The Blue Zones Secrets for Living Longer with Dan Buettner

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  • Опубліковано 21 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 100

  • @paolaceruti-jo9qs
    @paolaceruti-jo9qs 6 місяців тому +2

    My grandma lived 102 years; until her late 90es she used to wake up at 5.30 am to laundry, iron and cook and every evening she had a glass of red wine poured into her soup. She was a myth.

  • @kentroskelley1389
    @kentroskelley1389 Рік тому +25

    Dan Buettner seems to be a real down to earth guy.

  • @78twood
    @78twood Рік тому +26

    I just watched this episode and really enjoyed it! I would love to see more blue zones everywhere! I’m so glad this gentleman took the time to study all these cultures. He has such a wealth of knowledge 💜

  • @nettierose4915
    @nettierose4915 Рік тому +15

    Mr. Buettner makes an important point when he says that these people are not more virtuous or possessing of stronger will power than those in unhealthy areas, it is their environment and culture and lifestyle that makes the difference.

    • @alcogito8287
      @alcogito8287 Рік тому

      He also said that people who follow this lifestyle live to a happy healthy old age anywhere.

  • @terrytari1891
    @terrytari1891 7 місяців тому +1

    AJ: You get ALL the good case! Dan Buettner is the PERSON of 2024 with his beautiful book about Blue Zones!!

  • @michaellaverty1844
    @michaellaverty1844 9 місяців тому +1

    I just finished watch this on Netflix and I’m so inspired by he people he met. They’re active, mostly a plant based diet and they seem so mentally happy. He knocked it out of the park when he said if you can’t change someone’s mind, change their environment. I retired from a very toxic work place almost 5 years ago and since then I feel renewed. My wife and I have been plant based for almost 15 years but since I retired my diet has improved so much. I would stress eat, stuck behind a computer for hours a day. Having time for myself and working on me. Stay active, be mindful and eat well.

  • @Joseph1NJ
    @Joseph1NJ Рік тому +5

    I watched the NF special, thought it was good except for one minor thing: It's not all of Sardinia that's a blue zone, just some of the mountain dweller communities, many of whom are pig farmers, and eat a fair amount of pork.

  • @amberjohnston586
    @amberjohnston586 Рік тому +3

    It can take time to change your diet and lifestyle, be gentle as your tastes change. I had to due to sudden digestive issues, it was abrupt and harsh. I had to make it my own!!❤

  • @kardste8114
    @kardste8114 Рік тому +12

    Perfect! Thank you Dan Buetner!! 👍
    Raise the Price on these processed foods that are costing our healthcare industry and lives sooo much! 👍👍🙏

  • @estherkanlaileng8980
    @estherkanlaileng8980 Рік тому +1

    Bless to be introduced to Blue Zone, Dan Buettner by a good friend

  • @maryannjordan317
    @maryannjordan317 Рік тому +2

    I absolutely loved the Live to 100 series! I have listened to several of these UA-cam videos with Dan, but here is the deal: not everyone can tolerate a plant-based diet. I have had IBS since birth. I HAVE to eat an acidic diet. The keto diet is the only diet that keeps my syndrome under control.

  • @Joseph1NJ
    @Joseph1NJ Рік тому +3

    Chef AJ is a skilled interviewer, I'm impressed. 👏

    • @CHEFAJ
      @CHEFAJ  Рік тому +1

      Thank you!

    • @terrytari1891
      @terrytari1891 7 місяців тому

      @@CHEFAJ You deserve it! That's why you get A+ guests!

  • @sk.n.9302
    @sk.n.9302 Рік тому +2

    I lived in Germany for almost 20 years, lifestyle similar to Singapore. Lots of beauty, walking, bicycles, local & seasonal food, slow eating & pretty much everything is closed on Sundays. Lots of work/life balance, festivals, holidays. But they do still consume a lot of meat.

  • @estherkanlaileng8980
    @estherkanlaileng8980 Рік тому +1

    Notably impressed by Dan Beutner knowledge sharing in plant base foods❤

  • @terriclemens716
    @terriclemens716 Рік тому +2

    I watched the episodes at home and then played them for a community where I work at a memory care facility. They were completely enthralled and very engaged and interested in more information and how we can create our own blue zone.

    • @alcogito8287
      @alcogito8287 Рік тому +1

      I am 89 and have no diseases. I grow an organic garden, cook from scratch, eat everything, although I avoid sugar and processed foods, maintain a normal weight, am physically active, have lots of family and social connections, and volunteer a lot. I have my own Blue Zone in an American suburb.

