Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1153: Overhead Press vs. Push Press, What it Takes to be an Advanced Lifter, the Benefit of Training When Sore & MORE

Episode Date: November 1, 2019

In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions about the differences between beginner, intermediate and advanced lifters, the overhead press vs. push press, training a... muscle group that is still sore from the previous workout, and processed vs non-processed foods. Why is Adam walking funny? (3:53) Coach Eugene Teo likes to stir the pot: Challenging the hierarchy of exercises. (7:06) Was Jeffrey Epstein murdered?! Kevin Spacey’s accuser dies?! What is going on?! (24:45) Sal and Max Lugavere are creating a controversy of their own in their latest podcast on veganism. (27:15) BIG NEWS coming out of 24 Hour Fitness! Are they racing to the bottom? (31:40) Mind Pump Recommends Silicon Valley on HBO. (40:47) #Quah question #1 – What are the differences between beginner, intermediate or advanced lifters? (43:03) #Quah question #2 – Can you break down the differences between the overhead press vs. push press? Which is better for the novice lifter? (49:30) #Quah question #3 – What are your opinions on training a muscle group that is still sore from the previous workout? (57:25) #Quah question #4 – Thoughts on processed vs non-processed foods? If the macros are still good in processed foods? (1:04:37) People Mentioned Dr. Ben Pollack (@phdeadlift)  Instagram Jordan Syatt - SyattFitness (@syattfitness)  Instagram Eugene Teo (@coacheugeneteo)  Instagram Max Lugavere (@maxlugavere)  Instagram Mike Matthews (@muscleforlifefitness)  Instagram   Related Links/Products Mentioned October Promotion: MAPS Anabolic ½ off!! **Code “RED50” at checkout** Mind Pump 1152: Why You Should Powerlift Mind Pump 1065: Jordan Syatt on Becoming Gary Vee’s Trainer, the Biggest Lessons He Learned from Gary Vee, Keys to Building an Online Business (& Mistakes to Avoid) & MORE! Mind Pump TV - YouTube Jeffrey Epstein's autopsy more consistent with homicidal strangulation than suicide, Dr. Michael Baden reveals The Genius Life 77: Losing Fat Without Counting Calories, "The Game Changers," Plant-Based Politics | Sal di Stefano Visit Organifi for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout** Mind Pump 842: The Steve Jobs of Fitness- Mark Mastrov Mind Pump 985: Mark Mastrov- Fitness Industry Empire Builder, NBA Owner & Original Mind Pump Mentor Silicon Valley - HBO Z Press to take Your Shoulder Development to the Next Level The OFFICIAL Overhead Press Checklist! (AVOID MISTAKES!) How To IMPROVE Your Overhead Press | The Muscle Doc MAPS Fitness Prime Pro – Mind Pump Mind Pump 1142: Nine Signs You are Overtraining Guidance for Industry: Guide for Developing and Using Data Bases for Nutrition Labeling Can You Trust Calorie Counts? GAO Says FDA Fails to Ensure Accuracy and Truthfulness of Food Labels NIH study finds heavily processed foods cause overeating and weight gain Mind Pump Free Resources 

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Starting point is 00:00:00 If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go. MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts. Salta Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews. In this episode of Mind Pump, so in this episode, we answer questions asked by listeners like you, what they do to go to our Instagram page, Mind Pump, on Instagram and they ask us questions under the quamim. We pick our favorite ones and then we answer them.
Starting point is 00:00:28 But we also open these episodes with our introductory conversation. This is where we have a lot of fun. We talk about current events, studies, and we tend to mess with each other. And that first portion, here's what we talked about in this episode. We start out by talking about why Adam is walking funny. What the hell is going on here?
Starting point is 00:00:48 He's got a weird wobble in his stuff. A big weekend, huh? Then we talked about the Instagram debate or discussion we had with our good friend Eugene Taylor. He's a smart dude. He made a post that said, you don't need to squat bench or deadlift. Actually, it was a little bit more controversial than just that.
Starting point is 00:01:04 So we talk all about why we think most people should. Hi, this is Bree. Bench or deadlift. Actually, it was a little bit more controversial than just that. So we talk all about why we think most people should. Hi, this is Bree. Bench and deadlift. Then we talked about the Epstein autopsy. Believe it or not, another autopsy came out and the forensic's person that did it said, he might have been murdered. Whoa.
Starting point is 00:01:20 Yeah, who would have believed. Strange. I talked about the recent podcast that was aired where I was interviewed by Max Lugavir on the Genius Life, this podcast we went off. We talked about counting macros and calories and why you don't need to do that. We also gave a rundown of the game changers documentary.
Starting point is 00:01:38 So if you wanna know what our opinion is, go check that out. Then we talked about how organifi is our favorite vegan supplement company. That's because we were talking about the game changers. Now we talked about how organify is our favorite vegan supplement company. That's because we were talking about the game changers. Now we have a discount for you. Again, organify makes vegan supplements like protein powders, green juices and red juices
Starting point is 00:01:55 and the gold juice. They have a product called Pure, which is a Neutropic-based gut health supplement. You get 20% off if you use the mind pump discount. Here's what you do. Go to organify.com, forward slash mind pump. Use the code mind pump for the 20% off. Then we talked about 24 hour fitness.
Starting point is 00:02:13 This is the place where we all went to school back in the day, but it looks like they might be tinking. And then we talked about the show. Silicon Valley on HBO, I haven't seen it, but Justin said it's rad. You gotta check it out. Then we answered some fitness questions. Here's the first one.
Starting point is 00:02:29 What are the differences between a beginner, intermediate and advanced lifter? Like how do you categorize them? Next question, this person wants us to break down the difference in benefits or detriment of the strict overhead press versus the push press. The next question was, what are our opinions on training a muscle
Starting point is 00:02:49 that is still sore? Like, should you train it or should you skip it? And the final question we answered, this person wants to know what our thoughts were on process versus non-processed foods, even if the macros were the same. So proteins, fats, carbs, and calories are the same. What are the benefits, detriment, or is it the same. So proteins, fats, carbs, and calories are the same. What are the benefits
Starting point is 00:03:05 detriment? Or is it the same when it comes to process versus unprocessed foods? Also, you're entering into the final hours of one of the biggest promotions of the year. Maps and a ballack, our flagship fitness program designed to build muscle, speed up the metabolism, strengthen your body. This is the program that most people get started on with us. It's definitely our most popular one. It's 50% off. So if you're listening to this episode, right when we dropped it, you're lucky. There's some time left for the 50% off discount. Here's what you got to do. Do it now. Go to
Starting point is 00:03:42 maps red.com and use the code red50ard50 no space for the discount. You're entering the game zone. Do you know what's fun? Yeah, you know, it's hilarious. Watching Adam get in his truck. Oh, God. Right now, right now, legs or I can't walk like that. I can't remember the last time I was this sore. I mean, you know, it's funny is, you know, this is since probably the original three programs. I haven't like followed a protocol to a T. And I said, okay, when I do this powerlifting program,
Starting point is 00:04:20 I'm gonna just follow a T, just trust the process, go through it. Those that don't know, this is actually the first program that I haven't been involved in. I was here when the guys created it with Ben Pollock. And so that's part of why I was excited. Like, okay, cool, I'm literally going through it. Let's see what I'm in for.
Starting point is 00:04:36 What if we gave Adam a fake one? Yeah, that's what I felt like. I'll do this. Because normally what I would do is I'd go off of how I feel. I mean, we've been doing this for so long now. I know when I'm getting after it and work out, I know when I'm really overreaching.
Starting point is 00:04:53 And this is like, okay, I'm just kind of, whatever about all that, I'm just gonna follow the programming and see how I feel. And so I am just so, as fuck, man. Well, you went into it with a week off. Yeah, I was, yeah, I was deconditioned. I think if you're coming off of one of our other programs, you're coming off of anabolic or aesthetic or split
Starting point is 00:05:12 or one of our other programs and then you transition right into power, you'll be fine. That's what it was designed, that's how we wrote it, because when we wrote it with Ben, we told them we said, okay, we wanna design a program that gets fit people who already work out from where they're at to powerlifter competition.
Starting point is 00:05:29 We want to stretch them a little bit. Yeah, it's a powerlifting competition ready. And here's the thing, I've never trained purely like a powerlifter. I've trained with a lot of concepts and principles around it, but I've never trained. And I've never really trained, like all the way, you've never trained a client for a powerlifting competition. I'm aware of the principles and techniques and all that stuff. But I have had friends who were experienced lifters,
Starting point is 00:05:54 very experienced advanced, who are strong, go to a powerlifting gym or follow a powerlifting protocol and add like 30, 40 pounds to like a squat. Which is insane. No, me too. I've heard the same thing. So that's why I'm just, I'm, you know, blindly following it, no matter what.
Starting point is 00:06:13 And I'm definitely feeling it. Pain for it a little bit. Yeah, I'm paying for it for these. Did Jordan, Jordan Syat, he, when he went to, God, where'd he go? What's the same as, there you go. Yeah. He went to West Side and he added like a hundred and something pounds to his deadlift or something like that
Starting point is 00:06:29 or even more. He was in sync. Yeah, it was crazy. And he's already was already advanced. I mean, that's the thing about powerlifting training. It's very objective and it's tested because it works or doesn't. Well, when it's very specific,
Starting point is 00:06:40 like I've never programmed this specific for that. Like, I've always like, oh, I want to get a better deadlift or oh, I want my squad to improve. And so along those lines, like including it in your, right. So then I take some of the powerlifting principles and I integrate it into my already like bodybuilder type of routine.
