I decided today I would buy a popular Men's fitness magazine just to see if things have changed. I used to read it as a teenager and have since realised that most of the stuff in there regarding weight training is absolute rubbish.
Anyway, so there's an article where 4 celebrities go from looking like lager louts to ripped models in what they claim is "4 weeks."
This really annoys me because it sets completely unrealistic expectations on the reader. Some of the routines recommended involve things like 5 weights sessions and 6 cardio sessions a week which, done properly, would constitute over-training on a ridiculous scale. They also recommend doing 15-25 reps of things like DB chest presses.
I don't understand how they can get away with it. It is literally impossible to go from looking fat to ripped in one month, even with the most intricate and strict diet planning, optimum training regime, intelligent calorie partitioning it is simply not possible.
I understand magazines (and this also applies to PTs!) wouldn't sell if they told us the truth - that looking good is the result of hard work across all fronts of diet/rest/training and takes time but then how can we all take the **** out of college kids in the gym who know it all already if they're reading stuff like this?
Anyway, so there's an article where 4 celebrities go from looking like lager louts to ripped models in what they claim is "4 weeks."
This really annoys me because it sets completely unrealistic expectations on the reader. Some of the routines recommended involve things like 5 weights sessions and 6 cardio sessions a week which, done properly, would constitute over-training on a ridiculous scale. They also recommend doing 15-25 reps of things like DB chest presses.
I don't understand how they can get away with it. It is literally impossible to go from looking fat to ripped in one month, even with the most intricate and strict diet planning, optimum training regime, intelligent calorie partitioning it is simply not possible.
I understand magazines (and this also applies to PTs!) wouldn't sell if they told us the truth - that looking good is the result of hard work across all fronts of diet/rest/training and takes time but then how can we all take the **** out of college kids in the gym who know it all already if they're reading stuff like this?