The Sevan Podcast - Do Affiliates Actually DO CrossFit?, L1 Seminar Staff & Rhonda Patrick
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Goodness.
Here we go.
What's up, you guys?
How you doing?
Sorry, I had to push it back a little bit.
Always scrambling.
You know, you know how it goes.
Hope everybody's doing well out there.
Happy Tuesday.
What's up, Heidi?
Is it a Sousa show? It should say Sousa show.
You're not the only one that said that, that I should put the name,
like that it's a different show in the title.
I know a lot of you guys have caught on because of the way that I title the shows.
There's like three things.
But yeah, somebody left a comment like a couple weeks back,
and they were like, what'd they say?
Can you please label these so we know that they're Sousa shows so I don't download it off of Spotify?
It was like, I'm here for Sebon, not this loser.
I was like, geez, was the loser part necessary?
I get it if you're here just to watch Sebon, but man, you got to insult me on the way out the door.
Corey, what's up, my guy? Either way, thumbs up. Appreciate you're here just to watch seven, but, like, man, you got to insult me on the way out the door.
Corey, what's up, my guy?
Either way, thumbs up.
Appreciate you.
Omar, how you doing?
It's funny because I know it's a little emoji that, like, Will made of me, but on my end, it just says, like, Sousa, Sousa, Sousa.
It's like the script of it.
It's kind of funny.
Sousa day.
What's up, guys?
Did you guys see the Paige Powers interview from this morning?
Haven't got a chance to listen to it yet, but I'm excited to.
I like her a lot.
Riley, sorry to keep you waiting.
Oh, look at that photo.
Oh, my gosh.
That's funny.
That's funny.
Judy Reed.
Hi, Heidi.
Hi, Corey.
Omar and Riley and Judy.
Hi. Hi.
It was a great interview.
Was it, Judy?
It was good? No doubt it was good. Was it, Judy? It was good?
No doubt it was good.
Ernie, what's up, man?
Welcome back to the United States.
Hope your time in Switzerland was cool.
Falling along on your stories there.
Jonathan Ortega.
As soon as I was running on colored people time, it's okay.
Yeah.
Look at me.
Got a little sun, too.
It's not the lighting.
I got a little sunburn on my face.
Seth, what's up, dude?
Game on.
Yeah. Here we go. Eric, we're back. Yep, yep, yep, yep.
All right, everybody. So I had an interesting adventure over the weekend. I'm not going to share many details of it, but I'm going to give you guys the overall scope of what I thought it was, how it went. It's kind of vague right now. So we'll get into that in more detail.
Last week, I asked you guys if you wanted to end on a deep note
or talk about friends.
And you guys said deep, so we'd watch that trippy,
like you are a different person in everybody's mind around you kind of deal
and the way that they perceive you.
So today we're going to do the friend one, the opposite.
It's like that.
You guys remember back in the day when you got to choose choose which workout or version of dt they did at crossfit and then uh at the
crossfit games and then whatever one wasn't chosen was in fact the next year's um dt version it was
like double dt or heavy dt that's the same for you guys you didn't know it but by choosing last
week you also chose this week. So we'll do that.
We're going to talk a little bit about Rhonda Patrick.
I'm going to talk a little bit about Rhonda.
Do you guys know who Dr. Rhonda Patrick is?
I found MyFitness.
She's been on Joe Rogan like 10 times.
We're going to go over there and take a peek at her Instagram and see what she's got going on.
We're also going to talk a little bit about...
Damn, I should have had the live call-in on this because I wanted the, in the title, it says like, does your affiliate even do CrossFit or something like that?
Do affiliates actually do CrossFit?
There it is.
I wrote the title.
I should probably get it right.
But we're going to have a little, I want to have a little open discussion.
I was like thinking about this on the plane ride back home.
And I was like, holy shit, like we might be missing the envelope here in terms of the
methodology. We always talk about the methodology, following the CrossFit methodology, methodology.
But are we following the CrossFit methodology as affiliate owners and coaches? Are we?
We'll talk a little bit about that. And then we're going to check out the comment section
of a couple of
different things because I enjoy kind of reading other people's comments and going back. We'll
start with something happening over in Canada. Okay, but with no further ado, this is an older
clip from Muhammad Ali. And I thought it was cool. I thought it was cool. Matt Burns.
He's talking about affiliates doing CrossFit, following the methodology. Most do some don't.
Yeah. We're going to crack that nut. We're going to look at it. And, uh, I'm curious to get your
guys' opinions on, you know, like, do we follow CrossFit? Can we do it? Can we do it? Are we
doing it properly? Or are we, do we have the pyramid upside down um cory also being this week's and next week's sponsor of the kill taylor show which is quickly
one of my favorite things to watch um if you guys haven't watched that already i don't know what the
hell you're doing that show is hilarious and yes yes we're gonna cut them off once we realize they
have no chance of beating taylor we'll end it. Is my internet okay for you
guys? It's showing like one bar on this screen and full on this screen. I don't know if it's
choppy, freezing or what. Hopefully it doesn't get too screwed up when I show this clip.
It's so weird like how sometimes it gives me shitty internet and sometimes it doesn't.
I don't know. The Tom Brady roast was pretty funny, though. There's some really good ones in there. There's some really good ones. Okay, good on my end. Okay. All right. Cool.
Good. Glad it's not. That's not too bad. Okay, this is Muhammad Ali. Talk a little bit about
friends. Here we go.
Friend is one who will not even consider giving his life for you. That's a friend.
Everybody you name are with me for money and for what they can
get. I don't have no friends. I wrote a poem that says, friendship is a priceless gift that cannot
be bought in our soul, but its value is far greater than the mountain made of gold. For gold is cold
and lifeless. It can neither see nor hear, and in time of trouble, it is powerless to cheer. Gold,
it has no ears to listen, heart to understand it cannot not bring
you comfort or reach out a helping hand so when you ask god for a gift be thankful if he sins not
diamonds pearls are riches but the love of real true friends your friends are very rare a friend
is one who will not even consider giving i thought that was cool i watched it um you know it just
popped up in my algorithm and i was like listening to it. I watched it like a couple of times and I was like taking it in a little bit.
I was like, holy shit.
Like, man, is that, is that, is that true, huh?
And the thing, I think sometimes we think about friends are like being a friend.
And this is going to tie into what I did over the weekend and where I was.
But I think about like, like what is truly a friend, right?
Because sometimes people, how do I, how do I word this? If you, are you a friend, if you allow somebody
to not live up to their potential? And I don't mean like being like a jerk about it, right? But
you know, sometimes we get caught in our heads and, um, and like, oh, this sucks or this or this
or this or that. And, and, you know, you have other people who will just in our heads and like, oh, this sucks or this or this or this or that.
And you have other people who will just kind of call it like, yeah, you're right.
But you come in, you kind of complain about maybe your partner or something.
And they're like, yeah, screw them anyways.
You don't need them.
You're better than them.
Or maybe it's just a workout.
Maybe it's something as simple as like, hey, you skipped a couple of things, a couple of your workouts.
And like, it's fine.
Don't worry about it. And you're kind of like coddling them because we
all want to be nice. It's kind of like the analogy of like, your partner comes out and like
some address or whatever. Do I look good in this? And you're like, yeah, maybe they do.
Maybe they don't. But of course, you're just going to say, yeah. Right. There's like the
fine line between how are you going to be supportive? Like, how are you going to be
helpful? But at the same time, like, are you truly doing what's best for that
person? And sometimes what's best for that person is like an honest talk and a truth,
assuming you've built up the relationship and the trust with them. And sometimes that's hard.
Sometimes people don't realize that you're like being a friend or like helping them out in that
moment. Sometimes they think like you're the enemy or you're not, you're like being a friend or like helping them out in that moment. Sometimes they think like you're the enemy or you're not,
you're not understanding them or you're being too hard on them or something,
especially for us with this relationship as coaches,
for those of you guys that are like coaches out there, right?
Like people will show up and kind of be like, Oh,
like this movement hurts or I suck at this movement.
I'm just going to do this. And you know that, you know,
they need to be challenged a little bit.
So rather than just like backing off of it and just being like, yeah, cool.
Just do whatever you kind of like push them a little little bit and there's going to be some friction there.
And so I was just thinking, if you have a good friend, there's always a push and pull there.
