Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Lou Schuler on the Art and Science of Creating Great Content

Episode Date: November 18, 2020

I write a lot. Between my books and blog, I’ve written (er, typed) tens of millions of words on various topics ranging from building big guns (biceps) to literal gun rights, from calories and macros... to history and religion, from habits and motivation to actually getting smarter, and many excursions everything in between. So it’s not surprising that many people who are interested in writing ask me how to get started, about the writing process, how to get better at it, and how to break into the content creation game. To help address this topic, I invited a veteran expert, Lou Schuler, onto the podcast. In case you’re not familiar with Lou, he’s the Editorial Director of the Personal Trainer Development Center (Jonathan Goodman’s online training coaching company) and an award-winning journalist who’s spent decades writing fitness articles for Men’s Fitness and Men’s Health, as well as his own books, including The New Rules of Lifting series and The Lean Muscle Diet (with Alan Aragon). He’s even delved into the world of fiction, so he’s more than just a health and fitness writing guru. In this podcast, we chat about all things writing, including . . . How writing is different from other content creation Why you probably shouldn't write unless you really enjoy it The important of knowing your audience The value of self-editing (and how to do it) Why writing is hard (and should be) Dealing with drafts and coming back to them with fresh eyes And more . . . So, if you want to learn some key lessons Lou has learned from decades of writing in the fitness space, give this episode a listen! 10:04 - How do you get into the writing business? 46:28 - What does your self editing process look like? 58:10 - Do you tend to sit on something you’ve written and come back to it at a later time? Mentioned on The Show: Lou Schuler's books, blogs, and articles: www.louschuler.com/ Shop Legion Supplements Here: legionathletics.com/shop/ --- Want free workout and meal plans? Download my science-based diet and training templates for men and women: legionathletics.com/text-sign-up/

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey there, and welcome to another episode of Moss for Life. I'm Mike Matthews, your host. Thank you for joining me today. Now, as you probably know, I write a lot. Between my books and my blog over at legionathletics.com, I've written millions of words on many different things, ranging from the stuff you know about, like getting bigger biceps and abs and figuring out calories and macros and so forth, to things you may not know about, like the Bill of Rights. I've written a book called the Know Your Bill of Rights book, and I publish it under a pen name, Sean Patrick, to keep it separate from my fitness stuff. I've also written a self-help book under the same pen name called Awakening Your Inner Genius and other things.
Starting point is 00:00:47 Before I got into fitness writing, which is really all I do now, my original plan was to write on a variety of topics and in a variety of genres. And then my fitness stuff kind of took off. And so I just went all in on fitness. But in the future, I probably will get back to my original plan. I certainly will write fiction at some point. That was my original interest in writing. Anyway, my point with all of that is many people know that I've written a lot and that my books have done well and that my articles have gotten tens of millions of page views over the years. And so they ask me for tips on writing, on how to get started with content production, including the writing process and how to get better at writing and how to get
Starting point is 00:01:33 noticed, how to rise above the noise. And that's harder now than ever before, probably, at least in the fitness space. I mean, that is certainly true since i have been participating in the fitness space i entered in 2012 and at that time there weren't as many people producing content at all let alone good content as there are now and it was much easier to rank in google for many different topics related to body composition and health. It is far more difficult now after the last three to five updates that Google made to their algorithms. And of course, social media is also more glutted now than ever before and so on and so forth. Now, none of that is to say though, that there are no more opportunities in fitness content creation and that the market is
Starting point is 00:02:26 100% saturated. And the only way to really get anywhere now is to get really lucky or be really connected or spend a bunch of money. I don't believe any of that is true. I think there are just as many opportunities now as there were back in 2012, but not the same ones. So for example, the exact things that I did, the tactics that I used to get to where I am now don't work nearly as well as they once did. However, the underlying principles that those tactics came out of are just as workable as they ever were. And they will always be workable because they are rooted in human psychology, in human nature, in persuasion, in things that just don't change. And in this podcast, my guest Lou Schuler and I talk about some of those principles,
Starting point is 00:03:19 first principles really, as they relate to writing in particular. And I chose Lou for this interview because he is a veteran expert of not just fitness, but also writing. He is the editorial director of the Personal Trainer Development Center, which is John Goodman's online training coaching company, as well as an award-winning journalist who has spent decades writing fitness articles for men's fitness and men's health, as well as books, including the New Rules of Lifting series, which has been very popular, as well as the Lean Muscle Diet, which he co-authored with Alan Aragon. And Lou has even written some fiction too. So he's more than just a health and fitness guru. And in this podcast, we chat about a lot of that,
Starting point is 00:04:06 fitness guru. And in this podcast, we chat about a lot of that, a lot of things related to writing in particular. So if you are currently doing writing of any kind, really doesn't have to be fitness writing, or if you are considering getting into writing, I think you will find this episode interesting and helpful. And if you are not a writer, and if you don't plan on doing any writing, maybe outside of emails and text messages, but you're curious how the literary sausage is made, what goes into creating written content that performs well, this episode is for you. Also, if you like what I am doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out my sports nutrition company, Legion, which, thanks to the support of many people like you, is the leading brand of all natural sports supplements in the world. And we're on top because every ingredient and dose in every product is backed by peer-reviewed scientific research.
Starting point is 00:05:00 Every formulation is 100% transparent. There are no proprietary blends, for example, and everything is naturally sweetened and flavored. So that means no artificial sweeteners, no artificial food dyes, which may not be as dangerous as some people would have you believe, but there is good evidence to suggest that having many servings of artificial sweeteners in particular every day for long periods of time may not be the best for your health. So while you don't need pills, powders, and potions to get into great shape, and frankly, most of them are virtually useless, there are natural ingredients
Starting point is 00:05:38 that can help you lose fat, build muscle, and get healthy faster, and you will find the best of them in Legion's products. To check out everything we have to offer, including protein powders and protein bars, pre-workout, post-workout supplements, fat burners, multivitamins, joint support, and more, head over to www.buylegion.com, B-U-Y Legion.com. And just to show how much I appreciate my podcast peeps, use the coupon code MFL at checkout and you will save 20% on your entire first order. So again, if you appreciate my work and if you want to see more of it, and if you also want all natural evidence-based supplements that work, please do consider supporting Legion so I can keep doing what I love, like producing more podcasts like this. Hey, Lou. Mike, how's it going? Can't complain. Can't complain. Staying busy with many things. Well, you have an amazing amount of things going. That's what we just talked about in our interview a couple of weeks ago. So I'm
Starting point is 00:06:42 astounded one person can, you know, that you can have an enterprise that broad and with so many moving parts and still find time to sit down and do all the writing yourself. Yeah. I mean, to be fair, it's not just me, right? So there's about 30 of us doing all different types of things. So I can't take all the credit for all the things that you see when you're on the outside, you know, looking in, But the stuff that I still do myself, yes, is the writing. So anything that goes up under my name anywhere, period, was written by me. I do have someone that helps with research. So if I'm going to write an article, like I have an article on the overhead press coming on the blog, right? Because I've done a series of articles just kind of chipping away at the big exercises, the more technical exercises. And so I have somebody who is very good at doing research and putting together and drafting stuff.
