became so close to him so quickly. Yeah, Max is one of the few people because we like most
The people that we meet and some of them we like more than others very few do we not do we dislike but then there's a very small
amount of people that we meet
and right away we're like, we are going to work with you, you're our people.
You're my guy.
Max was that guy.
I remember he came in, first of all you can't not like Max.
He's like one of the coolest, nicest kind of likable dudes ever, right?
He's a super smart dude, good looking guy, but he comes across very humble.
He was telling a story on the podcast,
and a lot of it mirrored myself. I already self identified with a lot of what are we
saying? Super cool guy, super great guy, super smart guy, very humble, great podcast.
That was a great interview the first time. Then he had me on his show, and since then,
we talked to him all the time.
Yeah, I would say Max is another one of those pleasant surprises where, and another major sleeper,
because when he was coming on, in fact,
Max is the type of person who I'm typically really careful
not to let through the cracks.
And because if, you know, he was been on Doctor,
he'd been on Doctor, or the Doctor show.
Doctor, Doctor, Doctor shows.
Wrote a book.
Bestselling book was a genius food.
Very, very good book.
And so sometimes when you get somebody like him,
I'm very, very skeptical of like,
is this just another really good marketing person, right?
And he kind of has that look
because he's got a great team
and he is very well, he does very well.
But when I met him, I was like,
oh wow, this dude is awesome. He's somewhat of a, I was like, oh, wow, this dude is somewhat
of a unicorn. I mean, to be able to have that type of information and deliver it to, you
know, the middle America and mainstream and have them understand it well, that's a really,
like, you don't find that very often. It's usually what's the most popular? There's a lot
of holes in, you know, his philosophies. He's extremely likeable.
And I would, if we had a, you know,
he would be top five friends of art,
like I'm trying to think for sure.
That's what I'm saying.
He makes that small list.
Yeah, he makes the small list of like, you know,
and that list is growing obviously more than five.
It's probably like at least the top 10 people
that we all talk to on a pretty regular basis.
Yeah, he's a hyper-intelligent guy
and his story is phenomenal.
I mean, the guy's mom was stricken with Alzheimer's.
He just lost his...
Yeah, and our condolences, his mother just passed away.
But that's what drove him to figure out
the best way to eat for brain health.
Like, how can we, because Alzheimer's is an epidemic,
it's an epidemic a lot of people aren't
aren't talking about and as the population ages,
it's gonna be one of those things like diabetes.
That's just it's it.
Do you do you remember the moment where I think he realized
that he really liked us?
Do you guys remember when it was what moment?
I played top golf.
It was when we were playing.
Oh, he walked over.
Oh, that was my favorite.
He walked over to me and I think what it was,
we had all worked people, right?
He's about as awkward as I am with that.
That's why I love him so much.
You guys are the same guy.
Yes, for sure.
We've talked about this before.
If you were to pass away, that Max would be your,
did we say that?
Yeah, I think so.
So he comes, I have him meet us over at Top Golf.
And this is really the first time we all kind of mingled together
Before that we hadn't done anything yet. It was just a podcast. Yeah, right and so he came by and
He sees us all goofing around and playing golf and you know nobody is a good girl Taylor is the only golf red everyone there
Yeah, but it's like a work type event
But I he saw the way we were interacting and teasing each other.
And it, but it was like in a very brotherly love type of way.
Yeah.
And you could tell that he was like, fuck, these guys are more than just a podcast interviewers
and business people like, they're all, you could see the camaraderie and he came over
and he had said that to me and I said, oh, yeah, man, we wouldn't even have brought you
down here.
If we didn't really like you, we don't hang out with everybody like we really like you.
So that was and then that was and then we had Ruscio come down and all this.
And another guy and the thing about Max and this is a you can always tell this isn't
guarantee someone's going to be great or an awesome person, but it is a pretty good indicator.
Max, he was watching us all golf and yes, Taylor is the only one that knows how to golf,
but you guys are also
Somewhat athletic and then I get up there and I'm just hilarious with how I hit it
Although I did pretty good through my for because I was able to calculate what I was doing
But anyway, I go for a swing and it's just I look you know, I look terrible
I'm jerky and and you know short with my movements or whatever and everybody's laughing and I'm razzin you guys are fucking with me
And I love it right max goes up there because we we egg him on
We're like oh fucking go come on dude play with us who cares?
He's like right so he goes up there and he looks just as bad as me
It was the same
And and we all laughed and we were we were laughing at him and he turned around and at that moment
That's when you know yeah, they going to get offended? Exactly.
Is he going to get like a set or a...
He laughed along with this and loved it and then right away I'm like, this guy's
the guy.
He can take it.
That's all great.
Yeah.
And then later on, that's when Ruscio came down.
Now, before that too, we had done a podcast with him the year before.
We had podcasts with him before, but this is also what really kicked off us starting to
hang out and spend more time with Ruce
Because I that night I remember I went on later on to go hang out with him and have drinks and we we were together almost all night
That night and that was when I really connected with with Michael a lot and they're all so he's up there with that
Mike was also and Rucey was playing out of the handful of times. Yeah, Ruce is somebody who, if you, and we interviewed him this year on the list,
if you, I mean, I think he is my favorite source
of information, anything got released.
He's just a well.
And he's very, very careful.
He's like so anti-dogmatic that he's so careful
about the presented, when he presents,
sometimes I tease him,
remember when we were at the fire and I,
you know, just fucking spit it out, bro.
Because he's so careful to me.
It means you like a thousand coffee apps.
Yes, yes, he does it, but he doesn't want to.
But I get it.
I respect that, though, because.
He's a doctor.
Yeah, no, very measured.
The way he can present information, I love it.
He's just.
One of my favorite conversations of all time,
or in recent memory, was that around the fire.
And him, it was me, him, and Pekolsky and...
Shallow.
And Shallow, and we all went, like, we went to, like, level 15 nerd.
We started speculating about all kinds of different things.
And one of my favorite things to do,
first of all, I love conversation, obviously.
I don't think that's a secret.
But I really, really like talking to curious,
intelligent people to where I can get challenged
and we continue to elevate the level of the conversation.
And that was one of my favorite conversations.
Trying to solve the word's problems.
And just, and not only nobody's mad or irritated,
or whatever, we're just really interested.
It's just a perspective.
Oh, so good.
Yeah, that was fun to listen to, for sure.
So here was one that I was really nervous to do
I did not know how our audience would receive it
I mean, I know we're notorious for touching the third rails and doing things
Zero flux or whatever and I was really scared to go
Interview a bishop
We went and were you really that nervous about I was I was really scared to go interview a bishop. We went and did.
Were you really that nervous about him?
I was.
I was really worried that we were.
I could tell you were.
Like he was gonna get too churchy.
Yeah, exactly.
I didn't know if he was gonna come off like a preacher.
And I remember sound sharing,
cause this was South's lead.
And I mean, everybody knows like my, what my beliefs are, right?
And so he's showing me, and I'm like,
I love the information.
I'm like, so I grew up listening to this information,
so I'm with you on it, but I don't know if I'm ready
to bring some pastor.
I don't know if I'm not.
I don't know if I'm not.
I'm just gonna appreciate it.
Right, but the more that I watch the stuff
that you were sharing with me the more I like okay
I really like the way this guy to a reminding me like Jordan Peterson
Where the way he presents a lot of the information in the Bible and so I thought okay
If there was ever someone we would do on the show, but it was a glass
Bishop Baron has to be one of my top three yes favorite interviews Oh, my favorites. Now here's the thing. First of all, I appreciate something about the three
or the four of us, I should say, is that we trust each other. And I appreciate that
you guys trusted me with bringing a Catholic bishop and interviewing them on the show.
And my experience with Bishop Baron, so I was watching Jordan Peterson videos
and agreeing with most of it, disagreeing with some of it.
And when you YouTube, when you look up someone's name,
other videos pop up, and then here's this Catholic Bishop
who, you know, Bishop Baron's opinion on Jordan Peterson.
And I know Jordan Peterson talks a lot about the mythology,
if you will, or maybe for lack of a better term,
the how Christianity or the Judeo-Christian religions influenced Western societies.