They're supportive, but at the same time, they tell you the stuff that you don't want to hear,
but maybe you need to hear. But they find a nuance to it, to do it in a way that
makes you feel like, okay, you're not beating up on me. You're truly trying to give me a perspective
or tell me what's best for me, or even make me stay committed to a goal that I set, which is super, um,
important as a friend, at least to me, because sometimes we set these goals and we'll talk about
them with our friends, but then we don't hold ourselves accountable to them. And then as a
friend, like as a friend, like, do you hold that person accountable? Do you, do you not like,
and you know, do you find the nuance there? Right. Um, oh shit. Of course I don't have the link that I'm going to use to tie this into
like brought up. And I was with, um, I was with, uh, Tosh, Brian Kanosh. He's been on the show
twice. He rode across the Atlantic Ocean. Here we go.
Do you guys remember?
He's been on the show two times.
He was one of our first people that literally was on the show.
And then there's like this big outcry to like have him back on.
I think like two weeks later, we had him back on.
There's been very few of any other guests that that's been true with.
And he does something called a diesel day. And a diesel day is a
journey on finding yourself. We'll sum it up just like that. I'm going to give zero details to this.
I really want you guys to go and follow some of his stuff with the Crooked Butterfly and what he
has going on with the Hardway Project and the Diesel Day. But I experienced that over the weekend
with a handful of L1 seminar staff.
They went over to Tosh's place
where he conducts the Diesel Day
and they went through it.
And it is grueling, right?
And it was cool because I got to be around Tosh for the weekend,
and I got to watch him conduct this with this group and lead them through it,
along with two other amazing instructors, Brista and Todd.
And it was crazy to just be a witness to it,
to watch these 12 L1 seminar staff members go through this experience
that is the Diesel Day.
And I was there for a lot of their highs, there for a lot of their lows. I didn't stay up the
full time with them because it is a really big 24-hour plus block. I took a little bit of a
catnap in between when I was filming it. And I just have an immense amount of respect
for all the people that went through this weekend
and the instructors and Tosh and Nicole Carroll,
who was running a ton of support on the back.
All the instructors, including Nicole,
all stayed up with him the whole entire time
with the L1 staff members that are going through it.
And I bring up the friend thing because it was this interesting push and pull.
And a lot of the times, the instructors were crazy supportive.
They were watching these people like a hawk, monitoring their food intakes,
monitoring any blisters or small injuries that might be occurring.
Not even injuries, like little owies, little things that happen,
blisters in the hands, blisters in the feet. And, um, and at the same time,
they were pushing them and holding the people accountable to the goals that they set for
themselves. And it was, it was incredible to watch their journey and to be a witness to it.
Um, and it, it got me thinking of like, how could we be better as like coaches and friends,
right? Because a lot of the times, number one, do you even know your members goals that you're in front of each day? Like, have you spent some time really like asking them like, hey, like, why are you here? And here's the deal. Most of them are going to give you this like, I want to look better naked or like, oh, I want to be fit. But like, take a moment and try to like drill down on it a little bit. Assuming you have the relationship with that person. You know, I want to be fit.
Like, cool.
Like, why?
I want to be like healthy.
Why?
Like, just ask a few more times, right?
And maybe even do it to yourself.
Like, why do you show up to the gym every single day
and go through these like grueling workouts,
you know, that is CrossFit and suffer
and put yourself into these situations
where you know it's going to be hard,
you know it's going to be tough,
and you know it's going to challenge you.
And you know that there's a likelihood that you might fail.
You might fail the time cap.
You might fail some of the movements.
If you're trying some of your higher skill movements,
you might fail on the weight
and have to reduce the weight a little bit.
And then as coaches,
how could we do a good job of holding them accountable
and also being really supportive?
Because I think truly,
if you're going to be a friend to somebody, if you're going to be a coach, if you're going to
be an affiliate owner, you have to sometimes do the hard things and remind people of the goals
that they set out for themselves and believe in them that they could actually achieve these goals.
And that's what I got to be a witness to this weekend. And I'll just play this clip here.
This was from two weeks ago. I haven't even watched this clip
I don't even need to watch the clip because I know that if it's up here and
Tosh is giving one of his monologues
I know that there's gonna be something to take away from it and this might also give you a little bit of insight as to like
What they had going on over the weekend shit. You don't get hard. You're not gonna do hard shit
The magnitude of how hard somebody does something is irrelevant from individual to individual.
What's hard for me on my ruler is different.
I have a different ruler than you in your ruler.
It's where you're at on the ruler that makes the most difference.
It has the greatest value.
Just constantly push your zone. It doesn't have to
be all the time either. It doesn't have to be fanatical. I've realized, hey, I was due to do
something hard. I needed to earn something. I wanted to challenge myself and then I wanted to see if I could persevere against wanting to quit
or change the rules you know I just wanted to I wanted to get stronger you
don't get stronger by doing things that are easier you get stronger by doing
things that are harder and so doing things the hard way every so often is
good for you.
And what you guys are watching him do right there is he has a couple of these different, for lack of better words, challenges doing hard things.
And that right there is he'll often go out on his property
a little ways away.
They got massive property over in Colorado.
And by hand, he'll take an ax with him
and find a decently good-sized tree and chop it down
and then chop it into small pieces
and then by hand, carry it all the way home.
Or in that case, chop it and flip it and roll it home carry it all the way home or in that case chop it and
flip it and roll it home however you can get it each log and uh typically this will take somewhere
in the neighborhood of like 18 to like 24 hours and he'll work straight through just to just to
find that point like he talked about there just to do something hard just to challenge himself
and um i don't know man it's crazy i
definitely think like um you guys should check this out it would be nuts if a group of us went
and signed up for this like just as like the people from the seven podcast the seven east does
get like 12 of us and just fucking commit to this and just roll through and just dig in for 24 hours and
really challenge ourselves and see what we're capable of, see what the breaking point is,
see how you work through that. And one of the things too that lessons that he kept saying are
like a question he kept posing the whole time, Tosh, a question he kept posing the whole time
that really made me think about not only in the moment of what they were doing, but just thinking about it in terms of
life. And he kept saying, don't move the fucking goalposts. Don't move the goalposts. And what he
was talking about was everybody who was there was there for different reasons. They had their own
goals. They set their own reasons of why they were there, what they wanted to accomplish.
And as it got really hard, he literally kept just saying,
don't move the goalposts because we have so much...
How am I trying to word this?
Oftentimes, I will set goals for myself.
And then if I know I'm going to start to fall short, I'll move it.
I'll move the goalpost back a little bit.
Or I'll say, oh, fuck, we couldn't do it because of this excuse or this reason or that. And some of mine are tied to business stuff.
I should probably start tying it into more physical things. But let's say you set a goal
of like, hey, we're going to make $100 in revenue this month. And then a couple things happen,
life gets in the way. You maybe lose some of the enthusiasm to call people back or really push a couple of, you know, memberships in the gym. And you realize,
you know, you got two weeks left, and you're not even close to that 100 bucks. And you go,
well, that was ambitious. Maybe it should have just been closer to 50. And we didn't quite make
it right. Like, so you're moving goalposts. Because you weren't able to overcome whatever
obstacle it was, you won't, you weren't able to, to really commit to like what it was going to take, or maybe you just didn't even think about what it was going You weren't able to really commit to what it was
going to take, or maybe you just didn't even think about what it was going to take to actually
accomplish that goal. And so what happens when you reach that breaking point, when you know you're
not going to be able to essentially accomplish it? Are you going to make excuses? Are you going to
move the goalpost? Or are you just going to have acceptance and reassess why you set that goal in the first
place and maybe attack it from a different angle or take accountability of like, fuck, I could have
done 10 other things more that would have helped me move to that $100 more in revenue in a month.
But I just didn't do them. And taking a real honest assessment and look at
why did you not accomplish the goal that you had set
yourself out for? Um, and so I thought that was interesting. I just want to tie that in with kind
of that clip of like the friend at the beginning, because it was truly incredible to watch Tosh,
Todd and Brista and Nicole for that matter, um, um, work with, uh, work with the level one seminar
staff and, and remind them of why they were there and be a
friend and hold them accountable to their, to their goals. And when shit got hard and believe
me, it got hard for them. Um, they held them accountable. They didn't, they didn't really
let up in a way that, uh, made it comfortable for them and they didn't push them. They basically
asked them as to like, Hey, like, why, why are you here?
