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Here we go, Galaxy! Here we go!"I love you, man," said John Buhler (Staff Writer, FanSided.com) to one of The Starters.As Cody Williams (Content Director, FanSided.com) gets ready to get ready for another wedding and such, the boys came together to celebrate Red River, Magnolia, and Bulldog, Bulldog.Oh yeah, there is also a pair of huge Big Ten games going on out on the West Coast this weekend with Ohio State-Oregon and Penn State-USC.This Peter Klaven and Sydney Fife-inspired episode put out the paninis and made you want to travel to Muscle Beach for the best fish tacos in the world.The episode of False Start was heavily impacted by internet issues and Buhler's bad takes on Atlanta Braves farm system philosophies. It was still a great show!
Send us a textCan a well-planned workout regimen truly prevent overtraining and lead to optimal fitness results? Join me, Rob Maxwell, as I explore the precise and focused approach to exercise, likened to shooting a rifle versus a shotgun. This episode promises to shed light on how targeted training can minimize unnecessary harm and help you achieve your fitness goals without overexertion. We'll delve into the complexities of balancing intensity and volume in your workouts, understanding that each body is unique and requires a personalized training plan. Learn how listening to your body and adjusting your regimen is crucial for maintaining health and performance.Travel back in time to Muscle Beach, California, during the bodybuilding boom of the 1970s. We'll discuss how legends like Arnold Schwarzenegger trained intensely for hours each day, leveraging anabolic steroids for recovery. As natural athletes, it's crucial to understand the risks of mimicking these routines without similar aids. Discover practical tips for avoiding overtraining, including the benefits of maintaining an exercise journal to monitor key health indicators. This episode is packed with insights and practical advice to help you tailor an effective and safe workout plan. Tune in to find out more and thank you for your continued support in naming me the best personal trainer for the second consecutive year!
Send us a textBella Martin joins PC to recap the Pit Teen Throwdown where he "Fittest Teens on Earth" where crowned and Bella was there calling all the action. The newest 16-17 teen division champions, RJ Mestre and Reese Littlewood join us to talk about their season and the honors bestowed upon them.Bella and PC also preview this coming weekend's awesome event Lift, Run, Hang, hosted by Deuce Gym and STRIKE MVMNT at the iconic Muscle Beach on the famous boardwalk of Venice Beach this Saturday, September 14.Visit us on our website at bfriendlyfitness.comConnect with us on Instagram BFriendly on Instagram Brian on Instagram PC on Instagram Bella on Instagram Chad on Instagram Today's episode is brought to you by Home Grown Releaf and STRIKE MVMNT.Check out the new transit trainers.https://strike-mvmnt.comFollow Home Grown Releaf on their instagram channel @homegrownreleaf and be entered into a drawing for a $50 credit to be used on their website.HGR Website: ...
Daniel Schmidt (Der Spiegel, This Is America) takes the train with host Thomas Emerick to Euro '96 in England for Die Mannschaft vs. The Three Lions. Frankfurt to Manchester and then Manchester to London provides plenty of time to examine the soccer balance between these countries in the century leading up to and since this UEFA European Championship semifinals thriller. Also, whose side to take on '90s Britpop beefs, confluence with political tides of Labour and the Tories, and the influence of British pop culture on Daniel while growing up in Northwest Germany and going to school in the UK. This is Remember That Game, the podcast about sporting events that take you on a journey and chart the path of the zeitgeist. I'm your host Thomas Emerick, enjoy the show. Follow Remember That Game for the full archive: Apple Spotify YouTube "Remember That Game" in search wherever you get your podcasts More from Daniel Schmidt: This Is America (Website to grab Daniel's book) Impressions from first days of the trial in New York (Der Spiegel) Interview with American journalist Wesley Lowery (Frankfurter Allgemeine) A bodybuilder is a sculptor, like Rodin or Michelangelo, Arnold Schwarzenegger once said. Is that correct? A visit to Muscle Beach in Miami (Die Zeit) More from England vs. Germany Euro '96 semifinals: Match Sheet: Germany 1, England 1 (7-6 PKs) (Transfermarkt) Match highlights from June 26, 1996 (YouTube) Alan Shearer scores, Thomas Häßler equalizes, Andreas Möller converts clinching PK All penalty kicks (YouTube) Knockout stage path for England Quarters: Defeat Spain in PKs Semis: Fall to Germany in PKs Knockout stage path for (post-reunification as of October 1990!) Germany Quarters: Defeat Croatia in the Croats' post-Yugoslavia major tournament debut Semis: Defeat England in PKs Finals: Defeat Czech Republic in the Czechs post-Czechoslovakia Euro tournament debut More on the Battle of Britpop Noel Gallagher on the Battle of Britpop (YouTube) Noel and Liam Gallagher of Oasis troll Blur's song "Parklife" at the '96 Brit Awards (YouTube) Blur's Damon Albarn on Oasis (YouTube) HOST RotoViz Contributor Thomas Emerick (@ThomasEmerick) Guest Der Spiegel Contributing Writer and Author of "This Is America" Daniel Schmidt (@dcschmidt) SPONSORS BetterHelp - This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. Give online therapy a try at betterhelp.com/ROTOVIZ and get on your way to being your best self. Underdog Fantasy – Get a 100% deposit match on your first deposit up to $100 when you sign up at Underdogfantasy.com using this link or the promo code ROTOVIZ. Listeners of RotoViz Radio can save 10% on a one-year RotoViz subscription by visiting RotoViz.com/podcast or by using the promotional code "rvradio2024" at the time of purchase. Gametime - Download the Gametime app, create an account, and use code ROTOVIZ for $20 off SHOW NOTES RotoViz Radio provides the power for Remember That Game: Subscribe to the RotoViz Radio on YouTube Direct message: @ThomasEmerick Email: emericktc@gmail.com Subscribe: Remember That Game on YouTube Follow: Apple and Spotify Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Daniel Schmidt (Der Spiegel, This Is America) takes the train with host Thomas Emerick to Euro '96 in England for Die Mannschaft vs. The Three Lions. Frankfurt to Manchester and then Manchester to London provides plenty of time to examine the soccer balance between these countries in the century leading up to and since this UEFA European Championship semifinals thriller. Also, whose side to take on '90s Britpop beefs, confluence with political tides of Labour and the Tories, and the influence of British pop culture on Daniel while growing up in Northwest Germany and going to school in the UK. In 1996, Germany was the betting favorite and spoiled the party in England. Will the Brits return the favor in 2024 as the Germans host? This is Remember That Game, the podcast about sporting events that take you on a journey and chart the path of the zeitgeist. I'm your host Thomas Emerick, enjoy the show. Follow Remember That Game for the full archive: Apple Spotify YouTube "Remember That Game" in search wherever you get your podcasts More from Daniel Schmidt: This Is America (Website to grab Daniel's book) Impressions from first days of the trial in New York (Der Spiegel) Interview with American journalist Wesley Lowery (Frankfurter Allgemeine) A bodybuilder is a sculptor, like Rodin or Michelangelo, Arnold Schwarzenegger once said. Is that correct? A visit to Muscle Beach in Miami (Die Zeit) More from England vs. Germany Euro '96 semifinals: Match Sheet: Germany 1, England 1 (7-6 PKs) (Transfermarkt) Match highlights from June 26, 1996 (YouTube) Alan Shearer scores, Thomas Häßler equalizes, Andreas Möller converts clinching PK All penalty kicks (YouTube) Knockout stage path for England Quarters: Defeat Spain in PKs Semis: Fall to Germany in PKs Knockout stage path for (post-reunification as of October 1990!) Germany Quarters: Defeat Croatia in the Croats' post-Yugoslavia major tournament debut Semis: Defeat England in PKs Finals: Defeat Czech Republic in the Czechs post-Czechoslovakia Euro tournament debut More on the Battle of Britpop Noel Gallagher on the Battle of Britpop (YouTube) Noel and Liam Gallagher of Oasis troll Blur's song "Parklife" at the '96 Brit Awards (YouTube) Blur's Damon Albarn on Oasis (YouTube) HOST RotoViz Contributor Thomas Emerick (@ThomasEmerick) Guest Der Spiegel Contributing Writer and Author of "This Is America" Daniel Schmidt (@dcschmidt) SPONSORS BetterHelp - This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. Give online therapy a try at betterhelp.com/ROTOVIZ and get on your way to being your best self. Underdog Fantasy – Get a 100% deposit match on your first deposit up to $100 when you sign up at Underdogfantasy.com using this link or the promo code ROTOVIZ. Listeners of RotoViz Radio can save 10% on a one-year RotoViz subscription by visiting RotoViz.com/podcast or by using the promotional code "rvradio2024" at the time of purchase. Gametime - Download the Gametime app, create an account, and use code ROTOVIZ for $20 off SHOW NOTES RotoViz Radio provides the power for Remember That Game: Subscribe to the RotoViz Radio on YouTube Direct message: @ThomasEmerick Email: emericktc@gmail.com Subscribe: Remember That Game on YouTube Follow: Apple and Spotify Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Muscle Beach is the unmediated congregation of Neil, Maisy, Jane & Bennett – an LA 4-piece with a 9th ear, dedicated to the splendor of the human soul.