  • @Adriana-ue6qg
    @Adriana-ue6qg 11 місяців тому +1

    What a delightful video! That was such a great conversation I’m excited to start watching the show. Thank you so much!

    • @CHEFAJ
      @CHEFAJ  11 місяців тому

      Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @ellen9579
    @ellen9579 Рік тому +9

    Fascinating conversation!

  • @kimmurray1699
    @kimmurray1699 Рік тому +7

    People in blue zones DO eat meat! Mostly fish but other meats also only sparingly about 5-7 times a month and they have village festivals where roasted meat is served!!

  • @terrytari1891
    @terrytari1891 7 місяців тому +2

    Mr Dan Buettner: you are the Person of 2024! You are guest of AJ & CBS TV interview!

    • @terrytari1891
      @terrytari1891 7 місяців тому +1

      Dan love Adventures & Action!

  • @JeanneGuarnieri-vs7zn
    @JeanneGuarnieri-vs7zn Рік тому +3

    Dan Beuttner is handsome!

  • @Joseph1NJ
    @Joseph1NJ Рік тому +4

    When speaking on blue zone conversions in the US, which BTW I find fascinating, I was waiting for them to touch on school lunches. After all, we can't afford to continue to treat middle aged people with lifestyle diseases like diabetes, obesity, and heart disease and start with the next generation.

  • @pearlypawbeans
    @pearlypawbeans Рік тому +6

    I never heard of this guy until I started watching his Netflix show a couple days ago. I was blown away by it! So I started Googling to buy his book. I had no idea that his show would dovetail with plant based eating. I’m very familiar with Chef AJ & a big fan! I just found this vid randomly while looking for audio versions of The Blue Zone book. It’s so cool to see them together here. Really inspiring

  • @lisengel2498
    @lisengel2498 Рік тому +4

    I love the story of the Blue zones - maybe because it to me sounds like small paradises on Earth where everybody is deeply connected with life - its like Living in a sea of love to all around you. 🎵❤️🧡💛💚🩵💜🎶

  • @StephenMarkTurner
    @StephenMarkTurner Рік тому +8

    Interesting conversation. Thanks AJ and Dan.

  • @michaelclennan8425
    @michaelclennan8425 Рік тому +7

    Health is simple.

  • @TheSistachelle
    @TheSistachelle Рік тому +3

    I binged every episode! LOVED the documentary. Very eye opening. Great information that I will be adapting to my life.😊

  • @sk.n.9302
    @sk.n.9302 Рік тому +3

    Wonderful interview, have been a fan of the Blue Zones since 2016. Parents have cattle ranch in central Texas, but I nevertheless went (whole food) vegan.

  • @peninaweese7849
    @peninaweese7849 Рік тому +3

    Just got my copy. It’s beautiful!!

  • @jennan124
    @jennan124 Рік тому +1

    Love learning about the blue zones

  • @julieritchie4180
    @julieritchie4180 Рік тому +1

    Thank you for this! 59:37

  • @hestergreen2031
    @hestergreen2031 Рік тому +1

    Oh I need this book.

  • @neverendingjourneystilllea5271
    @neverendingjourneystilllea5271 9 місяців тому +1

    Thanks

  • @downhomegirl5
    @downhomegirl5 3 місяці тому

    Do a juice fast its so much better ❤

  • @nazokashii
    @nazokashii Рік тому +3

    Cool to hear about the documentary :D thank you

  • @goldbug9345
    @goldbug9345 Рік тому +1

    I wish the blue zone project would come to the eastren shore of Maryland

  • @27pugsly
    @27pugsly Рік тому +1

    Music to my ears moderate alcohol 🍷 😊😊

  • @jamiecramer5834
    @jamiecramer5834 Рік тому +2

    Too funny! I feel as if I live in the kitchen as well, cooking and doing dishes!

  • @traceykaminski7874
    @traceykaminski7874 Рік тому +1

    I watched it. So inspiring 🎉❤

  • @kardste8114
    @kardste8114 Рік тому +6

    🤣A bus 🚌 tour of the Blue Zones with safari hats and binoculars 🤣
    You are hilarious Chef AJ. and Dan was a great guest!
    Thank you!! 🙏

  • @kristingoettlicher3503
    @kristingoettlicher3503 Рік тому +1

    As a vegan and SDA, I am interested in this. I didn't know about the first book.

    • @kristingoettlicher3503
      @kristingoettlicher3503 Рік тому

      @@annemccarron2281 I didn't grow up as either. Chose them in my adulthood.

