Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:12):
Two really good looking band members and six guys who
are just kind of like eh. That is eight ninth
of the world famous Sullivan Van in studio with this
today as the big big show of rolls on mary Burg. Godwin,
Mike Costa pulled the fort down, Sully and Greg off
(00:32):
doing other things. But we're somebody glad that you guys
are here and along for the ride. We've got a
great show coming your way today. How we fought our
market analysts is with us and he was, Howie, you
can you can toot your own horn. You and Sully
were talking about the fact that Trump knew what he
was doing as far as the tariffs language, and then
(00:54):
he kind of cooled things and the market responded, as
you mentioned in our first segment, kind of to where
we're at the first of the year. Does this before
we talk about emails people aren't supposed to get when
it comes to government secrets.
Speaker 2 (01:09):
Is this is just.
Speaker 1 (01:10):
Something that other countries like Canada, Mexico, China, though, are
they still going to feel the stings of TARIFFSS the
Trump administration tries to get them to kind of play
ball as far as security is concerned.
Speaker 3 (01:26):
Look, look, I think all these tariffs are triggered by
each other, so you know, when once that goes in,
the next that will go in. So nothing has actually
happened yet, it's just all the uncertainty that we're feeling now.
We haven't actually gotten the you know, inflation from an
actual tariff hitting or anything like that, right, But I
do think that, you know, our de escalation, which is
(01:47):
effectively what it was, will cause a greater de escalation.
I haven't seen any big negotiation fruits of negotiation from
anything so far. It's been a lot of noise, not
a lot of signal, but that doesn't mean something's not
going to happen at the very end. So we kind
of have to wait for the whole saga to play
(02:08):
out to evaluate it.
Speaker 2 (02:09):
I think is the fairest thing to say.
Speaker 3 (02:13):
I guess you let the new president try. But so
far and it has not been pretty, at least outwardly.
Speaker 1 (02:19):
I think as long as Canada doesn't stop poutine shipments
down to the United States, I'm good.
Speaker 4 (02:25):
I mean, Greg was worried about those shipments of tequila
from Mexico.
Speaker 1 (02:30):
From Mexico, poutine from Canada, maybe maple syrup.
Speaker 3 (02:35):
How we want that bootlegger is like prohibition.
Speaker 1 (02:38):
I mean, howie a little a little toast up with
the Trump administration last couple of days, I guess somebody
was mailed. It was part of an email, it was.
Speaker 5 (02:50):
A text change, or it was a signal, which is
it was.
Speaker 2 (02:53):
A signal chat.
Speaker 3 (02:53):
And thank you, thank you guys for talking about this
because I just think I'm having so much fun.
Speaker 2 (02:58):
It is the silliest story ever.
Speaker 3 (03:00):
So a small group, yeah, I guess, not really important people,
the National Security Advisor, the Director of National Intelligence.
Speaker 1 (03:12):
Just civilians in the government, yeah.
Speaker 3 (03:15):
The Secretary of Defense, few others. So basically all of
Trump's security team and senior policy advisors were put into
a signal chat, which is not uncommon. So the signal,
for those who don't know encrypted app everyone deletes it.
You can't get the text messages. Again, I think it's
(03:35):
actually fairly common that some of these non classified discussions
have happened on signal, just kind of coming back and
forth policy wise, so that's not uncommon. The fun thing is,
have you ever have you ever sent someone you know
a picture and you meant it to send it to
someone else, like the imagine you're trying to you know,
(03:56):
reopen the straight of horror moves with some light aerial
bombardments and you accidentally add the editor of the Atlantic
tier group chat.
Speaker 1 (04:08):
Okay, so I'm a complete meat head when it comes
to the technology. So does the editor of the Atlantic
get it? And is it there like this message will
detonate in five seconds or does he get it?
Speaker 3 (04:21):
Could be like that, but it wasn't. It was just
a regular group chat like in your iPhone, except on
the signal app.
Speaker 4 (04:27):
And he could screenshot it or do whatever he needed
to do to keep it so that if somebody did
delete it, he has the proof of it.
Speaker 3 (04:34):
Right, we've seen we've seen some of those screenshots. He
didn't release everything because some of the information was he
didn't know, but it was potentially classified.
Speaker 2 (04:43):
And he wouldn't want to release anything.
Speaker 3 (04:46):
Sure, you know that crazy, So credit to him there,
but it is it is fairly hilarious that just because
he has the same initials as another member or as
someone inside.
Speaker 2 (04:57):
The White House, that he was accidentally aheaded.
Speaker 3 (05:00):
I mean, I mean, really, really, the Trump administration has
to take their licks. The President is defending everyone today.
