The placebo effect is so cool. It's wild how a fake magic bracelet was able to help people manage pain better than real medicine could. So many chronic conditions have a psychosomatic element that you could actually make a pretty strong argument for the use of placebo treatments in Dr surgeries.
Drs literally use placebos all the time. Most over the counter pain medications are placebos, with science saying they should only have a very minor effect on the nervous system. The medical community constantly employs placebos, they just don't tell you about at the front desk, because that would destroy the point of a placebo.
Yes, but not exactly as you’ve mentioned. It is known among surgeons to utilize placebos in order to prevent patients from developing an addiction to medications such as Fentanyl and others. They give them things like sugar pills. @@CharlesFreck
I was about to say THEY DO WORK! But they are actually an AMAZING TOOL to diagnose wether physical symptoms are due to something anatomically or something related to stress / depression / burn out etc. I actually am very greatfuk that a doctor confirmed to me that some medications I tried out were in my case only working due to placebo which gave me the knowldge I needed to adress my health concerns in a different manner withiut actually needing to suffer side effects of actual drugs. All those people probably used a lot of pain kilers that are horrible on your body and could instead do hypnotherapy, meditation or doing such changes as finding a new job etc. due to knowing it's not physiologically caused. There should be medications on the market that are registered placebos where only doctors can access the real informatjons about them being placebos fo actually help to diagnose people this way
I remember wearing Phitin and it gave me a ton of confidence. I had my best year ever, and I swore by them. When they were exposed for being fake and I couldn’t wear it the next year, I went on a huge slump. The Placebo Effect is crazy.
@@alpacalipsprofit9610 if I recall correctly, they wanted to ban it anyway because they had something against necklaces, so once they were just another necklace they had no reason not to ban it.
Someone did that balance test on me with the bracelet in a mall once. The reason it "works" is because the second time they try to throw you off balance, you already expect it so your brain anticipates it and makes sure you don't fall over. Had nothing to do with the bracelet.
Remember the yellow LIVESTRONG rubber bracelets that Lance Armstrong popularized? These bracelets did as much to improve health as those did, i.e., none at all.
Some girl I knew from high school worked in that. I knew the trick behind it. So when she first pushed me down without the band my body didn’t move and she said “never mind just go” and I walked away feeling smart. In retrospect, me being smart didn’t help my chances in getting with this girl. lol
Crazy having lived through this and remembering how this took root. One day the baseball kids at school were begging their parents to get them one. My mom got me one for Christmas that year and I wore it every day. Within the month damn near every student and teacher at school had one. Then like that, they were gone the next year. Haven’t thought about them since until today, thanks for making this video
Imagine your trainer tells you “Hey you know your ankle’s hurting, how about I do this new surgery I came up with on you in our locker room?” and you actually say yes and the team okays it. Insanity.
I never believed it at all because I always saw it as a flimsy rubber bracelet, because it is, so I never bought one. It's fun and good to have my own mind capable of rational thinking, my own thoughts, the ability to ask questions, and problem-solving skills. The majority can't relate.
I begged for one as a kid, I don’t even think I thought it did anything but I wanted to fit in with everyone else. My dad was outraged by the thought of a $30 rubber bracelet but he eventually caved in. Wore it for like three days then lost it- he was so pissed haha
Bro same. Except we just got the "used" ones from the older kids for like $1. Funny thinking back that there's pretty much no difference. I remember my sister's friends freaking out after seeing me wearing one when I later got home.
Part of the Power Balance trick was for the balance test, the demonstrators would push down closer to the shoulder when the person was wearing the bracelet, and closer to the hand when they weren't. They used the same amount of force, but had more leverage when the bracelet wasn't being worn.
Tried to get me once when I was like 16. Guy gave a firm push that I wasn’t expecting and I stumbled. He puts the bracelet on me and pushes me again and when I don’t stumble he says it’s the bracelet doing its job 😂😂😂 definitely not the fact that I was expecting to be pushed now
Proving the point that no one knows everything. Apparently she didn't ask if it had been proved in a double blind study. The science teachers would have asked. I'm one, and I argued with kids in those days about how a printed hologram could be affecting the fluid in their balance-sensing tubes in their ears. Of course, arguing with 15 year-olds did no good.
The same thing happened to me. When I was in elementary school, all the teachers, students, and parents were so convinced these were real. It made me feel like the black sheep, even though I was right the whole time. It helped me realize that just because someone is an adult doesn't mean they have all the knowledge.
As a 90s kid, the go to scam jewelry for my generation was mood rings. Genuinely had us thinking a cheap ring from a flea market could read our minds just because it changed from red to blue 😂
I worked at the printing press that made the power balance holographic stickers. They were referred to around the shop as the "snake oil stickers." I would estimate we shipped around 250,000,000 PB holographic stickers to China. People will believe anything.
There's a great VSauce MindField episode where they explore the idea of someone healing from nothing more than the perception of improving health. These bracelets/necklaces didn't have a measurable effect, but they allowed the wearers to believe they were going to get better. That sort of permission we have internally actually plays a significant part in the healing process
God I remember in high school I saw everyone on my football and baseball team wearing them, so I asked why everyone had one/what it was, and when they told me, my exact reaction was something like "That sounds dumb as fuck, there's no way that's real. We're 2-19. It's not helping you with shit". Made me very unpopular but I was happy to see the next year that they all say the headlines about it being a scam lol
growing up I didn't even know these things were called, we called them "focus bands". my teammates (baseball) said it helped them focus at the plate so I just started wearing them. I didn't feel anything but I kept wearing mine anyway because it was my team colors. This was definitely a throwback to see them again I had forgotten all about them
I was trying to remember these things. Couldn't, but when you said "focus bands" it kinda came back. I remember the focus bands. I remember a friend who was still playing ball said "I don't know, it helps me focus"
Oh god, I remember these dumb bracelets and I remember how even as a kid I thought how silly people who wore them were. Once my friend back in primary school got one of these that said "respect" and he claimed that he could feel how it "added" respect. I was like "dude, how? Respect is something that other people give you based on who you are. Respect doesn't come from a rubber band around your wrist." But still, he claimed that he it was "adding" him respect and that he was playing basketball better because of that (despite the fact that he was still missing nearly every shot). Good times.
This was the first time I understood why cults existed. I remember getting one, and my friend clowned me, saying I wasted my money. There were doctors who said it didn't work. Credible ones! I couldn't get my mind past it with so many influential people promoting it. One day, I just questioned myself for thinking, why are doctors lying? One of my professors at the time said that celebrities are managed by so many people due to their time being limited. Those people at times aren't good at their job. The bottom line is $$$. As long as the upside of the $$$ appears to cost more than the downside, justify it being worth it.
All my teammates wore them in baseball, but I hated wearing any jewelry while playing. I remember saying to my friend, why not wear 2 or 3 or 4 if they really work? He said "That'd be too much power" we both laughed and he stopped wearing his neckless a few days later.
@@poetac15 Until they started to charge $168 for x100 times the BS, because greed. That's the problem with these scams is that no amount of dirty money is ever enough.
I'm shocked you included the Scam School episode with Brian Brushwood and didn't go into the reasoning those holographic bracelets worked in the demos when they were trying to get new customers. It was all about how you are manipulating the person when trying to get them to lose balance. If you pushed towards their feet they would stand fine, if you pushed away, they would fall over.
It's actually even simpler than that. It's just physical cueing. You can do it in a variety of ways. Hold your arms out see how far you can rotate each direction. Rub your belly and sides for 10 seconds and do it again. I watched a PT demonstrate this with just touching a persons ear. Reflexive response is an amazing thing
@@_CoachWI think it also has to do with the person anticipating how they’re going to be moved and how hard they’re going to be pushed the 2nd time around. Obviously, it’s going to be easier to maintain your balance when you already know the forces you’re going to have to counter to do so versus having to adjust on the fly. To me, this makes more sense than assuming every single person across the country who performed the test on someone else was already aware of how the trick worked. Like the videos said, people were showing their friends, family, coworkers, etc. the same balance trick and I highly doubt they were all fully aware it had nothing to do with the bracelet considering a good portion of the people who bought and wore one genuinely believed it was literally curing their physical ailments. If it were only salesmen performing these demonstrations than that would be one thing but it was mostly people who probably bought one after the trick worked on them.
@@_CoachW Okay sure, there's a valid point in what you said, but, in the video I was talking about they make the point that I said. I'm not arguing, just commenting that it was left out of this summary even though the video was included.