Starting point is 00:06:59 But never have I just said, okay, I'm really focused on the three big lifts and let's see what I, speaking of that. Our boy Eugene yesterday with his, oh, tell. Yeah, with his post a little bit of controversy. Yeah, you know, it's so funny. I, you know, I really like him. Like he, he's a good guy.
Starting point is 00:07:17 Yeah, we were DMing back and forth last night. And I told him, I said, yeah, I saw your, because he was just like, man, boy, did that post stir it up big. And I said, yeah, I saw your, because he was just like, man, boy did that post stir it up big. And I said, yeah, no, I saw what you did there. He said something like, people who squat bench and deadlift all the time or something like that. Maybe you could read it at him. Yeah, I don't want to butcher it.
Starting point is 00:07:35 Yeah, yeah, no, I'll read it. You know, and what Eugene is really good at is, he's really good at stirring the pot. Like that. I mean, it's got 912 comments on it. It's got almost 10,000 likes. He said, most of the people doing barbell back squats bench press and conventional deadlifts would get far better results if they stop doing barbell squats bench press and conventional deadlifts, which is a total controversial statement, especially talking to us, right,
Starting point is 00:08:02 because we just did an episode that was like, you should do those three lifts. Yeah. You know, the core foundation lifts. And of course, anybody who's been following Mindfont for a really long time, and they also follow Eugene, because he's been featured on our YouTube channel and we're friends.
Starting point is 00:08:19 It's a smart dude. Yeah, no, totally. So everybody, and I saw it this morning, you actually brought it up yesterday morning when you saw it, you said, you see what Eugene posted? And I'm like, no, totally. And so everybody, and I saw it this morning, you actually brought it up yesterday morning when you saw it, you said, you see what Eugene posted? And I'm like, no, what did he do? I already know that he did something
Starting point is 00:08:31 that would probably cause a lot of discussion. Which I like that because he does explain himself really well and it does create good conversation and debate and he's not, he doesn't attack people that attack him on their, no, I went on there and I challenged him and we had a civil, smart debate. I don't fully agree with him, I don't think he fully agrees with me,
Starting point is 00:08:56 but he makes good points. And I mean, here, the thing that I think is important to understand with exercises is this, like let's forget arguing squat, deadlifts, and bench press for a second. Let's ask anybody who's been training people for a long time the following question. Is there a hierarchy of exercises?
Starting point is 00:09:15 Are some exercises more just generally more effective than others? Now, I want to preface this by saying that every exercise is not for every person. Okay, so yes, there's always going to be a variance. There's always individual applications when it comes to exercise, 100%. So, but borrowing that, I'm speaking generally, are some exercises just generally more effective than others? Now, for people who are thinking, we're like, no, it depends or whatever. Okay, I'll give you an extreme example. Is a one-legged banded, leg extension gonna be as effective as developing
Starting point is 00:09:52 strength and muscle and calorie burn and everything as a barbell squat? Of course not. I don't think anybody's gonna argue that. Okay, well, we know the extremes. I think everybody can agree on the extremes in terms of the hierarchy of exercises. Well, at the top, there's still some very good
Starting point is 00:10:08 and effective exercises, but some of them are at the top and some of them are a little bit lower. And the widespread consensus among coaches, among trainers, among very experienced lifters, widespread consensus, meaning not all, but most will tell you that the barbell, squat, the barbell deadlift, and I'll argue that the bench press is probably not as important as those two,
Starting point is 00:10:33 but definitely the barbell squat, barbell deadlift, those are among the best exercises that most people can do, and some people will not, and I'll stand by the statement all day long, some people will not reach their full potential if they don't do them. Some people can only reach the full potential for strength and function by doing those very effective exercises. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:55 And so that's just my... Well, it's interesting to watch, because it's definitely pulled more on the bodybuilding side, because I've seen lots of arguments, like for unilateral training being superior to bilateral training with barbells from the strength coach side, you know, from the world, from athletics.
Starting point is 00:11:12 And, you know, and there's some compelling arguments in that direction in terms of longevity and really keeping your athletes healthy and risk versus reward. And you can kind of go down that rabbit hole, but when you're bringing up the most effective time-tested exercises that produce the most strength gains, it's really hard to convince me otherwise,
Starting point is 00:11:37 strain me away from those other than whatever little you know, compensations or things that exist within that individual that we have to account for. Well, I responded to it and I said, I like this post because there's a lot of truth behind it. I dislike this post because it validates those looking for an excuse not to do the big three
Starting point is 00:11:55 because they're hard. Part of the unseen value of prioritizing the big lifts is the learning curve. It takes to get at those lifts. Yep. And that's, and the reason, and it's funny because some people, there's a kid on there right now that's actually, you can tell he's a young PT
Starting point is 00:12:10 who's siding with Eugene, and that's exactly the person why I don't like the post is because I was that person. I was a 22 year old kid who read the same books as Eugene's reading. I'm the same kid who's heard that information and went, oh, I knew I didn't have to do these squats and deadlifts. I'm just gonna stick the leg pressing and lunging and leg extensions on all these other exercises and build muscle.
Starting point is 00:12:34 And I did. I totally trained that way and I left that out. But because of that, there's a lot of things that ended up, I know, hurting me and hurting my clients because I didn't teach them to work towards squatting and deadlifting. And there's a lot of value in, oh wow, I'm not good at squatting, oh I'm not good at deadlifting, why am I not good at those movements? Unpacking that, addressing all the possible dysfunction and balances that's going on and working towards that.
Starting point is 00:13:02 And the truth is, it is hard. It is going to take probably a long time to get good at it, but the lessons that you get from working towards that are incredible. And then the argument that came back was, you know, well, why not just gobblet squat? Well, I mean, you could gobblet squat, but then you could elevate your heels.
Starting point is 00:13:19 You could crutch your ankle mobility and you could not work on your thoracic mobility, and you could do a movement that builds muscle on the legs, arguably almost as well as a squat. That's a good argument, but what I would say is, why not try and get that person who can't barbell squat because they have poor thoracic mobility and they have poor ankle mobility to address the poor ankle mobility,
Starting point is 00:13:40 the poor thoracic mobility over time and work towards having a good barbell squat. Sure, and I think it's a little bit of cheating to say why not do another type of squat? Okay, they're so similar, they're still both squats. The value of a barbell squat is you're able to load a lot of weight on your back. If the problem with the goblet squat is
Starting point is 00:13:57 you start to become limited by the weaker players in that lift, maybe your arms or your shoulders or your hands. So that's what makes a barbell squat, one of the reasons why barbell squat is so effective. And I'll say this, when we give advice or when you listen to the, you know, our opinion, what you have to consider is why, how we came to the conclusion, okay? We did not come to this conclusion solely because we did these exercises and noticed them on ourself. That's part of the reason, but that's a small part. Most of the reason why we have our opinions is based on training hundreds or thousands
Starting point is 00:14:33 by proxy because we did train lots of trainers who train lots of clients and we oversaw those programs. We also managed gyms and we saw people working out and we also trained hundreds of people ourselves every day regular people and that Trump's anything you can anything else, okay? If your experience is training a bunch of advanced athletes great you've got experience training advanced athletes So now your your opinion is gonna be based off that if you just train yourself your opinion is quite limited
Starting point is 00:15:02 It's based off training yourself if you just read a bunch of books and textbooks, well, that's where your experience comes from. But if you're an average person, which the 99% you're listening right now, follow that category, very few people follow the category of extreme self-aware athlete, that's the advice that we give is probably the one that's gonna apply to you.
Starting point is 00:15:24 And I use this example right here. It's like you want to travel across the ocean. Do you take the guy who or a girl who has studied all the navigation maps and understands the rotation of the earth and the ocean from learning these things from a textbook? Or do you go with the guy or girl who's actually gone across the ocean hundreds of times? Who are you going to get on that ship with? Who are you going to trust more? And so this is where we get our information.
Starting point is 00:15:52 So sometimes it's counter to even what might even seem a bit intuitive because for a common sense standpoint and intuitive standpoint, I think you can make an excellent case that you never need to squat or deadlift. I could easily break down the deadlift and be like, well, here's the muscles you're working and you can work them like this. You don't need a deadlift, you can work them this way.
Starting point is 00:16:11 Or I could say, it's all about tension. The body doesn't know what exercise it's doing. It doesn't know if you're deadlifting, it doesn't know if you're barbell rowing, it doesn't know what, so all you gotta do is create the right tension and you're gonna build the same amount of muscle. I can say all kinds of different things that might start to make sense, but at the end of the day,
Starting point is 00:16:29 after I've trained hundreds of everyday people, just works, it just dead lives squats, they just, for most people, they're the absolute best exercise. Well, just to compare it against like a pillar, you know, a known path of strength. Like this is a standard of strength that I know. Yes, I can alter that type of exercise
Starting point is 00:16:52 to meet the demands of whatever, like I'm dealing with the variables that the individual's coming in with. Like I can assess that and we can work our way. But you have to have a clear vision of what you're trying to work towards. And if it's a strength pursuit, those are pillars in that direction.