Follow The Girl Gains Podcast on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/thegirlgainzpodcast/Email: girlgainzpodcast@gmail.comWatch episodes on Youtube. Don't forget to subscribe! https://www.youtube.com/@TheGirlGainzPodcastFollow Alexis on Instagram: @a_fit_adams Follow Amber on Instagram: @amberpacholokFor posing @posing_with_alexis https://posing-with-alexis.square.site/For Stage Glam: https://amberpbeauty.square.site/book-stage-glamCODES:Liquid Sun Rayz Code: LSRALEXISThe Shoe Fairy Code: ALEXISNuethix code: AlexisGasp Alexis15 KH Customs AlexisA Amberp All That Glitters Gems code: amberp
The Lomeli Brothers talk the Kdot v Drake beef. Baby Reindeer. Renato's Muscle Beach trip and Huggy Wuggy.
Just a Blaiser check in on next steps. Looks like Blaiser is going to LA????? Romeo Muscles has asked Blaiser to come to LA and give him advice on working out.
Randy Stoklos is an American beach volleyball commentator and was highly regarded as the "King of the Beach" as a beach professional player, along with his partner, Sinjin Smith. Amassing 122 victories on the sand, his percentage of wins vs tournament participation (362) is an uncanny number that will most likely never be repeated. Leaving school early to pursue the sport (UCLA) turned out to be a wise choice, being the first player to reach the 1-million-dollar mark, en route to a hall of fame career that picked up what seems to be countless individual and team awards. His endeavors off the court bordered on the term pop culture, appearing in the video game "Kings of the Beach" and the volleyball-cult film "Side Out." 01:01 - About the Cuba national team, Ruth Nelson, Flo Hyman 12:14 - Where it started for him, Muscle Beach, Santa Monica 21:40 - Did you always know you were going to be good? Plus, the hundred-dollar bounty, similar journeys, 31:56 - What rule change did you like, and what rule change do you wish never happened? 37:45 - Fan questions from "Old School," ways the AVP can get better. 49:20 - FIVB/AVP: Did they/do they actually talk to each other? 55:17 - What move or rule in VB should be 2 points? 1:01:16 - How did "Side Out" happen? Plus other film appearances, and "Team Cup" Volleyball 1:12:45 - Three most memorable venues that he played in 1:16:15 - The Manhattan Open: The first one, Chris Marlowe, Jimmy Menges 1:24:35 - The trophy count, 1st place finishes vs 1st place finish percentage, who's got "the juice?" Champ life 1:37:00 - Who is your best defender? Blocker? Plus Household names, Transcendent athletes 1:52:25 - Lightning rounds
El lloretenc ha dedicat els últims mesos a obrir el seu propi gimnàs, el Muscle Beach.
I am joined by Evina Del Pizzo today. Evina is formally a Hawaiian Tropic Pageant Queen, she moved to the fitness industry in 2009. She started competing as an amateur Bikini Competitor and eventually worked her way to a Overall NPC Bikini Champion. Finishing her studies at CSUN, she became a certified Master Trainer and eventually started getting published in well known fitness magazines, and you can see her now as the Red Carpet Host of Joe Wheatley's Muscle Beach! We have an open, raw, and honest conversation about motherhood, being working moms, mom guilt, comparison, and in reality sometimes we are treading water and trying to stay afloat and it isn't talked about. Evina has a freebie for all my listeners. Head to her website or instagram and DM her to set up a free Nutrition Consultation and a meal guide. Instagram: @builtstrongstrength or @evinadelpizzo linktr.ee/evinadelpizzo Website: https://www.builtstrongstrength.com Find Nikki online: Instagram: @fitfunandfrazzledpodcast or @nikkilanigan.yogaandwellness Website: www.nikkiyogaandwellnes.com. I created a gratitude journal. Head to amazon or click on link Grateful: A Journal To Reflect Daily And Nightly on Amazon https://a.co/d/aTXAncV
There are still votes to be counted, but Janice Hahn declared victory last night in her bid for another term on the LA County Board of Supervisors. LA City Controller Kenneth Mejia announced that his office will conduct an audit of Inside Safe, Mayor Karen Bass's flagship program to address homelessness. And Venice is known for its funky boardwalk, Muscle Beach, and its laid back style, but a new museum dedicated to the beach neighborhood wants to focus on other voices.Support The L.A. Report by donating at LAist.com/join and by visiting https://laist.com.Support the show: https://laist.com
Sensei Julio is a fun guy to be around and has some crazy stories. He is a great example of a guy that fcked his life up and brought it back around. And the sory around how he smessed up his finger is one for the books! Enjoy. ** This was recorded in the basement dojo and the sound is a bit off. Mentions: Sensei Julio - https://www.instagram.com/internaljiujitsu/?hl=en HighSpeed Daddy - https://www.highspeeddaddy.com/?rfsn=7178368.317ce6 Live Rishi - USe the code "TABLE50" and get 50% off your entire order - https://liverishi.com/ Me - https://berawpodcast.com/ 'til next time! The history of bodybuilding is a captivating journey that intertwines with the evolution of physical fitness, cultural perceptions of the human body, and the pursuit of perfection. From ancient civilizations to modern-day competitions, bodybuilding has undergone significant transformations, shaping and being shaped by society's ideals and values. The origins of bodybuilding can be traced back to ancient Greece, where athletes trained to achieve physical prowess for competitive events like the Olympic Games. Sculpted statues and artworks from this era depict muscular physiques, highlighting the admiration for the human form. However, it wasn't until the late 19th century that bodybuilding as a structured discipline began to emerge. Eugen Sandow, often referred to as the "Father of Modern Bodybuilding," rose to prominence in the late 1800s with his impressive physique and groundbreaking performances. Sandow's exhibitions showcased his sculpted muscles and athleticism, captivating audiences worldwide and popularizing the concept of physical culture. He emphasized the importance of strength, symmetry, and aesthetics, laying the foundation for modern bodybuilding. In the early 20th century, the golden age of bodybuilding dawned with the advent of organized competitions and the rise of iconic figures like Charles Atlas and John Grimek. These pioneers inspired countless individuals to pursue bodybuilding as a means of self-improvement and personal expression. However, it wasn't until the mid-20th century that bodybuilding truly exploded onto the mainstream scene. The emergence of Muscle Beach in California during the 1940s and 1950s provided a platform for bodybuilders to showcase their talents in outdoor gyms along the sunny shores of Venice Beach. This vibrant community of fitness enthusiasts, including legends like Steve Reeves and Reg Park, attracted attention from the media and sparked a cultural phenomenon. The 1960s witnessed the rise of the International Federation of Bodybuilding and Fitness (IFBB), founded by bodybuilding icon Joe Weider. The IFBB established standardized rules and regulations for competitions, paving the way for the sport's global expansion. During this era, Arnold Schwarzenegger emerged as a dominant force, captivating audiences with his imposing physique and charismatic persona. Schwarzenegger's reign during the 1970s solidified bodybuilding's place in popular culture, inspiring millions to hit the gym and sculpt their bodies. Throughout the late 20th and early 21st centuries, bodybuilding continued to evolve, with athletes pushing the boundaries of muscular development and conditioning. The introduction of new training techniques, nutritional strategies, and supplementation further fueled the sport's growth. Additionally, the emergence of women's bodybuilding and other divisions, such as physique and bikini, diversified the competitive landscape, attracting a more diverse array of athletes. Today, bodybuilding remains a global phenomenon, with competitions held in countries around the world and a dedicated community of enthusiasts spanning all ages and backgrounds. While the sport continues to face scrutiny and stereotypes, its enduring appeal lies in its ability to empower individuals to transform their bodies and minds through discipline, dedication, and hard work. As bodybuilding enters a new era, its rich history serves as a testament to the enduring pursuit of physical excellence and the relentless drive to push the limits of human potential.