The bombing's already happened, but yeah, it is it is
fairly careless and no harm done this time.
Speaker 4 (05:14):
But I was gonna says it's funny, not funny because
we can laugh at it, but it's actually a pretty severe,
potentially severe situation that just shows potential ineptitude.
Speaker 5 (05:27):
I think, no, it's not potential.
Speaker 1 (05:30):
Wait, but it's not potential ineptitude. It is ineptitude. Right, listen,
I use it, not me, No, but no, listen. If
you're if you're gonna, if you're gonna go after the
opposition for looking like meerkats trying to have relations with
a football, then you've got to take the licks when
you do it, as well as far as your administration
(05:52):
is concerned. And yeah, and then.
Speaker 3 (05:55):
Years ago we were talking about emails of a different.
Speaker 1 (05:59):
Realm being bleached and stuff like that.
Speaker 3 (06:02):
Right, so yeah, you do have to take him as
they come. I think this is really entertaining because it's
so silly, it's so over the top. It's something we
all do, except they are working at the highest level
of you know, classified information and military operations.
Speaker 4 (06:16):
Well, and then I heard them trying to blame the
owner of the Atlantic, like it was his fault and
he was just the person that got at it. He
didn't do anything about it, so you know, I hope
there is some some owning of the mistake.
Speaker 1 (06:31):
And here's here's the thing. The owner of the Atlantic
does not have the greatest journalistic right, sort of.
Speaker 5 (06:39):
Depending on how bly hit or miss.
Speaker 3 (06:41):
But you have to give credit. One, he's a reporter,
and two he held back the classified stuff.
Speaker 1 (06:48):
And I even though if you don't have the you know,
the greatest reputation out there, the fact that he held
it back, I gotta I have to give him credit
for that. Was there any fallout as far as the
markets are concerned once this story started to spread, No.
Speaker 3 (07:06):
This is a little bit. Everything was made public the
result of everything happened. He the editor of The Atlantic,
was only sure that this was an actual true thing
that happened when he saw that the bombing happened. So
everything was public by the time this story was released.
So there wasn't an impact there so much. But the
(07:30):
actual relief that comes by having Suez not being blocked
is big. Another thing I will say that impacts the
markets is you got to see when you actually look
at the private messages, the vice president advocating, you know,
kind of harsher European foreign policy, something that he kind
of said before the campaign and doesn't talk about now
(07:51):
because he wants to match the administration. But he's internally
still advocating that, you know, we're doing too much to
help the Europeans. They need to clean up their own
side of the ocean. Sure, And so they were having
that debate internally. That is kind of the interesting thing
that might have policy slash market implications.
Speaker 1 (08:09):
How we find us our Big B Show market analyst.
He is with us every edition of The Big B Show.
So are we talking like bomb in Italy or just
financial repercussions? What are we talking here?
Speaker 6 (08:19):
Now?
Speaker 3 (08:20):
You remember Reagan did a radio address and just as
a joke to check the mind, he goes, yeah, he's
announced that we're bombing Russia, that's right, beginning in ten minutes,
and that scared everybody.
Speaker 2 (08:36):
Oops. No, the funniest thing.
Speaker 3 (08:39):
The only thing I've seen for this one is that
there's competition between Disney and Lockey Martin for who's going
to produce the most bombs this quarter.
Speaker 5 (08:49):
Oh whoa, that took me a second to get that one.
Speaker 3 (08:54):
Hey, that's all I got one.
Speaker 1 (08:58):
That's that's pretty try. The Clams lazy Joe Disney.
Speaker 3 (09:01):
I can't do fifteen drop jokes in a.
Speaker 4 (09:04):
Row, but can we can we collectively come up with
some more drop for him analogies that are more current
with the times.
Speaker 5 (09:12):
I mean, I can't, but I think you guys should.
Speaker 1 (09:14):
Well, No, he talks about the the Snow White remake
is his has bombed historically, like for Disney's going out now, Yeah,
I think it's out.
Speaker 3 (09:25):
Yeah, it's still running. It still has the chance to
make some money now, to be fair, and I think
the Marvel's lost.
Speaker 2 (09:32):
I think half a billion dollars.
Speaker 3 (09:34):
Sorry to be all over the place, I just really
wanted to make the bomb joke.
Speaker 1 (09:37):
No, well, you know this is a financial show, and
obviously that Snow White remake is going to have financial
repercussions for for the like, yeah, everybody.
Speaker 3 (09:48):
It's been about a quarter billion dollars making Oh I'm
sorry interrupt, And I don't know it's I think it
made less than fifty in the opening weekend. Yeah, so
you know there bombs happen that this was in production. Hell,
for a long time, I think everyone knew what they
thought about.
