How Did Pre-Steroid Bodybuilders Get So F***ing Jacked??

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

Пікірлер: 732

  • @AlexanderBromley
    @AlexanderBromley5 ай бұрын

    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 FREE 5 Week Squat Blast: 👇👇👇 empire-barbell.com/full-library-of-free-video-pdfs/

  • @chonkeboi

    @chonkeboi

    5 ай бұрын

    D

  • @Adamsfamily1990

    @Adamsfamily1990

    5 ай бұрын

    Great video, I think these historic lifting topics really suit you.

  • @calebworden2993

    @calebworden2993

    5 ай бұрын

    You should try isometric exercise and eccentric exercise and also learn muscle control

  • @TDCIYB77

    @TDCIYB77

    5 ай бұрын

    I did not watch the original video, the title "History of Bodybuilding Documentary" would have been much better IMHO. Because that is legit what you did and something no other creator ever did in this detail.. You really created something amazing here, sad that i overlooked because i thought it would just be some training programs compared. But a Doc at this detail on the history of bodybuilding? Hell Yeah! Ah.. Just saw people whining about title changes below.. F them.

  • @PapierDeutscher

    @PapierDeutscher

    3 ай бұрын

    15:06 "most done without repeating excersises" means only 1 set with 10-15 reps?

  • @fuckmyego
    @fuckmyego5 ай бұрын

    I like that the author of Sherlock Holmes judged the first bodybuilding contest ever. Sir Arthur Swollen Doyle

  • @alienturtle1946

    @alienturtle1946

    5 ай бұрын

    Sir Arthur Swollen DYEL

  • @WinterMorris

    @WinterMorris

    5 ай бұрын

    😂

  • @monkmoto1887

    @monkmoto1887

    5 ай бұрын

    Swol Doyle rules!

  • @themacocko6311

    @themacocko6311

    4 ай бұрын

    He was a pornstar.

  • @cccpredarmy

    @cccpredarmy

    3 ай бұрын

    "Do you even lift bruh?" (c) A. Swollen Dyel, ca 1901*

  • @aaronwylie6928
    @aaronwylie69285 ай бұрын

    To summarize: Heavy compound movements, good nutrition & rest, & progressive overload.

  • @leetaiming64

    @leetaiming64

    5 ай бұрын

    Niceee, saved me 15 minutes, thank man

  • @Vladimyrful

    @Vladimyrful

    5 ай бұрын

    Wow, simply revolutionary, no one ever heard of that before.

  • @antfc2024

    @antfc2024

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Vladimyrful😂

  • @pigeon-hater2267

    @pigeon-hater2267

    5 ай бұрын

    @@VladimyrfulHeard but never followed. What is actually followed : Science

  • @Vladimyrful

    @Vladimyrful

    4 ай бұрын

    @@pigeon-hater2267 I don't understand?

  • @alexschutz7283
    @alexschutz72835 ай бұрын

    It's worth mentioning that EVERYTHING was harder then. You want dinner? You're walking to a butcher, a farm stand, AND a baker, and carrying it home. There's no refrigerator. Someone's cutting the wood to make the fire to make dinner with. Everything was just harder. Even pooping

  • @Ason19

    @Ason19

    5 ай бұрын

    I grew up in the 80's and I second this, even back then something as simple as say TYPING, I learned on a manual typewriter with heavy ass keys and a manual return took hand and finger strength. I remember being a little kid and still thinking the automatic doors at supermarkets were cool, likewise the powered windows on my rich uncles car and his remote control for his tv(!) All little things but there have been a dozen of those over the years, them calories add up.

  • @joalvarado8506

    @joalvarado8506

    5 ай бұрын

    Nonsense. Taco Bell easily makes modern pooping a battle no caveman would win.

  • @alexschutz7283

    @alexschutz7283

    5 ай бұрын

    @@joalvarado8506 especially since pooping yourself to death was a pretty common way to die until like the 1920s

  • @jimperry4420

    @jimperry4420

    5 ай бұрын

    Pooping was harder because you had to walk to the out house.

  • @izzygarcialionibabaloipici6293

    @izzygarcialionibabaloipici6293

    5 ай бұрын

    the ice box was invented in 1802. People were more active but life was no more harder or easier than it is today.

  • @GymGarageMan
    @GymGarageMan5 ай бұрын

    Been training 40 years! No juice no special diet just hard work..Still ripped af at 53 years old!!!

  • @UsyksmashedFurytopieces

    @UsyksmashedFurytopieces

    5 ай бұрын

    And I’d say you’re stiff as a board from all the weights!

  • @twinrivers6200

    @twinrivers6200

    5 ай бұрын

    Rock on brother. Haters gonna hate.

