the hrt show tonight- ridiculous!!!!

The producers of these show have a leftist agenda, in case you havent watched the first episode. It explains how tough it is to make it in.....the United States.


He purposely got a minimum wage job, then switched jobs to physical labor and after one day of physical labor he had wrist problems, no doubt aided by his vegan no-protein diet. Then, they are actually making it and having some extra money, he decides to pretend to have two kids so he can end the month in debt.


The next show is how to live life as a Moslem. Anyone who doesnt believe in Islam, but is willing to bow down 5x to something for a reality TV show, is a moron in the first place. Then this hugely enducated show on HRT, which was helping the guy tremendously, despite that Jabba the Hut wife is his, and they hatchet job it. More regulations folks
 
Keep in mind, bros, that they were trying to cram something that can take up to 2 years into 30 days. He went from shitty diet, no exercise, and hormone deficient to 5 day cardio regimens, hCG, HGH, Testosterone, and 41 different vitamins. You can't do that to the body and expect an escalator ride clear to the top. Doesn't work that way.

Sure, the show (and his protocol) was a complete sham, but if they had done only testosterone, hCG, and a good multivitamin, can you imagine the progress in 30 days?

They were stuffing 10 pounds of shit into a 1 pound bag.
 
I don't think the number of supps or pills is unreasonable. I take that many per week and my liver is in great shape. I think the authors had a point of view and went out to find it. Miles may be an idiot--he clearly didn't know what he was getting into. Mark Gordon must have been so glad to have passed this off to "his friend" Alan Miles. In my opinion, Miles should have withheld everything till he got a better sense of what his client wanted--fertility--and dealt with the liver issues before giving another test shot. This couple's hysteria was only worsened by Miles' impulsivity. I also think the wife was threatened big time by the trainer's influence on the husband.

There was also the need to coordinate the medical services between the fertility expert and Miles. It did not appear to me that either doc knew of the other's involvment. I just don't think that antiaging medicine can be practiced totally removed from primary medicine. Miles proceeds as if none of this matters. He drops the supplements without finding out what the problem was. Hence he implicitly agreed that these supplements are causing the problem. Why? I wonder if he even took baseline liver values? Bad medicine is bad medicine no matter what twist or specialty is being practiced.
 
HeadDoc said:
I don't think the number of supps or pills is unreasonable. I take that many per week and my liver is in great shape.

I imagine you've been exercising for longer than 10 days and didn't start all your vitamins at once just after coming off of an insufficient diet.

I disagree... I think it was the supplements, because his body simply wasn't used to digesting those products. He was craming a lot of stuff down a broken pipe.
 
Kroms_laugh said:
I imagine you've been exercising for longer than 10 days and didn't start all your vitamins at once just after coming off of an insufficient diet.

I disagree... I think it was the supplements, because his body simply wasn't used to digesting those products. He was craming a lot of stuff down a broken pipe.
we will never know becasue Miles didn't work in any systematic way to find this out. Good evidence based practice is not only limited to the treatments you select, from research and established practice, but also the way you introduce them so you how your client is reacting to each step of the treatment.

And I agree. It made no sense to me to start an out of shape adult on hormones without first introducing the lifestyle changes: diet and exercise.
 
Kroms_laugh said:
I disagree... I think it was the supplements, because his body simply wasn't used to digesting those products. He was craming a lot of stuff down a broken pipe.

I agree.
 
I didn't

I didn't think he was on HCG. He went to the doc 1x per week for the test, and he just did the HGH shots daily. Didn't see any HCG
 
SPE said:
I didn't think he was on HCG. He went to the doc 1x per week for the test, and he just did the HGH shots daily. Didn't see any HCG

I specifically remember him saying 'hCG, HGH, and testosterone shots'
 
This show is on my Tivo. Haven't watched it yet.

After reading this, and the other threads, I'll just delete it. :cool:
 
I just wrote an email to the producers;


Dear Sir or Ma'am,

After watching your show about Hormone Replacement Therapy, I felt compelled to write your show. My name is Michael. I am a 23 year old male who is on HRT for hypogonadism (insufficient natural testosterone). This therapy has been a life saver. I simply take one shot of testosterone every 10 days. I do NOT take 40 different supplements and growth hormone.

Fine tuning HRT can take some guys up to 2 years or so. You guys attempted this in 30 days... and with an HRT doctor that probably needs his license re-evaluated by the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists.

HRT has turned many elderly men into active, healthy studs. And because hardly anyone knows about the proper, responsible protocols that are being implemented now, we hope to have positive media attention for the therapy. The doctor you chose to administer the therapy was a quack. You took a lazy, over weight guy who had not exercised and started him on a strict (and over-zealous) hormone replacement protocol. Quite frankly, you were cramming a lot of stuff down a broken pipe.

Steroids have saved the lives of unborn children who aren't able to develop fast enough in the womb. Steroids have performed medical miracles, but because of media attention, like yours, the public will never see the positive side of these things. More proof that the leftist media has its hands tightly around the balls of medical advancement.

I hate to end this email like I am, but in my experience, fighting fire with fire is the only way to combat ignorance. So excuse me, if you will, while I come down to your level;

What you did was dangerous. Your show sucks. So enjoy your first and only season of it.

I wish you limited success,
Michael
 
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The agenda of the show seemed to be the perils of steroid use. The guy probably had a very normal level of testosterone and shouldn't have been
on testosterone supplementation.
 
bullmastiff said:
The agenda of the show seemed to be the perils of steroid use. The guy probably had a very normal level of testosterone and shouldn't have been
on testosterone supplementation.

The documentary claimed that he had low levels of testosterone. There isn't a way to determine that as a viewer.
 
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