EPISODE
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Derek From More Plates More Dates: His +$100M Business Empire, Bryan Johnson & TRT

Sep 12, 2023·72:00·Sam & Shaan·with Derek Davidson·Listen·AppleSpotify
0:0036:0072:00
15 moments · 176 paragraphs · synced to the second
SHAAN

I don't know what you're doing per month, but I would not be shocked if this was doing between $6 and $8 million a month in revenue. Blink twice if I'm right.

Yeah, you're, uh, you guys are pretty, you know, on point with your ballparks. I feel like I can rule the world. I know I could be what I want to. I put my all in it like no days off. On the road, let's travel.

SHAAN

All right, what's up? We got Derek from More Plates, More Dates here. Derek, I made a fatal mistake before this podcast. I don't know if you know this, but, um, I was doing research last night. I was like, okay, I gotta be prepped. Gotta be ready to go. I've been following you for a while, but I said, let me just make sure I, I, I button up here. And I go to your subreddit, r/moreplatesmoredates.

To be, to be clear, this is not like my subreddit. I didn't start it, but anyway, and I didn't realize this at the time.

SHAAN

Okay. So I'm on this subreddit thinking it's your subreddit, thinking these are Just polite, civil, faithful fans. In fact, it says there's 163,000 faithfuls. That's how they call the members. It is a top 1%, uh, subreddit. So you're doing really well. And I say, hey, I'm interviewing, uh, Derek Smart. He's coming on our pod. We're gonna hang out. What should we talk about? And I said, you know, give me some ideas, hoping that this, you know, I did this like at, you know, let's see, time of post. It was like 1 AM, and I go to sleep, and I wake up, and I said, oh, let me just check that real quick. Maybe somebody had some really thoughtful questions. Here's the breakdown. 98% of them want to know, um, how big your penis is. That's the number one comment by far. Everybody said the same exact thing. I don't know if that's an inside joke or you just have some really, really eager fans. Uh, and then the second was like, bro, you needed to know this is a trolling subreddit. This is not a— this is not the serious subreddit of like people trying to have a real conversation. Like, you didn't— you didn't know what you were getting yourself into. And sure enough, I did not.

SAM

The third comment was, bring a ruler.

Yeah, they're very creative. I, I can imagine, uh, what kind of stuff you got— had an onslaught of for sure. There's a decent amount of trolling and, uh, I don't know, just like shitposting that goes on there, but there is some insightful stuff. Like, I, I'm a moderator on it. I didn't start it, but I do check in time to time and I've been pretty shocked how much it's ramped up. Like, I don't know what a, I don't know what a good subreddit is in size, but it seems like this is a good one.

SAM

Okay. This is very, yeah. So Derek, what I've been watching you for years, I remember watching you when you were doing like, I think a cottage cheese or some type of like protein intake video and you looked horrible because I believe you were an amateur or maybe even more serious than amateur bodybuilder and you were like cutting and you looked just miserable when you were like really lean. But you have all these amazing videos where originally it started out as like, is this celebrity taking steroids? But then it kind of like expanded beyond that to like, you would actually do some really cool breakdowns about science, the science behind different fitness stuff, but then also life advice. And now you have like, I think 4 different companies, Gorilla Mind, Merit, and a few others. And so we're interested in like definitely some fitness stuff, but also the fact that you're running like I think 3 or 4, uh, like pretty successful businesses. And what do you have now? 1.5 million subscribers? 1.8?

Yeah, I think, uh, let's see, 1.89. Yeah.

SAM

Yeah. So you've built like a pretty, like what it appears to be monster businesses, but you've done it like with some really high integrity, it feels like. And you've also, uh, like your video setup is like almost janky. Although I feel like that's part of the shtick. But so it's just like all about like just really high quality content that is well researched.

Yeah, it's almost, it's quite unintentional, the jankiness, because I just don't know what I'm doing when it comes to, I don't know, videography and whatnot. So every time I try and spruce it up, it just, I fail miserably. So I just leave it the same.

SAM

But I've heard a rumor. I've heard a rumor that you've gotten, you know, you've clearly have gotten quite successful. I imagine your businesses are doing tens of millions in revenue. I heard a rumor that you've moved to a really nice house and between your first apartment when you started and your second better apartment and your third nice house, that you purposely make the background look exactly the same to the point of you've even like took a wall from your first apartment into the third place. Is that true?

SHAAN

Is this true? Because we've been saying this, by the way, we've been spreading this rumor, whether it's true or not.

I heard a rumor from my mouth.

SAM

Okay.

I gotta, I gotta know first who told you that.

SAM

I, I, I won't say. I won't say. One of your, one of your friends.

Oh, they fucked me over, eh? No, I'm just kidding. It's, uh, it is not a green screen, I'll tell you that. So a lot of people wonder if it is a green screen. It's not.

SHAAN

Some people—

SAM

it doesn't sound like a real wall. That did not sound like a real wall.

It's, uh, a lot of people use it in their Zoom calls now, apparently, which is crazy. They've like pulled the background out. But, um, yeah, it's, uh It's been the same background for a while. It may or may not be a sauna. Some people, you know, that's the prevalent rumor as well. But I think it's a secret that's going to live and die with the channel.

SAM

You also have done a good job of like somewhat hiding your identity. I mean, you have to go like pretty deep in order to find like your full name. And you've done a good job of like kind of staying under the radar while also being incredibly popular.

Yeah. Yeah. It's I don't know. I don't know how I even managed to have the foresight to think of that at the time, but it just seemed like a reasonable idea given if you were ever going to become popular to avoid, I don't know, weirdos and stuff. With that said, there's also the question if you're going to be able to leave as much of a legacy without your last name out there, but I don't know how much I believe in that anyway. So it seems like it's worked out to date.

SAM

Yeah, I, I definitely think it has.

SHAAN

Go ahead. Uh, you and your business partner both have funny, like, kind of names of your channels, uh, your content channels. So your— yours is More Plates More Dates, which is hilarious, and then his is, I think, goodlookingloser.com.

Yeah, yeah, he had like a men's self-improvement blog from— he was an OG YouTuber before I ever was online. He started making content in 2009, I think. And that's actually how I found his stuff, was through his YouTube channel where he talked about, um, you know, how to talk to women. And he had like videos of him going up to girls cold approaching. And I was, you know, baffled at the time. And I was just a teenager in university watching his stuff and was one of the first like 10 or 15 people who joined his online forum. And then tracked and logged my, I don't know, trials and tribulations with fitness and chicks and all that kind of stuff, university. And then eventually we ended up actually working together, which is really cool. But yeah, he has not posted regularly in, I don't know, 5+ years, but he is, yeah, good looking loser. That's the OG right there.