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Australia wins a World Cup again, Australia beats India again, and yes: the comments are turned off. So are the highlights, apparently. Well, tempered. Will they be on PlayHQ? We ponder youth wins, talk white ball pumpings, and explore the raw, unbridled Jake Fraser McGurk alongside the refined Glenn Maxwell - the Sir Edmund Hillary of ceilings. We then discuss a runout episode featuring penguins, helmets, and pints of cows milk. That's before Broden Kelly of Aunty Donna fame joins in-studio to talk about real estate agents and whether footy is funny. Australia's women are still winning, India are short some experience ahead of England in Rajkot, the Skeletons loom, and someone's shadow bowling with a medicine ball at Muscle Beach. If you want to support The Grade Cricketer, please join us on Patreon at https://www.Patreon.com/gradecricketer where you get #AskTGC Fridays every week and access to the entire back catalogue of Patreon work that has been going for 3 years now. An extra 4 hours per month, every month of TGC when you sign up! Grab your EXCLUSIVE NordVPN Deal by going to the custom URL here: https://nordvpn.com/tgc to get a Huge Discount off your NordVPN Plan + 4 months for free! It's completely risk-free with Nord's 30-day money-back guarantee! https://nordvpn.com/tgc See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Today we are joined by Natalia Mehlman Petrzela, Professor of History at The New School, and author of Fit Nation: The Gains and Pains of America's Exercise Obsession (University of Chicago Press, 2023). In our conversation, we discussed the beginnings of fitness in the United States, how fitness both offered the state a way to shape bodies and liberatory possibilities for counter-cultural communities, and the future of exercise in a post-covid world. In Fit Nation, Petrzela investigates the long history of fitness in the United States to better understand how fitness became such an important part of American life. She notes that the number of people who think fitness is essential for a full life has expanded dramatically since the 1890s and fitness shape our understandings of national community, industry, security, wealth, and wellness. Her comprehensive and readable account begins with the immigration of European fitness fanatics to the United States in the 19th century and illustrates how fitness became one of the most proto-typically American pursuits. The book is divided into seven sections; the first, “When Sweating Was Strange,” shows how American entrepreneurs translated European practices to a sceptical audience. Muscle Beach in Venice, California played a special role in promoting bodybuilding but it also alarmed ordinary Americans who worried about the time participants spent on what many thought were narcissistic and vain habits. One of the major themes of Petrzela's work is the role of the government in promoting physical fitness and in the Cold War world the state opened the door to mass fitness. In the second section, “Slimming the Soft American,” she demonstrates how presidents starting with Eisenhower put fitness at the centre of their Cold War educational programs. The most notable example of government interventions into fitness was the President's Council on Youth Fitness (now the President's Council on Sport, Fitness, and Nutrition.) The third and fourth sections – “From the Margins to the Mainstream” and Movement Culture, Redefined” illustrate how fitness became a central part of the American experience and the limits to that experience in the 1960s and 1970s. Television brought fitness into American houses but gyms remained largely male spaces (although often associated with latent homosexuality.) Yoga and jogging made fitness accessible and linked fitness culture with counter-culture. Women were both the targets of most fitness programs – although not necessarily for liberatory reasons - and excluded from large sections of it. In the 1980s and 1990s, fitness changed further, moving away from the state-led efforts and counter-cultural currents of the 1950s and 1960s. Fitness became big business. In her fifth part, “Feel the Burn,” Petrzela shows how a new gospel of fitness emerged that made gyms, workout classes, and sweating accessible and desirable to growing numbers of Americans. In her sixth section, “Hard Bodies and Soulful Selves”, Petrzela shows how fitness shifted from an obligation imposed by the state for geo-political reasons to a more intrinsic requirement of people living in the neo-liberal era, but not everyone always fulfilled those obligations and many people resisted them. In the final section, “It's Not Working Out,” Petrzela looks at the present and the future of the Fit Nation. Americans are by some measures less fit than ever before, but Petrzela raises real questions about the potential of any narrow definition of fitness to fix persistent health problems. 9/11, the Global Financial Crisis, and Covid-19 changed the way people worked out – cross-fit, home gyms, and Peloton became more popular than ever but fitness was also politicized into the left/right dynamic that dominates American cultural life. Keith Rathbone is a Senior Lecturer at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. He researches twentieth-century French social and cultural history. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Today we are joined by Natalia Mehlman Petrzela, Professor of History at The New School, and author of Fit Nation: The Gains and Pains of America's Exercise Obsession (University of Chicago Press, 2023). In our conversation, we discussed the beginnings of fitness in the United States, how fitness both offered the state a way to shape bodies and liberatory possibilities for counter-cultural communities, and the future of exercise in a post-covid world. In Fit Nation, Petrzela investigates the long history of fitness in the United States to better understand how fitness became such an important part of American life. She notes that the number of people who think fitness is essential for a full life has expanded dramatically since the 1890s and fitness shape our understandings of national community, industry, security, wealth, and wellness. Her comprehensive and readable account begins with the immigration of European fitness fanatics to the United States in the 19th century and illustrates how fitness became one of the most proto-typically American pursuits. The book is divided into seven sections; the first, “When Sweating Was Strange,” shows how American entrepreneurs translated European practices to a sceptical audience. Muscle Beach in Venice, California played a special role in promoting bodybuilding but it also alarmed ordinary Americans who worried about the time participants spent on what many thought were narcissistic and vain habits. One of the major themes of Petrzela's work is the role of the government in promoting physical fitness and in the Cold War world the state opened the door to mass fitness. In the second section, “Slimming the Soft American,” she demonstrates how presidents starting with Eisenhower put fitness at the centre of their Cold War educational programs. The most notable example of government interventions into fitness was the President's Council on Youth Fitness (now the President's Council on Sport, Fitness, and Nutrition.) The third and fourth sections – “From the Margins to the Mainstream” and Movement Culture, Redefined” illustrate how fitness became a central part of the American experience and the limits to that experience in the 1960s and 1970s. Television brought fitness into American houses but gyms remained largely male spaces (although often associated with latent homosexuality.) Yoga and jogging made fitness accessible and linked fitness culture with counter-culture. Women were both the targets of most fitness programs – although not necessarily for liberatory reasons - and excluded from large sections of it. In the 1980s and 1990s, fitness changed further, moving away from the state-led efforts and counter-cultural currents of the 1950s and 1960s. Fitness became big business. In her fifth part, “Feel the Burn,” Petrzela shows how a new gospel of fitness emerged that made gyms, workout classes, and sweating accessible and desirable to growing numbers of Americans. In her sixth section, “Hard Bodies and Soulful Selves”, Petrzela shows how fitness shifted from an obligation imposed by the state for geo-political reasons to a more intrinsic requirement of people living in the neo-liberal era, but not everyone always fulfilled those obligations and many people resisted them. In the final section, “It's Not Working Out,” Petrzela looks at the present and the future of the Fit Nation. Americans are by some measures less fit than ever before, but Petrzela raises real questions about the potential of any narrow definition of fitness to fix persistent health problems. 9/11, the Global Financial Crisis, and Covid-19 changed the way people worked out – cross-fit, home gyms, and Peloton became more popular than ever but fitness was also politicized into the left/right dynamic that dominates American cultural life. Keith Rathbone is a Senior Lecturer at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. He researches twentieth-century French social and cultural history. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history
