I can hear Dr Mike swinging his legs under his desk
@Willrell8 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@Your__fit__realtor8 ай бұрын
🤣🤣
@jimi19438 ай бұрын
This is hilarious😂
@HkFinn838 ай бұрын
His little legs are sooooo cute!
@bingetobuff54688 ай бұрын
Dead🤣🤣
@Oscar-fi1ev8 ай бұрын
The fact that people are talking more about Mike Mentzer today than 45 years ago when he was in his prime is absolutely amazing.
@funkahontas8 ай бұрын
Right 💀💀 Would love to see blud lifting now
@mcfarvo8 ай бұрын
Posthumous glorification is sometimes the case with luminaries that were under-appreciated by their contemporary audience/peers. Many poets, authors, political thinkers, philosophers, etc., are now more famous and respected than when they were alive. That said, it is often in these cases that the modern audience misinterprets or misrepresents or reduces (loss of nuance) the offerings of that dead person (and they are not around now, obviously, to offer any correction or clarification or challenge or demonstration of how their own thinking changed on the subject in their own life).
@1TieDye18 ай бұрын
Internet+increased popularity of bodybuilding and gym culture
@user-he4ef9br7z7 ай бұрын
Mostly just algorithm induced hype.
@HO1ySh33t7 ай бұрын
probably because more people care about bodybuilding today than 45 years ago. Also, I do consume a lot of bodybuilding content on youtube but I've never heard of Mentzer until I started watching Dr. Mike, so I'm not sure who else are talking about Mike Mentzer. Kind of the same deal with people like Mendeleev (inventor of periodic table). People benefit a lot from their contribution, but we just took that contribution for granted, so nobody talks about this very influential people.
@ninasethi8 ай бұрын
I will spend the next 1 hour, 1 minute and 37 seconds edging to the sound of Dr. Mikes voice. Glorious.
@tyvekhomewrap91648 ай бұрын
There's a replay button for a reason bro
@ninasethi8 ай бұрын
It just hits harder the first time around, you can't recreate that rush once you've heard it bro@@tyvekhomewrap9164
@tomb84198 ай бұрын
Nothing makes me harder than doing HIT training while Dr Mike tells me how wrong and stupid I am
@debaronAZK8 ай бұрын
seems like a joke but we both know better
@victorrockwood7 ай бұрын
That is so hot❤
@user-hn9fr7mn3x8 ай бұрын
I’m doing more of a Mentzer and Jones plan and I’m having the best results of my life with no injuries thus far. Thank you Mike and Arthur 🙌🏻
@collectivismkills8 ай бұрын
Yeah. I mean, all I know is that when I started doing only one set push ups to almost failure only once every 3-5 days, my reps absolutely shot up. So,,:maybe HIT doesn’t work for everyone or every exercise...I don’t know...but it sure seems to work for me.
@JohnDoe-id5ih8 ай бұрын
@@collectivismkills Anything will work, as long as you rest enough and then do it again. People who criticize Mentzer (or any other approach) are just mad over nothing
@HerkulesNorsk7 ай бұрын
Me to, I did 2/3 different programs for a 1 year and a half. Discovered Mentzer last summer and the result has been amazing since. Not just muscles, but also my mind is better. I am much more focused at training and at my diet. I realy do not care anymore about everybody out there who wants to attack MM, his program for training, diet and resting has worked Wonder for me. First I was very sceptic, but then I just went for it and never looked back. He stil be wrong or very wrong about somethings, I have my self changed some of it, like not doing superset anymore, but if his program is wrong, my experince is that many other programs is much more wrong.
@collectivismkills7 ай бұрын
@@HerkulesNorskYep. I hear you and agree. And for me, as an older lifter (51 years), doing more than like a 45min workout is too much. I noticed with doing only one set, maybe 2 here and there, to relative failure, and then taking a day or two off between workouts, I could still progress without burning out. As I’m not on PEDs or even any TRT, it’s a very delicate balance at my age between progress and burnout. I discovered HIT almost by accident. During workouts I would do some exercises only one set for times sake, and because they were not my favorite. Interestingly though, it was in these exercises that I saw the most progress…quite rapid actually. This was surprising to me, but then I ran into Mentzer on youtube and it made sense. Maybe his program is not the end all be all, but it seems to work for me rather well. The only mod I make is to not go to absolute failure, but only relative failure (one or two reps before).
@cwsmith177 ай бұрын
Same here
@mithilaum8 ай бұрын
Mike on Mike crime.
@mann80988 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂
@mastermasih8 ай бұрын
hahahahaha
@greggyfontane14877 ай бұрын
BROOOO LOLOL
@President.GeorgeWashington7 ай бұрын
I laughed so hard my liver is failing
@fitz29176 ай бұрын
@@President.GeorgeWashingtonsame (it’s cause I abuse steroids)
@beewalk347 ай бұрын
"Why do bodybuilders spend 2-3 hours in the gym??? Do you not have anything better to do???" -Mike Menzer
@jorinsullivan13567 ай бұрын
I remember when someone asked Mentzer what should bodybuilders now do with their spare time and he was like "read a book." 🤣
@richbrake99107 ай бұрын
Wow. that's 10-20 hours per week...That's crazy. I'll take 2-3 per week
@BroJacksonTradez7 ай бұрын
Not when you're addicted to the pump. No place I'd ever rather be than in the gym honestly
@w1nt3rolymp1cs37 ай бұрын
@@BroJacksonTradezi only do hour sessions usually but I agree. When you’re on a roll hitting an intense workout the feeling is unmatched
@mrmap48757 ай бұрын
I think I'll just stick to my 69 push ups before sleep
@Iron.Historian8 ай бұрын
Mike Mentzer is having the last laugh, he’s doing zero sets per week.
