As the
legend goes, an ancient Cypriot King named Pygmalion sculpted a beautiful
girl from a block of granite, only to fall madly in love with it. He successfully begged Aphrodite
to bring the statue to life.
They lived happily ever after.
As the
legend goes, Joe Weider sculpted a business selling chunks of iron back
when it wasn’t very popular to lift the stuff. Nonetheless, he was personally in
love with iron. So, he
successfully solicited his brother Ben to give life to the biz by
presenting iron-pumping models to the world so all could see just how
important buying Joe’s iron could be to them. After a few bumps in the road,
they too lived happily ever after.
The first
paragraph, a cute story. The
second, the American dream come true. Didn’t matter that the dream
started in Canada, because, in large part, the dream came true upon Joe’s
move to America.
I’d like
to explore some of the consequences of the early dream for you. It is only of late that I have
come to feel compelled to do so for a simple reason. There is new blood entering the
world of Irondom all the time, and the newbies have not been exposed to
their roots, they have not been properly indoctrinated on the legends
which molded our sport, and they are being granted entry for many, many of
the wrong reasons. They have,
in some instances, been maliciously lied to by those who envy anyone whose
dreams are fulfilled to the extent that Joe’s has been. In short, I’d like to set the
record straight for the younger lifters who are a generation or two
removed from our collective beginning.
Beware
however. Let it be known
right now that I pulled NO punches in my interview with Joe. As you’ll see, I asked him
all the tough questions that I hear debated around the world, including on
the Internet. These are the
myths and truths. These are
our roots. You will see that
many of our own respective dreams were realized as a result of Joe’s
dreams-come-true. And
so too were many of our frustrations.
What are
my qualifications for telling this story? Folks, I’ve been working for Joe
since the very early eighties.
I have been regaled with his stories and philosophy about lifting,
business and sport daily ever since.
As part of my job, I was obliged to read scores of old books,
muscle mags and manuscripts.
I poured over early photos of the strongmen of yore, the
bodybuilders of mid-yore and modern day stars almost every day of my
life. All in order to deny or
support Joe’s endless stories.
Breakfast at Joe’s:
One early
AM., I joined Joe for breakfast at his place, up on the balcony, Betty’s
skirt drying on the line and the gentle spring breeze blowing it across
Joe’s head unmercifully.
Joe’s hand is full of nearly a dozen vitamin pills and such, which
he’s trying to swallow down with a glass of chamomile tea. Didn’t work. The skirt was too
persistent, so we went down to the verandah near the pool. Cute story? Why didn’t he just move the
skirt! But it was nicer down
in the verandah.
I started
our interview by explaining the reason for it to Joe. “Joe, there are so many
lifters out there who -- putting it as nicely as possible -- appear to
have it in for you. You were
never a lifter yourself, your vitamins are crap, Muscle & Fitness is
crap, you make too much money, you lie to kids about the gains they can
make, and your statue really isn’t you. Stuff like that.”
Before
Joe could respond the phone rang.
It was Franco. Franco
didn’t stand a chance. Joe
was livid when he grabbed the phone and shouted, “Franco! Do you know what they’re saying
about me? They’re saying that
I never lifted! Can you
believe that? Here! Tell Fred...”
Joe
angrily handed me the phone, mumbling something unspeakable under his
breath. Sure enough, it was
the great Franco Columbu.
“Frrrred,” Franco rolled in his Italian accent, “let me tell you a
great story. Arnold, Rickey
Wayne, Joe and I were working out at the Hudson Hotel. Rickey was doing curls with the
forties, and Arnold and I were using sixties. I said, ‘Guys! Look at that!’ There was Joe, over in the corner
doing incline curls with the seventies!
“So I
hollered over to Joe, ‘Hey Joe!
What are you doing!
That’s a lot of weight there! ‘ Joe threw down the dumbbells and
picked up the seventy fives.
‘Don’t bother me! I’m
busy! Gotta finish my
sets!’
“Can you
imagine that?”
