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Montana Fitness Guru Faces Jail For Selling Unapproved Drugs To Fight Man Boobs

“The FDA has observed that your website offers ‘VIRUS BIOSHIELD’ for sale in the United States and that this product is intended to mitigate, prevent, treat, diagnose or cure COVID-19 in people. Based on our review, this product is an unapproved new drug,” stated a warning letter from the FDA and FTC. Positive online reviews of […]

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Montana Fitness Guru Faces Jail For Selling Unapproved Drugs To Fight Man Boobs

“The FDA has observed that your website offers ‘VIRUS BIOSHIELD’ for sale in the United States and that this product is intended to mitigate, prevent, treat, diagnose or cure COVID-19 in people. Based on our review, this product is an unapproved new drug,” stated a warning letter from the FDA and FTC. Positive online reviews of Rat’s Army may have been based on false information, according to the Montana U.S. Attorney’s Office. In its Jan. 10 report, it alleges Hall posted “misleading Certificates of Analysis on the website to convince consumers that Rat’s Army was manufacturing products which were legitimate and safe to consume.

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Cowboy State Daily spoke with one of Hall’s attorneys Wednesday, but he declined to comment before Hall’s sentencing in May.That’s another way of saying Hall exploited a lucrative demand for drugs formulated to fight the onset of man boob — a condition known as gynecomastia — among bodybuilders using supplements that create an imbalance of the hormones estrogen and testosterone.Trouble is, Tyler Jordan Hall, 31, didn’t have that FDA OK to manufacture and sell a variety of bodybuilding supplements including his man boob cure, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Montana claims. But his Kalispell, Montana-based business Rat’s Army marketed and sold a variety of products, including selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs), which can block estrogen in some applications. Tamoxifen is used by oncologists to treat breast cancer, according to a 2011 report from the National Cancer Institute. In 2024, Sarmguide.com updated its review of Rat’s Army, reporting it, “Has shut down and stopped operating.”The study went on to report that bodybuilding discussion forums online have speculated that over the counter dietary supplements might contain tamoxifen. 

Started With COVID

Researchers from the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction and the School of Pharmacy and Biomolecular Sciences at Liverpool John Moores University in the UK reported back in 2014 that, “For more than 30 years, bodybuilders have taken tamoxifen to prevent and treat gynecomastia caused by use of anabolic steroids. Usually, tamoxifen is sourced from the illicit market.”Hall’s evasion tactics included falsely portraying the products as “research chemicals” and “not for human consumption,” even though it was clear, according to Langley, that his products “were for ingestion by humans to affect the structure and function of their bodies.”Federal prosecutors allege in court documents that from June 2020 through March 2022, Hall, who is from Tennessee, imported and bottled unapproved drugs. He then “marketed these substances to individuals in the bodybuilding and fitness community to increase muscle mass, reduce body fat and counter the unwanted side effects of using bodybuilding drugs.”“Hall repeatedly held out his business as a ‘pharmaceutical manufacturing’ establishment,” according to the affidavit. “Hall knowingly took steps to mislead and defraud United States regulatory agencies, including the FDA, about the true nature of the products he was selling.”In the online world of bodybuilding fitness supplements, there’s a lot of chatter about using SERMs to fight gynecomastia, aka man boobs. That chatter reflects a long history of scientific research into SERMs. 

