2 Bears, 1 Cave with Tom Segura & Bert Kreischer - Arnold Schwarzenegger PUMPS UP The Bears | 2 Bears, 1 Cave
Episode Date: December 23, 2024SPONSORS: Don’t miss out on all the action this week at DraftKings! Download the DraftKings app today! Sign-up using https://dkng.co/bears or through my promo code BEARS. Head to http://BlueChew.c...om to receive your first month FREE! Try VIIA! https://viia.co/BEARS and use code BEARS! Sign up for a $1 per month trial period at https://shopify.com/bears. GET TO DA CHOPPA!!! Arnold Schwarzenegger joins Tom Segura and Bert Kreischer in the gym for this week’s episode of 2 Bears, 1 Cave! The bears are beyond pumped (and maybe a little intimidated) as Arnie entertains them with wild stories from his bodybuilding days and his legendary rivalries with Lou Ferrigno and Sylvester Stallone. Arnold also talks to the bears about his love of cigars, the exercises he helped popularize, his physique, Muhammed Ali, plus the surprising way Milton Berle helped shape his career and so much more! 2 Bears, 1 Cave Ep. 268 https://tomsegura.com/tour https://www.bertbertbert.com/tour https://store.ymhstudios.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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There's two ways that you can move the weights.
One of them is physically and the other one is mentally.
So, in order to really get mentally ready for it,
you have to do just many reps with 300.
What is it supposed to do? 315.
315, yeah, so you have to go,
because you have to let the mind know
not to go and have fear of the 315.
So what I usually did was,
when I was training for powerlifting,
was I was, let's say, my max,
let's say, was at a competition, 515.
my max that was at the competition, 515.
And so I tried to do as many times as I can, 500.
Yeah. So I did 500 in the gym, then I waited a little bit,
and then I did again one rep at 500.
Same day?
Then I waited, yeah, you know, just kind of like.
Like waiting around?
Yeah.
Five minutes later, so...
Sure.
Shmoosing a little bit, and then okay, then the guys were coming in and said, okay, let's
do another one, let's do another one.
And then we were just going, doing it again.
And so he gets mentally used to the 500, so in a way you feel like...
This is all happening subconsciously.
It's not like consciously, consciously too,
but I mean the important thing is that you lie down
eventually on the bench and you say, I have that nailed.
Yeah, yeah.
Because as soon as you say, let me try,
it's not quite cutting it to try.
I mean trying is good, but I mean you gotta do it.
Yeah.
Because then you feel the fear if you're not ready for it.
The fear factor, that's why I say psychologically,
is the important thing is to just do it,
just for your head, to do it as many times as possible.
So you go, we went dinner once or twice a week,
we went to the ultimate weight,
then we just stayed on that,
whatever that weight is that day,
and then just stay on and do the heavy weight,
the heavy weight, the heavy weight, just one rep.
And when we normally train, we go up to three reps.
So we go, let's say, in your case,
you did three for,
285,
so you do then three reps,
and then you keep doing three reps,
and keep doing three reps.
Then eventually the next week you go to just for one rep.
So that's what we do.
It's just kind of doing the mind game.
Because our mind is really the thing that holds us back.
Sure.
Your mind is fascinating.
Well, it's fascinating.
But I try to work on it all the time,
because I figured it out on my own.
I said, look, this is really weird,
because I was doing weightlifting competitions
all the time as a kid, because I was doing weightlifting competitions all the time as a kid because I joined a weightlifting club in Graz.
So there was no bodybuilding club.
So we had to weightlift.
And then after we went through the weightlifting routine and the weightlifting training, then
we could go into chin-ups or do some incline presses or do some lateral raises or biceps curls and
stuff like that.
But first we had to do the weightlifting.
So we were competing pretty much every second weekend going from one town to another, kind
of competing against the town weightlifting club.
And so you kind of eventually figured out, you know, that why is it that you get to the
weight and you say, oh, I'm going to why is it that you get to the weight,
and you say, oh, I'm gonna do that,
this is gonna be great, and you pound it out.
You clean it up, boom, and you have it in your chest,
and then, boom, you pound it out, and it's a winner.
And then you put on five more pounds on it,
and all of a sudden it doesn't work.
It's what happened.
Then you realize, wait a minute, okay,
I went down to the bar,
and I, that second, I said, grab the bar,
I was wondering, can I do it or not?
And that's what fucked me.
So I realized that the mind was the thing, not the body.
The mind just says, maybe not.
And you say, what the hell is that?
So, okay, how do I now get the mind ready for that?
So, this is how you then work on it, on yourself.
And everyone operates differently,
but I mean, that's what I did.
I realized that the mind is so important
to really lift the ultimate weight
and also important to motivate you to get to the gym
and also important to stay in there for more the gym, and also important to stay in there
for more than two hours,
like we were competing in bodybuilding
and then weightlifting and then powerlifting,
so we had to train more than two hours,
so I mean, how do you make yourself do that?
And that's when you then come up
with all the various different principles that you need
in order to carry you through.
But then your mind also,
because you would, psychologically psychologically you would do something in
competition too, right?
Because it seemed like you always had an upper hand on your competition when you guys were
leading up to it and backstage.
You were doing something different.
Well, again, I think that when you compete,
there is a competition, a psychological kind of a little warfare going on. Sure.
You know, and we have seen that very well,
I think in the 60s with Muhammad Ali in boxing.
Right.
You know, that boxing was not just boxing.
You know, I think Ali taught us all
that there's another dimension to that,
which was the psychological warfare that goes on,
or the selling of the sport itself,
that you can box as well as you can,
but if you're not a really good salesman,
and if you don't create a certain personality
that people get kind of fall in love with,
then you don't really have much.
Then you would have your 10,000 people at the boxing arena
and that's it, but Ali figured out how to get 25,000
and how to get 50,000 and how to fill a stadium.
And it was all a psychological thing that he did.
And so I did the same thing in bodybuilding.
I just tried to figure out, okay,
what are the vulnerabilities that those guys have?
And then I would just, you know, use that.
And you would gas them up sometimes.
Because I've seen clips where you're like,
wow, you look really good, man.
I'm worried about you.
And you could tell that that guy was like, wait, what?
You're talking about Lou?
Yeah.
Well, you were Lou Frigno, and Lou Frigno's dad is gold.
Yeah, exactly, and I was trying to,
there was a two-pronged agenda.
There was the one is to win,
and the other one was to kind of be entertaining
for pumping iron.
And so I was trying to kind of show people
how you can kind of slowly talk an entire family
into losing.
You know?
And so.
That's awesome.
Yeah.
So it was like.
So.
But this is like.
It started out early already, you know,
by telling them about, you know,
it's just, you know,
as soon as I dragged them in, by talking, I said, I'd like to drag them in
by talking about my mother, because they're Italians.
They love family.
And the Farrignos, they love family,
and they always love talking about the family,
and the daughter, and the son, and the mother,
and the grandmother, and the grandfather, and the father,
and all of that stuff.
So I said, yesterday I called my mother,
and I said, oh, we're really looking forward to seeing her one day
and all that stuff.
I said, here she comes to America regular.
I said, but I told her, I said, I won.
You know, and he said, but the competition is tonight.
I said, no, I said, but I mean, I just told her,
I said, but I don't know if I can reach her tonight
after the competition.
I said, I told her, I won.
She says, congratulations, Adam.
And then he said, he was like, kind of like,
made them all look at each other, kind of, oh, Jesus.
I don't know if he'll be able to reach her later,
so I just wanted her to know I won.
Exactly.
And so it was stuff like that.
It was kind of all a mind fuck kind of a thing, you know?
And just to play with their mind a little bit,
and Lou got all confused.
But like I said, a lot of it was kind of show,
was for the pumping arm, for the cameras,
and all that stuff.
And for some reason, no doubt,
the funny thing about it is that Lou
has never really trusted me ever again since that moment.
Imagine 50 years, this has been 50 years ago.
I mean next year 50 years.
And see always, we're very good friends.
And we play chess together and we hang out together
and we schmooze together and have gossip sessions,
go to the gym together. But every time I say something, I say this,
I said, you know, I know it's foggy today, Louis,
but the sun is gonna come out,
I guarantee you, in the next two hours,
he'll go like.
He will kind of look around, is he putting me on here?
Then he looks up, no, I don't think so.
You know, kind of like, I don't think the sun is coming up.
I think you're putting me on or something.
So he just, no matter what I say, you know,
he kind of like, he's always doubting it
and it's always kind of questioning it, you know.