Today we are joined by Natalia Mehlman Petrzela, Professor of History at The New School, and author of Fit Nation: The Gains and Pains of America's Exercise Obsession (University of Chicago Press, 2023). In our conversation, we discussed the beginnings of fitness in the United States, how fitness both offered the state a way to shape bodies and liberatory possibilities for counter-cultural communities, and the future of exercise in a post-covid world. In Fit Nation, Petrzela investigates the long history of fitness in the United States to better understand how fitness became such an important part of American life. She notes that the number of people who think fitness is essential for a full life has expanded dramatically since the 1890s and fitness shape our understandings of national community, industry, security, wealth, and wellness. Her comprehensive and readable account begins with the immigration of European fitness fanatics to the United States in the 19th century and illustrates how fitness became one of the most proto-typically American pursuits. The book is divided into seven sections; the first, “When Sweating Was Strange,” shows how American entrepreneurs translated European practices to a sceptical audience. Muscle Beach in Venice, California played a special role in promoting bodybuilding but it also alarmed ordinary Americans who worried about the time participants spent on what many thought were narcissistic and vain habits. One of the major themes of Petrzela's work is the role of the government in promoting physical fitness and in the Cold War world the state opened the door to mass fitness. In the second section, “Slimming the Soft American,” she demonstrates how presidents starting with Eisenhower put fitness at the centre of their Cold War educational programs. The most notable example of government interventions into fitness was the President's Council on Youth Fitness (now the President's Council on Sport, Fitness, and Nutrition.) The third and fourth sections – “From the Margins to the Mainstream” and Movement Culture, Redefined” illustrate how fitness became a central part of the American experience and the limits to that experience in the 1960s and 1970s. Television brought fitness into American houses but gyms remained largely male spaces (although often associated with latent homosexuality.) Yoga and jogging made fitness accessible and linked fitness culture with counter-culture. Women were both the targets of most fitness programs – although not necessarily for liberatory reasons - and excluded from large sections of it. In the 1980s and 1990s, fitness changed further, moving away from the state-led efforts and counter-cultural currents of the 1950s and 1960s. Fitness became big business. In her fifth part, “Feel the Burn,” Petrzela shows how a new gospel of fitness emerged that made gyms, workout classes, and sweating accessible and desirable to growing numbers of Americans. In her sixth section, “Hard Bodies and Soulful Selves”, Petrzela shows how fitness shifted from an obligation imposed by the state for geo-political reasons to a more intrinsic requirement of people living in the neo-liberal era, but not everyone always fulfilled those obligations and many people resisted them. In the final section, “It's Not Working Out,” Petrzela looks at the present and the future of the Fit Nation. Americans are by some measures less fit than ever before, but Petrzela raises real questions about the potential of any narrow definition of fitness to fix persistent health problems. 9/11, the Global Financial Crisis, and Covid-19 changed the way people worked out – cross-fit, home gyms, and Peloton became more popular than ever but fitness was also politicized into the left/right dynamic that dominates American cultural life. Keith Rathbone is a Senior Lecturer at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. He researches twentieth-century French social and cultural history. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/sports
Today we are joined by Natalia Mehlman Petrzela, Professor of History at The New School, and author of Fit Nation: The Gains and Pains of America's Exercise Obsession (University of Chicago Press, 2023). In our conversation, we discussed the beginnings of fitness in the United States, how fitness both offered the state a way to shape bodies and liberatory possibilities for counter-cultural communities, and the future of exercise in a post-covid world. In Fit Nation, Petrzela investigates the long history of fitness in the United States to better understand how fitness became such an important part of American life. She notes that the number of people who think fitness is essential for a full life has expanded dramatically since the 1890s and fitness shape our understandings of national community, industry, security, wealth, and wellness. Her comprehensive and readable account begins with the immigration of European fitness fanatics to the United States in the 19th century and illustrates how fitness became one of the most proto-typically American pursuits. The book is divided into seven sections; the first, “When Sweating Was Strange,” shows how American entrepreneurs translated European practices to a sceptical audience. Muscle Beach in Venice, California played a special role in promoting bodybuilding but it also alarmed ordinary Americans who worried about the time participants spent on what many thought were narcissistic and vain habits. One of the major themes of Petrzela's work is the role of the government in promoting physical fitness and in the Cold War world the state opened the door to mass fitness. In the second section, “Slimming the Soft American,” she demonstrates how presidents starting with Eisenhower put fitness at the centre of their Cold War educational programs. The most notable example of government interventions into fitness was the President's Council on Youth Fitness (now the President's Council on Sport, Fitness, and Nutrition.) The third and fourth sections – “From the Margins to the Mainstream” and Movement Culture, Redefined” illustrate how fitness became a central part of the American experience and the limits to that experience in the 1960s and 1970s. Television brought fitness into American houses but gyms remained largely male spaces (although often associated with latent homosexuality.) Yoga and jogging made fitness accessible and linked fitness culture with counter-culture. Women were both the targets of most fitness programs – although not necessarily for liberatory reasons - and excluded from large sections of it. In the 1980s and 1990s, fitness changed further, moving away from the state-led efforts and counter-cultural currents of the 1950s and 1960s. Fitness became big business. In her fifth part, “Feel the Burn,” Petrzela shows how a new gospel of fitness emerged that made gyms, workout classes, and sweating accessible and desirable to growing numbers of Americans. In her sixth section, “Hard Bodies and Soulful Selves”, Petrzela shows how fitness shifted from an obligation imposed by the state for geo-political reasons to a more intrinsic requirement of people living in the neo-liberal era, but not everyone always fulfilled those obligations and many people resisted them. In the final section, “It's Not Working Out,” Petrzela looks at the present and the future of the Fit Nation. Americans are by some measures less fit than ever before, but Petrzela raises real questions about the potential of any narrow definition of fitness to fix persistent health problems. 9/11, the Global Financial Crisis, and Covid-19 changed the way people worked out – cross-fit, home gyms, and Peloton became more popular than ever but fitness was also politicized into the left/right dynamic that dominates American cultural life. Keith Rathbone is a Senior Lecturer at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. He researches twentieth-century French social and cultural history. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/sociology
Today we are joined by Natalia Mehlman Petrzela, Professor of History at The New School, and author of Fit Nation: The Gains and Pains of America's Exercise Obsession (University of Chicago Press, 2023). In our conversation, we discussed the beginnings of fitness in the United States, how fitness both offered the state a way to shape bodies and liberatory possibilities for counter-cultural communities, and the future of exercise in a post-covid world. In Fit Nation, Petrzela investigates the long history of fitness in the United States to better understand how fitness became such an important part of American life. She notes that the number of people who think fitness is essential for a full life has expanded dramatically since the 1890s and fitness shape our understandings of national community, industry, security, wealth, and wellness. Her comprehensive and readable account begins with the immigration of European fitness fanatics to the United States in the 19th century and illustrates how fitness became one of the most proto-typically American pursuits. The book is divided into seven sections; the first, “When Sweating Was Strange,” shows how American entrepreneurs translated European practices to a sceptical audience. Muscle Beach in Venice, California played a special role in promoting bodybuilding but it also alarmed ordinary Americans who worried about the time participants spent on what many thought were narcissistic and vain habits. One of the major themes of Petrzela's work is the role of the government in promoting physical fitness and in the Cold War world the state opened the door to mass