Here you will find things about fitness and nutrition, mainly (but not exclusively) in relation to the Beachbody programs like P90x and Insanity. And, I will start adding reviews for Books, DVDs and Blu-Rays, and other products. All views and opinions on this blog are my own.
Welcome
Welcome to my ever-evolving blog. It started out as a blog on Beachbody workouts and products, mainly when I was a Beachbody coach. I no longer coach, not because I don't believe in Beachbody's programs (I subscribe to Beachbody on Demand and use their workouts every day), I am just not a salesperson and hated that aspect of it. I am more than willing to answer questions about my experiences with their products and the various workouts, and I feel freer to do so without the appearance of giving a biased review of something.
I have also started adding reviews for various things I have purchased like movies, books, CDs, and other products. This was brought about by a fight with Amazon in which all of my reviews were removed over a completely bullshit allegation that I posted a review that violated their terms of service. After going back and forth with the morons in the community-reviews department (even after they admitted that my posts did not violate their guidelines) they restored my account (which took them six months to do), but I have been posting my reviews on my blog to have them preserved in case something like that happens again. And here, I will post uncensored reviews so I will swear from time to time and post reviews that may be longer than Amazon's character limit. Everything I post here on any topic or product is my personal opinion, and I take no compensation for any product reviews I post. I am a member of Amazon's vine program and because I get those products for free, I keep those reviews on Amazon only, but everything I have purchased with my own money, whether from Amazon or some other store/website/outlet, I will post here.
I also plan to do some longer blog posts on various topics, such as how to learn physics, how to get through calculus, and longer reviews of workout programs as I do them. Basically, whatever strikes me as interesting at the time. As you can see if you navigate around the blog, I had many years in between postings. During that time I was going back to school to get an engineering degree, and learning material that I avoided my first time through college was a different experience and one that gave me a lot of insight into how to do well in those classes, which I will try to impart here for those who are looking to get a science or engineering degree.
Sunday, December 3, 2023
DVD/TV Series Review: Baywatch: Season 8
Saturday, December 2, 2023
Workout Update: Lift-4/645 Corrective and Foam Rolling- Round 2 -Day 6
Day 6 was just the two recovery workouts from Lift 4. Nothing much new to say about either of them, aside from the fact that I did not have many knots in my legs when I was foam rolling and I could get a little deeper into my hamstring stretches.
DVD/Movie Set Review: The Dark Knight Trilogy
First, it brought back stability. Nolan co-wrote and directed all three movies, so the tone, visuals, and feel remained the same. Just as importantly, Christian Bale was in the lead role for all three. Regardless of whether you think he was the best Batman/Bruce Wayne or not, the continuity that not changing actors every movie brought was very important. Secondly, the movies were more than just superhero or action movies. It brought in big-name actors for both the main roles and the supporting roles and focused on not only having good scripts but excellent acting (punctuated by Heath Ledger's performance as The Joker). Those elements were spotty in the superhero genre up to that point. In some movies, you would have big-name actors and a good script. In some, you would have a decent script but only one or two big-name actors, and in some, you would have an awful script. These movies did not rely just on a bunch of special effects and lots of explosions to tell the story. Lastly, Nolan tried to bring a sense of realism where possible. Obviously, these are movies based on a comic book, and most of what you see in them could not happen in real life. But, the fact that the movies were filmed in real cities and that the gadgets he used (especially in Batman Begins) were somewhat realistic (like his grappling gun) made the movies more enjoyable for me.
Of the three movies I actually think the last one has the best overall story. Obviously, however, Heath Ledger's performance as Joker was the touchstone of the three movies. He played the in-control psychotic so well, that it will be hard for anyone to top that live-action version of the character. Even though I think Ledger was the best villain, I think all the movies did a good job with the bad guys. I especially liked that they cast Bane based on acting ability and not just finding a big guy with no talent. Obviously, Tom Hardy is not 7 feet tall or anywhere near it, but his version of Bane was much better than the one in Batman and Robin.
Chances are if you are reading this you have already seen each movie multiple times. While I do not think any of them are absolutely perfect, I think they are as close to perfect as the superhero movies that had come out up to that point had been in a long time. And, you can certainly argue that the success of Batman Begins played a big part in the Marvel movies being taken seriously from the start. I had hoped that the series that Nolan started would continue in some way. The ending of Dark Knight Rises certainly left that possibility open. But, after this many years, if it were to do so, it would more likely be in a "Batman Beyond" type of situation in which Bale plays the role of Alfred to a new, younger, Batman.
Friday, December 1, 2023
DVD/TV Series Review: House M.D.: Season 4
Workout Update: Lift-4/645 Corrective and Foam Rolling- Round 2 -Day 5
Day 5 was lower body foam rolling from 645 and Legs in Lift 4.
