Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1880: The Value of Bodybuilding Knowledge With Kris Gethin
Episode Date: August 15, 2022In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin speak with Kris Gethin, fitness entrepreneur and former editor-in-chief for bodybuilding.com. His interesting story of how he got into the fitness space. (2:47) It ...doesn’t matter if you’re a good therapist, it MATTERS if you’re a good salesperson. (7:12) If you want to make money, DO NOT open a gym. (9:41) His introduction into the Indian market and the massive opportunities there. (11:33) A look behind the curtain of the decline of bodybuilding.com. (20:21) A conversation on the current state of bodybuilding. (29:47) The value of getting back to the basics. (35:46) Does social media play an influence on the sport? (39:24) His favorite and least favorite parts of bodybuilding. (41:57) The importance of giving back and taking what he learned from bodybuilding into his daily practices. (45:00) How having structure creates discipline. (50:33) Where does his business acumen come from? (54:58) The progression and future of the supplement industry. (57:25) Is it a myth that the biggest bodybuilders are taking anabolics? (1:10:04) The oura of intensity. (1:13:01) His views on hormone replacement therapy. (1:17:28) The pivotal moments in his training career. (1:20:12) Related Links/Products Mentioned Visit Paleo Valley for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code MINDPUMP15 at checkout for 15% discount** August Special: TOP SELLING PROGRAMS COMBINED FOR ONLY $99.99! Body By Design: The Complete 12-Week Plan to Transform Your Body Forever – Book by Kris Gethin All Girls Orphanage - Future Generation International Missions Inc. Bodybuilding.com The Warrior Diet: Switch on Your Biological Powerhouse For High Energy, Explosive Strength, and a Leaner, Harder Body Bev Francis Body Builder The Resistance Training Revolution – Book by Sal Di Stefano Rich Dad Poor Dad: What the Rich Teach Their Kids About Money That the Poor and Middle Class Do Not! Visit Drink LMNT for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Semaglutide - Wikipedia MP Hormones Mind Pump Hormones Facebook Private Forum Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources Featured Guest/People Mentioned Kris Gethin (@krisgethin) Instagram Hunter Labrada IFBB Pro (@hunterlabrada) Instagram Dorian Yates (@thedorianyates) Instagram Ronnie Coleman (@ronniecoleman8) Instagram Danny Hester (@dannyhester) Instagram Lee Priest (@leepriestofficial72) Instagram Branch Warren (@thebranchwarren) Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mind, hop, mind, hop with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump.
All right, we got a special guest today, Chris Gethen.
This guy is a legend in the bodybuilding and fitness space.
He's actually used to run bodybuilding.com
or do some of the stuff over there that was in charge of
they're editing and some of their content.
Very smart guy.
In today's episode we talk about bodybuilding
and it's value, like the knowledge
and things we've learned from bodybuilding
and how it can apply to anybody
with their fitness and health
and of course improving the way that their body looks.
That's an obvious one.
So it's a great episode.
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All right, here comes the show.
Chris, thanks for coming on the show, man.
Hey, my pleasure, brother.
Now, you've been doing this for a long time.
You've been in the space for quite a bit
and you've worked with some of the most
influential organizations in our space.
I'd like to go back a little bit and talk a little bit about
for people who don't know and if you don't know, Chris,
you haven't been in fitness for very long,
but tell us how you started
and because you've got a very interesting story
how you ended up where you're at now.
Well, maybe I've stretched the truth in the past, but I'm from Wales originally, and I raced
motorcross for about 11 years, and it was injuries that put an end to that. And I was
seeing chiropractices, osteopaths, massage therapists, everybody, and nothing was alleviating me
of the pain at that time.
I kind of went down a slippery slope because my identity had been associated with adrenaline,
so I was getting at adrenaline now from drinking, party, and drugs. This is when the rave scene
first come about in early 90s, so I hooked onto that bandwagon, and it was through physiotherapy,
resistance training,
to help with my back pain,
was the only thing that alleviated me of that.
And that's what took me down a rabbit hole
of studying a little bit more about weight training,
nutrition, went to college then for three years
in the mid 90s to study it.
And that was my ticket out of Wales at that time
because I was just around good people,
but it was just the wrong circle of people for me at that time.
And I knew that there had to be something else out there for me.
Like I hated school, couldn't retain anything in school
because I just didn't like it.
But then when I studied studying everything
about health, nutrition, training, bodybuilding magazines,
I realized that I could retain that content
because this is something that I was interested in all of a sudden.
So I kind of went down that rabbit hole, got my qualifications, worked on cruise linings
for a little while, moved to Australia, owned a gym there for a little while, well I was
doing personal training first and I started competing in bodybuilding at that time because
I needed that sense of urgency to work towards something. So, I would go on my cardio in the morning around Sydney, Australia with these tri-fold
leaflets of my personal training services and I'd put them in letterboxes and that would
be my cardio in the morning as well.
And I had a client base for a couple of years, train people in their homes on a beaches
in the parks which is great so I'd goes surfing in between clients and then saved up for a gym, which is probably the worst
decision of my life at that time, because all of a sudden I'm opening the gym doors at
6 a.m. and closing them at 9. So I didn't really have much of a life. I wasn't very good at
delegating at that time. And then I started realizing, you know what, I want to reach out to more people.
And I wanted to start putting out content. So I bought, I think it's called Miriam Webster's
book on journalistic writing, taught myself how to write and started submitting content
to magazines and then reaching out to more people. And then I covered the Inault Classic in like 2001, I think it was.
So I flew over with the Editor-in-Chief of Flex Magazine and Muscle and Fitness Magazine
from Australia, Gary Phillips, and started covering the shows.
And I thought, you know what, I want to do this full time.
So I decided to sell everything.
And I took the risk, moved to Venice, California,
become a pain in the ass to Peter McGoff who was the editor and chief at that time of the
magazines and got myself a writer's contract and a photographer's contract in
2005 at Flex Magazine. I was doing a little bit of personal training in
Gold's as well at that time and then after about a year of that I was like, you know what, I don't like the way that
my content is being edited.
It's kind of being watered down.
So I started my own publication for two years called Caged Muscle because I covered what
was Caged Fighting, MMA back then is called Caged Fighting.
And any other half of the magazine was bodybuilding.
And I was doing a little bit of freelance work
for Body Bill and not Calm at that time.
And that's what got the attention of Ryan Deluca
that then founder of Body Bill and not Calm.
And I got the job as editor and chief in Boise.
Body Bill and not Calm there in 2007.
So that's how I kind of meandered up the ladder.
There's so much there that I wanted to hit up a bunch of things. I didn't know the cruise line. I think so tell meered up the ladder. There's so much there that I want to,
like you didn't hit up a bunch of things.
I didn't know the cruise line, I think.
So tell me what that was like.
Yeah, what did you do on the cruise liner?
Were you a trader?
Yeah, well, I had my personal training qualifications,
but I also had my massage qualifications
in Swedish massage, remedial massage,
and sports massage, and a Roman therapy massage.
And I noticed I'd never really spent much time
in the US other than when I said I came over
to Santa Cruz and Karlsbad.
And I noticed the massage therapists were getting tipped more.
I don't come from a tipping background.
People in the UK don't tip or in Europe, they don't tip.
And I noticed that the massage therapist
would get a tip to more than the personal trainers.
And I was like, you know what, I'm going to swap.
And I said, hey, I can do sports massage.
So I started doing the massage on the cruise liners then as well.
So I did that in a ladder half of my contract.
But it was tough work because I was the sports massage therapist.
So I was getting
these big people that needed working on. So I was imposing. Sounds kind of fun though,
right? Because you're basically traveling the whole time. For a single guy, that sounds
awesome. Yeah, yeah, it was great. You know, you'd have a couple of days like, this is the
crazy thing. It didn't matter if you were a really good therapist.
It mattered if you're a real good salesperson on the cruise liners. So you're selling a lot of the products, one of the products that you're selling is basically cow's bile. You had spread it
on that person. You'd do like what's called iron a thermy. You know, you'd put the clay mask on
there. That was that conducted electricity. So they'd get the contraction of the muscle and
they'd basically lose a lot of fluid. So you'd measure them before and measure them after
they've lost three inches. Here's a home kicked. It's cow's bile, you know. If you were really good at
selling, you'd get more days off and you'd get more commission. I'd have more days off than the
majority of the people there
who were much better therapists than me.
Yeah, so by the way, it doesn't work.
Those things do work at shrinking inches off you, but it's very temporary.
Yeah.
But I can see when you're on a cruise, you're going to go out to the pool.
I don't think they care.
Well, it's a similar effect that you get from those, their heat wraps, right?
The heat wraps.
Yeah, the heat wraps.
They do, or they do all the time.
Exactly.
You just suck out the water, right?
I know this is a five-star cruise line, a celebrity cruise line.
And you know, I'd like a lot of rich,
older female clients and I was like, yeah, I'll buy it.
Yeah, exactly.
Now, you said something about a gem,
which as you said, it was a terrible,
obviously terrible business decisions.
Funny, we get people all the time who ask us,
hey, I want to open a gem, I'm a personal trainer.
This is what I really want to do.
And we always tell them, if you want to make money,
don't do that.
That's one of the hardest ways.
Did you, I mean, you must have learned that the hard way.
Like, okay, I'm going to open this up,
it's going to be great.
And they're like, okay, this is a very tough way
to run a business and make a living.
Yeah, it was tough.
It fed me at the time because I was competing
in a natural bodybuilding at that time.
So I was like, you know, my head was just submerged.