@bad_money8 ай бұрын
Man 💀
@nerdmode52108 ай бұрын
I feel bad for laughing at this one
@valoranttv18568 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣
@grixx97078 ай бұрын
NIT (no intensity training)
@littlelebowski77148 ай бұрын
Mate 💀
@kukken8 ай бұрын
Respect for keeping the Shake Weight in the background, game recognize game
@mirrorcube37095 ай бұрын
lmfao busted
@jayt61835 ай бұрын
I thought I was imagining that
@ReegalP8 ай бұрын
As someone who also does this, I very much respect your ability to create unorthodox allegories or analogies like "the HIT Monster" and just run with them for extended periods of time.
@biglew4218 ай бұрын
One of us...
@Squatch343 ай бұрын
New PR
@jerryappleton68555 ай бұрын
If a new or intermediate comes up to me and asks "which bodybuilders program should I copy", which answer is best? Ronnie Coleman? Jay Cutler? Arnold? No: Mike Mentzer. Why? For 2 main reasons: 1) It teaches proper technique, intensity and appreciation of recovery from the get go, and 2) It can be expanded upon. Starting with 3 workouts a week, 1-2 exercises per bodypart is a great foundation. Perfect it then starting adding. Add to the Leg Extension and Leg Press a Hack Squat and see what happens. Add to the Chest Fly and Chest Press some Cable Crossovers and see what happens. But with it all done with: 1) Full ROM 2) To or near failure 3) Emphasis on the negative 4) With plenty of recovery It's a great foundation.
@jaimorgan17422 ай бұрын
This is a great concept for beginners but getting a beginner to appreciate what actual hard training is can be very difficult. Most beginners will hit slight discomfort and think that they have hit failure when in reality they aren’t even half way there. Arguably also a good thing but I always argue that it’s pretty difficult for beginners to not train to a state close to failure when they’re doing 12-20 sets per workout. Even if they train at 40% intensity they’re gonna learn by the last couple of sets what being uncomfortable really feels like. I could be wrong and I see both ways of thinking but most people don’t know what proper hard training is even after 5+ years in the gym, I don’t think doing 4 working sets a week will help them reach that point.
@angelolivАй бұрын
This is absolutely true
@StayTh1rsty8 ай бұрын
The line about gaining wisdom through intelligently absorbing what the crowd is doing is a great example of why I love my membership here. The gems about life.
@rene98928 ай бұрын
I loved that too. Reminds me of Bruce Lee's philosophy. It was something along the lines of "Take in what is useful, reject what is useless, add what is specifically your own."
@davidwalker87548 ай бұрын
Chat gpt-4.....Hitt monster frienz....
@tree93068 ай бұрын
its free hehehe
@rayzerot7 ай бұрын
Definitely true though. If you work your way smartly through that crowd it's very likely that there are both experts and professional practitioners in the crowd. They've got the good stuff
@bratdfortd8 ай бұрын
"cutting slack" is something you do when on a line (rope) like in rock climbing, but i'd imagine the term comes from sailing. by cutting slack, you give them more rope to move around with, thereby giving them more freedom. when you take slack, it makes the rope tighter so it's harder to move around
@drinkinouttacups26658 ай бұрын
Tried cutting slack then I tore my pecker off!
@DILFDylF8 ай бұрын
But why is it "cutting" slack? Does that part of the expression use a different expression? Give me some slack makes sense, but you're not cutting the slack off and handing it to them.
@vnm.eyeless7 ай бұрын
@@DILFDylFMay just be linguistics at work like with many other expressions in the english language. The only other origin I know for slack is the movement between train carts, meaning the space between them as they are often tied loosely. 'Cutting' may refer to 'cutting the distance' between them, making the bond tighter and reducing movement.
@DILFDylF7 ай бұрын
@@vnm.eyeless Yeah I just went back and forth with ChatGPT about it and nothing got cut, even in the nautical sense. Rope was untied to allow for more flexibility. Soooo it's just kind of a dumb expression. Give me some slack would make more sense but 🤷🏽
@kodymcgrath71487 ай бұрын
@DILFDylF have you never worked in any trades? There's tons of expressions like that.
@i0001100011008 ай бұрын
Avert your gaze miscreants. This is the members only version that was accidentally uploaded to SerfTube
@berniekerns42818 ай бұрын
So you're sayin there's a chance...
