BaseStrengthAI is more reliable than a coach, cheaper than an Excel template!👇👇👇 www.BaseStrength.com/the-app Bromley Merch from Barbell Apparel only available HERE! 👇👇👇 barbellapparel.com/Bromley
@Damian.Williams9 ай бұрын
Good video...
@espenstoro Жыл бұрын
Bromley just casually dropping a feature length movie out of nowhere, and I'm here for it.
@HerculesFit Жыл бұрын
Facts!
@DarkTrapStudio Жыл бұрын
Exept most Movies are useless exept distraction ^^ This is more than great !
@-I-Use-Punctuation Жыл бұрын
No joke! Love his content. I've been asleep at the wheel for months now, no motivation. 😂 SOMEONE PLEASE MOTIVATE ME!! Had to check in on Bromley, see what I've been missin. Then a badass, bodybuilding, history video calls my name 😁
@DarkTrapStudio Жыл бұрын
@@-I-Use-Punctuation Motivation is for lost people that doesn't have discipline, just do it bro, if you have trouble do it gradually : Day 1 make your bad, Day Make you bag and open the door, Day 3 make your bag, open the door and go take the road 1 minutes and so on and so on, Discipline is a Muscle trust in you I know this so bad my parents destroyed me back then. We have no limits, only the one we think of.
@memeboat9261 Жыл бұрын
Even if it doesn’t blow up, you should still consider making more of these. They’re excellent quality.
@AlexanderBromley Жыл бұрын
Going to move to these types of vids as my primary content (though maybe not 100 minutes long lol.
@cheeks7050 Жыл бұрын
Hardcore history just dropped a seven hour podcast, so, consider it.@@AlexanderBromley
@twistedstrength. Жыл бұрын
@@AlexanderBromley good call
@daevidpp445 Жыл бұрын
@@AlexanderBromleywatched the whole thing and will continue to do so 🙏 you've been my best source for programming what i need for my body type, appreciate you and the work you put in
@Qwerty8790 Жыл бұрын
@@daevidpp445i second this.
@aesop2733 Жыл бұрын
I thought it was interesting how timeless Hackenschmidt's advice was given the era he was from. He may be the first real gym bro
@AlexanderBromley Жыл бұрын
There are some gems in his books. They are public domain, so pretty easy to get.
@baileyterry37758 ай бұрын
Literally a gym genius
@usnhotcarl2 ай бұрын
There's no way in hell I'm going to enjoy this video for free. Thank you for putting this together, and keep up the great work!
@CoachBorgeFagerli Жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing both the Myo-reps technique and Effective Reps model - just to clarify, I originally came up with the Effective Reps model as a foundation for Myo-reps back in 2005-2006, whereas Chris Beardsley came up with the Stimulating Reps model about 7 years later. I think it’s difficult to quantify precisely how stimulating or effective a rep is, that’s my point. I don’t think it’s just a simple math equation where 1+1=2 - many variables are involved: proximity to failure, load and % of 1RM, overall volume (so the reps in the 5th set is less stimulating and more fatiguing than the 1st set), and then also rest periods, (probably) fiber type makeup and muscle group, exercise selection (stability, single- vs multi-joint, resistance curve, how recovered you are going into the workout (so residual fatigue from not only previous workouts, but also life stressors) and probably many more I’m forgetting atm. So the slope of the effective reps curve will be different, where 3 sets of 4 reps isn’t necessarily less effective than 3 sets of 5 reps at your 6RM, or even 10,9,8 reps at your 10RM etc etc. It’s a model that helps us explain why seemingly divergent training philosophies can provide the same approximate results. One such relevant example is the high vs low volume debates where someone might be doing 3 warm-up sets then 2 sets to failure, someone else is doing 8 submaximal sets only approaching 0-1RIR on the last set. From a "high vs. low" volume perspective people can argue to death about the superiority of one vs the other, when physiologically - they’re probably very close to each other. I’m a big fan of individualising volume, start low and see if you achieve progressive overload - add volume if and when you get stuck, or if you want to see if you get faster gains from it...but allow at least 3-4 weeks to determine that (and account for life stressors, sleep, nutrition or any variable that might affect your numbers). Great video!
@AlexanderBromley Жыл бұрын
Apologies! I spent a weekend diving into that and I started with Chris because I had heard his name passed around the most. In hindsight, I had heard both terms but mistakenly thought they were interchangeable. While I have you, would you mind giving me the cliff notes on the difference between the models? Did Chris just rebrand your work or is there something fundamentally different?
