Founder's Story - She Trained Anne Hathaway, Emily Blunt, and Stanley Tucci and This Is What Actually Works | Ep. 393 with Monique Eastwood Founder of Eastwood Fit App
Episode Date: May 1, 2026Daniel opens with a question he has carried since childhood, how real are celebrity transformations and what is actually happening behind the scenes. Monique Eastwood answers from the inside, explaini...ng that transformation is built through consistent training, athletic foundation, and learning how your body moves in space, not a single hack. The conversation spans film readiness, aging and strength, her movement method rooted in dance, her app and weekly live sessions, and how a single Instagram post during COVID turned behind the scenes work into global visibility. Key Discussion Points Monique explains the reality behind celebrity transformations, consistency plus a mix of training, and how a client’s athletic baseline determines how fast change happens. She shares her core philosophy as an ex ballerina, body awareness first, movement from the center, then building strength and endurance from that foundation. Daniel asks about Devil Wears Prada II training, and Monique explains they train year round, four to five times a week, not just for a film, but for life, press, and travel demands. Monique describes how her method evolved with everyday clients, especially busy mothers, using multi directional movement to engage the brain and body and make training feel doable. She explains the celebrity introductions started through Emily Blunt’s sister Felicity, meeting Emily during Edge of Tomorrow, then being introduced to Stanley Tucci, leading to fifteen years of consistent training relationships. She shares how COVID changed everything, Stanley Tucci posted “biceps by Monique,” people asked “who is Monique,” and the visibility became organic momentum. Takeaways If you want results that last, stop chasing quick routines and start learning how your body moves, because awareness drives performance and injury prevention. Aging changes the goal from aesthetics to strength, mobility, and muscle preservation, especially for legs, glutes, pelvis, and core. Short sessions can still change your body if the intensity and structure are right, and Monique designs 30 to 40 minute sessions to be realistic for real life. Supplements are not one size fits all, Monique only recommends what she has tested, and she emphasizes research and dosage based on your body and needs. What looks glamorous from the outside is still discipline, repetition, and routine, and Monique’s mission is to make that routine accessible through her app and challenges. Closing Thoughts Monique Eastwood’s approach is a reminder that fitness is not a trend, it is a relationship with your body that compounds over decades. This episode turns celebrity training into something practical and personal, focusing on movement, consistency, and strength that keeps you capable as you age. If you feel stiff, tired, or “too far gone,” Monique’s message is simple: start now, stay consistent, and let your body surprise you. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I remember when I was younger, I always used to read men's health magazine, men's fitness.
And every time I read that magazine, Monique, it was always a celebrity on the cover,
and it was always their transformation.
And I wondered, though, what was reality?
Because obviously they talk about this stuff.
And I'm like, oh, I could do these push-ups and I could do this and that.
And I would think, like, there's no way that they went.
Because their transformations sometimes are insane.
I'm like, there's no way that they did like these three exercises every day for 25 minutes
and that got them there.
So what is the reality?
So I would say the reality is consistency.
And also the athleticism of a client.
So whatever you are arriving to your training sessions at, what you've done previous.
So if you've been quite an athletic person, it's going to be a quick transformation.
if you understand your body, much quicker transformation, obviously,
but, you know, consistency of movement.
You can repetitively change over time
if you're doing the same strengths training
and you're doing things that are beneficial for your body,
whereas it's not one thing or three exercises or four exercises
like maybe sometimes it shows.
It's doing a mixture and a variety of exercises
and learning about your body and how to perform.
So when they come to you and they're going to be in a movie,
because you are the celebrity trainer, among other things.
But when they come to you, what do you normally find is lacking
and where they need to get to to really be effective in the movie?
So I'm an expoal arena.
So my mind is always on understanding your body.
That's the first thing I want a client to do,
is know how their body moves.
in space.
So it can be a slow process.
It can be, you know, quite frustrating in the beginning because I'm trying to communicate
how a dancer moves and how a dancer understands her body.
