4.9 • 667 Ratings
🗓️ 25 June 2024
⏱️ 99 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Shawn Coss is an ER Nurse and the artist behind Any Means Necessary. We discuss his early life in Ohio, his journey into medicine, the opioid epidemic, his love of art, Cyanide and Happiness, working on a Stephen King movie, mental health art, music and so much more.
Shawn was born in England whilst his Father was stationed there during his time in the Army, but moved back to America with his family when the base closed down. They ended up in West Virginia where money was tight, but eventually moved to Akron where they took over a relative’s janitorial business. Much like his parents, Shawn struggled to make ends meet, working long days in a factory, as a screen printer, and a pizza delivery guy.
He would move into the nursing field, seeing it as a more stable way to support his wife and two young daughters, which would become a job he held part time for many years. Shawn was driven, stubborn, loyal, and passionate in equal measure, wanting to prove himself and to make those around him feel proud. A legacy that his kids could look up to. He would go on to working with Cyanide & Happiness as one of their artists, having his work featured in the Stephen King film Cell, appearing at comic-cons, and even designing album covers for Seether (Poison the Parish, and Si Vis Pacem, Para Bellum).
But when Inktober 2016 hit, Shawn’s Mental Health awareness pieces gained him massive recognition, a swathe of new Any Means Necessary fans, as well as organizations such as Buzzfeed, and The Huffington Post reaching out to him, securing his name as a dark artist worth paying attention to. His hunger though has never been sated, and has helped drive the brand into as many places as it can possibly go, never missing a financial trick if one’s there to be learnt.
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0:00.0 | This episode is sponsored by Transcend, a veteran-owned and operated performance optimization company |
0:05.9 | that I introduced recently as a sponsor on this show. |
0:09.5 | Well, since then, I have actually been using my products, and I have had incredible success. |
0:14.4 | There was initial blood work that was extremely detailed, and based on that, they offered supplementation. |
0:20.6 | So I began taking DHEA, BPC 157 for inflammation |
0:25.3 | based on the fact that I've been a stuntman, a martial artist and a firefighter in my whole life, |
0:29.9 | lots of aches and pains, dihexa to help cognition after multiple punches to the head and shift work |
0:36.1 | and peptides. Four months later they they did a detailed blood work again, |
0:40.1 | and I was actually able to taper off two of the peptides |
0:43.2 | because my body had responded so well to just one of them |
0:46.3 | that it was optimized at that point. |
0:48.5 | So I cannot speak highly enough of the immense range of supplementation |
0:53.4 | that they offer, whether it's male health, |
0:55.6 | female health, peptides to boost your own testosterone, which I would argue is needed by a lot of |
1:00.7 | the fire service, or whether it's exogenous testosterone needed, especially after TBI's or advanced |
1:06.5 | age. Now, as I mentioned before, the other side of this company is an altruistic arm called |
1:11.9 | the Transcend Foundation, which is putting veterans and first responders through some of their |
1:17.2 | protocols free of charge. Now, Transcend are also offering you the audience 10% off their |
1:23.6 | protocols, and you can find that on Jamesgearing.com under the products tab. |
1:28.8 | And if you want to hear more about Transcend and their story, listen to episode 808 with the founder, |
1:35.5 | Ernie Colling. Or go to transcendcompany.com. |
1:41.1 | This episode is sponsored by a company I've literally been using for over 15 years now, and that is 511. |
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