But I mean, he's a great guy
and I really got to appreciate Lou
because he was one of
the very few bodybuilders that was willing to work, to work his ass off.
Not only in the gym, but also the various different jobs he had.
I mean, he was a sheep metal worker, he was a welder, he was playing football up in Canada,
he was trying to join a football team, up there and become a football player.
He went into professional wrestling
and he worked his ass off there and weightlifting.
I mean, everything that he did.
And then, in the movies, you know, he played The Hulk.
And he did really a great job there.
And then after that gig was over,
after years and years and years of The Hulk,
he then became a personal trainer,
and he was training celebrities here in Hollywood.
And he was going from house to house.
He never shied away from working.
You know, not like, I'm a star now, I don't have to work.
For him, the most important thing was
to provide for the family and to go and to do the work.
And I really loved it because I would say
like half of the bodybuilders are lazy bastards.
You know, they're just, I mean,
the ones that I hung out with,
they wanted to be on the beach
and they wanted to just hang out
and they just wanted to get a tan.
And then when Franco and I started our construction business,
I said, come on guys, we need some work.
I said, we just hit the earthquake here in Los Angeles.
We need to rebuild some of the patios
and the fireplaces and the chimneys.
And they will come and they will just,
they will just work one direction, this direction.
And then they will work, they put the bricks on it.
I said, guys, you gotta turn around
and do it the other way too.
No, no, no, but the Sun is coming from here
I want to get a tan get tan today, which is there to get a tan lazy bastards
So Frank, you lazy bastards get out of here, you know, we always did the work, but I mean it was
It's great when you see a bodybuilder like Frank of Colombo or like Lou Ferrigno that really were working hard
I love that Frank. Oh, I always said I love that. Because I always say in my book, be useful,
I always say, you know, one of the principles
work your ass off.
And be useful.
And be useful, exactly.
You, well, I got, because you're talking about Franco,
and Tom is my best friend, and Franco is your best friend.
Right.
And I can tell stories about Tom,
that I, of what I love about him,
and why he makes me, why he's my friend.
And I was wondering, I read your letter you wrote when Franco passed away last night in
bed, I was having a glass of wine and I got emotional. I went, Oh man, I'm going to do
that for Tom when he dies before me. And, but I would love for you to tell a story.
Look at that face. He might croak during the podcast.
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I would love for you just to tell a story about Franco
that maybe you haven't told or like what you loved about him or just
Anything well Franco was basically half animal half human
You know, so he was like no one could figure it out
Because he was like he had this unusual
strength and
this unusual strength and these unusual abilities.
Like who would just hang upside down on his toes
on a chin-up bar?
I could never hold myself with my toes.
He did.
It was like a gorilla.
And then the way he was like going from bar to bar
with his hands, he had this unbelievable power.
It was like a monkey.
And so he was doing things in the kind of lifts.
I mean, think about, the guy lifted like 750 pounds
deadlift and he weighed like 180 pounds.
Yeah, it's crazy.
It's ridiculous.
Crazy.
And doing like with 100 pound lateral raises
and stuff like that, that I used for dumbbell presses.
Billy could do that with 100 pounds.
And he would do lateral raises.
I mean, just crazy, crazy strength.
Franco came from Sardinia,
and the way he grew up was kind of like,
also very primitive, out in the farm,
and he was like on a ranch
and he had to go and take the sheep up to the mountains
and he had to figure out himself
how to go and feed himself
while he was up there for a few days.
So he had to kill animals and do all kinds of,
live like a really primitive kind of a thing.
And so it was like all kind of very strange
but it made him kind of like a person
that had no fear of anything.
And so when I brought him to America,
I tried to, you know, Joe Weider brought me
over to America first,
because I was like the big bodybuilder.
I weighed 250 pounds.
I just won Mr. Universe for the second time.
I was 21 years old.
I'm this new sensation, you know, this farm boy from Austria. Let's call him the second time. I was 21 years old, I'm this new sensation,
you know this farm boy from Austria,
let's call him the Austrian Oak,
to create a little bit of drama type of thing.
And so it was all that, but then Franco was a little guy,
but powerful and just thick.
And so I had to convince Joe Weider, I said,
you gotta bring over Franco, too.
We're a perfect team.
It was like the original twins type of thing, right?
And so Franco, Joe Weider would always say,
he's a nice little guy, come on.
Why do you want to bring him over?
We have so many little guys around here.
This is Joe, the way he talked,
you know, with his Canadian Jewish accent.
And so I said, no, you gotta bring Franco over.
It's just like, unbelievable.
There's no one here in America I can guarantee you
that's like Franco.
I say he can outlift anybody, he can outpost anyone,
and he's gonna win Mr. Universe, I guarantee you,
that he's on his way to win everything.
And then Joe Bida eventually brought him over.
And so Franco and I, we then continued training
together here. And within one year of being here,
he won the Mr. Universe contest in the amateur category.
The year after that, he won the Mr. Universe professional,
then Mr. World, eventually Mr. Olympia and all that stuff.
And Franco is the kind of a guy that,
because there was no money in bodybuilding.
Yeah.
So Franco and I, we were just saying,
hey, we're from Europe.
We're not one of those lazy fucks
that just want to hang around and do nothing.
I said, let's get our act together
and just let's educate ourselves.
Let's go to college, educate ourselves.
So Franco loved, of course, chiropractic and medical stuff.
So he went to chiropractic college.
I went to study business, and then decided
to start working, and Franco, of course,
was a bricklayer, and then a masonry worker,
and cement worker, and stone worker from Italy,
so I said, Franco, I said, we should start a business here,
and then, of course, we put an ad in the LA Times,
Italian and European masonry work experts,
and all of this shit,
I didn't know anything about masonry work.
So we put the ad in, the next day after the ad came out,
we had the earthquake in Los Angeles.
I mean, can you think about that?
And then, all of a sudden, everyone called us,
and they said, oh my God, you gotta come over,
you gotta rebuild our chimney,
you gotta rebuild our patio,
the patio has a big crack here,
the wall has a big crack,
the wall around the house fell down, and blah, blah, blah.
So Frank and I, we were doing bits left and right,
and going around and then.
So there's all kinds of places in LA
that you and Franco rebuilt?
Yeah, there's a famous,
I'm fucking insane. There's a famous wall down in Venice,
not far from here, that Franco and I
was one of the first walls that we built.
That's still standing there exactly the way it was.
Why don't you reopen that business?
50 years ago, more than 50 years ago,
this wall was built and it's still standing there,
not moved an inch,
nothing changed, it's gonna be there like the Roman walls.
You know, it's gonna be there for thousands of years,
no one except someone tears it down.
But I mean, I tell you, so our workmanship was good,
but I learned everything from Franco.
Franco would go in here, the Mustang,
and he would pick up a wheelbarrow,
and he would pick up a cement mixer,
one of those little machines, and he would just tow a wheelbarrow and he would pick up a cement mixer, one of those
little machines, and he would just tow it to the construction site.
And then I would be in charge of mixing the cement.
He would show me how, what the combination is, how much water, how much sand, how much,
you know, sand and water and all this stuff and concrete that we put in there and then
mix it up and then, you know, help him with that.
And then he taught me how to do the pre-claying
and all those things.
And so we made money.
We made $5,000 together a week.
I mean, imagine, it's a lot of money in the 70s, $5,000.
I mean, it was like a lot of money.
So we put literally a thousand or $1,500 aside.
And I started saving up money like that,
and that's how I eventually, in 1974,
had enough money to put down $27,000
for an apartment building.
In Santa Monica?
In Santa Monica, yeah.
A six-unit apartment building
on 19th Street in Santa Monica.
Because I knew that you had done that.
Did you, was that from studying business,
or did you always go,
I'm going to do real estate?
No, I think it was the kind of thing as an immigrant.
Yeah, yeah.
If you were an immigrant that had its act together,
and he was willing to work and not live off the state
or the country or something like that, we were kind of like,
I had a friend who was a Czechoslovakian immigrant,
then another guy that was a Polish immigrant. Every one of them had a little, kind of one had a,
kind of like a twin unit apartment building
with just two units.
Another one had like eight units.
Another one had six units.
So they talked me into this,
I said, Arnold, don't buy a house.
You gotta buy an apartment building
because that gives you money
and you can then pay it off with the rent
that the people are paying
and the value goes up much more than a house
and blah, blah, blah.
And so then they got a real estate agent
that all of them used, which was a Lebanese woman.