Franco
continued on, regaling me with stories about Joe’s lifting prowess. Betty was standing there listening
in to our conversation. She
couldn’t contain herself any more.
Said she, “Yes! Just
before Joe and I were married, Joe used to lift like a madman! I remember once...Florida, I
think...Joe was lifting this huge barbell. His face was red, and he looked
like he would explode! Joe,
how much were you lifting?”
I don’t
remember! Ask Franco.”
“Franco
was listening to the conversation.
“Six hundred,” he said.
“I was there! He was
doing deadlifts with six hundred pounds for reps!”
“How many
reps, Franco?”
“Threes.”
“Sets of
three with six hundred pounds?” I asked incredulously. “That would put him into an elite
class of powerlifting!”
“More
like five!” Betty chimed in.
Franco
continued, “Joe was a monster, Fred!
For people to say he wasn’t a lifter, well, they just don’t know
the guy! Joe was very, very
strong!”
And so it
went. Just for the record,
though, I went back to check on Joe’s teenage competitive weightlifting
career. Back in 1939 at age
18, Joe won the City and Provincial Championships in weightlifting, and
nearly beat the current Canadian National Middleweight Champion, Joe
Sklar. At the time, Joe’s
best lifts were 225 press, 240 snatch and 315 clean and jerk at 165 pounds
bodyweight. But Joe offered
his apology anyway, “I was a horrible presser.”
Not too
shabby, folks!
Back to
the verandah. By this time,
Joe had cooled off, and had completely forgotten all of the allegations I
had repeated to him. The only
thing on his mind was the one claiming he wasn’t a lifter. THAT is the Joe I know!
Joe:
I didn’t have a belt,
suit or nothing. What did
Franco say?
Fred: [I repeated the above story to
Joe.] He also told a
story when he came out here the first time to work out with you in
California you were working out with him and said, “Lets warm up,” and you
said, “Lets do some clean and presses.” Nobody did stuff like that back
then except the weightlifters.
Joe: I told you I was a weightlifter.
What did he say? [Joe’s always fishing for compliments on how strong he
was...all of us old retired iron slingers do. So I obligingly told him
again what Franco said.]
Fred, you know me.
What do I talk about mostly?
Fred: Lifting
Joe: The
bodybuilders know I’m a lifter too.
That’s why they worry about what’s going to happen to bodybuilding
when I die. They worry that
they won’t be able to find anybody that has their heart and soul in
bodybuilding. Take
TwinLabs. Anybody there from
the bodybuilding world?
No. The guys don’t
trust them. Take Jim [Ripped
Fuel ad]. I hear horror
stories about what he’s going through with TwinLabs. They don’t trust these guys
anymore.
Fred:
Interesting, OK, you
do equipment for home use, 8 magazines now, supplements, and you’re
getting into foods in a much heavier way soon. Overall, the biggest fitness based
operation in the world. Some
say that all of this has alienated you from the bodybuilders, and that
money is your motivation.
True or false?
Joe: Bodybuilders aren’t stupid. They can sense the soul of a
person. The fact that
bodybuilders have stayed with me all these years is because they believe
in me. The fact that they
think bodybuilding will die without me goes to show that they do have the
deep affinity toward me. And
because they have this affinity toward me there is a love-hate
relationship. Do you have a
deep affinity toward your wife?
Of course. And you
could love her deeply but you’d have more fights with her than a girl
you’d pick up in a bar. I think that the fact bodybuilders have stood by
me goes to show that they do have a strong affinity for me. I bet if you
went to TwinLabs and spoke to one of the editors there, and you talked to
them in five minutes, you’d lose them and they’d lose you too. They don’t understand
bodybuilders or lifters, they don’t know them, and they haven’t been in it
themselves. Why do you think
a leader can win over people?
Because people believe in them. They have a rapport with him.
Fred:
You tend to expect
more from you mentor than a kid on the street. The bodybuilders believe that
their interests are yours.
Joe:
Our guys have
instincts. They know who is
working in their best interests.
