If your body isn't getting the right "fuel," it can't function at peak levels.

Additional Info

  • Segment Number 2
  • Audio File naturally_savvy/ns891.mp3
  • Featured Speaker Kelly LeBrock
  • Guest Twitter Account @kellylebrock
  • Guest Bio Kelly-LeBrockKelly Le Brock, celebrated actress model, and soon to be author is taking #weirdscience to a whole new level through creating her foodie platform by blending social media channels, and a APP developed by Priceline founder and TEDMED curator Jay Walker. She is launching her lifelong passion project called Kellys Kitchen, leading into it as a "very busy" CHANGE AGENT for healthy eating and launching #calories4good, helping FOOD BANKs across America. You can see more on her social media and website.  She started this journey by participating in Partnership for a Healthier America's Twitter Chat in 2014 resulting in over 100 million impressions. Kelly and the Food Network were the most retweeted #cookathome activist six days after the chat which had over 175 contributors.
  • Transcription RadioMD Presents: Naturally Savvy | Original Air Date: February 25, 2015
    Hosts: Andrea Donsky, RHN & Lisa Davis
    Guest: Kelly Le Brock

    Honest information about living a healthy lifestyle on RadioMD.com. It’s time for Naturally Savvy with natural visionary Andrea Donsky and health journalist, Lisa Davis.

    LISA: I’m Lisa. So glad you’re listening to Naturally Savvy. My co-host Andrea Donsky is off today.

    So, I start my day in an interesting way. I get a can of coconut milk, organic, without any guar gum or anything else. I put it in the fridge. I open it up, I add a little bit of Xyla and a little bit of cinnamon and it fills me up for hours. Now, the reason I do this is because healthy fat is good for us.

    Here to talk about this is the fabulous Kelly LeBrock. Hi, Kelly.

    KELLY: Hello, beautiful! Hello, Boston! I’m glad it’s warming up a little bit. Twenty below or whatever. Yes. You know, I’m much, much happier when I’m eating good fats. I know that sounds crazy. When I eat good fats, I’m thinner than when I don’t and anybody who has a nutritionist that says, “Low fat, no fat skim milk is good,” I would run for the hills because they are being given the wrong information. You’ve never seen a fatter nation and everybody’s “no fat”. Isn’t that true?

    LISA: Yes. And, luckily, it’s starting to change. You know, I just spoke with Vinnie Tortorich in another segment about changing views on cholesterol. So, that’s why I wanted to continue this conversation with you and talking about recipes for healthy fat.

    Now, what I mentioned isn’t exactly a recipe. I just take some coconut milk, but I try to eat coconut oil. They say you should have a couple of spoonfuls a day, but I just—I don’t know. For me, I don’t like the taste, so that’s why with the coconut milk. What do you do to get more coconut milk or coconut oil into your diet, Kelly?

    KELLY: Well, coconut oil, I put it in my bath. I brush my dog’s teeth with it with a little hydrogen peroxide. I use it in everything. I use it to cook with because it can hold the high heats. It is hard to take down but if you put it into salads or you put it into smoothies; that works very nicely. You can also get coconut manna which is delicious. It’s like a butter. It’s a little bit sweeter. But, I’m kind of crazy. I also love raw butter and people say, “Oh, my goodness! That’s so expensive.” But, you know what? At the end of the day, it stops me from having to go to the doctors because my brain is getting the fats that it needs.

    I really believe that people who are depressed are depressed because they’re literally dehydrated inside. It’s like if you have a car and you don’t put oil in it, it’s going to sound cranky, right?

    LISA: That’s a good point.