Jordan Peterson doesn't talk about it like he believes in God.
He talks about it like, this is how it shaped.
The theology.
Yeah, this is how it shaped what we believe, and this is how we tell stories.
And so that's what was really fascinating.
So I'm like, oh, I wonder what a Catholic bishop has to say about Jordan Peterson.
Because Jordan Peterson called it he's a heuristics, I think, the way that you interpret the Bible with,
he broke all that down, which is very interesting.
Well, he talks about the meaning behind the stories, right?
And Jordan Peterson is very careful to not say, like, believe in God or believe in Jesus,
or he's more breaking it down like a scientist would.
And then here's a Catholic bishop,
and I'm like, I wonder what a Catholic bishop
would have to say about somebody who's breaking it down
in this way without saying, I believe in God,
or you should believe in Jesus, or whatever.
And Bishop Barron did a phenomenal job,
and he did a phenomenal job,
because here I am watching this,
and you guys know me, I'm extremely skeptical
and agnostic used to be an atheist, and I am watching this and you guys know me. I'm extremely skeptical and you know agnostic used to be an atheist
and I'm watching this and I and
Bishop Baron made a very compelling case for why Jordan Peterson did a good job
But didn't go far enough and I was like whoa if he can get me to
Understand where he's coming from I want to watch more of his stuff
so I started going through his videos on YouTube and Bishop Baron reminds me of Carl Sagan or Milton Friedman.
You know, these are people who are excellent communicators.
Excellent communicators.
Who, you know, if you're a astrophysicist
and you're doing videos on astrophysics,
you're gonna get astrophysicist and students
to listen to you.
That's not right. It's getting people outside of that to hear you and spark their interest.
That's very difficult. Carl Sagan did that. Carl Sagan, he developed an entire generation of
scientists who were fascinated just from his videos. Milton Friedman did that with the boring,
you know, study of economics. Bishop Barron does that with religion
in a way that nobody's ever done.
So I watched his videos and I'm like,
and he tackles topics that I've never heard a priest
even try to talk about.
And it makes sense about it.
And so I was like, this is fascinating.
I'd love to meet with this guy.
And they were super grateful that we contacted him
and they were really cool.
And you know why it's so funny.
So I had no idea he was as big as he is,
Bishop Aaron's has a huge following,
like he eclipses ours by far.
And what they did is they got on the phone with me
and I talked to Father Steve, it was,
you guys remember Father Steve?
And to see if we should be on the show.
And what got them to come on our show
was me saying, I'm totally not religious, but what got them to come on our show was me saying
I'm totally not religious, but you he got me to like listen to a lot of his videos and like okay cool
We want you guys on our show. Yeah, it's because they said okay. Well, this is a good for them
It's a good message. It's interesting it I remember and I totally understand why you had reserves
Adam because I've I've been through
the same type of experience with church, and
I've listened to countless preachers and really charismatic people deliver certain messages
and I was very concerned with jumping the shark.
Yeah, I see.
All the time.
Right.
Right.
And, but I did remember that we had interviewed Perry Marshall and Perry Marshall was going
to be this interview about marketing and like online marketing and all the stuff.
And all he wanted to talk about was like the mean of God.
And like, like you went crazy.
You know, it's crazy.
And I'd love it.
And I wish we were better interviewers back then.
Sure.
Yes.
Because I remember when we were going into that interview, we were kind of like, which we asked them about.
And we had this idea, I remember that interview,
and we had this idea like, hey, let's ask an interview
what they want to talk about, and then let's just drive it.
That's right.
And that's how that got there.
We get them on the phone, we're talking to them
before we get on air to record,
and we're talking to them about,
and he's kind of, what do you guys want to ask?
Talk about, we're like,
well, what are you into right now?
What are you reading heavily?
And I knew, I don't know,
one of you or both of you had inside track
that he was already into studying evolution and creation.
That was just an end.
And so you knew he was into that.
And you're like, I'd really love to ask him about that.
And we're like, well, fuck it, let's just tell him.
He just did, yeah.
And we were scared to death.
And that was a whole episode. Yeah, that was a whole episode. I was like mortified to see what the we're like, well, fuck it. Let's just tell you just did. Yeah. And we were scared to death. And that was a whole episode. Yeah. I was like mortified to see what the
forum would like, you know, hammer us with. I tell you what, I
was a little bit, I was even a little apprehensive about getting
a Catholic bishop on the show. But you know, what I told you
earlier is what convinced part of what convinced me. Here's the
other thing that convinced me is you guys know me very well now.
I cannot stand hypocrisy.
I really fucking hate hypocrisy.
And I thought to myself and I said,
why am I so apprehensive to have a Catholic Christian,
Bishop talk, when I'm not apprehensive to have someone
come and talk about fucking Ayahuasca,
or spirits in the crystals crystals or weird new age stuff
and I say weird jokingly, but we have no problem
having people like Paul check on talk about this.
Why am I apprehensive?
I'm like, this is stupid, fuck that.
It's just another segment of that kind of stuff.
He's a very smart guy, have them on the show
and let's see what happens.
And again, one of my favorite episodes.
I'd say one of my top three.
Yeah, I feel the same way. And we got a great response, which which was awesome. Yeah, no, that was a lot of good ones.
Here was a surprise one that I didn't anticipate to be good, but I thought was a really good conversation. It led to another podcast
was Larry Hagner with that edge podcast. Yeah, that was that was a cool podcast. I was I wasn't ready for it to be that good. I thought you
could tell didn't he interview you? Yeah, I was gonna say after the word. I led to the interview with
Adam. Remember the irony of that was so he comes on the show and we kind of know of him. We were
can I think Josiah connected us to him. I believe it was and he was going to come on the show and
we we didn't know much about him other than what Josiah had kind of passed along but we knew he was gonna come on the show and we didn't know much about him other than what Joe Sigh had kind of passed along.
But we knew he was a good podcaster
and he has a successful podcast
and we thought, okay, we'll figure something out.
You guys are both fucking dads.
You guys can talk dad stuff, right?
That's literally what's kind of the attitude.
And we were like, obsolete quickly.
Well, we did the interview and one, he interviews us
and I think that he did a really good job.
You know, it's always challenging to navigate through three guys and so with that.
So I thought you could tell by his, it was a very professional interview the way he did
it.
And then I think, I think the little bit that I talked to him about surprised him that
I would have anything to contribute to the whole dad conversation.
Well, you guys just had so much in common in terms of like,
you know, I grew up in everything.
And I think he really connected with you specifically.
And then that led into, you guys going really deep
on his podcast.
Yeah, he called me up afterwards.
And he says, Hey, would you feel comfortable
with talking more about your dad's suicide?
And I said, yeah, no, I'm going to open a book
with that stuff, man.
And if you think that it can help some of your audience and he goes, no, you have no idea,
he goes, you know, I think your message needs to be heard to my audience. I said, cool,
let's do it. And what a response. Yeah. I still get responses from that right now. In
fact, he actually just texted me yesterday, a day before his team were going over their
analytics and stuff from month of our month. And said like that that episode I think is the biggest
downloaded episode that they have and made such a big difference on his month
it was their largest month of downloads from that so I got I still get
trickled in DMs from that which is crazy to me because it literally that's
it kind of just I kind of went through my childhood and what it's like BNA a
son to somebody who commits
suicide at seven years old.
And then all the other, all the complications and challenges.
Yeah, yeah, I went into all the, did you ever listen to it?
Did you guys listen to it?
I listened to it.
It was a very compelling, I would say.
Yeah, very, very powerful.
I think it's an important interview.
If you guys haven't heard it, you gotta go over to the dad edge podcast
and find it where Adam gets interviewed
because he gets pretty deep.
So it's good stuff.
So after Larry, this was a cool one
because this was probably selfishly for us,
probably one of our favorite all-time guests
just because of who that person is to all of us.
And that was Mark Mastro.
Oh, yeah.
One of my top top.
What an awesome interview.
Yeah, Mark Mastroff was the founder of 24-hour fitness.
And now he's just this billionaire
who's got all these fitness brands under his name.
But, you know, we do not make it a secret
that all of us were brought up.
We owe a lot to him.