Fred:
Some folks questions
the directions of your flagship magazine, Muscle & Fitness . Mostly the people who question it
are the serious lifters, the guys like you or me, Joe, who are really into
the sport heart and soul, and see the magazine going in a direction other
than the one they remember.
Joe: I have a copy of Muscle and
Fitness right here. Lets see,
the hot line?
Fred:
Explosive delts. I
hear it over and over again -- people want hard scientific information
that they can make use of to become better bodybuilders and muscles.
Joe: They have that. [Flipping through
the pages] Bodybuilders
telling them how train. We have a lot of bodybuilding training
information. We have the best
photographs to inspire them and coach them in training. We don’t have
everything about the steroids scene which people are really tired of. It’s still in FLEX though, for the
hard-core people. [Still
flipping] Bodybuilders don’t
want to take drinks?
Eat? Take
supplements?
People
can’t seem to get it into their head is that I want to expand our
bodybuilding lifestyle so that we can reach the masses of people. If we are going to keep
bodybuilding an esoteric group by ourselves, bodybuilding won’t have much
of a following later on. If
we don’t have much of a following, bodybuilders will not be able to
compete and make money. There
will be very few seminars, fewer exhibitions, the magazine sales will be
very, very low, and I would not be able to put them in the magazine. There are no decent writers who
would work for $20,000.00.
So my whole purpose is to expand the appeal of Muscle & Fitness from
the hard core to the public and show them that they can use our lifestyle
to improve their longevity, their health and fitness, and that they should
immediately take up weight training to improve their appearance.
With
Muscle and Fitness we are trying to reach out more to the public, to the
guys and gals who train in gyms, spas, clubs, who are more educated. They want to know what
will weight training do for my heart. What does weight training do for
my longevity? What would weight training do for my cardiovascular
system? What food should I
eat that would make me work with bodybuilding to make me happier and
healthier? How can I enjoy my
fitness and strength sexually?
So they have a broader view than hard-core lifters.
But they
already have a hard-core magazine in Flex. So why should Muscle & Fitness
be totally hard-core and locked in?
Still, Muscle & Fitness still has hard-core; it does have a lot
of training. But it takes a
broader view of sports, foods, nutrition, cooking, how to take care of
your skin, hair and so forth so they can be a total package -- a perfect
person.
Fred: do you really believe Flex can
take up the banner that Muscle and Fitness once carried for the hard-core
people?
Joe: It
already has. It’s by far the
best selling hard-core magazine on the racks. Bigger than Muscle media 2000,
bigger than IronMan, Bigger than Muscular Development. By far. Look at the circulation of the
hardcore magazines. They go
up to 160, 170 or possibly to 180,000. Flex is more than 200,000, and
Muscle & Fitness has a 500,000 circulation. Now why don’t you put your ISSA ad
in Flex instead of Muscle & Fitness?
Fred:
It wouldn’t work.
Joe: You
see? It would be so locked
into a niche market that it wouldn’t pay for itself.
Fred: Why did the Weider Gym Operation
fail?
Joe: It
didn’t fail, Fred. We were
flooded with a thousand requests.
The fella we got to run the operation was not experienced in the
gym business. He had been telling people to give
up Gold’s, World’s, and Powerhouse Gyms so they could put in a Weider Gym
and make more money with us than the other guys. Also, he made all kinds of
promises that couldn’t be kept, and we were getting lawsuits. So I figured that’s not for
me. I just don’t want to get
involved in lawsuits. I don’t
want to have my name misrepresented and I canceled it. And that's it. I had the wrong guy at the wrong
time. I wasn’t aware that
when we opened a gym we would have to attack other gyms and tell them that
we were better and the other guys.
They were my friends and I didn’t want anybody to put them
down. It made me sick. Imagine! Me saying “Quit a World Gym and
make a Weider gym!” Joe Gold
is my friend! Pete Grymkowski
and Ed Conners are my friends!
I didn’t care for that.
It was the wrong sales people, wrong setup. I ended it voluntarily. It didn’t fail.