I'm kind of an all on nothing character. So as long as I had somewhere to train, I was competing in a natural bodybuilding at that time. So I was like, you know, my head was just submerged. I'm kind of an all on nothing character.
So as long as I had somewhere to train, I was good.
I'd close the gym at like two o'clock on a Sunday
and I'd go train somewhere else on a Sunday.
That's my kind of my holiday.
And it was tough because of the hours that I was working with.
It was exhausting.
It was very difficult to recover.
And I guess if I was in the mindset that I am now,
it'd be a little bit easier because I delegate so much more.
I've learned how to delegate.
Back then I didn't.
I only trusted myself when I tried to do everything myself.
So it was tough.
I kind of broke even on that gym.
I really much preferred my lifestyle
that I had prior, you know, training people
at their homes in the parks on the beaches.
I do have a gym franchise now in India,
and that's difficult.
Like people think, oh, you've got a franchise,
you must be successful.
It is difficult.
We're dealing with a franchise partner right now
who just hasn't paid their rent.
The powers off.
We're dealing with members that are coming to us and complaining,
hidden me up on my socials,
posting about it and like, it's the franchise partners that we're dealing with.
We're fixing that.
It's going to take about 20 days.
We're going to, you know, get a new partner in, but it's difficult.
It's very, very difficult.
What brought you to India? I mean, that's super fascinating in terms of also
then seeing opportunity to put a gym there. Where did you see that? Were you just traveling through
there and you just kind of saw the need for that? Well, I guess we'll get to this bit in a moment,
but we were talking before the podcast started that I was thrown out of.
The rest will.
And at that time, I'd written a book for BodyBuild.com and with BodyBuild.com called BodyByDesign.
I was supposed to go in a big, huge promotional tour to push that book,
it was through Simon and Schuster, which was the second largest publisher at the time,
couldn't do that, because I'm stuck in UK now.
But I was able to do a book launch and book signing
in India at an event there.
That got noticed by a celebrity, a Bollywood celebrity,
and he wanted me to transform him.
So I gave him a consultation.
I was like, this guy's serious. He really needs to get in shape. He was dealing with back issues,
definitely a foodie, smoking, alcohol, put on a lot of weight. So I transformed him over a
nine week period. We were supposed to do 12, but this guy was very intuitive to his body
and he reacted very, very quickly. And so that just got mainstream media everywhere,
absolutely everywhere.
And these actors aren't seen as actors, they're like gods.
Oh, so it's huge.
Yeah, it's massive.
So I was traveling a lot around India at that time.
I started flying in other trainers,
because they weren't taking the Indian trainers seriously.
So I had to bring in international trainers.
Neil Hill was one of the guys that I flew over,
a couple of guys from the UK and US.
And I noticed that there was just a huge void needed
for good gym facilities, but the infrastructure.
The personal trainers weren't respected.
A lot of them weren't educated.
They were selling steroids on a side
to try to make ends meet.
It was just a bad way.
So myself and my business partner, Jag Chema decided, you know what, let's open a gym
here.
That would consider a academy that will continue to educate these people.
They will be respected and will teach them how to be respected.
This is a profession just like you being a doctor, dentist, engineer or anything like
that, which personal training isn't so
as much, even though they're very important,
they're needed, then not seeing that way.
So that's how we kind of started the franchise model.
It's interesting, because obviously here in the US,
the fitness gym industry has been around for a long time,
but you see these developing,
these industries developing other parts of the world.
I remember, God, this would be about maybe 15, I want to say more more actually, maybe closer to 20 years ago
when I was grand opening clubs for 20-Far fitness. They were opening clubs in Asia and that market had just started taking off with
James and they were crushing over there. And I'm talking about like, God, were they opening Singapore?
Was one place they were opening. Hong Kong was another place that they were opening these clubs. And India seems to be talking about like, were they open in Singapore, was one place they were opening, Hong Kong was another place
that they were opening these clubs,
and India seems to be this,
like I've read a lot about this,
their interest in fitness,
health, bodybuilding in particular,
is exploding over there.
Is this the way, is this true?
Massive, I'd say it's about 10, 15 years behind here.
Like when I first moved there,
this is like 2013, I noticed moved there, this is like 2013,
I noticed, okay, this is America and the UK,
like in the 80s when you had that action hero zone,
Van Dam, still low, Dough, Lung Green, Arnold.
And that was happening this, specifically in Bollywood,
you know, so if a lot of these actors needed to be
in action hero shape, and then everything followed,
the supplement industry was growing,
the fitness industry from the gyms,
everything was growing.
And just like a lot of other countries,
they looked to the US for that next move.
So if Keto becomes massive here, three years later,
it'll be massive there.
It could be bastardized,
but it usually is several years behind.
Yeah, it looks like the places that I'm noticing, India is really
explained in the Middle East. Bodybuilding seems to be exploding over there.
I said, Asia like Hong Kong, but they've now been growing now for a while.
Are these are all still emerging markets? Would you consider these good opportunities?
Oh, for sure. No, you just make sure you have to price it accordingly for them
because the income just isn't there for a lot of these places.
But huge discoveries, you know, we're talking about body
bin lock arm earlier, you know, they would be getting like 500,000
unique visitors a day.
India would match the US in those visits.
In, US.
Just by themselves.
US was number one.
India was number two, just by visits.
Not conversion.
Conversion wasn't even at top in the top 10.
Because they have massive taxes that they have to pay.
They usually 70% in taxes, import duties.
So the conversion wasn't there,
but the numbers is just huge.
But fitness interest is massive.
I was just gonna say the interest.
Now, what about the challenges that you have to encounter?
Because if I look here, you still see this challenge now,
but not nearly like it was 20 years ago
where convincing women, for example,
to not just work out, but to lift weights 20 years ago
was like a big uphill battle.
You still get some of that now,
but not like it was 20 years ago.
Are those the challenges you're seeing
in some of these other markets like in India,
like are the men adopting it and the women
maybe not so much?
What does it look like?
Yeah, for sure.
And it all depends on the state, the area.
Like south of India, it's very difficult for women
to be more accepted because, you know,
it's definitely more of a male dominating state. So myself and my business partner Jag, we're
associated with a charity called the All Girls Orphanage, where a lot of girls, when they're babies,
they're discarded because it's a female and the guys that, you know, they're working on a farm,
it's like, well, they're not going to help on a farm
So they discard them and then an orphanage picks them up
So in a lot of those areas within the US you don't get many females training
We try to empower females will have female personal trainers
Within our facilities to try to educate try to encourage women to train
But it's still a very much a male dominating country
and industry.
What about nutrition?
Culturally, are there any different challenges that you're encountering?
Because there's similarities, right?
Like, okay, overeating, maybe processed food, I know that's a permeaning now most of the
world, but are there culturally any challenges there?
They have a very big, a big, excuse me, vegan population correct?
Yeah, about 62% of the population is vegetarian,
or vegan, yes, massive.
So that can be a challenge,
but I've got clients that have transformed really well
on a plant-based diet.
The biggest thing is that they are quote unquote,
foodies and very cultural with their foods.
A lot of sources.
A lot of it used to be a lot of ghee, but now unfortunately, with the West
and the world actually imposing their figure there, they're eating a lot of vegetable
oils, refined vegetable oils.
So in parts of south of India, like in 1960s, one area is like a blue zone.
Now it's one of the highest rates of diabetes.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, it's gone quite the opposite.
So there's a combination like you'll go,
now they've got Starbucks there.
And the majority of what you see at Starbucks
is not the coffees that they order.
It's the big frappuccinos or whatever it is
along with the inactive lifestyle.
They pick up the cake.
So there's a lot of that going on.
So unfortunately, like diabetes is through the roof.
Obesity is becoming a pandemic there now at the moment.
Do they view obesity the same that we would view it here?
Or culturally, I know in old cultures,
any, you know, because India is a very old country.
And I know old cultures, obesity was viewed
as a sign of wealth. Has that changed, or is that kind of an uphill battle?
It's probably in between, where we would look down upon it, maybe some people judge and say,
you're obese, that's going to be unhealthy, looking for an early demise, whereas not so much,
they're like, hey, I'm healthy. Why don't you
eat more? Because you see clients that are getting in very good shape there, and it's
frowned upon by a lot of the families because they look sick now. They're not healthy, and
if you're healthy, you're a little bit more robust around the waist.
Yeah, because the opposite of that was malnutrition. Yeah. Whereas now, it means something very different.
Obesity means malnutrition, whereas in the past,
obesity meant you had enough, and not the other way around.
Very interesting.
Let's talk about bodybuilding.com.
This is very fascinating to me because I've been doing this long enough
to where I remember when bodybuilding.com was,
it wasn't just the place to get good cutting edge fitness health, muscle
building, fat loss information.
It was also one of the top, you know, searched and visited websites period online.
It was a massive site and they've taken a huge decline in terms of views and I would assume
revenue.
And you were there, were you there during that kind of transition?
Or what did it look like?
I was in a growth, I suppose, the decline.
So you could say it was all down to me.
But I didn't say that.
No, it's like when Rhine Deluca sold everything kind of spiraled down and Rhine Deluca was
the founder, he was a visionary, still is.
And when I first started there, there's like 30 of us in the office, and then when I finished
there must have been over 450, 500 people there, like the growth was unbelievable.
Well you were part of the first 50 employees there.
Yeah, it was first 30.
Wow.
That's right.
Yeah.
And grow at an unbelievable rate.
But, you know, the thing with Ryan,
he always, always thought about the customer first.
You know, on BizRate, you have the rating
of, you know, customer satisfaction.
They were at the top for, I think, seven years straight.