I mean, placebo is a crazy real effect. You can have legitimate aches from actual strain, that begin to feel better because the object helps you train and convince your brain to ignore it. I literally use placebo objects, knowing that refocusing your brain towards the effects you want, makes you more likely to use better effort. (I just don't pay crazy amounts of money lmao, it's essentially "lucky objects" haha)
@sharpieman2035 @mkbzam placebo/nocebo absolutely does works, even if you know its only in your head. its why healthcare professionals try to use positive language in favour for medication, while trying to use objective language while describing side effect (example: "in rare cases, some ppl experience xy side effect" instead of "you may experience xy side effect") if you want a more practical example, imagine you have a headache. you take some ibuprofen for it, and after a couple of minutes you already feel better, eventhough pharmocologically speaking it shouldnt act for another 25 minutes. just you knowing you took something that is going to help you lessens your symptoms. sorry i cant really go into more detail, its all i can really remember after a lecture and a (very short) journal club😅
I'm guessing the lawyer found them rather than them finding the lawyer. From what I know, big civil suits like this get built by putting out ads asking for anyone who feels they've been scammed to join in.
you are underestimating the power of money, the moment a lawyer approached these guys and said "I can help you sue these guys for millions" they jumped into the idea
dude you dont understand how widespread they were. when he says everyone had them he means EVERYONE i remember seeing them at school all the time. Honestly i never understood wtf they were supposed to be but a friend gave me one and i wore it for a couple weeks i think. He told me it had a “microchip computer” in it and when i asked what it did he said something like “reads your body signs”? They were all over the place dude. Kids loved them and adults wore them.
I remember i was in middle school when i asked my best friend who played baseball what the necklace and wrist band was for and he said for “better balance and helps me relax my muscles” all i kept thinking was how can that even do that and i was an athlete myself playing soccer and that was me as a kid now i cant imagine adults thinking this shit actually worked lol
I didn't believe it either at first til my friends had me try it on, and did the test on me. Therefore it didn't sound as crazy if there was what we believed to be proof.
@@JimBakkerBonus Well if your friend attempts to push you with out the bracelet, and you almost fell but when they do it you again with the bracelet on, and you didn't fall, I would consider that proof enough. You're also ignoring context which would be the fact that no one knew for sure if it was a lie/scam or not . So this "test" is all we had to verify four our selves thus it would be considered proof if the bracelet supposedly did what it was said to be able to do.
I remember wearing one and I was laying down that pipe. If you know what I'm saying man. I was clapping those cheeks like you wouldn't believe I was giving it the good old pound town if you know what I'm saying. Oh my God I love those things now. Give me a quesadilla cuz I'm a little dehydrated
I don’t remember Phiten being a thing, but I very much remember Power Balance. I worked at a mall at that time, and those bracelets were everywhere. One person I knew who sold them at a kiosk gave me one, and I knew right away it was bullshit. I cut it open, and when I saw that it was just a holographic sticker like you’d see on a baseball cap, I knew my instincts were right. I did more research into them so I could tell everyone I knew not to fall for it.
From celebrity endorsements, stadium naming rights, and mass adoption through correlation & not causation, this is eerily similar to FTX and its collapse.
This video unlocked a deep memory for me. I remember people wearing these bands growing up - and I always thought it was pretty strange how everyone seemed to swear by them. The more you know
I remember being 12 years old and a girl in my class having one on. I asked her what it was and she gave me an explanation and I remember, even though I was 12, I already thought it was complete BS 😂
I graduated high school in 2006. Our entire baseball team rocked them like crazy, especially the "twister" variety. I didn't even play baseball or any sport when I was in high school, I was a hardcore skateboarder. I bought a couple. And I'm not and never been one to believe in those copper bracelets and all that crap still shilled to this day. Phiten became trendy to wear so we all had one! I kinda miss it lol
Bro we had chicks wearing them too. Don't think the "power" band or whatever really became trendy around my neck of the woods. I swear every kid in school had a phiten and at least two to three Aeropostale shirts, maybe some puka shell necklaces.
@@Shermuel same.. I think the power band was after my time, I don't recall it at all in the zeitgeist.. but I feel like it was definitely an as-seen-on-tv, mall, Kardashian Era right after my time
there were girls on my daughters 6u softball team this year with the twister and I had immediate flashbacks to select baseball and all our color coordinated phitens bahahahahaha
I remember seeing these bracelets on everyone in my school, mostly worn by athletes. It is crazy how gullible people are, and how they meld with people around them, kids and adults alike. The placebo effect is a hell of a drug
Yeah everybody thought the power balance bracelet was something magical. When in reality it was a rubber band with a piece of paper in the center. Cant believe we all paid money for that thing
@@grimreefer213 that’s not what social proof is. Sounds like you looked it up and didn’t comprehend what it was and came off in a condescending way about it. It’s not about validation, it’s the sudden assimilation of the whole. A real man would’ve accepted the information, rather than claiming to know something they didn’t know and still get it wrong, even though there wasn’t even a question being asked.
This is why a lot of chronic pain is psychological. I wish more doctors would attack all sides of pain. A lot of times pain can be healed with therapy, not opiates.
I'm so glad that you posted this. I never knew it was this widespread, but I did come across it once when a friend of mine and I were helping to set up for a local marathon that we helped to run. We were talking with one of the vendors who was selling these bracelets. He offered this test with my friend, first pushing him off balance without the bracelet and then having him put the bracelet on and then claiming that it was helping him to stay more balanced. I told him I wanted to try pushing on his arm with a power bracelet on and immediately pushed him off balance. The salesman immediately got mad at me saying that I was pushing down on his arm incorrectly. It was pretty funny to see how quickly it was unmasked as a scam when he wasn't the one that got to administer the test.
Had a similar experience myself. It was back in 2007 at the state fair and i remember, because our group of four friends had just recently graduated and only one of us could drive at the time. We were all at this booth where some peddlers were trying to sell these balance bracelets, and one of my friends had gotten sampled on. They did the same spiel, having him T-pose and pushing him off balance by pressing down on his extend arms before putting the bracelet on him, and doing the same thing but to no avail. I knew exactly what they were doing and after seeing my friend forced off balance a few more times while becoming immovable whenever the bracelet was on him, my friend actually fell for it and was about to buy one. I stopped him, dragged our party away, and outside of the area i told him they that were pulling on him instead of pushing, which was why he was going off balance. He wasn't convinced and the other two were curious as well, so we had to do an impromptu test right there outside of the booth area. Sure enough, even with just a light tug on his arm while pressing it down, he would immediate topple over while remaining completely balanced otherwise. To this day, I'm still amazed at how many people fell for this scam. EDIT: *many
dang you brought back a memory i completely forgot about. this was around late elementary school for me and i remember everyone who played sports was obsessed with them
I wore a Phiten necklace all the time playing baseball and hockey growing up. Our league even had to change rules surrounding jewelry because so many kids wanted to wear them. Even if it was obviously bullshit, I think I got mine for like $30, so I didn't really care. I've even dug it out a few times because I still kinda get nostalgia for how it looks, and it still fits me.
@@smackmeinthetree3854I could see that. Especially with the fields I remember playing on routine ground ball pop up catch you in the chest would leave a real nice imprint if you’re wearing metal.
These stupid jocks at my school had them, they called me stupid for not understanding the science behind it. I remember salesmen were trying to sell me one at a fair and I could tell he was faking pushing me hard the 2nd time around.
@@lmaoSach Definitions from Oxford Languages dumb adjective comparative adjective: dumber 1. temporarily unable or unwilling to speak. "they stood dumb while the attacker poured out a stream of abuse" 2. OFFENSIVE•DATED View definition (of animals) unable to speak as a natural state and thus regarded as helpless or deserving pity. 3. INFORMAL•NORTH AMERICAN stupid. "a dumb question"
@@MelodicTurtleMetalAre people claiming Stanley cups have a magic medical benefit? If not, it’s definitely not dumber. This is about as dumb as it can possibly get.
@@MelodicTurtleMetal Said like someone who wasn't around then. Stay in school, kid. Er, wait. That didn't help us any.. Eat your veg and do your studies, at least.
a lot of athletes are just fist puppets, because they're getting paid. unfortunately, 99.9% of society of morally bankrupt and can be swayed by dollar amounts instead of asking "why or what i'm selling".
Like the TB12 diet BS and the Russell Wilson "concussion water" (no, that is NOT a typo). If the TB12 diet is what allowed Tom Brady to play football for so long, then why aren't 90% of athletes dedicating themselves to it? Because it's a sham. Dude was almost certainly on PEDs like HGH and more, and I'm a huge Patriots fan who grew up less than an hr from the stadium during the start of their dynasty.
had a power balance bracelet growing up playing tennis, was fully aware that it didnt do anything directly but kept wearing it because it was popular and i was superstitious about keeping it on. Wore it for years until it broke when i got it caught on something. This was a huge nostalgia shock since i had completely forgot these existed lol
Placebo + confirmation bias at work here and these products ingeniously exploit it. if you had superstitions then the product most definitely didn't work.