The Legs workout was a 50/50 half lifting and half HIIT workout. I was definitely getting deeper into the squats and lunges, but not as deep as I would like. The HIIT portion of the workout was still quite hard and the only move I could do all of the way through was the high-knee runs. By the time I got to the core portion of the workout, I could not do much of anything, but I got through it the best I could.
Thursday, November 30, 2023
Workout Update: Lift-4/645 Corrective and Foam Rolling- Round 2 -Day 4
Day 4 was upper-body foam rolling from 645 and shoulders in Lift 4.
The shoulders workout was an interval workout, doing three rounds of two shoulder exercises followed by a 30-second HIIT exercise. Then, of course, finishing with core. I was surprised at how tired my shoulders got. By round three I had to drop the weight I was using for the y-raises and the shoulder flys. I was able to do unmodified HIIT and core moves for longer than I was in Round 1, even though I was dead tired by the end of the workout.
Wednesday, November 29, 2023
Workout Update: Lift-4/645 Corrective and Foam Rolling- Round 2 -Day 3
Day 3 was a recovery day, so it was corrective ankles from 645 and the two recovery routines from Lift 4.
I definitely had some knots in my quads this morning that interestingly did not come back when I did the Lift 4 foam rolling in the evening. And, I did not really have any knots in either of my hamstrings. So, I think when I do the lower body foam rolling routine on Friday, I will try using the rumble roller for most of it.
Tuesday, November 28, 2023
Workout Update: Lift-4/645 Corrective and Foam Rolling- Round 2 -Day 2
Day 2 of Round 2 was corrective hips from 645 and Back and Biceps in Lift 4.
The back and biceps routine (which was the circuit routine with no HIIT) was very tough. You go from using a heavy weight for the back exercises to lighter weights for the biceps without any rest in between so you get tired quickly. By the time you get through the three sets of the bonus round, it is hard to even lift your arms.
Monday, November 27, 2023
Workout Update: Lift-4/645 Corrective and Foam Rolling- Round 2 -Day 1
Day 1 of Round 2 was corrective shoulders in 645 and Chest and Triceps, 50/50 in Lift 4.
I will not describe the workouts again since I described them all in detail during round 1. It was interesting going back to Day 1 of Lift 4 because, while the workout was easier than the week 8 workouts, it was definitely not easy. That is because if you do a second round of Lift 4 immediately after the first round, you start out using the same weight you ended with, and since you are still not getting much of a break between exercises, it is just as challenging as it was on day 1 of round 1.
Book Review: Return of the Jedi Novelization
Saturday, November 25, 2023
Book Review: Mentats of Dune (Dune # 5)
Friday, November 24, 2023
DVD/TV Series Review: Baywatch Nights Seasons 1 and 2 (German Import)
Workout Review: Lift 4
The program is 8 weeks long and has you working out 4 days a week. It also includes two optional recovery workouts, a foam rolling routine and a stretching routine that each lasts about 10 minutes that you can do on the off days. Each workout has you lifting and/or doing cardio. During the first six weeks of the program, you work out for two days (doing chest and triceps and then back and biceps), then you get a rest day, then you do shoulders, and finish out the week with legs. The lifting workouts generally fall into one of three categories, a 50/50 workout in which you do half lifting and half cardio, a circuit workout in which you just lift, but do four exercises in each block with no rest in between them, or a circuit workout in which you do two lifting exercies followed by a 30 second HIIT exercise. Every other week, the leg workout is a leg-focused HIIT workout (so no lifting). Each workout ends with three sets of core in which you alternate between two or three core-focused exercises.
The final two weeks are "shred weeks" in which you switch up the exercise combinations (Chest and Back, Legs, rest day, Shoulders and Arms, and Full Body HIIT). The Full Body HIIT workouts consist of three rounds, each with two exercises, then a bonus round in which you do all six exercises. In the first round, the duration of the exercise and the breaks are the longest and in the third round, they are the shortest. In the bonus round, you do each exercise for 30 seconds with no breaks in between them.
The idea behind the workouts is that you lift as heavy as you can, mostly doing just 10 reps of each exercise. You get very little rest between the exercises (about 15-20 seconds, max) and a little more rest between sets and blocks (30 seconds between sets and however long it takes Joel to explain what you are doing in the next block). Usually, the circuit workouts will include a burnout round in which you do two exercises back to back for 30 seconds. There are 10 cast members that appear throughout the workouts. Most of them are young (in their 20s or early 30s) and very fit. Some of them clearly have a fitness background. One of the female cast members is probably in her mid to late 30s and there is one older guy who is probably in his 50s who is fit but is the most "regular" looking of all the cast members. In each workout, only 4 cast members appear (until the last workout of the program) and one person is always a modifier for the HIIT and core moves. One plus is that the workouts are fairly short. The longest is 39 minutes and the shortest (not counting the two recovery routines) is about 28 minutes. So, it is an easy program to fit into most people's schedules. Even when you are modifying the workouts are tough. And, as you get in better shape the harder you can go so it is good regardless of your fitness level. You can tell that is the case because all of the cast members end up modifying at some point in the program, regardless of whether they are the designated modifier for that particular workout.