Starting point is 00:17:09 And to take those pillars out is creating something else that is not like commonly shared known by people that have gone through the experience. You look into any sport that's been around for at least a few decades. And what you'll end up finding in each of these sports are, as Justin is saying, pillars. There are certain things that these athletes
Starting point is 00:17:30 and coaches have found to be just things you don't want to necessarily take out. Like, you know, like there's a certain type of training like boxers, right? Why have all the old time boxers? And why do the new ones even do long distance running? You think to yourself, what does long distance running have to do with boxing? Or why do they spend months of training head movement and footwork only?
Starting point is 00:17:50 Or why do they hit a speed bag? Yeah. We don't need a speed bag or, you know, why do basketball players do some of the drills that they do that are staples or, you know, judo fighters or any other athlete? Why is there's this widespread consensus among coaches and strength athletes and personal trainers who have a lot of experience? Why is there a widespread consensus that those are definitely among some of the most effective general exercises? And it's because there's truth in there. That's why there's this exact
Starting point is 00:18:21 structure. And the reason why Eugene's post was controversial is exactly that because he said something that is so counter to the widespread consensus You know, and and that's just saying it's not always going to be true if everybody's doing it I understand that as well, but well, and there's a reason why and back to the point that I made with him I also went on him and I were going back and forth and I said I think this is I think the went on him and I were going back and forth. And I said, I think this is, I think the, the wrong people are getting the right message from this. And the, and the, and the right, or the wrong people are getting the right message from this. And the, and the right message isn't getting across to all the other people that you want to reach. And I was telling on that because an example was the kid who came on there right afterwards and was, you
Starting point is 00:19:03 know, challenging me. I'm like, this is great. This is this young kid who's a trainer right now, who's going to go down the same path that I probably did for the first five to eight years of training. That is, I put a client on a squat and, oh my God, it's really hard for them. They're pronating their feet, their knees are collapsing. Their chest is falling forward. They can't retract their shoulders enough, oh, abandon ship, let's go to the leg press.
Starting point is 00:19:28 Oh, now they can do a leg press game. Right, must be better. Right, and so, and I did, I did a lot of, I don't wanna say harm, because I didn't hurt or injure my clients that way, but I wasn't doing them a favor by moving to movements that were just easier for me to still work the muscles out.
Starting point is 00:19:46 The better version or the older and more experienced version of me says that, CZAN goes, oh wow, you know, we have a lot of areas that we need to address and work on. And then I would unpack the squat and begin to address the breakdown in that movement. And that's another thing that makes that's why those movements are so valuable is they give coaches like ourselves a great starting point of like, okay, this is the pinnacle is to get a good
Starting point is 00:20:10 squad or good deadlift. Now the reality of it that we all know is coaches and so does probably Eugene is that probably a majority of your people that come in can't perform those movements very well. But it doesn't mean that you abandon them and you go look for easier exercises to do to still accomplish the building of the muscle. You still should use that, I'm my opinion, to still use that as foundational movements that we're going to pursue working towards. There's a reason why the squat is a part of most, maybe not all, but most national certification assessments. If you look at a lot of assessments across these certifications that have been around for a while,
Starting point is 00:20:48 a squat or some form of a squat is typically in there because it tells you a lot. It doesn't tell you everything, a real good assessment. There's a lot of things, multiple things you wanna use and look at, but when you do a squat, you can look at a lot of different things and how they're working, not just individually, but how they're working or not working together.
Starting point is 00:21:07 Here's a great example. You, Adam, for all intents and purposes, the squat should, using a lot of the arguments against the squat, it would be very easy for you to say you shouldn't squat your tall, you have long legs, your back hurt, when you did squats and your back hurt. In fact, sometimes when you didn't squat, you're tall, you have long legs, you're back hurt when you did squats and you're back hurt in fact, sometimes when you did in squat, which is hurt. So you were actually the poster boy for, oh, this guy right here, he's tall, he's lanky,
Starting point is 00:21:34 he's, you know, hurts his back like, he shouldn't be squatting. Now, Adam's a great trainer, he's worked a lot of people. And so instead, what did he do? He said, well, why can't I squat? And he spent a year working on getting himself to be able to squat. Now that you can squat, the benefits are, I mean, you can see it. Right. You can see it blows everything else away. Right. Right. And that same example, same example applies to so many clients that I've trained now. Right. Totally. Again, I, the beginning career. and I think that's why I'm passionate about this argument
Starting point is 00:22:05 because I think I was on that side of the fence for the first half of my career. And when I'm being completely self-aware and honest, why was because it was hard? Squatting was hard. Deadly living was hard. I wanted to get a pump. I wanted to look better.
Starting point is 00:22:22 I wanted to build muscle. I wanted to burn body fats. I like cared about. I didn't want to address a pump. I wanted to look better. I wanted to build muscle. I wanted to burn body fat So I cared about I didn't want to address why my feet were pronating and my my knees are collapsing and why the my back hurt when I was squatting like Fuck that. I didn't want to do that and so when I read when I read material like this especially from very intelligent educated coaches Before me that we're presenting it because it's he's not the first person to challenge these movements I mean, although it's still the consensus that they're the superior movements They've been challenged before by other professionals and and and made cases of other movements being better But I disagree because with the message that comes across to a young trainer like myself is oh good
Starting point is 00:23:03 I don't need to do those movements and so I I avoid them and I do a bunch of other exercises and built an okay physique. And if all you care about is aesthetics and that's the only goal is how I look, then absolutely you can avoid those movements to your entire life and build muscle and burn body fat without ever doing it. But there's so much more carryover that you get from that.
Starting point is 00:23:26 Not to mention something that I think we talk about on the show that not a lot of fitness professionals talk about, is it psychological benefits? Yeah. What are the benefits of finding something, of trying to get it good at a skill inside the gym and starting and being bad at it, and trying to figure it out and working towards it over months
Starting point is 00:23:46 and probably years for a lot of people, what is, what is the unsaid value of that? Or the value of the carryover, you know, if you could squat well, that means you're gonna be more functional in everyday life, more so than if you could leg press well or hack squat, you know, well, it just has a lot of carryover. We already make things easier in all aspects of life to begin with.
Starting point is 00:24:07 Why are we going to do this to fitness training? That's another reason why I have a problem with this. Is this generation now? Is this the right message to send to the generation that's coming up right now and learning from all of us that, hey, it's okay if it's too hard for you, there's other exercises that are better. I think it's a terrible message. Because most people who don't squat, go squat, they're going to come back and be like if it's if it's too hard for you. There's other exercises that are better like I think it's a terrible message There's most people who don't squat go squat. They're gonna come back and be like it's not for me
Starting point is 00:24:29 It's a cop out to me. It's a cop out and it's like conforming to your clients demands versus use the professional You know taking them through the journey and and delivering what's best? Absolutely and now along those lines of controversy since we're talking about controversy. I'm not fired up. Did you guys? Did you guys see the The the autopsy results from Jeff Jeffery Epstein I what I did see was Joe Rogan's jokes that he's been posting Yeah, dude. It's just like come on guys. So his brother Jeffrey Epstein Epstein's brother hired a autopsy what do they call him, pathology? I don't remember what they're calling me.
Starting point is 00:25:08 I'll pull it up for you. Oh, a forensic pathologist. And he is showing evidence that he did not die by suicide. He says that the autopsy points to homicide. Strangulation. Strangulation. Yeah, somebody killed them. This is what he's saying.
Starting point is 00:25:26 Yeah, which is funny because obviously, that's what happened. Now what? Dude, how are you going to do something about ours? Is this just going to be like one of those? Yep, they got away with it. Have you seen all the memes that people are saying? Yeah, then you see the one that Joe Rogan posted? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:25:40 Did you see the one I posted? The pregnancy one? Yeah. That was the result. Yeah. I posted one too. There's a bunch of them where there's like a fact in there like, like did you see and was murdered?
Starting point is 00:25:51 Yeah, did you know that wild boars can carry you know 40 pounds of weight on their back and Jeffrey Epstein did not kill himself, like all these memes that are like informational and then they'll be like a like a snapful cap, you know. And wasn't didn't Kevin space, so wasn't Kevin Spacey being investigated for like, he was on the, he was on the Bill Cosby train, right? It was something down the same path. It was something that happened with them, like he was on that train.
Starting point is 00:26:15 They were, and it was connected. Why not? They get off. I mean, this guy is unbelievable, dude. I don't think you mean. And then they get off again. I mean, yeah, not a way I like to get off. You can, you can rape 72 women, just not 73.
Starting point is 00:26:25 You know, saying like it's terrible. It's crazy and serve two years or whatever? Well, he got, what is Kevin gonna serve? So Kevin, so check this out. So they brought him in and he's connected to Epstein. So they're saying that he's connected. He was on his flights, you know, to this island that Epstein had that everybody said was like
Starting point is 00:26:43 where he did all this terrible shit or whatever. Anyway, the main, I guess, witness or the person who had all the evidence against Spacey died. So Spacey's off. He's off. Conveniently interesting. This whole thing is crazy to me. What is happening?