Fred: People always ask me, “Is that
really the statue of Joe?”
Most of the guys who’ve been around any length of time know that
the body is Robbie Robinson’s.
Joe:
First the sculptor
did me. He did my head and
body. I weighed 215
then. But he wasn’t a
good sculptor, and didn’t know anatomy. Even though he had a picture he
just couldn’t get the definition right. How many sculptors know
definition? They don’t know
an anterior deltoid from a pec. He made my body smooth. Now, granted, I wasn’t in hard
training, not on drugs, not doing any of that stuff. I was just an in-shape, busy man.
You gonna pose for definition under those circumstances, especially with
an inept sculptor? The
easiest thing for me to do was get Robbie to pose and show him how to add
some definition that I didn’t have because I wasn’t in rock-hard
shape. With Robbie, he was
able to see the definition and contours, and was able to add to the
sculpture.
Fred: Why does a statue in the first
place?
Joe: I thought I should make a statue
because pictures get lost.
But with a statue, people would always have the memories. It’s not that I’m an
egomaniac. If I were an
egomaniac, wouldn’t I put my statue in the Olympia like Arnold did in his
show? Not that Arnold is an
egomaniac either, but he has his statue at his Classic. I’m not an egomaniac. I’m
not going to use a statue for one of those purposes.
Fred: Joe, I confess that I would love a
statue of myself, and I think everyone else out there would too because
it’s like ensuring a little piece of immortality. Ben has worked for years to get
bodybuilding into the Olympics.
In fact, I meet with him once in Switzerland to speak with
Samaranch. Joe, bottom
line. What’s your prognosis
for getting bodybuilding into the Olympics?
Joe:
I’m not a
fortuneteller. But consider
this, how did we get recognition of IOC members who run the Pan-American
Games? How did we get in the
Pan-Pacific Games? The
Goodwill Games? We have bodybuilding in Russia, and we have it all over
Europe and the rest of the world. All Samarach has to do is put it up for
a vote. Samaranch was elected
president of the IOC. When
the vote came into the open, it was known that he got all the Latin
countries to support him because he’s Spanish. Now these same guys wrote to him
to accept bodybuilding.
He gave my brother an appointment to see him. Why would he do this
if he didn’t want bodybuilding under the IOC umbrella? Couldn’t he have just told him,
“Sorry Ben, don’t come. It’s
not gonna work”? Bodybuilding
stands an excellence chance of getting in. But, it’s got to be brought to a
vote.
Fred:
He doesn’t want to
rock the boat, because he’s near the end of his tenure. He wants to leave it up to the
next guy?
Joe:
Nah, the problem is different.
Let me explain.
Francisco, ambassador to Russia, was part of the Fascist movement
in Spain. Samaranch supported
him in the early days, and got a bad rap internationally for it. That's why he wanted another four
years as IOC president, so he would not have to go out humiliated. Now, a similar thing is happening,
but it involves bodybuilding.
If he spearheaded bodybuilding’s entry into the Olympics, what with
all the deaths and bad publicity against drugs in the sport, what does
that do to his name? He
worked all these years to build a great reputation. He doesn’t want to take a
chance. That's what I
believe. He was going to do
it, but another bodybuilder died from drugs. The last time he was ready to
recognize bodybuilding, Munzer died.
It’s like
the devil is following my brother.
Now wherever my brother goes, he has everyone recounting how Munzer
died from drugs. In
Europe, when a top bodybuilder dies from drugs they have major
headlines. But still, when
you put all of that together, you would think we still have a good chance.
Fred:
What could stop
bodybuilding from getting into the Olympics?
Joe:
Some of the top bodybuilders are shooting themselves in the foot. Look at it this way, if a coach in
any other sport tells you to do or not to do something, what’ll you
do? You’ll comply. If you don’t, what will happen to
you? You’re outa there! So, the coach controls such
situations. Or the manager
does. Recently, a girl --
swimmer I think -- who was trying out for the Olympics was banned because
she was on drugs. She kicks
up a hullabaloo, and sues the federation, reports it to the paper and so
forth. In bodybuilding it’s
ten times worse. Samaranch
says to Ben, “Can’t you control these people?” Bodybuilders are wild people! Individualists.
