PodParley PodParley

How Your Metabolism Really Works (with Josh Clemente)

An episode of the BarBend Podcast podcast, hosted by Josh Clemente, titled "How Your Metabolism Really Works (with Josh Clemente)" was published on January 18, 2021 and runs 31 minutes.

January 18, 2021 ·31m · BarBend Podcast

0:00 / 0:00

Today we're talking to Josh Clemente, Founder and President of Levels, a company producing wearable tech so users can track blood glucose in real time to maximize diet and exercise results. It’s a new company, and after a $12 million fundraise, they’re already in use by top pro athletes and are even making waves in the strength sports community. Josh is a veteran of both SpaceX and Hyperloop One, and his background is in designing life support systems for the next generation of space explorat...

Today we're talking to Josh Clemente, Founder and President of Levels, a company producing wearable tech so users can track blood glucose in real time to maximize diet and exercise results. It’s a new company, and after a $12 million fundraise, they’re already in use by top pro athletes and are even making waves in the strength sports community. Josh is a veteran of both SpaceX and Hyperloop One, and his background is in designing life support systems for the next generation of space exploration. In today’s episode, we discuss how that work inspired Josh to found Levels, why metabolic responses can vary so differently from one person to the next even with the same food, and what this means for actionable insights into strength and performance.

All Land is Beautiful Marshall Gorham All Land is Beautiful is a series of conversations around the obvious, and not so obvious, natural beauty of California and beyond. The motivation and nexus to start this podcast comes from an ever-evolving personal perspective shift on what contemporary habitat conservation means and looks like. You see, I, like I believe most people come to experience and perceive what’s good and bad for nature (at least the ones that I have interacted with) are of the mindset that the best we can do for nature is to simply remove ourselves from it and the natural of order of things will sort themselves out. You see a dense forest, you should leave it alone; you see a natural grassy field, well there certainly shouldn’t be any cows or sheep in it, and in that case why don’t we remove all of that old barbed-wire fencing; driving through huge swaths of agricultural land, jeez can you imagine what this all looked like before we turned it into row crops? And while those are all completely legitimate idea The Scholar's Corner Shaun de Beer, Petrus Barend Wentzel, Hanno Le Roux, Ronin Pretorius The world of academia is a complex one that is sometimes filled with intrigue and politics. But there are also academic papers with titles such as “Fantastic yeasts and where to find them” and “miR miR on the wall, who’s the most malignant medulloblastoma miR of them all?”. Some research studies from the field of psychology were quite controversial such as determining whether fear could be conditioned with the experiment done using an orphaned baby and a white rat.This podcast is a ACW 181 project.
URL copied to clipboard!