I worked in retail at a Six Flags in 2012, and we sold those Phi-Ten Tornado necklaces in a few of our gift shops. We sold a lot of them because in the park, they were priced at $12.99, while local sporting goods stores were selling them for at least $25, maybe even $40 or $50. It was so weird to have, like, 13-year-olds coming up to my register and saying these necklaces were so cheap in our stores (especially since most stuff in theme parks is marked up a lot). I think by then, they were a status symbol for kids and teens, but it’s nice to get some context from this video for what was going on there.
As a former high school and college athlete, I'd just like to expound on the whole superstition thing. With the exception of a small minority, it's not necessarily that superstitious athletes believe doing certain things will "make them better." It's about getting yourself in the right mindset. I had tons of little quirks that I would do, but not once did I ever believe that any of them made me stronger, quicker, or physically better in any way shape or form. Many of them were to just give myself a routine, and if I followed the routine, it kept me in the right mental space, or gave me a sort of focal "zero point." Or during a slump or big run, making a change (like the gold thong) gave you a focus point to prevent overthinking, which can often lead to poor performance. So, the vast majority of these athletes don't believe there's anything magical or superpower related, they realize it's just a mental guide of sorts.
Yeah, pretty much just that. Although, with things like the bracelet, it was often more of an aesthetics situation, or, at the level of MLB players, getting paid to promote them. I played D1 basketball and baseball. It would be much like how I had set way of shooting free throws. Always did the same routine, so that making the shot would hopefully become routine. I'm sure it sounds stupid to a lot of people, that's fine, but it could be something as simple as I wore the bracelet once, had good game, so I decided to keep wearing it. Like I said, no one really believes there's anything magical happening, but when you have a good game, you want to mimic as much of what led up to it as you can. Not to recreate "magic" but more of a sense of trying to make it so you feel like you did before. A lot of good sports performance is based off of feel. And when everything feels good, you're probably going to get a better performance. It's not going to turn you into a better player, but it could get a better performance out of the player that you are. @@threestans9096
@@alihenderson5910 I see no problem with wearing masks, even after the whole vaccination campaign occured I still wear one due to pollen and my sinuses not mixing well. I honestly feel stupid it took until covid for me to wear one.
Fun fact from someone with advanced science training in human performance. All the bells and whistles on smart watches for performance, such as tracking sleep quality, are essentially useless. Another fun fact, when they give people a placebo and tell them they are getting steroids they perform exceptionally well. Both cases show that the placebo and nocebo effect are very strong.
Id like to know more behind where you’re coming from for the performance trackers. I like having long-term goals and being able to see gradual changes over longer periods of time. I feel like that is useful to me. Open to learn more
I remember being too poor for most of the latest trends including this one. I remember how many kids believed they were better with them on, this is why I loved skateboarding because no one on a skateboard believed in a bracelet making you better or less likely to get hurt.
Curt Schilling also forgot to mention he was on copious amounts of Vicodin while pitching that ALCS game that has also known to make a person feel like a superhero as I can definitely vouch for that. (For about 3 hours anyway)
5:38 As someone who’s went through the end of elementary and into middle school at the time I’ve literally never heard of this thing but I remember the wrist band
I wrote a college paper / presentation on this in about 2011 because we were talking about pseudoscience in one of my classes (Science Teacher Methods). One of my dumber classmates refused to believe that they were fake because so many MLB players wore them and loved them, despite the fact that dissolving titanium in water was impossible. The dude went on to fail the Ohio Dept Ed test for Science education twice before finally passing it. As far as I know he taught for 5 years before quitting. I have most of my college papers saved, but I wasn't able to find that one unfortunately.
In 2010 I used to have a job at a mall kiosk selling a knock off version of these. Everyone selling it knew it was bs. We also did a strength, flexibility, and balance test/demonstration on people to sell them on the idea that it worked. The test/demonstration we did was a little different from the one in the video but the idea was the same. Its ceazy how many people fell for it, buying 5 or 6 of them at $25 a pop for the whole family. I had friends who believed it worked, so to prove them it doesnt, i would do the tests on them with a regual rubber band or scrunchy to show it works regardless
They were called Energy Armor correct? The salesman seemed more convincing and more well spoken than the Power Balance ones. I remember doing research about how the tests were done and where to apply the pressure and center of gravity. I basically did a reverse demonstration of the ones in the video and convinced my friend that his band made him worse and he wasted $60 😂
I remember my mom was so adamant Power Balance worked. She tried the balancing test with me and i was not convinced. Im glad i never fell for that shit lol
Mark Cuban throwing them away was a cherry on top at the end of this vid. I was in middle school when these were popular and would remember a lot of school kids and baseball kids had them and swore by them. I was 14 maybe at the time and I always had my doubts and always refused to believe this helped. Well made video and very entertaining.
I have heard that a lot of athletes do kind of a willing suspension of disbelief when it comes to this kind of thing because they are well aware of the power of the palcebo effect. So they will take any gimmick without much question, because at some level, it can work for them.
There's no reason not too for them. If anything helps get your head right try it, if you find something works keep doing it. It doesn't actually matter as long as you think it works. A $100 necklace which does nothing more than boost your confidence probably makes as much of a difference as a lot of very expensive gear that folks happily fork out for. E.g. I play slow pitch I just bought a monsta will it help me hit better probably not, am I hitting better yes. I feel more confident at plate my numbers have significantly increased I don't actually know if it's the bat or me but I'm fairly sure when it comes time to get a new bat I'll be getting the same one 😂
This was a great episode. You guys hit out of the park. I'm a fan of football and baseball but I knew nothing about these products. I do remember seeing a lot of ball players starting to wear necklaces about 20 years ago but thought it was just a fashion trend and nothing more. I learned a lot from this video.
I remember in middle school telling a group of kids that these things were fake, they all said if it was then why do all the athletes wear them. They also accused me of cheating the push test when I pushed one of them over
Love that you did a vid on this. I remember being like 10 in travel ball and seeing all the rich kids had these. Even at that age I was always like, "no way those do anything" lmao
There's still a Phiten retail shop at a huge famous shopping mall near my place, also at other popular shopping malls. Even a website promoting various products that can be purchased online.
I used to have one of those Phiten necklaces and it 100% made me feel better at baseball. I never thought it made me stronger or faster, but I had noticeably better balance with it on than with it off. I would even stand on on foot with it on and with it off and it was consistently longer wearing the necklace. Pretty crazy placebo Edit: it was the tornado model for anyone curious
I remember the power balance bands and they were crazy popular when I was in high school from about 2010-2012. We even noticed that there were knockoffs and we wanted to make sure we were buying the legit version of the scam 😂
I remember my friend raving about these things and I did a presentation in biology class all about the placebo effect and how these types of things were scams it’s crazy to me how many people bought into it
Placebos can have incredible effects on people, hell even your mood can have impacts on your physical health. People who are depressed tend to get sick more often and have less energy which leads to a lack of motivation to do things which usually compounds with lack of exercise and sunlight. It's honestly pretty fascinating stuff
Between these things and the mood rings that changed colors "depending on your mood", we used to fall for anything lol I remember these popping up and seemingly dissapearing relatively quickly back when I was in high school
Same goes for supplements and fashion What ive learned over the years is that wealthy people are actually easy marks for scammers just as much as the general public if not more so. This is a prime example. Or how so many rappers get finessed out so much cash on over priced clothes and jewelry or get hustled by buying bootleg stuff.
in fairness i think the point of buying overpriced jewlery and clothes is that its overpriced, its a status symbol. its still dumb but theres no false claims being made. supplements on the other hand, yeah celebrities fall for that shit like crazy lmao
Most people claim to be INDIVIDUALS while acting/looking exactly the same as every other 'individual' ... People are cooked,,,, always have been always will be
Рік тому+22
I’ll never forget the first time I tried on the power balance bracelet at the mall and literally felt my arm go numb. Getting it at the mall was the first red flag
That balance test also relies on recruitment always being stronger after the 2nd kinesiological resistance test. Average is about 40% better recruitment almost immediately upon second attempt. Muscles wake up to their work.