@mediaisthevirus8 ай бұрын
Much needed W for the peasants
@joeblow56588 ай бұрын
😅
@microwavetechnician74938 ай бұрын
Im here to eat your content rich boy
@voightkampffchamp8 ай бұрын
We're not worthy! But will take it
@genewalters8 ай бұрын
I finished my 2 HIT workouts for the week before this video finished playing.
@jamalbryant31397 ай бұрын
You still doing it?
@joe80ss8 ай бұрын
Mike was right about a lot of stuff, and so was Dorian Yates. Nothing but respect for them.
@justaguy53457 ай бұрын
Thank you. People who say their training philosophy doesn’t work either didn’t give it a fair chance or did not do it properly.
@icetray27277 ай бұрын
@@justaguy5345or they’re scared to try something different
@justaguy53457 ай бұрын
@@icetray2727Very true. Sad thing is I almost can’t blame them. When I first tried it I was worried it wasn’t going to work. It was a leap of faith, but when I saw my performance explode in such a short amount of time… I knew this would be the only way I would train for the rest of my life. Thank god I listened to Dorian and Mike.
@icetray27277 ай бұрын
@@justaguy5345 for me, I’m not a slave to the gym anymore and my social life isn’t suffering
@nestosauce6 ай бұрын
@@justaguy5345I’ve been using his methods for close to two years now and tweaked it overtime. My way is a warmup set, light set close to failure at 12-15 rep range, then two sets 6-10 reps with a drop set or pause set to ensure failure and get more volume in. What’s your way of working out?
@Vintage_geek8 ай бұрын
Dr. Mike doing Mentzer justice. An awesomely nuanced critique of a legendary bodybuilder that certainly deserves more respect than he gets...
@naruto86468 ай бұрын
Honestly you can counter a lot of teachings of Mike Mentzer with modern science be it a single set per muscle or holding muscle in concentric position for a time. But you can't deny the fact that dude was way ahead of his time considering his views on high intensity, recovery and removal of junk volume from training. Dude pretty much set up the foundation of modern exercise science.
@yt_hatesfreespeech8 ай бұрын
modern science lol, modern science is only modern today, tomorrow it will change, science is the only profession where you can be wrong over and over again and still not lose your job, all you have to say is the science has changed.
@Steven_DunbarSL8 ай бұрын
@@yt_hatesfreespeech And then back up your claim so you can get scrutinized 😂
@stevenroberts57418 ай бұрын
@@yt_hatesfreespeech😂😂😂😂 I don’t think you have really grasped what the scientific method is..😂😂
@tillburr67998 ай бұрын
@@yt_hatesfreespeech well yeah, that do be the point of science
@flow11888 ай бұрын
first opinion counters second. Makes no sence sorry Fanboi
@sxhrgvs8 ай бұрын
Loved the part about getting work focused, not goal focused. I think this is so important. People ask me what I’m training for… I’m not training for anything. I’m training to get better, forever, or for as long as I possibly can. It’s about habits for me, not end goals. Goals give you a reason to quit, stop or question yourself, if you get there.
@erinodonnell3866 ай бұрын
Not sure that I fully agree with this. Having smaller goals that build towards a greater trajectory of achievement can be really great for sustaining motivation. Keeps me not just going, but pushing myself to do better.
@gotomychanneltoseemyname6 ай бұрын
That’s true but I also agree with the reply above me😂😂
@ViktorM18 ай бұрын
10 years of natural bodybuilding and I've tried every training style, a modified variant of HIT works the best for me, closer to Dorian Yates style of training. I've made the best muscle and strength gains on HIT as a advanced lifter
@flow11888 ай бұрын
Than you cant be an advanced lifter.
@ViktorM18 ай бұрын
@@flow1188 According to who? I’m as advanced as you can get, training and health is my passion and my full time job.
@Eustres8 ай бұрын
@@ViktorM1 with advanced you mean that you have your fundamentals dialed in (nutrition, sleeping, recovery and technique) and also that after properly done training (example few mesocycles) you see minimal results, because you are so close to your potential that returns are diminished.
@Eustres8 ай бұрын
@@ViktorM1also advanced would take like minimum 10 years of optimal training (im not saying you aren't im only stating what advanced is)
@ViktorM18 ай бұрын
@@Eustres That’s your definition of an advanced, I would say after 5 years of dialed in training and nutrition. I’m dialed in and advanced according to your definition. And with adjustments in my training program and training style I’ve made better progress than the previous years
@imactuallyimmortal8 ай бұрын
Did Dr. Mike just end the Mentzer beef and start an Arnold beef?
@iamapokerface89926 ай бұрын
arni is a scum so i see no problem
@soonahero8 ай бұрын
That Ronnie Coleman impersonation is crazy
@corellianmerc53658 ай бұрын
That wasn't Ronnie stepping in for the shot?
@johnd58058 ай бұрын
where is it? I don't want to listen to the whole thing
@mk677hd8 ай бұрын
25:10
@johnd58058 ай бұрын
@@mk677hd thanks
@tiphainer71438 ай бұрын
It was to make up for the upcoming terrible Bruce Lee impression 😆
@paulx7620Ай бұрын
The realization that he contemplated all this before having all the knowledge blessings we have now.