Yeah, 24-hour fitness was my school for a long time. Yeah, I mean, all the idea of a lot of learning of us were brought up. We owe a lot to him. Yeah, 24th Fitness was my school for a long time.
Yeah, I mean, all the idea of a lot of learning
and stuff on my own, but I got mentored by people
who I still consider, you know,
some of the most important mentors that I've had
my entire life, were people that I met there.
What I learned about communication, sales, business,
the way that company was run, I mean,
it was so far in
ahead of anybody else. It really was, I had this love, hate relationship with it
because then I had my own challenges after the company kind of changed hands
after, especially after Mark left, but MassRough is still, I still look up to him
like, it's funny, I got more nervous meeting and interviewing him than other
guests because he's still
Mark Massifold.
Well, I felt that with all of us,
he has that father figure presence because,
I mean, for at least for me,
literally all the tools that I use to today
to be successful as a fitness professional,
all STEM and are in
Thanks and because of him. I mean the what I learned at 24 our fitness trumps so much
If anything else that I've acquired later on or from other people
The those those that foundation that was laid is because the company he created and even though he didn't have a direct real strong
Relationship people he trained in develop.
It's amazing to feel how I felt for him coming in.
There being like, man, this is the dude that made it possible for what we're doing today.
Because it's also full circle because, you know, what, and it's hard to explain to people,
those early days of the growth of, of, of 24th fitness in the environment that it was.
I don't know how it is now.
Because there's nothing like it right now.
Yeah, but back then, I can tell you,
I can list, literally, I can list 10 people that I know
who were performers, top performers in that company,
general managers, fitness managers,
sales counselors, operations, who are now millionaires,
all doing their own things.
And it's because of how the skills that they learn
and the environment that they worked in
in those days of 25th, it's literally,
I can name 10 millionaires.
That's the environment that we were in.
I don't think it'll ever be recreated.
And we were a part of it.
And it's funny, I left the company before you guys did
and then you guys ended up leaving.
We did our own things and started our own businesses.
And it's funny having Mark walk into our studio.
I wanted him to see how well we were doing.
You know what I mean?
I wanted to show him like, hey, look, you know,
your company hired me or whatever.
We did this, but now look what we're doing.
It was really cool.
I also have this special.
I'm gonna be proud.
Yeah.
I also have this special connection to him
because I got to be a part of, you know, I was there for 10 years
And I was there the first five with him and the next five without him and that was what it was huge contrast
Right. Yeah, and it was so important to my
My growth in business and just understanding business and operation like at that scale
just understanding business and operation like at that scale. Here you have this billion dollar company,
a guy that I don't even really see
or get to talk to that much.
I mean, it count on one hand how many times I interact
to with Mark over the 10 years that I was there
or the five years that he was there and I was there.
But to see them pull him out and see the changes
that happen because the leadership changed
and how different of I watched
the company completely change and unfortunately for the bad it was not good the best times were
when Mark was leading and it also it's something that I feel like I will be faced with one day where
you're at a point where the company is at a point where you have the options to sell it,
you have the options to keep growing it,
to just try and maintain it.
I mean, and no one really thinks about that,
but I see that in like Joe D'Ascina,
like when we talked to him who's got 300 employees
and can't be connected to everything that you're,
at what point do you realize that maybe this thing
is causing me more stress than it is good and
What is the smartest thing for me to do and to watch him leave something like that and then to watch it kind of crumble afterwards
And the big lesson from it was the importance of people
How important people you can have all the best being counters you can have all the best being counters, you can have all the best, you know, CEOs coming in with all the the baddest background pedigrees, but if you don't have
the people, the right people, and if the people don't believe in the purpose behind what
you're doing, because that's what was lost. Like when Mark was there, people were, we used
to say bleep purple, because that was the color of 24 fitness. When he left, that attitude
was gone. And it just confirmed that, and we talk about it
on this show, how important culture is in business.
Doesn't matter if you have a virtual online business,
doesn't matter if you have a gym, it doesn't matter.
How big or small it is, how important the culture is
of the success, especially in health and fitness, man.
Absolutely. So that was a, especially in health and fitness, man.
Absolutely.
So that was a...
Yeah, I remember, you know, just to give you an idea
of the kind of person that he was,
I was a...
I'd be started as a trainer,
then I became a fitness manager very quickly,
and then I wanted to move over
into managing the clubs,
and back in those days,
they didn't move trainers over to general manager.
General managers usually had a strong sales background
or management background,
but because I was such a high performer,
they gave me the opportunity,
but they said, you need to be an assistant
general manager first.
So I was an AGM assistant general manager
of the Sunnyvale 21st, shout out to Club 506.
So I was the AGM there,
and I was doing, at the time,
I was doing numbers that were totally unheard of.
Like back in those days, if you would sell,
just to give the audience an idea,
if you were selling $25,000 worth of,
what do these call commissionable sales,
you were a killer.
If you had $30,000, you were a god.
I was hitting in the 40s,
and nobody ever seen this before.
And here's this young 18 year old cocky kid.
And I remember I was upstairs,
I was on the phones,
trying to make appointments.
And one of my first mentors, Don Cardona, walks up
and he goes, Mark Mastroff's downstairs.
I knew he was the owner, because everybody talked about it.
At this time, I think 25th in his head, like 140 something
club.
So they were already a pretty damn big company.
Mark Mastroff's downstairs, he wants you to give him a tour,
treat him like a guest, and he wants to see what you're doing.
So here's the owner of a company
who sees this some kid in some club
doing things that no one else is doing.
He came all the way to the club
and had me give him a tour personally.
Personally, yeah.
And had me give him a tour.
And so I did.
I treated him like a guest,
and this was either me being naive
or because I was cocky.
I wasn't intimidated.
I think I did a fantastic job, right?
Didn't the whole tour brought him up.
This is when the way I sold memberships was I sold fitness first.
So I talked about training, the benefits of working with a trainer.
Nobody done that before.
So he told me how great that was.
Awesome.
He gave me some objections to see how it overcome them.
And then before he left, I said, uh, I want you to make me a general manager.
I actually said this to him and he says, you're too young.
And I said, Mark, I will, I will make it to the point where you you to make me a general manager. I actually said this to him. And he says, you're too young. And I said, Mark, I will make it to the point
where you have to make me a general manager.
I'm going to perform so hard.
And he loved it.
And he smiled.
And he shook my hand.
He goes, I like you.
I like you a lot.
And he left.
And sure enough, I became a general manager
a few months later.
But to have a guy who owns a company that big, come in and do
that, kind of cool.
That's a big deal.
Yeah, that was a very big deal. And I big come in and do that kind of cool. That's a big deal.
That was a very big deal.
And I think a very important interview for all of us will forever be that way too, which
is great too.
We've now remained in contact.
He was actually supposed to be here this week and I think had a rescheduled thing.
He's coming back in January.
I can't wait for round two.
Yeah, yeah, no, great.
And that's nothing to, besides all of us.
Oh my gosh, listen to her episode.
I know, we're over here just jerking them off on who he is, but he actually even if you
had don't care about any of that stuff, you great story. Oh,
listen to that episode. Great. He's no holds bar, man. One of the
top when we got to talk shit. I love it. What I think of like the
episodes that were I mean, he has one of the episodes that
stand out to me that are just you could not care about anything in
that space. Just told really good stories. Yes. You know,
him, Joe DeCino was like that.
So that's another great one when we saw again.
Very entertaining.
Yeah, Joe, I mean, did not disappoint the second time around again.
Oh my gosh.
He came down and we got to talk to some of his buddies.
Yeah.
That was fun.
That's a recent episode.
And if you haven't listened to that, you got to, because halfway through the podcast,
he's talking about his buddy and he goes,
we gotta give him a call.
And he calls the guy and the guy picks up the phone
and that guy tells us so great stories.
I think he did that twice in that of Harry.
He knows a bunch of characters.
He did.
And he's such a good guy.
Man, it's so neat when you meet somebody too like that.
And when you continue to meet people that know him,
have nothing but good.
You talk about a legacy, right?
Like, what do you want your legacy to be?
You don't just see this like a master off?
Yeah, that's similar.