Starting point is 00:07:30 But I understand from a marketing perspective, and I have some friends, not so much in the fitness space, where they've set up a whole team of people to write under their name. And it's very efficient in terms of the marketing. So in one case, I'm thinking of it allows him to put up seven articles a week at his blog and then 20 guest posts a week all of the marketing. So in one case, I'm thinking of it allows him to put up seven articles a week at his blog and then 20 guest posts a week all over the place. And that's because he has a team of like seven writers writing as him. And in the case of fitness, and this is a good segue into what I want to talk to you about, is he's not in the fitness space. He's in a totally different space. And writing that type of material is a lot easier. It's a lot easier
Starting point is 00:08:05 just to go look at other similar things and put together actually a good informative piece on it and figure out some easy ways to make it a bit better. Maybe include some more examples or some better examples or some visuals or whatever. But fitness is a lot harder. If you're going to do it right, if you're going to give good evidence-based information, you can't just Google something and just grab the top 10 results and Frankenstein your own thing together and have it be good. You just can't. is their criterion for success. I mean, as you know far better than me, that used to be kind of the operating model for some content sites, that they were just constantly scraping what's trending, what's trending, what's trending, and trying to hit every single keyword
Starting point is 00:08:54 with garbage articles just based on what you just described, which is just stuff lightly rewritten from whatever the top article was for that search term. Yeah. And that is, I mean, it's still, it can be effective to some degree, but that's something that Google has openly denounced and they've made it clear that they are trying to suppress that type of information as much as possible and elevate more authentic, I guess you could say, content. And in the case of health and fitness in particular, they are now paying more attention to who is writing this, right? So I know
Starting point is 00:09:33 that they have, in your case, it'd be the same thing. Google knows that when Lou Schuler puts up an article, that's the Lou Schuler who wrote these books. And who knows how their algorithm weights that, but it does weight that. So it looks at you as a brand of sorts, right? And the same thing for me. And recently there was that medic update that just decimated. I mean, some people I know lost like 80 to 95% of their Google traffic in the health and fitness space from that Google medic update. But as I was saying, that's a good segue into what I want to talk to you about. I want to talk to you about writing in particular, because that's how you have built your personal brand. And for the most part,
Starting point is 00:10:13 I would say that's probably what most people know me best for up until now is writing books and articles and stuff. And you have been doing it for a lot longer than I have. And so I thought it'd be interesting to hear just based on your experience, what are some of the key lessons you've learned over your career, writing books and writing articles and any other content you've produced and where you see things as they are now and where they are going in the future. And to give some context to listeners, why I thought this would be a good discussion is I often get asked about writing and just creating content in the fitness space by people who want to do something similar to what I'm doing and who are just asking for tips. And I haven't written or spoken much about it. And I do
Starting point is 00:10:57 have like a standard copy paste response that I've put together that does share stuff. But I thought this could make for a good conversation because, sure, I have my ideas, but you've been doing it a lot longer than I have, and you've done it in a lot of different ways. So I thought it could be a valuable discussion, both of us just kind of sharing our views and what has worked and what has not worked. And for people who are wondering, how can I get into this? How can I do something similar to what you guys are doing? Sure. Well, there's so much to unpack just with what you've already said, like the, use the word effective when you were talking about, you know, this content farming. And
Starting point is 00:11:32 the first question that pops into my head is, you know, effective for what, what are you trying to accomplish? And if the people listening to this podcast are fitness, nutrition, health professionals, and their goal is to put out information with some sort of personal stamp on it. So in other words, they're putting it out there with the goal of promoting themselves as someone who has ideas, as someone who has knowledge, as someone who can help other people, then you absolutely don't want to be quantity is not your friend. Because I think when your name's on it, there has to be some level of quality control. You don't push publish until... The
Starting point is 00:12:12 analogy I like to use is putting your material out there before you've really worked it over, proofread it, maybe shown it to a friend until you know that it's exactly right. Putting it out there before then is like showing up for a job interview in your pajamas. You've got to think of your writing as the presentation of yourself. And how do you want to present yourself? Do you want to present yourself with a bunch of typographical errors, with poor grammar, with slang, with obscure references? Or even faulty reasoning or lack of congruence, or there isn't a good flow from one concept to the next. And there's a point where you're no longer following along. You're like, wait a minute, how did we get here? Did I miss
Starting point is 00:12:50 something? And a lot of people think that writing, people will say, well, write like you talk. And what it ends up being is like, write like you think. So you end up with this stream of thoughts. And I've been sitting in this little room that you're looking at now for the last 16 years, on average of probably 10 hours a day, at least five hours every weekend day. I rarely go a holiday even without sitting down at my desk and doing something work-related. So I've had a lot of time with my own thoughts in this room. And I can tell you that my thoughts, if I just put them out there unfiltered, would be completely discordant. There wouldn't be necessarily any logical flow from one thought to another. So writing is a way to not just capture your thoughts, but organize
Starting point is 00:13:32 your thoughts. And you definitely want those thoughts to be organized before you put them out there. Now, I think a lot of people don't understand how disorganized their thoughts are until somebody points it out to them. And this is certainly with some entry-level writers where you look at it and you go, I know you had an idea here, but I can't tell what it is, or maybe I know what your idea is. And I think you've just tripped over your own shoelaces on this idea because whatever you were getting at, you completely stopped the flow. You jumped the track. You did something to make me either lose track of what you were trying to say or lose any confidence that you have something to say that I need to know or that can inform me beyond what I already know.
Starting point is 00:14:12 So all these things now, what I've just said makes writing sound really intimidating and hard. And good writing is hard, but it's not intimidating because you know this, you taught yourself. You sat down and you started writing and you built a publishing company and eventually you segued into the fitness books. And with me, I did it in a more formal way, but it was also a different era when I was coming up. I don't know if we want to talk about my background at all, but just real quickly, I went to journalism school in the late 1970s. And back then, no internet. If you wanted to get published, especially at the entry level, you had to go work for a publication and get your work published there.
Starting point is 00:14:52 It wasn't just that there were gatekeepers that might keep you from getting an article published on a popular website. There were big old gates. There was a big moat. You first had to get around the moat. And nobody's even at the gate. And you're wondering, how do I even get anybody's attention? somewhere. So there was these clear rules, these big old gates, like you said, there were moats, in some publications, there were spikes in the moat, and really hungry crocodiles. And maybe a dragon perched on top of the citadel. Broken glass, everything. It's concertina wire. And now it's such a free-for-all. And I think it has a couple of different effects on people. One effect is that people think, okay, I can just publish anything and I can put it out there.
Starting point is 00:15:49 And I think that's a terrible idea because once it's out there, it's out there. It's a damn internet. If you eventually succeed and get attention and people are looking at you, they're also going to look at what you've done in the past and you don't want a bunch of crap out there. On the other hand, a lot of people get really intimidated and they say, well, everybody's already written about everything. So why should I do anything? And my answer to that is if you walked into the gym on day one and you looked at the weights and said, there's no point lifting these weights because every weight has been lifted and every muscle has been built and every great
Starting point is 00:16:20 body has already been achieved. So what can I possibly do? And the answer is- That sounds like philosophy right there. I know, but what do you want to do? Do you want to express, you know, do you want to have a better physique than you have now? Well, hit the damn weights. Don't worry about other people did. Do you want to express yourself in this form, in this media? And the answer to that is yes, then just express yourself. There's lots of ways to build up to the point where you have a body of work that you feel that, okay, now I can start getting this out there and trying to get some attention.
Starting point is 00:16:49 And that's an important point I think that is worth emphasizing. And this is something I often tell people as well is I generally avoid black and white thinking. So I wouldn't say that this is a reason to not write at all, but I would say a strong reason to consider not writing is if you don't like it. People ask me, and I'll ask, so how did you go about creating these books and establishing yourself as a content creator in the space? And one of the first things that I'll ask is, do you actually enjoy the process? I mean, it's not always enjoyable, but similar to working out, right? So maybe we won't enjoy every workout, but we always enjoy having worked out, right? So I feel like writing is similar.
Starting point is 00:17:30 Sometimes it's a bit of a grind. If you're doing it right, it should be a grind because it's like if you're doing fitness right, if you're following the advice in your books and somebody is trying to get down below 10% body fat or whatever the goal is, that's going to suck at some points. And the closer you get to your goal, the more it's going to suck at some points. And the closer you get to your goal, the more it's going to suck. And it's the same with writing. When you get to the point where you're putting your stuff out there and you're getting attention and you're doing it for real, if you're doing it for money or you're doing it for, this is going to be my statement,
Starting point is 00:17:57 this is going to be the thing that people know me for, there are parts of that process that are just going to suck. And it's supposed to work that way. It's supposed to be hard because the hard work you do at your end makes it easier. It should, in theory, make it easier for the reader to understand what you're trying to say. So you're doing the work so the reader doesn't have to do it. If the reader has to do the point that you brought up is if you had alluded to it earlier, if at any point the reader is starting to feel confused or they don't get what you're saying, they're likely to get upset at you. And rightfully so, if you have not done a good job communicating whatever it is you're trying to communicate because it makes them feel stupid and nobody likes to feel stupid. So that's a good way of putting it, though, that a lot of the hard work that you as the content creator or as the writer are doing is to make it as, I mean, ideally, right, you would hit a bit on, I mean, it could be purely educational and that's fine.
Starting point is 00:18:55 So you want clarity. And if it has a practical element to it, you want them to know exactly what they're supposed to do. You don't want them wondering if they, did they understand that correctly or not? Or, okay, they get these three steps. They don't quite understand these elements over here. Ideally though, probably there's, well, depending on what you're writing about, but you might want to work in a little bit of entertainment as well. Maybe you even want to appeal to the, you might want to even move them emotionally depending on what it is, right? But as you had said, I think that, and this is something many writers have said, but I think
Starting point is 00:19:31 it's true that the primary reason to get into it is because you feel compelled to do it. And it doesn't have to be an erotic way, but you have ideas and you really do want to communicate them and express them. And I think that that's good advice, even if it's something that is a bit more utilitarian like fitness. If you do not feel compelled to share any ideas, I just don't know if it's worth trying to force yourself to do it because as you've said, there are so many people out there creating content. There are a lot of people out there who do a good job.
Starting point is 00:20:03 There are many more who do not do a good job, but you are going to be up against some stiff competition if you want to create fitness content of any kind. And so I think the first prerequisite, like you said, is that you feel drawn to it. It's not always going to be fun. You're not always going to enjoy it, but you just want to keep doing it and you get some sort of deeper satisfaction from it. Well, absolutely. And yeah, it's like so many other things, like with fitness related stuff, when we advise people to do things, your books and mine both focus on strength training. And if you hate strength training, I guess there was probably a time where I would, you know, where I was more militant about it. And it's like, well, everybody should train with
Starting point is 00:20:41 weights. And then I would get, you know, went through my anti-cardio phase where it's like it's like, oh, don't do this, don't do that. At some point, I just realized it's ridiculous to try to convince people or shame people into doing stuff they don't want to do. Yeah, absolutely do something, but whatever it is, don't make yourself hate life while you're doing it. And it's the same with writing. If it just pains you to open that document. Was it Hemingway said, it's easy. You just sit down and bleed, I think. Sit down to typewriter and bleed. But if that's all it ever is, hemorrhaging, then I would say find something else. And for some people, it might be YouTube. Maybe they would rather get on camera and just talk where it's okay maybe to be a bit more stream of consciousness. Maybe they just like that more, or maybe it's a podcast, or maybe it's not educational stuff
Starting point is 00:21:29 at all. Maybe it is more about entertainment. Maybe that suits their personality more. You don't have to teach people how to do things to get a following in the fitness space. If you can make them laugh, or if you can just make them like your personality, that's a whole other angle as well. Or if you do want to write educational stuff, and we both certainly know a lot of people who fall into this category, there's nothing wrong with writing educational material.