How SERMs Battle Man Boobs

In online fitness circles, SERMs are seen as an antidote to male breasts.They came with enticing flavor profiles like Strawberry Lemonade, Thizzle Berry and Clown Tears, and they all required FDA approval before being sold to bodybuilders. Some were even marketed as a cure for the unwanted onset of man boobs. In December 2020, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) reviewed the rats.army website and spotted a red flag. “Hall knew the substances he was distributing required prescriptions. But he falsely claimed, ‘You do not need a doctor to write a prescription’ or ‘access to a pharmacy, or pharmacist’ to obtain products through Rat’s Army. He repeatedly held out his company as a ‘pharmaceutical manufacturing’ business, but he was not a pharmacist, nor did he ever employ a licensed pharmacist at Rat’s Army.”Along with selling and moving the drugs, Hall’s actions also posed a health risk to the community and his customers, the U.S. Attorney’s Office says.“All in all, this really made me fall in love with this business,” continued Sarmguide.com, which predicted that others in the industry, “Are soon going to take notice of this small, but powerful company.”Instead, federal investigators took notice.“SERMs are tamoxifen and raloxifene can help reduce the amount of breast tissue,” according to a 2018 study in the Journal of Steroids and Hormonal Science. “Tamoxifen, an estrogen antagonist, is effective for recent-onset and gentle gynecomastia. Up to 80% of patients report partial to finish resolution.” This apparently put Hall on the FDA’s radar, and the agency tracked Rat’s Army until June 2022. In an affidavit in support of probable cause signed by Special Agent Craig Langley with the FDA’s Office of Criminal Investigations, the evidence stacks up like weights in a leg press.

Fallout With The Feds

“The government further alleged that Hall obtained proceeds of approximately ,805,470 from Rat’s Army,” the U.S. Attorney’s Office reports. “This income was, at least in part, from the sale of unapproved drugs, including Raloxifene, Tamoxifen and Pramipexole, in interstate commerce.”Hall faces a maximum of three years in prison, a 0,000 fine and one year of supervised release.In a review of the rats.army website, the online fitness influencer site Sarmguide.com, heaped praise on the business, stating, “Rat’s Army seems to be doing all the right things when it comes to their quality control. This inspires a lot of confidence in the company, and I implore you to have a look at their lab results … they are fully-fledged scientific reports.David Madison can be reached at david@cowboystatedaily.com.Hall pleaded guilty Jan. 9 to introduction of unapproved drugs into interstate commerce and will be sentenced May 15.

“Many of these substances were not safe for human use except for under the supervision of a practitioner licensed to administer prescription drugs,” the report says. “Some drugs were of similar composition to Food and Drug Administration-approved drugs, which require special boxed warnings in their labeling emphasizing serious potential side effects, including pulmonary embolism.”

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From the Liver King to ultramarathons, fitness influencers are glorifying extreme masculinity where ‘pain is the point’

A new Netflix documentary about a shirtless supplement salesman who claimed to be “natural” and was exposed as a fraud might seem like a punchline. But Untold: The Liver King is more than just a character study of a well-known fitness influencer; it’s a case study of performative masculinity in the world of social media. […]

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A new Netflix documentary about a shirtless supplement salesman who claimed to be “natural” and was exposed as a fraud might seem like a punchline.

But Untold: The Liver King is more than just a character study of a well-known fitness influencer; it’s a case study of performative masculinity in the world of social media.

Brian Johnson, better known as the Liver King, built a brand on extreme workouts, eating raw organ meat, and evangelising about masculinity. He preached “ancestral living” and radical self-control, all while secretly using steroids.

And his rapid rise to popularity reveals how social media rewards the spectacle of hypermasculinity – especially when it leans into extreme behaviours.

Extreme self-discipline, extreme exercise, extreme eating and extreme “wellness” have all become forms of public performance on social media.

From influencers pushing steroids or “wellness” lifestyles, to the growing popularity of ultramarathons, a new model of masculinity is going viral: control your body, grit through pain, workout hard, and make sure everyone hears about it.

The rise of ‘discipline content’

Social media apps and websites such as TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram, are flooded with content that frames pain and extreme physical effort as markers of masculine worth.

One analysis of male fitness YouTubers found they established authority and discipline through a mix of visible physical strength and affiliations with commercial fitness brands. In some cases, the influencers explicitly listed their personal records or showcased their physique post-training as proof of their “masculinity” and discipline.




Read more:
Why banning gym selfies could do us all a lot of good


Influencers also often frame extreme leanness and muscularity as indicators of moral virtue and discipline, even when achieving it has taken a negative physical or mental toll on them. The look of discipline has become more valuable than the outcome of it.