Consistently, every single year,
because he'd always think, what can we do for the customer customer customer customer customer
Be the head sponsor at all the you know the major bodybuilding shows given away so much free stuff and
Did whatever we could for the vendor, you know, so if the vendor came and said hey, I want to sell your product
Hey, let's give you contents as well. We've got in-house video crew, we've got content team. Let's help you. And maybe go on the forums as well, educate
people. So all these platforms were given to all the vendors as well. And there's a lot
of content that was going up 62 articles a week, along with video content, podcast,
so much, so much content. yeah, some of it could contradict
each other, but you know, it was content nonetheless. It was just a wheelhouse and obviously the
community was a massive part of it. But then when Ryan decided, you know, I've had enough
of this, I'm going to move on to different things, you know, now he's doing virtual reality.
Then it just become a little bit more of a numbers game when they
sold to Liberty Media and they've sold several times since.
And then they started charging for the content.
The content that was once free was now being charged.
I remember that and I remember thinking, oh, this doesn't seem like a good idea.
And from the outside it looked like Amazon was the reason why because of the supplements, but it sounds like there's way more of the story.
Yeah. So obviously Amazon was a big griller in a room at that time because they were,
you know, marking down things cheap. But, you know, unfortunately, they got into a price
wall with Amazon. You're not going to win that one. And then they had to obviously hit
the vendors a little bit harder to get more margin in order
to be a little bit more promotional, which was tough. So, you know, some vendors said,
well, we're kind of for to do that would have to go elsewhere. And then when the content
was being charged for as well, the transition back then wasn't good for that content.
I think the content that was free should have remained free. And if this content that you
put in out in the future, because a video trainer would cost a couple hundred thousand dollars
to put out, then charge for that in the future. That transition was a little bit rough, I think,
for the community to take. So, you know, they started purchasing elsewhere. And then if
there was any content that was for free, they would take that, but they weren't going
to pay for anything that was for free, they would take that, but they weren't gonna pay for anything that was once free.
Do you remember what Ryan sold for?
Do you remember what it was?
It was about 500,000.
500,000.
Yeah, wow.
I think that, yeah.
And the original model was really just,
they gave out all this incredible free content,
and then they were just making all the money
and all the supplements, right?
Was that, and then vendors, I would think.
Yes, those were the two main sources of income.
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
Wow. And they used to pay a lot of of income. Yeah, for sure. Wow.
And they used to pay a lot of money, you know,
for the head sponsorship for all the events.
And they'd do free, you know, the webcasts of these events,
you'd watch the Olympia live and the Arnold Classic live.
And you know, that would cost them
a couple hundred thousand as well.
But they never, ever, ever charged for, they charged the community at all, you know, that would cost him a couple hundred thousand as well. But they never, ever, ever charged for the, they charged the community at all,
you know, Ryan was all about, I don't care about customer satisfaction.
I want customer loyalty.
And that's exactly what he got with all his free content.
Are they still, I mean, they've been known forever as having the,
the largest section or booth at almost all the events, are they still,
are they still buying out like the biggest spots
or is that even?
They haven't been a part of a event for years and years now.
That's crazy.
The thing I personally valued most about
bodybuilding.com were the forums.
Yeah.
Like so many different forums, sub forums,
it was minimally moderated, meaning obviously you can't,
just harass somebody or whatever,
but we could discuss fitness and health information and whether it was approved or unapproved or followed
the common narrative or not. It was a wonderful place to get cutting edge information. In fact,
that was one of the first places I used to go to Bodybuilding.com to find topics to look up studies on.
So I would go on there and I'd read what people were saying about this diet or this compound
or this thing that they did.
And then that would prompt me to say, let me look, let me look and see if I can find
some studies to support some of these very interesting anecdotes.
It was actually Bodybuilding.com that first introduced me to fasting.
So I, like you, I got into, well, maybe differently,
but I was into bodybuilding as well,
and I was into trying to build my body.
The last thing I ever wanna do
was avoid food for longer than two or three hours.
I thought if I did that,
but muscle would fall off my body, I'd get real skinny,
so I was like, I'm never gonna do this.
And there were people on there talking about, the time it was the warrior diet book, and yet get real skinny so I was like, I'm never going to do this. And there were people on there talking about the time it was the warrior diet book.
And yet all these guys on there were like, oh my god, I'm doing this.
I'm not losing muscle.
And I feel great.
And to me, it was so opposite from what I was used to that it peaked my interest, especially
because guys were on there saying, not I don't lose any muscle at all.
And I'm totally fine.
And then I went and looked up the studies and those forums, do they even exist anymore?
Is that like good question? I don't think they do. Yeah, I remember when those the forums, all the
forums there and on MD get big bodybuilding.com were just absolutely massive. And I used to,
you know, even always work and it would be in there all the time. Yeah. And I remember brands
such as, you know, Mark Lawbliner, he had Syvation back then.
And that's pretty much born out of the forums because he was relentless on there at providing
free information, but also pushing the product. And then he went on to big pastures, we'd
fly him into the studio in Boise to film a lot of content because he was like, I want
to provide content. What can I do? I'm like, yeah, we need content. And he was phenomenal at
that. If you took advantage of it, much like social platforms today, you know, it can
really help.
It also reinvigorated, um, this is my opinion, but I think they played a huge role in this
and reinvigorated debates and discussions around training.
And what I mean by that is for a while there,
if you go back to like early muscle building,
it was all about the training,
training techniques and this superset,
versus this superset and peak contraction,
and what about the stretch and, you know,
doing it this way creates more muscle.
And then it turned into,
it wasn't really about the training
and hardcore body believe it was more about the drugs.
Then it became all about the supplements.
And believe it or not, it was the forums
that reinvigorated the conversations around
multi-set versus failure versus frequency versus
training full body.
That was discarded for a long time.
Full body workouts, that's not.
It's all about body parts.
It was in the forums that you would see debates
and discussions and people say,
hey, this is how guys trained way back in the day
and I've been trying it and here's what's working.
And I don't think a lot enough credit goes to these forums
and even bodybuilding.com and it's influence
on the fitness industry at large.
I know how to huge influence on me.
How big of a role did those forums play in the success of just
BodyBuilder.com during that time?
Massive, because a lot of the, if you look to the search engines, it wouldn't go to an
article or a video on BodyBuilder.com and take you straight to the forum because it was
just getting so much play, unbelievable.
And then, you know, we started doing these video trainers and we'd have people like Dorianiates
would fly them out and he would do like a blood and guts video trainer. And then part of the
contract was is that then he'd have to be in a forums to answer people's questions about
his certain style of training and whatnot. So you'd hear it from the horse's mouth as
well. Exactly what that person does. And you can try it. See if it works for you or you
try this video trainer over here with Jamie Eason or Steve Cork or whoever at that time, Jim's Department.
So there's just so much content out there that then people could interact with that influencer
through the forums and ask them questions.
Yeah, it was huge.
All right, let's talk about bodybuilding for a second.
You're the perfect person to ask questions about the state of bodybuilding. There's been recently, and now I do want to be clear, bodybuilding, competitive bodybuilding for a second. You're the perfect person to ask questions about the state of bodybuilding. There's been recently, and now I do want to be clear, bodybuilding, competitive bodybuilding is
like all competitive sports is extreme. So if you like to drive a fast car and then you look at
you know, NASCAR Formula One, you're going to see a lot of extremes, right? If you like to
rock climb, but then you look at competitive rock climbing, there's going to be extremes. Bodybuilding is the extreme competitive side of trying to build and shape muscles, okay? So you're always going
to see extreme behaviors, but this conversation tends to get reinvigorated every 10 years, at least
or five years, in my opinion. Because I remember this back in the 90s and then it kind of went away
and then it came back. We're seeing or hearing about bodybuilders dying again in their 40s or
30s, has something changed or is this just part for the course? It's just unhealthy to
go that extreme. What are the speculations? What's going on? Or is it what everybody
always says? Oh, it's the drugs. It's always the drugs.
You know what? I think it's a number of things. So we've seen over the past couple of years,
people dropping from any type of sport,
whether you're a professional soccer player,
American football player, you're even in a question.
Compete in a question.
There's the elephant in the room right now,
you're pulling up, keep going.
And there's, I know a professional mountain bike rider in Boise, Idaho, he ended up in
hospital, heart attack.
And I think there's just, we are so connected to bodybuilding, we only see it in bodybuilding.
But over the past couple of years, this happened in various arenas.
Now, just to stay specified on bodybuilding, yeah,
of course, it's an extreme sport,
and people are doing extreme things,
they're doing things that other people aren't
to try to get these results at other people can't.
Now, of course, that happens in a gym,
but with these extreme body weights
that we're seeing now, particularly in the off season,
and they're not doing really that much cardio in the off season.
It's putting a tremendous amount of strain on their hearts.
Dorian was like the first mass monster, and he'd be competing in the 250s.
Now we get a lot of these guys competing much higher than that, like...
He was the other pound swamble.
Yeah, Hunter Lebrada just posted this morning that he you know, he's had just had a stomach bug.
He was fasted at 279 this morning.
How tall is Hunter?
Uh, he's probably about 5'10.
Probably the same height as Dorian.
Oh no, probably a little bit.
No, he's shorter actually.
No, he's shorter.
He's about my height, about 5'8.
5'8.
Yeah, it's like his dad is a little smaller.
Yeah, he's about 5'8.
So Dorian was much taller.
And he's a lot heavier. Now, I's about 5'8", so Dorian was much taller and he's a lot heavier.