Olga was her name.
And she was like this little,
it was like Danny DeVito height.
And she also was an immigrant,
so I think that she knew that we were hardworking
and that we wanted to invest our money
and we wanted to make our money, $1 turn into two.
And so she helped us find us apartment buildings.
They were available and so she got us,
so she found me one that cost $240,000.
And so I had $27,000 to put down,
then he had $37,000 down, so Joe Weider gave me
$10,000 for the third deed.
So he put up that $10,000, so I paid him back
within a year, so now I had, this was my building,
and he didn't have anything to do with it anymore.
And then a year later, sold it for almost $400,000.
So I mean, imagine, by putting $27,000 to $37,000 down,
altogether, I went from $240,000 to $400,000,
$160,000 profit.
In a year?
In two years basically.
And then they deducted real estate fee.
It was the best return that you can think.
But I didn't take the money because I didn't want to pay
the income tax at this point.
So I did trading up.
Trading up exactly to a 12 unit apartment building
then eventually to a 36 unit apartment building
and a 48 unit apartment.
So then it started growing, and then it started getting
into buying office buildings, old office buildings
on Main Street here in Santa Monica.
They were decrepit, and they had artists in it,
and we then turned them into kind of like offices
for banks and for real estate offices and stuff like that.
Redid the space and started making a lot of money on that.
That's incredible.
Yeah.
I gotta ask you this, because I was so fascinated by this when I was watching your doc series
on Netflix, is that growing up, we knew about your bodybuilding, but we all became obviously
super fans from the movies and there's you know
It's no social media at the time. You don't have access to information
So you see the story and the one of the things I was most fascinated by was the rivalry with Stallone
Because when you're a kid you go you kind of go, you know you met you imagine
I wonder what what there was like I I wonder if they each other. And this was like seeing this was the first time
you guys talked about verifiably
that you guys had a real rivalry.
Right.
And like how did it originate?
Like what made you guys, you know,
was it just the fact that you're competing
in the box office or was it like deeper than that?
No, I think that it was kind of what the rivalry was there. that you're competing in the box office or was it like deeper than that? No I
think that it was kind of what the rivalry was there mm-hmm but it was I
think the whole thing was my fault. Really? Well because I remember that I
one time was really stupid and a journalist asked me some questions about Sly,
off the record, and I did not know that she had
the tape recorder on the side of her purse running,
and then printed the whole thing.
And so it was not meant to be like that.
And then of course he was very angry,
and that kind of flared up the competition.
And so at that point, the trust was gone
and okay, let's make this an open kind of a thing
and let's go all out.
And so we lived for years, we went just kind of like out,
trying to outdo each other with movies.
But I think as he said in an interview and I totally agree with him that it was
actually healthy. Uh, even though we, we went a little bit beyond what we should have done. Um,
but it was healthy because it did motivate me and I felt kind of like,
It was healthy because it did motivate me and I felt kind of like,
oh yeah, I mean the guy is really ripped.
You know, in Rambo too.
I mean, for example, kind of redefined definition.
Because he was so disciplined with his diet.
And so that motivated me,
then I did my next movie, Commando,
that okay, I have to go and
look like that too.
And so, you know, I mean, I always had like a body fat of around, you know, eight, nine
percent, but I went down to seven percent.
I'm sure that he was down to five percent.
Really?
I don't really know exactly.
You guys were really pushing each other.
So it was like, I got pushed by him,
and then I got really cut,
and people then said after, wow, you're really cut.
And then that pushed him for his next movie
when he did Rocky.
Oh, look at how much bigger Arnold was than me.
I gotta get bigger.
And so we kind of motivated each other.
And it was also, like I said,
the competition was so stupid
that it was like two little children.
It was like unbelievable for mature,
supposedly grown-up guys,
like who has a bigger knife in their movie.
Yeah, yeah.
So that was very important,
that we measured the length of the knife
and how many teeth does it have on it, right?
And who kills more creatively with that knife?
That was very important.
For real?
You just slice someone's neck very quickly or do you stab him three times and then slice
the neck?
So all of this was very, very important.
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Then it was like analyzing each other's guns.
Then we had to do the research,
what shells to come out of that?
What shells did this gun fire?
What did this gun used for?
Then someone said, well,
slice gun is you normally use on a helicopter. And I said, well, I said, why don't we go
since I was a tank driver in the army, why don't we get a machine gun from a tank? I
said, they are bigger than from a helicopter. I said, that's what I'm going to have in
Predator. And so we got a big gun that he normally can hold.
And it's stupid stuff like that.
And then I counted, he was like killing 46 people, so I had to kill 64 people.
Just turned a number around.
And it's just crazy stuff like that.
It's just dudes being dudes basically.
Yeah, exactly.
That's right.
And out came these real great, great action movies
that he did fantastic action movies.
I was doing fantastic action movies.
But I always felt like I was kind of behind.
Because he was like-
Really?
That's crazy.
Just think about it.
I remember that was like,
I was getting a million dollars now for Conan number two.
This was 1983. And then I'm reading a million dollars now for Conan number two. This was 1983.
And then I'm reading, I said,
Sly just made a deal to get five million dollars
for a movie.
So I said, what the fuck?
A minute later, okay, I'm a fifth.
This has to stop.
So I worked my way up and I did everything I could.
Eventually the next movie I got three million.
Then it was like always doubling.
Then it was six million dollars.
And so this is how I got up.
And then eventually I remember I got 10 million dollars
I think it was for Total Recall.
And it was in 1989.
And Sly signed a deal for one of his movies at number three for 15 million dollars.
Jesus Christ, I can't catch up. What is going on here?
There was always some number that was bigger than mine
and then eventually I think we ended up both
at 20 million dollars as kind of like our standard salary.
And there we were together now,
we said this was like in the 90s.
And then I did Batman and Robin where I got 30 million
dollars, they wanted me so bad for this movie because I didn't want to really play the villain. I played Batman and Robin, where I got $30 million.
They wanted me so bad for this movie, because I didn't want to really play the villain,
Mr. Freeze, and so they said,
if we give you $25 million,
and they said, no, $25 million is petty cash.
What's the matter with you guys?
And you know, they said, okay,
so then they called me back like a month later,
and they said, we give you $30 million, plus we give you points, and back end, and blah, okay, so then he called me back like a month later. And he said, we give you $30 million plus we give you points
and back end and blah, blah, blah.
So I said, okay, I do it.
He said, he doesn't have $30 million.
So I said, this is kind of my way to pay back
for all the tortures over the years
that he got more than I did.
So this is how the competition went.
It's interesting that you still remember all those numbers
Yeah, like cuz we we can tell you what we made of clubs what we made at theaters
We made an arena you don't forget. I mean I still remember when I had a mail order business
You see so I started out because everyone always always asked me about how do you train? How do you do biceps?
How do you get the peak and your biceps and how do you do this with the separation and the re-adultoid and the separation on your back
and the traps and this and that?
So everyone wanted to know kind of the inside scope.
I couldn't sit there for everybody.
I did seminars around the world,
but I couldn't just answer everyone's questions.
So I said to myself, I'm gonna come out
like Charles Atlas did, you know,
like way back when with those Charles Atlas courses, right?
In a way, you kick Santa in someone's face
and the next day you come back and you're the he-man
and you pay him back for that
and you grab the girl and all that stuff.
So anyway, so that was the idea.
I just started doing those courses
and how to get the peak, the bicep,
and how to get the chest like a fortress
and all these kind of titles, right? Joe Weider helped me with that, he was very generous.
And so we started advertising those booklets.
And I remember now, still today, that one weekend,
I was counting order checks and everything like that,
and we made that month $1,600.
I mean, we're talking about in the 70s,
huge money, $1,600.
So now, of course, it would take $400 out of 1,600
to fill the orders,
because you have to print the booklets
and you have to send it out and all that stuff.
But the rest of it was profit.
So this is the way I saved money.
I mean, every dollar was important to me.
And to do the work, and I was doing it myself,
stuffing the envelopes, bringing it to the post office,
and mailing it out and all of this kind of stuff.
It was really good learning experience,
how to get a business license, how to pay the taxes,
and how to make a deal with the IRS.
And they say, you know, what is your estimated income?
And you tell them, you know, this is what I think we'll make.
Okay, this is what you pay on taxes and all that stuff.
So it was fantastic.
And I was always saying to Frank, I said,
can you imagine how easy it is in America?
You just go to the IRS and you say,
this is the amount of money to make.
And first of all, they believe you.