@fourcheesewhopper19278 ай бұрын
This is what I like about the fitness industry right now different school of ideas colliding at each other and me as a consumer pick up what I can learn to accommodate my own training needs thank you for this dr mike
@demetriuspaschalides462220 күн бұрын
FYI: the most important reason for a conductor is visual queues. The distance between the players is causing a delay in sound to travel which can be tenths of ms (milliseconds) or hundreds. Yes, in everyday life its not noticeable (in fact anything up to 5 ms is unnoticeable to the human ear) but if you add up a 40 + plus poece orchestra, those distances and delays will cause havoc and it is physically impossible to play in RYTHM/TEMPO with eachother no matter how good they are. Thus, the presence of a conductor for visual queues is of utmost importance.
@bogrunberger8 ай бұрын
Would love to see dr. Mikes take on how David Goggins train. That dude is insane.
@SuperheroRockstar8 ай бұрын
Dr. Mike is Goku in that everything he approaches is science based. Absolutely work your ass off, but be efficient and intelligent about it, and remember to eat and rest properly. Goggins is Vegeta, work until you pass out, then get up and work again.
@Iron.Historian8 ай бұрын
David isn’t really training for the purpose of hypertrophy or getting jacked, he just wants to inflect the most amount of pain upon himself and go beyond his capabilities, I read both his books he’s inhuman lol
@uuh4yj438 ай бұрын
that would be interesting but i dont think their specialties overlap a lot. it might be a mess
@winthelottery46858 ай бұрын
I wouldn't say Goggins works out per se. He just administers great amounts of pain to himself. He is professional pain-applier. I think he would die before he starts getting sufficient rest and limit himself so as to not overtrain.
@rustneversleeps858 ай бұрын
@@Iron.Historian Self destructive behaviour comes in many forms
@Pengyz8 ай бұрын
56:43 That Arnold accent was spot on
@westhamdan728 ай бұрын
Why have I only just realised Mike counts on the back of his hand
@President.GeorgeWashington7 ай бұрын
He is a robot
@zackdavis75627 ай бұрын
I really appreciate the Space Ice recommendation, shit’s pure gold.
@MamaSwole8 ай бұрын
shoulda wore a fake mustache for this video
@solidus8188 ай бұрын
I used to have one 😂
@MarcillaSmith6 ай бұрын
True. Missed opportunity.
@thebackyardpsychologist4 ай бұрын
Facts !
@mickeymighty186622 күн бұрын
You single ??
@VernCrisler8 ай бұрын
"I'll just block you." -- Most of Mike's humor goes over (or under) my head, but this one got me lol. So did his "beast" imitation and Ronnie Coleman imitation! ... Another great video that is sure to stir up all the Mike Mentzer fan boys, maybe the Randroids, too.
@NicholasBurdohan8 ай бұрын
Making me glad I didn't get those Rand tattoos when I was 18. Sorry for your luck. Love the content bro!
@AndusDominae8 ай бұрын
Cut slack = to cut a length of rope/chain/tether slightly longer than necessary, to account for length lost in context such as use of knots/bindings/variability(eg, tide coming in/out)/whatever. Cut, because it's literally cut. Slack, because if you pull the length across a space as long as the length strictly required, having 'slack' will literally leave the length slack as opposed to taut. Intermediary to the saying, to give slack on a tether (think letting a dog's lead/leash go a bit) you're giving a little freedom to whatever/whoever is tethered. So, colloquially, cutting slack = giving someone a little extra leeway because of context or to avoid being unduly restrictive.
@Smellslikegelfling8 ай бұрын
What about the part where Mentzer speaks on realistic amounts of muscle that can be gained and the amount of calories and protein required for gaining muscle? Especially the part where he talks about how muscle is primarily composed of water. I think that would be an interesting topic to dissect.
@jimi19438 ай бұрын
He was in med school so he know quite lot about that stuff
@LowTierFallout8 ай бұрын
@@jimi1943We didn’t know dick about nutrition 40 years ago. Most “educated” people TODAY still don’t know dick.
@brofessormexАй бұрын
Mikes philosophy has got me caught between two worlds. I stopped caring about being so strict about contest prep. Stopped following every modern protocol. Stopped over training, stopped being a di$k at shows. Stopped taking everything seriously. Because that's why bodybuilders die. Nothing is that important. Not gear, not being sloppy, not being anything that represents a serious bodybuilder. Every show there's always a winner who casually shoes up at the last minute, eats some rice cakes and gets painted. Not shaved, no teeth whitening. And they don't just win their category, they win the overall. Thank you Mike menzer and thank you Dr. Mike
@ahmedtahir83918 ай бұрын
My new favorite thing on the Intranet now is Dr. Mike saying "slay" 🤣
@charlesjohnson8738 ай бұрын
I've never been a podcast or KZbin guy until I found your channel. Your advice and input has certainly broadened my view and helped me look at everything from the gym to life in another light. I certainly enjoy the content and always love seeing more
@danielescada67858 ай бұрын
If you're going to talk about HIT, you should also do a video on how Dorian Yates trained.