My first job was working for one of these kiosks in the mall. I quit the first day after my boss was trying to convince an elderly woman that it would get rid of her vertigo and she would be able to throw away her medication 😊
I remember seeing a bunch of the necklaces at a friends house and asked him why all baseball players wear them, since he used to play baseball. He kind of shrugged it off and didn’t really give me an answer, and I always found it funny. Now I know he was just embarrassed to tell me he had spent a bunch of money on a scam 😂😂
Well if all the baseball players still wore them, and you had no idea what it was even about clearly most people had no idea it was a scam yet therefore your friend truly didn't know...IMO
Great example of why just because someone is rich. Doesn’t make them smart, or know anything. Same goes for famous/celebrities. Don’t just blatantly follow what mainstream says!
I remember when these things showed up on Shark Tank and Mark Cuban immediately called the guy a scammer and refused to even take a sample or hear the guy out.
I remember that one lol. He just straight up didn’t amuse him. He just clear out said it’s a scam to all the sharks lol. I laughed so much at that guy lol
OMG this is cray especially when so many people tell my girlfriend's fibromyalgia pain isn't real and is in her head, yet they believe this sh*t?!¬ WE'RE LIVIN IN THE MATRIX FFS
I've always wondered what the deal was with those "rope necklaces" I'd always see ball players wearing. Anything developed by a chiropractor should immediately be thrown in the garbage.
This unlocked a memory I have of being in 8th grade and going with my whole class to the highschool we were going to the following year where they were holding basically a job fair for all the extra curriculars. There was a little booth for orchestra, photography, all the sports, and I stg there was a power balance booth too doing a demonstration with one of those yoga balance balls. I was extremely skeptical and didn’t think it would actually improve my balance but it was in fact easier to balance with the bracelet on. I never believed it was because of the bracelet. Absolutely wild that they had marketing in public schools around that time.
With all these 10 -12 year contracts being relatively new in the baseball world we dont know how well these contracts will turn out especially towards the end. You should do a video where you go back and look at star players of the past and see what would have happened if you gave them these long contracts. I would really like to see the outcome or consequences of these long contracts to see if the are worth it or not.
I always knew they were junk but I had friends that swore by them! Everyone wore them at my gym and you even saw them on everyone at clubs and bars. In Philly, they were pretty big. I don’t know if people actually believed they worked, it was cool to wear or they just wanted to believe it was real?
I remember being in elementary school and this was one of the first things that made me lose respect for humanity. It was clearly fake, yet even the smarter adults around me were hooked.
Placebo is often thought of as a "bad" thing where as some in the medical field would say it an invaluable tool. Our brains are capable of a lot and if it can be tricked to do something beneficial without some form of intrusive intervention then what's so bad about that?
Can you please make a video about Mark Eichorn please. He's been my pitching coach for 8 years now and has always had a love for the game of Baseball. Having the best ERA in a rookie season and also using his own unique pitching style would seem like a really good idea for a video. Much love❤
A channel named Look, It’s Baseball made a video on him. It’s really good and his wife has the pinned comment I believe. The channel isn’t as good as this one imo but worth checking out the vid
The placebo effect is so cool. It's wild how a fake magic bracelet was able to help people manage pain better than real medicine could. So many chronic conditions have a psychosomatic element that you could actually make a pretty strong argument for the use of placebo treatments in Dr surgeries.
Drs literally use placebos all the time. Most over the counter pain medications are placebos, with science saying they should only have a very minor effect on the nervous system. The medical community constantly employs placebos, they just don't tell you about at the front desk, because that would destroy the point of a placebo.
@@CharlesFreckname one over the counter medicine that is prescribed by a doctor that is placebo
Yes, but not exactly as you’ve mentioned. It is known among surgeons to utilize placebos in order to prevent patients from developing an addiction to medications such as Fentanyl and others. They give them things like sugar pills. @@CharlesFreck
I was about to say THEY DO WORK! But they are actually an AMAZING TOOL to diagnose wether physical symptoms are due to something anatomically or something related to stress / depression / burn out etc.
I actually am very greatfuk that a doctor confirmed to me that some medications I tried out were in my case only working due to placebo which gave me the knowldge I needed to adress my health concerns in a different manner withiut actually needing to suffer side effects of actual drugs.
All those people probably used a lot of pain kilers that are horrible on your body and could instead do hypnotherapy, meditation or doing such changes as finding a new job etc. due to knowing it's not physiologically caused.
There should be medications on the market that are registered placebos where only doctors can access the real informatjons about them being placebos fo actually help to diagnose people this way
was looking for this comment haha
I remember wearing Phitin and it gave me a ton of confidence. I had my best year ever, and I swore by them. When they were exposed for being fake and I couldn’t wear it the next year, I went on a huge slump. The Placebo Effect is crazy.
Why couldn't you wear it? Seems weird to ban something for not giving people an advantage
@@alpacalipsprofit9610 if I recall correctly, they wanted to ban it anyway because they had something against necklaces, so once they were just another necklace they had no reason not to ban it.
@@alpacalipsprofit9610because they would be laughed at for still wearing it
@@alpacalipsprofit9610you would just get bullied for still having it on until you blend right back into the rest of the sheep herd
It's more on psychological effect.
Someone did that balance test on me with the bracelet in a mall once. The reason it "works" is because the second time they try to throw you off balance, you already expect it so your brain anticipates it and makes sure you don't fall over. Had nothing to do with the bracelet.
Remember the yellow LIVESTRONG rubber bracelets that Lance Armstrong popularized? These bracelets did as much to improve health as those did, i.e., none at all.
@@SayAhh I do remember those. You're not wrong lol
Some girl I knew from high school worked in that. I knew the trick behind it. So when she first pushed me down without the band my body didn’t move and she said “never mind just go” and I walked away feeling smart. In retrospect, me being smart didn’t help my chances in getting with this girl. lol
@TETITO14 Yeah, I think you might've blew it 😂
@TETITO14 appearing gullible wouldn't have helped you either.
Wow a chiropractor with a scam? Ya don't say 😂 😂 😂
Crazy having lived through this and remembering how this took root. One day the baseball kids at school were begging their parents to get them one. My mom got me one for Christmas that year and I wore it every day. Within the month damn near every student and teacher at school had one. Then like that, they were gone the next year. Haven’t thought about them since until today, thanks for making this video
it was the fidget spinner of the 2000's
I remember selling these at school, after stealing them from five below.
😊
@@ribeiroWilliambefore the energy bracelets it was actually silly bands. Ya know... the color rubber bands
@fI1cker huh?
This would all be crazy if baseball really did exist
I went to a hot dog park and spent about 6 hours there. Never even realized a baseball was taking place.
So true.
So funny…,
Even funnier the 63th time!
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Imagine your trainer tells you “Hey you know your ankle’s hurting, how about I do this new surgery I came up with on you in our locker room?” and you actually say yes and the team okays it. Insanity.
That’s probably not even allowed under the CBA now
Think of the amount of pain killers he was on during that game. He probably felt like Superman.
Baseball players are the weirdest, craziest, dumbest people I swear
Arguably the craziest thing about this whole video💀😱🤯
That shit was wild man, I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. Kurt Schilling is a maniac.
The fact that there is a a single person on this planet who heard the description of how that works and DIDN'T think it was a scam is just wild
Anybody with the ability to reason saw it was a scam
I never believed it at all because I always saw it as a flimsy rubber bracelet, because it is, so I never bought one. It's fun and good to have my own mind capable of rational thinking, my own thoughts, the ability to ask questions, and problem-solving skills. The majority can't relate.
I begged for one as a kid, I don’t even think I thought it did anything but I wanted to fit in with everyone else. My dad was outraged by the thought of a $30 rubber bracelet but he eventually caved in. Wore it for like three days then lost it- he was so pissed haha
real
Bro same. Except we just got the "used" ones from the older kids for like $1. Funny thinking back that there's pretty much no difference. I remember my sister's friends freaking out after seeing me wearing one when I later got home.
10 dollars a day clearly
LOL
We are all with your dad in this situation.
I remember trying to ask the jocks in high school how these worked and their attempts at an explanation were always hilarious
thanks for sharing
thanks for sharing
yall mustve worn them huh 😂@@Andrew-lcy
U got beat up huh
don’t ever say the jocks in highschool. idk you but i imagine a short little virgin now. and no i didn’t wear these i graduated in 2022
Part of the Power Balance trick was for the balance test, the demonstrators would push down closer to the shoulder when the person was wearing the bracelet, and closer to the hand when they weren't. They used the same amount of force, but had more leverage when the bracelet wasn't being worn.
I bought one immediately after they tried that on me 😂
My highschool assistant baseball coach tried that bs on us while he tried selling us some bs water that he clearly got duped into investing in. 😂
I remember someone trying to sell these on Shark Tank a couple years back did the same trick.