It's not that we wanted to cheat because we had no idea.
So we just said, I think with construction side,
we may be make $2,000 a week or so.
I said, but if you make more, then we let you know.
And so they said, okay, the estimated taxes is this.
And it was like, you know,
the business license we got immediately. no one asked us if we have
a master's degree in masonry work or something like this,
like they would do in Europe.
So the whole thing is just different.
So we were just always so happy that America helped us
give us the opportunities to be able to work
and give us the opportunities to be useful because this is the key thing.
It was everyone always was positive here in America.
No matter what we said, we would say,
I would say, I'm gonna win Mr. Olympia 10 times.
They say, oh, that's fantastic.
I mean, you really have a great goal.
In Europe, they would say, you're fucking crazy.
I mean, you get the größer wahnsinnig,
which means that you're kind of like,
you know, crazy, you think you can do anything.
But I mean, here it's always the positive attitude.
And so we adopted that, and since then I have become,
maybe I was once negative, I don't know,
but I became positive.
I said, that's such a great way,
because in my family, everything was,
my father says, we want to go build those muscles.
This is the new Freinen, and only showing off.
What are you going to do with that?
Be useful, come on, do something.
I mean, go in there and shovel some coal,
or some snow in the winter for some poor people,
or something like that.
It was always negative.
You know, you're never going to make it and all that stuff.
And here, everything is positive.
People build it up.
They go to the football games with their children.
And they go and say, oh, you're going to make it.
You're going to score today.
You're going to do this and that.
That was fantastic.
And even me, when I went with my kids to the soccer games,
I said, hey, don't worry about it.
You didn't kick a goalie, but you were really good.
Next time you're gonna kick that goal,
I said, just don't trip over young balls.
It's just, you gotta be great.
So I mean, it's just a much more positive kind of a country,
the way we look at things
and the way people build each other up.
It's better to be, also,
because especially in entertainment,
you can surround yourself here with negative people
There's a lot of negative people around it's like you just try to embrace
Being around positive people. Yeah, you don't want to hang out between entertainers. Anyway, that's true
You know, that's true. I think that's just hang out with normal people. Yeah, I mean I love coming like to the gold gym
but there's a normal people is that there's a
Guy comes to me and he says, so yesterday I was like, unbelievable,
I put this new roof on this guy and blah blah blah.
I said, are you a roofer?
Yeah, yeah, I've been a roofer for seven years now.
I've noticed two guys, 20-year-old guys,
they make $200,000 a year just because they're also now
in the roofing and they're helping me with the roofing.
So you get ordinary people talking about ordinary things
and ordinary struggles.
I love that.
And a woman coming up, oh, I just was laid off.
I was in the movie business and now and now
they make this deal.
Now they're making less movies.
And then you hear the problems that people have
and how they can still fit into workouts every morning.
Sometimes I'm here at six in the morning,
sometimes I come at 10 in the morning,
I come at different times.
But it's really interesting to listen to people,
ordinary people.
I don't like hanging out with show business people
because sometimes they're lost, I think.
You know, with their mind and where they think
they're gonna go with their careers
and the hangups that they have and all of that stuff.
By the way, I wanted to add,
because you were talking about your mail order business
back then, that now you have the daily newsletter
that goes out.
Well, his app, your app, The Pump, is fucking awesome.
Well, thank you.
Your workouts, I did your first workout,
of course I did advanced weight muscle building.
I expect nothing less.
Thank you.
Bench, T-bars, squats, flies, I mean it's a great workout.
And the schmooze, the weekend schmooze, is fucking so great.
Well I tell you, it doesn't surprise me that you like it
because you and I, as you know, we worked out here.
And we had a great workout together.
And yes, we tried to have fun.
And I mean, you're a comedian, so of course,
you have to do the schmooze and the funding lines
and all of that stuff.
But I mean, it was so great to see you actually working out
and to have the strength and to have the energy
and to do the reps and to be interested
in doing the reps the full way.
Because we all know, we talked about that,
how every rep in bodybuilding and in weight training
has a flexing motion and a stretching
motion. So if you do a chin up, so coming all the way down is the stretch of the
lats, but then going all the way up is the flex of the back. So there's always
the biceps is the same. When you curl up, that's the flex. When you let the weight
down, that's the stretch of the bicep. And so you were fascinated with that
whole principle
and all that stuff and got right away into it.
So I could tell that you would be interested in it
and you will continue on with the workout.
Oh, the workouts are amazing.
My dad's 70, my dad's your age, 77.
And he just got into working out because
of getting out of a chair.
And I was like, dad, you gotta get the pump.
You gotta get the pump.
It's just, it's such a great, can I tell you what's fascinating about you?
Your book is amazing.
Your book is amazing.
I'm saying this, if you have a high school child getting ready to go to college, buy
them this book, this book is a guideline of how you should live your life.
But I couldn't stop thinking that it's so rooted,
all of your philosophies about life
are so rooted in working out.
Like the way you look at everything is
you gotta have struggle to have growth.
You've got everything,
the way you look at the world with just optimism
and we're selling, withhold some stuff first.
It's really amazing, you're working out informed
all of you I think.
Well it helped me in learning about life
because like you just said, there's so many
kind of similarities when it comes to the actual body
and to the muscles versus your brain.
I mean, you know, if you,
if you learn quickly,
and hopefully one learns quickly,
that the more you struggle with resistance,
the more weights you use,
the more you go through the pain period,
after you do like eight reps and you can't do anymore,
then you just do the four strips,
which are the most painful ones.
And it really differentiates you from the guy
that is gonna make it to the guy that's gonna lose.
And so then you cut to the mind and I said,
well, wait a minute, isn't it weird
that the mind is exactly the same way, that the mind and I said, well wait a minute, isn't it weird that the mind is exactly the same way?
That the mind also needs suffering.
The mind needs also struggle, setbacks,
and that you have to climb back up again.
That's what makes you strong.
It's like Nietzsche said, that what does not kill you
will make you stronger.
And this is exactly what it is.
It's all about that people should look forward to the struggle,
because the struggle makes you tougher.
And so don't shy away from that.
It's part of life, and it will make you grow.
It's that simple.
It makes the muscle grow, the more you have resistance,
and it will make your mind grow,
and the psychologically will become stronger,
the more you struggle.
What exercise?
I'm gonna be all exercise questions.
Because like-
You look great by the way.
You look fantastic.
You look amazing.
Well thank you, thank you.
Yeah, I mean it's, because I think you've always been
like the walking advocate for health and fitness
for years and years.
But I think, you know, one of the things is like
as people age, so many people go, you know,
stay away from training.
You just see it all the time.
But you're somebody who, obviously,
you're the standard for lifting, but you still train.
And it's something where I feel like somebody
who is getting into their 50s or 60s and 70s,
it's like you keep training and you look great, man.
But I cannot even take credit for it.
Because people always say, you're so disciplined.
I have no discipline.
It's just who you are.
I'm addicted.
Oh, you're addicted.
It's an addiction.
It's kind of like I cannot even imagine the mornings
without riding down to the gym with the bike
and then working out.
If I don't have it, sometimes it doesn't work out
because there's a morning schedule right away
or something like that.
Then I miss it all day and I'm kind of lost in the way.
So it's an addiction.
So I think that for my entire life,
the 60 years that I've been working out now,
it's all because it's an addiction.
It's kind of like, I have to.
I have to go to the gym in order to feel good.
And because I always tell people, I said,
the difference is, like when I come down with my bike,
it's like going through a black and white movie.
Then as soon as I work out and I ride back my bike
to the hotel and I have some breakfast,
it becomes a colorful movie, it becomes colored.
Everything is more beautiful, everything is brighter.
I look at life differently, everything is positive
and everything like this.
So it's just that the workout
and having done now something for yourself
and having pumped up and having struggled a little bit,
it makes you feel good for the rest of the day.
Yeah.
So this is what I needed.
What, you were at the precipice of bodybuilding
and working out, what exercises showed up in your career
that you were like, you're like, wait, what are they,
I heard you talk about tricep extensions one time.
I think it might have been in your book.
Yeah.
And I was like, well, all the exercises showed up.
Like all the stuff we just know as.
I still do Arnold presses, and you created that.
But what other exercises showed up
when you were working out and you're like,
oh, this is brand new and I love it.
Well first of all, let me tell you,
I was so fortunate that I worked out
and began my workouts in a weightlifting club. Why? Because I learned quickly that the basic exercises are extremely important.
