>>76637223
So I found his Youtube, watched his scientific gym video, and from the start I like how passionate he is. His bio says he’s a got a biochem degree which for sure would be like having flint and steel for fire-starting, as it relates to bodybuilding. To answer the question, that OP asked, “what could he do to get me to respect him”. I would personally say to tone down the ego. Everything is JN labeled. Calling it the “Jeff Nippard Muscle Lab” versus just the Muscle Lab is one example. The Dark Side and Light side sound eerie and ominous when it should be more fitness related terms, like maybe Hercules (Herculean side) or something after other fitness related icons or imagery. The Light and Dark seems too foreign of a label for a fitness gym. The equipment itself is great, and as for what would he could do to get respect as far as this, it would be having some sort of program in-which the less fortunate, young athletes, or those of the like (who wouldn’t normally have access to equipment like this) would have the ability to use these services, granted at a certain refined cost. The machines and technology itself is mind blowing, but I think a great usage of it would be for rehabilitation for people. It seems like it’ll be an exclusive gym to the uber wealthy on paper, and just from the tour alone. For the podcast, it’s fine, not gonna hate and say “there are too many podcasts out there” if anything, this guy is knowledgeable enough to host something. But only time will tell if it’s something that’ll survive the sea of similar podcasts. In other words, what makes this podcast different from other fitness ones like it