    KELLY: Basically, we’re just like cars. You need to put in the right water, the right oil. You have to change your tires which means changing your shoes. I don’t know. We’re very simple mechanisms and we’re trying to complicate all these diets. The bottom line is, the best thing for you is fats and one of the things that I love to do is make a gelatinous broth out of fish bones. You know, fish heads or any part that people throw out, I like to put into a soup stock that I make and I make it for like sometimes, 72 hours. And, I will just make it on a boil quickly and I turn it down to a low, low simmer. I throw in rosemary, a big head of garlic, an onion that I stick cloves into, ginger and I let that stuff cure. It’s like a witch’s broth. Then, if I’m sick, I have that to go by. Also, the ancient Chinese, they make these fish broths with the fish heads and it takes people that are terminally ill and gives them the nutrients that they need.

    LISA: Oh, that’s fantastic.

    KELLY: So, I’m a big proponent. It is fantastic. And then, like one of my favorite things when it’s really cold outside is to take my oatmeal, soak it in water overnight, cover it and soak it in water overnight. Then, you cook it the next day after you’ve drained off that water. It’s so rich and creamy. I throw in some beautiful raw cream with a little pat of raw butter, a little thing of Fresh Alt and some Grade B maple syrup and I’m in Tahiti. It’s so gorgeous.

    LISA: It sounds wonderful. You know, a big thing now, I recently spoke with Dave Asprey, who is the Bulletproof diet guy, and I spoke with Grant Peterson, who’s really big into eating a ton of coconut, a ton of healthy fat, almost a no-carb diet. I do like my carbs from my fruits and vegetables. But, they’ve been talking about putting butter or coconut oil in coffee and that seems to be a big thing now. Have you heard about that? Or, tea in the morning?

    KELLY: Oh, it’s been around for years. I believe that the Tai people, a lot of these nomadic people use it, too. Yes, because they know the benefits of that fat that floats on top of the hot morning beverage. It takes it and makes it smooth. It’s what this gelatin does. This gelatin broth that I make? It cures all kinds of digestion problems. It can be used successfully in many intestinal disorders like hyperacidity, colitis and Crohn’s because it has all these wonderful things in there that just push everything through. Yes. I’m right on that.

    LISA: What about avocados? I know you make really nice avocado mousse that you’ve told me about before.

    KELLY: Yes, I did. I love avocados. I’ll put them on anything. I’ll make a nice breakfast burrito and slap one of those on with my nice eggs. Yes, I gave you the recipe for the avocado mousse--chocolate mousse--which is more chocolate. You throw a little vanilla in there, a little agave syrup, little pinch of salt, mix it all in a blender and it’s just divine. You throw it in the fridge until it gets nice and cold and people think they’re eating rea chocolate.

    LISA: Mmm. That is so nice. And, that creaminess is so desirable. I don’t eat dairy because I’m sensitive to it, so it’s nice for me. That’s why I love the coconut milk. So, for people out there if they’re vegan or they’re Paleo, there are so many great things you can do now with these healthy fats.

    KELLY: Well, yes. And, like I said, I’m way thinner when I’m eating good, healthy fat. And also, you can make ice cream. A lot of ice cream. Do you know where the biggest amount of ice cream is ingested?

    LISA: No, I don’t.

    KELLY: Alaska. How crazy is that?

    LISA: I wouldn’t have guessed that.

    KELLY: I know! That’s why I’m bringing it up. It’s because people in Alaska, when it’s really cold, crave that fat. They’d be better off making a nice gelatin stew or whatever, but yes, that’s what it is. They’re craving those creams. Like, the Italians make a lovely gelato that is so rich and creamy that the ice cream isn’t even cold.

    LISA: Oh, wow. See, I really like coconut oil ice cream.

    KELLY: Oh, that sounds divine. And, also, if you don’t want to do the dairy and you want ice cream, you can use bananas. You peel them, then put the bananas in a nice freezer safe bag, put them in the freezer and then run them through your Champion juicer with whatever fruit you like and you have a lovely bowl of ice cream that’s not.

    LISA: Oh, I like that, too. Now, Kelly, do you watch your grains or not really? Or, how does that work for you? It’s like I mentioned probably too many times, that I tend to be more Paleo. I don’t never eat grains, but I don’t eat them very often. I just feel better.