You know, like deadlift,
the curl, the barbell curl,
bench press,
incline press, dumbbell press,
deadlift. All of this stuff is basic stuff
that has nothing with machines, but it should be basic weight, that if you build that,
and if you really use that, that you really can build
the body, everything from ground up.
Those are the basic exercises, or cleaning the weight
and then pressing it, snatching the weight up in one motion.
All of this stuff is just so good.
So that to me was always the key thing, I always tell people, you learn how to do everything
the perfect way for the rest of your life with the other machines because you know the
basic exercises.
So to me the basics are the most important thing.
Then the other thing is,
when you talk about what I found out was,
I said to myself, I was looking with my bicep,
and I said to myself, well, if we go like that, it flexes.
I turn the wrist and the bicep flexes.
I said, so therefore, the motion is not just up and down,
but it's also to turn the wrist.
So now I put an inside of the dumbbell,
an extra two to five pounds.
So now when I curl up like that,
I struggle turning the wrist,
and therefore I get more of a cut
and more of a height in my bicep.
So this was something that no one could see
because no one counts the blades and says,
why is Arnold using on the left side only four blades
and then on the right side there's five blades or something?
They don't do that, right?
So you can do that in a very, very subtle way
and then eventually I started explaining it.
I said, look, I figured this out a long time ago and I looked at the anatomy book you can do that in a very, very subtle way. And then eventually I started explaining it.
I said, look, I figured this out a long time ago.
And I looked at the anatomy book and even talked about it
that one of the jobs that the bicep says is to turn the wrist.
And I said, well, here we are.
I mean, we gotta go and load up on the inside
and do the turning of the dumbbell.
So there's certain things that you can't do
with just having a barbell because you don't turn.
So people that are using a barbell
and using a bridge or bench
can only get a certain size bicep
but never can really get the height.
So the height and the peak you only can get
if you turn the wrist.
With dumbbells.
If you use dumbbells, exactly.
Wow. That's right. These you use dumbbells, exactly. Wow.
That's right.
These are the little things that you learn
and the key thing is also when eventually
when you get into competition,
that you really figure out your own body.
Because there is no routine
that is exactly the same for everybody.
You know, this is like buying gloves or buying shoes.
There's different sizes,
and the different colors and all that stuff.
And the same is with the working out.
That you know, you brought, like Franco,
he had shorter thighs.
So therefore he never had to do as much squats
as I had to do.
I had long legs, so I had to do twice as much leg work
than Franco did.
So even though we trained together,
we sometimes split and Franco was working more on calves
or working more on his kind of like biceps problems
that he had that I didn't have,
and I had leg problems that he didn't have
and stuff like that.
So you have to kind of realize
that everybody is built differently and stuff like that. So you have to kind of realize that everybody's built
differently and everyone has different needs.
And this is exactly the same again with everything.
You cannot go and have one way of teaching someone
a language.
There's some people that are doing much better when you
give them pictures and show them what the words are.
Sometimes when you have them watch TV,
sometimes when you have conversations,
everyone operates differently.
And so this is what you have to realize,
that everyone is somewhat different.
There are some common rules,
but don't get stuck on those.
Just figure out yourself what works for you.
Wow.
I wanted to ask you this,
because I've always been fascinated.
Everybody who's ever trained, played sports,
experiences cramps at some point, right? Right. Like you've had, and there's ask you this, because I've always been fascinated. Everybody who's ever trained, played sports, experiences cramps at some point, right?
Right.
And there's, you know, it's usually that you're depleted from sodium, you need electrolytes in your system.
Would you guys cramp in bodybuilding shows?
Because you're flexing so hard. I always wondered.
Well, there was this problem at the day of the competition.
And the reason was because you're trying to get rid of the fluid in your body.
So doing exactly that what you shouldn't do.
I mean, you should do it in order to win,
but you shouldn't do it because of health reasons.
It's not really good.
And then you're gonna engage the muscles.
So there's guys that actually have huge cramps on stage.
I've seen that and this is also the time
when you tell people to kind of lay off water
so that they do cramp up and you win.
And you win.
But how would you not have them?
Like what's the way that you do it?
I just never went that extreme with the whole thing.
Oh, okay.
So I said to myself, you know, if I lose
because I have too much fluid,
I'd rather keep a little bit of fluid
and because I know I have to do,
the pre-charging sometimes takes three hours.
So that means that you're posing for three hours.
Yeah.
You know, legs and calves, and show me your back.
And then these idiots ask you the same thing again.
Oh, number seven and number nine, number two, number one.
You come together, stand together closely,
and now do a back pose.
Okay, didn't we just do a back pose?
You know, it's like for the 15th time.
And they says, okay, turn around,
now we want to see your the different guys, right?
And not just always the same.
And so you stand out there for hours
and now you go back at night when it's the final round
and you get judged by your posing
and by your body.
And so you're just standing there for hours
and you're just standing there for hours.
And then you're just standing there for hours
and you're just standing there for hours. And then you're just out there for hours, and now you go back at night when it's the final round,
and you get judged by your posing
and by your total performance.
So now you have to do it again.
So you can get cramped up.
So the key though is like don't be so dramatic with.
You don't be so dramatic.
I, for instance, I remember in 1980,
at the Mr. Olympia, I came third in the pre-judging
because I still had too much fluid.
And the judges came to me and said,
Arnold, I'm sorry to tell you,
but you're not gonna win tonight.
And I said, oh shit, I said, what's wrong?
He says, you're not as sharp as you were
the last time we saw you.
And this, of course, now five years later,
I know that we understand that, but I just wanted you to know last time we saw you. This of course now five years later, and I want you to understand that,
but I just want you to know it's not gonna happen.
So I went literally into a sauna when I went back
after the pre-charging, I went into the sauna at the hotel
and I posed for an hour to sweat out more fluid.
And then I went back at night and I was sharper and then I did my best job with the
posing routine and I ended up winning.
Wow.
Yeah, so you have to really find the right level so you don't kind of cramp up and you
can't pose anymore and lose but still have, you know, kind of be sharp enough.
Yeah.
Who are your, I feel like I know this a little bit,
but if you had to have your top five heroes
that gave us the guy we got today.
Because when I got the encyclopedia of bodybuilding,
I'm gonna be very honest, I was like, maybe I'm gay.
Because I couldn't stop looking at your body.
And I was like, this is like, I mean this is why,
I mean, and when I work out, I watch,
I put the documentary, your documentary on Netflix,
I put it on, it inspires me.
And so, but there's, you draw inspiration from men,
like I do, and I know you did.
So who are your top five Hall of Fame dudes
that gave us the guy we got today?
Well, I mean, I think that the first one was Reg Park.
Reg Park.
And Steve Reeves, these were guys that did Hercules movies.
Yeah.
And that inspired me to get a body like that,
but also inspired me to have a vision beyond my career,
which was to get into movies.
So to me that's-
Oh, that's fucking fascinating.
I never realized that.
Yeah, to me that was very, very important never realized that to me that was very very important that I said myself when I started reading about
The Reg Park and about Steve Reeves in the magazines
It was very clear that this guy's won. Mr. Universe not only once but I mean like Reg Park wanted three times
Mr. Universe, you know, and then Cheney Chitta in Rome, which was the town where they did the movies
and then Ginnit Jitta in Rome, which was the town where they did the movies,
they discovered him and they brought him down to Rome
and they had him do Hercules movies.
And he made several Hercules movies
and I said to myself, that's what I have to do.
I have to get that good.
I have to win Mr. Universe so many times
so that they would notice me also and blah, blah, blah.
So it gave me a vision.
So Reg Park and Steve Reeves was the number one,
the guys that were very important.
Muhammad Ali was very important
because when I came to the United States,
I hung out with him, and he was a very generous guy,
and he loved, he was fascinated with bodybuilding,
even though he didn't want to work out with weights,
but he was fascinated by that whole thing.
He always had me push him around.
He loved, and he'd say to his guys,
he says, watch this, watch what Arnold does.
He says, push me against the wall,
and then I would grab him and then push him
against the wall, and then he would say,
see guys, see what I'm saying, how strong he is?
Can you believe that?
And he just loved it, and he also just loved
to call me Schwarzenegger.
You know, he was like, he always,
I mean, he was like, as a matter of fact,
we just saw a playback in one of the interview shows
where the interviewer said, next coming out
is Arne Schwarzenegger, and he says,
yeah, Schwarzenegger, Schwarzenegger.
And he said, I didn't say that, the interviewerzenegger, and he says, I didn't say that,
the interviewer said, I didn't say that,
I didn't say that.
