Dynamic Dialogue with Danny Matranga - 201: My favorite exercises, BBL's + MORE!
Episode Date: June 22, 2022Thanks For Listening!  LEAVE A REVIEW OF THE SHOW:There is NOTHING more valuable to a podcast than leaving a written review and 5-Star Rating. Please consider taking 1-2 minutes to do that (iTunes) ...HERE. You can also leave a review on SPOTIFY!OUR PARTNERS:Legion Supplements (protein, creatine, + more!), Shop (DANNY) HERE! Get comprehensive lab analysis of the most important biomarkers for your health from our partner Marek Health HERE (save using the code "corecoaching")Get Your FREE LMNT Electrolytes HERE! Care for YOUR Gut, Heart, and Skin with SEED Symbiotic (save with “DANNY15) HERE! Put your nutrition on autopilot with our amazing partner CHOW meal prep HERE (save with code "danny")RESOURCES/COACHING: Train with Danny on His Training App HEREI am all about education and that is not limited to this podcast! Feel free to grab a FREE guide (Nutrition, Training, Macros, Etc!) HERE! Interested in Working With Coach Danny and His One-On-One Coaching Team? Click HERE!Want Coach Danny to Fix Your S*** (training, nutrition, lifestyle, etc) fill the form HERE for a chance to have your current approach reviewed live on the show. Want To Have YOUR Question Answered On an Upcoming Episode of DYNAMIC DIALOGUE? You Can Submit It HERE!Want to Support The Podcast AND Get in Better Shape? Grab a Program HERE!----SOCIAL LINKS:Follow Coach Danny on YOUTUBEFollow Coach Danny on INSTAGRAMFollow Coach Danny on TwitterFollow Coach Danny on FacebookGet More In-Depth Articles Written By Yours’ Truly HERE! Sign up for the trainer mentorship HERESupport the Show.
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Welcome in everybody to another episode of the Dynamic Dialogue podcast. As always, I'm your host, Danny Medrenga, and that little chuckle you're hearing is me just laughing at the state of affairs I'm living in right now. answer a lot of your guys' questions about various topics that I think are exciting. I think that
they're pretty nuanced. I think that they open the opportunity for us to unpack things related
to fitness, nutrition, cardiovascular exercise, and even things like cosmetic surgery. We're
going to talk a little bit today about the BBL or the Brazilian butt lift. But I'm laughing at first
one because I thought it was interesting
that I have that on the docket today. But also I am recording in my room right now.
It's about 100 degrees outside and probably about 90 degrees in my room. And I'm actively sweating
while I record the podcast. And the reason that I'm laughing a little bit about this is because
when I started the podcast, it was at the very beginning of the pandemic. I started it before the pandemic.
And I would sweat recording because I was nervous. Now I'm not sweating because I'm nervous. I'm just
sweating because I'm hot. And I thought that this would be, this was somewhat funny given that this
is episode 201. So full circle there, guys.
And as you're listening to this, I hope that whatever you are pursuing in life is going
well for you.
I'm in a period of change and transition that has a lot of things kind of thrown up in upheaval.
It has me frustrated.
It has me angsty.
But I am living vicariously through the meme of the man in the tunnel who has a pickaxe
who's chipping away at
the tunnel and the diamond is right there and he turns around at the last second and the diamond
is just sitting there one swing of the pickaxe away, but he gave up too fast. I'm trying as
hard as I can not to be that guy, to keep pushing and not give up and to bring you guys content like
this because every single one of you who listens and subscribes and has left reviews
and has come to work with me and my coaching team at core coaching method because of the podcast or
you're in my app based training community because of the podcast or you've found some of our partners
through the podcast and the products that they sell have improved your life like you guys are
all really awesome you guys are the reason that I do this. And I want to continue to try to add value for you each and every single day. And a lot of that comes directly from
answering your questions. So if you'd like to have your question featured in an episode of the show,
please, please, please follow me on Instagram, danny.matranga. Very simple. I ask questions
at least once a week and I pull a
lot of them from the podcast right there if I don't answer them on Instagram. So first question
comes from jesse.vsg. Question is, when is the best time to do cardio before or after you lift?