Yes, to me, that's such a great example
of what an incredible legacy this guy is leaving when,
I've met probably 50 plus people now
that know Joe personally and every one of them.
Love them.
Yeah, love them and speaks very, very highly of them.
So that was excellent one.
Flex Wheeler.
Yes.
Flex Wheeler was...
How about Flex demanding his red carpet treatment?
I know, right.
I'm on first class.
Go big time.
No, no, no, no.
Flex Wheeler was one of the greatest,
or probably the greatest, uncrown Mr. Olympia bodybuilder.
I was a huge fan of bodybuilding in the 90s
growing up.
Remember I was a skinny kid, right?
So I want to lift weights to build muscle.
So I'd buy all the bodybuilding magazines,
all the muscle magazines.
I'd read everything I possibly could to try and learn
as much as I could.
And Flex was always in the magazines.
He was always one of those top guys.
And so to selfishly, one of the my favorite things about what we do is that we now have
leverage to meet people.
We've always wanted to meet.
Yeah.
You know, I mean, like, when will I ever be able to sit down with one of my, a guy that
I looked up to, you know, 20 or 30 years ago, that we're going to sit here and talk about,
you know, bodybuilding.
Yeah, let's exploit this new power.
Yeah.
And so exactly.
So now I can call him and be like, yeah, I have this big podcast.
I'm going to call him. I'm like, I'm going to be Flex Whe power. Yeah, and so exactly so not I can call him be like, yeah, I have this big podcast I'm gonna come on my own like I'm gonna be flex Wheeler. Yeah, you know, so we had him on the show and
Surprising story of his childhood and what he been through very interesting
I think the interview was I think it was good. I don't think it was like the best conversation
But I think it was good him going deep into and being very honest about how we grew up and stuff
I thought was fast did you have him sign your wife, Peter? Yeah, totally.
I was, I was, I was not a fan of him heading in. Now, I was always been a fan of his
physique, but because I also have to deal with the back end stuff of like the, you
know, what are we, where are they booking? What are we doing? And I'm communicating, well,
was he a prima donna? Total prima donna. Total prima donna. And I'm like, this
motherfucker, you know? And when I, when like this and we've had a handful of them
That can be like this where if we reach out to them and we won't we invite them on the show
They they feel all big time and then they try and search well
Can I stay here and can I fly here afterwards and oh? I only fly first class and get the fuck out of here
Like we're already flying you out paying for you and can I fly here afterwards and oh, I only fly first class and get the fuck out of here.
Like we're already flying you out and paying for your hotel.
That's a fucking nice treat because we don't do that for anybody.
Maybe in 1980.
I think it's a bodybuilder thing for a 90s.
Well, I'm telling you almost it was all Sean Ray did the same.
Yeah, Sean Ray did the same thing.
Yeah, Sean Ray, another top bodybuilder from the 90s.
Same thing.
He did that whole pre-med.
And so did John Meadows.
Yep.
So all the body builder guys, and that was what we used to.
So fun at Red Carpet, yeah.
We have much bigger people in this show
that are happy to be on the show.
You fuckers won first class over here.
But Sean Ray, what a great conversation.
That guy's entertaining as fuck.
What a great conversation.
He's a great shit talker.
Great shit talker.
Everybody knows him as that and good information but just also very entertaining I was surprised
at how entertaining Sean Ray was on the podcast that was that was a lot of fun yeah and I should
say that I mean it flexed surprise me and it was a nice treat so I ended up really liking him
when we got once you got into studio we we did the interview, we hung out afterwards.
I definitely really liked him.
And I know I think you've remained texting him
more than I have.
Yeah, it's like this cool.
But he's been really cool.
And then Sean too was like that.
Sean was a surprise.
A lot of people, he in the body building world,
I thought we were gonna rile him up a little bit.
Remember we were trying to get him.
He's got this like moniker of being like an asshole.
Like he's an asshole, which I thought would be good for the podcast
He was cool with us and he was very entertaining. I didn't get too much of that asshole vibe from him
No, no, you know, we obviously went on this little run where we must have been this this little world right here
So then we went to Stan Effarding after this. Yes. All right. So Stan was cool. Superino Rants Stan Effarding is a power lifter, bodybuilder,
kind of a big muscle building personality
in social media and new media.
Really smart dude, great business guy.
He was somebody who I had been following for a long time,
so I was excited to have him on the show
because I found him around the same time that I found Lane.
And this is when I'm like,
and I was reminded the audience,
it's like I was not this like aspiring bodybuilder
or even give two shits about that side of the world.
I probably was more like Justin
with the sports performance thing like that.
I was not into any of that stuff.
So I don't know none of these fuckers at all.
You know more about bodybuilding than I do.
And so I'm getting into it. So I'm researching
it. I'm looking up all the people that are the big names and who's making the waves on social
media, who's putting out what. And I remember just like spending hours and hours on YouTube and on
social media looking for, you know, information out there that what was good. I was trying to
filter and so much bullshit out there. I felt like he's one of the smartest things. He was.
That's where I'm getting.
Bodybuilders that I've run into.
And I very much appreciated that episode
because of his nutritional approach,
his science behind it,
things that he had highlight in terms of like,
people really needing to look more into salt and...
Gut health.
Gut health and digestion.
Yeah.
And just, I just appreciated that like he, he also was into like strength, training and
doing like real like compound lifts and you know, he still integrated that a lot and
he looks like a freaking superhero.
Yeah.
No, he was, he was awesome.
I mean, he was, he was as every bit as good as I had wanted him to be.
Again, I would follow him for a long time. I love the information he was as every bit as good as I had wanted him to be. Again, I would
follow him for a long time. I love the information he was putting out. He was one of the few.
I was consuming a lot of their content when I was getting into competing. And I really liked
what he was putting on. And I loved his radical honesty. You know, another guy that,
you know, openly talked about steroids. He's not trying to hide into that stuff. And it was
educating people on nutrition
in the bodybuilding community.
I just, I think he had a counter message to much that was out there and it's good to
see him continue to get traction and keep growing because he's a really good fucking guy.
So I like Stan a lot.
After Stan, then we had Warren Farrell.
Yeah.
Yes.
Yep, that was great.
Warren Farrell was a little third railish.
Yep, I found him a while ago on social media.
And he talked about the, you know,
he wrote a book called The Boy Crisis.
And he talked about, he used to be a feminist.
And he left the feminist movement when you saw
that it wasn't about equality as much as it was about,
you know, creating this narrative
of an oppressive patriarchy
and how that's all the story is, that's how it's all about.
But he's a very smart guy
and he's very intelligent that we're presenting
and he talks a lot about fatherhood
and it's controversial only because of the current climate.
Yeah, I don't think he's there anything he's saying
that's controversial.
I didn't feel that way at all throughout the entire interview
but I knew the response was, there's gonna be,
especially YouTube, I mean YouTube, I think,
is a different,
oh we got a nice little, we got a lot of controversy.
Oh, it's a different place for different comments.
We lost the most followers on YouTube,
not very many, but we lost the most we've ever,
we don't hardly ever lose anybody on YouTube
and we lost some followers that day because,
and it was unfortunate because every one of the people that
They didn't listen to the actual episode and it was really irritating to see that like wow that you're so turned off
It's because things get politicized man. That's the problem because it was really a good conversation
I mean he talked about you know the the bit like the value of a of fathers. Yeah, why they're so important and what happens to kids when they're not
I don't know how that's controversial. And both sides, he was bringing up and highlighting
the importance of both sexism, what they bring, you know, to relationships and to, you
know, the development of kids and it was just very balanced and equal and rational.
He was talking about the dance that men and women play with each other when they're courting each other and how the fear today of, you know, going, oh no, I don't want to come across as, you know,
being harassing, I can't flirt, I can't do these type of things.
You say, well, this is a new time and it's a difficult one because this is how men and
women have always interacted.
And of course, it can go too far and be, be bad.
But, you know, like, like we talked about that, like how some colleges say, you need to
ask for every step
along the way you have to get positive affirmation,
like, can I kiss you?
Yes.
Can I touch your boob?
Yes.
And he's like, listen, this isn't how people do.