Fred:
Explain.
Joe: If
a bodybuilder was a basketball player and had the ball, and a guy right
next to him could get it in, he wouldn’t pass it to him. He has to run and put it in
himself. They’re
individualists. They’ve got
to do it all on their own.
They’re not team players.
Without team players you don’t stick together, Fred. That's why there is chaos.
Fred:
What would IOC acceptance mean in the sport of Bodybuilding?
Joe: They are
their own worst enemy. Let me
put it this way, Fred. We
have the Arnold Classic, The Olympia and so forth, and the guys make
money, but since bodybuilding is not recognized by the IOC, the sports
writers think its an esoteric sport, so they don’t pay to much attention
to it. Its not a family
sport. Now, the point is,
none of the big companies want to be involved with bodybuilding for one
reason. They don’t like the
environment. It is all about
drugs and is not recognized as a sport. Take Muscle & Fitness for
example. It has better
pricing, better everything than my other magazine, Men’s Fitness. Yet, I’ve got 45 pages of paid
national ads, national ads, but I can’t get any in M&F. They all tell us, “I love it! It’s perfect,” but they don’t want
to be in that environment.
Why should NIKE or anybody else take on a bodybuilder as a national
spokesperson? Most companies
want to because they’d be able to show big arms, powerful, strong as the
rock of Gibraltar ... you know what I mean. Every company wants to use
powerful looking bodybuilders in their ads, but the environment is
bad.
So if we
get recognition from the Olympic Committee that will break us out of that
cycle. Sports writers will
recognize it, advertisers will know it’s part of the Olympics, and it
creates a better environment around it to where the general advertising
community will have bodybuilders representing them. It will be better for the
bodybuilders because instead of making some money endorsing a product for
a few thousand dollars, they can get hundreds of thousands of
dollars. Look at Egg
Beaters with Dorian. They pay
him because that product is perfect for bodybuilders. Same thing, Fred.
Look at
all the companies who sell aspirin and drugs for pain. They are in most magazines but
they won’t go in Muscle & Fitness. And where would more guys have
more pain than in our magazines?
They just don’t want to be involved. Look at NIKE. Every bodybuilder trains
with shoes, every bodybuilder walks around with shoes. There are 45 million people who
trains in gyms and lift weights, and that’s more than there are runners.
Its because of the environment.
So, by
being recognized by the Olympic Committee, the environment of bodybuilding
would change for the better.
And here’s a few stupid but highly vocal bodybuilders saying, “What
do we need the Olympics for?”
Dumb, they’re just so dumb!
Its pathetic. You try to help them, but they’re arrogant. One thing about some of these
bodybuilders, they think they are bigger, better, stronger than anything,
and that Baroque thinking sews them up completely to the point where they
can’t be in contact with other people. They don’t think they belong.
They can’t see that they must
become a part of a group. Now
that's why both Ben and I think Olympic recognition will help
bodybuilding. Its not good
for me because now all the bodybuilders will endorse a product in a
national ad and get a fortune.
I won’t be able to afford them anymore! It goes to show how much I care
for bodybuilding.
Fred:
Most people that have
ever worked for you Joe, know that you have at least two difference
licenses. How old are you
really?
Joe:
[Laughing] I was born in ‘22. You figure it out. ‘22, ‘21, somewhere around
there. My mother was not
literate at all, she couldn’t read Yiddish and she couldn’t read
English. So I was not born in
a hospital. A rabbi was
called to witness the birth, but the rabbi happened to be scoundrel and
didn’t report it, so they didn’t have any record of me being born. So I had to ask my mother and she
said, “Well, you were born so many days from this holiday...” It was like that. Over the years she couldn’t pin
point it. In fact if I hadn’t
made any effort I wouldn’t have any reservations about claiming that I was
an immaculate conception [more mirth].