So a lot of this depends specifically on the type of training you're going to be doing,
and it depends on the type of cardio that you're going to be doing. So in general, the more intense
the cardiovascular exercise, for example, things like HIIT training or even sprinting, which I
don't consider cardio. I think it's much more anaerobic, but people classify it as cardio
because it's like running based. But think about the more
intense forms of cardio. Those are not a very, very good form of exercise to position before
you do something more rigorous like weight training because they're very fatiguing and
because the recovery cost is quite high. So if you position them after,
right, you will also in all likelihood be robbing yourself of the ability to recover from your
sessions. So there are some types of sessions, particularly HIIT, sprint work, and plyometric
work, which aren't aerobic training. I have got to say that a million times, but people think they are forms of aerobic training do not belong as warmups before weights or to be done immediately after a fatiguing resistance session.
Those kinds of sessions should be reserved for their own days.
a form of reasonable hit cardio, the kind of cardio that's pretty darn hard. It's allowed to still be very hard, but preferably it's not like performance-based sprinting or jumping.
I think you'll be in a great position if you choose to do that after your upper body sessions.
Things like low-intensity steady-state cardio that tend to be very, very easy to recover from,
and they don't fatigue the body too much are fine as a 8 to 15
minute long cardiovascular warm-up before you lift. Those things tend to actually enhance
performance. One thing though that I do think is important to bring up specifically are things like
cycling and Stairmaster because they tend to be particularly fatiguing on certain musculature in the legs
if you do too much of them prior to certain exercises. So too intensive cycling and too
intensive stairs might fatigue you going into certain lower body training exercises. So if you
are going to use those as your warm-up modalities prior to lower body specific sessions, I would dial back the
intensity a lot and keep it really, really easy. All right, really fun question here from
louie underscore neary. And the question is, what's your favorite slash most enjoyable lifts?
And I don't know why I love this question. It's like very rare that people ask questions
specific of my training relative to what I like about it. It's more of, it's more, I would say,
common. And this of course makes sense, right? Because people come to me for expertise that
they ask for the rationale behind why I program the way I program,
why my program looks a certain way, why did I choose this exercise over that exercise.
And quite often, I have answers that I would say are very evidence-based. I have answers that I
would say are not so evidence-based, but rooted in anecdote, things that I've seen over time that I think work
really well for clients, whether those be clients that I work with in person or online.
And on occasion, I choose and select exercises that I think are fun, that feel good, that I enjoy,
and I know this sounds conceited, but that I think have helped my body look better,
but that I think have helped my body look better, uh, in irrespective of perhaps other exercises that train similar muscles that don't agree so well with me. So what I've decided to do, uh,
is off the cuff here, divide my body into different body part or muscle groups and tell you which ones
I like for each. So we'll start with the chest because I think that the chest tends to be my favorite muscle group to train. This is pretty common for guys and I generally find for girls it tends to be the lower body and the glutes. I think there's a few things here. I think we generally gravitate towards liking some muscle groups more than others because of a desire to either develop them or a natural proclivity to be good at them. So for example,
I've always been a great presser. In high school, I was able to bench 225 at about 150 pounds for
reps. Bench press came super, super natural to me. The most I've ever benched is 335.
And quite frankly, that did not do my elbows any favors. I paid for that for quite a bit. But as 170 pound natural to be able to bench in the 300s
and my best volume bench PR was incline barbell bench for 10,
which I was more impressed with than any of the single flat bench PR.
So barbell pressing was one that I always loved for the chest.
I loved it.
And because I loved it, I really fell in love with chest training.
So that was my favorite muscle group. But for women, I find they're more drawn to lower body specific
training specifically or more commonly at the beginning of their career. And they get really
good at that. So leg days become their favorites and they often have a favorite that is a leg
exercise. So obviously, you know, I like bench press a lot, but it's actually not my favorite chest exercise.
Things have changed. My favorite now are cable pec flies. I love how they feel because they have a
very even resistance profile and they really allow me to contract my pecs because they allow the arms
to travel closer together in adduction where we bring the arms together across the body and they meet in the middle.
So that stuff's really important for developing the pecs optimally and getting a good contraction.
And I love a good contraction in the shortened position. So my favorite exercise for the pecs
is the cable fly. For the shoulders, a bunch of options here really came to play. Shoulders aren't my favorite muscle to train, and it definitely shows on my physique.