Now, I'm not saying that, you know, Hunters aren't healthy, but I'm just given an example
of the extremes that are out there at these extreme body weights. And I think that, you
know, there's only so much the heart can take, you know, we saw with Sean Road in this year,
you know, I was really sure on probably about two months prior to his passing and the
guy's massive. He hadn't even competed for like four years. Again, I'm not saying that this
was it, but it has to be a contributing factor. These extreme body weights just have to stop.
Yeah, it seemed, it's always been the trajectory if you follow the competitive bodybuilding world.
It definitely seemed like in the 90s, they really ramped it up and then it hasn't slowed down.
I mean, you had Dorian when he, he walked on stage,
everybody was like, what the hell is going on?
This guy's a mutant.
And then you had, you know, Ronnie Coleman come out.
And, you know, all those guys come out
and it just looks so insane.
Which everybody's like, how far can this possibly go?
And what it seems to be happening is,
it's gonna continue going that direction,
but now you're seeing this splintering.
It started with men's physique,
but now you're seeing what they call it classic.
Yeah, bodybuilding classic.
Is that, do you think that that's the,
I hate to say the future of bodybuilding.
What I mean by that is,
do you see that being the mainstream wing of bodybuilding now?
I wouldn't see it because people like a freak show.
You know, like I always competed as a natural bodybuilder.
I got second in a natural bodybuilding championships,
but I'd never go to a natural bodybuilding show.
It bore me.
You know, I just went to a motocross on a weekend.
I'm not going to go to a local show, a local race.
I'm going to watch the professionals.
And I think that's what we like. You know, maybe we don't want to ever look like that, but it's a freak show. And we get attracted
to that. So I think that will always be the main event. Now with classic physique, it's definitely
going towards that freaky look already. You know, like remember with women's bodybuilding,
they put a mandate in there where they had to lose their muscularity by about 30%,
I don't know how you measure that,
but I could see that possibly happening
with the classic physique as it's just getting bigger
and bigger, remember Danny Hester,
he won the first classic physique Olympia.
How would he place now?
Outside of the top 10, he's one of the smallest guys,
but to me, he's got the best physique up there.
Yeah.
But everything's just surpassing that now.
I agree with you.
I think it's just a money grab.
I mean, they're opening up more categories
because there's more people that are interested.
I think you're, people will always be drawn
to the most extreme versions of it.
And so, and as that category grows and gets popular,
and then they'll just open up another category
that's a little bit smaller, a little bit lighter and put different.
It's interesting.
You brought a female bodybuilding, people are like, oh my god, they look so crazy.
They're so whatever.
Bev Francis, I don't know if you guys know who she was.
She competed in the 80s.
If you saw, in 90s or early 90s, if you saw a picture of Bev Francis, she's the freakiest
looking female bodybuilder.
That was back then.
She's a power lifter as well.
That was back then, some of the best gems, by the way,
were the best Francis.
So I think it was the powerhouse of the second.
And that was back then that she looked that way.
So the potential was always there.
And yes, people are definitely drawn to that.
I want to ask you about the training trends
that we see in bodybuilding.
And the reason why I want to ask you that
is because a lot, and people might not,
the average person may not even know this,
and maybe the average fitness influencer won't admit this,
but a great deal of gratitude and appreciation
needs to go to bodybuilding.
There's a lot of the trained techniques
that we use now, maybe take for granted,
exercises started there.
So a lot of the trends start there,
and then you can extrapolate and maybe apply them to how you train your client or
yourself. But the trends are really fascinating. I'll bring up one as an
example. So in the 90s, it was not favorable. It was not in fashion for
bodybuilders to do barbell squats or deadlift. It wasn't really a big thing.
I remember in the 90s, one bodybuilder, Michael Francois, he did, he was a deadlifter, but nobody really did that.
Everybody avoided barbell squats, they all did leg presses,
everybody did behind the neck shoulder presses.
That was the way to do a shoulder press.
And then it started moving in the other direction
where you're starting to see more people squatting
and deadlifting and even pro bodybuilders now
are starting to go in that direction.
Are there any other exercise trends that you're seeing
and what people are saying about them?
And you know, any...
You know, the only thing that I'd say that the trend is,
you know, for a little while,
they got a little bit ballistic with the Reptempo
and I was one of those guys
because like I'm more of an aggressive person.
So my aggressive personality would just show itself in a gym.
You know, whether that's the right way or the wrong way, it just felt like a branch war in style.
Exactly. Like I've trained with it branch many times and that's definitely my sort of
style. Do I do that now? No, I'm a little more fragile now, you know. Which by the way,
how does he even keep doing that? I do. Have you guys ever watched branch war? This
guy? Yeah, I'll be with him next week.
Are you? Oh, makes no sense. Yeah, but I've noticed now the trend seems to be,
we watch people like Nick Walker,
you watch like Hunter, the top guys now,
they really seem to be slowing down
at a red tempo. Yeah, really controlled.
And really, there's got to be three second negatives
a lot of the time there, but they're training
with extreme weight.
You know, you look to see James Hollings head from the UK,
he is growing, but he's doing those,
like you said, the traditional lifts,
the dead lifts, the bent over row,
the barbell squat, the Smith machine squat.
It's definitely the basics they've gone back to,
especially at the beginning of the workout
when they're feeling they're absolute strongest.
That's where they're hidden the compounds first,
not the isolations as they did a little bit more than 90s.
Yes, with the name Chris Bums, that big dead lifter.
Yeah. And you've seen his dead lifts progress.
And I, as my personal opinion,
you see it in the reflection and the muscularity of the back.
Do you think that these basic lifts,
the reason why they're doing them more is because it's more, because it's fat or because
they're rediscovering the value of some of these lifts and what they could do for the, for the body.
It's a bit of both, isn't it now, because you know, we have access to everybody through social media,
so we see some people evolving a little bit quicker than others, and they see that they're doing these basic lifts, and I'm like,
okay, that's something that I need to apply in my arsenal.
Had they seen that, maybe they wouldn't have applied it,
but now they are, and they're seeing the effects from it.
So it's kind of, it's catching on,
where, you know, in the 90s or even early 2000s,
you'd see people like Dexter Jackson and Melvin Antony,
they wouldn't touch a deadlift.
So they'd think they'd blow out their waist.
Yeah, so you know.
But, oh, go ahead.
No, but then obviously on the other end of the spectrum,
you had people like, you know,
Ronnie, that's doing like 700 pound deadlifts.
Yeah, I was just gonna say like,
you brought up social media and I was curious,
whether or not you've seen like an uprising
in terms of interest in bodybuilding
as social media kind of brought some people to the forefront.
Or if you've seen potential, people that would have got into bodybuilding find more of a career
and be an influencer instead.
And because of the fact that supplement companies aren't really able to pay them the same as they used to back in the day.
Yeah, so I'd say the interest as a whole, whether you want to go the competitive
standpoint or the influencer way, maybe both, is definitely growing. You know, the downside
to that is that people want to have that status and they want to hit that 500 pound deadlift
yesterday. They want to look shredded now, you know, people don't have the attention span
or the patience to, you know to do it the right way.
So you get a lot of people that are getting sick, they're getting injured, they're feeling
let down, they're comparing themselves to others.
So it's leading to a lot of disorders in various ways.
But you know, there's how people are making a living out of this now is absolutely unbelievable.
It's phenomenal.
You know, I remember, because I'm like more old school, and I remember going to some events
probably about 10 years ago and seeing people who's like a friend of mine now, Ulysses,
who would have a massive line and I'd see Kevin Levereoni there. And I'm like, he's got
three people waiting for him. This is wrong. This is so wrong. I'm pissed off. But now I'm like, he's got three people waiting for him. This is wrong, this is so wrong.
I'm pissed off.
But now I'm like, you know what, I really applaud it.
If they are influencing people,
if these teenagers are going up to them and saying,
hey, what do I eat?
Because my family are feeding me McDonald's
or whatever, then good on them.
Hopefully we can influence them in the right direction
to make better decisions and give up the couch and Netflix.
I remember the first time that I went to my first Olympia show and I called these guys. It was right when we started, we were starting the podcast.
So this was about seven years ago and I remember freaking out that there was this crazy line.
And this is the first time I was ever introduced to like these influencers that were this popular and it was the Shreds guys. Oh, yeah.
And then you had Jay Cutler and he had nobody in his line
and then the around the whole entire building
was waiting to meet these kids.
And Joe's swollen.
Yes, these kids I had never even heard of before
and I remember coming to you guys
and then the banners they had,
they came in with their own security.
I mean, it was just crazy over the top.
It's unbelievable what social media has done in that space. What is, you know, your personal experience?
What are the things that you like to love about bodybuilding and what are the things you don't like?
What I love about bodybuilding is that for me personally, it's just to help, you know,
I always have my pivotal foot in the gym. I've been able to do so much with it.
Like I find that I'm one of those people that life can be a white knuckle ride, unless
I'm extreme with myself.
I'm more extreme with myself than I am with my clients, because I know I can go the other
way.
And it's helped me so much with the structure of waking up at a certain time, going
to bed at a certain time, because I've been so regimented in the past with my meal time.
So I need that structure, making sure that I'm getting up very, very early in the morning,
doing some form of activity, getting blood flow to my brain.
So I know from a cognitive standpoint, I'm on point a little bit more.
And knowing that the funny thing is, a lot of people rely on energy drinks
and they think, okay, this is good zerk gets
when it comes to cloud, brain fog and whatnot.
They're not feeding their brains with the right nutrients.
People are always reaching for something,
whether it be Adderol, whether it be Modaphanil
or caffeine to get them through the day.
It's like, have you ever tried eating properly
and hydrating yourself?