  • @annaloph
    @annaloph Рік тому +1

    Great documentary film 👏💖🌎🩺

  • @govegan562
    @govegan562 Рік тому +44

    so disappointing to hear that okinawa has adopted the standard american diet...very sad

    • @nickmeale1957
      @nickmeale1957 Рік тому +1

      Makes me so upset. Especially because a lot of people here trying to be healthier, and a lot of people over there aren't.

    • @amberjohnston586
      @amberjohnston586 Рік тому

      They really need to stop calling it the standard American diet, it’s actually the processed food diet. Many cultures have become unhealthy due to this.

    • @danielwillover
      @danielwillover Рік тому +1

      They didn't adopt the American diet for eating pork. They've been eating pork their entire lives in Okinawa. These people want you to believe that longevity is eating fruits and vegetables. It's not

    • @govegan562
      @govegan562 Рік тому +1

      @@danielwillover it definitely is tho...fruits vegetables, grains

    • @BigSlimyBlob
      @BigSlimyBlob 10 місяців тому

      ​@@govegan562 Grains are mostly empty carbs, they'll give you low-duration energy but otherwise they're basically just sugar.
      Fruits generally don't contain many macronutrients aside from fructose (a high harmful form of sugar) and the availability of their micronutrients is usually very low.
      Most vegetables are nutritionally bankrupt. No macronutrients, extremely poor micronutrient availability, lots of antinutrients, and usually various toxins or other harmful substances. Spinach, for example, does not provide energy (if anything, it costs more to digest than it would give you), you'll get almost nothing from the micronutrients (you can only get between 1% and 2% of the iron content), it will actually decrease how much micronutrients you get from the rest of your food, it contains oxalates, it often contains heavy metals, and like most other greens it can spread dangerous bacteria.
      Not that a vegan would ever buy any greens, of course. Paying a farmer to kill animals (mice, rabbits, snails, small birds, deer) slowly and painfully so that they can grow crops that provide virtually no nutrition is just about the least vegan thing you can do.

  • @KT-kq3tj
    @KT-kq3tj Рік тому +1

    Chef AJ, where can we watch your interview with Ellsworth?

  • @nickmeale1957
    @nickmeale1957 Рік тому +1

    My grandmother migrated from Italy to Australia in the 1930s. They had a long-lived population in her area, too. She has since changed her diet to include moderate meat and high amounts of olive oil and has been sicker because of it. I just wonder why she doesn't go back to the way she used to eat long ago!

  • @papimimi5469
    @papimimi5469 Рік тому +1

    The Hawthorne Effect is the observational interference in people's behavior vs. HEISENBERG uncertainty principle is the random movement of particles in space. You cannot predict 100% where an electronic is or will be, you only have a relative certainty.

  • @dianaanalla4571
    @dianaanalla4571 Рік тому +1

    OMG I just saw you in America says game 👍

  • @terrytari1891
    @terrytari1891 7 місяців тому +2

    Dan: I didn't know you were on Oprah, ABC, Netflix etc!

  • @phanypieee
    @phanypieee Рік тому +1

    Love this

  • @cab26
    @cab26 Рік тому +4

    Ooh Netflix I’m coming ….

    • @lhelms2850
      @lhelms2850 Рік тому

      It’s here now as of 09/01/23.

  • @kardste8114
    @kardste8114 Рік тому +5

    Do the outdoor dogs and cats in the Blue Zones live longer and higher quality lives? 😄
    I’ve heard that many of our pets get the same chronic-type diseases their human owners get. Some say it’s unnatural for them to live indoors and eat canned food.

    • @LuckyStarhun
      @LuckyStarhun Рік тому +2

      That depends on the quality of the canned food. My dog eats dry dog food and he is healthy and has à lot of energy because its à high quality food. It is not comparable to processed foods for humans unless the petfood contains sugar. Pets are not recreational eaters but sugar can make them addicted to food. Otherwise they tend to overeat, no matter what you give them, you have to portion healthy food too otherwise pets Will become obese. It is instinct: satiety does not work the same way in dogs and cats. Wolves are dogs ancestors and they are capable of eating 10 kilos of meat in one sitting. Even if you have à St bernard or à great dane you would not feed them that much at once even if they were capable of eating it. Pets get obese because mostly they have no portion control. Most pet owners admit they do not measure their Pets food. I do not think that it is different in blue zones. Pets should not eat the same food as their owners. You cannot make à cat plantbased. Making a cat plantbased does not fit into à plantbased lifestyle. Its called mistreating and animal abuse. Dogs health can be compromised on a plantbased diet as it is low fat. Dogs are fat burners unlike us humans as we are carb burners. Protein is not à concern, dogs do well with whatever protein theyre not allergic to. But the info should be put it out so I say it loud: dogs do NOT thrive on a low fat diet and can get diabetes if they are fed too much carbs!