@CoachBorgeFagerli Жыл бұрын
@@AlexanderBromley Chris came up with his model years after I did, and based on some different data from what he told me - but they are quite similar. I guess the main difference is that Chris’ model states that the final 5 reps of a set are the stimulating reps, so kind of a "hard" break point - whereas I’ve always looked at it as a slope - so at heavier loads (80-85%+) most, if not all reps are "effective" whereas at lighter loads, it’s more of a gradual slope where the final 3-5 reps are the most effective and it’s probably ineffective to do e.g. several sets of 10 reps with your 20RM unless you also use short rest periods (but then the 20RM load will gradually end up being your 10RM load after sets 4-5 or so).
@centurionstrengthandfitnes3694 Жыл бұрын
If my clients could sit still and ignore their phones for 1hr 44mins, I'd make watching this complulsory! Amazing work, man. Loved it.
@doesnotexist6524 Жыл бұрын
2x play speed is a game changer.
@centurionstrengthandfitnes3694 Жыл бұрын
@@doesnotexist6524 It is. That's how I watched it.
@AlexanderBromley Жыл бұрын
Really is a game changer; I have my TV app permanently set to 2x and my wife hates it. Can't even edit my own vids unless it's 3.5 lol
@bestwesterner Жыл бұрын
It’s so damn hard for me to process info at 2x speed. Slow brain go woah 🤤
@Tokenutha Жыл бұрын
@@bestwesterneryeah I can’t keep up lol don’t know what they’re on
@Mexicanjedi34296 ай бұрын
Ronnie Colman surgery wasn't botched. He decided to do what his doctor told him not too. Where he went back to lift super heavy before his healing period was over and fucked up his fusion and the screws came out
@GameN3rdz2 ай бұрын
Yikes he should've listened
@raminrouchi2022 ай бұрын
He then finished his set and his only regret was not doing 2 more reps
@jarvismarvis89002 ай бұрын
He’s a fucxkng idiot he probably be waking now then
@NanaJerome2 ай бұрын
I'm sorry were you his doctor mexicanjedi? Speaking hearsay like it's facts..
@johnsheetz66392 ай бұрын
I got a Joe weider bench from Sears when I was a kid I had to pull down machine thing and a leg extension that was useless the pool down thing connected to the leg extension and it was tied up with pretty much shoestring that came with it. The bar started bending at about 140 lb and it would pinch your hands when you try to rack it. Joe weider was a piece of work.
@billymcondon Жыл бұрын
This was honestly one of the best videos I have seen from you and seeing the history and repeating themes really helps me get rid of any skepticism I have for a number of different workout concepts. Very well structured, did not get too technical for me to overthink things, especially only being about 2 years into weight training. So much gets over complicated with the whole "optimal" workouts, splits, frequency etc. but you are incredible at helping sift through the bullshit and fluff, especially with the key takeaways at the end. Great editing too! Keep up the great work and thanks for all the advice you have given over the videos I have watched! 😁
@AlexanderBromley Жыл бұрын
Appreciate it man, feedback means the world!
@billymcondon Жыл бұрын
Of course! Gotta help get these type of vids on the good side of the algorithm lmao
@findango Жыл бұрын
My mind is blown. The level of research is astounding. I learned quite a bit from watching this series. Phenomenal work. I watched it all.
@j3rs3yjak3FIU Жыл бұрын
LONG FORM CONTENT FOR THE WIN. I'm a super nerd so this was awesome. I will definitely be watching this several times, there's so much great information. Thanks again, Bromley!
@richharr8 ай бұрын
The fact that you made this masterpiece 1 video when you could have stretched it out over several episodes for views give you so much credibility in my opinion. Thank you for everything you do.
@d.d5619Ай бұрын
that doesnt make any sense but it is ur opinion
@leosaffron222 Жыл бұрын
Bromley’s channel is a premier resource in training and programming knowledge. This is just adding to it
@DThrawn Жыл бұрын
Volume is tricky. I've never been able to make very high volumes work for me. And that was when I wasn't working manual labor. Recovery demands are so high for me now I'm basically lifting full body 2x per week like I'm old or something, with fairly low volumes. Interestingly, when I overdo it on volume, the issues I have aren't local to muscles or connective tissues, they're hormonal and neurochemical.