fitness. In the second section, “Slimming the Soft American,” she demonstrates how presidents starting with Eisenhower put fitness at the centre of their Cold War educational programs. The most notable example of government interventions into fitness was the President's Council on Youth Fitness (now the President's Council on Sport, Fitness, and Nutrition.) The third and fourth sections – “From the Margins to the Mainstream” and Movement Culture, Redefined” illustrate how fitness became a central part of the American experience and the limits to that experience in the 1960s and 1970s. Television brought fitness into American houses but gyms remained largely male spaces (although often associated with latent homosexuality.) Yoga and jogging made fitness accessible and linked fitness culture with counter-culture. Women were both the targets of most fitness programs – although not necessarily for liberatory reasons - and excluded from large sections of it. In the 1980s and 1990s, fitness changed further, moving away from the state-led efforts and counter-cultural currents of the 1950s and 1960s. Fitness became big business. In her fifth part, “Feel the Burn,” Petrzela shows how a new gospel of fitness emerged that made gyms, workout classes, and sweating accessible and desirable to growing numbers of Americans. In her sixth section, “Hard Bodies and Soulful Selves”, Petrzela shows how fitness shifted from an obligation imposed by the state for geo-political reasons to a more intrinsic requirement of people living in the neo-liberal era, but not everyone always fulfilled those obligations and many people resisted them. In the final section, “It's Not Working Out,” Petrzela looks at the present and the future of the Fit Nation. Americans are by some measures less fit than ever before, but Petrzela raises real questions about the potential of any narrow definition of fitness to fix persistent health problems. 9/11, the Global Financial Crisis, and Covid-19 changed the way people worked out – cross-fit, home gyms, and Peloton became more popular than ever but fitness was also politicized into the left/right dynamic that dominates American cultural life. Keith Rathbone is a Senior Lecturer at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. He researches twentieth-century French social and cultural history. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/american-studies
Today we are joined by Natalia Mehlman Petrzela, Professor of History at The New School, and author of Fit Nation: The Gains and Pains of America's Exercise Obsession (University of Chicago Press, 2023). In our conversation, we discussed the beginnings of fitness in the United States, how fitness both offered the state a way to shape bodies and liberatory possibilities for counter-cultural communities, and the future of exercise in a post-covid world. In Fit Nation, Petrzela investigates the long history of fitness in the United States to better understand how fitness became such an important part of American life. She notes that the number of people who think fitness is essential for a full life has expanded dramatically since the 1890s and fitness shape our understandings of national community, industry, security, wealth, and wellness. Her comprehensive and readable account begins with the immigration of European fitness fanatics to the United States in the 19th century and illustrates how fitness became one of the most proto-typically American pursuits. The book is divided into seven sections; the first, “When Sweating Was Strange,” shows how American entrepreneurs translated European practices to a sceptical audience. Muscle Beach in Venice, California played a special role in promoting bodybuilding but it also alarmed ordinary Americans who worried about the time participants spent on what many thought were narcissistic and vain habits. One of the major themes of Petrzela's work is the role of the government in promoting physical fitness and in the Cold War world the state opened the door to mass fitness. In the second section, “Slimming the Soft American,” she demonstrates how presidents starting with Eisenhower put fitness at the centre of their Cold War educational programs. The most notable example of government interventions into fitness was the President's Council on Youth Fitness (now the President's Council on Sport, Fitness, and Nutrition.) The third and fourth sections – “From the Margins to the Mainstream” and Movement Culture, Redefined” illustrate how fitness became a central part of the American experience and the limits to that experience in the 1960s and 1970s. Television brought fitness into American houses but gyms remained largely male spaces (although often associated with latent homosexuality.) Yoga and jogging made fitness accessible and linked fitness culture with counter-culture. Women were both the targets of most fitness programs – although not necessarily for liberatory reasons - and excluded from large sections of it. In the 1980s and 1990s, fitness changed further, moving away from the state-led efforts and counter-cultural currents of the 1950s and 1960s. Fitness became big business. In her fifth part, “Feel the Burn,” Petrzela shows how a new gospel of fitness emerged that made gyms, workout classes, and sweating accessible and desirable to growing numbers of Americans. In her sixth section, “Hard Bodies and Soulful Selves”, Petrzela shows how fitness shifted from an obligation imposed by the state for geo-political reasons to a more intrinsic requirement of people living in the neo-liberal era, but not everyone always fulfilled those obligations and many people resisted them. In the final section, “It's Not Working Out,” Petrzela looks at the present and the future of the Fit Nation. Americans are by some measures less fit than ever before, but Petrzela raises real questions about the potential of any narrow definition of fitness to fix persistent health problems. 9/11, the Global Financial Crisis, and Covid-19 changed the way people worked out – cross-fit, home gyms, and Peloton became more popular than ever but fitness was also politicized into the left/right dynamic that dominates American cultural life. Keith Rathbone is a Senior Lecturer at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. He researches twentieth-century French social and cultural history. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Today we are joined by Natalia Mehlman Petrzela, Professor of History at The New School, and author of Fit Nation: The Gains and Pains of America's Exercise Obsession (University of Chicago Press, 2023). In our conversation, we discussed the beginnings of fitness in the United States, how fitness both offered the state a way to shape bodies and liberatory possibilities for counter-cultural communities, and the future of exercise in a post-covid world. In Fit Nation, Petrzela investigates the long history of fitness in the United States to better understand how fitness became such an important part of American life. She notes that the number of people who think fitness is essential for a full life has expanded dramatically since the 1890s and fitness shape our understandings of national community, industry, security, wealth, and wellness. Her comprehensive and readable account begins with the immigration of European fitness fanatics to the United States in the 19th century and illustrates how fitness became one of the most proto-typically American pursuits. The book is divided into seven sections; the first, “When Sweating Was Strange,” shows how American entrepreneurs translated European practices to a sceptical audience. Muscle Beach in Venice, California played a special role in promoting bodybuilding but it also alarmed ordinary Americans who worried about the time participants spent on what many thought were narcissistic and vain habits. One of the major themes of Petrzela's work is the role of the government in promoting physical fitness and in the Cold War world the state opened the door to mass fitness. In the second section, “Slimming the Soft American,” she demonstrates how presidents starting with Eisenhower put fitness at the centre of their Cold War educational programs. The most notable example of government interventions into fitness was the President's Council on Youth Fitness (now the President's Council on Sport, Fitness, and Nutrition.) The third and fourth sections – “From the Margins to the Mainstream” and Movement Culture, Redefined” illustrate how fitness became a central part of the American experience and the limits to that experience in the 1960s and 1970s. Television brought fitness into American houses but gyms remained largely male spaces (although often associated with latent homosexuality.) Yoga and jogging made fitness accessible and linked fitness culture with counter-culture. Women were both the targets of most fitness programs – although not necessarily for liberatory reasons - and excluded from large sections of it. In the 1980s and 1990s, fitness changed further, moving away from the state-led efforts and counter-cultural currents of the 1950s and 1960s. Fitness became big business. In her fifth part, “Feel the Burn,” Petrzela shows how a new gospel of fitness emerged that made gyms, workout classes, and sweating accessible and desirable to growing numbers of Americans. In her sixth section, “Hard Bodies and Soulful Selves”, Petrzela shows how fitness shifted from an obligation imposed by the state for geo-political reasons to a more intrinsic requirement of people living in the neo-liberal era, but not everyone always fulfilled those obligations and many people resisted them. In the final section, “It's Not Working Out,” Petrzela looks at the present and the future of the Fit Nation. Americans are by some measures less fit than ever before, but Petrzela raises real questions about the potential of any narrow definition of fitness to fix persistent health problems. 9/11, the Global Financial Crisis, and Covid-19 changed the way people worked out – cross-fit, home gyms, and Peloton became more popular than ever but fitness was also politicized into the left/right dynamic that dominates American cultural life. Keith Rathbone is a Senior Lecturer at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. He researches twentieth-century French social and cultural history. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/popular-culture