And he says, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
he says, coming out Schwarzenegger,
and he's like a mumbler, he says, Schwarzenegger. And he was like, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, He's like unbelievable. He said, it's one of us.
And he just loved me.
So I watched him all the time.
And I went one time, I mean, people always talk about,
he gives away money, but I saw him one time at the airport
giving $100 to some guy that was begging for money.
He didn't even look how much money he had in the hand.
He just gave it to him. And he says, this doesn't mean anything. He says, I was begging for money. He didn't even look how much money he had in the hand.
He just gave it to him.
He says, this doesn't mean anything.
He says, I'm not into money.
He says he was never into that.
So he was like a very, very kind of generous person.
And I realized how generous he was,
but he started his foundations then,
started giving money away,
and he was always thinking about a bigger cost
than boxing was.
And then they also learned from him
how he sells boxing through his personality.
And so I wanted to do the same thing.
So the purse went up from $2 million for a fight
to $5 million for a fight, $10 million for a fight.
Notice it was all because of personalities
and who draw the most.
And so I wanted to do the same thing in bodybuilding.
So he was a kind of an example for me for generosity and being smart and being beyond
just the sport and really just beating up.
But he always said, you know, there's a time where you beat up on guys and put them down
and says, but there's a time where you lift up the whole sport.
And this is the most important thing.
I want to do the same thing.
Okay, I want to pump up and I want to go and win
and destroy my competition, but then it was the time
was to build the whole sport up
and to make it actually a bigger sport,
offer more cash prizes and all that.
So they were very important.
But then when I got more and more into a kind of life
and the global thinking, I think people like,
for instance, when I met my father-in-law,
Sergeant Shriver, he taught me a lot about generosity,
about the service and giving back to the community,
giving back to your town and to your state
and your country in some way.
And he was, of course, the president of Special Olympics.
And his wife, Eunice Kennedy Shriver started Special Olympics.
So I got involved with Special Olympics so he taught me about service and all of that
stuff so he became kind of a mentor.
Ronald Reagan became a mentor because to me I was always a Republican right and so when
Nixon was campaigning in 1968 against Humphrey, and he talked about, you know,
get government off your back, and less taxes,
and a strong military, strong law enforcement.
I said, this is me, I love this guy.
And then Humphrey talked more like a socialist in Austria,
right, so I didn't like that.
So I said, what party does he belong to?
He said, Republican.
I said, well, then I'm a Republican.
You know, and so I followed Reagan, of course,
and I was campaigning for Reagan,
and he became one of my heroes.
And then Gorbachev became one of my heroes, you know,
because he was able to recognize
that communism doesn't work.
And to have the balls to do that,
to be president of Russia,
and to say communism doesn't work,
let's dismantle this whole thing that doesn't work.
I mean, it's like unheard of.
I've never heard of anything like that.
And he had the balls to do that,
so I said to myself, that's courage.
I admire that.
And so I became a big fan of his,
met him many times, went to Moscow,
had meetings with him,
we always talked to him about international policies
and also movies.
He just loved, for instance,
he wanted me always to do The Crusade,
a movie that I wanted to do in the 90s.
And when I met him in the 90s, he always said to me,
he says, you must do The Crusade,
must do The Crusade, you know, it's very important.
But he said, important message today, you know,
about coming together, religions coming together and all this stuff,
and not always fighting against each other.
And so he was what?
Mantella, I mean, when I went down to South Africa
and promoted Special Olympics in South Africa,
Mantella was there, and he was greeting me
at the Robben Island, at his prison cell.
Right, and then we went into this prison cell
and we lit a torch, we lit a little torch
that we then took out from his prison cell
where he was imprisoned for 27 years.
And then we took it out to the courtyard of the prison
where there was 150 Special Olympics standing out there
and I was lighting the torch of hope
with the special Olympians and with Mandela.
And Mandela was one of the guys that I admired so much
because he taught us about forgiveness.
I mean, he is a guy that became president
and could have kind of turned everything around
and had the blacks pay back the whites in South Africa
for the misery that they went through for so many years.
And no, he didn't do that.
He says, that would make me feel better, yes.
He says, but it wouldn't be better for the country.
He says, we need to do what's best for the country.
We got to come together.
And I said, oh my God, this guy is like magic.
I mean, I've never even heard of anyone
talk that much about forgiveness like that
and being able to do that.
So just to mention some of my heroes.
Because those are the people that inspired me
to be who I am.
When people say to me, it says,
well, what's the most,
what's the thing that, what job?
The movie business or the bodybuilding or the governorship, what's the thing that they would chop, the movie business or the bodybuilding
or the governorship, what is the thing
that they're most proud of?
I always tell people, I said, none of them.
I said, what I'm most proud of is that I'm me.
That I was able to mold myself into a person
that I am today, a person that is generous, a person that has a vision,
a person that is not shying away from working hard
and all this stuff, and all of this kind of stuff is it.
That's what I brought because that is what made me win
Mr. Olympia seven times and Mr. Universe five times.
That's what made me win the governorship.
That's what made me go and do all of these great movies and
be able to reach out and to kind of give something back to the community and all of this stuff
and have the interest in doing, for instance, the pump app and to do all this, to give something
back and to really inspire people. I said to myself, if I have been inspired by so many
people, that's why I always say I'm a self-made man,
that I am a creation by all of those people
I just mentioned and so many others,
I said then I have the responsibility
to inspire other people.
And we all have to do that.
You know, like you guys, you have a podcast,
a fantastic podcast that everyone knows internationally, and so, but you have to,
that comes responsibility, right?
The bigger your podcast gets, the bigger the responsibility
because you got to go always and pump people up.
You have to entertain them, obviously,
which is of course why people tune in,
because you guys are really fucking funny, you know?
And you make me laugh when I hear you,
and you make everyone else laugh.
And so, but you have the responsibility to encourage people
to pump them up and to go and to give something back
and to be useful and all of that stuff at the same time.
That's our responsibility, you know, we got turned on
by somebody to sit here today, and now we have to do
the same thing to pump other people up and say,
you can do it too.
You got me fired the fuck up right now, man.
I'm gonna go fucking bench 315.
Yeah.
Yeah, shit.
I'm ready to go, dude.
You really are fucking awesome.
Well, thank you.
Like in the halfway through I was,
I almost goes, will you be our mentor?
Well, it's funny because it's so true that,
and it's funny that it goes back to physique
because I think you alluded to it earlier
about being young men.
But when you're a kid growing up
and you honestly see your physique first,
it kind of looks like make believe.
It's kind of like a cartoon.
It's like a drawing.
You're like, is this a real fucking guy?
You're so nice. And I mean all of it. And so you just kind of like a cartoon. It's like a drawing. You're like, is this a real fucking guy? And I mean, all of it.
And so you just kind of go, like,
I remember the first, I have such a vivid memory.
I did a father-son trip when I was nine years old.
His father was a competitive powerlifter.
He was an Olympic lifter.
Olympic lifter.
He was a three-time state champion Olympic lifter.
Wow, so you know when they talk about Olympic lifting.
Oh yeah, Olympic lifting was, he doesn't like, you know,
Before Ozempic, he was really strong.
Shut the fuck up.
You know, actually, I didn't ever do,
he did Ozempic when he was pre-diabetic,
but when I, when the person who helped me lose weight
recently was Phil Goglia, you know,
the, he was Mr. California once,
and he changed my diet and workout routine. He was absolutely, he was Mr. California West, and he changed my diet and workout routine.
He was absolutely, he was fantastic with it.
But he, what I was going to was,
when I did a father-son trip, I was nine years old,
and I still remember we were in a hotel,
I think we were in Orlando, and he goes,
it was just me and him, he goes, don't tell your mother,
but I'm gonna let you watch a rated-R movie tonight.
And I was like, oh great, this is in the hotel.
And he puts on Predator.
And so I'm nine years old
and I've never seen a rated R movie.
And I was like, this is the shit.
He was like, do not tell your mom.
And I see you in that, but you become like,
you know, that's who I,
we're basically kind of learning who you are.
But then we just follow you.
First, like I said, physically, you're just like,
is this a realistic attainable thing?
And you realize, probably not.
But all the things that you've done become inspiring.
And I do think it is kind of like,
of course anybody can choose to,
but I think as a young man, you follow a great man
and you go, this is an inspiration first physically
and then through all your philanthropy and then your great career. So it's just a huge
inspiration, who you are.