Speaker 4 (10:04):
These live action remakes have not been very good because
Hollywood has run out of ideas.
Speaker 1 (10:11):
I mean, I'm waiting right now. I'm waiting right now
for the Harry Potter reboot. Isn't it time for them
to remake those again? Because hollywoods right ideas?
Speaker 3 (10:20):
Are you?
Speaker 2 (10:21):
Are you joking?
Speaker 3 (10:22):
HBO seed is doing a ten or a seven season
remake there cast its casting announcements are coming out.
Speaker 1 (10:29):
I need a nice right across my risk. Howie, I
always appreciate about it. Talk to you next week, our
market analyst. How we fund I think they have is
going to.
Speaker 5 (10:43):
Be one of the characters, and I just heard an
interview with them.
Speaker 1 (10:46):
All right, keep it here. Much more riveting content like that.
Speaker 5 (10:50):
Birthday celebration continues.
Speaker 1 (10:51):
That's a big vision rolls on, Big B Show, rolls
on live from the Loft one hundred studios. Wherever you're watching,
wherever you're listening. We always appreciate you being along for
those wacky ride, those incredible sounds you hear in the background.
(11:14):
That is the band, the world famous band Sullivan. As
we have said today, eight nights of the band are here.
They're just missing the main piece, Sullivan, Sully. We'll be
back with this very shortly. Marry for Godwin might CASTU
with you. Glad you guys could be with us today
for another edition of The Big B Show. I am
(11:35):
so fired up, oh man, to speak with our next guest.
Speaker 5 (11:39):
Same, same, same, cannot wait.
Speaker 1 (11:41):
Are you a horrible sleeper?
Speaker 5 (11:43):
Actually I'm a pretty good sleeper.
Speaker 4 (11:45):
Okay, however, you know we have been talking a little
bit about my birthday month, which also comes with like
a certain time of life, which also is disrupting.
Speaker 1 (11:53):
That's all your putting me to sleep right now as
you're talking, I.
Speaker 4 (11:58):
Will say that it's I'm noticing some changes in my
deep sleep. I'm waking up more frequently, and you know,
so I'm very excited to talk to this next guest.
Speaker 1 (12:08):
Well, it's I just spent We have a VIP and
studio with us today. Our buddy from Westbewd Insurance Services,
This Sir David Darkangelo is here and he came in
studio just because he knew that we were going to
have our next guest with us on the air. He
consults with this company. Joining us right now is the
CEO of Newcom, mister Jim Pool. The website to go
(12:30):
to is Newcom and you c l M dot com.
Speaker 5 (12:35):
The Wonder Non drug.
Speaker 1 (12:36):
The wonder non drug. And Jim, if you can ensure
me that I wake up looking like that woman on
the screen, you know, twenty twenty five years old. I
am hooked. Welcome to the Big BIS Show. How are you, sir?
Speaker 7 (12:50):
I'm doing well, Thank you, thanks for having me.
Speaker 1 (12:52):
Absolutely, Jim, if you can give us the give us
a thirty thousand foot view about what newcom is, and
then maybe the genesis of why we're talking to you
today about newcom.
Speaker 7 (13:03):
Newcome is a revolution in how humans change their mental
state and how we choose to live. So if we
went back to the dawn of humankind, you'll be wholly
unimpressed with our inability to regulate our own state of mind.
Today in twenty twenty five, we use caffeine, alcohol, recreational drugs,
anti anxiety pills, antidepressants, sleeping pills, exercise intimacy. All it
(13:26):
does is change our state by modulating the frequency or
speed of our brainwave. Well, we've changed all that. We
took thirty five years of padent to clinically proven neuroscience,
really complicated cool brain science, and we put into a
mobile app to help you sleep on demand, focus on demand,
energize when you want to and recover every day.
Speaker 5 (13:48):
Wow, So how does it work?
Speaker 4 (13:50):
I mean, is it like a meditation app or or
talk me through how it works, because I am very,
very interested in this.
Speaker 7 (13:56):
There are two ways to trick your brainwave. If one
is called visual stimulation made famous by Sigmund Freud. You
follow a pocket watch. You're following the stimulation to elicit
a response. The second way is to use your ears
to carry a signal to your brain. And if the
signals good and complicated and the brain can't figure out
(14:19):
the pattern, the brain synchronizes us to that signal. So
we can, like an old school thermostat, we can dial
up or dial down, change the speed of your brain,
weigh frequency by delivering precise signals to your brain underneath music,
So you and me and everybody who listens to Newcolm
we hear beautifully composed music. What you can't hear is
(14:41):
one gigabyte of math and physics directing your brain either
down into a recovery sleep state or up into a
high performance energized state.