Why are you doing this?
Why is this important to you?
Remember that take a breath and keep moving.
And we'll transition a little bit into the L one seminar staff here.
Having spent the time with the 12 of them there, some of them I had, I had known
from, um, before, uh, met either at a seminar staff or just around through the community and some of them I had known from before. I either had a seminar staff or just
around through the community. And some
of them I had never met before.
And one thing that they all had in common
is they were truly, truly
incredible people that I just have an immense amount
of respect for.
I mean, I had a lot of respect for the L1 staff prior
to witnessing this, but especially after
watching them go through the Diesel day,
my respect especially for that group of 12 individuals there and the character that they
possess has gone up immensely. And I hope, truly, truly hope, I think there's like 240 L1 seminar
staff or like 230, whatever. The exact number is not important. But I hope that CrossFit really does make them superstars. I hope that
we find a way to get the L1 back into a place that is the most coveted training in terms of
learning how to be physically capable and learning how to train a methodology that you could do for life that will allow you to continue to grow not only physically, but mentally in as a human being. And I'm nervous about it
because that L1 doesn't sell the same way it does. And if I were to think about it in terms of money
in, money out, it's hard to justify it as in person because if I could run these courses
and essentially, too, I do believe CrossFit is looking at more as like a barrier to entry
to become an affiliate than just the thing in and of itself. And so what I mean by that is like,
they'll start making adjustments or being like, hey, this is courses for everybody. We're just
basically positioning the L1 now just for affiliate owners or just for
people that maybe want to coach inside of an affiliate. And I don't think that's the right
case. I think it should be positioned as anybody who truly wants to better their lives and to take
their own health into their control and learn a methodology that you can execute in your garage
with little to no money.
You don't need a fancy gym membership. You don't need fancy gym equipment.
You just need the knowledge of the methodology and you need consistency in your training.
And the L1 would definitely provide that starting point. And I don't want that to go away because
out of all the things that CrossFit has to offer,
and I mean, we talk about it a lot on this show, it's the transmission of not only the
methodology, but the type of human being that is willing to make the commitment to take
their own health and their responsibility and then learn the tools necessary so they
could potentially turn around and help somebody else with it.
And the people that work on the L1 seminar staff, they embody that to the fullest,
to the highest degree, just as being responsible humans. We don't even need to get into which
methodology is better or this or that. I mean, these people decided that they were going to
become coaches at the highest level and then turn around and teach other people and give them that starting
point to become a coach. And right now, I know that they've been contracted. So they're just
working on the weekends that they're hired. These people are not full-time employees.
I also know that they're no longer flown around to multiple geographic locations,
but they stay kind of huddled within their regions, which is not the best in my opinion,
because then people tend to get with their group and they're not working that much.
So if we're only getting the weekend thing every now and then, how am I going to support myself
as like a full-time level one staff member? Maybe you don't, right? Maybe you can't. So you have to
then go look for another job. And then if you're looking don't. Maybe you can't. So you have to then go look for
another job. And then if you're looking for another job, you can't really commit yourself
fully to being the L1 seminar staff member. And then if you're also staying within your own
cohort of people locally, so you could just do the ones locally and you're not really traveling
as much so they could save expenses, then what ends up happening is your group gets close.
And if your group gets close, we become friends. And just like the conversation that we had,
once it's friends, it's hard to give them honest feedback. So then we start to see the integrity
of the standard slipping. Because if I'm flying all around and my job is just to make sure that
we're all holding each other accountable, when I go over and see so-and-so who I haven't seen
in six months or a year and the other person that's coaching that, I'm like, hey, guys, fuck, we're not at standard here.
Like, here's some feedback.
Here's what we need to do.
Let's make this better.
Let's really up the energy in here.
Let's make sure we're doing it to the best of our abilities.
And when you get to that close group and they're already not working that much because they're just trying to get in on the weekends as they can, I think you start to see that slip. And once we start to see that feedback loop
within themselves and holding themselves accountable start to slip, then we know that
the whole entire seminar in and of itself, the quality is starting to potentially drop a little
bit. The quality is starting to potentially drop. And this isn't my idea.
This was a conversation that I had,
and I just thought it was a brilliant idea.
And this person was saying like,
hey, basically, instead of running them as like contractors that are just working on the weekends,
what if we took the best of the best
and made them full-time,
and then we had them drop into a certain amount of gyms, right?
Like as part of their job.
And I don't necessarily mean it like a quality control insurance,
like they're going to go report back to the mothership and be like,
you know, Jim X did this and sucked, and Jim Y did this.
But you cannot tell me, especially you coaches and affiliate owners
that listen to the show, and I know there's a bunch of you guys on that do, and thank you for that.
But if you're somebody who is working in a CrossFit gym, you know, as well as I do, and I am not immune to this at all.
This is basically me telling you how I would act, is you tighten everything up.
Even if you already run a great class, you have a great experience, like you check all the boxes,
you already run a great class you you have a great experience like you check all the boxes you know that if a red shirt comes into your gym to take your class you like your class like that
experience is going to like exponentially go up you're going to be like fuck yeah like i need to
hit i need to check all these boxes i need to do all of it right and that would be amazing to have
them do that on a regular basis.
And like, they don't even need to necessarily have some sort of like agenda.
And Ernie Garza, yeah, this whole, oh, like a secret shopper, but a CrossFit coach.
Yes, but no.
Yes, but no.
Because there's nobody that the L1 should be reporting back to.
They shouldn't have to.
So I worked at a restaurant.
I was a bartender at a restaurant
while and we used to get these secret shoppers. And then the secret shopper would have a list
of shit that you were supposed to do. And if you didn't do all of them, according to the book,
and according to whatever corporate said, like you would get in trouble, right? Like one of them was
like, you know, they're gonna order an appetizer and had to look this certain way you had to offer
the newest special or the menu on the or the newest special or the newest appetizer on the
menu, right? You had to, if they asked you where the bathroom was, you had to say, Oh, get up and let me show you.
And like, there's all these little things that they have you do, right? And if you don't do it,
then the cheaper shopper sends a report back to that restaurant afterwards with the name of the
server on it, everything else. And then you either get fucking, um, you know, chastised that you
didn't do all the stuff according to corporate, or you get, you know, praised because you checked all the boxes. The problem was that they were looking for the boxes that they're
being checked. They weren't looking for the overall experience and the person doing it.
And so I don't mean it in a sense of like a secret shopper where they're going to go report
back to something. I just mean it in a sense of accountability for all gyms, because we know as
coaches and as owners, when that red shirt walks in to take your class, I'm buttoning it up,
keep it tight. And even if you're not quite
feeling it that day, you're still going to level up. And then you're going to know,
not know exactly when, but you're going to know, oh, fuck, they're going to be coming around again.
I want to make sure I'm leveling up. I don't want to have that experience of feeling unprepared when the L1 trainer shows up and I, you know, didn't really have my lesson plan.
You know, I didn't really have my warmup dialed in. I didn't really know what my points of
performance for coaching that day was going to be. And now I'm trying to like, you know,
figure all that out because I just saw him walk in the door and you know, your heart rate's at 180.
You're like, Oh shit. Right. But at the same time, they want to report
it back. Basically, what it would be at that point would just be a conversation with the coach.
How's everything going over here? What are you experiencing? What are different things in your
coaching where you're reaching obstacles that you're feeling like you can't as a coach overcome
and just have a general conversation, not even anything really guided. And then the only way that they would report back to hq is just say hey i
dropped in at this dim at this time and uh and here's my receipt for the drop-in fee and then
crossfit would reimburse their that drop-in fee a little bit of money goes to the affiliate too
and then that way we could have l1 staff seminar that are seeing what's happening on the field like
on the battlefield
inside all their affiliates. And now some of them own affiliates, right? Um, so they're controlling
what's happening there, but then this would just give them a chance to just go out and see like,
Hey, like, what are we doing inside the L1? What could we talk about? Or what could we explain to
coaches that we're seeing, um, just in gyms in general, in our areas and around and what's good
and what can we improve upon. And then with CrossFit
too, you would have a little bit of this like quality insurance for really lack of like better
words here, because again, it's not a secret shopper. I don't want them reporting back and
getting in trouble and everybody's going to have a different flavor of how they coach the class and
a different way of doing things. And that is all great. And they should still have that. So we're
not looking for uniformity, not outside of the way that a coach should just conduct themselves.
