Take 1 capsule REDT Testosterone Booster daily with water. For severe conditions, take 3 capsules daily
Legal Disclaimer: Statements regarding dietary supplements have not been evaluated by the FDA and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease or health condition.
I bought this last time it was on offer, but got bad vibes before taking it.
I looked up reviews and what appropriate dosages are of the ingredients, I don’t recommend this.
It apparently has low effective doses of zinc, limiting the upside. But it does have DHEA, which introduced many potential downsides.
I threw it out without taking any of them, and don’t think it’s a good idea to take.
Guarana is an ingredient. Loaded with caffeine. Be wary if you’re sensitive or are taking in caffeine from other sources, or in combination with other stimulants and medications.
Pounding some Red Bulls with a fistful of these and huffing your asthma inhaler while snorting lines of crushed up adderall before a workout are probably not the healthiest choices.
@ShotgunX When you take more than one pill/capsule it is. I do see your point that if there was enough to be effective, they would hsve lawsuits or worse, FDA approval. to actually test and show safety and effectiveness. And that would mean it would be classified as a “drug”, not a “supplement”.
So, in a way, because it is classified as a supplement, by definition, it cannot claim to actually deliver the benefits the marketing imagines them to be. That’s why they use completely subjective terms like “improves” a feeling or “reduces the appearance of” some blemish, or “helps with” and a disclaimer that it should be used in conjunction with … something proven to work all by itself without the supplement. Which means by definition, the product has no provable effect.
Statements regarding dietary supplements have not been evaluated by the FDA and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease or health condition.
@mike808 We’re talking about caffeine, right? As far as caffeine is concerned, 75mg isn’t a lot. Even if you take 4 of these pills (the recommended serving is just 1), that would be about as much caffeine as a large coffee. At such big serving sizes, the other ingredients, and not the caffeine, become a concern.
@ShotgunX
My post was primarily to note that many “diet” supplements are really just disguised caffeine since that’s about the only stimulant that isn’t FDA regulated. And guarana is often the caffeine delivery agent, and is really being greenwashed as just another “exotic” and “natural” ingredient. Another is “matcha” ingredients.
I wish meh would stop selling snake oil. Two star blue tooth speakers I can understand. In my opinion snake oil like this crosses a line. Not to mention this kind of stuff could be dangerous to some. I thought meh had some standards, as low as they may be () but repeated offers of snake oil makes me wonder. I think it is unethical to sell crap like this.
AND if there was any validity in their claims for this snake oil then they’d submit it for FDA approval to actually treat whatever condition they are claiming to treat. They’d make far more money that way. It is junk that can’t get approval because it does no good that goes this route - eg we claim this but no FDA approval so take at your own risk and likely it doesn’t do anything other than placebo effect. Oh and it might harm you too but our disclaimer hopefully will cover our butt.
Clinically studied ingredients with fantastic results
I’m sure there is a clinical definition of “fantastic” somewhere.
Although, that is accurate. “Fantastic” literally means “of fantasy”, and it would be a fantasy to think taking these does what it says it does.
Then there’s The Former Guy’s similar claims of “fantastic results”, also “doctor recommended”:
… laboratory test results were astonishingly excellent.
… His physical strength and stamina are extraordinary.
…
If elected, Mr Trump, I can state unequivocally, will be the healthiest individual ever elected to the presidency.
@Kidsandliz YES!!! Taking “Supplements” without FDA approval is akin to taking street drugs. You never know what is really in it because there is no oversight. And really beware of ‘proprietary blends’. That means ingredients are kept secret supposedly so someone can’t copy their formula. They don’t even list them on the label.
@cosmicjones
Nothing says “spontaneous sincere testimony” like a scripted review?
The traveling medicine shows had nothing on the many peddlers of this stuff, and the very existence of places like The Vitamin Store tells me everything I didn’t want to have to know about how credulous a lot of people are.
@bakntyme@Bumplepimp except they can be harmful depending on your health condition and what other meds you might be taking. Discuss everything with your doctor or pharmacist to check for interactions.