Tried to get me once when I was like 16. Guy gave a firm push that I wasn’t expecting and I stumbled. He puts the bracelet on me and pushes me again and when I don’t stumble he says it’s the bracelet doing its job 😂😂😂 definitely not the fact that I was expecting to be pushed now
Same thing they did with those good feet arch supports, claimed it made your foot balance perfect 😂
I remember arguing about this with my math teacher, when I was in high school. She vehemently defended it and I lost whatever respect I had for her.
Proving the point that no one knows everything. Apparently she didn't ask if it had been proved in a double blind study. The science teachers would have asked. I'm one, and I argued with kids in those days about how a printed hologram could be affecting the fluid in their balance-sensing tubes in their ears. Of course, arguing with 15 year-olds did no good.
@@daveswaney5460 He's saying his teacher was the one believing this crap. Not the student.
Cringe
Yeah, was a great litmus test for whether someone possessed true sentience or was just an NPC.
The same thing happened to me. When I was in elementary school, all the teachers, students, and parents were so convinced these were real. It made me feel like the black sheep, even though I was right the whole time. It helped me realize that just because someone is an adult doesn't mean they have all the knowledge.
As a 90s kid, the go to scam jewelry for my generation was mood rings. Genuinely had us thinking a cheap ring from a flea market could read our minds just because it changed from red to blue 😂
They just measure body temperature.
@@scottlepot Nope, i am correct.
But at least looked cool and changed color. The Power Balance looks like a concert bracelet
@@scottlepot from now on, don't be dumb. Instead, be smart.
Mine were silly bands. The colorful wrist bands that came in all different shapes . Such as cartoon characters
I remember my whole team getting these and we still were trash 😂
same
Same quarterback was wearing this n shit getting smacked n throwing interceptions
😂😂😂😂
the other team wear double
Clearly you forgot to change it to Wumbo
I worked at the printing press that made the power balance holographic stickers. They were referred to around the shop as the "snake oil stickers."
I would estimate we shipped around 250,000,000 PB holographic stickers to China.
People will believe anything.
Kinda like what you commented? 😅
@@PaytonDowns😂😂😂😂 Touché
@@PaytonDownsAw, you fell for them. Bless.
The Kings' Arena almost being named after a snakeoil company is about the most Kings thing ever.
still better than crypto arena. at least with powerbalance you got a rubber band
Bangbros arena
There's a great VSauce MindField episode where they explore the idea of someone healing from nothing more than the perception of improving health. These bracelets/necklaces didn't have a measurable effect, but they allowed the wearers to believe they were going to get better. That sort of permission we have internally actually plays a significant part in the healing process
Yep there's an extreme amount of evidence in the world that our perception of sickness is makes it better or worse
What is it called
@@Yvngflexr placebo effect
Placebo effect
And even when they told the person it was a placebo going in, the effect still worked.
God I remember in high school I saw everyone on my football and baseball team wearing them, so I asked why everyone had one/what it was, and when they told me, my exact reaction was something like "That sounds dumb as fuck, there's no way that's real. We're 2-19. It's not helping you with shit". Made me very unpopular but I was happy to see the next year that they all say the headlines about it being a scam lol
Smart man knows what to say, wise man knows when to say it😂
BAHAHAHAHA!
😂 showed they asses
@@Clemfandang0 So OP was smart AND wise huh?
@@orppranator5230what was the benefit of him saying it?
"It makes us play better"
"We're 2-19"
growing up I didn't even know these things were called, we called them "focus bands". my teammates (baseball) said it helped them focus at the plate so I just started wearing them. I didn't feel anything but I kept wearing mine anyway because it was my team colors. This was definitely a throwback to see them again I had forgotten all about them
I was trying to remember these things. Couldn't, but when you said "focus bands" it kinda came back. I remember the focus bands. I remember a friend who was still playing ball said "I don't know, it helps me focus"
Oh god, I remember these dumb bracelets and I remember how even as a kid I thought how silly people who wore them were. Once my friend back in primary school got one of these that said "respect" and he claimed that he could feel how it "added" respect.
I was like "dude, how? Respect is something that other people give you based on who you are. Respect doesn't come from a rubber band around your wrist."
But still, he claimed that he it was "adding" him respect and that he was playing basketball better because of that (despite the fact that he was still missing nearly every shot). Good times.
+respect
Mission Passed
Respect +
You should have shown him more respect
Placebo effect is real. So it did do something
Tf is this copy pasta 😂
This was the first time I understood why cults existed. I remember getting one, and my friend clowned me, saying I wasted my money. There were doctors who said it didn't work. Credible ones! I couldn't get my mind past it with so many influential people promoting it. One day, I just questioned myself for thinking, why are doctors lying?
One of my professors at the time said that celebrities are managed by so many people due to their time being limited. Those people at times aren't good at their job. The bottom line is $$$. As long as the upside of the $$$ appears to cost more than the downside, justify it being worth it.
Also shows how those "organic food only" or "carnivore" dieters look and believe.
Not having chemicals in your food is not remotely similar to buying into junk science.@@ebscoHOSTpub
All my teammates wore them in baseball, but I hated wearing any jewelry while playing. I remember saying to my friend, why not wear 2 or 3 or 4 if they really work? He said "That'd be too much power" we both laughed and he stopped wearing his neckless a few days later.
man...all you need is something to catch a wave and cash out. fidget spinners and those poppers kids have..... cashout
Trump supporters are the perfect example of a cult
The placebo affect is an amazing thing
Not always a bad thing. If a $30 scam makes you feel better that seems like a win 😂
@@poetac15 Until they started to charge $168 for x100 times the BS, because greed. That's the problem with these scams is that no amount of dirty money is ever enough.
Yup. Take those bracelets away from a player mid game and try to tell me it didn't make a difference.
@@JBob08take away necklaces (crosses) and the angst would be very loud.
"Effect"
I'm shocked you included the Scam School episode with Brian Brushwood and didn't go into the reasoning those holographic bracelets worked in the demos when they were trying to get new customers. It was all about how you are manipulating the person when trying to get them to lose balance. If you pushed towards their feet they would stand fine, if you pushed away, they would fall over.
It's actually even simpler than that. It's just physical cueing. You can do it in a variety of ways. Hold your arms out see how far you can rotate each direction. Rub your belly and sides for 10 seconds and do it again.
I watched a PT demonstrate this with just touching a persons ear.
Reflexive response is an amazing thing
@@_CoachWI think it also has to do with the person anticipating how they’re going to be moved and how hard they’re going to be pushed the 2nd time around. Obviously, it’s going to be easier to maintain your balance when you already know the forces you’re going to have to counter to do so versus having to adjust on the fly.
To me, this makes more sense than assuming every single person across the country who performed the test on someone else was already aware of how the trick worked. Like the videos said, people were showing their friends, family, coworkers, etc. the same balance trick and I highly doubt they were all fully aware it had nothing to do with the bracelet considering a good portion of the people who bought and wore one genuinely believed it was literally curing their physical ailments. If it were only salesmen performing these demonstrations than that would be one thing but it was mostly people who probably bought one after the trick worked on them.
@@_CoachW Okay sure, there's a valid point in what you said, but, in the video I was talking about they make the point that I said. I'm not arguing, just commenting that it was left out of this summary even though the video was included.
I could literally touch you if I wanted to
@@SpudMcKeeganBrian is dope, love me some Modern Rogue and Scam School
never knew what they were, never had one, always wondered. Glad i waited like 12 yrs for a YT doc instead of just googling it. Great vid bro
I mean, placebo is a crazy real effect. You can have legitimate aches from actual strain, that begin to feel better because the object helps you train and convince your brain to ignore it.
I literally use placebo objects, knowing that refocusing your brain towards the effects you want, makes you more likely to use better effort. (I just don't pay crazy amounts of money lmao, it's essentially "lucky objects" haha)
absolutely, the human mind/body is amazing. The problem is that they weren't presented as placebo devices, they were dishonest about the "science".
Doesn’t it not work if you know it’s placebo though? How do you use placebo objects intentionally?
@sharpieman2035 @mkbzam
placebo/nocebo absolutely does works, even if you know its only in your head. its why healthcare professionals try to use positive language in favour for medication, while trying to use objective language while describing side effect (example: "in rare cases, some ppl experience xy side effect" instead of "you may experience xy side effect")
if you want a more practical example, imagine you have a headache. you take some ibuprofen for it, and after a couple of minutes you already feel better, eventhough pharmocologically speaking it shouldnt act for another 25 minutes. just you knowing you took something that is going to help you lessens your symptoms.
sorry i cant really go into more detail, its all i can really remember after a lecture and a (very short) journal club😅
Placebos can work if you know it's a placebo.
@@mkbzamThat's not true
Thank you for your great work!