So I take it slow.
I keep pushing.
I'm not faced by anything, really.
My whole objective is to make them understand themselves and really understand how movement
comes from the center of your body and then how you can build and grow once you have a strong
core we can then start to get a little bit more weight in our arms and and grow from that
place coming from your core muscles. So when you, is there ever a time where you were given
the job to help somebody and it just, it wasn't going well and you, you didn't see this was
going to be something that you could succeed in? I'm quite stubborn actually.
So I think being an ex-dance, as I said, we don't have room for no in a sense.
We have to pitch up for that show and we have to make it work.
So I'm quite determined to get that person to know themselves.
And I do believe that they will and they will be frustration because I'm quite bossy.
So I will try and get the best out of them and I want to get the best out of them.
And I really, really do believe they can give it to me.
So I'll stick at it and I'll stick at it and stick it and I'll keep going.
I'll find another way around it.
But I think eventually they're always sort of amazed by where they go.
After about a year of training them, my goodness, look where I am now.
I can't believe it.
I began without any knowledge on how my body moves in space.
And now I really do feel like I'm understanding how I move.
So yeah, I think you can't.
People.
How much time does it take to get ready for a movie?
I want to look, I've always wanted to act in a movie even though I'm not good at acting
and I'm not really funny but I want to be a comedian.
But an action star though?
I mean, that's like every kid's dream is to be an action star, I think, for me at least.
How much time is typically allotted to be able to get to that place?
So that's a difficult one because we individuals and I think if you have an athletic shape
or you have an athletic background,
it's going to be a lot easier to throw yourself into action.
I think it's probably harder for people that haven't been,
haven't had that athletic background.
So you've got to sort of train them to be,
have an athlete's mindset and have an athlete's approach to life
and really have that endurance in their muscles
and build that strength and endurance before you then take them
to another level of how they have to perform on that film.
But, you know, I'm lucky in a sense because the actors I've worked with are all so sort of focused
and they really want to do the best and do really well at what their role is.
So they'll put in 100%.
And I think that makes my job so much easier.
How has the experience been getting everyone ready for the devil wears Prada too?
I think you have Anne Hathaway.
I know you've coached Emily Blunt, Stanley Tucci, among a few.
people. How has this process been? And how does it feel that you're nearing the end?
We never really think of nearing the end because they are just signing in to their sessions on a
regular basis. I mean, I see them four to five times a week. We train the same way every year
consistently. We are quite strict with our routines. So their strength is there. It's not just for
film, it's for like press, for any campaigns, it's for their lives. It's having a strong,
body that can endure their lifestyle. So I don't think it's like, I mean, for the film,
obviously you are pushing it a little harder because you've got the time to do that. And then
with press, it's always all over the place because they're traveling the world and promoting.
So it changes slightly when you're going through time zones. So we just adapt. We adapt, but we're very
consistent with the training. It just stays, we don't, we don't lose sight of building strength and
endurance. By the way, I know you're in your 50s, which it really makes me feel super out of shape.
Because I'm like, how is it? I'm in my early 40s. And I feel like, I feel it's harder and harder
to stay in the shape. You're even training someone right now who's an action star who's going to be
56 or in their 50s right now currently. How have you seen the difference?
is when you are training people 20s, 30s, 40s, and now 50s, and even thinking about what you've
had to change for yourself. I haven't changed really anything, to be honest. I think being, just keep
doing it. I mean, I'm lucky in the sense with my job. I'm doing it all day. I haven't got a seat
to job. I'm not sitting at a desk. You know, I'm not static. I'm moving. So I think, you know,
in a sense, I'm lucky because I have kept that movement in my life. I think if you have got a
guest job or you're pretty static in your days. It does require a lot more effort to get your body
going at the end or beginning of a day and get it moving. So yeah, it's different careers. I mean,
I'm doing exactly the same things I was doing when I was younger. Maybe I get a little more tired
now because of the schedule and less time for myself to train, whereas I'm, you know, I'm moving
all day with my clients. That's the only thing I'd say is really, it really changed.
making the time to actually do things that I really want to do myself and train my body.