    KELLY: I’m a naughty girl and I figure like, I don’t know how long I’m going to be here. None of us do, so if I want to have something, I’m going to have it. I stay away from the whites like white pasta because I’m a pasta freak. I think my mother’s first meal to me was spaghetti. And so now, instead of using white spaghetti, I use the brown rice. I do like my brown rice. I’m a girl that likes her carbs and I’m not going to shrink away from them. I don’t know that I feel that different whether I do or not, but the rest of the time, I eat pretty healthy. I soaked some quinoa last night and I’m sprouting it right now and that’ll be ready in 2 or 3 days. I like my quinoa.

    LISA: Oh. Now, talk to us. How do you sprout it? I need to learn more about that.

    KELLY: I soak it overnight and then I drain it the next day into a lovely colander that’s especially for sprouting and literally, I just, I keep playing with it. When it’s a little dry, I add a little more water and then, it gets long and hairy. When it’s long and hairy, then it’s time to cook it.

    LISA: Really?

    KELLY: It gives it a more nutritional value. I think it puts more fiber in it and it’s just delicious and it’s got more crunch to it. Then, I slap olive all over it. I don’t cook with olive oil. Olive oil doesn’t like to be heated up. If you want to use olive oil, use as much as you like, cook your meal and throw it on top afterwards as well as with the salt. You don’t want to cook with the salt. You want to use those as a condiment afterwards, a good quality one.

    LISA: I’m so glad you mentioned that. Kelly, this has been great, as always. We have Kelly on twice a month here on Naturally Savvy. You can follow her on Twitter @Kelly LeBrock. I’m so glad you listened today. You can like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter @RadioMD and @NaturallySavvy.

    Have a great day and stay well.
  • Length (mins) 11:49
  • Waiver Received Yes
  • Internal Notes repeat guest
  • Host Andrea Donsky, RHN and Lisa Davis, MPH
Investigative health journalist Judy Foreman suggests that the key element to extending a healthy lifespan is exercise.

Additional Info

  • Segment Number 1
  • Audio File naturally_savvy/ns890.mp3
  • Featured Speaker Judy Foreman, Author & Journalist
  • Book Title Exercise Is Medicine: How Physical Activity Boosts Health and Slows Aging
  • Guest Twitter Account @judy_foreman
  • Guest Bio Judy Foreman, the author of A Nation in Pain (2014), The Global Pain Crisis (2017), and Exercise is Medicine (2019), all published by Oxford University Press, was a staff writer at the Boston Globe for 23 years and a health columnist for many of those years. Her column was syndicated in national and international outlets including the Los Angeles Times, Dallas Morning News, Baltimore Sun and others.

    She graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Wellesley College in 1966, spent three years in the Peace Corps in Brazil, then got a Master’s from the Harvard Graduate School of Education.
    She has been a Lecturer on Medicine at Harvard Medical School, a Fellow in Medical Ethics at Harvard Medical School and a Knight Science Journalism Fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She was also a Senior Fellow at the Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism at Brandeis. She also hosted a weekly, call-in radio show on Healthtalk.com.

    She has won more than 50 journalism awards, including a 1998 George Foster Peabody award for co-writing a video documentary about a young woman dying of breast cancer and the 2015 Science in Society Award from the National Association of Science Writers for her book, A Nation in Pain.
  • Length (mins) 23:25
  • Waiver Received No
  • Host Andrea Donsky, RHN & Lisa Davis, MPH
As epic as traumatic life events are, they are part of the human experience.