@RBC04058 ай бұрын
Mike should train with him. That would be fun... but not for Mike :-)
@Scion158 ай бұрын
@@RBC0405I would pay to see the tables turned on Mike lol
@gporr70048 ай бұрын
Yates didn’t do just one set. High intensity sure but not one set. And neither did Mentzer.
@Scion158 ай бұрын
@@gporr7004 yes they did wtf?
@adam_toddster53678 ай бұрын
@@Scion15 Yates didn't lol. Mike did after he reached his peak
@NathanielWoerner7 ай бұрын
So glad this is released. This is awesome! Thank you Dr Mike. I’ve tagged RP in a few Mentzer video looking for these answers.
@aliyma7 ай бұрын
Before critiquing Mike Mentzer's training method, better 1st have a look at this book and the links: High-Intensity Training the Mike Mentzer Way book Mike Mentzer and the science of heavy duty training kzbin.info/www/bejne/kJ6zlpyKqsiDn6M Mike Mentzer did not build all his size with volume training kzbin.info/www/bejne/fWOvZIxte7V7l9U
@Cam_Lane8 ай бұрын
Lots of hookups in band class. We had practice rooms with locks on the doors. Field trips with overnight hotel stays and access to school property well outside of regular hours.
@haydencapps7 ай бұрын
Sounds pretty
@haydencapps7 ай бұрын
Ghhheeeey
@VillaG897 ай бұрын
That is very nice.
@Ignats_IIII17 күн бұрын
Yep, those in band and theater were banging everybody....junk volume style.
@christianbell44138 ай бұрын
I bought the “partial reps don’t count” tank and I’ve gotten several compliments. Thanks Mike.
@Pnw2088 ай бұрын
People get so caught up in one way of doing things when in reality they are all great. There are tons of approaches that work. It’s best to cycle through all of them rather than just do 1. If you only do high volume light weight bro split it works great for a while but progress slows so instead of staying with that you should switch low high intensity low volume, then go to full body circuits, then push/ pull/ legs. Then back to the bro split. Keep your body guessing and get the benefits of all these programs.
@LM_280356 ай бұрын
Went to the gym for 5 years doing the modern style of lifting, tried Mike mentzers method for a few months and had the best results in that period of time then I ever have
@kaldordraigo40208 ай бұрын
Volumegoober can't fathom the high intensity chad
@logomarkz8 ай бұрын
Hit goober can't fathom the volume chad
@muscleandmath29108 ай бұрын
Voltensity can't fathom gooberchad.
@kaldordraigo40208 ай бұрын
@@logomarkz lift heavy, lift hard, lift with intensity or remain the same
@kaldordraigo40208 ай бұрын
@@Titan_ooo mans the type of guy to do light weight volume training and wonder why he's not growing or making progress mans also keeps up with the lastest lifting literature and still makes no gains
@Yoitsbobbyboy8 ай бұрын
@@kaldordraigo4020I used to think you have to lift heavy too. Till I constantly kept getting hurt and would have to almost felt like start over. Started using less weight with better form and I’m larger than I’ve ever been and most importantly I haven’t gotten injured in forever. Kudos to the people who constantly lift heavy but I can’t do it. Too many injuries lol.
@josesibi7 ай бұрын
This actually felt like a one hour comedy session. I'm working while listening to this and burst out laughing especially at the end. Thank you Mike :) Educative and hilarious at the same time.
@stefanpp11558 ай бұрын
Mike Mentzers voice sounds as if he was constantly talking through an old phone.
@DarkoFitCoach8 ай бұрын
He was. Tapes recorded through fone
@gloccry21848 ай бұрын
his voice was muffled by the moustache
@merrickbryan858 ай бұрын
The technology used then is a pretty long time ago
@WiredTenshi8 ай бұрын
And I love it
@ryankolbe3658 ай бұрын
Drive out to the sticks in Pennsylvania and it'll sound like that when you're buying gas or getting an oil change
@jlevans19858 ай бұрын
What drew me most to HIT training was seeing Dorian tearing his tricep due to not recovering enough & ronnie coleman's injuries due to over training. What I get most from his work is a set of principles in to apply individually which was what he actually recommended outside of his books which were just examples of what he was philosophy to training. 1 set & consolidated programs were not what he prescribed for everyone but based on how you recovered from lifting to failure with proper form. as far as quote 7 i think its in reference to being the hero of your own life, like only you can really change your life
@joachimjustinmorgan48518 ай бұрын
Even if you prove 1000 times that more volume is better, once you discover that you can still make gains from fewer sets a few times /week, it’s hard to justify going balls to the wall on volume ever again. Even when I add more volume beyond a few sets per body part (normal), I do not feel like I make better gains.
@TiberiusX8 ай бұрын
Honestly, if nothing else, I put so much more into my one set that I ever did 3x10. And though I've considered going every 3 days instead of every 4, I get so pumped to workout on gym days, and I sometimes still feel soreness on day 3.
@joachimjustinmorgan48518 ай бұрын
@@TiberiusX same, 100% same.