The one drawback to the program is that you will need dumbbells to do it. There are no band modifications like you get in some programs. And, you need a decent selection of weight as you will use light, medium, and heavy weights, whatever that is for you. The lightest weight I used was 3 pounds (for the shoulder exercise he calls swimmers) and the heaviest was 45 pounds (for the calf raises). This is definitely a workout in which you need to check your ego because, since there is so little rest between exercises and sets, you will very likely end up having to use lighter weights than you would doing the same exercises in a program like P90x where you get a lot of breaks (comparatively). The benefit to the minimal rest, however, is that even on the days when you are not doing any HIIT moves, you are still getting a cardio workout.
Overall, I would say it is a good program for a beginner who is in decent to good shape, but probably best for someone who is at an intermediate or advanced level. There are a handful of "before Lift 4" workouts that are shorter versions (each about 20 minutes long) of the regular workouts that you can do if you want to try pared-down versions of the workouts and see what it is like before committing to the full program.
Workout Update: Lift-4/645 Corrective and Foam Rolling Day 60
Day 60 was lower body foam rolling and the final day of Round 1 of Lift 4. That meant doing full-body HIIT.
The Lift 4 workout had the same format as last week. You do three rounds, with two exercises (one that is a lower-body-focused exercise and one that is an upper-body-focused exercise). In the first round, the duration of the exercises and the amount of rest between exercises are longer (60 seconds, 45 seconds, and 20 seconds rest between them). By the third round, the duration of the exercises is shorter (30 seconds and 15 seconds) and there is almost no rest (just 10 seconds) between the exercises. Each round has three sets. Once you are done with the three rounds, you do a single burnout round in which you do all of the exercises for 30 seconds with no rest between them, and then you finish out with three sets of core, this time alternating between three exercises.
The Lift 4 workout is tough, but not as bad as last week's version (mainly because there is no triple bear this time). The entire cast (minus Steve, who was on vacation) participates in this workout, as does Joel (for the vast majority of it). The workout goes quickly (it is just 32 minutes long), but you definitely work the entire time.
I have decided that I am going to do another round of Lift 4. My goal is to do as much unmodified as I can, then switch to the modifications once I cannot do the unmodified versions. I have been doing that for some, but not all, of the exercises during the HIIT and core portions, and this time I plan to do that for all of the HIIT and core exercises. For the next couple of days, I will do the recovery workouts and then start up with Day 1 on Monday (as well as continuing to do the Lift 4 corrective workouts.
Thursday, November 23, 2023
Workout Update: Lift-4/645 Corrective and Foam Rolling Day 59
Day 59 was upper body foam rolling in 645 and Shoulders and Arms in Lift 4.
Today, I actually did the Lift 4 workout first immediately followed by the upper body foam rolling. That actually worked out pretty well and acted as a good cooldown. The Lift 4 workout was another circuit workout, so there are two quad blocks of 4 exercises (two shoulder exercises, a biceps exercise, and a triceps exercise) done for three sets. Then you do three sets of the burnout which includes swimmers, full curls, and triceps push-ups, each done for 30 seconds. And, of course, you finish with three sets of core. That was a tough workout and again, doing four sets of weights with no rest in between the exercises is very hard. I definitely had to use a lot lighter weights for some of the exercises than I would use doing the same exercises in P90X because there you get much more time between the exercises than you do here.
DVD/Movie Review: Doc Hollywood
Wednesday, November 22, 2023
Workout Update: Lift-4/645 Corrective and Foam Rolling Day 58
Day 58 was the corrective ankles routine in 645 and the two recovery routines in Lift 4.
I absolutely needed the foam rolling today. Even though the corrective ankles routine has you foam rolling your calves and quads, I still had a bunch of knots in my calves in the evening when I did the Lift 4 foam rolling. Thankfully, I got them out so that when I did the stretch routine I was getting deeper into the stretches.
Blu-Ray/Movie Review: 2 Days in the Valley (Special Edition)
Tuesday, November 21, 2023
Workout Update: Lift-4/645 Corrective and Foam Rolling Day 57
For Day 57 I did the corrective hips routine from 645 and Week 8 legs in Lift 4.
This week, the Legs workout is another 50/50. During the lifting portion you do the same exercises as last week, but switch up the order. Then, in the HIIT portion, you again do three sets of three exercises (jump sumo squats, triple bear, and catchers with the jump), each for 30 seconds. Then you finish with three sets of core, alternating between flutter kicks and high-plank leg lifts.