When I walk downstairs, I can hear like Rice Krispies in my knees.
I don't know what it is, but I feel like my body's like 80 and I'm 40s.
So if I'm looking at doing something, I feel like I've really looked at, I want to do something
shorter workouts, different types of movements.
I know you have your own movement style.
what do you see as effective with this with the style that you've created do you know Dan I created this
without the celebrity I mean I teach normal people and people every day and not just celebrity clients
and I started very locally with a lot of young mothers and I used to watch how they used to come back
from dropping the kids at school and they're all very tired and rushed and I used to try and calm them all down
And I bought my dance training and my, all the education I'd been taught over the years as a dancer.
And I tried to give that to all my clients.
And I think rather than lying them on the floor doing sort of like Pilates and, you know, making them concentrate,
I tried to distract their brain to keep them engaged with me the whole session.
And I think that's how my movement method developed.
I went back to my dance training and taught.
them to be more graceful, more body-aware, multidirectional with their movements, because
life is, we do move in multidirectional ways in our lives. We're not just up-down sideways.
So I started to bring more multidirectional movements, which creates more awareness in your
core and your pelvis. And then I developed my app where I put short little bursts of
my classes on there. It's very raw, it's very me just teaching, you know, in my studio.
nothing fancy. I mean, I'm sweating with you. I'm there live with you. And you really
seeing me being punished with you. And I think that's really what people want. They want to feel
like it's a doable, it's a doable routine. And if I'm 59 and able to still do it and
push my clients in their 50s, their 40s, their 60s, if they all can still stay with me
doing it for 30, 40 minutes at maximum effort.
I mean, that's all really I can impart and give you during that short burst.
So getting those 40 minutes done, everyone can do a 30 or 40 minutes session.
So that's why I kept the app pretty raw.
I have to say, I'm inspired.
I'm very inspired to make the change.
I'm not going to say I'm going to start tomorrow.
I'm going to start tonight because I'm going to get the app.
that's okay. I need it. I need it because I'm really feeling like almost upset with myself of how I've
gotten to a place where I've been like the most out of shape. But it, I don't know. It's like life becomes
hard. But when you think about business and when you think about marketing, I think a lot of people
would say if I could attach myself to celebrity names, it could really propel my business.
I was literally talking to someone this morning about this with their company.
that they're working on, how did that transform your business? And how did that even,
how did you even get started working with celebrities? So that's interesting because I never
thought of obviously a business when I make my celebrity clients because you're just a trainer
and you meet your clients and you train them and then you go home. And, you know, the only thing
I'd say that really changed that was COVID because then everybody went online. I mean,
nobody was online really with their training before COVID. It was just going to a studio,
training the client, coming home and doing it all over again, and doing your local clients. So
that was my life. And then suddenly, COVID, we were stuck at home and our businesses would have gone
because we weren't allowed to travel. And Stanley Tutti post,
posted biceps by Monique on his Instagram.
And suddenly everybody was interested in who's Monique?
And so I think it was just, you know, purely from Stan mentioning me that we were all
stuck at home.
So everyone was looking and being interested.
And then, yeah, I became more interesting because I trained Stanley.
And then obviously people realized that I trained Emily and Annie.
And, yeah, it just rolled from there, really.
It was very organic.
Everything that's happened has been very organic.
How did the connection between you and Stanley happen?
And that is interesting around, like you're saying,
the virality of something and how that something could lead into potentially
almost changing someone's life.
Yes.
Well, Stan, I met through Emily, because I met Felicity, Emily's sister,
who I've trained for many years.
So meeting Emily when she was doing Edge of Tomorrow.
And then she introduced me to Stan and Felicity, because they're married.
And I've trained them now 15 years.
I've trained Emily 15 years, probably 10 years, Stan and Felicity.