It's ridiculous.
This is not how people, not normal interactions.
Romance each other.
And he goes, women don't like this either for the most part.
But yet, that's something controversial.
Yeah, when I took away, it was a big thing was just basically rough housing and the importance
of that type of play, especially with boys, but also with little girls too, but just what
that provides and like the insight he brought with that, I really like, it made me think
constantly, like I need to do this more with my kids and I'm teaching
them things.
Did you, learning?
Did you increase the frequency of rough housing with your boys after 100%?
I did the same thing.
Same thing.
And you know it's funny.
So check this out, right?
So, and this is a 100% true story.
Obviously, the audience knows I went through a divorce a few years ago.
And the hard thing of doing that with kids is that moving them from home to home
and the kids have to adjust.
And my daughter, I'm a very affectionate father.
I tell my kids I love them all the time.
I kiss them all the time.
I do lots of things for them all the time.
But every once in a while, my daughter would have
a little bit of an issue when she'd come to my place.
And I couldn't figure out if it was just my daughter
having had a two problem, or is it because of this whole thing.
We had the interview with Warren Farrell and he talked about the importance of rough housing
with your kids.
And right after that, I'm like, I need to make more of an effort.
And so I told my daughter, hey, do you want a rough house?
She's like, what's that?
Like, we're going to wrestle.
She's like, okay.
So I started doing it on a regular basis.
And my relationship with my daughter got so much better.
She's so much more excited when she sees me.
She knows that,
you know, we do this thing where I get a blanket and she gets in the blanket and I wrap up the blanket.
I carry her around like I'm Santa Claus and I swing her in the blanket and then she gets on my back
and I try to buck around. She tries to hold on and we play this game and it's so awesome because
it's something she looks forward to. It's something that I can take away if she's not, if she's
acting up and it's a great way to have that interaction and fun with my daughter.
And it's like, well, I know that episode.
And the message that he, he gave about that was you're teaching her that it's okay to be
touching and playing with another man and it not be sexual.
That's right. That's the big lesson that makes him comfortable with their bodies.
Right. Right. I thought that was a really good.
That was, I mean, there was a lot of takeaways in that one I mean that was he was a treat. He's up there with
Personally, I enjoyed it a lot some of my favorite interviews. I like when I mean I enjoy a fun interview and some of that
Where it's entertaining, but I like an interview sometimes where it like like you say right there like you
Went home and you fundamentally changed something that you were doing because of something they said and then saw a positive
Resolve that that to me is a powerful Interview his was definitely you know changed something that you were doing because of something they said and then saw a positive result.
That to me is a powerful interview.
His was definitely, you know, here's a sleeper, at least it was for me, because I remember
getting referred this guy and turning it down like a year before because I kind of first
glance looked at his stuff that he was putting out, seemed a little woo, woo, whatever, and
I was like, I just kind of moved on.
But that was Dr. Steven Crabral.
I remember that he was fire.
He was fire.
Very smart guy in the community.
Kids it very well.
Yes.
Yeah.
I've heard multiple people talk about subject matter
that was similar, but the way that he delivered it,
in a different way, but it clicked even more somehow.
Functional medicine doctor, he talked about
Asian medicine, Western medicine, how they combine,
talked about all the issues that we're starting to run into
now in modern times, all the chronic illnesses,
autoimmune issues, thyroid issues,
talked about the benefits of sauna,
how to use them properly, the sympathetic parents,
sympathetic state.
His episode lit up all the intellectuals
that listen to our show.
I got so many messages from people.
They were like best episode ever.
They loved it.
That episode is packed full of information.
It's one of those you listen to multiple times.
There's not a lot of them that you're like,
oh, I have to listen to it again.
Yep, yeah, that's one of those.
If you're here purely for entertainment
and you're not looking for information,
it's not the episode for you, right? But it's exactly that. That's what it was. That's why it those. If you're here purely for entertainment and you're not looking for information, it's not the episode for you, right?
But it's exactly that.
That's why it was jam-packed.
Sleeper to me was, I won, I wasn't sure how much I was gonna like him,
ended up really liking him.
And then just knowledge bomb after knowledge bomb.
And again, to your point, Sal,
the way he communicates the information, I think.
And we actually did some YouTube videos
because he was so good.
And they did very well.
Yeah, we said, hey, Sal, you got to go talk to him
about a couple other topics.
So we can put that up on the YouTube channel
that are still performing really well.
So he was a great treat.
He was an interesting one.
This was right after that, we saw Michael Wood.
Mm.
And Michael Wood was the, I heard him first or Justin
heard him first, I think, and then introduced him to me
on the Joe Rogan podcast.
And he had a really good, interesting discussion.
He's a Baltimore cop who, you know, during that whole era
of Freddie Gray, he came out and was talking about the things
that the police were doing behind the scenes
that was very controversial.
That's why Rogan had on the show, right?
Yeah, yeah.
He basically brought him on to clear up a different perspective
from the cops perspective,
but also that he was kind of fighting internally
to change the way that they handle a lot of these issues
and things.
So he was a different cat.
He was different, yeah.
I was what I was trying to do there.
And when I had heard him, the interviews I listened to,
he seemed like he had kind of a strong liberal side to him.
Yes.
And I was intentionally trying to set him and Salah for a very...
Yeah, we thought that would make it a little spicy. Well, I mean, here's the thing, I get along with
liberal, liberal ideas, you know, half the time and the same thing with, with conservatives, but
there's certain things that he says that I fundamentally believe are wrong. Like, you know, the way he would
talk about racism and stuff like, and so, you know, I thought, okay, well, cool.
Let's have a discussion on the podcast.
I'll challenge him and we'll have a great conversation.
And he talked in fucking circles.
It's one of my worst, my, one of my least favorite interviews
because the guy literally would not make sense in the circular talk and use words
that what's the, what's the, there's a word that describes it where, where you use
15 words when you can just use one. Right. What is that? Where they, the what there's a word that describes it where it where you use 15 words when you can
Just use one right what is that were they anyway? There's a term for it. Yeah, yeah, it just just I'm like, okay
You literally communicated something that required one sentence and you said a paragraph of big words and now we're back at the beginning
So I really did not like that. It wasn't very judicious about it. Yeah, he was a he was not a he was a cool guy
It wasn't a bad guy and it's like that a cool guy, it wasn't a bad guy,
it's like that, but yeah, one of my least favorite interviews
from him.
Yeah, that was interesting.
It didn't pan out the way.
I still thought it was an interesting interview.
I thought it was an interesting perspective,
but actually, to be honest, I probably had more interest
in like off-air.
Yeah, we had a great conversation.
Yeah, it was fascinating to pick his brain about this.
Sometimes that's a little bit of a bummer, right?
There's that.
And we always, we pride ourselves on capturing this always for our audience.
Sometimes it's just difficult.
If we greet somebody at the door, then we end up standing there for 20 minutes and talking
to them before they walk in.
But we try and set it up where Doug has got everything set up.
We're already sitting in the studio and we bring the guest in and you guys get to hear the first five minutes of us.
Yeah, we don't want to waste conversation.
Yeah, we don't want to waste,
and we want to be as authentic as possible.
So you guys get to hear if there's this awkward kind of meeting
and warming up with the conversation or whatever.
And he was one of those few where the stuff
that we talked about off the ball,
you know who else was like this?
Robert Overs was like this.
You know, the kind of thing.
Oh yeah.
I'm like, oh my God, I wish our audience.
The most epic stories you've ever heard.
Yes, like the,
I mean, you know, we couldn't,
you know, he wouldn't talk about it.
Yes, so every once in a while,
we have these guests that,
and it's not that they're not authentic or honest.
I think, you know, in Robert's case,
I know he was, it was the stories he was scared to tell
on there. Yeah. So I get, I get why he didn, in Robert's case, I know he was, it was the stories he was scared to tell on the air.
So I get, I get why he didn't share some of his stories, but, yeah, that made sense.
Yeah, but some of the best stuff we had with him was never made it on air.
Michael Wood, I felt the same way too.
Justin and I must talk an hour with him afterwards.
I left.
Yeah, we talked, we talked about his relationship with Joe Rogan.
