Angriest Trainer 142: Jimmy Moore Sets The Record Straight

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Vinnie and Anna talk to Jimmy Moore about his interview with Dr. McDougall.  Check out Jimmy’s fantastic podcast, Livin La Vida Low Carb.

Fat Slow Triathlete blog by Superfan John Harris.

Superfan Krystal Wright does her own Prancercise video:

Prancerise (Enhanced) from kwright18 on Vimeo.

Michael Tortorich sums up the podcast in the My Uncle Vinnie Blog Wrap Up:

Vinnie and Anna kick off this podcast by mentioning the new design of vinnietortorich.com. They also give shout-outs to a few of the newest superfans. Later, Jimmy Moore of the Livin’ La Vida Low Carb podcast comes on for an interview.

Angriest Trainer 140: MLMs, Sugar Industry Lies, and The ASU Honeybees

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Vinnie and Anna discuss Multi-Level Marketing companies, more lies from the Sugar Industry (article here), and the Alabama State University Honeybees.

Michael Tortorich sums up the podcast in the My Uncle Vinnie Blog Wrap Up:

Early in this show, Vinnie talks about the surprise gift Howie Mandel bought for his wife. Later, Vinnie and Anna talk about the scams surrounding multi-level marketing (MLMs) companies. They also get into the above article on the sugar industry. Finally, Vinnie and Anna cover the Alabama State Honeybees (link to video above).

Angriest Trainer 138: Statins, Carbs, and Breast Cancer

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Vinnie and Anna check in with Mike Tate, discuss statins, counting carbs, Susan G. Komen, and running shoes.

Donate to Mike Tate’s Beyond Blue Fundraising Page!

Michael Tortorich sums up the podcast in the My Uncle Vinnie Blog Wrap Up:

Early in this podcast, Vinnie and Anna talk about how they hooked up with Villa Cappelli olive oil. Vinnie also gives shout-outs to superfans. Later, Mike Tate returns to the show for an interview. They chat about Mike’s progress. After the interview, Vinnie and Anna delve into controversy surrounding Susan G. Komen and the breast cancer industry. Later, they get into a discussion on statins. The conversation then turns to everyone’s favorite topic, the Kardashians.

Angriest Trainer 137: The Simba Ugarte Interview

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Vinnie and Anna talk to triathlete Superfan Simba Ugarte about blacks in endurance sports, racketeering, Grape Nehi, and Sister Madonna Buder.

Simba Ugarte Iron Man

Simba Ugarte

Michael Tortorich sums up the podcast in the My Uncle Vinnie Blog Wrap Up:

After kicking off the show with some Dr. John, Vinnie and Anna go right into a discussion on triathlons. Superfan and triathlete Simba Ugarte calls in during Vinnie’s rant about sugary sports drinks versus the revolutionary original sports drink, water. They get into a discussion on the involvement of black athletes in triathlons.

 

Angriest Trainer 134: BRCA1, Sugar and Cancer, and Weight Training vs. Endurance Training

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Vinnie and Anna discuss the BRCA1 gene mutation test, Angelina Jolie, and Weight Training during Triathlon Training, plus they talk to Superfan and oncologist Dr. Jennifer Cultrera about the correlations of sugar and cancer.

Bea Arthur naked.  You’re welcome.

bear-arthur-naked

Michael Tortorich sums up the podcast in the My Uncle Vinnie Blog Wrap Up:

Early in this podcast, Vinnie and Anna talk about the genesis of The Simpsons, which debuted as an interstitial on The Tracey Ullman Show. They then get into the infamous Bea Arthur portrait, as visible above.

Angelina Jolie

Angelina Jolie

Later, they talk about Angelina Jolie’s preventative procedure and BRCA1. That leads to the interview with superfan and oncologist Dr. Jennifer Cultrera.

Angriest Trainer 131: Chris Christie and the Lap Bands

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Vinnie and Anna are joined by Andrea Anders to discuss Napoleon Hill, the dangers of vegetable juice, how to eat No Sugar No Grains as a vegan, Chris Christie, and Nigella Lawson.

Nigella Lawson

Nigella Lawson

How to Be a Domestic Goddess: Baking and the Art of Comfort Cooking

Think and Grow Rich

Michael Tortorich sums up the podcast in the My Uncle Vinnie Blog Wrap Up:

Vinnie and Anna chat about the band Blind Melon as this episode kicks off. That leads to Vinnie talking about his favorite authors from way back when he was a kid. Later in the podcast, Andrea Anders joins for another appearance. The conversation includes mention of British foodie Nigella Lawson (picture above).

Chris Christie

Chris Christie

Later, Vinnie weighs in (pun intended) on Christ Christie’s lap band surgery.