And you learn these things from bodybuilding
that has a transverance effect
into other areas of life.
And of course, if you're an active individual,
you've got kids, then obviously,
kids learn by observation.
They hopefully are gonna be influenced by that
and become a little bit more active
and make better food choices themselves.
And that's where I see bodybuilding.
Bodybuilding has helped me with my finances
because I'm more structured with it.
Obviously it can help you with your sex life.
Hidden as squats as deadlift,
produce a little bit more testosterone.
Well, so we like to think.
It has so many benefits.
That's what I do like.
What I don't like is the typical arrogance
that can sometimes be associated with it. You know, like when you're in bodybuilding, when I've competed in bodybuilding, everybody
tries to keep everything to themselves.
They look down upon you a little bit, whereas like I've competed, you know, as we spoke,
I think last week, I've competed in Iron Man triathlon several times
and Ultramarathon, and I like that community.
Everyone's really supported.
Supportive, somebody could be overtaking you on the run
and they're like, come on, bro, you're doing really good.
I love that encouragement.
So that's the only thing that I've seen.
That's a little bit darker in bodybuilding.
However, I still have great friends in bodybuilding. I do like that camaraderie, that's a little bit darker in bodybuilding. However, I still have great friends
in bodybuilding. I do like that camaraderie, but sometimes it can be a little bit condescending.
Yeah. Do you feel it made you a much better coach and trainer going through it?
Oh, for sure. You know, that's why I like to participate in so many things. I had some clients that
said, hey, I'm doing a Spartan. I'm like, okay, I'll go and compete in one. So I can give you, I can relate to you a little bit better
and give you maybe better advice.
So for sure, it's definitely helped, competing in various sports.
Yeah, it's funny when I look at the pursuit of bodybuilding.
So we'll take out competitive or competing on stage,
although I think there's potential value there too.
I'll show some potential negatives, but it's almost like
as you continue the pursuit of bodybuilding for yourself,
as you get older and continue to do it,
you just start to become more and more wise with things.
Like maybe you get into it because you wanna be bigger,
because you wanna look good or maybe because you're skinny
or you're insecure and maybe that's where you get that ego
or you keep things to yourself.
But you ever meet an older bodybuilder?
Guy's been bodybuilding and he's 50s, 60s.
The nicest, most open, we'll talk to you about anything.
And also it starts to lead to pursuing growth,
and I don't mean in terms of muscle growth,
but just this personal growth,
and other areas of your life.
Did you experience that as you've,
we talked earlier and you're little older than I am,
and you've been doing this longer than I am,
or I have, have you seen that with yourself
where it started one way and it just started to grow
into this much bigger thing?
Yeah, no doubt about it.
Like when I was first really into training,
I'd have my eyes to the floor, hoodie on,
I didn't want anyone to talk to me.
This is my office, this is my work. Don't come and talk to me, you know, probably a bit of an asshole. But, you know,
being around a lot of the older bodybuilders, like I mentioned that I met Dave Draper back
in the 90s and then hang out with people like, you know, Bill Grant, Robbie Robinson, trained with Tom Platten in the 90s as well,
and these guys are so giving, so humble, and they wanted to take their time to talk with you.
And I found that so refreshing, and now, as I'm a little bit older, not that I'm putting myself
on any pedestal, but if people come up to me to the gym now, I'm usually the one that's hanging on to them and not letting them go because I want to give them
my time. And I appreciate that sometimes people feel a bit awkward coming up to you into the gym.
And I didn't respect that before, but now I definitely do. I very, very much change. I want to
give a little bit more. And I have obviously a little bit wiser. Yeah, if there's one thing I could say to describe bodybuilding,
it's extreme attention to detail.
And in the extreme case of competitive bodybuilding,
you're paying attention to everything.
Water, sodium, you know, obviously proteins, fats, carbs,
sleep, supplements, training, volume.
I mean, like the more detail that you can focus on and manipulate
the more likely you are to look a particular way at a specific time.
And unless that becomes, or you allow it to be dysfunctional, I feel like that's a skill
that you can take and run in all kinds of other directions.
You mentioned like financially and personally like,
how has that skill of paying attention every day
in detail helped you in other areas?
Oh, it's really helped.
So I remember my father saying to me once
when I was younger, because I'd be leaning back
in my chair trying to fit more food in.
Because I felt if I fall over, I can't get enough into my stomach.
And he's like, dude, you're obsessed.
And I was like, yeah, I know.
That's right.
I love it.
But I think having that obsession of, like you said,
those details, you know, am I hidden 11 reps?
Or am I going to go for 10?
Scratch my head over this one.
That attention, a detail, would have an effect
into so many other areas of your life.
Like you said, whether it be the finances,
when I get invited to go out on a Saturday night,
you know, you may think this is terrible,
but I'm like, no, I have to be in bed.
And I enjoy that.
I really enjoy that structure because I guarantee you,
when I get up at four o'clock in the morning,
I don't regret
not going out. I don't get that fomo. And I just feel that has just had a positive effect
because I'm a better person at B-Round now. If I'd put other things first all the time,
as I see so many other people do, I would have put my health last and I wouldn't have been
such a good person at B-Round because I'm so attentive to the details in everything that I do.
And now I try to take what I've learnt from bodybuilding, I still always have my pivotal
foot in the gym, but I'm trying to help people with their longevity.
Because as we know, with extreme bodybuilding comes with a lot of inflammation and not everybody
is looking at the sources
of the food that they eat or the supplements that they take in. So I'm trying to match those
two now and bodybuilding has fed that. Are you drawn still to adrenaline a bit?
Yeah, still looking for that? Yeah, hence the black eye for matching like him.
What are you into these days? Yeah, so snowboarding, but you know, like, you know,
we're talking about being attentive and focused
when you're in the gym.
And I've never really encountered any injuries in the gym.
But, you know, I tore my tricep off the bone last year,
snowboarding, and I tore my hamstring,
helleyboarding in a Himalayas a couple of years ago,
separated both my EC joins
and torn my rotator cuff, downhill mountain biking, motocross injuries, torn pack.
I've torn a lot and broken a lot, but I don't think it'll slow me down.
I went snowboardin' this year, and maybe not as crazy as I did the year before, but I love
it.
I absolutely love it. We're talking about structure and discipline
that you got from bodybuilding.
How do you feel that this translates into rehabilitation?
I don't mean rehab in the physical sense,
but you take somebody who has got issues with substances
or with relationships.
Now I remember here in California when they banned
weights and basically gym equipment out of prisons, I thought, what a terrible... Yeah, unbelievable. I remember here in California when they banned weights
and basically gym equipment out of prisons.
I thought, what a terrible.
Yeah, unbelievable.
What a terrible, terrible idea.
I remember pumping iron.
There's that scene where Arnold is posing with the inmates
and he used to do this, he volunteers time
and teach them how to work out.
And there's lots of studies to show
that positive effects on just the personal growth
and the pursuit of changing yourself
and the structure has on rehabilitation.
So I thought that was such a bad idea.
How about you've said a couple times on here, you know, I know myself.
And if I didn't have that structure, I might be over here.
I might be doing that.
Like, how does that, how does that help to you?
Because of discipline, you know, the discipline of, you know, a hidden the gym, no matter what,
is mental therapy.
It's an outlet for me.
And it is for a lot of people, you know, a lot of people that deal with depression, anxiety,
any sort of mental disorder, a lot of the time I'm not saying it's a cure, it's going
to fix it, but it can certainly help by just working out, getting rid of a lot of this
pent-up anxiety or stress or energy that you need to release.
If you look better, you are going to feel a little bit better.
You're going to have more confidence.
If you're bullied, growing up, and you have insecurities now when you compete yourself
to other people online, well, you usually feel better after you have worked out.
It's just, it's a small sacrifice that you make for that long-term success
that you feel from it. Yeah, is it, you know, the early morning's tough? Yeah, sure. But, you
know, like, I get my clients, for instance, if I feel that this person is lacking in
motivation, it's like, or discipline, then maybe we need to start having some cold showers instead
of warm, you know. People, a lot of the time, they seek comfort. They do things that they feel like doing. Well, if you do things that
you feel like doing all the time, you're probably going to eat cake all the time. I'm probably
going to sit in your ass. I do the same. I'm not sleeping. But you have to get comfortable
being uncomfortable. I think the gym environment, or even working out at home, whatever it may
be, whatever you need to scratch your itch with
is definitely of benefit with resistance training.
You know, as you've mentioned in your book,
everybody of every single age bracket
should be working out, not only for mental health,
but bone density.
So are you telling me that you're gonna feel good
when you break your hip as you get older?
No, it's not gonna be good for your mental health.
So make sure that you do whatever you can
with resistance training,
even if it's just getting up and down
from the seat 50 times a day,
to ensure that you've got bone density.
Have you encountered going into these other fitness pursuits
like Iron Man and Mountain biking and stereotypes
where what I mean by,
were they new you or you told them,
yeah, I'm from the bodybuilding world.
Did they have preconceptions that you kind of shattered
when you would go into their world?
Okay, I can go with something.
Yeah, so Michael Riley, who is famous in the Iron Man circles,
I'm saying, you are an Iron Man as you cross the finish line.
He said he saw me at the start line.
He's like, this guy's not gonna finish.
There's no way because I was 220 pounds then.
Which is massive for every man.
Huge, huge.
But now when I was competing in motocross or bodybuilding,
I was thinking number one, it has to be number one.
And that is it.
Which can be good to ensure that you're bettering yourself, you're always hungry,
you're always striving, but at one point that you have to give in.