SHAAN

And we're gonna talk about your, your, the business side, 'cause it, I, it's unclear, but I believe you built a 9-figure business, so over $100 million business or collection of businesses off of your channel. So we'll talk about the business stuff in a second, but I want to start with this kind of pickup thing because I just had Mark Manson on the podcast, the guy who wrote The Subtle Art of Not Giving a Fuck. And so he started also, now he's like kind of like all about, you know, life advice and, you know, self-help and things, you know, he's one of the most popular self-help authors ever. He wrote a book with Will Smith. He's like super legit now, but he started off in the pickup world and he had this blog. He was named Entropy and his blog was all about picking up women. And I've noticed a few of these backgrounds that seem to lead to these, like there's a few backgrounds, like origin stories, like a superhero would have that lead to interesting people. So I've noticed like elite gamers. So people are like hardcore gamers. They tend to become, they can become really successful in the game of business afterwards if they to so choose. Or debate. Debate lends itself very well to people who end up being, you know, leaders, CEOs types of people, because they think a certain way and they're able to articulate themselves. And now another one I'm noticing is pickup. And I'm curious if you think there's anything to that, or am I just reading into it? Is there— are there any life skills, core life skills that you really get from that?

Yeah, it's weird. I was actually— I had lunch with Andrew Wilkinson a few weeks ago, and he said the same thing about pickup. He thinks that a lot of people come from that world, and I don't know if it's just like feeling of inadequacy that drove you to the pickup stuff to begin with, which also translates to your weird drive in an entrepreneurial aspect that kind of takes you to this level most people simply won't feel reasonable or something they, I don't know, want to strive for. But I think there's definite overlap there. And I don't know if it's like a emotionally healthy thing always, or a mentally healthy thing, but there's definite overlap where people are, I think, trying to optimize all areas of their life, whether it is social dynamics or what have you. And that obviously translates into business. Like for me, job interviews became infinitely easier after I learned how to walk up to attractive women. Because if you can walk up to an attractive, you know, 10 out of 10 and not get nervous going into a job interview, it's just like, it's butter. Whereas before it used to be super nervous, you know, you're in the waiting room, you know, being extremely, I don't know, overthinking the entire situation. And it's to you, anything that could be anxiety-inducing is just out of sight, out of mind. So for me, I think there is a huge overlap. Business presentations became so much easier, became more confident in rooms, meeting new people, whether it was talking to dudes or talking to chicks, didn't matter. And Yeah, I think there's still huge upside. Not to be like a dirtbag, which equates to being an entrepreneur. I wouldn't suggest that, but there are certain social skills and I don't know, like EQ you can gain from the pickup stuff that I think translates.

SAM

Sean, you didn't study that stuff?

SHAAN

I did.

SAM

Yeah.

Yeah.

SAM

Because I read all the books. I bought some of the courses. I went to like an event before, like I was like, really into that because it was rooted in a sense of like, I feel inadequate and I want to meet women and like be liked. But it totally carries over to sales. You know, like the rule, there's like a 3-second, there's like a 3-second rule. It's like, as soon as you see a woman that's like beautiful, you have 3 seconds to go talk to her. Or like, there's, I mean, I used, I used all of it. I loved it.

SHAAN

I wouldn't call myself an artist though. I don't think I made it to pick up artists. It's like a Subway sandwich artist.

Yeah.

SHAAN

Are you sure about that?

SAM

And half, half of those guys ended up like with horrible lives as they got older. Like, they're like 50 years old and they're still doing this shit. And it's like, dude, that's not cool. It's cool to be settled down, actually. It's cool to have like a relationship. And so like the pickup artist community does a really good job of teaching young men how to be confident and meet a woman. But then half of them do a really bad job of saying, all right, now here's how you remain loyal and how you become a good partner and things like that. But they just get you to the interview or the first date, but they suck after that. You know what I mean? It's like horrible on how to actually be a man and treat people respectfully.

Yeah, I think one of the best takeaways from the pickup artist world is being able to review their lives from pre-success, being losers essentially, to peak success, having this incredible, you know, dating life with diversity and choice, and then what happens to them thereafter. The younger guys have the luxury of being able to watch the entire timeline and see, did they end up somewhere that I would aspire to be? And why or why not? And how do I avoid getting down that path? Because when I was, you know, coming up and learning about this stuff too, it was even getting on a date was a task in itself and an achievement if you were able to even muster up a dating life from scratch with women that were not introduced to you through your friend circles or whatever. Being able to meet people cold was, uh, The floodgates open in terms of opportunity and thereafter, as long as you were sleeping with women, you thought you ended the game and you were good to go, but you don't realize thereafter there's a whole nother element of how do you actually become happy, have successful relationships. No one taught you that stuff. So being able to see the, I don't know, the before and after of like the Neil Strauss's of the world or whatever and what happened to them, I think is pretty insightful.

SAM

I want to ask you about some of your businesses and how you're actually managing all this because you have a lot going on. So there's Gorilla Mind, which it looks like that's pre-workout and creatine.

You gotta tell me what you name it, bro. I know you hate the name, right?

SAM

Yeah. What was this other one we had? We had this other one called, what was that one, Sean? It was called like Deer Killer or something.

SHAAN

I know, the deer antler spray. What was it? Oh, Bucked Up.

Bucked Up.

SAM

Bucked Up. Yeah.

Bucked Up.

SAM

Well, my thing with you, Derek, is like, I trust you. Like, I trust you a lot and I buy what you say.

SHAAN

Totally agree.

SAM

It reminds me in the same form of like, you remember when we were younger, like NO-Xplode and that stuff? And I remember taking that and I was like, this is awesome. And also like, this might be illegal. Like it was like, like it felt like, like Adderall.

SHAAN

I got two hearts right now.

This is awesome.

SAM

I didn't know anything about it, but I'm like, I don't know if this is good. But when I think of your brand, I think like I, my values align with your values. But for some reason that I don't think the name—

SHAAN

Okay, let's start with this. Objectively, this is working, right? Like I'm looking at the traffic. It looks like it's over a million visitors a month for an e-com store that's doing supplements, super high margin, high review purchase. Like, I don't know what you're doing per month, but I would not be shocked if this was doing between $6 and $8 million a month in revenue. Blink twice if I'm right.

Yeah, you're, uh, you guys are pretty, you know, on point with your ballparks. There we go. What I will say is, as far as the niche goes, and by the way, that's just like, I don't know if Amazon is equal to our Shopify, but we're starting to get into retail too. And the traffic numbers are oftentimes quite misleading. So I don't know what you guys use for that, but I've started, I don't know if how much I read into those traffic statistics. Do you use SimilarWeb or what do you?

SHAAN

Yeah, this one, I was looking at SimilarWeb, but I have like layers. It's like, you can go like, quick look at traffic, then it's like, there's tools that will literally just tell you, here's the sales of this store, but it doesn't know what your wholesale and retail might be. But you're like, all right, I know if their Shopify is at this level and I know that they have some retail distribution, you can get pretty, pretty close.

Right.

SAM

Yeah.

So as far as the branding around it, I do agree in the health niche when it comes to trusted dietary supplements for I don't know, let's just say a multivitamin or a B complex or a lipid support product, those kinds of things, I am totally on the same page that even I wouldn't necessarily have the highest trust factor in a company called a Gorilla Mind or a Bucked Up or a whatever. When it comes to things that are meant to get you cognitively dialed in though, and things that are meant to be hardcore pre-workouts, and vasodilate the shit out of you, all of this kind of stuff. That is where the more edgy branding, I think, for example, the same way you wouldn't trust a Gorilla Mind B-Complex and you would go with a Thorn, you probably would go with Gorilla Mode pre-workout over Thorn's pre-workout. Probably. I think most people would.