Because there should be, regardless of what gym and really regardless of what methodology,
there should be this avatar that we come to expect from a coach. This person should be able to
be really thoughtful. They should know nuances. They should be able to adapt their coaching style
to the human being that's in front of them. Is this person like it a little bit more like drill
sergeant-esque or do I need to have a more delicate approach? Where are they in their
fitness journey? How could I challenge them? What kind of challenges are they going through?
Do you know all this about the people that are in front of you and that you're coaching?
So yeah, I got to spend that time with the L1 staff. I got to have this conversation with this individual that kind of like had mentioned something like this. And I was like, and I'm building off that idea. So it was just kind of like a seed that was planted. And I was like, holy crap, that is such a phenomenal idea. Right? Because now we can offer those L1 more of a full time, like put them on salary, man. Don't make them have to fucking work other
jobs and then dedicate their weekends to this. Like it can be done. And if we're positioning
the L1 as something that is for everybody, regardless of what methodology they prefer
training is, if you're an endurance person, if you're a power lifter or whatever, or if you're somebody's mom or husband, son, daughter, wife, whatever.
You know that you're going into the L1 because you're going to go ahead and get the blueprint to become a better person by taking ownership of your health and here's how to do it.
Simple, elegant, just focus on the fundamentals.
do it. Simple, elegant, just focus on the fundamentals. So yeah, I thought that would just be interesting to share with you guys. Hi, Trish. How are you doing? You know, a while back
on your old Instagram before you died and deleted it and then came back to life, you had posted that
picture of me like huddled in the corner doing the media dump at one of Greg's broken science talks in Arizona.
I think it was like last year.
Fuck, it's hard to tell.
Like time goes by like fast and then slow.
So maybe that was a year ago or so.
I thought that that was cool
that you like picked that up and posted that there.
Thank you.
Some of them don't even do CrossFit. That's the next discussion that
we're going to transition to now. Thank you very much, Trish, for the segue, if you will.
JK, Lance, they could do that on the affiliate meeting and regional gatherings instead of the
DEI meetings. Absolutely. Yes, I agree. Trish, you're throwing ackerman under the bus ha ha ha ha jason ackerman
was one of the people that were there this weekend dude was a stud dude was a stud
lots of respect for that after watching that ernie garza they should be coaching the standard
whether they're at an affiliate or not ideally agreed Agreed. Yeah. Even if you don't,
like if you are taking the L1 and then you're teaching that methodology, it should be held
to the standard. Whether your gym chooses to not to pay the licensing fee, like whatever,
that's a different discussion that we could get into. But I agree with you already. Like you
should be holding the standard of what was taught there and the expectations and the way that it's taught.
Nicholas, what's up?
Are you on a set of rings right there?
Dope.
Dope ring hold.
Dope ring hold.
I'd bring those feet together,
point them out front,
get that hollow position a little bit better.
There's your completely unsolicited coaching advice.
They should have been doing checks on affiliates a long time ago.
CrossFit has the problem ago crossfit has the problem
uh crossfit has the problem it has because accountability isn't there too many trainers
aren't good and have no integrity and we could define good and we should define integrity
like what's good what does that mean how do you differentiate a good trainer versus like
a bad trainer right um and I just posed that question
back because we all have different definitions of that. So that would be the first place to start.
Right. And I think the L one, especially the L two outlines good and what that means, uh,
in integrity, doing the right thing for the right reasons. Right. Um, but I agree. I, and again,
I, this wasn't meant to be like a secret shopper thing right like i really want to uh push that point home like nobody's snitching on you but like how you said
there um nicholas uh the problem has it is because accountability isn't there that i agree with yep
because it could be there by just having l1s drop into your gym right going back to what i was
saying before it's a it would it would help a lot, especially
too if you just didn't know if they were coming or not, but you knew they were coming at the same
time, right? Someone's going to take that in the comments and put it in the wrong way. Trish,
they should drop into an F45 and see how bad things can be if we lose the kernel. I completely,
completely, completely agree. I completely agree with you in that because that is what makes us us. It's like the professionalization of the coach, the methodology,
the virtuosity, the things that are being lost for lead generation and just pumping more people
into affiliates because we think that that's a value proposition. I'm speaking from HQ's point
of view because I think that that's a value proposition to my affiliates and my affiliates is going to be my number one thing for EBITDA,
top line revenue and profit so I could package that puppy up for sale.
Chris N., why is F45 bad? I know it's not CrossFit, but I don't know why.
That is a great question, Chris. And I'm about to answer that for you right here
when we talk about do affiliates actually do CrossFit? In just a moment, we get through some more of these comments. Thank you guys for commenting. I always love when there's like a little bit of interaction. I really appreciate your guys' back and forth with me on this and anything you guys have to offer.
guys have to offer. I'm not joking. I should check out AF45 just for the sport of it. If not,
I'm just speculating. That's a great point. That's a great point. I could definitely fall into that camp, right? Many affiliates, former affiliates, and non-affiliates are way off the
CrossFit kernel. The salt shaker has gone through the window. Interesting. The salt shaker has gone through the window.
What does that mean?
Ears, I'm never joking.
Go drop in.
See how dark it could get.
Trish.
Okay.
Boom.
Coaching standard while podcasting.
Thanks, Annie.
Let's see.
Any more of these?
Best intentions.
Chris N., I can't tell my friends that go there that
it's just bad we need something to stand on yes sir yep yep yep yep um matt are you taking off
later dude great show suze all the love thanks dude appreciate it yolanda what up maybe affiliate affiliated opt into the service and it gets added to your gym info
i'd choose a box that would regularly go under review by the red shirts over another would that
make that would make the decision easier okay yeah that's a good point i i think that if you're
just a crossfit affiliate you sign that licensing agreement like you are signing up knowing that
l1s i was about to come to the gym. They're about to check it out, take a class, see what's up.
David, I know a lot of people that own F45 gyms but are longtime members of CrossFit gyms.
Interesting because they probably think that there's money to be made with the F45 but don't
believe in the methodology. Kenneth, the lab, what are we upset about already?
I'm upset that you came in with no context and think that I'm just complaining and not offering
some serious fucking value here on this show. So why don't you go ahead and take that little
thing, rewind it back to the get-go, and then you can watch it on 1.5 speed, catch back up,
and apologize. Jonathan Ortega, F45 doesn't have actual coaching.
I know pool boy works at one, but there's not much coaching going on.
Yeah.
And I've had some conversations with, uh, with pool boy about that when he was at the,
um, when he was coaching for me at the gym and, uh, you're right.
Okay.
So let's get into this portion here, which, uh, who was it?
Chris, Chris N.
Here's the differentiator, brother.
Let's talk about it.
Not that.
I clicked video file.
We don't want the video file.
We want to share.
We want to share.
Here's the difference, my friend.
This is the difference.
What is fitness and who is fit?
I'm not going to read this through, but if you guys have not read this, and by read this, I mean not like before, but within, we're going to go like you guys should read this,
like please read this if you haven't already. Please, please, please. But let me scroll down to
the pyramid portion because this is what I want to talk about here. And this is breaking down
each one of them. Weightlifting, throwing nutrition, sport.
Okay, here we go.
A theoretical hierarchy of development.
Okay, so now, oh, Eric's going to hook me up here.
Eric Brandt, salt shaker is referenced to Tom Cruise,
Jack Reacher movie where he used the salt shaker
to break through a car window.
I'm more confused now. but cool. Thank you.
Oh, Seth, old CrossFit Journal. Let's go. Yep. You know it. You know it. You know it.
Ashen. Sorry if I mispronounced that. Fernando. I know affiliate to charge extra for members
holding so-called toes to bar clinics, bar muscle-up clinics, etc. You think it's fair
when those movements need to be taught in a regular class? Fair? What's fair? What's fair?
That's already kind of a misnomer in the way that you kind of phrase it there. What's fair?
Fair is that I deserve a million dollars because I work really hard. That's fair to me. Might not be fair to other people.
