Okay so, I read some more of your stuff and watched a few of your videos, still try wrapping my head around what’s going on.
First off, two years ago (when you were 165 in this pic, at the start of your egg diet), you actually were in a decent starting place, physique-wise. But I feel like if you spent even a year or two figuring out your training and nutrition with some “old fashioned” time-tested methods, you’d be in a much better place currently and would’ve had a better starting point to experiment with. Also, your biceps are seriously pretty good.
Secondly, like some other guys have mentioned, I find myself pretty much alternating between a half-invested curiosity to see if you can make something out of whatever this thing has become to being simply flabbergasted with your stance on so many things, from the basics of training and nutrition to your frequent oversimplification and/or denial of certain accepted practices and physiological processes.
When I read that you found T-Nation in 2005 but you still plinked around for so long with crap training and eating, my brain exploded. After reading more about your training and diet history, I’m getting a better picture of why you seem to be doing what you’re doing.
The fact is that some of the principles you’ve played with (like super-high egg intake and raw meat, not the gorge-and-fast or “training like it’s the hunt”) were used successfully by well-respected bodybuilders 40+ years ago. Basically, “broscience” has already looked at, experimented with, and proven effective some of the things you were trying to investigate.
I still believe you have zero place doling out fitness/nutrition/health advice to anyone for anything, and your experiment has clearly become more of a freakshow-look-what-he-can-tolerate rather than seen as a “legit” scientific exploration into previously-unexamined depths of human physiology, but it is what it is.
I’ll admit I do like Bizzare Foods with Andrew Zimmern. I forget who mentioned it, but the landscape of TV/Youtube entertainment shows us that, yes, you could probably parlay your talent for enduring difficult diets into some kind of programming, and you’d probably have some people tune in, until they realize that you’re talking about diets and have an okay-at-best physique. But, I know, I know, “health markers and vitality, not fat loss”… because that’s certainly what the public is interested in.