Additional Info

  • Segment Number 5
  • Audio File naturally_savvy/ns889.mp3
  • Featured Speaker Marianne Williamson, Author
  • Book Title Tears to Triumph
  • Guest Facebook Account https://www.facebook.com/williamsonmarianne?fref=ts
  • Guest Twitter Account @marwilliamson
  • Guest Bio Marianne-WilliamsonMarianne Williamson is an internationally acclaimed author and lecturer. Six of her ten published books have been New York Times bestsellers. Her books include A Return to Love, A Year of Miracles, The Law of Divine Compensation, The Age of Miracles, A Course in Weight Loss, Everyday Grace, A Woman’s Worth, Illuminata, and The Gift of Change.

    Marianne has been a popular guest on television programs such as Oprah, Good Morning America and Charlie Rose.
  • Length (mins) 11:49
  • Waiver Received Yes
  • Host Andrea Donsky, RHN and Lisa Davis, MPH
Financial difficulties can also lead to poor mental and physical health -- especially if you're working hours upon hours to pay the bills and still only "just getting by."

Additional Info

  • Segment Number 1
  • Audio File naturally_savvy/ns888.mp3
  • Featured Speaker Keisha Blair, Economist
  • Book Title Holistic Wealth: 32 Life Lessons To Help You Find, Purpose, Prosperity and Happiness
  • Guest Twitter Account @KeishaOBlair
  • Guest Bio Keisha Blair is a trained Economist, with extensive experience in the public, private, and not-for-profit sectors. She started her career working on economic development projects sponsored by the World Bank and Inter-American Development Bank. She was a senior economist working in economic development and corporate finance, working on several federal budgets. She was part of the Prime Minister’s delegation to the World Economic Forum in 2018 as well as the East-Asia (ASEAN) Summit in Singapore. She led on events such as the FORTUNE Most Powerful Women Summit in Montreal, Canada and the Fortune Global Forum. She is a graduate of the Executive Leadership Program at Harvard University’s John. F Kennedy School of Government.

    Keisha has an Msc in public policy from Carleton University in Ottawa. She has been profiled in the New York Times, and has been featured in the New York Observer, Thrive Global, the Harvard Business Review among many other publications. Her viral article, “My Husband Died at 34: Here are 40 Life Lessons I Learned From It”, was featured in/or linked to by over 160 websites and viewed by more than 50 million people worldwide.

    Keisha Blair is passionate about gender equality and women’s economic empowerment.
  • Length (mins) 34:25
  • Waiver Received Yes
  • Host Andrea Donsky, RHN and Lisa Davis, MPH
Carol Alt is one of the most renowned Supermodels in history, but she didn't start her career thinking she would end up with that sort of title.

Additional Info

  • Segment Number 2
  • Audio File naturally_savvy/ns887.mp3
  • Featured Speaker Carol Alt
  • Book Title Easy Sexy Raw: 130 Raw Food Recipes, Tools, and Tips to Make You Feel Gorgeous and Satisfied, Eating in the Raw: A Beginner's Guide to Getting Slimmer, Feeling Healthier, and Looking Younger the Raw-Food Way
  • Guest Facebook Account https://www.facebook.com/modelcarolalt
  • Guest Twitter Account @ModelCarolAlt
  • Guest Bio Carol Alt is the ultimate pioneer and chameleon; constantly on the lookout for new ideas and new frontiers. Since her days as the world's most renowned Supermodel, Carol Alt has gone on to be multi-award winning actress, bestselling author on Raw Food Nutrition and hosting her own show, A Healthy You, on Fox News. Having twice graced the cover of the coveted Sports Illustrated Magazine's Swimsuit Edition and in February 2014 Alt was featured in the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit: 50 Years of Beautiful, celebrating the 50th anniversary of Sports Illustrated's swimsuit franchise. Alt's other activities include hosting various TV and radio morning shows and newscasts, including Good Day Live, GMA, Access Hollywood, and E! Entertainment. Forever touted as "the model that started the Supermodel trend" by John Casablanca, the owner of Elite Models – made Carol the first ever "Super Elite Model in the Supeer Elite Division." The press therefore dubbed her the first "Supermodel."
  • Transcription
  • Length (mins) 11:20
  • Waiver Received Yes
  • Internal Notes repeat guest
  • Host Andrea Donsky, RHN and Lisa Davis, MPH
Kara Landau, “The Prebiotic Dietitian," joins host Lisa Davis to explain why prebiotics are so essential and ways to get more of them into your diet.