So let me, I could just tell you what we do at the gym. We put on the clinics. We have it in a
little bit. We've been slacking in that regard, but normally we'll put on like some sort of skill
clinic, like double under, rope climb, toe to bar, kipping, whatever. And no, we don't charge
extra for them. They're free to our members. And in most cases, they're free to anybody who wants to just come in and drop in.
They're usually like an hour long. Sometimes we'll do more or less like a really intensive
workshop where we'll close the gym down for a Saturday with normal class. And we'll just be
working like rope climb for two hours where we'll start with some lecture. We'll go over like
breaking down each step. We'll do breakout groups. We would go with a coach and like,
you know, practice whatever it is that we talked about
and like different stages of it and kind of build yourself up to the rope climb.
We haven't done one of those in at least a year, maybe like a year and a half now.
And it's cool because every time we do one of those, you know, you get three or four
people with their first rope climb.
So for, I don't know whatever gym is, what gyms are in position to do or not to do.
But I can tell you this.
If you're the gym owner and you could do it, great.
Do it and do it for free, right?
But if you're the gym owner and then you're expecting your coaches to do it for free,
are you compensating them for that class?
How does that work, right?
So that's why I was saying who's deciding what's fair and what's not in that situation.
But yeah, so we don't charge for the clinics, uh, as we call them or the workshops, if we're
just doing an hour long one.
Um, and typically what we'll do is after we go through, like, again, the clinic is like
the longer version where it's, you know, an hour and a half or two hours of lecture and
practical back and forth.
The workshop is a little bit more condensed version.
We'll show some basics and then afterwards we'll kind of go over with everybody based off of like where their skill
level is and maybe give a little homework like, Hey, during open gym or after you finish out the
class, like come over here and, you know, work on these skills now that you know them and stuff
like that. So I think that that's just adding value generally to your member base. And I always
think that that's good. And then in terms of monetizing it,
because it's still a business and you still need cash flow. This is the other thing.
Sidetrack. We're about to go on a rant. Gyms got to fucking make money, guys.
Coaches have to make money. And sometimes you got to charge for that shit.
Okay? Because everybody wants something for free. And then your fucking gym closes. And by the way, your coaches and affiliate owners are rubbing two fucking pennies together to make anything anyways. Like, let's just be real fucking honest about the conversation.
You pay your $150 for your one meal and your two fucking cocktails, and then you shit out your $150 later and wake up with a headache.
You pay that for the whole entire month, and you fucking get fitness for life.
Something that makes you a better human.
We got to make money.
Businesses need fucking cash flow, you guys, to work.
Businesses need cash flow.
Coaches need to be paid. So with that being said,
I think that you could always charge like a personal training session and be like,
hey, do you want to learn the skill faster? If we work on a one-on-one basis,
here's what I charge for like an hour. We could go over, we'll do this assessment, you know, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Right?
And that,
it just,
fuck you guys.
How much do you pay for healthcare?
How much does your fucking Netflix subscription?
Nobody's fucking complaining about that.
But yet you got two,
three coaches that are passionate as fuck trying to make you better
and give you a better life.
And yet,
I'll be damned if they charge.
Oh, my goodness, y'all.
Sorry, National, that was misdirected.
You were collateral damage at that.
That wasn't anything to do with you or your question.
So please don't take that personally.
Please don't take that personally.
But yeah, so that's where that's at.
Okay, back to, regular discussion here.
Do affiliates actually do CrossFit?
So let's look at, um, Brandon, don't tell me to drop my next list.
Uh, how dare you?
Well, watch the roast of Tom Brady, then cancel that shit.
All right.
Oh, Franco healthcare, nothing.
Obamacare, bro.
Yeah, no shit, right?
Damn.
Is it Monji?
Monji?
Is that right?
David Monji?
I love this honest truth from Susan Putzing in perspective.
Thanks.
Yeah, sorry.
I get riled up sometimes.
A little bit of coffee and shit I get going.
So this theoretical hierarchy of development, right?
This is what we're calling like this article and this pyramid and the hundred words of fitness and
all that. Like this is what we call CrossFit, right? This is our differentiator. Observable,
measurable, repeatable, functional movements that apply to our lives outside of the gym,
functional movements that develop a core to outside of the gym, functional movements that
develop a core to extremity that produce more power, right? This is what makes CrossFit different
than the F45s and the Orange Theory. The other thing too, by the way, well, side note here,
CrossFit is one of the only things that own the barbell in terms of group fitness,
generally speaking. You might have like the weightlifting or powerlifting gym in your town, maybe.
But typically, CrossFitters are the ones who own the barbell in a group fitness setting.
Okay?
So use that as your differentiator to throw in your Google Top search.
And if we look at this pyramid here, and then we think about the way that we do CrossFit inside of our gyms, how many of you guys as coaches or as fellow donors have a nutrition discussion or component or offering or materials on nutrition. If it's the base of it, of our pyramid here, shouldn't that be a really good,
I mean, a really important starting place? I read Rambler's comment, pyramids are good,
and lost my train of thought when I said good. But shouldn't that be a starting place
as people come into your gym? Even if it's just a quick like, hey, here's a couple
of PDFs with some no-process carbohydrate dinners that are high in protein. You don't even need to
get crazy specific, right? Or, hey, we should start cutting out added sugar. You should start
eating real foods. Just some sort of general like discussion around nutrition.
And then the other thing too is, is like, if we're going to do that as a community and like,
we say that this is our differentiator, pointed it this way. This is our differentiator. I'm
monitors on the other side though. This is our differentiator between the orange theories,
the F45s, like every other fitness thing out there, then why aren't we really digging in and using this pyramid and using
the what is fitness articles and like staying as true to that as we can. And for my gym,
and we have a lot of room to improve. So please don't like, I'm not trying to fucking impress you
or any of that. Like I got a lot of fucking room to improve. Believe me. But we offer
a eight-week nutrition reset. My wife does. She's a registered dietitian. And that not only does it
start the year out with everybody getting eating right and thinking about it, but it also bonds
our community together. Because the way she has the program, everybody's in teams and you have these accountability
partners and you're doing these little extra side workouts and meetups and stuff.
And it's done wonders for our gym.
And my favorite part about it, as I was like thinking about it, is like, it's, we're, we're,
we're bringing a lot of people into the gym based off that nutrition portion of it.
Like they're, they're getting, if they start in that January time, any, and even if they're not
in the challenge, like from January until like that mid March, like the whole gym is so focused
on nutrition. We have these like accountability posters in our front room, like usually 50%
ish of the gym is, is doing it. Meaning going through the challenge. Um, a lot of people get
brought into the gym this way because they did the challenge last year. Now they're bringing
their mom or their dad in and they're going to introduce them to CrossFit.
And we kind of tailor the program a little bit more to some more foundational movements
before we get too fancy in those first couple of weeks to make sure all our new people are
coming in and getting assimilated in the right way. And I was thinking about it from a CrossFit
standpoint. And I ranted a little bit about this not that long ago, but from a CrossFit standpoint,
like what is our main thing that we all do together
or that the mothership pushes is the open.
And that's cool, but that's focused on sport,
which would be actually starting at the top of the pyramid,
the sport of CrossFit, not just CrossFit in and of itself.
Because we're together as a group, or me,
is claiming that this What Is Fitness article is the CrossFit.
This is the thing.
And so if this is the thing,
then the Open kind of seems like we're starting at the top of the pyramid
and completely missing the bottom of the pyramid.
And so I was just thinking about that on the flight home.
And I was like, man, how could my affiliate, how could CrossFit live more? How could we do
more of the nutrition portion of it? How could we introduce that from the start? And we do have
how to read nutrition labels that get sent out. Sometimes we'll have this discussion about it at the whiteboard and stuff. And we
definitely do with all the new people that are coming in. We're like, hey, you got to feel your
body properly. You got to really get your protein in. You got to cut out the added sugar and process
carbohydrate from your diet and stuff. But I do know that we can make that conversation more top
of mind and we can have that more often. But I think as an affiliate owner, as a coach,
it's your responsibility.
CrossFit HQ is going to throw out the open and bring in some nutrition thing.
I think who knows if you could even manage that or what that would look like.
But I think as coaches and as affiliate owners, it's our responsibility to really try to stay true to this methodology.
And I was talking about it in terms of the L1 Staff Seminar at the beginning of the show.