Starting point is 00:27:02 What the fuck did he commit suicide like Epstein? I don't know. Yeah, yeah, I don't know. He ran himself over with the car. I'm like, yeah, yeah. This whole thing is insane, man. It's so crazy. It's so crazy.
Starting point is 00:27:14 Anyway, and then again, more controversy. The podcast I did with the Macs that I told you guys about. The Genius Life podcast. That one came out, so I'm waiting for a little bit of blowback. Why would you say? Well, yeah, it was a controversy. Well, we talked about game changers, the documentary. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:27 And, you know, that's really stirring up a lot of... So, you know that James Cameron invested like $140 million into a vegan protein... A brand new... ...of vegan protein powder. Yeah, or supplement company. Or supplement company. He bought... It's actually right now the largest vegan supplement company in the US now owned by
Starting point is 00:27:49 Or he's one of the main shareholders is James Cameron. Wow, and we I knew it remember we called this we said I bet you they're gonna be They're putting out this documentary and then on the heels of it. They're gonna follow along I hope that if you if you're a cause hellupe if I hope if our our our audience Here's this episode and and when people like Kai green who I think are setting the table for announcing that they're sponsored Oh, Kai green so on the right I hope a ton of people go over there and call them out on it because it's I think that's what's coming next is He's been doing vegan post after vegan post and it's, some people though are saying that he's trolling. So I don't follow.
Starting point is 00:28:28 Kind of lose control. Oh, the coyote. Yeah, that coyote trolling everybody. Maybe. Yeah. I mean, if you did, he got me. He seems to be going deep in it though. It's like every post he's talking about it.
Starting point is 00:28:37 I agree too. Yeah. So he might be, look, I mean, I got nothing wrong with, I mean, organ. All plant-based games. I'll tell you what, organifies a vegan supplement. It's the best one that I'm aware of. So when I direct, and I take, if I take protein,
Starting point is 00:28:53 I take vegan protein, and that's because I have an intolerance to dairy protein. So I can't do way, I can't do casing. I could do a beef protein powder, but I haven't had, I never tried one of those, that was good. They're usually beef powder doesn't sound too. Yeah. It's only like, they have an egg one too.
Starting point is 00:29:09 I remember taking that, it was like G-robs or something. Oh, egg protein? Yeah, egg white. Yeah, that's like fart city. Exactly. My name is horrible. My favorite is when we get on these pages and we talk to people about that
Starting point is 00:29:20 and they try and throw that back in our face. I'm like, we're sponsored by a fucking vegan protein. Yeah, well, we're not anti-veganists, it's just funny, though. No, I'm like, we're sponsored by a fucking vegan protein. Yeah. Over and on anti-vegan is just funny, though. No, I'm where anti-battery for plant-based and meat-based, yeah, what are we gonna do? We're totally anti-batter information. And so Max and I got on there and really kind of broke down some of the fallacies of that documentary.
Starting point is 00:29:39 And my favorite was the study they showed on game changers that showed that the, look at this, the vegan diet will cause better performance in athletes because they were comparing a freaking keto diet to one with carbs, which is just, it's like, yes, that's true. If you don't eat carbs and you eat carbs, you're gonna perform better, but that doesn't mean vegan is better.
Starting point is 00:30:00 That wasn't comparing the omnivore diet to a vegan diet. That was comparing a no carb diet to a diet with carbs. Right. So they took some science and they twisted it. A lot of slight of hand stuff in there. Totally. Totally. But well-made.
Starting point is 00:30:14 No, it was. I really think they had some political strategies. They got one of the better filmmakers out there to produce. So that's for sure. Yeah, dude. So I don't know, man, we'll see. We'll see what happens on that. But I'm waiting for the backlash.
Starting point is 00:30:24 But I love Max. He's smart, dude. He's very sure. Yeah, dude. So I don't know, man, we'll see. We'll see what happens on that, but I'm waiting for the backlash. But I love Max. He's smart, dude. He's very measured. Yeah. You know, he does a good job and he's not, you know, he's not biased. He's always trying to do, you know, go off of the science
Starting point is 00:30:35 and what actually works and I really appreciate that. That's why I can't imagine him getting too much blowback. I mean, he's a pretty measured guy. He said he is. He still gets a lot of, bro, he gets a lot of shit. He says he's been getting. He's so weird. He says that he's a pretty measured guy. He said he is. He still gets a lot of, pro, he gets a lot of shit. He says he's been getting, he says that he's been getting attacked by, or, or a lot of vegans are, or, or, are hitting them hard because he's saying that an omnivore diet is better for most people, which is what the evidence totally shows,
Starting point is 00:30:58 you know. So some people just don't want to recognize science, I guess. Yeah, I guess. And also, this is the first time I've ever seen a diet be politicized and being tied to morality, not just the not killing animals part, but it's better for the environment, it's better for the world. And so because it's politicized, it's kind of drawing a line in the sand. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:31:22 Diet's been a tribal forever. Like diets have been tribal forever. People have always been tribal about their diet, but never have I, like, is it gonna be like you're gonna be eating burger and people are gonna think you're like lighting oil on fire or something like that, like the same thing or smoking a cigarette? Right, through a blood on you. Yeah, I don't know. Hey, did you guys get to, which one of you guys got the DM
Starting point is 00:31:42 from the guy who works at 24th fitness? I did. I saw that as you. I did. Wow. So I guess they're downsizing a bit. I guess all the clubs, this is what he said. So this is from somebody who worked there. So I don't know if this is true.
Starting point is 00:31:55 But I guess he said that all the clubs except for the super sport ones are no longer 24 hour. How do you call yourself 24 hour fitness? Yeah. I know. I don't know. Isn't that funny? This is gonna be fitness. We're gonna limit it to our fitness. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:07 20 hour fitness. So I guess they're gonna change their hours. So obviously cutting costs. He's cutting back kids club. I thought I saw. Cutting back kids club. They're just doing more rounds of costs. The bean counters are definitely taken over again.
Starting point is 00:32:19 They are, dude. That company man. What do you think? Do you think that eventually they go to like a fully automated, like almost like, what's that company that grew? Oh yeah. Not snap fitness. No, no, no.
Starting point is 00:32:30 I almost did any time fitness time for this. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Where it's just like a card and you swipe, it takes three people to manage the whole place. I kinda like that model. Yeah, it's interesting. Well, it's might be the direction they're going. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:42 I mean, they've already established a name for themselves. They already have enough facilities in place, enough branding in place that, you know, they could just be choppin' choppin' choppin' choppin'. There was a while there where their goal was, and this was undermarked, where their goal was to become known as a good, a good gem that is also priced competitively. Like they don't wanna be the bottom, you know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:33:10 It feels like they're racing to the bottom. Like no, we just wanna be cheap. We just wanna have more gems and be cheap. Well, I remember when they sold and then Carl Liebert came in as CEO, he came originally from Home Depot and he was responsible. He was a CEO of Home Depot
Starting point is 00:33:24 when Home Depot created all the self checkout So that was like his main initiative when he came in was to automate more to cut cut cut people that didn't need to be there and Automate and move this gym into the future With no regard to what it takes to get somebody involved into a fitness journey You know, it's just a different monster you go to Home Depot because you need a hammer and nails and with no regard to what it takes to get somebody involved into a fitness journey. It's just a different monster. You go to a home depot because you need a hammer and nails. And if I, when I show up there,
Starting point is 00:33:52 I don't need someone to convince me, I need a hammer and nail. I came there because I need a hammer and nail, or else I wouldn't even be in, I don't browse the store. I don't need to get convinced to go into the store. So it's a total different model than somebody who is on the fence of, should I work out, do I need to get convinced to go into the store. So it's a total different model than somebody who is on the fence of, you know, should I work out? Do I need to get in shape?
Starting point is 00:34:08 Or my doctor just told me I'm unhealthy and so I need to do something about it, but I'm here, I don't know what to do. When you go to a gym, you don't buy anything. Yeah, that's the thing. It's a dream. You really have to like paint that picture for people. Yeah, and I think that they forgot that,
Starting point is 00:34:21 what they thought was we're gonna lower the cost of operating the company by cutting out personnel or cutting out that human touch. And then they assumed that the revenue coming in would stay the same. They didn't realize that that would affect. We knew this as gym managers. I walked into a gym and the first month
Starting point is 00:34:43 would increase the revenue by 20 to 50% sometimes. How the fuck did I do that? Just walking into a gym and their first month would increase the revenue by 20 to 50% sometimes. How the fuck did I do that? Just walking into the gym. That's the kind of an impact that the people in the gym have and CrossFit proved this. CrossFit proved this. It became popular not because of their gyms, their gyms were fucking warehouses.
Starting point is 00:35:00 They were dirt holes. But why it wasn't the amenities? Why did they blow up? Because it was about the people and the community and the environment in there. That's what makes a gym a gym. It's not the equipment. Nobody gives a shit. People don't know about equipment. They can't count that accountability. They want to know that people are there in their corner. That's it. And that's what creates, you guys know that as well as I can walk into a gym that has minimal equipment. But you feel the energy. You see the people in there and what's going on.