And I was very happy to participate in Iron Man. I just want to finish these events,
and I've become very comfortable with that. But I just wanted to show people,
you can be a hybrid athlete, hybrid athlete, like CrossFit has do it,
they look phenomenal, but they're like CrossFit has do it, they
look phenomenal, but they're fit, they're big, but they're fit. And so I want to do encourage
people from the bodybuilding circles, you can participate in that 5K, 10K, a triathlon,
whatever it may be. And it's the same with the people in the endurance world that you
could benefit from some type of resistance training.
So I've really tried to merge that gap by doing so.
Yeah, that's great.
Chris, share with me a little bit about your business journey.
Where's the business acumen come from with you?
Was that something that you've had for since day one?
You've developed that?
Is it passed down from dad?
Like, where's the business knowledge come from?
I'd say a little bit of his past down from my dad
and it's something that I've never really set out to do.
I just do.
I don't really think about it.
It's when people say, how do you stay motivated?
I'm like, I don't know, I just do what I do.
So, we grew up on a farm and didn't have much money at all,
but my father bought the rich dad, poor dad book
by Robert Kioski, but he actually applied it.
A lot of people are students of learning, but not really students of application, he applied it.
And then, next thing, he's got 50 properties, and we left the farm, and I kind of learned a little bit from that.
And obviously, having to get up very early in the morning to help on a farm before going to school,
I had the work ethic,
that's for sure, but I just didn't have the knowledge. And like I said, when I got into bodybuilding and I realized I can retain that, I just found an interest in things that I enjoyed.
And when I did so, I was able to retain it and apply it as business. I think when people go
into engineering or dentistry because their parents told them that they need to do it
and they're not enjoying it,
they're not gonna excel or exceed.
I don't exceed at one thing.
I don't think I'm built that way.
That's why I like to do several things
and maybe together that I can excel at it.
But it's usually, they cross pollinate each other.
The supplements, the gyms, the coaching, the books, they're all within the industry
that kind of help each other out.
So, did your financial success, was it something that just kind of compounded over time?
Or did you have a pivotal point in your journey where things really took off for you?
No, no, no, no, it's just a little bit at a time.
You know, I don't make money out of the gyms, maybe when we exit we do. You know, it's the same with the supplement company, we don't bit at a time. I don't make any money out of the gyms. Maybe when we exit, we do.
It's the same with a supplement company.
We don't really take a wage.
Maybe when we exit, that we do,
there's other things we spoke about,
like the property investments.
That's more where the money is.
But I do have an interest in that.
I just love doing anything within the fitness space.
Because it gives me purpose. it makes me feel good.
I don't feel like I'm working.
I'm kind of working here, but it doesn't feel like it.
This is great. I love this.
When you said last week, can you come down?
I'm like, I'm there. Let's do this.
Let's talk about the supplement space.
It's hard to separate fitness from supplements.
I say over the last maybe at least a couple of decades, but definitely, definitely
the last few decades.
And I'm a huge fan of the supplement space.
I've always bought supplements.
I take them.
I think they're really fun.
And I've seen them go through, I've seen so many changes in the space.
I remember when Bill Phillips just really rewrote the book on how to build a successful
supplement business.
It just changed everything. I remember when there was no pre-workout supplement category,
except for maybe ultimate orange, remember that back in the day? And then all of a sudden,
you had these like, you know, super pump 250 and all these other pre-workout supplement,
which is now one of the largest supplement categories. I also remember buying my supplements at the
I want the largest supplement categories. I also remember buying my supplements at the local, you know, supplement store and then
it became GNC and then it became online.
Like, can you talk about the progression of this industry and kind of where it's at now
and where you think it may be going?
Yeah, it was interesting because it's funny, isn't it, where people complain today if
the flavor isn't good?
I'm like, you didn't taste these.
Oh, that's's 20 years ago.
This is beautiful.
What are you complaining about?
Oh, you're so soft.
But yeah, it was very interesting.
Like I remember when I first got into bodybuilding,
I literally spent, and I didn't have much money,
but I saved up and I spent like $800 on Metarex supplements.
Oh, Metarex, yeah.
I was thinking, this is it.
Was I'm going to go to the moon it. I'm gonna go to the moon.
I'm gonna go to the moon.
Yeah, and I had the cybergenics kits as well
with a VHS video that came from America to the UK,
so it wouldn't play us.
Chris, I tell that story.
I'm so good.
Finally, I meet somebody to do the same shit.
I told that story these guys so many times where I bought
as a kid, I saved up my money,
and I saw the ad in, you know,
I remember I was a Flax magazine maybe,
and it was Cybergenics,
and it came with like seven different pills,
supplemented.
Androppers.
Androppers, I thought, well, this is gonna work.
If I'm taking all this stuff
and the before and after, so I'm so glad
I finally met someone that didn't say it.
Yeah, and it didn't work, didn't it?
No, I didn't do it.
Yeah, none of that worked.
I remember I took up all my father's conservatory space with all these supplements.
It didn't work.
But it's interesting because even if there was a placebo effect to it, hey, you know,
what's wrong with that?
But the evolution, unfortunately, it went, I think it went down a bit of a downward spiral
for a little while.
You know, obviously you had the pro hormones here, especially in the US.
So people were screwing up the testosterone or hormonal levels.
Oh, that's me.
Pretty quick.
Yeah.
Yeah, I did the super draw and the methyl one test and, you know, the, you know, the,
howl a draw.
Yeah.
And they were called pro hormones, but they were designer steroids.
Yeah.
Definitely, they definitely negatively affected my.
For sure.
Like, it blew me away when I first came over to the Arnold and the Olympia in like
2001-2002 that they had all these pro-Horne moans there and they were given them away. Yeah, they're getting I'm like
This is insane. This is insane. Obviously I was competing in natural bodybuilding
So I have to be very very careful on what I use here and it just blew me away
But then unfortunately,
I think it went down a bit of a downward spiral, kind of much like, you know, the CBD industry
today is a bit of like the Wild West. You really don't know what you're getting. And you
didn't know what you were getting there for a little while. And I knew this firsthand
because when I started doing what's called video trainers, daily video trainers on bodybuilding.com, I was like, okay, now I've got a responsibility. I'm telling
people what to take. I'm going to test some of these supplements. So I put my hand in
my own pocket and I tested each one of these supplements and I was suggesting. And there
were some products that were out there that nobody had heard of. And they were testing
really, really good. But then there was some of the massive brands that weren't testing good at all.
Would you find that just, you know, maybe it's not nothing's in it that it's in.
Yeah, I mean, no spike in in the proteins, you know, yeah, all sorts, all sorts.
Just wasn't basically what was written on a label.
You were basically putting your hands together and hoping what you were taking was written,
you know, that was inside the bottle. So it was a little bit dodgy back then. So I started purchasing
raw ingredients and just putting them together myself. But of course, the viewer that's
watching this is not going to do that. So, you know, I'd only suggest the products that
I had tested. So that wasn't everything because it's
cost me at least $250 per test. And so that's when I just started formulating my own brand
a little bit later. Well, it wasn't myself, it's myself and Brian Rand, who was the
formulator at BodyBuild.com. He did the Platinum Series and the early Jim Stepanee line and then the CFO at BodyBill.com
He helped finance.
I was, even though I may not look at it, with the tattoos at a Mohawk back then, I was very,
very health conscious because I dealt with maltoxicity.
I was looking at everything. I was looking at the coffee, I was looking at the grains that I was eating and obviously
I was looking at the supplements.
So I wanted to make sure that, of course, what I'm suggesting is merging the health sector
with the sports performance sector because even though we're in a health and fitness industry,
a lot of these supplements just weren't promoting health, which was kind of weird to me.
So I think it's helping now.
It's starting to go in a
right direction with certain brands. You know, there's certain brands I could name here that I think
are doing absolutely phenomenal. They're doing it in right direction, but then there's others that go,
you know what, I don't have the money to put it in the R&D because I've got this much set aside
for marketing. It's all going to go into marketing. It's very difficult to do a little bit of the both. Were you aware of the margins in supplements? Like a lot of people think there's tons of money
to be made and it's very, very thin margins. It depends what products you make. And if you're going
for generic dosages or generic ingredients and you're very dusting, you've got prop lens or whatever,
you can make a big margin, of course. If you're white labeling, you can make big margin,
but if you're doing it the right way, it's difficult.
In the beginning, when GNC approached us,
it was like, we can't do business with you guys.
If you're asking for 50 points, we'll be out of business.
Yeah.
Yeah, some of the smallest margins
are the most consumed products, like protein sellers
and stuff in there.
Yeah, very, very little.
Okay, so list to me, some of the most,
I guess you would consider maybe important supplements
for an athlete or someone looking to change their body,
and you can't say creatine, that's a very, it's an easy one
because creatine's the most studied.
We know what it does, it's got health benefits, not stuff.
Are there other supplements that you would say,
you know, that you say, okay, these are the ones
you should probably look to first
if you're trying to take some.
For sure, I'd say like it's gonna be
like a protein powder or meal replacement
because the majority of the people aren't able
because it's inconvenience, because they've got families
because of work, they're just not sitting down
and eating the meals that they require
and they're going and eating fast food.
So I'd say meal replacement.
You know, try to go for a meal replacement that has you know organic vitamins and minerals
Maybe has organic carbohydrates in protein that has like digestive enzyme less than one gram of lactose
Something along those lines
Further from that
Dependent on the individual if they're eat if they're not eating grass fed or wild caught or something like that
Maybe an omega-3 oil,
because if they're having more pro-inflammatory omega-6s, they probably need some anti-inflammatory
omega-3s, and obviously help with hormonal production.