Heinz-enberg runs these streets! Restaurant Fiction's Monis Rose joins Michael to pretend to learn the Eat Deets about Hot Dog on a Stick because he already knows everything Michael does a Keyser Söze walk to hide his limp from Monis [Audiodrama segment] Turf wars over who can sell Dodger dogs on which corners Alex Borstein berates Michael's preferences in hot dog condiment Hot Dog on a Stick is also known for its lemonade, which started as a Muscle Beach health drink with honey The history of the famous employee uniform Monis raps the whitest version of an Ice Cube song that references Hot Dog on a Stick A customer is perfectly content finding actual trash in her dessert in this week's Yelp from Strangers The full review comes next week Music by: James McEnelly (@Ramshackle_Music) Theme Song by: Kyle Schieffer (@JazzyJellyfish) Segment Transitions Voiced by: Sandy Rose "Fine" Dining is on Patreon! Get an extra episode every month (on New Years Eve, the Kentucky Fried Chicken episode dropped faster than the ball in Times Square), extended Yelp from Strangers segments every other week, merch discounts, download access to our music including the 7 singles from our Olive Garden musical, and more! Patreon Producers: Sean Spademan, Joyce Van, & Sue Ornelas Get the 5 Survival Tips for Casual Dining at www.finediningpodcast.com! Send in your Hot Dog on a Stick stories at finediningpodcast@gmail.com. Follow the show on TikTok and Instagram @finediningpodcast Let me know where I should go next by leaving us a review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, PodcastAddict, Overcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. I read every one! Next week on "Fine" Dining: Hot Dog on a Stick (Part Two: Review)! Monis Rose returns to embrace his inner degenerate in appreciation of this anything-goes atmosphere. Plus, we order the entire menu. Ever work at Hot Dog on a Stick? Send your stories to finediningpodcast@gmail.com.
Alper Çelik, Ömür Okumuş ve Nuri Çetin ile varyantlı hususlara yolculuk
Vieves is back with her trademark blend of a high concept paired with a total lack of facility with internet culture, as she and Andrew break down commercials inspired by the socials. Plus, Andrew pieces together a confusing sportsbook ad, and Arnold Schwarzenegger looms large over Muscle Beach. Here are links to the ads we talked about on this week's show: AirBnB - Cannonball https://www.ispot.tv/ad/5Igr/airbnb-cannonball-lakefront-song-by-the-friends-of-distinction Anchorman https://youtu.be/3l3sJHA1lTU?si=07VWCDDve7AptfZK Tide Fabric Rinse - Cleaning tips https://youtu.be/siIzEM2OP84?si=kGPXKxtC_LQKWljE Heinz - Sushi Tasting https://youtu.be/NSwNT3yXOcU?si=25mjwMxs_nyv0Q4Y Taco Bell - Chalupa TikTok Dad https://www.ispot.tv/ad/Zvf0/taco-bell-triplelupa-tiktok-dad-trend-song-by-k-camp NFL - TikToks https://www.ispot.tv/ad/tRpp/tiktok-highlight-catches-song-by-grover-washington-jr Pizza Hut - TikToks https://www.ispot.tv/ad/b2ZL/pizza-hut-big-dinner-box-tiktok-compilation Google/Android - American Gothic selfies https://www.ispot.tv/ad/5upI/google-selfie-possibilities-american-gothic-song-by-elaine-stritch Google/Android - Old Selfie is History https://www.ispot.tv/ad/5zR8/google-the-old-selfie-is-history-song-by-mura-masa World of Warcraft - Chuck Norris https://youtu.be/WGisxNm6ybQ?si=klpsEe9_dUYiHuzn ESPN Sports Betting App: You Had To Be There https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L7ICigCa0kQ ESPN Sports Betting App - As long as everyone had fun https://youtu.be/9nqXDbGgqgk MCI - Ed O'Neil https://youtu.be/0xe5OIYXDGI?si=7mxpeMvNllUs9kGI
In der heutigen Episode spricht Olaf mit Christian Kellenberger, aka Chris Kelle, über seine überstandene schwere Rückenverletzung, sein Comeback auf der Bühne 2023, den Muscle Beach, aber auch das teils sehr kontrovers diskutierte Thema Juryfeedback und mehr. Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chris_kelle_fitness/ WERBUNG: Zu allen aktuellen Kooperationen von Stronger Than You geht es hier entlang: https://linktr.ee/stronger.than.you.koops
Hasta la vista, baby! It's iconic bodybuilder/politician Arnold Schwarzenegger and his brand new book (out this week!), "Be Useful: Seven Tools For Life." From a tiny village in Austria to conquering Muscle Beach, jacuzzis vs hot tubs, making your own January 6th response video, assessing the Governator's tenure, and lunchtime cigars. Plus, Steven randomly rides hard for political randomization. We'll be back.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Watch/Listen to this and all episodes ad free by joining the ITBR Patreon for only $5 a month! patreon.com/ivorytowerboilerroom Manuel Betancourt, a Los Angeles-based queer Colombian writer and film critic joins Andrew in the ITBR to talk all things Hunks Heartthrobs and Desiring Men! Andrew asks Manuel why he decided to write "The Male Gazed: On Hunks, Heartthrobs, and What Pop Culture Taught Me About (Desiring) Men" which is a memoir-in-essays that is both a coming of age and coming out journey. Manuel reveals that while some were enjoying Mario Lopez's performance in "Saved by the Bell," he was both enjoying and lusting after Mario! Just like his desire for Mario Lopez, Manuel and Andrew discuss their queer male interest in Antonio Banderas, Ricky Martin, wrestling singlets, Muscle Beach, and even jockstraps! Andrew then asks Manuel how Laura Mulvey's essay "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema" which discusses how the male gaze objectifies women connects to Manuel's theory about the queer male gaze? Be sure to get your hands or ears on Manuel's "The Male Gazed" here: https://mbetancourtcom.wordpress.com/ You can follow Manuel on Instagram, @bmanuel and on X (formerly Twitter), @bmanuel. Head to Broadview Press, an independent academic publisher, for all your humanities related books. Use code ivorytower for 20% off your broadviewpress.com order. To subscribe to The Gay and Lesbian Review visit glreview.org. Click Subscribe, and enter promo code ITBR to receive a free copy with any print or digital subscription. Order from @mandeemadeit, mention ITBR, and with your first order you'll receive a free personalized gift! Follow That Ol' Gay Classic Cinema on Instagram, @thatolgayclassiccinema. Follow ITBR on IG, @ivorytowerboilerroom, TikTok, @ivorytowerboilerroom, and Twitter, @IvoryBoilerRoom! Thanks to the ITBR team! Andrew Rimby (Host/Director), Mary DiPipi (Chief Contributor), and our Fall 23 interns (Jonathan and Sara) --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/ivorytowerboilerroom/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/ivorytowerboilerroom/support
David Kinder is an 86 year old bodybuilder who trained at the original Muscle Beach and was one of the early members of Vic Tanny's Gym, the original Gold's Gym and the legendary Dungeon Gym in California. David joins the Bodybuilding Legends Podcast on this episode to share his stories of watching Steve Reeves compete in 1947 and training alongside bodybuilding legends like Dave Draper, Chet Yorton, Don Howorth and Larry Scott. At the end of the Podcast, host John Hansen reads a controversial interview with Arnold Schwarzenegger from Oui Magazine in 1977. Time Stamps: 0:00 - Introduction 5:00 - Interview with David Kinder 57:00 - Host John Hansen reads the controversial interview with Arnold Schwarzenegger from Oui Magazine in 1977. Links: Become a Patreon Sponsor Bodybuilding Legends website John Hansen's YouTube Channel John Hansen Fitness website John's Interview on the Ralph Romeo Podcast Jerry Brainum's interview on the Ralph Romeo Podcast The Muscle Maturity Podcast
Ian returns to seranade Maria and discuss Muscle Beach, Q the Winged Serpant and Bantha adoption.This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5639429/advertisement
What makes a bird a Woodstock? Well, someone must know, because even stupid questions have answers! We watch as the classic character slowly comes into focus, and marvel as Schulz remains firmly in the center of a changing zeitgeist. Then Michael takes us on a quick tour of Muscle Beach, and Snoopy kicks everyone's butt in a sequence Jimmy believes reflects perfect management style. Plus: A square who doesn't care, is no square at all. Transcript available at UnpackingPeanuts.com Unpacking Peanuts is copyright Jimmy Gownley, Michael Cohen, and Harold Buchholz. Produced and edited by Liz Sumner. Music by Michael Cohen. Additional voiceover by Aziza Shukralla Clark. For more from the show follow @unpackpeanuts on Instagram and Twitter. For more about Jimmy, Michael, and Harold, visit unpackingpeanuts.com. Thanks for listening.