SAM

It depends who's buying it. Like, I'm like a 30-something yuppie guy who doesn't— I like, I want to look good naked and I want to live a long time. And there's like a balance of like, what, what, you know, am I putting like bro shit in my body or am I putting, do you know what I mean? But then like your other one, Maric Health, I'm on that website. I invested in this company called Hone. I think Sean maybe did too. I think you, in my opinion, the branding of Maric is like beautiful. I think that's beautifully done. So Maric Health does like hormone optimization or hormone replacement therapy. You do a bunch of thyroid stuff. I think that branding is phenomenal. And I would guess that this company will be more valuable than Gorilla Mind because it's, I would imagine subscription, and it's probably what, like $300 a month on average per customer?

Yeah. And the telemed, especially in high-level preventative medicine diagnostic space, you are, it's a lot more premium for sure. And the margins are superior, but it's also contingent on the level of service. And that's where we differentiate ourselves. There's a lot of telemedicine pop-up clinics now and hormone replacement therapy, you know, spots to go to, and we try to steer away from that moniker. We are kind of like a, I don't know, it's a broad-spectrum preventative medicine whereby you can trust that you're not going to just get thrown on a cookie-cutter script of testosterone and Nastrozol and get kicked out of the door. Like, we pride ourselves on the services and the doctor oversight and the quality of care and The providers especially are highly educated and are vetted by me and my team specifically. So, it's, I would say, more than $300 a month for sure in general. But that is definitely the way of the future in terms of what I am most passionate about. And yeah, you're definitely right that it's, I would say, at least objectively right now, perhaps more valuable than Gorilla Mind.

SAM

Are you— who are you? How big is your team now? And who do you have helping you run each of these companies? Because that's a it's fairly complex, I imagine.

SHAAN

Yeah. Maybe break it down like your core team that's like not assigned to any one of these companies. And then like, what does a core team look like first? And then how do the sub-companies look?

Yeah. So fortunately from an operational and backend standpoint, I live in Canada, by the way, the companies are based in the US. So for me being on site is essentially impossible. So I have my business partner, Chris, good looking loser, is in Idaho where Guerrilla Mind HQ is stationed, and he's the one who built out the team in person for warehouse fulfillment. We will both be ones who vet out the high-level C-suite guys, but a lot of the more, I don't know, like hands-on tasks are going to be fulfilled through teams there that I have minimal oversight or interaction with. I'm more the marketing and C-suite level stuff. And retail a bit now, but that is in terms of the team and number of people, I think there's like 50 to 100 in each company, but I don't, I don't actually know, to be honest. But as far as oversight from Gorilla, that's typically, that's essentially how it works is we have Chris in Boise, me in Canada. I oversee all things marketing, content, product formulation, manufacturing, supply chain. He oversees everything hands-on, fulfillment, warehouse, distribution, legal, accounting, and there's sub-teams within that that we oversee essentially. And we have, you know, financial controller, we have like a guy who oversees retail, et cetera, et cetera. But that is kind of how the org chart would delineate out. And then on the Maric Health side, my business partner, He's not a, he doesn't have an online presence, but he's somebody who I met through the industry myself years ago. And he's exceptionally well-versed in how to operate a team and build out the infrastructure and get the licensing and everything necessary to be above board and stay on top of all the compliance stuff. 'Cause in the telemedicine space, it's, you know, quite a bit goes into making sure you're doing it the right way. 'Cause there are a lot of clinics that get spun up and essentially are just illegally prescribing steroids. Essentially, that is literally why they exist, more or less. And a lot of compounding pharmacies, despite being legitimate compounding pharmacies, are not above board either. They will prescribe underground lab-level drugs that are not even pharmaceutical grade. It's wild stuff. So, um, he oversees essentially everything when it comes to the team, the, uh, I will help vet out the providers and high-level talent and C-suite guys and whatnot. And I'm also heavily involved in marketing, similar to Gorilla, but he is, uh, without the, the, my partners, none of this would be possible.

SAM

And then is Intelligent Shop like rounded? Is that the third one? Um, is that the third major one? Are those two significant?

Yeah. Oh, I would say those two are definitely bigger than Intelligent, but Intelligent has, uh, Probably the best profit margin, I would say. But that company is me and Chris as well.

SAM

It's crazy is that like you're going, you're like doing more challenging problems. So like I have no idea how challenging a supplement company is, but let's just say that that's like a 2 or 3 out of 10. And then Meric Health would be like a 6 or 7 out of 10 or even higher because you're like actually starting to do with like regulation. And then I know that you, I think you said it here and you said on videos, you're thinking about doing a compound pharmacy, uh, which, uh, like for the, which sounds like the hardest and like, I, I don't know too much about it, but does that basically mean like you're actually getting the commodities from whoever you're getting and you have to make sure they're safe and that you're handling them safely? And I guess compounding means you're combining, uh, and shipping them out to the Merrick Health of the world. Is that right?

Yeah. So for example, when you get prescribed your testosterone, for example, from a clinic like AmeriHealth or maybe own, I'm not sure how they operate, but in general they will fill a prescription through a pharmacy like an Empower or a fill-in-the-blank compounding pharmacy that is also having their own markup on medication, is the ones receiving the active drugs and creating a finished product for you to prescribe. And just logically anytime you can try and get more of the supply chain to control the margin, that's gonna be beneficial, I would imagine. At, at which point it becomes a logical and worthwhile use of your time though, is to be determined. 'Cause similar to the manufacturing side on dietary supplements, although there's different levels of quality control and oversight, you know, you still have to be GMP certified and, you know, have a certain level of oversight in your facility and is the bandwidth allocated to doing that, taking away from your, what your bread and butter is on the private labeling or marketing side of things. Depends on the person, I guess, because some companies kill it just being manufacturers and not even having a company that they sell stuff through.

SAM

So Empower is the guys that a lot of people go to, I believe, right? How big do you think that business is?

100 million plus, probably.

SAM

What, what could that be worth? How, what would like, what would a multiple on that business be? I don't even know what those would sell for. Cause is that considered just a manufacturing business?

Well, it's tough because they definitely have some level of trust factor that other pharmacies don't have. For even for me, if I was to get a compounded testosterone from Empower versus from some rinky-dink compounding pharmacy, I would 100% trust Empower more than fill in the blank, even though they have supposedly, you know, same levels of quality control, rigor, licensing, et cetera. There is pretty significant variability sometimes in the compounding world, plus minus on certain drugs, even as shocking as that sounds. What you see on the label, even in the pharmaceutical world, is not always what you're getting in compounding.

SAM

That just seems like such an intimidating business to go down, down the path.

Yeah. Fortunately for me, and that it's something that it's, it's actually wild because Gorilla Mind is probably the thing that has the highest level of difficulty for me because I'm intimately involved in product formulation. Whereas on the telemed side, fortunately there is no need for me to, I don't sit there making medication formulations. You have a preset, you know, testosterone concentration or fill in the blank drug. I don't control all that or need any creativity or insight into what goes into that because it's a very tightly regulated thing. Whereas in the supplement world, people will just look at our label and rip us off often. So, I am often the guy who has to be creative, come up with innovative ideas, and I don't want something to come out with my name on it that I don't have significant, you know, personal time investment into that formula that goes out. So, you know, for me, the Gorilla Mind formulation and product rollout side of things is the most time-consuming. So, I would say Gorilla is like, 6 or 7 out of 10, and Merrick is like a 2 out of 10 for me. Oh, interesting. Personally.