  • @sazmc7642

    @sazmc7642

    5 ай бұрын

    Just checked your channel garageman brutal training keep it up grandpa

  • @j.3566

    @j.3566

    5 ай бұрын

    Damn you started at 13 sick

  • @agentbashirov6543

    @agentbashirov6543

    5 ай бұрын

    He started training his right hand at that age and switched to the whole body workout later.

  • @Evil-La-Poopa
    @Evil-La-Poopa5 ай бұрын

    "lifting a horse ... upside down" like wtf i need to add that to my training

  • @criticalbil1

    @criticalbil1

    5 ай бұрын

    You should, it's really made the difference for me 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

  • @donjuantrumpetajohnson

    @donjuantrumpetajohnson

    5 ай бұрын

    Yes, but be smart like me. Start small. Start with a Poodle then work you way up depending on the animals available. I'm all the way up to a Pony right now. Soon will come the horse.

  • @matt59fire

    @matt59fire

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@donjuantrumpetajohnsonAs someone that has lived with ponies. You are already strong asf

  • @DjDolHaus86
    @DjDolHaus865 ай бұрын

    Bodybuilding contests need more singing and gymnastic events

  • @BuJammy

    @BuJammy

    5 ай бұрын

    I wanna see Markus Ruhl do ballet@ErgBerg1998

  • @adhamsalem9121

    @adhamsalem9121

    5 ай бұрын

    ehhhm...Magic?

  • @kingbyrd.1512

    @kingbyrd.1512

    5 ай бұрын

    I would love that. Better than the dry sterile competitions we have now. Although Idk to what degree the gymnastic events should go. Go too far and you lose out on size. Maybe Bromley can form his own bodybuilding/powerlifting contest

  • @taintwasher3703

    @taintwasher3703

    5 ай бұрын

    pose routines kind of already a dance, but maybe like some acrobatics or contortion included in that would be cool, whoever can do all that and still be the biggest wins

  • @user-rn1ws5id8h

    @user-rn1ws5id8h

    5 ай бұрын

    Gymnasts unironically look better than most bodybuilders.

  • @rafaelt8589
    @rafaelt85895 ай бұрын

    Here before the thousand different thumbnail and title changes

  • @IsaacMorgan98

    @IsaacMorgan98

    5 ай бұрын

    I critiqued the constantly changing titles and thumbnails a few months ago and copped flack for it, I like that it's now a meme at the top of the comments for all his recent vids 🤣

  • @VskatemanV

    @VskatemanV

    5 ай бұрын

    Here before this guy

  • @TheOutlierToday

    @TheOutlierToday

    5 ай бұрын

    A lot of pages are doing this. Idk y

  • @IsaacMorgan98

    @IsaacMorgan98

    5 ай бұрын

    Started watching and this is actually a reupload. Man this channel is dying.

  • @rafaelt8589

    @rafaelt8589

    5 ай бұрын

    @@IsaacMorgan98 nah the channel is fine, and i dont mind the name changes that much

  • @spiritual_hypertrophy
    @spiritual_hypertrophy5 ай бұрын

    Man, people that complain about title and thumbnail changes are ungrateful af. These things can make a difference between a video having no views or a million views, without changing the quality of the video. Don't let the people get to you, Bromley! You rock!

  • @theItalianshamrock

    @theItalianshamrock

    5 ай бұрын

    Yeah i dont get it. He's making great vids. Who cares about title changes

  • @executiveinvestments

    @executiveinvestments

    5 ай бұрын

    @@theItalianshamrockobviously you do since you’re commenting about it.

  • @PACHOUSEFITNESS

    @PACHOUSEFITNESS

    5 ай бұрын

    Yeah more views from the same people thinking it's a new video. Just make a new video. Your supposed to be a content creator not a lazy click bait maker. I didn't know he does that .... Definitely gotta unsubscribe now.

  • @spiritual_hypertrophy

    @spiritual_hypertrophy

    5 ай бұрын

    @@PACHOUSEFITNESS there are constantly new viewers coming in. Do you run your own successful youtube business? I have a feeling that if you did, you would have a different way of talking about this

  • @TelvanniWizardMoneyGang

    @TelvanniWizardMoneyGang

    5 ай бұрын

    I literally didnt notice because 1) I dont care and 2) I watch the video and move on. It boggles my mind why anyone would give a shit

  • @IronWarrior86
    @IronWarrior865 ай бұрын

    There has always been individuals who built muscle easier and faster than the average person, that in combination with on average much higher testosterone levels is the reason.

  • @matt59fire

    @matt59fire

    4 ай бұрын

    Its not always testosterone being the main factor. Although you are right. Its still a factor thats important. Just overall genetics. You can have a dude that's skinny or pudgy and short, with more test than someone bigger and broader shoulders. Also you give 2 people steroids. And 1 might not gain even half the amount as the other.

