What did @ezequielvedrovnik actually say?
Honestly? It's nearly impossible to tell. The transcript attributed to this video is a jumble of fragmented phrases, broken Spanish-English mixing, and what appears to be either severe audio corruption or auto-transcription failure at an industrial scale. Phrases like "nót el nót el nót el d'eain d'eau" and "mita-purgom-bleth apan" are not recognizable as any language, medical terminology, or coherent argument.
What we can extract: the creator appears to reference consumption of meat and something about a two-to-three day cycle ("aproximadamente dos a tres días"). The caption, which is legible, promotes a paid coaching service covering 94 countries, promises "guaranteed transformation," and mentions "natural supplementation." That caption is doing real marketing work while the video itself is linguistically unusable as a source of health claims.
We're not going to manufacture specific claims from noise. That would be worse than the video itself.
Does the science back this up?
There's nothing coherent enough in the transcript to test against evidence. But the caption's promise of "guaranteed transformation" through a coaching program that includes supplementation, presumably in the TRT or hormone optimization space, is a claim pattern we can evaluate on its own terms.
No legitimate clinical evidence supports the idea that any coaching program guarantees physical transformation. A 2021 review in JAMA Internal Medicine (Jakicic et al.) found that even well-structured, clinically supervised lifestyle interventions produce highly variable outcomes depending on baseline hormones, sleep, stress, and genetics. "Guaranteed" results are a marketing claim, not a medical one.
On the supplementation side: if this coach is recommending "natural" supplements as part of a TRT-adjacent program, the evidence base is thin for most of them. Ashwagandha has modest testosterone-supporting data (Lopresti et al., 2019, Medicine), but the effect sizes are small and far from transformative.
What did they get wrong (or right)?
What's wrong: The caption promises "guaranteed transformation," which no responsible health professional should promise. Outcomes in hormone optimization depend on baseline labs, adherence, underlying conditions, and factors no coaching program controls. Promising guarantees to people in 94 countries, many of whom may have no access to physician oversight, is irresponsible at best.
The framing of "natural supplementation" as a meaningful component of what appears to be a TRT-category service is also worth flagging. Natural supplements do not replace medically supervised testosterone therapy for diagnosed hypogonadism. Conflating the two misleads people who genuinely need clinical care.
What they got right: We cannot fairly credit specific claims because none are coherent. The promotion of working toward a "better version" of oneself through sustainable habits is a reasonable framing in general, but that's too vague to score.
What should you actually know?
If you're considering any hormone optimization program, including TRT, a few things matter more than any TikTok coach's pitch. First, diagnosis requires labs. Hypogonadism is defined by serum total testosterone below 300 ng/dL on at least two morning measurements, per the American Urological Association's 2018 guidelines. A coaching program cannot diagnose you or legally prescribe treatment.
Second, "natural supplementation" is not a substitute for medically indicated testosterone therapy. And testosterone therapy, when you do need it, is not a transformation guarantee either. A 2016 landmark trial in the New England Journal of Medicine (Snyder et al.) found meaningful but variable improvements in sexual function, mood, and bone density in older hypogonadal men, with effects differing significantly across individuals.
Third, coaching programs operating across 94 countries face wildly different regulatory environments. What's legal to recommend in one country may be illegal or dangerous in another. That's not a minor detail.
Bottom line on this video
The transcript is not fact-checkable because it is not intelligible. The caption, however, contains the kind of sweeping guarantees and vague supplement promises that should make any thoughtful person pause. If a coach can't tell you exactly what they're recommending, why it works, and what the evidence says, "transformation guaranteed" means nothing. Ask for the labs protocol, the clinical oversight structure, and the refund policy before you send a DM.