Nice
It's amazing that the people who bought these managed to get a lawyer and sue the companies. I wouldn't have bet that they had the capacity for that.
My thoughts exactly. Haha
I'm guessing the lawyer found them rather than them finding the lawyer. From what I know, big civil suits like this get built by putting out ads asking for anyone who feels they've been scammed to join in.
you are underestimating the power of money, the moment a lawyer approached these guys and said "I can help you sue these guys for millions" they jumped into the idea
This one seems a little personal, companies false advertise all the time.
dude you dont understand how widespread they were. when he says everyone had them he means EVERYONE i remember seeing them at school all the time. Honestly i never understood wtf they were supposed to be but a friend gave me one and i wore it for a couple weeks i think. He told me it had a “microchip computer” in it and when i asked what it did he said something like “reads your body signs”? They were all over the place dude. Kids loved them and adults wore them.
mad respect to this creator for having a guy in this video with a Bart Simpson haircut and not distracting from the topic at hand to talk about it
i was thinkng the same thing
I remember i was in middle school when i asked my best friend who played baseball what the necklace and wrist band was for and he said for “better balance and helps me relax my muscles” all i kept thinking was how can that even do that and i was an athlete myself playing soccer and that was me as a kid now i cant imagine adults thinking this shit actually worked lol
I'm regularly shocked by the number of people I otherwise respect that believe in ghosts. Certain bizarro beliefs are just culturally acceptable.
@@David-ln8qhwhat about aliens? I believe in them.
I didn't believe it either at first til my friends had me try it on, and did the test on me. Therefore it didn't sound as crazy if there was what we believed to be proof.
@asole2847 then you just need to re evaluate your standard for "proof"
@@JimBakkerBonus Well if your friend attempts to push you with out the bracelet, and you almost fell but when they do it you again with the bracelet on, and you didn't fall, I would consider that proof enough. You're also ignoring context which would be the fact that no one knew for sure if it was a lie/scam or not . So this "test" is all we had to verify four our selves thus it would be considered proof if the bracelet supposedly did what it was said to be able to do.
Y’all got space jammed..Mj..“it’s just water”😂😂
Space scammed
My favorite part of space Jam tho.
lol so true
I remember wearing one and I was laying down that pipe. If you know what I'm saying man. I was clapping those cheeks like you wouldn't believe I was giving it the good old pound town if you know what I'm saying. Oh my God I love those things now. Give me a quesadilla cuz I'm a little dehydrated
I don’t remember Phiten being a thing, but I very much remember Power Balance. I worked at a mall at that time, and those bracelets were everywhere. One person I knew who sold them at a kiosk gave me one, and I knew right away it was bullshit. I cut it open, and when I saw that it was just a holographic sticker like you’d see on a baseball cap, I knew my instincts were right. I did more research into them so I could tell everyone I knew not to fall for it.
I had a few of the phitens. Necklaces were cool lol. My school and leagues were mixed of PB and phiten
It turned me into Thor
@@Yeroccothe phitens were actually so dope
Bro you’re sick, you’re like, ahead of the curve, i bet the people you work with at the mall think you’re so sick.
@keenanhodge7792 and you'd probably fall for this laughable pseudoscience.
From celebrity endorsements, stadium naming rights, and mass adoption through correlation & not causation, this is eerily similar to FTX and its collapse.
This video unlocked a deep memory for me. I remember people wearing these bands growing up - and I always thought it was pretty strange how everyone seemed to swear by them. The more you know
I remember being 12 years old and a girl in my class having one on. I asked her what it was and she gave me an explanation and I remember, even though I was 12, I already thought it was complete BS 😂
@@danielb.2460I remover they actually looked pretty weird. I choose to wear an I love Boobies wrist band instead. Those were good times.
I just thought they looked cool cuz I was 12 white and poor so gold chains weren't an option
Thank you for not saying "cOrE mEmOrY."
Makes sense for young people to fall for it. Adult athletes had 0 business falling for this though.
I graduated high school in 2006. Our entire baseball team rocked them like crazy, especially the "twister" variety. I didn't even play baseball or any sport when I was in high school, I was a hardcore skateboarder. I bought a couple. And I'm not and never been one to believe in those copper bracelets and all that crap still shilled to this day. Phiten became trendy to wear so we all had one! I kinda miss it lol
Bro we had chicks wearing them too. Don't think the "power" band or whatever really became trendy around my neck of the woods. I swear every kid in school had a phiten and at least two to three Aeropostale shirts, maybe some puka shell necklaces.
@@Shermuel same.. I think the power band was after my time, I don't recall it at all in the zeitgeist.. but I feel like it was definitely an as-seen-on-tv, mall, Kardashian Era right after my time
there were girls on my daughters 6u softball team this year with the twister and I had immediate flashbacks to select baseball and all our color coordinated phitens bahahahahaha
@Matt_TX trends come and go then are back around! It's the time of the 90s-2000s again!
@@TheGreenGoblinYT I laughed so hard as i was explaining them to my wife lol my superstitions were so real and sound so dumb to me now
I remember seeing these bracelets on everyone in my school, mostly worn by athletes. It is crazy how gullible people are, and how they meld with people around them, kids and adults alike. The placebo effect is a hell of a drug
Yeah everybody thought the power balance bracelet was something magical. When in reality it was a rubber band with a piece of paper in the center. Cant believe we all paid money for that thing
It’s called “Social Proof”. Really, look it up
@@yellabeast22 I know what social proof is. Essentially if everyone around you is doing something then it gives it more credibility
@@grimreefer213 that’s not what social proof is. Sounds like you looked it up and didn’t comprehend what it was and came off in a condescending way about it. It’s not about validation, it’s the sudden assimilation of the whole. A real man would’ve accepted the information, rather than claiming to know something they didn’t know and still get it wrong, even though there wasn’t even a question being asked.
@@yellabeast22 You’re the one who is condescending, jesus christ.
This is why a lot of chronic pain is psychological. I wish more doctors would attack all sides of pain. A lot of times pain can be healed with therapy, not opiates.
I'm so glad that you posted this. I never knew it was this widespread, but I did come across it once when a friend of mine and I were helping to set up for a local marathon that we helped to run. We were talking with one of the vendors who was selling these bracelets. He offered this test with my friend, first pushing him off balance without the bracelet and then having him put the bracelet on and then claiming that it was helping him to stay more balanced. I told him I wanted to try pushing on his arm with a power bracelet on and immediately pushed him off balance. The salesman immediately got mad at me saying that I was pushing down on his arm incorrectly.
It was pretty funny to see how quickly it was unmasked as a scam when he wasn't the one that got to administer the test.
Had a similar experience myself.
It was back in 2007 at the state fair and i remember, because our group of four friends had just recently graduated and only one of us could drive at the time. We were all at this booth where some peddlers were trying to sell these balance bracelets, and one of my friends had gotten sampled on. They did the same spiel, having him T-pose and pushing him off balance by pressing down on his extend arms before putting the bracelet on him, and doing the same thing but to no avail. I knew exactly what they were doing and after seeing my friend forced off balance a few more times while becoming immovable whenever the bracelet was on him, my friend actually fell for it and was about to buy one. I stopped him, dragged our party away, and outside of the area i told him they that were pulling on him instead of pushing, which was why he was going off balance. He wasn't convinced and the other two were curious as well, so we had to do an impromptu test right there outside of the booth area. Sure enough, even with just a light tug on his arm while pressing it down, he would immediate topple over while remaining completely balanced otherwise.
To this day, I'm still amazed at how many people fell for this scam.
EDIT: *many
@@aarongale9214 It was always funny seeing it back when I had a part time job at a fair.
dang you brought back a memory i completely forgot about. this was around late elementary school for me and i remember everyone who played sports was obsessed with them
Yeah, was a great litmus test for whether someone possessed true sentience or was just an NPC.
I wore a Phiten necklace all the time playing baseball and hockey growing up. Our league even had to change rules surrounding jewelry because so many kids wanted to wear them.
Even if it was obviously bullshit, I think I got mine for like $30, so I didn't really care. I've even dug it out a few times because I still kinda get nostalgia for how it looks, and it still fits me.
The look was awesome
Yea I never knew they claimed to give health benefits. I remember all my friends in little league wanting them cause they looked cool
I remember that a lot of people started to advocate for these types of jewelry bc they were soft and safer
@@smackmeinthetree3854I could see that. Especially with the fields I remember playing on routine ground ball pop up catch you in the chest would leave a real nice imprint if you’re wearing metal.
@@smackmeinthetree3854umpires still made me take it off sometimes
These stupid jocks at my school had them, they called me stupid for not understanding the science behind it. I remember salesmen were trying to sell me one at a fair and I could tell he was faking pushing me hard the 2nd time around.