  • @ordinaryretrogamer6944

    @ordinaryretrogamer6944

    Ай бұрын

    Much higher test, organic food, clean water, clean air

  • @HughMansonMD
    @HughMansonMD5 ай бұрын

    I swear ever since I've been subbed, I'll have a random thought about something gym related and then the next time I'm on YT there's a video by you on the home page about that very thing. Also, I get a huge smirk on my face whenever I go through my old comics and magazines and see those Atlas program ads.

  • @user-kk7jq2rp1s

    @user-kk7jq2rp1s

    5 ай бұрын

    The algorithm K Nowith. All!!

  • @dawg13200
    @dawg132005 ай бұрын

    I'm on my 3rd week of 70's Powerlifting on Boostcamp. Damn, it's a ton of work but I'm loving it! Thanks for putting it out there

  • @dinguskhan46329

    @dinguskhan46329

    5 ай бұрын

    2 weeks later. how is it?

  • @dawg13200

    @dawg13200

    5 ай бұрын

    @@dinguskhan46329 love it! I cranked up my calorie intake, and that's helping recovery. Feel like as long as I keep that side of things covered, I'm on track to be the strongest I've ever been

  • @nicholaswright807

    @nicholaswright807

    5 ай бұрын

    Wanted to get in on this too I’m on week 7 and bro I think week 3 squat day was the hardest workout I’ve ever had. I’ve gotten noticeably stronger DENSER dude it’s hard but fuck the results are great just make sure to EAT and SLEEP it’s hard to recover in this program imo

  • @dawg13200

    @dawg13200

    5 ай бұрын

    @@nicholaswright807 totally agree! Week 3 was a bear, 3 of my 4 days were up around 50,000lbs for volume and it was right at the limit of what I could do. Excellent results though, really enjoying the exercise selection too

  • @user-rn1ws5id8h
    @user-rn1ws5id8h5 ай бұрын

    Wouldn’t be surprised if food quality was a major factor.

  • @bofi1280

    @bofi1280

    4 ай бұрын

    Right. Far less chemicals and things of that nature.

  • @martinpalm5

    @martinpalm5

    3 ай бұрын

    @@bofi1280 chemicals in the water have a huge affect on natural testosterone levels.

  • @carbonzo6

    @carbonzo6

    23 күн бұрын

    It doesn’t

  • @Oldtimenattylife
    @Oldtimenattylife5 ай бұрын

    Good to see another tuber finally covering Oldtime (sort of) bodybuilding, would love to see some bronze era strongman specific stuff, I cover this myself but as a small channel next to nobody see’s it

  • @DrAJ_LatinAmerica
    @DrAJ_LatinAmerica5 ай бұрын

    Here for the lifting and got a history lesson. Awesome 💪 thanks.

  • @yozfnn
    @yozfnn5 ай бұрын

    Imagine how people would look at Cbum with his current physique back then

  • @Txx00xic

    @Txx00xic

    5 ай бұрын

    Probably like some sort of monster tbh

  • @4literv6

    @4literv6

    5 ай бұрын

    Same as those viewing the original Hercules actor from 1959 vs Arnold in Conan probably. 😀

  • @sirdanoman

    @sirdanoman

    4 ай бұрын

    Pitchforks and torches, my friend.

  • @acb1511

    @acb1511

    3 ай бұрын

    Would have thought he has some sort of tumor in his muscles most likely.

  • @GabboT.V
    @GabboT.V5 ай бұрын

    Appreciate the research put into the video, Alex. Keep up the good work!

  • @thewanderingdumbass
    @thewanderingdumbass5 ай бұрын

    NGL< thought this was a full standalone video instead part of "History of Bodybuilding" video.

  • @rafaelt8589

    @rafaelt8589

    5 ай бұрын

    Still watched it all the way tho

  • @thewanderingdumbass

    @thewanderingdumbass

    5 ай бұрын

    @@rafaelt8589 Same. Just realized it was part of documentary when it suddently ended. "Wtf...ohhh."

  • @thewanderingdumbass

    @thewanderingdumbass

    5 ай бұрын

    @ErgBerg1998 Me neither. Taking two hours out of life randomly for something is hard to do.

  • @richtheunstable3359
    @richtheunstable33595 ай бұрын

    Keep strongman a circus act with freaky feats of strength. I actually stumbled on my copy of professor Attila's 5lb dumbbell book when tidying up today.

  • @Tup41195

    @Tup41195

    5 ай бұрын

    Thats awesome piece of histroy!

  • @BTScriviner
    @BTScriviner5 ай бұрын

    Well researched and very informative video. I love learning about bodybuilders/strongmen of the early days of physique training.