SAM

Yeah. We had Doug DeMuro on. Do you know who Doug DeMuro is? He's a car YouTuber.

Yeah. Yeah.

SAM

He's awesome. He's cool. He built this thing up to like 4 or 5 million subscribers. Then he launched this thing, Cars and Bids, which he sold a portion of the business. And Cars and Bids could be a multi-hundred million dollar business, I think. I think it's awesome. And But like going to compare you to him, that'd be like him starting to make like car parts. And I'm like, dude, Doug, why don't you just like make the best car marketplace ever and just like crush that? Because like, if I think of like you, Derek, launching, and I don't know much about the space. When I think about you launching like a pharmacy, I'm like, man, that seems like you're leveraging yourself pretty high. Like, what if that fucks everything up? Like, as opposed to kicking ass at these other two things.

I'm not dead set on it. So I imagine during, I don't know, discovery from buying a company or just the process of fleshing out all the details, I will probably uncover that, you know, leaning into our bread and butter is probably more worthwhile. So despite it being on my radar, similarly to the manufacturing side of supplements or energy drinks, it's probably not worth our time or money right now.

SAM

So, you know, to be determined in the future, but there's one reason why I imagine you should do it, which is it's pretty dope. Like, you know, like there's still like, there's still like that component of like, this seems very challenging, but like, this would be sick if you could actually pull it off. You know what I mean? Like there is that factor of like, it is, it's, you know, entrepreneurship's art and that, that's a cool challenge.

Yeah, no, it's, uh, and just being able to control everything, I think there's you're not putting yourself in a position where you can get squeezed. Whereas companies like Roman, they have their own pharmacies and there's a reason why, you know, they're not going to just private label to hell and market the shit out of it. They're going to control the drugs. So, you know, to me it seems like at scale there is some inevitable obstacle of trying to control that aspect of the business and not being subject to whatever the, you know, drug makers decide for you. But to be determined on that.

SHAAN

Do you, uh, like, what's your business goal? So like, uh, you shifted your focus. You're like, okay, I went through this bodybuilder dating, like, number one priority. Then you're like, all right, making money, entrepreneurship became the main focus for like the last period of time, last season. Um, what's your business goal? Because we've met a bunch of people that are like, some of them take this like, aw shucks, I don't know, I'm just trying to, you know, help people, like, type of attitude. Which I rarely believe, to be honest. And then there's a lot of other people like Rob Dyrdek came on and he's like, dude, I was like, yeah, I was like a skateboard kid, then ended up doing this, this. I ended up on TV, still wasn't making any money. And then I finally realized like, oh, like in the last, like in this last like 5-year period, I figured out like, okay, I need to go from rookie white belt to black belt. And I made it my focus. I made it my goal. And I said, I want to make $1 billion. And I decided, all right, to do that, What do I need to do? I need to own my own production company instead of just being a talent. So now I'm the talent and the production company. And then I brought people in and I started investing. I own real estate and I, he, and he like was very articulate about it. And our audience loved it because they were like, dude, I had no idea. He actually kind of had that part of his brain and had like intentionally set a goal and made a plan and started figuring it out. What's, how would I describe it for you? What's your, you know, cause you started off just doing this kind of fun, but then the business opportunities came up, came about. What's your goals and how did that come about?

Yeah, I should probably revisit my goals because I don't really have a firm concrete objective. I do know from a value standpoint, I think Gorilla Mind and AmeriHealth are billion-dollar companies in the future at some point, and I do very much intend for them to get there, and I strongly believe they will.

SAM

I mean, that sounds like a good goal.

I mean, if I was to put something on paper as a financial metric of sorts, those would be, you know, two concrete ones I could say in my near-ish future I foresee as doable and I want to make sure it happens. But I don't necessarily want to sell them either. It's just kind of a vanity metric or something that you're chasing, almost like a million subscribers on YouTube. Once you get there, you know, it's the same old the next day. Nothing changes other than your objective success and how you feel about yourself to some extent, maybe, and how people perceive you. But, and maybe you have more flexibility in what you can do, but you know, that's kind of how I see it too, is once the businesses get to a certain point, it's just going to be more of the same. Probably, I don't know. I can't imagine There's like, especially from the Maric Health side of things, it's a company that I'm so passionate about preventative medicine. If something is working, that is literally me being able to at scale educate and impart value about that. It's hard to see me deviating from it to be able to do what? That again? It doesn't really, I don't know, maybe I'll change my mindset as I get a bit older and I have kids or something, but Right now, not really, uh, that, that's kind of all I could say as far as concrete goals on a piece of paper financially, and also my path in terms of what I'm passionate about.

SAM

Have you raised financing or funding for any of these businesses?

No, never.

SAM

Dude, that's crazy because like, all right, you have 1.8 million subscribers, 1.9, close to 2 million. That's a lot, but that's not a lot, a lot. You know what I'm saying? I mean, that, that's like if someone grinds for 10 years, like you could get there. What's crazy is that, I mean, that's just a huge number to have two multi-billion dollar, two, let's just even say $100 million plus brands off the back of 1.9 million subscribers. That's a significant amount.

Well, yeah, you have to keep in mind too, our influencer marketing is pretty dialed, especially on the Gorilla side. And we have a lot of people who believe in what I'm doing and my passion and path forward too, and trust me. So they will also trust that I'm going to put them in the best spot to accrue the most value from whatever company they're partnering with and have mutually beneficial relationships as they develop their business careers too. So especially on Gorilla, there is no way we'd be anywhere near where we are. Well, I don't know what we'd actually be at, but a lot of our influencers behind us are huge needle movers. Huge. Like I would say our combined following is like, I don't know, in the tens of millions, if not 100 million plus.

SAM

Is it contingent on you getting more popular, do you think? Or do you think that they've grown beyond that?

Yeah, I think they're big enough. They can be their own thing. And I think fortunately for me, it has allowed me the flexibility to reel back on the content frequency a bit because I used to be very heavily output-oriented, which I should be still, but The trust factor is very high and the success of the company stands, has it, it has its own, I don't know, resume of credibility through what it's done. Like being, I don't know, one of the top-selling pre-workouts on Amazon, for example, against companies I literally bought when I was 17 years old and edging some of them out now. Like that's wild to me. And those kind of things help us get into retail and help us do things from a global expansion standpoint that aren't contingent on me. Sure, it helps that I'm a face of the brand and what I've done. And you know that when you work with us, I'm going to be the one formulating your products too. For example, like when influencers work with us, if you're going to have a collaborative pre-workout that drops, knowing that I'm indirectly endorsing it and making it for you too is a huge plus. Whereas most owners are not even faces of the brand and no one even knows who they are. So that kind of stuff I think gives us the latitude and flexibility to grow moving forward outside of having this influencer treadmill where we're having to acquire new people to get exposure to then sell more. I think there is absolutely a diminishing returns point, and for us at this point, it's very global expansion oriented and retail going heavier into retail on some of the products like the energy drinks and whatnot. But to be determined. So it's all a bit of an experiment, to be honest.