@hooktraining39668 ай бұрын
especially since not everyone is rich enough to workout all day and they have a limited time frame to get a lot of work done in the gym
@Meta_Meech8 ай бұрын
You all are saying exactly what I’ve been saying
@silatguy8 ай бұрын
You can make gains off anything so long as you have recovery figured out. I've done HIT but get a lot more size and strength gains from more volume and higher frequency
@reese34077 ай бұрын
I have read many of his books and he does talk about keeping in touch with how you feel. And if you're not getting stronger, you could be overtraining. Which I believe is true. I tend to lose my grip strength When I'm overtraining in deadlifts.
@debreakification8 ай бұрын
We need to get subtitles for Scott in every video
@nilychkirilov4 ай бұрын
"Potential is only the expression of a possibility, something that could be assessed accurately only in retrospect. In other words, you'll never know how good you might have become, unless you try." To me this is his best quote.
@stevemann12995 ай бұрын
Mike Mentzers HIT is the greatest thing I've ever done. At 60 years of age my arms have grown by over an inch in the last 8 months. What people just can't get through their heads. Is you need TIME to grow to your full potential. I need 6 days between workouts. I found this out 8 months ago. My god the gains are coming.
@AlexM-vt5pu6 ай бұрын
Great info. I just really wish there was a version of this without the "comedy".
@kelilemoore19988 ай бұрын
Can we all agree Mike Mentzer voice has the ability to make you believe the unbelievable
@h-k78045 ай бұрын
Not just his voice but his logic and proven methods
@spec246 ай бұрын
Conductors are responsible for keeping ALL of the instruments aligned in tempo, as well as increasing a decreasing the volume of any group of instruments or individual to better match the music being played. They also are responsible for indicating where inflections of certain instruments come into play. They don't just wave their wands to the beat.
@ColourOfTheGods8 ай бұрын
I think that Dr Israel should don the "Mentzer Moustache" and short-shorts..... he'll be a HIT advocate in no time
@ReDuVernay8 ай бұрын
I think there a T in there.
@mjr87482 ай бұрын
That was great. The final 2 minutes about advanced lifters using different methods for different body parts was gold. I will be tak8nf that advice and applying it. Thank you.
@alexvillalpando78378 ай бұрын
As someone who has been in band and orchestra since 6th grade and now teaches orchestra, I feel honored to be made fun of by Dr. Mike.
@paullane74898 ай бұрын
😂😂. Yes it’s hilarious because he is a PhD, no bigger nerds out there. Right? So on some level he has to respect the educated. But he is a meathead too. Which makes it funny. Also funny because what side does he really stand on, PhD or meathead? I’m joking because of course you can be both. But it’s funny to play the total gym meathead too. 👍🇺🇸👍🇺🇸👍🇺🇸
@nogroup58613 ай бұрын
Man, your take on #9 is quite inspirational. Your side-jokes are killer too!
@vybezD8 ай бұрын
I am trying to get as strong as possible, but i have to also do alot of endurance training and i fund that 1 set till failure and 2 sets per muscle group works really well for me and prevents over training.
@Whos_K0NG8 ай бұрын
I've been doing HIT for a few years now and love it. Had tremendous success with it. Although I will say the heavy loads week after week do take their toll on your tendons etc. But yeah I've gotten very strong and but on some good muscle size. Its definitely an option. Just make sure form and execution is your priority.
@screwball698 ай бұрын
Oh god its a hour long, hell yeah
@StayTh1rsty8 ай бұрын
I'm gonna fold so much laundry, I'm hype 😂😂
@chrism51268 ай бұрын
@@StayTh1rsty If ur hype your mom is probably folding your laundry! jk jk
@metaltheftgang95756 ай бұрын
Proud to be part of the 0.01 of Dr Mike's audience that is female 🎉 You've helped me with my training so much, really appreciate your lessons and your humour, thank you ❤
@bhuvaneshs.k6388 ай бұрын
Can we get an optimal workout routine for 3 days a week? Which combines sufficient volume and HIT High Intensity Training philosophy. Like a Modern HIT. Make a video on this.
@PlanetWiper6 ай бұрын
3 working days, spaced apart by 2 days of rest is what I do for deloading/HIT phase.
@kredonystus77688 ай бұрын
A good personal trainer is just like a good conductor. They aren't there for you when you're on point, they're there to point in a direction and to get you back on point when things go wrong.
@Ace_528 ай бұрын
I agree with Mike on this one
@fernandonaz11746 ай бұрын
His concept is pretty good for people who can't stay long in the gym. Maybe after they're comfortable they can change routine.
@danzoilokingsrd31178 ай бұрын
I would love more of this philosophical long videos, very entertaining, interestin, and your houmor is great to keep one interested. Amazing video, more please!
@Torgomasta8 ай бұрын
If you’re interested in hearing the ideas of the specific philosophy in the video, the Ayn Rand Institute’s YT channel has a lot of good information on the history of philosophy in general as well as objectivism specifically. It’s cool you’re intrigued about philosophy 😎
@chrism51268 ай бұрын
Yup, and I never get sick of his humor.
@danzoilokingsrd31178 ай бұрын
@@Torgomasta Thank you! If i was going to know more about a specific philosophy, then i would read about it. I would also say Dr. Mike's other youtube channel is good if you wanna see specifically him discuss ideas, which was kinda what i was requesting, but i would also like to see that philosophical discussion with exercise science too, because nerding out is fun. But cool, i'll check out Ayn Rand, thanks for the suggestion.