We talked about his relationship with Joe Rogan. We talked about his relationship with on it.
Those guys we talked about just all kinds of stuff and it was really fun talking with them.
I'm like, fuck, this should have been on air. So, but that was I thought it was still a good episode,
just a different cat. And then we had Rich Kaspari. This one. Yeah. Yeah. This was one of Sal's.
Yeah, yeah, this was one of sales. Rich, Rich Kaspari was a top bodybuilder in the 80s and early 90s, also owned one of
the more, one of the larger supplement companies of the, I'd say the early 2000s, he, he
started, he was a one selling the designer steroids before they became illegal.
He's one of the first guys to do that.
He created Super Pump 250, which is like one of the first pre-workouts to really, I mean the way he marketed was just brilliant.
So I thought, let's have him on the show. And I thought it was a good episode. We talked
about business and whatnot. I don't think it was a spectacular episode. But I thought
we had a good conversation. So I enjoyed it.
Yeah, I think he had some nostalgia there, right? Like from back in the day, he's just bringing
him on. So it's interesting to talk to these kinds of guys.
I don't think yeah, it was quite as entertaining
as it could have been, but you know,
there's definitely a lot of material there
that was great to cover and just like his,
you kind of pioneered a lot of directions
in terms of the supplement industry
and you know, like sort of wedged his impression
in that space for sure. I liked him. I was I liked him. I was interested in the conversation.
I didn't feel like it was a great one like I and not by any means because of him or the stuff
we just the stuff we talked about there wasn't a't a lot, I feel like it lacked either an incredible story
or lacked incredible information or something.
Yeah, we kind of just got facts.
Yeah, and I think because of the people that we were having
around that time, I think it was kind of cool to tie that all in.
And I know that ties in a lot of stuff that Sal talks about
on the show, so I thought it was neat for those reasons,
like for those that have been listening for a long time,
and have heard Sal reference like certain supplements
and his brand and things like that.
So that was kind of neat,
but in the last couple of months,
it was probably one of my least favorite.
Here was probably the scariest thing that we did.
And that was when we decided to touch another third rail
and have a conversation with
Chloe Johnson and Benette Casper the transgender. Yeah, that's right the transgender athletes
I was excited about it. Yeah, if you actually yeah, this all happened
So the way this all happened for the audience who's not familiar
We had we did a podcast that was one of our Q&A episodes and in the beginning of it
I brought up an article like I often do.
So you guys check this out.
There was an athlete in New Zealand, Weightlifter, who is breaking records.
But the kicker is, she's transgender.
She used to be male.
Used to be a male weightlifter and then transitioned to female.
And now is breaking records as a female weightlifter and then transition to female and now is breaking records as a female weightlifter.
And so we have this whole discussion about
whether or not she has an unfair advantage.
And we all agree that yes, you have an unfair advantage.
If you transition from male to female,
especially post puberty, like you've already had
all the benefits of male hormones
and you get muscle hyperplasia, muscle fiber hyperplasia,
you get bigger bones.
And that all doesn't completely
reverse just because you go on hormone therapy
and transition to be a female.
And we're very honest that that was our opinion,
and we aired that and taught, and we didn't hear much
from it from our audience.
It was controversial, but I don't think we're very open,
cool people, we weren't being, like we don't hate on anybody,
we're just saying, hey, physically speaking,
we think there's an advantage in this circumstance.
And I got an email, or I got a message from the out foundation,
which is an organization that is, it's, you know,
works with the LGBT community.
And they, what they try to do, I think this is awesome,
is they try to get more of them involved in fitness and health
and get it, make it more accessible to all of them. Because they in fitness and health and get it make it more accessible
to all of them.
They view fitness and health as a very body positive thing and it's something that can
benefit people who may be challenged from either coming out of the closet or who are transgender.
I fully agree, I think, exercise.
We know a study after study shows that exercise positively influences your mental space
as much as it influences your physical space
and everybody should work out.
So I thought that was awesome.
They reached out to me and they're like, hey, you know, we heard your episode and we disagree
with you.
We think that there is no advantage for transgender athletes.
And I said, you know, I said, I disagree.
I said, I think in a particular circumstance, like if a male transitions to female,
especially after they went through puberty,
I said, I think there's a clear advantage.
And I did, I was very clear, I said,
look, organizations, private organizations,
they can let whoever they want compete,
so I don't think there should be laws against it,
but it's just my opinion.
And they said, well, you know,
what if we had someone come on your show
to talk about all this and I thought this would
be brilliant.
Yes.
I said, I would love.
Let's do this.
I said, I would love if you could send me to, you know, send me a transgender athlete that
can talk about this.
And they said, we can do even better.
We'll send you two.
We'll send you a male and a female transgender athlete.
And then you guys can have your debate or discussion on that.
I said, look, we'll be totally respectful.
I want them to change my mind, but I don't think they will.
I know fitness, I know the human body.
I said, but I think it'll be a good conversation.
And you know what?
It was a great conversation.
It was very interesting.
It was very, very interesting.
Yeah, and it was interesting to see kind of how the conversation
like navigated and once they started to feel more comfortable.
I know it's Bennett, right?
The it was Chloe and Bennett.
Yeah, so it was interesting to see when Bennett
really started to get involved in the conversation
where that started to go.
There are certain things that Bennett said
that I was totally against.
Like everything, he must have said,
cisgender white males are the cause of everything.
Yeah.
Several times in there.
And at one point, I think Adam's like,
no, that's not, we're not gonna go there.
Yeah, you know, so.
That was a scary one for me because I know it's a sensitive
topic and I knew I had to go in there being,
because I know me.
With soft gloves.
Yeah, right.
And so I was really careful, like there'd be things
that would be said and I'm like,
fuck it, I don't wanna jump all over this already, right?
This is, I don't want it to turn into that.
Like this is supposed to be a healthy conversation,
but Bennett was saying several things that I'm like,
I just don't agree with that.
I don't think.
And then finally, I was like, no, I don't agree with that.
White privilege, white privilege.
And Adam's like sitting there and Adam is white,
but has none of the privilege of being white.
The story of privilege, yeah.
I don't need to go into it.
People know my views on all that, that segmenting people and giving them value because of their
skin color or whatever, which is ironic coming from people who are trying to make everybody
blind to race and sex and all that stuff.
So that part was a little frustrating.
But at the end of it, we were all cool.
Everybody respected the fact that we,
because we still disagreed at the very end of it,
we didn't agree that there wasn't, that it was all.
Yeah, no, I thought it was a very healthy discussion.
I actually really liked Chloe.
I thought Chloe was really great.
Yeah, I thought Chloe was really cool.
I actually thought she was a lot more open-minded.
I think I felt Bennett came there to argue.
Like a more chip on these.
He's a lawyer.
He's a lawyer.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And that's his background.
And they had an opposing view to ours.
And so I felt that apprehension when they first walked in.
Well, I felt like he came in and saw three dudes looking
the way we did.
And he's like, I'm going to attack.
You know what I mean?
I need to be the aggressive here.
But at the end of it,
I think they both realized like, no, we're cool.
Yeah, I think we finally sort of had, at the end of it, like we sort of hugged it out
and we were like, oh, they realized our intent, you know, with the way that we're trying
to deliver information and challenge certain things from a healthy place. And obviously,
you know, our very understanding of people
and just like listening to perspectives.
And I think that's the lesson through all this
is that we are 100% open for discussion.
And a lot of times there's people,
we just don't agree.
And that's totally cool.
Well, what happens is there's a lot of people
that will say, you know, transgender
athletes should not be allowed to compete in these sports against their, against the gender
that they now are. And being transgender is wrong, it's evil, you're, you know, whatever.
And so there's a lot of that crossover. We're not those people. We are, look, there's
an athletic advantage here. But if you're a human being,
you could do whatever you want to yourself.
And if I like you and you're nice,
I'm gonna be friends with you.
And that's something that really binds the four of us.
Like if you look at our friends,
we have this wide, eclectic group of people
that we consider friends so different in the way they view
things, some of them liberal, some of them ultra conservative, some of them, you know, gay, straight, transgender,
it doesn't matter.