Speaker 4 (14:52):
Can you kind of tell it what's affecting you and
then that's going to deliver That will dictate what sort
of music and sounds you get sent to listen to.
Speaker 2 (15:05):
That's a great question.
Speaker 7 (15:06):
So on the app it's color coded. The names are
pretty utilitarian. You can imagine what deep sleep is for
focus or powder and app. So what's interesting is that
we think we're unique. We think our problems are our own,
we think our challenges our own. But the human brain
has the same pieces, we're made from the same parts,
(15:27):
and the human brain wave function is the same frequency
range for all humans. So the cool aspect of that
and why it makes it easy for us is we
don't need any feedback from you. There's no biofeedback. We're
directing you to an outcome that we know is correlated
to the desire that you want. So if you want
to recover and heal, we take your brainwave to four herts,
(15:48):
which is just above deep sleep. If you want to
sleep and it's bedtime, we take your brain wave to
zero point five herts, which is sleep. If you want
to focus, we take you to eighteen point four herts,
which is the learning zone. So it's you direct it.
You simply say, hey, I want to feel like this.
Now takes us a few minutes to take your brain
to that outcome.
Speaker 8 (16:07):
And voila Wow.
Speaker 7 (16:08):
You can do whatever you want without drugs or side effects.
Speaker 1 (16:12):
Jim Poole is the CEO of Newcom and their website,
and I encourage you go to newcom dot com and
u ce l M dot com changing the way excuse me,
people are able to get that restorative sleep that so
many of us absolutely miss out on unfortunately, night in
and night out.
Speaker 5 (16:31):
I have a couple questions.
Speaker 4 (16:33):
One is you know, I hear these different things like
pink noise, white noise, brown noise, all these different types
of noises that I've found out about because I've only
heard of white noise. But anyway, are those kinds of
related to this or is it something totally different?
Speaker 7 (16:49):
Those are marketing gimmicks.
Speaker 5 (16:51):
Yeah, that's what I thought.
Speaker 7 (16:52):
Your brain, your brain is too smart, so it simply
serves a distraction, and distraction can be valuable because your
brain is constantly looking for familiarity and security. Your central
nervous systm is one defined goal self preservation. I need
to stay alive. So every night, if you listen to
the same type of music over time, your brain gets
to relax in the comfort of your home. But it's
(17:13):
not doing anything physiologically to you, so white noise, brown noise,
pink noise, green nose, it's just marketing. Your brain is
so freaking smart and it is always looking for patterns,
and if the pattern isn't complicated, your brain will figure
out that pattern and nothing really happens. So this is
completely different in the fact that it's science delivering a
(17:36):
physiological outcome. We're eliciting a state change in your mind
and your body by regulating the frequency of your brain winge.
Speaker 1 (17:44):
Go ahead, no, jim, I just I love the fact
that it's it's not a pill, it's not a drink,
it's not some crazy cap that you got to put
on your really just some some headphones and your app.
How did you and I'm going to use the word stumble,
but it's more than a stumble. How did you come
up with this? Or or what was the light that
(18:05):
went on in your brain that said, hey, I think
I can help people with newcom.
Speaker 7 (18:11):
So the neuroscientist, quantum physicist, natural path a brilliant, brilliant
genius amongst geniuses. In nineteen ninety began an invention and
discovery path because he was determined to figure out a
way how can I help complex trauma, trauma and addiction.
How can I help that profile of highly panicked mental
state resolve their problems without drugs? That's the whole genesis
(18:36):
of this. Yes, it took this gentleman nineteen years to
figure this out, and if you met him, you'd be like,
this dude is freaking smart. That's how complicated the brain is.
So I got involved because this brilliant gentleman with a
very nice Southern Texas drawl, said jam I invented a
technology that quickly and safely relaxes the mind and body
(18:57):
within minutes with no side effects. And had never heard
that statement before. I was like, it sounded to me
like marijuana. Yeah, the marijuana has side effects?
Speaker 1 (19:05):
Does Yeah?
Speaker 7 (19:06):
Your eyes gloss over, you get the monchies, you lose
sense of time, your mouth gets dry. This isn't any
of that. So as we started to explore this and
see what it could do, we started as a six
thousand dollars FDA classroom medical device in surgical procedures putting
people in a state of relaxation and deep celluar restoration
(19:27):
during surgery. We've done two million, six hundred thousand surgical
procedures replacing general anesthesia with people listening to our physics
wearing an imax.