@elliotthunter622610 ай бұрын
Maybe because you actually train HARD. This video seems a bit bias towards volume over HIT..... keep doing what works for you
@ruckerbrady83428 ай бұрын
Yup sounds like you train close to failure or to failure itself. High volume is a waist of time and energy for me. High or even moderate volume at high intensity is pointless imo. If going to failure, one set is all that's needed, anymore is just creating more recovery with no more growth. Iv tried all volumes. Low volume with high intensity is the only thing that makes sense after trying it ALL
@DThrawn8 ай бұрын
@@ruckerbrady8342 Basically, yeah. I've played with RPE/RIR in the past, but that was with very specialized programming. I found it let me bring my big lifts up a bit without having to gain weight, so probably the benefits were largely neuromuscular in nature. I've given training with more traditional bodybuilding principles (hit muscles with different exercises, short rests, get the big pumps) and I felt like crap and saw no performance increases (actually significant decreases). Shearing away a lot of that stuff has been seeing my strength come back in spades. I haven't been deadlifting or squatting for more than one really hard work set and it leaves me sore the next day. Overhead and bench this happens too, but not as sore. Why do I need all this extra shit if the bare bones is getting a stimulus going?
@devriestown5 ай бұрын
Sounds like you need to sort your sleep and diet out if your not recovering .
@franciscogutierrez3621Ай бұрын
I seriously doubt, without sound evidence, that you’d be able to discern whether those issues are leading to hormonal and neurochemical but hey maybe you have a system laid out
@binyaming7921 Жыл бұрын
This is insane. Fascinating material and perfectly presented. I think this may be one of your best videos yet. I'm not really into bodybuilding, so the fact that this engaged me throughout is a testament to how well done this video is.
@mrhigeji Жыл бұрын
Phenomenal summary of pretty much everything bodybuilding. This will become a go-to reference video to send to people when they want to learn about bodybuilding, at least for me
@AlexanderBromley Жыл бұрын
Appeciate it my man!
@yourstrulybostonyourstruly3185 Жыл бұрын
First time viewing, havent heard of you before but an hour and 44 minutes of sheer lifting history with research backed methods gets a new subscriber ALL DAY over here broski!
@Kuriboh-ec1me Жыл бұрын
This channel is criminally underrated ...one of if not the best source of info on KZbin
@DrEvil-ng7ep Жыл бұрын
Have been lifting for 25ish years and this is the best presentation on strength training I have ever seen.
@theicemanhaslanded Жыл бұрын
Legend for producing this Bromley! 💪
@alexw.8999 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for this. Simplifying the complex into easily understood concepts is a mark of brilliance. Amazing job, incredible compilation.
@CK-iy3hx Жыл бұрын
What a great video👍👍👍 One can only imagine the endless hours of work you put into this project. I would love a similar video like this done on strongman training. Greetings from 🇩🇪
@mattallthat Жыл бұрын
One of THE best videos ive ever seen on the subject. Brilliantly put together 👏
@AlexanderBromley Жыл бұрын
Greatly appreciated!
@nomad9584 Жыл бұрын
This video was extremely well put together and I thank you, Bromley, for being the breath of fresh air the fitness industry needs. You, along with Mike Israetel, are the pioneers of shifting the focus off of materialistic, narcissistic content like 'full day of eating videos' and other tropes done for sensationalism in favour of high-end education to make us simply better lifters. Awesome stuff.
@RoryEllisMusic Жыл бұрын
Amazing work with this dude! I love that you’re not afraid to make these in depth long form videos in a day and age where people have no attention spans.
@adamdaykin4052 Жыл бұрын
An absolutely fantastic video. I would happily say the best I’ve seen in a few years. Thank you so much for taking the time and effort to produce such an informative and engaging piece of work.
@GutsBatman Жыл бұрын
This year of lifting has been an interesting learning curve. I have grown to value effort and have really pay attention to it, and what that means for every lift that I do. I used to work sets and reps and percentage as a primary base until probably about May. Now that I really know what I can lift now, which is done primarily for strength gain, I am able to gauge effort much better. I've lifted in a meandering way from 2013-2020 and more a powerlifting/powerbuilding methodology since 2020. I look back at my strength training from about 2013-22 and firmly say that I wasn't able to firmly grade or gauge effort accurately. Figuring it out has been really, really been a help.
