Any of you lot seen his promotional video in the Koloseum site yet?Bloody awesome! Looks like a promo for an epic movie!
http://koloseum.com/video.html
200$ for some sugar and amino acids you could get for less than 1/3 is ridiculous. You can make your own drink for probably 1/4th of the price or less by buying the ingredients separately. Buy the carbs, creatine and aminos from trueprotein for example.
He thinks 1 hour of his time as a personal trainer is worth $500. Hell, most ivy-league lawyers don't even get $500/hr, let alone some meathead trainer. To put it in perspective, based on a 40-hour week that would be over $1M a year. So, it's not surprising that he's pimping some powders that should go for $20-$25 for $70.
The sad thing is his knowledge and theories are sound. And while I can't begrudge anyone for wanting to make money, being blatantly over-the-top greedy about it is not a way to enhance one's reputation.
Milos may be good, but is he really ten times better than a trainer charging $50/hour or five times better than one charging $100/hr? I doubt it. And are his amino acids really four times better than the amino acids sold by the very same company he's sourcing from under their AminoVital brand?