And I was just
thinking too, it's also our responsibility. And if we look at this pyramid, how closely are we
holding to this? Now, the next rung, as you guys know, is that metabolic conditioning,
being able to have some sort of aerobic base and stuff like that. Now, remember the metabolic
conditioning piece, the tried and true right there in the programming to elicit that response is going
to be your couplets, two movements, or your triplets, three movements. And those movements
are going to have that, that will produce the most power that will produce the most devastating
effect is like, think about a thruster, right? Like a couple of light thrusters and a
couple of fucking burpees over the bar, just a nasty couple right there. And boom, you got some
metabolic conditioning. And as we have moved more towards like leaning into like this sport forward,
like sport forward facing, like, you know, the tip of the spear athlete, we start to get into like
the gimmicky type shit a little bit. Like next thing you know, I got people coming in like,
I'm gonna learn my pullovers today. Like, okay, cool.
We sure we want to learn new gymnastics, but like, dude,
you haven't even done like, you know,
your thrusters and burpees that under the time cap,
like let's work that metabolic conditioning before we start worrying about
like back uprises and fricking pullovers.
The other thing too, is as we follow up that line,
it is gymnastics is the next piece.
And the reason why is because it's about controlling your range of motion in
your body through space.
And a lot of times we,
we forget that the essence of gymnastics,
and I can't remember if this was like publicly stated or where it was,
but I remember Greg saying like introducing the kip into that pull up is the
one thing that he would have,
he would have changed.
Because sometimes we rush to those high skills because we're so forward-facing with the sport.
I mean, it's cool, sexy. Who doesn't love to see some just ripped freaking athlete just hop up
there and just crank out a bunch of chest-to-bar butterfly pull-ups or something like that.
Then what ends up happening is people think, oh, to be good, I have to do that. And then they try to rush their gymnastics skills.
And all of a sudden, they can't control in a perfect hollow position and do one strict pull-up.
And they're asking me to teach them a butterfly pull-up. So going back to understanding what the
basics of gymnastics actually means, which is being able to control your body through space, through full
range of motion, and ideally as perfect as possible. Like I made the joke when I brought up,
shit, I forgot who it was, but I brought up somebody's comment and then they had the picture
of them in like support on the rings. And I was like, tighten it up, get that hollow position,
point those feet, right? Because you could always do your gymnastics just like a little bit better.
And almighty, isn't Murph coming up, which is probably... Man, if you were to just look at
some of the movements in Murph, it just gets rough, right? The pushups turn into this head nod.
You got somebody doing a fucking weighted vest pull-up, but they're still in a band.
You know what I mean?
When you see that come in the door and it's like, there I am with a weight vest on, but I got my band to help me with my pull-up.
Holy smokes.
And then we have the weightlifting in throwing.
Weightlifting in throwing.
And obviously, there's probably not a lot of throwing going down in anybody's gym. I know we don't have a throwing thing at my gym.
But the weightlifting and throwing, basically, when you look at those two together, and you
guys read this article, if you haven't lately, it's all about that core to extremity and
being able to produce power from the hip, whether I'm throwing a ball, throwing a punch,
doing a thruster, doing a clean, doing a snatch.
It's all going to come from being able to produce as much power as I can
from my core, from the hips.
And then using that to kind of like, you know,
drive underneath the bar, do my pull up or like whatever. Right.
And then at the very top we have sport,
which was never the sport of CrossFit.
It was like whatever perspective sport that you were training for, you know, doing. And that's why it says like in the 100 words CrossFit, it was like whatever perspective sport that you were training for,
you know, doing. And that's why it says like in the 100 Words of Fitness, like learn and play
new sports regularly. Because CrossFit was never meant to be just the thing. CrossFit was meant to
be the strength and conditioning program, the methodology that was going to make you better
at whatever it is that you were doing. Whether that's military, fire, police, just in order to have elite physical fitness so you could stay alive in your job and
make sure that everybody around you stays alive and comes home, or whether it was just to absolutely
dominate on the sports field by being completely competent in all these movements across the board
and being prepared for the unknown or knowable, that sport will inevitably throw at you.
And so when we think about the pyramid in that regard, it's like, how could we be better as
coaches? How could we be better as affiliate owners? And exemplifying the what is fitness,
because I do believe that that is our responsibility and that is our differentiator.
believe that that is our responsibility and that is our differentiator.
That's it on that piece.
We'll talk about Rhonda Patrick in a minute here.
Let me just go through a
couple of these
comments here.
Oh, yes. It was
Manji. I did pronounce it right. I have two
members at my gym with the same last name as
you, David.
Interesting. I wonder if y'all are related. Is that a popular last name? I'm contemplating opening up a CrossFit gym.
Would you be open to a conversation once we made our decision? Dude, I'm open up for a
conversation before you make your decision. We could talk about it before. Give you the good,
the bad, the ugly, what you should think about. Shit I didn't think about.
about. Shit I didn't think about. Ours does cap and when we have nutrition seminars and we have nutrition seminars and even do zoom calls frequently. That is awesome. That's great,
Judy. If the gym's following cap, do you guys just do the heavy days? Like is there straight
up just like five by five back squat? I'm curious to know that. Um, wait, Ken, Ken. Uh,
yup. My son just told me one of his friends is bitching about eating ramen and then proceeds
to tell him that his boss won't give him three days off and shows him some $500
madam pack he bought on the video game. Yeah. That about sums it up. I can,
and you're probably sitting there just shaking your head. Like, dude, come on. What are you doing?
I can. And you're probably sitting there just shaking your head like, dude, come on. What are you doing? Zoom calls about nutrition, Judy. Yeah, that's really cool. I'm curious to learn
about the heavy day and what that does. Is that an add value for you? Do you like that? That's
really cool. Your gym's doing that. So what's the name of your gym? Give him a shout out.
of your gym. Give him a shout out. Michael Ahern. Ahern? I probably screwed that up.
Okay. Michael. Just so hard to get anybody to agree on what is good nutrition. Don't even go down that rabbit hole. There's one thing that everybody should unanimously agree across the
board is that you need to eat real food and you need to eat protein.
And you could fall into like the vegan or vegetarian or carnivore. Like none of that
matters as long as the one thing we stretch and stress in the nutrition challenge is like
getting in enough water, getting in enough protein, staying away from alcohol, sugar,
and processed carbohydrate. And the rest of it, you could all kind of tweak, right?
The rest of it, you could tweak.
Asymmetric readers, how they make those pyramids anyway.
I think he's referring to Rambler's Pyramid
about the Egyptian pyramid.
Brooke Yen.
Brooke, what's up?
Are you new around here?
I haven't seen your comment before.
Thanks for commenting.
My affiliate does.
We offer seminars with the first form representatives
such as coach.
Cool.
Cool. CrossFit should publish a meal of the week. Oh are you saying that tongue in cheek because they used to do that do you remember when they had that i think it was like 2018 maybe or
2019 they started to like the meal of the day and it would like show you what it was on a like a
plate and they would break down all the macros and would break down all the ingredients. You guys remember that? I used to post them daily in the blog on my old website.
So I would just copy paste and embed that into my gym's website. And then when you would go to it,
it would pop up with the meal of the day. Nicholas Sellers. Oh, Nicholas, you were the
one in support that I was talking about. Yeah thomasville crossfit has a rest day each week and we talk about nutrition flexibility etc
who is doing that how many programmed flexibility days do box have is zero that's how many mine does
we do it on thursdays everybody kind of refers to it as cardio thursday but typically we'll do
some sort of recovery session there and inside that recovery session where everybody's kind of
there that's when we facilitate different discussions and then usually we'll do some sort of recovery session there. And inside that recovery session where everybody's kind of there, that's when we facilitate different discussions.
And then usually we'll do some sort of like, uh, you know, machine interval or something that'll
last between like 20 minutes or so, um, 20, 30 minutes or so, but he gets good sweating afterwards.
