Drunk People Try to Answer Fitness Questions for Money
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Renaissance Periodization·Health, Fitness & Longevity

Drunk People Try to Answer Fitness Questions for Money

TL;DR

Dr. Mike from RP Strength tests drunk strangers on Austin's Sixth Street with exercise science trivia, awarding protein bars and $20 cash.

Key Points

  • 1.The game has three escalating rounds with real stakes. Question 1 earns pride, Question 2 earns a protein bar, and Question 3 — the hardest — earns $20 cash, with push-up buybacks for eliminated contestants.
  • 2.Protein intake correctly beats high-carb for muscle retention on a cut. Contestant Isabelle answered this Q1 correctly, demonstrating that even casual fitness content consumers know basic nutrition principles.
  • 3.The anabolic window is wide, not narrow, and secondary to total daily intake. A group of contestants correctly identified this, noting post-workout insulin sensitivity as the reasoning behind the broader window.
  • 4.Direct delt work plus compound movements builds bigger shoulders than compounds alone. A group of contestants reasoned through this correctly together, winning a protein bar en route to the $20 question.
  • 5.The $20 question stumped most contestants. Hard questions included naming GABA as the brain's main inhibitory neurotransmitter, arginine as the nitric oxide precursor, ACTH as the cortisol-driving pituitary hormone, and inorganic phosphate as the fatigue metabolite.
  • 6.Leptin is the fat-tissue peptide signaling long-term energy sufficiency. One contestant confused it with peptide drugs before Dr. Mike confirmed leptin and ghrelin as the key hunger-regulation hormones.
  • 7.Glycogen was one of the few $20 questions answered correctly. After failing on ACTH and doing push-up buybacks, a group correctly named glycogen as the liver and muscle carbohydrate storage form.
  • 8.Educational background, not intoxication level, predicted performance. Dr. Mike observed mid-video that a nurse identified hematocrit rising with steroid use, and an Indian contestant correctly named glycogen, suggesting domain knowledge matters more than sobriety.

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