The leg workout was brutal. It was very hard and I could barely do anything with good form by the end of the workout. But, I was able to keep lifting the heavy weights during the lifting, and even increased the amount of weight I was using on the pulse squats.
Monday, November 20, 2023
Workout Update: Lift-4/645 Corrective and Foam Rolling Day 56
For Day 56 I did the corrective shoulders routine from 645 and week 8's chest and back workout from Lift 4.
The Chest and Back workout was another circuit workout (so no HIIT) with two blocks of four exercises (two chest-focused exercises followed by two back-focused exercises in each block). Then you do a burnout round consisting of three sets of regular push-ups, back extensions, and wide push-ups, and, of course, you finish off with three sets of core.
The workout was tough and again because you do not rest between exercises (and are lifting mostly heavy weights) you are getting some cardio in even though there is no HIIT. I do not think the circuit workouts are as tiring as the intervals or 50/50 workouts, but they are definitely not easy.
DVD/TV Series Review: Due South: The Ultimate Collection
The key to the show was that it was always well-acted. Even in the last season after David Marciano left and the story became a little more campy, the acting was always great. One thing I had forgotten was how many guest appearances were made on the show. Leslie Nielsen was the big one, who appeared in a few different episodes. But Ryan Phillipe and Mark Ruffalo also guest starred in very early roles for both of them, as well as Maria Bello, Carrie-Ann Moss, and Malina Kanakaredes. Callum Kieth Renne joined the series in the third (and if you count it, the fourth season) when Marciano could not agree on a new contract.
I originally thought that the show should have gone on longer, but after watching the series again from beginning to end, I think that the show went out at exactly the right time. It told as many stories as possible, without getting extremely repetitive. It was definitely a show that was always being kept alive. It barely got a second season on CBS, then survived a couple more in syndication. A couple of the episodes from the series are on my list of all-time favorite TV episodes.
In the end, I felt it did a fine job wrapping up everyone's stories and leaving the "continued adventures" to the imagination. It was one of the best series on the air at the time. It did not rely on gratuitous sex and violence to be entertaining. The stories always had a point, and the acting was great. It was a very underrated series, is definitely worth watching, and deserves a spot in any fan's collection.
Sunday, November 19, 2023
Workout Update: Lift-4/645 Corrective and Foam Rolling Day 55
On Day 55 I did the two recovery routines from Lift 4 again. I returned to using the "regular" foam roller for the foam rolling routine. I will probably go back to using the rumble roller from time to time and I hope to eventually get to the point where I can use the rumble roller for all of the foam rolling. I plan on foam rolling on a daily basis going forward, so hopefully by using the rumble roller once or twice a week to start with, I can eventually use it every day.
DVD/TV Series Review: Baywatch Nights: Season 2 (German Import)
Saturday, November 18, 2023
Workout Update: Lift-4/645 Corrective and Foam Rolling Day 54
For Day 54 I just did the two Lift 4 recovery workouts. But, the twist was, for the foam rolling workout I actually used my rumble roller. For those who do not know, the rumble roller is a hard foam roller that has protrusions on the surface. The idea is that it helps with trigger points and myofascial release. Because I already had a regular foam roller, when I ordered the P90X2 kit years ago I paid a bit extra to get the rumble roller. But, since I did not foam roll regularly, I could not use it (there is a reason Tony Horton is groaning throughout the X2 mobility workout). This time, I figured since I have been foam rolling every day for 7 weeks straight, I would try it. It was definitely tougher than the regular foam roller, but it was not as bad as I thought it would be. And, since the Lift 4 foam rolling routine is so short, it is the perfect one to try it out on. Once I got through that I did the stretch routine which went pretty much the same as it did on Wednesday.
Workout Update: Lift-4/645 Corrective and Foam Rolling Day 53
Day 53 was lower body foam rolling in 645 and Full Body HIIT in Lift 4.
The HIIT workout had a bit of a different format than the prior leg day HIIT workout. There are three blocks and a bonus round, which is the same as the other workouts. However, in this one, each block has two exercises, one focused on the legs and then one that is focused on the upper body (basically the chest and/or triceps doing push-ups). The two "easiest" moves (single-leg plyo jumps and push-ups with a hop or step-up in between that you do for 60 and 45 seconds respectively. The second and third blocks introduce harder moves like triple bear, tricep to wide plyo push-ups, box squats, etc. In each block, the amount of time you do the exercises goes down but the amount of rest between them (which is never long anyway) goes down. Then you do one bonus set in which you do all six moves for 30 seconds each and no rest between the moves, and then finish with three sets of core.
The Lift 4 workout was tough. Everyone, including Niels, who never modifies, had to modify moves during the last block of HIIT and in the bonus set. It was that hard. The core sets actually felt like rest because the regular part of the workout was so hard.