Speaker 1 (19:38):
I tell you, I tell you what you are a
whole Big Biz Show. Would you please the next time
you're in southern California, coming studio and spend the time
with us. I think there's so many more people that
need to hear your message and learn more about Newcom
Newcom dot Com. Jim Poole, CEO of Newcom, thank you
so much, Mary, I can out wait to get home
(19:59):
and literally laft one hundred studios. The Big Biz Show
and our affiliates and our hosts are not registered investment
advisors or broker dealers.
Speaker 6 (20:12):
Our show hosts make no commitment that the purchase of
securities of companies profiled or otherwise mentioned in our programming are.
Speaker 1 (20:18):
Suitable or advisable for any person, or than an investment
in such securities will be profitable.
Speaker 3 (20:22):
In general, given the nature of the company's profile and
the lack of an active trading market for the securities,
investing is highly speculative it carries a certain high degree
of risk.
Speaker 7 (20:32):
We profile selected publicly traded and privately held companies on
our program Most of these companies that we profile have
provided compensation to LAFT one hundred Studios and.
Speaker 9 (20:42):
Its hosts for the profile coverage.
Speaker 6 (20:45):
From time to time, we sell shares of the company's
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Speaker 1 (20:54):
But never sell stocks. If we are speaking about interviewing
or covering up public company who has paid compensation.
Speaker 6 (21:03):
Specific questions on compensation can be obtained by contacting producer
at Selliandgroup dot com.
Speaker 1 (21:11):
Listeners should verify all claims and do their own due
diligence before investing in any security.
Speaker 2 (21:15):
As mentioned on this program.
Speaker 3 (21:17):
Investing in securities is speculative and carries a high degree
of risk.
Speaker 6 (21:20):
We encourage our investors to invest carefully and read the
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Speaker 3 (21:25):
Securities and Exchange Commission at SEC dot gov and or
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dot org.
Speaker 9 (21:36):
I like it a rescue plan Big.
Speaker 1 (21:54):
This show rolls on live for the Lost one hundred studios,
where watching listen appreciate you me along for the ride.
All those beautiful faces you saw up on stage. Of course,
that is Sullivan eight ninths of Sullivan solely not with
us today, but still pleasure to have them in studio
(22:17):
with us. Of course, Mary burg Goblin with me, uh
here for another edition of Nania as a Nania business.
When the three of us were holding down the fort,
how many eight ninths of the Sullivan band.
Speaker 5 (22:28):
Oh, I thought he's the three of us? I said,
there's only two here? No, okay?
Speaker 1 (22:33):
Is the is the before we get to our friend Mitchell,
doctor Mitchell Steiner. Is the birthday officially done over?
Speaker 5 (22:40):
Well, it is still March, so it's kind of my
birthday month.
Speaker 1 (22:43):
Okay. Anyhow, joining us right now is the And we
love talking with this guy. He is the chairman, CEO,
president and founder of Route Incorporated. Their tic or symbol
is V E R. You and doctor Mitchell Steiner back
with us here on the Big Bis Show. Doctor are
always great to see your face, always great to talk
with you, sir. How are you this morning?
Speaker 8 (23:04):
Being great? Thanks for having me.
Speaker 1 (23:05):
Again, you know, reading up as we've got to know you.
We've got to know Varu and kind of be inclued
in as to how many people are, for lack of
a better term, fighting the battle of the bulge here
in the United States. I'm not sure what the numbers
are are worldwide, but one in eight are taking some
(23:29):
sort of weight loss drug to combat that.
Speaker 10 (23:34):
Yeah, that's exactly right. And uh and it's a big
issue because the whole world's going to change how we
eat snacks without craving to you know, getting better with
the cardiovascular side effects. And the best thing about these
drugs is they actually work. They actually provide benefits for patients,
particularly to look at all the health related issues with obesity.
(23:59):
But it comes with a price, and the prices they
have gi toxicsity, meaning they have knowledge of vomiting, they
feel sick all the time accortantly the GLP ones, which
is what they're called scientifically, these weight loss medicines. What
they do is they non selectively cause the loss of weight,
non selective meaning that you lose fat and you lose muscle.
(24:22):
Everybody wants to lose fat, but to lose muscle is
not good. And that rates about sixty forty, so forty
percent will be lean mass and sixty percent will be fat.
Speaker 8 (24:32):
Wouldn't be nice if you had.
Speaker 10 (24:33):
Something that can do nine ninety nine percent fat and
leave the muscle alone. And that's kind of where where
VERU comes in with our drug and Nobles arm and
and that's so the first big problem people have is
they want to lose weight, and lose weight meaning lose fat,
not lose muscle. And we did a phase two B
report of the results back in January that showed the
(24:56):
net of it is that people lose amount of weight
on that GLP one with an elvis arm in combination,
but the way that they lose is about ninety nine
percent fat. And so hold on to the muscle.