  • @erabbit777
    @erabbit7775 ай бұрын

    Loved the vid. Thought it ended too suddenly

  • @bryden72
    @bryden725 ай бұрын

    Mr Bromley. Hails from Bromley, South East London. And awesome video much appreciated

  • @didimidi7572
    @didimidi75725 ай бұрын

    Nice walkthrough few progressions. Thanks

  • @robertberkowitz992
    @robertberkowitz9925 ай бұрын

    Thanks for continuing to make great videos

  • @williesnyder2899
    @williesnyder28993 ай бұрын

    Mr. Bromley, thank you for your thoughts, material, perspective and honesty!! Congratulations upon the birth of your child!! I understand your priorities and your principles. No one should have to spoon feed “normal” adults - I worked with adults with extreme cognitive and functional disabilities- their (completely volitional) information at the sake of your sleep, rest, or patience. Not a one of your viewers need watch, subscribe or agree with your content; and neither do we need complain if our soft pillows aren’t plumped up enough… I will keep learning from you if you will keep teaching. I will retain the lessons long after your children are grown, and long after I can no longer hear adult men telling you to hurry up and tell them something they should already know save for being too lax to go find the answers themselves. Bad Genetics prevails over Poor Priorities!! Build a great new human being!!!

  • @joshuapadla
    @joshuapadla5 ай бұрын

    Excellent research. More of this please good sir. Thanks.

  • @SriranjanSeshadri
    @SriranjanSeshadri5 ай бұрын

    The point made about valuing movements over body parts resonates with me.

  • @randomassguy
    @randomassguy5 ай бұрын

    This is an aspect of bodybuilding i wouldve never thought was so gaddam interesting

  • @cezarbanuca8360
    @cezarbanuca83605 ай бұрын

    Clasic physique with no oversized chest🙏

  • @Bruce_Wayne35

    @Bruce_Wayne35

    5 ай бұрын

    They didn't train the pecs in those days. That's why they're flat-chested.

  • @AIDS_survivor

    @AIDS_survivor

    4 ай бұрын

    @@Bruce_Wayne35looks less gay.

  • @kdeb92968

    @kdeb92968

    4 ай бұрын

    ⁠@@AIDS_survivor okay little chest

  • @brin57

    @brin57

    3 ай бұрын

    or bubble guts !!

  • @chimbonda99
    @chimbonda995 ай бұрын

    Awsome, informative video. Learned lots of stuff about bronze era lifters.

  • @gregorymcgrath9236
    @gregorymcgrath92364 ай бұрын

    Excellent content and production, Thank you.

  • @Sonicracer100
    @Sonicracer1004 ай бұрын

    Anyone that says "better food quality" or "higher testosterone" is coping. Nothing stopping you from making whole foods to get your balanced diet. Testosterone is also lower due to obesity definitely is a factor. And a lot of those guys lifted with techniques or practices that would be considered inefficient today and still got jacked. No excuses

  • @dctPL
    @dctPL5 ай бұрын

    I'd say they ate less carbs and pretty much no highly processed food.

  • @Las645

    @Las645

    5 ай бұрын

    Carbs are good, they give you energy for workouts and any physical activity.

  • @dctPL

    @dctPL

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Las645 I'm not saying carbs as such are bad. I'm just saying that one's diet shouldn't be dominated by carbs. Nowadays people eat way too many carbs (especially sugars).

  • @animalscars3799

    @animalscars3799

    5 ай бұрын

    @@dctPLwrong lmaoooo carbs is literally more important than protein wtf you on 🤣

  • @user-ly3li3ex8c

    @user-ly3li3ex8c

    5 ай бұрын

    @@animalscars3799 Carbs turn into sugar in the body, carbs from one source are better than others. Its healthier to get your carbs from fruits and vegetables than it is to get it from the overly processed wheat/rice products that lack traditional fermentation, whole nutrients due to bleaching, and are made with seed oils.

  • @Wazzen563

    @Wazzen563

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@animalscars3799What the fuck are *you* on? 😂🤣 It's always so entertaining when some ass-ignorant person believes the direct opposite of a widely-known truth and is so goddamn arrogantly confident about it. 🤣🤣🤡🤡🤡

  • @UnleashedTraining101
    @UnleashedTraining1013 ай бұрын

    The Mr Olympia should totally be changed to “the hurly burley extravaganza” 😂

  • @TheSacredOrderOfKnightlyValor
    @TheSacredOrderOfKnightlyValor5 ай бұрын

    Dude, you went deep on this one.

  • @ukestudio3002
    @ukestudio30025 ай бұрын

    This seems to be well researched unlike many videos who may depend on youtube rumor. Thank you. Incidentally the 5 lb weights apparently were spring loaded (you had to squeeze the handle).

  • @hristohristov2882
    @hristohristov28825 ай бұрын

    Amazing video, my dude!

  • @noalane3626
    @noalane36265 ай бұрын

    I’m pretty sure being a strongman at some point is an arc of every great man’s lore

  • @glennbishopbishthemagish
    @glennbishopbishthemagish3 ай бұрын

    Great Video, Thanks!