SHAAN

I went and read your blog and prepped for this and I read a bunch of the posts and you said something, you said, when I was 18, what were my priorities? You said, well, I wanted to make more money. I wanted to date hordes of gorgeous women. I want to have a killer physique and I wanted to do well in school to set me up for my future. And you said, you know, I had these 4 goals and those all sounded like totally worth pursuing and they all sounded like things I should be working on. I'm in school, so I should probably work on school. I'm kind of, you know, 18 to 21 years old. I should probably try to date women or work out, make money. All of these things seemed like good ideas at the same time. And then you realized I should go all in on one of these goals right now at the expense of the others. Why did you have that philosophy of go all in on one life goal versus try to have kind of this balance or pursue all four?

Yeah, it's tough because it's not like I would claim it to be the correct way to live your life, but I think a lot of people live, especially in the entrepreneurial world, in stages. It's almost like seasons of your life. And there are certain seasons where you can complete certain things are prerequisites for the other. And I would say that when it comes to Getting women, for example, when you were young, you do not need exorbitant amounts of funds. You actually don't even need to have the ability to support somebody in a long-term relationship. If you're young, you can have a piece of crap car and live with your parents and still crush it with literally, like, objectively 10 out of 10 girls in your age bracket. And being able to kind of get that season of your life out of the way and develop those social skills, at least at the time, when I was broke too, I felt like was worth getting out of my way, so to speak, before I went down the road of entrepreneurship, which I knew would consume the majority of my free time. And dating, especially large amounts of women, when you're trying to kind of, I don't know, get your anxiety out of your system entirely and become even used to this dynamic of being out with attractive women, It's not something that I feel you can juggle both simultaneously. Dating is a full-time job, honestly. Like, if you're single, you can definitely agree with what I'm saying, that it can be as consuming as a full-time job in itself. So for me, you know, trying to— and I also was way more hardcore about bodybuilding at the time, so I would actually dedicate blocks of time to cutting and bulking phases, and the cutting phases would be getting striking distance of stage-ready condition, which is something that is super mentally sapping and demanding of your body and more extreme amounts of cardio, caloric restriction, et cetera. And it's not trying to do everything at the same time. I feel like you'll just fail or do everything kind of half-assed. Essentially, you will not get anything done with exceptional quality. So that was at least my thought process and logic at the time, and I would still probably agree with it even though that blog is, I don't even remember the last time I wrote an article on that blog. It is super outdated, but it is something I would still resonate with probably. I think people should be segregating things into seasons personally.

SAM

Yeah, I mean, we talk about seasons a lot and I think like, what's that quote, Sean, about the lion and the cow? Like cows graze, lions rest and then pounce and oftentimes it's a little bit easier in business to be like the line instead of just like, you know, instead of like a constant 40 hours a week, maybe like sprints is a little bit easier. And I was watching some of your videos. I remember there was one recently where I think you got back from Europe. You were in Europe and it sounded like you were with a girlfriend or a wife or something like that. So I assume you're in some type of long relationship. Has building these companies been a lot easier once you have more stability as opposed to dating?

Yeah, dude, it's night and day. Try, if I was single right now, I would get half as much work done probably. Yeah.

SAM

Yeah. Dude, having, and like, I remember when I was building my first company, there was probably twice a week I would lay on the floor and I'm like, this isn't going to work. I feel miserable. Like I'm just going to quit and like having a spouse or excuse me, fiancée or girlfriend at the time. To be like, no, you got this. Like, that is just like, it was like the greatest thing ever. That's what I knew. I'm like, dude, having a, a wife is so much better than—

SHAAN

she's like, also move out of the way, I'm trying to get to the kitchen, you're just laying on the floor.

No, yeah, I would, I, I, yeah, I totally agree with that sentiment for sure.

SHAAN

You've got these, you know, you have the content machine running, you got the business machine running. Have you figured out What you want to do with your money. So do you, have you learned kind of like how to either spend it in ways that are interesting or invest it? How much time and effort have you put into that? I guess like, what do you do with your money?

I've learned what not to do with it, which is good.

SAM

What have you done?

What have you done? So don't go with wealth management portfolio guys who will, even if it's with a big bank, because they get their management fees, even if they suck. So, and oftentimes they will make it sound like they're doing great things when objectively they're underperforming a basic, you know, index fund. So I would be very wary of that as a wealthy entrepreneur because a lot of those guys are the primary targets of those, you know, wealth management guys. And they will shockingly stay with them for years despite underperforming just objectively. And then You know, they just get rinsed the entire time while the management fees make the other guys rich. So I've learned not to do that the hard way. The thing that's tough is on the Canadian side, there is so much more complicated tax planning that goes into it. I've spent more time than I want to admit on figuring out how to not lose money than actually like making money with my money. So it's tough.

SAM

Yeah.

Like I'm still figuring, even figuring out how to put myself in the position most optimally to make my money work for me. But oftentimes even knowing what side of the country I should be keeping it on, it's been an ever learning process. And there are certain corporate structure things that I've been very hesitant to pour money into, you know, insurance fund that down the line is going to build money interest-free and I can then re— I've been very careful to not dive into any of those before I fully understand them, even though they could make me a lot of money, because I know once you're into some of those things, you can't unravel them. So, you know, as a Canadian, it's a lot more complicated unfortunately than just dollar cost average into the index.

SAM

So if you're, if, if your portfolio, you know, let's just say you're, you know, we'll do the pie chart thing without So just percentages, and not including your private businesses, where do you keep your money? Is it mostly equities? Are you investing in other private companies? What are you doing with it?

I do some angel investing, but it's very minor. Like, for example, MediaKits. You guys are familiar with Kieran. That's how we met. Like, his company, for example, I invested in. I don't know, some stuff like that, but not very often. But primarily it was, you know, wealth management was overseeing a lot of it. And then I realized how not ideal that was and liquidated it all recently at a loss. But yeah, it's just sitting in bank accounts right now doing nothing.

SAM

As absurd. No shit.

Really?

SAM

Yeah. Yeah.

So I'm like all cash right now. I have a decent amount of crypto, but I always forget I have that until somebody asks me like, what is your portfolio comprised of? So I guess technically some crypto. And then I guess it's the value of the businesses and whatever cash sits in those accounts. But yeah, it's mostly just chilling, doing nothing useful.

SAM

I remember you, I think you bought a Lamborghini or something like that and you like made a video about like the hedonic or hedonistic treadmill and you're like, this is kind of bullshit. Is there any, what have you spent money on that you think is thought would make you happy and it was bullshit versus where you actually like, where do you like to spend money on? And you're like, this actually makes me happy.

That's tough, man. 'Cause I don't, other than that, I haven't really spent egregious amounts of money on anything that I would deem to be irresponsible that was outside of a business capacity. Like I will invest, you know, always go first class 'cause of the convenience and just Legroom, just like basic stuff, which is, and other than that, I don't really buy anything luxury other than groceries, which, you know, getting high quality food I think is justified every single time. Yeah, I haven't really spent money on anything I could think of off the top of my head that was stupid.

SHAAN

What was the origin story for the businesses? So what order did they come in and what triggered the thought of like, all right, I need to I need to start this because I think you kind of, you're in the internet marketing affiliate game. When did you transition to like, I want to own my own businesses?

