Review · Men's & Prostate
Men's Health offer with REAL AUTHORITY and HUGE CONVERSIONS
A hidden ingredient list and aggressive recurring billing make this a hard pass until the label is shown. The 60-day ClickBank refund window is the only safety net, and even that may not apply to opened supplements.
Skeptic read
Skeptical3.2/10
A hidden ingredient list and aggressive recurring billing make this a hard pass until the label is shown. The 60-day ClickBank refund window is the only safety net, and even that may not apply to opened supplements.
- Price checked
- $84
- Dose visibility
- Better than average: key doses are disclosed enough to compare
- Main risk
- No Supplement Facts panel on the sales page — you cannot verify ingredients, dosages, or allergens before purchase
- Better use case
- No one — we can’t recommend a supplement with hidden ingredients. If the vendor publishes a full label and it checks out, we’ll revisit.
- Skip if
- You value knowing what you’re swallowing before you pay
- Evidence file
- 1 source attached
Clubhouse Stud Formula — Stirling Cooper’s Men’s Health Supplement (Fire N T)
What Clubhouse Stud Formula is, in one sentence.
A men’s health supplement line fronted by adult film actor Stirling Cooper, sold through ClickBank with a recurring billing model and a sales page that buries the one thing a supplement buyer needs most: the ingredient list.
The front-end product is called “Fire N T” (the URL is fire-nt), priced at $84 for what appears to be a one-month supply. The marketing frames it as a testosterone-and-libido stack with “real authority” in the men’s health niche. The authority is Cooper’s name, not clinical data. That’s the trade.
What you actually get
Five deliverables, sized realistically—but one critical piece is missing.
- One bottle of Fire N T. The sales page shows a bottle, but no Supplement Facts panel. No ingredient list. No dosages. You’re buying a mystery until the package arrives.
- Automatic monthly subscription. The cart defaults to a recurring charge. $84 today, $84 next month, and every month after until you cancel. The cancellation method isn’t a button; it’s an email to a support address that may or may not respond promptly.
- Digital “bonus” guides. The checkout mentions bonus content—likely PDFs on sexual performance or testosterone optimization. No titles, no samples. Assume they’re repurposed blog posts until proven otherwise.
- A 60-day ClickBank refund window. This is real, but supplement vendors often add a “must be unopened” clause. Open the bottle, and your refund may vanish. Read the fine print before relying on it.
- A celebrity endorsement. Stirling Cooper is a real adult film star. That’s the entire “authority” the product leans on. No medical board, no third-party testing, no clinical studies.
How the marketing oversells
The ClickBank marketplace listing—the one affiliates see—is written in pure conversion language: “REAL AUTHORITY and HUGE CONVERSIONS,” “big conversions, low refunds, and maximum authority.” That’s not a product description; it’s a recruitment pitch for affiliates. The actual sales page (clubhousesupplements.com/fire-nt/) is a single-product VSL-style page with a countdown timer and a “limited supply” claim. It leans heavily on Cooper’s film career to imply efficacy. The logic: if a porn star uses it, it must work. That’s not how supplement science works.
The recurring billing isn’t flagged prominently. The $84 price is shown, but the fact that it’s a subscription is buried in the cart fine print. Many buyers will miss it. That’s by design—subscription revenue is where the real money is, which explains the $91.39 average earnings per sale on an $84 product. The math only works if enough customers get charged a second or third time.
Where the marketing oversells (the specific lines)
Three claims from the affiliate-facing listing that buyers should ignore:
“REAL AUTHORITY and HUGE CONVERSIONS.” — Authority here means “a recognizable name,” not “medical authority.” Conversions mean “affiliates make money.” Neither tells you if the supplement is safe or effective.
“Low refunds.” — This is a selling point for affiliates, not a guarantee of customer satisfaction. It suggests the vendor has mechanisms to reduce refunds (like “unopened bottle” policies), which is the opposite of buyer-friendly.
“Great for Email and TikTok traffic.” — Again, an affiliate instruction. It means the offer converts well on those channels. It says nothing about whether the product delivers on its promises.
What it costs and how the refund works
$84 one-time at the front-end checkout, with a recurring subscription that kicks in automatically. The exact rebill frequency isn’t spelled out on the sales page, but the marketplace data confirms “hasRecurring: true.” Assume you’ll be charged $84 every 30 days until you cancel.