  • @jakecavendish3470
    @jakecavendish34705 ай бұрын

    Most of them were well under 6' which certainly helps in terms of the appearance of mass

  • @Bob_Shy_132
    @Bob_Shy_1325 ай бұрын

    Dude, this is awesome! Just imagine the downsides of old recovery (injury) methods in place back then. I have had to do things that way for the last few years. Shoulder injury either early last year or the year before that still is annoying to this day. Pro tip: don't freak out and attempt 100 pushups and thirty pull ups in the same day. And yes, I attempted those in sets of 10 for the push ups and 5 on the pullups.

  • @harryv6752
    @harryv67523 ай бұрын

    Great content and presentation here. Subscribed. 🤟

  • @papaspaulding
    @papaspaulding5 ай бұрын

    A lot of the very early strongman work and aesthetic can be traced back even further to ancient Greece which no doubt inspired them as of that time sculpting the body, human strength and feats of athleticism were seen as mastering oneself and just as important as art and philosophy. Building the muscles was seen and celebrated as an aesthetical art form. Hence sandow stating he was inspired by 'the Grecian Ideal'

  • @2ndHandHero
    @2ndHandHero5 ай бұрын

    Another great video!

  • @cheeks7050
    @cheeks70505 ай бұрын

    Love the background music

  • @GarsonProduction
    @GarsonProduction5 ай бұрын

    Watching this on your rest day is not optimal for rest. Just hearing about Hackenschmidt makes me wanna go lift and pracrise a new language.

  • @alessandrovalentini5013
    @alessandrovalentini50135 ай бұрын

    Rappresentavano la VERA Forza del Fisico Umano, senza nessun tipo di DOPING, o aiutini Vari!!! Massimo Rispetto! 👍💪💪💫💪💪👍

  • @Mantelar
    @Mantelar5 ай бұрын

    I spent my morning in the gym used to be the sort of thing that raised eyebrows. Now it’s assumed you spent half that time on your phone.

  • @MrZkoki
    @MrZkoki2 ай бұрын

    Thank you for your research.

  • @Piranesi-gc8gn
    @Piranesi-gc8gn5 ай бұрын

    This was very nice, hey could you examine their lifts and compare them how they fair to a modern strength table

  • @claytonwilson2036
    @claytonwilson20362 ай бұрын

    Iv been looking for this kind of chan for years thank you Jesus.😂

  • @geno755
    @geno7555 ай бұрын

    This is a good question - please dont forget that the poison in environment and food, esp microsplastic, decrease the testosterone across the male population. This is already a problem during the development of the embryo. An additional proof - the fertility of men is way lower than 1980. Check the interview on impact theory with a biologists (female).

  • @kaizenproductions00

    @kaizenproductions00

    4 ай бұрын

    They had lead and industrial waste pollution back then

  • @geno755

    @geno755

    3 ай бұрын

    @@kaizenproductions00 Yes - but obviously still more testosterone… maybe at that time the pollution was more localized in specific places - nowadays it is way more proliferated. Environmental poison also had time to accumulate in gonads over time and generations. Also the food was much better. I heard somewhere that eating 1 orange in 1920 would give the same nutrients as eating 8 oranges today. Well - but nowadays we have TRT and/or Steroids :D. Easy.

  • @antonvannelli9085
    @antonvannelli90852 ай бұрын

    Fascinating. They understood what systems/networks/muscles etc were weak by simply looking at them and testing them. The flabby comment is especially compelling, as this is something that becomes beyond obvious when you start to test muscle groups yourself in regards to contractions/muscle tone etc. When I finally stumbled upon this line of methodology myself, I was able to solve all of my back issues/knee issues/shoulder problems etc. They didn't understand the nervous system/brain part of it of course, but they noticed and sensed their bodies likely better than we do today. Really interesting video!

  • @commiezombie2477
    @commiezombie2477Ай бұрын

    Homie was viral before viral was viral 😂😎💪🏼

  • @davincibz1
    @davincibz15 ай бұрын

    You are doing a great job, Alex! Thank you for this mini documentary

  • @christianstreit950
    @christianstreit9505 ай бұрын

    Interesting historical fact: The short film showing a part of Sandow's posing routine was the first recorded motion picture ever( yeah, let that sink for a moment). Edison and Sandow were re- portedly the first to believe that this type of entertainment could have a future at all, while others fought it was a complete bullshit idea at the time. One might argue that Edison and Sandow were on to something. 😂

  • @duartelucas5746
    @duartelucas57465 ай бұрын

    No processed foods, meaning no frozen pizza, no ice cream, no cookies, etc.

  • @ictogon

    @ictogon

    5 ай бұрын

    What? So I'm just supposed to eat raw beef and wheat?