Starting point is 00:21:54 And by definition, you are telling people some of this material is going to be difficult. Some of this, you're going to have to do some work to do this. But you still have to do all the work at your end to make it as clear as possible what you're trying to say to make sure, and this is one, I guess this is like the number one tool of propagandists and conspiracy theorists. If you're including research in your piece, it's up to you to make sure that research actually supports the point that you're making, or at least it says what you claim it says. If you're just throwing in a link with the assumption that nobody's going to read past
Starting point is 00:22:31 the abstract or maybe not even go that far, or it's just because the- Maybe not even open it. Or not even open it, or the title of the study seems to support your point, but the actual study doesn't. So again, that's the work you do at the front end. You've got to read the studies. You've got to understand what they say. And it's up to you if you want to be respected and you want to be known for your integrity, or if you want to have any integrity, then it's certainly up to you to do the work at the front end and make sure that this material aligns with what you say, that it says what you say it says, and that you construct an argument.
Starting point is 00:23:06 David, an honest effort. I mean, I understand that we've all made mistakes and sometimes there are even ambiguity, just vague things in studies where you're not exactly sure. And sometimes you need to reflect that even in your own position where this study might suggest something or it shows that it may be the case, but we're not sure about this element of it. But that alone is difficult. It can be difficult. I mean, I just released a book that I had co-authored with James Krieger, who's, if anybody doesn't know, a published scientist and good guy. He did a lot of the heavy lifting on this project. He definitely made it easier than it would have been if I would have done it on my own, where we just break down. It's really like a crash course in understanding scientific research viewed through the lens of fitness.
Starting point is 00:23:49 So we're focusing primarily on nutrition research and exercise research. And it's kind of like the little book I wish somebody would have given me back when I first got into the evidence-based space, because let's start with jargon alone, right? You just get hit with all kinds of technical terms. And if you're really going to make it through a paper and understand it, if you're not already scientifically literate, you're going to spend way more time on Wikipedia and in the dictionary just trying to understand the fundamentals of the scientific method and the anatomy of a study and especially get into stuff like statistical analysis and what does any of this mean? Sure. Right. The people who publish the studies aren't
Starting point is 00:24:29 always, I don't want to say they're not always honest, but there may be sometimes their own work can be a little sloppy. And we've certainly seen, especially it's accelerating now, so many studies retracted, even, you know, especially a lot of the people that I used to quote in magazine articles and in books, you know, have been really, a lot of their work has been when people went through it and applied really rigorous mathematical models that I do not pretend to understand to their work. They said, you know, this work is really, it's just, you know, this doesn't say what they say it says. They certainly, they look like they've manipulated the variables to get the p-values that they wanted. Now, again, I can't tell you, I understand what a variable is. I can't tell you what a p-value is. I just know that when people who study these things as both,
Starting point is 00:25:19 you know, their career and their passion, they get down into the weeds with this stuff where they say this isn't what the person says it is. And maybe the person was honest and didn't understand that they weren't doing this as well as they could have. Other times you look at it and you go, well, that looks like a manipulation. I haven't gotten into the weeds on this stuff in a while, just because I'm really busy and it kind of makes my head explode anyway, because to get my brain around the way they're thinking and understand their process, that's way beyond me. So I'm really busy and it kind of makes my head explode anyway, because to get my brain around the way they're thinking and understand their process, that's way beyond me. So I'm glad that there's guys out there like James Krieger, who's a great guy. I've been following his work for many years. I'm glad there's people out there like him who love to get into that stuff and do a great
Starting point is 00:25:57 job of explaining it to the audience of enthusiasts who are not necessarily trained the way that James and other scientists are trained. So those guys are, I think, so valuable to our industry because they're really like our translators from, here's what the science says, here's how we can use this, here's what we can glean from this that's actually applicable. And so we can apply it, and then we can translate it down another level to the people we train or the people who are more consumers of books like yours and mine, where it's like, they don't want to necessarily, they don't want to get under the hood. They just want to understand, okay, I pushed this button in the car drives, right? Yep. Got it. All right. So that's their level of perfectly fine. Which is the understandable, the black box,
Starting point is 00:26:43 right? Like, just tell me what to do. I want to put something in and I want something to come out and I don't need to know how it works because I'm, in many cases, just because I understand that we only have so much time, right? And many people are busy and the amount of time it would really take for them to understand how the inner workings operate, it actually just, it doesn't make sense. The opportunity cost to them is too high. They would rather just, it doesn't make sense. The opportunity cost to them is too high. They would rather just, okay, here's somebody who I trust and here's why I trust this person. And I don't need to know all the details. I'm going to do what this person says and look at that. I'm getting the results I want. That's enough for me. Yeah, absolutely. And so getting
Starting point is 00:27:20 back to the writing challenge now, if you want to share that kind of information, possibly the most important thing for you to consider is for whom are you writing this? Who's your audience? What do they know? What do they need to know? What language will they understand? You look at where their current comprehension is and you say, okay, so I need to show them how to do this exercise. For that, they don't need an anatomy lesson.
Starting point is 00:27:44 They don't need a lesson in how to read scientific research. They don't need a PubMed tutorial. They just need to know how to do this exercise. So what do they need to know to be able to do this? And then possibly, what can I put in here that's going to make this person feel smarter than they did before and make them better at what they want to do, pushing them away from what I'm trying to tell them. Because what I've got here is valuable. My goal and my challenge is to get it to this person
Starting point is 00:28:11 in a way that they can use this information and then come back to me for more information like this because they like what I did and they like how I did it. And I won't say that that's easy because it took me a long time working for men's fitness, men's health magazines like that to be able to master this myself. And I won't even claim that I've got it totally. I don't think anybody ever does. understand this person has never done this before. And I understand this is really hard, but fortunately I've done it so many times that I know what questions to ask this person. And then through my edits, they can look at it and go, oh, okay. All right. That's what I'm going to try to do. And if they're willing to take the lessons from that, then their own writing can improve rapidly because they've seen, okay, now I saw how we went from this thing that was the best I could do at that point to, okay, this is the thing
Starting point is 00:29:06 that was actually published. The steps in between here, let me figure those out and then I'll be able to do this on my own. And then at that point, now you've got real value or potential value as a content producer for bigger audiences, bigger venues. Now you can start building that personal brand that you talked about a few minutes ago if you want to do that. But there are lots of steps that come before that. And a lot of it is just these technical nuts and bolts. And then that comes back to, you've really got to want to do this. You've got to want to get to be good at it. It's like, again, to use a person walking you to the gym for the first time metaphor, if you walk into the gym and somebody's trying to teach you an Olympic lift and you don't even know how to grip a barbell, then you're going to be pretty confused and you're probably not going to enjoy it.
Starting point is 00:29:53 And if you even try it, you'll probably find some way to hurt yourself. So you've got to be really motivated. Don't underestimate what it is you're trying to accomplish. I think that you're absolutely right in that if you can get to a professional level, which means that you can get paid consistently for the work, that would be the barometer, right? It requires, like you're saying, nobody just starts out at that level. Nobody's good at this when they first start out. We both know Greg Knuckles, the powerlifter and horrific writer. And he told me once that the first time he picked up a barbell, God, I wish I could remember the exact story, but it was like, I think he said he could deadlift. I don't know if he gave me a number or a percentage of his body weight, but he was incredibly strong the first time he picked. He was already strong before he lifted a weight. You can look at him, you're like, yeah, he was probably a strong, he was like at 10 years old, he was already strong before he lifted a weight. You can look at him. You're like, yeah, he was probably a strong,
Starting point is 00:30:45 he was like at 10 years old, he was strong. And nobody is that good at writing their first time out. And that's okay. You don't have to criticize yourself. There's something that's liberating about that knowing that because it can be intimidating when you are new and bad and you know you're bad and you're looking up to people whose work is good, and you know that work is good, and the gap is so large, it's like an abyss that you just don't even want to look at. You know what I mean? And that's why these intermediate steps, these beginner steps and intermediate steps are so important, right? Stuff on social media
Starting point is 00:31:19 with the goal of helping the people you want to help. And you may not know who that is at first. I think most people start off on social media, they're talking to their friends, and then maybe they're talking to their peers. And then at some point, they're trying to address the audience. All of those steps are fine. It's fine if you're not... I mean, you certainly don't want to jump straight into... You don't want to put pressure on yourself to make your work professional right off the starting line. And I didn't do that in the beginning. Even like the first edition of Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, I've very much looked at it as a minimum viable product. It wasn't very long as far as books go. I think maybe it was 50 or 60,000 words, I think. And I did a couple of
Starting point is 00:31:57 drafts and I knew it could be better, but I got it to a point where I was like, all right, this is good enough to see if anybody will even care. And I think it's okay to take that approach. I think it's even smart to take that approach in business in many cases, not always, sometimes with certain things that you would have to do more work and you'd have to really put out something polished. But generally, I think that's a better way of going about it and not getting all wrapped up in perfectionism and comparing your work to the premier writer in whatever, whether it's fitness or anything else, and being like, well, why even publish this? Because it's so much worse than this guy's or this girl's work.
Starting point is 00:32:34 Well, that's what John Goodman, who founded the PTDC and the Personal Trainer Development Center where I work, I'm the editorial director there, also the Online Trainer Academy. That's one thing that he tells entry-level online trainers all the time. Your goal is good enough. Your goal is not perfect. Your goal is not great. Your goal is good enough. Get started.
Starting point is 00:32:54 Make mistakes. Figure out what works, what doesn't work. But don't not do something because you haven't figured out all the steps. Get started. Okay, good enough. Now let's make it better. And what John says, which I think is really kind of the key to this whole thing, is the consumers out there aren't looking for great.
