In a broadcast featuring former UFC heavyweight Todd Duffee alongside Clavicular, the conversation touched on various topics including performance enhancement, a GLP-1 related effects and training protocols.
Clavicular revealed he is currently following a daily protocol involving the compound, having just started the regimen.
“I’m on 15 mg. I just started.”
Todd Duffee shared his own perspective on it, explaining medical advice he previously received.
“I had a doctor that told me to look into it and see if I was interested in doing it.”
Duffee explained his hesitation stems from prior negative experiences with autoimmune treatments.
“I’ve tried other medi cations for the autoimmune and it always makes it worse. So it’s like I don’t want to [mess] with it.”
He described his symptoms in detail.
“I get like I’ll show you my joints here in a minute. Like I get really bad inflammation.”
He noted that he has explored various options including stem cell therapy at CPI, IV therapy and fever-based treatments designed to raise white blood cell counts.
Regarding the GLP-1 related compound specifically, Clavicular mentioned its appetite suppression effects.
“It just suppresses your appetite to [massive levels].”
This aligns with the commonly reported effects of this class of compounds, which have gained attention in athletic and fitness circles.
Duffee already admitted to his use of hyperbaric chamber therapy and its importance in his routine.
“The hyperbaric chamber is like a big thing.”
He explained its intended function within the body.
“What it does is like it forces oxygen in all your cells.”
When discussing peptides and testing, Clavicular offered a simplified explanation.
“Peptides is a natural amino acid chain some [thing] in your body.”
The implication was that certain compounds face less scrutiny than traditional anabolic agents.
Duffee also mentioned his past use of BPC 157 peptides earlier in his career when they were obtained through medical channels.
“I used to take it when I got it from a doctor.”
Duffee isn’t in the wrong here. BPC 157 was put on WADA list of prohibited compounds only in 2022.
What feels new about peptides like BPC-157 is not their existence but their sudden cultural visibility. These compounds have been circulating quietly for well over a decade in niche forums, underground labs, and experimental circles, long before TikTok explainers and podcast gurus repackaged them as cutting-edge biohacks. What has changed is the narrative, peptides are no longer framed as obscure research chemicals but as shorthand for optimization, recovery, and staying ahead of the curve. As mainstream fitness, wellness, and longevity culture continues to blur the line between science, speculation, and self-experimentation, peptides are riding that wave, not because they are new, but because the culture is finally paying attention.