Posts are often wrapped in the language of “resilience”, “discipline” and militaristic rhetoric. Men are told to “go to war” in the gym, to “stay hard”, and to generally treat life like a battlefield.

What’s being sold isn’t stoicism: it’s pseudo-stoicism – a term researchers have coined to describe emotional suppression masquerading as strength and discipline.

Pain is the point

Strava’s 2023 Year in Sport report found Gen Z athletes are 31% less likely to exercise for health reasons compared to older generations. Instead, they are more likely to train with a focus on athletic performance – that is, to push their physical limits, improve metrics such as speed or distance, and outperform others.

The same report shows a surge in extreme endurance activity. Compared to 2023 data, uploads (activities shared with others) of gravel bike rides grew 55%, trail runs grew 16%, and ultramarathon-style workouts grew by 9%.

Take Nedd Brockmann, who ran across Australia in 2022, and last year ran 1,600 kilometres in ten days to raise money for charity – all while sharing his self-imposed physical torture.

Or take the countless fitness content creators pushing themselves through punishing routines for the camera.

These cases reflect a deeper shift of fitness being turned into spectacle, wherein suffering becomes a sign of legitimacy, and pain is “proof” that you’re serious.

Such extreme content, which is often visually striking, can also be pushed by social media algorithms. Research shows how social media platforms systematically boost content that is intense, emotionally charged, and morally loaded.




Read more:
Get big or die trying: social media is driving men’s use of steroids. Here’s how to mitigate the risks


In other words, posts that provoke a reaction are more likely to get promoted. And
content relating to “wellness” extremism is designed to provoke, as it is visceral, performative, and packed with motivational and self-help anecdotes.

Why this matters

This is a potential public health issue.

Social media platforms amplify and monetise these performances, often pushing the most extreme content to the top. And influencers make money, above the money made from directly these platforms, from selling supplements, gear and coaching plans. At the same time, they act in more and more extreme ways to get further amplified by algorithms.

The risks of this dynamic, for both the viewers and creators, are very real. They range from hormone damage, to mental and physical decline, to injury, and even death.

But there is also a deeper ideological harm, as young men are fed a narrow and punishing idea of what it means to be a man. They are taught pain equals purpose, and that if you’re not suffering, you’re not trying.

Where to from here?

Public health agencies need to reckon with this form of digital hypermasculinity.

Extreme fitness influencers aren’t just poor role models; they’re the product of a system that profits from insecurity and spectacle. The goal shouldn’t be to ban or censor this content. But we do need to challenge its dominance, and offer alternatives.

That means engaging young men in offline spaces, such as the Tomorrow Man project, where they have an outlet for community and relationship building.

It means creating counter-narratives that don’t mock, but model, healthier versions of ambition and masculinity. For instance, the Movember campaign’s podcast Dad in Progress explores the various challenges and experiences faced by new dads.

It also means holding platforms accountable for the way they amplify extreme content.

In the absence of healthier narratives, self-flagellation is the only thing young men will have to aspire to.



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Track and Field: Vanderbilt competes at SEC Outdoor Championships

Vanderbilt Track and Field competed at the SEC Outdoor Championships from May 15-17 in Lexington, Kentucky. The Commodores placed last at the event, earning 12 total points. Still, multiple athletes recorded season-best finishes during the week. Day 1 Vanderbilt began the event with a few top finishes and personal bests. Devyn Parham and Marta Sivina, […]

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Vanderbilt Track and Field competed at the SEC Outdoor Championships from May 15-17 in Lexington, Kentucky. The Commodores placed last at the event, earning 12 total points. Still, multiple athletes recorded season-best finishes during the week.