@TatisRingwormCreme Жыл бұрын
What an absolute class video Alexander, complete gem. Funnily enough was listening to this on my headphones and after it finished, I was walking past Georg Hackenschmidt's resting place as I live nearby and thought i'd thank him in spirit, the first real gym bro ❤
@mr-iz8cx Жыл бұрын
Really enjoying your work here. It's very interesting and pragmatic. One thing regarding Mentzer that springs to my mind is that highly talented and intellectually "gifted" individuals often have these psychological struggles. It has to do with achievement, self image, motivation...etc. But basically they often succeed early with less "effort" and setbacks create rupture in their self-esteem/image. There's quite a bit of academic literature surrounding it. Which is really worth some research and reading if a person is interested in ideas of failure and success and what those terms engender. So much weight is put into very high standards of "success" that we get indoctrinated into. So few people reach these standards and that, I think, for what it's worth is a good thing to investigate. If you're trying. ❤ ✌️
@Smludt Жыл бұрын
Exceptional work brotha. Thank you for this well researched and extremely detailed piece to educate. Not only on the history of our sport that any individual (at any level) interested in fitness should know, but also learn from based in their goals from the practice,results, and mistakes of the greats going back to the singularity of our sport(s).
@duxnlabs Жыл бұрын
Loved it, Bromley!! Really informative and slickly produced.
@michaelpease21039 ай бұрын
I got so fascinated with lifting 10 years ago that I went and got a degree in exercise science. Still fascinated to this day.
@SilverSlugs16 Жыл бұрын
A banger that I’ve been watching in pieces for like 3 days now. I don’t want it to end
@naturalgains4229 Жыл бұрын
Love HIT bodybuilding. 1-2 sets taken to failure with slow and controlled reps have been allowing me to continue growing at home.
@danielmillward9947 Жыл бұрын
Ive started doing this, 2 set's of weighted pullups ss with db ohp, incline db ss with db row, 1 set of ring pushup ss with ring chins, 2 sets of squats ss with hamstring curl, 2 sets of seated curl and lying triceps extension ss with side and rear laterals, finished off with a ab static hold to failure to finish off. Done in 40 - 50 mins with 3 minutes rest between sets is this similar to yours 🤔
@naturalgains422911 ай бұрын
@@danielmillward9947for these exercises, just assume I’m doing 1-2 sets. Reason is, it may be hard to reach failure in the first set, but I’m definitely reaching failure on the second set if I only rest a few seconds and go again almost immediately. And also, I do very slow reps so I don’t need much weight to continue seeing muscle and strength gains. On Monday I do bodyweight dips, 20 Lb dumbbell tricep extensions, 20 Lb static holds for the side delts. Wednesday I do bodyweight pull-ups, 35 Lb dumbbell rows for back, 35 Lb dumbbell shrugs for traps, 20 Lb dumbbell bicep and hammer curls, 20 Lb dumbbell forearm curls. Friday I do a timed static contraction on a wall sit, you could call it overcoming isometrics taken to failure same thing basically. You basically do a wall sit and plant your feet into the ground while slowly trying to push up against the wall as if you were trying to leg press the ground. I hit calves the same way, and then I do leg tucks for abdominals on the floor, basically bring your knees in towards your chest and bring your legs back out fully extended outward. This works and it works because you can really fatigue the muscle with super slow reps.
@coachbobkapustka480311 ай бұрын
the Value you're providing here is unmatched anywhere. such a dynamic thorough delivery with your personal touch! Thank you sir !
@gaddirafaelalfonsoco3648 Жыл бұрын
At 35:29 photo on the left is George Eiferman, not John Grimek
@shawnfausey Жыл бұрын
I absolutely loved this! Such amazing history of bodybuilding and strongman over the years and this was presented brilliantly. Would love more movies like this :D
@kendallt909 Жыл бұрын
Nice way to look at popular training through the ages
@Adityarm.08 Жыл бұрын
Very amazing content, as always. I've seen some of the most intelligent advice on this channel among any youtube channels I've seen even outside strength training - & that's saying a lot because most of the stuff I follow is maths, physics, & comuter science. At this point, I resonate very much with Steve Reeves's approach of enjoying the lifts in moderation. After 3 injuries & increased LDL Cholesterol due to high animal protein, I've just shifted to 6 times workout 4 days a week from friday to monday each ~17 minutes per session. Pull-ups+Dips, Single-leg squats, Forward/Reverse plank, & Kickboxing for some enjoyable high intensity cardio.