Starting point is 00:33:13 They're not looking for the best. They're looking for, I don't want to feel cheated. I don't want to know. I don't want to think that I've gotten hoodwinked. I don't want to feel that I've gotten the worst. So they're looking for good enough. Your goal is good enough. And your good enough may not be the consumer's good enough. And that may take a long time to get to that point, but definitely don't, you know,
Starting point is 00:33:34 perfectionism is a, I mean, that's a good way to never get anything done. And with- Especially with anything creative, right? What's the little adage, art is never completed, only abandoned, I think it is. Right. Yeah. Well, I heard that in the context of a novel, that a novel is never actually completed if you just at some point give up on it. The first I saw it, it was just art in general, which I agree. Any sort of creative activity. I know this happens to me. I'll finish whatever number draft is on a book. Finally, like, okay,
Starting point is 00:34:01 I'm so sick of working on this project. I have to be done with it now. And then I'll revisit it six months later and I could do another draft. I find things where I'm like, why did I think that sentence reads right? Like that could be said better. This could be changed. It's inevitable. The greatest education I got in self-editing was when I went to Men's Health magazine, because when I had been at Men's Fitness for six years, and at this point, by the time I got to Men's Health, I was 41 years old. And I had been writing, I guess, professionally for almost 20 years at that point. But I'd spent six years at Arrival Magazine, which not really Arrival,
Starting point is 00:34:36 but somebody who was doing the same thing and actually had been doing it a little bit longer. So I'd been doing that for six years, won a couple of awards when my colleagues and I, when we were there, and they hired me to be their fitness guy because they thought I knew what I was doing. And my God, my work was just torn to shreds. My first year there was absolute hell. There were better ways to handle that. And I certainly, when I had a chance to train people, I did not do it the way they did it by just telling people their work sucks constantly and not telling them what they should be doing instead. But what I learned was not to turn in something until I'd looked at that line by line and weeded out anything that they would want to edit out or that the editor would say, that doesn't work, that doesn't work. So I got myself into the head of these editors who, in a couple of cases, were just really bad human beings, but moved my family 3,000 miles to work for this company
Starting point is 00:35:29 back when you had to physically be in an office to do a job like that. So there was no getting out. I had to figure this thing out and work with these people. And I learned self-editing at that point because I did not want any of my work to ever again be torn apart like that. So that lesson in self-editing, I think, is made, for example, by the time I was writing books, it made editors really happy to be working with me because I was applying that self-editing. So they're looking at this manuscript and it looks like it was already edited, so they don't have to do anything. Again, that's not something that anybody listening to this has to worry about mastering. But you should, as you do this more and as you build a body of
Starting point is 00:36:08 work, you should be able to look at it with the critical eye of somebody who's not you, of somebody who might be an editor, somebody who might be a more critical reader, somebody who doesn't like your work. Why don't they like it? Well, is there something I can change here that would like, for example, am I being just ridiculously inflammatory here? Do I need to be this strident in this opinion? Do I need to use all this jargon that turns people off and keeps them from being able to understand?
Starting point is 00:36:34 Do I have to make all these stupid ass jokes? They seem really funny to me and like three of my friends and other people keep telling me, you know, your work would be better without that. Too many fart and poop jokes, man. Right. Yeah. Or, you know, just too many pop culture references or whatever they do. I haven't liked pop culture references, but I've seen writers who way overdo it. And in a couple of
Starting point is 00:36:52 cases when they've, you know, when people make the mistake of asking my opinion on something, and I'll say to them, you know, that shit, people have been doing that for 10 years now with the gifts and the clips and all that. And these double references and these movie quotes, you know, you really don't need to do that because it's been done for so long and people are going to skim right past that shit. I think this is an Elmore Leonard writing rule. Don't write the parts that people skim over. Just leave those out of your work. If you know that people are skimming over that stuff, and at some point it's just masturbatory. Trying to be too clever, too cutesy. Yes, that. And there's also that throat clearing. It's like, I'm not sure what I want to say. So I'm just going to type, type, type, type, type, type, type, type. Oh, there's what I wanted to
Starting point is 00:37:33 say. Okay. Well now you, as your own editor, you go in there and you take out all that throat clearing and you start over again with, I know what I want to say. So boom, now you start however you want to start it. There's multiple ways to start a good article or post or whatever it is, but now you just take out all that damn throat clearing because it didn't get anybody to where you want them to go. And again, you want to do this work so that your readers don't have to do it. So they don't have to skim over all that crap to get to whatever you were trying to say. Yeah. Good point. Something I always keep in mind when I'm writing really anything, if it's any sort of essay type of writing,
Starting point is 00:38:09 where what is it that I'm trying to say? And then I work backward from there to figure out what do I have to explain? And really, I'm trying to explain just enough so they can go from where they are, which is not knowing what I would want them to know. If I just gave it to them, because you have to know other things often, especially in fitness, right? If they're actually going to truly understand what it is that I'm trying to explain and how to do it. And so I'm kind of working backward from there. And my assumption is I'm always, I'm thinking about writing to, I'd probably say maybe a 10, 11, or 12-year-old. Not because I am looking down upon my readers, but especially with this type of writing, I understand because
Starting point is 00:38:53 I once was that person. The majority of my readers, they don't care to be entertained by me. They don't want to learn new interesting words per se. They just want to know, how do I lose? They don't want to hear your childhood anecdotes. How do I lose this damn belly fat? Can you please just explain to me in simple terms? And you've spoken about this. So I feel like I'm doing people a service by making things as simple as possible and not being an artiste about it and just being very practical going, okay, so
Starting point is 00:39:26 this person wants to know how to lose belly fat. What does that mean? Well, they're going to have to understand energy balance first and foremost. I should probably also tell them about macronutrient balance because that's important. And it probably would be good for them to understand that quote unquote stubborn fat actually is a scientific explanation for this, why some fat stores in the body are harder to lose than others. And that goes back to something you said earlier. Do they need to know that? No, but it is kind of interesting and it does give them a bit more understanding of their body and how it's working. And so they feel a little bit smarter for it.
Starting point is 00:39:59 And they can tell their friends, you know, it comes up, it comes up at dinner. Well, there's actually a reason. Exactly. And so, but I'm thinking always through the lens of my reader and serving their needs, as opposed to what you were just saying, just trying to, it's the, am I just trying to revel in my own words and voice? And so I avoid that as much as possible. So I think that's a very good point. I guess the older and less patient I get, I guess almost nothing annoys me as much as just the self-indulgence. I'm such an impatient reader. It's gotten bad, actually. Yeah. Before I'm going to tell you what you came to me for, I'm going to talk about these other
Starting point is 00:40:39 three or four things just because they're on my mind or I think I'm funny. And I'm going to try to flex my vocabulary, but I'm actually going to misuse words. And I'm so impatient as a reader. It actually is kind of annoying at this point where unless someone is an outstanding writer, I get a little bit annoyed having to go into the dictionary to check like, are you sure?
Starting point is 00:41:00 Can you actually use that word like that? No, that's not quite right. Or like you're saying where it's like, this chapter could have been one third of the length and that extra two thirds, it wasn't interesting. It just provided nothing. You had 200 words of actual content to communicate here. And that turned into 2000 because, well, a chapter can't be 200 words. So here, let me just bang the keyboard for a bit and we'll call that a, and it's very formulaic, right? Especially in nonfiction where it's, oh, okay,
Starting point is 00:41:30 I'm going to share maybe a reference to history or to science and then maybe a personal anecdote or two. And then I'm going to give some useful information, rinse, repeat. Well, you know what though? I'm finding that exactly that process you just described, which is I've got this time, is applying now to some podcasts and also some documentaries. There was Netflix, I think it was HBO, did this one, like the greatest scam that you've never heard of. And it was about how some gangsters scammed like a McDonald's giveaway. And it's like, that's impossible. How could a McDonald's million-dollar giveaway be illegitimate? Well, they found a way to do it. And I watched the first two parts of that documentary, I think, or three parts. And I was like,
Starting point is 00:42:14 this was a two-hour documentary that they stretched eight or 10 hours or whatever it is because that's how much time they had. And there was absolutely no reason for this documentary to be that long. Tiger King on Netflix was another one. What's that rule, that quote unquote rule that the work will fill the time allotted to it? Yes. And in the modern world, it's the content, whatever space you give content, you'll find the content to fill that space, whether you need it or not.