@MrBlick766 ай бұрын
I def piss myself alot with Dr mikes jokes
@serbianbossman7 ай бұрын
you should totally do a live stream of you taking a psychopath test
@omidnamadi92628 ай бұрын
36:19 I believe cutting slack is referring to tailoring pants, if you have a pair with more material you have more play room to maybe size it up or down easier after the fact.
@ice-xv1hi8 ай бұрын
I've come to the realization that Mentzer and Arnold were the two extremes. Very low volume to extremely high volume (two workouts per day). Most people need something in the middle. The trick is to figure out what's optimal for you.
@sumdudenorris1068 ай бұрын
simply become Tom Platz
@idx19418 ай бұрын
That is not how Arnold actually trained. Don't believe the bullshit that Hitters say about him.
@coltonkosto988 ай бұрын
Basically what I've come up with as well. Using RP techniques/protocols is a good place to start. At least for me it was
@deadlyalliance82816 ай бұрын
3 workouts a week. Back and bi's, chest and tri's, legs and core. Some moves overlap some muscle uses from workout to workout but that's inevitable. Everything is to failure and it's all high volume since it's only 3x a week. So high intensity, high volume 3x a week. Around 1 gram of protein per pound of body weight every day. My back and bi's(including shoulders) is around 20-22 sets, two-four of them being warm ups. Chest and tri's is around 13 sets, two of them being warm up, and same with legs and core with only 1 squat set being a warm up set.
@bonorcahey53398 ай бұрын
I think these would do well uploaded straight to Spotify too
@ferdferple1154Ай бұрын
Best video you can watch on training and funniest too. Good perspective and even summarized at the end.
@dylanrearick62278 ай бұрын
Fun thing about Dorian, he didnt do ONE set. He would do one or two top sets per lift and worked up to it with multiple warmups, so his volume was higher than descriptions of his workout would let on, some of those probably more than close enough to working sets themselves to “count” for everyone but Dorian.
@gporr70048 ай бұрын
Agreed. Mentzer didn’t just do one set either.
@LarryI74985 ай бұрын
The original Arthur Jones program was full body 3 times a week, which is what the Penn State football program was doing in the early to mid 80's, the whole weight room was nautilus with one Olympic bar in the corner, we had the most neck and shoulder injuries, we would have benefited from mentzers modifications, but Penn State eventually realized a full machine workout was not optimal for football training, I actually got weaker my first year, it took me going home my 2cd summer and getting trained by Bryan Greenberg on free weights, I never got a football injury again once I got off the machines
@srleplay8 ай бұрын
This might be the definitive video on the issue. There are many good points Mentzer made but this resurgence of HIT is one of the most baffling things that happened in the fitness space and I was there in the early days of KZbin fitness when even bosu balls had their day in the Sun
@TiberiusX8 ай бұрын
Honestly, it's probably because the fitness influencer space is 90% on gear and if you're a natural you shouldn't train like someone on gear.
@EnigmaticAnamoly8 ай бұрын
@@TiberiusX same case could be made for HIT. PEDs can also let you get away with less work and still grow rapidly quicker than a natural. A happy balance between volume, intensity, and recovery is all it takes. Sht's really not as complicated as some people make it seem. You don't need 20-30 sets per muscle....but that doesn't mean you only need 1 or 2... and lately everyone seems to think it has to be one or the other, without considering all the in between and the nuance.
@TiberiusX8 ай бұрын
@EnigmaticAnamoly I think most people are somewhere in between from what I've seen. Not even the channels named after Mentzer think that his final workout plan was as good as his earlier plans. Most gear is designed to decrease recovery time which is why high volume works for them. I think perhaps it might seem like there are so many idealogues now is because his actual recordings are finally being published on KZbin so more people are giving it a try. If you've been taking advice from people on gear who claim they aren't, then you try HIT you'll see results. Probably just because so many over train. Also, it's highly likely that most of the people who are espousing his routines DON'T plan to compete. They aren't working out to compare to anyone but themselves, I'm certainly never planning to compete, so why would I risk injury with overtraining if I'm personally seeing good results. I have considered experimenting with doing two sets instead of one, or working out every other day but with the same exercises to see if I get better results, but so far I've just pushed my working sets to the absolute limit and went home to eat a steak and it's worked pretty well so far.
@JayKey15058 ай бұрын
Definitely some good advice you had at the end of the video… find then do what works for you.
@Shon528 ай бұрын
Mike Mentzer keeping you big as hell
@danielrogers68628 ай бұрын
As a mike mentzer fanboy I'm glad I found your channel to set me straight
@planetlumi41388 ай бұрын
An hour of glory
@dgeorgefit8 ай бұрын
So true! My preworkout routine consisted of this video and food- baller! Lol!
@natepolidoro45653 ай бұрын
16:42 This is true. Dropped the violin and picked up the dumbbell and got laid instantly upon arrival at college.
@Wetterwet8 ай бұрын
Is that a shake weight in the background?