@mrsmuuve Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video man this is just awesome I'm not done with it yet but Its amazing work
@alikshaf691 Жыл бұрын
For some reason I sit and enjoy one hour or more of explanations about different topic on lifting, exercise and training methods here on this channel but I can't focus when I watch any other video about training from any other channel.... Great videos Mr Bromley highly educational thank you.....
@scottmitchell1974 Жыл бұрын
Epic! Well done! I've been a "lurker" but now I'm going to sub. Great info. At 49 years old high-rep very high intensity with 6-days rest between big body parts and 2-3 between little parts seems to be the ticket.
@DrRomaioi Жыл бұрын
Great coverage of the styles and history. And of course "we can only speculate"
@cam-the-bassist11 ай бұрын
I think Mike 'giving up' after losing to Arnie is more complex than you've let on here. Arnie showed up in pretty terrible form (relative to Olympia standards of course) and stole the win from much worthier participants, Mike included, which lead to a lot people thinking the judging was rigged to give Arnie 1st. I think Mike was flawed in the sense that he let his bitterness overcome him and rule his existence, but in my opinion his ire towards Arnie was completely justified. You've juxtaposed Arnie's accomplishments to Mike's here, but I think a lot of the former's success came down to his natural charisma versus Mike's more obsessive personality. That doesn't make Mike lesser, Arnie was just poised to succeed in that era due to his strengths. I think that specific Olympia, on the assumption it was rigged (which I believe it certainly was) shows the self entitlement Arnie had, which probably also helped him prosper post bodybuilding. I'm not trying to disrespect his accomplishments, I just think it's unfair to dwell on Mike's character flaws without mentioning Arnie's.
@Transformwithpuvi4 ай бұрын
1:16:40 when you talk about ronnie's workouts, i'm sure i've seen him in an interview saying 45 minutes of weight training everyday to look like him, I think it was on a late night talk show or something in the 90s or early 00s perhaps
@bruuhhhh Жыл бұрын
My god, nearly 2 hours of bromley goodness... It's fine, bodybuilding training methodology is more important than sleep anyway
@LatimusChadimus Жыл бұрын
But he's skipping Bronze&Silver era folks like John Grimek, starting with the age of PEDs..... My first 👎 on any of his videos......... 😥
@AlexanderBromley Жыл бұрын
It's an hour and 40 minutes long, and it hasn't been an hour and 40 minutes since I posted it.... try watching
@AlexanderRodriguez-lm1qw Жыл бұрын
@@LatimusChadimusimagine disliking a KZbin video.
@mrsmuuve Жыл бұрын
Damn right lol
@jugi1231 Жыл бұрын
@@LatimusChadimusits good to skip 60kg natty squirrels
@justinallen1851 Жыл бұрын
Really enjoyed the video! I've been binging bodybuilding content after starting to get serious with the gym this past April and this was great, very informative and interesting. Alot of the takeaways were things I had gathered through other sources and watching training of the best coaches (like Hany) and bodybuilders (like CBum and Derek) but having it in one place is going to be fantastic for alot of beginners and intermediates. For my part though I really enjoyed the history lesson of all the pre-Arnold bodybuilders and strongmen that paved the way.
@CraigCastanet Жыл бұрын
I was a huge fan of Mentzer's. Your commentary on Mike is spot-on, insightful, and tragically true. He betrayed himself.
@Anabsurdsuggestion Жыл бұрын
Superb video! For my money, Bromley’s Cruising Altitude of Volume is the best recipe, two reps from failure, twice a week. Every once in a while, the weight jumps a little, and so a little becomes a lot over time. Watching this amazing video, it strikes me that impatience is a problem if you’re an amateur, but a source of innovation if you’re a pro. Im no pro, so patience, and just remembering to enjoy it, have been my best allies. And Bromley.
@ljnv Жыл бұрын
The program you showed with Arnold was his pre olympia program to get shredded. I belive he focused on more compound movements with only 4-5 training days
@Bdavis2475 Жыл бұрын
I'd love to see more of his routines throughout the years
@rolemodel15 Жыл бұрын
Can't imagine how much work this took to put together. Thanks, my guy, this is a great doc.
@dobfeldman5026 Жыл бұрын
Very cool to donate for hard work. You’re a role model
@AlexanderBromley Жыл бұрын
Much appreciated!