Yeah, especially prior to influencer integrations. When I first started affiliate marketing, it was still very SEO-driven, blog-heavy. There was not as much flat rate, you know, paper integration type stuff happening, or at least I was not that aware of it if it was happening at scale.

SAM

What were you selling?

Oh, an array of things. Whatever I use personally, Amazon links to it, etc. So I was getting, you know, 5% commissions on shampoo that I would use for hair loss prevention or—

SHAAN

And was that like beer money or that was like, like, like, wow, I'm making stupid money doing this somehow. Like, how successful were you able to be doing that?

Well, I guess success is definitely subjective. So at the time, I felt extremely, but you know, in proportional terms, perhaps not now, but back then that was the stuff that funds your ability to actually start your own businesses. So I would say in that sentiment, definitely successful. And I think the thing that helped me the most and what I typically recommend people to do as when they're wondering, what do I even get into as a product or service or what have you? It's organically integrating things that you already use and truly believe in. Because if you just plug nonsense and you start to be an ad whore, essentially, where you just take whatever comes your way when it comes to integrations, even products you don't believe in or care about, and you just become a robot mindlessly reading scripts for, you know, dollars, you kind of get— your credibility goes out the window and people don't listen to your product recommendations anymore. And for me, it was always, how do I monetize stuff that I use anyways and would tell people for free? You should use this because I use it. So oftentimes that was taking piddly little affiliate commissions or none on products that I actually used and wanted people to also try to get results with. And that would include, but not limited to, you know, supplements, hair loss prevention products, sometimes random diet hack related things. I don't know, it varied significantly, but across the board it was basically what has an affiliate program that is a product I already use and I can get a commission for telling people something I would tell them anyways. And that is how I kind of built up my initial funds to then start some of the businesses that replaced the affiliate recommendations that I would've been making anyway. So it's, it was kind of stemmed from just what are the things I'm most passionate about personally? And promote them and, 'cause I would anyways, and then replace them eventually with things that I feel are higher quality and reflect exactly what I would want to see as a consumer in that niche. So that was kind of how I went down the rabbit hole of dietary supplements. I've always been a formulator. I've always dug very heavily into the chemistry and pharmacology side of things, and it was just an eventual inevitability that I was going to get into it at some point. And once it became viable financially, that was kind of my segue into that. And then hair loss prevention products, I'd been recommending certain things for years, and that was my segue into Intelligent Elephant, which is another company. And then telemedicine was, I was making content for years about preventative medicine and how to interpret diagnostics and blood work and hormone optimization and PEDs, ergogenic AIDS, et cetera. And it was, that was such a no-brainer for me to get into too. So across the board, that's kind of what I look for as the highest lever opportunities, at least how I kind of ended up starting those businesses to begin with and funding them.

SHAAN

We had our buddy Saeed on and what he did was he had a high traffic blog that was helping people out with WordPress. He's like, oh yeah, I recommend using this email popup. And like he would just basically see, oh, okay. The highest, the things that people click on the most, 'cause they're looking for a solution are X, maybe that's a business I should go into. And so what he would do is he would just go buy that business or buy the number 2 player, improve it, and then make it his recommendation. And he just went systematically. It's almost like you've did that for the body. You were like, cool, I got this high traffic. I give this ability to get a bunch of high traffic. I can start with affiliates and see what people click. What, you know, even if they have a crappy affiliate program, At least I know that's a category that I know I can drive a lot of, lot of customers to. Maybe I should be the supplier instead of the affiliate.

Yeah, it's crazy how much stuff has evolved just in the past. I don't know, not even 10, like 6 or 7 years too, in terms of where people get their recommendations from. Like SEO is so irrelevant now to where I shop and where most of our customers shop too. Back in the day, it was if you're top ranked on Google, Maybe for some services it's absolutely still relevant, but for certain products in the e-commerce space and whatnot, it's like no one gives a shit at all. Whereas back in the day, if you, it was all about how do I get top ranked on Google for buy fill in the blank or top 3 fill in the blank. And that was a lot of my affiliate stuff came through my blog articles back then and lesser YouTube, but now it's. So heavily social media.

SAM

The New York Times had this article come out a few weeks ago and it was like, my guru is better than your guru or something like that. And it was about how, I mean, this has always been the case, but it's just, there's more now and they're bigger about how audiences will attract, well, we'll go towards a certain like health and wellness person. So like there's you, there's Huberman, but then there's also, um, uh, Mark Sisson. Is that his name? Mark, the, the, the older guy who, uh, started Primal Kitchen. And then there's like 5 or 6 or 10 or 20 other ones. And they actually, but the article was saying, and this is true, that they say different things. Like not everyone agrees. So there's like, you know, eat a lot of plants, but then there's like Carnivore MD. And then you, you know, you did your whole thing on the Liver King. Like they don't, they oftentimes will say like different stuff, but you just get behind someone and you just do whatever they say. Like if you go, if you talk to Andrew Huberman, Like the most common question he gets, and I'm sure you get this too, which is just tell me exactly what you do and I'm going to do the exact same thing. Yeah. Uh, you know what I mean? But, and that's in one hand, that's on one hand, that's maybe dangerous because it doesn't always apply to each person. But on the other hand, it makes a great ass business because it's just like, whatever Derek says, I do and I buy. And I think that you've had like videos where you're like, my supplement company, like I'm not going to just make a ton of product because I have to make the quality good, but you guys are buying so much of it that we need like 2 weeks off in order to restock. You know what I mean? So it's like good for you as a business owner.

Yeah, I think trust factor is everything nowadays, especially because there is so— especially in the health niche, it is so hard to know who to trust because oftentimes the charlatans will get platformed too because they say outrageous things. You'll see them on big podcasts even sometimes just because they'll say something that seems so contradictory to what is accepted as, you know, scientific fact or whatever, just to get a good hook. Not even necessarily because they're the authority or foremost expert in a certain area. And it's super confusing for the layman who was just trying to, you know, learn something and then they hear 17 different versions of recommendations for something that should be basic. And yeah, trying to, even what I do too, and I think a lot of people should do when they're self-educating is find a handful of people that through all evidence provided are, have highest trust factor and knowledge simultaneously. 'Cause the two coupled are what are going to lead you to what I feel to be actual recommendations that are practical and valuable rather than just, You know, follow— it's wild how many, you know, bad educators there are out there for sure.

SHAAN

And how did you become an expert? Like, you know, Huberman's like a professor at wherever, he's like a Stanford lab or something. You know, you, when I first saw your thing, you were like, oh, I think I was clicking like some of the videos that were like, what is Conor McGregor taking or Jon Jones or whatever. And you're talking about the pulsing effects of picograms of whatever that Jon Jones got popped for. And I was like, how the hell would this guy know? It doesn't even seem like USADA even understands like what the hell's going on. Like, where is the literature of this? How would this random YouTuber know about any of this stuff?