I knew wholeheartedly that we as humans are stupid when this happened, I couldn’t even understand how this was real as a 10 year old lol
This Stanley cup thing is dumber
"dumber" @@MelodicTurtleMetal
@@lmaoSach
Definitions from Oxford Languages
dumb
adjective
comparative adjective: dumber
1. temporarily unable or unwilling to speak.
"they stood dumb while the attacker poured out a stream of abuse"
2.
OFFENSIVE•DATED
View definition
(of animals) unable to speak as a natural state and thus regarded as helpless or deserving pity.
3.
INFORMAL•NORTH AMERICAN
stupid.
"a dumb question"
@@MelodicTurtleMetalAre people claiming Stanley cups have a magic medical benefit? If not, it’s definitely not dumber. This is about as dumb as it can possibly get.
@@MelodicTurtleMetal Said like someone who wasn't around then. Stay in school, kid. Er, wait. That didn't help us any.. Eat your veg and do your studies, at least.
Athletes have been assisting in scams for decades. I'm just hoping I figure out the next "secret formula " I can sell to exploit the same market
a lot of athletes are just fist puppets, because they're getting paid. unfortunately, 99.9% of society of morally bankrupt and can be swayed by dollar amounts instead of asking "why or what i'm selling".
you're looking for the next scam so you can be the scammer? Bro it doesn't end up well for them, did you watch the last 3 minutes of the video?
Like the TB12 diet BS and the Russell Wilson "concussion water" (no, that is NOT a typo). If the TB12 diet is what allowed Tom Brady to play football for so long, then why aren't 90% of athletes dedicating themselves to it? Because it's a sham. Dude was almost certainly on PEDs like HGH and more, and I'm a huge Patriots fan who grew up less than an hr from the stadium during the start of their dynasty.
@@173jaSon371he started looking fake towards the end in Tampa. I agree he was on something crazy lol
had a power balance bracelet growing up playing tennis, was fully aware that it didnt do anything directly but kept wearing it because it was popular and i was superstitious about keeping it on. Wore it for years until it broke when i got it caught on something. This was a huge nostalgia shock since i had completely forgot these existed lol
Placebo + confirmation bias at work here and these products ingeniously exploit it. if you had superstitions then the product most definitely didn't work.
I worked in retail at a Six Flags in 2012, and we sold those Phi-Ten Tornado necklaces in a few of our gift shops. We sold a lot of them because in the park, they were priced at $12.99, while local sporting goods stores were selling them for at least $25, maybe even $40 or $50. It was so weird to have, like, 13-year-olds coming up to my register and saying these necklaces were so cheap in our stores (especially since most stuff in theme parks is marked up a lot). I think by then, they were a status symbol for kids and teens, but it’s nice to get some context from this video for what was going on there.
As a former high school and college athlete, I'd just like to expound on the whole superstition thing. With the exception of a small minority, it's not necessarily that superstitious athletes believe doing certain things will "make them better." It's about getting yourself in the right mindset. I had tons of little quirks that I would do, but not once did I ever believe that any of them made me stronger, quicker, or physically better in any way shape or form. Many of them were to just give myself a routine, and if I followed the routine, it kept me in the right mental space, or gave me a sort of focal "zero point." Or during a slump or big run, making a change (like the gold thong) gave you a focus point to prevent overthinking, which can often lead to poor performance. So, the vast majority of these athletes don't believe there's anything magical or superpower related, they realize it's just a mental guide of sorts.
"Athlete"
LOL
uhhh they why even use it IN YHE FIRST PLACE.
never had it before, but now just gonna acquire a bracelet to make a routine for?
Yeah, pretty much just that. Although, with things like the bracelet, it was often more of an aesthetics situation, or, at the level of MLB players, getting paid to promote them. I played D1 basketball and baseball. It would be much like how I had set way of shooting free throws. Always did the same routine, so that making the shot would hopefully become routine. I'm sure it sounds stupid to a lot of people, that's fine, but it could be something as simple as I wore the bracelet once, had good game, so I decided to keep wearing it. Like I said, no one really believes there's anything magical happening, but when you have a good game, you want to mimic as much of what led up to it as you can. Not to recreate "magic" but more of a sense of trying to make it so you feel like you did before. A lot of good sports performance is based off of feel. And when everything feels good, you're probably going to get a better performance. It's not going to turn you into a better player, but it could get a better performance out of the player that you are. @@threestans9096
I'm glad my parents were poor because at least I can say that I didn't fall victim to this scam! 😅😂😊
They had $5 knock off versions at the fair 😂
broke boi
@cynicalproductions6060 100% you have no money and get no bitches
@@cynicalproductions6060And you are still wearing a useless mask. So sad.
@@alihenderson5910 I see no problem with wearing masks, even after the whole vaccination campaign occured I still wear one due to pollen and my sinuses not mixing well. I honestly feel stupid it took until covid for me to wear one.
Fun fact from someone with advanced science training in human performance. All the bells and whistles on smart watches for performance, such as tracking sleep quality, are essentially useless.
Another fun fact, when they give people a placebo and tell them they are getting steroids they perform exceptionally well.
Both cases show that the placebo and nocebo effect are very strong.
Id like to know more behind where you’re coming from for the performance trackers. I like having long-term goals and being able to see gradual changes over longer periods of time. I feel like that is useful to me. Open to learn more
Not ever gonna own a smart watch or smart ring 😂 I do however own a gym membership, a mirror, and a scale. That's all I need
McGuire took 2 strays with that “how he get this much bigger but have the same cup” line 😭🤣
I remember being too poor for most of the latest trends including this one. I remember how many kids believed they were better with them on, this is why I loved skateboarding because no one on a skateboard believed in a bracelet making you better or less likely to get hurt.
I remember there was a grip tape company that was called paradox that supposedly put that stuff in the griptape lol
Ryan Sheckler wearing double bracelets in this video lmao
Curt Schilling also forgot to mention he was on copious amounts of Vicodin while pitching that ALCS game that has also known to make a person feel like a superhero as I can definitely vouch for that. (For about 3 hours anyway)
Vicodin just makes me itch
The way this guy talks is crazy he should be a baseball broadcaster
How can he be a broadcaster for a sport that doesn't exist?
5:38 As someone who’s went through the end of elementary and into middle school at the time I’ve literally never heard of this thing but I remember the wrist band
I wrote a college paper / presentation on this in about 2011 because we were talking about pseudoscience in one of my classes (Science Teacher Methods). One of my dumber classmates refused to believe that they were fake because so many MLB players wore them and loved them, despite the fact that dissolving titanium in water was impossible. The dude went on to fail the Ohio Dept Ed test for Science education twice before finally passing it. As far as I know he taught for 5 years before quitting. I have most of my college papers saved, but I wasn't able to find that one unfortunately.
I think there is a reason mark could wear the same cup the entire time lol
Goated comment
Might’ve needed a downsize in the later years
He said he believed wearing it helped him hit more home runs but really he meant being able to fit in is why he hit more homeruns
@@alpacalipsprofit9610whoosh
0:27 "A woman from Canada" *shows news story of a woman from Ladera Ranch, California* 😮
The placebo effect combined with confirmation bias is one helluva drug
In 2010 I used to have a job at a mall kiosk selling a knock off version of these. Everyone selling it knew it was bs. We also did a strength, flexibility, and balance test/demonstration on people to sell them on the idea that it worked. The test/demonstration we did was a little different from the one in the video but the idea was the same. Its ceazy how many people fell for it, buying 5 or 6 of them at $25 a pop for the whole family. I had friends who believed it worked, so to prove them it doesnt, i would do the tests on them with a regual rubber band or scrunchy to show it works regardless
They were called Energy Armor correct? The salesman seemed more convincing and more well spoken than the Power Balance ones. I remember doing research about how the tests were done and where to apply the pressure and center of gravity. I basically did a reverse demonstration of the ones in the video and convinced my friend that his band made him worse and he wasted $60 😂
You're a scammer
I remember my mom was so adamant Power Balance worked. She tried the balancing test with me and i was not convinced. Im glad i never fell for that shit lol
i remember getting into arguments about it with kids at school “it’s just a sticker” “ITS GOT A HOLOGRAM”
Mark Cuban throwing them away was a cherry on top at the end of this vid. I was in middle school when these were popular and would remember a lot of school kids and baseball kids had them and swore by them. I was 14 maybe at the time and I always had my doubts and always refused to believe this helped. Well made video and very entertaining.