I’m not very sensitive to caffeine, but if I take one after 5pm, I have a hard time getting to sleep at night. That being said, taking one around noon knocks out my 2:30 crash and seems to help my workout. I’m just getting over a week-long cold, so I can’t speak too highly of the immune-boosting capabilities. Then again, I may have suffered worse had I not been taking it.
@wickhameh Are you “crashing” at 2:30 because of blood sugar fluctuations? Like eating donuts with corn syrup sweetened coffee and processed sugars and what you’re experiencing is really a sugar crash. Just a thought. Switch to complex sugars like raw fruits or cut out sugars entirely and stick with a small portion of starches.
@mike808 I eat granola, blueberries, banana, and Greek yogurt for breakfast. Chicken breast and a smoothie for lunch, and sometimes some almonds here and there. I don’t usually crash hard when I’ve got things to do when work ends, such as coaching or going to the gym, so it’s more mental fatigue than anything.
@wickhameh That doesn’t sound super-sugary. What works for me is some Acetyl-L Carnitine mid-morning. You might want to pay attention to days when you don’t crash and try to isolate the “X-factor”.
Got my hopes up with the picture, I thought it was a “meal replacement shake” again. Haven’t mehed one of those for a month or two, and I’m running low.
Specs
Ingredients:
Directions:
Statements regarding dietary supplements have not been evaluated by the FDA and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease or health condition.
Supplement Facts
What’s Included?
Price Comparison
$51.56 at Amazon
Warranty
90 days
Estimated Delivery
Monday, Nov 1 - Thursday, Nov 4
What if women take this?
@yakkoTDI asking for a friend?
@jayman007 No. Asking for my trunk full of hookers.
@yakkoTDI Same thing. Nothing will happen.
@craigthom Darn it! Looks like I am about to have another trunk of dead hookers.
@yakkoTDI
time to sell that car…
@chienfou Sell the car? You know you can just empty the trunk and put them on the compost heap with the others right?
@yakkoTDI
Duh… why didn’t I think of that??
They will have wasted their money too
OH MY GOD THEY RED-PILLED GLEN!!!
@shahnm
No, Glen; I’m trying to tell you that when you’re ready, you won’t want to.
I bought this last time it was on offer, but got bad vibes before taking it.
I looked up reviews and what appropriate dosages are of the ingredients, I don’t recommend this.
It apparently has low effective doses of zinc, limiting the upside. But it does have DHEA, which introduced many potential downsides.
I threw it out without taking any of them, and don’t think it’s a good idea to take.
“For severe conditions, take 3 capsules daily”
…what’s considered severe?
@epantusso Maybe it’s another way of saying “fabulous”
Guarana is an ingredient. Loaded with caffeine. Be wary if you’re sensitive or are taking in caffeine from other sources, or in combination with other stimulants and medications.
Pounding some Red Bulls with a fistful of these and huffing your asthma inhaler while snorting lines of crushed up adderall before a workout are probably not the healthiest choices.
@mike808 75mg isn’t really “loaded” though.
@ShotgunX When you take more than one pill/capsule it is. I do see your point that if there was enough to be effective, they would hsve lawsuits or worse, FDA approval. to actually test and show safety and effectiveness. And that would mean it would be classified as a “drug”, not a “supplement”.
So, in a way, because it is classified as a supplement, by definition, it cannot claim to actually deliver the benefits the marketing imagines them to be. That’s why they use completely subjective terms like “improves” a feeling or “reduces the appearance of” some blemish, or “helps with” and a disclaimer that it should be used in conjunction with … something proven to work all by itself without the supplement. Which means by definition, the product has no provable effect.
Statements regarding dietary supplements have not been evaluated by the FDA and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease or health condition.
@ShotgunX
That doctor could be these people:
@mike808 We’re talking about caffeine, right? As far as caffeine is concerned, 75mg isn’t a lot. Even if you take 4 of these pills (the recommended serving is just 1), that would be about as much caffeine as a large coffee. At such big serving sizes, the other ingredients, and not the caffeine, become a concern.
@ShotgunX
My post was primarily to note that many “diet” supplements are really just disguised caffeine since that’s about the only stimulant that isn’t FDA regulated. And guarana is often the caffeine delivery agent, and is really being greenwashed as just another “exotic” and “natural” ingredient. Another is “matcha” ingredients.