Speaker 1 (25:09):
Doctor Steinder for a second. You know, when I go
in for my yearly physical and they do my body
fat index thing, it comes back and it just says
canned ham. I mean, that's how that's how out of
shape I am? Are we in the United States? Is
there one in eight people? One in eight people using
this because food is so unhealthy? Uh, fast food and
(25:32):
junk food are always right there at your fingertips.
Speaker 10 (25:35):
Well, of course we have a food epidemic. But the
problem is obesitly is a real disease. And that's part
of what we have to get understand. Why are some
people not overweight and other people are? And unfortunately it's
the spiral. Once you start getting some weight on you,
you start putting more weight, more weight, and you become
resistant to the signals that your brain tells you not
(25:57):
to eat. So it's a true disease and they need help.
And that's where these glp ones come in. So it's
good at one in eight. Hopefully we'll get the obesity
problem under control and people feel healthier, live better lives.
But it's not going to be just with glp ones.
It has to be GLP ones and other things to
(26:17):
make the journey more tolerable.
Speaker 1 (26:19):
Doctor Mitchell Steiner is the chairman, CEO, president founder of
Varu Incorporated. Their ticker symbol v r U.
Speaker 5 (26:28):
Doctor Steiner, now talk to me.
Speaker 4 (26:30):
I was reading about the phase two B that you
just mentioned and you said you went to an extension
study with those same candidates. Is what are you seeing
happen with them? And then what's the next step with
these candidates.
Speaker 10 (26:43):
The shocking number is that people should stay on these
glp ones. About eighty percent don't after.
Speaker 2 (26:50):
About a year or a year and a half.
Speaker 10 (26:51):
Why is that Well, because of side effects access potentially
expensive medicines. They feel weak and that of it. The
insurance data, it clearly shows that about half to about
eighty percent will not continue. And we're running a study
called the Extension Study because the next big question is
(27:12):
once you get your weight down to point a place
that you want to stay and you stop the GLP one,
what happens is that you go into this overeating cycle
and you get back to the muscle that you lost.
It doesn't come back the way it did before, but
instead the weight that comes back almost like before, it's
all fat. So you get this fat regain and people
(27:36):
get very frustrated they lost the weight. They want to
come off to medicine for whatever reason, and then they
find out they get the weight back to the worse
off because it's all fat. So the Extension study is
trying to show the reason why people get that fat
regain is because they deplete muscle. Muscle goes away, your
body goes into a self preservation mode and I have
to stay alive and sends the signals to the brain
(27:58):
to eat. Now you get rid of that GLP one,
it's sunning brain not to eat, and you have you
have the double whammy. You have your muscle saying eat
and you have the drug get told you not to eat,
gone away, and so you overeat and you get back
fat and not muscle, and you can and that's what
people getting frustrated. We believe then nobles arm has the
ability by leaving muscle alone gets rid of one of
(28:20):
those eat signals. And if you can get rid of
that eat signal, then the hope when we get our
data in the second quarter this year is that we
show that we can blunt that that regain a fat
that happens when you stop at GLP one, so you
have an off ramp as they call it, as opposed
to just crashing and getting the weight all back in fat.
(28:43):
So that data, as I said in one hundred and
sixty eight patients that was rolled in the study, that
data is expected in the second quarter and uh and
the goals to show that we can blunt that fat regain.
Speaker 4 (28:57):
Now, doctor our patience encouraged to also do a certain
workout routine to help combat the loss of muscle and
fat and all of this stuff into so they don't
regain it back to is I mean, obviously we are
all told to work out daily and do these things,
but is there a certain you know, prescription that you're
(29:17):
seeing work in.
Speaker 10 (29:19):
Conjunction prescription if you can, and the problem is nobody
sticks to it. If you if you find the odd
person that sticks to it, meaning the et protein and
they do resistant exercise, they get a soft landing. So
what that's telling you is it muscle must be important
for that soft landing or that ramp off ramp, meaning
that if you build a muscle, bring muscle back on athlete,
(29:41):
STOPAGLP one that will that will stop the fat regain.
But the problem is the same reason why people are
taking the b C drugs is that it's very, very
hard to keep up that kind of routine and uh.
And so for the for the majority of patients that
just can't do it, to have a like a noble's
arm that in some ways acts like exercise exercise in
(30:04):
the bottle, if you want to call that exercise bill.
It allows him to build back the muscle. And as
long as they're eating protein and change their body composition
to be uh, keep them maintain the weight. And if
they gain a little weight, it's muscle weight and not fat,
which is fat's the enemy.