I’ll never forget the tornado phiten necklace. It was everywhere in youth baseball and all of us kids swore it gave us more energy
I have heard that a lot of athletes do kind of a willing suspension of disbelief when it comes to this kind of thing because they are well aware of the power of the palcebo effect. So they will take any gimmick without much question, because at some level, it can work for them.
the smarter ones just jump straight to performance enhancing drugs
There's no reason not too for them. If anything helps get your head right try it, if you find something works keep doing it. It doesn't actually matter as long as you think it works. A $100 necklace which does nothing more than boost your confidence probably makes as much of a difference as a lot of very expensive gear that folks happily fork out for. E.g. I play slow pitch I just bought a monsta will it help me hit better probably not, am I hitting better yes. I feel more confident at plate my numbers have significantly increased I don't actually know if it's the bat or me but I'm fairly sure when it comes time to get a new bat I'll be getting the same one 😂
This was a great episode. You guys hit out of the park. I'm a fan of football and baseball but I knew nothing about these products. I do remember seeing a lot of ball players starting to wear necklaces about 20 years ago but thought it was just a fashion trend and nothing more. I learned a lot from this video.
Thats like giving someone a brownie and telling them its a edible, delusion is extremely powerful
I remember in middle school telling a group of kids that these things were fake, they all said if it was then why do all the athletes wear them. They also accused me of cheating the push test when I pushed one of them over
This was about as real as that Peter Popoff “Miracle Water” 💀
Love that you did a vid on this. I remember being like 10 in travel ball and seeing all the rich kids had these. Even at that age I was always like, "no way those do anything" lmao
There's still a Phiten retail shop at a huge famous shopping mall near my place, also at other popular shopping malls.
Even a website promoting various products that can be purchased online.
Tbf, the amount of steroids Maguire was on probably actually made the cup never feel too snug.
I used to have one of those Phiten necklaces and it 100% made me feel better at baseball. I never thought it made me stronger or faster, but I had noticeably better balance with it on than with it off. I would even stand on on foot with it on and with it off and it was consistently longer wearing the necklace. Pretty crazy placebo
Edit: it was the tornado model for anyone curious
Oh hell ya, thats’s twice the placebo baybeee. Maybe even 2.5x placebo via placebo fusion.
Whatever you sell ill buy it.@@Cheapiebeepie
I remember the power balance bands and they were crazy popular when I was in high school from about 2010-2012. We even noticed that there were knockoffs and we wanted to make sure we were buying the legit version of the scam 😂
This is a form of mass hysteria..😂😂
I remember my friend raving about these things and I did a presentation in biology class all about the placebo effect and how these types of things were scams it’s crazy to me how many people bought into it
All this taught me is that jocks are just as (if not more) superstitious than theater kids 😂
yikes.... its not close. Athletes are FAR MORE superstitious.
Placebos can have incredible effects on people, hell even your mood can have impacts on your physical health. People who are depressed tend to get sick more often and have less energy which leads to a lack of motivation to do things which usually compounds with lack of exercise and sunlight. It's honestly pretty fascinating stuff
Athletes didn't believe it. They got paid to promote it.
Between these things and the mood rings that changed colors "depending on your mood", we used to fall for anything lol
I remember these popping up and seemingly dissapearing relatively quickly back when I was in high school
Same goes for supplements and fashion
What ive learned over the years is that wealthy people are actually easy marks for scammers just as much as the general public if not more so. This is a prime example. Or how so many rappers get finessed out so much cash on over priced clothes and jewelry or get hustled by buying bootleg stuff.
in fairness i think the point of buying overpriced jewlery and clothes is that its overpriced, its a status symbol. its still dumb but theres no false claims being made. supplements on the other hand, yeah celebrities fall for that shit like crazy lmao
Most people claim to be INDIVIDUALS while acting/looking exactly the same as every other 'individual' ...
People are cooked,,,, always have been always will be
I’ll never forget the first time I tried on the power balance bracelet at the mall and literally felt my arm go numb. Getting it at the mall was the first red flag
That means it's working 😂
Sounds like you have some circulation issues.
That's why all the baseball players at my school were wearing those necklaces? I thought it was some weird fashion trend lmao
That balance test also relies on recruitment always being stronger after the 2nd kinesiological resistance test. Average is about 40% better recruitment almost immediately upon second attempt. Muscles wake up to their work.
My first job was working for one of these kiosks in the mall. I quit the first day after my boss was trying to convince an elderly woman that it would get rid of her vertigo and she would be able to throw away her medication 😊
You don’t seem like a good worker very untrustworthy
I remember seeing a bunch of the necklaces at a friends house and asked him why all baseball players wear them, since he used to play baseball. He kind of shrugged it off and didn’t really give me an answer, and I always found it funny. Now I know he was just embarrassed to tell me he had spent a bunch of money on a scam 😂😂
Not a scam bro. They were the swag we needed in grade school and middle school
@@KODAKJACK47right a lot of us didn’t know anything about the healing side of it. We just bought it cuz it was clean back then
@@KODAKJACK47 ngl I wanted one BAD. I asked for them so many times but never got one.
Well if all the baseball players still wore them, and you had no idea what it was even about clearly most people had no idea it was a scam yet therefore your friend truly didn't know...IMO
@ @RALSTONVINTAGEONIG if something is bought because of attention and validation and paralysing fear of missing out, it definitely is a scam
I remember seeing those necklaces as a kid and thinking they were just dumb. Really displays how powerful the placebo effect is.
Great example of why just because someone is rich. Doesn’t make them smart, or know anything. Same goes for famous/celebrities. Don’t just blatantly follow what mainstream says!
Fomo is terrifying thing and it's not surprising cancerous platforms like tiktok Twitter and Instagram holds up so we'll nowadays
I remember when these things showed up on Shark Tank and Mark Cuban immediately called the guy a scammer and refused to even take a sample or hear the guy out.
I remember that one lol. He just straight up didn’t amuse him. He just clear out said it’s a scam to all the sharks lol. I laughed so much at that guy lol
OMG this is cray especially when so many people tell my girlfriend's fibromyalgia pain isn't real and is in her head, yet they believe this sh*t?!¬ WE'RE LIVIN IN THE MATRIX FFS
I've always wondered what the deal was with those "rope necklaces" I'd always see ball players wearing.
Anything developed by a chiropractor should immediately be thrown in the garbage.
I was the perfect demographic for this brand. I remember being 12 at my baseball tournaments and absolutely begging my parents to get me one.
Not gonna lie I fell for all of this when I was younger. As a young kid playing sports how could you not have one of these?😂😂
Not me
This unlocked a memory I have of being in 8th grade and going with my whole class to the highschool we were going to the following year where they were holding basically a job fair for all the extra curriculars. There was a little booth for orchestra, photography, all the sports, and I stg there was a power balance booth too doing a demonstration with one of those yoga balance balls. I was extremely skeptical and didn’t think it would actually improve my balance but it was in fact easier to balance with the bracelet on. I never believed it was because of the bracelet. Absolutely wild that they had marketing in public schools around that time.
With all these 10 -12 year contracts being relatively new in the baseball world we dont know how well these contracts will turn out especially towards the end. You should do a video where you go back and look at star players of the past and see what would have happened if you gave them these long contracts. I would really like to see the outcome or consequences of these long contracts to see if the are worth it or not.
these are my favorite videos on youtube. those products that you just about forgot about but at one point in time gripped the world by storm lol
I always knew they were junk but I had friends that swore by them! Everyone wore them at my gym and you even saw them on everyone at clubs and bars.
In Philly, they were pretty big. I don’t know if people actually believed they worked, it was cool to wear or they just wanted to believe it was real?
I remember being in elementary school and this was one of the first things that made me lose respect for humanity. It was clearly fake, yet even the smarter adults around me were hooked.
The only thing I learned from this video is that kids aren’t paying attention in 6th grade science when the placebo effect is taught
kids are still learning ab rock types at that age my guy.... physiology would be somewhere near college and an elective.
Placebo is often thought of as a "bad" thing where as some in the medical field would say it an invaluable tool. Our brains are capable of a lot and if it can be tricked to do something beneficial without some form of intrusive intervention then what's so bad about that?
If A-Rod wears something, I probably wouldn't wear it lol
Can you please make a video about Mark Eichorn please. He's been my pitching coach for 8 years now and has always had a love for the game of Baseball. Having the best ERA in a rookie season and also using his own unique pitching style would seem like a really good idea for a video. Much love❤
A channel named Look, It’s Baseball made a video on him. It’s really good and his wife has the pinned comment I believe. The channel isn’t as good as this one imo but worth checking out the vid
This is a prime example of a placebo effect.
One time I put on a zebra sillyband, immediately after I felt sillier than ever. 10/10 recommend
Thanks really needed something to make me laugh needed something to make me laugh