And then I used to, I haven't in the last couple of months, I'll be bringing it back soon, but
Sunday was a dedicated mobility day to the gym. So I'd be in there for about an hour or so. People could come in, ask me questions. We do
some mobility together. We could talk about some nutrition. We could talk about anything that's
kind of like ongoing that was happening. Like, hey, my shoulder's been kind of bugging me when
I do X, Y, Z. Like, okay, cool. Let's take a look at it. So we did that. And it kind of follows like
a three-day on, one-day off, two days on one day off kind of, um, you know,
sequence for people's working out. Funny enough, when I started CrossFit, uh, this is Libby,
Libby. Funny enough, when I started CrossFit, I realized I had to straighten out my diet if I
wanted to get any better at it. I lost 35 pounds. Not sure I'm better at CrossFit, but I'm fitter.
Um, yeah, you're absolutely
right. The two come hand in hand, right? And that's why when you have nutrition and then you
have metabolic conditioning, remember like metabolic conditioning is you metabolizing
the food that you ate for energy. Garbage in, garbage out. I mean, you guys know this. It just
takes a five round workout, right? You really want to put your nutrition for the trust, eat like
shit for the whole entire weekend, and then do like five rounds of 400 meter run 30 wall balls. And when you hit that third round, and your body's like looking for
some good feel and you fed it like alcohol and sweets the whole weekend or fried food, delicious,
delicious fried food. You're gonna feel like shit on that third and fourth round as you kind of
finish out. And we all know that if you're eating good, you're hydrated, no alcohol,
no processed carbohydrate, you get to that like third or fourth round
and you're like, yeah, I can keep going.
I'm going to finish strong here.
Michael, and they were doing something like that on their YouTube channel,
food videos all the time.
Sometimes it seemed like every day.
Yep.
Yeah.
Clock, you remember.
You got it down.
Dude, have you seen competitions having skilled athletes using bands for pull-ups?
Laugh, laugh, laugh.
Yeah, why are you competing at that point, right?
Let's just work on the fundamentals.
Get that down.
Don't worry about just turning everything into a fucking competition.
Brooke N, the issue here is you try to explain a lot of these to some members
and they flat out refuse to hear or listen to what the coach is telling them.
Most frustrating thing.
That might be coming down to the culture of your gym because of every coach is doing it and they're introduced
that way. It is a lot easier to have those conversations. I'm definitely not saying like,
um, people are going to like, it's going to change everything and they'll want to listen.
But if it is something that's happening on the regular and it is coming from the affiliate
owners and it is coming from all the coaches and you guys are having discussions about it,
especially if you have some sort of program or something then like for sure it's
going to be a lot easier to have those conversations with members and in fact like people will start
having the conversations with us just because it's just kind of like baked into the culture of the
gym um but if you're the only coach doing it like at your gym and i'm not saying that's the case i'm
just using this as a hypothetical if you are the only one pushing it out your gym like for sure dude for sure it's hard to uh do that because it feels like you're
swimming upstream and nobody else is doing it so it's not being reinforced by the affiliate
owners or the other coaches david monge not a popular def not a popular last name that i'm
aware of uh they puerto rican i think so they're both two good looking dudes um jonathan are you
gonna be at carson yes sir i'm to be at Carson? Yes, sir.
I'm going to be at Carson and I'm pretty sure I will be in Knoxville as
well.
Like 99% sure.
I'll be in Knoxville.
A hundred percent.
Sure.
I'll be in Carson.
We're going to rock it out.
We're going to be doing some,
um,
uh,
on site on site podcasts,
just like we did at water.
So we'll be there on competition floor before it starts kind of filling you guys in on who to watch, just like we did at Wadapalooza. So we'll be there on competition floor before it starts,
kind of filling you guys in on who to watch, everything like that.
I'm pretty sure it'll be our Shut Up and Scribble gang.
We'll have Taylor, JR, Hal,
and hopefully we can get Will to do what he did over at Wadapalooza.
I thought he was great in kind of hosting that,
like throwing it back and forth between the two,
facilitating some questions.
So hopefully Will will want to get in front of the camera again and kind of do that i thought he was really good at it
and uh that kid could be a superstar but he'll get to choose what he wants to do we'll also be
shooting behind the scenes there so if he wants to assist with uh that he'll he'll do that maybe
he'll do both i don't know we'll find out me i'll be in the background collecting the checks
i'm just kidding just kidding just kidding i'll be there the background collecting the checks. No, I'm just kidding. Just kidding.
Just kidding.
I'll be there running assistance
and basically be servants to all my wonderful people
that are going to be hustling hard
doing the podcast and the behind the scenes.
Occasionally, heavy days, it's a good mix.
In my opinion, CrossFit 184 outside of Columbus, Ohio.
Cool. Thanks, Judy.
Thanks for sharing.
Odd, what's up?
What's up, Audrey?
How are you?
I hope you're doing well.
We do every other Sunday mobility.
That's what I should probably do too
because it's a slow class.
Jonathan, we offer mobility on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 6 p.m.
Cool.
How is it in that class?
Do people actually show up to it?
Let's see what else we got here.
Then we're going to move last um our last topic of discussion
jr what's up dude i always get so like whenever i see like chase in the comments or jr in the
comments or like well taylor never comments on my show but whenever i see you guys in the comments
i always feel like so proud or like when pedro's in here or something i'm always like yes they're
watching my stuff because i get it my show like fuck, like, fuck, Shut Up and Scribble is killing it.
Like, it's one of the most consistently watched shows, like, number-wise on the thing.
And I get my discussions aren't necessarily for everybody.
They're not as cool.
But it always makes me happy whenever you guys are hanging out.
So thanks, JR.
Appreciate it.
When do you get there?
Day, I forget. Wednesday there thursday something like that
yeah i think so when did thursday what did what did libby say why we have uh
i used to drink every weekend um ernie for saving me i used to drink every weekend and smoke a lot
of cigarettes and then i realized i keep getting beat on the wad so i casually started to straighten
my shit out yeah it gives you something else to focus on right and smoke a lot of cigarettes, and then I realized I keep getting beat on the wad, so I casually started to straighten my shit out.
Yeah, it gives you something else to focus on, right?
I can't imagine you smoking cigarettes.
That's crazy.
You all need a behind-the-scenes person.
Don't hesitate to reach out.
Thanks, dude.
Appreciate it.
Appreciate it.
Your pals are watching you.
I know.
I get so excited.
That text that we have, I always feel so privileged to be a part of it.
I feel like I'm just kind of like a fly on the wall in there for those guys.
They're all like movers and shakers of the space and everything else,
and I'm just kind of like hanging out.
Monkey grips definitely don't have that kind of ingenuity.
I don't know what's happening.
Oh, odd-ass question.
JR, how do you make those dumbbell rope handles? Okay, nothing we need to know about. Okay, last-ass question. JR, how do you make those dumbbell ropinas?
Okay, nothing we need to know about.
Okay, last topic of discussion.
Damn, it's already been an hour and five minutes.
I'm like 11 minutes late for a call I was going to do at noon.
We're hanging out.
We're having a good time.
Last one here is going to be Rhonda Patrick.
You're going to check her stuff out.
Oh, Miss Rhonda Patrick. Found my fitness. Found my fitness.
Okay. Let's look at a few things here, all right? Number one, I got, well, I don't.
Rhonda has 868,000 followers.
She's been on Joe Rogan like five, six, eight, 10, 12 times, a lot.
She's like, Rogan's like, homie, right?
Comes on.
What do they talk about?
They talk about health and fitness.
That's her whole entire deal, right? Now, let What do they talk about? They talk about health and fitness. That's her whole entire deal, right?
Now, let's just look at this.
Let's just look at her Instagram real quick.
What do we have?
CrossFit for health.
Boom.
Her speaking at the health summit, right?
That was April 10th.
Well, these are pinned ones.
Okay, that's a not CrossFit one.
Oh, what do we have again? Seven days ago.
It's her talk from the CrossFit Health Summit. What do we have here? She did doing that in
her region four by four HIIT protocol with her concept two rower. Right. Just doing a little
cardio day, a little aerobic threshold testing. What's the next one?
It's from the CrossFit Health Summit. Okay. We have her on another podcast here with Chris
Willicks. How many subscribers does Chris Willicks have? I don't know. Maybe over a
fucking million. Okay. Cool. Why do you seem like you're getting triggered?
Okay, cool.
Sousa, why do you seem like you're getting triggered?
Now we have her here again talking about her discussion at the CrossFit for Health Summit.
Where can I watch this whole entire video?
It's most recently on our YouTube channel.
Hmm, okay.
Now we see, what is she doing here?
She's doing some weightlifting.