Fred: Was Ben ever an athlete?
Joe:
Yeah, in school he was a boxer.
My brother liked to work out, but I was an extremist. He would do calisthenics and lift
lighter weights. I was a
crazy guy who wanted to lift big weights -- pull my ligaments and things
like that -- I was that kind of guy.
And that's when I wrote an article on “Momism” way back then. A lot of guys are brought up not
to lift heavy weights because their mothers tell them, “Don't lift that,
you’ll hurt yourself!”
Fred: So
you feel that because of that your brother Ben was held back and you
weren’t?
Joe: No he wasn’t held back. He trained, but he was not as
fanatical about it as I.
You don’t have any more of the wicked things they say about
me? People say that Joe only
wants people to tell him nice things, that Joe only wants to be
flattered. Here I am begging
you to ask me questions that are not flattering.
Fred:
[Now sweating] Well some of
the other things, Joe, are spurious comments. Like, “Joe’s a thief,” and “He
lies about his supplements,” and “He lies to the kids that they can do it
without drugs.” I hear this
sort of banter on the Internet all the time.
Joe: In
fact, Muscle Media 2000 wrote that answer for me. They stuck up for me. These allegations just aren’t
true. Where did they get
these ideas? I’m trying to
make bodybuilding a lifestyle, trying to go out and reach the public and
convince parents, and everybody else, that kids should take up
bodybuilding and live a better lifestyle, live longer, stronger and be
physically fit. And I want to
get bodybuilding into the Olympics! How am I going to reach
people if I tell them that they have to take drugs? They wouldn’t want their kids to
get involved in the sport!
People would look down on our sport. I’m caught in a bind. The people who openly talk
about drugs don’t give a shit for the sport. They just want to make money
selling stuff. Sure people
take drugs! But don’t
make a big issue out of it, and tell them what the side effects are. In fact, we have articles in this
issue of both Flex and Muscle & Fitness on drugs.
Fred:
Yeah, but to dwell on
it is like shooting yourself in the foot?
Joe: But, don’t shoot ME in the foot! I could make more money if I
openly talked about drugs in my magazines as if nothing was wrong with the
practice. But I don’t. The point is I would be destroying
the sport of bodybuilding.
We’d never get in the Olympics, never get recognition, and everyone
would continue to refer to us as steroid freaks. My philosophy is against
drugs. I know bodybuilders
take steroids, but the steroid issue is not the complete answer. Why do you think we want to put in
testing?
Fred: In order
to get into the Olympics?
Joe: Yes, but
the point is that we cannot continue to lie to the kids. In the amateur bodybuilding
championships we do have drug testing because amateur sports are part of
the Olympics. The Olympics
are uninvolved with the professionals. Maybe I like the pros too much,
and I don’t want to cut them down, but I have to spread the sport. I don’t want to make it
appear that bodybuilders are obsessed with drugs, drugs, drugs! That is my philosophy. But, now I have no chance
because the other magazines talk about drugs openly, and the average guy
thinks they’re being honest by doing so. They say, “They’re telling me about drugs,
so whatever they say is the truth.”
Which is shit. What
else?
Fred: Umm, Joe
likes money more than helping bodybuilders.
Joe: Let
me put it this way, Fred, I came up with the bodyshaper and sold 25
million of them. I made more
money selling the bodyshaper than I made in the previous 15 - 20 years.
I’ve got an imagination, I’ve got brains. I could go into any other field
and make ten times more than I’ve made in bodybuilding. Why should I stick to a limited
little field like bodybuilding?
Why?
Fred:
There is no reason, Joe
Joe:
Except that I love it. Do you
think I’m that dumb that all I can do is bodybuilding?
Fred:
Nope. He has a funny
voice. Joe, you know that
everybody in the world of bodybuilding imitates your voice. Maybe part of the love/hate thing?
Joe: I
do have an unusual way of speaking. They imitate the president too, so
it’s OK.
Fred: He
lies about the use of drugs, that's obviously false.
Joe:
I don't lie.