And then electrolytes.
I think electrolytes is very important.
A lot of people aren't hydrating enough.
They're drinking a lot of caffeine today.
And of course, you can have fluid, but if you're in an environment that you're sweating a lot,
the fluid volume isn't going to hydrate you enough, you want to have some magnesium,
you want to have some electrolytes in there as well. So I'd say those three.
Yeah, I can definitely get on board. Yeah, the electrolyte one blew us away recently.
There's a company we work with called Elemente. Yeah. And, you know, they sent us a box and Rob Wolf works with them.
We love them.
Yeah, Rob's back to quite a bit.
And we saw it and we just kind of left it there.
Yes, that's a studio for like six months.
Yeah, like electrolyte powder, whatever.
And, you know, then we tried it and, you know, also when you look into the amount of sodium
that you actually need as an athlete, especially if you don't eat heavily processed foods, taking more sodium, I couldn't believe the difference
I felt in the energy and the pump from having the more sodium in my diet, which we've
been told for so long is like so bad for you.
It's like the mineral version of creatin.
Yes.
It just helps with that cell volumization.
And you feel stronger from it.
Yeah, it's pretty crazy.
Okay, so what about a very popular fun, I'll call this a fun category supplements because So that's cell volumization and you feel stronger from it. Yeah, it's pretty crazy. Okay.
So what about very popular fun?
I'll call this a fun category supplements because for me, it's fun.
I love pre-workout supplements, not because I think you need them,
but just because you feel them and they're enjoyable for me to get that feeling.
Caffeine, obviously, a core ingredient.
Are there other ingredients that you see being more important to give you that feeling
that you're looking for or maybe even a little extra performance?
Yes, you know a lot of people like Peter Allenine or the you know the patty diversion a conison
Because it can dependant like if you're a high-volume trainer
Like I am I like to do a lot of reps a lot of reps a lot of intensity
So a little bit more towards like the soccer plasmate
a lot of reps, a lot of reps, a lot of intensity. So a little bit more towards like the psychoplasmic hypertrophy. But I do both, I do both. I find that karnasin or bideralinine
really helps with the lactate buffering a little bit. Along with, this is weird. Now this
could be placebo, but when I started doing a lot of Ironman training, a lot of endurance,
the karnasin with the BCAAs seem to really help with me.
Now, I'm an EAG, I like it, essential amino acids,
but when I put those two together,
again, I don't know if it was placebo,
just really helped with lactate buffering I found.
You know, I just didn't find that I burnt out
as quickly as I once did.
Intruder, could be a synergistic effect.
Yeah, definitely, definitely.
But kind of since it's definitely one of them,
now, citralline, obviously, you know, like a fermentant,
you know, I don't usually go for a citralline
that's bonded with a malach acid.
I just want pure citralline.
Okay.
That can help, obviously, with blood vastillation,
if you've got, like, for instance,
your posterior chain, you're not getting
that mind muscle connection,
because it's not a mirror muscle.
If you've got more blood flow to that area, much like a personal trainer tapping
that muscle group, I just feel that you get better connection with that blood flow with
the citrulline. So citrulline is one for me and obviously caffeine.
Yeah, what about appetite suppressing supplements, which I would put in the fat burner category. Now, we grew up during the ephedra caffeine aspirin stack, which I don't think there's anything
that compares to that these days. You see anything coming out that may be comparable?
There's peptides. There's one that I'm totally going to bastardize the pronunciation.
It's semigalide.
that's the pronunciation, it's semi-gallied. Oh, yeah, somatic light, I think.
Semagall, yeah, you say it.
But that seems to be, from what I've heard
that has quite a good effect, now, you can,
I think you can get that in a capsule form as well.
It was an injectable form, but I think you can get it
in a capsule now, and that seems to be having an effect
for people to be part of that type. Is there a pharmaceutical company that makes that right now that can be I want to say I bought some shares of this company because in the studies
It made people just eat less. Yeah, and it lasted for a while
It was actually one of the more effective. Yeah, I know there's a couple of companies out there that do it
You know, you'll get a lot of these HRT clinics out there that provide in it. I know peptide sciences
T clinics out there that provide in it. I know peptide sciences does one as well. Yeah, there's a few companies out there doing it. What are your thoughts on, uh, SARMS?
SARMS, I don't really have much experience in SARMS to be honest with you. From what I know, you know, for instance, like, you know, MK77, there's
Don't seem to be that many adverse effects. Obviously, you know, you'd want to make sure that you're being supervised correctly
taken them. But from what I know, I don't have much experience. I'm a little bit more
experiencing peptides. I haven't seen or heard of any negative effects.
Yeah, interesting. I've been toying with Ibuda moron a little bit.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Very interesting effects. It seems to be a bit of a mass builder. I noticed I gained a little bit when I take it,
but it's a very interesting class of,
I don't know if you want to call them supplements or compounds,
but it's totally new.
Here's a question I'd like to ask you
because you're so integrated into that professional
bodybuilding world for so long that I used to think
that the biggest, most muscular bodybuilders were just the ones that took the most drugs.
And I keep reading articles from bodybuilders who may be retired,
guys that for all intents and purposes, I don't think are lying, like Lee Priest.
Lee Priest, he tells you what's on his mind, at least he comes across that way, good, bad, or otherwise.
And they're coming out and talking about what they use.
And it's not a lot.
Like Lee Prech just talked about, he would use 700 milligrams
of combined antibiotics at the most,
which is for anybody who knows what people use in gyms.
That seems like such a low amount.
And the guy looked like total freak.
Is it a myth that the biggest guys were taking the most stuff?
Is it mostly just their genetics
and how they responded to some of this stuff? Absolutely, 100%. I know a couple of those guys
personally and I know then I'll bullshit in, they've got no reason to, especially after retirement.
You know, what are they trying to sell? Nothing. They don't have to worry about sponsors or anything
like that. And people are a little bit more open about it now, but no, I know Lee, he was a freak
as a teenager.
They stopped him from getting his pro card
for quite a number of years
because we can't have a 16 year old
getting his pro card, it shouldn't happen.
And then obviously Dorian's intensity
was just on another level to anybody else.
I remember after one of the Olympus,
Pianbergoff was called his then wife Debbie
on the Monday after the Olympus gone flung straight back.
The day after.
Yeah, well, this was on a Saturday the show was
on the Monday, he's called him for his interview
and Debbie said it's leg days at the gym.
You know, and that was just the intensity that he had.
So that was his steroid, his stack on top of that
was a very minimal amount.
But of course, he looks like a freak.
So of course, people are going to assume
that he's taken so much more.
Yeah, you know, it's crazy is that when he went
from being in second place to first,
and we should put a picture up,
hopefully if someone's watching this, we'll have that.
He made this rat, it's those famous black and white photos.
Camden Joltan's photos.
Yeah, where it's just like, what did he do?
And everybody's speculated, oh, it's IGF1, it's growth hormone, it's crazy.
And he said, no, I changed my training.
I went from high volume to more of a high intensity low volume style training, influenced
by Mike Menser, Arthur Jones style.
That's what he said, did it.
And as I get older, I more likely believe that now. And when I was a kid, I was style, that's what he said, did it. And as I get older, I'm more likely believe that now.
When I was a kid, I was like, no way he's lying.
Yeah, for sure.
And he said that he felt that he didn't over-diet in this show.
We're previously heat-over-dieted a little bit.
And in retrospect, he thinks that he over-dieted
in a lot of those shows because, you know,
he was peeled at three weeks out,
but he's like, okay, I'm definitely the biggest,
I need to be even sharper.
But I think he just lost a lot of muscle and died in down.
But that year he didn't see hit the nail on her.
He's about nine, ten pounds heavier.
Interesting.
Okay.
What are some of the best gyms you've been?
There's some of these gyms are legendary.
You talked about working in Gold's Venice.
I've been there before.
Really interesting.
I've never, I've always wanted to visit.
We're dooring and worked out back in the, I don't even know if that gym still exists.
Doesn't have this right.
I've always wanted to see the gym that, you know,
Ronnie worked out in in Texas.
And, you know, have you been to a lot of these facilities?
What are some of the best ones?
And definitely Dorians, even though it wasn't anything flash,
there was just something about the aura of intensity there.
I can't explain it.
You know, you're in this dungeon. There's literally no windows, right? You have to go downstairs into...
No windows. Nothing. Nothing. No windows. So, you know, it's funny.
Or I was talking about vitamin D and how important that hormone is.
He was paler than anything. But, yeah, it's just that aura of intensity,
like the equipment that he'd hand picked, a lot of the naughtless,
the chain-driven stuff. It was tough. you'd put three plates on, it's like,
oh my god, this is my max.
Very, very heavy, it's funny,
even the dumbbells felt heavier there than anywhere else.
But it was just something about the equipment
and at all of them, Tenshin,
and probably I was trading with Dorian a lot of the times
in near that, probably fed it as well.
And I trained with his training partner,
Leroy, several times,
and him screaming down your ear, probably led to that as well. And I trained with
branch many times in metraflex as well. And for completely different reasons, completely
different temperature, you know, training in like 115 degrees, where you're freezing cold in Dorian's gym. Very different,
but again, the intensity, the people, the aura, the camaraderie is just phenomenal. So those two
were probably my standouts facilities that I've trained at. Is there really no AC at Metrolux?
None, it's just a fan. So you throw it up during those leg workouts because of the heat,
as well as that intensity. Yeah, because as a kid, you watch, you throw it up during those leg workouts because of the heat as well as that intensity.
Yeah, because, you know, as a kid, you watch those,
you know, how much is this is real?