Largely through years of self-education, but also through educating myself through experts and being— I feel I'm very good extrapolating out and determining what is valuable information and then assimilating it into my own consolidated framework. That's one of my strong suits. It's taken years. I've been researching like a maniac since I was, I don't know, like 10, 10+ years at this point. So for me, I don't necessarily claim to be an expert. Oftentimes people will label me as such, but You know, I'm just a guy who's a nerd and learns a lot of shit and it's been, it's been good to date. But yeah, a lot of this stuff is available though too. It's just hard to translate into layman's terms. Like somebody who's in the lab determining if an assay is going to be implementable for the USADA in the future to catch people doing fill in the blank. The USADA, I don't know, spokespeople don't necessarily understand the chemistry and the science. They're not gonna go out and go into elaborate detail about why you could still get away with microdosing, for example, like that kind of, nor is it beneficial for them to assert publicly that it's possible to do such. So a lot of this stuff is just swept under the rug and no one talks about it 'cause they either don't understand it or it's not very, I don't know, readily circulated. So, but it's all publicly available. It's just a matter of being able to dissect it. So, you know, that's kind of been it.

SHAAN

What, what do you think of the, the sort of the tech, tech testosterone movement that's going on? So you got Bezos retires, gets jacked. You got Zuck becoming an MMA fighter. You have, who else is, who else is doing it? There's a couple of, Bryan Johnson has—

Elon's on semiglutide, so he is at least trying to get ripped. Not necessarily sauced to the gills, but he is trying to get, you know, leaner. He's trying to lose weight.

SAM

Yeah.

SHAAN

What do you think of, what do you, who's doing it right? Who's doing it wrong? What do you, what do you see in the, tech, uh, tech bodies?

I think it's, uh, good that guys are prioritizing muscle mass and quality of life and whatnot over just, you know, existing. So I think it's an overall good thing to have, um, I don't know, be pursuing kind of the masculine type, and I don't know, path. But I don't necessarily know who's doing it wrong or right because they're not very outspoken about their protocols. And what about Brian Johnson?

SHAAN

Because he's meticulous about like, you know, publishing what he's doing. What's your take on it, on what he's doing?

That guy, it's tough because I do see the value in what he's doing, but I think a lot of it is totally contradictory. Like, for example, the guy will calorie deprive the hell out of himself to the point of having hormone suppression, but then supplement with testosterone. It's like, dude, make up your mind. Which one is going to be conducive to longevity versus not? Because You're kind of just correcting what you screwed yourself up for to begin with. It's like, why, why is your body trying to fight back against you just to, you know, manually administer something to correct your deficiency self-induced from literal nutrient deprivation? Like that, there's clearly some sort of, I don't know, contradictory actions in this protocol in my opinion. But overall, I think it's interesting for sure. Seeing what he thinks is impactful versus not. But as he starts to roll out some of the products and services related to his stuff, you start to wonder how much of it is just noble intentions versus the entrepreneurial aspect of it, which is fine. But it's like, do not, if it goes down that road where he goes heavy into selling, I really hope he is very candid about his desire to monetize and not make it seem like this noble, you know, thing entirely. 'Cause it's certainly not, you know, your private label olive oil. Like other people could have got it. You could have just recommended a good company. You didn't have to go do it yourself necessarily. You know, you use some other companies up until a certain point. Why not just talk about them and give them the business? There's, there's some sort of monetary incentive there, which is fine. I think a lot of the stuff he does is way overkill, and I think it's kind of hard to track anything with any relative certainty when there's a billion different variables. And I also think he puts way too much credence into certain trackers like the age clocks. Those are complete bullshit essentially. And I don't think it's of great utility to be tracking those meticulously as if that's reflective of exactly what's going on.

SHAAN

And what, why are the age clocks bullshit?

That I would need to dig into more, but a lot of it is based on your current What is going on in your body in this current snapshot of time and then trying to reflect, okay, your velocity of aging equals this because you had a transient, like, better blood sugar or fill in the blank biomarker. Like, you could just as easily screw up your blood work and make it look like you're way older than you are in a matter of days. So, it's like, obviously, your chronological biological age didn't shift that much in a matter of days,, but just based on your current health status in your blood, in your body right now, you can make it look like you're plus minus 20 years. So to actually take that and make it assert that, oh, this is, it equals I'm this young now. It's like, no, you're maybe your current snapshot in time reflects something that looks like that, but it is not indicative that that is your overall health status. So I would have to do, I probably should do a video on it at some point, but It's, uh, most credible people that I trust think it's bullshit personally.

SAM

I test all of 'em. So I've done, uh, Insight, I think Insight Tracker or Insight Tracker, and then, uh, True Diagnostics. And then like, I've done all of 'em. They're, they're, they're, it's messed up because I know in my head that this is theory and that it's a, it's mo— like, I know it's a gimmick, but it's so fun. You know what I mean?

SHAAN

They come out the same, Sam, when you try it across multiple services.

SAM

Yeah, those two came out the same, which is basically like, my blood work is great. And I think they give you actually a number. So they're like, you're 34 biologically, you're 23 chronologically, or what is it? Chronologically, you're 34. Biologically, you're 23. So it said I was great. And then they have this other score where they look at—

is it the—

SHAAN

hang on, hang on. You're 23 biologically?

SAM

Yeah. Like, according to this shit. And so, which is, which is like a false sense.

SHAAN

I know Derek just said it's bullshit, but I'm not going to lie. Kind of admire you for that. But that's just what I have in my books.

SAM

But that's my thing is I see that and I'm like, oh, sick. I'm doing everything great. But I'm like, I'm pretty sore though. Like, I don't know, like, you know, like, I don't know if I'm doing everything perfectly. And what's it called? What do they look at? Is it the methane or, uh, methylation? Methylation. They look at that and they're like, oh, you're kicking ass. Your rate of aging is super low. So I'm like, sick. Like, I'm, I'm not going to change anything, but, but, uh, that's not exactly the reality because I don't always feel great. You know what I'm saying? I also went on a kick. I've tested everything. So I've tested the semi-glutide. I've tested TRT. I don't do any of that now. And then I used anastrozole, which is like, in my opinion, the worst thing ever. I fucking hate that. It made me feel miserable. I've tried Clomid. Now I don't do anything, but I've gone through, I've tried it all because I like experimenting with all this stuff. And then I like doing the blood work. It's like an addicting thing. It's like someone who's obsessed with different gadgets. You know what I'm saying?

Why did you come off of TRT?

SAM

Because I would, so I got like strong, so I like, I wanted to do it because I was really low for years, like 130, and I was like, all right, let's get this right and figure out what's going on. And so I did it and I got low body fat, I got strong, I was hitting like record squat and bench numbers. And then I was like, all right, well let's try without it. Let's just see what happens if I don't take it. And I still felt great. And so I was like, well, you know, if I don't have to take it, And my testosterone level actually went down, but I still felt wonderful and I was still lifting wonderfully and my body felt great. So I was like, let's just try not doing it for a while.

How long ago did you come off?

SAM

Uh, last summer, a year, a year.

Okay. Oh, and what's your test now?

SAM

Dude, it dropped. It was 800 and then it went to, uh, 400, 420.

You said it was like 130 or something before you started TRT though, right?

SAM

Yeah. And I was 26% body fat and I felt miserable. I was also running my company. And I was stressed and I didn't get— and, and, um, for a year I tried eating healthy and lifting and I just didn't get it right. And then I, uh, sold my company, so I got financial security. I was pretty, pretty ripped. I was pretty strong.

My—

SAM

I got married and my relationship was awesome and I just felt happy. And I ate well, I ate all natural foods and I just felt dialed in. And then I just went off of it and my testosterone dropped, but I didn't feel horrible.

