In this episode, I sit down with Christopher Gardner and Ty Beal to unpack the science, debate, and controversy surrounding the latest U.S. Dietary Guidelines. We explore how nutrition science is translated into public policy, where the evidence is strong, where uncertainty remains, and why the conversation around protein, ultra-processed foods, and dietary patterns has become so polarized.
What I appreciated most about this discussion is that while there are clear disagreements on some topics, there is also a surprising amount of common ground. When you zoom out from the debates on the margins, there is broad agreement on many of the fundamentals that support better public health.
What We Cover
- The controversy around the Dietary Guidelines committee report and why parts of it were replaced
- How conflicts of interest are evaluated in nutrition science and why transparency matters
- Why ultra-processed foods are difficult to define scientifically and how classification systems like NOVA work
- Whether plant-based meat alternatives are healthier than conventional meat
- What the evidence says about protein intake, muscle health, and ageing
- Nutrient density, iron deficiency, and the role of animal-source foods in different populations
- Why fibre intake remains one of the biggest nutritional gaps in Western diets
- How policy, school meals, and food systems influence the real-world impact of dietary guidelines
While debates about individual nutrients or foods can dominate headlines, the bigger picture is clear. If most people shifted toward diets rich in whole plant foods, fibre, and minimally processed ingredients, public health would likely improve significantly.
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)
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More about Christopher Gardner
For more than 30 years, Christopher Gardner, PhD, Rehnborg Farquhar Professor of Medicine at Stanford and nutrition scientist, has been a key faculty member at the Stanford Prevention Research Center where he leads the Stanford Nutrition Studies Research Group. With a PhD in Nutrition Science from UC Berkeley, he has led over 20 human nutrition intervention studies, including trials of Mediterranean, Ketogenic, Vegan, Low-Fat and Low-Carb diets and their effects on cardiometabolic outcomes such as blood lipids, glucose, and inflammation. He is recognized as a leading expert, both nationally and internationally, on what to consume and avoid for optimal health, and how to best motivate individuals to achieve healthy dietary behaviors. He recently completed a two-year term serving on the 2025 US Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee and is the past chair of the American Heart Association’s Nutrition Committee. Some of his current interests include stealth nutrition, unapologetic deliciousness, and institutional food settings. He is currently working on personalized nutrition explorations with several colleagues, with particular focus on the gut microbiome. He is frequently consulted by major outlets like The New York Times, CNN, and MSNBC for his expertise. His work was recently featured in the Emmy-awarded docuseries (January 2024) – You Are What You Eat: A Twin Experiment.
More about Ty Beal
Ty Beal, PhD, is a nutrition scientist and host of The Ty Beal Show, where he interviews leading experts on food, health, and science. Drawing on his global research and advisory work with organizations like WHO and UNICEF, he cuts through the noise to deliver clear, evidence-based insights.