But I think my favorite exercise of all time for the shoulder has to be another cable exercise,
and it is the cable lateral raise.
Nothing wrong with regular lateral raises, but I do find the more consistent resistance profile on the cable
makes them feel a lot better and I get a much better pump and sensation in my deltoids.
For the trapezius and the traps, the muscles of the upper back, I love snatch grip shrugs on the
Smith machine. I learned to do snatch grip shrugs from Eugene Tao,
coach Eugene Tao. When I went to a couple of his seminars in Southern California back in 2008,
seven, 18, maybe, um, Carlsbad in one right in downtown LA. And I got the opportunity to learn
from Eugene in short order in back-to-back, uh, uh, back-to-back workshop style seminars. And one of the things
that he really focused on in his teaching, and this is something that's been valuable for me,
is understanding and acknowledging the angles at which muscles are running relative to how we load
them. And one of the things he told me and taught me that really resonated was the conventional
up and down shrug as it's done with dumbbells aligns a little bit better with the musculature
of the neck and spine than it does the traps.
And that to optimally or in a more efficient way train the traps, you might want to abduct
or move the arms away from the body, the opposite of a cable fly, to about 30 degrees where
your arms or humerus are lined up really nicely with the fibers of your upper traps.
And so I started doing snatch grip shrugs, which were awesome.
And in shifting over to the Smith machine, I find I have so much less stability requirement
and I don't have to worry about a barbell oftentimes brushing up against my man parts like I do with a barbell shrug.
I can step back just a smidge while in that Smith machine.
It makes a
really, really good difference. Big difference. Not a good difference. A big difference. So that
kind of takes care of the upper portion of the back. I guess you could say rear delts. I really
like face pulls. For the lats, I love the chest supported single arm lat row. That's one that
I've learned from N1 Education and Coach Chasm. That's a really kick-ass exercise. Definitely feel my lats a lot on that one. But my favorite, and a lot of people
hate it, I fucking love it, is the straight arm pull down. Man, oh man, do I love that one.
For my back and lats, I like to use cable machines with dual cables or a little bit of a wider
grip with double ropes to make sure I get a nice fat contraction and a good pump. And I'm not limited so much by the size of the cable
attachment for the core or abs. Um, we'll talk just about the rectus abdominis. So this doesn't
take forever. I'd have to say it's probably sit-ups on a exercise ball or yoga ball. So
fucking underrated to have that contoured effect on the low back and
support through the lumbar spine that allows for really good thoracic spine flexion and extension.
Just you get a killer, killer, killer contraction in your abs for hamstrings. It's got to be the
Romanian deadlift specifically when I really focus on not trying to load up the weight and really
just focus more on executing the
movement with my hamstrings. Oh my gosh, killer every time. Taking a little break from the action
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the code DANNY15 to save. Back to the show. What's going on, guys? Taking a break from this episode
to tell you a little bit about my coaching company, Core Coaching Method. More specifically,
our app-based training. We partnered with Train Heroic to bring app-based training to you using
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Back to the show.
What's going on, guys?
Taking a break from the show to tell you about our amazing partners over at Elemental Labs.
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back to the show for glutes. It's walking lunges. I don't
do any direct glue training. Uh, I have genetically a predisposition for like just hammer glutes,
which I guess is like wasted. Uh, but like, damn dude, like my fucking glutes just become
bakery cake shop madness. If I do a lot of direct glute training. It's out of control to the point
where it's like, oh my gosh, I don't even like going pant shopping because I have a 29 inch waist
and I can't get anything around my bubble butt if I'm doing hip thrust. So I really like walking
lunges because those always crush my glutes. They work so well for clients. And I think they have such great carry over
to other exercises.
For calves, it's standing calf raises.
And for quads, it's reverse banded hack squats
with a close, close second being Bulgarian split squats.
That was almost my answer
for half the damn muscles of the lower body.
So there you guys have it.
That was a super fun question to answer. I really, really liked that one. Thanks again, Louie, for asking that one. Okay. This
question comes from Gabby Sigran. She says, is it more important to hit calories or macros?