Fred: He
lies about the contribution of supplements to getting big and ripped.
Joe: How
am I lying about supplements?
We have 7 of the top guys in the world designing our
supplements! These guys are
chemists and doctors!
You should come up to our plant and see all these top people and
talk to them! And have a look
at the research we do.
The main
reason we developed our own plant is that I used to have to give a formula
to a manufacturer to have it made for me, as most of the other companies
still do. We’d argue and I’d
try to get the best price I could.
Then, when I’m gone, the owner says, “What do we have that's left
over we can get rid of?”
So, what do they do?
They short-change the protein, they don’t give you the exact amount
of this or that, and they short-change the vitamins. And the flavor isn’t
consistent. How are you going
to know unless you test?
Therefore, I decided to make my own plant to make sure that my
supplements had exactly what we wanted. Anybody can take any of our
products and have them tested.
They’ll see that they’re perfect. I challenge them to!
Fred:
Take my protein
powder, and you’ll get big arms just like me.
Joe:
It’s all BS! Where’s the
muscle mag [Joe rummages through a monstrous heap of mags looking for a
recent Muscle & Fitness].
Here! This ad
says, “In order to develop
muscles you must have proper nutrition. And this is proper nutrition
for the muscle. I don’t say
the product makes them grow by themselves.
Fred:
What people accuse
you of is making kids believe they too can become an elite bodybuilder
with your supplements.
Joe:
Not true! Let me get one of them and go over
it with you so you will be convinced. Ah, where is it you son of a
bitch! Product
everywhere. Here! It says, “We challenge $30,000.00 to anybody to make a
better product and better results.”
Read there and tell me where it says take the product and you build
muscles. They think their
product is so good why am I challenging them? Because ours is better, Fred. You saw the test we made with Dr.
Paul Ward! Do you honestly
think I told the guys to fake the results? Read this Fred, read this!
Fred:
“As with all
supplements, this product will not promote faster or greater muscular
gains. This product is,
however, a nutritious low fat food supplement which like other foods
provides nutritional support for a weight training athlete.”
Joe:
Where do we tell them
they get bigger muscles with that?
Where? So where am I
lying to the people?
What sets the champions apart is knowledge that comes from training
and commitment to bodybuilding, the experience that gives them the edge of
being able to distinguishing the good from the bad in the huge array of
protein supplements on the market.
Victory asked these professionals to give their opinion. Many agreed to do this. Are they liars too? Where does it say builds
bigger muscles? We create the
most useable protein scientists can manage. Then we tell them when to take our
professional protein. No
place does it say that it builds muscle.
See
here? Dorian says, “I enjoy
professional protein during my recuperation because it tastes good and
provides excellent quality protein with no fat.” Laurel Cravel says, “I love this
quality protein. No carbs, no
lactose, its an easy way to keep my protein high when I’m training
hard. Anyone you want, Lou
Ferrigno. At last I found a
super protein I can use to supplement my meals without fat. I take one before I work out and
it helps keep me lean while I build muscle tissue and recuperate faster.
I don’t
know where they get crazy ideas, just absolutely crazy ideas.
Fred:
In the years ahead,
as you grow older, is there something you feel like you haven’t
accomplished yet that you would really like to do?
Joe:
Yeah, enjoy my
life! Do things for ME. If I didn’t love the damned
sport so much, I would just chuck it all. Just sell out and go. I’m tired of reading books on
powerlifting. I want to
read good literature. I want
to travel. To see things, go
to museums, do things that make me happy. I want to train six times a
week. Now, I struggle to get
in three days a week. I have
to rush my workout.
But, I
like what you do too damn much.
That's the whole thing. I gave birth to it. It’s like raising
children. You don’t get tired
of them. You don’t want to
get away from them. Its the
same thing with bodybuilding.
If I didn’t have such a great love for bodybuilding in its infancy,
and I didn’t grow up with bodybuilders, if I didn’t get so bonded to the
whole damn sport, it would be easy for me to break. But I’m just too bonded to
it. |