Fork U with Dr. Terry Simpson podcast

Salesmen of Supplements and Scams

0:00
28:11
Rewind 15 seconds
Fast Forward 15 seconds

The Scams and Quacks of the Year

The New Year, the point we all look for a second chance. To get healthy, lose weight, adopt a new habit. And waiting for you are the hucksters who want to sell you hydrogen in your water, expensive supplements of dubious value, and some choices that might actually harm you. If it sounds too good to be true, you might just be hearing the sound of the duck - or a quack, at least.

TOP SCAMS OF THE YEAR

  1. Carnivore Diet
  2. Magnesium Supplementation
  3. Celtic Salt
  4. MTHFR Gene Mutation
  5. Cold Plunges

FORK U

Today, on Fork U, we will reveal the top scams of 2023 and make sense of the madness that surrounds them.

I'm Dr. Terry Simpson, and this is FORK U. Fork University.

Where we teach you a little bit about food as medicine

Busting myths and making sense of the madness.

The Liver King and Paul Saladino

Chief among the shirtless salesmen of supplements and scams, 2023 saw the self-described liver king (Brian Johnson) fall from grace, and his partner, Paul Saladino, tried to say he didn't know.

Liver King's five-foot-two-inch frame was filled with more steroids and growth hormones than found in a pharmacy. Purchasing somewhere between $12,000 and $20,000 of injectables a month and eating a diet far from the liver he recommended. Ultimately, Johnson admitted this, albeit the evidence was overwhelming. Finally, let us not forget that his business partner, Paul Saladino, loves to yell at spinach and kale while pushing his Heart and Soil supplements.

Liver King and Saladino jointly own a supplement business, Heart and Soil. They sell supplements and pretend to tell you about health through the carnivore diet. Moreover, the company "Heart and Soil" is registered in Texas, and Brian Johnson, his wife, and Saladino are all board members.

The Shirtless Salesmen of Supplements and Scams

Being shirtless is oddly effective, especially among some men. Whether this comes from "we like alpha males with abs" or homo-erotic fantasy, shirtless sells. Countless times showing studies refuting their claims don't move these supporters. In fact, the response from some males was some version of "Show me your abdominals." My retort, "I'd love their abs, but in time they'd love my arteries," just didn't move them.

I still find it odd that a grocery store would allow a shirtless person to yell at spinach. Yes, Saladino did train in psychiatry, although he does not see patients.

While Saladino said, he had "an inkling" his partner was doing steroids. Johnson (Liver King) used to inject insulin and balance it with maple syrup. Isn't it odd that Saladino's refrigerator is filled with the same maple syrup that Liver King used to balance his insulin to increase glycogen in his muscles?

The Carnivore Diet - or - Doctors Don't Learn Nutrition in Medical School

Saladino received a medical degree from The University of Arizona, and I was a faculty member (assistant professor) at the time. Saladino loves to pander to the anti-medicine crowd with the trope that doctors don't learn the root cause of disease. I pointed out that we taught him pathophysiology, and he must have forgotten that our Western medicine discovered the root cause of many diseases.

In front of one audience, Saladino claims he learned nutrition in medical school. Then, a few years later, he claims he didn't learn nutrition in medical school. Do we learn nutrition in medical school?

Do Doctors Learn Nutrition in Medical School?

As someone who is certified in Culinary Medicine and taught nutrition, I can say yes and no. The basics of nutrition are anatomy, physiology, and biochemistry. While you can get these courses in college, in...

More episodes from "Fork U with Dr. Terry Simpson"