And so I think once they realize that, oh, okay, they're not those kind of people.
They're, yeah, and that, then it turned out okay.
Yeah, no.
Then the next one, probably one of my personal favorites was Paul Fabritzz, who is JJ Performance.
His PJ Performance is somebody who I followed on Instagram
back when he had just a few hundred followers.
And I remember at that time, the reason why I was even
looking at this stuff, I was getting back to playing basketball,
I believe I was in a men's league,
and I was looking for good content again,
looking for people that were providing
good science-based performance-based stuff specific to basketball and he was like the only
guy I had literally found.
I began falling right away and he was pretty small at that time and I would be communicating
with him and say, hey, great pose and commenting on his stuff.
This was before the podcast even got going. And then the podcast kept going. And I
remember telling you guys about him, like, dude, and I know I got you on to falling in
my pants. Yeah, you turn me on to his stuff, like real early. And I was immediately a
fan of what he was putting out and his content information, because you got to realize too that on the sports
performance and there are just as many shenanigans and gimmicks and ways to sell people how to
train specifically for their sport just to get your money.
And that, it's just riddled with that.
And so to have somebody that has a real science approach that has really put in his own personal research,
it was refreshing to talk to you.
Yeah, I didn't know him at all until,
we scheduled him to be on the show,
and then I saw a social media and stuff,
and I was really impressed with the stuff
that he was communicating.
And I could see that he was,
I mean, I consider myself a good trainer,
but 99% of my experience is working with the average person. Here's a guy that works with elite athletes and he's one of the best. And to have
him come in and talk and say things that I, you know, that I agree with made me feel
good about, you know, what a trainer I am, because I respected the show. He totally affirmed
a lot of, yeah, my beliefs, your beliefs, it was great. Yeah. So to hear someone that
I really respect, like, okay, this guy's a bad ass, yeah, my beliefs, your beliefs, it was great. Yeah, so to hear someone that I really respect,
like, okay, this guy's a bad ass athletic trainer,
like on another level that I, I'm nowhere near.
And now he's saying some of the stuff
that we've communicated on the show, I'm like,
fuck yeah, you know, I felt good about that.
Yeah, no, it was a treat.
I was not expecting, and I wasn't sure
of how he would be on the podcast,
because he really wasn't in the podcast circuit.
I'd never really heard him talk for long extended periods of time.
A lot of the stuff I got was that
it just on Instagram videos, really.
Yeah, little clips of him providing information,
but just what he was writing and the clips that he was sharing
and the way he was breaking down the science
to what he was showing.
I was already interested enough that I wanted to talk to this guy and then we met and then absolutely hit him.
He was great on the podcast.
He's natural.
He's natural.
No, and I thought, what a cool person.
I mean, this is Hardin's freaking guy,
you know, saying like how cool is that James Hardin MVP
of the league and we got to talk to his,
basically his athletic coach or his guy who's teaching
and teaching him all his skill stuff
and improving his vertical.
So that was a treat and a half. This one was cool. his athletic coach or his guy who's teaching him, teaching him all his skill stuff and improving his vertical.
So, that was a treat and a half.
This one was cool.
We could talk about how we actually met him.
Hunter McIntyre.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, that guy's a character.
That guy belongs in some kind of entertainment.
I mean, he's very, we met him the first time at the Tahoe podcast hard event. We had all of our podcasting friends there
And there was the last day that we were there. We threw our big party for everybody
great event and in walks in
Hunter with he was like wearing a big American
Flag shirt with a cowboy hat with like American flag shirt with his sleeves cut off
shirt with a cowboy hat with like American flag shirt with his sleeves cut off. Super loud, super boisterous, but not I thought at first when he walked in loud and boisterous, I'm like, I thought I
was gonna like oh my god. Yeah, me too. I'm like we're gonna have to kick someone. That is gonna be
this like aggressive guy like at the bar where you're just like dude this guy we gotta get rid of this
thing. No, super cool guy. Super cool. Very entertaining, very very charismatic and a very very cool guy.
So we're like you need to come on our show, dude.
He's definitely needs to be a pro wrestler.
Yeah, he definitely needs to be a pro wrestler.
Oh, dude.
Yeah, I could totally see him, just like, because he, I love how he comes at people when
he's competing, like how aggressively he, like, you know, talk shit to people and everything.
So it's, he's just a fun guy to listen to.
And, you know, if you're competitive at all,
like it's totally contagious.
Incredible charisma, you know, natural talker,
great story, super badass.
Yeah, you know, he's done some badass stuff.
Super badass, humble at it at the same time,
but also confident at the same time.
Humble with cocky as fuck.
Yeah, it's a perfect fuck. It's perfect blend.
It is, and it's rare that you meet people.
There's, we have a mutual friend, Larry Evans,
is like this good boy of ours.
I remember he used to come,
he was a first guy ever that I knew
that would wear a peak suit to work at the gym
with his Calvin Klein shades
and poppin' his collar when he walked in.
But he had this such a likable personality
that you couldn't help but love the guy the same time.
Everybody loved him.
So over the top, it's lovable.
Yeah, and not a day would go by
that he didn't remind you that he's the best.
But it didn't bother you.
So because he backed up a lot of his shit,
which hunters like this, right?
A hundred of them like this.
Dude, the fucking badass.
Absolute badass talks about it,
but he does it in such a likable way
that you can't help smiling and joy the guy about.
That interview was such a treat.
And then one that we just recently did too,
right after that, we ran the Paul for Brits
and then not long after that, we had Cory.
Yeah, and that was through Justin,
that was your guy.
Corey Slesinger, yeah, love that guy, man.
I had a...
He's the athletic basketball coach, Stanford.
Stanford, right?
Yep, yep, yep, for the men's basketball team.
And I was fortunate, I got connected to him
from Jordan Shallow.
And I remember talking to Jordan quite a bit
about like different modalities out there
and like who's
really applying these concepts well.
He had mentioned Corey and just how he was actually utilizing a lot of these concepts.
We talk about quite a bit like FRC, animal flow, a lot of mobility practices, but also
strength training, power, explosiveness.
And he was just like, he's on a whole nother level.
He's got it all figured out in the way that he programs
is just masterful.
And I got to spend some time with him and had coffee with him
and met and we just hit it off because again,
one of those guys that really just kept affirming
everything that I thought believed in.
He's like, oh yeah, and then he would take it to a whole
other level that I didn't even think of.
And just my mind was going crazy.
And I got to go up to Stanford and see his facility meet a couple of his
players and stuff and just his workout setup.
And he's just, yeah, he's just a fascinating guy.
He's the real deal.
Yeah, I want more, I want more people like that on him and Paul great
Well, to be honest, they're hard to find they really are like there's
There's a there's a big you know like Justin said there's a there's a ton of you know sports performance people are people that are
presenting that information
But there's not a lot of really good experts that are doing it and though they're hard to they're like hard to find like Justin
Finds this guy like Corey's not this big famous dude on Instagram. Oh, I see.
You're following him. I mean, in the NBA. Right. Yeah. So and remember, we talked to these
guys, like, just because somebody's extremely high in the sports world, NBA or some of
that doesn't necessarily mean they are the best coaches either. They both poke holes
exactly. And a lot of the, a lot of the, you know, it's about who you know when you're
at that level. So that's still kind of, and you guys know this, it's no different than, I remember being a kid,
at least I, I were a coach, a trainer going back and watching my siblings playing sports,
and they were playing sports all the way from young, all the way through high school,
and even some of them went on to travel, do like after college.
And I remember coming back and seeing the trainers that were
teaching stretching and teaching things like that. And I remember scratching my head and
being like, what, these are, these they should know better than that. That's like basic,
don't do that. No, you shouldn't do that. They should be, you know, and I remember thinking
that. And then seeing this even at the much higher level. So it's still prevalent in the
NBA and NFL that just because they're elite getting paid a ton of money, not all of them
are the best athletic trainers. And yeah, Corey's one of those diamonds in the NBA and NFL, that just because they're elite getting paid a ton of money, not all of them are the best athletic trainers. And Cory's one of those diamonds in the rough,
you know, Paul Favritz is another one of those diamonds in the rough. Like there's just not a lot
of these dudes that are like that, you know, they're hard to find. So that was a really cool one.