@LWonderchild Жыл бұрын
Bromley back at it with the fire content as always. Keep it up man, cant wait for this one. 2 whole hours!
@bretdupuis1971 Жыл бұрын
@Alexanderbromley, this video is fantastic. You did an amazing job, I will be re watching this multiple times over the years.
@John_on_the_mountain Жыл бұрын
Im surprised you never mentioned Jack LaLanne
@AlexanderBromley Жыл бұрын
Too many people to mention throughout history! Though culturally a pioneer, I don't believe Jack was ever a competitive bodybuilder (could be wrong, but didn't find mention of it).
@John_on_the_mountain Жыл бұрын
@@AlexanderBromley yeah i dont think he was. He did a lot to get people in the gym and lifting weights though. And according to wikipedia he invented leg extension machines, cable pulldown machines, all sorts of standard gym equipment we use now, but never patented it. Dont really know how true it is though i only read it on wikipedia
@LeoTrainer-if9gg11 ай бұрын
Damn! Hats off to the work that went into this. Smart. Informative. And professionally produced. Nearly 2 hours flew by. Thanks.
@rafaelt8589 Жыл бұрын
Feels wrong to be this ungodly early
@rafaelt8589 Жыл бұрын
@@CatsOnTrenhaha my bad
@prototype9904 Жыл бұрын
This is hands down, the most thorough and informative Video regarding bodybuilding I've ever seen!! I'm a long time bodybuilder +30 years. I'm so glad you put this together, currently, there is sooooo much static in the sphere of bodybuilding and fitness with all the social media "influencers" pumping out the click bait at record levels. I feel so defeated sometimes when I'm trying to counter all the bad advice floating around. This is such a brilliant and accurate description of the nuts and bolts and history, I'm really impressed. Thank you \m/
@dmytrotkachoyv Жыл бұрын
This is a great piece of information 👏👏👏. It is not only about history but also about the practicality and effectiveness of different methods and approaches. I wish people around me who train regularly knew English at a decent level so I could share this video with them.
@bloodypommelstudios7144 Жыл бұрын
I had doubts about Leroy Colbert being natural but seeing him at 12 I can definitely believe it's possible for him to have 21" arms drug free.
@danielmillward9947 Жыл бұрын
Yep look at steve reeves at 16 or 17, already built like a pro footballer
@cuchulainn1967 Жыл бұрын
@ 35:29 min ...That is George Eiferman on the left, not John Grimek!
@thoughtsuponatime847 Жыл бұрын
This video is going to blow up.
@AlexanderBromley Жыл бұрын
Fingers crossed, lol. This was a lot of minutes to make.
@tapioperala301011 ай бұрын
"Why would you choose to be weak?" Gotta love that. Great video!
@GVS Жыл бұрын
Move over Marvel!
@jk-tn8ry8 ай бұрын
Interesting video. Informative. Reg Park was from Leeds, England. Moving to South Africa later in life.
@patrickhodgson361 Жыл бұрын
Mike mentzer for the win! 1 set every 2 weeks! Best scientific approach of all time!
@BuJammy Жыл бұрын
Good one, lol.
@tryingtothinkofsomethingcool Жыл бұрын
Please tell me you're kidding.
@patrickhodgson361 Жыл бұрын
Of course numbnuts 😉
@patrickhodgson361 Жыл бұрын
@shank me too. But then I tried 1 rep every 2 weeks and somehow I have better results. It’s insane man
@BuJammy Жыл бұрын
You're horribly overtrained.@@therustedshank9995
@JGJ505 Жыл бұрын
Crazy to have this type of content for free! Thank you sir 🙏
@HerculesFit Жыл бұрын
Bro unleashed a Netflix worthy documentary 💪
@hb00123 ай бұрын
This is a great overview and critique of the sport. Excellent
@Charles-pf7zy Жыл бұрын
i always had this weird gut feeling that mike mentzer was "king of the losers". attracted an army of losers who felt smarter than everyone else yet gave up at anything they ever did at a drop of a dime
@Charles-pf7zy Жыл бұрын
honestly. a lot of ayn rand fans i've met have sort of been this way. that isn't to attack her ideological positions, it's just interesting how snark and loserdom seem to be correlated
@JoshuaKevinPerry Жыл бұрын
@@Charles-pf7zyGo ahead and tell me how much you love Brandon
@98danielray Жыл бұрын
@@JoshuaKevinPerrywho?
