
In this episode, I’m joined by Christopher Gardner and Ty Beal to break down the science and debate behind the latest U.S. Dietary Guidelines. We explore ultra-processed foods, protein recommendations, plant-based alternatives, and how nutrition evidence is interpreted when shaping national dietary advice. Despite disagreements on specific points, this conversation highlights how much common ground exists when scientists engage in open, constructive dialogue. What We Cover Why the Dietary Guidelines process became controversial Conflicts of interest and transparency in nutrition science The science behind ultra-processed foods and the NOVA classification Plant-based meats versus conventional meat Protein intake, muscle health, and ageing Fibre intake and the biggest nutritional gaps in Western diets When you zoom out from the debates, the fundamentals remain clear: diets built around whole foods, fibre-rich plants, and minimally processed ingredients consistently support better health. To connect with the guests and explore more of their work, follow Christopher Gardner on Instagram and LinkedIn, and learn more about his research through the Stanford Nutrition Studies Research Group. You can follow Ty Beal on Instagram, subscribe to his YouTube channel, and explore his research at tybeal.com. Intro (00:00) Should Diet Advice Include Sustainability (06:06) Why Canada's Food Guide Beats America's (13:52) How Much Protein Do Americans Actually Need? (23:49) Can Regenerative Farming Fix Meat's Problem? (35:31) How the Dietary Guidelines Committee Works (42:32) Do Conflicts of Interest Corrupt Diet Guidelines? (50:11) Scientists React to the New 2025 Guidelines (57:50) The Saturated Fat vs Seed Oils Debate (01:12:03) Why Health Equity Divided the Committee (01:22:18) Diet Wars: Stopping the Science Undermining (01:32:59) Epidemiology vs RCTs: Which Evidence Wins? (01:43:24) Ultra-Processed Foods: Where NOVA Gets It Wrong (01:53:12) Are Plant-Based Meats Just Ultra-Processed Junk? (01:57:58) Should Plant-Based Milks Be Fortified? (02:05:46) Low Carb vs Low Fat: What Protects Your Heart? (02:12:21) High Protein Diets and the Hidden Fiber Gap (02:18:11) GLP-1 Drugs and Your Protein Needs (02:22:27) How Much Protein to Preserve Muscle With Age? (02:28:46) Diet Guidelines Both Scientists Agree On (02:39:22) This episode is brought to you by: 38TERA Consider 38TERA's DMN prebiotic supplement a daily multivitamin for your gut. Formulated by yours truly and gastroenterologist Dr Will Bulsiewicz. Use code THEPROOF for a discount at checkout. ProLon Ready for your own reset? For a limited time, ProLon is offering The Proof listeners 15% off sitewide plus a $40 bonus gift when you subscribe to their 5-Day Program. Visit ProLonLife.com to claim your discount and bonus gift. Eight Sleep Upgrade your sleep with the Pod 5 Ultra by Eight Sleep. Clinically validated to deliver up to 1 extra hour of quality sleep per night through temperature control and biometric tracking. Use code THEPROOF for $350 off at eightsleep.com/theproof. Try it risk-free for 30 days, with worldwide shipping. IM8 With 92 nutrients, including Vitamin B12, Iodine, Selenium and Vitamin D, in highly absorbable forms, IM8 Daily Essentials is the perfect all-in-one daily multi-vitamin to ensure you meet your daily micronutrient needs. IM8 is offering an exclusive 10% off your first order with a free welcome kit when you enter the promo code SIMON at checkout on im8health.com. Caraway Caraway’s cookware set is a favourite for a reason. It can save you up to $190 compared to buying items individually, and The Proof listeners can take an additional 10% off at CarawayHome.com or by using code PROOF at checkout. Caraway. Non-toxic cookware made modern. Subscribe & Connect: YouTube Apple Podcasts Spotify Instagram: @simonhill Twitter: @theproof Facebook: The Proof with Simon Hill