Thank you. Thank you. So let me ask you about your father. How old is he now?
He died. He died at 74 a couple years ago. So he must have lifted during the Bob Hoffman era, right?
Bob Hoffman was kind of the chowita of weightlifting.
So there was chowita in bodybuilding,
and then there was Bob Hoffman from York, Pennsylvania.
So all the original barbell blades said York,
and then you work on it.
And so they come from Bob Hoffman.
So he was like the guy, because I remember that he
was like the king of the weightlifting kind of thing.
All the weightlifting stuff,
all had york on it in the old days.
Yeah, he was really into the Olympic stuff.
So he started competition at 14,
and was the Kentucky State Champion.
Yes, he must have known all of those guys, John Grimick and all those guys that
that were the editors of Health and Strength and the muscle magazines that
they had back then you work and for the weightlifters. Yeah.
It was an interesting period. I started all of that.
Really?
Yeah, because it was this war between Hoffman
and Joe Weider way back.
We did bodybuilding and weightlifting,
and one was supposed to be legitimate.
The weightlifting and bodybuilding was not,
and then they tried to get bodybuilding into the Olympics
and to become an official sport,
which they did then in 1970, were able to do that,
and bodybuilding became an official sport.
It was always this competition going on.
But it was interesting in the old days.
Yeah, yeah.
He was, I mean, he loved weightlifting.
That's good.
It was a big part of our growing up.
Will you tell him about Milton Berle?
When we were working out, you had so many great stories
about Milton Berle.
Oh yeah, yeah, Milton Berle.
And I would just love for you to share them.
You know Milton Berle?
Of course, of course.
Yeah, exactly, yeah.
Of course.
So Milton Berle, by total coincidence,
his, there was an organization called Shere,
and it was Hollywood women
that had husbands that were powerful.
So the women were powerful because of that.
But they were wives of Sammy Davis Jr.,
wife of Dean Martin, the wife of Johnny Carson,
the wife of Milton Burrow, the wife of Selton,
and all this kind of like mishmash of different people.
And so my then girlfriend, then future,
became my wife, Maria, she was kind of like
hanging out with all these girls
because she belonged to Cher.
She was part of it.
And so Maria, when we had our engagement party,
she says, I hope you don't mind,
but I'm gonna have Ruthie come also.
I say, you mean Milton Burroughs wife?
Yeah, and then so, but we did not know the idea
if this meant also Milton Burrough.
So sure enough, Milton Burrough came also.
And he did a little standup routine.
I remember it so well because I was like appalled.
Because you don't know, if you don't know really humor
and comedy,
and what are the rules and all that stuff,
I had no idea, right?
So I mean, I was like sitting there and he says,
he says, oh, it's great to have, you know, Ruthie,
look at my beautiful wife here.
I mean, last time I saw lips like that,
it had a hook through it, you know?
And I mean, I said this, oh my God.
Oh my God, did he just say this about his wife?
And she just casually looked over to Maria,
just oh, I heard this shit every day.
I said, Jesus, you know, so I mean,
it was like the beating, it was like unbelievable.
He said, look at Schwarzenegger,
he had bigger tits than his girlfriend.
And all this kind of stuff, it was like relentless,
this stuff, right?
And so anyway, so Milton and I became very good friends.
And he says, you know something, let me tell you something.
He says, you're a great actor.
He says, but I want to teach you about comedy.
And because as you grow in your profession,
you will be asked to speak.
And there's no speech without starting
out with a joke. You got to be ready for no matter what the occasion is and so he
was kind of like teaching me yeah all of this stuff and I said and I didn't quite
get it yet what he was talking about then but then as time went on he was
telling me I said look he, look, he says,
you asked me to go and give you something
about the speech that you're doing in Vegas,
you're getting an award.
And he says, so here it is.
And he was telling me this thing, he says,
it was really fantastic, thank you so much.
I said, you know, being a bodybuilder
and having been around the movie business,
you get, of course, a lot of trophies
and a lot of medals and awards,
but this one is without any doubt the most recent.
And so then he says, okay, say the joke.
And then I will be going and he says, okay, say the joke. And then I will be going and he says,
okay, and this is the most recent.
He says, fucking stupid Nazi,
what the fuck is the matter with you?
What did I say?
Did you see my pause?
I say you have to look at it and you say,
you know, I've gotten a lot of medals,
but this without any doubt is the most,
you have to kind of get emotional.
Yeah.
And give that moment.
And people go, oh, isn't that nice?
And then you say, recent.
I said, and then you throw out the recent.
I said, you don't go and say recent right away.
You have to have the timing.
I said, don't be stupid now.
Listen to me carefully.
And so he was always kind of like screaming
at everything like this.
So this is how I kind of like learned from him. That's a great lesson. How to kind of like screaming at everything like this. So this is how I kind of like learn from him
That's a great lesson how to kind of do comedy and how important it is to do the timing and all of that stuff
You know, I said well, I said
Like, you know, they may call you down to give to give a speech at the at the some medical convention
And they said and I would never do that,
I said I've known nothing about that.
And they says, no, no, no, no, no.
He says, what's wrong with just starting out
and just saying, he says, hey,
what a coincidence it is.
I had a physical this morning.
I went in there, the doctor says,
okay, take off your clothes.
And I said, okay
Where should I put it and this is right there in the corner where mine is?
And he says that gets people laughing he says now you win them over then he goes, you know something is this
It's really funny. I am getting asked all the time of all his stupid questions about you know, how is your blood pressure?
How is this? How is that and one one of them, this is the other day, was also, how is your stool?
And I said to the doctor, I said, stool is fine.
I have to go every morning at six.
He says, well, that's great.
And I said, it's easy for you to say.
I said, I don't wake up until seven.
So he says, you see, he said, now we are talking.
You get people to laugh and you win them over. He says, you see, he said, now we are talking. He said, you get people to laugh and you win them over.
He says, you maybe follow up.
And he says, you know, there's the stupid thing.
First thing is, it's always the same thing.
You did a blood sample, a urine sample, and a stool sample.
So I just said, take my underwear.
So he says, you see, I just gave you three jokes
for the medical thing, and this is how it goes
with everything.
You know, if a guy gets divorced or something like that,
you just say, well, my problem started already.
When my wife said to me, I'd like to have sex
in the back seat of the car.
And then he said, I said, me too.
And he says, no, no, I want you to do the driving.
You know, so shit like that.
So he showed me basically, kind of like for every category,
if you go to a Plummer's convention, here's a joke.
If you go to this convention, here's a joke.
If you go to do this for politicians, here's a joke.
So this is what he was trying to do,
he was trying to teach me how to have
a certain sense of humor and how to use the jokes
and how important it is to do the timing and all of that.
And he hung out with me all the time.
He of course was a big cigar smoker.
So we smoked cigars at Cafe Roma in Beverly Hills.
He always would come by or we'll go over to his house
and smoke or he comes over to my house and smoke.
Then he would come to the set.
I remember when I was doing like twins
or kindergarten copy, we'll come to the set
as the inspector general kind of to check out if I'm doing okay with
The humor I was used to kick my ass
You know he will come Ivan Reitman was directing. Yeah, right and so they will come to the set and he was says
How is the kid doing?
And then I was anything okay. I says, okay good
You know those days he was smoking right there
in the classroom in the movie.
You know, with all the kids around.
He says, okay, good.
He says, okay, director said you're doing well.
Keep on working.
You know, and he would just,
he would do this whole routine,
like coming to the set to check me out
to see if I can do my comedy in a comedic movie.
So we had a wonderful routine.
And even, you know, he, they wanted me to,
or maybe he wrote it in his will, I don't know, but someone,
he decided, Mildy wants you to do the eulogy.
So, so, I said, Mildy wants you to do the eulogy.
So, so, so, okay. So I went out there and I said,
I'm a suffer in the Milton Brown eulogy.
What you gonna do, you're gonna be funny, right?
Yeah.
Maybe it was a little bit over the top.
I have to admit it.
Because I said, son of a bitch,
I just, we just close to Cask and I said,
look at this fucking 15 minutes
because he still had big boner.
You know, he was always known for his long, his schwanz.
Right?
And so, you know, he was always saying,
people always say I have a long schwanz.
He says, but you know, this is all bullshit.
Well, there is that kitchen help is jerking me off right now.
You know, and he always has things like that.
So of course I did that joke.
And we put the, we put the casket, the top of the casket,
and it was really hard, because he still had a boner.
And people were laughing.