Starting point is 00:42:38 And I'm finding this, again, like somebody will recommend a new podcast series. somebody will recommend a new podcast series. And I'm thinking, you know, I listened to the first hour and basically I learned about five minutes worth of really interesting stuff surrounded by 55 minutes worth of either foreshadowing or them trying to convince me that this was important enough to listen to. And it's like, you know, if it's important enough to listen to, at some point, the information content should speak for itself, right? That you shouldn't need to spend so much time convincing me. Or in a book, 50 pages. I don't need 50 pages of buildup. Or of marketing. And it's like, I already bought the damn book. Just give me what I bought. Don't spend two chapters marketing the book to me. I already have the book. You already have my money. Now,
Starting point is 00:43:25 give me what I want. We've both read fitness books, health books, where it's like, you know, those first two chapters were really... Yeah. I've probably been guilty of that to some degree. Although I do think in my most recent work, I have included this chapter in like I'm doing a book with Simon and Schuster and I've included a chapter that I like this concept of the promise where it's short and sweet, but it is a restatement of this is why you should read the book because I don't just want people to buy my book. I really do want them to read it and apply it and get results. And so it does require a little bit of marketing and a little bit of sizzle to get them excited enough to take the time and the effort, even though I am going to try to make it as painless as possible. But
Starting point is 00:44:09 you still have to sit down and you have to gather your wits and you have to focus on the book and you have to turn off the TV and put your phone away and you have to get through it. But I totally agree that there is, especially in nonfiction, I don't read very much fiction, but I've seen it a lot in practical nonfiction where the book really probably, you have like an 80,000, 70 to 80,000 word book that really probably could have been like a 3,000 word article if you just would have taken the key takeaways and just laid it out and gotten rid of all of the useless stories and all of the marketing and all of the hyping? You know, my brand's different from yours in that I'm kind of, I think people who like
Starting point is 00:44:50 my writing, at least this is what they tell me, I hope they're not lying, that they like the stories and they like the funny asides, you know, and they like the analogies as you've heard, like, I don't know how many of them on this one already, you know, drawing these analogies that are like, you know, okay, maybe that paragraph didn't have to be there, but it made it just a little bit easier and smoother to get to this more difficult information or challenging information. The way I used to structure my books was there would be a foreword where I would tell the backstory of the book. This is why I wrote this book. And then there's an introduction that kind of, this is what you're going to learn in this book. And then the book is the book. And then we start getting into it, getting the new rules book certainly started with new rules,
Starting point is 00:45:28 which is an opinion that's going to be backed up by something that's going to be supported by the material that I'm presenting. But with the forward and the introduction, if they want to skip it, they can skip it. That's fine. I wouldn't be offended by any of that. I hope that people like knowing what the background was, but they don't need to know it. If you're making that stuff optional, then again, if you're writing an article, there's no optional sections, right? So you've really, you can't waste anyone's time from the first line to the last. You need to pay off whatever your headline and keywords and whatever your SEO was, you need to pay that off because if they came to your site for that, you need to make sure that they get that. They may not like it. They may
Starting point is 00:46:05 bounce off in a few seconds, but you at least have to make sure they're not deceived, that you didn't bring them in under false pretenses. If you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out my sports nutrition company, Legion, which thanks to the support of many people like you is the leading brand of all natural sports supplements in the world. What does your self-editing process look like? Sure. Well, and one important thing, and I do bring this up whenever I talk about writing is when you're a professional writer and this is your job to sit your ass down in a chair for 10 hours a day, you have a different process than somebody who only has like an hour to write something and then they got to train
Starting point is 00:46:50 their clients or they've got to go do something else. So in my case, I will have, sometimes I'll let myself wander and I'll try out ideas. I save those documents and no reader will ever see those. When I come up with, I don't like to sit down and write anything until I'm pretty sure what I want to say, until I've done the basic research, done the interviews, whatever it is. And I'll probably stumble and try a few different ways to get into a topic, but I will definitely force myself to look at that. For example, if I write five paragraphs and I realize that there's no, that I've, you know, I can't jump over the river between that fifth paragraph and what I, and this big point that I
Starting point is 00:47:29 need to make here, then I'll just start over and I'll say, okay, I need five better paragraphs because I need to get here. And, you know, okay, maybe there can be a little ditch that I'm asking a reader to jump over. There's not this chasm where this idea can't connect to that. I'm not going to, I'm not going to keep that in just because I like it or it was interesting to me. I've got to make sure that each paragraph leads to the next paragraph in a logical way and gets me to where I want to go. So if I hit that on the first try, which I almost never do, but if I hit it on the first try, I'll tell you what, if I hit something on the first try, and again, this is after doing this,
Starting point is 00:48:04 I've been writing about fitness since 1992. If I hit something on the first try, I'll tell you what, if I hit something on the first try, and again, this is after doing this, I've been writing about fitness since 1992. If I hit something on the first try, that's my first thought was, wow, okay, cool. I nailed it. You know what my second thought is? Holy shit, I've written this before. And I will go and I'll Google my own work. I will go through my books. I'll go through anything where I think, I'll do search on my desktop, through all my files, through my emails. If it's too good the first try, I could guess at least 75% chance it's something I've written before and that's why it came to me so easily. Because if it's not hard, if it's not a struggle to find a new way to say something, I've got to assume I've already written that thing and I can't repeat myself. Yeah, I can totally relate to that. Most top of mind ideas, and I'm speaking for myself, whether it's
Starting point is 00:48:46 anything creative really. So it could be writing, it could be marketing for sure. Most top of mind ideas are okay at best and are often cliched and, or like you said, just are, it's already been discussed previously. And so I always assume as well that whatever it is that's coming out in the beginning, it's not going to stand. What's going to be there in the end is going to look very different and you have to be willing to go through that process. And yes, it's work. It requires mental effort, but there's the payoff, right? You get that gem of when you come to the other end of it and now you know you have something that's unique and it's expressed in a way that you like and it fits into the whole.
Starting point is 00:49:27 But I think that, and I'm speaking now, again, not just with writing I've seen, but marketing as well, particularly on the level of ideas, right? So how, we haven't even gotten to this specific copy yet, but what's the hook? Like, why should anybody care about this? What's the idea? And it takes a lot of ideation to get to something worth pursuing. Yeah. And again, circling way back to what we were talking about a while ago, you know, when
Starting point is 00:49:51 you're just starting off, you don't have to have all that. If you haven't written much yet, you don't have to worry about repeating yourself. And sometimes that's the really fun part is you're saying everything for the first time. It doesn't have to be something that nobody has written about. I mean, it's almost impossible that you're going to come up with something that nobody else has written about. So what matters is what you said, which is what is my personal spin on this based on my experience and my knowledge, my own research, my own conversations, and how do I make that interesting to somebody who's not in my head? And then now you've got the basis for writing something. And again, it doesn't have
Starting point is 00:50:23 to be great. It's just, this is your starting point is, okay, I feel like I've got something to say about this. So I'm going to say it and I'm going to put it out there and then I'm going to figure out how to do this better as I go along. But just make sure that that first thing you put out isn't embarrassing. It's not filled with inaccuracies or typos or bad grammar. Make sure that it's not plagiarizing somebody else which i my god i hear these stories now that seems to be a bigger and bigger problem
Starting point is 00:50:50 all the time is that people out there just are just it's like well okay nobody can write you know seven full articles and guest posts and like you said nobody can actually no one person can sit down and do that so they're they can't hire people yet So they're just taking other people's material and doing it. And again, to me, the idea of putting your name on something that you didn't do, I guess I understand that people like to take shortcuts or just don't give a damn and they're bad people or whatever they are. But I've never understood why you want to put your name on somebody else's stuff because it's like, now it's not your, you know, now it's not your brand. It's just, you're constantly in this race against the law until somebody figures out who you are and exposes you. Right. Yeah. On the point of plagiarizing, I don't pay too
Starting point is 00:51:34 much attention to other people creating content in the space. The articles I read are, I don't even read that many articles because I'm like, if I'm going to read, I'm going to read one of, or I don't even read that many articles because if I'm going to read, I'm going to read one of, like if a new issue of Greg Knuckles' and Eric Helms' and Zordo's' Mass is out, I'll read that, or maybe I'll read Krieger's Waitology or Alan Aragon's as well. So I like the research reviews now more than anything else. So I don't really see- Tom Venuto's another one. He never puts anything out there that's not worth your time to look at. Yeah, yeah. I haven't seen his work recently.
Starting point is 00:52:08 But what I have seen is on Instagram, I've seen it. I don't spend much time there, but I have seen instances, not of people plagiarizing me. I mean, maybe it's out there, but I haven't seen it. I've just seen it as a thing, I guess, where you're having people just copy and pasting other people's captions, right? So they see that somebody's post got a lot of engagement and the caption is well-written and then they'll just
Starting point is 00:52:30 copy and paste it themselves. And like you say, it seems like, oh, it's a hack, a marketing hack, but it's not. Eventually you will get found out and people are not going to respond well to that. You will destroy any credibility that you have created and it'll be very hard to get it back. So instead, what's the difference between plagiarizing and just to define that? It's where you're just taking one person's work and you're just presenting it as your own. So the difference between plagiarizing and researching is, okay, now if you're looking at a bunch of different people's work and then you're synthesizing information, you're adding your own ideas, you're presenting it differently. Well, yes, that's adding value. If we look at it in terms of
Starting point is 00:53:09 the overall body of work in the fitness space, for example, you're adding value. That's great. That's the difference, right? Between research, it's not that every single idea you put down has to be completely unique. Nobody else has said this or even necessarily said it in this way. That's how I've looked at it. That's how I've always approached it. But if you really like the way somebody said something, then you can either just share their work and just say, I love this article. I wanted to share it. I want people to see it. They'll appreciate it. There's value in that too. You've saved them some time. Maybe they didn't even know about that person's work and they would have never even found it. And you've also probably scored
Starting point is 00:53:43 some points with that person if it's somebody you admire. And the other thing is, if you're synthesizing multiple sources, like you said, which all of us do. That's research. That's just research and it's writing and that's what all writing is when we talk about nonfiction. If you really like the way somebody said something, just quote him saying that thing, put it in quotes, link to the original source, or if you can't link to it, if it's in a book, just say what it is. Make sure that people could backtrack. And A, you're giving the person credit. B, you're telling readers, if you like this, here's how to find the rest of it. And again, you've done everybody a favor. You've helped publicize somebody else's work. You've helped
Starting point is 00:54:21 promote somebody else's work. You've given your readers great information that you enjoyed and you got something out of, and you've done it with perfect integrity. There's nothing wrong with that. That's what I don't understand. When you can link to other people's work, when you can share other people's work, when you can quote from other people's work and do all these things ethically and fairly and as a service to everyone, to the person who created the content, to the people consuming the content, why wouldn't you just do that? It is so damn easy, unless your goal is to cheat and deceive people. And in which case, it's so hard for me to understand that mentality. I understand it's out there. That's why we have prisons. That's why we shame people. So again, I don't understand it. I understand it happens. Doing it your way also enhances the credibility of the person writing or communicating as well, because it at least implies that they did some research and that, oh, here's this other expert. And this person has taken time to study the expert's work for me and pulled out some key takeaways. Oh, that's great. That saved me some time.
