يحاول ذهب - حر
THE BATTLE OVER AG1
February - March 2025
|Fortune US
Influencers are fighting over it. Scientists scoff at it. But the $100-a-month powder once known as Athletic Greens is only getting more popular.
IF YOU LISTEN to podcasts of any sort, chances are you’ve heard tell of the magical properties of AG1, the moss-green powder formerly known as Athletic Greens—probably in the voice of a host whom you like and trust.
Joe Rogan swears by a morning glass of AG1 as “a science-backed solution for energy, focus, and high performance.” On The Pivot Podcast, journalist Kara Swisher tells listeners that a daily scoop can replace “a ton of other supplements like [a] daily multivitamin, minerals, and probiotics,” while her cohost, New York University professor Scott Galloway, shares that he takes his “with some yogurt and some coconut milk and a few berries.” The neuroscientist Andrew Huber- man on Huberman Lab says AG1 makes him “feel better” and contains “adaptogens to help buffer stress.” Over on New Heights, the chart-topping podcast hosted by Jason and Travis Kelce, the football-playing brothers claim the powder is the result of “a lot of testing” and should be the go-to product if you’re “serious about stepping up your health game.”
Mixed with cold water every morning, a 12-gram scoop of AG1’s $99-a-month supplement ($79 if you commit to a monthly subscription) promises to provide easily ingested “foundational nutrition” comprising “75 minerals, whole-food-sourced superfoods, probiotics, and adaptogens.” As a voice-over explains in one of the company’s sun-dappled video advertisements showing smiling athletic people shooting hoops, climbing trees, and cartwheeling through luscious green fields, AG1 is “here to make healthy habits beautifully easy.”
هذه القصة من طبعة February - March 2025 من Fortune US.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
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