So, yeah, it's been a long journey.
I mean, you know, we've seen each other three times a week, maybe when we can for many, many years.
Fascinating.
So when you look at having the celebrity angle, having the community of people that you've built, you now have the app you've created, how has this all connected to allow you to now be successful with basically anything that you do?
Because I imagine once you build up, it's like you build up your brand online and then whatever things that you do, people will attach themselves.
they want to check it out, they want to follow you.
How are you seeing that now play into the success of the app?
That's a tricky one down because I'm not, I wouldn't say I'm natural on social media.
I'm not, I don't chat away and give loads of exercises to do.
I'm not a natural sort of in front of the camera.
I'm definitely a better behind-the-scenes kind of person.
I like to help put that other person in front of the camera and make them better.
I think I've got to be quite consistent with my press and staying relevant and, you know, being out there with what I'm doing, which, as anyone knows, in social media is exhausting.
But most of my day I'm teaching.
So it's like kind of an add-on, the social media side for me, because, you know, I'm busy from morning till night with clients.
So when do you have the time to do footage and, you know, talk on the camera and do all that
extra stuff that social media has demanded of you?
So it is a bit of a juggling act, which is why I did the app, because the app is so real.
It's exactly what I'm doing with my clients every day.
So I thought, well, I've got to give you something rather than giving on Instagram, spending
all that time on Instagram, and I do a live session on a Friday morning.
and I got loads of local people and people all over the UK that join it.
And then some Americans and Europeans that do it later catch up on it.
So I think the app really wasn't built on people asking me,
can you show us what to do?
Can you tell me what you do on Instagram?
And I was like, I better put this all into a package.
And then they can just do the classes and see exactly what I do as a trainer with my everyday clients.
From the outside, it might look that everything is so glamorous.
Like, oh my gosh, you get to hang out with these people and you get to change lives and transform.
That sounds amazing.
However, I imagine there's ups and downs.
Was there a moment, though, where you're like, I don't want to do this anymore.
I'm just going to go get a job in finance or do something else.
No, I don't think I can do anything else, to be honest.
I've been doing this for so long.
I'm very passionate about how I approach it all.
I really do believe in what I teach.
I believe it can make a difference.
I believe it because I know how strong it's made me
and the people that have stayed consistent with me.
So I have that belief in what I'm teaching.
And if it does bring, I don't know, fame or glory,
that's just the bonus.
but I've been doing it for like 35 years.
It's not something.
I didn't start doing it because I wanted to be known about it.
I just started doing it because I wanted people to change and understand their bodies and get stronger.
So it came from a place of pure passion, really.
So what would you say then is the long-term mission and vision?
Like, where do you see all this going?
Because obviously the tough part about being a trainer is your one human being who can only train X amount of
people, which obviously is why you made the app so you could really broaden the impact that you
can have. What do you see is the long-term vision? That I would love for the app to just be
everywhere where people can just wake up in the morning and go, right, how do I work my whole
entire body and get the most out of it and feel really strong and have good endurance?
I'll put Monique's strength and technique session on for 30 minutes.
I'm going to be lifting weights.
I'm going to feel amazing after 30 minutes.
Shower, go to work.
And if I can get loads of people on that mission,
either 40 minutes session, 30 minute session,
a hit class, a ballet-inspired class,
you know, three times a week,
I'm making fitter, stronger, healthier people.
And that would be such an incredible thing.
Okay, let's do like a men's health, women's health breakdown because they always break down like this is Monique and this is exactly her routine.
Because I'm very curious, at 59 years old, can you walk me through a day of what you do at 59?
Because if you're doing it at 59, even though you do have a lot more years of experience than I do, I feel like if you can do it at 59, I think I should be able to do at
at least 25% of it at 42.
The human body is very incredible.
Just remember that.
We underestimate our abilities.
We really do.
I see an old man that lives down the road for me.
He was 90 years old.
He goes running three times a week.