Starting point is 00:35:25 The part that I find interesting and watching it is can you though have grown to be so big and you have so much of a base already that you can look at your overhead and go, oh wow, we're spending, let's just say for arguments, we're making $ you know, let's just say for arguments, say, we're making $100 million a year and we're spending $50 million on people to run this facility. Could we cut the cost of $50 million on people down to $10 million in people and afford
Starting point is 00:35:59 to lose the $40 million in memberships because there's still a certain amount of people that will pay just because it's absolutely convenient because it's a gym, well, it was a gym, open 24 hours. It has a lot of them have sonnas and pools and basketball courts and cardio and decent sized weight floors and there's one on almost every corner
Starting point is 00:36:23 like McDonald's these days. So, you know, you or I don't need to be sold to go in there. I mean, I still pay my 24-hour membership because I know when we travel and we go around places, I can pretty much count on that there's a 24-hour round. I can't count on that there's a Bay Club over there. I can't count. I can't count any different mentality towards it.
Starting point is 00:36:43 Right. So, why I don't count if there's a Bay Club over there. I can't completely different mentality towards it. Right, so why don't count them out completely? Although I don't think you could ever build a business or build a gym business with the mentality that they have now. I agree with you that. But do they have enough to wear? Right, to steam, we have enough cloud that it's okay, we can lose 40 million
Starting point is 00:37:04 because we're gonna cut 50 million and people in over here. We have enough cloud that it's okay. We can lose 40 million because we're gonna cut 50 million and people and over. Maybe, but the gym business is far more competitive today than it was 20 years ago. You have companies like LA Fitness and Crunch. Planet Fitness is what's happening. Planet Fitness and all these other companies
Starting point is 00:37:21 that are competing now. Well, I think that's why they're doing this because Planet Fitness is at the bottom, as far as pricing, $9 a month, or $10 a month. And they're everywhere. Yeah, and they're starting to pop up everywhere. So I actually think that 24 looks at them is probably one of their biggest competitor
Starting point is 00:37:37 and they are trying to figure out how do we get our rates down to $9 and stay afloat. And maybe the only obvious choice of that is cutting overhead, cutting the kids club out, cutting the employees that are working from 10 PM till 4 AM because there's not really a lot of traffic in there and getting rid of positions. And well, you know the way that,
Starting point is 00:38:01 and I'm pretty sure that Ray Wilson had comp plans like this for his managers. Now Ray Wilson owned, if Mark Maestroff is the godfather of the fitness industry, Ray Wilson would be like the grandfather. He's like one of the first people to really kind of start to figure this out. And this is back when 24-hour nodalists combined with family fitness centers, which was owned by Ray Wilson, became 24 hour fitness. But anyways, Ray Wilson had comp plans where the managers were given a budget and whatever they saved over the budget, they took. And that proved to be a great model for cutting costs because here's my belief. I think there's definitely ways you can cut costs from the top when you have a massive company where you can cut
Starting point is 00:38:50 it from the top. But you're never going to be quite as accurate at cutting costs or as effective as the people individually who are managing each gym because each gym is a little bit different. Like I may be managing a gym and I know what my budget is, let's say my budget's $50,000 a month. And I'm looking at my club and I'm like, I don't need all this, these people cleaning my club. My club is clean, we clean the club. I can cut a lot of that.
Starting point is 00:39:14 Or maybe in a club like, man, this club is dirty all the time. I need more money on that. And I actually need less money on kids' club because barely any of my members use this. And so this is what they did. The managers cut where they saw they needed to cut, added where they needed it, and then the rest,
Starting point is 00:39:29 they would take, and sometimes that meant that they just work more themselves, but the profits did well and they still perform very well. Cutting from the top can be very difficult. Now the challenge with that is that, you know, 24 has already made the mistake of cutting the cost or cutting the pay of these general managers. Are they going to love the best ones out?
Starting point is 00:39:49 Yeah, so somebody who could probably manage P&Ls really well like that, back in Ray Wilson days, is long gone. And now you're attracting a different breed of managers that come in. So you think that would be a good idea how to do it, but it might be too little too late in that direction. You know what I would love to ask, Master off, what would he do? If he got 24 hour fitness again. Interesting conversation.
Starting point is 00:40:14 Who knows, maybe they're maybe their position because sometimes what companies do, to positions in a position to sell. That's what they do. They cut costs and they're one of the best ways to show that you're profitable when you're that size is exactly what I said is. It's easy.
Starting point is 00:40:28 We're spending, yeah, $50 million a year on people get rid of all those people if the place is still fit your value. If that place can still stand, you know, and it may be a recipe for long term disaster, but an investor may not understand that or see that. They're just looking at, oh shit, profit is a hundred million. They're see that. They're just looking at the ocean. Yeah, there's 100 million numbers. And they're handed that. Yeah. Have you guys seen the Silicon Valley that's back?
Starting point is 00:40:50 Like, you see the sound? No, I haven't. Oh my God, I love that. So great. It's such great satire on what's all around us all the time. It's great because they like, Hulee gets bought out by Amazon. And they're going through this whole thing and it's just so great.
Starting point is 00:41:06 They throw so many jabs at a lot of these like massive companies, like the Four Horsemen companies and they're talking about them basically being the new kings and everything and then they need to take them down and so they're like resisting like this king taking them over and then you know, they're going into Congress and kind of like battling the fact of like stealing it. All the users data and these are all like real issues.
Starting point is 00:41:30 No, we're seeing all my clients that are in violence and friends that are working for a lot of these companies. Say that it's so spot. Is it on point? It's so spot. Yeah. Oh, wow. I want to, and is this showtime or HBO? It's HBO.
Starting point is 00:41:43 Oh, okay. Oh, you've never seen them before? No, I've got HBO now. You can't have to watch them. I was going to say, does it make sense is this showtime or HBO? It is HBO. Okay, I can never see no more. No, I've got HBO now. You can't have to watch it in the very beginning. I was gonna say does it make sense to watch it from the beginning? No, no, watch from the beginning for sure. Really? It's worth it.
Starting point is 00:41:52 It's hilarious. Courtney gets uncomfortable because the guy is so awkward. He's like, has the most awkward delivery and I love it because it's so funny. Well, again, that's another point today. They say that this take a lot of my family and friends and clients that are involved in that space or like those little incubators, the personalities, those are the CEOs.
Starting point is 00:42:14 Yeah, those are the personality. Hyper nerds, like hate like attention. Yeah. Yeah. So that's the voice you make when you make fun of me. Yeah. Hey, on today's episode. Yeah. Yeah. I'm always getting bullied. That's the voice you make when you make fun of me. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha Santa Ballic! If you're looking to maximize your overall muscle and strength, Maths and the Ballic is the perfect place to start! With a full 30-day money back guarantee, there is absolutely zero risk!
Starting point is 00:42:51 So what is your waiting for? Go to mindpromidia.com and get started today! It's the motherfucking squad! An English Landish! Quikwa... Alright, our first question is from DeeprinVail. What are the differences between a beginner, intermediate, or advanced lifter? Now at first glance, this question seems pretty simple, but the more I think about it, the more I realize that.
Starting point is 00:43:17 That's hard to answer. It is, right? Like, I would say a beginner is somebody who is learning how to move properly and learning how to do the right exercises for their body properly. Intermediate is somebody that knows those things. They know how to do the squats and the deadlifts and the presses and the rows. They've got good form. They know what the exercises do for the body.
Starting point is 00:43:43 I think most people stay in an intermediate for a long time. I think it's a long face. I was just gonna say, I feel like I could answer this really well for beginner and advanced. I have a hard time putting together the category that would fit all the intermediate people. And what I mean by that is, the beginner to me is somebody who is, they're very green to the gym. Most exercises are very foreign. Most of their mechanics are
Starting point is 00:44:11 poor. And so they're they're still learning the technique and what is it for? That's kind of like your beginner. And then somebody who's on the advanced to me is somebody who can intuitively lift. There are they are they understand form. they understand exercise, they understand programming, they know what their body needs to get to whatever goals they have. I think it's just amounts to consistency. If you're an advanced lifter, you've gotten past the point of having those waves of momentum where it's like, I'm on, I'm off, I'm on, I'm off. You know what to do in the gym for the most part, if you're, like you know the mechanics, you know how to kind of structure your workouts,
Starting point is 00:44:50 but maybe you haven't fine-tuned it to the degree, and maybe that's just because of the consistency, the frequency that you've been applying these techniques and you haven't really been succumbed by, well, I don't feel like going for know, going for a few weeks to a month and then you come back and it's like this, this on and off. I think, I think advanced takes a long time to get to.
Starting point is 00:45:12 I really do. I think it's advanced lifters. Well, it's probably like everything else. I've been talking about being a master at like 10,000 hours. Yeah, and advanced lifter is somebody who can go by feel. So it's like, you know, it's like, like a black belt and a martial art. Like you, you know, when a movement is working for you, when it's not, you know, when you need to apply it more intensity or less, you know how frequency affects your body. You are in the unconscious
Starting point is 00:45:38 competent stage where you don't, it's like walking or breathing. Like I don't need to think about walking or breathing. It just happens. I take one step after the other, and I can talk to other people and think about other things and it's normal. And that's what advanced lifting is all about. And advanced lifting, if that's the definition, it takes a long time.