@chrisdiaz487610 ай бұрын
Mike doesn't really look like a "king of the losers" to me lol. His rhetoric for as controversial as it is, seems fairly smart.
@nboss96810 ай бұрын
Lmfao
@markovasil1608 Жыл бұрын
What an impressive documentary, insane quality so much better for watching the entire 1.45hrs
@mattTHEEgreat8 ай бұрын
Mentzer is like a vegan strongman, making 97 percent of their gains eating plenty of meat. Then goes vegan for 6 months and claims that is where all the strength comes from.
@nicksmith42447 ай бұрын
It’s just amino acids. You can get plenty of those from plants. I made all of my gains vegan (17-23 years old). There is nothing magically ineffective about vegan diets. I agree with the overarching point, the analogy just doesn’t work.
@mattTHEEgreat7 ай бұрын
@@nicksmith4244 then why aren't there more vegan strongman? I don't think Mitch Hooper or the Stoltman brothers are eating buckets of Kale and getting plenty of AA to win. Where are you getting creatine from plants? It's hard to get enough Creatine from a carnivore diet that is why everyone supplements.
@nicksmith42447 ай бұрын
@@mattTHEEgreat because veganism isn’t popular enough anywhere in the world to contribute a substantial sample to any given sport. Additionally, meat is assumed to be a necessary component of strength based endeavors, culturally dissuading those of the plant based persuasion. People only benefit in terms of muscle protein synthesis up to around .8 grams per pound of lean body mass. And those benefits are relatively marginal. I’m not saying it’s advantageous for strength based sports, just that it’s adequate. The only challenge I can see would be with bodybuilders during a prolonged cut, because they’d basically have to only eat tofu and protein powder to get to single digit body fat while eating enough protein to prevent muscle decay in such a large defecit.
@nicksmith42447 ай бұрын
@@mattTHEEgreat you supplement creatine. Don’t be reactionary, you’d have to consume pounds of red meat each day to get enough creative naturally. This appeal to naturalism is a silly argument. Nothing about strongman is “natural” if you catch my drift. Nothing about modern life is natural. Cars aren’t natural, vaccines aren’t natural, modern medicine is not natural, yet we use them. You don’t even need to supplement b12 as a vegan if we are being technical because nutritional yeast contains it to my knowledge, but I’d suggest anyone who is to supplement for convenience and as an insurance policy.
@nicksmith42447 ай бұрын
@@mattTHEEgreat I’m not trying to be overly critical, I just don’t like people perpetuating the myth that vegans are sickly anemic stick people when that isn’t necessarily the case. I agree with the assertion that heavy duty / high intensity training doesn’t contribute a great enough workload to promote reasonable progress for most people.
@jamespurchase4035 Жыл бұрын
Outstanding and fascinating content. Very high quality as usual. It was very interesting for me to learn about the history. I enjoyed those clips and images of the old timers. From my perspective I'm keen to maintain some of that old timey athleticism while getting stronger. I've already hit my, very modest, bulk/weight goals and now I'm just going for strength/endurance/resiliance and general indestructable longevity without blowing out any joints or tendons. And I'm staying as clean as a whistle. Some of my takeaways from this video: Have fun, mix things up, then mix it up some more when you hit a wall. God bless you.
@beburs11 ай бұрын
You implying as if there aren’t high volume fanatics as much as there are HIT fanatics is blatantly dishonest bromley,I don’t know if you like to fanboy over Arnold or is this an objective opinion but acting as if the “ high volume “ cult represents everyone else is ridiculous.
@bennyc40911 ай бұрын
Mate! That was such a good watch. Wholesome, entertaining, and bloody awesome!
@limebarchetta79797 ай бұрын
Your assessment of Mike Mentzer's motives is wrong. You misinterpreted his intentions. His choice to quit was not a matter of not finishing something he started. Mentzer quit Bodybuilding because he saw how corrupt that Industry is.
@ralf-54 ай бұрын
And he stopped working out because?
@Jereth1273 ай бұрын
Mentzer has a semi cult like following. His propensity for philosophy presents his ideas as more meaningful than they really are.
@scott-hr3hd3 ай бұрын
@@ralf-5 Because of a shoulder injury.