And whenever I feel...
And now I feel really bad then.
So he goes running and I often stop and go, Mike, how many times a week do you do this?
He goes.
He goes and all the way around.
He goes and all the way back three times a week.
he's got knee braces on but he is determined so I think a lot of it starts in our heads if we can get
our heads to believe we can do it I mean my routine is not always easy I don't always wake up perky
thinking yay can't wait for the day I mean I'll wake up sort of early and then I'll do a session
go into another session sometimes have a break for some breakfast going to another session so this
and it's you're on you know you're giving energy the whole
morning and then you try and build in your breaks because I think in the early days I didn't
build in enough breaks and I know I was exhausted so now as you get older you learn you need those
breaks and then you go into your afternoon sessions and also try and make time to do maybe a yoga
class at night or a sauna or a lovely walk in fresh air in nature to get away from the screen
I do I'm quite I'm quite good at and disciplined at doing that but Dan I'm also quite
boring in the week. I eat super healthy, no alcohol. I'm very, very, I'm very Mediterranean. I don't snack.
One of those annoying people that, unless I've got a huge schedule, I'll grab some dried apricots or nuts or something.
I'm not sort of like somebody that crave sugar, luckily. I think that's my dance background.
I don't know, maybe. But, yeah, I know I have lots of protein. I have. I have.
complex carbohydrates, loads of vegetables. I have eggs for breakfast or goat cheese on toast or
smoked salmon with sulk trout. I'm quite sort of consistent. I'm not fatty. I don't do any weird
sort of strange bowls of food or anything too different. I'm just pretty Mediterranean,
actually, with the way I eat. I want to be Mediterranean. I enjoy the Mediterranean, by the way.
It's a wonderful place. Croatia?
It's one of my favorite places, by the way.
Oh, I have me.
I know.
I go to Beathia two.
I'm not.
I always go to.
What about Greece?
Do you like Greece and do you like Italy?
I love Italy.
I would be absolutely dreadful if I lived in Italy because I do love pasta.
I'd just be eating all day.
But I'm Greece.
I feel like Croatia is like a mixture of Greece and Italy for me.
Is it?
Like if they had a baby, that's like Croatia.
You got to go.
I will go. I will definitely go. I'm going to Greece at the end of the year. I'm doing a retreat in Greece.
So in Santorini. So that'll be lovely.
I love Santorini. Have you been before?
No, never been. Never been. So I'm looking forward to.
Amazing.
Gorgeous. Yeah. Where I'm gorgeous.
Incredible. Some of the best pasta I ever had rivaled Italy.
Really? Interestingly. They think, they say that their olive oil is better than Italy's olive oil. That's what they say.
All right. I should.
try it up and I'll let you know you can you can be the judge what do you think about supplements
because I feel like there's there's been this really big push around supplementation
peptides I know a lot of people that are doing like TRT or HRT I don't know even you know which
acronym it is but I know I feel like the supplement industry is more is booming more now than
ever I could be making that up it just feels that way
Look, I mean, I'm not a scientist, and I do listen to a lot of this stuff out there.
God, it's so much noise out there.
I don't know how anybody knows what they should be taking, eating, doing, training.
I mean, it's exhausting.
I wouldn't want to be a young person on social media.
It's just a minefield.
I think you've got to know what's right for your body.
We all deplete in certain ways.
So if you're not good at absorbing certain vitamins, your bloods will tell you this.
You might need to supplement with vitamins.
Bs. I know I have to supplement with vitamin Bs because my nervous system's always on high alert.
So I'm definitely needing the B1s and B12s.
Vitamin D, we don't get a lot of sunshine in this country.
So, you know, I'm from South Africa, so I'm, I need to maybe supplement with vitamin D.
Creatine, I've started only taking recently.
And I really do feel that it has built, it has helped build my muscle.
I don't talk about anything until I've tried it because I don't want to just be one of those
people that just sort of talk about stuff unless it has made a difference to me.