Starting point is 00:45:55 That's why I think most people are intermediate. Like in the past, I would have said, oh, you know, after about three years of consistent lifting your advanced, I think I change that now. I think you could lift consistently, and it might take you longer. It might take more like five years or six years before you really get to that place of really understanding how your body feels. I imagine it. I really like the 10,000 hour rule and it applies to most other things. I
Starting point is 00:46:20 don't know why it wouldn't apply very well to this. I felt like it took me 10,000 hours to get good at being a personal trainer. I think for sure it took me 10,000 hours of training myself and others before it became intuitive for me. Isn't that funny too? Because if I went and asked Justin, Adam, or Sal, five years into personal training, do you think you're a master personal trainer? Oh yeah, totally. Yeah, I'm an awesome. Now looking back, I was far from master at five years. into personal training. Do you think you're a master personal training? Oh yeah, totally. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:46:45 I'm a lot of them. Now looking back, I was far from master at five years. It took me more like 10. I would say it took 10 years before I felt like I was. I like what you said. I think most people in their first year or so fall in the beginner category at least, like for the least the first year.
Starting point is 00:47:03 And then after that, once you get pretty good form down and understand the exercises that you're doing, you probably move into the beginning stages of intermediate. And then you're probably in intermediate for most of your lifting career until you've put that many hours under your belt. And just what comes with that experience is a lot of things that you learn along the way.
Starting point is 00:47:24 And you probably are in that intermediate phase, thinking you're advanced, a lot of things that you learn along the way. And you probably are in that intermediate phase, thinking you're advanced, a lot like what if you would have asked me five years into personal training and seven years into training myself. Yeah, yeah, I know what I ever do. But shit, looking back now, I go like, most of what I think I've learned came from years 10 to beyond. So, you know, it's...
Starting point is 00:47:45 Well, then the sure, but then what about those, those people at the gym that have been there for like 20 years doing the same routine? You stuck it in your immediate. Yeah, you stuck it, you're stuck in your immediate. That's a great, it's not the hours. You know, it's the education. It's the right hours.
Starting point is 00:47:58 Yeah, what do they say? Perfect practice makes perfect, not just practice, you know? I think that's a great point. Now, that being said That doesn't mean that if you've been lifting for four years Because you're not advanced that doesn't mean you can't do an advanced program to work out right because then there's Recovery ability there's your body's ability to adapt now that's totally different totally totally different if you've been training consistently hard
Starting point is 00:48:23 For two years three three years, you could follow an advanced workout. The problem is you can't write of it in advance work out here. But you can follow one. If you bought an advanced workout program and you've been lifting consistently for two or three years and you've got good and you're healthy, otherwise, that's probably going to be okay for you. You just not going to be able to create one for yourself. Definitely not going to be able to create one for other people. That's a good point because within beginner intermediate advanced there's different subcategories of what we're talking about.
Starting point is 00:48:50 Right. And if you're just talking about your body's ability. Yeah, your body's ability to train advanced lifts or to train an advanced program. If you've been lifting consistently for a year or two, you absolutely can train a... I mean, it's like the powerlifting program we have right now, like I wouldn't recommend it to a beginner green first month in the gym. I would tell them to run like a map, Santa Ball, like, and go through the three, the three core ones that we originally created first. That's almost a year's worth of training. Then you would be, I think, in a great place to do something,
Starting point is 00:49:23 move into that. But yeah, I think the beginner intermediate advance really depends on what we're talking about. Next question is from Leah V. 1983. Can you break down the differences between the overhead press versus push press, which is better for the novice lifter? Excellent. So, overhead press is just a straight press the bar or dumbbells up, straight up over your head, and it's strict in the sense that your body stays tight
Starting point is 00:49:50 and rigid when you do it, you've got good control. Good stability. A push press is explosive. So a push press is I got the bar, the dumbbells at my shoulders, and then I engine your hips back and you're explosively kind of jumping the way down. Yeah, I'm boosting it.
Starting point is 00:50:04 I'm boosting it with my lower body and my chest or the rest of my body to get the more advanced. Way more advanced. The novice lifter shouldn't be doing a push press. A push press requires all the skills that it takes to be good at an overhead press plus extra. So if you're not like, if you don't have it like mastered the overhead press, doing a push press is totally silly.
Starting point is 00:50:26 Now they do have different benefits. The push press is explosive, so there's a speed element. That's excellent for people who've been working out for a little while. So if you've only ever done overhead presses, try some push presses and watch what happens to the muscle on your body. It's also excellent for people that have athletic pursuits, right? Like, if you care about explosiveness and that matters to you, for the general population that's just trying to build muscle, lose body fat, it's probably less applicable than somebody who's like an athlete.
Starting point is 00:50:56 Like, if I'm someone who's a young athlete and an explosiveness, it's something that I want, then there's a little more value to that. But still, regardless, I would teach a strict overhead press and great form there before I start to incorporate. A strict press is definitely a prerequisite for me. I mean, I would need to see how well that you're controlled and that you're able to stabilize the weight overhead. That by itself is quite the challenge with today's demands in the workplace at home, like what you're doing constantly, just to be able to raise your arms and have good
Starting point is 00:51:31 shoulder mobility by itself is quite the feat. And I think that a lot of people don't realize that. They think that by just lifting something over their head, like that's, you know, the end of the story, where we don't even like track to see, like where that bar path is, like where your capacity is to bring your shoulder in the right position to be able to now incorporate your shoulder blades to stabilize and get your muscles activated properly. So there's just a lot going on there
Starting point is 00:52:01 before we get into going fast. This is why I love the Z-Press. Yes. I think it's forced as that. Yes, it forces that. Like it's showing somebody on a, you know, our program in a video, a strict press is, it's tough because I know from my experience, you know, I could stand in front of a client, show them a strict overhead press, then give them the bar and then do it, and then then fuck up the bar path easily, because their body will deviate, and they'll just, they'll take the easiest path, that's just natural for clients.
Starting point is 00:52:30 So I love teaching with the Z-press, because what I know with the Z-press is you can't cheat it, you'll fall back. And so if you have a poor bar path, you'll know right away. There's no guessing for you, you don't need a mirror to know, you won't be able to extend your arms all the way up
Starting point is 00:52:46 and lock out with the bar above your head and not fall over unless you are taking a good bar path. So I love to teach the Z press first and get those mechanics down really well. And then I teach a strict overhead press standing where I've teach them to engage their core, activate their glutes and keep their lower body stiff. And then the advance to that is eventually the push-press.
Starting point is 00:53:09 Totally. And this, you know, when I first became a trainer, this blew me away quite a bit. When I had the average 35 plus year old, so 35 and up, come in, who's untrained, just the average person doesn't work out. I was shocked at how little of them, or how few of them were able to fully extend
Starting point is 00:53:33 their arm above their head without weight. It sounds simple, sounds like nothing. But if you're listening right now, go to your mom or your dad or your aunt or your uncle, somebody doesn't work out, have them place their back up against the wall and see if they can raise their arms straight up above their head while keeping their hand in elbow and contact with the wall without having to over arch their back or have their butt come off the wall. You'd be surprised how few people can achieve that straight line above
Starting point is 00:54:00 their head. When I would train people in advanced age, that was something that I always worked on. And it always blew me away. I was like, wow, you can't even reach straight up above your head. But it makes sense. How often do we do that in our everyday lives? To, you know, how often do we strengthen that pattern? We don't. I mean, I lost a lot of that. It took me a long time to get that back. Right. Because and I was still working my shoulders. This goes back to the earlier discussion and the big three kind of because I would actually incorporate the big four and it would be over at best. Totally. I would. In fact, functionally speaking, I would even consider it superior to a bench press. I agree. So I mean, and this is just another example that I mean, I did, you know, military
Starting point is 00:54:41 press and lateral raises and front dumbbell raises. I did all those movements and built great shoulders for a decade of training and then got to a point where you know And I totally ignored overhead press why because I'd arch my low back I didn't have good thoracic mobility so it didn't allow me to retract my shoulders So I could get my shoulder my arms up by my. And so I just kept building muscle and neglected that movement. And because of it, I have all kinds of poor mechanics. And it took me probably a year on unpacking that and working on that to get to the point
Starting point is 00:55:13 where I could actually do a behind the neck press. But talk about the value in that. I mean, I had a lot of neck pain and tightness in my traps all the time. That got eliminated completely. The tracking, just my shoulder, just the whole, you know, the way I would feel the clicking on my shoulder when I did certain exercises because my scapula was rolled forward, completely got rid of that. I mean, this just goes, this is why these movements are so good and a lot of people are bad at them,
Starting point is 00:55:42 but that's not why you should ignore them. You incorporate them. If they do bother you, they are challenging. Then instead of just walking away for them, you try and unpack that, which this is where why I think that Prime Pro is probably the most valuable thing for everybody. Because very few people are going to do the big three or the big four and have perfect mechanics and it's because they've got breakdown in one of the major joints, if not all of them or most of them, and they should be doing movement. And it's not completely obvious. Right. You know, you really need
Starting point is 00:56:17 feedback. And a lot of times like you can get that from a coach so it's gonna be able to point that out and look at you. But if you're just by yourself doing an exercise, you think everything's going great. Because that's what your body is supposed to do. It's supposed to make it efficient and get to an endpoint. Like I'm doing this, now I'm getting to an endpoint. But you don't realize like all these compensations that are occurring along the process.