“Why Is This In My Race Bag?” A Guest Post By Superfan Andrew Weaver

Andrew Weaver is the real person behind the Doughboy to Ironman project, which began in early 2011. He caught a case of adult onset athleticism on Dec 1, 2010. His current weight loss stands at over 100 pounds, with plans to nearly double that. He jumped on the NSNG bandwagon in December 2012. He is an ordained Lutheran pastor, who uses a lot less profanity than Vinnie. He has been happily married for 18 years, and is father of two creative and brilliant children. His blog is found at www.doughboytoironman.com He isn’t an ironman yet, but it about halfway there. His kids think he’s awesome. They’re right.  Take it away, Andrew…

Why is this in my race bag?

It’s 7am. I’m checking in at packet pickup to take on the hardest uphill climb I’ve done in my short life as an endurance athlete. I’ve done half ironman races, I’ve done a 5k open water swim, I’ve gone places that the person I was 110 pounds heavier could not have imagined a few years ago.

Yet the uphill battle I am expecting this day (a 25k trail run that has climbs so steep, everyone ends up on their hands and knees, some of us in prayer not to fall off the mountain to our deaths) is met with another uphill battle: another freebie in the race bag that makes me wonder “why did I join up with the endiurance community if this is the crap people still eat?”

Biscoff

There is a technical term for this: cognitive dissonance. That’s when your mind holds two different thoughts at the same time, which cannot be reconciled. We don’t usually think about this consciously, but when we believe one thing but act as if we believe the opposite, we’re living in cognitive dissonance. When Ted Haggard was leading the charge against homosexual people having rights, meanwhile paying a male prostitute with meth, right there is a solid hardcore example of cognitive dissonance.

The food around endurance sports is a less dramatic, but just as accurate, textbook case of cognitive dissonance, and precisely the source of my own frustration that made me wonder why I was the same weight after two years of endurance sports. Looking for off-the-beaten-path answers is what led me to find first Vinnie, then low carb, then paleo. And all of these voices need to be much louder within the endurance community. We’re made up of a lot of people who may look fit, but are carb addicts. If you find this stuff in a bag at a trail run, where I expect a less modern, more natural vibe, it’s clearly everywhere.

If you look around the world of triathlon, as well as the three individual sports that go into them, you will find a vast array of people, many shapes and sizes. This is a good thing. Without that, many of us would never even bother. I am glad to have found a community that invites me to be a part of it, as one of the slowest, and still largest out there. It has inspired me to blog, and to encourage others who don’t see themselves in the category of “athlete.” There is nothing like the encouragement that the back of the pack receives at a triathlon, marathon, or even your local 5k.

But even with my weight loss so far, I am still a very large guy, and I don’t want to stay this way. I took a hard look at things after my first year in endurance, going from couch to half-marathon and an Olympic distance triathlon in my first year. The progress in distance was great. But the weight loss was not happening. I had to take a serious look at my relationship with food. That landed me in the 12-step world, for which I am truly grateful. But even in those first months, I had convinced myself that all this talk of eliminating sugar entirely, well, that didn’t apply to me since I am now an endurance athlete. We fuel on carbs, right? So I was off Snickers bars (ate two on the bike in my first tri in 2011) for the “much healthier” box of clif bars. I was seeing weight loss under my new self-defined abstinence, so I was sure it was working. My first OA sponsor really tried to warn me that I was playing with fire, that there was little difference. I said “oh yeah, yeah… I know.” But I didn’t. After a disappointing DNF at my first half-iron attempt, I fell off the wagon, and was again overeating as an addict, and of course I regained a lot of weight.

The endurance world is made up of high achievers and tough-it-out types. But we spend a lot of time making it harder on ourselves than we need to. At the middle and back of the pack are many of us who still struggle with weight, but use the long training hours and races as an excuse to indulge in too much food. Check out the food tent at any big race. Even after the race, it’s quick carb city. The red herring of “carb loading” has gone so far from what it ACTUALLY meant for elite runners who would deplete reserves to then jam them back quickly, to now being an everyman’s parade of pasta for days before and after an event. It’s human nature to take the excessive part of a method and forget the other side. (How many Mardi Gras partiers actually observe a disciplined Lent?) Check out the conventional wisdom from this article on active.com, a major player in the mainstream endurance world. Carbs=good, fat=bad.

The current grab-anything-that sounds-good trend that is keeping many endurance people on the sugar wagon is good old chocolate milk. One magazine prints an article comparing chocolate milk to other drinks for recovery, and instantly establishes a paradigm we’re all dying to hear: it’s good for you! Recover right! The chocolate milk people wasted no time in jumping the popular wave, and have pro triathletes on board for marketing. Two months before I found the NSNG way, I was considering producing a “Become One” video contest entry to win a trip to Ironman Kona and train with Hines Ward along the way. I hope Hines finishes Kona strong. I hope the people who won the contest get to compete and finish. But I know that as long as I stayed on the chocolate-milk-as-recovery train, I was still living in my sugar addiction, undoing all the progress I made with training.