Starting point is 00:55:25 Take Greg Knuckles, for example. His articles are often very long and very technical. And so for somebody who maybe doesn't have the time or they just don't have the, in Greg's case, would be really be like scientific literacy. For example, if they don't know how to speak the language of science, they're going to have a hard time with some of his work. So if you can go through it and pick out some useful information, maybe explain things also in a way that makes it more accessible to the layman, then you're also enhancing your own ethos, right? Your own credibility. And you're also associating yourself with this other person who, you know, let's say that person is better known. Now you've created a link, literal link online
Starting point is 00:56:05 between, there's a literal connection between you and that other person. That's a good point in the mind of the reader as well. And if it's somebody you know, or you've met, you've corresponded with, that person knows who you are. Now you can sort of in subtle or overt ways, say, I'm in the same club as this person who maybe other people who are in that club may have never heard of you. But now you kind of planted this idea out there that you're with this group. So again, it enhances you. It's a brand building exercise to associate yourself with people who are respected at higher than you on the pyramid of fame or credibility or whatever it is. a pyramid of fame or credibility or whatever it is. But now you've done something for yourself without cheating, without doing anything unethical. You've elevated your own status. Again, I don't understand why more people don't just do that if they like somebody else's work and want to share it or want to use it. Even if your goal is just, I really like what this guy
Starting point is 00:57:02 did. I don't have time to do what they did. I just want to use this thing. You can still quote and link. That's, again, you don't have to take the time to completely reinvent what they did and recraft it. Or like you said, curation, right? I mean, that's what, let's see, what are the, in my inbox, I get curated digests of sorts from Pocket, from Flipboard. And I actually, the reason why I remain subscribed to those
Starting point is 00:57:28 emails is sometimes I find some interesting stuff to read, but more often, I'm actually just looking for clever titles that I can dump into my swipe file just to give me more grist for the marketing mind. Well, of course. And that's different. If your headlines, titles, they're not copyrighted, they're not, maybe something's trademarked. 80% of good marketing is good swiping. You know, if you do it literally, don't give the person credit. And if it's like a super clever headline, but what's wrong with using the other person's headline and then just acknowledging, I love this headline so much, I didn't change it. It's so-and-so. Why not? Your readers aren't going to think less of you, that you didn't come up with this clever thing. You know,
Starting point is 00:58:03 you shared this clever thing and they got to see the clever thing. Again, attribution is so damn easy and it doesn't make you look worse. I totally agree. With editing, I'm sure you do. This is something, this is a tip for everybody listening. It's so easy, but it really does make a difference. So write, let's say a first draft and then put it away for, I find at least 24 hours and then go and read through it again. And it's a bit, maybe not dismaying. It's a bit obnoxious that as much as I've written, you've probably experienced the same thing in terms of volume of words. I'm sure you've written quite a bit more than I have. I've written a lot though. And so as much as I've written, I still am unable to produce a
Starting point is 00:58:46 first draft that I can just put away for 24 hours, come back to and still like for the most part. Well, maybe that's a bit extreme. Maybe I can like it for the most part, but every time, no matter whether it's, it could be a few paragraphs of copy or something much longer by just putting it away and coming back to it. I'm going to find things that obviously need to be improved, sometimes just fixed or things that are maybe okay, but can be done better. And then I'll do that, put it away for another, at least 24 hours with successive drafts. I like to leave it for a little bit longer, come back to it. So when I finished that second round, I'm pretty happy with it. I'm like, yeah, I think I did a good job, right?
Starting point is 00:59:28 Okay. Now round three, and it's the same thing again. I'm finding more things and you do eventually reach a point of diminishing returns with this. And then it does become- Well, yeah, you get to the point where you hate your own work, right? I think though you have to get close to that if you're going to produce very good work. I do think that, but do you do the same thing? Well, mine's a little bit more condensed, especially if I'm on a deadline, but I do like rather than 24 hours, I like to sleep on it. So if I'm, you know, the classic trick of you stop yourself in the middle of a sentence, you know, it's like, okay, say, you know, whatever it is where I hit the wall.
Starting point is 01:00:01 So, you know, exactly where it puts you right back into the mindset to carry on. So, you know, I'm a morning person. So usually by four in the afternoon, I'm cooked. I find myself, I'm just staring at the screen and I'm not getting anything done. I might be right in the middle of a sentence and I will close the file, reopen it first thing the next morning. And if I can't figure out how to finish that sentence, then I just cut the sentence and figure out something else there. If I sleep on it overnight, I can usually fix a problem. But then again, what I do, I have other chances to review something before I put it away. Now, back when I was writing books, I like to put away the first draft for a week. In some cases,
Starting point is 01:00:38 especially while working with the publishers I work with, it might be a month, maybe even longer between when I turn in a draft. And again, this is the best draft and best self-edited draft I can do. It might be a month before I start getting editor's notes on that. And that's usually enough time for me to look at it with fresh eyes. But again, nobody out there is going to wait a month and I wouldn't recommend it. You do have to press publish. If you're not publishing, you're actually not a writer. Yeah. Well, yeah, that's right. If you're putting anything out there, you're a writer. You're not a good writer, not a bad writer. You're just a writer who's publishing their own stuff. But if you never publish, then what? I guess you're talking to yourself? I've always said, I think with my fingers on a keyboard. So that's my way of getting thoughts out there. And again, I've got tons of thoughts that I will never share with anybody.
Starting point is 01:01:27 And that's totally fine. I just had something in my mind. I wanted to get it out. I might come back to it later and find a better way to say it. A key point though, is you record those thoughts. Yes. I don't lose anything. But that's a good tip for people who I think want to create content of any kind. I do the same thing. I do it on my phone. I use Google Keep, which allows me to just quickly dump notes into it. And then once a week, I go through my Google Keep and I'll pull those notes out and then I'll put them into Evernote. Google Keep, you can tag. Their system is a little bit too simplistic if you get too much stuff. So I'll
Starting point is 01:02:01 bring them into Evernote and I have a whole bunch of tags. So those would be thoughts and ideas of mine, things that come across in books, just anywhere, right? So I'm just building this repository of ideas. And like you, that's just the creator or sometimes even the clown hat where it's not the editor. There's no judgment on if the idea is good or bad. If I'm even expressing it well, I don't care. Just getting it down because like you said, nobody's going to see it anyway. And who knows, maybe it'll become the kernel of, maybe it's an article, maybe it turns into a book. You never know. Sure. And like you said, you're not judging yourself with that. If you're just interested in the idea and you want to explore it a little bit, I mean, that's like, you know, to me, that's what makes life worth living is that everything I do doesn't have to be work.
Starting point is 01:02:49 And circling way back to what you said at the beginning of this conversation, sometimes you just have to do something to remind yourself that you enjoy writing. You know, sometimes, you know, it was fun at the beginning and then it got to be a grind and sometimes it just needs to be fun again. And that's what, you know, that's why I self-published a novel a few years ago. I had been writing fiction for so long. And it's like, you know, I just have to put something out there that I like, that I think is worth sharing. And a few people read it.
Starting point is 01:03:15 A few people liked it. They weren't all relatives of mine. So that's a win. It's like I never felt for one minute that any of that time was wasted. I was glad. I put it out there. And OK, it never had blockbuster potential and probably undershot the lack of potential that it had. It probably did worse than even whatever minimum potential it had, but that's fine. I suck at marketing and that certainly proves it, but it reminded me of how
Starting point is 01:03:40 much fun writing is. It reminded me of how much fun it was to wake up, just to be going out mowing the grass and having the characters, you got the lawnmower, the big noise and all that, and the characters are in my head and I'm thinking, what should that person do in the next scene? And then the characters are telling me what they want to do. They're writing their own dialogue in my head. They're talking to each other in my head. And it sounds like schizophrenia, but when you're a writer, that's actually really healthy because that's the coolest part of the process is where it begins to feel like it's a story that needs to be told. And I think sometimes in nonfiction, it works that way too, where you just feel like this is important enough that I need to put this out there. If nobody likes it, okay, nobody likes it. If nobody agrees with me how important it is, but if it
Starting point is 01:04:23 feels really important, then put that stuff on on paper and look for those things because this is something i've also some advice i've shared with people who ask for it that if you are bored while you're writing something like that's your emotional response to this is just boredom you're just hitting the keyboard whatever getting it out then that is likely to produce boredom in the reader as well. That's my personal theory. Why should they be more excited about it? Exactly. A lot of that is because of the amount of nuance and subtlety of the English language, and so when you are just bored or worse, maybe you're angry or you're like in just apathy, just one more word.