So yeah, I think supplements are very unique to you and what your body needs.
And I think we can't just say one thing is going to suit everybody.
You know, there's proof on amigas being good for you.
There's proof on vitamin B12 being good for your nervous system.
So, yeah, those sort of supplements, I'm quite happy to do.
take. I'm fascinated by creatine because I remember taking creatine. I started working out like in the
90s, got really heavy in the early 2000s. And that was definitely the time of like huge like gay,
get really, really big like Arnold. I think that was like what everyone wanted to be. So
creatine was like the thing that everyone was like based. You've got to take creatine. But it wasn't mass.
It was very niche among like. I feel like. I feel like.
men who really wanted to get really muscular.
And then over the last few years, I don't know what's changed.
But over the last few years, it just feels like all these people are talking about how
creatine's like good for everyone and all these different things.
And it's not what we used to think it was where like women might be afraid to get like
I would always hear like I don't want to get too big.
Like I don't want to gain too much muscle.
But now it's like, I don't know.
So maybe I maybe I should go back to trying it.
I think they've done so much research on it, and it's like one of the most researched
sort of supplements, I think that's important.
So do your research.
I also think it depends on the dosage.
You've got to know, I mean, look, I'm small.
So, I mean, we can't all take the same dosage, and we won't all absorb it the same way.
We won't all process it the same way.
So I don't take a full dose, but I do feel that my muscles are a little bit more pumped up
than they were because don't forget my age, you lose muscle. So you're not there yet, but at my age,
you lose a lot of muscle mass and bone density. So you become almost not neurotic about it,
but you become aware that you have to keep your muscle mass and your bone density as you go through
the aging process. So it's become quite an attractive thing for people our age to just help us
maintain muscle mass. But it shouldn't be the only thing. Obviously, you've got to do your, you've got to do your weights,
You've got to do, you know, you've got to do your exercises.
I'm not from the body building gym sort of background.
I'm from a dance background.
So we didn't ever want to be bulked up.
We always wanted to be lean and strong and performance ready.
And that's how I think my method has developed.
It's not from the gym side of things.
It's really from that movement and dance and fluidity and mobility and strength.
that's that's the my Eastern movement method really from that side of thing so I never want to
look like you know one of those big bodybuilders what seems like the the talk now around
preserving muscle mass not only because of aging but because of the large mass use of
gLP ones people obviously not eating barely eating any food at all and I've heard a lot of things
around large depletion of muscle mass, which I've heard, you know, like one of the biggest,
we had someone on before who's a professor and they've studied how people will live longer
is a lot determined by their leg strength and also by like the strength of them being able to
like pick themselves up, like upper body strength.
And if we lose all our muscle mass, then I imagine our life is going to be very complicated
as we get older.
But at the same time, with health now,
AI solving a lot of health-related problems,
we potentially have read a lot around we could be living to 150-plus years old.
However, if we have no muscle mass and we're solving other problems,
I imagine our lifestyle is going to be pretty miserable.
And that's kind of where I think our heads go as you get older.
I don't know if your head was, my head never was there in my 40s.
it was more aesthetics in your 40s.
I think when you cross over that menopausal line as a woman
and you get to that sort of 50s stage and as you're aging,
you definitely are really focused on strength
and feeling strong and healthy.
And I mean, you just have to do one of my sessions down.
I'm a leg girl, leg and butt.
I'm a next dancer.
It's all, you know, everything comes from strong,
strong pelvis, strong leg, strong core.
The arms, obviously, we also want to build muscle
because I want you to feel your arms are really an extension of your back.
So when you lift your weights, it's not just like pumping it up.
It's coming from your back.
So everything has a grace when you move.
And like you say, if you fall over,
if you haven't got leg strength or agility or any mobility,
you can't get yourself off the floor.
So a lot of old people use their arms to try and pull themselves up.
And that's tough.
I mean, my dad's 99, and he still does his little exercise routine.
And he's quite disciplined.