    • @LuckyStarhun
      @LuckyStarhun Рік тому +1

      Anyway living indoors does not affect pets if they get enough activity. Dogs who do sports like agility tend to age slower and live longer. An agility dog can do competitions at 10 years while the couch potato dogs of the same age have more frequent visite to the vet. But it also depends on the breed too.

    • @kardste8114
      @kardste8114 Рік тому +2

      I wonder about pets I had in past. I think not having access to Outdoors is not healthy for humans or our furry friends.
      Think of ALL the benefits of being in sunshine and nature... and for our pets... seems wrong to deprive them of outdoor time.
      I know that cats who catch and eat occasional mice or birds are very Happy creatures.
      I wonder if Blue Zone rural “pets” who live more naturally, also live longer.. like their humans?

  • @carlo6912
    @carlo6912 Рік тому +2

    I need help. My PCP is telling me to start eating meat again because of my high bilirubin and low iron... need help, feeling so confused.

    • @rhondamoore4466
      @rhondamoore4466 Рік тому +1

      Get another Dr or not one at all! I’ve been plant based since January, just had my bloodwork done, it’s perfect. Everything went back to normal.give up dairy and meat, you’ll look better and feel better

    • @mariaespiritu9512
      @mariaespiritu9512 Рік тому

      Yes, look for another doctor. Meat = heart disease and cancer and then he’ll prescribe pills after you get sick from eating meat. Also eat more fresh greens and beets all full of iron.

    • @pearlypawbeans
      @pearlypawbeans Рік тому

      Also maybe look into getting more fiber from fruits & veg? Also beans

    • @BigSlimyBlob
      @BigSlimyBlob 10 місяців тому

      That is good advice. Plant foods generally have extremely poor bioavailability of nutrients. Spinach, for example, contains a fair amount of iron, but your body isn't adapted to greens and can only get 1% to 2% of the iron content. Meat has lots of heme iron which is far more bioavailable.
      This is to be expected. For eight months out of the year, for hundreds of thousands of years, our ancestors ate literally nothing but meat, and plants only rarely and opportunistically the remaining four months. Meat is the food that our bodies are best adapted to. No wonder that Hong Kong, the place with the highest life expectancy on the planet, also has the highest meat consumption on the planet.
      If you're suffering mineral deficiencies, definitely try to eat less fiber. Fiber is indigestible, and an antinutrient: it chemically binds with some minerals so that your body cannot absorb those minerals. It also causes many digestion issues. This one hits me on a personal level: I have had multiple severe digestion issues for most of my life, and they all vanished completely when I stopped eating fiber. A 2012 experiment separated people with digestion issues into four groups who were fed different diets (high fiber, moderate fiber, low fiber, no fiber) and the less fiber they ate the fewer problems they had. The group that ate zero fiber literally had zero digestion issues, it made the graph look like it was missing data because that section was completely empty.

  • @oopssugar
    @oopssugar Рік тому +1

    Those who eat like this time stamp of 725 just call it eating too.... not intermittent fasting we just eat late one meal.

  • @aircamflyer
    @aircamflyer Рік тому

    The people in the blue zones have had this diet their entire lives. I'm wondering, as a senior, what immediate and long-term benefits people, 60 and older will have when changing to a blue zone diet?

    • @CHEFAJ
      @CHEFAJ  Рік тому

      Please send any questions to: help@chefaj.com

    • @questioneverything1776
      @questioneverything1776 11 місяців тому

      Better life and health than what you have now most likely . Any positive change in lifestyle will be good for your health

    • @BigSlimyBlob
      @BigSlimyBlob 10 місяців тому

      Not their entire lives. Okinawans lost access to their beloved pork for a few years due to the war, and had to eat purple sweet potatoes during that time. But they made massive efforts to import pigs, and now they are back to having pork as their traditional staple. People in Italy and Greece also had periods of poverty during which they had to eat far less meat.
      Realistically, very few people have been able to maintain the exact same diet for 100+ years.

  • @mariaryan-q7t
    @mariaryan-q7t Рік тому +1

    hardly used kitchen

  • @terrytari1891
    @terrytari1891 7 місяців тому +2

    Dan/AJ: Does Sweden have a BLUE ZONE? Because the Swedish small town of Vittsjö, Sweden, has the most 100-year-olds.

  • @waleskasabustamante6043
    @waleskasabustamante6043 Рік тому

    Legendas em português, please!