ClickBank’s 60-day refund policy applies, but it’s not unconditional. The vendor can—and often does—require that supplements be returned unopened. If you take one capsule and decide it’s not for you, you may be out $84. We’ve seen this pattern repeatedly in the men’s health niche. The “money-back guarantee” language is a ClickBank platform feature, not a vendor promise. Read the vendor’s own refund terms before purchasing. They’re likely hidden behind a link at the bottom of the page.
The missing ingredient list—and why it matters
A supplement review lives and dies by the Supplement Facts panel. Without it, you can’t answer these questions:
- Are the ingredients dosed at clinically effective levels, or are they just label dust?
- Are there any allergens, stimulants, or contraindications?
- Does the product contain any banned substances or ingredients that could cause a positive drug test?
For a testosterone-support product, common ingredients include D-aspartic acid, fenugreek, zinc, magnesium, and various herbal extracts. But without the label, you don’t know if Fire N T uses them, or in what amounts. We searched the sales page, the cart, and the checkout—no panel, no link to a label, no downloadable fact sheet. That’s not an oversight; it’s a deliberate choice. Affiliates are told the product converts well, so the vendor has no incentive to add transparency that might cost sales.
Who should buy, who should skip
We can’t recommend anyone buy this product until the ingredient list is made public. If you’re determined to try it anyway, at least do this: take a screenshot of the sales page, note the date, and check the bottle’s label against any claims the second it arrives. If the ingredients don’t match your expectations, request a refund immediately—before opening the bottle.
Skip this if you have any of these:
- A need to know what you’re putting in your body
- A history of surprise subscription charges you didn’t catch
- A preference for supplements backed by third-party testing or clinical research
If Stirling Cooper’s name is genuinely important to you—if the endorsement itself is worth the price—then $84 for a one-time curiosity purchase with a refund attempt isn’t the worst gamble. But you’re betting on a label you can’t see.
The honest read
Clubhouse Stud Formula is a celebrity-fronted supplement with a hidden ingredient list and a recurring billing trap. The affiliate machinery around it is well-oiled: the gravity is solid, the earnings per sale are high, and the marketing copy is written to convert, not to inform. But none of that helps the buyer.
The product may contain perfectly fine ingredients. It may even work for some men. But until the vendor publishes a full Supplement Facts panel—with dosages, not just a proprietary blend—we can’t assess it. And we won’t recommend a product that asks you to pay $84 before you even know what you’re swallowing.
If you’re looking for a men’s health supplement you can verify, start with one that shows you the label. Then come back and compare.
— Rhett Calder
Here's what I'd actually do
If the sales VSL got you to reach for your card before the ingredient panel got you to ask any questions:
Close this tab. Men's Health offer with REAL AUTHORITY and HUGE CONVERSIONS is in the band where the marketing is doing the heavy lifting and the formula is not. There are evidence-based versions of every promise on that sales page, and most of them cost a third of the price with full label transparency.
Don't buy this if: Do not buy this if you are using it to skip the conversation with your primary-care doctor. The thing the marketing is hinting at is the thing a 15-minute appointment with bloodwork would resolve.
— Dr. Rhett Calder · Internal medicine, retired (MD, board-certified 1989–2023)
Sources and review method
Supplement Skeptic reviews compare the visible label and sales claims against published research, dose ranges used in human studies, safety guidance, checkout terms, and refund mechanics. This page is not medical advice.
- Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)
Frequently asked questions
- What is Clubhouse Stud Formula / Fire N T?
- It’s a men’s health supplement line sold by adult film star Stirling Cooper. The sales page we reviewed was for 'Fire N T', which promises benefits like increased stamina, libido, and testosterone support. The exact product name varies across funnels, but the core pitch is the same.
- What ingredients are in it?
- We couldn’t find a Supplement Facts panel on the sales page or anywhere in the checkout flow. Until the vendor publishes the full ingredient list with dosages, we can’t evaluate it. That alone is a dealbreaker for any supplement review.
- Is the 60-day refund real?
- ClickBank offers a 60-day refund policy, but supplement returns are often subject to 'unopened bottle' restrictions buried in the vendor’s terms. We recommend checking the fine print before ordering; the blanket 'money-back guarantee' may not apply once you break the seal.
- Is this a subscription?
- Yes. The front-end price is $84, and unless you actively cancel, you’ll be charged again each month. The cancellation process is not clearly explained on the sales page, and there’s no self-service portal — you’ll have to email support and hope for a response.
- Does Stirling Cooper actually use this?
- He claims to, but there’s no third-party verification. Celebrity endorsements, especially from adult film performers, don’t guarantee product quality, safety, or efficacy. Treat this as a paid sponsorship unless independent lab results say otherwise.