The best of Monocle 24 in the week includes the latest from the World Economic Forum in Davos, plus the redesign of Miami's very own Muscle Beach and the importance of European cultural journals.
Tomos Lewis investigates how the redesign of Miami's very own version of Muscle Beach is working out for local residents. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ein Wiedersehen in Vice City. Redneck Rainman (https://www.instagram.com/tombs1oneblues/) und ich sind zurück in Miami. Erste Content Clown Jahr V: Andy ist zurück mit einem Miami Vibe Check und Reisebericht (1/2). Seit wir das letzte Mal gemeinsam hier waren (Ende 2019, noch komplett ahnungslos) ist ja einiges passiert. Wir haben gute Nachrichten und gute Laune für euch. Happy New Year Bois und based Girls. Miami Vibe Check Teil & Reisebericht 2/2 und paar final White Pills dann auf Patreon. Finde Aethervox Ehrenfeld überall: https://linktr.ee/AethervoxEhrenfeld
1960 AAU Mr. America winner Red Lerille joins the Bodybuilding Legends Podcast to talk about his career in bodybuilding. Red won the 1960 AAU Mr. America and then won his height class at the 1960 NABBA Mr. Universe. Red became a gym owner after his bodybuilding career ended and he now owns Red Lerille's Health and Racquet Club in Lafayette, Louisiana, one of the biggest gyms in the country. Red was also a mentor to the legendary bodybuilder Boyer Coe and he talks about his relationship with Boyer over his great career. At the end of the Podcast, host John Hansen reads the article "How I Became a Mr. America" by Lloyd Lerille from the July-August, 1960 issue of IronMan Magazine. (Time Stamps below) Time Stamps: 1:50 - Pro Physique weekend in Denver 5:05 - Emails from last week's show 10:00 - Start of interview with Red Lerille 10:55 - Red's last visit with Bill Pearl 13:25 - How Red got started in bodybuilding 14:40 - What Bodybuilding was like in the 1940's 16:15 - Winning the Mr. Orleans contest 18:30 - Red's genetics for bodybuilding 19:16 - Joe Gold's gym in New Orleans 20:00 - Red's early contest wins 21:20 - Bodybuilding training while serving in the Navy 23:00 - The original Muscle Beach 25:50 - Red's memories of Bill Pearl 27:27 - Competing in the AAU Mr. America 33:50 - The 1960 NABBA Mr. Universe in London 38:10 - Mentoring Boyer Coe 40:47 - How Red got involved in the gym business 44:23 - Red's current workout routine at 86 years old 47:30 - Red's Gym 52:00 - Bodybuilding today 52:45 - Casey Viator 56:10 - Host John Hansen reads the article "How I Became a Mr. America" written by Lloyd "Red" Lerille from the July-August, 1960 issue of IronMan Magazine. Links: Red Lerille's Gym John's Online Training Bodybuilding Legends website Become a Patreon Donor John's YouTube Channel Muscle Maturity Podcast John Hansen Fitness website
The Whack Pack are BACK for another episode of the After Hours Podcast, the show where literally ANYTHING goes! It's the After Hours Podcast, on RXMuscle.com.
Big Ron Partlow and Dusty Hanshaw are back with Producer Scott McNally, taking your listener questions. TIME STAMPS BELOW - This week, Derek Lunsford and Nick Walker are looking freaky. Ron tells us about hanging with Rich Piana at Muscle Beach, Getting even with your gym nemesis and more.
dear livejournal, do you know about your sitz bone? it’s the butt bone that you sit on. when you sit on a chair, your squishy butt fat disperses your weight across a larger surface and you don’t feel that much pressure directly on your sitz bone. but i got a new bicycle seat recently. it’s nose-less and designed to remove pressure from soft tissue, and instead puts all the pressure on your sitz bone. i’ve only spent two days on the seat and i’m already feeling it in my sitz. but it’s a good thing. i’ve spent the last fifteen years not riding a bicycle because of painful hemorrhoids. is this t.m.i.? naw. hemorrhoids have been a pain in my butt long enough. it’s time to take my life back. and my butt back lolol.DOWNLOAD RECORDINGsubscribe to the podcast here: http://feeds.feedburner.com/5432fun00:00 (intro by omar)00:20 Bedwetters Anonymous “Poverty Porn” R.U. EXPERIENCING DISCOMFORT (?)02:24 Emily Reo “Strawberry” Only You Can See It06:20 CLARKO “Medeocre Man” Medeocre Man 7"08:12 No Sister “Muscle Beach” Portrait In A Rear View Mirror10:37 Value Void “Back in the Day” Sentimental14:04 Noel Thrasher “In the morning” Fun fun fun17:38 Community college “gasoline” comco22:55 WEEED “I See You” You Are The Sky25:47 SWEAR BEAM “GRIME” SWEAR BEAM29:42 Laura Stevenson “Living Room, NY” The Big Freeze33:03 Charly Bliss “Bleach” Young Enough36:54 Lazy Day “Double j” Letters EP39:41 Purrer “Thank You” 25th ½43:44 Twinken Park “Green Day” Flowers45:40 Time Fraud “houston” time/fraud47:53 Patio “Vile Bodies” Essentials50:09 Shady Bug “Lucky” Lemon Lime53:21 Honey 2 Honey “Tone Of Voice” A Taste Of
Doug interviews Annelle Sheline, author of a new Quincy Institute policy brief about the Yemen war, on the reasons behind Saudi Arabia's brutal war. Doug also interviews Natalia Petrzela, author of the column "How Moisturizing Became Macho," on how we went from Muscle Beach to gender neutral cosmetics products.Behind the News, hosted by Doug Henwood, covers the worlds of economics and politics and their complex interactions, from the local to the global. Find the archive here: https://www.leftbusinessobserver.com/Radio.html See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Steve Gregory on Prop 47 that has swayed the crime rates in Los Angeles County // Steve reports on the squirrel outside of KFI // Rams OT Andrew Whitworth Retires today // Impact of athletes on youth // It's rare that NFL Players get to retire on a high note // Tom Brady – Bets fluctuated for the Buccaneers to win the Super Bowl after Brady unretired // Muscle Beach w/ Blake Troli // Muscle beach lifter admits he works out at the beach for the girls // Queen Mary repair // Someone mentioned to Conway's wife that a ghost was onboard of the Queen Mary and she was out of there // Life Boats from the Queen Mary up for auction
Richard H Webb competed for 10 years in amateur bodybuilding finishing with back-to-back Master division wins on Muscle Beach in Venice, CA. I wrote a book available on Amazon, "Fat Burning Secrets: Efficiency in Fitness" were to talk about my journey where I was able to reduce my weekly workout time from 16+ hours/week to 4 hours/week and continued to compete and work full time in the tech industry. The book is NOT for bodybuilders, but rather for normal people engaged in careers, family, etc. Website : https://www.richardhwebb.com/ Facebook: https://web.facebook.com/richardhwebb.author/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/RichardHWebb LinkedIn : https://www.linkedin.com/in/richardhwebb/ Twitter : https://twitter.com/RichardHWebb Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/richardhwebb/ Clubhouse: https://www.clubhouse.com/@richardhwebb --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/jay-feldman5/support
To celebrate one year of the Midtown Madness, Peter and Zac welcome on Billiken great Scott Highmark. Whose jersey from the Spoonball era would have sold the best? Was Hedeke Smith shaving points against the Billikens? Who would fit in best at Muscle Beach? How to spread the word of God after beating a team on a buzzer beater. Negotiating a 100% pay raise in New Zealand.