Day 1

Vanderbilt began the event with a few top finishes and personal bests. Devyn Parham and Marta Sivina, Vanderbilt’s two heptathlon athletes, sat in fourth and sixth place through four events, respectively. The pair set personal records in the 100-meter hurdles, while they both cleared 1.62 meters in the high jump, a season-best mark for Parham. The duo also set personal records in the 200-meters, as Parham registered a time of 24.35 seconds while Sivina crossed the finish line in 25.05 seconds. Parham and Sivina competed in the final three events of the heptathlon on Day 2. 

In the track events, Eva Gautreaux placed 12th in the 800 meters with a time of 2:07.50. Allyria McBride earned her spot in the competitive 400-meter hurdles finals as she finished second in her heat with a season-best time of 56.17 seconds. A standout performance from Gigi Clifford in the 10,000 meters earned the Commodores another top-15 overall finish.

Day 2

The Commodores recorded a pair of scoring performances, a finals qualification and three program all-time top-10 marks to round out Day 2. Vanderbilt’s first points of the week were earned by heptathletes Sivina and Parham. Both totaled personal best scores, with Sivina placing fourth with 5,452 points and Parham placing seventh with 5,287 points. Sivina notched a personal best both in the long jump (5.73 meters) and the 800 meters (2:15.82) 

Taylor McKinnon registered a personal-record time of 13.50 seconds in the 100-meter hurdles to move to fourth in the program’s all-time performers list. 

Julia Rosenburg also advanced to the 1,500 meters final as she finished second in her heat with a time of 4:19.80. In the 3,000-meter steeplechase, Ellie Wolski set a personal-best time of 10:32.72, good for third best in program history. 

Day 3

The Commodores’ 4×100-meter relay team got the day started as they clocked a season-best time of 45.20 seconds to move into the No. 3 spot on the program’s all-time top-10 list. McBride placed fifth in the 400-meter hurdles which gave the Commodores another four points. 

Vanderbilt capped off the week with an eighth-place finish in the 4×400-meter relay.

“As this conference and the NCAA keep evolving, we, at Vanderbilt, are evolving,” director of cross country and track and field Althea Thomas said. “It was very special to see our seniors, those who we’ve had here for four years and those who have transferred in and believed in the product we have been putting out. It was a really good meet and a really good showing in reference to how we’re showing up.”

Qualifiers for the NCAA East First Round will be announced next week, and the event will take place May 29 and 31 in Jacksonville, Florida. 



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Texas A&M Athletics

COLORADO SPRINGS – Texas A&M volleyball’s Ifenna Cos-Okpalla was named to the USA Volleyball U23 North, Central America and Caribbean Volleyball Confederation Pan American Cup training roster the organization announced Monday.   Cos-Okpalla’s call up to the U23 national team marks her second-straight year earning the nod from Team USA, after being named to the […]

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COLORADO SPRINGS – Texas A&M volleyball’s Ifenna Cos-Okpalla was named to the USA Volleyball U23 North, Central America and Caribbean Volleyball Confederation Pan American Cup training roster the organization announced Monday.
 
Cos-Okpalla’s call up to the U23 national team marks her second-straight year earning the nod from Team USA, after being named to the collegiate national team last year. She joins a group of 18 which will gather for a training block at the National Team Training Center in Anaheim, Calif., from July 18-25. From this pool, 12 athletes will be chosen to represent the United States in Mexico.
 
“I’m proud of the work that Ifenna has put in on and off the court,” head coach Jamie Morrison said. “This invitation is a testament to that hard work and is well deserved. I can’t wait to see her playing for her country.”
 

Cos-Okpalla had a dominant junior season for the Aggies, showing elite production both offensively and defensively. The middle blocker stuffed 161 swings in 2024, averaging 1.46 blocks a set which ranks second and third, respectively, in the Maroon & White’s history books. On the offensive side of the net, the Flower Mound, Texas, native crushed 228 kills which is more than her previous two seasons combined. Cos-Okpalla’s efficiency also jumped off the charts, as she hit at .374 percent across the year which ranked seventh on A&M’s all-time list.
 
FOLLOW THE AGGIES
Visit 12thMan.com for more information on Texas A&M volleyball. Fans can keep up to date with the A&M volleyball team on Facebook, Instagram and on Twitter/X by following @AggieVolleyball.