Take the “Blue” pill!!
But Dare always told me to say No to Drugs!?!
@Num1Zero
So did Mary Baker Eddy, peddling a different kind of snake oil…
Red is new purple?
Too bad it doesn’t have a unique man-boosting formula
Only UniqueMan® can verify that claim, so they’d be safe claiming it…
I wish meh would stop selling snake oil. Two star blue tooth speakers I can understand. In my opinion snake oil like this crosses a line. Not to mention this kind of stuff could be dangerous to some. I thought meh had some standards, as low as they may be () but repeated offers of snake oil makes me wonder. I think it is unethical to sell crap like this.
AND if there was any validity in their claims for this snake oil then they’d submit it for FDA approval to actually treat whatever condition they are claiming to treat. They’d make far more money that way. It is junk that can’t get approval because it does no good that goes this route - eg we claim this but no FDA approval so take at your own risk and likely it doesn’t do anything other than placebo effect. Oh and it might harm you too but our disclaimer hopefully will cover our butt.
@Kidsandliz
I’m sure there is a clinical definition of “fantastic” somewhere.
Although, that is accurate. “Fantastic” literally means “of fantasy”, and it would be a fantasy to think taking these does what it says it does.
Then there’s The Former Guy’s similar claims of “fantastic results”, also “doctor recommended”:
@mike808 Well as of right now 76 have been sold so there are suckers
born ever minuteout there… I guess that is what meh is counting on.@Kidsandliz @mike808
I will simply note that the word “fantastic” has “fantasy” as its root, and the sense oif its meaning here is probably closer to that.
@Kidsandliz @mike808
But you said already. Blame the redundancy on me.
@Kidsandliz YES!!! Taking “Supplements” without FDA approval is akin to taking street drugs. You never know what is really in it because there is no oversight. And really beware of ‘proprietary blends’. That means ingredients are kept secret supposedly so someone can’t copy their formula. They don’t even list them on the label.
What is with all of the scripted video reviews on the Amazon page?
@cosmicjones
Nothing says “spontaneous sincere testimony” like a scripted review?
The traveling medicine shows had nothing on the many peddlers of this stuff, and the very existence of places like The Vitamin Store tells me everything I didn’t want to have to know about how credulous a lot of people are.
One pill makes you larger…
@Bumplepimp
@Bumplepimp
But the pills that Meh sells you
Don’t do anything at all…
Go ask Alice.
She’ll know.
@bakntyme @Bumplepimp except they can be harmful depending on your health condition and what other meds you might be taking. Discuss everything with your doctor or pharmacist to check for interactions.
As soon as you see the term “support,” RUN. It’s the supplement syndicate’s buzzword for “no evidence whatsoever.”
4 x 30 == 120 capsules, not a “120-Day Supply” for anyone with a “severe condition” (the ones who might actually want this, um, stuff).
I’m not very sensitive to caffeine, but if I take one after 5pm, I have a hard time getting to sleep at night. That being said, taking one around noon knocks out my 2:30 crash and seems to help my workout. I’m just getting over a week-long cold, so I can’t speak too highly of the immune-boosting capabilities. Then again, I may have suffered worse had I not been taking it.
@wickhameh Are you “crashing” at 2:30 because of blood sugar fluctuations? Like eating donuts with corn syrup sweetened coffee and processed sugars and what you’re experiencing is really a sugar crash. Just a thought. Switch to complex sugars like raw fruits or cut out sugars entirely and stick with a small portion of starches.
@mike808 I eat granola, blueberries, banana, and Greek yogurt for breakfast. Chicken breast and a smoothie for lunch, and sometimes some almonds here and there. I don’t usually crash hard when I’ve got things to do when work ends, such as coaching or going to the gym, so it’s more mental fatigue than anything.
@wickhameh That doesn’t sound super-sugary. What works for me is some Acetyl-L Carnitine mid-morning. You might want to pay attention to days when you don’t crash and try to isolate the “X-factor”.
Got my hopes up with the picture, I thought it was a “meal replacement shake” again. Haven’t mehed one of those for a month or two, and I’m running low.
Instead it is trash in a similar-shaped tub.