How much?
So there's no AC, it's just big ass fans, hot ass, Texas, summer.
And they're lifting like, like just animals.
Yeah, and I think that's why, you know, people like Branch,
you know, staying in such good condition
all year round, because you have to be fit. It's a train in that heat and with that intensity and with the volume, you know, staying in such good condition all year round because you have to be fit
to train in that heat and with that intensity and with the volume, you know, and it doesn't go it doesn't do any kind of work. So you did work out with Dorian then? Yes, yes,
several times. Both he stayed with me when I lived in LA, we're training golds together,
funny story. If you don't mind me just taking a little bit of a rabbit hole here. So I was working for Flex Magazine, and the one day myself and Dorian
had gone into her goals,
and all the pros back then, they go in for free.
And the female asked Dorian,
it's $25, whatever it was,
and he says, I'm a pro.
And she said, well, do you have your pro card?
He didn't have his pro card,
he'd been retired a couple of years, and there's a massive picture of said, well, do you have your pro card? He didn't have his pro card. He've been retired a couple of years
and there's a massive picture of him right behind.
She said, is that enough?
And she said, you know, the woman didn't know.
She wasn't trained.
And I thought this is a great article.
So I put this piece and it got published in Flex magazine
a Mateo who was the manager of Gold's Denny, wasn't happy.
He put me aside, he wasn't happy.
I was like, hey, it's any publicity, it's good, isn't it?
That was quite funny, that she wouldn't let Dorian in.
It's so funny you bring up the chain-driven
Nautilus equipment.
I, when I first worked in gyms,
because I worked in, I started 24-of-fitness,
which used to be 24-art Nautilus.
So they had a partnership with Nautilus.
Oh, wow, okay.
And they would have the original,
and the chain-driven Nautilus. Oh, wow, okay. And they would have the original and the chain driven Nautilus machines,
I have yet to find any plate loaded,
selectorized equipment that's as good.
And I know why they got rid of it
because you got a chain on a gear.
I mean, one finger in there and you're losing your hand,
but I have yet to use equipment that has that same feel.
I have yet to find, and if I pull over machine, the best.
Yeah, if we, Adam and I talk, if we ever see that, that's where using that same feel. I have yet to find it. And if I pull over machine the best. Yeah.
If we, Adam and I talk, if we ever see that, that's we're using that for sure.
So I, it really made me upset that they went in the opposite direction,
making so, I don't know, comfortable or whatever.
Yeah.
The feel of those was just incredible.
I think a lot of the equipment now, they want people to feel empowered like,
Hey, guys, I'm doing a whole stack.
Yes.
So you're going to go back to that gym, you know, it's like if you've got the big mirrors,
you're going back to that gym. You know, it's like if you got the big mirrors, you're going back to that gym for that effect. But that change, those change of the stuff is still out
there. I was with Julian Smith just last week. And he's picked up the preacher curl that Dorian had
in temple as well. So it's out there. Oh, great stuff. Chris, you are, you are approaching 50 years old.
What has been your journey with hormones? Are you on
HRT right now? Have you got into that? At what point did you? No, I think I'm about to, though.
The reason being is that I had long COVID and believe it or not, that had, like I've always had
pretty good testosterone levels. I think ever since I've really focused on kind of biohacking my health, going to bed at 730,
increasing my fats because fats with the devil and managing my stress, going on silent
retreats, earth things, sunlight, whatever.
You know, I get a little bit woo-woo there, I make sure that I block all EMFs and whatnot.
My testosterone levels have always been pretty good.
And I've been very lucky with that. When I made these changes, my body felt better,
a lot of the inflammation that I felt in my joints, I thought was from weight training.
It was from my lifestyle. So it's good. But then I got the dreaded seawood last year.
And I definitely had the long COVID. And it's had a negative effect on my testosterone
that hasn't really bounced back.
Oh, interesting.
So I think for longevity purposes, because I'm here for the long run, I'm definitely going
to have to go on, definitely you have to go down that street now for sure.
And I've got no qualms with that.
I'm not going to step on stage again.
I don't have to worry about being tested, but for the purpose of my health, I think is the right move to go.
Well, so you never used anabolic, your whole...
No, no, no, no. Like, I've been...
It's funny, you know, when you're online, you're definitely exposed to it, people, you're
all steroids, Photoshop, or whatever. And I always tell, I put on like less than a pound
a year, you know, it takes time if I've been training for,
you know, 23 years now and I train intense.
For 17 years I didn't miss one meal if you believe that.
So like, you know, you came across fasting on the forums,
like I knew about fasting,
but I'd put that much pressure on myself
that I've never missed a meal.
I can't miss one now even if I wanted to.
You know, but when I went and I had to go for
a colonoscopy because I'm at that age,
I was like, I had to fast.
I thought, okay, I'm gonna give this a go
and I enjoyed the effects of it, you know.
But, you know, I don't know how I'm meandered off there.
But for sure, it's something that I'm gonna do
to optimize my health for the future,
along with a lot of other things.
Yeah, it's just been something I've always wanted to ask you, because I have seen people
because I know how the internet can be that will, oh, he's definitely a hero.
He's not true.
I had that for my very first bodybuilding show, very first bodybuilding show when I was in
the local paper, and I was like, I look like I'd come out of a concentration camp, really,
but people don't see it that way.
So you're an even better person to ask this question.
I'd love to ask people that have been training as long or longer than we have.
You know, do you, can you like recall the very like pivotal moments in your training
career that like like light ball, we talk about time like all the things we did wrong
early on and then like you changed that like volume, talk about that.
That was a big one for me.
Like I was the seven days a week hammering the body
like crazy, literally just reduced my volume
and I grew like 10 pounds at summer, it was crazy.
Like do you remember like those very pivotal moments
in your training career and what were the things
that really changed for you?
Yeah, the opposite is me increasing my volume
because I always came from like the Arthur Jones
Mike Mensa, Dorian type of heavy duty.
And you know, I'd go really heavy.
I remember myself and Danny Chow, who was the natural Mr. Olympia then, we were trained
together in Australia.
And we'd be working up to seven plates a side on squats.
Wow.
And it'd take us about 45 minutes to get up to that weight.
And my structure, I realised just wasn't built for that, especially
with the back issues that I had from motorcross. And I was getting niggly and issues, you
know, bicep tendonitis, my elbows, knees. And at one stage, you got so bad where I thought
I have to either stop training or really lighten the load. And because I need the therapy
mentally, I lighten the load. And I need the therapy mentally, I lighten the load
and I was like, you know what, I'm going to reach, fail at 50 repetitions.
So I do that.
I'm like, okay, that's comfortable.
And I do sets of 50.
And then the next week I'd go, okay, I'll start with 50, but then I'll go up to 40,
you know, increase the weight.
And then I'd go 30.
And then 20 and 10.
But I always start at 50.
So I'd 50, 40, 30, 20, 10.
And I found that my body just responded so much better
from that volume and that intense to ears,
going through a lot of calories,
and it was exhausting from a cardiovascular standpoint,
but I'd always done some form of cardiovascular exercise
every day, every day, because I love,
I'm one of those rare people that love cardiovascular exercise.
And I just found that my body really responded to that.
So that was the pivotal moment for me.
It isn't all about the ego, it isn't all about the weight.
Yes, I can combine both, but a lot of the time it came from volume.
And it's very convenient, you know, staying under hotel, and there's just a minimal amount
of equipment.
It's like, okay, I'll just stay on here for 20 sets, but I'll do 50 reps and 40 and 30.
And by the time I get down to 10, then maybe I'm not going to be as strong.
And I'd usually rest a lot longer between the lower repetitions to ensure my ATP was a replenishing
itself. But from what I understood about like, you know, that was more than my fibula hypertrophy,
but what I'd known a little bit more
about the glycolictic energy sources and psychoplasmic
that even though my brain and body is telling me to rest
when I've done like 50 repetitions
before I do another 50 or 40,
I'd keep that rest period very, very short, about 45 seconds
and I found that really worked.
Interesting. You know what's funny about hearing this is the trends in bodybuilding
or dictated where people would get stuck.
So like if you started bodybuilding in the 70s and 80s, it was high volume, lots of volume,
lots of angles.
And then you know, you hear Dorian come out and you and heavy duty. And everyone's like, oh my God, it's low volume, high intensity.
And it's just funny to see how it, you know,
I was the first of Chris, I was the opposite.
I was like super hypertrophy pump,
super sets, high reps.
And then I never, I never did a five by five type of style
training until way later in my career.
And just I always thought like, oh, I don't want to be a power lifter.
So why do I don't care about weight?
I didn't care about being strong.
It was all about the pump and chasing that.
And that flipped for me actually exploded my body because of the inverse.
You definitely learn from your mistakes.
And I think we have to look at our genetic structure to a cent degree as well.
Like my father's side of the family are just horrendously strong,
just naturally, bigger people.
We're on my mother's side, they're much smaller.
And I feel that I've got my mother's maybe bone structure,
but I've got my father's strength.
It didn't really mix well together.
Things started falling off pretty quick.
So you have to have of adhere to that,
you know, much like I adhere to our ancestors
to Cadeum Rhythm, I mean, bed early.
So I adhere to, you know, my genetic structure.
Good deal.
Well, this has been a lot of fun.
Thank you.
Very, very glad we had you on the show.
Appreciate it.
Yeah, now that we know you're just a little small plane
right away, do you have to come back over here
more often?
Hey, if it's root not too, once I get back from India,
I'll be here, buddy. For sure. Careful what you wish for. Thanks for coming back on.
Thank you, sir. I appreciate it, guys. Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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