@btanonymous8 ай бұрын
100% support an episode on your other channel critiquing Objectivism/Rand
@spurzo-thespiralspacewolf89168 ай бұрын
Wish you would’ve wore a fake mustache and glasses for this video! LOL
@GOLDENERA692 ай бұрын
The wit and dry humor is just awesome and my favorite.
@NaturalIntensity698 ай бұрын
Mike didn't have all the answer, no one does. But for his time he was pretty damn close, especially as far as adherence goes due to simplicity. And that keep it stupid simple adherable approach can amount vastly better gains for a good chunk of lifters.
@flyingturtlemonkeyindatrees8 ай бұрын
Not only that but he was going against the status quo at the time. Idk I feel like indoctrinated people hate Mentzer more just because of going against the norm than anything else. He was right on the money about so many things but instead we choose to nitpick
@NaturalIntensity698 ай бұрын
@Mantastic-ho3vm XD
@pinkyandorbrain8 ай бұрын
I'm enjoying Scott the Video guy's increasing presence in the mythology.
@blasvillanueva71954 ай бұрын
19:44 "Like" Lmao
@joelvirolainen5908 ай бұрын
Some buddhist monks do various physical training as well as mental training including martial arts, getting hit with various objects, running, balance and agility work etc. Some do basically circus tours as well.
@andrewmcmurray80818 ай бұрын
Monks huh? Very useful info
@jessebrown14008 ай бұрын
Mentzer is was a genius, he's like Obi-wan, guiding principals are all there, people can argue over how many sets till they are blue in the face. I still see people overtraining all the time and undertraining all the time. You take his slowed tempo reps and throw burnout reps in there at the end of your working sets you have the Houdini secret lever.
@KootBear8 ай бұрын
the real genius was Vince Gironda
@christopherhenrythomas27367 ай бұрын
I really hate when a vshred ad pops up while I'm watching Dr Mike, but I do find it comical 😂
@jarodsantana2316 ай бұрын
Get Brave browsing and then get an ad blocker. I haven't watched a KZbin ad in years.
@miltkarr51098 ай бұрын
Stronger you are the less work you can do to get a response. Platz worked out legs every 2 weeks at his peak. Sterons definitely help from going catabolic in the off time.
@JM-837 ай бұрын
What’s a steron?
@karelenhenkie6667 ай бұрын
I dont know , ehats a steron with you😂@@JM-83
@jamesmiddleton8335Ай бұрын
Comparing yourself to others is how you realise you’re doing something wrong, which then leads to improvement and optimisation.
@patrickalbani40567 ай бұрын
Mike you’re a good guy but just get to the point
@itsGzim6 ай бұрын
Yapping olympics, and I ain’t compare
@chrisj37896 ай бұрын
How dare you!
@ben_gurin5 ай бұрын
We are here for the talking bro , not just facts, we need fun too
@ORiOh45824 ай бұрын
Shame
@Weirdguy68 ай бұрын
WHAT? the video was an hour long??? i finished the video and didn't even realise it wasn't 15 minutes long. Dr.Mike is too funny
@shaklla3697 ай бұрын
Mike Mentzer is long dead. He can't defend his approach and can't debate you either. But, Dorian Yates is alive and in great health. He also has started his own podcast lately. Why not address him and debunk the HIT methodology? Or start a debate with him. At least he's alive and able to talk. Also, very important to note: Quotes don't represent any philosophy fully. They are just part of a larger ocean. And can easily be taken out of context. Mike Mentzer has also written books. Did you read them? I highly doubt it. With all my respect, but your take is just 'coffee talk'. This is not how intellectuals engage in analyzing and 'debunking' others philosophies and methodologies.
@samsutton776 ай бұрын
To your point at about the 12 min mark. When i started lifting. I was over training. But the results were cool to me. In 6 or 8 months. I was in a facility "job corps". I just lifted in all of my free time. I never gained weight. But muscles were hard. At 155 i could curl 60 lbs reps of 3 sets of 10 eazy. They didnt have 70's. Chest shredded. Benching around 185 3 sets 10. . Its nothing major. But i started around 95lbs. (6 months) Its just i wasnt eating extra. Just stayed in the gym. A 16 yo. Point its. You can train not eat and be thin shredded and strong. Prolly gained about 5 lbs in that time. Wish i knew what you were preaching now. I wanted to be big. But i was amazed at my change regardless. .
@sobakuf5846 ай бұрын
Just subbed. Such a good bodybuilding channel
@Spudcore4 ай бұрын
Short shorts *sploosh* Fun factoid: "man" used to just mean person. It still does in German. "Man kann mit dem Rad fahren" means "one can ride a bike". "Werman" and "Wifman" meant man and woman, and that's where we get the word "wife" (as well as "werewolf", ie "manwolf"). Over time, the language shifted and now man, in everyday speech, generally means man. But man also means mankind, as in people. And since you asked, I'd go for number 3, getting railed by all the dudes 24/7.
@DM-sq3jm5 ай бұрын
"Quit bodybuilding while you're behind." - Dr. Mike.😂 Love the content, Dr. Mike; informative and very entertaining.