And I think because he's been quite disciplined with these little exercise routine,
he's kept his muscle mass.
And, you know, he's lived, I mean, he still drinks wine and eats what he wants,
but he's still lived till 99.
So I do think exercise.
Amazing genetics.
Well, let's hope.
I am a good point.
hope. Obviously, I mean, you're like you are following everything to a T. Obviously, by the way,
I need to work on my glutes. My wife has told me that my glutes are, they're lacking.
They're lacking. I've been skipping too much leg day. So I need to make sure I get that. How do I get
the app, by the way? So you just go on to my website, we'll have it. My Instagram has it at the top.
Or you just go on to Apple and you get it on the Apple store, on the app store.
Eastwood fit.
And yeah, but don't, don't give up.
Don't think, oh my goodness, she's moving in so many different directions.
Which way is she going now?
What is she just, you have to stick with it.
You have to be determined that your brain and body, it's brain and body, Dan.
It's I'm making your brain and body engage, which is like doing a puzzle,
which is really good for us now.
So, you know, it's not just pick up the weight and do a squat.
I'm making you do different things with the weights and the squats.
I love it.
Well, I'm going to get into the best shape of my life.
I'm going to send you a photo before and after to let you know that I stuck with it.
I'm determined.
I can't wait.
I've got challenges on the app.
Do one of the challenges, which will be a five-week challenge.
I'm going to challenge you.
I'm going to challenge a student that's semi-out-of-shaped black.
like myself. I'm going to challenge someone who's similar to me and I'm going to come through. I'm a very
competitive person. So I'm very excited to get this app. I can't wait to watch Devil Wear's Prada too. So I can see
your work. I think that's got to be pretty. How does that feel? This is my final question. How does that
feel when you're sitting in a movie theater or you're sitting at home and you're watching a movie?
Because I imagine that's what you're looking for is you want to see. This is your work, right? And then
you want, then you go and see tabloids and media of what they say about that person.
Because I imagine that kind of reflects it back on like, did I do my job?
Did I do my job in a way that other people see a difference?
Yeah.
I mean, I've never really sort of looked at it.
And I look at them, my clients as, you know, just making the best, getting the best out of them.
And making their jobs or whatever they do, giving them.
I don't know, something to feel good about.
And the fact that this is part of their routine in their lives to make them stronger and fitter and have healthier bodies,
yeah, I'm just part of their journey.
And I'm very grateful I'm part of their journey.
And it's just wonderful for me to see, you know, them in films looking strong and graceful and in control of their body.
And when they're on the red carpet, looking, you know, so in tune with themselves.
I mean, I don't take credit.
I just feel, yeah, we've done well.
You know, we've achieved.
Like, I guess, a choreographer in a ballet
would just, he can't take all the credit.
The dancer has to have some credit
because, you know, she's putting in the effort
and putting in the time.
We just sort of directing, yeah, we're just directing.
So it's, you know, it is a teamwork.
It's a real teamwork effort.
It's a team effort.
Well, Monique Eastwood.
I hope everyone gets the act.
I'm going to take the challenge.
Eastwood Fab.
I'm taking the challenge.
I'm going to take the challenge.
I've been for 30 some odd years, the last, you know, the first time ever looked at a men's health magazine, I wondered how much truth went into that.
So thank you for answering my childhood teenage questions around fitness and fitness with celebrities, because I was an avid reader.
So thank you for that.
But I'm very excited to see your work live in action with all these people.
and I'm going to, I'm determined in 30 days from now, I am going to send you before and after to show you that I put in the work.
So thank you for inspiring me.
Dan, that's amazing because I have got a journalist that did exactly this.
And he did one of my challenges.
And he's from The Guardian.
And he said he did his personal best in the gym because he loves CrossFit after he'd done my five week challenge.
All right.
I'm challenging him.
Challenge how?
I'm challenging him for the next 30 days.
There you go.
Thanks for joining us today.
Thank you.