  • @duartelucas5746

    @duartelucas5746

    5 ай бұрын

    @@ictogon It was the available food. Whole Foods. It is not an opinion. You can’t eat what does not exist or isn’t available. Also, the lifestyle was different for a lot of people. Less cars, more walking. No computers or tvs, people would engage more in other less sedentary activities. I am saying nothing new.

  • @DHRtheTHIRD
    @DHRtheTHIRD5 ай бұрын

    Great video

  • @selda2528
    @selda25285 ай бұрын

    thou whats your take on heavy and explosive landmine moves that seem to pop up here and there and all the rotational strength training stuff like rope flow and the other things

  • @BluegillGreg

    @BluegillGreg

    5 ай бұрын

    That Felice Napoli picture with the heavy club could be evidence of rotational strength training. Training with heavy clubs goes back very far and is depicted in ancient art.

  • @Vladimyrful
    @Vladimyrful5 ай бұрын

    There's no conceivable way people from 150 years ago had access to more knowledge/training methods than we do today.

  • @IronWarrior86
    @IronWarrior865 ай бұрын

    Also weight training was not mainstream, meaning the ones that did were most likely to be individuals with an aptitude for developing muscles.

  • @josephperkins4857

    @josephperkins4857

    5 ай бұрын

    most likely to be individuals with an aptitude for developing muscles? thats Not 100% true,you are generalizing that they where most likely,individuals with an aptitude for developing muscles. Many actually started out frail and used weights to build themselves up. Read the following books "Superstrength" by Alan Calvert,and Physical Strength simplified by Mark H Berry.

  • @soopdreadla
    @soopdreadla5 ай бұрын

    Felice Napoli was a fashion icon.

  • @blueboots141
    @blueboots1415 ай бұрын

    Need a playlist of the history of building series

  • @whipivy
    @whipivy5 ай бұрын

    I've used "double progression most of my life, started while in the Army. It just seemed intuitive that as the weight became too easy, I should increase the weight. I really had no idea it was this old.

  • @weareham3068
    @weareham30685 ай бұрын

    Weird how this kind of just ends, no outro? Good video either way

  • @BigOlJungleMonkey
    @BigOlJungleMonkey5 ай бұрын

    What can I do instead of upright rows for the kong programme because it messed up my neck.

  • @ole5837
    @ole58375 ай бұрын

    Please make a video on a good program to run on a cut. Just Started a cut and not sure witch program to run or how to train.

  • @sometimeswitty6849
    @sometimeswitty68495 ай бұрын

    Just to clarify about the Snatches, cleans,jerks,presses part, Its saying to establish your 10 rep max and then do 2 reps a with an extra 10lb lets say then add an extra 10lb for 1 rep?

  • @vlad_IT_87
    @vlad_IT_875 ай бұрын

    Better food, higher testosterone, better character and higher discipline.

  • @ShareseVHatch
    @ShareseVHatch5 ай бұрын

    Excellent information! Very thorough. Thank you for helping us "naturals" see the awesome potential of the human body, unassisted by drugs!! Many now days lie about drug use. To me it's pretty obvious. The unfortunate thing is that if you are exceptional and work hard , you are accused of not being natural. I find that a shame, and frustrating. Keep up the good work!!

  • @uberjackkde

    @uberjackkde

    3 ай бұрын

    Most people who accuse others of steroids are just ignorant and weak, they haven't seen what's possible because they're not talented or hardworking so anything that goes beyond what they think is possible must come from enhancements. These people are the majority in the fitness community since now working out is so popular, so you have some muscular guys being self conscious about their results. I was accused of steroids when I benched 315, that says it all. It's like the new buzzword accusation.

  • @lotleoregler6836
    @lotleoregler6836Ай бұрын

    Great historic work, thanks, cheers from Germany

  • @shirohige291
    @shirohige2915 ай бұрын

    I have two friends Both born 1990 started working out 2007 Both good genetics around 1.80m One started to roid 2015 The other is still pure natural (doesnt even take creatine or whey) The roider benches 200kg The roider squats 250kg The roider deadlifts 250kg The roider can do 10 strict pull ups at 120kg bw (rather ripped 120kg) Slow body type - The natty benches 180kg The natty squats 250kg The natty deadlifts 310kg The natty does 10 strict pullups at 120kg bw (huge guy but no fat belly) Sprinter body type - The natty definitely looks more intimidating having oldschool warriorlike genetics with large as fck hands, 50cm arms etc. The roider looks more like the typical roider with veins, leathery skin etc. - The roider eats a modern diet with lots of pasta etc The natty eats a traditional german diet with lots of cabbage, fish, pork etc - If the natty stops training he will keep most of his strength and muscles after 1 year of no workout If tge roiders stops roiding he will be back to 120kg bench in a month. Why roid if you are not Hafthor?