Somewhere toward the end of the second year of my new life, I decided to start looking for an answer to a question that I was not hearing anyone ask in the endurance world: why do we rely on sugar so much? Is there a low-carb option? I was already sympathetic to the paleo mindset before I knew that label. I have been a small-farm, vegetable CSA, pastured chicken, grass-fed beef, raw dairy advocate for a long time. But there was a disconnect. I had been drinking the kool-aid (actually gatorade) of the conventional wisdom that constant streams of highly refined carbs were the way to fuel any long distance activity. But these were the substances that caused me lifelong trouble. Was there a way out of this vicious cycle? Or would I just continue being the fattest guy at the race?

IF you’re reading this post, then you know the rest of the story. First through the Angriest Trainer podcast, then with an expanding web of resources, the names Jimmy Moore, Mark Sisson, Bob Seebohar, Gary Taubes, William Davis, Nora Gedgaudas, Phinney and Volek, all became part of my library.

I am in season three of becoming a runner and triathlete. I am still between Doughboy and Ironman. And I still have what an addict needs to properly call a relapse from time to time. But now when I open a swag bag and it’s full of cookies, nutrigrain bars, gels, or even a huge jar of spread that’s nothing but sugar and industrial seed oils, I just pass it along. And as I’ve joined a facebook group with one of those very telling names “Run Disney So I Can Eat Disney” I enjoy the camraderie and fun of groups like this, but I’m sure to say “hey, the bacon challenge is fun, but it is what we should be fueling on anyway!”

The NSNG voices are growing, the paleo movement is making inroads into endurance (when they’re not slamming “chronic cardio”) and when more people have their ah-ha! moment as Vinnie nails the reality of all the porta-potties, gels, and fat people at triathlon (I resemble that remark), you’re going to see a movement take hold. There’s no reason we have to keep blending the sport that we love with the “food” that gives us the weight we’re trying to lose through that sport.

There is another way. Getting off the couch is a great first step, and I applaud anyone willing to do it. Food is usually a tougher enemy. But if I can make a change and willingly put on lycra in front of other people, there’s no reason I should let oreos bring me down.

I’m not perfect at this, and my current stretch of weight loss is slow. But when I dropped grains and sugars, I reversed type 2 diabetes and significantly lowered my triglycerides. This stuff works. And it can work for all the distance activities I want to do. I just have to look the other way when the big sponsors push all their carbage in my face.

Andrew “The Doughboy” Weaver

Angriest Trainer 127: The Truth About Celiac, HPV, and Unethical Doctors

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Vinnie and Anna discuss CureCervicalCancer.org, doctors taking a cut from pharmaceutical companies, and interview Superfan Justin Ferrell, who has set a great example for how to get your kids to go sugar and grain free.

Buy Wheat Belly here: Wheat Belly: Lose the Wheat, Lose the Weight, and Find Your Path Back to Health

Michael Tortorich sums up the podcast in the My Uncle Vinnie Blog Wrap Up:

Early in the podcast, Vinnie and Anna talk about the current state for doctors. They then talk to Justin Ferrell, a superfan of the show. They get into a discussion about personal experiences with celiac.

Angriest Trainer 126: The Antioxidant Myth and Massive Attack

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Vinnie and Anna discuss this article on the marketing of antioxidants, the most insane stadium foods, and a redux on protein powder.  Low Carb Shark blog here.

enhanced-buzz-17604-1366384180-10

Pulled Pork Parfait

Michael Tortorich sums up the podcast in the My Uncle Vinnie Blog Wrap Up:

Vinnie leads off this episode talking about his views on Coca-Cola. Anna and Vinnie then go over some of the most outlandish foods available. Later, they get into the marketing of antioxidants. Vinnie brings up a conversation he and yours truly had about secondhand smoke. He then makes an argument that his generation was always around smoking, so therefore it’s not so bad. I disagree. The Massive Attack reference in the title of this podcast references Vinnie’s ongoing obsession with the song “Diamond in the Back.”

 

Angriest Trainer 125: Bob Harper, Stevie Ray Vaughn, & Bill Meadows

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Vinnie and Anna give shout-outs and answers to Superfan questions.

UK Mars Bar Ad from 1983:

Michael Tortorich sums up the podcast in the My Uncle Vinnie Blog Wrap Up:

Vinnie’s love of introducing his favorite music on the show continues early in this one. He kicks off this podcast with a clip of guitar great Stevie Ray Vaughn. About midway through the show, they play back an old Mars candy ad from 30 years ago (link above). Vinnie then rants on Bob Harper. This leads to Vinnie’s update on why his book has been delayed. Later, they get into some superfan shout-outs.