Starting point is 00:56:40 So you're back in the day, bench press didn't become a popular exercise until the 1930s, I think. It was always overhead press. All the strength athletes. Maybe nowadays a little different, but when I was growing up, it was like, how much can you bench? That was your, how they talked about how strong you are. How much can you bench?
Starting point is 00:57:01 Now it's maybe how much can you deadless walk. That's true, yeah. How much bench bro? Exactly. Now back in the day can you deadless walk. That's true for me. Yeah, much bench bro. Exactly. No, back in the day it was how much you could press over your head. That's how much. That was a test of your strength.
Starting point is 00:57:11 And that's why I make the argument that the overhead. And the truth is, if someone compress a shit ton of weight overhead standing, it means more than if they could bench more off their chest. The overhead press is a very valuable exercise. Yep. Next question is from Jazz Fitness. What are your opinions on training a muscle group that is still sore from the previous workout? Boy, I'll tell you what. So Jazz. Years ago, I was, my family and I were planning a trip to Italy over the summer. And I wanted to
Starting point is 00:57:44 look good because I have a bunch of cousins and family over there. And they all knew I was in fitness. I wanted to make a good impression or whatever I hadn't seen for a long time. Yeah, I had cousins. I'm not that succillion. So I, you know, so, and I've always been a historian when it comes to fitness, especially bodybuilding. I love reading old publications. And you know, at this point, I'd been working out for a long time. And I'd noticed that the bodybuilders and strength athletes
Starting point is 00:58:10 in the past all worked their body parts more than once a week. The once a week training became a trend of each body part where you like biceps on Monday. You don't wait till next Monday to hit it again. That didn't become a thing until like the 90s. That was because the Mr. Olympia at the time during the eights was an advocate for, the Arthur Jones style of heavy duty training
Starting point is 00:58:34 where you hammer the shit out of a muscle and leave it alone for an entire week. But before that, everybody trained muscle groups twice a week and before that it was three days a week or four days a week. So I'd read all these things and I was like, you know, I know I'm only supposed to work my body parts once a week, but I'm gonna try this two day a week thing. And so what I did is I broke up my body into,
Starting point is 00:58:55 you know, I did upper body, lower body, rest, upper body, lower body. And part of my rationale was, I gotta get lean anyway. So I'm just gonna burn a lot more calories. So I'm doing, I'm hitting everything anyway. So I'm just gonna burn a lot more calories. So I'm doing, I'm hitting everything more. So I'm just gonna burn more calories. Now, luckily and intuitively, I knew to not go quite as hard if my body was a little sore.
Starting point is 00:59:15 So when it ended up happening Monday, upper body, you know, Tuesday legs, Wednesday off, then it came back Tuesday. It's upper body again. I'm still a little sore. I'm gonna go a little easy, but I'm still gonna train it because I gotta see what happens.
Starting point is 00:59:29 Blue my mind. Training a sore muscle appropriately, so don't beat the shit out of it, but training appropriately, I recovered faster. Actually, I didn't get more sore the next day. I actually felt a little bit better. And then I started progressing at a very, very quick rate. And this was the one of the things that led to the development of maps and a ball, like which is where you hit body parts, essentially three days a week. So hitting
Starting point is 00:59:54 a sore muscle group, if you do it right, it's actually better than not hitting it. In my opinion, I've had, I've had that experience. And it's just like promoting more blood flow, like getting the oxygen there, like all these different, like, again, this is dose dependent, this is making sure that I'm not going to intense, you know, with that workout where I'm already sore, but to get through like those same movements and get blood flow and get that,
Starting point is 01:00:19 to facilitate better recovery, definitely, that definitely was an effective strategy and that helped a lot because like just sitting around and being sore like I noticedably was more stiff and it was almost exaggerated on that level. I think it's important though and I agree with everything we're saying but I also think it's important to note that if you're getting so sore that like you go into it's two three days later and you're hitting that muscle group again or you're getting so sore that like you go into it's two, three days later and you're hitting that muscle group again or you're supposed to hit that muscle group again and you're
Starting point is 01:00:49 like really, really sore. That's a sign that you overreached on the last workout and you need to take that into consideration when you go back into that routine again. That routine again. Great point. That I didn't need to go that far, you know, and really what you're reaching for, what you're targeting. The goal for me is always, and I say this a million times on the show, that I didn't need to go that far, you know? And really what you're reaching for, what you're targeting, the goal for me is always, and I say this a million times on the show,
Starting point is 01:01:09 that I'm trying to do as little as possible to elicit the most amount of change. Well, what does that look like? Well, what it looks like is just stretching myself enough that I might be a little sore from it. So I know that like, okay, definitely, that was more for me, because my body's telling me I'm a little sore from it.
Starting point is 01:01:25 But if I'm really sore from it, that means I way overreached and I way over to it. So bad that it's probably going to hinder that workout that I do again in two or three days that I probably won't be able to get after it as much as I'd like to because I am so sore. So yes, I agree. You can definitely hit a muscle and you should
Starting point is 01:01:44 because it will, it'll facilitate recovery faster, and you will probably adapt and grow. You're increasing your volume, so there's nothing wrong with training a quote unquote sore muscle, but I also think that's a good signal for you to know that you're overreaching more than you need to,
Starting point is 01:01:59 and to probably back off a little bit on the volume, meaning less sets, less reps, or a little less weight, the next time you circle back around there. Again, my sweet spot, if I know that I'm hitting a muscle group every other day or every two days, I wanna feel it. I wanna get a good workout where I'm like, oh, the next day, I know I worked my legs, but when I'm having a hard time walking around,
Starting point is 01:02:24 I know that it's like, but when I'm having a hard time walking around, I know that it's like, oh, I totally could have done three less sets and still sent a signal to my body to build muscle there. And I wouldn't be walking around like I have to stick up my ass and I'd be able to get a good workout in two days. This is why I've also, like, I've, I love, I've gravitated more towards the total body workout instead of split. Like I used to do split routines like a long time ago, but that was way more, I would
Starting point is 01:02:51 get sore from that way more so than I would these total body movements. And that's just mainly because I'm hitting them again. I know I'm going to go through these movements again the next day. And then it's psychologically kind of prepares you to not overreach because you already know that like well I can't like I can't really go all out I have to come back again in two days and again. Yeah and two days I'm doing you know today I'm doing squats and you know man I feel great and I've already knocked out five or six sets like maybe I'll push eight or ten sets
Starting point is 01:03:22 but then I'm like well yeah I could push eight or ten sets, but then I'm like, well, yeah, I could push eight or 10 sets, but I also know on Wednesday. Yeah, you can get to it. I'm coming back here again, and I'm doing Bulgarian split squats, or I'm doing lunges, or I'm doing front squats. I don't want to, I don't want to hinder those because I went, I went so hard here. So what I'm going to do is I'm going to leave a little bit in the tank, and then know I'm going to get after it on, on two days later. And also understand that recovery and adaptation
Starting point is 01:03:45 are two different things. So your body wanting to heal and your body wanting to build muscle, which is a type of adaptation. Those are two different things. Now they happen oftentimes at the same time, because as your body's healing, it's also trying to build muscle. But that doesn't mean you can't get your body
Starting point is 01:04:03 to want to build more muscle while you're healing. In other words, if you're sore and you hit the muscle again, but you do it right, okay? You gotta adjust the intensity. Don't overdo it. Depends how sore you are. If I'm super sore, I'm going light. I'm just trying to get a pump. I'm getting a squeeze. I'm stretching a little bit. You're gonna send another or a louder or make the current muscle building signal louder while not hampering your body's ability to heal. In fact, as we discussed earlier, you may actually speed up your body's ability heal at the same time.
Starting point is 01:04:36 Next question is from Riley McFatter 18. Thoughts on processed versus non-processed foods if the macros are still good in the processed foods. As we go to answer this Doug, will you look this up? Because I know I'm gonna make a point that I wanna make sure I'm right on my percentages because it's been a while since I lived this.
Starting point is 01:04:56 Would you look up at what FDA approves labels to be off? And I believe it's... How accurate do they have to be? Yeah, I believe FDA allows like 30%. Oh, yeah, 30. Yeah, it's 20 to 30% wiggle room on their labels. And you would be a fool to think that. That's a lot.
Starting point is 01:05:17 Yeah, you would be a fool to think that a package thing like a lean pocket, which is designed to market and advertise to people that are probably trying to lose weight or counter calories. But they also want it still to taste good. You would be a fool to think that they're not going to push those boundaries as far as they can so that you feel like, man, this is so good. I can't believe it's only 250 calories.
Starting point is 01:05:40 Well, it technically could be about 320 calories based off of how much they allow it to be off. And then also foods that are marketing to, oh, this has 20 grams of protein. Well, again, if you can be off 20 or 30%, I know I'm targeting the group demographic of people that are searching for protein, I'm gonna push those limits.
Starting point is 01:05:57 I'm gonna round up to make you think that there's a lot more in there. So before sal goes on his tangent about process and non-processed foods and the benefits of each or whatever, I'm just going to tell you straight up that when you're, this is also why 99.9% of all competitors don't eat processed foods when you're competing is because when you are, have to be that diligent track. Can't count on it. No, you can't, you can't count on it. I can't, I can't go eat it. It's much more precise to weigh a chicken breast or weigh. Yes, weigh, weigh, weigh more accurate.
