Description
A limited series on sport science hosted by student athlete Sophie and featuring two experts: Dr. Christopher Labos, cardiologist and regular co-host of this podcast, and Nick Tiller, who holds a doctorate in exercise physiology. Together, they will answer Sophie’s questions while dispelling myths that athletes—and anybody getting into fitness—are likely to hear.
This is part 4 of 4. The topic: fitspiration. Influencers on social media showing off their toned bodies and posing on a beach can encourage you to go to the gym, but how can you judge if what they say is based on solid evidence… or if it’s all lies, exaggerations, and undeclared sponsored content?
(0:29) Intro
(1:03) Influencers are not your friends
(5:12) What credentials should I look for in a fitness influencer?
(8:43) Sponsorships not disclosed
(9:50) Looks beget credibility
(13:44) How to read a scientific paper
(20:47) What to do to protect yourself from fitness misinformation
Opening music: “Energetic Upbeat” by WinnieTheMoog
Free download: https://filmmusic.io/song/6033-energetic-upbeat
Licensed under CC BY 4.0: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license
End title music: “Fall of the Ocean Queen“ by Joseph Hackl.
To contribute to The Body of Evidence, go to our Patreon page at: http://www.patreon.com/thebodyofevidence/.
It’s the case of the woman who was too tired to “par-tay!” What is afflicting her? It’s something that we don’t about enough. Plus: what is happening with avian flu and should you keep using Q-tips in your ears to remove earwax?
A Block: The Case of the Woman Who Was Too Tired to Party
...
Published 04/23/24
What does the body of evidence say on measles, that scourge we thought we’d gotten rid of? Plus: do you need to drink AG1 every day for the rest of your life, and Chris explains what doctors do and don’t control when you see them at the clinic.
A Block: Measles
(0:57) How many people have...
Published 04/09/24