You worked with, you mentioned Ivan Ryb,
you worked with a lot of great directors.
Do you have favorites that you just loved?
No, because it depends what the movie is,
but I can tell you one thing,
that the director's the answer.
I don't ever think that you can pull off a movie
without a really great director.
I've had shitty directors, then the movie came out shitty,
and it went in the toilet.
And then the same actor, me, was doing a movie
with a great director, like Jim Cameron,
or Paul Verhoeven, or Ivan Reitman, all of those movies went through the roof.
I mean, not because of me necessarily,
but it was them understanding me
and figuring out what I can do well,
and they had me do it that way.
And so I really think the world of great directors,
and of course, what is not on the page is not on the stage.
Right, I mean it's like you got to have it on a page.
You got to have a good script,
and with a good script and a good director,
you're very much home free.
God.
You're just, I mean I feel like I could talk to you
for an hour, another hour, and I know you have stuff to do,
but you're just so, I'm dying to one day get the call
and go Bert, you and Tom wanna have a cigar with me?
And we just out there smoking,
what does your cigar regiment look like these days?
When's your first cigar?
I smoke one a day.
Just one?
Just one a day, yeah exactly.
Same time?
I sometimes, no, I sometimes start after lunch
with one, just smoke a half one,
and then finish it off at night.
Or sometimes just smoke one right after lunch,
or smoke one just at night.
I mean, it really depends,
but I would say most of the cases,
it is kind of a once a day, and sometimes none actually.
You know, if I fly or if I travel around,
or if I'm inside, I never smoke when I'm inside,
so sometimes it just doesn't, you know,
the thing is, when you're used to smoking,
and having a great time smoking a cigar,
you don't want to spoil it with just smoking it anywhere.
Yeah.
You know, there's certain moments where you feel like,
this is what I need to smoke a great cigar.
Yeah.
And I gotta go, like, I love, for instance,
when I go into a new town,
and I light up a cigar in the car
and tell the guy to drive me around for half an hour
and show me the town.
Mm-hmm. You know, just have the window open in the car and tell the guy to drive me around for half an hour and show me the town.
You know, just have the window open
and just look at the city and just smoke your stokey
and hopefully you have a buddy in there with you
that also smokes one so then you have a good time.
But I love smoking over at my house.
We have a fireplace outside and-
Favorite beverage with a cigar?
Sagan.
Do you have a favorite beverage with a cigar? No. a favorite beverage with no no no it could be coffee yeah it could be water it could
be anything do you drink it could be prune juice do you drink much I don't
drink much no I think that like the first time I have had a glass of wine
in a long time was just on Saturday when I had a Christmas party and it was Glühwein.
Do you know what is Glühwein?
Glühwein is like hot wine with cinnamon in it.
Oh, I think.
And so there's an Austrian kind of a thing.
Like ski chalets.
That's right, yeah.
Yeah, I've had it in Austria.
And so it fools you because it's hot,
and because it's cinnamon in it,
it doesn't taste like wine, wine, right?
It just tastes extra, kind of like,
almost like a dessert drink.
And so you drink more, oh man,
I got a nice buzz from that one.
I needed a stokage just for that one to stay awake.
I don't know, it was wild.
So that was really good.
But I very rarely, just this much wine
or this much schnapps or something like that.
In the old days, we would start playing pool
and after every pool game, we would have a stumble schnapps.
So after 10 games, there were 10 stumble schnapps, right?
And there were the loser who always pay.
But I mean, eventually I got to the point
where I just, after my heart surgery and stuff like that,
I couldn't really handle the alcohol anymore that much.
Now I do it in moderation.
Yeah.
Very little.
Do you think about death at all?
About what? Death?
I try not to.
Because I mean, it sucks, right?
Yeah. I think about it every morning.
Oh, you do?
He's obsessed with death. Yeah, yeah, no, I can about it every morning. Oh you do he's obsessed with death
Yeah, yeah, no, I can I understand it because the funny thing about it
Is is that I think that the better off we are and the more fun you have in life
The more pissed off you get that eventually this is gonna be taken from you. Yeah
Yeah, and of course we don't know that it has been taken from you because it's over
But I mean that also pisses me off. Yeah, so since everything pisses me off about the whole thing
Yeah, I mean, there's just nothing good about it
I feel like I'm the luckiest guy in the world and then I that death would be the one unlucky thing
I know I know it sucks. It's like
Who was asked me to catch up about, what did I think about?
Howard Stern.
Howard Stern, he asked me, he said, governor.
I suppose being governor makes you an expert in death.
He says, tell me, what happens to us when we die?
I said, the only thing I can come up with is this,
we go six feet out and we rot.
And he said, oh my God, what a welcome to Los Angeles.
He was doing his show out in LA.
I said, it's the only thing that I know.
Well, I mean, I will simply say,
your doctor series on Netflix is outrageous.
It's so good.
It is really great.
Your book is phenomenal.
I can't reiterate this enough.
Especially if you have a young boy,
and I'm just coming from my perspective,
if you have an 18-year-old boy, you buy him this book.
It is so good.
And if you are looking to get in shape
this New Year's coming up, get the pump.
The pump is awesome and the schmooze is you.
You are writing the schmooze.
It is very personal.
And the comment section is wildly positive.
It is just people pumping each other up.
Yeah, that daily newsletter too has so much information, has different perspective on
what's going on in the country, fitness, everything. It's all great information, man.
And you said when you were a child
that you never felt Austrian,
you felt like you were American,
you felt like you belonged here.
And I will just simply say, as an American kid,
you are like my favorite American.
Yeah, well, thank you.
You're an American hero now.
Yeah, you're an American hero.
Well, really, you're so right about this
because I always, as soon as I saw documentaries
about America, I said to myself,
man, I belong over there.
I'm with the skyscrapers in New York,
the Golden Gate Bridge, the highways in California,
you know, the beaches and the whole thing, Hollywood.
I said, you know, maybe my mother had something going with an American soldier.
I literally checked into it.
I said, there's something off why I feel like I belong there and not here.
And just that somehow didn't pencil out because the Americans never went down in Graz.
It was the British soldiers that were in Graz. Yeah. But not the Americans. Well, thank God you didn't pencil out because the Americans never were down in Graz. It was the British soldiers that were in Graz.
Yeah.
Thank God you didn't go there.
We're glad you're here, man.
I better tell you, it was the most wonderful thing to eventually come over here with the
age of 21 and to have someone like Joe Weider that was generous enough to bring me over here
and to set me up with an apartment and with a car when I came out here to Los Angeles
and to be able to train on Muscle Beach and to see Hollywood and to be in a mecca of bodybuilding
in a mecca of show business. I mean it was like unbelievable. It was like I was so happy. So it was
I tell you I would not switch my life with anyone's. That's all I was so happy. So it was, I tell you, I would not switch my life
with anyone's, that's all I can tell you.
No, I always say no one should cry at my funeral
because I have done it.
Like I have done it, but when I look at your life,
I'm like, Jesus, I still have work to do.
Yeah, so you don't want anyone to cry at your funeral?
No, I want everyone to cry, really bad.
Yeah, and also want people to suffer.
He said he would be okay. How do we not go move forward without Schnitzel? This is impossible.
How are we going to move forward without Schnitzel? He said he would be okay with the world ending
at his funeral. Exactly. That's funny. Arnold, thank you so much. From the bottom of my heart.
Thank you so much. No, it's always great. Yeah, thank you. From the bottom of my heart, thank you so much.
It's always great.
I mean, we should do this as a regular basis, you know?
It works great.
We'll get that down.
Exactly, yeah, yeah.
Get that down.
It was great to see you.
Thanks for spending time with us.
Good luck with the 315 bench press.
315.
You will do it.
I will do it.
Well, you will do it.
I would wish you could be there.
If I was trying to organize it here at Gold's.
Okay. And get the boys out here, but I... Let's organize it here at Gold's and get the boys out here.
Let's organize it.
I'll see if I can.
All right.
Just wanted to show you.
He's got good height.
Your father will be proud of you.
Thank you very much.
With a bicep like that.
Yeah, come on.
I mean, look at his.
You ready for this?
This is the size your arm was when you were 16.
I went through your measurements.
Your arm at its biggest, 22 inches, this is 17 and a half.
Chest, right now, you were five inches bigger than me at your biggest.
Your waist and my waist, nine inches difference.
Well, also you have twins coming in the New Year.
That was below the belt.
What kind of a partner is that?
You're the best, man.
Thank you so much.
Thank you. Two bears, one cave.