@orthodox_christian One thing that often bothers me is the over-reliance on science to justify fitness advice. Obviously, science rules, I am not anti-science. But sometimes, if 60% of participants in a study respond to a thing, these guys will preach only that thing. Not accounting for the 40% that the study had no impact on. Because everyone's body responds differently to different stimuli.
Jeff sometimes can be one of those guys where it seems that, if a study implied in any way a thing is beneficial ... it ends there. And you end up with 10,000 scientific factoids to consider when trying to get a workout in. I just think there should be a disclaimer when referencing a study, that qualifies who the study was done on and what the full results were. For example, it's not good enough to recommend something to a novice, saying "studies show x"- if the study was done on professional athletes that train every day, on a strict diet, and saw a 2% performance increase in 68% of participants... It's probably pointless to concern a beginner with that. This is where the shit just gets kind of annoying to me. I've often looked up studies these fitness gurus reference, and often this is what I find.
I still like the guys videos, lot of good info, no nonsense approach. Just think there is some nuance people miss