Speaker 5 (30:25):
Yeah. Love that.
Speaker 1 (30:26):
The company is Varux Incorporated. He is doctor Mitchell Steiner, chairman, CEO,
president and founder of course, their ticker symbol is VARU
v e R. You Doctor Steiner always appreciate the uh
the visit. I love the fact that he's helping people
with this, but it always makes you feel so bad
about myself. All right, much more to come with the
(30:47):
Big Biz Show. Keep it right here. That is Sullivan
(31:19):
missing only Sullivan as The Big Biz Show rolls on
live for the Lobtoe hundred studios we ever watching or listening,
Thanks for being along for the ride. Pasta and Mary
Burg Godwin with these dinner. The other special edition of
Nana Nania Business is what we call The Big Biz
with and Greg are are not with us and the Birthday.
Speaker 5 (31:43):
Celebrate Birthday Month continues. Here's the deal is.
Speaker 4 (31:48):
I was actually at a dance competition over the weekend
with my daughters.
Speaker 1 (31:52):
Oh your daughters.
Speaker 5 (31:52):
Okay, yes, I would have won, and so it was fun,
but I didn't, you know, it was not It wasn't
all about me, So.
Speaker 1 (32:05):
It was boring.
Speaker 4 (32:06):
No, So we're going on a little vacation. Yeah, we're
going to New York and we're going to some theater show.
Speaker 1 (32:11):
So that's going to be my actual the culmination all full.
Speaker 5 (32:14):
Week of Birthday celebrating in New York.
Speaker 1 (32:17):
Yeah, all right, very fun. When are you going like
next week? Yeah? Okay, good for you.
Speaker 5 (32:22):
I'll be gone.
Speaker 1 (32:23):
Yeah. I know. I speak on behalf of everybody with
Loftown Hunters Studios when I say we are so glad
it's coming My god. You know what's not coming to
an end is the price of gold. Look at that segue.
Speaker 5 (32:35):
Good, good work, good work.
Speaker 1 (32:37):
Yeah, thank you very much. I get paid the big
for that right now, I think we do. Joining us
is mister Allan Hibbard, precious metals and alternative money specialists.
His company is Gold Silver Website goldsilver dot com. Alan,
Welcome to the Big Bis Show. We certainly appreciate you
jumping on and talking some gold with us. How are you, sir?
Speaker 8 (32:59):
I am great. Thank you so much for having me today.
Really appreciate it.
Speaker 1 (33:02):
Yeah. Before we talk about prices of gold and where
to go and get gold and stuff like that, is
it finite as far as the supply that man knows
of in the world or do we really have a
true gauge of how much gold there is if we
haven't really been able to explore every single square inch
(33:22):
of the earth to find it.
Speaker 11 (33:24):
Yeah, it's a great question, and actually your question sort
of hints at why gold is even a store of
value in the first place. So I would argue that
the supply of gold is essentially infinite, but for practical purposes,
it's capped by our ability to go out and get
new gold. So the reason that gold is a store
of value is because some of it is accessible to
us and that's relatively easy to get sure, and some
(33:47):
other gold in the future is going to be a
lot harder to get.
Speaker 8 (33:50):
We're going to have to spend much more energy to
get it.
Speaker 11 (33:52):
And so as a result, anyone who has kept gold
until that time is going to be able to sell
it at that new higher price, representing a higher cost
of getting new units. So the supply of gold is
essentially limited, and that's what makes it a store value.
Speaker 4 (34:06):
Hey, Allen, I want to ask in this climate of
you know, the market is unsure, the what's going on
with you know, all the things are kind of uncertain
in question. So you know, there's cryptocurrency out there, all
the things are happening, inflation. Now, how does that affect
gold and silver? Does it bode well for your industry?
Speaker 11 (34:30):
Yes, absolutely, it bodes well, and I think that's why
gold and silver have both had fantastic years recently. You know,
I'll perform the S and P for example, And so yeah,
whenever you have a period of uncertainty, people start to
cling to something they can control, something they can get
their hands on, something they know isn't going to disappoint
them down the road. And if you look at so
(34:51):
much of what's happening in the world, we sort of
have a crisis of leadership really everywhere.
Speaker 8 (34:57):
And that that accounts for.
Speaker 11 (34:59):
Leaders of country trees, leaders of countries, leaders of other
institutions who have broadly speaking, either been negligent to put
it nicely, or outright corrupt right in the worst of cases.
Speaker 8 (35:10):
And that's across the globe.
Speaker 11 (35:12):
So of course there are standout exceptions, but broadly speaking,
we have a failure of leadership. And when that happens,
people turn to something that doesn't have a leader.