Raven has run 8 miles on South Beach Miami every single day since Jan 1, 1975 for one of the longest streaks in the world. Robert Kraft is quite a personality around Miami Beach and continues his ritual each day starting at the 5th Street lifeguard stand. He lives right by the ocean and spends the rest of his time writing songs and impressing the crowds around Muscle Beach. His kindness is genuine and it's no wonder he is such an influencer around Miami. This was an excellent conversation and we plan to visit Raven again in the future.
Todd Offenbacher - Comedian, Mountain Guide, Body Builder, Badass Rock Climber, TV Personality, Climbing Community Builder Episode #23 Brought to you by Tamarack Resort & Killington “I've done a lot of first ascents around the world, but it's at this point in my life, reflecting on that, I'd have to say [my greatest achievement is climbing is] a lot of the easy and moderate route development that I've done here around my community. You know, you're not gonna get on the cover of a magazine putting those routes up, but they're the most rewarding. It really feels good. And I think, you know, maybe my grandkids will climb there. My daughter's already climbing there.” - Todd Offenbacher My guest today is Todd Offenbacher. Todd is one of the most amazing, hilarious, and entertaining people I know. He's a mountain guide, a badass rock-climber with first ascents in Pakistan, China, Peru, Alaska, Antarctica, and more, he's a Lake Tahoe television personality for Outside TV, he used to be a Body Builder at Muscle Beach in LA, he's currently in the middle of a community-building passion project where he puts in climbing routes all over Lake Tahoe for beginner and intermediate climbers and kids, he's the founder of Tahoe Adventure Film Festival, he's a professional speaker, and essentially a stand-up comedian. No one has a bad time when Todd's around and his story-telling is world-class. Please enjoy! *** This episode is also brought to you by Tamarack Resort : Nestled in the west-central mountains of Idaho Tamarack boasts 1,100-acres of terrain, 2,800-vertical-feet, and an independent spirit and community vibe unmatched in the westYou might come to Tamarack Resort for the views that unfold across the valley, or the unspoiled terrain and vast open bowls. Maybe you'll come to uncover a place that's a little different, that's down to earth and at home on the path less traveled. But we know you'll come back because there's a community of people at Tamarack who make you feel like you're in the right place, at the right time. For the free-spirits that hear the call of the undiscovered and believe the future truly is boundless, Tamarack Resort is the place for you. And we can't wait to welcome you with arms wide open. Find it. Together. At TamarackIdaho.com This episode is brought to you by Killington: Make the most of any winter weekend—head to Killington, the East Coast's biggest mountain resort. The Beast of the East has everything you need to enjoy a winter getaway—from the best ski and snowboard terrain to one-of-a-kind dining options and fabulous apres-ski experiences. Vacation packages are available now, visit Killington.com to learn more. The eyes of the winter sports world will be on Killington Resort this Thanksgiving Weekend as The Beast of the East hosts the HomeLight Killington Cup. It's a weekend full of Audi FIS Ski World Cup racing, outstanding musical entertainment and more. Watch women from more than 20 nations compete in giant slalom and slalom and enjoy concerts from renowned artists O.A.R., DJ Z-Trip, and G. Love. Learn more and purchase tickets at killington.com/worldcup. Big mountain skiing and riding meet small mountain charm at Vermont's Pico Mountain. Ski or ride Pico this season and save up to 57% off the ticket window rate when you purchase My Pico 3-Packs. My Pico 3-Packs give you three days of skiing and riding for one low price. Use them yourself or share with friends, but be sure to get them before they're gone – My Pico 3-Packs are only available through December 16. Learn more at picomountain.com. *** If you enjoyed this podcast, please share with friends & family, and please subscribe. Follow SnowBrains: SnowBrains.com Facebook: facebook.com/snowbrains Instagram: instagram.com/snowbrains Twitter: twitter.com/snowbrains *** The SnowBrains Podcast Episode #23 - Todd Offenbacher | Brought to you by Tamarack Resort & Killington Recorded on July 31, 2021, in the California Delta (Miles Clark) and Lake Tahoe, CA (Todd Offenbacher). This episode was edited by Jared White Music by Chad Crouch Host, producer, and creator = Miles Clark
Terri Marie is a native to southern California loves travel, fitness and fashion and being on the Red carpet and meeting new people she has a strong desire to help others be their best. She is an entertainment Host, Actress, Model, Business Women and Fitness Competitor She currently a co-hosts for Movie Reviews & More, Women's Broadcast TV Network, Binge Network and ITube247. She also does interviews for Celebrity Connection and Sportamix, and she has interviewed legendary agent Leigh Steinberg. She has appeared on the reality show Botched on the E channel and is in the film Heavens Warriors. She also is a personal trainer and loves helping women achieve their goals. She believes age is a number and fitness is a lifestyle. She has won 1st place in here class at Muscle Beach and Fitness Universe. She has also placed Second in NPC Bikini Master Class. http://terrimarieofficial.com/ https://www.instagram.com/Terrimarienonstop/ This episode is proudly brought to you by: #Betterhelp : https://www.betterhelp.com/sipod for 10% off #H2one #Handsanitizer : https://h2one.com/ BUY MERCH!!!!! #Merch Store: https://www.dckproductions.com/shop Follow me: https://www.instagram.com/suckitpodcast https://www.facebook.com/suckitpodcast https://www.twitter.com/suckit_podcast --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thedarksideofmusic/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thedarksideofmusic/support
Dodgers World Series Game Reaction, Lakers Talk w/ Guest Jc "Mouthpiece" Thompson The Voice Of Venice Beach...The guys get to it with Jc to talk the big Game 5 World Series win for the Dodgers against the Tampa Bay Rays, Lakers Trade Rumors, Clippers Needs, Jerry West, UBall and more!Dodgers, Lakers, UBall, Lebron James, Jansen, Corey Seager, Tyrone Lue, Beach Basketball
DJ/Producer Cajjmere Wray [Promo Only DJ Set - Not For Sale] See CAJJMERE WRAY at the MUSCLE BEACH PARTY in Miami, as a part of White Party Week on Sunday November 26, 2017 --- Tickets now on sale at http://www.whiteparty.org