  • @mrdavisdance

    @mrdavisdance

    5 ай бұрын

    It's so crazy that you just happen to have two friends that are the exact same age and height, that both started training at the exact same time 17 years ago. And that they have similar numbers. It's even crazier that they both of them happened to max out an give you their numbers and diet for this comment. Steroids make people much stronger, especially when they lift. That's common sense. There's downsides to steroid use too. I'm not trying to be mean but I'm honestly curious, why did you sit down and make all of that up?

  • @earlgrey1

    @earlgrey1

    5 ай бұрын

    @@mrdavisdance yeah, I call bs

  • @Nickxxx85

    @Nickxxx85

    5 ай бұрын

    It sounds like total bullshit

  • @Nickxxx85

    @Nickxxx85

    5 ай бұрын

    wait it IS bullshit

  • @Cr4shOverride
    @Cr4shOverride19 күн бұрын

    all i can say this light dumbbell training is extremely intensive for the tendons. so i assume it helps a lot to develop strength. a thickened tendon also enables the muscle itself to develop stronger fiber basis at the main part. especially the biceps curls with just 5 lbs (excersises 1 and 2 from sandow) will show this clearly. you will also train into getting used to the burn feeling more and more. you basically learn to still execute a reptition with having a burning muscle already. cause your pain and ability to still move your arm, increases if you stick to this program. when you learn that you can overpower the muscle above failure your strength with also grow, not just the muscle size. the cool part is, with low weights its much easier to do. cause you cannot really damage something. just overlactate the muscle. i tested it with 100 reps i still could go longer cause the weight wasnt much. but i did cut here. and i had to shaken my arms for about 2-3 minutes after i did just to get rid of all that lactate in the muscle and distract me from the unpleasant pain it causes. you will feel it more afterwards than inside the reps. it was not much pain but it was a really annoying feeling (more like a pressed one that limits movement). only by constantly shaking i got it back to normal feeling. you do not even not wanna do that. you automatically wanna shake your arms. this was new to me. the other excersises are not that painful. due to not being that high in rep count. however when done the ones for the abs right. they are also quite heavy intensive. can therefore be recommended. so we can say he gives you the best start to learn to train hard enough later with higher weights as well. good for newbies indeed. and this is already strength itself! the body will automatically due to this effect start storing more nutrients and fluids inside his muscles to be better endure the next session and stress you put him under. you aquire especially with your arms the strength and power the endurance type fibers give you. you may not had before. so if someone never did train in such a way before. you can bet this person will aquire more muscle size. cause even the type 1 fibres can hypertrophy a bit. i dont know how much at this point in time. but if it gives you extra power for higher weight lifts and hypertrophy region training as a new trained basis by default. its worth therefore developing it too. adds to more solid developed ground in my opinion. they can decide the difference between still being able to do one or 2 more reps with higher weights later. compared to not having trained them at all. cause then its zero more reps. do not underestimate trained endurance fibres compared to not trained ones. adds to energy consumption when this is regularly trained. and this adds to more jacked look. such muscles seem to need more consumption compared to not trained in such a way without adding much to feeling of hunger. so they burn the fat a lot. could be a logical explanation if you ask me. pretending you do it often enough to get lean from it.

  • @zacvanadrichem1553
    @zacvanadrichem15535 ай бұрын

    Is this video a re-post due to copyright? I've watched 3 minutes and all of it has been reviewed word for word on this channel before

  • @Bjorn_R
    @Bjorn_R5 ай бұрын

    The original fitness hustler

  • @majungasaurusaaaa
    @majungasaurusaaaa4 ай бұрын

    Their natural test levels were on avg much higher. Their food was fresh and natural. Now with pollutants we're chemically castrated and fed processed crap. Nowadays you'd need to be on TRT to match what they could do natty back then.

  • @bryanmartin897
    @bryanmartin8975 ай бұрын

    When I went “weapons free” with my workouts going to failure with either wt or calestenics everything took off.

  • @jessg.9368
    @jessg.93685 ай бұрын

    Awesome video

  • @larrybaba5635
    @larrybaba56355 ай бұрын

    Oldtimers trained frequently but they practiced movements ..just like an archer does archery. Only tested their strengths during events. They ate a lot and even drunk moderately!

  • @ictogon

    @ictogon

    5 ай бұрын

    Beer is my favorite way to bulk

  • @adrianobernardiprado5033
    @adrianobernardiprado50335 ай бұрын

    Awesome vídeo

  • @yufoh7753
    @yufoh77535 ай бұрын

    I've just found out today after watching a couple of videos, that without ever hearing about them before, I've apparently been doing 'super sets' and 'double progression' the last few years. I thought it was something I had made up myself.

  • @damcleandetailing
    @damcleandetailing3 ай бұрын

    3:30 good ole iron online forums.. I had always enjoyed Dave Drapers weekly news letters/emails and looked up to him since my late teens. He passed away on my dad’s birthday in 2021 and my dad passed away in August of that year.