Always hit macros, but always under on calories. So for body fat loss, hitting calories is the
primary driver. That's really important. And some people might only want to track calories because
it's easier. But here's the cool thing about tracking macros. If you track macros, you're
automatically tracking calories. Now, some macros like fiber don't have a caloric value, but they
might show up in your carbohydrate total. So you might end up being like, damn, I nailed my macros,
but my calories were off. A lot of fitness trackers have this glitch, error, whatever you'd like to call it,
because of the non-caloric impact or the lack of a caloric impact on fiber,
but the actual software using those carbohydrate totals that way. So if you get a food label and
something has 25 grams of carbohydrates and 5 grams of fiber, it has 20 net carbs. Those 20 net carbs contribute
80 calories. Depending on how the software reads that, it might read it as a 25-carbohydrate
dish with 100 calories from carbs. It might not necessarily be able to deduce that the fiber
doesn't yield calories because sometimes these softwares are imperfect.
My general recommendation for people who want to do the absolute least is to just track calories
and try to hit a certain protein total per day. But if you want to get the most out of your
training and performance, you absolutely should have a macronutrient framework you're working
inside to make sure you're getting enough protein, carbs, and fats. We do this for all of our clients at Core Coaching Method. It's so important to
have macronutrient breakdowns for the days you train and quite frankly, the days you don't.
We give non-training day macros too, because I believe if you want to get the most out of
your physique, your transformation, your results, or you're just looking to get started and lose a
little bit of weight, understanding the differences in metabolism for glycolytic work like resistance training and sitting on your ass
all day on a rest day and having macronutrients that are more tailored to your activity and your
lifestyle and looking at yourself as an athlete and training like an athlete and fueling like an
athlete and giving your body what it needs for you to be successful. I don't love to cut corners too much. And so for complete novices, I think protein and carbs works, but for people who
want the most out of this damn thing, tracking your macros can make a huge, huge difference.
All right. This question comes from sand stadreen, any advice for how to train with a shoulder
injury? I can't do any push movements
at the moment. So without knowing your exact injury, I can't say how you should train.
But one thing I can say for sure, and I have the awesome benefit of having a literal in my gym
physical therapist, like my best friend is a physical therapist. We co-opened a gym studio
together. He does the physical
therapy. I do the strength and conditioning. It's fucking awesome. So we talk all day about
this kind of stuff. And one thing that he and I have talked about ad nauseum is the positive impact
of upper back training and development of the mid to upper back musculature for making these
shoulders feel better and be able to train harder. If you're unable to currently press because of pain, it's very likely that you'll be able to do pulling movements like
pull downs, unless we're talking about an impingement, which does seem to be exacerbated
by a lot of overhead work, but like pull downs and rows and face pulls and all that kind of stuff
can be so, so valuable and so, so beneficial. And I think that they make a huge, huge difference in the
long run, like the development of the upper back in overall, quote unquote, shoulder health,
just having happy shoulders. So those are things that I would focus on, the development of the
rear delts, low traps, upper traps, rhomboids, and especially the muscles of the rotator cuff while you work your way out of pain.
Okay, this is a question that got a lot of traction on Instagram, but it is how do these
women on Instagram have such tiny waists and big butts? And I want to give you guys three specific
examples of how you can achieve this physique while still being reasonable and
without being judgmental. So the first is many of the girls you see on Instagram with small
waists and big butts work harder than you. They're more consistent than you. They watch their diet
and nutrition much more than you do, and they've done it longer than you. And while you spend your
time comparing
yourself to them, they are making small, tiny, incremental movements forward towards their
ultimate goals while you sit back and ponder how they have what it is that they have and how they've
accomplished what they've accomplished. I'll use two friends of mine as an example. This is not to
name drop, but many of you guys know Catherine and Kendra Kane, the KK fit twins. Okay. They started training
in the gym directly next door to the gym. I started working at after about six months at
that gym, they started coming over to the gym I was at because they were making progress.
And you know what they looked like? Not the way they look today. They had good genetics,
not great genetics, good genetics. And they worked their
fucking ass off every day for five years. I swear I watched these two train every damn day for about
closer to four years. And you want to know what they did? They trained for about an hour to an
hour and a half, sometimes longer. They trained hard. They train close to failure. They spot each other.