Starting point is 01:06:27 And when I'm controlling everything that's in it and being cooked and this goes for, when you go to restaurants too, and they now have to like label or list, you know, to me it's so funny that this is even a question because do you really think that the thousand Chipotle's that have 10,000 different employees that are scooping the black beans and the rice? And I know who am I heavy handed guys?
Starting point is 01:06:52 Right. I'm like, hey man, you give me the meat. Right. Do you really think that they're all the same? No, you're talking about, and we're talking about hundreds of calories that could be off based off of just one meal. you're talking about, and we're talking about hundreds of calories that could be off based off of just one meal. If you eat multiple meals out or that are processed, yeah, it's nowhere near as accurate as you
Starting point is 01:07:13 think it is. Here's what I'm going to say about this topic. I can pretty confidently say, and I think that this will age very, very well. I think in 10, 15 years, I think this is gonna be the consensus. But I can confidently say that it was the processed food revolution that was the single largest contributor to the obesity epidemic in modern Western societies. For a long time, we wanted to blame fat.
Starting point is 01:07:46 It was too much fat in our diet. That's what's making it fat, making it fat. Then it was carbs or sugar. The reality is you can gain or lose weight if your calories are too high or too low. And it can be higher in carbs, lower in carbs, higher in fat, lower in fat. We know this.
Starting point is 01:08:02 So why the hell ever since I'd say the the the 50s But definitely the 60 70s and really started taking off after the 70s 80s 90s and now Why the hell did we all of a sudden become so fat? And why is it that other countries that start to adopt The quote unquote American diet, which really isn't it's just really it's a it's the modern Develop Western diet. Why is it that other countries, as soon as they adopt this, they all get fat too. You look at Mexico, for example.
Starting point is 01:08:32 Mexico, you know, a few decades ago, three, four decades ago, did not have an obesity problem. You go back 50 years, they had a problem, the opposite. Today, Mexico, I believe rivals America in terms of obesity How did this happen? It wasn't fat. It wasn't carbs. It was processed food now. Why does processed food Make us gain weight. Well, we now have studies that show this This is what we've learned as personal trainers. By the way, this is what I knew as a trainer working with people This is what Adam and Justin have saw themselves as well
Starting point is 01:09:01 was a trainer working with people. This is what Adam and Justin saw themselves as well. Heavily processed foods make you eat more. So now you have, you know, American culture, 60s and 70s, the introduction, or at least the all of a sudden processed foods started to become part of our daily lives. Now at that time, it was still a staple to have, you know, a well-cooked dinner, you know,
Starting point is 01:09:25 you know, mom made dinner for you and lunch was probably still made. And breakfast still people had eggs and bacon and that kind of stuff. But little by little, these meals were getting replaced by cereal, by, you know, boxed processed foods, by microwave dinners became a thing for a little while. People started eating out more and more. That's considered heavily processed food, all these fast food restaurants started popping up.
Starting point is 01:09:48 And as we started to consume more processed food, our wastes started to grow alongside them, our wait started to go up alongside them. Now we have studies that actually show this. There was one of the best studies that I've ever seen when it comes to nutrition. And I consider it one of the best because it was fully controlled.
Starting point is 01:10:06 In other words, the people in the study were in a lab the whole time. One of the problems with studies done on nutrition is that most of them are based off of surveys. People will go in and then they'll ask them questions like, how often do you eat vegetables? How often do surveys are just notoriously inaccurate. People just ask somebody to estimate how many calories they throw always off by 500 calories or more, sometimes thousands. But this study was done in the lab, it was controlled.
Starting point is 01:10:33 And what they did is they took two groups of people, one group, they gave them unlimited access to unprocessed natural foods. So like chicken and meat and eggs and milk and fruits and vegetables and nuts and that kind of stuff. The other group had unlimited access to heavily processed foods. Believe it or not, this is how good the study was done. They even controlled for macros.
Starting point is 01:10:54 The macros of each side were similar. So it wasn't like the heavily processed food side was all sugar and the other side was less or no. They matched them up pretty damn well. Then here's what they did that was even more brilliant. They had them stay in their camps for a little while, eat as much as you want, eat as much as you want, both groups, then they switched them.
Starting point is 01:11:14 Then they switched them over, just to make sure that it wasn't like these people over here just to eat more and whatever. Then they switched them over. Do you know what they found? On average, in other studies of echo this, on average, when people consume a lot of heavily processed foods, they around 500 more calories every single day.
Starting point is 01:11:34 That's a pound of body fat a week. Okay, that's incredible. And that's a lot of food. Now how does this happen? Well, because hunger is not regulated, not just regulated by how many calories in your food or how much it fills up your stomach. It has to do with a lot of different things.
Starting point is 01:11:51 And processed foods are designed to make you eat more. They do a phenomenal job of doing this. So here's the difference. If you got processed foods and unprocessed foods in the same macros and same calories, you're going to have a way tougher time eating an appropriate amount if you be processed. And that's you're using an example of a controlled study where they factored in what the calories had to be. My argument is that I would say that a majority of people, and we know this from other studies,
Starting point is 01:12:19 under report and they don't know how to calculate correctly. And it's hard to calculate correctly. Doug pulled up the article for me. It's actually the FDA allows 20% leeway north or south. So, and they use the example. So a cliff bar, a cliff bar legally could say it's 200 calories or 300 calories. It could be literally 100 calorie difference.
Starting point is 01:12:38 Now, which one do you think they'll put on the label? Right, the 150. Yeah, that's a 20% variation up or down. Yeah, yes. So, that, a 20% variation up or down. Yeah, yes. So, and that's on a small bar. The bigger the product is, the more exaggerated that can be. And that's one thing in your diet for that single day.
Starting point is 01:12:54 You've got multiple things in your diet that is processed or packaged like that or eating out. You could be miscalculating by 300 to 700 calories every day, which is typically about how many calories I'm telling a client to restrict or add to their diet based off of their goal. So if you're eating a lot of these foods and you think the, the quote unquote macros align, they probably don't. So I mean, now that all being said, that doesn't mean too,
Starting point is 01:13:22 that I'm also freaking out every time I eat. I mean, I had, you know, Mikes, a good friend of ours, sends us his protein, he's always pushing his products on us all the time, right? So, you know, fuck I eat him. You know, he sends a chocolate chip bars in there all the time, I pick him out and I was eating a mouser. I don't freak out because I'm eating a bar and going, oh my God, this could be off by 50 calories or whatever.
Starting point is 01:13:43 If it's in your diet occasionally, it's not that big of a deal where I think it's going to be, you will or you won't get results, but it's important that you're mindful of these things. You're mindful of the points that Sal is making that when you eat highly processed foods that it's created to hijack your palate and make you want to eat more, that's why it's designed, it's designed to do that.
Starting point is 01:14:03 And then also, there's a good chance that it's off by a solid 20% north or south, and normally the direction that you don't want it to be off. So keep that in mind when you're eating that stuff. Yeah, and at the end of the day, do you want your, do you want to be able to maintain a good body weight or body fat percentage, but do you want it to be a struggle? Like, you want to have to like use willpower every damn day
Starting point is 01:14:28 or do you want it to feel a little bit more natural? Eating heavily processed foods is gonna make it a lot harder. So regardless of what your goal is, eating those types of foods just, and that means I'm counting if everything's equal. As Adam said, it probably not. And we're not even going down the micro-nat and nutrient path. And we're not even talking about the other reasons
Starting point is 01:14:49 why whole foods are usually healthier than unprocessed foods. So there just is no comparison. Now again, that being said, here's what process food is really good at, because I'm not going to demonize it. I know it sounds like I'm demonizing it, but here's a deal. Process foods allowed us to feed a lot of fucking people. They don't go bad. I can ship them across the world. There's a reason why
Starting point is 01:15:11 in Hawaii spam has become a staple. A lot of people don't realize it's been you go to Hawaii, spam and eggs and spam, you're like, why do they spam someone? Because we had soldier stationed in Hawaii. And how do you ship meat without it going bad? They made spam, you know, processed foods have value and there's a reason why they exist, but they make you eat more and I would say if you have the privilege of buying, you know, unprocessed foods can make you it's gonna make it a lot easier for you to stay Lean and healthy just makes things a lot easier. And with that, go to MindPumpFree.com and download our guides. They cost nothing.
Starting point is 01:15:50 You can also find all of us on Instagram. You can find Adam at MindPump. Adam, Justin at MindPump. Justin, and you can find me at MindPump. Thank you for listening to MindPump. If your goal is to build and shape your body, dramatically improve your health and energy, and maximize your overall performance. Check out our discounted RGB Superbundle at MindPumpMedia.com.
Starting point is 01:16:11 The RGB Superbundle includes maps and a ballac, maps for performance, and maps aesthetic. Nine months of phased, expert exercise programming designed by Sal Adam and Justin to systematically transform the way your body looks, feels, and performs. With detailed workout blueprints in over 200 videos, the RGB Superbundle is like having Sal Adam and Justin as your own personal trainer's butt at a fraction of the price. The RGB Superbundle has a full 30-day money bag guarantee, and you can get it now plus other valuable free
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