And then the last interview that we just recently did, also probably cracks my top five
because I was totally, I love being blindsided.
I love only one other time if I've been blindsided this much
and that was with Joe Desina.
And when I tell people now about this interview,
I say he's the Joe Desena interview of the bodybuilding world.
So even if you're not an obstacle course race runner, you have to listen to Joe Dacena's
episode because it's just a great story listening to him talk and his story is awesome and
the way he tells it's awesome.
And I felt the same way about John Romano.
Now I recognize the name.
And when Sal reminded me, like, oh, this is a guy
who's row for T Nation.
He wrote all the major articles
and all the magazines used to read as a kid.
I go, okay, that triggered that.
I remember that.
But I didn't really remember as much as Sal remembered.
And Sal was very excited to bring him on the show.
And he just was such a treat from John.
John threw me off, too, because it was John like Giovanni
or like it wasn't John Romano.
It's his real name.
It's his real name.
And so I was like, like, who is this?
Wait, you know, and like we were sort of in that state of like,
I had no idea what to expect.
Yeah, no, I, he was first of all, he was impossible to find.
So I was going through a little stint of
That's when we had flex wheeler on Sean rayon, you know all these so I said okay
I want I want to find people who I think will be great interviews that I used to follow back in the in the 90s and early
2000s when I was you know when I was a kid working out and
John Romano was he wrote articles he wrote for
muscular development.
He did some stuff with muscle meaty 2000.
He was close with Dan Ducain and Bill Phillips
and that whole world.
He had like a feud with Bill Phillips
in terms of articles and stuff.
And he was very no-holds barred.
I mean, these were the first articles I had ever read
where he talked, where someone talked very honestly about
the drug use in body building building the dark sides of the sport
How things really work and the way he wrote in his writing style. It's fun to read and so I thought oh, I want to find John Romano
Impossible to find him. I was all over socially so finally on Facebook and I'm like
Let's see if I can I found his personal profile, which is of course not you know, I finally found that
I'm like is this pretty John Romano sent him a message and you replied and I'm like,
oh perfect, I'd love to have you on my show.
And he agreed right away.
And the show was just so entertaining.
The guy's such a great storyteller, great dude,
and a very candid, like good.
He did not skip a beat.
Nope, like you mentioned something that's a little bit
controversial, you know, sort of
gray market area of what the conversation was going and he was just all in. Yep.
He told you everything. Everything. Oh yeah. I mean, the guy wrote, he's probably one of the most
prolific writers in bodybuilding up there with top three ever probably. And the guy wrote his first
article in prison. That's not an episode. That's where we started.
That's not an of cliffhanger for you.
We started in prison.
And we started that episode.
Yeah.
I mean, that in itself, and then built himself
a very successful business and had so many great stories,
so many name drops in that episode.
He knew everybody.
Yeah.
Everybody in that whole world, which was really cool.
So that was a treat, man.
Yeah, yeah.
I really enjoy that whole pro. You know, for a long time interviewing was, was one of the, it
was more difficult, right? We would do our episodes with just us with a lot of fun, great
conversation. The interview process was hard to include people into that chemistry, and
it's starting to happen now, and it's funny as you go down this list and they become more
and more recent, it's more and more episodes that are like that while we're having a lot
of fun.
So I'm really looking forward to interviewing
more amazing people for the years to come.
Yeah, no, I agree.
Well, we, I mean, we're very transparent on this podcast
and one of the things that we kinda had to do
to build it up and to keep it going was,
when you do a podcast with another podcast,
there's the most carryover into the business, right?
So if we just interview, for example,
John Romano is not gonna make us any more money.
Like, we don't really see a flux in the business
when it brings back.
He's not gonna introduce us to a bunch of people
who've never heard us.
Right, the guy has a very small social following,
he's not really big on podcasts,
so the business is not gonna feel it financially is what I'm saying, right?
Even though it creates a ton of value for the audience.
And when we were first getting going, and especially last year and the year before, we had
to collaborate with a minimum of like six to eight podcasts a month to keep filling
the top of the funnel so we could make enough
revenue to pay everybody and keep growing the business.
And we've finally arrived in a place where we don't need to do that to keep going.
So it's now allowed us to really start seeking after like, who do we want to talk to?
Like, I really want to talk to this person.
I really want to talk to this person versus having to take into consideration like, hey,
I want to this person, but do they have a big enough network that it's also going to do
us both well.
And so those things were factored in where they're no longer factored in anymore.
Right.
And I think that has a lot to do with it.
I think that has to do with it.
I also think that has a lot of large parts to do with it.
But I also think, I also think we're just, you know, we've been doing it more and more
and the more you do something, the better you get at it and
Having three people interview one person is a totally different
It's a different school. It's something you have to it's something you learn through doing it. Yeah, and now that we've done a lot of them
I think it's fun. It's working. Yeah, absolutely fun itself. So yeah, well, there's no way I could possibly get through
Every single one that we did this year because this this episode would turn into like
People are gonna get pissed. Well, hey, you're
Didn't we interview Ben Greenfield this year at paleo? Yes, one of my favorite interviews. Yeah, it was at that house
Ben what a great interview that was that was awesome. That's when we really I feel like we really
Connected with Ben and got the real like Ben all the way through.
That's what I really, really, really like reached
a new level with him on that podcast.
Well, yeah, it was, that was actually up there
with my top interviews we'd ever done.
We touched some serious third rails then.
We asked some of his personal and spiritual beliefs
and got into his family life.
Got real personal with him on that podcast.
And it was very comfortable.
We were all sitting on the couch together
and kind of hanging out.
At every time.
Yeah, that was really good with Paul Check there too.
Yeah, I think that was my favorite one within there.
We had him again recently, but I think I liked
even more the one we did in, I think you're right too,
Justin, I think that.
And I didn't bring that up just because we have
podcasted with both those guys the
year multiple times so they were I try to cover all the new I mean we we we saw a lot of people
this year that we'd also seen the year before but I wanted to make sure I went through all the
like the first timers that we in our first impressions. Yeah this this next year is one of the
is exciting for me it's one of the most exciting times That we've been doing this to look and see the kind of growth that we're experiencing it
You know what were the direction we're moving the amount of people now that we're able to to touch and communicate to
It's very exciting looking back at this last year now now. We're heading into the end of 2018
I would say this was the one of the most transformative years
that we've experienced, of the four years that we've been
just incredibly transformative.
And it's setting us up for what our purpose is,
what I think, what do we think our purpose is,
which is really change people's minds about fitness and health
or to take this industry and move it in a direction
where it can really become the answer to some of the health problems that we're seeing
in modern societies.
And this is the year that set it up.
I believe that.
I think this year was the year of building the team and acquiring the tools.
And I think that we've acquired the tools and I think we've built the tools. And I think that we've acquired the tools
and I think we've built the team.
And 2019 will be about applying that
and will be about like our people.
I think those things is what will drive 2019
and it'll be in a really...
The scaffolding and the framework is there now.
I think that we've definitely done our due diligence
in building all of those pieces.
And I feel like it's just now,
we're gonna get, it's gonna start getting
even more fun from here.
I think so too.
It's also cool to just continue to, you know,
for us in our relationship, we're really becoming,
you know, like brothers.
And that happened pretty early on,
but it just continues to solidify
as we continue working together.
And it's pretty cool, it's cool looking forward
because I've never done anything where I'm
even more excited as it continues to go along,
which is very strange because I was so fucking excited
when it first started.
And to see it go along and become more and more excited
is pretty wild, it's a pretty wild feeling.
Anyway, so look, if you want to check out some of the information that we like to give
people for free that's very valuable, go to mindpumpfree.com.
We have a bunch of free guides on there.
One of the more popular ones recently is a guide for new personal trainers teaching them
how to build their business. Prospecting is covered, how to get a certification or which ones to get is teaching them how to build their business, prospecting is covered,
how to get a certification, or which ones to get is covered, how to sell personal training
is covered, how to schedule your pricing is covered.
It's a free guide, but we have a lot of other guides on there as well.
Just go check them out, mindpumpfree.com.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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