And after they finish eating, they would go to the local market many times and get very healthy,
nutritious, protein, nutrient-dense food. And they would go work and they would do all the
stuff that normal people would do. This was well before they became extremely, extremely
influential figures on social media. They were just doing that
work, putting in that work. And they have genetics that I would say for a woman are similar to the
genetics that I have as a guy. But why do I not look like the male equivalent? Well, I didn't
practice what I, I was not in the gym as much training as hard. I did not have a training
partner of similar size, age, and strength supporting me and pushing me. I did not have a training partner of similar size, age, and strength supporting me
and pushing me. I did not take my nutrition as serious. I was up early training clients
and earning money and building my career at that time and sacrificing sleep. And so one thing that
makes it possible for somebody to have a small waist and a bigger butt than you is they just
outworked you. Here's the second thing, the genetic card. I've got to bring it back up here because I do think it's very, very important. Genetics are not your destiny,
but having good genetics can make a huge ass, no pun intended, difference.
Some women are blessed with incredible genetics and they have very small waste and a predisposition for
body fat storage around the glutes. I'll use this without sounding too crass, but there are
specific regions of the female body where body fat deposits are celebrated, and there are specific
regions of the female body where body fat deposits are hated. They're universally disliked,
and people don't like the way that it
looks and they're very self-conscious about it. Not everybody decides where their body fat
deposits are going to go and some people are fortunate enough to have those body fat deposits
like kind of center themselves in a few regions and they might have a physique that is just simply
not achievable for the average person because you can't influence
where your body fat storage happens. You can influence where and how you build muscle,
but that's a very different thing altogether. The last piece is cosmetic surgery. Cosmetic
surgery is very, very common, much more common than it used to be. And the most common form of cosmetic surgery
when it comes to enhancement of the glutes
is the Brazilian butt lift,
which is an outpatient procedure done under general anesthesia
where the surgeon will take essentially a needle
or a large suction form of device, perform liposuction, usually on the
abdominal area, the midsection. That will make the waist look smaller. That extracted fat is then
removed. It goes through a process to make sure that it's non-toxic and it's purified. And then
it is re-injected into specific parts of the butt to create a shape and size enhancement
effect.
And these surgeries have become increasingly common.
I have seen exponentially more women who have a Brazilian butt lift at the gym.
It's very obvious because you can always see a lack of development in the surrounding musculature.
When you see a butt like that, you should see some form of muscular development
elsewhere because it's extremely common for people who have a well-developed buttocks,
whether they have a substantial amount of genetically predeposited fat on top of it,
one way or another, but buttocks of that development should coincide with some
glute and hamstring development. And oftentimes oftentimes you see stick legs with a butt
that looks like a diaper. And I'm not saying that's as common amongst fitness influencers
as it is amongst maybe perhaps general population individuals who want to use cosmetic surgery to
change how they look, which there's nothing wrong with. This is not an indictment of anybody who
chooses to do that. Your body, your choice. Do whatever the fuck you want with it.
chooses to do that. Your body, your choice. Do whatever the fuck you want with it.
Here's the thing though. When you start selling fitness programs and highlighting your gluteal size as a reason you're an expert when it comes to fitness programs, things look a little sticky.
And I won't name names, but there's plenty of influencers in the space who have very clearly
had that form of surgery done. And there are a number of very famous individuals who have had that
surgery done and then who have gone on to lecture people about working harder and the benefits of
fitness and activity, which always just seems super tone deaf when you've spent a bunch of money
augmenting the way your physique looks. And then you turn around and sell fitness programs that
might help people generate similar results, but that's not how you got yours. It's disingenuous. So that's a big reason why people look different from you.
But what can you do? You can train hard. You can eat right. You can be patient. And I literally
have developed a group-based training platform just for developing your glutes. I partnered
with Train Heroic. So it's beautiful. It's app-based. It comes with tutorials, sets, reps, feedback, and a training community of other women with the same goals as you,
and you get direct access to me and my coaches. All you got to do is go to corecoachingmethod.com,
select from the training app tab, Elite Physique, or go to trainheroic.com, type in Elite Physique,
or go to the show notes, look for the link to Train Heroic, join us in Elite Physique.
That'll do it for today's episode, guys.
Thanks so much for tuning in and I'll catch you on the next one.