  • @shoshanachavab
    @shoshanachavab Рік тому +3

    So my mom lived until 102. She did all her gardening and housework and drove her car until about 87. She lived very frugally and ate very sparingly and never needed to go on a diet. The only illnesses she had were osteoporosis and arthritis and Parkinson’s from which she died.

    • @couchphotography8861
      @couchphotography8861 Рік тому

      Those are serious diseases, probably caused by what sounds like a near starvation diet!

    • @BigSlimyBlob
      @BigSlimyBlob 10 місяців тому +2

      My grandfather lived longer than that and he rode his bicycle past 100. He did live quite frugally as well. He ate pretty much as much as he wanted (he was a farmer) but he wasn't super hungry because he ate good food. A lot of meat from the farm, a few random veggies as decoration (though he did love garlic). As far as we know he just died in his sleep, no apparent cause.
      A quiet life of mild but frequent work, lots of time spent outdoors, away from the city, and high-quality unprocessed food. These things count for a lot.

  • @alannahri1385
    @alannahri1385 Рік тому +2

    Amazing all those countries in ur blue zone do not eat meat how did you make that movie u genius? Oh like Ancel Keys who through 13 countries out of his data.

  • @camillachristinenorveganus161
    @camillachristinenorveganus161 Рік тому +3

  • @crochetgram
    @crochetgram Рік тому

    Is it too late at 66 to make changes and influence my longevity?

    • @CHEFAJ
      @CHEFAJ  Рік тому +1

      It's never too late to make positive changes!

  • @Joseph1NJ
    @Joseph1NJ Рік тому +3

    Blue Zne Frozen meals? Ok, the ingredients do look good, and I'm sure they taste good. But the entire concept is antithetical to the way people in the blue zones eat, and Dan knows it. Besides, 7 bucks for only 300 calories, even for a moderately small dinner, you'd need at least two. Your money is better spent buying real whole food, and making your own meal. No one knows where these ingredients come from, how far they've traveled, how they were stored and preserved, etc. Other than that, I very much enjoy and respect his work. I just won't be buying any of these meals.

  • @questioneverything1776
    @questioneverything1776 11 місяців тому

    Disappointing to here you guys discuss fasting and not discuss the damages of Americans fasting when the focus is typically to do it for weight loss only as you’re essentially promoting starving and disordered eating which ends up pushing a lot of ppl into binge eating eventually. Please review the Minnesota Starvation Experiment and how the restriction unfortunately negatively affected many of those men the rest of their lives and some lost their lives. Many of our health issues is because many ppl are not eating out of physical hunger but instead eating out of emotion, boredom, or habit and because food is so abundant especially a lot of the cheap highly palatable unhealthy refined foods

    • @BigSlimyBlob
      @BigSlimyBlob 10 місяців тому

      The Minnesota Starvation Experiment primarily studied long-term caloric restriction, not fasting. Long-term caloric restriction is awful on the human body and, more importantly, the mind. However, the human body reacts very different to full fasting than it does to eating less. I'm not into fasting myself but I tried it for the personal experience (only short ones, no more than 5 days) and it was fine. Had to take some electrolytes on day 2 and 3 to avoid headaches and that's it.
      But yes, a lot of people have a highly unhealthy relationship with food, in large part because of bad diet and hyperpalatable and addictive foods. For most of my life I suffered from constant unbearable hunger, I would stuff myself to near-vomiting and feel immense anxiety because I was never satiated.
      For the last six years I have eaten a single meal a day. It fills me to about 20% or 25% of my capacity, so I haven't felt full in years. But I end every meal fully satiated. That's major. I'm never hungry anymore. 20 to 26 hours after my previous meal, I get the sense that it's roughly time to eat. That's it.

  • @terrytari1891
    @terrytari1891 7 місяців тому +1

    UA-cam Logo
    CHEF AJ loves your comment
    The Blue Zones Secrets for Living Longer with Dan Buettner | CHEF AJ
    @terrytari1891
    AJ: You get ALL the good guest! Dan Buettner is the PERSON of 2024 with his beautiful book about Blue Zones!!
    View hearted comment
    You're welcome AJ!

  • @DianeWilkins-j5m
    @DianeWilkins-j5m 7 місяців тому +1

    I just finished watch this on Netflix and I’m so inspired by he people he met. They’re active, mostly a plant based diet and they seem so mentally happy. He knocked it out of the park when he said if you can’t change someone’s mind, change their environment. I retired from a very toxic work place almost 5 years ago and since then I feel renewed. My wife and I have been plant based for almost 15 years but since I retired my diet has improved so much. I would stress eat, stuck behind a computer for hours a day. Having time for myself and working on me. Stay active, be mindful and eat well.