Starting point is 01:05:10 Okay. Then it's going to come through in non-obvious ways. And a reader may not even be able to pinpoint that of like, you know what? This writing makes me really bored. That's what I don't like about it. Or maybe they don't know why that is. But on the other hand, if you are enthused about something, I think that naturally is going to be infused into your writing through your, even just the choice of your words and the tempo. And there's so much that goes into
Starting point is 01:05:36 composition that is, you're not going to be able to control all those variables by faking it. Absolutely. Like say you're the thought that just popped into my head was how many times have I written pushup articles and how could I possibly bring myself to write another pushup article? And the way I would like, if that ever came up or that were ever an issue, I would find something new to say about it. I would find something interesting to say about it. I would tell a story and try to get the reader interested in it that way. And even if the advice is just nuts and bolts and maybe just going through the motions and trying to make this as simple as possible and put your palms on the ground with your fingers open and your hands shoulder width apart and align your body this way, that's the
Starting point is 01:06:19 boilerplate stuff. But I would have to find something interesting about that topic, something that I didn't know, something that was totally like amazeballs to me. I would have to have that for me to get excited enough to write an interesting article about that. And that's time well spent. And I think that's- It's time well spent searching for that. I'm sure you've experienced this. Until you get it, it can feel very unproductive and you wonder. I mean, I've had that where like, am I going to find anything? Is there anything that just grabs me and says, oh, that's it. That's the angle or the hook,
Starting point is 01:06:49 or that's something I can get excited about. And sometimes it takes a bit of work to get there. And along the way, I feel like I'm not even working. Like, should I just be writing the fucking article? Am I just wasting my time? You know what I mean? Well, you know, but it's easier if you start with that, where it's like through whatever process you stumble on something you didn't know. And then it's like, wow, that reminds me of something else that I never put it into an article. And that reminds me of something else. Why don't I write an article? And you can start with this as fun new thing. And then you don't have to go searching for it because you know, it just, it came to you. And that's really all the
Starting point is 01:07:21 stuff that we're talking about a process and self-editing and the long march to actually getting good at this. The fun part is where you start with something you're really excited about. I didn't know that. Wow. How do I share this? Well, it depends on who your audience is and what platforms you have, but it's so much easier if you start with something that's like, wow, I didn't know that. That's wow. That is so cool. I can't wait to share that with people. And then at that point, then all the hard work of writing, you feel that it's worth it, especially when there's that spark at the very beginning, makes it so much easier to get to the point. I guess in some ways it's like running a 10K or a marathon or all these things that I don't do with my knees. It's like, okay, so maybe starting off right at the start, you're excited about that run. And then you get to halfway through that
Starting point is 01:08:08 marathon and you're just like, oh my God, why did I do this to myself? Well, it's because of how excited you were at the beginning and how excited you're going to be at the end. That's how you get through that middle part. If everything is the middle part, you'll never do anything. Yeah, it's very true. And that's the premise of a Seth Godin book. I believe it's called The Dip. Oh, right. I've probably got it on my shelf over here. I'm looking, trying to think of, I may not have that one, but I mean, Seth's books are, you know, they're all one sitting books anyway. So I don't know how many I actually have or how many I just feel like I read. And then also a lot of his ideas he's shared in his blog as well. So sometimes like, was that on his blog or in his book? Yeah, right. But yeah, no, I totally agree. Well, this has been a lot of fun, Lou. I appreciate you taking
Starting point is 01:08:47 the time. Hopefully people who are interested in writing and creating content have taken some good takeaways from this. I think that there's definitely some stuff in here that I wish I would have known when I started out. I think that's a good sign. And why don't we wrap up with where people can find you, your books, your work. Do you have any new projects that you want people to know about? Well, I interviewed you a couple of weeks ago, and that's going to be a feature at the PTDC. That's the ptdc.com where I'm editorial director. So that article, I hope, will be up on the site before this podcast drops. So people, if they like this podcast, then they can go read more about you in that feature.
Starting point is 01:09:24 So that's mainly what I do. I mean, that's a full-time gig working for John Goodman. And as far as my own writing goes... Any more fiction in the works? That resonates with me, by the way, because that was my original interest in writing was fiction. Yeah. I wrote a novel. I didn't know what I was doing. I just kind of jumped into it. What started as, I wonder if I would enjoy this, turned into, I finished it because I enjoyed it so much, even though I didn't know what I was doing.
Starting point is 01:09:52 And then after that, subsequently, I read a bunch of books on fiction writing and storytelling, and I realized that maybe the premise has some potential, but everything else just needs to be scrapped. I did not know what I was doing. And in my next life, I'll probably write fiction. Yeah, that's with me too. And the thing is, I gave it a fair shot. I spent five years out in LA waiting tables while I wrote screenplays and then segued into fiction I've written. Probably, I haven't counted them up in a while, but probably 10 screenplays. I'm going to guess seven or eight novels and then different versions of different stories with different same characters where I recreated the character and made it something else. So, and I've only published one of those things.
Starting point is 01:10:28 Why don't you publish the other ones? That would just be too much work. And some of it was actually, you know, I saved it on like floppy disks and I've never found, I guess the disks are just corrupted. They're too old or whatever. So I would actually have to take the manuscripts and hand type them or hire somebody to hand type them just to have my first draft back. Like I said, I don't lose anything. I've got file boxes full of my fiction and screenplays down in the basement. And I've thought about it, but it'd be one of those things where I would have to have enough money to live on for a couple of years. It takes a lot of time.
Starting point is 01:11:01 Right. And when you're writing fiction, that's definitely the time where when you finish a manuscript, you put it aside for at least a week, probably a month before you go back and look at it and say, okay, do I still like this? Does this work? I think it probably takes a month to really be able to look at it somewhat objectively. And I'll tell you when you know that there's been enough time passed, I was doing one of my many reorganizations. I found an old novel that I did not remember writing. I did not remember writing this novel. I mean, it's like once I saw it, I was like, oh yeah, okay, I wrote that. And I was sitting down, I was having dinner. Our kids were really young then, so we were all having dinner together. And I was picking it up and I was leafing through it. And I did not recognize anything about it until I got to like page 10. And it's like, okay, that one rings a bell. So that's like probably 10, 15 years between when I wrote that draft and abandoned that project and where I was sitting down.
Starting point is 01:11:57 And that's like, okay, now I could really look at it objectively. And my objective opinion was the writing's fine. The story was idiotic. So that's what I definitely won't be reviving. Yeah. That was similar to my take on mine. It was, the story is semi-idiotic. The writing is pretty bad.
Starting point is 01:12:14 So I should probably just leave that one alone. Well, at that point, I've been writing for a very long time already, even though it was back in my table waiting days. So I'd had a lot of time to work on that part of it. But it's like looking at it, it's like the writing is not the problem here. This story is just really dumb. Just to comment on that is I think that premise, the idea behind the story is one of the most important things. And that I've been rereading some classic books recently, dystopian things that I think are particularly relevant to what's going on. Like what? So I reread 1984, Animal Farm, Brave New World, Fahrenheit 451. And theoretically, I may reread Atlas Shrugged, but it's so long and tedious. I do like some of the ideas and I
Starting point is 01:12:59 appreciate certain aspects of it, but it's like a 1200 page trudge through quicksand because she was not a good writer. So I don't know if I'll do that one. She was a good writer. She was a good writer. Not a good fiction writer. No, she was a good writer when she started. She was a good playwright. I was actually in one of her plays when I was in high school. It was called The Night of January 13th or I forget what the exact date, but it was A Night of something. She was a good writer. And then when she became a philosopher- A bloviator. A bloviator, right, when she had this-
Starting point is 01:13:30 When you read 30 pages of Atlas Shrugged and you're like, literally nothing has happened, actually. No. Yeah, it's not for me. I don't- Although I do like some of her ideas in that book. I don't agree with her hyper-individualistic philosophy with much of it. But I do think that, and of course, the book has been an like some of her ideas in that book. I don't agree with her hyper individualistic philosophy with much of it, but I do think that, and of course the book has been an enduring success because the subtext and some of the critiques that she makes of virtually human nature are accurate. And we are seeing a lot of it, I think going on today, just in terms of the trend toward, I guess it's just parasitism,
Starting point is 01:14:07 just being a parasitic taker, somebody who does not give much to the world and is more interested in what they can take from it and what the implications of that are in terms of... You know, human nature is human nature. And we wouldn't call it human nature if people weren't different from each other and if we things that you know how to do to be able to help them do it, to be able to give people a hand up, not a handout, but give them a hand up. I'm going to help people do this. Whereas with somebody like Ayn Rand, where you look at that and you say, you know, she talks about objectivism, but really you can boil that down and say it's to be incredibly selfish and not feel responsible for anything other than your own pleasure and gratification. And that's human nature.
Starting point is 01:15:11 But that's way over here at one extreme that frankly repels me. So I would like to go over here, not to an extreme, but I like to go over here and say, this is the part of human nature I want to deal with, where sincere people try to help each other and share information and deal with each other in honest and productive ways and enjoy their lives while they do it. That's where I am, whether that's in the middle or it's off to one side or the other, I don't know, but that's the part of human nature that I like and that I like to participate in. So the other parts of it, I can't change. I can just not want to emulate them. Yeah, I totally agree. After reading that book, I didn't look too much into her philosophy. I read
Starting point is 01:15:53 a little bit about it just because I want to understand a little bit more, but I came to the same conclusion where the John Donne thing, right? No man is an island. It doesn't make sense to me to be a completely atomized individual out only for my own interests and to pretend like I'm not a part of larger groups that will not be able to function as well as they could if I operated like that. And certainly, I think this is a good morality test. Something I use with myself is, what if everybody behaved like this? What would things be like?