@BlueGamingRage2 ай бұрын
I confused how someone could get into a professional sport and not expect it to be corrupt
@Ian-yf7uf2 ай бұрын
Look at the side by side pic of Mentzer and Arnold. Arnold actually did beat him, Arnold was right - Mentzer's belly looked too big.
@gtronin2631 Жыл бұрын
Great job!! This is so much work, and presented so well. Thank you for all your time and effort put into this video.
@eldigitom9680 Жыл бұрын
History, theory, photos, production, narrative, presented flawlessly. Thx Bromely, that one was loaded.
@Alex55455 Жыл бұрын
This is up there with the best videos I have seen any Fitness Channel produce. I learnt a lot in this one
@ParvParashar Жыл бұрын
Wow! Absolutely amazing video. Truly outstanding. It’s highly insightful and comprehensive. Totally excellent work. Thanks for sharing! The amount of effort you’ve put into this and all the other videos is very commendable. I’m deeply grateful to you for creating such great videos. This video is certainly a well crafted masterpiece. 🙏
@JayBrie69 Жыл бұрын
Watched the whole damn thing. Well done Bromley!
@AlexanderBromley Жыл бұрын
Glad you liked it!
@Maximum_Natural_Muscle Жыл бұрын
Great video. You put a lot of work to make it. Well done!
@derekmorrow7721 Жыл бұрын
This is genuinely one of, if not the, best workout videos ive ever watched. The way youve been able to summarise all of this is so impressive and valuable. Thank you. I wish an 18 year old or even 30 year old me had have been able to watch this. I feel like ive wasted so much training time.
@ryandillingsworth3540 Жыл бұрын
this is a great video, love history and bodybuilding, and nerding on overthinking training principles
@AlexanderBromley Жыл бұрын
Unnecessarily granular analysis is what I do best.
@ryankelly663 ай бұрын
I love the long form stuff. This is one of the most brilliant breakdowns of lifting I've seen. Keep it coming!!
@Raao1 Жыл бұрын
Best believe I'm watching and sharing this one. Your work is needed and appreciated.
@AlexanderBromley Жыл бұрын
Awesome, thank you!
@Blorguehad2 ай бұрын
Beginning my fitness journey (again for the 3rd time in my life). Threw out all of my old narratives. Just spending a lot of time researching and learning slowly. This video was awesome. Thanks!
@Qwerty8790 Жыл бұрын
Excellent content. I enjoyed the longer in depth video focused on history and covering so many significant players in the big game up to present day. I would love to see a video similar covering strength training in some fashion as challenging as that might be similar to how you covered bodybuilding.
@Fozzieboi Жыл бұрын
That was an epic video! Obviously a lot of work to compile and arrange the info. Good stuff. Bromley is such a beauty.
@afterzanzibar Жыл бұрын
Very nuanced and informative. Also, I like the chart graphic, music and background in this video. Well done.
@reviewsvoiceontube Жыл бұрын
I just like how you summarize key information so fluently and entertaining
@PantheraOnca60 Жыл бұрын
This was awesome. I've been lifting for over 50 years and have studied everything I could get my hands on -- and I still picked up good information from this video. Nicely done!
@blackpanther2819 Жыл бұрын
Dude, solid film. Excellent information. Spot on delivery. You're doing awesome work here.
@stevin5011 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic! Favourite ‘fitness’ channel right now for sure!
@ryanwhite4084 Жыл бұрын
Amazing video Brom! I admire your passion and knowledge.
@shrekyboijames6711 Жыл бұрын
Excellent well made video. Let the algorithm do it more justice. It’s a very good informational video that addresses many topics without inserting unnecessary information
@guyhorowitz158 Жыл бұрын
Bromley, wow bro, the amount of energy and dedication you put in sharing knowledge on such a high level, THANK YOU!
@brianholland5447 Жыл бұрын
I love this "monstrosity"! I plan on watching it again and taking a few notes! It's not a monstrosity at all, but a mass monster of a YT video!
@joaquinroces9332 Жыл бұрын
Been goin thru some bromley content withdrawal lately so this has come at just the right time 👌
@TheHumbleDiet7 ай бұрын
Outstanding work Alexander. Bravo 👏👏👏Not only the content, but also the scripting, the delivery, and the overall storytelling and production. Thank you for your effort, it is much appreciated.
@michaelanthony4750 Жыл бұрын
This is one of my favorite lifting videos ever! Thanks for putting in the research!