Clearly, she's new at it, but it's not that terrible.
People in the comments will be like, oh, those poor joints.
Suck my dick, Patricia.
What the fuck do you know?
Why is it her poor joints?
Tardville in the comments section.
Nice effort, but you're not mechanically built for that movement.
Oh, really, Rob?
Yeah, let's see what you're mechanically built for.
Being a douche.
Not mechanically built for that movement?
What?
Silly.
Silly.
What do we have here?
CrossFit for Health Summit again.
CrossFit for Health Summit again.
CrossFit for Health Summit again. CrossFit for Health Summit again. What do we have here? CrossFit for Health Summit again. CrossFit for Health Summit again. CrossFit for Health Summit again.
CrossFit for Health Summit again.
What do we have here?
She's doing her 4x4 again.
Also looks a lot like CrossFit.
What do we have here?
Oh, she's doing more CrossFit.
A little hang clean action, right?
She's practicing a hang clean.
Maybe some front squats she's going to do here.
Look at that.
And who is this guy? Oh, look. A.O. Neal, another shirtless dude on fucking PRT here to save the day. I love that you are lifting and posting about it, but please get a
trainer or a coach to help with form. Okay. Who we got? This is their coach. This is their coach.
Okay, who we got? This is her coach. This is her coach, Zia, owner of CrossFit Counterculture,
CrossFit Global Affiliate Mentor Team, CrossFit Affiliate Council Member.
This is her coach. This is who's coaching her. Okay, this lovely lady here.
I don't know much about her. I just got pitched with Craig.
Love Craig.
What's up, Craig?
Right?
So she somehow got hooked up with Rhonda Patrick.
Keep fitness legal.
Let's go.
Right?
So she got hooked up with Rhonda Patrick.
She's coaching Rhonda Patrick.
Right?
She's coaching Rhonda Patrick. right? She's coaching Rhonda Patrick.
They're doing CrossFit together.
But yet, why isn't this collabed with CrossFit?
Why isn't she collabed with CrossFit?
Is it Rhonda Patrick's fault or is it CrossFit's fault?
Is it Rhonda Patrick's fault or is it CrossFit's fault, right?
Here she is again,
doing some rowing and some burpees.
She's doing Fortitude,
a CrossFit workout,
most likely with her CrossFit coach.
Now, you guys can go through
and kind of check the rest of that out together.
Here's the deal.
She is a influencer, for lack of better words, in the
space. And she has 800 plus thousand followers. She goes on podcasts to talk about health and
fitness. Some of the largest fucking platforms, Joe Rogan, Chris Wallace. Okay. Huh. Weird. And where is CrossFit? She never tags or says CrossFit.
Ernie, is that her fault? Do you know it's her fault? Or is it fucking CrossFit's fault?
They gave her a coach. Where's the camera? Why aren't we following her journey?
Why aren't we placing Rhonda Patrick and saying,
hey, look, she is new to CrossFit. She's big in the health and fitness space. She has a large
following, goes on these big platforms. Let's get with her. Let's send a fucking camera crew
out there. Let's talk to her coach. Let's build stuff. Let's start to put out Instagram reels
and shit all the time from it. Let's make sure that every post she has on here, we're asking if she could collaborate.
Let's start putting out shorts on her development so I could see those first couple of cleans.
And then we check in with her a week or two later and I go, oh shit, she's gotten better. And then we interview her CrossFit coach. Right? How the fuck is this happening? And it's not synonymous with CrossFit training
and the methodology. She goes on Joe Rogan next fucking week. I'm making this up. I don't know
if she's actually going to go on Joe Rogan. She goes on Joe Rogan next week. And Joe goes,
what have you been up to, Rhonda? Oh, fuck, Joe. I've been up to CrossFit. Huh? CrossFit? We had Frazier on here.
The guy who claimed he made a million plus dollars for Greg. Cue the fucking gargle sound.
We didn't think it was that great. What do you know about it, Rhonda? And then she starts to
break it down. And then you go and you look at all of her stuff and you start to see her doing
all of the movements, learning the movements, learning it with the coach, show her coach coaching. So that way,
when we have fucking whatever the hell, this guy who thinks, oh, nice effort, but they're not
mechanically built for you. You could go to the long-term video of the coach going over all the
movements with her, showing the warmup, showing her with the barbell, showing how they led up to that. Completely changing all of the people
who follow her perception about CrossFit. So ask yourself, is it Rhonda's problem?
Because it seems like at some point, she came out to the Health Summit and talked. It seems like at
some point, she requested to get a CrossFit coach. It seems like at one point, that coach showed up and is now coaching her. So who's not pressing the fucking button? Who's not sending the person
out here to film this, to watch it, and then have her share this on the largest platforms?
Why? Why? Now, you mean to tell me between all the people that follow her and the platform she's going to go on, that that wouldn't have made a massive impact in not only changing public perception, but getting more people excited about CrossFit?
Give her a free L1.
Take her through the L1, CrossFit.
Video all of that.
What are you doing?
She's clearly interested in learning more.
She's clearly doing it and she's posting it on her own.
And yet, fucking, where's the button?
No, it's not frozen.
I'm just sitting here to let that sink in.
Think about that.
And think about if they did this with anybody who had large followings that were interested in it.
The fuck are you doing?
This is a perfect example of how we could build media around her to do what?
Highlight her education.
Bring her into the L1.
Show that.
Guys, it doesn't take a fucking genius to figure it out.
This is partnership 101.
She's already interested.
She's already doing the thing.
Give her the support.
Home, Atlanta.
She's been on twice already. I don't know what she's been on twice already i don't know what she's been on send me see this send me
okay so i was ceo i'd send you jonathan don't worry man i just see that and you start to ask
yourself like why is it no daniel no i don't want to roast her i don't want to roast her i want to
be her friend i want everybody who follows her to don't want to roast her. I want to be her
friend. I want everybody who follows her to understand what we do as CrossFit. I want
everybody to understand that she is embodying the what is fitness article and she could start to
talk about that to her audience. And she could talk about that when she says, what are you up to?
Well, check this out. There's some research here. Let me go over it. It's called CrossFit.
Yeah. I don't know. We already talked about that. A hundred percent, right? It's like, what are we doing in this? And this, which is
obvious, this just came like, look at her profile guys. And none of these are collaborated with
CrossFit. They haven't offered her to do with anything. Why aren't they taking advantage of
this?
And the crazy part was, is I listened to her talk at the health summit.
And it's like almost the L1, it's almost what is fitness. And if she just got exposed to it
in the right way, this could be massive. And then she has friends, Andrew Huberman,
all these other guys that are, you know health and fitness, kind of like science and gurus.
And all of a sudden, they start talking about CrossFit and they start trying CrossFit.
And now everybody's talking about it in a different way, in a way that's synonymous with health, but still going to be pushing people into our affiliates, but more importantly, pushing people into our L1s.
Perfect opportunity to showcase how badass our coaching is. Perfect opportunity to shed more
light on what is fitness and the L1 and build some great media around her. So the question you need to ask yourself is, why aren't they?
Thanks for hanging out, guys.
I appreciate all of you.
It's about 100 plus people hanging out today, and I can't tell you how much that means to me.
Especially you guys coming here in the comments and contributing
and come back and forth
even if we don't
see it the same way.
Like, I just really appreciate
all the contribution
you guys are making.
Rambler,
she predates Andrew Heerman.
She's an OG.
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
It's just not...
It just baffles me
as to why we're not taking advantage of all this low hanging fruit, right? Carlos, what's up, brother? Looking forward to seeing you shortly here. Oh, fuck, yes. Andrew's here now too. Yes. What's up, dude? Because they are selling oh yeah because they are selling oh shit Pedro's on okay you
guys need to go over to watch uh Pedro's show please go check him out right now. And then right when you guys are done
with that, go check out Andrew's Hiller, his 90 minute feature on CrossFit Mayhem and everything
they got over there. That video was awesome. Congrats again on stretching your what you do,
Andrew. I know I talked about it in person. I was like, dude, watching your just continuous
involvement of how you're creating, what you're doing, testing things all the time.
Really fucking cool, dude.
Super stoked that we're along for the ride with you.
All right, guys.
Thank you so much for hanging out.
I will see you on the internet.
Love ya.
Bye-bye.