Starting point is 01:16:23 Oh, it would be really bad. There are so many examples of this, right? And we could see this even in terms of, I guess it would be like, might even be as far as kind of an anarchic kind of libertarian view, though, where- To me, that's hell on earth. This idea that everybody's out for themselves. Absolutely. Where let's say I bought all this land, right? Say I bought all this land, fair and square, and now I want to destroy it. I want to destroy the environment. I bought all this land, right? Say I bought all this land, fair and square, and now I want to destroy it. I want to destroy the environment. I bought thousands of acres. I'm going to cut down all the trees. I'm going to poison everything. But what do you mean? This was a fair and square transaction. I got it. Why should I care about the greater effects? I mean, so you get to some
Starting point is 01:16:57 pretty illogical, when you take these things to their logical conclusion, and then you just go, no, no, no, that's just wrong. So there's something wrong with the philosophy that got me here with the core idea. Whether we like it or not, our actions and decisions affect other people. They affect the economy in both micro and macro ways. They affect how other people behave. If we're modeling poor behavior, you can bet there's somebody out there who's going to emulate that poor behavior. And if we're modeling good behavior, some people are going to try to take advantage of us. So you certainly have to be selfish enough to where you can protect yourself and your family and your integrity from people with that. Don't be naive. You can't be
Starting point is 01:17:31 naive. On the other hand, model good behavior. The word altruistic, I think, would have made Ayn Rand vomit. But there's an altruism to believing that if you behave well and behave charitably, whatever that means to you, that you will in some way, large or small, make the world a better place for other people. And that that's a good thing to do. I'm all in on that. That doesn't mean I'm going to give up my house in the suburbs or starve my family or go out, live in the shed and give up material things. Absolutely not. I'm a little bit greedy. I'm a little bit selfish.
Starting point is 01:18:12 But at the same time, I'd like to think, I certainly understand through life experience and through study, that everything we do affects other people. So why would we want to affect other people in a negative way? What do we get out of that if we negatively affect other people? And I don't see anything good that comes from that. Yep. Yep. I mean, I agree. Of course, there's always money and that's usually why people are, that's probably the most common reason why people are willing to do things that they would not want done to them. But there are, I mean, this is again, my opinion. I think that Jordan Peterson put it in a good way where if you behave like that consistently enough, you are accumulating penalties that will visit upon you someday. And the worse your behavior is, when it does finally hit you, it might be really bad and it might turn your life completely. It might upend everything, but realize that you did that to yourself. You accumulated bit by bit. There is that disconnect between cause and effect. And so it may not even be obvious to you why all of a sudden your life
Starting point is 01:19:17 is falling apart. Or maybe it's one of those kind of home truths that you don't want to look at. You just something, these are the things you've been pushing into the memory hole, but the memory hole can fit no more. And so now it is just spewing back and it can be, again, I think in very non-obvious ways. And so on the flip side, I think that if you behave in the way that you're talking about, what we're talking about is helping other people and treating other people the way you want to be treated. I mean, this is like very old, simple ideas. What you were talking about was Jacob Marley's chain in A Christmas Carol. You forge it link by link by link in life. And if you're forging a chain through bad acts, through acts of greed and dishonesty and treating people poorly, well, eventually that chain's going
Starting point is 01:20:00 to be heavy enough to hold an anchor and eventually that anchor is going to hold you down. A lot of people escape this life without ever having to pay that penalty. And that's just, again, life can't possibly ever be perfect. Or they do, but it's insidious. Or it'd be like adding a little bit of maybe it's 15 grams of weight on your head every day. But you acclimate to, or take a simple fitness analogy, when you are cutting and you'd say you have quite a bit of fat to lose and you look at yourself in the mirror every day, it's easy to not see the changes until you look at your progress pictures and you go, oh shit, look, look at me here and look at me a
Starting point is 01:20:34 month ago. Whereas in the day-to-day, you're like, is anything even happening? And it's funny, anybody who has cut from, really has lost, let's just say a significant amount of fat, regardless of where they started. And I'm sure you've experienced a slew where it kind of seems to all come together in the end. If you're just looking at yourself in the day-to-day where eventually you get to a point where you wake up, you look in the mirror, you're like, oh, wow, I actually look pretty good. Well, but it's a different mirror. It's when you're walking by and you see your reflection in a pane of glass or in a car window and it's like, oh, wait, that's me. You get the right lighting.
Starting point is 01:21:01 Yeah, something happened. Yeah. Or the right lighting. Yeah. or you're staying in a hotel and it's a different mirror. Now, in my case, when I'm staying in a hotel with a different mirror, that's usually where I'm like, oh, my God. Because it's like no mirror in my house goes below the waist. Blame the lighting. Just blame the lighting. Right, and I'm looking at a full-length mirror and it's like, oh, something went wrong here. here but yeah so these things that are getting better or worse but it's happening so incrementally that and you know i've i've experienced this to some degree where i get to a point with something where i'm like okay i officially don't feel good about this we're talking about conscience here
Starting point is 01:21:36 right of what's right or wrong and look at how did i get here yeah it's usually by little progressive steps and i think so long as you're willing to stop, face something and do what it takes to fix it, it's okay. We all make mistakes, but- A major transgression is almost never the first transgression. Exactly. Exactly. Well, it's funny. We got off on a whole different talk that could make for maybe an interesting follow-up podcast. There is a connection in that I think conducting as you have some luck and some success and work your way up to the point where people know who you are and established a reputation, you definitely want that reputation to be for doing good work and treating people well and being generous to whatever extent you're able
Starting point is 01:22:19 or capable. And you definitely don't want the reputation to go the other direction where you're leaving behind a trail of people who feel cheated or information that is found to be erroneous or intentional errors. Whatever it is, you want your reputation to be over here with, this was somebody who helped other people, somebody who did good work. Whatever you're trying to build, you definitely want it to be built on positive impressions that people have of you and your work. It really is the foundation of everything that we're talking about. So that's, I think, a good connective tissue between our philosophical musings and then the more practical element of building a business or a brand in the fitness space.
Starting point is 01:23:01 Yeah. Well, it was what binds your work and your life. Yeah. I mean, we all have a past. We all have a present. Hopefully we'll all have a future. And these things, at some point there's not that clear separation between this is what I do for a living and this is what my life is at a certain point. What is that saying? How you do one thing is how you do everything is I think relevant. And just a final comment on that is I think people generally, especially, I mean, I see it definitely in the fitness space. They crave authenticity and that they've found someone who is genuine and this person doesn't have to be right all the time. I've been wrong about things. I've been open about that where people have asked me like, Hey, you mentioned
Starting point is 01:23:40 something about reverse dieting and you don't really recommend it anymore back here. You did recommend it. And actually, I addressed that on a podcast where I explained this was my position on this and this is why it was. And now this is my position and this is why it is now. This may change in the future. And that admission of being wrong or admission of making a mistake, it doesn't turn people off so long as they understand that here's why I thought this way at that point. And they go, oh, that makes sense. I understand. There wasn't much research on this. And there were a lot of smart people who were saying that this was probably a thing
Starting point is 01:24:12 and it's not harmful, blah, blah, blah. And now I think differently. People like to see that. They go, oh, that's cool that he's willing to admit one, that he was wrong. And two, that he is working to evolve and to update his positions on things. Well, if you're never wrong, you're not trying. You're not pushing yourself. Sometimes you push a little too far and maybe you go for information that makes sense to you, but will subsequently be found to not be what you thought it was. And sometimes you just change your mind. It's like, that made sense to me at the time and it doesn't anymore. I found better ways to do it
Starting point is 01:24:47 or I just don't think that works or the research wasn't what I thought it was or I misunderstood a concept, which in my case happened a lot because I don't have a scientific background. So if you never change your mind, then you've got a very small mind. And if you're never wrong,
Starting point is 01:25:01 it means you weren't working hard yet. Yeah, I totally agree. Well, again, why don't we finish wrapping up? Yeah. We've wrapped up for a half hour, so yeah. I know, I know, I know. Where we left off, where we got off, where I just veered us off the road is... Yeah, once you get into dystopian fiction, yeah, that's a hard hole to dig back out of.
Starting point is 01:25:22 But we can get back here. We can get back to, it was your books. So you had mentioned that you had fiction, but you hadn't mentioned yet your fitness books. Well, the New Rules of Lifting series, which I wrote with Alan Cosgrove, there are six books in the series. I would actually start with the most recent, which is Strong. It's written for women.
Starting point is 01:25:39 It's written as a follow-up to the New Rules of Lifting for Women, which was the most popular book in the series. But I think Alan would say that the program is something that is much closer to what he works with, does with his clients in his gym when his gym is open now. And I have yet to recommend that program to a guy who said, oh no, I didn't get anything out of that program. If you're a guy, that program will kick your ass. If you're a woman, that program will kick your ass. It's a good program. If you're looking just to read my work, I would go to my website, lueschuler.com. You'll find links to everything, all my books, most of my articles. And I'll link to everything in the
Starting point is 01:26:15 show notes as well. All right, Lou, thanks again for doing this. I really appreciate it. Okay. Thanks a lot, Mike. All right. Well, that's it for today's episode. I hope you found it interesting and helpful. And if you did, and you don't mind doing me a favor, could you please leave a quick review for the podcast on iTunes or wherever you are listening from? Because those reviews not only convince people that they should check out the show. They also increase the search visibility and help more people find their way to me and to the podcast and learn how to build their best body ever as well. And of course, if you want to be notified when the next episode goes live, then simply subscribe to the podcast and whatever app you're using to listen, And you will not miss out on any of the new stuff that I have coming.
Starting point is 01:27:08 And last, if you didn't like something about the show, then definitely shoot me an email at mike at muscleforlife.com and share your thoughts. Let me know how you think I could do this better. I read every email myself and I'm always looking for constructive feedback. All right. Thanks again for listening to this episode and I hope to hear from you soon.

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