Additional Info

  • Segment Number 1
  • Audio File naturally_savvy/ns886.mp3
  • Featured Speaker Kara Landau, “The Prebiotic Dietitian”
  • Guest Facebook Account https://m.facebook.com/UPLIFTfood/
  • Guest Bio Kara Landau the “The Prebiotic Dietitian” is a highly respected NYC based Australian Registered Dietitian and Founder of Uplift Food – Good Mood Food - The world's first dietitian created functional food brand to focus exclusively on the mood supportive benefits of gut healthy prebiotics. A previous spokesperson for the Dietitians Association of Australia, and now the media representative for the Global Prebiotic Association. Kara has appeared in Reader’s Digest, Elite Daily, Body & Soul, PopSugar, Elle, Whole Foods Magazine, Healthy Eats, Prevention, Shape Magazine, Business Women TV and more!

    Kara's Backstory Story:
    Kara Landau Used Her Breakup to Launch a Popular Snack Brand Cookie To Help Heal Your Gut! Learn How this CEO and Dietician’s “Mood Boosting Formula” Caught the Attention of the Makers of Oreos...

    Kara Landau, the “Prebiotic Dietitian”, was always passionate about nutrition and entrepreneurship, but until she had her own “problem” to solve, she did not have any major breakthroughs. In 2012, as a result of a long term relationship ending, Kara heartbroken and depressed decided to move to New York City to pursue her passions and heal her heart… or more accurately, her gut. After extensive research into how she could get out of her heartbroken rut, she ended up writing and publishing “The Clean Separation” in 2013, which was only the beginning of her entrepreneurial journey. In her book she combines various dietary changes people can make to improve their emotional states, as well as “business planning” one’s life, and encouraging people to see the bigger picture of situations.

    Upon her health findings, Kara began to act as a spokesperson to talk to people about why gut health is so important in relation to emotional health- in fact 90% of your body’s serotonin (the hormone that makes us feel good!) is located in your gut.

    Traveling the world to spread her message of gut-forward emotional health, Kara found that there were no products readily available that helped the gut and boosted mood. It was this need that spurred her to develop her own company in 2018, Uplift Food. Uplift Food was the first dietary supplement created for gut health, focused mainly on its mood-boosting benefits.

    Kara’s entrepreneurial passion did not go unnoticed. In March of 2019 Mondelēz- the folks behind Oreo, Philadelphia, and Trident - made Uplift Food the first investment in their new branch called SnackFutures.
  • Length (mins) 25:27
  • Waiver Received Yes
  • Host Andrea Donsky, RHN and Lisa Davis, MPH
If you're going through perimenopause, you may be feeling helpless. Fortunately, there are effective treatment options.

Additional Info

  • Segment Number 1
  • Audio File naturally_savvy/ns885.mp3
  • Featured Speaker Suzanne Somers
  • Book Title I'm Too Young for This! The Natural Hormone Solution to Enjoy Perimenopause
  • Guest Bio Suzanne Somers is one of America's most popular and beloved personalities. In a multifaceted career that has spanned more than three decades, she has achieved extraordinary success as an actress, singer, comedienne, New York Times bestselling author, Las Vegas Entertainer of the Year, entrepreneur, and lecturer. She is the voice and face of alternative medicine. Her latest book, I'm Too Young for This!: The Natural Hormone Solution to Enjoy Perimenopause (Crown Archetype; 2013) was an instant New York Times bestseller. She received an Emmy nomination as Outstanding Host for The Suzanne Show,  her weekly Lifetime Network talk show, which provides a thought-provoking morning show alternative with in-depth information on health and wellness in a casual, entertaining format. Suzanne's fun, smart, empowering talk show, Suzanne Somers' Breaking Through, airs online on the CafeMom Studios YouTube channel.
  • Length (mins) 10
  • Waiver Received No
  • Internal Notes No waiver - OK'd by management
  • Host Andrea Donsky, RHN and Lisa Davis, MPH
Many people don't have a full understanding of which nutrients they should be taking in -- or how much of those nutrients are needed to optimize health.