SHAAN

Interesting.

Well, yeah, if you don't need it, yeah, probably better to wait if you don't want to be—

SAM

How old are you? 30. Are you on it right now?

Yeah. But it's, for me, more so because when I was younger, I did a lot of hardcore bodybuilding stuff and shut down my system. And now, with what I know now, I could probably restore natural function similar to what you did, but it would be a lot more aggressive of a recovery phase and more arduous. And, putting myself through that right now isn't necessarily top of mind. So it's kind of just been a stay on it right now and optimize everything around it. But yeah, that's kind of how I ended up on it.

SAM

There's, there's a few of the things that I really like though. What's it called? Is it BP-157? Like some of the BPC, like some of these peptides that like, for example, if I strain my Achilles and as I get older, I'm like, not my, my injuries aren't healing. Which is like the most depressing thing about age is that you just like heal slower or like, and you get hurt easier.

SHAAN

Bro, you're 23. What do you mean?

SAM

Well, that's why those tests are, that's what I'm saying. Those tests are bullshit. They like say that you're young. I'm like, I don't know, man. My shoulder freaking hurts and it's been hurting for a month. And like I've been really interested in some of those recovery drugs or peptides or whatever you want to call 'em. What do you think about those?

I think they can be useful for sure, as long as they're context specific and not overused. 'Cause a lot of them are pro For example, BPC is increases something called VEGF expression and it's pro-angiogenic, meaning it will literally create, it, it can induce blood flow that essentially was not present. So you could also have a pro-carcinogenic type proliferative effect with cancer cell development if you have existing cancer cells that could be, you know, exacerbated. So I think some athletes use it preventatively a bit too much, but in the context where you actually have an injury, there's low blood flow to it, you can actually have a use case for it. I think it's super high utility, very valuable product.

SAM

From my like very amateur point of view, I think that like the semaglutide and metformin and some of these other, what's it called? The GLB limiter or what, you know, am I using the, the phrasing correctly?

GLP-1 agonist.

SAM

Yeah, like these things that like limit blood spikes or blood sugar spikes. Those seem really fascinating. Like they even seem fascinating to the point of like, I think they can help cure or help alcoholics not become alcohol or, you know, get off alcohol. Like it, like there's some like weird things about these drugs that they can do other things than what they are intended to do. And that's super fascinating to me at the moment. But I know that you were, I think you were on semaglutide. I don't know if you are anymore.

Yeah, I've tested most of the GLP-1 agonists for appetite suppression and yeah, they definitely are of the available appetite suppressants in the pharmaceutical world. They're probably the best overall like mechanism in how they work. 'Cause previous to that it was people just abusing the hell out of Adderall and Phentermine and crazy stimulants to shut down their appetite, but it also screws up their heart, their brain. I wouldn't say that semaglutide or some of these drugs are risk-free though. And they certainly have, sure. Question marks around their long-term use, especially in children who are developing.

SAM

But yeah, I think they, I think they have like a children's dose now, don't they? Yeah.

Yeah. Yeah. I think so.

SHAAN

They do. There's like an Ozempic Juniors.

SAM

Yeah. Which is fucked up, right? It's just, I would want the answer to be just eat less, but yeah.

The thing though is, is it, are those children ever going to become optimal without it? And then is the ROI worth it? And You could easily assert that those fat kids that would've been fat kids regardless are better off by taking it. For sure. Yeah. So I, and I wouldn't say, well, generally that's the answer for anybody who's overweight, of course, 'cause there are certain, certainly ways to educate and help people get on the right path that don't involve drugs. And I've seen plenty of people do great that were formerly very fat and then end up down a different life path and are lean year round and have amazing lifestyles and get into a habit and cement it into their everyday life. But you know, some kids are, I don't know, just might need it for all we know.

SAM

You did, you did this good thing. I mentioned your Europe video and the interesting thing to me was actually that you said that you weren't training that hard and you, I think you like indulged in bread and food. Like you, you, you, you lived like a tourist, you know, you ate a lot, but you're like, I didn't, I felt great because A, I was walking a ton. And I don't remember if you said this or if I read this from somewhere else. Another person's experience, but you're like, the groceries and food just seemed higher quality, whether that's like, involves like regulation around the FDA and like certain chemicals are or aren't allowed. Are you buying most of your, you said you spend a lot on groceries and you get high quality stuff. Are you buying most of your foods from popular grocery stores or do you go to, do you buy online from niche providers or are you going, what are you doing for that?

I go to a butcher for bison liver and things of that nature, mostly my meats, but a lot of the other stuff is local grocery. In Canada, there's not a lot of flexibility unfortunately on quality of or just availability of some of the foods that you might otherwise buy at higher end places in the States. So as much as I'd love to have, if I could, the highest level of everything, it's sourcing is a huge issue in Canada. As absurd as it sounds, like sourcing for like basic foods. So yeah, it's when I can, I get, you know, the best available, but Like for example, bison I think is the leanest, most nutrient-dense red meat essentially that you could get. And I will buy a ton of that even though it's, you know, 3 times more expensive than extra lean ground beef at the grocery store. So that's one example.

SAM

We talked about this company, I don't remember Sean, if you said Huberman helped get it going or was an affiliate or something or whatever. Yeah, man, that thing was cool. Like I ordered a bunch of stuff like the But I have no idea if I'm getting sold on the marketing or not, but like the story behind it, like they got me bought in, like they got me so bought into it.

No, I was at Peter Atias' place a couple of weeks ago and I had the venison sticks or whatever that they sell and pretty damn good. And yeah, I trust him and his recommendation, so I would imagine it's on the up and up and everything's probably pretty top tier.

SAM

Yeah, man, that story like totally got me bought in. I thought it was a cool business. Okay. And I've been watching some of your videos and it's made me nervous about just like my food and like the quality of food and like Whole Foods for the longest time was like the gold standard. And now I'm like, nah, man, that, that still might even be shit. Like I, it's, it's to the point where I want to start raising my own animals, you know what I mean?

Or, oh yeah, it's tough 'cause it's a lot of people will swear off supplements and say buy Whole Foods, but then other people will say the Whole Foods or the soil is depleted of nutrients. So then you should supplement, but then the you know, there's, trying to know what you're doing can be quite arduous and sketchy even when you're trying to optimize, even when you have the financial means, it's trying to even figure out what to spend your money on can be overwhelming at times for sure.

SAM

Well, we appreciate you coming on, man. I've been a big fan of yours for years. I know Sean has too. I think what's going to happen is like in the next 4 or 5 years, there's going to be You might have an exit or there's going to be some type of article that reveals how big your empire is. And I think that a lot of people are going to be surprised at some of the outcomes that you have. You know, the fact that you, I believe that you can build multiple billion plus or 9-figure companies off the back of this audience. And I think it's going to be really cool when that story finally comes out.

Oh, we'll see where it goes. I appreciate you guys having me on and being so patient as I get back into content here, because I know you guys have been Trying to— Kieran has been trying to get me on for a while, so I'm glad we were able to make it happen.

SAM

Yeah, shout out to him. Thanks, Kieran, we appreciate that. Yeah, right on.

SHAAN

All right, that's it, that's the pod.