  • @mister_dadstersays_hi7372
    @mister_dadstersays_hi73725 ай бұрын

    The secret was the dapper mustaches.

  • @CityBlades
    @CityBlades2 ай бұрын

    Heyyy a dan John book made an appearance, nice

  • @DCJayhawk57
    @DCJayhawk575 ай бұрын

    Video suddenly cuts off, was that intentional? Seems like it wasn't.

  • @igelbeatz
    @igelbeatz3 ай бұрын

    How do I program for lifting a horse upside down??

  • @jjk3502
    @jjk35025 ай бұрын

    Well before I even took gear, after five years of training clean I was 218 had 18 " arms and benched 400 x 4. Gear gives you no more than 25 % or less. After gear 226 lbs arms 19.5 " and that was about it. If you don't have genetics and work hard no amount of gear going to make you champion.

  • @jensstrkjr3164
    @jensstrkjr31642 ай бұрын

    Thank you

  • @tonyquinlan7341
    @tonyquinlan73415 ай бұрын

    Very interesting history of Weight lifting bodybuilding.

  • @Yeawhatever507
    @Yeawhatever5073 ай бұрын

    loved the part where u linked the full video

  • @BigDaddySwingingMeat
    @BigDaddySwingingMeat5 ай бұрын

    Back in those days they would inject moose semen straight into their ding-a-lings. Absolute best way to get jacked quick! Moose it up!

  • @MrMhtmht
    @MrMhtmht2 ай бұрын

    I still know dozens of nattys who look better and are stronger than 90% of people on TRT Some pure natty stats on a traditional german/silesian diet: 180cm, 100kg BW, 15 years of training - 300kg Deadlift, 10.5s sprint, 50cm arms, 80cm thighs, 45cm forearms, 50cm calves, row training is 140kgx8, german silesian prussian genetics, white blonde. My brother easily pulled 300kg deadlift with 2 years of training at 20yo 120kg bw at 1.85m on a traditional german diet. The thing is, in Germany we mostly hate people who roid, but there are tons of genetics who could easily pull 450kg and more. But in Germany roiding is either for immigrants or for bodybuilders.

  • @techyb8614
    @techyb86145 ай бұрын

    Respect to the lad. He tried his best to give some work to a pro fighter and failed, no shock there. But after that, he took his beating like a man salute.

  • @burnhamsghost8044
    @burnhamsghost80445 ай бұрын

    They did high frequency training and never to failure.

  • @_Sp4c3y_

    @_Sp4c3y_

    5 ай бұрын

    What's your source? I've looked into a lot of the classic greats and they seem to follow a lot of different practices and protocols, it was kind of a wild west to my understanding.

  • @burnhamsghost8044

    @burnhamsghost8044

    5 ай бұрын

    @@_Sp4c3y_ read Pavel Tsatsouline’s: Power to the People. “Feeling the burn” was not a priority of the greatest classic lifters like Arthur Saxon. It was intentionally avoided. They were much better at empirical observations since they didn’t have social media, only experience.

  • @geraldfriend256

    @geraldfriend256

    5 ай бұрын

    Interesting

  • @brin57
    @brin573 ай бұрын

    It was because back then, every idiot didn't think you were on juice just because you had muscles !! It is and always has been possible to be big and natural, just not super-human huge !! Some of these kids who scream roids at the sight of a muscle, need to hang out with more hard working men to see what's what.

  • @Thehappybirder
    @Thehappybirder3 ай бұрын

    One of the other advantages that they had at that time was it food was a lot more nutrient dense

  • @bengie2015
    @bengie20155 ай бұрын

    I also believe what helped is that people were also more active then. And they probably carried heavy stuff around instead of lifting it too by chance. Also Overcoming Isometrics! My apologies if I already brought stuff from the video up😭 this is the first vid I’ve watched from your account but you have very good knowledge! You’ve earned a subscription.

  • @rob1279
    @rob12795 ай бұрын

    Dedication! Plain and simple. It'll take longer than it would with gear and limited to size and strength but getting jacked natty is possible. I have done this myself, I was in prison which helped. I can remember the majority of the gym goers were all strong, some leaner than others as you will find in most gyms. I remained natty till 38 and have used gear over the remaining 11 years so can clearly see the benefits to either gear or not.

  • @oneanamoly

    @oneanamoly

    2 ай бұрын

    What was your prison workouts like?

  • @user-nd9ls1xn5f
    @user-nd9ls1xn5fАй бұрын

    Genetics plays the most important part in how u turn out some people can make fantastic gains in just three months while others might take years and still not get real strong but even if you are just average you will be a lot better off than a person that doesn’t excercise

  • @mmmbbop9351
    @mmmbbop93514 ай бұрын

    The guy who wrote the "convict conditioning" series loved Eugene Sandow.