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Marquette grad named to all-freshman beach volleyball team | Sports

Marquette graduate Mia Scanlon has been named to the all-freshman Florida Atlantic beach volleyball team. The 5-foot-9 Scanlon is 5-7 this season, including a season-best 4-5 record on court three, in addition to going 1-0 at the No. 1 position. This season, Scanlon earned a ranked win against No. 16 Stetson. The Sandy Owls won […]

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Marquette graduate Mia Scanlon has been named to the all-freshman Florida Atlantic beach volleyball team.

The 5-foot-9 Scanlon is 5-7 this season, including a season-best 4-5 record on court three, in addition to going 1-0 at the No. 1 position. This season, Scanlon earned a ranked win against No. 16 Stetson.

The Sandy Owls won their second Conference USA title to earn a berth in the NCAA

Ranked No. 13 in the nation, Florida Atlantic beach volleyball’s season came to a close recently when the Sandy Owls fell 3-0 to No. 4 Loyola Marymount University in the opening round of the NCAA Championship.

The Sandy Owls were making the program’s third all-time appearance in the NCAA Championship. FAU ends its campaign 21-15 overall.

 



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Vikings Track & Field preps for National Championships

Story Links CHICAGO, Ill. –– Seven Vikings will represent North Park University Track & Field at the 2025 Outdoor Championships this week. The Vikings will compete at the SPIRE Institute’s Outdoor Track & Field facility in Geneva, Ohio. Jereme Ombogo is the lone representative for the Viking men, qualifying for the 200m. His […]

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CHICAGO, Ill. –– Seven Vikings will represent North Park University Track & Field at the 2025 Outdoor Championships this week. The Vikings will compete at the SPIRE Institute’s Outdoor Track & Field facility in Geneva, Ohio.

Jereme Ombogo is the lone representative for the Viking men, qualifying for the 200m. His PR time of 20.95 in Augustana’a Midwest Twilight Qualifier places him as the seventh-ranked runner in the Division III event.

Thea Ring will be the only Viking to compete in an individual event, looking to match the highs of her winter championships Pentathlon finish in this spring’s Heptathlon. Ring enjoyed a PR total of 4825 to handily win the CCIW Outdoor Championship back on may 3. She’s ranked 10th in the country in the event.

North Park also saw its Women’s 4x100m Relay Team qualify to compete on the national stage with a time of 46.49 at the Wheaton Invitational on April 12. Mariana Costa Riana Hayes, Meja Lindberg, and Ring are expected to race while Julia Klein and Kimoria Oliver will serve as the alternates.



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Boys Volleyball Season Recap 2025 – Viking Magazine

The Paly Boys Volleyball team had a season nothing short of successful, ending the season with a 23-12 record. The Vikings won every single one of their league games as well, going 15-0, and placing first in the SCVAL-Foothill league. They started off the season very strong, winning 5 of their first 6 games before […]

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The Paly Boys Volleyball team had a season nothing short of successful, ending the season with a 23-12 record.

The Vikings won every single one of their league games as well, going 15-0, and placing first in the SCVAL-Foothill league.

They started off the season very strong, winning 5 of their first 6 games before tournament play.

“We started off very strong, and spirits were very high to start the season,” standout sophomore Tiam Maurstad said.

The one struggle for the Vikings over the course of the season was the tournaments, where they went 6-10 in tournaments on the year.

“Tournaments were a struggle for us the entire season, I think we could’ve gone into these games with better energy,” Maurstad said.

On a more positive note, after a their skid in tournaments, the Vikings went on an 8 game winning streak to end the regular season.

“We had a good chance at winning CCS because we ended our regular season on a strong note,” sophomore Mathis Lynn said.

However, the season came to an abrupt end, with the Vikings being defeated by Mountain View in the first round of CCS playoffs.

“Hopefully we can come back next year and come back to make a further run in playoffs,” Maurstad said.





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