Speaker 8 (35:19):
So gold doesn't have a leader.
Speaker 11 (35:21):
There's no one in charge of all the gold, and
same with silver, for example, and same with bitcoin.
Speaker 8 (35:26):
So if you're.
Speaker 11 (35:27):
Unhappy with your leadership, if there's uncertainty about how they're
going to behave, what kind of rules they're going to
enact whether or not they're going to enforce those rules,
and if they're going to be good or bad for
you and your family. You can really just take a
lot of uncertainty out of the equation by going to
something that doesn't have a leader, that can't be corrupted.
So that's gold, silver, and bitcoin. So that's really good
for our industry.
Speaker 1 (35:47):
Alan hybrid precious metals alternative money specialist. His company Gold
Silver on their website is goldsilver dot com. Alan, what's
the craziness going over in London? What are the experiencing
with gold?
Speaker 11 (35:59):
Yeah, they're getting rid of it basically, So in London,
they're selling a lot of their gold. They're selling a
lot of the gold off the LBMA, moving that to Switzerland,
refining it for bars that are acceptable in the United States,
and shipping them to New York.
Speaker 8 (36:14):
And the reason for.
Speaker 11 (36:15):
That is that there's one or more large investors in
the United States, and we could speculate who that might be.
Speaker 8 (36:21):
It might even be the federal government.
Speaker 11 (36:23):
Who are going to take physical delivery of gold sometime
in the very near future. So the gold stockpiles on
the COMEX have gone from roughly ten million ounces to
forty million ounces. It's gone up by a factor of
four in just a few months. This is basically unprecedented. Unprecedented.
It happened during COVID, but that was the first time,
so now it's happening again. So that means somebody is
taking a lot of gold in physical delivery and it's
(36:46):
coming from London, So we don't know who that is.
It could be the US government preparing for an audit
of Fort Knox, you know, we could speculate about that,
but either way, it means the price of gold is
moving up and that's probably going to continue for the
foreseeable future.
Speaker 4 (37:00):
So that segues into my next question, which is about silver.
I was just mentioning my kids dance competitions.
Speaker 5 (37:05):
You know, silver is.
Speaker 4 (37:05):
Below gold in the in the medal or the words
category at the Olympics, everywhere in dance categories too. So
but right now silver is looking like an attractive buy.
Speaker 5 (37:16):
Is that correct?
Speaker 8 (37:17):
Yeah? I think so definitely.
Speaker 11 (37:19):
So while gold is at its all time high over
three thousand dollars an ounce, silver is still below its
all time high, so you could think of it as
being on sale. It's almost like a thirty three percent discount,
so if you like the product, you know it's better
to buy it on sale.
Speaker 8 (37:32):
And that's definitely silver right now.
Speaker 11 (37:33):
And historically silver outperforms gold during these bull runs, so
it does ultimately rise a lot more in price. However,
you pay the price of volatility, So if you're not
happy seeing the ups and downs day to day in
your portfolio, maybe silver isn't a good fit for you. Also,
you tend to have to wait longer to experience those gains,
but they are bigger over time. So I think gold
(37:55):
and silver are both attractive right now. I have both
in my portfolio, and the both good picks for most people.
Speaker 1 (38:01):
Alan, If I go to goldsilver dot com, can I
physically buy bullion from you, or a big brick or
a big brick or a nose ring or something like that.
Speaker 11 (38:11):
You can, Yes, if you go to goldsilver dot com,
you can buy coins.
Speaker 8 (38:14):
And bars of gold and silver.
Speaker 11 (38:16):
They're all investment grade, so you're not gonna buy You're
not gonna get scammed. You're not gonna buy anything that
looks like it's you know, investment grade gold, but then
it's actually only a tiny fraction of gold. No, we
don't do that on our website at all. There's no collectibles.
You don't have to worry about numismatic value. It's all
investment grade stuff and you can even get stuff for
your IRA if you do it before April fifteenth.
Speaker 1 (38:38):
Uh, will you me a favorite? Will you promised to
come back on our show? We do not have an
official Big Biz Show Gold person. And what you were
just able to explain to me someone who's got nothing
but cement between his ears old, I'm like, all right,
I know exactly what he's talking about. Will you come
back on with this please?
Speaker 8 (38:57):
I would love to thank you so much.
Speaker 1 (38:59):
Alan, every precious metals and alternative money specialist. Goldsilver dot
com is his website. This show has been gold because
we have sullivan Is Studio, we have everybody who makes
the show possible behind the scenes, Premry for Godwin. I'm
Mike Costa. Thanks for tuning into the Nick b Show.
We'll see you again next time.