Additional Info

  • Segment Number 1
  • Audio File naturally_savvy/ns882.mp3
  • Featured Speaker Christine Horner, MD, FACS
  • Book Title Radiant Health, Ageless Beauty
  • Guest Facebook Account https://m.facebook.com/drchristinehorner
  • Guest Twitter Account @drhornermd
  • Guest Bio Christine Horner, MD, FACS, is a nationally known surgeon, author and professional speaker and holds two board certifications: the National Board of Surgery and the National Board of Plastic Surgery. Horner was recognized as a leader in her field shortly after starting her plastic and reconstructive surgery practice because she successfully ran a national campaign to pass laws requiring insurance companies to pay for breast reconstruction following mastectomy. Her five-year crusade with the Breast Reconstruction Advocacy Project (BRA Project) led to the passage of an unprecedented federal law that was signed by President Bill Clinton in 1998, requiring insurance companies to pay for this specific surgical procedure. Horner is the award-winning author of, “Waking The Warrior Goddess: Dr. Christine Horner's Program to Protect Against and Fight Breast Cancer,” (3rd Edition) and her award-winning book, “Radiant Health, Ageless Beauty,” (Elgea Publishing).
  • Length (mins) 23:49
  • Waiver Received Yes
  • Host Andrea Donsky, RHN and Lisa Davis, MPH
Actress Jennifer Esposito knows firsthand the "invisible" aspect that makes celiac disease so difficult to deal with.

Additional Info

  • Segment Number 1
  • Audio File naturally_savvy/ns884.mp3
  • Featured Speaker Jennifer Esposito, Actress
  • Book Title Jennifer's Way: My Journey with Celiac Disease--What Doctors Don't Tell You and How You Can Learn to Live Again
  • Guest Twitter Account @JennifersWayJE
  • Guest Bio Jennifer Esposito is an actress, celiac activist, bakery owner, founder of Jennifer's Way Bakery and author of Jennifer's Way: My Journey with Celiac Disease--What Doctors Don't Tell You and How You Can Learn to Live Again.
  • Length (mins) 11:18
  • Waiver Received Yes
  • Host Andrea Donsky, RHN and Lisa Davis, MPH
Grief recovery specialist Kristi Hugstad has dedicated her life to helping abolish the stigma of mental illness and suicide.

Additional Info

  • Segment Number 1
  • Audio File naturally_savvy/ns881.mp3
  • Featured Speaker Kristi Hugstad, Author & Grief Recovery Specialist
  • Book Title Beneath the Surface: A Teen’s Guide to Reaching Out when You or Your Friend Is in Crisis
  • Guest Facebook Account https://www.facebook.com/thegriefgirl/
  • Guest Twitter Account @khugstad
  • Guest Bio Kristi Hugstad is the author of Beneath the Surface: A Teen’s Guide to Reaching Out when You or Your Friend Is in Crisis. Ever since her husband completed suicide in 2012, after years of struggling with clinical depression, by running in front of a train, she has dedicated her life to helping to abolish the stigma of mental illness and suicide. A certified grief recovery specialist and a grief and loss facilitator for recovering addicts at South Coast Behavioral Health, Kristi frequently speaks at high schools. She is also the host of The Grief Girl podcast and lives in Orange County, California.
  • Length (mins) 26:55
  • Waiver Received Yes
  • Host Andrea Donsky, RHN and Lisa Davis, MPH
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